FROM JOY TO DEATH
For ten days the hordes of Thark and
their wild allies were feasted and entertained, and,
then, loaded with costly presents and escorted by
ten thousand soldiers of Helium commanded by Mors Kajak,
they started on the return journey to their own lands.
The jed of lesser Helium with a small party of nobles
accompanied them all the way to Thark to cement more
closely the new bonds of peace and friendship.
Sola also accompanied Tars Tarkas,
her father, who before all his chieftains had acknowledged
her as his daughter.
Three weeks later, Mors Kajak and
his officers, accompanied by Tars Tarkas and Sola,
returned upon a battleship that had been dispatched
to Thark to fetch them in time for the ceremony which
made Dejah Thoris and John Carter one.
For nine years I served in the councils
and fought in the armies of Helium as a prince of
the house of Tardos Mors. The people seemed
never to tire of heaping honors upon me, and no day
passed that did not bring some new proof of their
love for my princess, the incomparable Dejah Thoris.
In a golden incubator upon the roof
of our palace lay a snow-white egg. For nearly
five years ten soldiers of the jeddak’s Guard
had constantly stood over it, and not a day passed
when I was in the city that Dejah Thoris and I did
not stand hand in hand before our little shrine planning
for the future, when the delicate shell should break.
Vivid in my memory is the picture
of the last night as we sat there talking in low tones
of the strange romance which had woven our lives together
and of this wonder which was coming to augment our
happiness and fulfill our hopes.
In the distance we saw the bright-white
light of an approaching airship, but we attached no
special significance to so common a sight. Like
a bolt of lightning it raced toward Helium until its
very speed bespoke the unusual.
Flashing the signals which proclaimed
it a dispatch bearer for the jeddak, it circled impatiently
awaiting the tardy patrol boat which must convoy it
to the palace docks.
Ten minutes after it touched at the
palace a message called me to the council chamber,
which I found filling with the members of that body.
On the raised platform of the throne
was Tardos Mors, pacing back and forth with tense-drawn
face. When all were in their seats he turned
toward us.
“This morning,” he said,
“word reached the several governments of Barsoom
that the keeper of the atmosphere plant had made no
wireless report for two days, nor had almost ceaseless
calls upon him from a score of capitals elicited a
sign of response.
“The ambassadors of the other
nations asked us to take the matter in hand and hasten
the assistant keeper to the plant. All day a
thousand cruisers have been searching for him until
just now one of them returns bearing his dead body,
which was found in the pits beneath his house horribly
mutilated by some assassin.
“I do not need to tell you what
this means to Barsoom. It would take months
to penetrate those mighty walls, in fact the work has
already commenced, and there would be little to fear
were the engine of the pumping plant to run as it
should and as they all have for hundreds of years
now; but the worst, we fear, has happened. The
instruments show a rapidly decreasing air pressure
on all parts of Barsoom—the engine has
stopped.”
“My gentlemen,” he concluded,
“we have at best three days to live.”
There was absolute silence for several
minutes, and then a young noble arose, and with his
drawn sword held high above his head addressed Tardos
Mors.
“The men of Helium have prided
themselves that they have ever shown Barsoom how a
nation of red men should live, now is our opportunity
to show them how they should die. Let us go about
our duties as though a thousand useful years still
lay before us.”
The chamber rang with applause and
as there was nothing better to do than to allay the
fears of the people by our example we went our ways
with smiles upon our faces and sorrow gnawing at our
hearts.
When I returned to my palace I found
that the rumor already had reached Dejah Thoris, so
I told her all that I had heard.
“We have been very happy, John
Carter,” she said, “and I thank whatever
fate overtakes us that it permits us to die together.”
The next two days brought no noticeable
change in the supply of air, but on the morning of
the third day breathing became difficult at the higher
altitudes of the rooftops. The avenues and plazas
of Helium were filled with people. All business
had ceased. For the most part the people looked
bravely into the face of their unalterable doom.
Here and there, however, men and women gave way to
quiet grief.
Toward the middle of the day many
of the weaker commenced to succumb and within an hour
the people of Barsoom were sinking by thousands into
the unconsciousness which precedes death by asphyxiation.
Dejah Thoris and I with the other
members of the royal family had collected in a sunken
garden within an inner courtyard of the palace.
We conversed in low tones, when we conversed at all,
as the awe of the grim shadow of death crept over
us. Even Woola seemed to feel the weight of
the impending calamity, for he pressed close to Dejah
Thoris and to me, whining pitifully.
The little incubator had been brought
from the roof of our palace at request of Dejah Thoris
and now she sat gazing longingly upon the unknown
little life that now she would never know.
As it was becoming perceptibly difficult
to breathe Tardos Mors arose, saying,
“Let us bid each other farewell.
The days of the greatness of Barsoom are over.
Tomorrow’s sun will look down upon a dead world
which through all eternity must go swinging through
the heavens peopled not even by memories. It
is the end.”
He stooped and kissed the women of
his family, and laid his strong hand upon the shoulders
of the men.
As I turned sadly from him my eyes
fell upon Dejah Thoris. Her head was drooping
upon her breast, to all appearances she was lifeless.
With a cry I sprang to her and raised her in my arms.
Her eyes opened and looked into mine.
“Kiss me, John Carter,”
she murmured. “I love you! I love
you! It is cruel that we must be torn apart who
were just starting upon a life of love and happiness.”
As I pressed her dear lips to mine
the old feeling of unconquerable power and authority
rose in me. The fighting blood of Virginia sprang
to life in my veins.
“It shall not be, my princess,”
I cried. “There is, there must be some
way, and John Carter, who has fought his way through
a strange world for love of you, will find it.”
And with my words there crept above
the threshold of my conscious mind a series of nine
long forgotten sounds. Like a flash of lightning
in the darkness their full purport dawned upon me—the
key to the three great doors of the atmosphere plant!
Turning suddenly toward Tardos Mors
as I still clasped my dying love to my breast I cried.
“A flier, Jeddak! Quick!
Order your swiftest flier to the palace top.
I can save Barsoom yet.”
He did not wait to question, but in
an instant a guard was racing to the nearest dock
and though the air was thin and almost gone at the
rooftop they managed to launch the fastest one-man,
air-scout machine that the skill of Barsoom had ever
produced.
Kissing Dejah Thoris a dozen times
and commanding Woola, who would have followed me,
to remain and guard her, I bounded with my old agility
and strength to the high ramparts of the palace, and
in another moment I was headed toward the goal of
the hopes of all Barsoom.
I had to fly low to get sufficient
air to breathe, but I took a straight course across
an old sea bottom and so had to rise only a few feet
above the ground.
I traveled with awful velocity for
my errand was a race against time with death.
The face of Dejah Thoris hung always before me.
As I turned for a last look as I left the palace
garden I had seen her stagger and sink upon the ground
beside the little incubator. That she had dropped
into the last coma which would end in death, if the
air supply remained unreplenished, I well knew, and
so, throwing caution to the winds, I flung overboard
everything but the engine and compass, even to my
ornaments, and lying on my belly along the deck with
one hand on the steering wheel and the other pushing
the speed lever to its last notch I split the thin
air of dying Mars with the speed of a meteor.
An hour before dark the great walls
of the atmosphere plant loomed suddenly before me,
and with a sickening thud I plunged to the ground
before the small door which was withholding the spark
of life from the inhabitants of an entire planet.
Beside the door a great crew of men
had been laboring to pierce the wall, but they had
scarcely scratched the flint-like surface, and now
most of them lay in the last sleep from which not even
air would awaken them.
Conditions seemed much worse here
than at Helium, and it was with difficulty that I
breathed at all. There were a few men still
conscious, and to one of these I spoke.
“If I can open these doors is
there a man who can start the engines?” I asked.
“I can,” he replied, “if
you open quickly. I can last but a few moments
more. But it is useless, they are both dead and
no one else upon Barsoom knew the secret of these
awful locks. For three days men crazed with
fear have surged about this portal in vain attempts
to solve its mystery.”
I had no time to talk, I was becoming
very weak and it was with difficulty that I controlled
my mind at all.
But, with a final effort, as I sank
weakly to my knees I hurled the nine thought waves
at that awful thing before me. The Martian had
crawled to my side and with staring eyes fixed on the
single panel before us we waited in the silence of
death.
Slowly the mighty door receded before
us. I attempted to rise and follow it but I
was too weak.
“After it,” I cried to
my companion, “and if you reach the pump room
turn loose all the pumps. It is the only chance
Barsoom has to exist tomorrow!”
From where I lay I opened the second
door, and then the third, and as I saw the hope of
Barsoom crawling weakly on hands and knees through
the last doorway I sank unconscious upon the ground.