Chapter 42
Still it was not altogether a happy sound; there was anger in it, and courage, and defiance. He said, "We go on, Golden One! My sword thirsts for His defeat!" And swiftly, eagerly, he pressed onward. Thus came Meg and Daiv to the City of Death.
CHAPTER THREEIT WAS NOT so EASY to effect entry into the city as Meg had expected. According to the old marker-of-places she had brought, the city was connected with the road by a tunl. Meg did not know what a tunl was, but clearly it had to be some sort of bridge or roadway.
There was nothing such here. The road ended abruptly at a great hole in the ground, similar to that which they had seen at the shrine of Uray Caver, except that this one was begemmed with glistening creet platters, and everywhere about it were queer oblongs of G.o.d-metal scored with cryptic runes. Prayers.
"O Left Tur," said one; "O Parki," another.
Daiv glanced at Meg querulously, but she shook her head. These were -or appeared to be-in the language, but their meanings were lost in the mists of time. Lost, too, was the significance of that gigantic magic spell can-en in solid stone at the mouth of the hole- N.Y.-MCMXXVII-N.J.
Discouraged but undaunted, Meg and Daiv turned away from the hole. Fortunately this was uncivilized territory; the forest ran right down to the water's edge. It eased the task of hewing small trees, building a raft with which they might cross the river.
This they did in the daytime, working with m.u.f.fled axes lest He hear, investigate, and thwart their plans to invade His domain.
At night they crept back into the forest to build a camp. While Daiv went out and caught game, a fat young wild pig, Meg baked fresh biscuit, boiled maters she found growing wild in a nearby glade, and brewed cawfee from their rapidly dwindling store of that fragrant bean.
The next day they worked again on their craft, and the day after that. And at last the job was completed, Daiv looked upon it and p.r.o.nounced it good. So at dusk they pushed it into the water. And when the icy moon invaded the sky, forcing the tender sun to flee before its barrage of silver h.o.a.r-shakings, they set out for the opposite sh.o.r.e.
Without incident, they attained their goal. Behind a thicket, Daiv moored their rough craft; each committed the location to memory. Then they climbed the stone-rubbled bank, and stood at last in the City of Death, on the very portals of His lair.
Nor was there any doubt that this was Death's city. So far as the eye could see or the ear hear, there was no token of life. Harsh, jumbled blocks of creet sc.r.a.ped tender their soles, and there was no blade of gra.s.s to soften that moon-frozen severity. About and around and before them were countless aged hoams; their doors were gasping mouths, their shutterless windows like vast, blank eyes. They moved blindly forward, but no hare sprang, startled, from an unseen warren before them; no night bird broke the tomblike silence with a melancholy cry.
Only the faint breath of the wind, stirring through the great avenues of emptiness, whispered them caution in a strange, sad sigh.
A great unease weighted Meg's mind, and in the gloom her hand caught that of Daiv as they pressed ever forward into the heart of Death's citadel. High corridors ab.u.t.ted them on either side; by instinct, rather than sense, they pursued a northward path.
A thousand questions filled Meg's heart, but in this hallowed place she could not stir her lips to motion.
But as she walked, she wondered, marveled, at the Ancient Ones who, it was told, had built and lived in this great stone village.Perhaps the creet roadbed on which they walked had once been smooth, as the legends told, though Meg doubted it. Surely not even the ages could have so torn creet into jagged boulders, deep-pitted and sore. And why should the Ancient Ones have deliberately pockmarked their roads with holes, and at the bottom of these holes placed broken tubes of red G.o.d-metal?
Why, too, should the Ancient Ones have built hoams that, probing the sky, still were roofless, and had in many places had their fa9ades stripped away so that beneath the exterior showed little square cubicles, like rooms? Or why should the Ancient Ones have placed long laths of metal in the middle of their walk-avenues? Was it, Meg wondered, because they feared the demons? And had placed these bars to fend them off? All demons, Meg knew, feared G.o.d-metal, and would not cross it- How long they trod those deserted thoroughfares Meg could not tell. Their path was generally northward, but it was a devious one because Daiv, great-eyed with wonder, was ever moved to explore some mysterious alley. Once, even, he braved destruction by creeping furtively into the entrance of a hoam consecrated to a G.o.d with a harsh-sounding foreign name, Mcmxl, but from there Meg begged him to withdraw, lest He somehow divine their presence. Yet it was Daiv's insatiable curiosity that found a good omen for them. Well within the depths of the city, he stumbled across the first patch of life they had found. It was a tiny square of green, surmounted on all sides by bleak desolation. Yet from its breast of high, rank jungle gra.s.s soared a dozen mighty trees, defiantly quick in the city of the dead. Meg dropped to her knees at this spot, kissed the earth and made a prayer to the familiar G.o.ds of her clan.
And she told Daiv, "Remember well this spot. It is a refuge, a sanctuary. Perhaps, then, even He is not invulnerable, if life persists in His fortress. Should we ever be parted, let us meet here."
She marked the spot on her marker-of-places. From a plaque of the Ancient Ones, she learned its name.
It was called Madinsqua.
Through the long night they trod the city streets, but when the first faint edge of gray lifted night's shadow in the east, Daiv strangled in his throat and made a tired mouth. Then Meg, suddenly aware of her own fatigue, remembered they must not meet their powerful foe in this state.
"We must rest, Daiv. We must be strong and alert when we come face to face with Him."
Daiv demanded, "But where, Golden One? You will not enter one of the hoams-"
"The hoams are taboo," said Meg piously, "but there are many temples. Behold, there lies a great one before us now. I am a Priestess and a Mother; all temples are refuge to me. We shall go there."
So they went into the mighty, colonnaded building. And it was, indeed, a temple. Through a long corridor they pa.s.sed, down many steps, and at last into the towering vault of the sacristan.
Here, once, on the high niches about the walls, there had stood statues of the G.o.ds. Now most of these had been dislodged, their shards lay upon the cracked tiles beneath. Yet a few stood, and beneath centuries of dust and dirt the adventurers could still see the faded hues of ancient paint.
The floor of the sacristan was one, vast crater; a wall had crashed to earth and covered the confessionals of the priests. But above their heads was suspended an awesome object-a huge, round face around the rim of which appeared symbols familiar to Meg.
Daiv's eyes asked Meg for an answer.
"It is a holy sign," Meg told him. "Those are the numbers that make and take away. I had to learn them when I was a priestess. There is great magic in them." And while Daiv stood silent and respectful, shechanted them as it was ordained, "One-two-three-"
The size of this temple wakened greater awe in Meg than anything she had heretofore seen. She knew, now, that it must have been a great and holy race that lived here before the Great Disaster, for thousands could stand in the sacristan alone without crowding; in addition, there were a dozen smaller halls and prayer rooms, many of which had once been provided with seats. The western wall of the cathedral was lined with barred gates; on these depended metal placards designating the various sects who were permitted to wors.h.i.+p here. One such, more legible than the rest, bore the names of communities vaguely familiar to Meg.
THE SPORTSMAN-12:01.
Newark Philadelphia Was.h.i.+ngton Cincinnati This was, of course, the ancient language, but Meg thought she could detect some similarity to names of present-day clans. She and Daiv had, themselves, come through a town called Noork on their way here, and the elder legends told
But it would have been sacrilege to sleep in these hallowed halls. At Meg's advice they sought refuge in one of the smaller rooms flanking the corridor through which they had entered the temple. There were many of these, and one was admirably adapted to their purpose; it was the tiny prayer room of a forgotten G.o.d, Ited-Ciga. There was, in this room, a miraculously undamaged dais on which they could sleep.
They had eaten, but had not slaked their thirst in many hours. Daiv was overjoyed to find a black drink-fountain set into one of the walls, complete with a mouthpiece and a curiously shaped cup, but try as he might, he could not force the spring to flow.
It, too, was magic; at its base was a dial of G.o.d-metal marked with the numbers and letters of the language. Meg made an incantation over it, and when the water refused to come, Daiv, impatient, beat upon the mouth part. Rotten wood split from the wall, the entire fountain broke from its foundation and tumbled to the floor, disclosing a nest of inexplicable wires and metal fragments.
As it fell, from somewhere within it tumbled many circles of stained metal, large and small. Meg, seeing one of these, prayed the G.o.ds to forgive Daiv's impatience.
"The fountain would not flow," she explained, "because you did not make the fitting sacrifice. See? These are the tributes of the Ancient Ones. White pieces, carven with the faces of the G.o.ds: the Red G.o.d, the buffalo G.o.d"- her voice deepened with awe-"even great Taamuz, himself I I remember his face from the Place of the G.o.ds.
"Aie, Daiv, but they were a humble and G.o.d-fearing race, the Ancient Ones!"
And there, in the ma.s.sive pantheon of Ylvania Stat, they slept- Meg started from slumber suddenly, some inner awareness rousing her to a sense of indefinable malease.
The sun was high in the heavens, the night-damp had pa.s.sed. But as she sat up, her keen ears caughtagain the sound that had awakened her, and fear clutched her kidneys.
Daiv, too, had been awakened by the sound. Beside her he sat upright, motioning her to silence. His lips made voiceless whisper.
"Footsteps!"
Meg answered, fearfully, "His footsteps?"
Daiv slipped to the doorway, disappeared. Minutes pa.s.sed, and continued to pa.s.s until Meg, no longer able to await his return, followed him. He was crouched behind the doorway of the temple, staring down the avenue up which they had marched the preceding night. He felt her breath on his shoulder, pointed silently.
It was not Him. But it was someone almost as dangerous. A little band of His wors.h.i.+pers-all men. It was obvious that they were His followers, for in addition to the usual breechclout and sandals worn by all clansmen, these wore a gruesome decoration-necklaces of human bone! Each of them -and there must have been six or seven-carried as a weapon His traditional arm, a razor-edged sword, curved in the shape of a scythe!
They had halted beside the entrance to a hooded cavern, similar to dozens such which Meg and Daiv had pa.s.sed the night before, but had not dared investigate. Now two of them ducked suddenly into the cavernous depths. After a brief period of time, two sounds split the air simultaneously. The triumphant cry of masculine voices, and the high, shrill scream of a woman!
And from the cave mouth, their lips drawn back from their teeth in evil happy looks, emerged the raiders.
Behind them they dragged the fighting, clawing figure of a woman.
Meg gasped, her thoughts churned into confusion by a dozen conflicting emotions. Amazement that in this City of Death should be found living humans. The ghouls, His followers, she could understand. But not the fact that this woman seemed as normal as her own Jinnians.
Second, a frightful anger that anyone, anything, should thus dare lay forceful hands upon a woman. Meg was of the emanc.i.p.ated younger generation; she had accepted the new principle that men were women's equals. But, still- Her desire to do something labored with her fright. But before either could gain control of her muscles, action quickened the tableau. There came loud cries from below the ground, the sound of clanking harness, the surge of racing feet. And from the cavern's gorge charged the warriors of this stranger clan, full-panoplied, enraged, to the rescue of their comrade.
The invaders were ready for them. One had taken a position at each side of the entrance, another had leaped to its metallic roof. As the first warrior burst from the cave mouth, three scythe swords swung as one. Blood spurted. A headless torso lurched forward a shambling pace, pitched to earth, lay still. Again the scythes lifted.
Daiv could stand no more. A rage-choked roar broke from his lips, his swift motion upset Meg. And on feet that flew, sword drawn, clenched in his right fist, bellowing his wrath, he charged forward into the unequal fray!
CHAPTER FOUR.
NOR WAS MEG far behind him. She was a Priestess and a Mother, but in her veins, as in the veins of all Jinnians, flowed ever the quicksilver battle l.u.s.t. Her cry was as loud as his, her charge as swift. Liketwin lances of vengeance they bore down upon the invaders from the rear.
The minions of Death spun, startled. For an instant stark incredulity stunned them to quiescence; that immobility cost their leader his life. For even as his scattered wits rea.s.sembled, his lips framed commands to his followers, Daiv was upon him.
It was no hooked and awkward scythe Daiv wielded; it was a long sword, keen and true. Its gleaming blade flashed in the sunlight, struck at the leader's breast like the fang of a water viper-and when it met sunlight again, its gleam was crimson.
Now Daiv's sword parried an enemy hook; his foeman, weaponless and mad with fright, screamed aloud and tried to stave off the dripping edge of doom. His bare hands gripped Daiv's blade in blind, inchoate defense. The edge bit deep, grotesque-angled fingers fell to the ground like bloodworms crawling, bright ribbons of blood spurted from severed palms.
All this in the single beat of a pulse. Then Meg, too, was upon the invaders; her sword thirsted and drank beside that of her mate. And the battle was over almost before it began. Even as the vanguard of clanswomen, taking heart at this unexpected relief, came surging from the cave mouth, a half dozen bodies lay motionless on the creet, their blood enscarleting its drab. But one remained, and he, eyes wide, mouth slack in awestruck fear, turned and fled down the long avenue on feet lent wings by terror.
Then rose the woman whom the invaders had attempted to linber; in her eyes was a vast respect. She stared first at Daiv, uncertain, unbelieving. Then she turned to Meg and made low obeisance.
"Greetings and thanks, O Woman from Nowhere! Emma, Card of the Be-Empty, pledges now her life and hand, which are truly yours."
She knelt to kiss Meg's hand. Then deepened her surprise, for she gasped: "But... but you are a Mother! You wear the Mother's ring!"
Meg said quietly, "Yes, my daughter. I am Meg, the Mother of the Jinnia Clan, newly come to the City of Death."
"Jinnia Clan!" It was the foremost of the rescuers who spoke now; by her trappings Meg knew her to be a lootent of her tribe. "What is this Jinnia Clan, O Mother? Whence come you, and how-"
Meg said, "Peace, woman! It is not fitting that a clanswoman should make queries of a Mother. But lead me to your Mother. With her I would speak."
The lootent flushed. Apologetically, "Forgive me, Mother. Swiftly shall I lead you to our Mother, Alis.
But what-" She glanced curiously at Daiv who, the battle over, was now methodically wiping his stained blade on the hem of his clout. "But what shall I do with this man-thing? It is surely not a breeding-male; it fights and acts like a Wild One."
Meg smiled.
"He is not a man-thing, my child. He is a man-a true man. Take me to your Mother, and to her I will explain this mystery."
Thus it was that, shortly after, Meg and Daiv spoke with Alis in her private chamber deep in the bowels of the earth beneath the City of Death. There was great wonder in the Mother's eyes and voice, but there was respect, too, and understanding in the ear she lent Meg's words.Meg told her the tale of the Revelation. Of how she, when yet Meg the Priestess, had made pilgrimage, as was the custom of her clan, to the far-off Place of the G.o.ds.
"Through blue-swarded Tucky and Zurrie I traveled, O Alis; many days I walked through the flat fields of Braska territory. In this journey was I accompanied by Daiv, then a stranger, now my mate, who had rescued me from a Wild One. And at last I reached the desolate grottoes of distant 'Kota, and there, with my own eyes, looked upon the carven stone faces of the G.o.ds of the Ancient Ones. Grim Jarg, the sad-eyed Ibrim, ringleted Taamuz, and far-seeing Tedhi, He who laughs-"
Alis made a holy sign.
"You speak a mighty wonder, O Meg. These are G.o.ds of our clan, too, though none made your pilgrimage. But we wors.h.i.+p still another G.o.d, whose temple lies not far away. The mighty G.o.d, Granstoom. But-this secret you learned?"
"Hearken well, Alis, and believe," said Meg, "for I tell you truth. The G.o.ds of the Ancient Ones-were men!"
"Men!" Alis half rose from her seat. Her hands trembled. "But surely, Meg, you are mistaken-"
"No. The mistake occurred centuries ago, Mother of another clan. Daiv, who comes from the sacred Land of the Escape, has taught me the story.
"Long, long ago, all Tizathy was ruled by the great Ancient Ones. Mighty were they, and skilled in forgotten magics. They could run on the ground with the speed of the woodland d6e; great, wheeled horses they built for this purpose. They could fly in the air on birds made of G.o.d-metal. Their hoams probed the clouds, they never labored except on the play-field; their life was one of gay amus.e.m.e.nt, spent in chanting into boxes that carried their voices everywhere and looking at pictures-that-ran.
"But in another world across the salt water from Tizathy were still other men and women. Amongst them were evil ones, restless, impatient, fretful, greedy. These, in an attempt to rule the world, created a great war. We cannot conceive the war of the Ancient Ones. They brought all their magics into play.
"The men met on gigantic battlefields, killed each other with smoke and flame and acid and smell-winds.
And at hoam, the women-in secret magic-chambers called labteries-made for them sticks-that-spit-fire and great eggs that hatched death."
"It is hard to believe, O Meg," breathed Alis, "but I do believe. I have read certain cryptic records of the Ancient Ones-but go on."
"Came at last the day," continued Meg, "when Tizathy itself entered this war. But when their mates and children had gone to Him by the scores of scores of scores, the women rebelled. They banded together, exiled all men forevermore, set up the matriarchal form of government, keeping only a few weak and infant males as breeders.
"When they could no longer get the fire-eggs or the spit-sticks, the men came back to Tizathy. Then ensued years of another great war between the s.e.xes-but in the end, the women were triumphant.
"The rest you know. The men, disorganized, became Wild Ones, roving the jungles in search of food, managing to recreate themselves with what few clanswomen they linberred from time to time. Our civilization persisted, but many of the old legends and most of the old learning was gone. We finally came to believe that never had the men ruled; that it was right and proper for women to rule; that the very G.o.dswere women.
"But this," said Meg stanchly, "is not so. For I have brought back from the Place of the G.o.ds the Revelation. Now I spread the word. It is the duty of all clans to bring the Wild Ones out of the forests, make them their mates, so our people may one day reclaim our deserved heritage."
There was a long silence.
Then asked Alis, "I must think deeply on this, O Meg. But you spoke of the Land of the Escape. What is that?"
"It is the hot lands to the south. Daiv comes from there. It is a sacred place, for from there-from the heart of Zoni-long ago a Wise One named Renn foresaw the end of the civilization of the Ancient Ones.
"In the bowels of a monstrous bird, he and a chosen few escaped Earth itself, flying to the evening star.
They have never been heard of since. But some day they will come back. We must prepare for their coming; such is the law."
Alis nodded somberly.
"I hear and understand, O Mother to whom the truth has been revealed. But... but I fear that never can we make peace with the Wild Ones of Loalnyawk. You have seen them, fought them. You know they are vicious and untamed."
Meg had been so engrossed in spreading the news of the Revelation, she had almost forgotten her true mission. Now it flooded back upon her like an ominous pall. And she nodded.
"Loalnyawk? Is that what you call the City of Him? Perhaps you are right, Mother Alis. It would be impossible to mate with the children who wors.h.i.+p Death as a master."
"Death?" Alis' head lifted sharply. "Death, Meg? I do not understand. They do not wors.h.i.+p Death, but Death's mistress. They wors.h.i.+p the grim and savage warrior G.o.ddess, the fearful G.o.ddess, Salibbidy."
"Her," said Meg dubiously, "I never heard of. But you speak words unhappy to my ear, O Alis. A long way have Daiv and I come to do battle with Him who nips the fairest buds of our clan. Now you tell me this is not His city- "Aie, but you must be mistaken! Of a certainty it is His city. His tumbled desolation reigns everywhere."
Alis made a thought-mouth.
"You force me to wonder, Meg. Perhaps He is here. Of a truth, He takes many of us to whom He has no right. A moon ago He claimed the Priestess Kait who was young, happy, in wondrous good health.
"A sweet and holy girl, inspired by the G.o.ds. Only the day before had she been in commune with them; her tender young body atremble with ecstasy, her eyes rapt, her lips wet with the froth of their knowledge. Oft did she experience these sacred spells, and I had planned a great future for her. But-"