The Golden Age of Science Fiction Novels Vol 03

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The Golden Age of Science Fiction Novels Vol 03 Page 67

by Anthology


  And so they went on.

  There was a perceptible current coming down the river. The water was cold and clear, and in the brighter light now he could see down into it in many places to the bottom, six or eight feet below. The region seemed utterly uninhabited; no sign of a house or even a boat on the river met them as they advanced.

  "Mightn't there be boats along here?" Mercer asked once. "How far up is this place?"

  "Not far now--beyond there."

  The river appeared to terminate abruptly up ahead against the side of a frowning brown cliff, but Mercer saw a moment later that it opened out around a bend to the left.

  "Around that next bend?"

  She nodded.

  It seemed incredible to Mercer that the second largest city in Mercury lay hidden in the midst of this desolation.

  "We'll meet boats," he said. "What will the people think of me? Don't let's start anything if we can help it."

  "You lie there." Anina indicated the bottom of the boat at her feet. "No one see you then. I steer. They do not notice me. Nobody care who I am."

  Mercer had still the very vaguest of ideas as to what they would do when they got to the Water City. As a matter of fact, he really was more curious just to see it than anything else. But there was another reason that urged him on. Both he and Anina were hungry.

  They had eaten very little since leaving the Great City the night before; and now that it was again evening, they were famished. They had rummaged the boat thoroughly, but evidently the men had taken all their supplies ashore with them, for nothing was in the boat.

  "We'll have to dope out some way to get something to eat," said Mercer.

  They came upon the sharp bend in the river Anina had indicated. Following close against one rocky shore, they swept around the bend, and the Water City lay spread out before Mercer's astonished eyes.

  CHAPTER XXIV.

  THE WATER CITY.

  It had stopped raining; the sky overhead was luminous with diffused sunlight; the scene that lay before Mercer was plainly visible. The river had opened abruptly into a broad, shallow, nearly circular lake, some five or six miles across. The country here showed an extraordinary change from that they had passed through. The lake appeared to occupy a depression in the surrounding hills, like the bottom of a huge, shallow bowl. From the water's edge on all sides the ground sloped upward. It was no longer a barren, rocky land, but seemingly covered with a rich heavy soil, dotted with tropical trees. That it was under a high state of cultivation was evident. Mercer saw tier upon tier of rice terraces on the hillsides.

  But what astonished him most was the city itself. It covered almost the entire surface of the lake--a huge collection of little palm-thatched shacks built upon platforms raised above the water on stilts. Some of the houses were larger and built of stone, with their foundations in the water.

  Off to one side were two or three little islands, an acre or less in extent, fringed with palms and coconut trees. In nearly the center of the lake stood a stone castle, two stories in height, with minarets ornamenting its corners. An open stretch of water surrounded it.

  There was little of regularity about this extraordinary city, and no evidence of streets, for the houses were set down quite haphazard wherever open space afforded. In some places they were more crowded together than others, although seldom closer than twenty or thirty feet.

  Around the larger ones there was a little more open water, as though the owners controlled it and forbade building there. Some of the smaller houses were connected by little wooden bridges. Anina said this was where two or more families of relatives had located together.

  There were a few boats moving about--little punts hollowed out of logs and propelled by long poles--and Mercer saw many others, some of them larger like the one he and Anina were in, tied up by the houses. It was now the time of the evening meal. The workers had returned from the terraces; there were few moving about the city. Occasionally a girl would dart up from one of the houses and wing her way to another, but beyond that there were no signs of activity.

  Anina took command of the boat now, slowing it down and heading for the nearest of the houses, which were hardly more than quarter of a mile away. Mercer stretched himself out in the bottom of the boat, covering himself with a large piece of fabric that lay there. He felt that he would be unnoticed, even should a girl chance to pass directly overhead. But he could see nothing of the city from where he was, and soon grew restless and anxious to do something else.

  "I'm coming up, Anina," he said once. "Shucks! Nobody can do anything to us. Haven't I got this light-ray?"

  But Anina was obdurate, and made him stay where he was.

  They went slowly forward and were soon among the houses. On the front platform of one a man sat fishing. A little naked boy slid down into the water from another, swimming as though born to the water. Both stared at Anina curiously as she passed slowly by, but they said nothing. A girl looked out of the window of another house and waved her hand in friendly greeting, which Anina answered.

  Mercer, lying with all but his face covered by the cloth, could see only the sides of the boat, the bottom of the cross-seat over his head, and Anina as she sat above him in the stern.

  "Where do you suppose the Tao people hang out around here?" he suddenly asked. "If we could--"

  The girl silenced him with a gesture.

  He lowered his voice. "Try and find out where they are, Anina," he whispered.

  Anina steered the boat directly under several of the houses, which must have been quite a usual proceeding, for it attracted no attention. A girl flew close to them once, and Anina called to her. The girl alighted on the stern of the boat for a moment; Mercer slid the cloth over his face and held himself motionless. Then he heard Anina's voice calling to him softly. He slid the cloth back; the girl had gone.

  "She says Tao's men live, there--large house, of wood," said Anina, pointing off to one side.

  Mercer nearly rapped his head against the seat above him in his excitement.

  "You know which house? Let's go there. Maybe we can hear what they're saying. Can we get under it?"

  She nodded.

  "Let's try, Anina," he said eagerly. "You steer us slow right under it, just as if you were going past. If there's nobody in sight you can stop underneath, can't you? Maybe we can hear what they're saying."

  "I try," the girl said simply.

  "I'll lay still," encouraged Mercer. "Nobody will bother about you. Just sneak in and see what happens. If anybody sees you, keep going."

  He was all excitement, and in spite of Anina's protests wriggled about continually, trying to see where they were.

  The house that the girl had pointed out lay only a few hundred yards ahead. It was one of the largest of the wooden buildings--sixty or seventy feet long at least--single story, with a high sloping thatched roof.

  It was raised on a platform some six feet above the water, which, in front, had a little flight of wooden steps leading down to the surface. There was a hundred feet of open water on all sides of the building. The boat, moving slowly, slipped through the water almost without a sound.

  "Where are we now?" Mercer whispered impatiently. "Aren't we there yet?"

  The girl put a finger to her lips. "Almost there. Quiet now."

  She steered straight for the house. There was no one in sight, either about the house itself or about those in its immediate vicinity. A moment more and the boat slid beneath the building into semidarkness.

  Anina shut the power off and stood up. The floor of the house was just above her head. In front of her, near the center of the building, she saw the side walls of an inner inclosure some twenty feet square. These walls came down to the surface, making a room like a basement to the dwelling. A broad doorway, with a sliding door that now stood open, gave ingress.

  The boat had now almost lost headway. Anina nosed its bow into this doorway, and grasping one of the pilings near at hand, brought it to rest.

  Me
rcer, at a signal from her, climbed cautiously to his feet, still holding the little light-ray cylinder in his hand.

  "What's that in there?" he whispered.

  Beyond the doorway, through which the bow of the boat projected, there was complete darkness.

  "Lower room," Anina whispered back. "Store things in there. And boat landing, too."

  "Let's go in and see."

  Mercer started toward the bow of the boat. Six feet or more of it was inside the doorway. He made his way carefully into the bow, and found himself inside the basement of the house.

  In the dimness of this interior he could just make out the outlines of things around. The doorway was located at a corner of the inclosure. In front lay a small open space of water. At one side a platform about two feet above the surface formed the floor of the room. A tiny punt lay moored to it. Farther back a small, steep flight of steps led up through a rectangular opening to the building above.

  Most of the light in this lower room came down through this opening; and now, as Mercer stood quiet looking about him, he could hear plainly the voices of men in the room above.

  Anina was beside him.

  "They're up there," he whispered, pointing. "Let's land and see if we can get up those stairs a ways and hear what they're saying."

  They stood a moment, undecided, and then from the silence and darkness about them they distinctly heard a low muffled sound.

  "What's that?" whispered Mercer, startled. "Didn't you hear that, Anina? There's something over there by the bottom of the steps."

  They listened, but only the murmur of the voices from above, and an occasional footstep, broke the stillness.

  "I tell you I heard something," Mercer persisted. "There's something over there." He rattled a bit of rope incautiously, as if to startle a rat from its hiding place. "Let's tie up, Anina."

  They made the boat fast, but in such a way that they could cast it loose quickly.

  "We might want to get out of here in a hurry," Mercer whispered with a grin. "You never can tell, Anina."

  He stood stock still. The sound near at hand was repeated. It was unmistakable this time--a low, stifled moan.

  Mercer stepped lightly out of the boat onto the platform. A few boxes, a coil of rope, and other odds and ends stood about. He felt his way forward among them toward the bottom of the steps. He heard the moan again, and now he saw the outlines of a human figure lying against the farther wall.

  Anina was close behind him.

  "There's somebody over there," he whispered. "Hurt or sick, maybe."

  They crept forward.

  It was a woman, bound hand and foot and gagged. Mercer bent over and tore the cloth from her face. In another instant Anina was upon her knees, sobbing softly, with her mother's head in her lap.

  They loosed the cords that held her, and chaffed her stiffened limbs. She soon recovered, for she was not injured. She told Anina her story then--how Baar had captured her in her home while she was waiting for Miela and me, and how two of his men had brought her here to the Water City by boat at once.

  That was all she knew, except that this house was the headquarters of Tao's emissaries, who, it appeared, were now allied with Baar and his party.

  Anina whispered all this to Mercer when her mother had finished.

  "Let's get out of here," said Mercer.

  The responsibility of two women, especially the elder Lua, who could not fly, weighed suddenly upon him, and his first thought was to get back to the Great City at once.

  Anina helped her mother into the boat.

  "Wait," she whispered to Mercer. "I hear what they say. You wait here."

  She went to the foot of the steps and began climbing them cautiously.

  "Not on your life, I won't wait here," Mercer muttered to himself, and, gripping the light-ray cylinder firmly as though he feared it might get away from him, he joined Anina on the stairway.

  Slowly, cautiously they made their way upward. The steps were fairly wide, and they went up almost side by side. From near the top they could see a portion of the room above.

  The corner of a table showed, around which a number of men were gathered, eating. A woman was moving about the room serving them.

  Their words, from here, were plainly audible. Mercer would have gone a step or two higher, without thought of discovery, but Anina held him back. "Wait, Ollie. I hear now what they say."

  They stood silent. The men were talking earnestly. Mercer could hear their words, but of course understood nothing he heard.

  "What do they say, Anina?" he whispered impatiently after a moment.

  "Baar is here with two or three of his men. He talks with Tao's men. They talk about men from Twilight Country. Waiting for them now. Speak of storm. Worried--because men do not come. Waiting for light-ray."

  "They'll have a long wait," Mercer chuckled. "Let's get out of here, Anina."

  He must have made a slight noise, or perhaps he and Anina, crouching there on the stairs, were seen by some one above. He never knew quite how it occurred, but, without warning, a man stood at the opening, looking down at them.

  There was a shout, and the room above was in instant turmoil. Mercer lost his head. Anina pulled at him and said something, but he did not hear her. He only knew that they had been discovered, and that most of their enemies in the Water City were crowded together in this one room at hand. And he had the light-ray--the only one in the city.

  A sudden madness possessed him. He tore away from Anina and, climbing up the steps of the stairway, leaped into the room above.

  Twenty or thirty men faced him, most of them about the table. Several had started hastily to their feet; two or three chairs were overturned.

  The man who had been looking down into the opening darted back as Mercer came up, and shouted again.

  Mercer saw it was Baar.

  THE WATER CITY.

  The men around the table were now all on their feet. One of them picked up a huge metal goblet and flung it at Mercer's head. The last remaining bit of reason Mercer had left fled from him. Without thought of what he was about, he raised the metal cylinder; his thumb found the little button and pressed it hard; he waved the cylinder back and forth before him.

  It was over in an instant. Mercer relaxed his pressure on the button and staggered back. He was sick and faint from what he had seen--with the realization of what he had done. Flames were rising all about him. The room was full of smoke. He held his breath, finding his way back somehow to the stairway, with the agonized screams of the men ringing in his ears. He caught a glimpse of Anina's white face as she stood there where he had left her.

  "Good God. Anina! Go back! Go back! I'm coming!"

  He tripped near the top of the stairs and fell in a heap onto the platform below, but he still held the cylinder clutched tightly in his hand.

  Anina groped her way down to him. He gripped her by the arm. He was trembling like a leaf. The crackling of the burning house above came down to him; the cries of the men were stilled.

  "Come, Anina," he half whispered. "Hurry--let's get away, anywhere. Home--out of this cursed city."

  Lua was still in the boat. Her calm, steady glance brought Mercer back to his senses. They shoved the boat out from under the house, and in a moment more were heading back through the city. The building they had left was now a mass of flames, with a great cloud of smoke, rolling up from it. A woman stood on the front platform an instant, and then, screaming, flung herself into the water.

  The city was in commotion. Faces appeared at windows; girls flew up and gathered in a frightened flock, circling about the burning building; boats miraculously appeared from everywhere. Lua was steering their boat on its tortuous way between the houses. She put the boat nearly to full speed, and as they swept past a house nearly collided with a punt that was crossing behind it.

  Mercer's nerves were still shaken. He handed Anina the light-ray cylinder.

  "Here--take it, Anina. I don't want the cursed thing. Shoot it
up into the air. Somebody might try and stop us. That'll scare them. Careful you don't hit anything!"

  Anina played the light about in the air for a time, but soon there were so many girls flying about she had to shut it off. A few minutes more and they had passed the last of the houses, swept around the bend in the river, and left the frightened city out of sight behind them.

  They had left the river and, following close along shore, headed for the bayous that led up to the Great City. The storm had now entirely passed, leaving the daylight unusually bright and a fresh coolness in the air. The sea was still rough, although not alarmingly so, and the boat made comparatively slow progress. It was two hours or more--to Mercer it seemed a whole day--before they were nearing the bayous. Anina was sitting by his side in the center of the boat. Lua was steering.

  "You hungry, Ollie?" the girl asked, smiling.

  Mercer shook his head. He had forgotten they had intended to eat in the Water City.

  "I very hungry. Soon we--"

  She stopped abruptly, staring up into the sky ahead of them.

  Mercer followed her glance. A little black blob showed against the gray; off to one side two other smaller black dots appeared.

  "What's that?" cried Mercer, alarmed.

  They watched a few moments in silence. Then Mercer took the cylinder, and flashed its light into the air.

  "If it's anybody connected with Tao, that'll show they'd better keep away," he explained grimly.

  Anina smiled. "Tao people cannot fly, Ollie."

  A few moments more and they saw what it was. And within ten minutes they had landed at the mouth of one of the bayous, and Miela and I were with them.

  CHAPTER XXV.

  PREPARATIONS FOR WAR.

  The months that followed were the busiest, I think, of my life. I began by a complete reorganization of this government of which I found myself the head. For the doddering old councilors of the late king I substituted men whom I selected from among those of the city's prominent business men who cared to serve.

  The personnel of the police force I allowed to remain, for I soon saw they were inclined to act very differently under me than under my predecessor. The various other officials of this somewhat vague organization I subjected to a thorough weeding out.

 

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