<h2 id="CHVII">CHAPTER VII</h2>
<h3>A FIGHT AND A CHANCE</h3></div>
<p>After occupying the new village, Orthis and I were separated,
he being assigned a hut close to Ga-va-go, while I was
placed in another section of the village. If I could have
been said to have been on good terms with any of the terrible
creatures of the tribe, it was with the woman who had
taught me the language of the Va-gas, and it was from her
that I learned why Orthis was treated with such marked
distinction by Ga-va-go, whom, it seemed, he had promised
to lead to the land of our origin, where, he had assured the
savage chieftain, he would find flesh in abundance.</p>
<p>Nah-ee-lah was confined in still another part of the village,
and I only saw her occasionally, for it was evident that
Ga-va-go wished to keep the prisoners separated. Upon one
occasion when I met her at the shore of the lake I asked her
why it was that they had not slain and eaten her, and she
told me that when Ga-va-go had discovered her identity, and
that her father was a Jemadar, a ruler of a great city, he
had sent messengers with an offer to return Nah-ee-lah for a
ransom of one hundred young women of the city of Laythe.</p>
<p>“Do you think your father will send the ransom?” I asked.</p>
<p>“I do not know,” she replied. “I do not see how they are
going to get a message to him, for ordinarily, my race kills the
Va-gas on sight. They may succeed, however, but even so,
it is possible that my father will not send the ransom. I would
not wish him to. The daughters of my father’s people are
as dear to them, as am I to him. It would be wrong to give
a hundred of the daughters of Laythe in return for one, even
though she be the daughter of the Jemadar.”</p>
<p>We had drunk, and were returning toward our huts when,
wishing to prolong our conversation and to be with this
pleasant companion while I might, I suggested that we walk
farther into the woods and gather fruit. Nah-ee-lah signified
her willingness, and together we strolled out of the village
into the denser woods at its rear, where we found a particularly
delicious fruit growing in abundance. I gathered some
and offered it to her, but she refused, thanking me, saying
that she had but just eaten.</p>
<p>“Do they bring the fruit to you,” I asked, “or do you have
to come and gather it yourself?”</p>
<p>“What fruit I get I gather,” she replied, “but they bring
me flesh. It is of that which I have just eaten, and so I do
not care for fruit now.”</p>
<p>“Flesh!” I exclaimed. “What kind of flesh?”</p>
<p>“The flesh of the Va-gas, of course,” she replied. “What
other flesh might a U-ga eat?”</p>
<p>I fear that I ill-concealed my surprise and disgust at the
thought that the beautiful Nah-ee-lah ate of the flesh of the
Va-gas.</p>
<p>“You, too, eat of the flesh of these creatures?” I demanded.</p>
<p>“Why not?” she asked. “You eat flesh, do you not, in
your own country. You have told me that you raise beasts
solely for their flesh.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” I replied, “that is true, but we eat only the flesh of
lower orders; we do not eat the flesh of humans.”</p>
<p>“You mean that you do not eat the flesh of your own
species,” she said.</p>
<p>“Yes,” I replied, “that is what I mean.”</p>
<p>“Neither do I,” she said. “The Va-gas are not of the same
species as the U-ga. They are a lower order, just as are the
creatures whose flesh you eat in your own country. You have
told me of beef, and of mutton, and of pork, which you
have described as creatures that run about on four legs,
like the Va-gas. What is the difference, then, between the
eating of the flesh of pork and beef or mutton, and the
eating of Va-gas, who are low creatures also?”</p>
<p>“But they have human faces!” I cried, “and a spoken
language.”</p>
<p>“You had better learn to eat them,” she said, “otherwise
you will eat no flesh in Va-nah.”</p>
<p>The more I thought about it the more reason I saw in
her point of view. She was right. She was no more transgressing
any natural law in eating the flesh of the Va-gas than do
we, eating the flesh of cattle. To her the Va-gas were less
than cattle. They were dangerous and hated enemies. The
more I analyzed the thing, the more it seemed to me that we
humans of the earth were more surely transgressing a natural
law by devouring our domestic animals, many of which we
learned to love, than were the U-ga of Va-nah in devouring
the flesh of their four-footed foes, the Va-gas. Upon our
earthly farms we raise calves and sheep and little pigs, and
oftentimes we become greatly attached to individuals and
they to us. We gain their confidence, and they have implicit
trust in us, and yet, when they are of the right age, we slay
and devour them. Presently it did not seem either wrong
or unnatural that Nah-ee-lah should eat the flesh of the Va-gas,
but as for myself, I could never do it, nor ever did.</p>
<p>We had left the forest, and were returning to the village
to our huts when, near the large hut occupied by Ga-va-go,
we came suddenly upon Orthis. At the sight of us together
he scowled.</p>
<p>“If I were you,” he said to me, “I would not associate with
her too much. It may arouse the displeasure of Ga-va-go.”</p>
<p>It was the first time that Orthis had spoken to me since we
had occupied this village. I did not like his tone or his manner.</p>
<p>“You will please to mind your own business, Orthis,” I said
to him, and continued on with Nah-ee-lah. I saw the man’s
eyes narrow malignantly, and then he turned, and entered
the hut of Ga-va-go, the chief of the No-vans.</p>
<p>Every time I went to the river, I had to pass in the vicinity
of Nah-ee-lah’s hut. It was a little out of my way, but I always
made the slight detour in the hope of meeting her,
though I had never entered her hut nor called for her,
since she had never invited me and realizing her position, I
did not wish to intrude. I was of course ignorant of the social
customs of her people, and feared offending her accidentally.</p>
<p>It chanced that the next time that I walked down to the
lake shore, following our stroll in the woods, I made my
usual detour that I might pass by the hut of Nah-ee-lah. As
I came near I heard voices, one of which I recognized as that
of Nah-ee-lah, and the other, a man’s voice. The girl’s tones
were angry and imperious.</p>
<p>“Leave my presence, creature!” were the first words that I
could distinguish, and then the man’s voice.</p>
<p>“Come,” he said, ingratiatingly. “Let us be friends. Come to
my hut, and you will be safe, for Ga-va-go is my friend.” The
voice was the voice of Orthis.</p>
<p>“Go!” she ordered him again. “I would as soon lie with
Ga-va-go as with you.”</p>
<p>“Know then,” cried Orthis, angrily, “that you will go,
whether you wish it or not, for Ga-va-go has given you to me.
Come!” and then he must have seized her, for I heard her
cry out, “How dare you lay hands upon me, Nah-ee-lah,
princess of Laythe!”</p>
<p>I was close beside the entrance to the hut now, and I did
not wait to hear any more, but thrusting the hanging aside
entered. There they were, in the center of the single room,
Orthis struggling to drag the girl toward the opening while
she resisted and struck at him. Orthis’ back was toward me
and he did not know that there was another in the hut until
I had stepped up behind him and grasping him roughly by
the shoulder, had jerked him from the girl and swung him
about facing me.</p>
<p>“You cad,” I said, “get out of here before I kick you out,
and don’t ever let me hear of you molesting this girl again.”
His eyes narrowed, and he looked at me with an ugly light
in them. “Since boyhood, you have cheated me out of all that
I wished. You ruined my life on Earth, but now, conditions
are reversed. The tables are turned. Believe me, then, when
I tell you that if you interfere with me you sign your own
death warrant. It is only by my favor that you live at all. If I
gave the word Ga-va-go would destroy you at once. Go then to
your hut and stop your meddling in the affairs of others—a
habit that you developed in a most flagrant degree on Earth,
but which will avail you nothing here within the Moon. The
woman is mine. Ga-va-go has given her to me. Even if her
father should fail to send the ransom her life shall be spared
as long as I desire her. Your interference then can only result
in your death, and do her no good, for provided you are
successful in keeping me from her, you would be but condemning
her to death in the event that her father does not
send the ransom, and Ga-va-go has told me that there is little
likelihood of that, since it is scarcely possible that his messengers
will be able to deliver Ga-va-go’s demands to Sagroth.”</p>
<p>“You have heard him,” I said, turning to the girl. “What
are your wishes in the matter. Perhaps he speaks the truth.”</p>
<p>“I have no doubt but that he speaks the truth,” she replied,
“but know, strangers, that the honor of a princess of Laythe
is dearer than her life.”</p>
<p>“Very well, Orthis,” I said to the man. “You have heard
her. Now get out.”</p>
<p>He was almost white with anger, and for a moment I
thought that he was going to attack me, but he was ever a
coward, and contenting himself with giving me a venomous
look, he walked from the hut without another word.</p>
<p>I turned to Nah-ee-lah, after the hanging had dropped
behind Orthis. “It is too bad,” I said, “that with all your
suffering at the hands of the Va-gas, you should also be
annoyed by one who is practically of your own species.”</p>
<p>“Your kindness more than compensates,” she replied graciously.
“You are a brave man, and I am afraid that you
are going to suffer for your protection of me. This man is
powerful. He has made wonderful promises to Ga-va-go. He
is going to teach him how to use the strange weapons that
you brought from your own world. The woman who brings
me my meat told me of all this, and that the tribe is much
excited by the promises that your friend has made to Ga-va-go.
He will teach them to make the weapons, such as you
slew their warriors with, so that they will be invincible, and
may go abroad in Va-nah slaying all who oppose them and
even raiding the cities of the U-ga. He has told them that
he will lead them to the strange thing which brought you
from your world to Va-nah, and that there they will find
other weapons, like those that you carried, and having the
noise which they make, and the things with which they kill.
All these he says they may have, and that later he will
build other things, such as brought you from your world to
Va-nah, and he will take Ga-va-go and all the No-vans
to what you call Earth.”</p>
<p>“If there is any man in the universe who might do it, it is
he,” I replied, “but there is little likelihood that he can do it.
He is merely deceiving Ga-va-go in the hope of prolonging
his own life, against the possibility that an opportunity to
escape will develop, in which event he will return to our ship
and our friends. He is a bad man though, Nah-ee-lah, and
you must be careful of him. There is a vacant hut near
yours, and I will come and live in it. There is no use in
asking Ga-va-go, for if he is friendly with Orthis, he will not
permit me to make the change. If you ever need me, call
‘Julian’ as loud as you can, and I will come.”</p>
<p>“You are very good,” she said. “You are like the better men
of Laythe, the high nobles of the court of the Jemadar,
Sagroth, my father. They too are honorable men, to whom
a woman may look for protection, but there are no others in
all Va-nah since the Kalkars arose thousands of kelds ago,
and destroyed the power of the nobles and the Jemadars, and
all the civilization that was Va-nah’s. Only in Laythe, have
we preserved a semblance of the old order. I wish I might
take you to Laythe, for there you would be safe and happy.
You are a brave man. It is strange that you are not married.”</p>
<p>I was upon the point of making some reply, when the
hangings at the doorway parted, and a No-van warrior entered.
Behind him were three others. They were walking
erect, with drawn spears.</p>
<p>“Here he is,” said the leader, and then, addressing me,
“Come!”</p>
<p>“Why?” I asked. “What do you want of me?”</p>
<p>“Is it for you to question,” he demanded, “when Ga-va-go
commands?”</p>
<p>“He has sent for me?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Come!” repeated the leader, and an instant later they
had hooked their spears about my arms and neck and none
too gently they dragged me from the hut. I had something of
a presentiment that this was to be the end. At the doorway
I half turned to glance back at the girl. She was standing
wide-eyed and tense, watching them drag me away.</p>
<p>“Good-bye—Julian,” she said. “We shall never meet again
for there is none to carry our souls to a new incarnation.”</p>
<p>“We are not dead yet,” I called back, “and remember if
you need me call me,” and then the hanging dropped behind
us, and she was shut off from my vision.</p>
<p>They did not take me to my own hut, but to another, not
far distant from Nah-ee-lah’s, and there they bound my
hands and feet with strips of leather and threw me upon
the ground. Afterwards they left me, dropping the hanging
before the entrance. I did not think that they would eat
me, for Orthis had joined with me in explaining to Ga-va-go
and the others that our flesh was poisonous, and though
they may have questioned the veracity of our statements,
nevertheless I was quite sure that they would not risk the
chance of our having told the truth.</p>
<p>The Va-gas obtain their leather by curing the hides of
their dead. The better portions they use for their trappings
and harness. The other portions they cut into thin strips,
which they use in lieu of rope. Most of this is very strong,
but some of it is not, especially that which is improperly
cured.</p>
<p>The warriors who had been sent to seize me had scarcely
left the hut before I commenced working with my bonds in
an attempt to loosen or break them. I exerted all my strength
in the effort, until I became sure that those which held my
hands were stretching. The effort, however, was very tiring,
and I had to stop often and rest. I do not know how long I
worked at them, but it must have been a very long time
before I became convinced that however much they gave they
were not going to break. Just what I intended to do with
my freedom I do not know, since there was little or no
chance that I might escape from the village. Perpetual daylight
has its disadvantages, and this was one of them, that
there was no concealing nocturnal darkness during which I
might sneak away from the village unseen.</p>
<p>As I lay resting after my exertions, I suddenly became
aware of a strange, moaning sound from without, and then
the hut shook, and I realized that another storm had come.
Soon after I heard the beat of rain drops on the roof, and
then a staggering, deafening peal of lunar thunder. As the
storm waxed in violence, I could imagine the terror of the
No-vans, nor even in my plight could I resist the desire to
smile at their discomfiture. I knew that they must all be hiding
in their huts, and again I renewed my efforts to break the
bonds at my wrists, but all to no avail; and then suddenly,
above the moaning of the wind and the beating of the rain,
there came distinctly to my ears in a clear, full voice, a
single word: “Julian!”</p>
<p>“Nah-ee-lah,” I thought. “She needs me. What are they
doing to her?” There flashed quickly before my mental vision
a dozen scenes, in each of which I saw the divine figure of
the Moon Maid, the victim of some fiendish brutality. Now
she was being devoured by Ga-va-go; now some of the
females were tearing her to pieces, and again the warriors
were piercing that beautiful skin with their cruel spears; or it
was Orthis, come to claim Ga-va-go’s gift. It was this last
thought, I think, which turned me almost mad, giving to
my muscles the strength of a dozen men. I have always been
accounted a powerful man, but in the instant that that sweet
voice came across the storm to find me, and my imagination
pictured her in the clutches of Orthis, something within
moved me to Herculean efforts far transcending aught that
I had previously achieved. As though they had been cotton
twine now, the leather bonds at my wrists snapped asunder,
and an instant later those at my ankles were torn away,
and I was upon my feet. I sprang to the door and into the
open, where I found myself in a maelstrom of wind and rain.
In two bounds I had cleared the space between the hut in
which I had been confined and that occupied by Nah-ee-lah,
had torn the hanging aside, and had sprung into the interior;
and there I beheld the materialization of my last vision—there
was Orthis, one arm about the slender body of the girl
pinning her arms close to her side, while his other hand was
at her throat, choking her and pressing her slowly backward
across his knees toward the ground.</p>
<p>He was facing the door this time, and saw me enter, and as
he realized who it was, he hurled the girl roughly from
him and rose to meet me. For once in his life he seemed to
know no fear, and I think that what with his passion for the
girl, and the hatred he felt for me, and the rage that my
interference must have engendered, he was momentarily insane,
for he suddenly leaped upon me like a madman, and for
an instant I came near going down beneath his blows—but
only for an instant, and then I caught him heavily upon the
chin with my left fist, and again, full in the face with my
right, and though he was a splendid boxer, he was helpless
in my hands. Neither of us had a weapon, or one of us certainly
would have been killed in short order. As it was I tried to
kill him with my bare fists, and at last, when he had fallen
for the dozenth time, and I had picked him up and held him
upon his feet and struck him repeatedly again and again, he
no longer moved. I was sure that he was dead, and it was
with a feeling of relief and of satisfaction in a duty well
performed that I looked down upon his lifeless body. Then
I turned to Nah-ee-lah.</p>
<p>“Come,” I said, “there has been given to us this chance for
escape. Never again may such a fortuitous combination of
circumstances arise. The Va-gas will be hiding in their huts,
crouching in terror of the storm. I do not know whither we
may fly, but wherever it be, we can be in no greater danger
than we are here.”</p>
<p>She shuddered a little at the thought of going out into the
terrors of the storm. Though not so fearful of it as the ignorant
Va-gas, she still feared the wrath of the elements, as do all
the inhabitants of Va-nah, but she did not hesitate, and as
I stretched out a hand, she placed one of hers within it, and
together we stepped out into the swirling rain and wind.</p>
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