Читать книгу The Lost World MEGAPACK® - Lin Carter - Страница 68
ОглавлениеCHAPTER 24
SCARLET SAILS
Suddenly, Jorn the Hunter froze, straining every nerve and listening intently.
“Hark!” wheezed Professor Potter at his side. “What was that?”
“I do not know,” Jorn muttered shortly. “It sounded like a woman screaming in mortal fear—”
The two had traced the narrow and winding gorge through the Peaks of Peril, until they had almost reached the farther side of the cliffs. They had been maneuvering their way through the stone walls of the little pass, when suddenly there had come to their ears the faint cry from the distance.
“Could it be the young woman?” murmured the Professor fearfully.
The glint of fear came and went in the steady blue eyes of the Cro-Magnon warrior at his side.
“I do not know,” he grunted. “But it was a woman’s voice, and what woman could possibly exist in this desolate region, swarming with monstrous thakdols, if not the gomad Darya?”
Straining his ears to catch the slightest sound, the stalwart youth stood motionless for another long moment. Then, turning to his companion, he said:
“Come!”
And with that curt word, the Stone Age youth broke into a rapid, space-eating stride, racing in the general direction from which there had come to his ears—that sharp, frightened cry of a woman’s fear.
They had evidently penetrated farther down the narrow pass between the Peaks of Peril than even Jorn the Hunter had guessed, for it was only a few minutes later that the close-set walls gave way and the warrior and the old scientist found themselves in the open country again.
Before them stretched a prospect of sandy slope leading down to the shore of the Sogar-Jad. A stand of tall calamites blocked most of their view of the inland sea, and the only other thing to meet their eyes was a small gurgling brook which meandered between shores lined with thick shrubbery, emptying into the sea.
Searching about with eagle eyes, Jorn suddenly became aware of that which rode the mist-veiled waves of the prehistoric ocean.
And his keen eyes widened incredulously, as he stared upon a sight so fantastic as to beggar comparison—
* * * *
For the better part of two hours, Kâiradine Redbeard, called Barbarossa, and seventh in direct succession from the famous Khair ud-Din of Algiers, had watched as his longboats fetched to their ship supplies of fresh game, fruit and water.
The tall, long-legged reis or captain of the pirate galley at length decided to stretch his legs upon the shore himself, and set out with the last boatload of his corsairs. Beaching the boat upon the sandy strand, he strode inland, glad to feel the firm land beneath his feet once more, after two months at sea.
Anchored off the shoals, his galley, the Red Witch, swayed to the rhythm of the waves. He surveyed his pirate galley, approvingly, the red sails booming and snapping in the breeze, the green banner of Islam fluttering from the stern. For many weeks had the Barbary pirate been at sea; soon, now, he would head his prow farther up along the coast, returning in triumph to his home port.
By now the last kegs of fresh water and barrels of ripe fruit had been borne into the longboat, and it was nearly time to depart; for the Moslem pirate did not care to linger for too long a time in the vicinity of the Peaks of Peril, mindful of the dreaded thakdols that made their nests amid that wilderness of cleft and soaring rock.
He was a commanding figure as he stood there, looking about him. His curled beard was tinted red with dyes, and stank of heavy perfumes; his lean, muscular body was swathed in the long robes of the desert princes who had been his remote forebears. His swarthy, hook-nosed face was villainous, but not unhandsome in a fierce, hawklike, imperious way. From the curled toes of his red-leather boots to his linen headdress, he was every inch a swaggering figure stepped forth from the golden pages of romance.
A rustling in the bushes came to his alert senses. Laying the long fingers of one swarthy, beringed hand upon the hilt of his scimitar, he glanced through the leaves…and at what he saw, his eyes widened delightedly.
“By the Veiled Prophet of Khorassan—a girl!” he swore softly. And his eyes glided over the slim naked body, the sleek thighs and firm, luscious breasts of the blond-haired girl who splashed carelessly in the waters of the little stream.
Passion flared within the breast of the Barbary pirate as he stood there, concealed by the bushes, watching as Darya of Thandar bathed.
Passion, and…desire!
And, with such swaggering, lawless rogues as Kâiradine of El-Cazar, to desire was to—possess.
Darya was unconscious of the presence of another as she splashed nakedly in the little stream until suddenly the bushes parted to reveal the tall, curiously-garbed figure of a grinning man.
He plunged into the stream and bore down upon her, and the Cro-Magnon girl had time to scream only once before strong fingers closed about her mouth and sinewy arms crushed her in a powerful embrace.…
* * * *
Having been alarmed by that terrified shriek, Jorn the Hunter and Professor Potter had traversed the remainder of the pass at a rapid pace, and now stood transfixed with astonishment at the unexpected sight which met their eyes.
The Stone Age savage uttered a stifled gasp at the enormous thing before him; a moment later, his keen gaze narrowed and a growl of primeval menace sounded from his deep breast.
As for the elderly savant, he was too amazed to utter a sound.
Before them lay a prospect of sea and shore, with tall trees beyond, and a small river. But it was none of these commonplace and natural features of the landscape which caught and seized their fascinated attention.
There, riding at anchor off-shore, rose a red-sailed galley such as neither of the two men had ever seen before in all their lives. At the sight of this amazing ship, the Stone Age boy blinked as if stunned.
And the Professor gaped incredulously. For, if he had never seen such a craft in the flesh, so to speak, he had seen its likeness depicted many times before, in books and paintings.
“By my soul,” he stammered feebly, “a pirate ship-a galley! (See the oarbanks?)—and Islamic, from the green banner at the stern…Artful Archimedes: the Barbaray pirates!”
And there came crowding into the Professor’s dazed and wondering brain the history of those daring and villainous sea rovers, who had roamed and ruled the coastal waters of North Africa from Algiers to Tunis, led by the dreaded redbeard, Barbarossa, until driven from their island strongholds by the French conquest of Algeria in 1830.
But—Barbary pirates here in Zanthodon?
“Well, and after all, why not?” murmured the Professor vaguely. “They could, after all, have fled inland to avoid the French fleets; finding their way overland to the Ahaggar Mountains, and to the hollow crater of the extinct volcano…as obviously they or their ancestors had, nearly a century and a half ago.”
“See! It is the gomad Darya,” cried torn, pointing suddenly. The Professor peered, his heart sinking: tall, swarthy sailors were lifting aboard from a longboat the naked and struggling body of a young white woman with long bright hair the color of sun-ripened corn and wide blue eyes like the skies of April. It could be none other than Darya—
Without a word, Jorn burst into a run. Across the slope he hurtled, and down the shore, to fling his strong bronzed body into the tossing waves of the Sogar-Jad.
As the half-naked, brawny body of the Cro-Magnon warrior clove the waves of the Sogar-Jad, heading directly toward the sides of the great pirate galley, the sailors along the rail caught sight of their unexpected visitor and called the attention of their captain, who had just come aboard with his naked, and furiously struggling, captive.
“O reis Kâiradine! Behold!” they shouted, pointing.
The hawklike gaze of the Barbaray pirate narrowed; he could not help admiring the reckless courage of the savage boy to strive single-handedly to rescue his jungle sweetheart. But his numbers were already depleted by battle with the Apemen of Kor and other savage peoples he had encounterd during his voyage.
He raised his jewelled hand carelessly, and at the signal his pirates quickly unlimbered their horn bows, nocking barbed and deadly arrows and drawing the feathered shafts tight.
Oblivious to his danger, the young warrior of Thandar swam to the side of the pirate craft, and had just reached it when the misty waves of the sea were ripped and torn by a deadly rain of hissing arrows.
The waves burst into seething froth as Jorn kicked and struggled. Then his body sank beneath the waters of the prehistoric sea, and vanished from sight.
“Cast off, my corsairs!” cried Kâiradine Redbeard. And as the anchor rose dripping from the Sogar-Jad and strong hands tugged the sails into position, and the sharp keel of the galley swung about for El-Cazar, the Barbary pirate seized up his helpless captive and bore within his cabin the naked form of Darya of Thandar.
The cabin door thudded shut behind them, muffling her sudden scream of terror.
And on the shores of the Sogar-Jad, an old man in dilapidated and travel-stained garments fell forward weakly to his knees and buried his face in shaking hands.
Darya carried off by pirates, and Jorn slain! And, he, himself, alone and friendless in a savage world of prehistoric monsters and primitive fighting men!
It was too much even for the brave and gallant spirit of Professor Percival P. Potter. And the old scientist fell forward in a dead faint, there at the feet of the Peaks of Peril, by the shores of the prehistoric sea.
THE END
But the Adventures of Eric Carstairs in the Underground World continue in “ZANTHODON,” the second volume in this series, available soon in The Zanthodon Megapack.
APPENDIX: A STONE AGE GLOSSARY
DRUGAR: Literally, “Ugly One.” The Cro-Magnons’ name for the Neanderthals.
DRUNTH: The stegosaurus.
GOMAD: The title of the daughter of a High Chief, or Omad. Has much the same meaning as “princess.”
GOROTH: The mighty bull aurochs of the Ice Ages, resembling the bison.
GRYMP: Triceratops, one of the more terrible of the Jurassic dinosaurs.
JAD: The word for “sea”; also, “water.”
JAMAD: The son of an Omad, or High Chief; literally, “prince.”
LUGAR: A word meaning “smaller” or “lesser,” as in Lugar-Jad, the Lesser Sea.
OMAD: The High Chief or ruler of a country; literally, “king.”
OMODON: The giant cave bear of Ice Age Europe, larger and fiercer than the grizzly.
PANJAN: Literally “Smoothskin.” The Neanderthals’ name for the Cro-Magnons. The plural is panjani.
SOGAR: A superlative: “great” or “greater,” as in Sogar-Jad, the Greater Sea.
SUJAT: Anything which the peoples of Zanthodon regard with superstitious awe is considered sujat. The word has much the same meaning as both “sacred” and “supernatural.”
THAKDOL: A pterodactyl, the great flying lizard of the Jurassic Age.
THANTOR: The wooly mammoth of Ice Age Europe.
ULD: A small, plump, harmless mammal. Eric Carstairs is of the opinion that the uld may be eohippus, the remote ancestor of the horses of today. The people of Thandar and, perhaps, of Kor, may hunt or even breed the uld for meat.
VANDAR: The great saber-tooth tiger of the Stone Age, one of the most feared and cunning of all the predators of the jungles of Zanthodon.
VATOR: The word for “father” in the universal language of Zanthodon. The word for “mother” is not given in the tex, but may be mator.
VATHRIB: A species of gigantic albino spider which inhabits the subterranean depths.
XUNTH: Enormous serpents, dwelling in caverns in the mountains.
YITH: The dragon-snake of the primordial seas of Zanthodon, which Professor Potter has identified with the extinct plesiosaurus.
ZOMAK: A primitive species of feathered bird-reptile, which Eric Carstairs considers to be the archaeopteryx.