The Golden Amazons of Venus - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"Then it must have been Chester Sand," he said promptly.
"Why do you say that?"
Brent shrugged.
"Because he's the only man aboard that I don't know too well to suspect."
"Interesting logic," Gerry grunted, "But we can't lock a man up on such negative grounds. Keep your eyes open. I'm going to try to sweat some information out of someone as soon as we get through this ceremony of visiting the king of this place."
Women working in the fields looked up as the _Viking_ pa.s.sed, lifting a hand to shade their eyes as they stared aloft at the soaring s.p.a.ce-s.h.i.+p.
Other women drove small carts along the white roads that wound through the fields. There did not seem to be any men in this land at all. Then, along the far horizon ahead, there began to lift the domes and towers and minarets of a mighty city. Closana proudly lifted her arm.
"The Golden City of Larr!" she said, "Capitol of our land of Savissa.
None but our own people have ever penetrated those walls except as prisoners of war."
The walled city of Larr dominated the plain in all its towered splendor.
Its walls of polished yellow stone were more than a hundred feet high.
The serrated battlements at the top were faced with plates of thin gold.
Domes of blue and scarlet gleamed within the walls. Slender minarets lifted their lattices high in the air. In the center was a ma.s.sive round tower whose top was shaped like the point of a golden arrow.
"But surely your people never built this place!" he gasped. Closana shook her head.
"The city was not built by my people as they are now. Larr, the Golden City, is very ancient. It was built by the Old Ones--they who lived here long ago, in the dim dawn of time. I have forgotten most of the tale but my father can tell you."
As they pa.s.sed over the outer walls, Gerry saw some long steel tubes mounted on swivels above the battlements. They were protected by gleaming metal s.h.i.+elds. He touched Closana's arm.
"What are those things that look like giant ray-guns?"
"Those are the defences of the walls," the girl answered, "We also have them at the barrier forts. In some way they send out rays of heat that burn and shrivel all things within reach. I do not know much about them, but my father can tell you."
"Looks like he's going to tell me a lot of things," Gerry said. Closana shook back her long hair and looked at him thoughtfully for a moment.
"Yes, Geree. He will also tell you why you had better marry me as I suggested."
"I told you we'd have to let that subject wait till later!" he said grimly. Steve Brent prodded him gently in the ribs.
"Persistent souls, these Golden Amazons!" he said in English.
The appearance of the _Viking_ in the air over Larr created a mounting excitement among the citizens of the city. Through the open windows of the control room Gerry could hear the brazen clamor of many trumpets, sounding the alarm. Crowds appeared on the roofs. Arrows streaked up at the s.p.a.ce-s.h.i.+p, futile shafts that fell short of the mark. As they neared the central tower, gun crews swarmed about two of the ray-tubes.
Knowing the resisting power of the _Viking's_ duralite hull, Gerry was not greatly worried, but Closana seemed to feel that things had gone far enough.
Hitherto the girl had been quite evidently enjoying the consternation that the _Viking's_ arrival had caused among the defenders of the city.
Now she leaned far out from the open window and waved rea.s.suringly. As she was recognized, defense preparations ceased and the gun crews began to cover their weapons up again.
The _Viking_ settled gently down on the worn stone pavement of a square plaza directly before the central tower. A ring of amazon spearmen instantly formed to keep back the curious crowds, and other companies were drawn up as a guard of honor. They saluted Closana with a shout and a surge of uplifted spears when she and Gerry stepped out the opened starboard door. Then, when Angus McTavish came out with a group of senior officers a few seconds later, all the Amazon warriors dropped instantly down on one knee while their spear-points rattled on the stones. The big engineer beamed through his beard, and tilted his uniform cap to a more rakish angle.
"I have already stated that these folk are a verra discriminating people!" he said with deep satisfaction. Closana turned to Gerry.
"It would be better to take only a few of your people along when we go into see my father."
Gerry faced about, his glance running quickly over those of his crew who had emerged from the hull and were standing nearby.
"Steve Brent stays here in command," he said quietly, "You come with me, Angus. And Portok. And one other...." He hesitated, then named Olga Stark. Later he was to wonder what evil genius had led him to select her as one of the party. He could not quite remember. Probably it was just a desire to take as varied and representative a group along with him as possible. Closana looked annoyed at his choice, but did not comment.
They pa.s.sed through the ranks of the spear-guard, and up to the octagonal main door of the tower where carved golden leaves slid back into the wall on each side. A blue light glowed around the inner frame of the door, and Closana held up her arm.
"Wait till the blue light fades, for it is Death," she said quietly.
Then, as the light died out, they all stepped inside while the golden leaves of the door closed clas.h.i.+ng behind them.
They were in a winding corridor whose stone walls were faced with polished stone and hung with ancient tapestries. The place was lighted by metal discs set flush in the ceiling, discs of a substance that gave forth a soft and golden glow. Even this light, Gerry noticed, was so diffused as to be shadowless. "The Land of No-Shadow!" he muttered under his breath, remembering the phrase that had come to him earlier. Somehow the friendly old Earth seemed very far away at that moment!
In an ante-chamber they met the first man they had seen since they reached Venus, aside from the half-animal raiders of the Scaly Ones.
This man was short and slight, with a very high forehead and unusually large eyes. His skin had the same tawny tinge as that of the feminine warriors of his race, but he was more lightly built than they. He wore a loose yellow tunic, and his hair and thin beard were heavily shot with gray. Somehow he looked tired, and old even beyond his years, as though the sands of his race were running very low.
"Rupin-Sang awaits your coming," he said to Gerry. As Portok and the others from the _Viking_ came into sight, the Venusian stared at them with strangely startled eyes. He said nothing more, but his glance seemed to hold a strange, terrible haunting fear.
At the end of the corridor they stepped into a small golden car. A door closed behind them. The floor shot rapidly upward. A few seconds later the door of the lift-car swung open again and they stepped out into a round chamber near the top of the great tower.
"Enter to His Highness Rupin-Sang, Lord of Savissa and the Mountain Lands, ruler of field and forest and castle, hereditary Warden of the Great Sea!" the Venusian courtier said sonorously.
The room was circular, with gla.s.sless windows set in the walls every few feet. A warm breeze blew in to stir the tiny metal discs that hung around near the tops of the walls in a sort of frieze, setting them swinging till they clashed together with a continuous jingling. A small fountain murmured in the center of the room. A peculiarly shaped telescope stood by one wall, and there were other scientific instruments of a type unfamiliar to the Earth-men.
In a big carved chair in the center sat a very old man, a rolled parchment lying across his knees. What remained of his hair and beard were pure white. His face was lined and sunken. He half raised his arm in a ceremonial gesture of welcome, but then a sudden expression of alarm came over his face. He pointed with one shaking hand.
"_Aie_--woe to the City of Larr! The hour of the fulfilment of the prophecy is at hand! Woe to Larr, with its walls and towers!"
Closana hurried to her father's side. A moment later the old man had regained his calm. He greeted them with formalized speech of welcome full of old phrases, then added:
"Forgive my agitation when you first entered, _hiziren_, but it brought to mind the doom-filled phrases of what we of Savissa call the Prophecy of Jeddah-Khana."
"What is that?"
"It is a very old prophecy, carved in an ancient runic script on the stone walls of one of the vaults under this tower. Tradition says it was put there by the Old Ones who built this city, and of whose science we are the unworthy heirs." Rupin-Sang bowed and touched his forehead as he mentioned the Old Ones. "The Prophecy states that the day will come when a red-skinned man and a dark-haired woman and a ruddy, bearded giant will come together to the city from afar, and that within a month thereafter the Golden City of Larr will crumble and return to the dust."
"But surely you don't take such old legends seriously!" Gerry said. The old man smiled.
"My head tells me not to, but superst.i.tion is strong in we of Savissa.
However--I can take comfort from the fact that the old legend also prophecies a re-birth for Savissa after the great catastrophe. But enough of this talk of portents and legends! I give you welcome to Savissa, and to the city of Larr. Also, I thank you for rescuing my youngest daughter from the Scaly Raiders. Whence come ye?"
Gerry sketched in hasty phrases the outline of present conditions on Earth and Mars, and told of their trip through s.p.a.ce to Venus in the _Viking_. Rupin-Sang nodded without showing any particular surprise.