<h2 id="CHIX">CHAPTER IX</h2>
<h3>AN ATTACK BY KALKARS</h3></div>
<p>The tunnel in which I found myself and along which
Nah-ee-lah led me toward the city of Laythe was remarkable
in several particulars. It was largely of natural origin, seemingly
consisting of a series of caves which may have been
formed by bubbles in the cooling lava of the original molten
flow and which had later been connected by man to form a
continuous subterranean corridor. The caves themselves were
usually more or less spherical in shape and the debris from
the connecting passageways had been utilized to fill the bottoms
of them to the level of the main floor of the passageway.
The general trend of the tunnel was upward from the
point at which we had entered it, and there was a constant
draught of air rushing along it in the same direction in which
we were moving, assuring me that it was undoubtedly well
ventilated for its full length. The walls and ceiling were
coated with a substance of which radium was evidently one
of the ingredients, since even after we had lost sight of the
entrance the passageway was well illuminated. We had been
moving along in silence for quite a little distance when I
finally addressed Nah-ee-lah.</p>
<p>“It must seem good,” I said, “to travel again this familiar
tunnel of your native city. I know how happy I should be
were I thus approaching my own birthplace.”</p>
<p>“I am glad to be returning to Laythe,” she said, “for
many reasons, but for one I am sorry, and as for this passageway
it is scarcely more familiar to me than to you, since I
have traversed it but once before in my life and that when I
was a little girl and came here with my father and his court
upon the occasion of his periodical inspection of the passageway,
which is now practically never used.”</p>
<p>“If you are not familiar with the tunnel,” I asked, “are
you sure that there is no danger of our going astray at
some fork or branch?”</p>
<p>“There is but the one passageway,” she replied, “which
leads from the crater to Laythe.”</p>
<p>“And how long is the tunnel?” I asked. “Will we soon
enter the city?”</p>
<p>“No,” she replied, “it is a great distance from the crater
to Laythe.”</p>
<p>We had covered some little distance at this time, possibly
five or six miles, and she had scarcely ceased speaking
when a turn in the passageway led us into a cave of larger
proportions than any through which we had previously
passed and from the opposite side of which two passageways
diverged.</p>
<p>“I thought there were no branches,” I remarked.</p>
<p>“I do not understand it,” she said. “There is no branch
from the tunnel of Laythe.”</p>
<p>“Could it be possible that we are in the wrong tunnel?”
I asked, “and that this does not lead to Laythe?”</p>
<p>“A moment before I should have been sure that we were
in the right tunnel,” she replied, “but now, Julian, I do not
know, for never had I heard of any branch of our own
tunnel.”</p>
<p>We had crossed the cave and were standing between the
openings of the two divergent passageways.</p>
<p>“Which one shall we take?” I asked, but again she shook her
head.</p>
<p>“I do not know,” she replied.</p>
<p>“Listen!” I cautioned her. “What was that?” For I was sure
that I had heard a sound issuing from one of the tunnels.
We stood peering into an aperture which revealed about a
hundred yards of the passageway before an abrupt turn hid
the continuation of it from our view. We could hear what
now resolved itself into the faint sound of voices approaching
us along the corridor, and then quite suddenly the
figure of a man appeared around the corner of the turn.
Nah-ee-lah leaped to one side out of sight, drawing me with
her.</p>
<p>“A Kalkar!” she whispered. “Oh, Julian, if they find us
we are lost.”</p>
<p>“If there is only one of them I can take care of him,” I said.</p>
<p>“There will be more than one,” she replied; “there will be
many.”</p>
<p>“Then, let us return the way we came and make our way
to the top of the crater’s rim before they discover us. We
can throw their hooked poles into the crater, including the
one which we use to ascend from the mouth of the tunnel,
thus effectually preventing any pursuit.”</p>
<p>“We cannot cross this room again to the tunnel upon the
opposite side without being apprehended,” she replied. “Our
only hope is in hiding in this other tunnel until they have
passed and trusting to chance that we meet no one within it.”</p>
<p>“Come, then,” I said. “I dislike the idea of flying like a
scared rabbit, but neither would there be any great wisdom
in facing armed men without a single weapon of defense.”</p>
<p>Even as we had whispered thus briefly together, we found
the voices from the other tunnel had increased and I thought
that I noted a tone of excitement in them, though the
speakers were still too far away for us to understand their
words. We moved swiftly up the branch tunnel, Nah-ee-lah
in the lead, and after passing the first turn we both felt comparatively
safe, for Nah-ee-lah was sure that the men who had
interrupted our journey were a party of hunters on their way
to the outer world by means of the crater through which we
had entered the tunnel and that they would not come up the
branch in which we were hiding. Thus believing, we halted
after we were safely out of sight and hearing of the large cave
we had just left.</p>
<p>“That man was a Kalkar,” said Nah-ee-lah, “which means
that we are in the wrong tunnel and that we must retrace our
steps and continue our search for Laythe upon the surface
of the ground.” Her voice sounded tired and listless, as though
hope had suddenly deserted her brave heart. We were standing
shoulder to shoulder in the narrow corridor and I could
not resist the impulse to place an arm about her and comfort
her.</p>
<p>“Do not despair, Nah-ee-lah,” I begged her; “we are no
worse off than we have been and much better off than before
we escaped the Va-gas of Ga-va-go. Then do you not recall
that you mentioned one drawback to your return to Laythe—that
you might be as well off here as there? What was the
reason, Nah-ee-lah?”</p>
<p>“Ko-tah wants me in marriage,” she replied. “Ko-tah is
very powerful. He expects one day to be Jemadar of Laythe.
This he cannot be while I live unless he marries me.”</p>
<p>“Do you wish to marry him?” I asked.</p>
<p>“No,” she said; “not now. Before—” she hesitated—“before
I left Laythe I did not care so very much; but now I know
that I cannot wed with Ko-tah.”</p>
<p>“And your father,” I continued, “what of him—will he
insist that you marry Ko-tah?”</p>
<p>“He cannot do otherwise,” replied Nah-ee-lah, “for Ko-tah
is very powerful. If my father refuses to permit me to marry
him Ko-tah may overthrow him, and when my father is dead,
should I still refuse to marry Ko-tah he may slay me, also,
and then become Jemadar easily, for the blood of Jemadars
flows in his veins.”</p>
<p>“It appears to me, Nah-ee-lah, that you will be about as
badly off at home as anywhere else in Va-nah. It is too
bad that I cannot take you to my own Earth, where you
would be quite safe, and I am sure, happy.”</p>
<p>“I wish that you might, Julian,” she replied simply.</p>
<p>I was about to reply when she placed slim fingers upon
my lips. “Hush, Julian!” she whispered, “they are following us
up this corridor. Come quickly, we must escape before they
overtake us,” and so saying, she turned and ran quickly along
the corridor which led neither of us knew whither.</p>
<p>But we were soon to find out, for we had gone but a short
distance when we came to the tunnel’s end in a large circular
chamber, at one end of which was a rostrum upon which
were a massive, elaborately carved desk and a chair of
similar design. Below the rostrum were arranged other chairs
in rows, with a broad aisle down the center. The furniture,
though of peculiar design and elaborately carved with strange
figures of unearthly beasts and reptiles, was not, for all of
that, markedly dissimilar to articles of the same purpose
fabricated upon Earth. The chairs had four legs, high backs
and broad arms, seeming to have been designed equally for
durability, service, and comfort.</p>
<p>I glanced quickly around the apartment, as we first entered,
only taking in the details later, but I saw that there
was no other opening than the one through which we had
entered.</p>
<p>“We will have to wait here, Nah-ee-lah,” I said. “Perhaps,
though, all will be well—the Kalkars may prove friendly.”</p>
<p>She shook her head negatively. “No,” she said, “they will
not be friendly.”</p>
<p>“What will they do to us?” I asked.</p>
<p>“They will make slaves of us,” she replied, “and we shall
spend the balance of our lives working almost continuously
until we drop with fatigue under the cruelest of taskmakers,
for the Kalkars hate us of Laythe and will hesitate at nothing
that will humiliate or injure us.”</p>
<p>She had scarcely ceased speaking when there appeared in
the entrance of the cave the figure of a man about my own
height dressed in a tunic similar to Nah-ee-lah’s but evidently
made of leather. He carried a knife slung in a scabbard
depending from a shoulder belt, and in his right hand he
grasped a slender lance. His eyes were close set upon either
side of a prominent, hooked nose. They were watery, fishy,
blue eyes, and the hair growing profusely above his low
forehead was flaxen in color. His physique was admirable, except
for a noticeable stoop. His feet were very large and his
gait awkward when he moved. Behind him I could see the
heads and shoulders of others. They stood there grinning at
us for a moment, most malevolently, it seemed to me, and
then they entered the cave—a full dozen of them. There were
several types, with eyes and hair of different colors, the
former ranging from blue to brown, the latter from light blond
to almost black.</p>
<p>As they emerged from the mouth of the tunnel they
spread out and advanced slowly toward us. We were cornered
like rats in a trap. How I longed for the feel of my automatic
at my hip! I envied them their slender spears and their
daggers. If I could have but these I might have a chance
at least to take Nah-ee-lah out of their clutches and save her
from the hideous fate of slavery among the Kalkars, for I had
guessed what such slavery would mean to her from the little
that she had told me, and I had guessed, too, that she
would rather die than submit to it. For my own part, life
held little for me; I had long since definitely given up any
hope of ever returning to my own world, or of finding the
ship and being re-united with West and Jay and Norton.
There came upon me at that moment, however, a sense of
appreciation of the fact that since we had left the village of
the No-vans I had been far from unhappy, nor could I attribute
this to aught else than the companionship of Nah-ee-lah—a
realization that convinced me that I should be utterly
miserable were she to be taken from me now. Was I to submit
supinely then, to capture and slavery for myself and worse
than death for Nah-ee-lah, with the assurance of consequent
separation from her? No. I held up my hand as a signal for
the advancing Kalkars to halt.</p>
<p>“Stop!” I commanded. “Before you advance farther I wish
to know your intentions toward us. We entered this tunnel,
mistaking it for that which led to the city of my companion.
Permit us to depart in peace and all will be well.”</p>
<p>“All will be well, anyway,” replied the leader of the Kalkars.
“You are a strange creature, such as I have never before
seen in Va-nah. Of you we know nothing except that you
are not of the Kalkars, and therefore an enemy of the Kalkars,
but this other is from Laythe.”</p>
<p>“You will not permit us to go in peace, then?” I demanded.</p>
<p>He laughed sneeringly. “Nor in any other way,” he said.</p>
<p>I had been standing in the aisle, with my hand upon one of
the chairs near the rostrum and now I turned to Nah-ee-lah
who was standing close beside me.</p>
<p>“Come,” I said to her, “follow me; stay close behind me.”
Several of the Kalkars were coming down the main aisle
toward us, and as I turned toward them from speaking to
Nah-ee-lah, I raised the chair which my hand had been
resting upon, and swinging it quickly around my head
hurled it full in the face of the leader. As he went down Nah-ee-lah
and I ran forward, gaining a little toward the opening
of the tunnel, and then without pausing I hurled another
chair and a third and a fourth, in rapid succession. The
Kalkars tried to bring us down with their lances, but they
were so busy dodging chairs that they could not cast their
weapons accurately, and even those few which might otherwise
have struck us were warded off by my rather remarkable
engines of defense.</p>
<p>There had been four Kalkars advancing toward us down the
center aisle. The balance of the party had divided, half of it
circling the cave to the left and the other half to the right,
with the evident intention of coming up the center aisle
from behind us. This maneuver had started just before I commenced
hurling chairs at the four directly in front of us,
and now when those who had intended to take us from the
rear discovered that we were likely to make our way through
to the tunnel’s entrance, some of them sprang toward us
along the passageways between the chairs, which necessitated
my turning and devoting a moment’s attention to them. One
huge fellow was in the lead, coming across the backs of the
chairs leaping from seat to seat; and being the closest to me,
he was naturally my first target. The chairs were rather heavy
and the one that I let drive at him caught him full in the chest
with an impact that brought a howl from him and toppled
him over across the backs of the chairs behind him, where
he hung limp and motionless. Then I turned my attention
again to those before us, all of whom had fallen before my
massive ammunition. Three of them lay still, but one of them
had scrambled to his feet and was in the very act of casting
his lance as I looked. I stopped the weapon with a chair and
as the fellow went down I caught a glimpse of Nah-ee-lah
from the corners of my eyes as she snatched the lance from
the first Kalkar who had fallen and hurled it at someone
behind me. I heard a scream of rage and pain and then I
turned in time to see another of the Kalkars fall almost at my
feet, the lance imbedded in his heart.</p>
<p>The way before us was temporarily open, while the Kalkars
behind us had paused, momentarily, at least, in evident consternation
at the havoc I wrought with these unseemly
weapons against which they had no defense.</p>
<p>“Get two knives and two lances from those who have
fallen,” I cried to Nah-ee-lah, “while I hold these others back.”
She did as I bade, and slowly we backed toward the
mouth of the tunnel. My chairs had accounted for half our
enemies when at last we stood in the opening, each armed
with a lance and a knife.</p>
<p>“Now run, Nah-ee-lah, as you never ran before,” I whispered
to my companion. “I can hold them off until you have
reached the mouth of the tunnel and clambered to the rim
of the crater. If I am lucky, I will follow you.”</p>
<p>“I will not leave you, Julian,” she replied, “we will go together
or not at all.”</p>
<p>“But you must, Nah-ee-lah,” I insisted, “it is for you that I
have been fighting them. What difference can it make in my
fate where I am when in Va-nah—all here are my enemies.”</p>
<p>She laid her hand gently upon my arm. “I will not leave
you, Julian,” she repeated, “and that is final.”
The Kalkars within the room were now advancing toward
us menacingly.</p>
<p>“Halt!” I cried to them, “you see what fate your companions
have met, because you would not let us go in peace.
That is all we ask. I am armed now and it will be death to
any who follow us.”</p>
<p>They paused and I saw them whispering together as
Nah-ee-lah and I backed along the corridor, a turn in which
soon shut them from our view. Then we wheeled and ran like
deer along the winding passageway. I did not feel very safe
from capture at any time, but at least I breathed a sigh of
relief after we had passed the chamber from which the Kalkars
had run us into the cul-de-sac, and we had seen no sign
of any other of their kind. We heard no sound of pursuit, but
that in itself meant nothing, since the Kalkars are shod with
soft leather sandals, the material for which, like all their other
leather trappings, is made of the skins of Va-gas and of the
prisoners from Laythe.</p>
<p>As we came to the pile of hooked poles which marked the
last turn before the entrance of the tunnel I breathed an
inward sigh of relief. Stooping, I gathered them all in my
arms, and then we ran on to the opening into the crater,
where I cast all but one of the poles into the abyss. That
which I retained I hooked over the lip of the crater and
then, turning to Nah-ee-lah, I bade her ascend.</p>
<p>“You should have saved two of the poles,” she said, “and
then we could have ascended together; but I will make haste
and you can follow me immediately, for we do not know
but that they are pursuing us. I cannot imagine that they will
let us escape thus easily.”</p>
<p>Even as she spoke I heard the soft patter of sandal shod
feet up the corridor.</p>
<p>“Make haste, Nah-ee-lah,” I cried; “they come!”</p>
<p>Climbing a pole is slow work at best, but when one is
suspended over the brink of a bottomless chasm and is none
too sure of the security of the hook that is holding the pole
above, one must needs move cautiously. Yet, even so, Nah-ee-lah
scrambled upward so rapidly as to fill me with apprehension
for her safety. Nor were my fears entirely
groundless, for standing in the mouth of the tunnel, where I
could keep one eye upon Nah-ee-lah and the other toward
the turn around which my pursuers would presently come
in view, I saw the girl’s hands grasp the rim of the crater at
the very instant that the hook came loose and the pole
dropped past me into the abyss. I might have caught it as it
fell, but my whole mind was fixed upon Nah-ee-lah and her
grave danger. Would she be able to draw herself upward, or
would she fall? I saw her straining frantically to raise her
body above the edge of the volcano, and then from up the
corridor behind me came an exultant cry and I turned to face
a brawny Kalkar who was racing toward me.</p>
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