<h2><SPAN name="XX_THE_TABLES_TURNED" id="XX_THE_TABLES_TURNED">XX</SPAN></h2>
<p class="ph2"> THE TABLES TURNED</p>
<p>But the men in charge of the kerkools in the street below, the
kerkools which bore the machinery for the short-circuiting ray, busied
themselves about their outfits as though they did not realize that
their rays were impotent against the trophil engines of the enemy.</p>
<p>The vanguard of the Formian fleet arrived over the city. The watchers
on the terrace could distinctly see the low-flying-point-plane. But,
to get a clearer view, Cabot removed the black light filters from the
binoculars which had dropped beside him the night before, and focused
the glasses on the oncoming flyer. He noted her black crew. He noted
that she carried the black pennant of the ant empire, rather than the
yellow pennant of Yuri. And then he uttered an exclamation of surprise.</p>
<p>“She is a bomber,” he cried, “and is about to bomb the palace!”</p>
<p>At these words Lilla started to rush down into the interior; but
Nan-nan put out a restraining hand. “You are safer here,” he said, “and
what the Great Builder wills let us accept.”</p>
<p>Cabot drew his princess close to him and waited.</p>
<p>But the plane never reached the palace. Suddenly and inexplicably it
burst into flames and dropped like a meteor into the plaza just to
the southward. The plane on its left quickly followed suit, and then
that on its right. Other planes along the line met the same fate, and
yet the Cupian fleet had not yet come within range. What could be the
explanation?</p>
<p>And then into that disorganized and demoralized line of ants, which
but a few paraparths ago had been advancing so serenely confident
upon Kuana, there charged the united forces of the Cupians and their
Hymernian allies. The Formians broke. They retreated southward again.
Their retreat became a rout. But how had it been accomplished?</p>
<p>“It is the miracle for which I prayed,” Lilla exclaimed.</p>
<p>“Tell us, O Nan-nan,” Cabot demanded, “you of the lost religion, whose
holy father knows everything.”</p>
<p>But the young priest merely grinned sheepishly.</p>
<p>“Doubtless the holy father does know,” he said, “but he omitted to
impart his knowledge to me before I left the Caves of Kar.”</p>
<p>“Well said!” Cabot remarked. “That is the best crawl I have ever
witnessed. As an alibi artist you beat even a certain classmate of
mine, who was noted for that at Harvard, and later in his practice of
the law.”</p>
<p>Nan-nan’s grin became even more sheepish.</p>
<p>Cabot continued: “But this should be an occasion for rejoicing rather
than for questionable humor on my part. Forgive me, Nan-nan. We have
just been present at a great victory. You and Glamp-glamp saved my life
in the Caves of Kar, so that I might live to see this day. You yourself
saved my princess by directing me to her in the passage beneath the
palace, and thus she too is present on this joyous occasion. Cupia is
again free. And no little of the credit belongs to the priests of the
lost religion.”</p>
<p>“The credit all belongs to Myles Cabot,” magnanimously replied Nan-nan.</p>
<p>They were interrupted by a boyish figure which rushed up the stairs
onto the terrace. It was Prince Toron. His youthful face was suffused
with joy. In fact, he seemed more like his former carefree self than he
had at any time since the beginning of the war.</p>
<p>“Well, well,” he cried. “Greetings, my cousins! This is indeed a happy
occasion. Even now the vanguard of our army of liberation is entering
the capital. But I came on in advance to superintend my machines.”</p>
<p>“And to take over your palace, I suppose,” Cabot added dryly and not
without malice. Ever since he had found the dead body of the baby
Cupian on the royal bier in the deserted castle on the island of Lake
Luno, with the note signed “Toron, King of Cupia,” Myles had borne
ill-will against his wife’s cousin. At first he had suspected Toron of
the deed. But this suspicion had been allayed by the account of the
happenings at Luno Castle which had been told him by the priests of
the Caves of Kar. It had awakened, only to be stilled again by Toron’s
own story and by the assurances given by Poblath. Nevertheless, he
still resented Toron’s bad taste in signing the note with his royal
title—resented even the fact that Toron, that any one else than Lilla’s
own son, was King of Cupia. This resentment had been only slightly
mitigated by the unquestioned loyalty of Toron to Cupia and the common
cause.</p>
<p>And so Myles permitted his feelings to get the better of his manners
when he greeted Toron on this joyous occasion which should have been
free from all malice.</p>
<p>Lilla appeared shocked and surprised at her husband’s language, and
started to remonstrate; but he, sensing the situation at once, cut in
ahead of her with a question.</p>
<p>“By the way, your majesty,” he said, “we are all most inquisitive to
learn just how you contrived to bring down those enemy planes, and thus
save the day when all seemed lost.”</p>
<p>“I thought you would want to know,” Toron replied, with boyish pride.
“So that was one of the reasons why I rushed up here to greet you.
You remember the day with our army in the mountains, when that young
aviator excited your attention by stopping his airplane motor with
a word, and how we perfected a machine which would send a ray which
would accomplish the same thing. But perhaps you were not so intimately
acquainted with our later experiments with that ray. You remember how
we were not able to understand fully just why this ray accomplished
what it did. This intrigued me to such an extent that I resolved to
discover the secret. And I hit upon the clue just about the time that
you were captured.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes,” Cabot interrupted, “but I am not asking about the
motor-stopping ray, which became useless as soon as the enemy copied us
by adopting trophil engines. What I am asking is how you destroyed the
foremost planes of the enemy advance in this morning’s battle?”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Toron smiled indulgently.</p>
<p>“Wait a paraparth,” he said. “I am just getting to that. To get back
to the motor-stopping ray, which I was telling you about, I discovered
that it was not the radio impulse which actually did the work, but
rather a sort of sub-wave, or by-product of it, which was more of
the nature of a light-wave than anything else. In fact, it was a bit
like the black light of which you taught us, and which we used so
effectively in our signaling and in our searchlights. This led me to
turn my efforts to producing the sub-wave directly, rather than as a
by-product of a radio impulse.</p>
<p>“When this had been accomplished I discovered that this new wave worked
by converting its path through the air into an electric conductor more
perfect even than heavy electric cable. It was this conductive path,
falling athwart the wiring of the airplane, that short-circuited the
ignition and stopped the motor.</p>
<p>“From this discovery it was but a simple step to use the wave as a
power-line. In the battle this morning we would focus two rays on the
fuel tank of an enemy plane, send a high potential current up one wave
and down the other—and bang goes the tank. Very neat, wasn’t it?”</p>
<p>“Toron, you’re a genius!” Cabot exclaimed, patting the other warmly on
the cheek. “The radio man from the earth yields the palm to the radio
man of the planet Poros.”</p>
<p>“This is something which the holy father must know at once,” Nan-nan
interjected.</p>
<p>“In order to maintain his reputation for omniscience,” Cabot laughingly
added.</p>
<p>This reminded him that he had ignored the presence of the priest and
the colonel, ever since the sudden arrival of Toron, so he turned with
an apology and introduced them.</p>
<p>“I must beg your majesty’s pardon and that of my two distinguished
friends here,” he said. “Your majesty, permit me to present Colonel
Wotsn, impressed into service as chief of staff of the palace forces,
and Nan-nan, one of the priests of the lost religion, who ministered
unto me in the Caves of Kar. A very human individual, in spite of being
a priest.”</p>
<p>Toron patted the cheek of each in turn as they bowed low before him.</p>
<p>Again Lilla sought to interrupt: “But my cousin is not king.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” Cabot exclaimed, amazed. “Certainly you hold no
brief for his brother, the renegade Yuri.”</p>
<p>“Certainly not,” the princess remonstrated, “but you forget our little
son. It’s our little Kew who is King of Cupia.”</p>
<p>All the party turned to look at her in horror! Was her mind becoming
unhinged by the ordeals which she had gone through? Did she not
remember the terrible doings in Luno Castle, when Yuri’s dagger had
stilled forever the heart of the little babe?</p>
<p>Toron had found the dead body and had withdrawn the dagger and prepared
the funeral bier. Cabot had buried the little corpse with his own
hands. Nan-nan knew the whole ghastly story in its every detail, from
the spies of the lost religion. And even Wotsn shared in the general
popular knowledge.</p>
<p>Had Lilla’s mind gone blank on this subject? Lilla, from whose own arms
the babe had been snatched by its assassin!</p>
<p>Myles flung a protecting arm about her.</p>
<p>“My poor, poor, dear girl,” he said comfortingly, “our little darling
lies dead and buried in the courtyard of Luno Castle.”</p>
<p>Indignantly she broke away from him, and stormed: “I’ll <i>not</i> be
soothed as though I were drunk with saffra-root. I know what I know.
And—”</p>
<p>But suddenly Nan-nan exclaimed, “Look! Look at the street below!”</p>
<p>Instantly all were attention. And no wonder, for the street below was
filled with the ranks of marching ant men!</p>
<p>“Is it a <i>coup</i>?” Cabot shouted. “Are we betrayed? You, whose religion
tells you everything, answer me that.”</p>
<p>All stood doubly dumfounded. What signified the marching Formians? And
what meant Princess Lilla’s words about the infant king?</p>
<hr class="chap" />
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