He was clad in a coa.r.s.e kind of brownish stuff, like the first, roughly and loosely woven. His long hair, pure white, was twisted up in a kind of topknot and fastened there by pins of dull gold. Bearded he was, but not one hair upon his head or chin was other than silvery white--a color common to all these folk, as Stern was soon to know.
This man, evidently seeing with perfect clarity by a light which permitted the engineer only partial vision, also examined Stern and made speech thereto and nodded with satisfaction.
Then he put half a dozen questions to the prisoner with evident slowness and an attempt to speak each word distinctly, but nothing came of this. And with a contemptuous grunt he went back to his paddle.
"Hold on, there!" cried Stern. "Can"t you understand? There were two of us, in a--machine, you know! We fell. Fell from the surface of the earth--fell all the way down into this pit of h.e.l.l, whatever it is.
Where"s the girl? For G.o.d"s sake, _tell me!_"
Neither man paid any heed, but the elder suddenly set hollowed palms to his lips and hailed; and from across the waters dully drifted another answering cry.
He shouted a sentence or two with a volume of noise at which the engineer marveled, for so compressed was the air that Stern"s best effort could hardly throw a sound fifty feet. This characteristic of the atmosphere he well recognized from work he had often done in bridge and tunnel caissons. And a wonder possessed him, despite his keen anxiety, how any race of men could live and grow and develop the evident physical force of these people under conditions so unnatural.
Turning his head and wrenching his neck sidewise, he was able to catch a glimpse of the water, over the low gunwale--a gunwale made, like the framework of the boat itself, of thin metallic strips cleverly riveted.
There, approaching through the mists, he got sight of another boat, also provided with its cresset that flung an uncanny shaft of blue across the jetty expanse--a boat now drawing near uncles the urge of half-seen oarsmen. And farther still another torch was visible; and beyond that a dozen, a score or more, all moving with dim and ghostly slowness, through the blind abyss of fog and heat and drifting vapors.
Stern gathered strength for another appeal.
"Who _are_ you people?" cried he pa.s.sionately. "What are you going to do with us? Where are we--and what kind of a place are we in? Any way to get out, out to the world again? And the girl--that girl! Oh, great G.o.d! _Can"t_ you answer something?"
No reply. Only that same slow, strong paddling, awful in its purposeful deliberation. Stern questioned in French, Spanish and German, but got not even the satisfaction of attracting their attention. He flung what few phrases of Latin and Esperanto he had at them. No result. And a huge despair filled his soul, a feeling of utter and absolute helplessness.
For the first time in his life--that life which had covered a thousand years or more--he found himself unable to make himself intelligible.
He had not now even recourse to gestures, to sign language. Bound hand and foot, trussed like a fowl, ignored by his captors (who, by all rules, should have been his hosts and shown him every courtesy), he felt a profound and terrible anger growing in his heart.
A sudden rage, unreasoning and insensate, blazed within him. His fists clenched; once more he tugged, straining at his stout bonds. He called down maledictions on those two strange, impa.s.sive, wraithlike forms hardly more than half seen in the darkness and fog.
Then, as delirium won again over his tortured senses and disjointed thoughts, he shouted the name of Beatrice time after time out into the echoing dark that brooded over the great waters. All at once he heard her voice, trembling and faint and weak, but still hers!
From the other boat it came, the boat now drawing very near. And as the craft loomed up through the vapors that rose incessantly from that Stygian sea, he made a mighty effort, raised himself a little and suddenly beheld her--dim, vague, uncertain in the shuddering bluish glare, yet still alive!
She was crouching midships of the canoe and, seemingly, was not bound.
At his hail she stretched forth a hand and answered with his name.
"Oh, Allan! Allan!" Her voice was tremulous and very weak.
"Beatrice! You"re safe? Thank G.o.d!"
"Hurt? Are you hurt?"
"No--nothing to speak of. These demons haven"t done you any damage, have they? If so--"
"Demons? Why, Allan! They"ve rescued us, haven"t they?"
"Yes--and now they"ve got me tied here, hand and foot! I can"t more than just move about two or three inches, blast them! They haven"t tied you, have they?"
"No," she answered. "Not yet! But--what an outrage! I"ll free you, never fear. You and I together--"
"Can"t do anything, now, girl. There may be hundreds of these people.
Thousands, perhaps. And we"re only two--two captives, and--well--hang it, Beatrice! I don"t mean to be pessimistic or anything like that, but it certainly looks bad!"
"But who are they, boy? Who can they be? And where are we?"
"Hanged if I know! This certainly beats any dream I ever had. For sheer outrageous improbability--"
He broke off short. Beatrice had leaned her head upon her arms, along the gunwale of the other canoe which now was running parallel to Stern"s, and he knew the girl was weeping.
"There, there!" he cried to her. "Don"t you be afraid, little girl!
I"ve got my automatic yet; I can feel it under me, as I lie here in this infernal boat. They haven"t taken yours away?"
"No!" she answered, raising her head again. "And before they ever do, I"ll use it, that"s all!"
"Good girl!" he cheered her, across the s.p.a.ce of water. "That"s the way to talk! Whatever happens, shoot straight if you have to shoot at all--and remember, at worst, the last cartridge is for yourself!"
CHAPTER XXIV
THE LAND OF THE MERUCAANS
"I"ll remember," she answered simply, and for a little s.p.a.ce there came silence between them.
A vast longing possessed the man to take her in his arms and hold her tight, tight to his fast-throbbing heart. But he lay bound and helpless. All he could do was call to her again, as the two canoes now drew on, side by side and as still others, joining them, made a little fleet of strange, flare-lighted craft.
"Beatrice!"
"Yes--what is it?"
"Don"t worry, whatever happens. Maybe there"s no great harm done, after all. We"re still alive and sound--that"s ninety-nine per cent of the battle."
"How _could_ we have fallen like that and not been killed? A miracle!"
"The machine must have struck the surface on one of its long slants.
If it had plunged straight down--well, we shouldn"t be here, that"s all. These infernal pirates, whoever they are, must have been close by, in their boats, and cut us loose from our straps before the machine sank, and got us into their canoes. But--"
"Without the machine, how are we ever going to get out of here again?"
"Don"t bother about that now! We"ve got other more important things to think of. It"s all a vast and complex problem, but we"ll meet it, never fear. You and I, together, are going to win! We"ve got to--for the sake of the world!"
"Oh, if they"d only take us for G.o.ds, as the Horde did!"
"G.o.ds nothing! They"re as white as we are--whiter, even. People that can make boats like these, out of iron bars covered with pitched fabric, and weave cloth like this they"re wearing, and use oil-flares in metal baskets, aren"t mistaking us for G.o.ds. The way they"ve handled me proves it. Might be a good thing if they weren"t so devilish intelligent!"
He relapsed into silence, and for a while there came no sound but the cadenced dipping of many paddles as the boats, now perhaps a score in number, all slowly moved across the unfathomed black as though toward some objective common point. Each craft bore at its bow a fire-basket filled with some spongy substance, which, oil-soaked, blazed smokily with that peculiar blue-green light so ghostly in its wavering reflections.
Many of the folk sat in these boats, among their brown fiber nets and long, iron-tipped lances. All alike were pale and anemic-looking, though well-muscled and of vigorous build. Even the youngest were white-haired. All wore their hair twisted in a knot upon the crown of the head; none boasted anything even suggesting a hat or cap.