<h2 id="c16">XVI <br/><span class="small">AFTERTHOUGHTS</span></h2>
<p>There could be no doubt of it. Doggo’s plane was gone,
and with it had vanished all hopes of a speedy return to
Cupia. Sadly the two returned to camp, and gave directions
to start back to Vairkingi.</p>
<p>But Myles Cabot was not a man to despair or he would
have yielded to fate many times in the past during his
radio adventures on the silver planet. Already, as the porters
were loading the carts, his agile mind was busy seeking
some way whereby to snatch victory from defeat.</p>
<p>So when the expedition was ready to start he led it
around the woods until he picked up the trail of the stolen
airship. Quite evidently the theft had not been made by
ant-men, for they would have <i>flown</i> the machine away, upon
clearing the woods. No, it had obviously been taken by
either Roies or Vairkings, who had wheeled or dragged it
away. If he and Doggo could follow its path, they might
yet be able to locate and recover the stolen property.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_118">118</div>
<p>The trail led north until it struck, at right angles, a broad
and much-rutted road which ran from Vairkingi to the
northeast territory of the Vairkings. And at this point the
trail completely vanished.</p>
<p>Myles held a written conference with Doggo, at which
it was decided to return at once to the city and make
inquiries there as to the stolen plane. If no one there knew
of it, Doggo was to be dispatched on a new expedition
into the northeast territory, and in the meantime Cabot was
to rush the completion of his radio set. So they turned to
the left and took up the march to Vairkingi.</p>
<p>It was a tired and disgusted human who returned that
evening to the quarters which he had never expected to set
eyes on again. Myles Cabot gave himself up to a few moments
of unrestrained grief.</p>
<p>As he sat thus a soft, sympathetic voice said: “Didn’t you
succeed in finding that which you sought? I am so sorry!
At least you came back safely to me.”</p>
<p>But the blandishments of little Quivven, his pal, failed
to comfort him.</p>
<p>That evening when Jud returned from the brickyard, Myles
sought an audience with him and demanded news of the
plane. Said Myles: “This beast friend of mine came near here
in a magic wagon which travels through the air. Possession
of this magic wagon would mean much to Vairkingi in your
wars, and especially if the beasts ever take it into their
heads to attack you, as they undoubtedly will do sooner or
later.</p>
<p>“Yesterday Doggo and I embarked on a secret expedition
to bring this magic wagon as a surprise to you and
Theoph. But we find that it has been stolen. We have
traced it to the northeast road, and there the trail ends.
It must be either in this city or in the northeast territory.
Will you help me to find it?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_119">119</div>
<p>But Jud smiled a crafty smile, and said: “It is not in
Vairkingi—of that I am certain. Nor will I send into the
northeast territory to find it for you; for I well know that
you would use it to return to your own land beyond the
boiling seas. We wish you to stay with us and do wonders
for us. We believe that we can make your lot among us a
happy one.</p>
<p>“But remember that, although you are treated with great
honors, you are nevertheless still my slave. Any attempt on
your part to locate the magic wagon will be met with severe
punishment, and an end will be put to your experiments. I
have spoken.”</p>
<p>Myles Cabot met the other’s eye squarely. “You have
spoken, Jud,” he said.</p>
<p>Myles was now convinced that Jud knew more about the
missing plane than he was willing to admit; so the only
thing to do was to lie low, bide his time, keep an ear out
for news of the plane, and continue the manufacture of the
radio set. Thus the earth-man ruminated as he walked
slowly back to his quarters.</p>
<p>And then the linking of radio and airplanes in his mind
gave him an idea. He had felt all along that he was doing
the correct thing in building a radio set rather than in manufacturing
firearms with which to attack the Formians, or in
trying to fabricate an airplane for a flight across the boiling
seas.</p>
<p>His intuition had been correct; his subconscious mind must
have guided him to make the radio <i>in order to phone Cupia
for a plane to come over to Vairkingi and get him</i>. Why
hadn’t he realized this before? It gave him new heart.</p>
<p>With a laugh he reflected that this afterthought was
pretty much like those so characteristic of the man whom
he had just left. Jud the Excuse-Maker, always bungling, and
always with a perfectly good excuse or alibi, thought up
afterward to explain why he did something which, when
he did it, was absolutely pointless. Myles had always
looked down on the Vairking noble because of this failing.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_120">120</div>
<p>But now what he found himself going through exactly
the same mental processes, he began to wonder if perhaps
Jud were not guided by a fairly high-grade intuition. Perhaps
Jud’s afterthoughts and excuses were but the breaking
through of a realization of some real forethoughts on the
part of Jud’s subconscious mind. Myles wondered. He was
still wondering when he fell asleep that night.</p>
<p class="tb">The next morning he plunged into his work with renewed
vigor. He now had copper wire, copper plates, wood, mica,
solder, platinum, glass, and batteries—everything that he
needed for his radio set except a better vacuum for his
tubes; but without that he was as far from success as when
he started.</p>
<p>Of course he knew what he needed—magnesium. But
it was one thing to step into a drug store on the earth, or
into a chemical laboratory in Cupia, and take magnesium
off the shelves, and quite another matter to pick this elusive
element out of thin air in Vairkingi.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, in spite of this lack, Myles kept on working.
He wound his inductances, transformers, earphones, and
rheostats. He assembled his variable condensers and microphones.
He fashioned his sockets and lamp bases. He strung
his antennae. He wired up his baseboard and panel.</p>
<p>Small sets were installed in Quivven’s rooms at the palace,
at Jud’s house, and at the brickyard. Each of these was
equipped with a transformer-coupling for Doggo’s antennae,
as well as with mouthpieces for the others, so that now
at last oral conversation was possible with his Formian friend.
Later he would prepare a portable head-set such as he
had worn in Cupia.</p>
<p>Laboratory experiments demonstrated the success of his
sets in everything except durability of tubes. Yet in spite
of this drawback he was able to communicate across his
laboratory, and even with Jud’s house, and under favorable
conditions with Quivven at the palace by using a cold-tube
hookup. But this was not powerful enough to send as far
as the brickyard, let alone Cupia.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_121">121</div>
<p>At this juncture there appeared one morning at his gate
a Vairking soldier in leather tunic and helmet, requesting
entrance with important secret news. Myles grudgingly left
his work-bench and gave audience. The fellow had a strangely
familiar appearance and smiled in a quizzical manner; yet
Myles could not place him.</p>
<p>“Who are you?” Myles asked.</p>
<p>“Do you not know me?” the other asked in reply.</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>The soldier doffed his leather cap. “Do you know me
now?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“A life for a life?”</p>
<p>“Now I know you!” Cabot exclaimed. “You are Otto the
Bold, son of Grod the Silent, who is King of the Roies. To
paraphrase one of the proverbs of my own country, ‘A face
that is familiar in Sur is oft a stranger in Vairkingi.’ I did
not recognize you away from the surroundings in which
we met. What good fortune brings you here?”</p>
<p>“Not <i>good</i> fortune, but <i>bad</i>,” the Roy replied. “It is true
that Grod, my father, is our king, but it is also true that
Att the Terrible likewise claims the kingship. Att loves
Arkilu, and is even at this moment on the march against
Vairkingi with the largest army of Roies ever gathered.”</p>
<p>Myles smiled. “We are grateful for the information,” he
said. “With this forewarning we are secure against attack.”</p>
<p>“If you will pardon me,” Otto continued, “I think that
you are <i>not</i> secure. For one of your own Vairkings, Tipi
by name, marches with Att. Att has promised Tipi the
glorious golden Quivven in return for Tipi’s support. And
Tipi has many partisans within this city.”</p>
<p>Myles continued to smile. “We can deal with traitors,”
he asserted smugly. “There are many lamp-posts in our
city.”</p>
<p>But Otto kept on: “Sur has fallen.”</p>
<p>“What!” the earth-man shouted, at last shocked out of his
complacency. “The rock-bound impregnable fortress of Sur
fallen? Impossible!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_122">122</div>
<p>“Not impossible to those who travel through the skies
and drop black stones which fly to pieces with a loud
noise,” Otto calmly replied. “The beasts of the south have
made alliance with Att the Terrible, and Tipi the Steadfast,
and are marching with them. Good Builder! They are upon
us even now. Quick, the beasts enter this very room. Come,
draw, defend yourself!”</p>
<p>Wheeling quickly, Cabot confronted Doggo standing in
the doorway. Much relieved, he explained to Otto who this
newcomer was; then, seizing a pad and a lead stylus of his
own manufacture, he hurriedly sketched the situation to his
Formian friend.</p>
<p>In reply Doggo wrote: “At last I have magnesium ore.
Some soldiers brought it in, attracted by its pretty red color.
There is no time to be lost. To the laboratory. You must
complete our set and summon aid from Cupia. Meanwhile
I will get Jud on the air, and call him here for a conference.
We have no time to wait upon him, or even Theoph, in this
emergency.”</p>
<p>Myles read the message aloud to Otto.</p>
<p>“It is well,” the latter commented. “Now, if you will excuse
me, I must be running along. My disguise as a Vairking
soldier will get me safely out of your city, and I must join
my father, who is planning to counter-attack, if a fit opportunity
presents itself. Till we meet again.”</p>
<p>“Till we meet again, in this life or beyond the waves,”
the earth-man replied. “And may the Builder bless you for
your help this day.” Then he rushed to the laboratory.</p>
<p>Doggo was already tuning the set. “Jud is not at home,”
he wrote. “Shall I waste a tube on the brickyard?”</p>
<p>“No,” Myles signified with a shake of his head; then
seizing the pad and stylus again, he wrote: “I will try
and get Jud. You meanwhile attempt to extract magnesium
from this piece of carnallite.”</p>
<p class="tb">The ant-man knew exactly how to proceed. Grinding the
ore, he mixed it with salt and melted the mass in an iron
pot, which he connected electrically with the carbon terminal
of a line of electric batteries. In the boiling pot he placed
a copper plate connected with the zinc elements of his cells.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_123">123</div>
<p>By the time the earth-man returned from calling Jud on
the radio, a coating of pure magnesium had begun to form
on the copper anode.</p>
<p>An hour or so later he scraped off his first yield of the
precious metal, the final necessity of his projected radio set.</p>
<p>At this stage Jud appeared. “Pardon the delay,” he started
to explain. “You see, I—”</p>
<p>But Myles cut him short with: “Never mind explanations
now. It is enough that you are here. Sur has fallen. The
beasts of the south and Att the Terrible are on the warpath.
They seek to rob you of your Arkilu. With their aerial
wagons they will drop magic rocks upon this city and destroy
it. Give Doggo back his plane, and he will try to combat
them.”</p>
<p>But Jud shook his head. “You would merely escape,” he
replied, “and then we would be worse off than now.”</p>
<p>“Then you admit that you know the whereabouts of
Doggo’s plane?” Myles eagerly asked.</p>
<p>“Not at all, not at all,” the Vairking suavely replied. “I
was merely stating that, even if I knew where this ‘plane,’
as you call it, is—”</p>
<p>“For Builder’s sake, man!” Cabot cut in. “This is no
time to quibble over words! Give us the plane, if you would
save Theoph, yourself, and Arkilu.”</p>
<p>“It’s hardly necessary,” Jud asserted, unruffled. “Don’t get
so excited! If Att wants Arkilu, he certainly won’t drop
things on the palace. And we can defend the palace against
all the Roies in Vairkingi.”</p>
<p>“But not against magic slingshots,” replied the earth-man.</p>
<p>“Perhaps not,” the noble said with a crafty smile; “but
we shall see. Now I go to prepare the defense. You are at
liberty to come with us, if you will, or putter around your
tubes if you had rather. Good-by.”</p>
<p>“Shift for yourselves then!” Myles shouted after him,
and frantically resumed his work. His attempt to get the
plane by stratagem had failed. Perhaps Jud did not know
anything about the plane after all. It would be typical
of him.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_124">124</div>
<p>Myles had plenty of sets of grids, plates, and filaments
all prepared. Also plenty of long tubes of pyrex glass. All
that remained necessary was to coat the platinum elements
with magnesium, fuse them into the tube, exhaust the air
by the water method as before, seal the tube, and his
radio set would be complete.</p>
<p>“Where is Quivven?” he wrote to Doggo. “She ought
to be here helping with this.”</p>
<p>“On her way from the palace,” the ant-man replied. “I
radio-phoned her there.”</p>
<p>Presently she entered, and jauntily inquired what all
the excitement was about. Myles explained as briefly as
possible.</p>
<p>Her only answer was to shrug her golden shoulders and
remark, “Tipi is a little fool. He can have me if he can
get me.”</p>
<p>Then she took her seat at the workbench.</p>
<p>After a while she inquired, “Why the rush with the
radio set, when Vairkingi is in peril?”</p>
<p>Myles replied, “Our only hope now is to get Cupia on the
air, and persuade my followers there to send across the
boiling seas enough aerial wagons to defeat the beasts of
the south, or ‘Formians,’ as we call them.”</p>
<p>“And will you talk with your Lilla?” she asked innocently.</p>
<p>“Yes, if the Builder wills,” he eagerly and reverently replied.</p>
<p>To his surprise, Quivven jumped to her feet with flashing
eyes, and, seizing a small iron anvil from the workbench,
she held it over the precious pile of platinum elements.</p>
<p>“And if I drop this anvil, you will <i>not</i> talk to her. Is not
that so?”</p>
<p>Myles, horrified, sat rooted to his seat, unable to move.</p>
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