THE LOOTING OF ZODANGA
As the great gate where I stood swung
open my fifty Tharks, headed by Tars Tarkas himself,
rode in upon their mighty thoats. I led them
to the palace walls, which I negotiated easily without
assistance. Once inside, however, the gate gave
me considerable trouble, but I finally was rewarded
by seeing it swing upon its huge hinges, and soon
my fierce escort was riding across the gardens of
the jeddak of Zodanga.
As we approached the palace I could
see through the great windows of the first floor into
the brilliantly illuminated audience chamber of Than
Kosis. The immense hall was crowded with nobles
and their women, as though some important function
was in progress. There was not a guard in sight
without the palace, due, I presume, to the fact that
the city and palace walls were considered impregnable,
and so I came close and peered within.
At one end of the chamber, upon massive
golden thrones encrusted with diamonds, sat Than Kosis
and his consort, surrounded by officers and dignitaries
of state. Before them stretched a broad aisle
lined on either side with soldiery, and as I looked
there entered this aisle at the far end of the hall,
the head of a procession which advanced to the foot
of the throne.
First there marched four officers
of the jeddak’s Guard bearing a huge salver
on which reposed, upon a cushion of scarlet silk, a
great golden chain with a collar and padlock at each
end. Directly behind these officers came four
others carrying a similar salver which supported the
magnificent ornaments of a prince and princess of
the reigning house of Zodanga.
At the foot of the throne these two
parties separated and halted, facing each other at
opposite sides of the aisle. Then came more
dignitaries, and the officers of the palace and of
the army, and finally two figures entirely muffled
in scarlet silk, so that not a feature of either was
discernible. These two stopped at the foot of
the throne, facing Than Kosis. When the balance
of the procession had entered and assumed their stations
Than Kosis addressed the couple standing before him.
I could not hear his words, but presently two officers
advanced and removed the scarlet robe from one of
the figures, and I saw that Kantos Kan had failed
in his mission, for it was Sab Than, Prince of Zodanga,
who stood revealed before me.
Than Kosis now took a set of the ornaments
from one of the salvers and placed one of the collars
of gold about his son’s neck, springing the
padlock fast. After a few more words addressed
to Sab Than he turned to the other figure, from which
the officers now removed the enshrouding silks, disclosing
to my now comprehending view Dejah Thoris, Princess
of Helium.
The object of the ceremony was clear
to me; in another moment Dejah Thoris would be joined
forever to the Prince of Zodanga. It was an
impressive and beautiful ceremony, I presume, but to
me it seemed the most fiendish sight I had ever witnessed,
and as the ornaments were adjusted upon her beautiful
figure and her collar of gold swung open in the hands
of Than Kosis I raised my long-sword above my head,
and, with the heavy hilt, I shattered the glass of
the great window and sprang into the midst of the
astonished assemblage. With a bound I was on
the steps of the platform beside Than Kosis, and as
he stood riveted with surprise I brought my long-sword
down upon the golden chain that would have bound Dejah
Thoris to another.
In an instant all was confusion; a
thousand drawn swords menaced me from every quarter,
and Sab Than sprang upon me with a jeweled dagger
he had drawn from his nuptial ornaments. I could
have killed him as easily as I might a fly, but the
age-old custom of Barsoom stayed my hand, and grasping
his wrist as the dagger flew toward my heart I held
him as though in a vise and with my long-sword pointed
to the far end of the hall.
“Zodanga has fallen,” I cried. “Look!”
All eyes turned in the direction I
had indicated, and there, forging through the portals
of the entranceway rode Tars Tarkas and his fifty
warriors on their great thoats.
A cry of alarm and amazement broke
from the assemblage, but no word of fear, and in a
moment the soldiers and nobles of Zodanga were hurling
themselves upon the advancing Tharks.
Thrusting Sab Than headlong from the
platform, I drew Dejah Thoris to my side. Behind
the throne was a narrow doorway and in this Than Kosis
now stood facing me, with drawn long-sword. In
an instant we were engaged, and I found no mean antagonist.
As we circled upon the broad platform
I saw Sab Than rushing up the steps to aid his father,
but, as he raised his hand to strike, Dejah Thoris
sprang before him and then my sword found the spot
that made Sab Than jeddak of Zodanga. As his
father rolled dead upon the floor the new jeddak tore
himself free from Dejah Thoris’ grasp, and again
we faced each other. He was soon joined by a
quartet of officers, and, with my back against a golden
throne, I fought once again for Dejah Thoris.
I was hard pressed to defend myself and yet not strike
down Sab Than and, with him, my last chance to win
the woman I loved. My blade was swinging with
the rapidity of lightning as I sought to parry the
thrusts and cuts of my opponents. Two I had
disarmed, and one was down, when several more rushed
to the aid of their new ruler, and to avenge the death
of the old.
As they advanced there were cries
of “The woman! The woman! Strike
her down; it is her plot. Kill her! Kill
her!”
Calling to Dejah Thoris to get behind
me I worked my way toward the little doorway back
of the throne, but the officers realized my intentions,
and three of them sprang in behind me and blocked my
chances for gaining a position where I could have defended
Dejah Thoris against any army of swordsmen.
The Tharks were having their hands
full in the center of the room, and I began to realize
that nothing short of a miracle could save Dejah Thoris
and myself, when I saw Tars Tarkas surging through
the crowd of pygmies that swarmed about him.
With one swing of his mighty longsword he laid a
dozen corpses at his feet, and so he hewed a pathway
before him until in another moment he stood upon the
platform beside me, dealing death and destruction right
and left.
The bravery of the Zodangans was awe-inspiring,
not one attempted to escape, and when the fighting
ceased it was because only Tharks remained alive in
the great hall, other than Dejah Thoris and myself.
Sab Than lay dead beside his father,
and the corpses of the flower of Zodangan nobility
and chivalry covered the floor of the bloody shambles.
My first thought when the battle was
over was for Kantos Kan, and leaving Dejah Thoris
in charge of Tars Tarkas I took a dozen warriors and
hastened to the dungeons beneath the palace.
The jailers had all left to join the fighters in the
throne room, so we searched the labyrinthine prison
without opposition.
I called Kantos Kan’s name aloud
in each new corridor and compartment, and finally
I was rewarded by hearing a faint response. Guided
by the sound, we soon found him helpless in a dark
recess.
He was overjoyed at seeing me, and
to know the meaning of the fight, faint echoes of
which had reached his prison cell. He told me
that the air patrol had captured him before he reached
the high tower of the palace, so that he had not even
seen Sab Than.
We discovered that it would be futile
to attempt to cut away the bars and chains which held
him prisoner, so, at his suggestion I returned to
search the bodies on the floor above for keys to open
the padlocks of his cell and of his chains.
Fortunately among the first I examined
I found his jailer, and soon we had Kantos Kan with
us in the throne room.
The sounds of heavy firing, mingled
with shouts and cries, came to us from the city’s
streets, and Tars Tarkas hastened away to direct the
fighting without. Kantos Kan accompanied him
to act as guide, the green warriors commencing a thorough
search of the palace for other Zodangans and for loot,
and Dejah Thoris and I were left alone.
She had sunk into one of the golden
thrones, and as I turned to her she greeted me with
a wan smile.
“Was there ever such a man!”
she exclaimed. “I know that Barsoom has
never before seen your like. Can it be that all
Earth men are as you? Alone, a stranger, hunted,
threatened, persecuted, you have done in a few short
months what in all the past ages of Barsoom no man
has ever done: joined together the wild hordes
of the sea bottoms and brought them to fight as allies
of a red Martian people.”
“The answer is easy, Dejah Thoris,”
I replied smiling. “It was not I who did
it, it was love, love for Dejah Thoris, a power that
would work greater miracles than this you have seen.”
A pretty flush overspread her face and she answered,
“You may say that now, John
Carter, and I may listen, for I am free.”
“And more still I have to say,
ere it is again too late,” I returned.
“I have done many strange things in my life,
many things that wiser men would not have dared, but
never in my wildest fancies have I dreamed of winning
a Dejah Thoris for myself—for never had
I dreamed that in all the universe dwelt such a woman
as the Princess of Helium. That you are a princess
does not abash me, but that you are you is enough
to make me doubt my sanity as I ask you, my princess,
to be mine.”
“He does not need to be abashed
who so well knew the answer to his plea before the
plea were made,” she replied, rising and placing
her dear hands upon my shoulders, and so I took her
in my arms and kissed her.
And thus in the midst of a city of
wild conflict, filled with the alarms of war; with
death and destruction reaping their terrible harvest
around her, did Dejah Thoris, Princess of Helium, true
daughter of Mars, the God of War, promise herself in
marriage to John Carter, Gentleman of Virginia.