<h2 id="c6">VI <br/><span class="small">THE VAIRKINGS</span></h2>
<p>Myles Cabot opened his weary eyes. Around him hung
barbaric tapestries. He was lying on a couch covered by
the same materials.</p>
<p>Seated on the couch beside him was a creature human
in form, but covered with short golden-brown fur. It seemed
to be a young woman of some species. But of what species?</p>
<p>Myles threw back his head and studied the creature’s
face, expecting to see the prognathous features of some
anthropoid ape. But no; for eyes, nose, mouth, ears, and
all were human, distinctly human, and of high type. They
might have been the features of an earth-girl, except for the
fact that the short brown fur persisted on the face as on the
rest of the body. The general effect reminded Cabot for all
the world of a teddy bear. Yes, that is what this creature
was, an animated human teddy bear.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
<p>Seeing Cabot looking at her, the creature smiled down at
him, and murmured some strange words in a soothing
musical voice. Also she stroked his cheek with one of her
furry paws.</p>
<p>At this moment the hangings parted, and there stepped
into their presence a man of the species, wearing a leather
tunic and leather helmet, and carrying a wooden spear.
Bowing low before the furry lady, he spoke to her in the
same soft tongue which she had employed in addressing
Myles.</p>
<p>Not a single syllable was familiar to the earth-man, but
he caught the words “Roy” and “Vairking” repeated a
number of times, and also made out that the furry man
had addressed the furry lady as “Arkilu.”</p>
<p>Arkilu now arose from the couch and, taking a tablet
and a stick of charcoal from a near-by stand, wrote some
characters upon a sheet of paper and handed it to the
man, who bowed and withdrew.</p>
<p>The pad and charcoal gave Myles an idea. If he was to
stay any length of time with these creatures he had better
start in at once learning both their written and their spoken
language.</p>
<p>And perhaps, when he had mastered it, he could persuade
these kindly yet warlike folk to assist him against
the Formians. He judged that they were kindly, because
of the actions of the furry lady; and they were warlike,
because of the habiliments of the furry man.</p>
<p>Putting his idea into action, Myles sat up, gathering
a gaudy blanket about his shoulders, and pointed to the
writing materials. With a furry smile Arkilu brought them
to him.</p>
<p>Having been through this game once before, he knew
just where to begin. He pointed to the couch, and handed
her the pad and charcoal.</p>
<p>Whereupon the lady spoke some absolutely unintelligible
sound, and wrote upon the pad, in unmistakable Cupian
shorthand, the familiar Cupian word for couch!</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_38">38</div>
<p>Myles could hardly believe his senses. He stared at the
paper, rubbed his eyes, and then stared again. How was it
that this creature employed a written character identical
with the word used by another race, far across the impassable
boiling seas, to designate the same thing? But perhaps
this was merely a coincidence.</p>
<p>So he pointed to another object. Again there came a
strange sound, coupled with the familiar Cupian symbol.</p>
<p>The experiment was repeated and repeated, always with
the same result.</p>
<p>Then Cabot himself took the writing materials and inscribed
a number of words which sounded somewhat alike
in Porovian antenna speech. To these words Arkilu gave
an entirely different set of similar sounds.</p>
<p>“Aha,” said Cabot to himself, “this language employs
exactly the same words as are used on our continent, but
translates the sound-symbols of these words into entirely
different sounds!”</p>
<p>Cabot’s interpretation of the situation proved correct in
the main, which fact made it extremely easy for him to
master the new language. Already he could carry on a
written conversation with his benefactress; and before long
it became possible, by dint of great care, for him to talk
aloud in simple sentences.</p>
<p>Of course, all this progress was not made at one sitting,
for Arkilu insisted that her patient take frequent rests. From
time to time meals were served by female attendants, meals
abounding in strange meats, mostly lobsterlike, but some
resembling fish and flesh. Each night Arkilu departed, leaving
a furry man-creature on guard, with leather armor
and wooden spear.</p>
<p>As he mastered the language, Myles learned the following
facts from Arkilu. Her people were called the Vairkings,
and she was the eldest daughter of Theoph, their ruler.
The Vairkings were a primitive race. Apparently they knew
nothing of any of the metals, but had made considerable
progress in the arts of tanning, weaving and carpentry.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
<p>The fact that they had made cloth accounted for the fact
that they had paper. Their leather they had obtained from
the hides of a large variety of nocturnal reptiles, known
indiscriminately as “gnoopers,” and ranging in size from
that of a cat to that of an elephant, though all possessed
the common characteristics of small heads, long necks,
stumpy legs, and long heavy tails.</p>
<p>She explained as follows to her guest how he had been
rescued: “Our home is in the city of Vairkingi, far away,
a little east of north from here. We Vairkings stick pretty
close to the cities, for the great open spaces of our land are
inhabited by predatory tribes of wild creatures very like ourselves,
called Roies. The leader of one of the largest tribes
of these, Att the Terrible, sought alliance with my father,
and, as the price of this alliance, a union between Att and
myself. But I spurned him.</p>
<p>“His hordes then attacked Vairkingi, but we repulsed
them and drove them to the southward. At present we are
on a punitive expedition into their territory. Our warriors
are under the command of Jud the Excuse-Maker; and my
father (Theoph the Grim) and I have accompanied the
headquarters, so as to witness the downfall of Att the
Terrible.</p>
<p>“It was undoubtedly one of the Roies who wounded you,
but the approach of our men drove them off before they
had time to do you further harm. It was I myself who found
you lying beside the brook, and I would fain possess you
as my own, you who are unlike any man whom I have
ever seen. Whence come you?”</p>
<p>“I am from the planet Minos, O Arkilu the Beautiful,”
replied Cabot.</p>
<p>But the princess incredulously shook her head, saying,
“I know not whereof you speak, nor know I the meaning of
the word ‘planet.’ There are no other worlds than this
continent which we inhabit, surrounded by boiling seas on
all sides; though rumor says that strange beasts from somewhere
have landed and are building a city to the eastward
of the mountains.”</p>
<p>“Rumor has it right,” Myles laconically interjected, “for
I had just escaped from those beasts when I was wounded
by the arrow of the Roies.”</p>
<p>Arkilu opened her eyes in wonder.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_40">40</div>
<p>“Tell me about them,” she breathed.</p>
<p>So the earth-man sat up, swathed in the gaudy tapestries
of the Vairkings, and related to the furry princess the
story of his adventures on the planet Poros. It was difficult
to put it all into words within her comprehension, for
neither she nor her people could know anything of radio,
of the solar system, of airplanes, or of rifles. Accordingly
his account ran about as follows:</p>
<p>“Know, O Princess, that there is another land called
‘Minos’, or in our own language ‘the earth’, far above
those silver clouds, one million times the distance from here
to your capital city, Vairkingi. Also there is, beyond the
boiling seas, another land much like this, where dwell
hairless men called ‘Cupians’, and also the black beasts to
whom you have referred. These beasts are called ‘Formians’.</p>
<p>“Cupians and Formians cannot talk with their mouths as
you and I. Nor do they have ears to hear with. Instead,
they communicate by a kind of soundless magic, called
‘radio’. But they write the same language as do you Vairkings.</p>
<p>“On the earth I was master of this magic, radio. But
one day my own magic proved too strong for me, and
shot me through the skies to Formia, where the Formians
captured me. I found that the Cupians were the slaves of
the Formians.</p>
<p>“By means of radio I was able to talk with both races. I
escaped from the Formians. By other magic, which could
throw small black stones faster than arrows and with
more deadly results, I led the Cupians to victory over
their oppressors. Their princess, Lilla, became my bride, and
our son, Kew, now sits on the throne of Cupia. But
Prince Yuri, a renegade Cupian, rebelled against us, for
he too loved Lilla!”</p>
<p>Myles continued: “Yuri and his allies possessed magic
wagons which could fly through the air—”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_41">41</div>
<p>“What is ‘fly’?” Arkilu interrupted. “If you mean ‘swim’
it is impossible, for no creature ever lived which could
swim in air.”</p>
<p>“Ah, but this is magic, you must remember,” he assured
her. “Have you Vairkings never seen any peculiar black
objects sailing through the sky since the rumored arrival
of the Formians on your continent?”</p>
<p>Arkilu pursed her lips in thought. “Yes,” she admitted,
“there have been rumors of that too.”</p>
<p>“Well,” he continued, “those were the flying wagons of
the Formians. When we finally defeated them and drove
them across the boiling seas in these wagons, I revisited
the planet earth by means of the radio magic of which
I have told you. But on my attempted return to Cupia
I landed on your continent instead, by mistake, and was
again captured by my Formian enemies. Of my escape from
them, my wounding by the Roy arrow, and my rescue by
you, you already know.”</p>
<p>Arkilu smiled ingratiatingly. “You are a pretty spinner of
tales. Therefore I shall keep you to amuse me. Methinks
that even Theoph the Grim will revel in your fantasies.”</p>
<p>And she leaned over and caressed Cabot’s cheek with
one furry hand. He cringed at the touch, yet strove not
to offend her, whose continued friendship might mean so
much toward his return to his own country.</p>
<p>He wanted her good will and her influence; but, out
of loyalty to Lilla, he dreaded her love.</p>
<p>To change the subject he inquired: “When shall I be
well enough to get up?”</p>
<p>“You are well enough now,” she replied “Try to stand.”</p>
<p>At Myles’s insistence, a leather suit was sent for; he soon
found himself dressed like a soldier of the Vairkings. Thus
arrayed he stood and walked about a little inside the tent,
but Arkilu would not permit him to venture outside until
he should be stronger.</p>
<p>Before leaving for the night Arkilu announced: “Tomorrow
our expedition starts back for Vairkingi. When we reach
the city I shall marry you, for I have decided that I
love you.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
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