Everyone who has ever flown will recall the thrill of his first flight over
familiar terrain, viewing the old scenes from a new angle that imparted a
strangeness and a mystery to them as of a new world; but always there was the
comforting knowledge that the airport was not too far away and that even in the
event of a forced landing one would know pretty well where he was and how to get
home.
But that dawn that Duare and I took off from Havatoo to the accompaniment of the
staccato hum of Amtorian rifles, I was actually flying over an unknown world;
and there was no landing field and no home. I believe that this was the happiest
and most thrilling moment of my life. The woman I love had just told me that she
loved me, I was once again at the controls of a ship, I was free, I was flying
in safety above the innumerable menaces that haunt the Amtorian scene.
Undoubtedly, other dangers lay ahead of us in our seemingly hopeless quest for
Vepaja, but for the moment there was nothing to mar our happiness or arouse
forebodings. At least, not in me. With Duare it may have been a little
different. She may have had forebodings of disaster. It would not be strange if
she had, for up until the very instant that we rose to top the walls of Havatoo
she had had no conception that there might exist any contrivance in which man
might leave the ground and fly through the air. It was naturally something of a
shock to her; but she was very brave, and content, too, to accept my word that
we were safe.
The ship was a model of perfection, such a ship as will one day be common along
the airways of old Earth when science has progressed there as far as it has in
Havatoo. Synthetic materials of extreme strength and lightness entered into her
construction. The scientists of Havatoo assured me that she would have a life of
at least fifty years without overhaul or repairs other than what might be
required because of accident. The engine was noiseless and efficient beyond the
dreams of Earth men. Fuel for the life of the ship was aboard; and it took up
very little space, for it could all be held in the palm of one hand. This
apparent miracle is scientifically simple of explanation. Our own scientists are
aware of the fact that the energy released by combustion is only an
infinitesimal fraction of that which might be generated by the total
annihilation of a substance. In the case of coal it is as eighteen thousand
millions are to one. The fuel for my engine consists of a substance known as
lor, which contains an element called yor-san, as yet unknown to Earth men, and
another element, vik-ro, the action of which upon yor-san results in absolute
annihilation of the lor. Insofar as the operation of the ship was concerned, we
might have flown on for fifty years, barring adverse weather conditions; but our
weakness lay in the fact that we had no provisions. The precipitancy of our
departure had precluded any possibility of provisioning the ship. We had escaped
with our lives and what we had on, and that was all; but we were very happy. I
didn't want to spoil it by questioning the future. But, really, we had a great
many questions to ask of the future; and Duare presently raised one quite
innocently enough.
"But that is the one place you have been longing to go ever since you were
kidnaped by the klangan," I reminded her.
"But not now, Carson. My father, the jong, would have you destroyed. We have
spoken of love to one another, and no man may speak of love to the daughter of
the jong of Vepaja before she is twenty. You know that well enough."
"I certainly should," I teased her; "you have told me often enough."
"I did it for your own safety, but nevertheless I always liked to hear you say
it," she admitted.
"From the first. I have loved you from the first, Carson."
"You are an adept at dissimulation. I thought you hated me; and yet, sometimes I
wondered."
"And because I love you, you must never fall into the hands of my father."
"But where can we go, Duare? Do you know a single spot in all this world where
we should be safe? There is none; and in Vepaja you, at least, will be safe. I
shall have to take the chance of winning your father over."
"It could never be done," she declared. "The unwritten law that decrees this
thing is as old as the ancient empire of Vepaja. You have told me of the gods
and goddesses of the religions of your world. In Vepaja the royal family
occupies a similar position in the minds and hearts of the people, and this is
especially true of the virgin daughter of a jong--she is absolutely sacrosanct.
To look at her is an offense; to speak to her is a crime punishable by death."
"It's a crazy law," I snapped. "Where would you be now, had I abided by its
dictates?--dead. I should think your father would feel some obligation toward
me."
"And I suppose he is a jong first," I said, a little bitterly.
"Yes, he is a jong first; and so we may not return to Vepaja," she said with
finality.
What an ironical trick Fate had played upon me. With many opportunities in two
worlds to pick a girl for me to fall in love with, she had ended up by choosing
a goddess. It was tough, yet I wouldn't have had it otherwise. To have loved
Duare, and to know that she loved me, was better than a lifetime with any other
woman.
Duare's decision that we must not return to Vepaja had left me in something of a
quandary. Of course I didn't know that I could have found Vepaja anyway, but at
least it was something to aim at. Now I had nothing. Havatoo was the grandest
city I had ever seen; but the unbelievable decision of the judges who had
examined Duare after I had rescued her from the City of the Dead, and our
escape, made it impossible for us ever to return. To hunt for a hospitable city
in this strange world seemed useless and hopeless. Venus is a world of
contradictions, anomalies, and paradoxes. In the midst of scenes of peace and
beauty, one meets the most fearsome beasts; among a friendly, cultured people
exist senseless and barbarous customs; in a city peopled by men and women of
super-intelligence and sweetness the quality of mercy is utterly unknown to its
tribunals. What hope had I, then, of finding a safe retreat for Duare and
myself? I determined then to return Duare to Vepaja, that she, at least, might
be saved.
We were flying south along the course of Gerlat kum Rov, The River of Death,
toward the sea to which I knew the waters must eventually guide me. I was flying
low, as both Duare and I wished to see the country rolling majestically beneath
us. There were forests and hills and plains and, in the distance, mountains;
while over all, like the roof of a colassal tent, stretched the inner cloud
envelope that entirely surrounds the planet; and which, with the outer cloud
bank, tempers the heat of the sun and makes life possible on Venus. We saw herds
of animals grazing on the plains, but we saw no cities and no men. It was a vast
wilderness that stretched below us, beautiful but deadly--typically Amtorian.
Our course was due south, and I believed that when we reached the sea we would
but have to continue on across it to find Vepaja. Knowing that Vepaja was an
island, and always having in mind that some day I might wish to return to it, I
had designed my ship with retractable pontoons as well as ordinary landing gear.
The sight of the herds below us suggested food and stimulated my appetite. I
asked Duare if she were hungry. She said she was--very--but asked what good it
would do her.
"There's our dinner down there," I said, pointing.
"Yes, but by the time we get down there it will be gone," she said. "Wait till
they catch a glimpse of this thing. There won't be one of them within miles by
the time you get this thing on the ground--unless it scares some of them to
death."
She didn't say miles, of course; she said klookob, kob being a unit of distance
equivalent to 2.5 earth miles, the prefix kloo denoting the plural. But she did
say 'this thing' in Amtorian.
"Please don't call my beautiful ship 'this thing,'" I begged.
"But it is not a ship," she demurred. "A ship goes on water. I have a name for
it, Carson--it is an anotar."
It was a good name, too; for notar means ship, and an is the Amtorian word for
bird--birdship. I thought this better than airship, possibly because Duare had
coined it.
I had an elevation of about a thousand feet; but as my motor was absolutely
noiseless, none of the animals beneath us was yet aware of the strange thing
hovering above them. As I started to spiral downward, Duare gave a little gasp
and touched my arm. She didn't seize it, as some women might have; she just
touched it, as though the contact gave her assurance. It must have been rather a
terrifying experience for one who had never even seen an airship before that
morning.
"I'm going down after our dinner. Don't be frightened"
She said no more, but she still kept her hand on my arm. We were dropping
rapidly when suddenly one of the grazing animals looked up; and, at sight of us,
gave a loud snort of warning and went careening off across the plain. Then they
all stampeded. I straightened out and went after them, dropping down until I was
just above their backs. At the altitude at which we had been flying, the ground
speed had probably seemed slow to her; so that now that we were but a few feet
above ground it surprised her to find that we could easily outdistance the
fleetest of the racing beasts.
I do not consider that it is very sporting to shoot animals from an airplane,
but I was not indulging in sport--I was after food, and this was about the only
way that I could get it without endangering our lives by stalking on foot; so it
was without compunction that I drew my pistol and brought down a fat young
yearling of some strange herbivorous species unknown to our world; at least, I
guess it was a yearling--it looked as though it should be. The chase had brought
us quite close to a fringe of forest that grew along the banks of a tributary of
the River of Death; so that I had to bank quite sharply to avoid piling up among
the trees. When I glanced at Duare she was quite white, but she was keeping a
stiff upper lip. By the time I landed beside my kill, the plain was deserted.
Leaving Duare in the cockpit, I got out to bleed and butcher the animal. It was
my intention to cut off as much meat as I thought would remain fresh until we
could use it and then take off and fly to a more suitable temporary campsite.
I was working close beside the plane, and neither Duare nor I faced the forest
which lay but a short distance behind us. Of course, we were careless in not
maintaining a better watch; but I suppose we were both intent on my butchering
operations, which, I must admit, were doubtless strange and wonderful to behold.
The first intimation I had of impending danger was a frightened cry of "Carsonl"
from Duare. As I wheeled toward her, I saw fully a dozen warriors coming for me.
Three of them were right on top of me with raised swords. I saw no chance of
defending myself; and went down beneath those swords like a felled ox, but not
before the brief glimpse I had of my attackers revealed the astonishing fact
that they were all women.
I must have lain there unconscious for more than an hour, and when I regained
consciousness I found myself alone--the warriors and Duare were gone.