<h2 id="CHX">CHAPTER X</h2>
<h3>THE CITY OF KALKARS</h3></div>
<p>Now, indeed, did I have reason to curse the stupidity that
had permitted me to cast into the abyss all of the hooked
poles save one, since even this one was now lost to me and I
was utterly without means of escape from the tunnel.</p>
<p>As the fellow approached me at a rapid run I hurled my
lance, but being unaccustomed to the weapon, I missed, and
then he was upon me, dropping his own lance as he leaped
for me, for it was evidently his desire to take me alive and
unharmed. I thought that I was going to have him now, for I
believed that I was more than a match for him, but there
are tricks in every method of attack and this lunar warrior was
evidently well schooled in his own methods of offense. He
scarcely seemed to touch me, and yet he managed to trip me
and push me simultaneously so that I fell heavily backward
to the ground and turning a little sideways as I fell, I must
have struck my head against the side of the tunnel, for that
is the last that I remember until I regained consciousness in
the very cave that Nah-ee-lah and I had reached when we
saw the first of the Kalkars. I was surrounded by a party of
eight of the Kalkars, two of whom were half carrying, half
dragging me. I learned later that in the fight before the rostrum
I had killed four of their number.</p>
<p>The fellow who had captured me was in very good humor,
doubtless because of his success, and when he discovered
that I had regained consciousness he started to converse with
me.</p>
<p>“You thought that you could escape from Gapth, did
you?” he cried, “but never; you might escape from the
others, but not from me—no, not from Gapth.”</p>
<p>“I did the principal thing that I desired to do,” I replied,
wishing to learn if Nah-ee-lah had escaped.</p>
<p>“What is that?” demanded Gapth.</p>
<p>“I succeeded in accomplishing the escape of my companion,”
I replied.</p>
<p>He made a wry face at that. “If Gapth had been there a
moment earlier she would not have escaped, either,” he said,
and by that I knew that she had escaped, unless she had
fallen back into the crater; and I was amply repaid for my
own capture if it had won freedom for Nah-ee-lah.</p>
<p>“Although I did not escape this time,” I said, “I shall next
time.”</p>
<p>He laughed a nasty laugh. “There will be no next time,”
he said, “for we are taking you to the city, and once there,
there is no escape, for this is the only avenue by which you
can reach the outer world and once within the city you
never can retrace your steps to the mouth of the tunnel.”</p>
<p>I was not so sure of that, myself, for my sense of direction
and that of location are very well developed within me. The
degree of perfection attained in orientation by many officers of
the International Peace Fleet has been described as almost
miraculous, and even among such as these my ability in this
line was a matter of comment. I was glad, therefore, that the
fellow had warned me, since now I should be particularly
upon the watch for each slightest scrap of information that
would fix in my memory whatever route I might be led over.
From the cave in which I regained consciousness there was
but a single route to the mouth of the tunnel, but from here on
into the city I must watch every turn and fork and crossing
and draw upon the tablets of my memory an accurate and
detailed map of the entire route.</p>
<p>“We do not even have to confine our prisoners,” continued
Gapth, “after we have so marked them that their ownership
may always be determined.”</p>
<p>“How do you mark them?” I asked.</p>
<p>“With heated irons we make the mark of the owner here,”
and he touched my forehead just above my eyes.</p>
<p>“Pleasant,” I thought to myself, and then aloud: “Shall I
belong to you?”</p>
<p>“I do not know,” he replied, “but you will belong to
whomever The Twentyfour allot you.”</p>
<p>We moved on after we left the cave for a considerable
period of time in silence. I was busy making mental notes of
every salient feature that might be useful to me in retracing
my steps, but I found nothing other than a winding and gently
ascending corridor, without crossings or branches, until we
reached the foot of a long flight of stone steps at the summit
of which we emerged into a large chamber in the walls of
which there must have been at least a dozen doorways,
where, to my great disappointment, I was immediately blindfolded.
They whirled me around then, but evidently it was
done perfunctorily, since it was exactly one full turn and I
was halted in my tracks facing precisely in the same direction
that I had been before. This I was positive of, for our powers
of orientation are often tested in this way in the air service.
Then they marched me straight forward across the room
through a doorway directly opposite that at which I had
entered the chamber. I could tell when we left the larger
chamber and entered the corridor from the different sound
which our footsteps made. We advanced along this corridor
ninety-seven paces, when we turned abruptly to the right and
at the end of thirty-three paces emerged into another chamber,
as I could easily tell again from the sound of our
footsteps the instant we crossed the threshold. They led me
about this chamber a couple of times with the evident intention
of bewildering me, but in this they did not succeed,
for when they turned again into a corridor I knew that it was
the same corridor from which I had just emerged and that
I was retracing my steps. This time they took me back
thirty-three paces and then turned abruptly to the right. I
could not but smile to myself when I realized that we were
now continuing directly along the same corridor as that
which we had entered immediately after they had first
blindfolded me, their little excursion through the short corridor
into the second chamber having been but a ruse to
bewilder me. A moment later, at the foot of a flight of steps
they removed the blind, evidently satisfied that there was now
no chance of my being able to retrace my steps and find the
main tunnel leading to the crater, while, as a matter of fact,
I could easily have retraced every foot of it blindfolded.</p>
<p>From here on we climbed interminable stairways, passed
through numerous corridors and chambers, all of which
were illuminated by the radium-bearing substance which
coated their walls and ceilings, and then we emerged suddenly
upon a terrace into the open air, and I obtained my
first view of a lunar city. It was built around a crater, and the
buildings were terraced back from the rim, the terraces being
generally devoted to the raising of garden truck and the
principal fruit-bearing trees and shrubs. The city extended
upward several hundred feet, the houses, as I learned later,
being built one upon another, the great majority of them,
therefore, being without windows looking upon the outer
world.</p>
<p>I was led along the terrace for a short distance, and during
this brief opportunity for observation I deduced that
the cultivated terraces lay upon the roofs of the tier of
buildings next below. To my right I could see the terraced
steps extending downward to the rim of the crater. Nearly
all the terraces were covered with vegetation, and in numerous
places I saw what appeared to be Va-gas feeding upon the
plants, and this I later learned was the fact, and that the
Kalkars, when they are able to capture members of the race
of Va-gas, keep them in captivity and breed them as we breed
cattle, for their flesh. It is necessary, to some extent, to change
the diet of the Va-gas almost exclusively to vegetation, though
this diet is supplemented by the flesh of the Kalkars, and
their Laythean slaves who die, the Va-gas thus being compelled
to serve the double purpose of producing flesh for
the Kalkars and acting as their scavengers as well.</p>
<p>Upon my left were the faces of buildings, uniformly two
stories in height, with an occasional slender tower rising fifteen,
twenty or sometimes as high as thirty feet from the terraced
roofs above. It was into one of these buildings that
my captors led me after we had proceeded a short distance
along the terrace, and I found myself in a large apartment
in which were a number of male Kalkars, and at a desk
facing the entrance a large, entirely bald man who appeared
to be of considerable age. To this person I was led by
Gapth, who narrated my capture and the escape of Na-ee-lah.</p>
<p>The fellow before whom I had been brought questioned
me briefly. He made no comment when I told him that I was
from another world, but he examined my garments rather
carefully and then after a moment turned to Gapth.</p>
<p>“We will hold him for questioning by The Twentyfour,”
he said. “If he is not of Va-nah he is neither Kalkar nor
Laythean, and consequently, he must be flesh of a lower order
and therefore may be eaten.” He paused a moment and fell
to examining a large book which seemed to be filled with
plans upon which strange hieroglyphics appeared. He turned
over several leaves, and finally coming evidently to the page
he sought, he ran a forefinger slowly over it until it came
to rest near the center of the plat. “You may confine him
here,” he said to Gapth, “in chamber eight of the twenty-fourth
section, at the seventh elevation, and you will produce
him upon orders from The Twentyfour when next they
meet,” and then to me: “It is impossible for you to escape
from the city, but if you attempt it, it may be difficult for
us to find you again immediately and when we do you will
be tortured to death as an example to other slaves. Go!”</p>
<p>I went; following Gapth and the others who had conducted
me to the presence of this creature. They led me back
into the very corridor from which we had emerged upon the
terrace and then straight into the heart of that amazing pile
for fully half a mile, where they shoved me roughly into an
apartment at the right of the corridor with the admonition
that I stay there until I was wanted.</p>
<p>I found myself in a dimly lighted, rectangular room, the
air of which was very poor, and at the first glance I discovered
that I was not alone, for upon a bench against the
opposite wall sat a man. He looked up as I entered and I
saw that his features were very fine and that he had black
hair like Nah-ee-lah. He looked at me for a moment with a
puzzled expression in his eyes and then he addressed me.</p>
<p>“You, too, are a slave?” he asked.</p>
<p>“I am not a slave,” I replied, “I am a prisoner.”</p>
<p>“It is all the same,” he said; “but from whence come you?
I have never seen your like before in Va-nah.”</p>
<p>“I do not come from Va-nah,” I replied, and then I briefly
explained my origin and how I came to be in his world. He did
not understand me, I am sure, for although he seemed to be,
and really was, highly intelligent, he could not conceive of
any condition concerning which he had had no experience
and in this way he did not differ materially from intelligent
and highly educated Earth Men.</p>
<p>“And you,” I asked, at length—“you are not a Kalkar?
From whence come you?”</p>
<p>“I am from Laythe,” he replied. “I fell outside the city and
was captured by one of their hunting parties.”</p>
<p>“Why all this enmity,” I asked, “between the men of
Laythe and the Kalkars—who are the Kalkars, anyway?”</p>
<p>“You are not of Va-nah,” he said, “that I can see, or you
would not ask these questions. The Kalkars derive their name
from a corruption of a word meaning The Thinkers. Ages
ago we were one race, a prosperous people living at peace
with all the world of Va-nah. The Va-gas we bred for flesh,
as we do today within our own city of Laythe and as the
Kalkars do within their city. Our cities, towns and villages
covered the slopes of the mountains and stretched downward
to the sea. No corner of the three oceans but knew our
ships, and our cities were joined together by a network of
routes along which passed electrically driven trains”—he did
not use the word trains, but an expression which might be
liberally translated as ships of the land—“while other great
carriers flew through the air. Our means of communication
between distant points were simplified by science through
the use of electrical energy, with the result that those who
lived in one part of Va-nah could talk with those who lived
in any other part of Va-nah, though it were to the remotest
ends of the world. There were ten great divisions, each ruled
by its Jemadar, and each division vied with all the others in
the service which it rendered to its people. There were those
who held high positions and those who held low; there
were those who were rich and those who were poor, but the
favors of the state were distributed equally among them, and
the children of the poor had the same opportunities for
education as the children of the rich, and there it was that
our troubles first started. There is a saying among us that
no learning is better than a little, and I can well believe
this true when I consider the history of my world, where, as
the masses became a little educated, there developed among
them a small coterie that commenced to find fault with
everyone who had achieved greater learning or greater power
than they. Finally, they organized themselves into a secret
society called The Thinkers, but known more accurately to the
rest of Va-nah as those who thought that they thought. It is
a long story, for it covers a great period of time, but the
result was that, slowly at first, and later rapidly, The Thinkers,
who did more talking than thinking, filled the people with dissatisfaction,
until at last they arose and took over the government
and commerce of the entire world. The Jemadars were
overthrown and the ruling class driven from power, the majority
of them being murdered, though some managed to escape,
and it was these, my ancestors, who founded the city
of Laythe. It is believed that there are other similar cities
in remote parts of Va-nah inhabited by the descendants of
the Jemadar and noble classes, but Laythe is the only one
of which we have knowledge. The Thinkers would not work,
and the result was that both government and commerce fell
into rapid decay. They not only had neither the training nor
the intelligence to develop new things, but they could not
carry out the old that had been developed for them. The
arts and sciences languished and died with commerce and
government, and Va-nah fell back into barbarism. The Va-gas
saw their chance and threw off the yoke that had held them
through countless ages. As the Kalkars had driven the noble
class into the lofty mountains, so the Va-gas drove the Kalkars.
Practically every vestige of the ancient culture and
commercial advancement of Va-nah has been wiped from the
face of the world. The Laytheans have held their own for
many centuries, but their numbers have not increased.</p>
<p>“Many generations elapsed before the Laytheans found
sanctuary in the city of Laythe, and during that period
they, too, lost all touch with the science and advancement
and the culture of the past. Nor was there any way in
which to rebuild what the Kalkars had torn down, since
they had destroyed every written record and every book in
every library in Va-nah. And so occupied are both races in
eking out a precarious existence that there is little likelihood
that there will ever again be any advancement made along
these lines—it is beyond the intellectual powers of the Kalkars,
and the Laytheans are too weak numerically to accomplish
aught.”</p>
<p>“It does look hopeless,” I said, “almost as hopeless as our
situation. There is no escape, I imagine, from this Kalkar
city, is there?”</p>
<p>“No,” he said, “none whatever. There is only one avenue
and we are so confused when we are brought into the city
that it would be impossible for us to find our way out again
through this labyrinth of corridors and chambers.”</p>
<p>“And if we did win our way to the outer world we would
be as bad off, I presume, for we could never find Laythe,
and sooner or later would be recaptured by the Kalkars or
taken by the Va-gas. Am I not right?”</p>
<p>“No,” he said, “you are not right. If I could reach the rim
of the crater beyond this city I could find my way to Laythe.
I know the way well, for I am one of Ko-tah’s hunters and
am thoroughly familiar with the country for great distances
in all directions from Laythe.”</p>
<p>So this was one of Ko-tah’s men. I was glad, indeed, that I
had not mentioned Nah-ee-lah or told him of her possible escape,
or of my acquaintance with her.</p>
<p>“And who is Ko-tah?” I asked, feigning ignorance.</p>
<p>“Ko-tah is the most powerful noble of Laythe,” he replied,
“some day he will be Jemadar, for now that Nah-ee-lah, the
Princess, is dead, and Sagroth, the Jemadar, grows old, it
will not be long before there is a change.”</p>
<p>“And if the Princess should return to Laythe,” I asked,
“would Ko-tah still become Jemadar then, upon the death
of Sagroth?”</p>
<p>“He would become Jemadar in any event,” replied my
companion, “for had the Princess not been carried off by
the air that runs away, Ko-tah would have married her, unless
she refused, in which event she might have died—people
do die, you know.”</p>
<p>“You feel no loyalty, then,” I asked, “for your old Jemadar,
Sagroth, or for his daughter, the Princess?”</p>
<p>“On the contrary, I feel every loyalty toward them, but
like many others, I am afraid of Ko-tah, for he is very powerful
and we know that sooner or later he will become ruler of
Laythe. That is why so many of the high nobles have attached
themselves to him—it is not through love of Ko-tah, but
through fear that he recruits his ranks.”</p>
<p>“But the Princess!” I exclaimed, “would the nobles not
rally to her defense?”</p>
<p>“What would be the use?” he asked. “We of Laythe do
but exist in the narrow confines of our prison city. There is
no great future to which we may look forward in this life, but
future incarnations may hold for us a brighter prospect. It
is no cruelty, then, to kill those who exist now under the
chaotic reign of anarchy which has reduced Va-nah to a
wilderness.”</p>
<p>I partially caught his rather hopeless point of view and
realized that the fellow was not bad or disloyal at heart,
but like all his race, reduced to a state of hopelessness that
was the result of ages of retrogression to which they could
see no end.</p>
<p>“I can find the way to the mouth of the tunnel where it
opens into the crater,” I told him. “But how can we reach it
unarmed through a city populated with our enemies who
would slay us on sight?”</p>
<p>“There are never very many people in the chambers or
corridors far removed from the outer terraces, and if we
were branded upon the forehead, as accepted slaves are, and
your apparel was not so noticeable, we might possibly reach
the tunnel without weapons.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” I said, “my clothes are a handicap. They would immediately
call attention to us; yet, it is worth risking, for I
know that I can find my way back to the crater and I should
rather die than remain a slave of the Kalkars.”</p>
<p>The truth of the matter was that I was not prompted so
much by abhorrence of the fate that seemed in store for me,
as by a desire to learn if Nah-ee-lah had escaped. I was
constantly haunted by the horrid fear that her hold upon the
rim of the crater had given and that she had fallen into the
abyss below. Gapth had thought that she had escaped, but
I knew that she might have fallen without either of us having
seen her, since the pole up which she had clambered had been
fastened a little beyond the opening of the tunnel, so that,
had her hold become loosened, she would not have fallen
directly past the aperture. The more I thought of it, the more
anxious I became to reach Laythe and institute a search for
her.</p>
<p>While we were still discussing our chances of escape, two
slaves brought us food in the shape of raw vegetables and
fruit. I scanned them carefully for weapons, but they had
none, a circumstance to which they may owe their lives. I
could have used their garments, had they been other than
slaves, but I had hit upon a bolder plan than this and must
wait patiently for a favorable opportunity to put it into practice.</p>
<p>After eating I became sleepy and was about to stretch
out upon the floor of our prison when my companion, whose
name was Moh-goh, told me that there was a sleeping apartment
adjoining the room in which we were, that had been set
apart for us.</p>
<p>The doorway leading to the sleeping chamber was covered
by heavy hangings, and as I parted them and stepped into
the adjoining chamber, I found myself in almost total darkness,
the walls and ceiling of this room not having been
treated with the illuminating coating used in the corridors and
apartments which they wished to maintain in a lighted condition.
I later learned that all their sleeping apartments were
thus naturally dark. In one corner of the room was a pile of
dried vegetation which I discovered must answer the purpose
of mattress and covering, should I require any. However, I was
not so particular, as I had been accustomed to only the
roughest of fare since I had left my luxurious stateroom
aboard <i>The Barsoom</i>. How long I slept I do not know, but I
was awakened by Moh-goh calling me. He was leaning over
me, shaking me by the shoulder.</p>
<p>“You are wanted,” he whispered. “They have come to take
us before The Twentyfour.”</p>
<p>“Tell them to go to the devil,” I said, for I was very sleepy
and only half awake. Of course, he did not know what devil
meant, but evidently he judged from my tone that my reply
was disrespectful to the Kalkars.</p>
<p>“Do not anger them,” he said, “it will only make your fate
the harder. When The Twentyfour command, all must obey.”</p>
<p>“Who are The Twentyfour?” I demanded.</p>
<p>“They compose the committee that rules this Kalkar city.”</p>
<p>I was thoroughly awakened now and rose to my feet, following
him into the adjoining chamber, where I saw two
Kalkar warriors standing impatiently awaiting us. As I saw
them a phrase leaped to my brain and kept repeating itself:
“There are but two, there are but two.”</p>
<p>They were across the room from us, standing by the entrance,
and Moh-goh was close to me.</p>
<p>“There are but two,” I whispered to him in a low voice,
“you take one and I will take the other. Do you dare?”</p>
<p>“I will take the one at the right,” he replied, and together
we advanced across the room slowly toward the unsuspecting
warriors. The moment that we were in reach of them we
leaped for them simultaneously. I did not see how Moh-goh
attacked his man, for I was busy with my own, though it
took me but an instant to settle him, for I struck him a
single terrific blow upon the chin and as he fell I leaped
upon him, wresting his dagger from its scabbard and plunging
it into his heart before he could regain his senses from
the stunning impact of my fist. Then I turned to assist Moh-goh,
only to discover that he needed no assistance, but was
already arising from the body of his antagonist, whose throat
was cut from ear to ear with his own weapon.</p>
<p>“Quick!” I cried to Moh-goh, “drag them into the sleeping
apartment before we are discovered;” and a moment later we
had deposited the two corpses in the dimly lighted apartment
adjoining.</p>
<p>“We will leave the city as Kalkar warriors,” I said, commencing
to strip the accoutrements and garments from the
man I had slain.</p>
<p>Moh-goh grinned. “Not a bad idea,” he said. “If you
can find the route to the crater it is possible that we may
yet escape.”</p>
<p>It took us but a few moments to effect the change, and
after we had hidden the bodies beneath the vegetation that
had served us as a bed and stepped out into the other
chamber, where we could have a good look at one another,
we realized that if we were not too closely scrutinized we
might pass safely through the corridors beneath the Kalkar
city, for the Kalkars are a mongrel breed, comprising many
divergent types. My complexion, which differed outrageously
from that of either the Kalkars or the Laytheans, constituted
our greatest danger, but we must take the chance,
and at least we were armed.</p>
<p>“Lead the way,” said Moh-goh, “and if you can find the
crater I can assure you that I can find Laythe.”</p>
<p>“Very good,” I said, “come,” and stepping into the corridor
I moved off confidently in the direction that I knew I should
find the passageways and stairs along which I had been
conducted from the crater tunnel. I was as confident of success
as though I were traversing the most familiar precinct
of my native city.</p>
<p>We traveled a considerable distance without meeting anyone,
and at last reached the chamber in which I had been
blindfolded. As we entered it I saw fully a score of Kalkars
lolling upon benches or lying upon vegetation that was piled
upon the floor. They looked up as we entered, and at the
same time Moh-goh stepped in front of me.</p>
<p>“Who are you and where are you going?” demanded one
of the Kalkars.</p>
<p>“By order of The Twentyfour,” said Moh-goh, and stepped
into the room. Instantly I realized that he did not know in
which direction to go, and that by his hesitancy all might
be lost.</p>
<p>“Straight ahead, straight across the room,” I whispered to
him, and he stepped out briskly in the direction of the
entrance to the tunnel. Fortunately for us, the chamber was
not brilliantly lighted, and the Kalkars were at the far end
of it; otherwise they must certainly have discovered my
deception, at least, since any sort of close inspection would
have revealed the fact that I was not of Va-nah. However,
they did not halt us, though I was sure that I saw one of
them eyeing me suspiciously, and I venture to say that I
took the last twenty steps without drawing a breath.</p>
<p>It was quickly over, however, and we had entered the
tunnel which now led without further confusing ramifications
directly to the crater.</p>
<p>“We were fortunate,” I said to Moh-goh.</p>
<p>“That we were,” he replied.</p>
<p>In silence, then, that we might listen for pursuit, or for the
sound of Kalkars ahead of us, we hastened rapidly along the
descending passageway toward the mouth of the tunnel where
it opened into the crater; and at last, as we rounded the last
turn and I saw the light of day ahead of me, I breathed a
deep sigh of relief, though almost simultaneously my happiness
turned to despair at the sudden recollection that there were
no hooked poles here to assist us to the summit of the crater
wall. What were we to do?</p>
<p>“Moh-goh,” I said, turning to my companion as we halted
at the end of the tunnel, “there are no poles with which to
ascend. I had forgotten it, but in order to prevent the Kalkars
from ascending after me, I threw all but one into the abyss,
and that one slipped from the rim and was lost also, just
as my pursuers were about to seize me.”</p>
<p>I had not told Moh-goh that I had had a companion, since
it would be difficult to answer any questions he might propound
on the subject without revealing the identity of Nah-ee-lah.</p>
<p>“Oh, we can overcome that,” replied my companion. “We
have these two spears, which are extremely stout, and inasmuch
as we shall have plenty of time, we can easily arrange
them in some way that will permit us to ascend to the summit
of the crater. It is very fortunate that we were not pursued.”</p>
<p>The Kalkars' spears had a miniature crescent-shaped hook
at the base of their point similar to the larger ones effected
by the Va-gas. Moh-goh thought that we could fasten the two
spears securely together and then catch the small hook of the
upper one upon the rim of the crater, testing its hold thoroughly
before either of us attempted to ascend. Beneath his
tunic he wore a rope coiled around his waist which he explained
to me was a customary part of the equipment of all
Laytheans. It was his idea to tie one end of this around the
waist of whichever of us ascended first, the other going as
far back into the tunnel as possible and bracing himself, so
that in the event that the climber fell, he would be saved
from death, though I figured that he would get a rather
nasty shaking up and some bad bruises, under the best of
circumstances.</p>
<p>I volunteered to go first and began fastening one end of the
rope securely about my waist while Moh-goh made the two
spears fast together with a short length that he had cut
from the other end. He worked rapidly, with deft, nimble
fingers, and seemed to know pretty well what he was doing.
In the event that I reached the summit in safety, I was to pull
up the spears and then haul Moh-goh up by the rope.</p>
<p>Having fastened the rope to my satisfaction, I stood as far
out upon the ledge before the entrance to the tunnel as I
safely could, and with my back toward the crater looked up at
the rim twenty feet above me, in a vain attempt to select
from below, if possible, a reasonably secure point upon which
to hook the spear. As I stood thus upon the edge of eternity,
steadying myself with one hand against the tunnel wall, there
came down to me from out of the tunnel a noise which I
could not mistake. Moh-goh heard it, too, and looked at me,
with a rueful shake of his head and a shrug of his
shoulders.</p>
<p>“Everything is against us, Earth Man,” he said, for this was
the name he had given me when I told him what my world
was called.</p>
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