<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI<br/> The Forest Men Attack</h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Many</span> times during the
months I remained prisoner
among the Hans I had tried to
develop a plan of escape, but
could conceive of nothing which
seemed to have any reasonable
chance of success.</p>
<p>While I was allowed almost
complete freedom within the confines
of the city, and sometimes
was permitted to visit even the
military outposts and disintegrator
ray batteries in the surrounding
mountains, I was never
without a guard of at least five
men under the command of an
officer. These men were picked
soldiers, and they were armed
with powerful though short-range
disintegrator-ray pistols,
capable of annihilating anything
within a hundred feet. Their vigilance
never relaxed. The officer
on duty kept constantly at my
side, or a couple of paces behind
me, while certain of the others
were under strict orders never to
approach within my reach, nor to
get more than forty feet away
from me. The thought occurred
to me once to seize the officer at
my side and use him as a shield,
until I found that the guard
were under orders to destroy
both of us in such a case.</p>
<p>So in this fashion I roamed the
city corridors, wherever I
wished. I visited the great factories
at the bottom of the shafts
that led to the base of the mountain,
where, unattended by any
mechanics, great turbines
whirred and moaned, giant pistons
plunged back and forth, and
immense systems of chemical
vats, piping and converters, automatically
performed their
functions with the assistance of
no human hand, but under the
minute television inspection of
many perfumed dandies reclining
at their ease before viewplates
in their apartment offices
in the city, that clung to the
mountain peak far above.</p>
<p>There were just two restrictions
on my freedom of movement.
I was allowed nowhere
near the power-broadcasting station
on the peak, nor the complement
of it which was buried three
miles below the base of the mountain.
And I was never allowed to
approach within a hundred feet
of any disintegrator ray machine
when I visited the military outposts
in the surrounding mountains.</p>
<p>I first noticed the "escape tunnels"
one day when I had descended
to the lowest level of all,
the location of the Electronic
Plant, where machines, known as
"reverse disintegrators," fed
with earth and crushed rock by
automatic conveyors, subjected
this material to the disintegrator
ray, held the released electrons
captive within their magnetic
fields and slowly refashioned
them into supplies of metals and
other desired elements.</p>
<p>My attention was attracted to
the tunnels by the unusual fact
that men were busily entering
and leaving them. Almost the entire
repair force seemed to be
concentrated here. Stocky, muscular
men they were, with the
same modified Oriental countenances
as the rest of the Hans,
but with a certain ruggedness
about them that was lacking in
the rest of the indolent population.
They sweated as they labored
over the construction of
magnetic cars evidently designed
to travel down these tunnels, automatically
laying pipe lines for
ventilation and temperature control.
The tunnels themselves appeared
to have been driven with
disintegrator rays, which could
bore rapidly through the solid
rock, forming glassy iridescent
walls as they bored, and involving
no problem of debris removal.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">I asked</span> San-Lan about it the
next time I saw him, for the
officer of my guard would give
me no information.</p>
<p>The supreme ruler of the Hans
smiled mockingly.</p>
<p>"There is no reason why you
should not know their purpose,"
he said, "for you will never be
able to stop our use of them.
These tunnels constitute the road
to a new Han era. Your forest
men have turned our cities into
traps, but they have not trapped
our minds and our powers over
Nature. We are masters still;
masters of the world, and of the
forest men.</p>
<p>"You have revolutionized the
tactics of warfare with your explosive
rockets and your strategy
of fighting from concealed
positions, miles away, where we
cannot find you with our beams.
You have driven our ships from
the air, and you may destroy our
cities. But we shall be gone.</p>
<p>"Down these tunnels we shall
depart to our new cities, deep under
ground, and scattered far
and wide through the mountains.
They are nearly completed now.</p>
<p>"You will never blast us out of
these, even with your most powerful
explosives, because they
will be more difficult for you to
find than it is for us to locate a
forest gunner somewhere beneath
his leafy screen of miles of
trees, and because they will be
too far underground."</p>
<p>"But," I objected, "man cannot
live and flourish like a mole continually
removed from the light
of day, without the health-giving
rays of the sun, which man
needs."</p>
<p>"No?" San-Lan jeered. "Wild
tribesmen might not be able to,
but we are a civilization. We
shall make our own sunlight to
order in the bowels of the earth.
If necessary, we can manufacture
our air synthetically; not
the germ-laden air of Nature, but
absolutely pure air. Our underground
cities will be heated or refrigerated
artificially as conditions
may require. Why should
we not live underground if we
desire? We produce all our needs
synthetically.</p>
<p>"Nor will you be able to locate
our cities with electronic indicators.</p>
<p>"You see, Rogers, I know what
is in your mind. Our scientists
have planned carefully. All our
machinery and processes will be
shielded so that no electronic disturbances
will exist at the surface.</p>
<p>"And then, from our underground
cities we will emerge at
leisure to wage merciless war on
your wild men of the forest, until
we have at last done what our
forefathers should have done, exterminated
them to the last
beast."</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">He</span> thrust his jeering face
close to mine. "Have you any
answer to that?" he demanded.</p>
<p>My impulse was to plant my
fist in his face, for I could think
of no other answer. But I controlled
myself, and even forced
a hearty laugh, to irritate him.</p>
<p>"It is a fine plan," I admitted,
"but you will not have time to
carry it through. Long before
you can complete your new cities
you will have been destroyed."</p>
<p>"They will be completed within
the week," he replied triumphantly.
"We have not been asleep,
and our mechanical and scientific
resources make us masters
of time as well as the earth. You
shall see."</p>
<p>Naturally I was worried. I
would have given much if I could
have passed this information on
to our chiefs.</p>
<p>But two days later a mighty
exultation arose within me, when
from far to the east and also to
the south there came the rolling
and continuous thunder of
rocket fire. I was in my own
apartment at the time. The Han
captain of my guard was with
me, as usual, and two guards
stood just within the door. The
others were in the corridor outside.
And as soon as I heard it, I
questioned my jailer with a look.
He nodded assent, and I did
what probably every disengaged
person in Lo-Tan did at the same
moment, tuned in on the local
broadcast of the Military Headquarters
View and Control
Room.</p>
<p>It was as though the side wall
of my apartment had dissolved,
and we looked into a large room
or office which had no walls or
ceiling, these being replaced by
the interior surface of a hemisphere,
which was in fact a vast
viewplate on which those in the
room could see in every direction.
Some 200 staff officers had
their desks in this room. Each
desk was equipped with a system
of small viewplates of its own,
and each officer was responsible
for a given directional section of
the "map," and busied himself
with teleprojectoscope examination
of it, quite independently of
the general view thrown on the
dome plate.</p>
<p>At a raised circular desk in
the center, which was composed
entirely of viewplates, sat the
Executive Marshal, scanning the
hemisphere, calling occasionally
for telescopic views of one section
or another on his desk
plates, and noting the little pale
green signal lights that flashed
up as Sector Observers called for
his attention.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Members</span> of Strategy Board,
Base Commanders of military
units, and San-Lan himself,
I understood, sat at similar
desks in their private offices, on
which all these views were duplicated,
and in constant verbal and
visual communication with one
another and with the Executive
Marshal.</p>
<p>The particular view which appeared
on my own wall fortunately
showed the east side of
the dome viewplate and in one
corner of my picture appeared
the Executive Marshal himself.</p>
<p>Although I was getting a viewplate
picture of a viewplate picture,
I could see the broad,
rugged valley to the east plainly,
and the relatively low ridge
beyond, which must have been
some thirty miles away.</p>
<p>It was beyond this, evidently
far beyond it, that the scene of
the action was located, for nothing
showed on the plate but a
misty haze permeated by indefinite
and continuous pulsations
of light, and against which the
low mountain ridge stood out in
bold relief.</p>
<p>Somewhere on the floor of the
Observation room, of course, was
a Sector Observer who was looking
beyond that ridge, probably
through a projectoscope station
in the second or third "circle,"
located perhaps on that ridge or
beyond it.</p>
<p>At the very moment I was
wishing for his facilities the Executive
Marshal leaned over to a
microphone and gave an order in
a low tone. The hemispherical
view dissolved, and another took
its place, from the third circle.
And the view was now that which
would be seen by a man standing
on the low distant ridge.</p>
<p>There was another broad valley,
a wide and deep canyon, in
fact, and beyond this still another
ridge, the outlines of which
were already beginning to fade
into the on-creeping haze of the
barrage. The flashes of the great
detonating rockets were momentarily
becoming more vivid.</p>
<p>"That's the Gok-Man ridge,"
mused the Han officer beside me
in the apartment, "and the Forest
Men must be more than fifty
miles beyond that."</p>
<p>"How do you figure that?" I
asked curiously.</p>
<p>"Because obviously they have
not penetrated our scout lines.
See that line of observers nearest
the dome itself. They're all busy
with their desk plates. They're in
communication with the scout
line. The scout line broadcast is
still in operation. It looks as
though the line is still unpierced,
but the tribesmen's rockets are
sailing over and falling this side
of it."</p>
<p>All through the night the barrage
continued. At times it
seemed to creep closer and then
recede again. Finally it withdrew,
pulling back to the American
lines, to alternately advance
and recede. At last I went to
sleep. The Han officer seemed to
be a relatively good-natured fellow,
for one of his race, and he
promised to awake me if anything
further of interest took
place.</p>
<p>He didn't though. When I
awoke in the morning, he gave
me a brief outline of what had
happened.</p>
<p>It was pieced together from
his own observations and the
public news broadcast.</p>
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