<h2 id="CHXIII">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<h3>DEATH WITHIN AND WITHOUT!</h3></div>
<p>As rapidly as I could I made my way from the palace of
Ko-tah, and upward, terrace by terrace, toward the palace
of the Jemadar. I had never presented myself at Sagroth’s
palace since Nah-ee-lah had so grievously offended me. I did
not even know the customary procedure to follow to gain
an audience with the Emperor, but nevertheless I came
boldly to the carven gates and demanded to speak with
the officer in command of the guards. When he came I told
him that I desired to speak either with Sagroth or the
Princess Nah-ee-lah at once, upon a matter of the most
urgent importance.</p>
<p>“Wait,” he said, “and I will take your message to the
Jemadar.”</p>
<p>He was gone for what seemed to me a very long time, but
at last he returned, saying that Sagroth would see me at
once, and I was conducted through the gates and into the
palace toward the small audience chamber in which Sagroth
had once received me so graciously. As I was ushered into
the room I found myself facing both Sagroth and Nah-ee-lah.
The attitude of the Jemadar seemed apparently judicial, but
that of the Princess was openly hostile.</p>
<p>“What are you doing here, traitor?” she demanded, without
waiting for Sagroth to speak, and at the same instant a door
upon the opposite side of the room burst open and three
warriors leaped into the apartment with bared swords. They
wore the livery of Ko-tah, and I knew instantly the purpose
for which they had come. Drawing my own sword, I leaped
forward.</p>
<p>“I have come to defend the life of the Jemadar and his
Princess,” I cried, as I sprang between them and the advancing
three.</p>
<p>“What means this?” demanded Sagroth. “How dare you
enter the presence of your Jemadar with drawn sword?”</p>
<p>“They are the assassins of Ko-tah come to slay you!” I cried.
“Defend yourself, Sagroth of Laythe!” And with that, I
tried to engage the three until help arrived.</p>
<p>I am no novice with the sword. The art of fencing has been
one of my chief diversions since my cadet days in the Air
School, and I did not fear the Laytheans, though I knew
that, even were they but mediocre swordsmen, I could not
for long withstand the assaults of three at once. But upon
this point I need not have concerned myself, for no sooner
had I spoken than Sagroth’s sword leaped from its scabbard,
and placing himself at my side, he fought nobly and well in
defense of his life and his honor.</p>
<p>One of our antagonists merely tried to engage me while the
other two assassinated the Jemadar. And so, seeing that he
was playing me, and that I could do with him about as I
pleased if I did not push him too hard, I drove him back a
few steps until I was close at the side of one of those who
engaged Sagroth. Then before any could know my intention,
I wheeled and lunged my sword through the heart of one of
those who opposed the father of Nah-ee-lah. So quickly had
I disengaged my former antagonist, so swift my lunge, that I
had recovered and was ready to meet the renewed assaults
of the first who had engaged me almost before he realized
what had happened.</p>
<p>It was man against man, now, and the odds were even. I
had no opportunity to watch Sagroth, but from the ring of
steel on steel, I knew that the two were bitterly engaged. My
own man kept me well occupied. He was a magnificent
swordsman, but he was only fighting for his life; I was fighting
for more—for my life and for my honor, too, since after
the word “traitor” that Nah-ee-lah had hurled at me, I had
felt that I must redeem myself in her eyes. I did not give any
thought at all to the question as to just why I should care
what Nah-ee-lah the Moon Maid thought of me, but something
within me reacted mightily to the contempt that she
had put into that single word.</p>
<p>I could catch an occasional glimpse of her standing there
behind the massive desk at which her father had sat upon
the first occasion of my coming to this chamber. She stood
there very tense, her wide eyes fixed upon me in evident
incredulity.</p>
<p>I had almost worn my man down and we were fighting
now so that I was facing Nah-ee-lah, with my back toward
the doorway through which the three assassins had entered.
Sagroth must have been more than holding his own, too, for
I could see his opponent slowly falling back before the older
man’s assaults. And then there broke above the clang of steel
a girl’s voice—Nah-ee-lah’s—raised in accents of fear.</p>
<p>“Julian, beware! Behind you! Behind you!”</p>
<p>At the instant of her warning the eyes of my antagonist
left mine, which, for his own good, they never should have
done, and passed in a quick glance over my shoulder at something
or someone behind me. His lack of concentration cost
him his life. I saw my opening the instant that it was made,
and with a quick lunge I passed my blade through his heart.
Whipping it out again, I wheeled to face a dozen men
springing into the chamber. They paid no attention to me,
but leaped toward Sagroth, and before I could prevent he
went down with half a dozen blades through his body.</p>
<p>Upon the opposite side of the desk from us was another
door-way directly behind Nah-ee-lah, and in the instant that
she saw Sagroth fall, she called to me in a low voice: “Come,
Julian, quick! Or we, too, are lost.”</p>
<p>Realizing that the Jemadar was dead and that it would be
folly to remain and attempt to fight this whole roomful of
warriors, I leaped the desk and followed Nah-ee-lah through
the doorway beyond. There was a cry, then, from someone
within the room, to stop us, but Nah-ee-lah wheeled and
slammed the door in their faces as they rushed forward, fastened
it upon our side and then turned to me.</p>
<p>“Julian,” she said, “how can you ever forgive me? You
who have risked your life for the Jemadar, my father, in spite
of the contemptible treatment that in my ignorance I have accorded
you?”</p>
<p>“I could have explained,” I said, “but you would not let
me. Appearances were against me, and so I cannot blame you
for thinking as you did.”</p>
<p>“It was wicked of me not to listen to you, Julian, but I
thought that Ko-tah had won you over, as he has won over
even some of the staunchest friends of Sagroth.”</p>
<p>“You might have known, Nah-ee-lah, that, even could I
have been disloyal to your father, I never could have been
disloyal to his daughter.”</p>
<p>“I did not know,” she said. “How could I?”</p>
<p>There suddenly came over me a great desire to take her
in my arms and cover those lovely lips with kisses. I could
not tell why this ridiculous obsession had seized upon me,
nor why, of a sudden, I became afraid of little Nah-ee-lah, the
Moon Maid. I must have looked very foolish indeed, standing
there looking at her, and suddenly I realized how fatuous
I must appear, and so I shook myself and laughed.</p>
<p>“Come, Nah-ee-lah,” I said, “we must not remain here.
Where can I take you, that you will be safe?”</p>
<p>“Upon the outer terrace there may be some of the loyal
guards,” she replied, “but if Ko-tah has already taken the
palace, flight will be useless.”</p>
<p>“From what I know of the conspiracy, it will be useless,”
I replied, “for the service of Sagroth and his palace is rotten
with the spies and retainers of the Javadar.”</p>
<p>“I feared as much,” she said. “The very men who came to
assassinate Sagroth wore the imperial livery less than an
ola since.”</p>
<p>“Are there none, then, loyal to you?” I asked her.</p>
<p>“The Jemadar’s guard is always loyal,” she said, “but they
number scarce a thousand men.”</p>
<p>“How may we summon them?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Let us go to the outer terraces and if there are any of
them there we can congregate the balance, or as many of
them as Ko-tah has left alive.”</p>
<p>“Come, then,” I said, “let us hasten;” and together, hand
in hand, we ran along the corridors of the Jemadar’s palace
to the outer terraces of the highest tier of Laythe. There we
found a hundred men, and when we had told them of what
had happened within the palace they drew their swords
and, surrounding Nah-ee-lah, they shouted:</p>
<p>“To the death for Nah-ee-lah, Jemadav of Laythe!”</p>
<p>They wanted to remain there and protect her, but I told
them that there would be nothing gained by that, that sooner
or later they would be overwhelmed by far greater numbers,
and the cause of Nah-ee-lah lost.</p>
<p>“Send a dozen men,” I said to their commander, “to rally
all of the loyal guards that remain alive. Tell them to come
to the throne room, ready to lay down their lives for the
new Jemadav, and then let the dozen continue on out into
the city, rallying the people to the protection of Nah-ee-lah.
As for us, we will accompany her immediately to the throne
room, and there, place her upon the throne and proclaim her
ruler of Laythe. A hundred men may hold the throne room
for a long time, if we reach it before Ko-tah reaches it with
his forces.”</p>
<p>The officer looked at Nah-ee-lah questioningly.</p>
<p>“Your command, Jemadav?” he inquired.</p>
<p>“We will follow the plan of Ju-lan the Javadar,” she replied.</p>
<p>Immediately a dozen warriors were dispatched to rally the
Imperial Guard and arouse the loyal citizens of the city to
the protection of their new Jemadav, while the balance of
us conducted Nah-ee-lah by a short course toward the throne
room.</p>
<p>As we entered the great chamber at one end, Ko-tah and
a handful of warriors came in at the other, but we had the
advantage, in that we entered through a doorway directly
behind the throne and upon the dais.</p>
<p>“Throw your men upon the main entrance,” I called to the
officer of the guard, “and hold it until reinforcements come;”
and then, as the hundred raced the length of the throne
room toward the surprised and enraged Ko-tah, I led
Nah-ee-lah to the central throne and seated her upon it. Then
stepping forward, I raised my hand for silence.</p>
<p>“The Jemadar Sagroth is dead!” I cried. “Behold Nah-ee-lah,
the Jemadav of Laythe!”</p>
<p>“Stop!” cried Ko-tah, “she may share the throne with me,
but she may not possess it alone.”</p>
<p>“Take that traitor!” I called to the loyal guard, and they
rushed forward, evidently glad to do my bidding. But Ko-tah
did not wait to be taken. He was accompanied by only a
handful of men, and when he saw that the guard really
intended to seize him and realized that he would be given
short shift at the hands of Nah-ee-lah and myself, he turned
and fled. But I knew he would come back, and come back
he did, though not until after the majority of the Jemadav’s
guard had gathered within the throne room.</p>
<p>He came with a great concourse of warriors, and the
fighting was furious, but he might have brought a million men
against our thousand and not immediately have overcome
us, since only a limited number could fight at one time in
the entrance way to the throne room. Already the corpses lay
stacked as high as a man’s head, yet no single member of
Ko-tah’s forces had crossed the threshold.</p>
<p>How long the fight was waged I do not know, but it must
have been for a considerable time, since I know that our men
fought in relays and rested many times, and that food was
brought from other parts of the palace to the doorway behind
the throne, and there were times when Ko-tah’s forces
withdrew and rested and recuperated, but always they came
back in greater number, and eventually I realized we must be
worn down by the persistence of their repeated attacks.</p>
<p>And then there arose slowly a deep-toned sound, at first
we could not interpret. It rose and fell in increasing volume,
until finally we knew that it was the sound of human voices,
the voices of a great mob—of a mighty concourse of people
and that it was sweeping toward us slowly and resistlessly.</p>
<p>Closer and closer it approached the palace as it rose, terrace
upon terrace, toward the lofty pinnacle of Laythe. The
fighting at the entrance to the throne room had almost ceased.
Both sides were worn down almost to utter exhaustion,
and now we but stood upon our arms upon either side of
the wall of corpses that lay between us, our attention centered
upon the sound of the growling multitude that was sweeping
slowly upward toward us.</p>
<p>“They come,” cried one of Nah-ee-lah’s nobles, “to acclaim
the new Jemadav and to tear the minions of Ko-tah the
traitor to pieces!”</p>
<p>He spoke in a loud voice that was easily audible to Ko-tah
and his retainers in the corridor without.</p>
<p>“They come to drag the spawn of Sagroth from the throne!”
cried one of Ko-tah’s followers. And then from the throne
came the sweet, clear voice of Nah-ee-lah:</p>
<p>“Let the people’s will be done,” she said, and thus we stood,
awaiting the verdict of the populace. Nor had we long to
wait, for presently we realized that they had reached the
palace terrace and entered the building itself. We could hear
the shouting horde moving through the corridors and chambers,
and finally the muffled bellowing resolved itself into
articulate words:</p>
<p>“Sagroth is no more! Rule, Ko-tah, Jemadar of Laythe!”</p>
<p>I turned in consternation toward Nah-ee-lah. “What does
it mean?” I cried. “Have the people turned against you?”</p>
<p>“Ko-tah’s minions have done their work well during these
many kelds,” said the commander of the Jemadav’s guard,
who stood upon the upper steps of the dais, just below the
throne. “They have spread lies and sedition among the
people which not even Sagroth’s just and kindly reign could
overcome.”</p>
<p>“Let the will of the people be done,” repeated Nah-ee-lah.</p>
<p>“It is the will of fools betrayed by a scoundrel,” cried the
commander of the guard. “While there beats a single heart
beneath the tunic of a guardsman of the Jemadav, we shall
fight for Nah-ee-lah, Empress of Laythe.”</p>
<p>Ko-tah’s forces, now augmented by the rabble, were pushing
their way over the corpses and into the throne room, so
that we were forced to join the defenders, that we might
hold them off while life remained to any of us. When the
commander of the guard saw me fighting at his side he asked
me to return to Nah-ee-lah.</p>
<p>“We must not leave the Jemadav alone,” he said. “Return
and remain at her side, Ju-lan the Javadar, and when the
last of us has fallen, drive your dagger into her heart.”</p>
<p>I shuddered and turned back toward Nah-ee-lah. The very
thought of plunging my dagger into that tender bosom fairly
nauseated me. There must be some other way, and yet,
what other means of escape could there be for Nah-ee-lah,
who preferred death to the dishonor of surrender to Ko-tah,
the murderer of her father? As I reached Nah-ee-lah’s side,
and turned again to face the entrance to the throne room, I
saw that the warriors of Ko-tah were being pushed into the
chamber by the mob behind them and that our defenders
were being overwhelmed by the great number of their
antagonists. Ko-tah, with a half dozen warriors, had been carried
forward, practically without volition, by the press of
numbers in their rear, and even now, with none to intercept
him, was running rapidly up the broad center aisle toward
the throne. Some of those in the entrance way saw him,
and as he reached the foot of the steps leading to the dais, a
snarling cry arose:</p>
<p>“Ko-tah the Jemadar!”</p>
<p>With bared sword, the fellow leaped toward me where I
stood alone between Nah-ee-lah and her enemies.</p>
<p>“Surrender, Julian!” she cried. “It is futile to oppose them.
You are not of Laythe. Neither duty nor honor impose upon
you the necessity of offering your life for one of us. Spare
him, Ko-tah!” she cried to the advancing Javadar, “and I
will bow to the will of the people and relinquish the throne
to you.”</p>
<p>“Ko-tah the traitor shall never sit upon the throne of Nah-ee-lah!”
I exclaimed, and leaping forward, I engaged the
Prince of Laythe.</p>
<p>His warriors were close behind him, and it behooved me to
work fast, and so I fought as I had never guessed that it lay
within me to fight, and at the instant that the rabble broke
through the remaining defenders and poured into the throne
room of the Jemadars of Laythe, I slipped my point into the
heart of Ko-tah. With a single piercing shriek, he threw his
hands above his head and toppled backward down the steps
to lie dead at the foot of the throne he had betrayed.</p>
<p>For an instant the silence of death reigned in the great
chamber. Friend and foe stood alike in the momentary paralysis
of shocked surprise.</p>
<p>That tense, breathless silence had endured for but a moment,
when it was shattered by a terrific detonation. We felt
the palace tremble and rock. The assembled mob looked
wildly about, their eyes filled with fear and questioning. But
before they could voice a question, another thunderous report
burst upon our startled ears, and then from the city
below the palace there arose the shrieks and screams of terrified
people. Again the palace trembled, and a great crack
opened in one of the walls of the throne room. The people
saw it, and in an instant their anger against the dynasty of
Sagroth was swallowed in the moral terror which they felt
for their own safety. With shrieks and screams they turned
and bolted for the doorway. The weaker were knocked down
and trampled upon. They fought with fists and swords and
daggers, in their mad efforts to escape the crumbling building.
They tore the clothing from one another, as each sought to
drag back his fellow, that he might gain further in the
race for the outer world.</p>
<p>And as the rabble fought, Nah-ee-lah and I stood before
the throne of Laythe, watching them, while below us the few
remaining members of the Jemadar’s guard stood viewing
in silent contempt the terror of the people.</p>
<p>Explosion after explosion followed one another in rapid
succession. The people had fled. The palace was empty, except
for that handful of us faithful ones who remained within the
throne room.</p>
<p>“Let us go,” I said to Nah-ee-lah, “and discover the origin
of these sounds, and the extent of the damage that is being
done.”</p>
<p>“Come,” she said, “here is a short corridor to the inner
terrace, where we may look down upon the entire city of
Laythe.” And then, turning to the commander of the guard
she said: “Proceed, please, to the palace gates, and secure
them against the return of our enemies, if they have by this
time all fled from the palace grounds.”</p>
<p>The officer bowed, and followed by the few heroic survivors
of the Jemadar’s guard, he left by another corridor for
the palace gates, while I followed Nah-ee-lah up a stairway
that led to the roof of the palace.</p>
<p>Coming out upon the upper terrace, we made our way
quickly to the edge overlooking the city and the crater. Below
us a shrieking multitude ran hither and thither from
terrace to terrace, while, now here and now there, terrific
explosions occurred that shattered age-old structures and
carried debris high into the air. Many terraces showed great
gaps and tumbled ruins where other explosions had occurred
and smoke and flames were rising from a dozen portions
of the city.</p>
<p>But an instant it took me to realize that the explosions were
caused by something that was being dropped into the city
from above, and as I looked up I saw a missile describing
an arc above the palace, past which it hurtled to a terrace far
below, and at once I realized that the missile had originated
outside the city. Turning quickly, I ran across the terrace
to the outer side which overlooked the plateau upon which
the city stood. I could not repress an exclamation of astonishment
at the sight that greeted my eyes, for the surface of the
plateau was alive with warriors. Nah-ee-lah had followed me
and was standing at my elbow. “The Kalkars,” she said. “They
have come again to reduce Laythe. It has been long since
they attempted it, many generations ago, but what is it,
Julian, that causes the great noise and the destruction and
the fires within Laythe?”</p>
<p>“It is this which fills me with surprise,” I said, “and not
the presence of the Kalkar warriors. Look! Nah-ee-lah,” and
I pointed to a knoll lying at the verge of the plateau, where,
unless my eyes deceived me badly, there was mounted a mortar
which was hurling shells into the city of Laythe. “And
there, and there,” I continued, pointing to other similar
engines of destruction mounted at intervals. “The city is surrounded
with them, Nah-ee-lah. Have your people any
knowledge of such engines of warfare or of high explosives?” I
demanded.</p>
<p>“Only in our legends are such things mentioned,” she
replied. “It has been ages since the inhabitants of Va-nah lost
the art of manufacturing such things.”</p>
<p>As we stood there talking, one of the Jemadar’s guards
emerged from the palace and approached us.</p>
<p>“Nah-ee-lah, Jemadav,” he cried, “there is one here who
craves audience with you and who says that if you listen to
him you may save your city from destruction.”</p>
<p>“Fetch him,” replied Nah-ee-lah. “We will receive him
here.”</p>
<p>We had but a moment to wait when the guardsman returned
with one of Ko-tah’s captains.</p>
<p>“Nah-ee-lah, Jemadav,” he cried, when she had given him
permission to speak, “I come to you with a message from one
who is Jemadar of Jemadars, ruler of all Va-nah. If you
would save your city and your people, listen well.”</p>
<p>The girl’s eyes narrowed. “You are speaking to your
Jemadav, fellow,” she said. “Be careful, not only of your
words, but of your tone.”</p>
<p>“I come but to save you,” replied the man sullenly. “The
Kalkars have discovered a great leader, and they have joined
together from many cities to overthrow Laythe. My master
does not wish to destroy this ancient city, and there is but
one simple condition upon which he will spare it.”</p>
<p>“Name your condition,” said Nah-ee-lah.</p>
<p>“If you will wed him, he will make Laythe the capital of
Va-nah, and you shall rule with him as Jemadav of Jemadavs.”
Nah-ee-lah’s lips curled in scorn. “And who is the presumptuous
Kalkar that dares aspire to the hand of Nah-ee-lah?”
she demanded.</p>
<p>“He is no Kalkar, Jemadav,” replied the messenger. “He is
one from another world, who says that he knows you well
and that he has loved you long.”</p>
<p>“His name,” snapped Nah-ee-lah impatiently.</p>
<p>“He is called Or-tis, Jemadar of Jemadars.”
Nah-ee-lah turned toward me with elevated brows and
a smile of comprehension upon her face.</p>
<p>“Or-tis,” she repeated.</p>
<p>“Now, I understand, my Jemadav,” I said, “and I am commencing
to have some slight conception of the time that must
have elapsed since I first landed within Va-nah, for even
since our escape from the Va-gas, Orthis has had time to discover
the Kalkars and ingratiate himself among them, to
conspire with them for the overthrow of Laythe, and to
manufacture explosives and shells and the guns which are
reducing Laythe this moment. Even had I not heard the
name, I might have guessed that it was Orthis, for it is all so
like him—ingrate, traitor, cur.”</p>
<p>“Go back to your master,” she said to the messenger, “and
tell him that Nah-ee-lah, Jemadav of Laythe, would as leave
mate with Ga-va-go the Va-ga as with him, and that Laythe
will be happier destroyed and her people wiped from the
face of Va-nah than ruled by such a beast. I have spoken.
Go.”</p>
<p>The fellow turned and left us, being accompanied from
Nah-ee-lah’s presence by the guardsman who had fetched
him, and whom Nah-ee-lah commanded to return as soon as
he had conducted the other outside the palace gates. Then
the girl turned to me:</p>
<p>“O, Julian, what shall I do? How may I combat those terrible
forces that you have brought to Va-nah from another
world?”</p>
<p>I shook my head. “We, too, could manufacture both guns
and ammunition to combat him, but now we have not the
time, since Laythe will be reduced to a mass of ruins before
we could even make a start. There is but one way, Nah-ee-lah,
and that is to send your people—every fighting man that
you can gather, and the women, too, if they can bear arms,
out upon the plateau in an effort to overwhelm the Kalkars
and destroy the guns.”</p>
<p>She stood and thought for a long time, and presently the
officer of the guard returned and halted before her, awaiting
her commands. Slowly she raised her head and looked at him.</p>
<p>“Go into the city,” she said, “and gather every Laythean
who can carry a sword, a dagger, or a lance. Tell them to
assemble on the inner terraces below the castle, and that I,
Nah-ee-lah their Jemadav, will address them. The fate of
Laythe rests with you. Go.”</p>
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