<h2 id="c5">V <br/><span class="small">LOST AMID THE ROCKS</span></h2>
<p>But although Myles Cabot was lost, he was free for the
first time since his return to Poros.</p>
<p>So not disheartened he arose and proceeded along the
trail, looking for food and a place to spend the night; and
presently came upon a “green cow,” as he was wont to
call the aphids which are kept both by Cupians and Formians
for the honey-dew which they produce.</p>
<p>It made no objection to Cabot’s approach, nor to his
manipulating the two horns which projected from its back,
with the result that the tired man was presently regaling
himself with a satisfying drafts of green “milk” from a leafy
cup.</p>
<p>The bush, which furnished the leaf to fashion the cup,
closely resembled the tartan bushes of Cupia, whose heart-shaped
leaves are put to so many uses in that country.
Myles Cabot accordingly stripped off a considerable portion
of the foliage, and lay down in a bed of warm, thick
green for the night.</p>
<p>The morning dawned silver bright. Myles drew another
meal from the grazing aphid and then pressed on up the
rocky defile. He did not dare return for fear of meeting
ant-men; and besides, now that a night’s rest had to some
extent tempered his chagrin at not catching up with the
particular ant-man whom he had been pursuing, he could
not be sure he had taken the wrong road after all. So on he
went, up the rocky path.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
<p>Around noon the path petered out at the top of an
eminence which gave Cabot an opportunity to survey the
surrounding scenery. To the westward lay the city from
which he had fled. What had become, he wondered, of
the supporters of his friend Doggo and of Formis, the ant-queen,
whose cause he had espoused? According to Emu,
Doggo and Formis were both dead, or Cabot would never
have deserted them.</p>
<p>Cabot turned his attention next to the northward. To his
great joy, on the next peak to the one where he sat, there
stood two rough wooden towers, spanned by an aerial.</p>
<p>He decided to cut across country and attempt to approach
the installation by stealth. So he started scrambling
down into the intervening valley.</p>
<p>Never before had the earth-man traveled through such
difficult country. As soon as he had gone a short distance
below the summit he encountered a continuous expanse of
boulders, ranging in size from a man’s head to twenty feet
or more in diameter, and piled aimlessly together. Lying
crossways in every direction, upon and between the rocks,
were the gaunt skeletons of fallen trees in all stages of decay.</p>
<p>The sharp edges of the rocks cut and tore the bare feet
of the earth-man, while the splinters of the fallen trees
jabbed his body. Time and again he slipped and nearly
fell into one of the chasms which yawned between the
boulders, and on one of these occasions he must have inadvertently
let go the ant-rifle which he had treasured so
far so carefully, for presently he noticed that it was gone.</p>
<p>But to all this there was one extenuating feature, although
Myles did not realize it at the time, namely that
his physical pain and the need for constant vigilance on
his part so occupied his mind as to spare him from the
mental pain which had been his almost constant companion
since his return to Poros. The attention necessary to avoid
misjudging a jump, or slipping into a dark deep hole, or
being impaled by a tree-branch, crowded out of his mind
even his great love and anxiety for Princess Lilla and Baby
Kew.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
<p>Through the maze of obstacles Cabot toiled all day long.</p>
<p>Oh, to reach the radio station established by his enemy
Yuri, and get into touch with his own continent. Thus he
could learn what was happening in Cupia, and also give
word of his own safe arrival on the planet. Safe, hm! He
smiled grimly at the word.</p>
<p>“I <i>must</i> reach that station,” he thought, “and then, when
I have talked with Cupia, I must secure a Formian plane
by hook or by crook, and brave the boiling seas. If ants
have crossed those seas safely, if Yuri has safely crossed
them twice, then why cannot I, the Minorian?”</p>
<p>As he communed thus with himself, a faint pink flush appeared
in the sky. Slowly, painfully he continued his way.
Gradually the pink light turned to crimson in the west and
then darkened to a royal purple. Gradually the black night
crept up out of the east. But also gradually the boulders
became smaller and smaller as he clambered upward,
until just as darkness finally enveloped the planet, the tired
man gained the smooth rocks of the summit, and lay down
amid some leaves.</p>
<p>He had had nothing to eat or drink since his breakfast
of green milk that morning. He had undergone an exhausting
journey. His feet were bruised and cut, his body covered with
innumerable scratches, and he was weary, thirsty and hungry.
But he had almost reached the point which he had been
seeking, and this thought comforted him as his eyes closed
in healthy and dreamless sleep.</p>
<p class="tb">Next morning early he was up, rested, parched and ravenous.
As the first faint pink tinged the eastern sky Myles
Cabot shook off the leaves and completed the ascent.</p>
<p>It only required a few moments for him to reach the top,
a narrow plateau, about a mile in length, near the farther
end of which there stood a small cabin with its two
towers and aerial.</p>
<p>With a cry of joy—which he knew the earless Formians
could not hear—he raced toward it. The huge chain and
lock, which secured its door on the outside, indicated that
it was unoccupied, and a glance through the narrow slitlike
windows confirmed this.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
<p>The glance through the window also revealed the presence
of a complete radio sending and receiving set of the same
general hook-up which he himself had adapted for the use
of Cupians and Formians on the other continent.</p>
<p>“Imitation is the most insulting form of flattery,” as
Poblath, the Cupian philosopher, used to say. Yet Cabot
was willing to brook the insult, until suddenly it dawned
on him that the set had no earphones nor microphone!</p>
<p>Of course not, since it was designed for use by creatures
who possessed neither ears nor vocal speech! Gone then was
all hope of news from home, even if he could succeed in
breaking in. At the most, he would merely be able, by
interposing an interrupter in the primary or secondary of
that aerial circuit, to send a dot-dash message across the
boiling seas—I use the term “aerial circuit,” because “antenna
circuit” would be ambiguous, as the latter term
might have either its conventional earth significance, or might
mean the circuit in which the Formian operator would
place <i>his</i> living antennae in sending and receiving.</p>
<p>Well, even a chance to send to Cupia a message to the
effect that he was free and safe, would be worth something.
Myles Cabot tried the slitlike windows, and finding them
too narrow, slid quickly down the near-by slope, soon to
return laboriously with a twenty-pound rock, which he
heaved against the door.</p>
<p>Again and again he heaved the rock, until he had the
satisfaction of seeing the door crack and then give. Finally
a large enough opening was effected to afford passage for
a man, although not for a Formian; and through this breach
Myles Cabot squeezed into the station.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
<p>A few minutes’ scrutiny familiarized him with the details
of the hook-up, the generator set, and the trophil-engine.
Everything was in running order and the fuel tank
was full. So he fashioned a rude sending key, broke one of
the circuits and tied in the key. Then he warmed-up and
cranked the trophil-engine, clutched-in the generator, threw
the main switch, and sat down to flash across the seas the
message which was to hold firm his partisans in Cupia
until he could join them.</p>
<p>But at that instant an arrow hummed through the hole
in the door, and struck quivering in the bench beside him.</p>
<p>Cabot sprang to his feet and slid home the huge beam
which barred the door on the inside. This was a precaution
which he had neglected to take before. Next he filled the
hole in the door with some boards hastily wrenched from
the work-bench. Then picking up a Formian rifle and
bandolier which hung on the wall, he made his way to
one of the slit windows on the same side as the door and
peeped cautiously out.</p>
<p>The result was immediate; an arrow sped through the
window and passed just above his head. But even as he
ducked instinctively, he saw a dark form moving behind a
bush at some distance outside; so quickly rising again, he
discharged the rifle square at the bush.</p>
<p>There came a cry of pain, followed by silence. And there
were no more feathered incursions.</p>
<p>Not knowing whether his enemy had been disposed of, or
whether the cessation of the stream of arrows was merely
a ruse to entice him from his shelter, Myles did not dare
venture forth to investigate.</p>
<p>From the first time the arrow had struck the work-bench
until this final squelching of the unknown enemy, Myles
had been engrossed in action. Now came the reaction, as he
realized how narrowly he had twice escaped from death
in the last few minutes. He shuddered at the thought,
and turned pale; not, however, at the danger to himself,
but rather at the danger to his loved ones in Cupia. He
must keep himself alive until he could reach and save them
from whatever peril it was that had caused Lilla to send the
SOS which had recalled him to Poros.</p>
<p>But being ever the inquisitive scientist, his attention was
soon distracted by the arrow which stood sticking to the
bench.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_32">32</div>
<p>Its shaft was of some hard and very springy wood. Its
tip was of chipped stone resembling flint, and bound to the
shaft by vegetable fibers. Its “feathers” were thin laminae of
wood, doubtless because birds, and hence true feathers, are
unknown on Poros.</p>
<p>Why on earth—or rather, on Poros—were the ant-men
employing such crude weapons? Rifles they had aplenty,
and powder was easy to manufacture. Besides what did
they know of bows and arrows, which had never been used
by them, even in the days before Cabot the Minorian introduced
firearms upon the planet?</p>
<p>Thus these arrows presented a perplexing problem. But
a practical job remained to be performed before Myles was to
have any time for abstract questions. The message to Cupia
must be sent off.</p>
<p>The earth-man returned to the radio set. The trophil-engine
and the generator were still running. The whole apparatus
appeared to be functioning properly. And so Myles
ticked off into space the following message:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>CQ, CQ, CQ, DE, Cabot, Cabot, Cabot. I have returned
to Poros from Minos. I am on the continent of
the Formians. I am in complete control there.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>That was a lie, but it would serve to hearten his supporters,
or throw the fear of the Supreme Builder into the
partisans of Yuri, whichever it reached. The message continued:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Do not expect me soon, for first I must consolidate
what I have gained here. But when I do come, Yuri
beware! My friends, hold out until then. I have spoken.</p>
<p><span class="jr">DE, Cabot.</span></p>
</blockquote>
<p>This message he sent again and again, at every wavelength
of which the installation was capable. He repeated
and repeated it until he was tired.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_33">33</div>
<p>And then, for the first time, he remembered his thirst
and his hunger. Fortunately there was both food and
drink in the shack; so Cabot satisfied his wants, and then
went at his message again.</p>
<p>When at last he paused once more for a rest, and shut
off the trophil-engine, his human ears caught a familiar
rattling sound. Instantly he realized the situation; one or
more ant-men were approaching. Sure enough, as he looked
out of a window in the direction of the sound, he saw
two of these creatures trotting toward him across the
plateau.</p>
<p>Both carried rifles slung at their backs; so without waiting
for their nearer approach Myles opened fire. One of the
Formians dropped, but the other turned and fled; and in
spite of the hail of bullets which the earth-man sent after
it, reached the crest in apparent safety, and disappeared from
view.</p>
<p>Cabot knew what that meant to him. It portended the
early return of the fugitive ant with scores of his fellows,
to lay siege to the radio station. Then a doubt occurred
to him. What if these ants were members of Doggo’s
faction, and he had killed a friend?</p>
<p>And so at the risk of his life, he unbarred the door and
rushed out to inspect the dead body. But it was no ant whom
he knew. Time would tell whether the surviving ant would
return with friends or foes. Meanwhile Cabot must get busy
with his message. So at it again he went, first barring the
door again.</p>
<p>From time to time he rested and listened for the approach
of Formians. Occasionally he ate and drank. During
his longer rests, he carted the rifle, the ammunition and
some provisions to a point quite a distance down the mountainside,
and cached them there; for he had formulated
a plan of escape. But mostly he stuck to his signaling. All
Cupia, or such of it as might still possess long-distance radio
sets in spite of the renewed dominion of Yuri, must be
made to know of the return of Myles Cabot from the earth.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_34">34</div>
<p>Night fell, and with it came a respite from the danger
of Formian attack; for these creatures would never venture
forth in the darkness without lights, and lights would betray
them. Myles spent part of the night in sending his
message, part in watching for approaching lights, and part
in dozing.</p>
<p>Finally along toward morning he set about wrecking the
set, for he did not wish the Formians to get into communication
with Cupia and undo the effect of his own message
by pointing out its falsity. Accordingly he smashed the tubes,
unwound the inductances and transformers, cut all the
wiring into little bits, bent the plates of the condensers,
chiseled through the coils of the generator, pounded the
trophil-engine to pieces, and drained the trophil tank. It
would be many sangths before a new radio set could be
built, if indeed these Formians knew enough of the art to
ever build another.</p>
<p>His work of destruction completed, he sat down to wait;
but the inaction palled on him, and before he knew it he
had fallen sound asleep.</p>
<p>He awakened with a start. It was broad daylight. He
listened. There was much rattling outside. So he walked to
the door, unbarred it, and stepped out.</p>
<p>He was not afraid; for on the evening before he had
nailed above the door two crossed sticks, the Porovian
equivalent of a flag of truce.</p>
<p>At a short distance stood a band of thirty or forty ant-men,
their leader holding a pair of crossed sticks. Accordingly
the ragged earth-man advanced. Not one of them did he
recognize, but this was no indication of their identity.</p>
<p>Were these members of the Yuri faction, he wondered,
or of the faction recently captained by the now deceased
Doggo? If the former, they were conquerors intent on adding
him to their list of conquests; but if the latter, then
they might be fugitives like himself. It behooved him to
find out.</p>
<p>So he proceeded to a slight depression in the mountain-top,
very near the group of Formians. This depression
contained soil, and in it he scratched in Porovian shorthand
the words: “Yuri or Doggo?” Then pointed to his message
and withdrew for a slight distance.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_35">35</div>
<p>One of the ant-men advanced alone to the depression,
stared at the words, rubbed one part of them, and returned
to his comrades, at which Cabot in turn advanced.</p>
<p>The one word remaining written in the dirt was “Yuri!”</p>
<p>So these were victorious enemies, rather than fugitive
friends.</p>
<p>Waving a signal that the interview was at an end, Myles
Cabot returned with dignity to the shack and pulled down
his crossed sticks.</p>
<p>But then, instead of entering, he suddenly dashed around
the house and slid down the mountainside amid a shower
of pebbles.</p>
<p>Instantly the Formian pack rushed after him, but they
were too late; for by the time they had gained the crest
he was safely under cover of the bushes, making his way
down the slope with his rifle, ammunition, and provision.
The ant-men evidently feared an ambush, for they did not
follow.</p>
<p>This side of the mountain (the eastern) was wooded,
instead of the almost impassable boulders over which he
had climbed up the other side two days ago. Accordingly
the descent was easy, almost pleasant. Soon he struck a
path beside a little brook, and followed it until it led out
onto the fertile eastern plains which he had observed when
first he had topped this range of hills.</p>
<p>Beneath a large tree beside the brook, at the edge of the
plain, Myles Cabot stopped and sat down for lunch; and it
was while seated thus, with his back against the tree trunk,
that an arrow suddenly whistled through the woods and
imbedded itself in the bark just above his head.</p>
<p>Startled, he sprang to his feet, seized his rifle, and looked
around.</p>
<p>A second arrow sped through the air, and this one did
not miss him.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
<p>In due course of time, Myles regained consciousness. He
was lying on the ground beneath the same tree. There was
an ugly gash in his head. His rifle, ammunition, and food
were gone. His face and body were covered with clotted
blood, and he felt very faint.</p>
<p>With difficulty he dragged himself to the stream, tore off
a piece of his ragged toga, and washed away some of the
gore. But it required an almost superhuman effort. He lay on
the bank and panted. His head swam. His surroundings
began to blur and dance about. And then he swooned
again.</p>
<p>After what seemed an interminable time he became
dimly conscious that he was lying on something less hard
than the ground. Soft arms were around him. Some one
was crooning to him sweet words and low.</p>
<p>Was this a dream? Or was he back once more in Cupia
with his loved ones?</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />