4
It was during the morning of July
6, 2137, that we entered the mouth of the Thames—to
the best of my knowledge the first Western keel to
cut those historic waters for two hundred and twenty-one
years!
But where were the tugs and the lighters
and the barges, the lightships and the buoys, and
all those countless attributes which went to make
up the myriad life of the ancient Thames?
Gone! All gone! Only silence
and desolation reigned where once the commerce of
the world had centered.
I could not help but compare this
once great water-way with the waters about our New
York, or Rio, or San Diego, or Valparaiso. They
had become what they are today during the two centuries
of the profound peace which we of the navy have been
prone to deplore. And what, during this same
period, had shorn the waters of the Thames of their
pristine grandeur?
Militarist that I am, I could find
but a single word of explanation—war!
I bowed my head and turned my eyes
downward from the lonely and depressing sight, and
in a silence which none of us seemed willing to break,
we proceeded up the deserted river.
We had reached a point which, from
my map, I imagined must have been about the former
site of Erith, when I discovered a small band of antelope
a short distance inland. As we were now entirely
out of meat once more, and as I had given up all expectations
of finding a city upon the site of ancient London,
I determined to land and bag a couple of the animals.
Assured that they would be timid and
easily frightened, I decided to stalk them alone,
telling the men to wait at the boat until I called
to them to come and carry the carcasses back to the
shore.
Crawling carefully through the vegetation,
making use of such trees and bushes as afforded shelter,
I came at last almost within easy range of my quarry,
when the antlered head of the buck went suddenly into
the air, and then, as though in accordance with a
prearranged signal, the whole band moved slowly off,
farther inland.
As their pace was leisurely, I determined
to follow them until I came again within range, as
I was sure that they would stop and feed in a short
time.
They must have led me a mile or more
at least before they again halted and commenced to
browse upon the rank, luxuriant grasses. All
the time that I had followed them I had kept both
eyes and ears alert for sign or sound that would indicate
the presence of Felis tigris; but so far not the slightest
indication of the beast had been apparent.
As I crept closer to the antelope,
sure this time of a good shot at a large buck, I suddenly
saw something that caused me to forget all about my
prey in wonderment.
It was the figure of an immense grey-black
creature, rearing its colossal shoulders twelve or
fourteen feet above the ground. Never in my
life had I seen such a beast, nor did I at first recognize
it, so different in appearance is the live reality
from the stuffed, unnatural specimens preserved to
us in our museums.
But presently I guessed the identity
of the mighty creature as Elephas africanus, or, as
the ancients commonly described it, African elephant.
The antelope, although in plain view
of the huge beast, paid not the slightest attention
to it, and I was so wrapped up in watching the mighty
pachyderm that I quite forgot to shoot at the buck
and presently, and in quite a startling manner, it
became impossible to do so.
The elephant was browsing upon the
young and tender shoots of some low bushes, waving
his great ears and switching his short tail.
The antelope, scarce twenty paces from him, continued
their feeding, when suddenly, from close beside the
latter, there came a most terrifying roar, and I saw
a great, tawny body shoot, from the concealing verdure
beyond the antelope, full upon the back of a small
buck.
Instantly the scene changed from one
of quiet and peace to indescribable chaos. The
startled and terrified buck uttered cries of agony.
His fellows broke and leaped off in all directions.
The elephant raised his trunk, and, trumpeting loudly,
lumbered off through the wood, crushing down small
trees and trampling bushes in his mad flight.
Growling horribly, a huge lion stood
across the body of his prey—such a creature
as no Pan-American of the twenty-second century had
ever beheld until my eyes rested upon this lordly
specimen of “the king of beasts.”
But what a different creature was this fierce-eyed
demon, palpitating with life and vigor, glossy of
coat, alert, growling, magnificent, from the dingy,
moth-eaten replicas beneath their glass cases in the
stuffy halls of our public museums.
I had never hoped or expected to see
a living lion, tiger, or elephant—using
the common terms that were familiar to the ancients,
since they seem to me less unwieldy than those now
in general use among us—and so it was with
sentiments not unmixed with awe that I stood gazing
at this regal beast as, above the carcass of his kill,
he roared out his challenge to the world.
So enthralled was I by the spectacle
that I quite forgot myself, and the better to view
him, the great lion, I had risen to my feet and stood,
not fifty paces from him, in full view.
For a moment he did not see me, his
attention being directed toward the retreating elephant,
and I had ample time to feast my eyes upon his splendid
proportions, his great head, and his thick black mane.
Ah, what thoughts passed through my
mind in those brief moments as I stood there in rapt
fascination! I had come to find a wondrous civilization,
and instead I found a wild-beast monarch of the realm
where English kings had ruled. A lion reigned,
undisturbed, within a few miles of the seat of one
of the greatest governments the world has ever known,
his domain a howling wilderness, where yesterday fell
the shadows of the largest city in the world.
It was appalling; but my reflections
upon this depressing subject were doomed to sudden
extinction. The lion had discovered me.
For an instant he stood silent and
motionless as one of the mangy effigies at home, but
only for an instant. Then, with a most ferocious
roar, and without the slightest hesitancy or warning,
he charged upon me.
He forsook the prey already dead beneath
him for the pleasures of the delectable tidbit, man.
From the remorselessness with which the great Carnivora
of modern England hunted man, I am constrained to
believe that, whatever their appetites in times past,
they have cultivated a gruesome taste for human flesh.
As I threw my rifle to my shoulder,
I thanked God, the ancient God of my ancestors, that
I had replaced the hard-jacketed bullets in my weapon
with soft-nosed projectiles, for though this was my
first experience with Felis leo, I knew the moment
that I faced that charge that even my wonderfully
perfected firearm would be as futile as a peashooter
unless I chanced to place my first bullet in a vital
spot.
Unless you had seen it you could not
believe credible the speed of a charging lion.
Apparently the animal is not built for speed, nor
can he maintain it for long. But for a matter
of forty or fifty yards there is, I believe, no animal
on earth that can overtake him.
Like a bolt he bore down upon me,
but, fortunately for me, I did not lose my head.
I guessed that no bullet would kill him instantly.
I doubted that I could pierce his skull. There
was hope, though, in finding his heart through his
exposed chest, or, better yet, of breaking his shoulder
or foreleg, and bringing him up long enough to pump
more bullets into him and finish him.
I covered his left shoulder and pulled
the trigger as he was almost upon me. It stopped
him. With a terrific howl of pain and rage,
the brute rolled over and over upon the ground almost
to my feet. As he came I pumped two more bullets
into him, and as he struggled to rise, clawing viciously
at me, I put a bullet in his spine.
That finished him, and I am free to
admit that I was mighty glad of it. There was
a great tree close behind me, and, stepping within
its shade, I leaned against it, wiping the perspiration
from my face, for the day was hot, and the exertion
and excitement left me exhausted.
I stood there, resting, for a moment,
preparatory to turning and retracing my steps to the
launch, when, without warning, something whizzed through
space straight toward me. There was a dull thud
of impact as it struck the tree, and as I dodged to
one side and turned to look at the thing I saw a heavy
spear imbedded in the wood not three inches from where
my head had been.
The thing had come from a little to
one side of me, and, without waiting to investigate
at the instant, I leaped behind the tree, and, circling
it, peered around the other side to get a sight of
my would-be murderer.
This time I was pitted against men—the
spear told me that all too plainly—but
so long as they didn’t take me unawares or from
behind I had little fear of them.
Cautiously I edged about the far side
of the trees until I could obtain a view of the spot
from which the spear must have come, and when I did
I saw the head of a man just emerging from behind
a bush.
The fellow was quite similar in type
to those I had seen upon the Isle of Wight.
He was hairy and unkempt, and as he finally stepped
into view I saw that he was garbed in the same primitive
fashion.
He stood for a moment gazing about
in search of me, and then he advanced. As he
did so a number of others, precisely like him, stepped
from the concealing verdure of nearby bushes and followed
in his wake. Keeping the trees between them
and me, I ran back a short distance until I found a
clump of underbrush that would effectually conceal
me, for I wished to discover the strength of the party
and its armament before attempting to parley with
it.
The useless destruction of any of
these poor creatures was the farthest idea from my
mind. I should have liked to have spoken with
them, but I did not care to risk having to use my
high-powered rifle upon them other than in the last
extremity.
Once in my new place of concealment,
I watched them as they approached the tree.
There were about thirty men in the party and one woman—a
girl whose hands seemed to be bound behind her and
who was being pulled along by two of the men.
They came forward warily, peering
cautiously into every bush and halting often.
At the body of the lion, they paused, and I could
see from their gesticulations and the higher pitch
of their voices that they were much excited over my
kill.
But presently they resumed their search
for me, and as they advanced I became suddenly aware
of the unnecessary brutality with which the girl’s
guards were treating her. She stumbled once,
not far from my place of concealment, and after the
balance of the party had passed me. As she did
so one of the men at her side jerked her roughly to
her feet and struck her across the mouth with his
fist.
Instantly my blood boiled, and forgetting
every consideration of caution, I leaped from my concealment,
and, springing to the man’s side, felled him
with a blow.
So unexpected had been my act that
it found him and his fellow unprepared; but instantly
the latter drew the knife that protruded from his
belt and lunged viciously at me, at the same time
giving voice to a wild cry of alarm.
The girl shrank back at sight of me,
her eyes wide in astonishment, and then my antagonist
was upon me. I parried his first blow with my
forearm, at the same time delivering a powerful blow
to his jaw that sent him reeling back; but he was
at me again in an instant, though in the brief interim
I had time to draw my revolver.
I saw his companion crawling slowly
to his feet, and the others of the party racing down
upon me. There was no time to argue now, other
than with the weapons we wore, and so, as the fellow
lunged at me again with the wicked-looking knife,
I covered his heart and pulled the trigger.
Without a sound, he slipped to the
earth, and then I turned the weapon upon the other
guard, who was now about to attack me. He, too,
collapsed, and I was alone with the astonished girl.
The balance of the party was some
twenty paces from us, but coming rapidly. I
seized her arm and drew her after me behind a nearby
tree, for I had seen that with both their comrades
down the others were preparing to launch their spears.
With the girl safe behind the tree,
I stepped out in sight of the advancing foe, shouting
to them that I was no enemy, and that they should
halt and listen to me. But for answer they only
yelled in derision and launched a couple of spears
at me, both of which missed.
I saw then that I must fight, yet
still I hated to slay them, and it was only as a final
resort that I dropped two of them with my rifle, bringing
the others to a temporary halt. Again, I appealed
to them to desist. But they only mistook my
solicitude for them for fear, and, with shouts of
rage and derision, leaped forward once again to overwhelm
me.
It was now quite evident that I must
punish them severely, or—myself—die
and relinquish the girl once more to her captors.
Neither of these things had I the slightest notion
of doing, and so I again stepped from behind the tree,
and, with all the care and deliberation of target
practice, I commenced picking off the foremost of
my assailants.
One by one the wild men dropped, yet
on came the others, fierce and vengeful, until, only
a few remaining, these seemed to realize the futility
of combating my modern weapon with their primitive
spears, and, still howling wrathfully, withdrew toward
the west.
Now, for the first time, I had an
opportunity to turn my attention toward the girl,
who had stood, silent and motionless, behind me as
I pumped death into my enemies and hers from my automatic
rifle.
She was of medium height, well formed,
and with fine, clear-cut features. Her forehead
was high, and her eyes both intelligent and beautiful.
Exposure to the sun had browned a smooth and velvety
skin to a shade which seemed to enhance rather than
mar an altogether lovely picture of youthful femininity.
A trace of apprehension marked her
expression—I cannot call it fear since
I have learned to know her—and astonishment
was still apparent in her eyes. She stood quite
erect, her hands still bound behind her, and met my
gaze with level, proud return.
“What language do you speak?”
I asked. “Do you understand mine?”
“Yes,” she replied.
“It is similar to my own. I am Grabritin.
What are you?”
“I am a Pan-American,”
I answered. She shook her head. “What
is that?”
I pointed toward the west. “Far
away, across the ocean.”
Her expression altered a trifle.
A slight frown contracted her brow. The expression
of apprehension deepened.
“Take off your cap,” she
said, and when, to humor her strange request, I did
as she bid, she appeared relieved. Then she edged
to one side and leaned over seemingly to peer behind
me. I turned quickly to see what she discovered,
but finding nothing, wheeled about to see that her
expression was once more altered.
“You are not from there?”
and she pointed toward the east. It was a half
question. “You are not from across the
water there?”
“No,” I assured her.
“I am from Pan-America, far away to the west.
Have you ever heard of Pan-America?”
She shook her head in negation.
“I do not care where you are from,” she
explained, “if you are not from there, and I
am sure you are not, for the men from there have horns
and tails.”
It was with difficulty that I restrained
a smile.
“Who are the men from there?” I asked.
“They are bad men,” she
replied. “Some of my people do not believe
that there are such creatures. But we have a
legend—a very old, old legend, that once
the men from there came across to Grabritin.
They came upon the water, and under the water, and
even in the air. They came in great numbers,
so that they rolled across the land like a great gray
fog. They brought with them thunder and lightning
and smoke that killed, and they fell upon us and slew
our people by the thousands and the hundreds of thousands.
But at last we drove them back to the water’s
edge, back into the sea, where many were drowned.
Some escaped, and these our people followed—men,
women, and even children, we followed them back.
That is all. The legend says our people never
returned. Maybe they were all killed. Maybe
they are still there. But this, also, is in
the legend, that as we drove the men back across the
water they swore that they would return, and that
when they left our shores they would leave no human
being alive behind them. I was afraid that you
were from there.”
“By what name were these men called?”
I asked.
“We call them only the ‘men
from there,’” she replied, pointing toward
the east. “I have never heard that they
had another name.”
In the light of what I knew of ancient
history, it was not difficult for me to guess the
nationality of those she described simply as “the
men from over there.” But what utter and
appalling devastation the Great War must have wrought
to have erased not only every sign of civilization
from the face of this great land, but even the name
of the enemy from the knowledge and language of the
people.
I could only account for it on the
hypothesis that the country had been entirely depopulated
except for a few scattered and forgotten children,
who, in some marvelous manner, had been preserved
by Providence to re-populate the land. These
children had, doubtless, been too young to retain
in their memories to transmit to their children any
but the vaguest suggestion of the cataclysm which had
overwhelmed their parents.
Professor Cortoran, since my return
to Pan-America, has suggested another theory which
is not entirely without claim to serious consideration.
He points out that it is quite beyond the pale of
human instinct to desert little children as my theory
suggests the ancient English must have done.
He is more inclined to believe that the expulsion of
the foe from England was synchronous with widespread
victories by the allies upon the continent, and that
the people of England merely emigrated from their
ruined cities and their devastated, blood-drenched
fields to the mainland, in the hope of finding, in
the domain of the conquered enemy, cities and farms
which would replace those they had lost.
The learned professor assumes that
while a long-continued war had strengthened rather
than weakened the instinct of paternal devotion, it
had also dulled other humanitarian instincts, and
raised to the first magnitude the law of the survival
of the fittest, with the result that when the exodus
took place the strong, the intelligent, and the cunning,
together with their offspring, crossed the waters
of the Channel or the North Sea to the continent, leaving
in unhappy England only the helpless inmates of asylums
for the feebleminded and insane.
My objections to this, that the present
inhabitants of England are mentally fit, and could
therefore not have descended from an ancestry of undiluted
lunacy he brushes aside with the assertion that insanity
is not necessarily hereditary; and that even though
it was, in many cases a return to natural conditions
from the state of high civilization, which is thought
to have induced mental disease in the ancient world,
would, after several generations, have thoroughly
expunged every trace of the affliction from the brains
and nerves of the descendants of the original maniacs.
Personally, I do not place much stock
in Professor Cortoran’s theory, though I admit
that I am prejudiced. Naturally one does not
care to believe that the object of his greatest affection
is descended from a gibbering idiot and a raving maniac.
But I am forgetting the continuity
of my narrative—a continuity which I desire
to maintain, though I fear that I shall often be led
astray, so numerous and varied are the bypaths of
speculation which lead from the present day story
of the Grabritins into the mysterious past of their
forbears.
As I stood talking with the girl I
presently recollected that she still was bound, and
with a word of apology, I drew my knife and cut the
rawhide thongs which confined her wrists at her back.
She thanked me, and with such a sweet
smile that I should have been amply repaid by it for
a much more arduous service.
“And now,” I said, “let
me accompany you to your home and see you safely again
under the protection of your friends.”
“No,” she said, with a
hint of alarm in her voice; “you must not come
with me—Buckingham will kill you.”
Buckingham. The name was famous
in ancient English history. Its survival, with
many other illustrious names, is one of the strongest
arguments in refutal of Professor Cortoran’s
theory; yet it opens no new doors to the past, and,
on the whole, rather adds to than dissipates the mystery.
“And who is Buckingham,”
I asked, “and why should he wish to kill me?”
“He would think that you had
stolen me,” she replied, “and as he wishes
me for himself, he will kill any other whom he thinks
desires me. He killed Wettin a few days ago.
My mother told me once that Wettin was my father.
He was king. Now Buckingham is king.”
Here, evidently, were a people slightly
superior to those of the Isle of Wight. These
must have at least the rudiments of civilized government
since they recognized one among them as ruler, with
the title, king. Also, they retained the word
father. The girl’s pronunciation, while
far from identical with ours, was much closer than
the tortured dialect of the Eastenders of the Isle
of Wight. The longer I talked with her the more
hopeful I became of finding here, among her people,
some records, or traditions, which might assist in
clearing up the historic enigma of the past two centuries.
I asked her if we were far from the city of London,
but she did not know what I meant. When I tried
to explain, describing mighty buildings of stone and
brick, broad avenues, parks, palaces, and countless
people, she but shook her head sadly.
“There is no such place near
by,” she said. “Only the Camp of
the Lions has places of stone where the beasts lair,
but there are no people in the Camp of the Lions.
Who would dare go there!” And she shuddered.
“The Camp of the Lions,”
I repeated. “And where is that, and what?”
“It is there,” she said,
pointing up the river toward the west. “I
have seen it from a great distance, but I have never
been there. We are much afraid of the lions,
for this is their country, and they are angry that
man has come to live here.
“Far away there,” and
she pointed toward the south-west, “is the land
of tigers, which is even worse than this, the land
of the lions, for the tigers are more numerous than
the lions and hungrier for human flesh. There
were tigers here long ago, but both the lions and
the men set upon them and drove them off.”
“Where did these savage beasts
come from?” I asked.
“Oh,” she replied, “they
have been here always. It is their country.”
“Do they not kill and eat your people?”
I asked.
“Often, when we meet them by
accident, and we are too few to slay them, or when
one goes too close to their camp. But seldom
do they hunt us, for they find what food they need
among the deer and wild cattle, and, too, we make them
gifts, for are we not intruders in their country?
Really we live upon good terms with them, though
I should not care to meet one were there not many
spears in my party.”
“I should like to visit this
Camp of the Lions,” I said.
“Oh, no, you must not!”
cried the girl. “That would be terrible.
They would eat you.” For a moment, then,
she seemed lost in thought, but presently she turned
upon me with: “You must go now, for any
minute Buckingham may come in search of me.
Long since should they have learned that I am gone
from the camp—they watch over me very closely—and
they will set out after me. Go! I shall
wait here until they come in search of me.”
“No,” I told her.
“I’ll not leave you alone in a land infested
by lions and other wild beasts. If you won’t
let me go as far as your camp with you, then I’ll
wait here until they come in search of you.”
“Please go!” she begged.
“You have saved me, and I would save you, but
nothing will save you if Buckingham gets his hands
on you. He is a bad man. He wishes to have
me for his woman so that he may be king. He
would kill anyone who befriended me, for fear that
I might become another’s.”
“Didn’t you say that Buckingham
is already the king?” I asked.
“He is. He took my mother
for his woman after he had killed Wettin. But
my mother will die soon—she is very old—and
then the man to whom I belong will become king.”
Finally, after much questioning, I
got the thing through my head. It appears that
the line of descent is through the women. A
man is merely head of his wife’s family—that
is all. If she chances to be the oldest female
member of the “royal” house, he is king.
Very naively the girl explained that there was seldom
any doubt as to whom a child’s mother was.
This accounted for the girl’s
importance in the community and for Buckingham’s
anxiety to claim her, though she told me that she
did not wish to become his woman, for he was a bad
man and would make a bad king. But he was powerful,
and there was no other man who dared dispute his wishes.
“Why not come with me,”
I suggested, “if you do not wish to become Buckingham’s?”
“Where would you take me?” she asked.
Where, indeed! I had not thought
of that. But before I could reply to her question
she shook her head and said, “No, I cannot leave
my people. I must stay and do my best, even
if Buckingham gets me, but you must go at once.
Do not wait until it is too late. The lions
have had no offering for a long time, and Buckingham
would seize upon the first stranger as a gift to them.”
I did not perfectly understand what
she meant, and was about to ask her when a heavy body
leaped upon me from behind, and great arms encircled
my neck. I struggled to free myself and turn
upon my antagonist, but in another instant I was overwhelmed
by a half dozen powerful, half-naked men, while a
score of others surrounded me, a couple of whom seized
the girl.
I fought as best I could for my liberty
and for hers, but the weight of numbers was too great,
though I had the satisfaction at least of giving them
a good fight.
When they had overpowered me, and
I stood, my hands bound behind me, at the girl’s
side, she gazed commiseratingly at me.
“It is too bad that you did
not do as I bid you,” she said, “for now
it has happened just as I feared—Buckingham
has you.”
“Which is Buckingham?” I asked.
“I am Buckingham,” growled
a burly, unwashed brute, swaggering truculently before
me. “And who are you who would have stolen
my woman?”
The girl spoke up then and tried to
explain that I had not stolen her; but on the contrary
I had saved her from the men from the “Elephant
Country” who were carrying her away.
Buckingham only sneered at her explanation,
and a moment later gave the command that started us
all off toward the west. We marched for a matter
of an hour or so, coming at last to a collection of
rude huts, fashioned from branches of trees covered
with skins and grasses and sometimes plastered with
mud. All about the camp they had erected a wall
of saplings pointed at the tops and fire hardened.
This palisade was a protection against
both man and beasts, and within it dwelt upward of
two thousand persons, the shelters being built very
close together, and sometimes partially underground,
like deep trenches, with the poles and hides above
merely as protection from the sun and rain.
The older part of the camp consisted
almost wholly of trenches, as though this had been
the original form of dwellings which was slowly giving
way to the drier and airier surface domiciles.
In these trench habitations I saw a survival of the
military trenches which formed so famous a part of
the operation of the warring nations during the twentieth
century.
The women wore a single light deerskin
about their hips, for it was summer, and quite warm.
The men, too, were clothed in a single garment, usually
the pelt of some beast of prey. The hair of both
men and women was confined by a rawhide thong passing
about the forehead and tied behind. In this
leathern band were stuck feathers, flowers, or the
tails of small mammals. All wore necklaces of
the teeth or claws of wild beasts, and there were
numerous metal wristlets and anklets among them.
They wore, in fact, every indication
of a most primitive people—a race which
had not yet risen to the heights of agriculture or
even the possession of domestic animals. They
were hunters—the lowest plane in the evolution
of the human race of which science takes cognizance.
And yet as I looked at their well
shaped heads, their handsome features, and their intelligent
eyes, it was difficult to believe that I was not among
my own. It was only when I took into consideration
their mode of living, their scant apparel, the lack
of every least luxury among them, that I was forced
to admit that they were, in truth, but ignorant savages.
Buckingham had relieved me of my weapons,
though he had not the slightest idea of their purpose
or uses, and when we reached the camp he exhibited
both me and my arms with every indication of pride
in this great capture.
The inhabitants flocked around me,
examining my clothing, and exclaiming in wonderment
at each new discovery of button, buckle, pocket, and
flap. It seemed incredible that such a thing
could be, almost within a stone’s throw of the
spot where but a brief two centuries before had stood
the greatest city of the world.
They bound me to a small tree that
grew in the middle of one of their crooked streets,
but the girl they released as soon as we had entered
the enclosure. The people greeted her with every
mark of respect as she hastened to a large hut near
the center of the camp.
Presently she returned with a fine
looking, white-haired woman, who proved to be her
mother. The older woman carried herself with
a regal dignity that seemed quite remarkable in a
place of such primitive squalor.
The people fell aside as she approached,
making a wide way for her and her daughter.
When they had come near and stopped before me the
older woman addressed me.
“My daughter has told me,”
she said, “of the manner in which you rescued
her from the men of the elephant country. If
Wettin lived you would be well treated, but Buckingham
has taken me now, and is king. You can hope
for nothing from such a beast as Buckingham.”
The fact that Buckingham stood within
a pace of us and was an interested listener appeared
not to temper her expressions in the slightest.
“Buckingham is a pig,”
she continued. “He is a coward. He
came upon Wettin from behind and ran his spear through
him. He will not be king for long. Some
one will make a face at him, and he will run away
and jump into the river.”
The people began to titter and clap
their hands. Buckingham became red in the face.
It was evident that he was far from popular.
“If he dared,” went on
the old lady, “he would kill me now, but he
does not dare. He is too great a coward.
If I could help you I should gladly do so.
But I am only queen—the vehicle that has
helped carry down, unsullied, the royal blood from
the days when Grabritin was a mighty country.”
The old queen’s words had a
noticeable effect upon the mob of curious savages
which surrounded me. The moment they discovered
that the old queen was friendly to me and that I had
rescued her daughter they commenced to accord me a
more friendly interest, and I heard many words spoken
in my behalf, and demands were made that I not be
harmed.
But now Buckingham interfered.
He had no intention of being robbed of his prey.
Blustering and storming, he ordered the people back
to their huts, at the same time directing two of his
warriors to confine me in a dugout in one of the trenches
close to his own shelter.
Here they threw me upon the ground,
binding my ankles together and trussing them up to
my wrists behind. There they left me, lying
upon my stomach—a most uncomfortable and
strained position, to which was added the pain where
the cords cut into my flesh.
Just a few days ago my mind had been
filled with the anticipation of the friendly welcome
I should find among the cultured Englishmen of London.
Today I should be sitting in the place of honor at
the banquet board of one of London’s most exclusive
clubs, feted and lionized.
The actuality! Here I lay, bound
hand and foot, doubtless almost upon the very site
of a part of ancient London, yet all about me was
a primeval wilderness, and I was a captive of half-naked
wild men.
I wondered what had become of Delcarte
and Taylor and Snider. Would they search for
me? They could never find me, I feared, yet
if they did, what could they accomplish against this
horde of savage warriors?
Would that I could warn them.
I thought of the girl— doubtless she could
get word to them, but how was I to communicate with
her? Would she come to see me before I was killed?
It seemed incredible that she should not make some
slight attempt to befriend me; yet, as I recalled,
she had made no effort to speak with me after we had
reached the village. She had hastened to her
mother the moment she had been liberated. Though
she had returned with the old queen, she had not spoken
to me, even then. I began to have my doubts.
Finally, I came to the conclusion
that I was absolutely friendless except for the old
queen. For some unaccountable reason my rage
against the girl for her ingratitude rose to colossal
proportions.
For a long time I waited for some
one to come to my prison whom I might ask to bear
word to the queen, but I seemed to have been forgotten.
The strained position in which I lay became unbearable.
I wriggled and twisted until I managed to turn myself
partially upon my side, where I lay half facing the
entrance to the dugout.
Presently my attention was attracted
by the shadow of something moving in the trench without,
and a moment later the figure of a child appeared,
creeping upon all fours, as, wide-eyed, and prompted
by childish curiosity, a little girl crawled to the
entrance of my hut and peered cautiously and fearfully
in.
I did not speak at first for fear
of frightening the little one away. But when
I was satisfied that her eyes had become sufficiently
accustomed to the subdued light of the interior, I
smiled.
Instantly the expression of fear faded
from her eyes to be replaced with an answering smile.
“Who are you, little girl?” I asked.
“My name is Mary,” she replied.
“I am Victory’s sister.”
“And who is Victory?”
“You do not know who Victory
is?” she asked, in astonishment.
I shook my head in negation.
“You saved her from the elephant
country people, and yet you say you do not know her!”
she exclaimed.
“Oh, so she is Victory, and
you are her sister! I have not heard her name
before. That is why I did not know whom you
meant,” I explained. Here was just the
messenger for me. Fate was becoming more kind.
“Will you do something for me, Mary?”
I asked.
“If I can.”
“Go to your mother, the queen,
and ask her to come to me,” I said. “I
have a favor to ask.”
She said that she would, and with
a parting smile she left me.
For what seemed many hours I awaited
her return, chafing with impatience. The afternoon
wore on and night came, and yet no one came near me.
My captors brought me neither food nor water.
I was suffering considerable pain where the rawhide
thongs cut into my swollen flesh. I thought that
they had either forgotten me, or that it was their
intention to leave me here to die of starvation.
Once I heard a great uproar in the
village. Men were shouting—women
were screaming and moaning. After a time this
subsided, and again there was a long interval of silence.
Half the night must have been spent
when I heard a sound in the trench near the hut.
It resembled muffled sobs. Presently a figure
appeared, silhouetted against the lesser darkness
beyond the doorway. It crept inside the hut.
“Are you here?” whispered a childlike
voice.
It was Mary! She had returned.
The thongs no longer hurt me. The pangs of
hunger and thirst disappeared. I realized that
it had been loneliness from which I suffered most.
“Mary!” I exclaimed.
“You are a good girl. You have come back,
after all. I had commenced to think that you
would not. Did you give my message to the queen?
Will she come? Where is she?”
The child’s sobs increased,
and she flung herself upon the dirt floor of the hut,
apparently overcome by grief.
“What is it?” I asked. “Why
do you cry?”
“The queen, my mother, will
not come to you,” she said, between sobs.
“She is dead. Buckingham has killed her.
Now he will take Victory, for Victory is queen.
He kept us fastened up in our shelter, for fear that
Victory would escape him, but I dug a hole beneath
the back wall and got out. I came to you, because
you saved Victory once before, and I thought that
you might save her again, and me, also. Tell
me that you will.”
“I am bound and helpless, Mary,”
I replied. “Otherwise I would do what
I could to save you and your sister.”
“I will set you free!”
cried the girl, creeping up to my side. “I
will set you free, and then you may come and slay
Buckingham.”
“Gladly!” I assented.
“We must hurry,” she went
on, as she fumbled with the hard knots in the stiffened
rawhide, “for Buckingham will be after you soon.
He must make an offering to the lions at dawn before
he can take Victory. The taking of a queen requires
a human offering!”
“And I am to be the offering?” I asked.
“Yes,” she said, tugging
at a knot. “Buckingham has been wanting
a sacrifice ever since he killed Wettin, that he might
slay my mother and take Victory.”
The thought was horrible, not solely
because of the hideous fate to which I was condemned,
but from the contemplation it engendered of the sad
decadence of a once enlightened race. To these
depths of ignorance, brutality, and superstition had
the vaunted civilization of twentieth century England
been plunged, and by what? War! I felt
the structure of our time-honored militaristic arguments
crumbling about me.
Mary labored with the thongs that
confined me. They proved refractory—defying
her tender, childish fingers. She assured me,
however, that she would release me, if “they”
did not come too soon.
But, alas, they came. We heard
them coming down the trench, and I bade Mary hide
in a corner, lest she be discovered and punished.
There was naught else she could do, and so she crawled
away into the Stygian blackness behind me.
Presently two warriors entered.
The leader exhibited a unique method of discovering
my whereabouts in the darkness. He advanced slowly,
kicking out viciously before him. Finally he
kicked me in the face. Then he knew where I was.
A moment later I had been jerked roughly
to my feet. One of the fellows stopped and severed
the bonds that held my ankles. I could scarcely
stand alone. The two pulled and hauled me through
the low doorway and along the trench. A party
of forty or fifty warriors were awaiting us at the
brink of the excavation some hundred yards from the
hut.
Hands were lowered to us, and we were
dragged to the surface. Then commenced a long
march. We stumbled through the underbrush wet
with dew, our way lighted by a score of torchbearers
who surrounded us. But the torches were not to
light the way—that was but incidental.
They were carried to keep off the huge Carnivora
that moaned and coughed and roared about us.
The noises were hideous. The
whole country seemed alive with lions. Yellow-green
eyes blazed wickedly at us from out the surrounding
darkness. My escort carried long, heavy spears.
These they kept ever pointed toward the beast of
prey, and I learned from snatches of the conversation
I overheard that occasionally there might be a lion
who would brave even the terrors of fire to leap in
upon human prey. It was for such that the spears
were always couched.
But nothing of the sort occurred during
this hideous death march, and with the first pale
heralding of dawn we reached our goal—an
open place in the midst of a tangled wildwood.
Here rose in crumbling grandeur the first evidences
I had seen of the ancient civilization which once
had graced fair Albion—a single, time-worn
arch of masonry.
“The entrance to the Camp of
the Lions!” murmured one of the party in a voice
husky with awe.
Here the party knelt, while Buckingham
recited a weird, prayer-like chant. It was rather
long, and I recall only a portion of it, which ran,
if my memory serves me, somewhat as follows:
Lord of Grabritin, we Fall on our knees to
thee, This gift to bring.  Greatest of kings
are thou!  To thee we humbly bow!  Peace to
our camp allow.  God save thee, king!
Then the party rose, and dragging
me to the crumbling arch, made me fast to a huge,
corroded, copper ring which was dangling from an eyebolt
imbedded in the masonry.
None of them, not even Buckingham,
seemed to feel any personal animosity toward me.
They were naturally rough and brutal, as primitive
men are supposed to have been since the dawn of humanity,
but they did not go out of their way to maltreat me.
With the coming of dawn the number
of lions about us seemed to have greatly diminished—at
least they made less noise— and as Buckingham
and his party disappeared into the woods, leaving
me alone to my terrible fate, I could hear the grumblings
and growlings of the beasts diminishing with the sound
of the chant, which the party still continued.
It appeared that the lions had failed to note that
I had been left for their breakfast, and had followed
off after their worshippers instead.
But I knew the reprieve would be but
for a short time, and though I had no wish to die,
I must confess that I rather wished the ordeal over
and the peace of oblivion upon me.
The voices of the men and the lions
receded in the distance, until finally quiet reigned
about me, broken only by the sweet voices of birds
and the sighing of the summer wind in the trees.
It seemed impossible to believe that
in this peaceful woodland setting the frightful thing
was to occur which must come with the passing of the
next lion who chanced within sight or smell of the
crumbling arch.
I strove to tear myself loose from
my bonds, but succeeded only in tightening them about
my arms. Then I remained passive for a long
time, letting the scenes of my lifetime pass in review
before my mind’s eye.
I tried to imagine the astonishment,
incredulity, and horror with which my family and friends
would be overwhelmed if, for an instant, space could
be annihilated and they could see me at the gates
of London.
The gates of London! Where was
the multitude hurrying to the marts of trade after
a night of pleasure or rest? Where was the clang
of tramcar gongs, the screech of motor horns, the
vast murmur of a dense throng?
Where were they? And as I asked
the question a lone, gaunt lion strode from the tangled
jungle upon the far side of the clearing. Majestically
and noiselessly upon his padded feet the king of beasts
moved slowly toward the gates of London and toward
me.
Was I afraid? I fear that I
was almost afraid. I know that I thought that
fear was coming to me, and so I straightened up and
squared my shoulders and looked the lion straight in
the eyes—and waited.
It is not a nice way to die—alone,
with one’s hands fast bound, beneath the fangs
and talons of a beast of prey. No, it is not
a nice way to die, not a pretty way.
The lion was halfway across the clearing
when I heard a slight sound behind me. The great
cat stopped in his tracks. He lashed his tail
against his sides now, instead of simply twitching
its tip, and his low moan became a thunderous roar.
As I craned my neck to catch a glimpse
of the thing that had aroused the fury of the beast
before me, it sprang through the arched gateway and
was at my side—with parted lips and heaving
bosom and disheveled hair—a bronzed and
lovely vision to eyes that had never harbored hope
of rescue.
It was Victory, and in her arms she
clutched my rifle and revolver. A long knife
was in the doeskin belt that supported the doeskin
skirt tightly about her lithe limbs. She dropped
my weapons at my feet, and, snatching the knife from
its resting place, severed the bonds that held me.
I was free, and the lion was preparing to charge.
“Run!” I cried to the
girl, as I bent and seized my rifle. But she
only stood there at my side, her bared blade ready
in her hand.
The lion was bounding toward us now
in prodigious leaps. I raised the rifle and
fired. It was a lucky shot, for I had no time
to aim carefully, and when the beast crumpled and
rolled, lifeless, to the ground, I went upon my knees
and gave thanks to the God of my ancestors.
And, still upon my knees, I turned,
and taking the girl’s hand in mine, I kissed
it. She smiled at that, and laid her other hand
upon my head.
“You have strange customs in
your country,” she said.
I could not but smile at that when
I thought how strange it would seem to my countrymen
could they but see me kneeling there on the site of
London, kissing the hand of England’s queen.
“And now,” I said, as
I rose, “you must return to the safety of your
camp. I will go with you until you are near enough
to continue alone in safety. Then I shall try
to return to my comrades.”
“I will not return to the camp,” she replied.
“But what shall you do?” I asked.
“I do not know. Only I
shall never go back while Buckingham lives.
I should rather die than go back to him. Mary
came to me, after they had taken you from the camp,
and told me. I found your strange weapons and
followed with them. It took me a little longer,
for often I had to hide in the trees that the lions
might not get me, but I came in time, and now you
are free to go back to your friends.”
“And leave you here?” I exclaimed.
She nodded, but I could see through
all her brave front that she was frightened at the
thought. I could not leave her, of course, but
what in the world I was to do, cumbered with the care
of a young woman, and a queen at that, I was at a
loss to know. I pointed out that phase of it
to her, but she only shrugged her shapely shoulders
and pointed to her knife.
It was evident that she felt entirely
competent to protect herself.
As we stood there we heard the sound
of voices. They were coming from the forest
through which we had passed when we had come from
camp.
“They are searching for me,”
said the girl. “Where shall we hide?”
I didn’t relish hiding.
But when I thought of the innumerable dangers which
surrounded us and the comparatively small amount of
ammunition that I had with me, I hesitated to provoke
a battle with Buckingham and his warriors when, by
flight, I could avoid them and preserve my cartridges
against emergencies which could not be escaped.
“Would they follow us there?”
I asked, pointing through the archway into the Camp
of the Lions.
“Never,” she replied,
“for, in the first place, they would know that
we would not dare go there, and in the second they
themselves would not dare.”
“Then we shall take refuge in
the Camp of the Lions,” I said.
She shuddered and drew closer to me.
“You dare?” she asked.
“Why not?” I returned.
“We shall be safe from Buckingham, and you
have seen, for the second time in two days, that lions
are harmless before my weapons. Then, too, I
can find my friends easiest in this direction, for
the River Thames runs through this place you call
the Camp of the Lions, and it is farther down the
Thames that my friends are awaiting me. Do you
not dare come with me?”
“I dare follow wherever you lead,” she
answered simply.
And so I turned and passed beneath
the great arch into the city of London.