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Title: The Land That Time Forgot
Author: Edgar Rice Burroughs
Release date: June 1, 1996 [eBook #551]
Most recently updated: June 27, 2025
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Judith Boss. HTML version by Al Haines.
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAND THAT TIME FORGOT ***
The Land that Time Forgot
By Edgar Rice Burroughs
CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 1
It must have been a little after three o’clock in the afternoon that it
happened—the afternoon of June 3rd, 1916. It seems incredible that all that I
have passed through—all those weird and terrifying experiences—should have been
encompassed within so short a span as three brief months. Rather might I have
experienced a cosmic cycle, with all its changes and evolutions for that which
I have seen with my own eyes in this brief interval of time—things that no
other mortal eye had seen before, glimpses of a world past, a world dead, a
world so long dead that even in the lowest Cambrian stratum no trace of it
remains. Fused with the melting inner crust, it has passed forever beyond the
ken of man other than in that lost pocket of the earth whither fate has borne
me and where my doom is sealed. I am here and here must remain.
After reading this far, my interest, which already had been stimulated by the
finding of the manuscript, was approaching the boiling-point. I had come to
Greenland for the summer, on the advice of my physician, and was slowly being
bored to extinction, as I had thoughtlessly neglected to bring sufficient
reading-matter. Being an indifferent fisherman, my enthusiasm for this form of
sport soon waned; yet in the absence of other forms of recreation I was now
risking my life in an entirely inadequate boat off Cape Farewell at the
southernmost extremity of Greenland.
Greenland! As a descriptive appellation, it is a sorry joke—but my story has
nothing to do with Greenland, nothing to do with me; so I shall get through
with the one and the other as rapidly as possible.
The inadequate boat finally arrived at a precarious landing, the natives,
waist-deep in the surf, assisting. I was carried ashore, and while the evening
meal was being prepared, I wandered to and fro along the rocky, shattered
shore. Bits of surf-harried beach clove the worn granite, or whatever the rocks
of Cape Farewell may be composed of, and as I followed the ebbing tide down one
of these soft stretches, I saw the thing. Were one to bump into a Bengal tiger
in the ravine behind the Bimini Baths, one could be no more surprised than was
I to see a perfectly good quart thermos bottle turning and twisting in the surf
of Cape Farewell at the southern extremity of Greenland. I rescued it, but I
was soaked above the knees doing it; and then I sat down in the sand and opened
it, and in the long twilight read the manuscript, neatly written and tightly
folded, which was its contents.
You have read the opening paragraph, and if you are an imaginative idiot like
myself, you will want to read the rest of it; so I shall give it to you here,
omitting quotation marks—which are difficult of remembrance. In two minutes you
will forget me.
My home is in Santa Monica. I am, or was, junior member of my father’s firm. We
are ship-builders. Of recent years we have specialized on submarines, which we
have built for Germany, England, France and the United States. I know a sub as
a mother knows her baby’s face, and have commanded a score of them on their
trial runs. Yet my inclinations were all toward aviation. I graduated under
Curtiss, and after a long siege with my father obtained his permission to try
for the Lafayette Escadrille. As a stepping-stone I obtained an appointment in
the American ambulance service and was on my way to France when three shrill
whistles altered, in as many seconds, my entire scheme of life.
I was sitting on deck with some of the fellows who were going into the American
ambulance service with me, my Airedale, Crown Prince Nobbler, asleep at my
feet, when the first blast of the whistle shattered the peace and security of
the ship. Ever since entering the U-boat zone we had been on the lookout for
periscopes, and children that we were, bemoaning the unkind fate that was to
see us safely into France on the morrow without a glimpse of the dread
marauders. We were young; we craved thrills, and God knows we got them that
day; yet by comparison with that through which I have since passed they were as
tame as a Punch-and-Judy show.
I shall never forget the ashy faces of the passengers as they stampeded for
their life-belts, though there was no panic. Nobs rose with a low growl. I
rose, also, and over the ship’s side, I saw not two hundred yards distant the
periscope of a submarine, while racing toward the liner the wake of a torpedo
was distinctly visible. We were aboard an American ship—which, of course, was
not armed. We were entirely defenseless; yet without warning, we were being
torpedoed.
I stood rigid, spellbound, watching the white wake of the torpedo. It struck us
on the starboard side almost amidships. The vessel rocked as though the sea
beneath it had been uptorn by a mighty volcano. We were thrown to the decks,
bruised and stunned, and then above the ship, carrying with it fragments of
steel and wood and dismembered human bodies, rose a column of water hundreds of
feet into the air.
The silence which followed the detonation of the exploding torpedo was almost
equally horrifying. It lasted for perhaps two seconds, to be followed by the
screams and moans of the wounded, the cursing of the men and the hoarse
commands of the ship’s officers. They were splendid—they and their crew. Never
before had I been so proud of my nationality as I was that moment. In all the
chaos which followed the torpedoing of the liner no officer or member of the
crew lost his head or showed in the slightest any degree of panic or fear.
While we were attempting to lower boats, the submarine emerged and trained guns
on us. The officer in command ordered us to lower our flag, but this the
captain of the liner refused to do. The ship was listing frightfully to
starboard, rendering the port boats useless, while half the starboard boats had
been demolished by the explosion. Even while the passengers were crowding the
starboard rail and scrambling into the few boats left to us, the submarine
commenced shelling the ship. I saw one shell burst in a group of women and
children, and then I turned my head and covered my eyes.
When I looked again to horror was added chagrin, for with the emerging of the
U-boat I had recognized her as a product of our own shipyard. I knew her to a
rivet. I had superintended her construction. I had sat in that very
conning-tower and directed the efforts of the sweating crew below when first
her prow clove the sunny summer waters of the Pacific; and now this creature of
my brain and hand had turned _Frankenstein_, bent upon pursuing me to my
death.
A second shell exploded upon the deck. One of the lifeboats, frightfully
overcrowded, swung at a dangerous angle from its davits. A fragment of the
shell shattered the bow tackle, and I saw the women and children and the men
vomited into the sea beneath, while the boat dangled stern up for a moment from
its single davit, and at last with increasing momentum dived into the midst of
the struggling victims screaming upon the face of the waters.
Now I saw men spring to the rail and leap into the ocean. The deck was tilting
to an impossible angle. Nobs braced himself with all four feet to keep from
slipping into the scuppers and looked up into my face with a questioning whine.
I stooped and stroked his head.
“Come on, boy!” I cried, and running to the side of the ship, dived
headforemost over the rail. When I came up, the first thing I saw was Nobs
swimming about in a bewildered sort of way a few yards from me. At sight of me
his ears went flat, and his lips parted in a characteristic grin.
The submarine was withdrawing toward the north, but all the time it was
shelling the open boats, three of them, loaded to the gunwales with survivors.
Fortunately the small boats presented a rather poor target, which, combined
with the bad marksmanship of the Germans preserved their occupants from harm;
and after a few minutes a blotch of smoke appeared upon the eastern horizon and
the U-boat submerged and disappeared.
All the time the lifeboats had been pulling away from the danger of the sinking
liner, and now, though I yelled at the top of my lungs, they either did not
hear my appeals for help or else did not dare return to succor me. Nobs and I
had gained some little distance from the ship when it rolled completely over
and sank. We were caught in the suction only enough to be drawn backward a few
yards, neither of us being carried beneath the surface. I glanced hurriedly
about for something to which to cling. My eyes were directed toward the point
at which the liner had disappeared when there came from the depths of the ocean
the muffled reverberation of an explosion, and almost simultaneously a geyser
of water in which were shattered lifeboats, human bodies, steam, coal, oil, and
the flotsam of a liner’s deck leaped high above the surface of the sea—a watery
column momentarily marking the grave of another ship in this greatest cemetery
of the seas.
When the turbulent waters had somewhat subsided and the sea had ceased to spew
up wreckage, I ventured to swim back in search of something substantial enough
to support my weight and that of Nobs as well. I had gotten well over the area
of the wreck when not a half-dozen yards ahead of me a lifeboat shot bow
foremost out of the ocean almost its entire length to flop down upon its keel
with a mighty splash. It must have been carried far below, held to its mother
ship by a single rope which finally parted to the enormous strain put upon it.
In no other way can I account for its having leaped so far out of the water—a
beneficent circumstance to which I doubtless owe my life, and that of another
far dearer to me than my own. I say beneficent circumstance even in the face of
the fact that a fate far more hideous confronts us than that which we escaped
that day; for because of that circumstance I have met her whom otherwise I
never should have known; I have met and loved her. At least I have had that
great happiness in life; nor can Caspak, with all her horrors, expunge that
which has been.
So for the thousandth time I thank the strange fate which sent that lifeboat
hurtling upward from the green pit of destruction to which it had been
dragged—sent it far up above the surface, emptying its water as it rose above
the waves, and dropping it upon the surface of the sea, buoyant and safe.
It did not take me long to clamber over its side and drag Nobs in to
comparative safety, and then I glanced around upon the scene of death and
desolation which surrounded us. The sea was littered with wreckage among which
floated the pitiful forms of women and children, buoyed up by their useless
lifebelts. Some were torn and mangled; others lay rolling quietly to the motion
of the sea, their countenances composed and peaceful; others were set in
hideous lines of agony or horror. Close to the boat’s side floated the figure
of a girl. Her face was turned upward, held above the surface by her life-belt,
and was framed in a floating mass of dark and waving hair. She was very
beautiful. I had never looked upon such perfect features, such a divine molding
which was at the same time human—intensely human. It was a face filled with
character and strength and femininity—the face of one who was created to love
and to be loved. The cheeks were flushed to the hue of life and health and
vitality, and yet she lay there upon the bosom of the sea, dead. I felt
something rise in my throat as I looked down upon that radiant vision, and I
swore that I should live to avenge her murder.
And then I let my eyes drop once more to the face upon the water, and what I
saw nearly tumbled me backward into the sea, for the eyes in the dead face had
opened; the lips had parted; and one hand was raised toward me in a mute appeal
for succor. She lived! She was not dead! I leaned over the boat’s side and drew
her quickly in to the comparative safety which God had given me. I removed her
life-belt and my soggy coat and made a pillow for her head. I chafed her hands
and arms and feet. I worked over her for an hour, and at last I was rewarded by
a deep sigh, and again those great eyes opened and looked into mine.
At that I was all embarrassment. I have never been a ladies’ man; at
Leland-Stanford I was the butt of the class because of my hopeless imbecility
in the presence of a pretty girl; but the men liked me, nevertheless. I was
rubbing one of her hands when she opened her eyes, and I dropped it as though
it were a red-hot rivet. Those eyes took me in slowly from head to foot; then
they wandered slowly around the horizon marked by the rising and falling
gunwales of the lifeboat. They looked at Nobs and softened, and then came back
to me filled with questioning.
“I—I—” I stammered, moving away and stumbling over the next thwart. The vision
smiled wanly.
“Aye-aye, sir!” she replied faintly, and again her lips drooped, and her long
lashes swept the firm, fair texture of her skin.
“I hope that you are feeling better,” I finally managed to say.
“Do you know,” she said after a moment of silence, “I have been awake for a
long time! But I did not dare open my eyes. I thought I must be dead, and I was
afraid to look, for fear that I should see nothing but blackness about me. I am
afraid to die! Tell me what happened after the ship went down. I remember all
that happened before—oh, but I wish that I might forget it!” A sob broke her
voice. “The beasts!” she went on after a moment. “And to think that I was to
have married one of them—a lieutenant in the German navy.”
Presently she resumed as though she had not ceased speaking. “I went down and
down and down. I thought I should never cease to sink. I felt no particular
distress until I suddenly started upward at ever-increasing velocity; then my
lungs seemed about to burst, and I must have lost consciousness, for I remember
nothing more until I opened my eyes after listening to a torrent of invective
against Germany and Germans. Tell me, please, all that happened after the ship
sank.”
I told her, then, as well as I could, all that I had seen—the submarine
shelling the open boats and all the rest of it. She thought it marvelous that
we should have been spared in so providential a manner, and I had a pretty
speech upon my tongue’s end, but lacked the nerve to deliver it. Nobs had come
over and nosed his muzzle into her lap, and she stroked his ugly face, and at
last she leaned over and put her cheek against his forehead. I have always
admired Nobs; but this was the first time that it had ever occurred to me that
I might wish to be Nobs. I wondered how he would take it, for he is as unused
to women as I. But he took to it as a duck takes to water. What I lack of being
a ladies’ man, Nobs certainly makes up for as a ladies’ dog. The old scalawag
just closed his eyes and put on one of the softest
“sugar-wouldn’t-melt-in-my-mouth” expressions you ever saw and stood there
taking it and asking for more. It made me jealous.
“You seem fond of dogs,” I said.
“I am fond of this dog,” she replied.
Whether she meant anything personal in that reply I did not know; but I took it
as personal and it made me feel mighty good.
As we drifted about upon that vast expanse of loneliness it is not strange that
we should quickly become well acquainted. Constantly we scanned the horizon for
signs of smoke, venturing guesses as to our chances of rescue; but darkness
settled, and the black night enveloped us without ever the sight of a speck
upon the waters.
We were thirsty, hungry, uncomfortable, and cold. Our wet garments had dried
but little and I knew that the girl must be in grave danger from the exposure
to a night of cold and wet upon the water in an open boat, without sufficient
clothing and no food. I had managed to bail all the water out of the boat with
cupped hands, ending by mopping the balance up with my handkerchief—a slow and
back-breaking procedure; thus I had made a comparatively dry place for the girl
to lie down low in the bottom of the boat, where the sides would protect her
from the night wind, and when at last she did so, almost overcome as she was by
weakness and fatigue, I threw my wet coat over her further to thwart the chill.
But it was of no avail; as I sat watching her, the moonlight marking out the
graceful curves of her slender young body, I saw her shiver.
“Isn’t there something I can do?” I asked. “You can’t lie there chilled through
all night. Can’t you suggest something?”
She shook her head. “We must grin and bear it,” she replied after a moment.
Nobbler came and lay down on the thwart beside me, his back against my leg, and
I sat staring in dumb misery at the girl, knowing in my heart of hearts that
she might die before morning came, for what with the shock and exposure, she
had already gone through enough to kill almost any woman. And as I gazed down
at her, so small and delicate and helpless, there was born slowly within my
breast a new emotion. It had never been there before; now it will never cease
to be there. It made me almost frantic in my desire to find some way to keep
warm the cooling lifeblood in her veins. I was cold myself, though I had almost
forgotten it until Nobbler moved and I felt a new sensation of cold along my
leg against which he had lain, and suddenly realized that in that one spot I
had been warm. Like a great light came the understanding of a means to warm the
girl. Immediately I knelt beside her to put my scheme into practice when
suddenly I was overwhelmed with embarrassment. Would she permit it, even if I
could muster the courage to suggest it? Then I saw her frame convulse,
shudderingly, her muscles reacting to her rapidly lowering temperature, and
casting prudery to the winds, I threw myself down beside her and took her in my
arms, pressing her body close to mine.
She drew away suddenly, voicing a little cry of fright, and tried to push me
from her.
“Forgive me,” I managed to stammer. “It is the only way. You will die of
exposure if you are not warmed, and Nobs and I are the only means we can
command for furnishing warmth.” And I held her tightly while I called Nobs and
bade him lie down at her back. The girl didn’t struggle any more when she
learned my purpose; but she gave two or three little gasps, and then began to
cry softly, burying her face on my arm, and thus she fell asleep.
Chapter 2
Toward morning, I must have dozed, though it seemed to me at the time that I
had lain awake for days, instead of hours. When I finally opened my eyes, it
was daylight, and the girl’s hair was in my face, and she was breathing
normally. I thanked God for that. She had turned her head during the night so
that as I opened my eyes I saw her face not an inch from mine, my lips almost
touching hers.
It was Nobs who finally awoke her. He got up, stretched, turned around a few
times and lay down again, and the girl opened her eyes and looked into mine.
Hers went very wide at first, and then slowly comprehension came to her, and
she smiled.
“You have been very good to me,” she said, as I helped her to rise, though if
the truth were known I was more in need of assistance than she; the circulation
all along my left side seeming to be paralyzed entirely. “You have been very
good to me.” And that was the only mention she ever made of it; yet I know that
she was thankful and that only reserve prevented her from referring to what, to
say the least, was an embarrassing situation, however unavoidable.
Shortly after daylight we saw smoke apparently coming straight toward us, and
after a time we made out the squat lines of a tug—one of those fearless
exponents of England’s supremacy of the sea that tows sailing ships into French
and English ports. I stood up on a thwart and waved my soggy coat above my
head. Nobs stood upon another and barked. The girl sat at my feet straining her
eyes toward the deck of the oncoming boat. “They see us,” she said at last.
“There is a man answering your signal.” She was right. A lump came into my
throat—for her sake rather than for mine. She was saved, and none too soon. She
could not have lived through another night upon the Channel; she might not have
lived through the coming day.
The tug came close beside us, and a man on deck threw us a rope. Willing hands
dragged us to the deck, Nobs scrambling nimbly aboard without assistance. The
rough men were gentle as mothers with the girl. Plying us both with questions
they hustled her to the captain’s cabin and me to the boiler-room. They told
the girl to take off her wet clothes and throw them outside the door that they
might be dried, and then to slip into the captain’s bunk and get warm. They
didn’t have to tell me to strip after I once got into the warmth of the
boiler-room. In a jiffy, my clothes hung about where they might dry most
quickly, and I myself was absorbing, through every pore, the welcome heat of
the stifling compartment. They brought us hot soup and coffee, and then those
who were not on duty sat around and helped me damn the Kaiser and his brood.
As soon as our clothes were dry, they bade us don them, as the chances were
always more than fair in those waters that we should run into trouble with the
enemy, as I was only too well aware. What with the warmth and the feeling of
safety for the girl, and the knowledge that a little rest and food would
quickly overcome the effects of her experiences of the past dismal hours, I was
feeling more content than I had experienced since those three whistle-blasts
had shattered the peace of my world the previous afternoon.
But peace upon the Channel has been but a transitory thing since August, 1914.
It proved itself such that morning, for I had scarce gotten into my dry clothes
and taken the girl’s apparel to the captain’s cabin when an order was shouted
down into the engine-room for full speed ahead, and an instant later I heard
the dull boom of a gun. In a moment I was up on deck to see an enemy submarine
about two hundred yards off our port bow. She had signaled us to stop, and our
skipper had ignored the order; but now she had her gun trained on us, and the
second shot grazed the cabin, warning the belligerent tug-captain that it was
time to obey. Once again an order went down to the engine-room, and the tug
reduced speed. The U-boat ceased firing and ordered the tug to come about and
approach. Our momentum had carried us a little beyond the enemy craft, but we
were turning now on the arc of a circle that would bring us alongside her. As I
stood watching the maneuver and wondering what was to become of us, I felt
something touch my elbow and turned to see the girl standing at my side. She
looked up into my face with a rueful expression. “They seem bent on our
destruction,” she said, “and it looks like the same boat that sunk us
yesterday.”
“It is,” I replied. “I know her well. I helped design her and took her out on
her first run.”
The girl drew back from me with a little exclamation of surprise and
disappointment. “I thought you were an American,” she said. “I had no idea you
were a—a—”
“Nor am I,” I replied. “Americans have been building submarines for all nations
for many years. I wish, though, that we had gone bankrupt, my father and I,
before ever we turned out that _Frankenstein_ of a thing.”
We were approaching the U-boat at half speed now, and I could almost
distinguish the features of the men upon her deck. A sailor stepped to my side
and slipped something hard and cold into my hand. I did not have to look at it
to know that it was a heavy pistol. “Tyke ’er an’ use ’er,” was all he said.
Our bow was pointed straight toward the U-boat now as I heard word passed to
the engine for full speed ahead. I instantly grasped the brazen effrontery of
the plucky English skipper—he was going to ram five hundreds tons of U-boat in
the face of her trained gun. I could scarce repress a cheer. At first the
boches didn’t seem to grasp his intention. Evidently they thought they were
witnessing an exhibition of poor seamanship, and they yelled their warnings to
the tug to reduce speed and throw the helm hard to port.
We were within fifty feet of them when they awakened to the intentional menace
of our maneuver. Their gun crew was off its guard; but they sprang to their
piece now and sent a futile shell above our heads. Nobs leaped about and barked
furiously. “Let ’em have it!” commanded the tug-captain, and instantly
revolvers and rifles poured bullets upon the deck of the submersible. Two of
the gun-crew went down; the other trained their piece at the water-line of the
oncoming tug. The balance of those on deck replied to our small-arms fire,
directing their efforts toward the man at our wheel.
I hastily pushed the girl down the companionway leading to the engine-room, and
then I raised my pistol and fired my first shot at a boche. What happened in
the next few seconds happened so quickly that details are rather blurred in my
memory. I saw the helmsman lunge forward upon the wheel, pulling the helm
around so that the tug sheered off quickly from her course, and I recall
realizing that all our efforts were to be in vain, because of all the men
aboard, Fate had decreed that this one should fall first to an enemy bullet. I
saw the depleted gun-crew on the submarine fire their piece and I felt the
shock of impact and heard the loud explosion as the shell struck and exploded
in our bows.
I saw and realized these things even as I was leaping into the pilot-house and
grasping the wheel, standing astride the dead body of the helmsman. With all my
strength I threw the helm to starboard; but it was too late to effect the
purpose of our skipper. The best I did was to scrape alongside the sub. I heard
someone shriek an order into the engine-room; the boat shuddered and trembled
to the sudden reversing of the engines, and our speed quickly lessened. Then I
saw what that madman of a skipper planned since his first scheme had gone
wrong.
With a loud-yelled command, he leaped to the slippery deck of the submersible,
and at his heels came his hardy crew. I sprang from the pilot-house and
followed, not to be left out in the cold when it came to strafing the boches.
From the engine room companionway came the engineer and stockers, and together
we leaped after the balance of the crew and into the hand-to-hand fight that
was covering the wet deck with red blood. Beside me came Nobs, silent now, and
grim. Germans were emerging from the open hatch to take part in the battle on
deck. At first the pistols cracked amidst the cursing of the men and the loud
commands of the commander and his junior; but presently we were too
indiscriminately mixed to make it safe to use our firearms, and the battle
resolved itself into a hand-to-hand struggle for possession of the deck.
The sole aim of each of us was to hurl one of the opposing force into the sea.
I shall never forget the hideous expression upon the face of the great Prussian
with whom chance confronted me. He lowered his head and rushed at me, bellowing
like a bull. With a quick side-step and ducking low beneath his outstretched
arms, I eluded him; and as he turned to come back at me, I landed a blow upon
his chin which sent him spinning toward the edge of the deck. I saw his wild
endeavors to regain his equilibrium; I saw him reel drunkenly for an instant
upon the brink of eternity and then, with a loud scream, slip into the sea. At
the same instant a pair of giant arms encircled me from behind and lifted me
entirely off my feet. Kick and squirm as I would, I could neither turn toward
my antagonist nor free myself from his maniacal grasp. Relentlessly he was
rushing me toward the side of the vessel and death. There was none to stay him,
for each of my companions was more than occupied by from one to three of the
enemy. For an instant I was fearful for myself, and then I saw that which
filled me with a far greater terror for another.
My boche was bearing me toward the side of the submarine against which the tug
was still pounding. That I should be ground to death between the two was lost
upon me as I saw the girl standing alone upon the tug’s deck, as I saw the
stern high in air and the bow rapidly settling for the final dive, as I saw
death from which I could not save her clutching at the skirts of the woman I
now knew all too well that I loved.
I had perhaps the fraction of a second longer to live when I heard an angry
growl behind us mingle with a cry of pain and rage from the giant who carried
me. Instantly he went backward to the deck, and as he did so he threw his arms
outwards to save himself, freeing me. I fell heavily upon him, but was upon my
feet in the instant. As I arose, I cast a single glance at my opponent. Never
again would he menace me or another, for Nob’s great jaws had closed upon his
throat. Then I sprang toward the edge of the deck closest to the girl upon the
sinking tug.
“Jump!” I cried. “Jump!” And I held out my arms to her. Instantly as though
with implicit confidence in my ability to save her, she leaped over the side of
the tug onto the sloping, slippery side of the U-boat. I reached far over to
seize her hand. At the same instant the tug pointed its stern straight toward
the sky and plunged out of sight. My hand missed the girl’s by a fraction of an
inch, and I saw her slip into the sea; but scarce had she touched the water
when I was in after her.
The sinking tug drew us far below the surface; but I had seized her the moment
I struck the water, and so we went down together, and together we came up—a few
yards from the U-boat. The first thing I heard was Nobs barking furiously;
evidently he had missed me and was searching. A single glance at the vessel’s
deck assured me that the battle was over and that we had been victorious, for I
saw our survivors holding a handful of the enemy at pistol points while one by
one the rest of the crew was coming out of the craft’s interior and lining up
on deck with the other prisoners.
As I swam toward the submarine with the girl, Nobs’ persistent barking
attracted the attention of some of the tug’s crew, so that as soon as we
reached the side there were hands to help us aboard. I asked the girl if she
was hurt, but she assured me that she was none the worse for this second
wetting; nor did she seem to suffer any from shock. I was to learn for myself
that this slender and seemingly delicate creature possessed the heart and
courage of a warrior.
As we joined our own party, I found the tug’s mate checking up our survivors.
There were ten of us left, not including the girl. Our brave skipper was
missing, as were eight others. There had been nineteen of us in the attacking
party and we had accounted in one way and another during the battle for sixteen
Germans and had taken nine prisoners, including the commander. His lieutenant
had been killed.
“Not a bad day’s work,” said Bradley, the mate, when he had completed his roll.
“Only losing the skipper,” he added, “was the worst. He was a fine man, a fine
man.”
Olson—who in spite of his name was Irish, and in spite of his not being Scotch
had been the tug’s engineer—was standing with Bradley and me. “Yis,” he agreed,
“it’s a day’s wor-rk we’re after doin’, but what are we goin’ to be doin’ wid
it now we got it?”
“We’ll run her into the nearest English port,” said Bradley, “and then we’ll
all go ashore and get our V. C.’s,” he concluded, laughing.
“How you goin’ to run her?” queried Olson. “You can’t trust these Dutchmen.”
Bradley scratched his head. “I guess you’re right,” he admitted. “And I don’t
know the first thing about a sub.”
“I do,” I assured him. “I know more about this particular sub than the officer
who commanded her.”
Both men looked at me in astonishment, and then I had to explain all over again
as I had explained to the girl. Bradley and Olson were delighted. Immediately I
was put in command, and the first thing I did was to go below with Olson and
inspect the craft thoroughly for hidden boches and damaged machinery. There
were no Germans below, and everything was intact and in ship-shape working
order. I then ordered all hands below except one man who was to act as lookout.
Questioning the Germans, I found that all except the commander were willing to
resume their posts and aid in bringing the vessel into an English port. I
believe that they were relieved at the prospect of being detained at a
comfortable English prison-camp for the duration of the war after the perils
and privations through which they had passed. The officer, however, assured me
that he would never be a party to the capture of his vessel.
There was, therefore, nothing to do but put the man in irons. As we were
preparing to put this decision into force, the girl descended from the deck. It
was the first time that she or the German officer had seen each other’s faces
since we had boarded the U-boat. I was assisting the girl down the ladder and
still retained a hold upon her arm—possibly after such support was no longer
necessary—when she turned and looked squarely into the face of the German. Each
voiced a sudden exclamation of surprise and dismay.
“Lys!” he cried, and took a step toward her.
The girl’s eyes went wide, and slowly filled with a great horror, as she shrank
back. Then her slender figure stiffened to the erectness of a soldier, and with
chin in air and without a word she turned her back upon the officer.
“Take him away,” I directed the two men who guarded him, “and put him in
irons.”
When he had gone, the girl raised her eyes to mine. “He is the German of whom I
spoke,” she said. “He is Baron von Schoenvorts.”
I merely inclined my head. She had loved him! I wondered if in her heart of
hearts she did not love him yet. Immediately I became insanely jealous. I hated
Baron Friedrich von Schoenvorts with such utter intensity that the emotion
thrilled me with a species of exaltation.
But I didn’t have much chance to enjoy my hatred then, for almost immediately
the lookout poked his face over the hatchway and bawled down that there was
smoke on the horizon, dead ahead. Immediately I went on deck to investigate,
and Bradley came with me.
“If she’s friendly,” he said, “we’ll speak her. If she’s not, we’ll sink
her—eh, captain?”
“Yes, lieutenant,” I replied, and it was his turn to smile.
We hoisted the Union Jack and remained on deck, asking Bradley to go below and
assign to each member of the crew his duty, placing one Englishman with a
pistol beside each German.
“Half speed ahead,” I commanded.
More rapidly now we closed the distance between ourselves and the stranger,
until I could plainly see the red ensign of the British merchant marine. My
heart swelled with pride at the thought that presently admiring British tars
would be congratulating us upon our notable capture; and just about then the
merchant steamer must have sighted us, for she veered suddenly toward the
north, and a moment later dense volumes of smoke issued from her funnels. Then,
steering a zigzag course, she fled from us as though we had been the bubonic
plague. I altered the course of the submarine and set off in chase; but the
steamer was faster than we, and soon left us hopelessly astern.
With a rueful smile, I directed that our original course be resumed, and once
again we set off toward merry England. That was three months ago, and we
haven’t arrived yet; nor is there any likelihood that we ever shall.
The steamer we had just sighted must have wirelessed a warning, for it wasn’t
half an hour before we saw more smoke on the horizon, and this time the vessel
flew the white ensign of the Royal Navy and carried guns. She didn’t veer to
the north or anywhere else, but bore down on us rapidly. I was just preparing
to signal her, when a flame flashed from her bows, and an instant later the
water in front of us was thrown high by the explosion of a shell.
Bradley had come on deck and was standing beside me. “About one more of those,
and she’ll have our range,” he said. “She doesn’t seem to take much stock in
our Union Jack.”
A second shell passed over us, and then I gave the command to change our
direction, at the same time directing Bradley to go below and give the order to
submerge. I passed Nobs down to him, and following, saw to the closing and
fastening of the hatch.
It seemed to me that the diving-tanks never had filled so slowly. We heard a
loud explosion apparently directly above us; the craft trembled to the shock
which threw us all to the deck. I expected momentarily to feel the deluge of
inrushing water, but none came. Instead we continued to submerge until the
manometer registered forty feet and then I knew that we were safe. Safe! I
almost smiled. I had relieved Olson, who had remained in the tower at my
direction, having been a member of one of the early British submarine crews,
and therefore having some knowledge of the business. Bradley was at my side. He
looked at me quizzically.
“What the devil are we to do?” he asked. “The merchantman will flee us; the
war-vessel will destroy us; neither will believe our colors or give us a chance
to explain. We will meet even a worse reception if we go nosing around a
British port—mines, nets and all of it. We can’t do it.”
“Let’s try it again when this fellow has lost the scent,” I urged. “There must
come a ship that will believe us.”
And try it again we did, only to be almost rammed by a huge freighter. Later we
were fired upon by a destroyer, and two merchantmen turned and fled at our
approach. For two days we cruised up and down the Channel trying to tell some
one, who would listen, that we were friends; but no one would listen. After our
encounter with the first warship I had given instructions that a wireless
message be sent out explaining our predicament; but to my chagrin I discovered
that both sending and receiving instruments had disappeared.
“There is only one place you can go,” von Schoenvorts sent word to me, “and
that is Kiel. You can’t land anywhere else in these waters. If you wish, I will
take you there, and I can promise that you will be treated well.”
“There is another place we can go,” I sent back my reply, “and we will before
we’ll go to Germany. That place is hell.”
Chapter 3
Those were anxious days, during which I had but little opportunity to associate
with Lys. I had given her the commander’s room, Bradley and I taking that of
the deck-officer, while Olson and two of our best men occupied the room
ordinarily allotted to petty officers. I made Nobs’ bed down in Lys’ room, for
I knew she would feel less alone.
Nothing of much moment occurred for a while after we left British waters behind
us. We ran steadily along upon the surface, making good time. The first two
boats we sighted made off as fast as they could go; and the third, a huge
freighter, fired on us, forcing us to submerge. It was after this that our
troubles commenced. One of the Diesel engines broke down in the morning, and
while we were working on it, the forward port diving-tank commenced to fill. I
was on deck at the time and noted the gradual list. Guessing at once what was
happening, I leaped for the hatch and slamming it closed above my head, dropped
to the centrale. By this time the craft was going down by the head with a most
unpleasant list to port, and I didn’t wait to transmit orders to some one else
but ran as fast as I could for the valve that let the sea into the forward port
diving-tank. It was wide open. To close it and to have the pump started that
would empty it were the work of but a minute; but we had had a close call.
I knew that the valve had never opened itself. Some one had opened it—some one
who was willing to die himself if he might at the same time encompass the death
of all of us.
After that I kept a guard pacing the length of the narrow craft. We worked upon
the engine all that day and night and half the following day. Most of the time
we drifted idly upon the surface, but toward noon we sighted smoke due west,
and having found that only enemies inhabited the world for us, I ordered that
the other engine be started so that we could move out of the path of the
oncoming steamer. The moment the engine started to turn, however, there was a
grinding sound of tortured steel, and when it had been stopped, we found that
some one had placed a cold-chisel in one of the gears.
It was another two days before we were ready to limp along, half repaired. The
night before the repairs were completed, the sentry came to my room and awoke
me. He was rather an intelligent fellow of the English middle class, in whom I
had much confidence.
“Well, Wilson,” I asked. “What’s the matter now?”
He raised his finger to his lips and came closer to me. “I think I’ve found out
who’s doin’ the mischief,” he whispered, and nodded his head toward the girl’s
room. “I seen her sneakin’ from the crew’s room just now,” he went on. “She’d
been in gassin’ wit’ the boche commander. Benson seen her in there las’ night,
too, but he never said nothin’ till I goes on watch tonight. Benson’s sorter
slow in the head, an’ he never puts two an’ two together till some one else has
made four out of it.”
If the man had come in and struck me suddenly in the face, I could have been no
more surprised.
“Say nothing of this to anyone,” I ordered. “Keep your eyes and ears open and
report every suspicious thing you see or hear.”
The man saluted and left me; but for an hour or more I tossed, restless, upon
my hard bunk in an agony of jealousy and fear. Finally I fell into a troubled
sleep. It was daylight when I awoke. We were steaming along slowly upon the
surface, my orders having been to proceed at half speed until we could take an
observation and determine our position. The sky had been overcast all the
previous day and all night; but as I stepped into the centrale that morning I
was delighted to see that the sun was again shining. The spirits of the men
seemed improved; everything seemed propitious. I forgot at once the cruel
misgivings of the past night as I set to work to take my observations.
What a blow awaited me! The sextant and chronometer had both been broken beyond
repair, and they had been broken just this very night. They had been broken
upon the night that Lys had been seen talking with von Schoenvorts. I think
that it was this last thought which hurt me the worst. I could look the other
disaster in the face with equanimity; but the bald fact that Lys might be a
traitor appalled me.
I called Bradley and Olson on deck and told them what had happened, but for the
life of me I couldn’t bring myself to repeat what Wilson had reported to me the
previous night. In fact, as I had given the matter thought, it seemed
incredible that the girl could have passed through my room, in which Bradley
and I slept, and then carried on a conversation in the crew’s room, in which
Von Schoenvorts was kept, without having been seen by more than a single man.
Bradley shook his head. “I can’t make it out,” he said. “One of those boches
must be pretty clever to come it over us all like this; but they haven’t harmed
us as much as they think; there are still the extra instruments.”
It was my turn now to shake a doleful head. “There are no extra instruments,” I
told them. “They too have disappeared as did the wireless apparatus.”
Both men looked at me in amazement. “We still have the compass and the sun,”
said Olson. “They may be after getting the compass some night; but they’s too
many of us around in the daytime fer ’em to get the sun.”
It was then that one of the men stuck his head up through the hatchway and
seeing me, asked permission to come on deck and get a breath of fresh air. I
recognized him as Benson, the man who, Wilson had said, reported having seen
Lys with von Schoenvorts two nights before. I motioned him on deck and then
called him to one side, asking if he had seen anything out of the way or
unusual during his trick on watch the night before. The fellow scratched his
head a moment and said, “No,” and then as though it was an afterthought, he
told me that he had seen the girl in the crew’s room about midnight talking
with the German commander, but as there hadn’t seemed to him to be any harm in
that, he hadn’t said anything about it. Telling him never to fail to report to
me anything in the slightest out of the ordinary routine of the ship, I
dismissed him.
Several of the other men now asked permission to come on deck, and soon all but
those actually engaged in some necessary duty were standing around smoking and
talking, all in the best of spirits. I took advantage of the absence of the men
upon the deck to go below for my breakfast, which the cook was already
preparing upon the electric stove. Lys, followed by Nobs, appeared as I entered
the centrale. She met me with a pleasant “Good morning!” which I am afraid I
replied to in a tone that was rather constrained and surly.
“Will you breakfast with me?” I suddenly asked the girl, determined to commence
a probe of my own along the lines which duty demanded.
She nodded a sweet acceptance of my invitation, and together we sat down at the
little table of the officers’ mess.
“You slept well last night?” I asked.
“All night,” she replied. “I am a splendid sleeper.”
Her manner was so straightforward and honest that I could not bring myself to
believe in her duplicity; yet—Thinking to surprise her into a betrayal of her
guilt, I blurted out: “The chronometer and sextant were both destroyed last
night; there is a traitor among us.” But she never turned a hair by way of
evidencing guilty knowledge of the catastrophe.
“Who could it have been?” she cried. “The Germans would be crazy to do it, for
their lives are as much at stake as ours.”
“Men are often glad to die for an ideal—an ideal of patriotism, perhaps,” I
replied; “and a willingness to martyr themselves includes a willingness to
sacrifice others, even those who love them. Women are much the same, except
that they will go even further than most men—they will sacrifice everything,
even honor, for love.”
I watched her face carefully as I spoke, and I thought that I detected a very
faint flush mounting her cheek. Seeing an opening and an advantage, I sought to
follow it up.
“Take von Schoenvorts, for instance,” I continued: “he would doubtless be glad
to die and take us all with him, could he prevent in no other way the falling
of his vessel into enemy hands. He would sacrifice anyone, even you; and if you
still love him, you might be his ready tool. Do you understand me?”
She looked at me in wide-eyed consternation for a moment, and then she went
very white and rose from her seat. “I do,” she replied, and turning her back
upon me, she walked quickly toward her room. I started to follow, for even
believing what I did, I was sorry that I had hurt her. I reached the door to
the crew’s room just behind her and in time to see von Schoenvorts lean forward
and whisper something to her as she passed; but she must have guessed that she
might be watched, for she passed on.
That afternoon it clouded over; the wind mounted to a gale, and the sea rose
until the craft was wallowing and rolling frightfully. Nearly everyone aboard
was sick; the air became foul and oppressive. For twenty-four hours I did not
leave my post in the conning tower, as both Olson and Bradley were sick.
Finally I found that I must get a little rest, and so I looked about for some
one to relieve me. Benson volunteered. He had not been sick, and assured me
that he was a former R.N. man and had been detailed for submarine duty for over
two years. I was glad that it was he, for I had considerable confidence in his
loyalty, and so it was with a feeling of security that I went below and lay
down.
I slept twelve hours straight, and when I awoke and discovered what I had done,
I lost no time in getting to the conning tower. There sat Benson as wide awake
as could be, and the compass showed that we were heading straight into the
west. The storm was still raging; nor did it abate its fury until the fourth
day. We were all pretty well done up and looked forward to the time when we
could go on deck and fill our lungs with fresh air. During the whole four days
I had not seen the girl, as she evidently kept closely to her room; and during
this time no untoward incident had occurred aboard the boat—a fact which seemed
to strengthen the web of circumstantial evidence about her.
For six more days after the storm lessened we still had fairly rough weather;
nor did the sun once show himself during all that time. For the season—it was
now the middle of June—the storm was unusual; but being from southern
California, I was accustomed to unusual weather. In fact, I have discovered
that the world over, unusual weather prevails at all times of the year.
We kept steadily to our westward course, and as the _U_-33 was one of the
fastest submersibles we had ever turned out, I knew that we must be pretty
close to the North American coast. What puzzled me most was the fact that for
six days we had not sighted a single ship. It seemed remarkable that we could
cross the Atlantic almost to the coast of the American continent without
glimpsing smoke or sail, and at last I came to the conclusion that we were way
off our course, but whether to the north or to the south of it I could not
determine.
On the seventh day the sea lay comparatively calm at early dawn. There was a
slight haze upon the ocean which had cut off our view of the stars; but
conditions all pointed toward a clear morrow, and I was on deck anxiously
awaiting the rising of the sun. My eyes were glued upon the impenetrable mist
astern, for there in the east I should see the first glow of the rising sun
that would assure me we were still upon the right course. Gradually the heavens
lightened; but astern I could see no intenser glow that would indicate the
rising sun behind the mist. Bradley was standing at my side. Presently he
touched my arm.
“Look, captain,” he said, and pointed south.
I looked and gasped, for there directly to port I saw outlined through the haze
the red top of the rising sun. Hurrying to the tower, I looked at the compass.
It showed that we were holding steadily upon our westward course. Either the
sun was rising in the south, or the compass had been tampered with. The
conclusion was obvious.
I went back to Bradley and told him what I had discovered. “And,” I concluded,
“we can’t make another five hundred knots without oil; our provisions are
running low and so is our water. God only knows how far south we have run.”
“There is nothing to do,” he replied, “other than to alter our course once more
toward the west; we must raise land soon or we shall all be lost.”
I told him to do so; and then I set to work improvising a crude sextant with
which we finally took our bearings in a rough and most unsatisfactory manner;
for when the work was done, we did not know how far from the truth the result
might be. It showed us to be about 20° north and 30° west—nearly
twenty-five hundred miles off our course. In short, if our reading was anywhere
near correct, we must have been traveling due south for six days. Bradley now
relieved Benson, for we had arranged our shifts so that the latter and Olson
now divided the nights, while Bradley and I alternated with one another during
the days.
I questioned both Olson and Benson closely in the matter of the compass; but
each stoutly maintained that no one had tampered with it during his tour of
duty. Benson gave me a knowing smile, as much as to say: “Well, you and I know
who did this.” Yet I could not believe that it was the girl.
We kept to our westerly course for several hours when the lookout’s cry
announced a sail. I ordered the _U_-33’s course altered, and we bore down
upon the stranger, for I had come to a decision which was the result of
necessity. We could not lie there in the middle of the Atlantic and starve to
death if there was any way out of it. The sailing ship saw us while we were
still a long way off, as was evidenced by her efforts to escape. There was
scarcely any wind, however, and her case was hopeless; so when we drew near and
signaled her to stop, she came into the wind and lay there with her sails
flapping idly. We moved in quite close to her. She was the _Balmen_ of
Halmstad, Sweden, with a general cargo from Brazil for Spain.
I explained our circumstances to her skipper and asked for food, water and oil;
but when he found that we were not German, he became very angry and abusive and
started to draw away from us; but I was in no mood for any such business.
Turning toward Bradley, who was in the conning-tower, I snapped out:
“Gun-service on deck! To the diving stations!” We had no opportunity for drill;
but every man had been posted as to his duties, and the German members of the
crew understood that it was obedience or death for them, as each was
accompanied by a man with a pistol. Most of them, though, were only too glad to
obey me.
Bradley passed the order down into the ship and a moment later the gun-crew
clambered up the narrow ladder and at my direction trained their piece upon the
slow-moving Swede. “Fire a shot across her bow,” I instructed the gun-captain.
Accept it from me, it didn’t take that Swede long to see the error of his way
and get the red and white pennant signifying “I understand” to the masthead.
Once again the sails flapped idly, and then I ordered him to lower a boat and
come after me. With Olson and a couple of the Englishmen I boarded the ship,
and from her cargo selected what we needed—oil, provisions and water. I gave
the master of the _Balmen_ a receipt for what we took, together with an
affidavit signed by Bradley, Olson, and myself, stating briefly how we had come
into possession of the _U_-33 and the urgency of our need for what we
took. We addressed both to any British agent with the request that the owners
of the _Balmen_ be reimbursed; but whether or not they were, I do not
know.[1]
[1] Late in July, 1916, an item in the shipping news mentioned a Swedish
sailing vessel, _Balmen_, Rio de Janeiro to Barcelona, sunk by a German
raider sometime in June. A single survivor in an open boat was picked up off
the Cape Verde Islands, in a dying condition. He expired without giving any
details.
With water, food, and oil aboard, we felt that we had obtained a new lease of
life. Now, too, we knew definitely where we were, and I determined to make for
Georgetown, British Guiana—but I was destined to again suffer bitter
disappointment.
Six of us of the loyal crew had come on deck either to serve the gun or board
the Swede during our set-to with her; and now, one by one, we descended the
ladder into the centrale. I was the last to come, and when I reached the
bottom, I found myself looking into the muzzle of a pistol in the hands of
Baron Friedrich von Schoenvorts—I saw all my men lined up at one side with the
remaining eight Germans standing guard over them.
I couldn’t imagine how it had happened; but it had. Later I learned that they
had first overpowered Benson, who was asleep in his bunk, and taken his pistol
from him, and then had found it an easy matter to disarm the cook and the
remaining two Englishmen below. After that it had been comparatively simple to
stand at the foot of the ladder and arrest each individual as he descended.
The first thing von Schoenvorts did was to send for me and announce that as a
pirate I was to be shot early the next morning. Then he explained that the
_U_-33 would cruise in these waters for a time, sinking neutral and enemy
shipping indiscriminately, and looking for one of the German raiders that was
supposed to be in these parts.
He didn’t shoot me the next morning as he had promised, and it has never been
clear to me why he postponed the execution of my sentence. Instead he kept me
ironed just as he had been; then he kicked Bradley out of my room and took it
all to himself.
We cruised for a long time, sinking many vessels, all but one by gunfire, but
we did not come across a German raider. I was surprised to note that von
Schoenvorts often permitted Benson to take command; but I reconciled this by
the fact that Benson appeared to know more of the duties of a submarine
commander than did any of the stupid Germans.
Once or twice Lys passed me; but for the most part she kept to her room. The
first time she hesitated as though she wished to speak to me; but I did not
raise my head, and finally she passed on. Then one day came the word that we
were about to round the Horn and that von Schoenvorts had taken it into his
fool head to cruise up along the Pacific coast of North America and prey upon
all sorts and conditions of merchantmen.
“I’ll put the fear of God and the Kaiser into them,” he said.
The very first day we entered the South Pacific we had an adventure. It turned
out to be quite the most exciting adventure I had ever encountered. It fell
about this way. About eight bells of the forenoon watch I heard a hail from the
deck, and presently the footsteps of the entire ship’s company, from the amount
of noise I heard at the ladder. Some one yelled back to those who had not yet
reached the level of the deck: “It’s the raider, the German raider
_Geier!_”
I saw that we had reached the end of our rope. Below all was quiet—not a man
remained. A door opened at the end of the narrow hull, and presently Nobs came
trotting up to me. He licked my face and rolled over on his back, reaching for
me with his big, awkward paws. Then other footsteps sounded, approaching me. I
knew whose they were, and I looked straight down at the flooring. The girl was
coming almost at a run—she was at my side immediately. “Here!” she cried.
“Quick!” And she slipped something into my hand. It was a key—the key to my
irons. At my side she also laid a pistol, and then she went on into the
centrale. As she passed me, I saw that she carried another pistol for herself.
It did not take me long to liberate myself, and then I was at her side. “How
can I thank you?” I started; but she shut me up with a word.
“Do not thank me,” she said coldly. “I do not care to hear your thanks or any
other expression from you. Do not stand there looking at me. I have given you a
chance to do something—now do it!” The last was a peremptory command that made
me jump.
Glancing up, I saw that the tower was empty, and I lost no time in clambering
up, looking about me. About a hundred yards off lay a small, swift
cruiser-raider, and above her floated the German man-of-war’s flag. A boat had
just been lowered, and I could see it moving toward us filled with officers and
men. The cruiser lay dead ahead. “My,” I thought, “what a wonderful targ—” I
stopped even thinking, so surprised and shocked was I by the boldness of my
imagery. The girl was just below me. I looked down on her wistfully. Could I
trust her? Why had she released me at this moment? I must! I must! There was no
other way. I dropped back below. “Ask Olson to step down here, please,” I
requested; “and don’t let anyone see you ask him.”
She looked at me with a puzzled expression on her face for the barest fraction
of a second, and then she turned and went up the ladder. A moment later Olson
returned, and the girl followed him. “Quick!” I whispered to the big Irishman,
and made for the bow compartment where the torpedo-tubes are built into the
boat; here, too, were the torpedoes. The girl accompanied us, and when she saw
the thing I had in mind, she stepped forward and lent a hand to the swinging of
the great cylinder of death and destruction into the mouth of its tube. With
oil and main strength we shoved the torpedo home and shut the tube; then I ran
back to the conning-tower, praying in my heart of hearts that the _U_-33
had not swung her bow away from the prey. No, thank God!
Never could aim have been truer. I signaled back to Olson: “Let ’er go!” The
_U_-33 trembled from stem to stern as the torpedo shot from its tube. I
saw the white wake leap from her bow straight toward the enemy cruiser. A
chorus of hoarse yells arose from the deck of our own craft: I saw the officers
stand suddenly erect in the boat that was approaching us, and I heard loud
cries and curses from the raider. Then I turned my attention to my own
business. Most of the men on the submarine’s deck were standing in paralyzed
fascination, staring at the torpedo. Bradley happened to be looking toward the
conning-tower and saw me. I sprang on deck and ran toward him. “Quick!” I
whispered. “While they are stunned, we must overcome them.”
A German was standing near Bradley—just in front of him. The Englishman struck
the fellow a frantic blow upon the neck and at the same time snatched his
pistol from its holster. Von Schoenvorts had recovered from his first surprise
quickly and had turned toward the main hatch to investigate. I covered him with
my revolver, and at the same instant the torpedo struck the raider, the
terrific explosion drowning the German’s command to his men.
Bradley was now running from one to another of our men, and though some of the
Germans saw and heard him, they seemed too stunned for action.
Olson was below, so that there were only nine of us against eight Germans, for
the man Bradley had struck still lay upon the deck. Only two of us were armed;
but the heart seemed to have gone out of the boches, and they put up but
half-hearted resistance. Von Schoenvorts was the worst—he was fairly frenzied
with rage and chagrin, and he came charging for me like a mad bull, and as he
came he discharged his pistol. If he’d stopped long enough to take aim, he
might have gotten me; but his pace made him wild, so that not a shot touched
me, and then we clinched and went to the deck. This left two pistols, which two
of my own men were quick to appropriate. The Baron was no match for me in a
hand-to-hand encounter, and I soon had him pinned to the deck and the life
almost choked out of him.
A half-hour later things had quieted down, and all was much the same as before
the prisoners had revolted—only we kept a much closer watch on von Schoenvorts.
The _Geier_ had sunk while we were still battling upon our deck, and
afterward we had drawn away toward the north, leaving the survivors to the
attention of the single boat which had been making its way toward us when Olson
launched the torpedo. I suppose the poor devils never reached land, and if they
did, they most probably perished on that cold and unhospitable shore; but I
couldn’t permit them aboard the _U_-33. We had all the Germans we could
take care of.
That evening the girl asked permission to go on deck. She said that she felt
the effects of long confinement below, and I readily granted her request. I
could not understand her, and I craved an opportunity to talk with her again in
an effort to fathom her and her intentions, and so I made it a point to follow
her up the ladder. It was a clear, cold, beautiful night. The sea was calm
except for the white water at our bows and the two long radiating swells
running far off into the distance upon either hand astern, forming a great V
which our propellers filled with choppy waves. Benson was in the tower, we were
bound for San Diego and all looked well.
Lys stood with a heavy blanket wrapped around her slender figure, and as I
approached her, she half turned toward me to see who it was. When she
recognized me, she immediately turned away.
“I want to thank you,” I said, “for your bravery and loyalty—you were
magnificent. I am sorry that you had reason before to think that I doubted
you.”
“You did doubt me,” she replied in a level voice. “You practically accused me
of aiding Baron von Schoenvorts. I can never forgive you.”
There was a great deal of finality in both her words and tone.
“I could not believe it,” I said; “and yet two of my men reported having seen
you in conversation with von Schoenvorts late at night upon two separate
occasions—after each of which some great damage was found done us in the
morning. I didn’t want to doubt you; but I carried all the responsibility of
the lives of these men, of the safety of the ship, of your life and mine. I had
to watch you, and I had to put you on your guard against a repetition of your
madness.”
She was looking at me now with those great eyes of hers, very wide and round.
“Who told you that I spoke with Baron von Schoenvorts at night, or any other
time?” she asked.
“I cannot tell you, Lys,” I replied, “but it came to me from two different
sources.”
“Then two men have lied,” she asserted without heat. “I have not spoken to
Baron von Schoenvorts other than in your presence when first we came aboard the
_U_-33. And please, when you address me, remember that to others than my
intimates I am Miss La Rue.”
Did you ever get slapped in the face when you least expected it? No? Well, then
you do not know how I felt at that moment. I could feel the hot, red flush
surging up my neck, across my cheeks, over my ears, clear to my scalp. And it
made me love her all the more; it made me swear inwardly a thousand solemn
oaths that I would win her.
Chapter 4
For several days things went along in about the same course. I took our
position every morning with my crude sextant; but the results were always most
unsatisfactory. They always showed a considerable westing when I knew that we
had been sailing due north. I blamed my crude instrument, and kept on. Then one
afternoon the girl came to me.
“Pardon me,” she said, “but were I you, I should watch this man
Benson—especially when he is in charge.” I asked her what she meant, thinking I
could see the influence of von Schoenvorts raising a suspicion against one of
my most trusted men.
“If you will note the boat’s course a half-hour after Benson goes on duty,” she
said, “you will know what I mean, and you will understand why he prefers a
night watch. Possibly, too, you will understand some other things that have
taken place aboard.”
Then she went back to her room, thus ending the conversation. I waited until
half an hour after Benson had gone on duty, and then I went on deck, passing
through the conning-tower where Benson sat, and looking at the compass. It
showed that our course was north by west—that is, one point west of north,
which was, for our assumed position, about right. I was greatly relieved to
find that nothing was wrong, for the girl’s words had caused me considerable
apprehension. I was about to return to my room when a thought occurred to me
that again caused me to change my mind—and, incidentally, came near proving my
death-warrant.
When I had left the conning-tower little more than a half-hour since, the sea
had been breaking over the port bow, and it seemed to me quite improbable that
in so short a time an equally heavy sea could be deluging us from the opposite
side of the ship—winds may change quickly, but not a long, heavy sea. There was
only one other solution—since I left the tower, our course had been altered
some eight points. Turning quickly, I climbed out upon the conning-tower. A
single glance at the heavens confirmed my suspicions; the constellations which
should have been dead ahead were directly starboard. We were sailing due west.
Just for an instant longer I stood there to check up my calculations—I wanted
to be quite sure before I accused Benson of perfidy, and about the only thing I
came near making quite sure of was death. I cannot see even now how I escaped
it. I was standing on the edge of the conning-tower, when a heavy palm suddenly
struck me between the shoulders and hurled me forward into space. The drop to
the triangular deck forward of the conning-tower might easily have broken a leg
for me, or I might have slipped off onto the deck and rolled overboard; but
fate was upon my side, as I was only slightly bruised. As I came to my feet, I
heard the conning-tower cover slam. There is a ladder which leads from the deck
to the top of the tower. Up this I scrambled, as fast as I could go; but Benson
had the cover tight before I reached it.
I stood there a moment in dumb consternation. What did the fellow intend? What
was going on below? If Benson was a traitor, how could I know that there were
not other traitors among us? I cursed myself for my folly in going out upon the
deck, and then this thought suggested another—a hideous one: who was it that
had really been responsible for my being here?
Thinking to attract attention from inside the craft, I again ran down the
ladder and onto the small deck only to find that the steel covers of the
conning-tower windows were shut, and then I leaned with my back against the
tower and cursed myself for a gullible idiot.
I glanced at the bow. The sea seemed to be getting heavier, for every wave now
washed completely over the lower deck. I watched them for a moment, and then a
sudden chill pervaded my entire being. It was not the chill of wet clothing, or
the dashing spray which drenched my face; no, it was the chill of the hand of
death upon my heart. In an instant I had turned the last corner of life’s
highway and was looking God Almighty in the face—the _U_-33 was being
slowly submerged!
It would be difficult, even impossible, to set down in writing my sensations at
that moment. All I can particularly recall is that I laughed, though neither
from a spirit of bravado nor from hysteria. And I wanted to smoke. Lord! how I
did want to smoke; but that was out of the question.
I watched the water rise until the little deck I stood on was awash, and then I
clambered once more to the top of the conning-tower. From the very slow
submergence of the boat I knew that Benson was doing the entire trick
alone—that he was merely permitting the diving-tanks to fill and that the
diving-rudders were not in use. The throbbing of the engines ceased, and in its
stead came the steady vibration of the electric motors. The water was halfway
up the conning-tower! I had perhaps five minutes longer on the deck. I tried to
decide what I should do after I was washed away. Should I swim until exhaustion
claimed me, or should I give up and end the agony at the first plunge?
From below came two muffled reports. They sounded not unlike shots. Was Benson
meeting with resistance? Personally it could mean little to me, for even though
my men might overcome the enemy, none would know of my predicament until long
after it was too late to succor me. The top of the conning-tower was now awash.
I clung to the wireless mast, while the great waves surged sometimes completely
over me.
I knew the end was near and, almost involuntarily, I did that which I had not
done since childhood—I prayed. After that I felt better.
I clung and waited, but the water rose no higher.
Instead it receded. Now the top of the conning-tower received only the crests
of the higher waves; now the little triangular deck below became visible! What
had occurred within? Did Benson believe me already gone, and was he emerging
because of that belief, or had he and his forces been vanquished? The suspense
was more wearing than that which I had endured while waiting for dissolution.
Presently the main deck came into view, and then the conning-tower opened
behind me, and I turned to look into the anxious face of Bradley. An expression
of relief overspread his features.
“Thank God, man!” was all he said as he reached forth and dragged me into the
tower. I was cold and numb and rather all in. Another few minutes would have
done for me, I am sure, but the warmth of the interior helped to revive me,
aided and abetted by some brandy which Bradley poured down my throat, from
which it nearly removed the membrane. That brandy would have revived a corpse.
When I got down into the centrale, I saw the Germans lined up on one side with
a couple of my men with pistols standing over them. Von Schoenvorts was among
them. On the floor lay Benson, moaning, and beyond him stood the girl, a
revolver in one hand. I looked about, bewildered.
“What has happened down here?” I asked. “Tell me!”
Bradley replied. “You see the result, sir,” he said. “It might have been a very
different result but for Miss La Rue. We were all asleep. Benson had relieved
the guard early in the evening; there was no one to watch him—no one but Miss
La Rue. She felt the submergence of the boat and came out of her room to
investigate. She was just in time to see Benson at the diving rudders. When he
saw her, he raised his pistol and fired point-blank at her, but he missed and
she fired—and didn’t miss. The two shots awakened everyone, and as our men were
armed, the result was inevitable as you see it; but it would have been very
different had it not been for Miss La Rue. It was she who closed the
diving-tank sea-cocks and roused Olson and me, and had the pumps started to
empty them.”
And there I had been thinking that through her machinations I had been lured to
the deck and to my death! I could have gone on my knees to her and begged her
forgiveness—or at least I could have, had I not been Anglo-Saxon. As it was, I
could only remove my soggy cap and bow and mumble my appreciation. She made no
reply—only turned and walked very rapidly toward her room. Could I have heard
aright? Was it really a sob that came floating back to me through the narrow
aisle of the _U_-33?
Benson died that night. He remained defiant almost to the last; but just before
he went out, he motioned to me, and I leaned over to catch the faintly
whispered words.
“I did it alone,” he said. “I did it because I hate you—I hate all your kind. I
was kicked out of your shipyard at Santa Monica. I was locked out of
California. I am an I. W. W. I became a German agent—not because I love them,
for I hate them too—but because I wanted to injure Americans, whom I hated
more. I threw the wireless apparatus overboard. I destroyed the chronometer and
the sextant. I devised a scheme for varying the compass to suit my wishes. I
told Wilson that I had seen the girl talking with von Schoenvorts, and I made
the poor egg think he had seen her doing the same thing. I am sorry—sorry that
my plans failed. I hate you.”
He didn’t die for a half-hour after that; nor did he speak again—aloud; but
just a few seconds before he went to meet his Maker, his lips moved in a faint
whisper; and as I leaned closer to catch his words, what do you suppose I
heard? “Now—I—lay me—down—to—sleep” That was all; Benson was dead. We threw his
body overboard.
The wind of that night brought on some pretty rough weather with a lot of black
clouds which persisted for several days. We didn’t know what course we had been
holding, and there was no way of finding out, as we could no longer trust the
compass, not knowing what Benson had done to it. The long and the short of it
was that we cruised about aimlessly until the sun came out again. I’ll never
forget that day or its surprises. We reckoned, or rather guessed, that we were
somewhere off the coast of Peru. The wind, which had been blowing fitfully from
the east, suddenly veered around into the south, and presently we felt a sudden
chill.
“Peru!” snorted Olson. “When were yez after smellin’ iceber-rgs off Peru?”
Icebergs! “Icebergs, nothin’!” exclaimed one of the Englishmen. “Why, man, they
don’t come north of fourteen here in these waters.”
“Then,” replied Olson, “ye’re sout’ of fourteen, me b’y.”
We thought he was crazy; but he wasn’t, for that afternoon we sighted a great
berg south of us, and we’d been running north, we thought, for days. I can tell
you we were a discouraged lot; but we got a faint thrill of hope early the next
morning when the lookout bawled down the open hatch: “Land! Land northwest by
west!”
I think we were all sick for the sight of land. I know that I was; but my
interest was quickly dissipated by the sudden illness of three of the Germans.
Almost simultaneously they commenced vomiting. They couldn’t suggest any
explanation for it. I asked them what they had eaten, and found they had eaten
nothing other than the food cooked for all of us. “Have you drunk anything?” I
asked, for I knew that there was liquor aboard, and medicines in the same
locker.
“Only water,” moaned one of them. “We all drank water together this morning. We
opened a new tank. Maybe it was the water.”
I started an investigation which revealed a terrifying condition—some one,
probably Benson, had poisoned all the running water on the ship. It would have
been worse, though, had land not been in sight. The sight of land filled us
with renewed hope.
Our course had been altered, and we were rapidly approaching what appeared to
be a precipitous headland. Cliffs, seemingly rising perpendicularly out of the
sea, faded away into the mist upon either hand as we approached. The land
before us might have been a continent, so mighty appeared the shoreline; yet we
knew that we must be thousands of miles from the nearest western land-mass—New
Zealand or Australia.
We took our bearings with our crude and inaccurate instruments; we searched the
chart; we cudgeled our brains; and at last it was Bradley who suggested a
solution. He was in the tower and watching the compass, to which he called my
attention. The needle was pointing straight toward the land. Bradley swung the
helm hard to starboard. I could feel the _U_-33 respond, and yet the arrow
still clung straight and sure toward the distant cliffs.
“What do you make of it?” I asked him.
“Did you ever hear of Caproni?” he asked.
“An early Italian navigator?” I returned.
“Yes; he followed Cook about 1721. He is scarcely mentioned even by
contemporaneous historians—probably because he got into political difficulties
on his return to Italy. It was the fashion to scoff at his claims, but I recall
reading one of his works—his only one, I believe—in which he described a new
continent in the south seas, a continent made up of ‘some strange metal’ which
attracted the compass; a rockbound, inhospitable coast, without beach or
harbor, which extended for hundreds of miles. He could make no landing; nor in
the several days he cruised about it did he see sign of life. He called it
Caprona and sailed away. I believe, sir, that we are looking upon the coast of
Caprona, uncharted and forgotten for two hundred years.”
“If you are right, it might account for much of the deviation of the compass
during the past two days,” I suggested. “Caprona has been luring us upon her
deadly rocks. Well, we’ll accept her challenge. We’ll land upon Caprona. Along
that long front there must be a vulnerable spot. We will find it, Bradley, for
we must find it. We must find water on Caprona, or we must die.”
And so we approached the coast upon which no living eyes had ever rested.
Straight from the ocean’s depths rose towering cliffs, shot with brown and
blues and greens—withered moss and lichen and the verdigris of copper, and
everywhere the rusty ocher of iron pyrites. The cliff-tops, though ragged, were
of such uniform height as to suggest the boundaries of a great plateau, and now
and again we caught glimpses of verdure topping the rocky escarpment, as though
bush or jungle-land had pushed outward from a lush vegetation farther inland to
signal to an unseeing world that Caprona lived and joyed in life beyond her
austere and repellent coast.
But metaphor, however poetic, never slaked a dry throat. To enjoy Caprona’s
romantic suggestions we must have water, and so we came in close, always
sounding, and skirted the shore. As close in as we dared cruise, we found
fathomless depths, and always the same undented coastline of bald cliffs. As
darkness threatened, we drew away and lay well off the coast all night. We had
not as yet really commenced to suffer for lack of water; but I knew that it
would not be long before we did, and so at the first streak of dawn I moved in
again and once more took up the hopeless survey of the forbidding coast.
Toward noon we discovered a beach, the first we had seen. It was a narrow strip
of sand at the base of a part of the cliff that seemed lower than any we had
before scanned. At its foot, half buried in the sand, lay great boulders, mute
evidence that in a bygone age some mighty natural force had crumpled Caprona’s
barrier at this point. It was Bradley who first called our attention to a
strange object lying among the boulders above the surf.
“Looks like a man,” he said, and passed his glasses to me.
I looked long and carefully and could have sworn that the thing I saw was the
sprawled figure of a human being. Miss La Rue was on deck with us. I turned and
asked her to go below. Without a word she did as I bade. Then I stripped, and
as I did so, Nobs looked questioningly at me. He had been wont at home to enter
the surf with me, and evidently he had not forgotten it.
“What are you going to do, sir?” asked Olson.
“I’m going to see what that thing is on shore,” I replied. “If it’s a man, it
may mean that Caprona is inhabited, or it may merely mean that some poor devils
were shipwrecked here. I ought to be able to tell from the clothing which is
more near the truth.
“How about sharks?” queried Olson. “Sure, you ought to carry a knoife.”
“Here you are, sir,” cried one of the men.
It was a long slim blade he offered—one that I could carry between my teeth—and
so I accepted it gladly.
“Keep close in,” I directed Bradley, and then I dived over the side and struck
out for the narrow beach. There was another splash directly behind me, and
turning my head, I saw faithful old Nobs swimming valiantly in my wake.
The surf was not heavy, and there was no undertow, so we made shore easily,
effecting an equally easy landing. The beach was composed largely of small
stones worn smooth by the action of water. There was little sand, though from
the deck of the _U_-33 the beach had appeared to be all sand, and I saw no
evidences of mollusca or crustacea such as are common to all beaches I have
previously seen. I attribute this to the fact of the smallness of the beach,
the enormous depth of surrounding water and the great distance at which Caprona
lies from her nearest neighbor.
As Nobs and I approached the recumbent figure farther up the beach, I was
appraised by my nose that whether man or not, the thing had once been organic
and alive, but that for some time it had been dead. Nobs halted, sniffed and
growled. A little later he sat down upon his haunches, raised his muzzle to the
heavens and bayed forth a most dismal howl. I shied a small stone at him and
bade him shut up—his uncanny noise made me nervous. When I had come quite close
to the thing, I still could not say whether it had been man or beast. The
carcass was badly swollen and partly decomposed. There was no sign of clothing
upon or about it. A fine, brownish hair covered the chest and abdomen, and the
face, the palms of the hands, the feet, the shoulders and back were practically
hairless. The creature must have been about the height of a fair sized man; its
features were similar to those of a man; yet had it been a man?
I could not say, for it resembled an ape no more than it did a man. Its large
toes protruded laterally as do those of the semiarboreal peoples of Borneo, the
Philippines and other remote regions where low types still persist. The
countenance might have been that of a cross between _Pithecanthropus_, the
Java ape-man, and a daughter of the Piltdown race of prehistoric Sussex. A
wooden cudgel lay beside the corpse.
Now this fact set me thinking. There was no wood of any description in sight.
There was nothing about the beach to suggest a wrecked mariner. There was
absolutely nothing about the body to suggest that it might possibly in life
have known a maritime experience. It was the body of a low type of man or a
high type of beast. In neither instance would it have been of a seafaring race.
Therefore I deduced that it was native to Caprona—that it lived inland, and
that it had fallen or been hurled from the cliffs above. Such being the case,
Caprona was inhabitable, if not inhabited, by man; but how to reach the
inhabitable interior! That was the question. A closer view of the cliffs than
had been afforded me from the deck of the _U_-33 only confirmed my
conviction that no mortal man could scale those perpendicular heights; there
was not a finger-hold, not a toe-hold, upon them. I turned away baffled.
Nobs and I met with no sharks upon our return journey to the submarine. My
report filled everyone with theories and speculations, and with renewed hope
and determination. They all reasoned along the same lines that I had
reasoned—the conclusions were obvious, but not the water. We were now thirstier
than ever.
The balance of that day we spent in continuing a minute and fruitless
exploration of the monotonous coast. There was not another break in the
frowning cliffs—not even another minute patch of pebbly beach. As the sun fell,
so did our spirits. I had tried to make advances to the girl again; but she
would have none of me, and so I was not only thirsty but otherwise sad and
downhearted. I was glad when the new day broke the hideous spell of a sleepless
night.
The morning’s search brought us no shred of hope. Caprona was impregnable—that
was the decision of all; yet we kept on. It must have been about two bells of
the afternoon watch that Bradley called my attention to the branch of a tree,
with leaves upon it, floating on the sea. “It may have been carried down to the
ocean by a river,” he suggested.
“Yes,” I replied, “it may have; it may have tumbled or been thrown off the top
of one of these cliffs.”
Bradley’s face fell. “I thought of that, too,” he replied, “but I wanted to
believe the other.”
“Right you are!” I cried. “We must believe the other until we prove it false.
We can’t afford to give up heart now, when we need heart most. The branch was
carried down by a river, and we are going to find that river.” I smote my open
palm with a clenched fist, to emphasize a determination unsupported by hope.
“There!” I cried suddenly. “See that, Bradley?” And I pointed at a spot closer
to shore. “See that, man!” Some flowers and grasses and another leafy branch
floated toward us. We both scanned the water and the coastline. Bradley
evidently discovered something, or at least thought that he had. He called down
for a bucket and a rope, and when they were passed up to him, he lowered the
former into the sea and drew it in filled with water. Of this he took a taste,
and straightening up, looked into my eyes with an expression of elation—as much
as to say “I told you so!”
“This water is warm,” he announced, “and fresh!”
I grabbed the bucket and tasted its contents. The water was very warm, and it
was fresh, but there was a most unpleasant taste to it.
“Did you ever taste water from a stagnant pool full of tadpoles?” Bradley
asked.
“That’s it,” I exclaimed, “—that’s just the taste exactly, though I haven’t
experienced it since boyhood; but how can water from a flowing stream, taste
thus, and what the dickens makes it so warm? It must be at least 70 or 80
Fahrenheit, possibly higher.”
“Yes,” agreed Bradley, “I should say higher; but where does it come from?”
“That is easily discovered now that we have found it,” I answered. “It can’t
come from the ocean; so it must come from the land. All that we have to do is
follow it, and sooner or later we shall come upon its source.”
We were already rather close in; but I ordered the _U_-33’s prow turned
inshore and we crept slowly along, constantly dipping up the water and tasting
it to assure ourselves that we didn’t get outside the fresh-water current.
There was a very light off-shore wind and scarcely any breakers, so that the
approach to the shore was continued without finding bottom; yet though we were
already quite close, we saw no indication of any indention in the coast from
which even a tiny brooklet might issue, and certainly no mouth of a large river
such as this must necessarily be to freshen the ocean even two hundred yards
from shore. The tide was running out, and this, together with the strong flow
of the freshwater current, would have prevented our going against the cliffs
even had we not been under power; as it was we had to buck the combined forces
in order to hold our position at all. We came up to within twenty-five feet of
the sheer wall, which loomed high above us. There was no break in its
forbidding face. As we watched the face of the waters and searched the cliff’s
high face, Olson suggested that the fresh water might come from a submarine
geyser. This, he said, would account for its heat; but even as he spoke a bush,
covered thickly with leaves and flowers, bubbled to the surface and floated off
astern.
“Flowering shrubs don’t thrive in the subterranean caverns from which geysers
spring,” suggested Bradley.
Olson shook his head. “It beats me,” he said.
“I’ve got it!” I exclaimed suddenly. “Look there!” And I pointed at the base of
the cliff ahead of us, which the receding tide was gradually exposing to our
view. They all looked, and all saw what I had seen—the top of a dark opening in
the rock, through which water was pouring out into the sea. “It’s the
subterranean channel of an inland river,” I cried. “It flows through a land
covered with vegetation—and therefore a land upon which the sun shines. No
subterranean caverns produce any order of plant life even remotely resembling
what we have seen disgorged by this river. Beyond those cliffs lie fertile
lands and fresh water—perhaps, game!”
“Yis, sir,” said Olson, “behoind the cliffs! Ye spoke a true word,
sir—behoind!”
Bradley laughed—a rather sorry laugh, though. “You might as well call our
attention to the fact, sir,” he said, “that science has indicated that there is
fresh water and vegetation on Mars.”
“Not at all,” I rejoined. “A U-boat isn’t constructed to navigate space, but it
is designed to travel below the surface of the water.”
“You’d be after sailin’ into that blank pocket?” asked Olson.
“I would, Olson,” I replied. “We haven’t one chance for life in a hundred
thousand if we don’t find food and water upon Caprona. This water coming out of
the cliff is not salt; but neither is it fit to drink, though each of us has
drunk. It is fair to assume that inland the river is fed by pure streams, that
there are fruits and herbs and game. Shall we lie out here and die of thirst
and starvation with a land of plenty possibly only a few hundred yards away? We
have the means for navigating a subterranean river. Are we too cowardly to
utilize this means?”
“Be afther goin’ to it,” said Olson.
“I’m willing to see it through,” agreed Bradley.
“Then under the bottom, wi’ the best o’ luck an’ give ’em hell!” cried a young
fellow who had been in the trenches.
“To the diving-stations!” I commanded, and in less than a minute the deck was
deserted, the conning-tower covers had slammed to and the _U_-33 was
submerging—possibly for the last time. I know that I had this feeling, and I
think that most of the others did.
As we went down, I sat in the tower with the searchlight projecting its
seemingly feeble rays ahead. We submerged very slowly and without headway more
than sufficient to keep her nose in the right direction, and as we went down, I
saw outlined ahead of us the black opening in the great cliff. It was an
opening that would have admitted a half-dozen U-boats at one and the same time,
roughly cylindrical in contour—and dark as the pit of perdition.
As I gave the command which sent the _U_-33 slowly ahead, I could not but
feel a certain uncanny presentiment of evil. Where were we going? What lay at
the end of this great sewer? Had we bidden farewell forever to the sunlight and
life, or were there before us dangers even greater than those which we now
faced? I tried to keep my mind from vain imagining by calling everything which
I observed to the eager ears below. I was the eyes of the whole company, and I
did my best not to fail them. We had advanced a hundred yards, perhaps, when
our first danger confronted us. Just ahead was a sharp right-angle turn in the
tunnel. I could see the river’s flotsam hurtling against the rocky wall upon
the left as it was driven on by the mighty current, and I feared for the safety
of the _U_-33 in making so sharp a turn under such adverse conditions; but
there was nothing for it but to try. I didn’t warn my fellows of the danger—it
could have but caused them useless apprehension, for if we were to be smashed
against the rocky wall, no power on earth could avert the quick end that would
come to us. I gave the command full speed ahead and went charging toward the
menace. I was forced to approach the dangerous left-hand wall in order to make
the turn, and I depended upon the power of the motors to carry us through the
surging waters in safety. Well, we made it; but it was a narrow squeak. As we
swung around, the full force of the current caught us and drove the stern
against the rocks; there was a thud which sent a tremor through the whole
craft, and then a moment of nasty grinding as the steel hull scraped the rock
wall. I expected momentarily the inrush of waters that would seal our doom; but
presently from below came the welcome word that all was well.
In another fifty yards there was a second turn, this time toward the left! but
it was more of a gentle curve, and we took it without trouble. After that it
was plain sailing, though as far as I could know, there might be most anything
ahead of us, and my nerves strained to the snapping-point every instant. After
the second turn the channel ran comparatively straight for between one hundred
and fifty and two hundred yards. The waters grew suddenly lighter, and my
spirits rose accordingly. I shouted down to those below that I saw daylight
ahead, and a great shout of thanksgiving reverberated through the ship. A
moment later we emerged into sunlit water, and immediately I raised the
periscope and looked about me upon the strangest landscape I had ever seen.
We were in the middle of a broad and now sluggish river the banks of which were
lined by giant, arboraceous ferns, raising their mighty fronds fifty, one
hundred, two hundred feet into the quiet air. Close by us something rose to the
surface of the river and dashed at the periscope. I had a vision of wide,
distended jaws, and then all was blotted out. A shiver ran down into the tower
as the thing closed upon the periscope. A moment later it was gone, and I could
see again. Above the trees there soared into my vision a huge thing on batlike
wings—a creature large as a large whale, but fashioned more after the order of
a lizard. Then again something charged the periscope and blotted out the
mirror. I will confess that I was almost gasping for breath as I gave the
commands to emerge. Into what sort of strange land had fate guided us?
The instant the deck was awash, I opened the conning-tower hatch and stepped
out. In another minute the deck-hatch lifted, and those who were not on duty
below streamed up the ladder, Olson bringing Nobs under one arm. For several
minutes no one spoke; I think they must each have been as overcome by awe as
was I. All about us was a flora and fauna as strange and wonderful to us as
might have been those upon a distant planet had we suddenly been miraculously
transported through ether to an unknown world. Even the grass upon the nearer
bank was unearthly—lush and high it grew, and each blade bore upon its tip a
brilliant flower—violet or yellow or carmine or blue—making as gorgeous a sward
as human imagination might conceive. But the life! It teemed. The tall,
fernlike trees were alive with monkeys, snakes, and lizards. Huge insects
hummed and buzzed hither and thither. Mighty forms could be seen moving upon
the ground in the thick forest, while the bosom of the river wriggled with
living things, and above flapped the wings of gigantic creatures such as we are
taught have been extinct throughout countless ages.
“Look!” cried Olson. “Would you look at the giraffe comin’ up out o’ the bottom
of the say?” We looked in the direction he pointed and saw a long, glossy neck
surmounted by a small head rising above the surface of the river. Presently the
back of the creature was exposed, brown and glossy as the water dripped from
it. It turned its eyes upon us, opened its lizard-like mouth, emitted a shrill
hiss and came for us. The thing must have been sixteen or eighteen feet in
length and closely resembled pictures I had seen of restored plesiosaurs of the
lower Jurassic. It charged us as savagely as a mad bull, and one would have
thought it intended to destroy and devour the mighty U-boat, as I verily
believe it did intend.
We were moving slowly up the river as the creature bore down upon us with
distended jaws. The long neck was far outstretched, and the four flippers with
which it swam were working with powerful strokes, carrying it forward at a
rapid pace. When it reached the craft’s side, the jaws closed upon one of the
stanchions of the deck rail and tore it from its socket as though it had been a
toothpick stuck in putty. At this exhibition of titanic strength I think we all
simultaneously stepped backward, and Bradley drew his revolver and fired. The
bullet struck the thing in the neck, just above its body; but instead of
disabling it, merely increased its rage. Its hissing rose to a shrill scream as
it raised half its body out of water onto the sloping sides of the hull of the
_U_-33 and endeavored to scramble upon the deck to devour us. A dozen
shots rang out as we who were armed drew our pistols and fired at the thing;
but though struck several times, it showed no signs of succumbing and only
floundered farther aboard the submarine.
I had noticed that the girl had come on deck and was standing not far behind
me, and when I saw the danger to which we were all exposed, I turned and forced
her toward the hatch. We had not spoken for some days, and we did not speak
now; but she gave me a disdainful look, which was quite as eloquent as words,
and broke loose from my grasp. I saw I could do nothing with her unless I
exerted force, and so I turned with my back toward her that I might be in a
position to shield her from the strange reptile should it really succeed in
reaching the deck; and as I did so I saw the thing raise one flipper over the
rail, dart its head forward and with the quickness of lightning seize upon one
of the boches. I ran forward, discharging my pistol into the creature’s body in
an effort to force it to relinquish its prey; but I might as profitably have
shot at the sun.
Shrieking and screaming, the German was dragged from the deck, and the moment
the reptile was clear of the boat, it dived beneath the surface of the water
with its terrified prey. I think we were all more or less shaken by the
frightfulness of the tragedy—until Olson remarked that the balance of power now
rested where it belonged. Following the death of Benson we had been nine and
nine—nine Germans and nine “Allies,” as we called ourselves, now there were but
eight Germans. We never counted the girl on either side, I suppose because she
was a girl, though we knew well enough now that she was ours.
And so Olson’s remark helped to clear the atmosphere for the Allies at least,
and then our attention was once more directed toward the river, for around us
there had sprung up a perfect bedlam of screams and hisses and a seething
caldron of hideous reptiles, devoid of fear and filled only with hunger and
with rage. They clambered, squirmed and wriggled to the deck, forcing us
steadily backward, though we emptied our pistols into them. There were all
sorts and conditions of horrible things—huge, hideous, grotesque, monstrous—a
veritable Mesozoic nightmare. I saw that the girl was gotten below as quickly
as possible, and she took Nobs with her—poor Nobs had nearly barked his head
off; and I think, too, that for the first time since his littlest puppyhood he
had known fear; nor can I blame him. After the girl I sent Bradley and most of
the Allies and then the Germans who were on deck—von Schoenvorts being still in
irons below.
The creatures were approaching perilously close before I dropped through the
hatchway and slammed down the cover. Then I went into the tower and ordered
full speed ahead, hoping to distance the fearsome things; but it was useless.
Not only could any of them easily outdistance the _U_-33, but the further
upstream we progressed the greater the number of our besiegers, until fearful
of navigating a strange river at high speed, I gave orders to reduce and moved
slowly and majestically through the plunging, hissing mass. I was mighty glad
that our entrance into the interior of Caprona had been inside a submarine
rather than in any other form of vessel. I could readily understand how it
might have been that Caprona had been invaded in the past by venturesome
navigators without word of it ever reaching the outside world, for I can assure
you that only by submarine could man pass up that great sluggish river, alive.
We proceeded up the river for some forty miles before darkness overtook us. I
was afraid to submerge and lie on the bottom overnight for fear that the mud
might be deep enough to hold us, and as we could not hold with the anchor, I
ran in close to shore, and in a brief interim of attack from the reptiles we
made fast to a large tree. We also dipped up some of the river water and found
it, though quite warm, a little sweeter than before. We had food enough, and
with the water we were all quite refreshed; but we missed fresh meat. It had
been weeks, now, since we had tasted it, and the sight of the reptiles gave me
an idea—that a steak or two from one of them might not be bad eating. So I went
on deck with a rifle, twenty of which were aboard the _U_-33. At sight of
me a huge thing charged and climbed to the deck. I retreated to the top of the
conning-tower, and when it had raised its mighty bulk to the level of the
little deck on which I stood, I let it have a bullet right between the eyes.
The thing stopped then and looked at me a moment as much as to say: “Why this
thing has a stinger! I must be careful.” And then it reached out its long neck
and opened its mighty jaws and grabbed for me; but I wasn’t there. I had
tumbled backward into the tower, and I mighty near killed myself doing it. When
I glanced up, that little head on the end of its long neck was coming straight
down on top of me, and once more I tumbled into greater safety, sprawling upon
the floor of the centrale.
Olson was looking up, and seeing what was poking about in the tower, ran for an
ax; nor did he hesitate a moment when he returned with one, but sprang up the
ladder and commenced chopping away at that hideous face. The thing didn’t have
sufficient brainpan to entertain more than a single idea at once. Though
chopped and hacked, and with a bullethole between its eyes, it still persisted
madly in its attempt to get inside the tower and devour Olson, though its body
was many times the diameter of the hatch; nor did it cease its efforts until
after Olson had succeeded in decapitating it. Then the two men went on deck
through the main hatch, and while one kept watch, the other cut a hind quarter
off _Plesiosaurus Olsoni_, as Bradley dubbed the thing. Meantime Olson cut
off the long neck, saying that it would make fine soup. By the time we had
cleared away the blood and refuse in the tower, the cook had juicy steaks and a
steaming broth upon the electric stove, and the aroma arising from P. Olsoni
filled us all with a hitherto unfelt admiration for him and all his kind.
Chapter 5
The steaks we had that night, and they were fine; and the following morning we
tasted the broth. It seemed odd to be eating a creature that should, by all the
laws of paleontology, have been extinct for several million years. It gave one
a feeling of newness that was almost embarrassing, although it didn’t seem to
embarrass our appetites. Olson ate until I thought he would burst.
The girl ate with us that night at the little officers’ mess just back of the
torpedo compartment. The narrow table was unfolded; the four stools were set
out; and for the first time in days we sat down to eat, and for the first time
in weeks we had something to eat other than the monotony of the short rations
of an impoverished U-boat. Nobs sat between the girl and me and was fed with
morsels of the Plesiosaurus steak, at the risk of forever contaminating his
manners. He looked at me sheepishly all the time, for he knew that no well-bred
dog should eat at table; but the poor fellow was so wasted from improper food
that I couldn’t enjoy my own meal had he been denied an immediate share in it;
and anyway Lys wanted to feed him. So there you are.
Lys was coldly polite to me and sweetly gracious to Bradley and Olson. She
wasn’t of the gushing type, I knew; so I didn’t expect much from her and was
duly grateful for the few morsels of attention she threw upon the floor to me.
We had a pleasant meal, with only one unfortunate occurrence—when Olson
suggested that possibly the creature we were eating was the same one that ate
the German. It was some time before we could persuade the girl to continue her
meal, but at last Bradley prevailed upon her, pointing out that we had come
upstream nearly forty miles since the boche had been seized, and that during
that time we had seen literally thousands of these denizens of the river,
indicating that the chances were very remote that this was the same Plesiosaur.
“And anyway,” he concluded, “it was only a scheme of Mr. Olson’s to get all the
steaks for himself.”
We discussed the future and ventured opinions as to what lay before us; but we
could only theorize at best, for none of us knew. If the whole land was
infested by these and similar horrid monsters, life would be impossible upon
it, and we decided that we would only search long enough to find and take
aboard fresh water and such meat and fruits as might be safely procurable and
then retrace our way beneath the cliffs to the open sea.
And so at last we turned into our narrow bunks, hopeful, happy and at peace
with ourselves, our lives and our God, to awaken the following morning
refreshed and still optimistic. We had an easy time getting away—as we learned
later, because the saurians do not commence to feed until late in the morning.
From noon to midnight their curve of activity is at its height, while from dawn
to about nine o’clock it is lowest. As a matter of fact, we didn’t see one of
them all the time we were getting under way, though I had the cannon raised to
the deck and manned against an assault. I hoped, but I was none too sure, that
shells might discourage them. The trees were full of monkeys of all sizes and
shades, and once we thought we saw a manlike creature watching us from the
depth of the forest.
Shortly after we resumed our course upstream, we saw the mouth of another and
smaller river emptying into the main channel from the south—that is, upon our
right; and almost immediately after we came upon a large island five or six
miles in length; and at fifty miles there was a still larger river than the
last coming in from the northwest, the course of the main stream having now
changed to northeast by southwest. The water was quite free from reptiles, and
the vegetation upon the banks of the river had altered to more open and
parklike forest, with eucalyptus and acacia mingled with a scattering of tree
ferns, as though two distinct periods of geologic time had overlapped and
merged. The grass, too, was less flowering, though there were still gorgeous
patches mottling the greensward; and lastly, the fauna was less multitudinous.
Six or seven miles farther, and the river widened considerably; before us
opened an expanse of water to the farther horizon, and then we sailed out upon
an inland sea so large that only a shore-line upon our side was visible to us.
The waters all about us were alive with life. There were still a few reptiles;
but there were fish by the thousands, by the millions.
The water of the inland sea was very warm, almost hot, and the atmosphere was
hot and heavy above it. It seemed strange that beyond the buttressed walls of
Caprona icebergs floated and the south wind was biting, for only a gentle
breeze moved across the face of these living waters, and that was damp and
warm. Gradually, we commenced to divest ourselves of our clothing, retaining
only sufficient for modesty; but the sun was not hot. It was more the heat of a
steam-room than of an oven.
We coasted up the shore of the lake in a north-westerly direction, sounding all
the time. We found the lake deep and the bottom rocky and steeply shelving
toward the center, and once when I moved straight out from shore to take other
soundings we could find no bottom whatsoever. In open spaces along the shore we
caught occasional glimpses of the distant cliffs, and here they appeared only a
trifle less precipitous than those which bound Caprona on the seaward side. My
theory is that in a far distant era Caprona was a mighty mountain—perhaps the
world’s mightiest mountain—and that in some titanic eruption volcanic action
blew off the entire crest, blew thousands of feet of the mountain upward and
outward and onto the surrounding continent, leaving a great crater; and then,
possibly, the continent sank as ancient continents have been known to do,
leaving only the summit of Caprona above the sea. The encircling walls, the
central lake, the hot springs which feed the lake, all point to such a
conclusion, and the fauna and the flora bear indisputable evidence that Caprona
was once part of some great land-mass.
As we cruised up along the coast, the landscape continued a more or less open
forest, with here and there a small plain where we saw animals grazing. With my
glass I could make out a species of large red deer, some antelope and what
appeared to be a species of horse; and once I saw the shaggy form of what might
have been a monstrous bison. Here was game a plenty! There seemed little danger
of starving upon Caprona. The game, however, seemed wary; for the instant the
animals discovered us, they threw up their heads and tails and went cavorting
off, those farther inland following the example of the others until all were
lost in the mazes of the distant forest. Only the great, shaggy ox stood his
ground. With lowered head he watched us until we had passed, and then continued
feeding.
About twenty miles up the coast from the mouth of the river we encountered low
cliffs of sandstone, broken and tortured evidence of the great upheaval which
had torn Caprona asunder in the past, intermingling upon a common level the
rock formations of widely separated eras, fusing some and leaving others
untouched.
We ran along beside them for a matter of ten miles, arriving off a broad cleft
which led into what appeared to be another lake. As we were in search of pure
water, we did not wish to overlook any portion of the coast, and so after
sounding and finding that we had ample depth, I ran the _U_-33 between
head-lands into as pretty a landlocked harbor as sailormen could care to see,
with good water right up to within a few yards of the shore. As we cruised
slowly along, two of the boches again saw what they believed to be a man, or
manlike creature, watching us from a fringe of trees a hundred yards inland,
and shortly after we discovered the mouth of a small stream emptying into the
bay. It was the first stream we had found since leaving the river, and I at
once made preparations to test its water. To land, it would be necessary to run
the _U_-33 close in to the shore, at least as close as we could, for even
these waters were infested, though, not so thickly, by savage reptiles. I
ordered sufficient water let into the diving-tanks to lower us about a foot,
and then I ran the bow slowly toward the shore, confident that should we run
aground, we still had sufficient lifting force to free us when the water should
be pumped out of the tanks; but the bow nosed its way gently into the reeds and
touched the shore with the keel still clear.
My men were all armed now with both rifles and pistols, each having plenty of
ammunition. I ordered one of the Germans ashore with a line, and sent two of my
own men to guard him, for from what little we had seen of Caprona, or Caspak as
we learned later to call the interior, we realized that any instant some new
and terrible danger might confront us. The line was made fast to a small tree,
and at the same time I had the stern anchor dropped.
As soon as the boche and his guard were aboard again, I called all hands on
deck, including von Schoenvorts, and there I explained to them that the time
had come for us to enter into some sort of an agreement among ourselves that
would relieve us of the annoyance and embarrassment of being divided into two
antagonistic parts—prisoners and captors. I told them that it was obvious our
very existence depended upon our unity of action, that we were to all intent
and purpose entering a new world as far from the seat and causes of our own
world-war as if millions of miles of space and eons of time separated us from
our past lives and habitations.
“There is no reason why we should carry our racial and political hatreds into
Caprona,” I insisted. “The Germans among us might kill all the English, or the
English might kill the last German, without affecting in the slightest degree
either the outcome of even the smallest skirmish upon the western front or the
opinion of a single individual in any belligerent or neutral country. I
therefore put the issue squarely to you all; shall we bury our animosities and
work together with and for one another while we remain upon Caprona, or must we
continue thus divided and but half armed, possibly until death has claimed the
last of us? And let me tell you, if you have not already realized it, the
chances are a thousand to one that not one of us ever will see the outside
world again. We are safe now in the matter of food and water; we could
provision the _U_-33 for a long cruise; but we are practically out of
fuel, and without fuel we cannot hope to reach the ocean, as only a submarine
can pass through the barrier cliffs. What is your answer?” I turned toward von
Schoenvorts.
He eyed me in that disagreeable way of his and demanded to know, in case they
accepted my suggestion, what their status would be in event of our finding a
way to escape with the _U_-33. I replied that I felt that if we had all
worked loyally together we should leave Caprona upon a common footing, and to
that end I suggested that should the remote possibility of our escape in the
submarine develop into reality, we should then immediately make for the nearest
neutral port and give ourselves into the hands of the authorities, when we
should all probably be interned for the duration of the war. To my surprise he
agreed that this was fair and told me that they would accept my conditions and
that I could depend upon their loyalty to the common cause.
I thanked him and then addressed each one of his men individually, and each
gave me his word that he would abide by all that I had outlined. It was further
understood that we were to act as a military organization under military rules
and discipline—I as commander, with Bradley as my first lieutenant and Olson as
my second, in command of the Englishmen; while von Schoenvorts was to act as an
additional second lieutenant and have charge of his own men. The four of us
were to constitute a military court under which men might be tried and
sentenced to punishment for infraction of military rules and discipline, even
to the passing of the death-sentence.
I then had arms and ammunition issued to the Germans, and leaving Bradley and
five men to guard the _U_-33, the balance of us went ashore. The first
thing we did was to taste the water of the little stream—which, to our delight,
we found sweet, pure and cold. This stream was entirely free from dangerous
reptiles, because, as I later discovered, they became immediately dormant when
subjected to a much lower temperature than 70 degrees Fahrenheit. They dislike
cold water and keep as far away from it as possible. There were countless
brook-trout here, and deep holes that invited us to bathe, and along the bank
of the stream were trees bearing a close resemblance to ash and beech and oak,
their characteristics evidently induced by the lower temperature of the air
above the cold water and by the fact that their roots were watered by the water
from the stream rather than from the warm springs which we afterward found in
such abundance elsewhere.
Our first concern was to fill the water tanks of the _U_-33 with fresh
water, and that having been accomplished, we set out to hunt for game and
explore inland for a short distance. Olson, von Schoenvorts, two Englishmen and
two Germans accompanied me, leaving ten to guard the ship and the girl. I had
intended leaving Nobs behind, but he got away and joined me and was so happy
over it that I hadn’t the heart to send him back. We followed the stream upward
through a beautiful country for about five miles, and then came upon its source
in a little boulder-strewn clearing. From among the rocks bubbled fully twenty
ice-cold springs. North of the clearing rose sandstone cliffs to a height of
some fifty to seventy-five feet, with tall trees growing at their base and
almost concealing them from our view. To the west the country was flat and
sparsely wooded, and here it was that we saw our first game—a large red deer.
It was grazing away from us and had not seen us when one of my men called my
attention to it. Motioning for silence and having the rest of the party lie
down, I crept toward the quarry, accompanied only by Whitely. We got within a
hundred yards of the deer when he suddenly raised his antlered head and pricked
up his great ears. We both fired at once and had the satisfaction of seeing the
buck drop; then we ran forward to finish him with our knives. The deer lay in a
small open space close to a clump of acacias, and we had advanced to within
several yards of our kill when we both halted suddenly and simultaneously.
Whitely looked at me, and I looked at Whitely, and then we both looked back in
the direction of the deer.
“Blime!” he said. “Wot is hit, sir?”
“It looks to me, Whitely, like an error,” I said; “some assistant god who had
been creating elephants must have been temporarily transferred to the
lizard-department.”
“Hi wouldn’t s’y that, sir,” said Whitely; “it sounds blasphemous.”
“It is no more blasphemous than that thing which is swiping our meat,” I
replied, for whatever the thing was, it had leaped upon our deer and was
devouring it in great mouthfuls which it swallowed without mastication. The
creature appeared to be a great lizard at least ten feet high, with a huge,
powerful tail as long as its torso, mighty hind legs and short forelegs. When
it had advanced from the wood, it hopped much after the fashion of a kangaroo,
using its hind feet and tail to propel it, and when it stood erect, it sat upon
its tail. Its head was long and thick, with a blunt muzzle, and the opening of
the jaws ran back to a point behind the eyes, and the jaws were armed with long
sharp teeth. The scaly body was covered with black and yellow spots about a
foot in diameter and irregular in contour. These spots were outlined in red
with edgings about an inch wide. The underside of the chest, body and tail were
a greenish white.
“Wot s’y we pot the bloomin’ bird, sir?” suggested Whitely.
I told him to wait until I gave the word; then we would fire simultaneously, he
at the heart and I at the spine.
“Hat the ’eart, sir—yes, sir,” he replied, and raised his piece to his
shoulder.
Our shots rang out together. The thing raised its head and looked about until
its eyes rested upon us; then it gave vent to a most appalling hiss that rose
to the crescendo of a terrific shriek and came for us.
“Beat it, Whitely!” I cried as I turned to run.
We were about a quarter of a mile from the rest of our party, and in full sight
of them as they lay in the tall grass watching us. That they saw all that had
happened was evidenced by the fact that they now rose and ran toward us, and at
their head leaped Nobs. The creature in our rear was gaining on us rapidly when
Nobs flew past me like a meteor and rushed straight for the frightful reptile.
I tried to recall him, but he would pay no attention to me, and as I couldn’t
see him sacrificed, I, too, stopped and faced the monster. The creature
appeared to be more impressed with Nobs than by us and our firearms, for it
stopped as the Airedale dashed at it growling, and struck at him viciously with
its powerful jaws.
Nobs, though, was lightning by comparison with the slow thinking beast and
dodged his opponent’s thrust with ease. Then he raced to the rear of the
tremendous thing and seized it by the tail. There Nobs made the error of his
life. Within that mottled organ were the muscles of a Titan, the force of a
dozen mighty catapults, and the owner of the tail was fully aware of the
possibilities which it contained. With a single flip of the tip it sent poor
Nobs sailing through the air a hundred feet above the ground, straight back
into the clump of acacias from which the beast had leaped upon our kill—and
then the grotesque thing sank lifeless to the ground.
Olson and von Schoenvorts came up a minute later with their men; then we all
cautiously approached the still form upon the ground. The creature was quite
dead, and an examination resulted in disclosing the fact that Whitely’s bullet
had pierced its heart, and mine had severed the spinal cord.
“But why didn’t it die instantly?” I exclaimed.
“Because,” said von Schoenvorts in his disagreeable way, “the beast is so
large, and its nervous organization of so low a caliber, that it took all this
time for the intelligence of death to reach and be impressed upon the minute
brain. The thing was dead when your bullets struck it; but it did not know it
for several seconds—possibly a minute. If I am not mistaken, it is an
Allosaurus of the Upper Jurassic, remains of which have been found in Central
Wyoming, in the suburbs of New York.”
An Irishman by the name of Brady grinned. I afterward learned that he had
served three years on the traffic-squad of the Chicago police force.
I had been calling Nobs in the meantime and was about to set out in search of
him, fearing, to tell the truth, to do so lest I find him mangled and dead
among the trees of the acacia grove, when he suddenly emerged from among the
boles, his ears flattened, his tail between his legs and his body screwed into
a suppliant S. He was unharmed except for minor bruises; but he was the most
chastened dog I have ever seen.
We gathered up what was left of the red deer after skinning and cleaning it,
and set out upon our return journey toward the U-boat. On the way Olson, von
Schoenvorts and I discussed the needs of our immediate future, and we were
unanimous in placing foremost the necessity of a permanent camp on shore. The
interior of a U-boat is about as impossible and uncomfortable an abiding-place
as one can well imagine, and in this warm climate, and in warm water, it was
almost unendurable. So we decided to construct a palisaded camp.
Chapter 6
As we strolled slowly back toward the boat, planning and discussing this, we
were suddenly startled by a loud and unmistakable detonation.
“A shell from the _U_-33!” exclaimed von Schoenvorts.
“What can be after signifyin’?” queried Olson.
“They are in trouble,” I answered for all, “and it’s up to us to get back to
them. Drop that carcass,” I directed the men carrying the meat, “and follow
me!” I set off at a rapid run in the direction of the harbor.
We ran for the better part of a mile without hearing anything more from the
direction of the harbor, and then I reduced the speed to a walk, for the
exercise was telling on us who had been cooped up for so long in the confined
interior of the _U_-33. Puffing and panting, we plodded on until within
about a mile of the harbor we came upon a sight that brought us all up
standing. We had been passing through a little heavier timber than was usual to
this part of the country, when we suddenly emerged into an open space in the
center of which was such a band as might have caused the most courageous to
pause. It consisted of upward of five hundred individuals representing several
species closely allied to man. There were anthropoid apes and gorillas—these I
had no difficulty in recognizing; but there were other forms which I had never
before seen, and I was hard put to it to say whether they were ape or man. Some
of them resembled the corpse we had found upon the narrow beach against
Caprona’s sea-wall, while others were of a still lower type, more nearly
resembling the apes, and yet others were uncannily manlike, standing there
erect, being less hairy and possessing better shaped heads.
There was one among the lot, evidently the leader of them, who bore a close
resemblance to the so-called Neanderthal man of La Chapelle-aux-Saints. There
was the same short, stocky trunk upon which rested an enormous head habitually
bent forward into the same curvature as the back, the arms shorter than the
legs, and the lower leg considerably shorter than that of modern man, the knees
bent forward and never straightened. This creature and one or two others who
appeared to be of a lower order than he, yet higher than that of the apes,
carried heavy clubs; the others were armed only with giant muscles and fighting
fangs—nature’s weapons. All were males, and all were entirely naked; nor was
there upon even the highest among them a sign of ornamentation.
At sight of us they turned with bared fangs and low growls to confront us. I
did not wish to fire among them unless it became absolutely necessary, and so I
started to lead my party around them; but the instant that the Neanderthal man
guessed my intention, he evidently attributed it to cowardice upon our part,
and with a wild cry he leaped toward us, waving his cudgel above his head. The
others followed him, and in a minute we should have been overwhelmed. I gave
the order to fire, and at the first volley six of them went down, including the
Neanderthal man. The others hesitated a moment and then broke for the trees,
some running nimbly among the branches, while others lost themselves to us
between the boles. Both von Schoenvorts and I noticed that at least two of the
higher, manlike types took to the trees quite as nimbly as the apes, while
others that more nearly approached man in carriage and appearance sought safety
upon the ground with the gorillas.
An examination disclosed that five of our erstwhile opponents were dead and the
sixth, the Neanderthal man, was but slightly wounded, a bullet having glanced
from his thick skull, stunning him. We decided to take him with us to camp, and
by means of belts we managed to secure his hands behind his back and place a
leash around his neck before he regained consciousness. We then retraced our
steps for our meat being convinced by our own experience that those aboard the
_U_-33 had been able to frighten off this party with a single shell—but
when we came to where we had left the deer it had disappeared.
On the return journey Whitely and I preceded the rest of the party by about a
hundred yards in the hope of getting another shot at something edible, for we
were all greatly disgusted and disappointed by the loss of our venison. Whitely
and I advanced very cautiously, and not having the whole party with us, we
fared better than on the journey out, bagging two large antelope not a
half-mile from the harbor; so with our game and our prisoner we made a cheerful
return to the boat, where we found that all were safe. On the shore a little
north of where we lay there were the corpses of twenty of the wild creatures
who had attacked Bradley and his party in our absence, and the rest of whom we
had met and scattered a few minutes later.
We felt that we had taught these wild ape-men a lesson and that because of it
we would be safer in the future—at least safer from them; but we decided not to
abate our carefulness one whit, feeling that this new world was filled with
terrors still unknown to us; nor were we wrong.
The following morning we commenced work upon our camp, Bradley, Olson, von
Schoenvorts, Miss La Rue, and I having sat up half the night discussing the
matter and drawing plans. We set the men at work felling trees, selecting for
the purpose jarrah, a hard, weather-resisting timber which grew in profusion
near by. Half the men labored while the other half stood guard, alternating
each hour with an hour off at noon. Olson directed this work. Bradley, von
Schoenvorts and I, with Miss La Rue’s help, staked out the various buildings
and the outer wall. When the day was done, we had quite an array of logs nicely
notched and ready for our building operations on the morrow, and we were all
tired, for after the buildings had been staked out we all fell in and helped
with the logging—all but von Schoenvorts. He, being a Prussian and a gentleman,
couldn’t stoop to such menial labor in the presence of his men, and I didn’t
see fit to ask it of him, as the work was purely voluntary upon our part. He
spent the afternoon shaping a swagger-stick from the branch of jarrah and
talking with Miss La Rue, who had sufficiently unbent toward him to notice his
existence.
We saw nothing of the wild men of the previous day, and only once were we
menaced by any of the strange denizens of Caprona, when some frightful
nightmare of the sky swooped down upon us, only to be driven off by a fusillade
of bullets. The thing appeared to be some variety of pterodactyl, and what with
its enormous size and ferocious aspect was most awe-inspiring. There was
another incident, too, which to me at least was far more unpleasant than the
sudden onslaught of the prehistoric reptile. Two of the men, both Germans, were
stripping a felled tree of its branches. Von Schoenvorts had completed his
swagger-stick, and he and I were passing close to where the two worked.
One of them threw to his rear a small branch that he had just chopped off, and
as misfortune would have it, it struck von Schoenvorts across the face. It
couldn’t have hurt him, for it didn’t leave a mark; but he flew into a terrific
rage, shouting: “Attention!” in a loud voice. The sailor immediately
straightened up, faced his officer, clicked his heels together and saluted.
“Pig!” roared the Baron, and struck the fellow across the face, breaking his
nose. I grabbed von Schoenvorts’ arm and jerked him away before he could strike
again, if such had been his intention, and then he raised his little stick to
strike me; but before it descended the muzzle of my pistol was against his
belly and he must have seen in my eyes that nothing would suit me better than
an excuse to pull the trigger. Like all his kind and all other bullies, von
Schoenvorts was a coward at heart, and so he dropped his hand to his side and
started to turn away; but I pulled him back, and there before his men I told
him that such a thing must never again occur—that no man was to be struck or
otherwise punished other than in due process of the laws that we had made and
the court that we had established. All the time the sailor stood rigidly at
attention, nor could I tell from his expression whether he most resented the
blow his officer had struck him or my interference in the gospel of the
Kaiser-breed. Nor did he move until I said to him: “Plesser, you may return to
your quarters and dress your wound.” Then he saluted and marched stiffly off
toward the _U_-33.
Just before dusk we moved out into the bay a hundred yards from shore and
dropped anchor, for I felt that we should be safer there than elsewhere. I also
detailed men to stand watch during the night and appointed Olson officer of the
watch for the entire night, telling him to bring his blankets on deck and get
what rest he could. At dinner we tasted our first roast Caprona antelope, and
we had a mess of greens that the cook had found growing along the stream. All
during the meal von Schoenvorts was silent and surly.
After dinner we all went on deck and watched the unfamiliar scenes of a
Capronian night—that is, all but von Schoenvorts. There was less to see than to
hear. From the great inland lake behind us came the hissing and the screaming
of countless saurians. Above us we heard the flap of giant wings, while from
the shore rose the multitudinous voices of a tropical jungle—of a warm, damp
atmosphere such as must have enveloped the entire earth during the Palezeoic
and Mesozoic eras. But here were intermingled the voices of later eras—the
scream of the panther, the roar of the lion, the baying of wolves and a
thunderous growling which we could attribute to nothing earthly but which one
day we were to connect with the most fearsome of ancient creatures.
One by one the others went to their rooms, until the girl and I were left alone
together, for I had permitted the watch to go below for a few minutes, knowing
that I would be on deck. Miss La Rue was very quiet, though she replied
graciously enough to whatever I had to say that required reply. I asked her if
she did not feel well.
“Yes,” she said, “but I am depressed by the awfulness of it all. I feel of so
little consequence—so small and helpless in the face of all these myriad
manifestations of life stripped to the bone of its savagery and brutality. I
realize as never before how cheap and valueless a thing is life. Life seems a
joke, a cruel, grim joke. You are a laughable incident or a terrifying one as
you happen to be less powerful or more powerful than some other form of life
which crosses your path; but as a rule you are of no moment whatsoever to
anything but yourself. You are a comic little figure, hopping from the cradle
to the grave. Yes, that is our trouble—we take ourselves too seriously; but
Caprona should be a sure cure for that.” She paused and laughed.
“You have evolved a beautiful philosophy,” I said. “It fills such a longing in
the human breast. It is full, it is satisfying, it is ennobling. What wondrous
strides toward perfection the human race might have made if the first man had
evolved it and it had persisted until now as the creed of humanity.”
“I don’t like irony,” she said; “it indicates a small soul.”
“What other sort of soul, then, would you expect from ‘a comic little figure
hopping from the cradle to the grave’?” I inquired. “And what difference does
it make, anyway, what you like and what you don’t like? You are here for but an
instant, and you mustn’t take yourself too seriously.”
She looked up at me with a smile. “I imagine that I am frightened and blue,”
she said, “and I know that I am very, very homesick and lonely.” There was
almost a sob in her voice as she concluded. It was the first time that she had
spoken thus to me. Involuntarily, I laid my hand upon hers where it rested on
the rail.
“I know how difficult your position is,” I said; “but don’t feel that you are
alone. There is—is one here who—who would do anything in the world for you,” I
ended lamely. She did not withdraw her hand, and she looked up into my face
with tears on her cheeks and I read in her eyes the thanks her lips could not
voice. Then she looked away across the weird moonlit landscape and sighed.
Evidently her new-found philosophy had tumbled about her ears, for she was
seemingly taking herself seriously. I wanted to take her in my arms and tell
her how I loved her, and had taken her hand from the rail and started to draw
her toward me when Olson came blundering up on deck with his bedding.
The following morning we started building operations in earnest, and things
progressed finely. The Neanderthal man was something of a care, for we had to
keep him in irons all the time, and he was mighty savage when approached; but
after a time he became more docile, and then we tried to discover if he had a
language. Lys spent a great deal of time talking to him and trying to draw him
out; but for a long while she was unsuccessful. It took us three weeks to build
all the houses, which we constructed close by a cold spring some two miles from
the harbor.
We changed our plans a trifle when it came to building the palisade, for we
found a rotted cliff near by where we could get all the flat building-stone we
needed, and so we constructed a stone wall entirely around the buildings. It
was in the form of a square, with bastions and towers at each corner which
would permit an enfilading fire along any side of the fort, and was about one
hundred and thirty-five feet square on the outside, with walls three feet thick
at the bottom and about a foot and a half wide at the top, and fifteen feet
high. It took a long time to build that wall, and we all turned in and helped
except von Schoenvorts, who, by the way, had not spoken to me except in the
line of official business since our encounter—a condition of armed neutrality
which suited me to a T. We have just finished it, the last touches being put on
today. I quit about a week ago and commenced working on this chronicle for our
strange adventures, which will account for any minor errors in chronology which
may have crept in; there was so much material that I may have made some
mistakes, but I think they are but minor and few.
I see in reading over the last few pages that I neglected to state that Lys
finally discovered that the Neanderthal man possessed a language. She has
learned to speak it, and so have I, to some extent. It was he—his name he says
is Am, or Ahm—who told us that this country is called Caspak. When we asked him
how far it extended, he waved both arms about his head in an all-including
gesture which took in, apparently, the entire universe. He is more tractable
now, and we are going to release him, for he has assured us that he will not
permit his fellows to harm us. He calls us Galus and says that in a short time
he will be a Galu. It is not quite clear to us what he means. He says that
there are many Galus north of us, and that as soon as he becomes one he will go
and live with them.
Ahm went out to hunt with us yesterday and was much impressed by the ease with
which our rifles brought down antelopes and deer. We have been living upon the
fat of the land, Ahm having shown us the edible fruits, tubers and herbs, and
twice a week we go out after fresh meat. A certain proportion of this we dry
and store away, for we do not know what may come. Our drying process is really
smoking. We have also dried a large quantity of two varieties of cereal which
grow wild a few miles south of us. One of these is a giant Indian maize—a lofty
perennial often fifty and sixty feet in height, with ears the size of a man’s
body and kernels as large as your fist. We have had to construct a second store
house for the great quantity of this that we have gathered.
_September_ 3, 1916: Three months ago today the torpedo from the
_U_-33 started me from the peaceful deck of the American liner upon the
strange voyage which has ended here in Caspak. We have settled down to an
acceptance of our fate, for all are convinced that none of us will ever see the
outer world again. Ahm’s repeated assertions that there are human beings like
ourselves in Caspak have roused the men to a keen desire for exploration. I
sent out one party last week under Bradley. Ahm, who is now free to go and come
as he wishes, accompanied them. They marched about twenty-five miles due west,
encountering many terrible beasts and reptiles and not a few manlike creatures
whom Ahm sent away. Here is Bradley’s report of the expedition:
Marched fifteen miles the first day, camping on the bank of a large stream
which runs southward. Game was plentiful and we saw several varieties which we
had not before encountered in Caspak. Just before making camp we were charged
by an enormous woolly rhinoceros, which Plesser dropped with a perfect shot. We
had rhinoceros-steaks for supper. Ahm called the thing “Atis.” It was almost a
continuous battle from the time we left the fort until we arrived at camp. The
mind of man can scarce conceive the plethora of carnivorous life in this lost
world; and their prey, of course, is even more abundant.
The second day we marched about ten miles to the foot of the cliffs. Passed
through dense forests close to the base of the cliffs. Saw manlike creatures
and a low order of ape in one band, and some of the men swore that there was a
white man among them. They were inclined to attack us at first; but a volley
from our rifles caused them to change their minds. We scaled the cliffs as far
as we could; but near the top they are absolutely perpendicular without any
sufficient cleft or protuberance to give hand or foot-hold. All were
disappointed, for we hungered for a view of the ocean and the outside world. We
even had a hope that we might see and attract the attention of a passing ship.
Our exploration has determined one thing which will probably be of little value
to us and never heard of beyond Caprona’s walls—this crater was once entirely
filled with water. Indisputable evidence of this is on the face of the cliffs.
Our return journey occupied two days and was as filled with adventure as usual.
We are all becoming accustomed to adventure. It is beginning to pall on us. We
suffered no casualties and there was no illness.
I had to smile as I read Bradley’s report. In those four days he had doubtless
passed through more adventures than an African big-game hunter experiences in a
lifetime, and yet he covered it all in a few lines. Yes, we are becoming
accustomed to adventure. Not a day passes that one or more of us does not face
death at least once. Ahm taught us a few things that have proved profitable and
saved us much ammunition, which it is useless to expend except for food or in
the last recourse of self-preservation. Now when we are attacked by large
flying reptiles we run beneath spreading trees; when land carnivora threaten
us, we climb into trees, and we have learned not to fire at any of the
dinosaurs unless we can keep out of their reach for at least two minutes after
hitting them in the brain or spine, or five minutes after puncturing their
hearts—it takes them so long to die. To hit them elsewhere is worse than
useless, for they do not seem to notice it, and we had discovered that such
shots do not kill or even disable them.
_September_ 7, 1916: Much has happened since I last wrote. Bradley is away
again on another exploration expedition to the cliffs. He expects to be gone
several weeks and to follow along their base in search of a point where they
may be scaled. He took Sinclair, Brady, James, and Tippet with him. Ahm has
disappeared. He has been gone about three days; but the most startling thing I
have on record is that von Schoenvorts and Olson while out hunting the other
day discovered oil about fifteen miles north of us beyond the sandstone cliffs.
Olson says there is a geyser of oil there, and von Schoenvorts is making
preparations to refine it. If he succeeds, we shall have the means for leaving
Caspak and returning to our own world. I can scarce believe the truth of it. We
are all elated to the seventh heaven of bliss. Pray God we shall not be
disappointed.
I have tried on several occasions to broach the subject of my love to Lys; but
she will not listen.
Chapter 7
October 8, 1916: This is the last entry I shall make upon my manuscript. When
this is done, I shall be through. Though I may pray that it reaches the haunts
of civilized man, my better judgment tells me that it will never be perused by
other eyes than mine, and that even though it should, it would be too late to
avail me. I am alone upon the summit of the great cliff overlooking the broad
Pacific. A chill south wind bites at my marrow, while far below me I can see
the tropic foliage of Caspak on the one hand and huge icebergs from the near
Antarctic upon the other. Presently I shall stuff my folded manuscript into the
thermos bottle I have carried with me for the purpose since I left the
fort—Fort Dinosaur we named it—and hurl it far outward over the cliff-top into
the Pacific. What current washes the shore of Caprona I know not; whither my
bottle will be borne I cannot even guess; but I have done all that mortal man
may do to notify the world of my whereabouts and the dangers that threaten
those of us who remain alive in Caspak—if there be any other than myself.
About the 8th of September I accompanied Olson and von Schoenvorts to the
oil-geyser. Lys came with us, and we took a number of things which von
Schoenvorts wanted for the purpose of erecting a crude refinery. We went up the
coast some ten or twelve miles in the _U_-33, tying up to shore near the
mouth of a small stream which emptied great volumes of crude oil into the sea—I
find it difficult to call this great lake by any other name. Then we
disembarked and went inland about five miles, where we came upon a small lake
entirely filled with oil, from the center of which a geyser of oil spouted.
On the edge of the lake we helped von Schoenvorts build his primitive refinery.
We worked with him for two days until he got things fairly well started, and
then we returned to Fort Dinosaur, as I feared that Bradley might return and be
worried by our absence. The _U_-33 merely landed those of us that were to
return to the fort and then retraced its course toward the oil-well. Olson,
Whitely, Wilson, Miss La Rue, and myself disembarked, while von Schoenvorts and
his German crew returned to refine the oil. The next day Plesser and two other
Germans came down overland for ammunition. Plesser said they had been attacked
by wild men and had exhausted a great deal of ammunition. He also asked
permission to get some dried meat and maize, saying that they were so busy with
the work of refining that they had no time to hunt. I let him have everything
he asked for, and never once did a suspicion of their intentions enter my mind.
They returned to the oil-well the same day, while we continued with the
multitudinous duties of camp life.
For three days nothing of moment occurred. Bradley did not return; nor did we
have any word from von Schoenvorts. In the evening Lys and I went up into one
of the bastion towers and listened to the grim and terrible nightlife of the
frightful ages of the past. Once a saber-tooth screamed almost beneath us, and
the girl shrank close against me. As I felt her body against mine, all the pent
love of these three long months shattered the bonds of timidity and conviction,
and I swept her up into my arms and covered her face and lips with kisses. She
did not struggle to free herself; but instead her dear arms crept up about my
neck and drew my own face even closer to hers.
“You love me, Lys?” I cried.
I felt her head nod an affirmative against my breast. “Tell me, Lys,” I begged,
“tell me in words how much you love me.”
Low and sweet and tender came the answer: “I love you beyond all conception.”
My heart filled with rapture then, and it fills now as it has each of the
countless times I have recalled those dear words, as it shall fill always until
death has claimed me. I may never see her again; she may not know how I love
her—she may question, she may doubt; but always true and steady, and warm with
the fires of love my heart beats for the girl who said that night: “I love you
beyond all conception.”
For a long time we sat there upon the little bench constructed for the sentry
that we had not as yet thought it necessary to post in more than one of the
four towers. We learned to know one another better in those two brief hours
than we had in all the months that had intervened since we had been thrown
together. She told me that she had loved me from the first, and that she never
had loved von Schoenvorts, their engagement having been arranged by her aunt
for social reasons.
That was the happiest evening of my life; nor ever do I expect to experience
its like; but at last, as is the way of happiness, it terminated. We descended
to the compound, and I walked with Lys to the door of her quarters. There again
she kissed me and bade me good night, and then she went in and closed the door.
I went to my own room, and there I sat by the light of one of the crude candles
we had made from the tallow of the beasts we had killed, and lived over the
events of the evening. At last I turned in and fell asleep, dreaming happy
dreams and planning for the future, for even in savage Caspak I was bound to
make my girl safe and happy. It was daylight when I awoke. Wilson, who was
acting as cook, was up and astir at his duties in the cook-house. The others
slept; but I arose and followed by Nobs went down to the stream for a plunge.
As was our custom, I went armed with both rifle and revolver; but I stripped
and had my swim without further disturbance than the approach of a large hyena,
a number of which occupied caves in the sand-stone cliffs north of the camp.
These brutes are enormous and exceedingly ferocious. I imagine they correspond
with the cave-hyena of prehistoric times. This fellow charged Nobs, whose
Capronian experiences had taught him that discretion is the better part of
valor—with the result that he dived head foremost into the stream beside me
after giving vent to a series of ferocious growls which had no more effect upon
_Hyaena spelaeus_ than might a sweet smile upon an enraged tusker.
Afterward I shot the beast, and Nobs had a feast while I dressed, for he had
become quite a raw-meat eater during our numerous hunting expeditions, upon
which we always gave him a portion of the kill.
Whitely and Olson were up and dressed when we returned, and we all sat down to
a good breakfast. I could not but wonder at Lys’ absence from the table, for
she had always been one of the earliest risers in camp; so about nine o’clock,
becoming apprehensive lest she might be indisposed, I went to the door of her
room and knocked. I received no response, though I finally pounded with all my
strength; then I turned the knob and entered, only to find that she was not
there. Her bed had been occupied, and her clothing lay where she had placed it
the previous night upon retiring; but Lys was gone. To say that I was
distracted with terror would be to put it mildly. Though I knew she could not
be in camp, I searched every square inch of the compound and all the buildings,
yet without avail.
It was Whitely who discovered the first clue—a huge human-like footprint in the
soft earth beside the spring, and indications of a struggle in the mud.
Then I found a tiny handkerchief close to the outer wall. Lys had been stolen!
It was all too plain. Some hideous member of the ape-man tribe had entered the
fort and carried her off. While I stood stunned and horrified at the frightful
evidence before me, there came from the direction of the great lake an
increasing sound that rose to the volume of a shriek. We all looked up as the
noise approached apparently just above us, and a moment later there followed a
terrific explosion which hurled us to the ground. When we clambered to our
feet, we saw a large section of the west wall torn and shattered. It was Olson
who first recovered from his daze sufficiently to guess the explanation of the
phenomenon.
“A shell!” he cried. “And there ain’t no shells in Caspak besides what’s on the
_U_-33. The dirty boches are shellin’ the fort. Come on!” And he grasped
his rifle and started on a run toward the lake. It was over two miles, but we
did not pause until the harbor was in view, and still we could not see the lake
because of the sandstone cliffs which intervened. We ran as fast as we could
around the lower end of the harbor, scrambled up the cliffs and at last stood
upon their summit in full view of the lake. Far away down the coast, toward the
river through which we had come to reach the lake, we saw upon the surface the
outline of the _U_-33, black smoke vomiting from her funnel.
Von Schoenvorts had succeeded in refining the oil! The cur had broken his every
pledge and was leaving us there to our fates. He had even shelled the fort as a
parting compliment; nor could anything have been more truly Prussian than this
leave-taking of the Baron Friedrich von Schoenvorts.
Olson, Whitely, Wilson, and I stood for a moment looking at one another. It
seemed incredible that man could be so perfidious—that we had really seen with
our own eyes the thing that we had seen; but when we returned to the fort, the
shattered wall gave us ample evidence that there was no mistake.
Then we began to speculate as to whether it had been an ape-man or a Prussian
that had abducted Lys. From what we knew of von Schoenvorts, we would not have
been surprised at anything from him; but the footprints by the spring seemed
indisputable evidence that one of Caprona’s undeveloped men had borne off the
girl I loved.
As soon as I had assured myself that such was the case, I made my preparations
to follow and rescue her. Olson, Whitely, and Wilson each wished to accompany
me; but I told them that they were needed here, since with Bradley’s party
still absent and the Germans gone it was necessary that we conserve our force
as far as might be possible.
Chapter 8
It was a sad leave-taking as in silence I shook hands with each of the three
remaining men. Even poor Nobs appeared dejected as we quit the compound and set
out upon the well-marked spoor of the abductor. Not once did I turn my eyes
backward toward Fort Dinosaur. I have not looked upon it since—nor in all
likelihood shall I ever look upon it again. The trail led northwest until it
reached the western end of the sandstone cliffs to the north of the fort; there
it ran into a well-defined path which wound northward into a country we had not
as yet explored. It was a beautiful, gently rolling country, broken by
occasional outcroppings of sandstone and by patches of dense forest relieved by
open, park-like stretches and broad meadows whereon grazed countless
herbivorous animals—red deer, aurochs, and infinite variety of antelope and at
least three distinct species of horse, the latter ranging in size from a
creature about as large as Nobs to a magnificent animal fourteen to sixteen
hands high. These creatures fed together in perfect amity; nor did they show
any great indications of terror when Nobs and I approached. They moved out of
our way and kept their eyes upon us until we had passed; then they resumed
their feeding.
The path led straight across the clearing into another forest, lying upon the
verge of which I saw a bit of white. It appeared to stand out in marked
contrast and incongruity to all its surroundings, and when I stopped to examine
it, I found that it was a small strip of muslin—part of the hem of a garment.
At once I was all excitement, for I knew that it was a sign left by Lys that
she had been carried this way; it was a tiny bit torn from the hem of the
undergarment that she wore in lieu of the night-robes she had lost with the
sinking of the liner. Crushing the bit of fabric to my lips, I pressed on even
more rapidly than before, because I now knew that I was upon the right trail
and that up to this point at least, Lys still had lived.
I made over twenty miles that day, for I was now hardened to fatigue and
accustomed to long hikes, having spent considerable time hunting and exploring
in the immediate vicinity of camp. A dozen times that day was my life
threatened by fearsome creatures of the earth or sky, though I could not but
note that the farther north I traveled, the fewer were the great dinosaurs,
though they still persisted in lesser numbers. On the other hand the quantity
of ruminants and the variety and frequency of carnivorous animals increased.
Each square mile of Caspak harbored its terrors.
At intervals along the way I found bits of muslin, and often they reassured me
when otherwise I should have been doubtful of the trail to take where two
crossed or where there were forks, as occurred at several points. And so, as
night was drawing on, I came to the southern end of a line of cliffs loftier
than any I had seen before, and as I approached them, there was wafted to my
nostrils the pungent aroma of woodsmoke. What could it mean? There could, to my
mind, be but a single solution: man abided close by, a higher order of man than
we had as yet seen, other than Ahm, the Neanderthal man. I wondered again as I
had so many times that day if it had not been Ahm who stole Lys.
Cautiously I approached the flank of the cliffs, where they terminated in an
abrupt escarpment as though some all powerful hand had broken off a great
section of rock and set it upon the surface of the earth. It was now quite
dark, and as I crept around the edge of the cliff, I saw at a little distance a
great fire around which were many figures—apparently human figures. Cautioning
Nobs to silence, and he had learned many lessons in the value of obedience
since we had entered Caspak, I slunk forward, taking advantage of whatever
cover I could find, until from behind a bush I could distinctly see the
creatures assembled by the fire. They were human and yet not human. I should
say that they were a little higher in the scale of evolution than Ahm, possibly
occupying a place of evolution between that of the Neanderthal man and what is
known as the Grimaldi race. Their features were distinctly negroid, though
their skins were white. A considerable portion of both torso and limbs were
covered with short hair, and their physical proportions were in many aspects
apelike, though not so much so as were Ahm’s. They carried themselves in a more
erect position, although their arms were considerably longer than those of the
Neanderthal man. As I watched them, I saw that they possessed a language, that
they had knowledge of fire and that they carried besides the wooden club of
Ahm, a thing which resembled a crude stone hatchet. Evidently they were very
low in the scale of humanity, but they were a step upward from those I had
previously seen in Caspak.
But what interested me most was the slender figure of a dainty girl, clad only
in a thin bit of muslin which scarce covered her knees—a bit of muslin torn and
ragged about the lower hem. It was Lys, and she was alive and so far as I could
see, unharmed. A huge brute with thick lips and prognathous jaw stood at her
shoulder. He was talking loudly and gesticulating wildly. I was close enough to
hear his words, which were similar to the language of Ahm, though much fuller,
for there were many words I could not understand. However I caught the gist of
what he was saying—which in effect was that he had found and captured this
Galu, that she was his and that he defied anyone to question his right of
possession. It appeared to me, as I afterward learned was the fact, that I was
witnessing the most primitive of marriage ceremonies. The assembled members of
the tribe looked on and listened in a sort of dull and perfunctory apathy, for
the speaker was by far the mightiest of the clan.
There seemed no one to dispute his claims when he said, or rather shouted, in
stentorian tones: “I am Tsa. This is my she. Who wishes her more than Tsa?”
“I do,” I said in the language of Ahm, and I stepped out into the firelight
before them. Lys gave a little cry of joy and started toward me, but Tsa
grasped her arm and dragged her back.
“Who are you?” shrieked Tsa. “I kill! I kill! I kill!”
“The she is mine,” I replied, “and I have come to claim her. I kill if you do
not let her come to me.” And I raised my pistol to a level with his heart. Of
course the creature had no conception of the purpose of the strange little
implement which I was poking toward him. With a sound that was half human and
half the growl of a wild beast, he sprang toward me. I aimed at his heart and
fired, and as he sprawled headlong to the ground, the others of his tribe,
overcome by fright at the report of the pistol, scattered toward the
cliffs—while Lys, with outstretched arms, ran toward me.
As I crushed her to me, there rose from the black night behind us and then to
our right and to our left a series of frightful screams and shrieks,
bellowings, roars and growls. It was the night-life of this jungle world coming
into its own—the huge, carnivorous nocturnal beasts which make the nights of
Caspak hideous. A shuddering sob ran through Lys’ figure. “O God,” she cried,
“give me the strength to endure, for his sake!” I saw that she was upon the
verge of a breakdown, after all that she must have passed through of fear and
horror that day, and I tried to quiet and reassure her as best I might; but
even to me the future looked most unpromising, for what chance of life had we
against the frightful hunters of the night who even now were prowling closer to
us?
Now I turned to see what had become of the tribe, and in the fitful glare of
the fire I perceived that the face of the cliff was pitted with large holes
into which the man-things were clambering. “Come,” I said to Lys, “we must
follow them. We cannot last a half-hour out here. We must find a cave.” Already
we could see the blazing green eyes of the hungry carnivora. I seized a brand
from the fire and hurled it out into the night, and there came back an
answering chorus of savage and rageful protest; but the eyes vanished for a
short time. Selecting a burning branch for each of us, we advanced toward the
cliffs, where we were met by angry threats.
“They will kill us,” said Lys. “We may as well keep on in search of another
refuge.”
“They will not kill us so surely as will those others out there,” I replied. “I
am going to seek shelter in one of these caves; nor will the man-things
prevent.” And I kept on in the direction of the cliff’s base. A huge creature
stood upon a ledge and brandished his stone hatchet. “Come and I will kill you
and take the she,” he boasted.
“You saw how Tsa fared when he would have kept my she,” I replied in his own
tongue. “Thus will you fare and all your fellows if you do not permit us to
come in peace among you out of the dangers of the night.”
“Go north,” he screamed. “Go north among the Galus, and we will not harm you.
Some day will we be Galus; but now we are not. You do not belong among us. Go
away or we will kill you. The she may remain if she is afraid, and we will keep
her; but the he must depart.”
“The he won’t depart,” I replied, and approached still nearer. Rough and narrow
ledges formed by nature gave access to the upper caves. A man might scale them
if unhampered and unhindered, but to clamber upward in the face of a
belligerent tribe of half-men and with a girl to assist was beyond my
capability.
“I do not fear you,” screamed the creature. “You were close to Tsa; but I am
far above you. You cannot harm me as you harmed Tsa. Go away!”
I placed a foot upon the lowest ledge and clambered upward, reaching down and
pulling Lys to my side. Already I felt safer. Soon we would be out of danger of
the beasts again closing in upon us. The man above us raised his stone hatchet
above his head and leaped lightly down to meet us. His position above me gave
him a great advantage, or at least so he probably thought, for he came with
every show of confidence. I hated to do it, but there seemed no other way, and
so I shot him down as I had shot down Tsa.
“You see,” I cried to his fellows, “that I can kill you wherever you may be. A
long way off I can kill you as well as I can kill you near by. Let us come
among you in peace. I will not harm you if you do not harm us. We will take a
cave high up. Speak!”
“Come, then,” said one. “If you will not harm us, you may come. Take Tsa’s
hole, which lies above you.”
The creature showed us the mouth of a black cave, but he kept at a distance
while he did it, and Lys followed me as I crawled in to explore. I had matches
with me, and in the light of one I found a small cavern with a flat roof and
floor which followed the cleavage of the strata. Pieces of the roof had fallen
at some long-distant date, as was evidenced by the depth of the filth and
rubble in which they were embedded. Even a superficial examination revealed the
fact that nothing had ever been attempted that might have improved the
livability of the cavern; nor, should I judge, had it ever been cleaned out.
With considerable difficulty I loosened some of the larger pieces of broken
rock which littered the floor and placed them as a barrier before the doorway.
It was too dark to do more than this. I then gave Lys a piece of dried meat,
and sitting inside the entrance, we dined as must have some of our ancient
forbears at the dawning of the age of man, while far below the open diapason of
the savage night rose weird and horrifying to our ears. In the light of the
great fire still burning we could see huge, skulking forms, and in the blacker
background countless flaming eyes.
Lys shuddered, and I put my arm around her and drew her to me; and thus we sat
throughout the hot night. She told me of her abduction and of the fright she
had undergone, and together we thanked God that she had come through unharmed,
because the great brute had dared not pause along the danger-infested way. She
said that they had but just reached the cliffs when I arrived, for on several
occasions her captor had been forced to take to the trees with her to escape
the clutches of some hungry cave-lion or saber-toothed tiger, and that twice
they had been obliged to remain for considerable periods before the beasts had
retired.
Nobs, by dint of much scrambling and one or two narrow escapes from death, had
managed to follow us up the cliff and was now curled between me and the
doorway, having devoured a piece of the dried meat, which he seemed to relish
immensely. He was the first to fall asleep; but I imagine we must have followed
suit soon, for we were both tired. I had laid aside my ammunition-belt and
rifle, though both were close beside me; but my pistol I kept in my lap beneath
my hand. However, we were not disturbed during the night, and when I awoke, the
sun was shining on the tree-tops in the distance. Lys’ head had drooped to my
breast, and my arm was still about her.
Shortly afterward Lys awoke, and for a moment she could not seem to comprehend
her situation. She looked at me and then turned and glanced at my arm about
her, and then she seemed quite suddenly to realize the scantiness of her
apparel and drew away, covering her face with her palms and blushing furiously.
I drew her back toward me and kissed her, and then she threw her arms about my
neck and wept softly in mute surrender to the inevitable.
It was an hour later before the tribe began to stir about. We watched them from
our “apartment,” as Lys called it. Neither men nor women wore any sort of
clothing or ornaments, and they all seemed to be about of an age; nor were
there any babies or children among them. This was, to us, the strangest and
most inexplicable of facts, but it recalled to us that though we had seen many
of the lesser developed wild people of Caspak, we had never yet seen a child or
an old man or woman.
After a while they became less suspicious of us and then quite friendly in
their brutish way. They picked at the fabric of our clothing, which seemed to
interest them, and examined my rifle and pistol and the ammunition in the belt
around my waist. I showed them the thermos-bottle, and when I poured a little
water from it, they were delighted, thinking that it was a spring which I
carried about with me—a never-failing source of water supply.
One thing we both noticed among their other characteristics: they never laughed
nor smiled; and then we remembered that Ahm had never done so, either. I asked
them if they knew Ahm; but they said they did not.
One of them said: “Back there we may have known him.” And he jerked his head to
the south.
“You came from back there?” I asked. He looked at me in surprise.
“We all come from there,” he said. “After a while we go there.” And this time
he jerked his head toward the north. “Be Galus,” he concluded.
Many times now had we heard this reference to becoming Galus. Ahm had spoken of
it many times. Lys and I decided that it was a sort of original religious
conviction, as much a part of them as their instinct for self-preservation—a
primal acceptance of a hereafter and a holier state. It was a brilliant theory,
but it was all wrong. I know it now, and how far we were from guessing the
wonderful, the miraculous, the gigantic truth which even yet I may only guess
at—the thing that sets Caspak apart from all the rest of the world far more
definitely than her isolated geographical position or her impregnable barrier
of giant cliffs. If I could live to return to civilization, I should have meat
for the clergy and the layman to chew upon for years—and for the evolutionists,
too.
After breakfast the men set out to hunt, while the women went to a large pool
of warm water covered with a green scum and filled with billions of tadpoles.
They waded in to where the water was about a foot deep and lay down in the mud.
They remained there from one to two hours and then returned to the cliff. While
we were with them, we saw this same thing repeated every morning; but though we
asked them why they did it we could get no reply which was intelligible to us.
All they vouchsafed in way of explanation was the single word Ata. They tried
to get Lys to go in with them and could not understand why she refused. After
the first day I went hunting with the men, leaving my pistol and Nobs with Lys,
but she never had to use them, for no reptile or beast ever approached the pool
while the women were there—nor, so far as we know, at other times. There was no
spoor of wild beast in the soft mud along the banks, and the water certainly
didn’t look fit to drink.
This tribe lived largely upon the smaller animals which they bowled over with
their stone hatchets after making a wide circle about their quarry and driving
it so that it had to pass close to one of their number. The little horses and
the smaller antelope they secured in sufficient numbers to support life, and
they also ate numerous varieties of fruits and vegetables. They never brought
in more than sufficient food for their immediate needs; but why bother? The
food problem of Caspak is not one to cause worry to her inhabitants.
The fourth day Lys told me that she thought she felt equal to attempting the
return journey on the morrow, and so I set out for the hunt in high spirits,
for I was anxious to return to the fort and learn if Bradley and his party had
returned and what had been the result of his expedition. I also wanted to
relieve their minds as to Lys and myself, as I knew that they must have already
given us up for dead. It was a cloudy day, though warm, as it always is in
Caspak. It seemed odd to realize that just a few miles away winter lay upon the
storm-tossed ocean, and that snow might be falling all about Caprona; but no
snow could ever penetrate the damp, hot atmosphere of the great crater.
We had to go quite a bit farther than usual before we could surround a little
bunch of antelope, and as I was helping drive them, I saw a fine red deer a
couple of hundred yards behind me. He must have been asleep in the long grass,
for I saw him rise and look about him in a bewildered way, and then I raised my
gun and let him have it. He dropped, and I ran forward to finish him with the
long thin knife, which one of the men had given me; but just as I reached him,
he staggered to his feet and ran on for another two hundred yards—when I
dropped him again. Once more was this repeated before I was able to reach him
and cut his throat; then I looked around for my companions, as I wanted them to
come and carry the meat home; but I could see nothing of them. I called a few
times and waited, but there was no response and no one came. At last I became
disgusted, and cutting off all the meat that I could conveniently carry, I set
off in the direction of the cliffs. I must have gone about a mile before the
truth dawned upon me—I was lost, hopelessly lost.
The entire sky was still completely blotted out by dense clouds; nor was there
any landmark visible by which I might have taken my bearings. I went on in the
direction I thought was south but which I now imagine must have been about due
north, without detecting a single familiar object. In a dense wood I suddenly
stumbled upon a thing which at first filled me with hope and later with the
most utter despair and dejection. It was a little mound of new-turned earth
sprinkled with flowers long since withered, and at one end was a flat slab of
sandstone stuck in the ground. It was a grave, and it meant for me that I had
at last stumbled into a country inhabited by human beings. I would find them;
they would direct me to the cliffs; perhaps they would accompany me and take us
back with them to their abodes—to the abodes of men and women like ourselves.
My hopes and my imagination ran riot in the few yards I had to cover to reach
that lonely grave and stoop that I might read the rude characters scratched
upon the simple headstone. This is what I read:
HERE LIES JOHN TIPPET
ENGLISHMAN
KILLED BY TYRANNOSAURUS
10 SEPT., A.D. 1916
R. I. P.
Tippet! It seemed incredible. Tippet lying here in this gloomy wood! Tippet
dead! He had been a good man, but the personal loss was not what affected me.
It was the fact that this silent grave gave evidence that Bradley had come this
far upon his expedition and that he too probably was lost, for it was not our
intention that he should be long gone. If I had stumbled upon the grave of one
of the party, was it not within reason to believe that the bones of the others
lay scattered somewhere near?
Chapter 9
As I stood looking down upon that sad and lonely mound, wrapped in the most
dismal of reflections and premonitions, I was suddenly seized from behind and
thrown to earth. As I fell, a warm body fell on top of me, and hands grasped my
arms and legs. When I could look up, I saw a number of giant figures pinioning
me down, while others stood about surveying me. Here again was a new type of
man—a higher type than the primitive tribe I had just quitted. They were a
taller people, too, with better-shaped skulls and more intelligent faces. There
were less of the ape characteristics about their features, and less of the
negroid, too. They carried weapons, stone-shod spears, stone knives, and
hatchets—and they wore ornaments and breech-cloths—the former of feathers worn
in their hair and the latter made of a single snake-skin cured with the head
on, the head depending to their knees.
Of course I did not take in all these details upon the instant of my capture,
for I was busy with other matters. Three of the warriors were sitting upon me,
trying to hold me down by main strength and awkwardness, and they were having
their hands full in the doing, I can tell you. I don’t like to appear
conceited, but I may as well admit that I am proud of my strength and the
science that I have acquired and developed in the directing of it—that and my
horsemanship I always have been proud of. And now, that day, all the long hours
that I had put into careful study, practice and training brought me in two or
three minutes a full return upon my investment. Californians, as a rule, are
familiar with ju-jutsu, and I especially had made a study of it for several
years, both at school and in the gym of the Los Angeles Athletic Club, while
recently I had had, in my employ, a Jap who was a wonder at the art.
It took me just about thirty seconds to break the elbow of one of my
assailants, trip another and send him stumbling backward among his fellows, and
throw the third completely over my head in such a way that when he fell his
neck was broken. In the instant that the others of the party stood in mute and
inactive surprise, I unslung my rifle—which, carelessly, I had been carrying
across my back; and when they charged, as I felt they would, I put a bullet in
the forehead of one of them. This stopped them all temporarily—not the death of
their fellow, but the report of the rifle, the first they had ever heard.
Before they were ready to attack me again, one of them spoke in a commanding
tone to his fellows, and in a language similar but still more comprehensive
than that of the tribe to the south, as theirs was more complete than Ahm’s. He
commanded them to stand back and then he advanced and addressed me.
He asked me who I was, from whence I came and what my intentions were. I
replied that I was a stranger in Caspak, that I was lost and that my only
desire was to find my way back to my companions. He asked where they were and I
told him toward the south somewhere, using the Caspakian phrase which,
literally translated, means “toward the beginning.” His surprise showed upon
his face before he voiced it in words. “There are no Galus there,” he said.
“I tell you,” I said angrily, “that I am from another country, far from Caspak,
far beyond the high cliffs. I do not know who the Galus may be; I have never
seen them. This is the farthest north I have been. Look at me—look at my
clothing and my weapons. Have you ever seen a Galu or any other creature in
Caspak who possessed such things?”
He had to admit that he had not, and also that he was much interested in me, my
rifle and the way I had handled his three warriors. Finally he became half
convinced that I was telling him the truth and offered to aid me if I would
show him how I had thrown the man over my head and also make him a present of
the “bang-spear,” as he called it. I refused to give him my rifle, but promised
to show him the trick he wished to learn if he would guide me in the right
direction. He told me that he would do so tomorrow, that it was too late today
and that I might come to their village and spend the night with them. I was
loath to lose so much time; but the fellow was obdurate, and so I accompanied
them. The two dead men they left where they had fallen, nor gave them a second
glance—thus cheap is life upon Caspak.
These people also were cave-dwellers, but their caves showed the result of a
higher intelligence that brought them a step nearer to civilized man than the
tribe next “toward the beginning.” The interiors of their caverns were cleared
of rubbish, though still far from clean, and they had pallets of dried grasses
covered with the skins of leopard, lynx, and bear, while before the entrances
were barriers of stone and small, rudely circular stone ovens. The walls of the
cavern to which I was conducted were covered with drawings scratched upon the
sandstone. There were the outlines of the giant red-deer, of mammoths, of
tigers and other beasts. Here, as in the last tribe, there were no children or
any old people. The men of this tribe had two names, or rather names of two
syllables, and their language contained words of two syllables; whereas in the
tribe of Tsa the words were all of a single syllable, with the exception of a
very few like Atis and Galus. The chief’s name was To-jo, and his household
consisted of seven females and himself. These women were much more comely, or
rather less hideous than those of Tsa’s people; one of them, even, was almost
pretty, being less hairy and having a rather nice skin, with high coloring.
They were all much interested in me and examined my clothing and equipment
carefully, handling and feeling and smelling of each article. I learned from
them that their people were known as Band-lu, or spear-men; Tsa’s race was
called Sto-lu—hatchet-men. Below these in the scale of evolution came the
Bo-lu, or club-men, and then the Alus, who had no weapons and no language. In
that word I recognized what to me seemed the most remarkable discovery I had
made upon Caprona, for unless it were mere coincidence, I had come upon a word
that had been handed down from the beginning of spoken language upon earth,
been handed down for millions of years, perhaps, with little change. It was the
sole remaining thread of the ancient woof of a dawning culture which had been
woven when Caprona was a fiery mount upon a great land-mass teeming with life.
It linked the unfathomable then to the eternal now. And yet it may have been
pure coincidence; my better judgment tells me that it is coincidence that in
Caspak the term for speechless man is Alus, and in the outer world of our own
day it is Alalus.
The comely woman of whom I spoke was called So-ta, and she took such a lively
interest in me that To-jo finally objected to her attentions, emphasizing his
displeasure by knocking her down and kicking her into a corner of the cavern. I
leaped between them while he was still kicking her, and obtaining a quick hold
upon him, dragged him screaming with pain from the cave. Then I made him
promise not to hurt the she again, upon pain of worse punishment. So-ta gave me
a grateful look; but To-jo and the balance of his women were sullen and
ominous.
Later in the evening So-ta confided to me that she was soon to leave the tribe.
“So-ta soon to be Kro-lu,” she confided in a low whisper. I asked her what a
Kro-lu might be, and she tried to explain, but I do not yet know if I
understood her. From her gestures I deduced that the Kro-lus were a people who
were armed with bows and arrows, had vessels in which to cook their food and
huts of some sort in which they lived, and were accompanied by animals. It was
all very fragmentary and vague, but the idea seemed to be that the Kro-lus were
a more advanced people than the Band-lus. I pondered a long time upon all that
I had heard, before sleep came to me. I tried to find some connection between
these various races that would explain the universal hope which each of them
harbored that some day they would become Galus. So-ta had given me a
suggestion; but the resulting idea was so weird that I could scarce even
entertain it; yet it coincided with Ahm’s expressed hope, with the various
steps in evolution I had noted in the several tribes I had encountered and with
the range of type represented in each tribe. For example, among the Band-lu
were such types as So-ta, who seemed to me to be the highest in the scale of
evolution, and To-jo, who was just a shade nearer the ape, while there were
others who had flatter noses, more prognathous faces and hairier bodies. The
question puzzled me. Possibly in the outer world the answer to it is locked in
the bosom of the Sphinx. Who knows? I do not.
Thinking the thoughts of a lunatic or a dope-fiend, I fell asleep; and when I
awoke, my hands and feet were securely tied and my weapons had been taken from
me. How they did it without awakening me I cannot tell you. It was humiliating,
but it was true. To-jo stood above me. The early light of morning was dimly
filtering into the cave.
“Tell me,” he demanded, “how to throw a man over my head and break his neck,
for I am going to kill you, and I wish to know this thing before you die.”
Of all the ingenuous declarations I have ever heard, this one copped the
proverbial bun. It struck me as so funny that, even in the face of death, I
laughed. Death, I may remark here, had, however, lost much of his terror for
me. I had become a disciple of Lys’ fleeting philosophy of the valuelessness of
human life. I realized that she was quite right—that we were but comic figures
hopping from the cradle to the grave, of interest to practically no other
created thing than ourselves and our few intimates.
Behind To-jo stood So-ta. She raised one hand with the palm toward me—the
Caspakian equivalent of a negative shake of the head.
“Let me think about it,” I parried, and To-jo said that he would wait until
night. He would give me a day to think it over; then he left, and the women
left—the men for the hunt, and the women, as I later learned from So-ta, for
the warm pool where they immersed their bodies as did the shes of the Sto-lu.
“Ata,” explained So-ta, when I questioned her as to the purpose of this
matutinal rite; but that was later.
I must have lain there bound and uncomfortable for two or three hours when at
last So-ta entered the cave. She carried a sharp knife—mine, in fact, and with
it she cut my bonds.
“Come!” she said. “So-ta will go with you back to the Galus. It is time that
So-ta left the Band-lu. Together we will go to the Kro-lu, and after that the
Galus. To-jo will kill you tonight. He will kill So-ta if he knows that So-ta
aided you. We will go together.”
“I will go with you to the Kro-lu,” I replied, “but then I must return to my
own people ‘toward the beginning.’”
“You cannot go back,” she said. “It is forbidden. They would kill you. Thus far
have you come—there is no returning.”
“But I must return,” I insisted. “My people are there. I must return and lead
them in this direction.”
She insisted, and I insisted; but at last we compromised. I was to escort her
as far as the country of the Kro-lu and then I was to go back after my own
people and lead them north into a land where the dangers were fewer and the
people less murderous. She brought me all my belongings that had been filched
from me—rifle, ammunition, knife, and thermos bottle, and then hand in hand we
descended the cliff and set off toward the north.
For three days we continued upon our way, until we arrived outside a village of
thatched huts just at dusk. So-ta said that she would enter alone; I must not
be seen if I did not intend to remain, as it was forbidden that one should
return and live after having advanced this far. So she left me. She was a dear
girl and a stanch and true comrade—more like a man than a woman. In her simple
barbaric way she was both refined and chaste. She had been the wife of To-jo.
Among the Kro-lu she would find another mate after the manner of the strange
Caspakian world; but she told me very frankly that whenever I returned, she
would leave her mate and come to me, as she preferred me above all others. I
was becoming a ladies’ man after a lifetime of bashfulness!
At the outskirts of the village I left her without even seeing the sort of
people who inhabited it, and set off through the growing darkness toward the
south. On the third day I made a detour westward to avoid the country of the
Band-lu, as I did not care to be detained by a meeting with To-jo. On the sixth
day I came to the cliffs of the Sto-lu, and my heart beat fast as I approached
them, for here was Lys. Soon I would hold her tight in my arms again; soon her
warm lips would merge with mine. I felt sure that she was still safe among the
hatchet people, and I was already picturing the joy and the love-light in her
eyes when she should see me once more as I emerged from the last clump of trees
and almost ran toward the cliffs.
It was late in the morning. The women must have returned from the pool; yet as
I drew near, I saw no sign of life whatever. “They have remained longer,” I
thought; but when I was quite close to the base of the cliffs, I saw that which
dashed my hopes and my happiness to earth. Strewn along the ground were a score
of mute and horrible suggestions of what had taken place during my
absence—bones picked clean of flesh, the bones of manlike creatures, the bones
of many of the tribe of Sto-lu; nor in any cave was there sign of life.
Closely I examined the ghastly remains fearful each instant that I should find
the dainty skull that would shatter my happiness for life; but though I
searched diligently, picking up every one of the twenty-odd skulls, I found
none that was the skull of a creature but slightly removed from the ape. Hope,
then, still lived. For another three days I searched north and south, east and
west for the hatchetmen of Caspak; but never a trace of them did I find. It was
raining most of the time now, and the weather was as near cold as it ever seems
to get on Caprona.
At last I gave up the search and set off toward Fort Dinosaur. For a week—a
week filled with the terrors and dangers of a primeval world—I pushed on in the
direction I thought was south. The sun never shone; the rain scarcely ever
ceased falling. The beasts I met with were fewer in number but infinitely more
terrible in temper; yet I lived on until there came to me the realization that
I was hopelessly lost, that a year of sunshine would not again give me my
bearings; and while I was cast down by this terrifying knowledge, the knowledge
that I never again could find Lys, I stumbled upon another grave—the grave of
William James, with its little crude headstone and its scrawled characters
recording that he had died upon the 13th of September—killed by a saber-tooth
tiger.
I think that I almost gave up then. Never in my life have I felt more hopeless
or helpless or alone. I was lost. I could not find my friends. I did not even
know that they still lived; in fact, I could not bring myself to believe that
they did. I was sure that Lys was dead. I wanted myself to die, and yet I clung
to life—useless and hopeless and harrowing a thing as it had become. I clung to
life because some ancient, reptilian forbear had clung to life and transmitted
to me through the ages the most powerful motive that guided his minute
brain—the motive of self-preservation.
At last I came to the great barrier-cliffs; and after three days of mad
effort—of maniacal effort—I scaled them. I built crude ladders; I wedged sticks
in narrow fissures; I chopped toe-holds and finger-holds with my long knife;
but at last I scaled them. Near the summit I came upon a huge cavern. It is the
abode of some mighty winged creature of the Triassic—or rather it was. Now it
is mine. I slew the thing and took its abode. I reached the summit and looked
out upon the broad gray terrible Pacific of the far-southern winter. It was
cold up there. It is cold here today; yet here I sit watching, watching,
watching for the thing I know will never come—for a sail.
Chapter 10
Once a day I descend to the base of the cliff and hunt, and fill my stomach
with water from a clear cold spring. I have three gourds which I fill with
water and take back to my cave against the long nights. I have fashioned a
spear and a bow and arrow, that I may conserve my ammunition, which is running
low. My clothes are worn to shreds. Tomorrow I shall discard them for
leopard-skins which I have tanned and sewn into a garment strong and warm. It
is cold up here. I have a fire burning and I sit bent over it while I write;
but I am safe here. No other living creature ventures to the chill summit of
the barrier cliffs. I am safe, and I am alone with my sorrows and my remembered
joys—but without hope. It is said that hope springs eternal in the human
breast; but there is none in mine.
I am about done. Presently I shall fold these pages and push them into my
thermos bottle. I shall cork it and screw the cap tight, and then I shall hurl
it as far out into the sea as my strength will permit. The wind is off-shore;
the tide is running out; perhaps it will be carried into one of those numerous
ocean-currents which sweep perpetually from pole to pole and from continent to
continent, to be deposited at last upon some inhabited shore. If fate is kind
and this does happen, then, _for God’s sake, come and get me!_
It was a week ago that I wrote the preceding paragraph, which I thought would
end the written record of my life upon Caprona. I had paused to put a new point
on my quill and stir the crude ink (which I made by crushing a black variety of
berry and mixing it with water) before attaching my signature, when faintly
from the valley far below came an unmistakable sound which brought me to my
feet, trembling with excitement, to peer eagerly downward from my dizzy ledge.
How full of meaning that sound was to me you may guess when I tell you that it
was the report of a firearm! For a moment my gaze traversed the landscape
beneath until it was caught and held by four figures near the base of the
cliff—a human figure held at bay by three hyaenodons, those ferocious and
blood-thirsty wild dogs of the Eocene. A fourth beast lay dead or dying near
by.
I couldn’t be sure, looking down from above as I was; but yet I trembled like a
leaf in the intuitive belief that it was Lys, and my judgment served to confirm
my wild desire, for whoever it was carried only a pistol, and thus had Lys been
armed. The first wave of sudden joy which surged through me was short-lived in
the face of the swift-following conviction that the one who fought below was
already doomed. Luck and only luck it must have been which had permitted that
first shot to lay low one of the savage creatures, for even such a heavy weapon
as my pistol is entirely inadequate against even the lesser carnivora of
Caspak. In a moment the three would charge! A futile shot would but tend more
greatly to enrage the one it chanced to hit; and then the three would drag down
the little human figure and tear it to pieces.
And maybe it was Lys! My heart stood still at the thought, but mind and muscle
responded to the quick decision I was forced to make. There was but a single
hope—a single chance—and I took it. I raised my rifle to my shoulder and took
careful aim. It was a long shot, a dangerous shot, for unless one is accustomed
to it, shooting from a considerable altitude is most deceptive work. There is,
though, something about marksmanship which is quite beyond all scientific laws.
Upon no other theory can I explain my marksmanship of that moment. Three times
my rifle spoke—three quick, short syllables of death. I did not take conscious
aim; and yet at each report a beast crumpled in its tracks!
From my ledge to the base of the cliff is a matter of several thousand feet of
dangerous climbing; yet I venture to say that the first ape from whose loins my
line has descended never could have equaled the speed with which I literally
dropped down the face of that rugged escarpment. The last two hundred feet is
over a steep incline of loose rubble to the valley bottom, and I had just
reached the top of this when there arose to my ears an agonized cry—“Bowen!
Bowen! Quick, my love, quick!”
I had been too much occupied with the dangers of the descent to glance down
toward the valley; but that cry which told me that it was indeed Lys, and that
she was again in danger, brought my eyes quickly upon her in time to see a
hairy, burly brute seize her and start off at a run toward the near-by wood.
From rock to rock, chamoislike, I leaped downward toward the valley, in pursuit
of Lys and her hideous abductor.
He was heavier than I by many pounds, and so weighted by the burden he carried
that I easily overtook him; and at last he turned, snarling, to face me. It was
Kho of the tribe of Tsa, the hatchet-men. He recognized me, and with a low
growl he threw Lys aside and came for me. “The she is mine,” he cried. “I kill!
I kill!”
I had had to discard my rifle before I commenced the rapid descent of the
cliff, so that now I was armed only with a hunting knife, and this I whipped
from its scabbard as Kho leaped toward me. He was a mighty beast, mightily
muscled, and the urge that has made males fight since the dawn of life on earth
filled him with the blood-lust and the thirst to slay; but not one whit less
did it fill me with the same primal passions. Two abysmal beasts sprang at each
other’s throats that day beneath the shadow of earth’s oldest cliffs—the man of
now and the man-thing of the earliest, forgotten then, imbued by the same
deathless passion that has come down unchanged through all the epochs, periods
and eras of time from the beginning, and which shall continue to the
incalculable end—woman, the imperishable Alpha and Omega of life.
Kho closed and sought my jugular with his teeth. He seemed to forget the
hatchet dangling by its aurochs-hide thong at his hip, as I forgot, for the
moment, the dagger in my hand. And I doubt not but that Kho would easily have
bested me in an encounter of that sort had not Lys’ voice awakened within my
momentarily reverted brain the skill and cunning of reasoning man.
“Bowen!” she cried. “Your knife! Your knife!”
It was enough. It recalled me from the forgotten eon to which my brain had
flown and left me once again a modern man battling with a clumsy, unskilled
brute. No longer did my jaws snap at the hairy throat before me; but instead my
knife sought and found a space between two ribs over the savage heart. Kho
voiced a single horrid scream, stiffened spasmodically and sank to the earth.
And Lys threw herself into my arms. All the fears and sorrows of the past were
wiped away, and once again I was the happiest of men.
With some misgivings I shortly afterward cast my eyes upward toward the
precarious ledge which ran before my cave, for it seemed to me quite beyond all
reason to expect a dainty modern belle to essay the perils of that frightful
climb. I asked her if she thought she could brave the ascent, and she laughed
gayly in my face.
“Watch!” she cried, and ran eagerly toward the base of the cliff. Like a
squirrel she clambered swiftly aloft, so that I was forced to exert myself to
keep pace with her. At first she frightened me; but presently I was aware that
she was quite as safe here as was I. When we finally came to my ledge and I
again held her in my arms, she recalled to my mind that for several weeks she
had been living the life of a cave-girl with the tribe of hatchet-men. They had
been driven from their former caves by another tribe which had slain many and
carried off quite half the females, and the new cliffs to which they had flown
had proven far higher and more precipitous, so that she had become, through
necessity, a most practiced climber.
She told me of Kho’s desire for her, since all his females had been stolen and
of how her life had been a constant nightmare of terror as she sought by night
and by day to elude the great brute. For a time Nobs had been all the
protection she required; but one day he disappeared—nor has she seen him since.
She believes that he was deliberately made away with; and so do I, for we both
are sure that he never would have deserted her. With her means of protection
gone, Lys was now at the mercy of the hatchet-man; nor was it many hours before
he had caught her at the base of the cliff and seized her; but as he bore her
triumphantly aloft toward his cave, she had managed to break loose and escape
him.
“For three days he has pursued me,” she said, “through this horrible world. How
I have passed through in safety I cannot guess, nor how I have always managed
to outdistance him; yet I have done it, until just as you discovered me. Fate
was kind to us, Bowen.”
I nodded my head in assent and crushed her to me. And then we talked and
planned as I cooked antelope-steaks over my fire, and we came to the conclusion
that there was no hope of rescue, that she and I were doomed to live and die
upon Caprona. Well, it might be worse! I would rather live here always with Lys
than to live elsewhere without her; and she, dear girl, says the same of me;
but I am afraid of this life for her. It is a hard, fierce, dangerous life, and
I shall pray always that we shall be rescued from it—for her sake.
That night the clouds broke, and the moon shone down upon our little ledge; and
there, hand in hand, we turned our faces toward heaven and plighted our troth
beneath the eyes of God. No human agency could have married us more sacredly
than we are wed. We are man and wife, and we are content. If God wills it, we
shall live out our lives here. If He wills otherwise, then this manuscript
which I shall now consign to the inscrutable forces of the sea shall fall into
friendly hands. However, we are each without hope. And so we say good-bye in
this, our last message to the world beyond the barrier cliffs.
(_Signed_) BOWEN J. TYLER, JR.
LYS LA R. TYLER.
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