IN THE ATMOSPHERE FACTORY
For two days I waited there for Kantos
Kan, but as he did not come I started off on foot
in a northwesterly direction toward a point where
he had told me lay the nearest waterway. My only
food consisted of vegetable milk from the plants which
gave so bounteously of this priceless fluid.
Through two long weeks I wandered,
stumbling through the nights guided only by the stars
and hiding during the days behind some protruding
rock or among the occasional hills I traversed.
Several times I was attacked by wild beasts; strange,
uncouth monstrosities that leaped upon me in the dark,
so that I had ever to grasp my long-sword in my hand
that I might be ready for them. Usually my strange,
newly acquired telepathic power warned me in ample
time, but once I was down with vicious fangs at my
jugular and a hairy face pressed close to mine before
I knew that I was even threatened.
What manner of thing was upon me I
did not know, but that it was large and heavy and
many-legged I could feel. My hands were at its
throat before the fangs had a chance to bury themselves
in my neck, and slowly I forced the hairy face from
me and closed my fingers, vise-like, upon its windpipe.
Without sound we lay there, the beast
exerting every effort to reach me with those awful
fangs, and I straining to maintain my grip and choke
the life from it as I kept it from my throat.
Slowly my arms gave to the unequal struggle, and
inch by inch the burning eyes and gleaming tusks of
my antagonist crept toward me, until, as the hairy
face touched mine again, I realized that all was over.
And then a living mass of destruction sprang from
the surrounding darkness full upon the creature that
held me pinioned to the ground. The two rolled
growling upon the moss, tearing and rending one another
in a frightful manner, but it was soon over and my
preserver stood with lowered head above the throat
of the dead thing which would have killed me.
The nearer moon, hurtling suddenly
above the horizon and lighting up the Barsoomian scene,
showed me that my preserver was Woola, but from whence
he had come, or how found me, I was at a loss to know.
That I was glad of his companionship it is needless
to say, but my pleasure at seeing him was tempered
by anxiety as to the reason of his leaving Dejah Thoris.
Only her death I felt sure, could account for his
absence from her, so faithful I knew him to be to my
commands.
By the light of the now brilliant
moons I saw that he was but a shadow of his former
self, and as he turned from my caress and commenced
greedily to devour the dead carcass at my feet I realized
that the poor fellow was more than half starved.
I, myself, was in but little better plight but I
could not bring myself to eat the uncooked flesh and
I had no means of making a fire. When Woola had
finished his meal I again took up my weary and seemingly
endless wandering in quest of the elusive waterway.
At daybreak of the fifteenth day of
my search I was overjoyed to see the high trees that
denoted the object of my search. About noon
I dragged myself wearily to the portals of a huge building
which covered perhaps four square miles and towered
two hundred feet in the air. It showed no aperture
in the mighty walls other than the tiny door at which
I sank exhausted, nor was there any sign of life about
it.
I could find no bell or other method
of making my presence known to the inmates of the
place, unless a small round role in the wall near
the door was for that purpose. It was of about
the bigness of a lead pencil and thinking that it
might be in the nature of a speaking tube I put my
mouth to it and was about to call into it when a voice
issued from it asking me whom I might be, where from,
and the nature of my errand.
I explained that I had escaped from
the Warhoons and was dying of starvation and exhaustion.
“You wear the metal of a green
warrior and are followed by a calot, yet you are of
the figure of a red man. In color you are neither
green nor red. In the name of the ninth day,
what manner of creature are you?”
“I am a friend of the red men
of Barsoom and I am starving. In the name of
humanity open to us,” I replied.
Presently the door commenced to recede
before me until it had sunk into the wall fifty feet,
then it stopped and slid easily to the left, exposing
a short, narrow corridor of concrete, at the further
end of which was another door, similar in every respect
to the one I had just passed. No one was in
sight, yet immediately we passed the first door it
slid gently into place behind us and receded rapidly
to its original position in the front wall of the building.
As the door had slipped aside I had noted its great
thickness, fully twenty feet, and as it reached its
place once more after closing behind us, great cylinders
of steel had dropped from the ceiling behind it and
fitted their lower ends into apertures countersunk
in the floor.
A second and third door receded before
me and slipped to one side as the first, before I
reached a large inner chamber where I found food and
drink set out upon a great stone table. A voice
directed me to satisfy my hunger and to feed my calot,
and while I was thus engaged my invisible host put
me through a severe and searching cross-examination.
“Your statements are most remarkable,”
said the voice, on concluding its questioning, “but
you are evidently speaking the truth, and it is equally
evident that you are not of Barsoom. I can tell
that by the conformation of your brain and the strange
location of your internal organs and the shape and
size of your heart.”
“Can you see through me?” I exclaimed.
“Yes, I can see all but your
thoughts, and were you a Barsoomian I could read those.”
Then a door opened at the far side
of the chamber and a strange, dried up, little mummy
of a man came toward me. He wore but a single
article of clothing or adornment, a small collar of
gold from which depended upon his chest a great ornament
as large as a dinner plate set solid with huge diamonds,
except for the exact center which was occupied by
a strange stone, an inch in diameter, that scintillated
nine different and distinct rays; the seven colors
of our earthly prism and two beautiful rays which,
to me, were new and nameless. I cannot describe
them any more than you could describe red to a blind
man. I only know that they were beautiful in
the extreme.
The old man sat and talked with me
for hours, and the strangest part of our intercourse
was that I could read his every thought while he could
not fathom an iota from my mind unless I spoke.
I did not apprise him of my ability
to sense his mental operations, and thus I learned
a great deal which proved of immense value to me later
and which I would never have known had he suspected
my strange power, for the Martians have such perfect
control of their mental machinery that they are able
to direct their thoughts with absolute precision.
The building in which I found myself
contained the machinery which produces that artificial
atmosphere which sustains life on Mars. The secret
of the entire process hinges on the use of the ninth
ray, one of the beautiful scintillations which I had
noted emanating from the great stone in my host’s
diadem.
This ray is separated from the other
rays of the sun by means of finely adjusted instruments
placed upon the roof of the huge building, three-quarters
of which is used for reservoirs in which the ninth
ray is stored. This product is then treated electrically,
or rather certain proportions of refined electric vibrations
are incorporated with it, and the result is then pumped
to the five principal air centers of the planet where,
as it is released, contact with the ether of space
transforms it into atmosphere.
There is always sufficient reserve
of the ninth ray stored in the great building to maintain
the present Martian atmosphere for a thousand years,
and the only fear, as my new friend told me, was that
some accident might befall the pumping apparatus.
He led me to an inner chamber where
I beheld a battery of twenty radium pumps any one
of which was equal to the task of furnishing all Mars
with the atmosphere compound. For eight hundred
years, he told me, he had watched these pumps which
are used alternately a day each at a stretch, or a
little over twenty-four and one-half Earth hours.
He has one assistant who divides the watch with him.
Half a Martian year, about three hundred and forty-four
of our days, each of these men spend alone in this
huge, isolated plant.
Every red Martian is taught during
earliest childhood the principles of the manufacture
of atmosphere, but only two at one time ever hold
the secret of ingress to the great building, which,
built as it is with walls a hundred and fifty feet
thick, is absolutely unassailable, even the roof being
guarded from assault by air craft by a glass covering
five feet thick.
The only fear they entertain of attack
is from the green Martians or some demented red man,
as all Barsoomians realize that the very existence
of every form of life of Mars is dependent upon the
uninterrupted working of this plant.
One curious fact I discovered as I
watched his thoughts was that the outer doors are
manipulated by telepathic means. The locks are
so finely adjusted that the doors are released by the
action of a certain combination of thought waves.
To experiment with my new-found toy I thought to
surprise him into revealing this combination and so
I asked him in a casual manner how he had managed
to unlock the massive doors for me from the inner chambers
of the building. As quick as a flash there leaped
to his mind nine Martian sounds, but as quickly faded
as he answered that this was a secret he must not
divulge.
From then on his manner toward me
changed as though he feared that he had been surprised
into divulging his great secret, and I read suspicion
and fear in his looks and thoughts, though his words
were still fair.
Before I retired for the night he
promised to give me a letter to a nearby agricultural
officer who would help me on my way to Zodanga, which
he said, was the nearest Martian city.
“But be sure that you do not
let them know you are bound for Helium as they are
at war with that country. My assistant and I
are of no country, we belong to all Barsoom and this
talisman which we wear protects us in all lands, even
among the green men—though we do not trust
ourselves to their hands if we can avoid it,”
he added.
“And so good-night, my friend,”
he continued, “may you have a long and restful
sleep—yes, a long sleep.”
And though he smiled pleasantly I
saw in his thoughts the wish that he had never admitted
me, and then a picture of him standing over me in
the night, and the swift thrust of a long dagger and
the half formed words, “I am sorry, but it is
for the best good of Barsoom.”
As he closed the door of my chamber
behind him his thoughts were cut off from me as was
the sight of him, which seemed strange to me in my
little knowledge of thought transference.
What was I to do? How could
I escape through these mighty walls? Easily could
I kill him now that I was warned, but once he was dead
I could no more escape, and with the stopping of the
machinery of the great plant I should die with all
the other inhabitants of the planet—all,
even Dejah Thoris were she not already dead.
For the others I did not give the snap of my finger,
but the thought of Dejah Thoris drove from my mind
all desire to kill my mistaken host.
Cautiously I opened the door of my
apartment and, followed by Woola, sought the inner
of the great doors. A wild scheme had come to
me; I would attempt to force the great locks by the
nine thought waves I had read in my host’s mind.
Creeping stealthily through corridor
after corridor and down winding runways which turned
hither and thither I finally reached the great hall
in which I had broken my long fast that morning.
Nowhere had I seen my host, nor did I know where
he kept himself by night.
I was on the point of stepping boldly
out into the room when a slight noise behind me warned
me back into the shadows of a recess in the corridor.
Dragging Woola after me I crouched low in the darkness.
Presently the old man passed close
by me, and as he entered the dimly lighted chamber
which I had been about to pass through I saw that
he held a long thin dagger in his hand and that he
was sharpening it upon a stone. In his mind
was the decision to inspect the radium pumps, which
would take about thirty minutes, and then return to
my bed chamber and finish me.
As he passed through the great hall
and disappeared down the runway which led to the pump-room,
I stole stealthily from my hiding place and crossed
to the great door, the inner of the three which stood
between me and liberty.
Concentrating my mind upon the massive
lock I hurled the nine thought waves against it.
In breathless expectancy I waited, when finally the
great door moved softly toward me and slid quietly
to one side. One after the other the remaining
mighty portals opened at my command and Woola and
I stepped forth into the darkness, free, but little
better off than we had been before, other than that
we had full stomachs.
Hastening away from the shadows of
the formidable pile I made for the first crossroad,
intending to strike the central turnpike as quickly
as possible. This I reached about morning and
entering the first enclosure I came to I searched
for some evidences of a habitation.
There were low rambling buildings
of concrete barred with heavy impassable doors, and
no amount of hammering and hallooing brought any response.
Weary and exhausted from sleeplessness I threw myself
upon the ground commanding Woola to stand guard.
Some time later I was awakened by
his frightful growlings and opened my eyes to see
three red Martians standing a short distance from us
and covering me with their rifles.
“I am unarmed and no enemy,”
I hastened to explain. “I have been a
prisoner among the green men and am on my way to Zodanga.
All I ask is food and rest for myself and my calot
and the proper directions for reaching my destination.”
They lowered their rifles and advanced
pleasantly toward me placing their right hands upon
my left shoulder, after the manner of their custom
of salute, and asking me many questions about myself
and my wanderings. They then took me to the
house of one of them which was only a short distance
away.
The buildings I had been hammering
at in the early morning were occupied only by stock
and farm produce, the house proper standing among
a grove of enormous trees, and, like all red-Martian
homes, had been raised at night some forty or fifty
feet from the ground on a large round metal shaft
which slid up or down within a sleeve sunk in the
ground, and was operated by a tiny radium engine in
the entrance hall of the building. Instead of
bothering with bolts and bars for their dwellings,
the red Martians simply run them up out of harm’s
way during the night. They also have private
means for lowering or raising them from the ground
without if they wish to go away and leave them.
These brothers, with their wives and
children, occupied three similar houses on this farm.
They did no work themselves, being government officers
in charge. The labor was performed by convicts,
prisoners of war, delinquent debtors and confirmed
bachelors who were too poor to pay the high celibate
tax which all red-Martian governments impose.
They were the personification of cordiality
and hospitality and I spent several days with them,
resting and recuperating from my long and arduous
experiences.
When they had heard my story—I
omitted all reference to Dejah Thoris and the old
man of the atmosphere plant—they advised
me to color my body to more nearly resemble their
own race and then attempt to find employment in Zodanga,
either in the army or the navy.
“The chances are small that
your tale will be believed until after you have proven
your trustworthiness and won friends among the higher
nobles of the court. This you can most easily
do through military service, as we are a warlike people
on Barsoom,” explained one of them, “and
save our richest favors for the fighting man.”
When I was ready to depart they furnished
me with a small domestic bull thoat, such as is used
for saddle purposes by all red Martians. The
animal is about the size of a horse and quite gentle,
but in color and shape an exact replica of his huge
and fierce cousin of the wilds.
The brothers had supplied me with
a reddish oil with which I anointed my entire body
and one of them cut my hair, which had grown quite
long, in the prevailing fashion of the time, square
at the back and banged in front, so that I could have
passed anywhere upon Barsoom as a full-fledged red
Martian. My metal and ornaments were also renewed
in the style of a Zodangan gentleman, attached to the
house of Ptor, which was the family name of my benefactors.
They filled a little sack at my side
with Zodangan money. The medium of exchange
upon Mars is not dissimilar from our own except that
the coins are oval. Paper money is issued by
individuals as they require it and redeemed twice
yearly. If a man issues more than he can redeem,
the government pays his creditors in full and the
debtor works out the amount upon the farms or in mines,
which are all owned by the government. This
suits everybody except the debtor as it has been a
difficult thing to obtain sufficient voluntary labor
to work the great isolated farm lands of Mars, stretching
as they do like narrow ribbons from pole to pole,
through wild stretches peopled by wild animals and
wilder men.
When I mentioned my inability to repay
them for their kindness to me they assured me that
I would have ample opportunity if I lived long upon
Barsoom, and bidding me farewell they watched me until
I was out of sight upon the broad white turnpike.