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The Valley of Creation Page 12


  "To the river!" Nelson cried. "If they land behind us we're lost! Ei, lead the way!"

  "This way, Clan-brothers!" flashed the eagle's thought as he soared up again on thunderous wings.

  Nelson had leaped on Hatha's back. Riding beside Kree back through the red-lit forest toward the river-edge, he sensed the wild relief of the Clans pouring to the fight around him.

  Fire they hated, inaction they hated, but now at last their chance to come to grips with the destroyers had come. Beasts and mounted men, they crashed through brush and trees to the edge of the red-lit river just as the first of a score of long crude rafts, loaded with warriors, was poled ashore. Nelson saw that some of the Humanites carried webbing sacks of grenades.

  He shouted, "Charge them! Rush them in the shallows! You Hoofed Ones — ride them down!"

  Hatha laid his ears back and ran straight for the water. Nelson clung to his mane, his gun out, firing. Behind him, in a terrible resistless rush, the Clans swept into battle and even the red thundering flowers of the grenades could not stop them.

  In the brush of the banks, on the rocky shore, in the water, men and beasts crashed together, screamed and died, and the river was the color of blood under the flame-lit sky.

  Squealing, kicking, plunging, Hatha raged through the thick of the fight and took Nelson with him. Nelson caught a glimpse of Sloan and Van Voss, on rafts out in the river, willing to let Shan Kar's men bear the brunt of the fight. They fondled submachine-guns but could not use them, the two forces were so entangled.

  The men of Vruun rode up and down the beaches, their swords flashing, and where their horses were killed under them they fought on foot, locked breast to breast with their erstwhile brothers of Anshan.

  Great striped bodies leaped and rolled and clawed, and everywhere the gray wolves ran, slashing, slaying. Eagles swooped and struck their talons home. Bodies fell on the stones and lay heaped in the shallows and the clans and the men of Anshan fought on over them, the horses' hoofs ringing on the mail of the fallen men.

  "Hai-ooo!" came the blood-chilling killing-cry of Tark, a gray demon gone mad with battle.

  Nelson, clinging to Hatha's back as the stallion crashed and whirled in the crazy fight, glimpsed a white-faced Humanite warrior stabbing upward with his sword.

  He shot, and glimpsed the man's face drive in. But another Humanite had seized the instant to rush in at him, sword gleaming. A gray thunderbolt flew from behind Nelson at the new attacker, aiming for the throat.

  "Asha, look out!" Nelson sent his warning thought as he saw the dog-wolf's staggering opponent drop sword and whip out a dagger.

  Even as he flung himself off Hatha into the shallow water to help he saw the dagger rip the dog-wolf's ribs. And then the Humanite sprawled in the water, his throat a pumping red gash.

  Asha staggered, slipped. Fading flare of green eyes shone up at Nelson as he reached the wolf. He heard the dying thought

  "Good hunting, broth—"

  "They flee!" came the wild, raging thought-cry of Quorr. "Kill, before they escape!"

  The Humanites, what was left of those who had landed, were wildly pushing their rafts back into the river, back into the deeper water.

  Nelson heard Nick Sloan's cool sharp voice cut in across the din, from the rafts farther out.

  "Pull back! That's enough!"

  The fighters of the Clans, blood-mad, were balked, could not follow into that deeper water. But as the fight momentarily slackened thus, past Nelson pushed Kree.

  The Guardian stood outlined in the suddenly brighter glow of distant firelight, his hand raised as his voice rolled out onto the river.

  "Men of Anshan, will you destroy all L'Lan in blood and fire? Wrath of the ancients, wrath of the Cavern, fall upon you if you follow this road farther!"

  "Kree, get back!" yelled Nelson, leaping forward.

  He was too late. The burst of submachine-gun fire that came from out there on the rafts was brutally, contemptuously short. Kree clutched his breast and went down in the water. And Nelson heard Nick Sloan's voice from out there.

  "Good shooting, Piet!"

  A mad cry, a cry that was a thought and a howl and a scream of fury, went through the Clans.

  "The Guardian is slain!"

  Nelson, turning to drag Kree's body ashore, felt his heart check as he saw why the firelight was suddenly brighter now. The forest between them and their firebreak was a wall of flame, marching southward toward them.

  "Our backfire has jumped the gap while we fought here!" he cried. "We can't stop it now — Vruun is doomed!"

  Chapter XVI

  THE CAVERN OF CREATION

  Nelson now realized with tragic clarity the simple and effective strategy that Nick Sloan had used. Seeing them building a defense against the sweep of fire, Sloan had callously sent Humanite warriors in to a landing he knew could not succeed to draw them away from their fight against the flames.

  And the strategy had worked. The fire had overrun their line of defense and was now moving on the wings of the wind toward Vruun.

  "We can't hold that fire now!" Nelson cried. "It will be into Vruun in an hour. Pull back!"

  Retreat was a lesson the Clans had never learned. Wild with battle-excitement, they would have refused to retreat now had it not been for the wall of flame sweeping toward them.

  Tark sent out his thought-cry. "Back to Vruun, Clan-brothers! We must get all out of the city before the fire reaches it!"

  From out in the river a submachine-gun started hammering at them as they drew back from the water.

  A stallion crashed down, a tiger screamed in rage and pain. Nelson, having lifted Kree's body across the back of Hatha, led the way through the forest.

  Great scorching winds howled and whooped about them and flung blinding smoke to impede their way. The steady crackling of the sky-high wall of flame behind them had grown to an ominous roar.

  Nelson felt rage and hatred equal to those of the Clans about him as he stumbled with them through the smoke toward Vruun. He knew that Nick Sloan would coolly bring his forces on down the river just behind the fire, following it in complete safety. And Sloan could wait, smiling, while the people of Vruun died amid the flaming trees.

  "Hurry!" cried Nelson. "Hurry!"

  The southern edges of the city were crowded. All those who had been left behind had come there to watch the doom that rolled toward them down the reddened sky — the females, the old, the very young. The winding forest-avenues were choked with them.

  As the returning Clans swept into Vruun, scorched and bloody and raging with defeat, from all sides the anxious question came.

  "What word? Is the fire stopped?"

  Then they saw Hatha and the burden he carried and it seemed to Nelson that the whole city gave one great cry of woe and was silent. Nsharra was waiting for them outside the Hall of Clans, and Nelson saw from her face that word of Kree's death had reached her.

  She flung her mantle on the grass. She said to Nelson, "Lay my father here under the trees."

  As he did so, he heard the thought of the Clan-leaders to Nsharra. "You inherit the Guardianship now!"

  She took the weight of duty on her slim shoulders. "What is the word?"

  Nelson told her rapidly. "You must get every living thing out of Vruun," he finished. "The fire will be in these forest-streets in less than an hour."

  Nsharra showed no sign of fear. She turned to the leaders.

  "Lead your Clans to the northern hills, up beneath the mountains!"

  Quorr growled. "Let the females and the young go. We stay to fight!"

  "Fight what?" Nelson demanded. "The flames?"

  He whirled and pointed to the southern sky. Crimson and cruel it lowered over them and already the flickering glare was lighting the streets of Vruun.

  "Will your Clan pull that down with their claws, Quorr?"

  Tark's thought was furious. "But to run away like cubs, with our tails between our legs-!"

  "So that you'll live to f
ight later!" Nelson told him. "When the ashes cool the Clans can come down from the hills and attack the Humanites again!"

  "He is right, Tark!" Nsharra supported. "Go now and spread the word!"

  Nelson heard the cry go out by voice and thought. "North to the hills and tarry not, my brothers!"

  And they went, out through the streets of the doomed city under the reddened sky.

  Mothers drove their children ahead of them — wolf-cub and tiger-cub and human. Mares with their foals went by. Broad pinions of the Winged Ones beat northward through the fiery gloom. Moving out, moving out, even as the Clans had fled from the forest! And fear went with them on the bitter air and the eyries were empty save for the drifting smoke.

  Watching this, Eric Nelson came to a desperate decision. He told Nsharra, "Sloan and Van Voss are the backbone of the whole Humanite campaign. If I could get those two and their weapons out of the way the Brotherhood would have a fighting chance later on!"

  She looked at him, white-faced. "I know what you are thinking — that you must stop them because you helped bring them here!"

  Nelson did not deny it.

  "But it's impossible!" she cried. "You can't get near them. They won't come on until the fire has swept us out of Vruun and out of the forest!"

  Nelson said swiftly, "But when the fire has cleared the way for him Sloan will make for the Cavern of Creation! I know him — it's the platinum there he's after, first and last."

  He caught her arm. "You must show me how to get into the Cavern, Nsharra! I'll wait there for them — I've a few bullets left and those two won't get out again if I can help it!"

  Nsharra looked at him with wide dark eyes. Then she said, "Come, I'll show you the way."

  The streets, the forest-ways, were almost empty now. The last stragglers were disappearing northward through the trees. It was none too soon. Ash was falling like snow and the wind was hot. The Clan-leaders came racing back, their eyes burning with the anger and the shame of flight. Hatha had brought a mount for Nelson.

  "Is the city cleared?" Nsharra cried.

  Tark's quick thought answered. "It is cleared."

  "Then it is time to go!"

  She looked for a moment at her father, stretched out as though in sleep upon the dark mantle, his head pillowed on the grass.

  "Leave him here in his city," she said.

  She turned and sprang to Hatha's back. Nelson also mounted, and they galloped northward out of Vruun after the Clans. Smoke coiled thick among the trees, lit by the strange red glow. Ash fell more heavily and the wind brought burning showers of sparks.

  Looking back minutes later, Nsharra cried, "The city burns!"

  Nelson looked back also and saw the flames leaping triumphant behind them. They flared in great twisting banners from the treetops, turning the forest-ways into red rivers of fire that flowed northward. The crest of that fiery flood raced after the fugitives, roaring, dancing, eating the trees as it pursued.

  "Faster or we'll be trapped!" Nelson shouted.

  He saw how the glassy bubble-roofs back there had turned smoky red as the flames washed over them. They did not burn or crack but they glowed in the terrible heat, the minarets throwing back the crimson glare.

  Choking, coughing, burned by flying sparks, Nelson and Nsharra and the Clan-leaders raced ahead of the leaping flames. Nelson clung desperately to his mount as the Hoofed One smashed through brush, leaped dry gullies, bucked and scrambled over fallen trees. He could barely see the others in the smoke.

  They burst out of the woods onto the open plain that rose ahead of them to the barren foothills. Another spurt, another staggering burst of speed and they were safe. The fire flared to the edge of the woods and checked.

  Now, close above them, Nelson saw the throbbing eye of the Cavern of Creation, pulsing with mysterious light. The Clans were moving up on either side of that coldly flaring orifice, on up into the higher bare hills.

  On a flat ledge just outside the glowing mouth of the Cavern, Nelson stopped and dismounted. Nsharra did likewise.

  She told the four leaders, "Nelson and I go into the Cavern! You lead your Clans on to safety."

  Nelson cried, "No! You're not to stay in there with me, Nsharra — only to show me the way!"

  "I am Guardian now," Nsharra said firmly. "It is my duty and my right to go with you."

  He realized from her tone that argument would not sway her. And there was no time for argument. Time was running out.

  "I go also!" Tark's thought cried and the other leaders echoed him.

  "No!" Nsharra denied. "You also have your duty- to lead your Clans to safety."

  Wolf and tiger, horse and eagle, wavered, irresolute. Then, as Nsharra repeated her command, they unwillingly went on into the darkness of the upper slopes.

  Nelson uttered an exclamation. He had turned to look back, and now he pointed downward. By the glaring light, they could see Nick Sloan's rafts coming down the blood-red river past the blazing city.

  "They'll be up here soon," he said edgedly. "Nsharra, there's still time for you to get away!"

  "I will show you the safe way into the Cavern, now," she answered. "But I am its Guardian and I will not leave it!"

  He turned with her toward that great mouth of cold, quivering light. Deliberately, Nsharra led the way into it.

  Just inside the entrance she paused. Nelson looked about. Where the light outside had been red and hot, here it was a cool glow like uncanny moonlight.

  The cavity was huge and circular, running back into the hill. Nelson guessed it to be eighty feet high. A hundred feet from where they stood yawned a deep cleft that ran across the cavern floor, and it was from here that the cold light came — a terrific blaze of white radiation flung upward out of the cleft.

  Nelson began to see things that astounded him even more than his first sight of Vruun and Anshan.

  Great circular ribs of metal, massive girders dim in the lofty gloom, seemed to support the roof and sides of the Cavern. He made out the shapes of metal tubes, gigantic things, crumpled and twisted as though by blasting force, that ran along the walls into the unguessable shadowy spaces farther in.

  His brain began to reel with impossible conjectures. Stepping forward toward the cleft, he glimpsed a glowing white mass that lay deep down at the bottom of the crevice.

  Nsharra drew him back. "Do not go too close to the cold fire — its light can blast and kill!"

  "Radioactive!" Nelson muttered incredulously. "A radioactive chemical mass of some sort that's eaten its way into the floor."

  Very effectively, that moat of death had barred all entrance into the unguessable farther depths of the Cavern.

  He looked up along the wall above the cleft and made out vast twisted cylinders, their metal sides burst and gaping. There was no mistaking what those cylinders were. They were huge tanks.

  Had the radioactive mass spilled from those shattered tanks? It seemed obvious and yet—

  Nsharra led him to the end of the mass of giant tubes that ran along the walls back to the farther depths of the Cavern. The tubes were all of six feet in diameter, made of unfamiliar metal, massive and thick. He tried to picture them as they must have been once and the picture staggered his mind with suggestions that were pure madness.

  Nsharra said, "Most of these strange tunnels are broken. But one of them leads safely over the cleft of cold fire. It is the secret way, found long ago by a Guardian and told only to his successors."

  She climbed into the flared ripped end of one of the giant tubes, motioning him to follow. He did so, using his pocket light. The inner wall of the tube was pitted and scored, the metal burned. Yes, burned, like a charred log. And yet it seemed amazingly tough metal. It acted as a shield against the deadly radiation they were crossing.

  Numbly Nelson wondered what terrible force had ripped through these giant tubes to scar them so.

  Ahead of him, Nsharra came to a place where the tube twisted upon itself. He scrambled with her around the turn.
Then, suddenly, he snapped off his light and whispered quickly to her.

  "Silence!"

  They crouched and listened, and Nelson heard plainly this time the sound that had warned him-a sound of something slipping and scrambling behind them in the tube, something straining to overtake them.

  He had his gun out and ready when Tark's thought came to them. "Where man can go wolf can go! And where Nsharra goes this wolf goes also!"

  Nelson relaxed and swore. Tark scrambled toward them, digging his claws into the pitted metal.

  "Too late for anger now," he thought to Nsharra. "The outlanders and Shan Kar's men have already landed." He added with a wolfish shrug, "And anyway my Clan is safe now."

  Nsharra's hand briefly touched the massive hairy head, but she did not speak. They went on for what seemed a long time in the tube. Then it debouched into a round gigantic metal chamber that looked to Nelson very like part of a turbine — a turbine built by giants for some unguessable purpose.

  "Giant tubes that could be jet-tubes!" he said half aloud in a stunned voice. "This colossal turbine — and the radioactive chemical from the tanks, that could be fuel—"

  "Come," said Nsharra and he followed her, the wolf keeping close to them as though awed by this forbidden place.

  As they stepped out of the shattered turbine, well beyond the deadly cleft, Nelson could look into the shadowy farther spaces of the Cavern that previously the cold radiance had hidden from him.

  He was not really surprised at what he saw. Shocked, stunned, awed, but not really surprised. Before him stretched the Cavern, vast, incredible, shadows glooming thicker as the eye went back into it.

  And its half-seen, half-guessed shape was the shape of a torpedo, tapering from blunt stern to slender point. A sharp, clean point to cleave the air, to cleave, perhaps, the vast gulfs where there was no air, where only the stars rubbed shoulders with eternity!

  He saw the great arching ribs, the looming platinum machinery that had no meaning for him because there had never been anything like it on Earth. Machines, and panels, that bore gauges and dials marked in strange symbols. And the alien but unmistakable assembly of jet-tubes, the great turbine-engines that once had driven thunderously—