Contents
CHAPTER P AGE
1.
Backward in Time....................................... 1
2. The Space-Time Machine . . . 11
3. Alone in the Unknown .... 20
4.
Mists of Dawn........................................... .......... 28
5.
The Neanderthals....................................... 35
6.
Escape...................................................... .......... 42
7.
The Night.................................................. ........... 51
8.
Flames of Morning...................................... .......... 58
9.
Across the Ages.......................................... .......... 67
10.
The Cro-Magnons....................................... .......... 78
11. The Tainted Man......................................... 91
12.
A New World............................................. ........ 103
13.
Titans of the Ice.......................................... ...... 116
14. Man Against Mammoth .
. . . 124
15.
A7o Longer Alone....................................... ......... 132
16.
Ambush..................................................... 142
17. Dweller Under the Earth . .
. .152
18.
The Council of War...................................... 161
19.
The Tainting.............................................. ........ 172
20.
Battle in the Dawn...................................... ........ 182
21. A Fifty-Fifty Chance . . . .190
22.
Home........................................................ 200
Chapter I Backward in Time
I |
he long
black shadows of the New Mexico evening crept across the valley floor, changing
the land into a patchwork pattern of darkness and light. In the west, the sun
floated down behind the pine-covered mountains that surrounded the valley, its
last rays turning the gathering storm clouds to flame.
Two
men walked along the dusty road through the valley, their steps quickening
before the threat of rain. One of the men was middle-aged, with prematurely
white hair, though still trim and in good condition. The other was younger, a
tall, athletic boy of seventeen. Despite the difference in their ages, careful
eyes could not have missed the close relationship between the two. There was a
similarity of expression on their tanned faces, particularly in their intelligent,
perceptive brown eyes, that told more eloquently than words of long association
and friendship.
Ahead
of them, frisking up and down the road, a golden-brown cocker spaniel puppy
charged imaginary enemies in the dust, barking shrilly with more determination
than success, and furiously wagging the stump of his tail in great
self-satisfaction.
Mark Nye smiled and pointed at the dog. "You must have been feeding Fang some atomic-powered dog food," he told his uncle. "If we don't do something pretty soon, he'll tear the road apart."
Doctor Robert Nye took a battered pipe out of his hip pocket and filled it with tobacco from a can that had seen better days. "Fang's quite a dog," he agreed. "He's doing his level best to live up to his name."
As if to prove the doctor's point, Fang attacked a clump of grass viciously and yelped a challenge to the world in general. Lightning began to flicker in the mountains, and a distant rumble of thunder rolled down upon them from the hills. There was a faint smell of rain in the air and a cool breeze began to sigh across the valley floor.
Quite suddenly, two dark figures loomed up ahead of them on the road. Fang took one very short look at them and promptly abandoned his plans to be a great fighter. He dashed back to Mark at full speed and then, considering himself safe, tried a hesitant growl that proved to be magnificently ineffective.
As they drew nearer, the two figures proved to be Indians. They were of medium height, with straight black hair and dark eyes, and they were dressed in faded jeans and cotton shirts. Mark recognized one of them and waved a greeting.
"Howdy, Tino," he said. "Looks like we're about to get wet."
Tino paused. "Soon now," he agreed. "How does it go with you, Mark?"
"Fine, thanks—though I think you two scared Fang here half to death."
The Apache winked solemnly. "Injun scalpum," he said, imitating the strange dialect affected by the tourists when they
talked to the Indians.
Doctor
Nye and Mark laughed and waved good-by as the two Apaches moved along on their
way to the near-by Mescalero reservation. It was almost dark now, and the
evening was hushed with the threat of rain.
"A
lot of history just walked by us then/' Mark said thoughtfully.
Doctor
Nye puffed on his pipe and nodded agreement. "Tino
is a member of a proud race," he said. "The blood that flows in his
veins, the blood of the Mescalero Apaches, is the blood that goes back to Gion-na-tah, who finally had to surrender to his friend,
Kit Carson —the blood that goes back to the warriors who fought with the great Victorio, back to the wily Nana, who at eighty years of age
led fifteen braves against over a thousand soldiers, and back to the most
famous Apache of them all—Geronimo."
Mark
smiled. "We wouldn't have walked by them quite so easily seventy-five
years ago. Not even Fang could have helped us much."
"The
Indians were old when Rome was young,'* Doctor Nye mused, as the road began to
rise into the hills. "There were Indians here in the United States when
our ancestors in Europe still lived in caves."
When Rome was young. Mark felt his pulse quicken as the phrase fired his imagination. Out of
the corner of his eye, he looked at the figure of his uncle walking beside him.
He thought of his uncle's strange dream, a dream shared with him alone—would it
ever come true?
Could
they go back?
Rome, Imperial Rome.
Visions of grandeur raced through Mark's head—visions made more vivid and real
than ever by the secret he shared with his uncle. Rome in the days of the
Caesars—a mighty city, hub of a fabulous empire, rich with glories that lived
on still in the pages of history, that had never been forgotten. Rome with its
seven hills, its mighty temples, its art and literature, its bloody games in
the roaring Colosseum, now an empty ruin in modern
Rome . . .
Rome—with the great figures of history
walking its streets under a warm Italian sun. Julius Caesar himself,
that wonderful, lonely man, and his adopted son, Augustus. Cicero, rich
in eloquence, and the plotter Catiline, who heard the
orations that spelled his doom. The twisted Nero and the mad
Caligula. The curious and appealing Claudius—did he yet live, lost somewhere
in the mists of time?
Could
they go hack?
The
darkness was upon them now, and it was hard to see. Mark and Doctor Nye knew
the road well, however, and proceeded without difficulty. The rain seemed to be
suspended above them, waiting only for a trigger to loose
a deluge. Flashes of lightning lit up the rocks and pines around them, and the
booming of the thunder drew nearer as the road climbed into the hills near
Ruidoso. Fang was very much subdued in the face of the storm, and kept tangling
himself up in Mark's legs. Mark could smell the wet smell of rain around them.
"The
Rome of the Caesars is closer than you think," Doctor Nye said quietly,
sensing his nephew's thoughts. "Rome is only two weeks away."
Mark
stopped short and then moved on again, his mind spinning with surprise. Two weeks? That meant—
"It's
all finished," Doctor Nye went on, his pipe a red glow in the darkness.
"I finished the actual construction last night, and all it needs now are
a few final touches and supplies. Better brush up on your Latin, Mark."
"Hie, haec, hoc," said Mark, with a lightness that he did not
feel. He knew how much this meant to his uncle. It was the result of twenty
years of work, twenty years of dreams.
A
machine to carry man backward in time—now a dream no longer!
The two walked on in silence, working their
way back to Doctor Nye's mountain lodge. Mark could not help feeling a little
in awe of the man who walked beside him. Doctor Nye had been father and mother
to him ever since he was five years old, when his parents-had been lost in a
plane crash. Doctor Nye, with no children of his own, had survived the disaster
which had taken the life of his own wife, as well as of Mark's parents, and had
been closer to Mark than to any other person in the world. Yet Mark felt
strange beside him tonight, much as he might have felt walking beside
Archimedes, Da Vinci, Edison, Einstein—or perhaps.
Columbus, sailing into the unknown . . .
The unknown. What could be more mysterious, more
wonderful, than a journey through time into the fabled past of Earth, that most
incredible of all planets?
Doctor
Robert Nye, who was a nuclear physicist working with the rocket experiments at
near-by White Sands, had all his life been fascinated by the history of ancient
Rome. The idea of time travel had been a hobby with him all his adult life, and he had pursued that hobby with the single-minded
devotion and energy which men give only to their special dreams. Einstein's
theoretical work on space-time had started him in the right direction,
and the harnessing of the atom at Los Alamos had provided him a magnificent
power source that enabled him to focus and direct the vast energies necessary
to warp an organic substance back through space-time.
And now, at last, he was ready.
Mark
Nye had seen Italy many times, on trips abroad with his uncle. He had seen Rome
and had journeyed across the sea to North Africa where the genius Hannibal had
threatened the Roman rule. He had traveled in France and Germany, where he had
seen the sites of ancient man—which had fascinated him, just as the aboriginal
lore of the Indians of the United States had always fascinated both Mark and
his uncle. He had studied the past, and listened to Doctor Nye spin long and
glorious tales about the past, and had even prepared himself to be able to
accompany his uncle if his dream should ever come true—but now, actually to go
. . .
The
yellow outdoor light from Doctor Nye's lodge loomed up before them as they
hurried up the drive. The storm was very close now, and they seemed to be
walking along in the middle of a suspended island of nothingness, of electric
suspense, where the rain could not reach them. Fang galloped ahead joyfully and
camped by the front door, wagging the stump of his tail impatiently. Doctor Nye
paused on the doorstep and squinted up into the darkness and the sighing of the
pines.
"Looks
like this will be some real weather, Mark." "Anything wrong?"
asked Mark. "We have a lot of storms up here, and this doesn't look much
worse than any of the others. It'll probably be over in an hour or so."
"Oh,
I'm not worried about us," Doctor Nye said, tapping out the ashes in his
pipe against his boots. "The house isn't likely to blow away or anything.
I was just thinking—it's seven-thirty now, and with that storm all around us .
. ."
"What's
going on tonight? Something at White Sands?"
Doctor
Nye nodded and scratched the impatient Fang's ears. "They were scheduled
to test a new rocket tonight," he explained. "One
of the Toney experimental jobs with a small atomic warhead. According
to Jim Walls—you remember Jim, in charge of the rocket shoots—the rocket is
supposed to go almost straight up, describe a short arc, and come down on a
target a few miles away. But if it's storming like this in White Sands—"
"They'll
probably call it off, if there aren't too many generals around," suggested
Mark. "You wouldn't mind that too much, would you, Uncle Bob?"
Doctor
Nye smiled. "You read my mind like a book, son," he said. "I'm
due to fly my 'copter over there tomorrow to help Garvin make the radioactivity
check, but if they call the shoot off we can work on our plans in the morning,
and then maybe sneak off in the afternoon and see if we can't find some trout
around here that aren't too smart for us."
Mark
Nye brightened visibly at the prospect. "There are some swell places on
the reservation," he said. "I snagged some beauties there last time,
and the Indians invited me to come back and try it again."
"We'll keep it in mind," Doctor Nye
agreed. "But first..."
"But
first, open the door!" shouted Mark. "Here she comes!"
There
was a sudden hush as the world seemed to pull its defenses together to ward off
a mighty blow. Then a livid flash of lightning split the tops of the shuddering
pines and a blast of thunder slammed into the earth like a monstrous fist of
iron. A clean, fresh, wet smell blew up from the valley below and the first
big, heavy drops of rain pattered like lead pellets on the roof of the lodge.
Doctor
Nye threw open the door and they hurried inside, with Fang well in the lead and
barking excitedly. Mark shut the door behind them and switched on the inside
lights. The storm hit with full fury then, with the wind shaking the lodge and
the rain pounding down in torrents on the roof.
"I'm
just as glad we're not fishing now," Doctor Nye said. "You wouldn't
be able to tell the fishermen from the fish."
Mark
grinned. "I remember the last time we got caught out in a storm like
this—I got so wet I didn't have to drink anything for a month."
The
sitting room of Doctor Nye's lodge was neat and comfortable, with long shelves
full of books, a bust of Caesar by the lamp on the table, Navajo rugs on the
floor, and walls of lightly varnished pine. For a few minutes they were content
just to sit there and listen to the storm raging outside. Fang had already
found his favorite spot in the best armchair in the room and had gone to sleep.
"Well, who fixes supper tonight?"
asked Doctor Nye.
"I will," Mark
offered. "But before I do . . ."
"Yes?"
"You
haven't let me go down with you to see the time machine since you started in on
its final construction. You said I could see it when it was finished, Uncle
Bob."
Doctor Nye nodded. "That's a bargain,
Mark," he said, "though I'm afraid there isn't too much to see. If
you're expecting some sort of weird contraption with electricity flying through
the air all around it like in the Frankenstein movies, you're going to be
disappointed."
"I'm
not interested in what it looks like," Mark assured his uncle. "I'm
interested in what it can do"
"Good
boy," his uncle approved. "You get supper started and we'll have a
look at my little brain child."
Mark
disappeared into the kitchen, extracted the remnants of the previous night's
roast from the ice box, and shoved it into the oven to warm up. Then he started
a fresh pot of coffee and rejoined his uncle.
"Done," he
reported.
Doctor Nye laughed. "Okay, Mark. Come
with me."
While
the storm roared around the mountain lodge and the rain turned the creeks into
small rivers of foaming water, Mark followed his uncle down the steps into the
special basement underneath the lodge. It was a rather ordinary basement,
though filled with equipment and tools of a more complex nature than would be
likely to be found in the average home workshop, except that the underground
room was cut in two by a lead wall across the middle. Mark's heart pounded in
his chest. The lead was a shield against radioactivity, of course, and that
meant that on the other side of that lead wall. . .
Doctor Nye led him across the basement floor
and paused at a heavy metal door set in the lead wall. He opened the
combination lock and shoved the door open. As it swung back, a clear white
light was switched on inside the room. With a strange, tense feeling that he
did not understand, Mark followed his uncle into the room.
"There
it is, Mark," Doctor Nye said quietly. "The
space-time machine."
Cf The Space-Time Machine
I |
he space-time machine almost completely filled
the small room. Gleaming dully under the white light, it resembled nothing more
than what it was—a gray lead sphere fifteen feet across. Its dull high lights
seemed to pulse with faint shadows of life, as though tremendous sleeping
energies hung suspended in the metal, waiting. Waiting for
the touch of man to burst into flaming strength and power.
Doctor
Nye threw a switch in the side of the sphere and a circular section of metal
slid back with a faint hissing sound. The interior of the machine glowed gently
with soft light. "After you, Mark." Doctor
Nye smiled. "Be careful not to touch anything."
With
infinite care, Mark Nye stepped up through the circular entry port and into the
sphere. He felt cold sweat in the palms of his hands. He told himself that
there was nothing to worry about, but he knew too much about the awful energies
imprisoned inside the atom—he had a healthy respect for the compact atomic pile
that took up one whole side of the lead sphere.
There
was not a great deal of room in the sphere, but it was not crowded; indeed,
since the supplies for their
backward trip in time had not yet been placed in the machine, it was virtually empty. There were no chairs. On one side of the sphere, opposite the power source, a control panel had been built up some four feet from the bottom of the machine.
Hanging from a projection in one wall was a belt holding a holstered .45
automatic. Mark Nye noted the gun with quick understanding. His uncle had carried the .45
in the First World War, when he had been an infantry captain. It had saved his life more than once, and he had kept the gun near him through the years, both as a sentimental good-luck charm and as a practical means of defense in a long and active life.
"So this is our time machine," Mark said finally. "It makes me feel so little . . ."
"That is because you don't understand it," Doctor Nye told him. He pulled out his pipe again, filled it with tobacco, and lit it. He blew a smoke ring at the control panel and smiled. "We always fear what we do not understand, Mark," he said. "I can't, of course, make entirely clear to you the physics and mathematics involved, but I can explain it more fully than I have before. It is essential that you understand what we are doing before we start out."
Mark sat cross-legged. "Fire away," he said.
"The idea of traveling through time has fascinated mankind for centuries," Doctor Nye began, puffing slowly on his pipe. His eyes had a faraway look in them, the way some men's eyes seem when they look at the stars. "It is customary to say that it has never been done, but that isn't true."
Mark looked at his uncle, wondering. Not true? But that could only mean—
"The
point most people forget is that we are all time
travelers," Doctor Nye explained. "Each and every one of us, every
second of the day or night, travels through time. Even as I speak, I am moving
forward in time, so to speak. When we came in out of the storm, it was
seven-thirty. Now it is eight-fifteen. We have traveled forty-five minutes
forward in time—into the future, if you care to look at it that way. In a
sense, the world itself is a great time machine. We are all moving into the
future, all the time."
"I
never thought of it that way before," Mark admitted, feeling the lead
sphere all around him, waiting ...
"But
to go back into the past—to go from eight-fifteen to seven-thirty—that is
something else again," his uncle continued. "That has never been
done, as far as I know. But we'll do it, you and I! I know we can, and I know
that it will be safe, or I would not consider taking you along. You're all I
have in the world, Mark—all that matters to me. I would rather share this
moment with you than with any friend I have, and I know you won't let me down.
You've worked hard, you've learned a lot, and I know I can depend on you to do
as I say. Even science has its human side, you know, and this is one dream that
I do not care to share with anyone else."
Mark did not speak. . . .
There were no words.
"Now
then," Doctor Nye went on, "you understand that it is incorrect to
refer to this device as a time machine. It is a space-time machine. What does that mean? Well, simply,
it means that it moves through space as it moves through time. This is nothing
really new. You know, if you'll stop and think about
it, that space and time are hooked up together. They are both aspects of the
same thing. You cannot move through space without moving through time as well—that
is, you cannot go from New York to Washington in no
time at all. In the same way, you cannot move through time without moving
through space simultaneously. Even if you sit perfectly still in a chair and
watch fifteen minutes tick off on a clock, you have moved many, many miles—for
the earth is moving through space all the time, and our solar system and our
galaxy are moving as well."
"I
understand," Mark said. "That is what makes it possible for us to go
into the machine here in New Mexico and come out in Italy, isn't it?"
"That's
right," Doctor Nye agreed. "I have determined the exact relationship
between space and time with respect to this machine of ours, and it will be possible
for us to go from New Mexico to Rome in space while we are going from a.d. 1953 to 46 b.c. in time. One day, it may even be possible
to travel through interplanetary space by the same means. That is, we might be
able to arrange things so that we could go back millions of years in time and
all the way to Mars in space—which might put us on Mars at a time when that
planet held a high civilization."
Mark
Nye's imagination ran wild at his uncle's words. Mars!
"Of
course," said Doctor Nye, "the way the rocket experiments are
shaping up it looks like we'll get to Mars easily enough without the space-time
machine, but it's certainly something to think about." He drew on his pipe
steadily, turning the air hazy with blue smoke. "Now," he continued,
"what this machine actually does is to utilize the tremendous energies of
the atom to warp space-time in such a manner that the machine can travel
through them at will. But there are a few catches to all of this—a few
conditions that you must remember. If you understand these, there is a great
deal that would have seemed mysterious to you otherwise that will now be
perfectly clear when we start out."
"I'm
listening," Mark assured him. His heart was still beating rapidly with
excitement. Here he was, sitting in the lead sphere in the basement of his
uncle's home in New Mexico, in the year 1953. Vast energies were sleeping all
around him, and yet at the touch of a hand, the flick of a switch, he would go
where no man before him had ever gone—back, back past Columbus on his voyage to
America, back past Marco Polo, back to ancient Rome two years before the death
of Julius Caesar. Would they see him fall? Or could they perhaps prevent his death—warn him in advance of what was
coming? What would happen then? What would the course of history have been if
Julius Caesar had lived?
"First of all," his uncle said,
"you must remember that this machine operates with atomic energy as a
power source. The particular system that I have employed works on a principle
of continuous nuclear reaction—that is, it is set to go a certain way before
we start, and then once it is started it cannot be stopped until the space-time
machine has reached its destination. There is no way to change the reaction
once it has begun. It is like an automatic car that you have set to go to
Detroit—once it starts out, you can't change your mind and go to San Antonio
instead. Understand?"
"Clear so far."
"All right," his
uncle continued. "The next thing to remember is that, for all its power,
this machine is a very delicately balanced mechanism. You know how long and how
hard I've worked, and most of the work involved was not in the theory or in the
power source, but in the mechanism itself. Everything must balance exactly. I have finally gotten what appears to be the right combination, and of
course I have kept detailed records, but whether or not I could ever build a
duplicate space-time machine again, I don't know. Certainly, it would be the
work of many years."
"I
see," said Mark. "In other words, as far as we know, this is a
once-only proposition."
"That's
right. It isn't as though we had a device that would enable us to go backward
and forward in time whenever we pleased. It will take us back and bring us
home—once. I have picked Rome partly because I have been interested in it all
my life, but also because it is relatively close in time—not over several
thousand years away. For the first trip I think it wise that we do not attempt
too much. Then again, we know a great deal about Rome, which will make it
possible for us to conduct ourselves intelligently when we get there. We know
the language, the detailed history, and the society and culture we are going
into. We will know how to behave and take care of ourselves. It would be sheer
and utter folly to attempt to journey into a time that we knew nothing about.
We couldn't speak the language, we couldn't adjust to the life, we would be
dressed in the wrong sort of clothing—everything would be against us. We'd
probably wind up dead or in prison or in an insane asylum—if they had
them!"
"How about the future?" Mark asked thoughtfully. "Could we go
into the future?"
"I frankly don't know about the future," Doctor Nye said, puffing slowly on his pipe. "It's still an open question. Theoretically, I believe it could be done. But all the objections I have just raised would apply. We could not possibly know what we were going into, we could not prepare ourselves in any way. And there are other problems. Going into a future that does not yet exist is a risky business—for is it possible to change history, either of the past or of the future? What would happen to you, for instance, if you went back in time and killed your grandfather before your father was born? Time travel is full of unanswered questions. I do believe, however, that we'll find that it is impossible for us to alter history in any fundamental way. I believe that it would be wiser not to try to change things. Of course, there is the possibility of alternate time streams, multiple futures—"
"You're losing me now," Mark broke in. "We'd better stick to what I can understand or I may wind up being more confused than when we started out!"
"Okay, Mark, I'm sorry," Doctor Nye apologized. "Let's go back to fundamentals. There's just one more thing that you have to keep in mind—When the space-time machine reaches its destination and stops, it will be impossible for it to make the return trip right away. The balance of energies—the combination of forces-must have time to restore itself. The machine must have time to rebuild the energy potential in order to come back here to 1953."
"How long will that take?" asked Mark.
"Roughly two weeks—perhaps longer. We'll have to wait and see. Come here a moment."
Mark got to his feet and followed Doctor Nye over to the control panel on the side of the sphere. There was a bank of lights
along the top of the panel and a carefully calibrated dial in the center. On
each side of the dial there was a large knife switch with a black handle. Both
switches were open.
"Careful
now," cautioned Doctor Nye. "Don't touch anything—this baby is all ready to go. You'll notice
that the controls are quite simple, and there's nothing mysterious about them.
That green light burning there means that the machine is in order and prepared for
operation. When the machine starts, the green light goes off and the red light
comes on. When that red light is on, you must not try to change anything or the whole machine will explode. Don't forget that. Finally, when the machine
stops, the yellow light goes on. That means it is safe to go out, but the
machine is in the process of rebuilding the energy potential and cannot be
moved. When the energy potential has been built up again, the yellow light goes
off and the green light comes on again."
"That's clear enough," Mark said. "I suppose that the dial in the center is to fix the machine's
destination?"
"Check,"
said Doctor Nye. He took the turning knob of the dial carefully between his
thumb and index finger. "You see that the pointer of the dial is now set
for 1953, and that the very fine small pointer that looks something like the
large second hand of a watch makes it possible to set the machine for a
specific day—even a specific minute and
hour. Now, I turn to the dial—"
Cautiously,
Doctor Nye turned the knob. Mark heard a series of faint but precise clicks. He
watched the dial swing back across the centuries, back—
"There we are," said Doctor Nye.
"It's now set for
46 b.c.
and all I would have to do to get us back there would be to throw that
left-hand switch. I don't have to tell you of the work it took to adjust the
actual time spans to the calendar times. You know, of course, that the calendar
has been often adjusted; by Gregory and Julius Caesar himself among others, in
order to make it correspond to the actual lunar and solar years. But it is all
integrated in this machine, and allowances made for such things. We can go back
almost anywhere, and any time, just by twisting this dial—thus!"
Smiling,
Doctor Nye pressed a release button and gave the dial a hard spin. A slight
whirring noise filled the machine. After a moment, he engaged the mechanism
again and there was a rapid series of clicks that slowly diminished in speed
until there was silence.
"There
we are," Doctor Nye said. "The machine is now set for—"
Suddenly,
unexpectedly, there was a loud, urgent ringing from outside the sphere. Mark
jumped slightly and then recovered himself. The space-time machine, he decided,
was no place to hear sudden noises!
"That's
the upstairs phone," Doctor Nye said quickly, a worried expression on his
face. He glanced at his watch. "It's not quite nine o'clock—something must
have gone wrong with the rocket at White Sands. Hold on, Mark—and don't touch anything."
Doctor
Nye hurried out through the circular door and Mark heard his feet on the stairs
as he ran up to answer the phone. He looked around him at the dull lead sphere.
It was very quiet. He felt a slow, icy cold begin to creep up his spine.
Mark
shivered. He was alone in the space-time machine.
Chapter 3 Alone in the Unknown
|
ark nye stood very still in the center of the lead sphere. He could barely hear
the sound of his uncle's voice talking on the upstairs phone, and beyond that,
there was a very faint rumble of thunder. It was difficult to tell, isolated as
he was by the lead walls, but it seemed to him that the storm was dying down.
He
did not move. The space-time machine, with its silent and impersonal gray
walls, filled him with a nameless awe. He felt much as he had when first seeing
the newsreel picture of an atomic bomb blast—small and afraid, with a cold knot
inside where an icy fist clutched at his heart.
His
eyes strayed to the control panel as though pulled by a force beyond his power
to control. The green light looked at him steadily, without blinking, like a
strange emerald eye in the black of the panel. It had an almost hypnotic effect
on him, and staring into its compelling depths he fancied himself viewing the
shadow legions of a vanished past marching before him, the ghost armies of
history . . .
There was Davy Crockett, fighting to the end
in the
Alamo—and by his side Napoleon and Genghis
Khan.
There stood Machiavelli and in the shadows, blind Homer sang an immortal song.
There was Alexander the Great—there Socrates. David, Moses, Tutankhamen—all
still lived and loved and dreamed. And beyond them, as in a cloud of blue
smoke, the first men walked through the mists of dawn. Cro-Magnon, Neanderthal,
Pithecanthropus—and farther still, lost in the haze of time, the dragons hissed
and screamed across the face of the earth as the great reptiles—Brontosaurus, Stegosaurus,
the fierce Tyrannosaurus Rex-plodded through the swamps at the beginning of
time . . .
With
a visible effort, Mark looked away. He still did not dare to move—he was taking
no chances on being thrown by some accident into the time stream alone. When
Doctor Nye, with his wide knowledge and calm self-assurance, was with him it
was all right and everything was under control, but alone it was a different
story. Mark stood very still, waiting for his uncle to come back.
It was very still now in the lead sphere of
the space-time machine. It was so quiet that Mark thought that he could hear
his heart beating in his chest. He swallowed hard, ashamed of his nervousness.
He clenched his fists tightly, afraid of he knew not what. It was almost as if—
With
a suddenness that numbed his brain, it happened. A slugging, hammering
concussion slammed into his body and threw it across the sphere. A sharp,
blasting roar boomed through the little room, and Mark felt the house
shuddering around him. With desperation, Mark tried to keep his footing.
The rocket, the rocket, his mind screamed in the chaos. The rocket's gone off her course and blown up in the hills!
Swaying, stunned, Mark felt himself going. He fought valiantly not to fall, but his mind was spinning, his legs wobbled, and he sank toward the side of the sphere, falling, falling . . .
Too late, he saw that he was collapsing on the control panel. The tiny green light looked at him, laughed at him, pulled him down. Mark gasped breathlessly and tried to arch his body back away from it. It was no use. With a shudder he sank down against the control panel—and felt a knife switch click shut under his body.
Mark screamed once and tried to claw his way up again. It was too late. Horrified, his mind reeling with shock, he saw the green light wink off. The circular lead door of the space-time machine hissed into place, sealing him in. The red light in the control panel flicked on and a vast humming vibration filled the sphere.
The machine, his mind whispered. It's started—I'm trapped . . .
Mark couldn't get up and he dimly realized that he could do nothing even if he could get to the controls. Once the space-time machine got underway, it could not be tampered with. He was alone—going backward into time! Backward to—where?
Where was the machine set for? When Doctor Nye had spun the dial, where had it come to rest? Where was he going?
Desperately, Mark made a final effort to regain his footing. He pulled himself to his knees and felt the blood rushing and pounding in his brain. He gasped with shock and fought to get up. The pounding in his head became a roar—a roaring torrent of darkness that swirled and eddied and wrapped itself around him, pulling him down, down into the cool depths, down.
With a low moan Mark lost consciousness and slumped to the floor of the space-time machine.
As in a dream, sounds and faces swam before him. Fang dashed down a dusty road, barking excitedly. The two Apaches marched by under the gathering storm. The bust of Caesar stared at him with eyes of flame. His uncle shook his head, and his voice drifted up out of nothingness: "It would be sheer and utter folly to attempt to journey into a time that we knew nothing about . .
Mark Nye came to with a start and looked around him. Panic raced through his body, but he fought it down. This was no dream—that was certain. He was in the lead sphere, and the humming vibrations still buzzed in his ears. A gray atmosphere seemed to fill the space-time machine, and there was the feel of electricity in the air. The red light in the control panel was still on, and its flickering rays pushed out with a pinkish glow into the grayness.
Though sick and dizzy with shock, Mark found that he could move without pain. No bones broken then, he thought gratefully. By a great effort of will, he managed not to think about the terrible situation he was in. He had to keep cool, he knew that. If he gave up to fear and hysteria, he was lost and nothing could save him. He determined to conduct himself in such a way that his uncle would be proud of him.
His uncle. Would he ever see him again?
Mark pushed the thought away and struggled to his
feet. He closed his eyes a moment, waiting for the dizziness to pass. He had
no watch, and no way of telling how long he had been unconscious or what time
it was. He smiled without humor. That, he realized, was a question that would
take some tall answering. What time was it? Not in terms of minutes or hours, or the time of day. But
what year, what century, what era? What time was it?
He
opened his eyes. The red eye in the control panel looked at him, mocking him.
Mark took a deep breath and examined the time dial. He started, unable to believe
his own eyes. He looked again.
Mark
heard laughter in the sphere, and he looked around
sharply to see where it was coming from. There was nothing there. The machine
was empty and he was alone. The laughter was his own.
He
clamped an iron vise on his mind. The laughter stopped. He had to keep himself
under control, no matter what happened. If his mind once
snapped . . .
But
it wasn't easy. The time dial that his uncle had spun was no longer set for 46 b.c. Nor was it set for 460 b.c. Nor was it even set for 4,600 b.c. . . .
The time dial now was set
for the year 50,000 b.c.!
Mark
shuddered. He was going back in time fifty thousand years before the birth of
Christ—and there was nothing that he could do about it. He sensed the time
stream flowing by him as the gray sphere carried him back, back across the
centuries and the tens of centuries. He knew roughly where he was going, all
right—that was the trouble.
Still
somewhat dizzy, Mark sat down again on the floor to take stock of the
situation. He forced himself to examine his problem rationally, as Doctor Nye
had trained him to do. Frantic emotion certainly had a place—too large a place,
perhaps, in human existence, but its place was emphatically not in the solving
of problems. Mark knew that he had a brain, but that was not enough. He had to use that brain.
Mark
thrust the humming of the space-time machine from his mind. He ignored the gray
eeriness that surrounded him. He did not look again at the red eye in the
control panel. As calmly as possible, he thought the problem through.
The
space-time machine was carrying him back through time and space. In space, of
course, he would no longer have Italy for his destination. As he understood
it, however, the extra thousands of years would throw him off his course not
too far toward the northwest—probably into what in modern times
was known as France and Germany. In time, the problem was more
difficult. Mark thanked his lucky star that his uncle had drilled him so
thoroughly in history and prehistory. The year 50,000 b.c., he knew, would place him in the Pleistocene, or Ice Age. Further, it
would place him in the last, or most recent part of
it, known as the Upper Pleistocene. Beyond that, a peculiar problem presented
itself. Authorities disagreed violently on the exact time sequence of this last
part of the Ice Age, and the year 50,000 b.c. might fall almost anywhere, according to
which system you followed. However, his uncle had believed that the year 50,000
b.c. would fall roughly in the Upper Paleolithic, or toward the end of the Last Ice Age—and that
was as good a guess as any. He would just have to wait and see.
Mark
looked carefully around the inside of the space-time machine, hoping against
hope for some sort of miraculous aid. But there was no miracle. Everything was
just as it had been when his uncle had left him—how long ago?—to answer the
telephone. There were no supplies of any sort in the machine—no food and no
water. And he knew that he would have to spend at the very least two weeks in
the Ice Age before he could hope to return, in order to give the energy
potential time to rebuild itself. That meant that, somehow, he would have to
go out after food and water.
Knowledge
can be a frightening thing, but it can also prevent you from worrying about
nonexistent dangers. Mark knew that he needed to waste no time worrying about
dinosaurs or other reptilian monsters, since they had died out millions of
years before the first men were born. And there were men in the Last Ice
Age—strange men . . .
Mark
got to his feet and examined himself. He was dressed in blue jeans, which would
be strong and able to take rough wear, and a long-sleeved wool shirt that would
at least help to keep him warm. His shoes were less promising, moccasin-type
loafers that would probably prove useless in ice or snow. He emptied his
pockets as a check and found the usual things—a handkerchief, a comb, a pocket
knife, a small box of matches that he carried in order to light his uncle's
pipe when Doctor Nye forgot his own matches, which was most of the time, and a
billfold containing ten dollars in bills and a few coins. He smiled—the money
wouldn't come in too handy where he was going.
There
was, however, one fortunate circumstance; Doctor Nye's .45 was still hanging in
its holster from the side of the sphere. Mark took the gun down and looked it
over. It was loaded, as always, with a clip of six cartridges. There was no
bullet in the chamber, for safety's sake. Six shots, hardly enough for what he
might have to face, but they would have to do. Mark buckled on the holster and
felt a little better.
Then
he sat down again to wait—there was nothing else to do. He had no way of
knowing how much time had passed inside the sphere, nor did he know how long
the journey would take. He was hungry, since he had missed supper, but that was
no index. He was always hungry.
He
tried to sleep, but it was impossible. He was more wide-awake than he had ever
been in his life. But he closed his eyes and attempted to get what rest he
could. What were his chances, really? He didn't know. But he did know that he
was not going to give up. He would try, give it the best he had in him, and
that was all anyone could do. And he knew, too, that he was fortunate in being
as well educated as he was. He was not going into the Ice Age unequipped, and
he suspected that what he carried in his head would in the long run prove more
valuable to him than the .45 he
carried in his holster.
Mark's first awareness that the space-time
machine had stopped came when he suddenly noticed a complete absence of sound.
It was dead quiet in the lead sphere. He opened his eyes. The gray atmosphere
was gone and the air seemed stale and flat. The red light in the control panel
was off and the yellow light had replaced it.
Slowly,
Mark got to his feet. He hesitated a moment and then walked steadily toward the
circular entry port in the side of the sphere.
Chapter 4 m$ of Dawn
I Iabk threw a small switch and the circular portal
II hissed back. A cold gust of fresh air chilled
the
lyl machine. Mark shivered and looked outside.
I 1 Instantly, with unexpected suddenness, something
roared almost in his face and Mark lurched back inside, snatching out his .45.
He waited, his heart pounding in his throat. But whatever it was that had challenged
him was evidently just as surprised to see Mark as Mark had been to hear the
sudden roar. Mark heard the thud of retreating hoofs and, gun in hand,
cautiously advanced again and looked outside. He caught a quick glimpse of a
large, woolly animal with a horn in its head, just as it disappeared from his
line of vision. Mark relaxed a little and examined the landscape before him.
It
was early evening, evidently, and a blood-red sun was drifting down toward the
snow-capped mountains in the west. Carefully, Mark stepped out of the
space-time machine to look around, the .45 ready in his hand. The sphere had
come to rest in a great treeless plain, a forest of damp grass, dotted with
brilliant flowers and small shrubs. Mark spotted some red berries on a
near-by shrub, but did not recognize them and could
not tell whether or not they were edible.
Far
to the north, he saw a glint of what looked like an ice sheet, although it was
too far away for him to be certain. It might have been some sort of mica-like
mineral, or even a trick of the light from the setting sun. To the east, the
grassy plains extended for miles, to be broken finally by a low range of
snow-capped mountains some twenty or thirty miles away. The mountain range
curved around toward the south, becoming somewhat higher, and Mark could see
what appeared to be scrub pine trees in the near foothills that seemed to be no
more than five or ten miles away from him. A low mist, clearly a product of the
approaching coldness of the night, hugged the ground in tiny whorls and
rivulets.
Mark
hesitated, uncertain of what course to follow. He was stunned and dizzy from
the shock of what had happened, and he was ravenous. He squinted at the sun and
judged that he had still an hour or two of daylight left to him. But he could
not be positive; he knew it would depend on precisely where he was and what
time of the year it happened to be. Night could descend with fearful speed in
some parts of the world, as he had seen for himself many times.
He
thought it over carefully and then threw the switch that would close the entry
port into the space-time machine. The circular door hissed shut. It wouldn't
do, obviously, for some strange creature to wander into the machine while he
was gone. Mark looked around, looking for he knew not what. Which way to go?
There was evidently game around in profusion,
although he didn't care to tackle anything as big as the woolly rhinoccros-like animal he had seen, with only a pistol. He
eyed the berries, but decided against them. It wouldn't help any to poison himself, and as a rule of thumb he knew that it was usually
wisest not to eat anything you weren't familiar with. He had only one testing
animal available—himself. And if the test turned out for the worst, he wouldn't
benefit from the knowledge.
Mark decided finally to move due east, so
that the sun's position could guide him back to the space-time machine. He hefted the .45 thoughtfully. It was
heavy, but having it in his hand might mean the difference between life and
death. He smiled and patted the dull lead of the space-time machine.
"Take
care of yourself," he breathed fervently.
"If anything happens to you, my name is mud."
He
set out then, resolutely. The evening wind was blowing toward him, into his
face, which was good— the animals wouldn't get wind of him and disappear. It
was cold, and getting colder, but it was not unbearable and Mark's mind was on
other things. He turned and looked back at the machine that had carried him
across the ages. The great sphere squatted there on the plain, a stranger,
utterly out of place under the deep blue sky with the little rivers of white
mist beginning to curl around it as though curious about the odd thing that
had suddenly appeared out of nowhere.
Mark
kept going, on into the strange new world. He realized that it was funny he
should think of it that way. This world was old, lost in the past byways of an
almost forgotten history. And yet it was new too—new and fresh and clean with the scent of millions of wild flowers. Some of
Mark's natural fear left him. If only he could find some food, it might not be
so bad . . .
It
was quiet save for the sighing of the grasses. Mark had never heard such
silence before. Always, in his own time, there had been the mechanical noises
of civilization all around him. The great cities clattered and banged in their
dirt and grime, and in the green countryside the cars and tractors hummed and
chugged. No matter where you went, the buzz of civilization went with you.
Even far out on a mountain stream, alone, you would be startled by the thunder
of airplanes or the whistling scream of jets. The silence now was uncanny—and
somehow it seemed choked with life, invisible life that hid itself from his
eyes.
Mark
walked on, feeling his way, every sense alert. He had himself under control,
and steadfastly refused to think of the terrors and the horrors which might
confront him at any moment. He concentrated on the objective at hand, and did
not think about the dangers and the coming cold and the loneliness. What he
could not change could not be helped.
On
he went, through the grasses and the flowers, with the red sun fading into dull
orange and sinking lower and lower in the west. Soon, he knew, he would have to
start back or else run the risk of getting caught out at night away from the
space-time machine, his only refuge—a prospect that was far from pleasant. But
hunger urged him on.
Mark
began to grow uneasy as the long shadows walked along beside him and the cold
breeze strengthened into a forcible wind. He hesitated and was almost ready to
give up and spend the night hungry when he spotted movement ahead. Mark
instantly dropped to one knee. Holding his breath, he peered ahead through the grass.
There was still enough light to see by, and he could make out dark patches not far away. They moved slightly as he watched, evidently grazing. Mark wormed his way forward through the grass, scratching himself slightly on small shrubs but not noticing the pain. He crept closer and closer, stalking the black shadows. They were just ahead of him now. Holding his breath again so that he made no sound, he carefully parted the grass and looked out.
There they were, five of them. Mark examined them intently. They were fairly large animals with shaggy manes. They had short legs and two small horns. They had a distinct hump on their front shoulders and they were heavy and bulky. For a moment, Mark was haunted by a distinct sense of familiarity. Where had he seen animals like these before? Then he had it. They were bison, buffalo, much like those which had once roamed the plains of America before their virtual extermination by white hunters like Buffalo Bill. There were four adults and one smaller calf, and they obviously suspected nothing.
Cautiously, Mark inched his way closer. He could not afford to waste one of his precious shots, and a .45,
for all its smashing power, was a very erratic weapon as a target pistol. He settled on the calf as his best bet. It grazed a little apart from the others and should be easier to bring down.
Mark halted, a scant thirty yards from his prey. He checked his gun and slipped the safety off. He lay down full length in the grass and raised his pistol to take aim.
He
never had a chance to fire. With a sudden snort, the lead bison lifted its head
and broke into a lumbering run that covered ground with a deceptive speed. The
others followed him instantly. Mark still had a shot of sorts, but he passed it
up. He simply could not take a chance on missing, with bullets in such short
supply. It had to be a sure shot or nothing.
There
was something else, something that sent a cold chill through Mark that was not
entirely due to the chillness of the coming night. Something had frightened the
bison, and he was positive that it hadn't been himself. He lay very still in
the grass, listening. He heard nothing. There was only the whisper of the wind.
It was growing late. With an alarming
rapidity, the sun was gone and the long shadows of twilight were merging into
the black of night. It was colder now, a wind-driven cold that threatened to
drop the temperature far too low for comfort. Mark was painfully hungry. He
had been so close to food that he could almost taste buffalo steaks in his
mouth. And the skin could have kept him warm, if he could have managed to get
it off with his pocket knife.
Mark
did not want to move. He felt the weird presence of something alien in the
shadows of the onrush-ing night. He felt unseen eyes
upon him, boring into his back, lifting the hair on his neck. But he had no
choice. He told himself that it was all imagination and got to his feet, the
.45 ready in his hand. He saw nothing, but the shadows were thick around him
now.
Desperately,
he started back the way he had come, guiding himself by the faint lingering
light behind the mountains in the west. He was grimly afraid that he.
had waited too long, that he would be unable to find his way back to the space-time machine before nightfall. He could never find it at night and he knew enough not to try to blunder on, which would only result in his getting hopelessly lost. He would have to stop, if he didn't make it; build a fire perhaps.
He did not like the idea of a night in the open, in this unknown country, so Mark kept going, praying that the light would not fail. But it was growing darker by the second; he could hardly see at all. The feeling that unseen eyes were upon him persisted; he could not shake the feeling off. He tried to tell himself that it was a normal reaction under the circumstances, but he couldn't convince himself.
Doggedly he went on—and then stopped dead.
There was something there.
Ahead of him, they were ahead of him. Mark turned around. They were behind him too. He could feel them. He gripped the .45
tightly, feeling cold sweat start out on his forehead. The night wind sighed eerily through the grass and he could not see.
He was trapped—the things were all around him!
Chapter 5 The Neanderthals
I I ark was terrified. This was too much. Panic 1)1
shrieked along his nerves.
He had a wild impulse lyI to shoot crazily into the darkness—shoot
anywhere, I I
at anything. He mastered
the impulse with difficulty. But what could he do? What . . .
One
small corner of his mind still functioned. Wait, it whispered. Don't
lose your head. Wait.
Mark
waited, clutching the gun as though determined to squeeze it into a shapeless
mass. The things came closer, closer. He could almost see them now. He stifled
a sudden, terrible scream. Those things! What were they? What could they be?
His
hand trembled, but he raised his gun, took careful aim. But he did not fire.
There were too many of them. He could make out at least ten shadowy figures in
the semidarkness. He had only six cartridges. There was a chance that the shots
might scare the things, but that was a long chance to take. They didn't look like
anything would scare them, ever.
They were nightmares . . .
Mark
waited. His eyes peered through the gloom. He was beginning to make them
out—and suddenly he
did not want to see them, not in the light. They
were terrible enough dimly glimpsed in the darkness. The things walked on two
legs, which were bent slightly, giving them a stooping posture. They were
short, about five-feet-five. They had two arms, and they seemed to be carrying
weapons of some sort. They were not apes—and yet they were not men either. They
were half-men, and Mark knew that if he ever got a good look at them he might
well go out of his mind.
One
of them snarled hideously. The thing came forward. It touched him. Mark tensed. A foul animal smell
assailed his nostrils. He dug the muzzle of the .45 into the thing's belly but
he did not dare fire. He waited. If he was attacked, he determined to sell his
life as dearly as possible. Otherwise—what?
The thing snarled at him
again and jerked his arm.
"Who
are you?" Mark heard a voice gasp. It was his own.
"What do you want?"
There
was no answer, of course. The things could not possibly understand what he
said, even if they had a language of their own. But Mark had to talk. He felt
better talking.
"What
do you want? Get away from me, get . . ."
The
thing snarled again and then screamed hideously. Mark shuddered. The half-men's eyes seemed to glow redly
in the darkness, like monsters, like fiends from Hades . . .
The
thing jerked at his arm again, harder this time. Its hand was rough and as hard
as iron. The half-man growled deep in his throat. Again he pulled at Mark's
arm, while Mark kept the .45 buried in the thing's stomach, his finger curled
around the trigger.
Mark understood dimly what the creature
wanted.
It
wanted Mark to come with them somewhere, that was
clear. Mark weighed the possibilities. He could shoot the thing and make a
break for it, but where could he go? It was too dark to see now, although the
stars were coming out, and he could not find his way back to the space-time
machine without a stroke of extraordinary luck. And the others would be all
over him in a minute, ripping him apart, tearing at him. He had no chance and
he knew it.
"Okay," Mark
whispered. "Let's go."
The
thing understood nothing of the words, but it seemed to sense the meaning of
Mark's voice. The iron hand relaxed and Mark was free. The shadows of the
half-men closed in around him and began to walk across the plain into the
night. With a sinking heart, Mark kept in the center of them. Whenever he fell
back or hesitated, a warning snarl kept him in line.
Mark
kept the .45 ready in his hand. However, he had abandoned all hope of using it.
It was very cold now, although the wind had died down with the coming of the
night. It was very still, except for the shuffling of feet and the harsh
sounds of breathing. From far, far away, as though from another world, he heard
an awesome trumpeting like the cry of an elephant.
Mark
shivered. If only he had a fire to keep him warm! He was not used to such cold,
nor was he dressed properly to endure it, the chill going through his shirt as
if it didn't exist. A fire. That gave him an idea. He still had the matches in his pocket—could he
do anything with them? Mark had read stories in which people had startled
savages by unexpectedly striking a match, and thus
making good their escape. It was a slim hope, but worth a try.
Mark holstered his .45 and fumbled with
numbed hands for his box of matches. He opened it and took out a match. With a
fervent mental prayer he suddenly struck a light and held it aloft.
Nothing
happened. The things looked at the light without even curiosity, their faces
swimming in the feeble, flickering light.
Mark
blew out the match, quickly. He wasn't going to get out of this by any such
simple trick, he realized. And the sight of their faces, even half-seen by
match-light, was almost more than he could stand. They were awful. Like men, and yet terribly, horribly
different.
Mark
walked on in the midst of the half-men, a grim suspicion growing in his mind.
As nearly as he could tell by the stars, they were moving southwest. Toward the
snow-capped mountains Mark had noticed earlier, and away from the space-time machine.
Would he ever see it again?
Onward
they went, with Mark's legs beginning to ache with weariness. His hunger was an
empty knot inside him, and the cold numbed his body. He was very tired and his
eyes burned with the dry flames of exhaustion.
The
moon began to swing up on its arc through the night. It was a half-moon, a
silver crescent, and its pale rays swept down on the shadowed world, lighting
the things that walked beside him. Mark did not trust himself to look.
It
was a nightmare procession, touched with the fantasy of the forever unreal.
Under a frozen moon, across the plains of the vanished past of earth, Mark
stumbled forward. And around him, unbelievable monsters from the fears and the
legends of forgotten history, the half-men shambled over the mist-kissed grass,
their red eyes gleaming in the black shadows of the night.
How
long they traveled through the darkness under the moon Mark did not know. It
seemed to go on forever, the shuffling of the feet and the harsh breathing all
around him. Finally, he noticed that they appeared to have left the level
plain. The ground was rising under him and his feet occasionally stumbled on
sharp rocks. The grass had played out now and he could see the black outlines
of scrub pines along the trail. The rise in the land became steeper and turned
into low hills. Up they climbed, and Mark found himself gasping shallowly for
breath in the cold, thinning air. Sharp pains lanced through his chest, and he
knew that he was close to collapse.
The
half-men set a murderous pace through the night. They seemed never to tire. The
world became a horror of stooped figures and a merciless moon swimming through
the stars. Mark was dimly aware of splashing through a rapid, icy stream, with
the moon shimmering the rushing water with silver.
Then they went on, with Mark's open shoes wet and cold and beginning to freeze.
Mark's
mind blanked out. He kept walking somehow, but he was not conscious of it. His
body went on functioning, his legs kept moving, but his body seemed to be something
utterly apart from him. He was somewhere else, numb, floating through
colorless emptiness.
The hills widened into a valley and then into
a mountain pass. The hushed light of false dawn was just lighting up the world
and Mark sensed, rather than saw, snow-capped mountains all around him. The
half-men that he refused to see led him up a tortuous, rocky trail from the
valley and then suddenly it was dark again.
Mark
realized dimly that they were in a cave. Ahead of them, orange light danced and
flickered on the damp walls. Fires. Sensing warmth, Mark's body moved forward more rapidly. The shadows
played grotesque nightmare games on the cold cave walls.
Growls
and mutterings greeted their appearance and Mark found himself in the light. A
faraway corner of his mind was grateful that his shocked senses could not
properly respond, that he could not see clearly. As it
was, he saw—too much.
The
things were terrible enough in the shadows of the night. Here, around the
fires, they were monstrous. They did not look like apes at all—that wouldn't
have been so bad. Apes were amusing, comical, in their happy imitation of men.
There was nothing comical about these things, and the worst part of it was that
they were clearly and unmistakably men.
Their
legs were bent at the thighs and at the knees, giving them a perpetual stooping
posture, almost like a gorilla. They had broad, massive shoulders and barrel
chests. They had huge bones, heavily muscled, and their lower legs and forearms
were short and powerful. From their bull-like necks, their great heads hung
forward horribly. Deep-set, beady eyes peered out from under heavy eyebrow
ridges and a large, projecting mouth faded back into a receding chin. They
were bearded, and dirty hair grew down over their low foreheads. They were
dressed in crude skins, and their hair showed around them almost like an animal
pelt.
The cave was dirty. Old bones and decaying
flesh littered the floor, and the smell was overpowering. Insects hovered
around the creatures, like fleas around a dog. From time to time, the half-men
made spasmodic attempts to brush the flies away, their brute mouths hanging
open, revealing sharp white teeth.
The
human brain and nervous system is equipped with many defense mechanisms. When
shock becomes too great, when fear becomes too intense, something happens and
nothing seems to matter any more. Mark had reached
that state, and more. In the midst of horror, he had
but one thought—get to the fire. His body was cold, numb, and the warmth from
the blaze was like a breath of life.
Mark
staggered forward, and fell toward the fire. But one of the half-men caught him
and jerked him back. The things grunted at each other and Mark felt himself
seized and shoved up a narrow trail inside the cave. He was thrown into a dank,
wet cavern and collapsed on the rocks. Faintly, he was aware of the half-men
shoving a great boulder across the small cavern entrance, cutting off the
light.
Mark
was sealed in. Cold and hungry, he gasped for breath on the wet floor of the
cavern. He knew with cold certainty what had happened to him. Those half-men
were unmistakable.
He was in the hands of the
Neanderthals.
That
was all. Mark could stand no more. A white pain lanced along his nerves, up
through his chest, and exploded with a cloudy puff in his brain. With a hopeless
gasp, he lost consciousness.
Chapter Ö Escape
IiIhen Mark came back to awareness again, he lay [A very still and looked at the damp rocks before his VV eyes. He felt a little better and his mind was cool f 1 and
clear. He did not bother to pinch himself, for he knew all too well that what
had happened to him was no dream.
He was lucky to be alive; he had not really
expected to wake up again, ever. He wasted no time on idle regrets, but went
right to work analyzing the situation. As long as life was left in him, he
would go on trying. That was what it meant to be a man.
First
of all, what kind of shape was he in? Mark got gingerly to his feet and braced
himself against the wall of the little cavern until the dizziness passed. He
was very weak, but his hunger had subsided to a dull ache. His mouth was dry
and he was thirsty. His throat was beginning to be sore, but by some miracle he
had no fever as yet. He knew that if he came down with pneumonia he was
through, and he had no way to take care of himself. Why was it, he wondered,
that in books of fiction the hero never seemed to be troubled with colds or
illness, but felt wonderful all the time,
Escape
43
even after a rifle bullet through the chest? He smiled ruefully. It was different when you were real.
Mark moved silently through the gloom to the mouth of the sealed cavern. The big boulder did not fit flush with the sides of the cave opening, and he could see through the cracks. He looked out into the big cave of the Neanderthals and examined the entrance to their cavern. The light outside was gray, and he judged that it must be getting on toward evening. He had slept some twelve hours, then.
What could he do? He tried to move the boulder, but it did not budge. He did not waste his remaining strength, but stretched out again on the floor of the cave. There was a little moisture oozing out of the dank rocks, and Mark licked at it with his tongue to relieve the parched dryness in his mouth. Then he glued his eyes to the crack in the rock and determined to learn what he could, in the hope that some method of escape would present itself to him. He told himself that he was certainly smarter than his captors, and he still had his .45, and thus he bolstered his courage.
Mark counted twenty Neanderthals in the cave, many of them women and children. They were grouped around a central fire. At first, they seemed to be simply a pack of savages, moving around without aim or purpose. But as Mark watched he began to detect certain patterns that brought some semblance of order out of the seeming chaos.
The Neanderthals were still hideously ugly, even startlingly so, but they were somehow less revolting to Mark than they had been the night before. Perhaps it was because he was more used to them now, or possibly it was due to the fact that he had had some
sleep and his jangled nerves were more settled.
Probably though, Mark reasoned, it was due to their actions. For all their
grotesque appearance, they were doing things that were unmistakably human.
Several
of the Neanderthal women were engaged in building up the fire, taking dead
branches, ferns, and moss from a pile in one corner of the cave and piling it
on the crackling blaze. The little children, for all their ghastly looks, were
almost comic as they tottered around after their elders, trying to drag
branches to the fire. Mark spotted another woman scraping the flesh from a
bison hide with a sharp stone scraper. The scraper was very crude and seemed to
be too large for its purpose, but it was getting the job done.
There
were no animals of any sort around. At the mouth of the cave, a Neanderthal
man, who might have been a lookout, squatted on his haunches, flaking a chunk of rock with a hammerstone.
By his side lay a short wooden spear tipped with a stone spearhead.
There
were some animal skins scattered about, evidently for sleeping purposes.
Behind the fire, there was a curious arrangement of bones and stones that could
hardly have been accidental. Mark judged that the pattern had some sort of ceremonial
significance. He noticed, too, that the bones were placed in distinct groups of
four. Evidently the symbolism of a lucky number had made an early appearance in
human society.
As
Mark watched, there was a call from the man at the mouth of the cave and
shortly five more men came in. They were burdened down with the carcasses of
several small bison, and one of them carried a pile of roots and berries. All
the men were armed with spears, and Mark was relieved to see that they had no
bows. They dumped the meat in front of the women and snarled at each other.
Mark could not catch any distinct words, but the half-men obviously had a language.
From their gestures, Mark judged that they were arguing about the division of
the meat. One of the men became angry and grabbed at a bison leg for himself, but two others instantly shoved him roughly away.
Except for three men, the Neanderthals then split into several family groups
and retired to separate parts of the cave.
The
three men grunted at each other and one of them pointed toward the cavern in
which Mark was imprisoned. They started toward him. Mark drew his .45 and waited. The time was not yet right to make a break for it, but it
might be that he would have no choice.
As
the Neanderthals approached, Mark's fear returned. Human or not, the half-men
were not a pleasant sight. Mark stared at their sharp teeth and.won-dered. . . .
The
three Neanderthals moved the boulder away from the cavern entrance. Mark got to
his feet and faced them, the gun ready in his hand. He could smell them. What
did they want? If only he could communicate with them, talk to them! Mark
understood full well now what his uncle had meant when he warned against trying
to go into a time stratum unprepared. If he could talk to them, he might at
least have a chance.
One
of the Neanderthals kept pointing at him and jabbering, and Mark finally got
the idea that he was showing him to the other two. Mark was a prize exhibition.
But he could see that the Neanderthals did not seem to be surprised at what
they saw; they accepted him as a perfectly normal part of their surroundings.
One of them poked at his clothes with what appeared to be curiosity, and
another eyed his short-cut hair, but that was all.
Mark
waited, the germ of an idea growing in his brain. It might be significant that
the Neanderthals accepted him as an everyday part of their lives. Of course, it
was always possible that they were simply too dim-witted to notice any
difference between himself and the animals they saw all the time, but that was
not probable. These Neanderthals, Mark knew, were in all likelihood much
smarter than they looked. No, there must be some other explanation for their
calm behavior. And Mark could think of only one possible answer. The
Neanderthals must have seen men like him before. But where?
How? Mark thought he knew . . .
After
a time, the three half-men left him, resealing the mouth of the cavern with the
boulder. Mark hol-stered his .45 and lay down again
on the cold rocks. His hunger began to assert itself again, and he licked some
more water from the side of the cave. What next? If something did not happen
soon, it would be too late to do anything. He was growing weaker by the minute,
and the rawness in his throat was getting worse in the damp air of the cave. He
looked outside and judged that night had come once more.
The
flickering fires threw long crawling shadows on the cave walls, and the
half-men moved through the dancing light like creatures from a long-forgotten
dream. Mark watched them roast chunks of meat on long sticks and then gorge
themselves with food. His
hunger became almost unbearable as the smell of
roasting meat drifted up into his tiny cavern.
After
the Neanderthals had eaten, Mark witnessed a strange sight. Methodically, as
from long habit, the half-men shuffled into position behind the fire. There,
fitting themselves into places between the ceremonial rocks and bones, they
stood silently for a moment. One of their number, a
man with a band of red painted across his low forehead, screamed loudly four
times. Then he fell to his knees and four times he pounded his head against a
large skull that looked as if it had come from a mammoth.
There
was silence. The long shadows played among the stooped figures. Outside, the
cold wind moaned across the cave mouth like the cry of an impossible spirit,
forever dead, forever longing to be born.
Mark
watched, fascinated despite the seriousness of his position. At what must have
been a prearranged signal that he had failed to catch, every Neanderthal except
the man with the red band on his forehead picked up a long white bone and
started to beat it on the rocks. A rhythmic clicking filled the cave. Once
more, the number four was predominant. The rhythm was a distinct pattern of a
series of fours followed by short, sharp silences.
It
was a scene to stagger the imagination, and its effect was not lost on Mark.
Here in the dawn of time the first groping men stood in the black shadows beyond
the leaping flames and made their rude music out of bones and rocks. There was
something infinitely sad about the creatures in the cave, something that was
past all knowledge or expression. Almost, Mark could pity them, horrible as
they were. They were not really human—and yet they were not wholly animals either. There they lived and dreamed strange dreams, and all the while the great Wheel of Time rolled mercilessly on, wiping them out even as it wiped out the vast ice sheets that had been their home. The Wheel turned, grinding them under . . . But they were not gone yet.
Suddenly, the clicking stopped. The hush was deafening. The Neanderthals stood without moving. There wasn't a sound in the cave except the sputter and hiss of the fire. Three men detached themselves from the group, the half-man with the red band across his forehead in the lead. They came across the cave floor, straight toward Mark.
Mark smiled coldly. The ceremony had been for his benefit, then. He was to be the star performer. He could not know exactly what his part would be, but he could guess. It wasn't that the Neanderthals hated him in particular, or in any way regarded him as unusual. This was evidently just the process they went through whenever they got hold of anyone like him. What was the Army phrase he had heard his uncle use?
Standard operating procedure.
What would happen to him? Obviously, a group like the Neanderthals, living as they did on a bare economy of essentials, would have no use for prisoners. A slave was of little use in such a society, being more trouble than he was worth. Mark had not been fed, nor had he been given anything to drink. It was clear that they were not going to leave him alive. His death might be fast or slow, but death it would be. Were the Neanderthals cannibals? Possibly—but Mark was not worried about what would happen to him after he died. He wanted to live.
Escape
49
There would be no more waiting, no more hoping for a better chance. This, he knew, was it.
The three Neanderthals thrust aside the boulder at the cave mouth. The half-man with the red band on his forehead growled at Mark and Mark understood that he was to get up. He thought carefully and drew the .45;
and this time he knew that he would use it. But he did not fire yet. He pulled himself to his feet and then swayed dizzily. He shook his head at the half-man and stumbled. He tried desperately to get across the idea that he was too weak to walk.
The half-man snarled again and grabbed his arm. His grip was like jagged steel and his long, dirty nails dug painfully into Mark's flesh. Instantly, he shifted the .45 to his other hand. If they tried to take it away from him, he would have to break for it at once, and that would take at least three precious shots . . .
But if the Neanderthals noticed the gun at all, they paid no attention to it. Mark's trick—it wasn't much of a trick, since he really was weak—worked and they evidently considered him too helpless to worry about. Two of the Neanderthals moved on ahead, going back to the ceremony beyond the fire, leaving Mark with the painted half-man.
Mark waited until they were clear of the little cavern entrance. The path to the outside world was open. It was dark and cold outside, but that did not matter. It was now or never.
Mark hesitated only a moment. The half-man was a horrible travesty of a man, but for all of that he was a man. Mark had never killed a man, and even now . . .
But he had no choice. Tensing himself, Mark suddenly came to life. He stopped short, and the surprised
Neanderthal stopped with him, although the
steel grip on his arm did not slacken. The half-man growled low in his throat.
Mark looked him in the eye. He raised the .45 and his hand was steady. The
half-man, not even knowing that it was a weapon, looked faintly puzzled.
Mark
aimed right between the eyes and squeezed the trigger. There was a blasting
roar that seemed to shake the cave, echoing and re-echoing back into the dark
depths. The gun kicked back in his hand, and the grip on his arm fell away as
the surprised Neanderthal, still with a puzzled look on his face, crumpled to
the cave floor.
Calling
upon hidden resources that he hadn't known he possessed, Mark dashed for the
cave entrance. The rocks stabbed at his feet and he had a wild, irrational fear
that he would lose his wet shoes. His heart pounded wildly in his chest and he
clenched his fists, clutching at the smoking .45. Which way could he go? How
long could he last?
In
desperation, Mark increased his speed, racing like a scared rabbit out into the
darkness of the cold night. He remembered all too well the terrible stamina and
speed of the half-men. He ran frantically down the rocky trail and into the
starlit valley he had stumbled through—when? It seemed like a million years
ago.
Mark
felt his exhausted body crying out in protest. He was weak with hunger and
fatigue, and he knew that he could not hold out for long. Gasping for breath,
he heard behind him the shouting snarls of the maddened Neanderthals.
Chapter 7 The Night
|
rrHiN all men there is a deep reserve of dark power. It lies
hidden, unseen, unsuspected, far in the depths of the human personality. It
cannot be tapped at will, this reservoir of strength, and there is no way to
call it to the fore. Most men go all through their lives and never suspect its
existence. But some men find it. To some men, a chosen few, it comes. Ask the
man next to you, he may not know. But ask the doctor, far in the night. Ask the
fugitive, trapped and alone. Ask the soldier. They know.
And
Mark knew. It came from nowhere and flowed through his tired veins. It kept him
going past all endurance, kept him going when he should have dropped in his
tracks. It came from deep within him, and Mark gritted his teeth and kept
going.
He
raced through the valley, dimly conscious of the sighing pines around him. The
growls and the shouts of the half-men crept closer. He could not seem to lose
them; now he knew that they would tear him to pieces.
Mark charged across the icy stream, his numb
feet barely feeling the terrible cold. He plunged through the low foothills and out
upon the open plains. The
grass pulled at his feet and the shrubs tore with
sharp fingers at his clothes. Ahead of him, the grass waved in cold unconcern,
a silver sea under the faraway stars.
Mark
ran and ran and ran, his chest a hot flame of agony, the breath stabbing like
knives through his laboring lungs. His mouth and throat were dry, parched, and
the cold air washed through him with searing pain. His legs throbbed and his
feet were like blocks of ice. He couldn't go
on.
But
behind him he still heard the inexorable pounding of the Neanderthals, and the
tireless shouts and snarls. They weren't even tired, those inhuman pursuers of
his, they could go on forever, they would run him down if it took them a week.
Suddenly, Mark realized that he could not
possibly make the space-time machine, even if he could find it by starlight. He
could not hold out that long, and the moon would rise in the night soon,
lighting the grassy plains and the mist with ghost light, picking him out as
surely as a searchlight. He couldn't make it.
Mark
stopped short, his chest heaving. He had to think. Somehow he had to think. But there was no time —he had only a moment.
And he was so tired, ready to drop—it would be so nice just to lie down in the
grass and drift away to nowhere . . .
He
slapped himself awake. The half-men snarled through the darkness behind him,
and they were very close. With desperate decision, Mark reversed his direction
and forced his body to run again, back the way he had come, back toward the
growling, angry Neanderthals.
But not straight back. Mark had been running almost due north from
the valley mouth, and now he was
running south. South, but veering
a little to the east, just enough to miss the half-men, if he was lucky.
If he wasn't lucky—
They
wouldn't be expecting him to double back, of that he felt sure. He drew his .45
and ran bent over almost double, only a shadow among the shadows. He was close
to them, he was even with them, he could smell them in
the night—
With
horrifying suddenness, a figure loomed up right at his side. Mark dropped like
a shot and wriggled through the wet grass on his stomach. Had he been seen? He
fought to control his breathing, but it was impossible. Had he been seen? Evidently not. There was no alarm. His body one aching
agony, Mark lurched to his feet and ran on.
He
wouldn't fool them long, he figured. They would be back after him. But he knew
now that he did not have so much as a prayer on the open plains in the
moonlight. The Neanderthals were stronger than he was, and there were more of
them. Even as he ran, a small subconscious corner of his mind wrestled with the
problem. It was the old, old game of man against man, the hunter and the
hunted. But one factor at least was changed—now it was man against half-men,
and that made a difference. It had to
make a difference. It was his only hope.
Mark
angled along the slope of the foothills, bearing somewhat east from the valley
of the Neanderthals. The sounds of pursuit were almost lost in the distance
now, but Mark did not fool himself into thinking that he had given them the
slip. They would pick up his trail and come on, snarling, untiring, like mighty
hounds on the scent of a desperate fox. He was the fox.
The foothills continued for a long time, with
the dark mountains that shielded the Neanderthal caverns fading by on his
right. The ascent was becoming steeper, however, and the scrub pines that
dotted the foothills were getting fewer and fewer. Mark redoubled his efforts,
but his best speed now was no more than a jagged trot. If he could just reach
the mountains, hide himself somehow, somewhere . . .
But
the Neanderthals would surely know the mountains around their home well enough
to search him out. Mark gasped for breath. He had no hope now, and he knew that
he was fast reaching the ultimate limits of his reserve strength. He could only
go until he dropped, and then there was the .45. Five shots left. Four for the
half-men— And one for himself.
Mark
hurled himself into the mountains. The rocks tore at his beaten body, but he
kept going. Up and up, and always bearing toward the east, away from the valley
of the Neanderthals. He scrambled up smooth cliffs and plunged through
snowdrifts, white and ghostly under the stars. He had no way of knowing whether
the drifts were a few inches deep, or a few feet, or a few miles, and he had no
time for caution. Certain death was behind him, and chance, no matter how slim,
was better than that black certainty that pursued him.
His
luck held, and he stopped going up the mountain and struck off due east across
the snow. He knew that he was leaving footprints, but that couldn't be helped.
Or could it? Ahead of him he saw a black crevice, a deep pass in the mountains.
Seeing it clearly before him, dark beside the whiteness of the snow, was the
first indication that he had that the moon had risen. He looked up. There it
was, coldly beautiful as ever, a silver crescent hanging from the frosty
stars....
A
wild thought raced through his mind. In his own time, they were preparing to launch a rocket for the moon. Could it be? Did that future time, his time, really exist somewhere? Or was it all just part of the nightmare?
Which was the real world, now—or then?
Mark
shook his head. He had to hurry. From far below him, he heard the cold chuckle
and gurgle of running water. He smiled, beyond pain now, beyond anything save
the will to try. He was stripped down to bare essentials now, down to the will
to live.
What
was the phrase? Survival of the fittest. Well, he would see.
Gingerly,
Mark lowered himself over the brink of the chasm. He could see the outlines of
rocks and ledges in the side of the pass, and he would just have to trust to
fate that they would support him. Going on raw courage alone, Mark fought his
way down into the mountain valley. It was hard going, impossible going, and far
below him he saw the silver shimmer of the stream, like a cold snake writhing
forever across the frozen earth.
He made it, although afterward he never remembered
how. He came back momentarily to his senses and found himself standing on the
bank of the rushing stream, with the dark shadows of the mountains all around
him. He heard nothing but the rustle of the water, but he took no chances. It
would be folly to stop now, with victory almost in his grasp.
If he could just hold out—
Which
way to go? Mark debated a moment, and decided that his pursuers would expect
him to go upstream, into the mountains, away from the plains that had almost
trapped him. So Mark went downstream. He stepped into the icy water without
even feeling it and fumbled his way across the slippery stream bed. If there
were any holes ahead of him, invisible in the moonlight, it would be too bad.
But as long as he stayed in the stream they could not follow his trail. Mark's
exhausted mind gave out, but his body kept on.
While
the moon sailed serenely through the night sky and the stars marched through
the heavens, Mark Nye splashed grimly onward through the icy water of the
mountain stream. He struggled on for what seemed to be miles, until the stream
ran bubbling out into the plains. Mark dragged himself out of the water and
headed east again, away from the Neanderthal caverns and away from the
space-time machine that he had little hope of ever seeing again.
The
ground was wet and marshy around him, but Mark was unaware of it. He put one
foot mechanically ahead of the other and plodded on, his shoes making sucking
noises in the soft earth. His pace had slowed to a virtual crawl, and he knew
that he had to find some place in which to rest.
He
kept on until he could go no farther and then cut back into the mountain
foothills. He looked around him dazedly. There were a few pines, but nothing
that offered any hope of concealment. He was just on the verge of collapsing
where he was and taking a chance when he noticed an outcropping of rock on a
little ledge above him to the east. He crawled up to it,
hand over hand, unable to stay on his feet. He pulled himself over the
outcropping and found a slight depression in the rock wall, surrounded by large
and formidable boulders. He dragged his body inside, where he was at least
sheltered from the cold wind.
It
was not the best possible place, but he could go no farther. He was wet and
numb with cold, but he knew that he did not dare to build a fire, even if he
had had the strength to do it, which he hadn't. He took out his .45 and wiped
it as dry as he could on his torn shirt, and then returned it to its holster.
Gasping for breath, his chest aflame with pain, he thought briefly of climbing
out to get some snow he saw. He could eat the snow and thus quench his thirst a
little—
But
his body refused to move. It had served him well, but it was spent. Mark heard
his heart beating with a rapid, exhausted flutter and he could not even move
his hand.
He
was hopelessly cut off from the space-time machine. He was ill and unutterably
tired, without food or water. He did not even have the satisfaction of knowing
that he had eluded the Neanderthals; they might be right behind him, and he was
too weak even to pull the trigger of his .45. Mark looked at the cold moon, now
fading in the east. From the plains that stretched below him, he heard the
trumpeting cry of some animal that he could not even imagine. For the first
time, he became aware of the enormity of the thing that had happened to him. He
was only a boy, after all, and he was tired and hungry and terribly alone. A
line from a poem he had once read whispered through his mind in the dawn of
time . . .
I, a stranger and afraid—In a world I never made ...
Mark
coughed brokenly as sleep washed over him like a warm and comforting sea. He
was a long, long way, and a long, long time, from
home.
Chapter 8 Flames of /Morning
I I ark
slept the dreamless sleep
of complete exhaus-R J| tion and when he awoke he could not believe
that IVI he was alive. He must have died during that night I « of horror, died and gone to heaven. He did not open his eyes for a
moment, but simply lay there and enjoyed the almost forgotten luxury of
comfort. He was warm, gloriously warm, and the searing agony of his pains had
subsided to a dull ache. Even the ache seemed pleasant to him—such was the
relativity of pleasure.
Mark
opened his eyes at last, then blinked them shut again.
He tried once more, this time opening them to mere slits. He saw the sun, the
wonderful sun. And a brilliant blue sky, flecked with scudding white clouds.
Almost it seemed that he was back home again in the
hills of New Mexico; the sky was the same.
The
warmth from the sun's rays bathed his body, and he soaked them up gratefully.
The gentle heat coursed through him, wakening once more the slumbering fires
of life. Mark smiled contentedly. The sun's heat was the most enchanting thing
he had ever known.
Mark became aware of the fact that he was
lying on his back, and he rolled over on his side. The
rocks that had sheltered him were warm and friendly now, no longer the dark
behemoths of terror that they had seemed the night before. The scrub pines
stretched away down the foothills below him, and beyond them was
the grassy plains. The scent of pines was strong in the air, and sweet.
Mark saw that the sun was directly above him. It must be noon.
Cautiously,
he tested his dry throat. It was still raw and sore, but it seemed little worse
than it had been before. Mark knew that the sun had saved him for sure, the sun
and the rocks. The great boulders had shielded him from the cutting wind, and
the sun must have come up shortly after he had collapsed, warming him and
drying out his wet clothes. Mark felt like a new man, through with the terrors
of the night and ready to face life again with a fresh spirit.
Mark
got to his feet, and his new strength promptly
deserted him. He swayed dizzily and almost fell, but caught himself on one of
the boulders. He stood with his eyes closed for a moment, waiting for the spinning
in his mind to stop, and then struggled erect again. This time he made it, but
he was fearfully weak.
He
panted from the slight exertion and tasted the dryness of his throat. His mouth
felt as if it was full of cotton, cotton that had the flat, metallic taste of
copper pennies. His thirst came back with a vengeance, and with it came a
gnawing hunger.
He
had to have food—and he had to have it in a hurry. Mark moved carefully from
his retreat, every sense alert. He saw nothing that looked dangerous. There was
only the blue sky, and the sun, and some faraway tiny shadows on the plains
that must have been birds. He crawled up over the ledge, and walked slowly to
where he saw a patch of snow under a large rock. He fell to his knees and
scooped out a handful, which he forced himself to eat slowly. The snow melted
deliciously in his mouth and trickled down his dry throat. Mark ate another
handful, and another, and then he felt a little better—well enough, at any
rate, to make it to another stream. Water was everywhere in the mountains, and
he expected to have no trouble finding it.
Mark
waved a weak farewell to the little shelter that had saved his life, and made
his way back through the foothills to the edge of the marshy plain. He moved
slowly, conserving his strength. He thought for only a moment before he set out
once more into the east, determined to put distance between himself
and the half-men. Of course, there might be others ahead of him—he had no way
of knowing. But that was a chance he had to take.
Mark
kept a wary eye out, but he saw no game. He tried not to think about how hungry
he was, but he couldn't help it. He began to construct wondrous edible
fantasies as he walked along. He could see himself sitting down at a table in
his uncle's home—the little table in the kitchen, with the clean white tablecloth
on it. And there was salad, and turkey soup, and a thick charcoal-broiled steak
with hashed brown potatoes, and banana cream pie . . .
Mark smiled ruefully. It was going to be a
long time before he saw banana cream pie again. Banana cream pie was fifty
thousand years and more away . . .
He kept going, not daring yet to eat the red
berries that grew in profusion all around him. He was desperately lonely. In
many ways, his loneliness was the worst part of it. Mark had never before
realized how completely dependent he had been on other people. In the modern
world, in the world he had known, you were never truly alone. If there was
something you needed, you went to someone else and got it. If you were hungry,
you opened a can that had been processed in a
factory. If you were sick and could not move, you picked up a telephone and
help was at your side.
A telephone. If only his uncle had not gone upstairs to
answer the telephone! So long ago—or was it yet to be? If only his uncle were
with him now!
But
he wasn't. Mark could turn to no one—he would have to make it alone or not at
all. The sun felt good on his back, but the leather in his shoes had dried out
and was now stiff and hard. His feet hurt. But it couldn't be helped. He kept
going.
Finally, he noticed a small clump of shrubs
ahead of him and hurried forward as best he could. His eyes had not played
tricks on him; he knew the signs of water when he saw them. A small, still pool
bubbled out of a spring before him. The water was fairly deep, but clean and
pure. Mark could count the pebbles on the bottom. He flopped down beside the
clear water and drank his fill. The water was delicious, and he was much
refreshed. He got to his feet again, and instantly dropped to all fours and
wriggled back into the shrubbery, tugging at his holstered .45.
His heart pounded joyfully. Here was his
first real stroke of luck. Mark crossed his fingers and held his breath. If
only this dream did not dissolve in smoke like all the others!
It
didn't. As Mark watched, a stately stag walked daintily out of the brush on the
far side of the pool and sniffed the air. Then, as though convinced that he was
alone and at peace with the world, the stag lowered his muzzle and began to drink.
Presently, he was followed by two does and a small fawn. They looked like
common reindeer, or caribou, although they appeared to be slightly larger.
Too
nervous even to breathe, Mark took careful aim at the buck. His hand trembled,
and twice he lowered the gun to steady himself. One of the does sniffed
nervously at the air, and the buck raised his antlered head inquiringly. Mark
could hesitate no longer. He aimed the clumsy .45 and squeezed the trigger.
There was a smashing report, unnaturally loud in the stillness, and the buck
spun and leaped for the shrubbery behind him. Mark cried out despite himself.
He had missed!
Mark
leaped to his feet and desperately fired again. In mid-air the buck faltered.
He came down trying to run, but Mark spotted the telltale red wetness on his
left shoulder. He took careful aim but held his fire. He could ill afford to
use up another bullet, but he was prepared to do so if he had to. But it wasn't
necessary. The buck managed a few staggering steps and then collapsed in the
grass, his great sad eyes looking at Mark in a way that was almost human. The
fawn nosed the fallen buck in confusion, then followed its mother away across
the plains.
Mark came forward, his hands shaking with
excitement. He knelt beside the reindeer and fumbled for his pocketknife.
"Sorry,
old boy," he murmured, "but I never needed a meal in my life like I
need this one."
Mark
set to work, but it was tough going. The blade of his knife was razor-sharp,
but it was not made for carving. He sawed around the right foreleg, cutting
through the skin and as many tendons as he could. Then he placed one foot on
the leg between the shoulder and the cut, and attempted to break the bone by
force. In his weakened condition, it was far from easy. But he managed, and
then carved out several good cuts with his knife.
There
might be Neanderthals lurking near, but Mark reasoned that if his shots had not
drawn their attention then, nothing else would. Hungry as he was, he did not
intend to eat his meat raw. A flat rock by the pool would serve as a fireplace,
and the shrubs should kindle up into a good enough fire. Mark found enough
shrubs within twenty yards to more than satisfy his needs,
and he hacked branches from them with his pocketknife. He trimmed them of
foliage and then carefully split several of them down into sections. These he
shaved into fine slivers for kindling. He arranged the wood with meticulous
care on the flat rock, building it up from tiny shavings to fair-sized
branches. He trimmed one stout branch to a sharp, twin-forked point and he was
ready.
Mark
fished out his matches and struck one on the box. It failed to light, and he
saw that the matches were damp. He felt a sinking sensation in the pit of his
stomach and began to realize what primitive man was up against. Suppose he had to make his own knife, where would he start? Suppose he had to kindle a fire from a chunk of wood and an improvised drill? Sure,
it looked simple enough in the diagrams—but could he do it?
Mark
wasted six matches before one hissed and caught. He cupped the priceless light
in his hands and applied it to the wood shavings. The wood was damp from the
night mists, the flame flickered very feebly and
almost died. Mark realized he had never appreciated a fire before. Fires were
always something you just took for granted, but not now. He concentrated
every atom of his being upon that scanty blaze. He blew gently on it, but it
would not catch. He frantically lit another match from the tiny flame and tried
again with the same results. He knew that if he could once get a reasonably hot
blaze going, however small, the fire would catch. But how?
He needed paper, and there just wasn't any
paper.
Or was there?
With
sudden inspiration, Mark dug out his billfold from his pocket, all the while
fighting to keep some sort of flickering flame alive. The billfold was damp,
but not wet. He fumbled it open. It was dry on the inside. Hastily, he slipped
out five dollar bills. He tore one to shreds and sprinkled them gently on the
tiny spark. They hesitated and then caught with little puffs of flame. Mark
built the other four bills around them like a tent, and slipped slivers of
shaved wood in on top of them. He held his breath. The flame wavered—and then
caught with a crackle.
Mark watched the little fire heat the wood
and move on, spreading to the larger kindling and then to the branches
themselves. He
watched the fire as though he had never seen a fire before, as though it was
the most beautiful sight in the world. He watched it in utter fascination,
until the heat drove him back.
Mark
slipped the matches into his billfold and returned the billfold to his pocket.
Gratefully, he speared a reindeer steak with his twin-forked stick and held it
just above the blue point of the crackling flames. The red meat contracted and
juices fell hissing into the fire. The smell of roasting venison filled the
air, and Mark sniffed it with complete pleasure. He had never been so hungry in
his life, and nothing had ever smelled so good to him.
After
the venison had been thoroughly cooked, Mark took the steak from the forked
stick and placed it on a flat rock. He used the knife and a small stick to cut
the meat up into thick sections, and then he ate. The venison had the zestful
tang of game meat cooked over an open fire, and Mark would have declared without
a moment's hesitation that it was by all odds the most delicious meal he had
ever eaten. When he finished, he swallowed more cool water from the pool and
put another steak on the coals to cook.
Comfortable
at last, Mark lay back in the afternoon sun and just enjoyed feeling human
again. Now that he had the chance, he determined to skin the reindeer before
evening. He was not going to get caught out another night without protection of
some sort. He knew nothing about curing hides, but he figured that if he
scraped all the meat off and then dried it in the sun it would serve his
purpose and keep him warm.
Then
there was the meat. It had taken two shots to down the reindeer, and he had
used one on the Neanderthal, which left him with three shots in his
.45. He could not afford to waste the meat,
but on the other hand, he certainly could not eat it all before it spoiled.
Mark decided to cut up the choice sections, wrap them in leaves, and bury them
deep in the snow. That was as good a deepfreeze as he could ask for, and the
meat cache should keep him alive for weeks if necessary.
Mark
got up and speared the other steak, which he cut up as he had the first. He ate
this one more slowly, savoring the fine flavor, and he actually found himself
feeling uncomfortably full. Then he lay back again in
the grass and permitted himself the luxury of relaxation. It was good just to
be alive, and danger seemed a remote and unreal thing under the blue sky, with
the white clouds drifting by, the smell of flowers and green grass in the air,
and the warm afternoon sun beating gently down upon him. Good just to be alive!
Mark realized sleepily that he had never truly appreciated that before. When
you tottered on the brink of the Valley of the Shadow, and then came out once
more into the sunshine, you looked at things with new and deep-seeing eyes.
Mark
nodded, half-asleep. He rolled over on his stomach, yawning. He looked into the
still waters of the pool—and suddenly stiffened. He knew instantly that he had
been guilty of the greatest mistake of all-he had won through, only to let his
guard down when victory was in his grasp. A dark shadow was reflected in the
pool, silent, unmoving.
Someone, or something, stood behind him!
Chapter y Across the Ages
i |
OR
a long moment, Mark could
not move. To come so far, to dare so much and then to be struck down through
blind carelessness—it was hard to take. Fool, his
mind whispered to him. Fool!
Steeling himself to
calmness, unwilling to surrender to fate no matter how tough things got, Mark
snaked his hand toward his .45, moving very slowly in order not to excite any
suspicion. It was a fortunate circumstance, he knew, that
the .45 was not known as a weapon in this era. If your enemy thinks that you
are helpless, he is apt to be careless. And when your helplessness actually
consists of a loaded .45—
Mark
drew the .45. There was still no sound behind him. Very cautiously, almost inch
by inch, Mark began to roll over on his back where he could snap a shot with
some hope of success. Still not a sound from the figure he had seen in the
pool. Mark tensed himself and whipped over on his back, his finger already contracting
on the trigger of the .45 even as its stubby muzzle swung down on its target.
In
the nick of time, Mark held his fire.
A
man stood watching him. Not a half-man, not a
Neanderthal, but a man. He carried a bow at the ready, with a feathered arrow taut against the
bowstring. He was tall, perhaps a shade under six
feet, and he was a magnificent physical specimen. He was bronzed from the sun,
but recognizably white. He was dressed neatly in furs, with his powerful arms
and legs bare. His hair was long and black, but neatly arranged and tied with a
rawhide thong. His face was broad and strong, and he reminded Mark of a tall
Indian, though he lacked Mongoloid characteristics.
Mark
looked at the man, and the man looked at Mark. Both
seemed equally surprised, and uncertain of how to proceed. Neither dared to
lower his guard, yet neither seemed ready to kill without cause. Mark realized
that the man could have killed him at any time, and that he even now considered
Mark unarmed. The man was evidently not a killer unless he was prompted, but
one glance into his cold black eyes convinced Mark that death would be swift
and sudden if he made a wrong move.
The
scene held, a moment frozen in time. Mark did not want to shoot, but on the
other hand he could not know when the stranger would take a notion to release
that arrow. He waited. The man waited. The sun seemed to stop in the blue
afternoon sky, watching. Mark noted that he was sweating, and not with heat.
"Orn?" said the man suddenly, his voice deep and
steady. It sounded like a question.
Mark
felt keenly the language barrier that stood between them. The man had asked him
something, and waited for an answer. But what could he say?
"Friend," Mark said, feeling that
it was best to say something, even if it could not be understood. He spoke
slowly and as calmly as he could. "I am your friend."
The
man looked at him, unmoving. His black eyes were unreadable. The arrow did not
waver. Mark wondered at the strength that held that taut bow as steadily as a
rock.
"Orn?"
the man asked again.
Mark
hesitated and then very slowly he got to his feet. The man stepped back
instantly, and the bow tensed still more. Mark managed a smile. Should he
shoot?
"I
am your friend," he said again. Cautiously, so as not to alarm the man, he
raised his left hand, palm outward, in a sign of peace. With his right, he held
the .45 at the ready. The man watched with intelligent eyes, but it was at
once obvious that the sign meant nothing to him. Mark lowered his hand and
smiled again. The man did not move, nor did the bow relax in any way.
"Orn?" the man asked once more, his voice hard. This
time it sounded like an ultimatum.
Mark's
finger tensed on the trigger, but he could not forget that this man had spared
his life when he might have killed him in cold blood. The man was an unknown
factor. What was he like? Mark had to know before he could come to any
understanding with him. If only he could make him understand that he was not an
enemy!
With
sudden inspiration, Mark moved very slowly over to the ashes of the fire. The
man's eyes followed him, but he made no move. Mark reached over and picked up
one of the reindeer steaks that he had cut but not cooked. He held it out to
the man with his left hand, still holding the .45 in his right, ready for
instant action. The man looked at the meat, and his grip on the bow relaxed
just a trifle. Mark started toward him, holding out the meat. At once, the man
backed away again and the bow tensed in his hands.
This
was a crucial moment, and Mark knew it. The friendship or the hostility of this
fur-clad man might very well mean the difference between life and death to him
in this strange world. Mark hesitated and then placed the steak on a rock at
his feet. He pointed to it, and he pointed to the man. Then he backed slowly
away, leaving the meat unprotected.
The
man watched him, his face still expressionless. A long minute passed. Neither moved. Finally, with sudden decision, the man
relaxed his bow. He took the arrow and replaced it in a hide quiver on his
shoulder. He stepped forward, still not taking his eyes off Mark, and picked up
the meat. He smiled, showing fine white teeth.
Mark
smiled back and holstered his gun. He realized that the man was not placing
himself in Mark's power, at least not to his way of thinking. He still thought
of Mark as unarmed, and his putting aside of his bow just meant that he had
abandoned the idea of killing Mark, at least for the present. No doubt he
figured that he could handle Mark with his bare hands if it came to that, and
looking at the man's bronzed muscles Mark did not question his ability to do
so.
The
man evidently did not eat his meat raw. He walked over to the ashes of the fire
and stirred them up. He threw some shrubs on, and kindled a new blaze from the
still-hot coals of the old. Using the same stick Mark had used, and looking
with interest at the sharpness of the points on the double fork, he roasted his
steak. Permitting it to cool only slightly, he picked up the
meat in his hands and gnawed at it with great satisfaction. Then he
washed off his hands in the pool and sat down a short distance from Mark,
looking at him curiously.
The
strange man did not try to speak, clearly having proved to his own
satisfaction that he could not make himself understood. It was probably no
novelty to him, Mark thought, to run across a man like himself who did not
speak his language. Doubtless his people were not organized into anything
larger than extended family groups or bands, and each group might very well
have a tongue of its own. It was possible, however, that there were a few
words generally understood by several local groups, of which the term "orn" was no doubt one example. What did it mean?
Mark
had received thorough linguistic training from his uncle, but his training was
of little help to him in the present situation. A word might mean anything, of
course. A word was not a thing. A word was a symbol that stood for whatever a
group of people had agreed to have it stand for. A word like "orn" might stand for literally anything, and the only
clue that Mark had to go on was its context, the situation in which it was
used. At a rough guess, he figured that the word probably meant
"friend" or something like that. Used as a question, it could carry
the notion of asking whether Mark was hostile or peaceful, friend or enemy.
Following that line of reasoning, Mark could see that if his guesses were
correct, all he had to do was answer him with the same word, inflected as a
statement, telling the man that he was, indeed, a
friend. He toyed with the idea of doing just that, but decided against it. He
could be mistaken, and that very easily. For example, "orn"
might well mean "enemy" and if Mark replied in kind, he might get an
arrow in his chest for his efforts.
Mark
decided to let well enough alone for the present, but he was eager to
establish some sort of understanding with the man. Savage though he doubtless
was, he could be a valuable ally. After some reflection, Mark realized that he
could not very well bury his meat and then simply stay in the area. He was
still too close to the Neanderthals for comfort, and he did not see how he
could ever make his way back to the space-time machine without being seen. He
was trapped in the past, and the sooner he accepted the fact and planned
accordingly, the better off he would be.
A
sudden, cold gust of wind bent back the grasses of the plains, and Mark became
abruptly aware of a sort of brooding oppressiveness in the air. He looked up,
and saw that dark clouds had drifted overhead, unseen in the excitement of the
stranger's appearance. The sun was low on the horizon, and Mark moved closer to
the dying fire.
The
wind sighed eerily across the plains that only a few moments ago had been warm
and sunlit. It was a wind that chilled Mark to the marrow—not the gentle breeze
that felt so fine on the first balmy days of spring, but the icy, bitter wind
that whipped through the cold chasms of winter. And it was going to rain, if it
did not indeed turn to snow before it fell. In an instant, the grassy plains
that had seemed so pleasant were stripped down to their essential nakedness.
They were raw and hard, and life upon them was no laughing matter.
But, astoundingly, the stranger laughed. He
laughed softly and pointed overhead to the dark and ominous clouds. His meaning
was clear enough—they were in for a storm. The man got up and took a burning
torch from the fire. Then he beckoned toward Mark with a gesture that was
unmistakable and started off across the field to the mountain foothills near by. Mark did not hesitate. Leaving the reindeer and
the pool, he followed the stranger's invitation and did his best to keep up
with him.
The
man set a rapid pace under the threatening skies, but Mark stayed by his side.
He was getting stronger now, and he knew that this hard dawn-world would either
make a man or break him. There wasn't any in-between.
Thunder
marched, rumbling heavily across the wind-swept plains, and lightning flickered
like ghostly torches on the other side of the world. The stranger looked about
him with keen eyes until finding what he sought—two large boulders that sat end
to end, forming a solid V of shelter. He then found two poles of dead wood,
each about four feet long, and cut notches in them with a stone knife. He
placed the poles in the ground in front of the boulders, and laid another pole
over the top of the V. Mark
understood what he was doing now, and helped him find more dead branches, about
ten feet long, which they placed lengthwise from the crosspole
to the ground behind the boulders. Then they gathered grass and some leafy
shrubs and piled them on top of the frame of wood,
following this with more wood to act as weights
against the wind.
They
had a very serviceable lean-to now, and they kindled the fire up just in the
entrance. Mark could see the rain coming in a vast gray sheet across the plains, and he hurried to gather some wood to keep the fire
going during the night. Then he dived into the shelter with the dawn man, and
not a moment too soon. The rain hit with a hiss and a roar, while the thunder
crashed over their heads as though determined to rip the shelter to bits by
the power of sound alone.
It
was quite comfortable in the lean-to, and Mark looked at his companion and
wondered how to go about making some progress toward understanding. He decided
to try to learn the man's name as a first step.
In
the firelight he pointed to himself. "Mark," he said, shouting to
make himself heard above the smashing of the storm.
The
man watched him intently, but made no sign. Mark's spirits fell. Had he perhaps
overestimated the man's intelligence? What did he know about him really?
"Mark," he said,
trying again. "Mark."
His
companion nodded slowly. "Mark?" he asked, pointing. The word sounded
very strange on his hps; it was recognizable, but
seemed to have been somehow translated into another language.
Mark
was delighted. "Mark," he said again, and then pointed at the man.
This
time his companion got it at once. He pointed to himself. "Tlaxcan," he said slowly. "Tlaxcan." He smiled.
Mark smiled back. They could not go much
farther with the storm raging around them, but they had made an important
start. Mark listened to the rain and the thunder, and was thoroughly glad that
he was under the lean-to. The slow hours whispered by, and Mark saw that the
man had gone to sleep. Mark closed his eyes too, but sleep was slow in coming.
The storm howled miserably in the night, and he could not forget that he was
not two feet away from a savage who for all he knew might take a notion to
knife him at any moment. Mark found it difficult to think of the man as a
savage, but that, by definition, was what he was. Mark told himself that he
trusted the silent figure who shared the shelter with him, but nevertheless he
found that sleep was slow in coming.
Who
was this man? Clearly, he was no Neanderthal, and was not even related to that
weird and hideous race. Who were his people, where had he come from? Mark
thought he knew, and the germ of a plan was beginning
to plant itself in his mind. A plan that might one day get him back to the lead
sphere of the space-time machine, cut off from him now as surely as if it had
been whisked away to another world.
It
was a long night. The storm whistled around the little lean-to, and the cold
wind and the rain sighed up the mountain valleys. Twice, Mark crawled over and
put fresh wood on the fire—and twice he saw TIaxcan's
eyes open and watch him. The man evidently slept like
a cat, and no more intended to put himself at Mark's mercy than Mark cared to
put himself at TIaxcan's.
Mark
thought of his uncle, there in the night and the howling storm. His uncle would
be terribly, frantically worried, he knew. Mark was all he lived for, and if
something happened to him, there was no telling what might happen to Doctor
Nye. It was very difficult to shake off the notion that every minute, every
hour, that passed was torture to his uncle, far away in time, but such was not
the case. Hard as it was to understand, the fact was that time was not
necessarily going by at the same rate of speed for both Mark and his uncle.
That is, for every hour that passed here in the long-ago world of the Old Stone
Age, another hour did not
have to pass for Doctor Nye
in 1953. Mark could see that a little ingenuity would save his uncle most of
his suffering. For instance, if he could once get back to the space-time
machine, he could set the controls for a time not more than fifteen minutes
after his uncle had first dashed upstairs to answer the telephone. Thus, even
if months or years passed here in the dawn of time, even if Mark lived his life
and became an old man, only fifteen minutes would have passed in the life of
Doctor Nye. It was hard to believe, but Mark knew that it was true.
As
the black night wore on into morning, Mark grew drowsy and gradually relaxed.
It was good not to be alone any more, and even though he could not talk to Tlaxcan he felt a genuine kinship with him. He looked
across at his dark sleeping form, and the night seemed somehow less cold and
fearful. How strange it was, he reflected, that they should have met. What were
the odds on any two people meeting in the twisted destinies of the world? What
were the odds on them,
two who had lived their
lives separated by a gulf of almost fifty-two thousand years?
Mark did not know the odds. There in the
shadows
of early morning, with the dying storm sighing
around their small shelter, he knew only one thing. Man had met man, across the
ages, and he was glad.
Mark
slept, and his heart was lighter than he had thought it would ever be again.
When he awoke, the sunlight was streaming into the lean-to and the storm was
over. He rolled over, and the cold laughter of despair once more mocked him in
his mind.
Tlaxcan was gone.
Chapter JO The Cro-Magnons
|
ark was up in an instant and out in the open air. Perhaps Tlaxcan
had only awakened early and stepped outside to wait for him. He-looked around
hopefully, but Tlaxcan was not in sight. Mark sat
down on a rock, wondering. Where had he gone? Why?
Then
he noticed Tlaxcan's stone knife on the ground in
front of the lean-to. He walked over and picked it up. Surely, Tlaxcan would not have wandered off and forgotten something
that represented many hours of labor for him. He must have left the knife
behind intentionally, as a sign that he would return. Where had he gone? Well,
he had taken his bow and arrows with him, and that suggested that he had gone
out after food.
Mark
climbed to the top of a large rock and shaded his eyes with his hand. He judged
that Tlaxcan would probably hunt on the open plains,
which certainly seemed to be teeming with game, and so he looked for him there.
He saw nothing at first. There was only the grassy expanse of open country, so
deceptively peaceful under the morning sun. A faint, fresh breeze rustled among
the flowers, a joking reminder of the bitter gale that had raged the night
before.
Mark saw a herd of animals in the distance,
grazing on the plains, and at first he thought they were bison. But as he
looked more closely he changed his mind. It was difficult to tell so far away,
but the herd looked for all the world like wild
horses, with several small colts frisking happily about in the sunshine. Mark
tried to remember whether or not there had been horses in the year 50,000 B.C., and then he smiled. There the horses were,
and after all was he not the world's greatest authority on this Ice Age? He
was the only modern man who had actually been there.
Then
Mark saw something else. To his left, over the spot where he had left the dead
reindeer by the pool, a cloud of great black birds hovered on widespread wings,
drifting in the breeze, landing, and gliding in endless circles. Mark
shuddered. Vultures, the grim scavengers of the dead . . .
He
became aware of still another cloud of the devil birds to his right, and it was
a moment before the significance of the sight sunk in. Tlaxcan!
The vultures would not venture near his kill if he was all right himself. Of
course, he could have left a carcass behind him and started back for the
shelter, but if that was the case, either he was moving very slowly or else the
vultures had moved in with unusual speed. Something told Mark that there was
no time to waste.
He
grabbed up Tlaxcan's stone knife and drew his .45.
Taking a careful sight on the cloud of vultures so as not to miss his
directions, he scrambled down from the rock and left their camp on the double.
He did not try to sprint, knowing that he had too far to go for that, but kept
to a steady trot that covered the ground with rapid speed. He loped out of the
foothills and onto the grassy plain, and then cut eastward to where he could
still see an occasional vulture flying higher than his fellows.
It
took him over half an hour, and at his approach the great ugly birds rose
higher into the air, their gruesome naked necks arched in dismay. Carefully,
Mark picked his way through the shrubs until he saw that his fears had been
only too well warranted. Tlaxcan had propped himself
up against the dead body of his prey, a very large wolflike
animal that looked something like an overgrown Arctic fox. The wolf-thing was
dead, but it had given a good account of itself. Tlaxcan
had driven two arrows completely through the beast, but Tlaxcan
himself had been clawed badly on his left shoulder. The blood had run down his
side and dried in a dark mat, although it was still thickly red at the wound.
Somehow, Tlaxcan had retained his senses and had
actually been using his bow to good effect with his shoulder clawed and bitten
fearfully, as one dead buzzard with an arrow through its neck mutely testified.
Tlaxcan had heard him coming,
and Mark once again found himself with one of Tlaxcan's
deadly arrows staring him in the face. But Tlaxcan
recognized him at once and lowered his bow. He smiled feebly and tried to get
up, but couldn't make it. His tense face was white beneath its tan, and Mark could
see that he had lost a lot of blood.
Mark came forward and knelt beside the fallen
man. He was still oppressed by the fact that he could not speak and make
himself understood, but Tlaxcan solved this problem
for him neatly. He put his right hand on Mark's shoulder and looked searchingly
into his eyes, then lowered his hand and sank back. Mark understood—Tlaxcan was putting himself in Mark's hands. Facing almost
certain death if he were abandoned on the plains, he was
trusting a stranger to save him.
Mark
examined the wound in Tlaxcan's shoulder. It was deep
and undoubtedly painful, but not fatal if it could be properly taken care of. Mark was no doctor, but he could see that what he had to fear was
the danger of infection, plus weakness that would result if the bleeding was
not stopped in a hurry. He looked around and spotted the telltale line
of dense vegetation that indicated one of the many postglacial streams flowing
down out of the mountains and across the great plain. Tlaxcan's
wound should be cleaned, and for that he would need water, but the stream was
at least half a mile away. Mark again looked closely at the wound, and saw that
it had stopped bleeding for the present. He signed for Tlaxcan
to keep still, and then built a quick fire that caught more easily than had his
first such attempt.
Tlaxcan watched with avid interest, taking puzzled
note of both Mark's matches and his sharp metal knife that folded so
miraculously in and out of itself. Mark cut a strip from the flank of Tlaxcan's kill and broiled it on a stick. Acting on a
hunch, he also collected some of the wolf-thing's still-warm blood in a crude
container he fashioned out of skin and gave it to Tlaxcan.
Tlaxcan gulped it down with obvious relish, and then
ate the meat that Mark had cooked for him.
Mark
let him rest a few minutes and then judged that he was strong enough to make it
to the stream. He put out the fire and got himself under Tlaxcan's
good right shoulder, lifting him up. Not a sound came from
Tlaxcan's lips, not even the whisper of a moan, although
the pain must have been terrific. Taking it easy, Mark supported him as they
slowly walked the long half-mile and then lowered him to the ground again by
the banks of the stream, which was large enough to qualify as a small river.
Tlaxcan's shoulder was bleeding again, but that
couldn't be helped. A little bleeding wouldn't hurt, probably, and would even
assist in cleaning the wound. Mark carefully washed it out with the ice-cold
water, which stopped the bleeding in short order, as the veins and muscles
contracted with the cold, permitting the blood to coagulate. He took out his
handkerchief, which was still clean, and folded it into a bandage which he
placed over the wounded shoulder. Then he tore a long strip from his shirttail,
and after some difficulty, tied the bandage in place.
It
was now early afternoon, and Mark judged that it would be unwise to try to move
farther that day. He spent the afternoon in rigging a lean-to shelter and
building a fire, and then sat down by Tlaxcan's side.
Tlaxcan had not moved, but now his color was better
and most of the tenseness had gone out of his face. He dug into his skin pouch
with his good arm, took something out, and handed it to Mark.
For
a moment, Mark did not understand what the thing was. It was one of those
common, ordinary things that we become so used to seeing in one form that we do
not recognize the same article when it is made out of something else. It was a
length of some sort of organic material, about six feet long, with a curved
bit of bone or ivory attached to the end.
Mark hesitated, puzzled. Tlaxcan
pointed to the gurgling waters of the little river, and then Mark got it. The
thing was a fishing line! He hadn't thought of fish before, but the streams
must be full of them. He smiled. Fishing was something that he was an expert
in, and it was nice to know that there was at least one thing he could do as
well as a savage who had had the ill luck to be born many thousands of years
before the blessings of civilization.
Mark examined the fishhook and decided that
it was made of ivory. It was excellently constructed, sharp and with a definite
barb, and it was fastened to the line by tying the line through a hole punched
in the ivory, in the fashion of modern fishhooks. Mark looked at the soft river
earth and considered digging for worms, but changed his mind and caught a
grasshopper instead. He put the grasshopper on the ivory hook and wandered
down the riverbank until he came to a beautiful dark pool behind a large rock
that blocked the current. The pool was clear and cold and deep, and it had fish written all over it in letters that fishermen of any age could read
without difficulty.
He
dropped the line in and got an instant, thrilling strike. He yanked the line,
felt the lithe, tugging pull at the other end, and knew he had a fish. He could
not help thinking of how much Doctor Nye would have enjoyed a chance to fish in
this paradise—how hard it was, even now, to realize that his uncle was far, far
away, cut off from him by the gulf of centuries, in another world that in a
sense was yet to be born.
Mark
landed the fish after a brief fight, and was faintly surprised to find that he
recognized the fish at once. If he was expecting some strange marine monster of
the type so dear to the hearts of writers of lurid prehistoric fiction, he was
disappointed. The fish was a perfectly ordinary salmon, although a beauty that
must have weighed close to four pounds. Mark broke the fish's neck and cleaned
it speedily with his knife. It was the work of but a moment, since salmon have
no scales and are an easy fish to clean.
Mark
started back to Tlaxcan, the fish held proudly in his
hand. He realized that he was beginning to learn, in a way he would never
forget, the first law of primitive life: you had to eat, and getting and
preparing food took a lot more time than it did when all you had to do was to
stroll into a restaurant and order a meal. It almost seemed to him that since
he had stepped out of the space-time machine—and he had come out in the first
place in search of food—it had taken every single minute of his time just to
stay alive. If you weren't hunting something, then something was hunting you.
Mark shuddered, remembering the horrible Neanderthals who might even now be
lurking behind every bush, every rock, hidden in every twisted shadow . . .
He
cooked and they ate the delicious salmon, and then passed a peaceful night in
the lean-to. With the coming of the dawn, Tlaxcan was
on his feet again and amazingly ready to go. Mark watched his companion with
envy. He must have a constitution like an ox. Mark remembered his
steel-hardness when he had supported him the day before. With a wound such as
he had received, he should have been helpless for days, but here he was almost
as good as new.
Side
by side now, the two struck out for what was, to Mark, an unknown destination.
He took careful note of their direction, so that he would not hopelessly lose
the space-time machine. He and Tlaxcan were still
moving almost due east, skirting the mountain foothills, and going directly
away from the valley of the Neanderthals.
The
warm, sun-drenched days passed, and with them the bitter-cold, mysterious
nights. Mark and Tlax-can walked on across the great
plain, detouring twice to get around great green lakes carved out of solid rock
by the retreating glaciers. Mark could still see an occasional glitter far to
the north, and he was convinced that it was indeed the last of the glacial ice,
an isolated section, probably, since vegetation had already come back on the
plain, and pines dotted the mountain foothills. He made up his mind to get a
good look at the ice if he ever saw an opportunity. It would be a real thrill
to be able to look down on the vast ice sheet that so recently had covered most
of Europe, and which even in 1953 had not completely disappeared. Few people
realized, in 1953, that they were not yet altogether out of the Ice Age.
Enormous sheets of ice, thousands of feet thick, the remnants of those which
had licked out across the world, still crushed the earth of Greenland and
Antarctica in modern times. The ice was not gone, and it was a safe bet that it
would come again, as it had come before, reaching back into the lands where it
had been foolishly forgotten.
Mark
did not waste this precious interlude of time, but rather employed it to learn Tlaxcan's language as best he could. It was out of the
question, as well as impractical, to try to teach Tlaxcan
English—not because Tlaxcan was stupid, but because
English was an impossibly difficult tongue to learn in a hurry, as well as
being quite useless in 50,000 B.C. Tlaxcan s language was simpler, although by no means
easy. There were not many words, but each one had a different meaning according
to the way in which it was said. Mark was handicapped by not having any books
to learn from, nor any organized rules to help him, but he made slow progress
and began to make himself understood in simple
sentences. For one thing, he learned what Tlaxcan
had been doing out on the plain when he had been attracted by the strange sound
of Mark's shots. Tlaxcan had been scouting for the quaro herds, on which his people placed their primary dependence, when they
could get them. Tlaxcan said that he had failed to
find the quaro herds, so they couldn't have been bison, reindeer,
or horses, all of which they had seen in profusion. From his description, Mark
got an impression of a mighty elephant of some kind, and, putting two and two
together, Mark thought he knew what Tlaxcan had been
after. Mammoths!
As
they went on, Mark at last had some time to think. Given a little chance to
rest, his imagination went busily to work. Where, exactly, was he? What, in
modern times, had become of the great plain on which they were walking? As
nearly as he could figure it, they were somewhere near the modern line between
France and Germany. It was a little frightening to think, as they walked along
under the sunny skies, that all the teeming millions of France and Germany were
as yet unborn, dust and less than dust. No man in the world had yet heard the
name of Napoleon, or of Hitler. Mark looked about him, wondering. What history
would be written, how many men would die on this grassy plain before the end of
time? In his mind's eye, as he walked through the grass in the dawn of man, he
could almost see the great plains twisted with ugly slit trenches, the mighty
guns, yet uninvented, belching flame and death from
black muzzles.
Mark
could not help thinking, there in the sun with Tlaxcan
at his side, of the relativity of it all. Here he was, in 50,000 B.C., and the beautiful plain was, as he knew all too well, deceptively
deadly. Wild animals roamed through its grasses in dense herds, and the hideous
Neanderthals prowled its surface in wicked packs. It was no place to be alone;
it was hard and tough and demanding. But would almost fifty-two thousand years
of civilization make it any safer? He doubted it. No matter what frightful
danger waited for him beyond the smoke-blue horizons, he knew that there were at
least no atom bombs to vaporize his body into nothingness.
Mark
walked along beside Tlaxcan and reflected upon what a
vast difference a companion made. When he had been alone, this savage world had
been an impossible one. He had been lonely and afraid. But now he had a
friend, for that was how he thought of Tlaxcan now. Tlaxcan was no longer a mysterious being from the dawn of
time, nor was he an illiterate savage. He was Tlaxcan.
A man who laughed a lot in a world that was no laughing
matter, a man whom Mark was proud to have at his side. He had a friend, Tlaxcan, and he could depend on him. That made all the
difference, he knew, the difference between living and dying. That was the
secret behind the survival of the fittest. The fittest did indeed survive, but
he was fittest because he had the one secret that made him a man—the secret of
friendship. It was co-operation, one man helping another man,
that had enabled man to survive in a harsh world. Alone, man was little
more than an animal. But together, united, he was king. They seemed to know
that much in 50,000 B.C. Had they forgotten, Mark wondered, in 1953?
On
the fifth day, just as the blood-red sun was gently sinking to the far horizon,
Mark and Tlaxcan left the whispering plains and
walked up through the foothills and into a secluded mountain valley. The valley
narrowed as they continued along it, until it was barely wide enough to hold
the foaming mountain stream that rushed through it, and in the distance they
could hear a roaring thunder as of a mighty storm.
After
a short time, the valley turned sharply and they rounded the corner on a
well-worn path that ran to one side and slightly above the swiftly flowing
water. They rounded the corner—and there it was. Mark stopped in his tracks. He
had never seen this place before, but he knew instantly, without question, that
they had come to the end of their journey.
Mark
Nye had known beauty before. He was no calf-eyed weakling who was forever
gasping about the beauty of it all, nor did he often speak of beauty in any
form. But beauty he had known nonetheless—the beauty of sunrise in the New
Mexico mountains, the beauty of old Rome at night when
the ghost legions marched, the lonely beauty of frosted city lights in the
early morning when the city slept. He was no stranger to beauty, but he had
never seen the equal of the sight which now confronted him.
In the blue distance at the head of the
valley, a mighty torrent of water thundered down from the mountains in a
spectacular waterfall. It smashed down for fully one hundred feet into a rock
basin, where the white clouds of spray were turned all the colors of the
rainbow by the setting sun. From the basin, the water boomed down in a lovely
double cascade, one stream on either side of the basin. The cascades dropped
into a deep, bubbling pool, and from the pool streamed the water that flowed
through the valley, cold and sparkling in the last light of evening.
Thick
green grass covered the valley floor like a soft carpet, and clumps of
sweet-smelling pines grew around the edges and up into the surrounding hills.
The air was incredibly fresh and clean, with just a hint of campflre
smoke and the delicious smell of roasting meat. Under the pines, and spread
somewhat up into the hills, were large and well-constructed lean-to structures,
built with a framework of poles covered with great cured skins. In front of the
lean-tos, small fires blazed cheerily.
Upon
the rock ledges that broke out from the hillsides, Mark could see the dark
openings of a labyrinth of caves. Within the depths of the caves, but not too
far from the entrance, fires crackled with heat and light.
The
valley was not silent, but neither was it noisy. A soft roar from the cascades
in the distance filled the air with a gentle backdrop, and there was the
humming sound of many voices. From one of the caves came the sharp tick-tick of rock striking against rock.
The
valley seemed to be filled with people—not that there were really so many
there, certainly not over sixty or seventy, but it was the most people Mark had
seen together in a long time. There were men, women, and children, young and
old. The men and the women were dressed in furs, like Tlaxcan,
and the children, for the most part, were as innocent of clothing as the
day they were born. Mark noticed that many of
the women wore necklaces and bracelets of sea shells, which indicated either
that these people were closer to the sea than he had
imagined, or were in contact with those who were. The men wore charms of bone,
shell, or ivory. Mark saw no animals of any sort about, although he did hear
an occasional growl from one of the empty-looking caves that sounded like a
wolf or dog of some kind.
As
Mark looked about him in amazement, his earlier hunch about Tlaxcan
was abundantly confirmed. There could be no doubt about it whatever now. Mark
knew beyond question that he saw before him a camp of astonishing people. He
knew that he was looking upon one of the most remarkable cultures in all the
fantastic history of mankind.
He was in the midst of the
Cro-Magnons.
Chapter 11 The Painted Man
ven as Mark watched, he became aware of a group of men
coming toward him. There were ten of them, all strongly built, and they were
armed with bows and arrows, spears, axes, and long weapons that looked like
harpoons. They did not speak, nor did they smile. They seemed to ignore Tlaxcan as though he wasn't there.
The
warriors headed straight for Mark, and their expressions told all too plainly
that they meant business.
Mark
hesitated, knowing that he was in a ticklish position. He noted with
considerable satisfaction that his nerves were steady; there was little danger
now of a hysterical outburst. That was good—necessary, even. He had to think
his way out of this, he had to make the right
decisions. There was no time for mistakes, and he knew that he would get no
second chances.
The
Cro-Magnons came closer, threatening. The humming roar of the waterfall seemed
to hang suspended in the air of evening, waiting.
Mark
considered drawing his .45 and making a fast break for it, but discarded the
idea at once. He had no place to go, and knew that he could not last long alone
in this strange world. His future was here with
these people, or else he had no future at all.
He
looked at Tlaxcan, quiet by his side. Had he led him
into a trap? Had he taken Mark back to his own people as a prisoner, a slave, a
trophy of the hunt? Mark didn't think so. Although as yet they could not talk
fluently to each other, he had gotten to know Tlaxcan
pretty well during their trip across the plains. Tlaxcan
was young, possibly no older than Mark, although he seemed adult in every way.
He had a refreshing and genuine habit of laughing wholeheartedly at little
incidents; everything, to him, had a humorous side that he invariably sought
out to laugh at. But it was not a stupid laughter, the laughter of an idiot who
knew no better. It was the laughter of a man who lived in a tough, hard world
and had learned that it was wiser to laugh than to cry. Behind Tlaxcan's laughter, deep in his dark eyes, there was cold
steel. He was not a man to fool with, and, if Mark was any judge, he was not a
man to betray a friend.
Once
again, he put his trust in Tlaxcan. He was not sorry.
At once, as though sensing Mark's decision, Tlaxcan
stepped forward, between Mark and the oncoming warriors.
"Orn," Tlaxcan said clearly,
pointing at Mark. Then he spoke again, too rapidly for Mark to catch what was
said. The Cro-Magnons slowed their pace, but they kept coming. "Tlan!" ordered Tlaxcan
coldly. "Stop!"
The
warriors kept coming. Tlaxcan slipped an arrow from
his quiver and fitted it to his bowstring. He drew the bow taut, and it was
clear that he was not bluffing. He was ready to shoot. The warriors stopped. At
the time, Mark wondered greatly at the fact that Tlaxcan
was quite evidently ready to put an arrow through a lifelong friend for the
sake of someone he had known for a few days, but the explanation was simple
enough. The band of Cro-Magnons was seldom together in the valley as a unit,
each extended family group following the herds alone for most of the year. The
warriors who confronted them now were not members of Tlaxcan's
immediate kinship group, and so were not close to him. Probably he had not seen
them twenty times in his life. They were known not to be enemies, but that was
all. They were not his personal friends.
For
a long moment, the tense scene held. Then five more warriors came up and
arranged themselves behind Tlaxcan. Tlaxcan greeted them by name, and
they were obviously friends of his. They looked at Mark coldly, but offered him
no harm as long as he was under Tlaxcan's protection.
Mark began to realize that helping Tlaxcan when he
had been in trouble was the smartest thing he could have done. Strangers around
here were clearly presumed to be enemies unless they could prove otherwise in a
hurry. They were declared guilty until proven innocent—if they had time to
prove anything before someone ran a spear through them. With Mark's halting
command of the language, he would not have had a prayer without Tlaxcan.
The
ten warriors milled about uncertainly for a moment, and then went back the way
they had come. Mark breathed more easily again. He turned and smiled at the
five friends of Tlaxcan and, after Tlaxcan had explained the situation to them, several of
them smiled in return. They did not, however, welcome Mark with open arms. Mark
knew that getting himself accepted into this tribe as
an equal was apt to prove something of a job. Desperately, he wished that he
could talk with these people in a way that would make them understand that he
meant them no harm.
"I
am your brother," he said in their language. "I come in peace."
That was the best he could do, and he saw Tlaxcan
smiling at his accent.
Four
of the warriors did not respond, but the fifth, an older man of perhaps forty
years, iron-hard but with streaks of gray in his long hair, came forward and
put his hand on Mark's shoulder, much as Tlaxcan had
done. "I am Nrani," he said in a friendly
voice. "I am Tlaxcan's brother. You are Tlaxcan's brother. I am your brother."
Mark
nodded, wishing fervently that he knew how to say "thank you" in
Cro-Magnon. The term "Cro-Magnon," of course, was not the name that
these people used in referring to themselves. They had been named the
Cro-Magnons because the original scientific discovery of five modern-type
skeletons had been made at the rock shelter of Cro-Magnon in the French village
of Les Eyzies during the late 1800's. The Cro-Magnon
peoples themselves, living as they did in the dawn of
man, had never heard the name by which they were to be known to science. They
referred to themselves as the Danequa, with the
middle e pronounced as in the English
"neigh" or like the a in "ate." Literally translated, Danequa
meant simply "the people," which, as Mark knew, was a common practice
among isolated primitive groups. Many primitive societies thought they were the
only human beings in the world, all others being mere animals.
With
the five warriors for an escort, Mark and Tlaxcan
made their way across the valley floor and climbed
a narrow trail up to one of the rocky ledges
where the caves were. The sun was gone now, although there was still light
enough to see by. The cold night wind was already whipping through the hills,
and in the distance the great waterfall sang its lullaby of power. The whole
scene seemed to Mark to partake of the unreal, of fantasy. It was a moment
sliced out of legend, the time-frozen landscape of a dream . . .
Or
was it the other world, the world of 1953, that was a
dream? His uncle, the space-time machine, his dog, Fang, did they really exist?
Mark shook his head. It was useless to think such thoughts. He was where he
was, and his problem right now was staying alive.
When
they reached the ledge, no one spoke. The people there looked at him curiously,
neither hostile nor friendly. They seemed to be waiting. Waiting for what? Mark
soon found out.
From
one of the caves there came an eerie, high-pitched whistle. This was repeated
six times, and then there was a sort of chant, delivered in a rather high,
rhythmical voice. Mark could make no sense out of the chant, although he
thought he caught a familiar word now and then, mixed in between strings of
singsong syllables that were to all intents and purposes meaningless. Finally,
the chant stopped. There was a complete, hushed silence.
Out of the mouth of the cave, through the
black shadows of evening, danced a painted man. Mark did not move.
The
man came toward him in a strange, dancing motion. He hopped first on one foot
for six steps, then on the other for six steps. As he danced, his hands and
arms writhed like snakes and his head bobbed forward and backward as though
disconnected from his body. Even in the fading dead light of evening, the
colors of his body were startling. Arms, legs, face, chest, back— the man was
completely covered with brilliant paints. The paint was striped in thin series
of sixes, each series composed of red, brown, black, white, gray, and green. Shells
and ornaments of bone and ivory adorned the painted man as necklaces, arm
bracelets, and leg rattles. They clicked and whirred together with the motion
of his body, and in the silence they reminded Mark of nothing so much as the
warning whirrrr of a rattlesnake.
The
man was frightening, but Mark was not as unnerved as he would have been had he
not seen similar painted men before. He knew the grotesque dancer coming toward
him was much the same sort of official as the Neanderthal with the red band on
his forehead had been. He was a type of person that Doctor Nye had often
discussed with him, a type of person he himself had seen among the Indians. He
was a shaman, popularly known as a witch doctor.
Knowing
these facts was helpful. It changed the oncoming dancer from a supernatural
horror to an understandable human being, one who could be dealt with. But it
did not change the fact that Mark was skating on very thin ice and had to watch
his step. Knowing that the painted man was a shaman did not dispose of him—and
shamans could be dangerous.
Shamans had the power of
life or death.
A
lot depended on the individual, as always. In common with other professional
people, a shaman was a human being first and a witch doctor afterward. They
were sometimes insane, sometimes subject to fits, some-
times not. Is the driver of a car dangerous? It
depends on who the driver is, and where you happen to be. The painted man was
completely unknown to Mark; he was an X factor. What should he do?
Once
more, Tlaxcan came to his aid. He touched Mark on the
arm to reassure him and smiled his quick and ready smile.
"Orn,"
whispered Tlaxcan. "Do not be afraid."
Mark
smiled back, but his smile was a little shaky. That word "orn" was apt to be used pretty loosely from his point
of view. The painted man coming toward him might be lots of things, but if the
expression in his eyes was friendship, then Mark wanted no part of it. It
looked like the sort of friendship a vampire might feel for its victim.
The
painted man stopped. Tlaxcan at once began to talk,
speaking too rapidly for Mark to follow him. The shaman talked back, his voice
a trifle high for a man's, although not abnormally so. Then Tlaxcan
started in again, and now Mark was able to catch enough of the words to
understand the general drift of the conversation. Tlaxcan
elaborated the details of how Mark had saved his life, and then recounted the
story of how he had first come upon Mark on the plains. He spoke in awed tones
of the reindeer that Mark had killed without any weapons except a small knife,
and Mark realized that Tlaxcan was speaking the
literal truth so far as he knew it—he probably regarded the .45 as a magic
charm of some sort, or at most as a clumsy fist-ax. Tlaxcan
told about the amazing knife that was not made of stone, and he spoke of the
red flower—fire-that Mark had kindled by magic.
The shaman was visibly impressed, although he
tried not to show it and muttered something to the effect that all that was old
stuff to him and he could do it himself if he really wanted to. Tlaxcan did not contradict him, but he was plainly
skeptical.
The
shaman turned to Mark. "Come," he said, and his voice was not
entirely without fear. Mark suddenly realized that this shaman was doing a very
brave thing, from his own point of view. To him, Mark had just been represented
as no mean witch doctor himself, and for all he knew he might be out looking
for trouble. Mark relaxed a little, and after another reassuring smile from Tlaxcan he followed the shaman back across the ledge toward
the cave.
The
waterfall moaned and boomed in the distance, and night had fallen like black
snow in the valley. Despite Mark's realization that the shaman was uneasy, he
was none too confident himself. As he followed the painted man into the dark
cavern, Mark could not help wondering whether or not he would ever come out of
the cave again—alive.
The
cave was large, roomy, and dry. They turned one corner, and then proceeded down
a long, straight tunnel to where a small fire burned in a tiny chamber. The
fire, Mark noticed, fed on dry bones, not wood— a logical enough fuel source in
a land that was somewhat short on wood. The painted man did not stop, but
continued on into a larger chamber beyond. It was dark, with only enough light
coming in from the flickering fire outside to gray the air and throw great
twisting shadows on the walls.
With startling suddenness, things began to
happen. The shaman, as far as Mark could tell, stood quite still in the center
of the chamber. The chamber was otherwise empty. But weird songs, chants, and
screams filled the air, coming from the ceiling, the floor, the
corners. Voices came frpm nowhere at all, and not
only voices of humans. Bison snorted, horses nickered, lions roared, and grim trumpetings that could only have come from mighty mammoths
echoed through the cave.
Mark
shivered. In spite of himself, he edged back toward the light. Something
snarled right behind him and he stopped abruptly. Ventriloquism, his mind whispered, but he was growing
nervous nonetheless. This shaman knew his stuff; he was good.
An
eerie, violet light filled the cavern. Mark was startled. Radioactive
rocks? Some kind of glowing mineral? He didn't
know, but he could see that the painted man now had a long coat on. And in his
hands was something large, white, and gleaming. A skull.
Not
just a skull, either. A monster
skull, with two huge curving tusks of ivory. The thing was enormous.
Mark wondered wildly how in the world the shaman was holding it up, and decided
that it must be suspended on a rope of some kind that he could not see in the
gloom. The shaman looked straight at him, his eyes gleaming.
"Mark,"
he intoned, his voice like blue ice in the empty
chamber. Then his eyes looked down at the skull in his hands. "Quaro," he said distinctly. "Mammoth."
Mark
watched intently. The shaman took his hands off the skull and it hung whitely
in mid-air. A rope,
Mark reminded himself in
desperation, a
rope. A knife appeared in
the shaman's hand as if by magic, and he whipped it around in a blazing arc
into the skull of the mammoth.
The skull disappeared. That was all. Disappeared.
Mark gasped, and realized for the first time
that he had been holding his breath. He thanked his lucky star that he knew
enough anthropology and Indian lore to interpret what he had just witnessed.
Unless he was very much mistaken, the import of what he had seen was simple
enough, in theory at least. He had come into the tribe, seeking status as a
member. Very well. The tribe, naturally, wanted no
weaklings, no incompetents. Mark had to prove himself first. How? In a way that would leave no doubt of his manhood. He had to kill a mammoth.
That,
Mark knew, was easier said than done. It was out of the question that he could
kill a mammoth with a pistol shot, even with a .45. He did not know how these
people went about hunting the giant monsters— surely not just with a bow and
arrow—but he could only hope that they didn't do it alone; he would need plenty
of help. He had a feeling, however, that he would not be asked to do anything
impossible. He simply had to show that he could do what any other man of this
time could do—no more and definitely no less. That, too, he knew, would take
some doing.
The
shaman led the way out of the dark chamber, back into the small cave room where
the fire was. The show was over. Even in 50,000 B.C., it appeared, magicians had found that magic worked better in
the dark where no one could see too clearly. But it had been a spectacular
performance, judged by any standards. Mark noticed that the shaman was having
trouble holding back a satisfied smile. He was evidently well pleased with his
night's work.
The
painted man, now dressed in a heavily decorated coat, placed his arm on Mark's
shoulder in the
Danequa gesture of friendship. "Qualxen,"
he said, giving his name. Mark realized that he was being honored, and smiled
his appreciation. lie returned the gesture, giving his
own name despite the fact that Qualxen obviously
already knew it.
There
was an awkward moment of hesitation, and Mark figured that the shaman was
waiting for a coun-terdemonstration of power. The
ceremony was over, so to speak, and now it was just a case of two magic men
being together. Did Mark perhaps have a trick or two of his own up his sleeve?
Mark
did. Furthermore, he would do his trick right out in the open, in the light,
without mumbo-jumbo. He fished out his box of precious matches and took two
matches out of the box. He thought fast. It wouldn't do to just strike the
matches; the essence, the vital part, of any magic trick lay in the build-up
you gave to it. If a magician just walked calmly out onto a brightly lighted
stage and proceeded to saw a woman in half, chances are that the audience would
be bored stiff, even if he really did saw
a woman in half. But let the house lights dim, let the
magician chant a strange song from a nameless land, let the weird music cry and
moan in the orchestra pit—that was different!
Mark
decided that he had to have a chant, at least. Any chant in English would do,
since Qualxen would not know what he was saying. He
thought of a football yell, but that didn't sound right. Finally, he selected a
rime that had just the rhythm he desired. Mark
frowned terribly and made passes at the air with his hands. He moaned and
clapped his hands six times—use of the Danequa magic
number wouldn't hurt any, he supposed. Then, suddenly, he stopped dead and
thrust his face at Qualxen.
"'Twas the night before Christmas," Mark whispered in
an eerie tone of voice, "and all through the house—"
The
shaman jerked backward fearfully. Truly, this was strong medicine! "Not a
creature was stirring," moaned Mark terribly, "not even a MOUSE!"
With
the last horrible word, Mark quickly lifted his hands to the level of Qualxen's face and snapped the two matches together. There
was a sharp crack and a puff
of flame. Qualxen stood his ground, but it was easy
to see that he was terrified. The red flower, fire, out of nothing!
Contemptuously, Mark blew out the matches and tossed them into the fire.
Qualxen recovered his composure and grinned delightedly.
"Orn," he said, again touching Mark on the
shoulder. "Orn!" Qualxen knew a powerful shaman when he saw one, and he wanted to be on his side. Mark knew that he had
made a powerful ally in the camp of the Cro-Magnons—and, besides, he found himself
rather liking the intriguing Qualxen.
Qualxen led the way back through the cave, and as
they drew nearer the entrance Mark felt his high spirits begin to desert him.
Whether Qualxen was friendly or not, that grim
ceremony in the dark cavern had been in dead earnest. It would take more than a
trick with a match to bring down the monster mammoth.
It
was night now, a cold night frosted with stars. The icy wind sighed across the
valley floor and touched Mark with chill fingers. In the distance, the great
waterfall thundered forever down its silver cascades. And beyond that—was it
only Mark's imagination? The deep trumpetings of
gigantic mammoths!
Chapter 12 a New
World
ark now found himself in a somewhat peculiar position. He had made friends
among the Cro-Mag-nons, and he was at least tolerated
by the tribe. But he was not a member of
the tribe, and he was not related by kinship to anyone who was, except in the
figurative sense that he was their "brother." That might be enough to
do the trick eventually, but not yet. Where was he to stay? There were no
hotels in 50,000 b.C., and no tourist courts.
His
friend Tlaxcan was nowhere to be seen, but he had
evidently arranged things ahead of time. Qualxen led
Mark to a small cave in the hill and told him that he would see him when the
great red flower bloomed again—that is, when the sun came up in the morning. He
smiled in friendly fashion and left Mark alone for the night.
Although
there was no moon as yet, it was clearly quite late, and Mark had difficulty
estimating the exact time. He looked out of the mouth of the cave, but the
valley of the Danequa was utterly deserted under the
stars. Everyone was asleep, and only the great waterfall lived and talked in t^he night. It
was cold, but Mark
found a fur covering that had been left in the
cave for him. He wrapped himself up in this and was quite comfortable.
He
could not be sure, but he thought that this cave —which was very small, little
more than a deep recess in the rock—was the one from which he had heard the whinings and growlings of the
wolf-dogs earlier. He sniffed the air, and there was no doubt that something had recently occupied the cave. He hoped with
all his heart that it had been nothing more dangerous than a dog, and that it
wouldn't take a notion to come home sometime in the dark hours of the night.
Mark
was very tired; he had not realized how tired he was until he stretched out on
the cave floor with the warm fur over him. He took his .45 from its holster,
placed it within easy reach and closed his eyes. The ways of men are indeed
odd, he thought sleepily . . . A few short days ago, he would have thought
anyone crazy who tried to tell him that it would be possible for him to go back
through space-time to the beginnings of man and calmly go to sleep, without
fear and with an untroubled mind. And yet he found himself relaxed and trusting
toward his new-found friends. The Danequa, he was
sure, were not a treacherous people. He was safe in their hands—safe, at least,
from cowardly sneak-attacks. When these people felt like arguing, they would
do it in the open. And here, finally, he need not worry about the ghastly
half-men, who prowled like fantastic accidents through the night lands of the
Ice Age . . .
Mark
slept and dreamed. He was grateful for the sleep, but it would be long before
he was able to forget his dream.
Through
the gray twilight world of sleep, in a world without color of any sort, a man
ran desperately. He had been running for a long time, and he was very tired.
His lungs ached, and even in the cold air sweat covered his body like a film of
moisture. His feet were cut and bleeding. The man was dressed in furs, but Mark
knew him. The man was himself.
Behind
Mark, almost touching his weary feet as they pounded across the gray earth, the
half-men screamed and growled hideously. Mark did not dare to turn and look at
them, but he knew that they were there. The Neanderthals neither gained on him
nor did they lose ground. They came on untiringly, always exactly the same
distance behind him.
Where
was he going? Mark looked around him, sensing that he knew this country
somehow. He had been here before. Behind him, the low pine-covered foothills
merged into the mountains, with their snow white against the gray sky. Between
the mountains was a valley—and not the valley of the Danequa, with its green grass and beautiful waterfall. A
ghastly valley, a nightmare valley . . .
To
his right, a gray field undulated to the horizon, gray grass shimmering in
ghost-waves under a supernatural wind. He could see the wind—it looked like gray smoke. Far away, a
glimmer of lighter gray. The ice sheet. And
ahead of him, a great sphere, waiting on the plain.
The
space-time machine.
Gasping
for breath, the half-men right behind him, Mark threw
the gray switch in the side of the machine. The circular door hissed open, and
Mark plunged inside. He closed the entry port behind him, catching one
Neanderthal's hand in the
closing section.
The hand was cut off and dropped to the floor, gray brute fingers still
wiggling.
Mark
lay on the floor of the space-time machine, fighting to get his breath. A
tremendous wave of relief flooded through him. He was safe! He had only to set
the controls and step out to greet Doctor Nye, and Fang, and be home again in
New Mexico. He laughed, hysterical with relief over his narrow escape.
Something laughed back at
him. He wasn't alone.
Mark
jerked to his feet and then recoiled in horror. There was a Neanderthal inside
the machine with him, the biggest Neanderthal he had ever seen. He was fully
nine feet tall, and his great hairy body almost filled the sphere. The smell of
the half-man washed against his nostrils. Mark screamed frantically. The
Neanderthal's monstrous hand reached out for him, the hairy fingers with their
dirty, clawed finger nails touched him—
Mark
woke up with a start. There was a
hand touching him, but it belonged to no Neanderthal. It belonged to Tlaxcan.
"You
have been in the Land of Shadows," he said, smiling. "You are back
now."
Mark
got to his feet, rubbing the sleep out of his eyes. Pale rays of the early
morning sun lighted up the world, and the fears of the night dissolved in their
warmth. Consciously, Mark did not place any faith in dreams. They were what
they were—dreams, with no special meaning or significance. But subconsciously,
deep within his mind, he found his nightmare hard to forget. He was shaken, and
it was no easy matter to thrust his strange dream from his thoughts.
It was good to be with Tlaxcan
again, and Mark went out with him into the life of the Danequa
valley. The booming waterfall was more beautiful than ever, gleaming in the
morning sunlight, and the scent of pines was bracing
in the fresh air. Mark followed Tlax-can to his own
cave, a large, roomy cavern high on another ledge. There he was surprised to
find that Tlaxcan had a family. It was curious that
he had always thought of his friend as single, but now that he paused to think
about it, he remembered that most primitive peoples married while quite young,
out of economic necessity. A man had to have someone to make his clothes, cook
his food, keep his home. There were no servants in
this dawn world, and most of a man's time was taken up with hunting and
fighting.
Tlaxcan's wife greeted Mark shyly, touching her hand
to his shoulder in greeting. She was attractive in a clean, healthy way, and
obviously devoted to Tlaxcan. Her name, Mark learned,
was Tlaxcal, which was the Danequa
feminine form of Tlaxcan. This seemed curiously wrong
to Mark, and for a moment he was at a loss to understand why. Then he had it.
In English, "Al" was a man's name, while "Ann" was a
woman's. It seemed funny to hear them reversed, but no funnier, he knew, than
the English version would have seemed to the Danequa.
Tlaxcan
had a son too. He was a hearty, handsome child of three, and his name, with
wonderful economy of logic, was Tlax. He toddled
fearlessly up to Mark and tried to reach up to place his small hand on Mark's
shoulder. Mark bent over to accommodate him, and grinned. As a rule, he was not
overly fond of young children, but Tlax was one in a
million. He was thoroughly cute, and Mark fell for him at once.
They breakfasted on roasted meat and berries.
The meat was pungent with strong flavor, and Mark guessed that it was bison.
The berries, he noted ironically, were the same red variety that he had passed
up when he was so hungry before, because he had feared that they might be
poisonous. They were delicious.
When
they had eaten, Mark sat back and talked as best he could. He felt very much at
home, and joined heartily in the good-natured laughter at young Tlax, who was industriously trying to pull back the string
on his father's bow, which was almost as big as he was. It was hard to
reconcile Tlaxcan, the happy family man, with the
grim-eyed savage, ready to kill, that Mark had first met on the grassy plains.
It showed, if nothing else, that first impressions were
apt to be very misleading. Mark felt that he had known Tlaxcan
all his life; and he knew with sudden certainty that he would never have a
better friend, nor a finer one, anywhere.
Tlaxcal, while avoiding looking at Mark directly,
had been examining his clothes with some interest. Mark was uncomfortably aware
that they were very dirty, as well as being ripped and torn from the rough wear
he had given them. Tlaxcal whispered briefly to Tlaxcan,
and Tlaxcan smiled his approval. Mark did not have to
be a mind reader to figure out that he was going to get a new suit of clothes,
and once more he determined to learn how to say "thank you" in
Cro-Magnon. He did the best he could with his eyes, and felt that he had
succeeded in getting the idea across.
They
left the cave finally, Mark smiling his farewell to Tlaxcal
and little Tlax. Tlax tried
to follow them down the rocky trail, and his mother came out and pulled him
back, scolding him for all the world like a modern
mother. Mark thought of his own mother, the mother he had hardly had time to
know. And his uncle —where was he now? What did "now" mean—when was
"now"? Was his uncle as yet thousands of years unborn, or was he
still talking on the telephone to White Sands?
Mark
walked among the Danequa, and he kept his eyes open. It was entirely possible, he knew, that he was destined to spend the rest of his life
with these people. The thought did not dismay him, for it was plain enough that
the Danequa, with their skin clothing sewn together
by ivory needles, their artistic weapons, and their robust good humor, were a
remarkable and gifted people. Mark had lived in this hard dawn-world long
enough now to begin to appreciate the accomplishments of the Danequa. True, their camp in the valley with the foaming
waterfall was simple and crude enough by the standards of the twentieth century.
There were no towering skyscrapers, no great electric generators, no theater
but the clean show place of nature. But things are seldom what they seem, and
this was no exception. Which was the greater accomplishment, to invent for the first time a bow and arrow, or to develop, with all the
resources of thousands of years of technology behind you, atomic energy? It was
not an easy question, and Mark was far from sure how he would go about
answering it.
That
day, Mark met Roqan, and his wife, Roqal. Roqan was an old man as Danequa men went, perhaps fifty years of age. His hair was
still dark and thick, but his face was lined and wrinkled far more than a
modern man of fifty would have been. He seemed to be very
stern, and he had an old hunting scar across his
forehead that made him seem fiercer than he was. Roqan
frowned constantly, and was treated with great respect by everyone. When he met
Mark, he examined him as he might have looked at an insect.
"What
do you want of us?" he demanded sternly. "I have known your type
before. You have come to steal our food and kill our warriors."
Mark
returned his harsh gaze, determined not to look away. He wished desperately
that he could speak the language well enough to make an effective reply to the
old man, but all he could do was to stammer a reply to Tlaxcan,
who answered for him with a few ideas of his own.
"My
friend says that he comes in peace," Tlaxcan
said to Roqan. "His only desire is to learn to
be wise and good as is his brother, Roqan. He has
heard of Roqan from afar."
"You
He," stated Roqan flatly, but he was obviously
pleased. His old eyes twinkled with delight, and Mark got the distinct
impression that he was disgusted with himself for permitting his good nature to
shine through. He at once wiped the pleased expression from his face and
replaced it with his customary frown. But Mark wasn't fooled this time. He knew
that he and Roqan would get along.
Roqal,
his wife, seemed to be his direct opposite, at least on the surface. She was
very plump and motherly and bubbling over with friendliness. Mark suspected
that she was bubbling over with something besides friendliness, for she seemed
slightly tipsy. He suspected that she was addicted to taking frequent snifters
of the Danequan equivalent to liquor, a fermented
berry drink aptly named kiwow. Roqal greeted him with an almost girlish giggle,
and let him know in no uncertain terms that he was most welcome.
Mark
saw Qualxen, the shaman, again, and he greeted him
like an old friend, together with winking between-us-shamans secretiveness.
Mark played along with him, and was genuinely grateful to have friends again.
It made the world, any world, a much brighter place to live in.
Mark
only met two people that day with whom he could not get along. One was a thin,
pale man named Tloron, who, as nearly as he could
understand what Tlaxcan tried to explain to him, was
a holy man of some sort who had great magical powers. Evidently his power was
of a different sort than Qualxen's, because there
was no jealousy between the two men. Mark rather liked Tloron,
but he was silent and kept strictly to himself; Mark found it impossible to
talk to him. The other person who gave him trouble was an entirely different
proposition. His name was Nran-quar, and he was a
tall, powerful warrior who appeared to be capable of tackling a mammoth alone,
without batting an eye. Nranquar was suspicious of
Mark, and didn't try to hide the fact. He let it be known that he would be
watching Mark in action against quaro, the mammoth, and Mark knew that he had better come through with flying
colors—or else.
It
was a good day, all in all, and Mark was sorry to see it end. The valley was
humming with activity, and Mark understood that this was the time for tribal
ceremonies. Indian fashion, these people were in isolated groups following the
herds most of the year, and when they got together they made the most of it. Tlaxcan
apologetically explained to Mark that he could not participate
in or witness the ceremonies, because he was still technically an outsider.
After the evening meal, Tlaxcan escorted him back to
his tiny cave, where someone—Mark strongly suspected that it had been Tlaxcan's wife, Tlaxcal—had
kindled a small fire and left enough dried bones to keep it going.
Alone,
Mark sat in the mouth of the cave, wrapped in his fur blanket, and watched the
black shadows of night creep through the valley, soaking up the fading light,
and clearing the way for the cold night wind sweeping down out of the north.
The stars dusted the dark sky with frozen pearls, and the waterfall muttered
and boomed in the distance.
It
was infinitely lonely, all the more lonely now that he had once again tasted
friendship and the warm glow of human companionship. The Danequa—men,
women, and children—were gone from the vicinity as though they had never
existed, leaving only the dark pines and the moaning wind behind them.
Fires
flickered into life far across the valley, near the shores of the deep pool at
the foot of the waterfall. Alone in the silence of the night, Mark heard the
ceremonial drums of the Danequa take up their
rhythmic chant. The throbbing drums were felt, rather than heard, against the
roaring backdrop of the mighty cascades. And then came the singing, a weird
chorus of plaintive cries, with deep voices mixed with high ones in a
never-ending flood of sound. There was no harmony, and the rhythm of the voices
was different from the rhythmic beat of the drums.
Sad,
lonely, wistful, exciting—the sounds of the ceremony were carried by the
sighing winds across the valley of the Danequa to
where Mark sat alone. Savage it may have been, and primitive it certainly was,
but Mark would have given his heart and soul to be there with them now, dancing
under the stars.
A
silver moon climbed high into the sky of night, and still the drums played on,
and the singing sobbed across the valley floor. Mark had hoped that the ceremony
might end, and someone might come by and just say
hello before morning—but no one came. This was a night for the Danequa, and he was not of the Danequa.
Finally,
unable to watch the fires any longer, but still not tired, Mark crawled on into
the tiny cavern and stretched out on the floor under the robe. He closed his
eyes, but he could not sleep. The rhythmic pounding of the drums, mixed with
the humming roar of the waterfall, marched in through the cavern mouth and thumped
against his ears. The singing filled the cave, and Mark knew that he had never
been so lonely in his life. He thought of home, as lonely people do, and he was
acutely aware that home was almost fifty-two thousand years away.
Then
another sound came into the cave, a different sound. For a moment, Mark could
not place it. It was something of a whine, and yet it
was something of a snarl . . .
Mark
leaped to his feet, wide awake, the .45 ready in his hand. His first thought
was of the half-men, and he felt himself shuddering. He would kill himself
before he would surrender to those monsters again, but he would take a few of
them along with him. He waited, holding his breath. Nothing happened.
The sound came again, and Mark peered
cautiously at the mouth of the cave. He couldn't see anything. He took a long
stick with his free hand and stirred up die fire. The circle of light expanded,
slowly. There, a dark shadowl Mark took careful aim,
but held his fire.
"Who is it?" he
called. "What do you want?"
No
answer. There was only the night, and the moon, and the shadows.
"Answer
or die!" Mark hissed, his finger curling on the trigger.
There
was a low whine. The shadow moved and came into the circle of firelight.
"Well, Til be darned," Mark muttered in relief.
The
thing was an animal. More than that, it was a dog. At least, it looked so much like a dog Mark could not see any
difference. He was almost full-grown, a brownish-gray in color, and looked a
great deal like an Arctic husky. He was lying flat on his belly, his head
cocked to one side in a questioning attitude, his bushy tail wagging hopefully.
Mark
remembered at once the sounds he had heard coming from this cave when he had
first arrived among the Danequa, and it did not take
him long to put two and two together. He did not believe that the Danequa had domesticated the dog, in the sense of keeping
them and breeding them in captivity. But it was certainly possible that they
permitted some of them to hang around the camp, living in empty caverns, to
feed on the scraps and thus keep the place clean. No doubt they even petted
them occasionally, and perhaps played with the puppies. At any rate, this dog
looked anything but vicious. He seemed to be pathetically eager to make
friends.
"Well, boy," Mark said, speaking
now in English, "did I put you out of your home?"
The dog thumped his tail
affirmatively.
"No
offense," Mark assured him. "Come here. I'm glad to have some
company."
Eying
Mark, the dog came forward very slowly, and stretched out by the fire. Not
wanting to scare him away, Mark moved over carefully, and gently scratched his
ears. The dog stiffened, then relaxed and wagged his tail vigorously.
Mark
listened to the distant throb of the drums, and the
eerie singing of the Danequa. The night wind moaned
outside, and the silver moon floated through a sea of stars.
"That's
right," Mark whispered to the dog, "you just stay right here. You and
I—we'll be alone together."
Chapter 73 Titans of
the Ice
I |
he long days passed, and became weeks. Mark stayed with the Danequa, learning their language, learning their ways, and
learning the million things that he had to know in order to exist in this
strange new world. His friends, Tlaxcal and little Tlax, Roqan and Roqal, Qualxen, the shaman, stuck
by him and helped him. And there was always Tlaxcan,
steady as a rock at his side, ready to kill or to laugh on a moment's notice.
These were happy days, and busy days, but still Mark was lonely. With all his
friends, he was yet not a member of the tribe of Danequa,
and was therefore necessarily rather left out of things.
The
dog, who had come to him in the night, was like the
man who came to dinner; Mark could not get rid of him. Not that he wanted to,
for the dog made the long nights less lonely. lie was
really quite a dog, and Mark named him Fang, after the dog he had left behind
in 1953. He had named his cocker spaniel Fang as a kind of joke, but the new
Fang lived up to his name. Gentle enough with Mark, who fed him, he bristled
and snarled at anyone else who came near him. The Danequa
were curious about the
friendly relationship between Mark and the dog; they had never seen a pet before. But they accepted it as they had accepted Mark himself. Different people behaved iii different ways, and that was all there was to it. Nranquar was still suspicious of Mark, and having Fang around didn't help matters any, but he was the only one who seemed to care one way or the other.
Then one day it happened. One of the scouts, out on the same duty that had first taken Tlaxcan to Mark, came back to camp with the long-awaited news. The mammoth herd had been sighted!
The camp was thrown into great excitement over the information, and at once preparations for the hunt were begun. The primitive equivalent to K-ration, dried meat pounded and mixed with berries, then sealed with animal fat, was made ready for use. Qualxen went into action to contact the supernatural, and brief ceremonies got underway. Mark for the first time appreciated how much time was taken up by the Danequa in their almost endless ceremonies, but the ceremonies gave to them a confidence that was well worth the time invested. On a tough job, it helps for the worker simply to believe that the job can be done.
The men were armed with lances, harpoons, bows and arrows, and sharp cutting knives. The women and children prepared noisemakers of various sorts, and loaded up on robes which they would flap. Mark carried his .45, and was prepared to use it if he had to, but he was not under the illusion that he could kill a mammoth with a pistol. In addition, he carried one of TIaxcan's spears, and he was determined to prove himself on this hunt.
He had to prove himself, he remembered grimly.
The
camp moved out through the valley and hit the long trail. The quaro herd had been sighted due north, on the edge of the retreating ice
sheet, about fourteen hours distant. Men, women, children—the whole tribe went.
The mammoth meant food, shelter, clothes, and many other things for the whole
village, and it took the whole village to bring one down. One hunter, no matter
how able, could not possibly handle a mammoth. It would be like hunting an
elephant with a slingshot, a practice which does not work very well outside of
the jungle movies.
It
was broad daylight when the Danequa moved out, and
once more Mark found himself on the great plains with
their waving grasses and millions of brilliant flowers. But it was different
this time; he was no longer alone, he was part of a team, and the world held no
terrors for him now. He might win or he might lose, he might live or he might
die, but he could face what was to come with a steady heart. Part of it was
due, of course, to the friends that walked at his side—but part of it, too, was
due to Mark himself. For Mark, subtly and almost unknown to
himself, had changed. It is doubtful that his friends in 1953 would have
recognized him now—a young, bronzed savage, spear in hand, long hair held in
place by a thong of bison hide, his body covered with the warm furs that had
been made for him by Tlaxcal, a fierce wolf-dog at
his side. Mark had been aged by more than time, and he was hard as only a hard
world can make a man, with a confident, even look in
his eyes.
All
through the day the colorful procession moved through the dawn of time. The men
were painted, even Mark having consented to a couple of stripes of green across
his forehead and arms. In fact, he remembered with a smile, he had been
grateful to Qualxen for offering to paint him—thus
quickly did his values change. He even wore a tiny medicine bundle on a string
around his neck. There was nothing in it but a tooth and a small stone, and he
assured himself that he did not believe in its powers. He wore it, however.
When
in Rome, do as the Romans do. He had almost gone to Rome—what would have
happened to him there? Would his uncle ever see that fabled city in the time of
its glory? He thrust the thought from his mind.
The
sun drifted down to the rim of the mountains, and the evening shadows crept
across the land. Mark was astounded when they saw a herd of bison in the
distance, so vast that it was like a black flood on the land, and when they
broke into a run, the dark waves were set into motion. There must have been
thousands upon thousands of the beasts, and now Mark could well believe the
stories of the early American West about herds of buffalo that stopped trains.
But the Danequa were not after buffalo now—they were
out after bigger game.
Just
at nightfall, they saw a large herd of horses galloping across the grass,
racing the shadows. Mark could not help thinking of how much easier life would
be for the Danequa if they could just see the possibilities
of using the horse as a riding animal. But evidently the idea had never
occurred to them, and they marched along on foot within a hundred yards of the
finest riding animal the world had ever known. How many other such
opportunities, Mark wondered, were under our very eyes in 1953, obvious enough
if someone could only put two and two together in the right way?
Through
the night marched the Danequa, under the stars and
under the moon. They seemed to have an infallible sense of direction; there
were no landmarks that Mark could see. Somewhere in the night, he knew, was the
space-time machine. It was there, to the west, to his left. It was ready to go
now, if it was in good condition still. All he needed to do was to walk to it
and get in. But that was the catch—walking to it. The Neanderthals would be
watching from their valley of death, and he could never get through them alive.
Almost,
he fancied that he felt the cold eyes of the half-men on him now, as he walked
on across the plains.
In
the tricky light of false dawn, which faintly illuminates the earth an hour
before the true dawn of sunrise, the scouts located the quaro herd. Mark had not yet caught a glimpse of them, but he could hear them.
Their trumpetings, elephant-like,
coughed through the cold air surrounding the ice sheet, sending shivers along
the spines of the bravest of men.
Like
a well-drilled team, the Danequa went into action.
Every person knew his place—knew what to do and how to do it. The old men
stationed themselves at the foot of a jagged cliff that offered a drop of
fully one hundred yards to solid rock below—a product of the great earth
cracks and fissures which resulted from the passing of the
glacial ice. The Danequa had obviously used the cliff
before, because Mark could see plenty
of bones around. Huge bones . . .
The women and children, armed with all sorts
of noisemakers and robes, spread out behind rocks leading to the cliff. They
formed a long V-shaped funnel, with the narrow end opening on the cliff. Except
for the rocks, the women and children were unprotected. They had only their
noisemakers, their robes to flap— and their raw courage, of which there was a
plentiful supply.
Nranquar, the only man who had been completely
hostile to Mark, led the warriors around in a wide circle. Mark felt the grass
play out under his feet, and quite suddenly they were walking on ice. The
footing was difficult, but the Danequa did not make a
sound. It was darker now, just before the dawn, and there was no talking. Even
Fang, struggling to walk on the ice, was completely quiet. He seemed to know,
as did Mark, that if he made a sound Nranquar would
destroy him without an instant's hesitation.
Nranquar
had taken them neatly into position now. They were behind the mammoth herd,
between the huge animals and the open ice sheet. The men of the Danequa arranged themselves in a broad semicircle behind
the quaro, waiting silently in the darkness. Mark, Tlaxcan,
and old Roqan, who, although somewhat lame, had
insisted on staying with the warriors, built up a pile of kindling wood on the
ice. The wood had been carried with them, and it was arranged in a curious fashion.
First there were wood shavings, to serve as paper. Then smaller sticks were
added, and after them larger ones. The largest wood used in the actual fire
consisted of sticks not over an inch in diameter, and wide air spaces were left
between them. It was essential that the fire catch in a hurry when it was
lighted, for the failure of the fire would mean disaster. Placed carefully end
to end around the fire, with only their tips in the flame area, were dried and
treated torches, one for each warrior.
The
eastern sky began to glow softly with the approach of the sun, and the gray
light of dawn filtered across the cold ice sheet. Mark strained his eyes, but
could not yet see anything. He heard restless coughs from the invisible
monsters, and twice an ear-splitting trumpeting, startlingly near, cut through
the chill air. Mark swallowed hard as the familiar dryness of excitement choked
up his throat, and he felt his heart thumping so
loudly in his chest that he was almost afraid the sound would carry to the quaro herd and alarm them.
The
light increased, and Mark could make out several of the nearer warriors,
crouching in their positions on the ice. He looked out ahead, across the
flatly gleaming ice. He was sure that he saw something out there now—great blotches
of blackness, enormous shadows that moved and swayed as he watched.
The
sun crept higher; its rim inching almost over the horizon. Mark felt his hands
sweating and he wiped them on his furs.
"Now,
Mark," old Roqan whispered sternly, "light
the fire quickly, and see that you do it right."
Mark
dropped to one knee, the matches ready in his hand. Tlaxcan stood by with his fire
drill, just in case the magic failed to work, as magic sometimes did at crucial
moments. Mark struck the match, cupped it carefully, and fired the wood
shavings. A tiny trickle of flame crawled along the shavings with agonizing
slowness, branched out, fired other shavings. Mark
held his breath—and the fire caught with a puffing whoosh that exploded like a
cannon shot in the silence.
Mark
heard an excited trumpeting ahead of him, but he did not look up. He watched
the fire, making certain that the torches were caught properly before he moved.
Then he and Tlaxcan grabbed up the flaming torches
and dashed at full speed down the line, Tlaxcan going
one way and Mark the other, handing out the torches to the waiting Danequa warriors. It was the work of but a moment, and they
ran back to join Roqan in the center of the line.
"Took
you long enough," hissed Roqan. "In my day
I could have done it in half the time. I don't know what's happening to this
younger generation."
The
sun touched the horizon—it climbed higher, Mark gasped and gripped his lance
tightly. He could see the quaro now, and the blood turned to ice in his veins.
"Charge!"
shouted old Roqan, before Mark had time to think.
Through the dawn, with the mists beginning to
rise from the ice sheets, the Danequa moved to the
attack. Mark charged with the rest, his torch gripped in one
hand and his spear in the other, shouting and screaming at the top of his
lungs, the barking Fang at his side.
There was no time for fear now, and Mark
avoided looking directly at the trumpeting quaro. But a corner of his mind whispered to him as he raced across the ice
through the rising mists—whispered to him that they were charging the titans of
the ice, who would trample them to shreds if anything went wrong.
er it Man
Against Mammoth
i |
HE
morning air, hushed and
silent a moment before, became a bedlam of roaring sound. Mark
ran through a chaos of shouting, screaming men, trumpeting, coughing mammoths,
pounding, thumping feet. The very earth beneath the ice sheet trembled
under him, the cold air stabbed at his lungs—and the quaro were right before him.
Mammoths!
The very word means enormous, and enormous they were. There were fifteen of the
monsters clustered on the ice, and they were big. Mark judged that the largest of them would weigh at least twenty
thousand pounds—ten tons of maddened power. They were built something like a
modern elephant, with a huge, powerful trunk reaching almost to the ground, but
they were covered with a heavy coat of yellowish-brown wool mixed with long
black hair. The quaro had immense, curving tusks of ivory, some of
them fully fifteen feet long and wickedly pointed. Nor was their quarry a
stupid hulk, such as the extinct dinosaur had been. For all their massive size,
the mammoths were smart. Mark knew that elephants in general were among the
most intelligent of living animals,
their flexible trunk being one of nature's
experiments on the road that had finally led to man's opposable thumb and
grasping hand. Beyond doubt, the mammoth was a worthy foe, and Mark wondered
how many people would have cared to charge him with only a spear and a torch.
But charge the Danequa did, and Mark with them.
Mark
yelled frantically, and waved his torch in fiery circles around his head. He
knew that the success of the hunt depended entirely on keeping the mammoths
confused by fire and noise; if they were allowed time to think clearly, they
would squash the Danequa like so many buzzing insects
hit by a baseball bat. The first step was to get them moving, and it was not an
easy step.
It was the oldest military tactic in the book,
surprise and panic. Like all tactics, it was wonderful if it worked. If it didn't . . .
The
mammoths were in no hurry to move. They eyed the shouting warriors nervously,
they trumpeted and shifted, their eyes began to gleam angrily, but they did not
break. Mark screamed and brandished his torch, and one
of the beasts backed away a little. But that was not enough. Nranquar suddenly dashed in behind one of the mammoths and
jabbed him with a spear. The mammoth trumpeted angrily and spun around with
surprising speed. He reared up on his huge hind legs, snorting. Nranquar stood his ground, yelling and waving his torch. It
was a crucial moment, and Mark and Tlaxcan ran to
help. If the mammoth decided to fight, he could probably handle all three of
them without difficulty, and the other monsters would join in the massacre. The
three warriors shouted, and Tlaxcan, with sudden
insight, threw his torch like a spear at the rearing mammoth. The mammoth
snorted at the heat, and came down with an earth-shattering impact. His
tremendous feet missed the dodging men, but it was close. The mammoth eyed them
warily, and then turned slowly away and lumbered into motion in the other
direction.
Mark
breathed easier, and was elated to see that the mammoth herd had joined the old
bull and were jogging along toward the plains. Mark knew that they had not
defeated the mammoths, in any sense. It was just that the mammoths, like most
animals, did not want to fight at all. They wanted to be let alone, and
doubtless considered the puny men as not worth killing. But they might change
their minds at any moment; they had to be handled with skill.
As Tlaxcan had trained him to do, Mark joined in guiding the
moving mass of the herd, flanking them and shouting to keep them on course.
Fang learned fast, and dashed in to nip almost at the quota's heels, barking furiously all the while. Mark could not help thinking
that he would have made a first-rate cattle dog. Fang was a big help, and Mark noticed that Tlaxcan
was watching him approvingly.
Everything
was going according to plan, with the morning sun smiling in the blue sky. Now
they were running along the grassy plains, and Mark began to relax.
Instantly,
he saw that he had let down his guard too soon.
There
was no warning, no hint of a suggestion of any sort that it was going to
happen. One minute, everything was moving smoothly; the next, tragedy struck
with blinding speed. Three of the giant mammoths turned aside as one, and
there was no stopping them. They simply walked over the warrior who confronted
them, brushing aside his spear as though it had been a toothpick. The man was
trampled into a pulp with frightening swiftness; in an instant, where once a
man had stood, there was nothing. The three mammoths moved sedately off on
their own affairs, and nothing could be done about it.
The
warriors of the Danequa redoubled their efforts to
hold the remaining twelve mammoths. There was really nothing to prevent the
monsters from going with their fellows if they so chose—nothing but bravery and
human voices and a few pitiful torches. But they did not go—they shambled with
deceptive speed along toward the trap which awaited them.
Mark
did not relax again. He shouted with all his strength, and when his torch was
exhausted he threw it in the midst of the mammoths. Fang barked and snarled as
if he really thought he could tear a mammoth to pieces if he felt like it. Tlaxcan maneuvered with infinite skill and patience, a
fighting smile on his proud face. Nranquar, whose
bravery was beyond question, risked his life again and again to keep the
trumpeting quaro in line.
Across
the morning-wet plains they ran, and Mark felt his newly toughened muscles rise
to the occasion and carry him forward without a tremor. He breathed easily, and
his hand was steady. He had a healthy respect for the mighty mammoths, and he
knew that they could wipe him out in a second, but he had also learned a
healthy respect for his fighting comrades, the Danequa.
They were not fools, and they would not have attempted the hunt unless they had
thought they would be successful. The very fact that they were still alive was
eloquent testimony to their skill in the past.
With
the precision of trained experts, the Danequa
warriors drew together into a compact group behind the mammoth herd at exactly
the moment the beasts lumbered into the mouth of the trap funnel. The men
shouted with renewed energy, and now the women and children sprang up on all
sides, yelling madly, beating on drums, flapping robes in the air, and making
a general racket with all sorts of noisemakers. It all made a terrific din, to
which the mammoths themselves contributed by their trumpeting squeals and the
vibrating thunder of their great feet.
For
the first time, the nervous monsters began to get really excited. The noise
kept them mentally off balance, and they were not thinking clearly. Their one
impulse was to get away from the noisy, irritating creatures that seemed to
swarm around them like angry bees. Not yet in a panic, but simply eager to
escape, they followed the path of least resistance, which is usually the most
dangerous road you can take, no matter what your destination. They lumbered
skittishly down the line of howling humans, and as the sides of the funnel
closed in, the noise increased. The mighty beasts lifted their powerful trunks
and trumpeted angrily, and at last they broke into a run.
The
earth shook beneath the heavy tread of the quaro herd, and the noise was deafening. Excited by their
own running, the monster mammoths went faster, and faster still. They
covered the ground at a surprising rate of speed, and the Danequa
were hard-pressed to keep up with them. Their frantic trumpeting redoubled in
strength, and Mark shouted with wild exultation.
The mammoth herd had
stampeded.
Across
the great plains, down the funnel of death, the great
beasts charged, their yellowish-brown wool and long black hair tossing, their
long trunks extended, their gleaming ivory tusks curving and shaking in the
sunlight of early morning. Closer and closer to the yawning cliff thundered the
quaro, and with every smashing step their speed increased. They were in a wild
run, their one thought to escape from the noise and confusion all around them.
Too
late, the lead mammoth saw the destruction which awaited him. He squealed
horribly and tried to stop, his trunk waving frantically in the air as he
sounded his warning to his fellows. But the time for thought was long past; the
jaws of the trap had closed, and there was no mistake. Driven on by the bedlam
behind them, and unable to see what lay ahead, the mammoths rushed down the
rock-lined corridor of extinction. Their massed tons of bulk shoved
then-struggling leader off the brink of the cliff, and he fell with a piteous
bleat to the jagged rocks far below.
There
was no stopping the racing monsters. Over they went, by ones and twos and
threes, to fall crushed and broken to the foot of the cliff where the old warriors
waited to finish them off. The morning air was split by their screams, and Mark
had to grit his teeth to go on. Man, the killer, was killing again—and the
innocent animals of the earth fell before him.
Mark
could have saved his sympathy, however. There was one mammoth, at least, who had ideas of his own about who should be pitied. He was
the last of the herd, he had seen his fellows die, and there was no mammoth behind him to
push him over. Excited and confused as he was by the shouting bedlam all
around him, he somehow stopped dead at the brink of the cliff. His red eyes
glittered with hot fury, and he spun around to face his tormentors. He was at
bay, and deadly dangerous.
They
had to get him over—it was now or never. The warrior nearest to him did not
hesitate, but rushed at the monster, shouting and waving his spear. This
mammoth was not having any of that! He was smart, and he had learned his lesson
thoroughly. He stood solid as a rock, unmoving, and his powerful trunk snaked
out with the sudden deadly accuracy of a whip and coiled itself about the
charging man. The warrior did not live long enough to scream. With a contemptuous
flip of his trunk, the mammoth tossed his body over the cliff, there to fall
among the animals he had killed.
There was a sudden hush among the Danequa. The mammoth poised himself triumphantly on the
edge of the cliff, his trunk lashing out angrily. He stamped his huge foot and
trumpeted loudly, his red eyes sweeping his enemies with hatred. For a long
moment no man moved.
Then Nranquar
walked proudly out of the group of warriors and advanced on the waiting
mammoth. He was determined to force him back before more damage was done, and
he had a still-burning torch in his hand. He held it before him like a shield,
and his step did not falter. Ashamed by this display of raw
bravery, Mark stepped out and followed his enemy.
Without a word, Tlaxcan walked at his side.
Nranquar
was still in the lead, and marching steadily. The
mammoth watched him come, his red eyes glittering as they reflected the flames
from the burning torch. He snorted, hesitated. He did not like the torch, and
he was not keen about charging the massed Danequa
warriors waiting in the rear. But the three men coming at him were a different
story. If they thought they were going to scare him into stampeding off the
cliff, they were sadly mistaken. He would stampede, and do it willingly enough.
But he was going forward.
With a trumpeting bellow, the mammoth
charged.
Chapter J5 No longer
Alone
time
seemed to freeze as the
mammoth hurled his | tons of fighting fury away from the cliff's edge and I toward the three men who had dared to challenge I him. Mark had no time to think, but his mind registered every tiny
detail as the monster came toward him. lie saw the
place where one of the mammoth's curving tusks was chipped slightly on the tip,
he saw the red tongue exposed when the trunk snaked upward in the air, he saw
distinctly the four large toes on the mammoth's raised foot. He heard the
harsh, whistling breathing of the beast. He smelled its rank animal smell. He
felt the earth shake under its charging tread.
Nranquar
desperately backed away, but he could not possibly move fast enough to get out
of the mammoth's path. He hurled his torch and the monster brushed it aside
with his trunk. Nranquar stopped dead for a long
instant, poised himself, and threw his spear with all his might. The shaft
lanced through the air and imbedded itself in the mammoth's left shoulder. It
was a good throw, and it hurt the beast, as was
evidenced by a snort of rage and pain. But it did not
stop him; on the contrary, it speeded him up.
The
mammoth rushed at Nranquar who, defenseless, turned
and ran. The man was not fast enough. The mammoth's deadly trunk whipped out
with lightning precision and slashed sideways, knocking Nranquar
down like a club. The warrior moaned once, and was still, though he was still
breathing. The mammoth stopped, trumpeted angrily, and lifted one massive foot
to finish the job.
Mark
and Tlaxcan charged as one, shouting at the top of
their lungs to distract the great beast from his task. The mammoth hesitated,
his foot hanging in the air over the prostrate Nranquar,
his eyes beadily watching the two rash animals who dared to charge him. Mark,
somewhat lighter in build, outdistanced Tlaxcan by a
few steps and raced right at the mammoth without pausing. He was actually
between the long, curving tusks when the surprised monster backed up a step,
freeing Nranquar, who struggled to get up but could
not.
Mark
knew that he was very close to death, but he was determined to show his
friends, and most particularly Nranquar, the stuff
he was made of. Death was no stranger to him now, and he faced it calmly.
The
mammoth had moved back one step, but that was all. He was not going over that cliff, and that was that. He braced himself, bellowing.
Mark, planted between the monster and the fallen Nranquar,
so close to the mammoth that he could see the crooked red veins in his eyes,
took a deep breath, aimed, and lunged with his spear, every ounce of his power
and every pound of his weight behind the thrust. He felt the shock in his arms
when the spear rammed home, and he heard the mad trumpeting of the bull mammoth.
He could see the red blood staining the monster's
woolly coat—and he caught a sudden glimpse of mighty ivory tusks tossing
angrily, their sharp points digging at him furiously.
That
was all that Mark remembered with any degree of clarity. A fiery pain stabbed
through his side, and as he twisted away, something slammed into his skull with
paralyzing force. He crumpled in front of the enraged mammoth, his face buried
in the grass. Vaguely, as from an infinite distance, whispering down from the
stars, he heard shouts and trumpetings as a battle to
the death raged over his body. He heard Tlaxcan
barking orders, and old Roqan telling everybody to
stand aside and let a man in there. Something caught hold of his feet and he
felt himself pulled along the grass, away from the fight. His brain began to
spin, and whirled faster and faster, in many-colored circles and bubbles of
light. His whole body seemed to be whirling, around and around, and now the
colored light all flowed together and was shot through with darkness. Someone
was running crazily through his brain, wearing a billowing cape of black velvet...
Blackness. Silence. His soul
drifted on an infinite sea of calmness that had no waves and yet washed the
shores of the universe. Mark knew that he was dead. It was good to be dead,
with nothing to worry about ever again. He had often wondered what it would be
like to die, and he had feared it. But now that it had happened it wasn't bad
at all. Very pleasant, really, just drifting on forever . . .
"Mark."
Someone was calling him. Who could it be? He
was all alone on the sea. "Mark!"
His uncle? What was he doing here, drifting with the
dead? But no—his uncle was thousands of years away.
"Mark!"
Mark
stirred. The vast, unmoving sea dissolved into nothingness. Plis
head hurt. He opened his eyes and there was the sun and the blue sky. He saw a
cloud. Mark moaned and decided that he was still alive. He wished that he were
dead again.
"It's
all right, Mark," said a voice. It wasn't his uncle,
the voice did not speak English. "The quaro is dead, but you are alive. The great red flower will burn through the
heavens many more times before you leave us. The evil spirits had you—they were
dragging you away across the Sea of Shadows—but I have brought you back."
Mark's
dazed eyes swam back into focus and he saw the owner of the voice. It was Qualxen, the shaman. He was smiling broadly, well pleased
with his success in driving out the spirits with his magic. Mark managed a
smile in return.
"You
are the most powerful medicine man in all the
world," Mark assured him, his voice weak with shock.
Qualxen
positively beamed with delight. "Sleep now," the shaman whispered
soothingly. "Sleep, sleep . . ."
Mark
slept, and he did not dream. When he woke up again, it was dark. There was a
robe over him, and his head was clear. He sat up, looking around.
He felt surprisingly good; the pain in his
side had diminished to a throbbing ache, and a careful exploration with his
fingers assured him that nothing was broken. His head was sore where it had
been hit by the swinging tusk, but the soreness was all on the surface. He felt
a warm glow of relief wash through him. He had evidently just been knocked out,
and was not seriously hurt.
Mark
got uncertainly to his feet, taking it easy at first, and at once a shadow
detached itself from the others that filled the night and came to him.
"You
are back with us," said a voice. "I have been watching you."
"Nranquar!" Mark said with surprise. "Is that
you?"
"Yes,
it is Nranquar. The others are down below the cliff,
cutting up the meat."
"What happened? The
mammoth . . ."
"Tlaxcan and Roqan drove him
back—the whole tribe hit him at once. He died fighting, but no one else was
injured."
There
was an awkward silence then, and Mark became aware of the sounds drifting up
from below the cliff—quiet laughter, the low voices of people at work, the chip-chip of
stone tools. The world was curiously hushed after the bedlam of the hunt, and
the silver moon was already high in a sea of stars, floating in lonely splendor
through the night.
"Mark?"
"Yes?"
"I—I
owe my life to you," Nranquar said haltingly.
This man who faced death without a tremor was acutely embarrassed at showing
his emotions, but he was trying. "I have stood in your way ever since you
came among us, and now you have saved my life. My life is yours."
"It
is forgotten," Mark assured him, placing his hand on Nranquar's
shoulder. "I would be proud to call you my friend."
"You
are one of the Danequa now," Nranquar
said softly. "You are my brother."
Mark
felt a thrill go through him at the words, a thrill and a tingling happiness. A
few short months ago—or fifty-two thousand years ago, perhaps—these people had
not even existed as far as he was concerned. They were savages, names in a
book, dawn men who had once roamed the earth. And now their friendship and
approval meant more to him than anything else in his life. He did not spoil
the moment with words; all had been said that needed to be said, and he knew
that now, whatever happened, the Danequa were his
people, and he was one of them.
"Let
us join the others," Nranquar said finally.
"They are waiting for us."
Following
Nranquar's lead, Mark felt his way down a path that
led to the bottom of the cliff. The moon was bright and clear, but they did not
need it when they reached the Danequa. Great fires
were burning redly in the night, and the delicious
smell of wood smoke filled the air, together with that of roasting meat. The Danequa were feasting while they worked, and they were
tired but content. Mark noticed that they had recovered their dead, and the two warriors they had lost slept the final
sleep under a robe by the fire. Their loss somewhat dampened the spirits of the
Danequa, but there were no demonstrations of grief.
There would be time enough for that when the work was done. Nor was this lack
of feeling on then-part, Mark realized. It was just that these people lived
with death at their side always; death was no novelty to them, and they had to
save their sorrow for when they had time for it. Time enough to remember the
dead after they were buried with their weapons and charms—time enough to
remember the dead on the long winter nights, when the families were alone, when
the spirits howled and moaned down the snow-driven winds.
Mark
was greeted by soft smiles and cheerful waves that meant more to him than any
enthusiastic demonstration could have possibly meant. He belonged now; he was
not a hero, and did not want to be, but was simply one of the Danequa, sharing their joys and sorrows because they were his joys and sorrows.
Tlaxcan grinned. "You are just in time to miss
all the work," he told him.
Old
Roqan came up, wearing his perpetual frown, bringing
a choice piece of meat and a chunk of split bone loaded with juicy marrow.
"Here," he grunted, "since you are too late to work you might as
well eat a little something." He gave Mark the meat and the marrow, the
twinkle in his eyes taking all the sting out of his
words. Mark gratefully dug into the tangy meat, and sampled the marrow, which
was considered quite a delicacy by the Danequa. The
marrow was the soft, red tissue that filled the bone cavities, and Mark found
it rather salty but very good after he got used to it.
Roqal, the plump wife of Roqan,
ran up, skipping and laughing, and told Mark that she thought he was just the bravest thing ever. He told her that she was
beautiful, and she raced happily away to convey this surprising intelligence to
her husband, who had different ideas.
When
the Danequa had cut all the meat and hides that they
could possibly carry on the return trip, they loaded it all on devices they
used for transporting their belongings. These contraptions were quite simple,
since the wheel was completely unknown to them, and they consisted of two long
lean-to poles, which crossed at one end to form a V-shaped frame. The hides
were fastened to this frame, and the meat was piled on the hides and tied in
place. These were pulled with the open end of the V dragging behind, and were quite helpful. Mark had seen similar devices
among the Indians, where they were called travois. He remembered that the
Indians, in times past, had used dogs to pull small travois, and he tried to
hook a small one up to Fang. Fang, however, whose knowledge of history was
cheerfully less than Mark's, refused to cooperate, snapping at his improvised
harness and looking at Mark with pleading eyes. Mark turned him loose.
"Guess
it just doesn't pay to tamper with history, old boy," he said, scratching
Fang's ears and giving him a chunk of meat. "You've done enough work for
this day anyhow."
Fang
wagged his bushy tail happily and nuzzled Mark's hand. Mark could not help
thinking that here was a concrete example of a problem he had often wondered
about. Could you change history, if you went back in time? The Danequa had not used any animals for transportation
purposes, and his brief attempt to change that had failed. Had Mark changed
anything, in any fundamental way, in his weeks with the men of the dawn? He
doubted it, and doubted that he could even if he had worked at it. He was
beginning to realize that there was more to changing history than just coming
along with a new or original idea. A people and their culture had to be
receptive to the idea. In his own time, politicians
and others had found that out, although they expressed it in different words.
They said that "the time had to be right" for change.
Leaving
three warriors behind to guard the meat they could not carry, the Danequa moved out across the plains for home, their travois
loaded with meats and hides from the hunt. Old Roqan
walked in the lead, his slight limp hardly noticeable—and, indeed, he would
have been furious if anyone had noticed
it in his presence. Behind him walked Mark, Tlaxcan,
and Nranquar, side by side.
The
moon was full, a silver world of ice swimming through the star-flecked reaches
of the universe. The pale moonlight bathed the procession in soft radiance,
lighting their way across the plains. Mark felt strangely proud and humble, and
something in the darkness of the shadows whispered to him that this night would
live forever in his heart.
Behind
him, a few scattered voices started a chanting song. Others took it up, their
voices carrying eerily across the moon-drenched plains. Mark listened intently,
trying to learn the song, not sure whether he should join in or not.
The
song was not difficult, once Mark caught on to what the singers were doing. Not
every line of the chant had meaning, he soon realized. The lines of the song
were mixed in with lines of pure sound, sung
for their music alone. Nranquar
looked over at him and smiled, urging him to join in the singing.
Mark
took a deep breath, and there under the full moon in the dawn of man, singing
carefully so as not to destroy the rhythm of the music, he joined the Danequa in their weirdly beautiful chant:
O he o-yo o-yo he o-he O he o-yo o-yo he o-he o O he o-yo o-yo he o-he he O he o-yo o-yo he o-he O he o-yo! House of the night House of the moon Darkness walks tvith us On the hunt In life, in death In the moon-rays it is finished In the moon-rays it is ended. O he o-yo o-yo he o-he O he o-yo o-yo he o-he o—
Mark Nye smiled happily, knowing that he
belonged at last. He was no longer alone.
Chapter 16 Ambush
I |
he next evening, after sleeping a few hours in the valley of the Danequa, Mark and Tlaxcan hit the
long trail back to the cliff. The rest of the tribe was busy drying the meat,
and storing some of it under the snow in nature's icebox. They would head back
for another load the next day, and in the meantime Mark and Tlaxcan were going to relieve the three guards who had been
left behind with the dead mammoths. Fang trotted along beside them, and the
wolf-dog had now been tamed to the extent that he permitted Tlaxcan
to pet him occasionally, and the two actually seemed to be quite fond of each
other.
Mark
still carried his .45, together with a spear. Tlaxcan
had his bow and arrows and the stone knife he was seldom without. They did not
anticipate trouble, but they were alert and ready for anything. The night was
always full of hidden dangers, and the cold wind of death lurked behind every
rock and shrub.
The
night passed without incident, however, although along toward morning they
spotted a curious animal that instantly reminded Mark of the one he
had briefly seen when he had first stepped out
of the space-time machine. The beast looked like a giant rhinoceros, with a
wicked horn on its snout, but he was covered by the same yellowish-brown wool
Mark had seen on the mammoths. He was an unpleasant-looking customer, and Mark
noticed that Tlaxcan gave him a wide berth. The
woolly rhinoceros did not bother them; he was content with planting himself
like a rock on the plain, his eyes stating quite plainly that he would be a
good animal to leave alone.
All
through the day Mark and Tlaxcan continued on their
way, eating the dried meat mixed with berries and sealed by animal fat—called
berry pemmican when used by the American Indians—when they were hungry. They
were approaching the cliff from the southwest, and it was early evening before
they sighted the rocky hills that surrounded the mammoth trap. Mark was
surprised to see how easily he could make out the trail that had been left by
the Danequa on their return trip to their valley
home; the streaky tracks left by the heavily loaded, dragging poles in the
grass were plainly visible to him. He was sure that he could have found his way
to the cliff without help, and he was proud of the fact. He was learning,
slowly but surely. But there was much to learn in this strange new world . . .
Nearing
the cliff just as the sun was fading in the west, Tlaxcan
shouted to warn his three friends that he was coming. His voice echoed hollowly
through the hushed silence of the rocks, but there was no reply.
"Sleeping on the job, perhaps." Tlaxcan smiled.
"It's lucky that Roqan is not here. He would
skin them alive."
"It's not like them to sleep at a time
like this," Mark said, a questioning note in his voice.
Tlaxcan looked at him. "No, it isn't," he
said quietly, and Mark realized that he had feared that something was wrong
from the first. It was hard to get used to Tlaxcan's
habit of speaking lightly no matter what was on his mind. It did not pay to
take him too literally, and Mark wondered idly how many men and animals had died,
their last sight a glimpse of Tlaxcan, his smile calm
and unruffled even with death in his hand . . .
"You there!" shouted Tlaxcan. "Where are you?" No answer.
"Is everything all right?" Silence.
"I
don't like this," said Mark, loosening his .45 in its holster and taking a
fresh grip on his lance. The cool evening breeze whipped across the plains, and
its moan was the only sound in all the world. It was too still; the very air seemed to whisper danger. The two men moved forward
cautiously, Tlaxcan slightly in the lead. Tlaxcan fitted an arrow to his sinew-backed bow, and
unconsciously his body assumed a fighting crouch. He sniffed the air, his
sensitive nostrils flaring wide.
As
if guided by instinct, Tlaxcan changed his course a
trifle so as to mount a near-by rise in the land. Clearly, he was uncertain
about the wisdom of following the well-marked trail too closely until he found
out exactly what was going on. They hurried up the hill, their light footfalls
sounding unnaturally loud in the ominous quiet. Mark thought that he had never
heard the land so still; there was not the rustle of an insect, not the chirp
of a bird, nothing.
Sticking
to cover without quite knowing why—for surely they had been spotted long ago if
enemies were indeed about—they wormed their way up to a pile of jagged rocks
and looked over. All was almost as they had last seen it in the little valley
at the bottom of the cliff. The huge carcasses of the dead mammoths, chopped
and carved as they had been by the Danequa hunters,
still lay on the rocks, their remaining tusks gleaming whitely in the dying
rays from the sun. The three guards left behind by the Danequa
were still there too. But it was obvious enough why the three warriors had not
answered their calls. The guards were as dead as the mammoths they guarded.
Mark
looked down into the pit of death, his throat choked with horror. The hushed
silence shrieked in his ears. There was something decidedly odd about the scene
before them, something above and beyond the spectacle of their three friends
lying dead and cold across the massive bodies of the quaro that they themselves had slain. For a long moment, Mark could not quite
put his finger on what it was. Then he saw it.
"The
vultures," he whispered to Tlaxcan, pointing
into the gray air. "There are no vultures."
That
was it. With the great hulks of the mammoths beginning to decay after a day in
the sun, and with the three guards dead, the sky should have been alive with the
ugly black vultures that fed on the dead. Moreover, there should have been
carrion-eaters gnawing on the dead flesh—wolves, dogs, something. Fang's hackles bristled, and Mark's own neck
felt a curious, nervous tingling. If there were no men around, there;
should have been vultures. There were no vultures.
Therefore—
"Run
for it!" hissed Tlaxcan, sniffing the air. "The Mroxor."
The Mroxor,
the half-men . . .
Mark
needed no second invitation. Desperately, he sprinted back the way they had
come, with Tlaxcan by his side and Fang racing on
ahead. They still had seen nothing, and the world was hushed, waiting. Perhaps
they had avoided the ambush by veering off from the main trail, perhaps Tlaxcan was wrong!
Tlaxcan was not wrong.
Seeing
their prey racing out of the trap, the half-men burst from cover. A chorus of
blood-freezing screams and snarls split the silence of the evening, and Mark
felt his heart leap convulsively in his chest. He would never forget those
chilling snarls, the snarls and grunts that had pursued him through the nightmare
of his first days in the Ice Age. The bestial Neanderthals held a very
personal terror for him, and it was all he could do to keep himself under
control.
The
half-men had been waiting for them along the regular trail, and Tlaxcan's unexpected turning had destroyed their neat
ambush. They had been filtering across to catch them on the hill when Tlaxcan's keen nose had caught wind of them, and now they
were mostly behind the two men, charging along in their shuffling, animal-like
run. Mark did not turn to look, but he could tell that there were plenty of the
hideous Neanderthals. Enough to overpower three of the fighting Danequa, certainly, and from their snarling shrieks there
must have been a horde of them.
Mark and Tlaxcan
cut back toward the southeast, where a low range of mountain foothills was
visible in the gray light of evening. Tlaxcan seemed
to know where he was going, and Mark had no choice but
to follow him in any event. They were running with the speed and endurance that
only fear can give to a man's feet, but the half-men
were hot on their heels. Mark remembered all too well their clinging, endless
pursuit. You could never outrun a Mroxor
for long in a straight dash, for they were absolutely tireless. Still, if they
could make the hills—
With
the sudden shock of a nightmare, two of the half-men popped up behind a boulder
and barred their way. They were almost unbelievably ghastly; they were so
horrible, with their crouched, hairy bodies and their brute mouths and eyes,
that you felt that if you blinked your eyes they would surely be gone. They
were too awful to be real.
But
they were real, and they were definitely not going away. They gripped their
crude stone axes, eyes gleaming, their puffing lips drawn back from their wet
teeth, ready for the kill.
There
was no time for anything but swift action. The Neanderthal horde was right
behind them, and the two half-men were right before them. Without even breaking
stride, Tlaxcan loosed an arrow which thunked completely through one of the monsters, dropping him like a stone. Mark
had no time to draw his gun; he simply ran full speed at the other half-man and
ran him through with his spear before he ever knew what hit him. The smell of
the Mroxor was overpowering, and the others were too
near to spare a second. Mark left the spear in the body and raced after Tlaxcan across the grassy plains. He had
a terrible, dreamlike impression that the
interlude with the Danequa had been but an unreal
fantasy, that he had always been running with the fearful Neanderthals behind
him, eternally, forever, for the rest of his life.
For
the rest of his life. That
might not be very long.
But
the paralyzing fear abated slightly, and he saw that the half-men were not
gaining on them. Actually, it was easier this time than it had been before. He
was in far better condition, he was not alone, and the world was no longer so strange to him as it had once been. But all that would be
scant comfort if that snarling pack of man-things ever caught up with them,
and catch them they would, eventually, unless Tlax-can
knew his stuff.
Tlaxcan had no breath to waste in talking. However,
sensing his friend's thoughts, he managed a quick smile of reassurance that
picked Mark up amazingly. Mark knew that if anyone could get them through, it
was Tlaxcan. That, of course, was the question—could anyone?
Mark
stopped thinking. He realized that Tlaxcan knew the
country better than he could ever know it, and his job was simply to follow his
lead. Mark was intelligent enough to recognize a real leader when he saw one, and he did not foolishly try to exert his own influence
in a situation he was not equipped to deal with. And he did not want to think about the snarling half-men behind him; above all things he
must not permit his muscles to become constricted with fear. In New Mexico, he
had once seen a bird frozen with fear at the sight of a snake slithering toward
it. All the bird had to do was to fly away, but it simply could not move. It
stood rooted to the spot, staring, until it no longer had eyes with which to
see.
Mark
tried to imagine that this was just a race he was running, a cross-country
marathon. He kept his eyes on Tlaxcan's broad back
and matched him step for step. He was dimly aware that night had fallen, and he
was seeing by starlight. He felt the grass under his feet turn to rock as they
raced into the mountains, and he was conscious that the grunting snarls of the
Neanderthals were fading behind him.
Finally,
there was only the pounding of their own feet, the dry gasping of their own
breathing. They were alone—they had shaken them! Tlaxcan
stopped, and Mark sat down to catch his wind. Tlaxcan
instantly pulled him to his feet.
"Do
not be a fool, my friend," he panted. "One does not escape from the Mroxor so simply. The night has confused them for a moment, that is all."
Mark
shook his head, ashamed of his own stupidity. "That is what happens when
you turn off your mind," he apologized. "What do we do now?"
"We
build a fire," Tlaxcan answered surprisingly,
"and we do it fast."
Mark
looked at his friend in amazement, but there was no time to discuss strategy.
If Tlaxcan said to build a fire, then that was what
they were going to do. Mark pitched in with frantic speed, gathering some dead
and rotten pine. He split the shavings with his knife, and he and Tlaxcan piled kindling and boughs together in record time.
Mark knelt with his precious matches, and eyed Tlaxcan
questioningly.
"They
will see the fire," he said logically. "They will find us and come
here."
Tlaxcan smiled. "They will find us
anyway," he explained. "They will come, but we will not be
here."
Wondering,
Mark lit the fire. It blazed up brilliantly, and Mark reflected that he was
getting to be an expert at building fires. If he ever got home, he knew that he
would never again waste more than one match in starting a fire.
"Now,"
said Tlaxcan hurriedly, "we need torch
branches—all we can carry. Be quick, we have little time."
The
two men searched through the night and managed to locate six dead branches
that would serve as torches. They lit just one of them, which Tlaxcan carried, and then they left the fire and climbed
on into the hills. In a short time they came to a dark cave, which had
evidently been Tlaxcan's destination, and they were
not a moment too soon. A chorus of snarling shouts below them told them that
the half-men were already at the fire.
The
cave mouth was dark and unwholesome-looking. Damp, faintly foul air rose out
of its depths and Mark felt an unreasonable shudder pass through him. Caves,
like houses, had personalities of their own. Some were warm and cozy, good
places to sleep in. Others were vastly mysterious and hinted of scenic marvels
underground. And still others were dank and evil-smelling, with a nameless
dread dwelling in their subterranean caverns, crawling with wormy horrors that
had never known the light of day.
It
was not an inviting place to enter. Mark quickly saw, however, the wisdom of Tlaxcan's move. They could not elude the Neanderthals for
long, even in the mountains; it would not do to count on another streak
of luck such as had saved Mark the first time.
Sooner or later, they would have to stand and fight. If they had to fight, it
was best to do it before they were too exhausted to give a good account of
themselves. And what possible location could give them a better advantage than
a cave? There, in the narrow tunnels deep in the earth, they could take the
half-men on one at a time; and it was altogether possible that the Mroxor would not dare to follow them at all. They were not
fools, and they would know that plunging into a dark cave after two cornered Danequa was not far removed from suicide.
Of
course, getting out again would be another matter. But there in the coldness
of the night, with the bestial half-men snarling furiously as they raced toward
them, there was but one way to go—forward.
Together,
with only Tlaxcan's fitfully burning torch to guide
them, they entered the cave. Fang sniffed at the cave mouth and drew back,
whining. The half-men screamed behind him, and Fang, growling deep in his
throat, trotted hesitantly through the entrance and followed the flickering
torch into the uneasy darkness below.
Chapter 17 Dweller Under the
Earth
i |
HE cave sloped downward, and Mark could feel his
steps quickening on the slanting floor of rocks. He could hear the Neanderthals
growling in the darkness, and judged that they were grouped around the cave
mouth, trying to decide whether or not to go in. The hollow, tubular caverns
did strange things with voices however, taking them and twisting them grotesquely
out of all recognition. It was almost impossible to tell whether a sound came
from just over your shoulder or hundreds of yards away. The growls and mutterings
chased each other down the black echoes and lost themselves among the uncaring
rocks.
Fang
stayed so close to him that he constantly entangled himself in Mark's legs; he
had to push him away forcibly in order to keep on going. The dog was obviously afraid
of something, and Mark had a grim suspicion that what he feared waited ahead of them in the depths of the cave, rather than behind them where the
half-men whispered their fury.
Mark
had a continual feeling that he was about to step off into a bottomless pit;
there was not enough light to see by, and he simply had to follow, as best
he could, the light from Tlaxcan's
torch, as it wound on down into the cave. He knew, of course, that where Tlaxcan had gone he could also go, but it was weirdly
uncomfortable to have to put his feet down on rocks that he could not see,
feeling all the while that he might just go on forever, down, down, down . . .
The
dank, unpleasant smell increased as they pushed on through the caverns. Mark
could not quite decide what it was about the smell that was so oppressive; it
was a nameless thing, all the more chilling because he could not positively
identify it. It was not merely a dead smell, although the cave had the stench
of death about it somehow. Nor was it only the dampness, or the stifling
closeness that one often knows deep in the earth, with the untold tons of rock
pushing down on you from the clean world above.
It
reminded Mark of a sewer pipe he had once crawled into as a child. The pipe had
stopped abruptly and turned into a stone tunnel, where the sewer line ran under
a railroad track. He had groped forward in the darkness, the batteries in his
small flashlight beginning to give out. He splashed excitedly through the
murky ooze, still on his hands and knees, putting one hand ahead of the other
to feel his way along. First his right hand, then his left hand, then his right
hand, then his left hand touched something.
It was cold, cold and slippery. Horrified, he could not take his hand away. The
thing was round and soft and flexible. Mark ran his hand along it, shocked
almost out of his senses. It was long. His other hand shaking so that he could
hardly hold the flashlight, he turned the fading beam downward. There on the
rocks, dead glazed eyes staring at him, was a six-foot rattlesnake that had
been dead too long . ..
That was the way this cave
felt,
Down
and down Tlaxcan went, not even bothering to look
behind him. Mark could not hear the half-men now. Had they given up? Were they
squatting around the cave mouth, waiting? Or were they stalking them in silence
through the Stygian blackness, their red eyes fixed on Tlaxcan's
dwindling torch even as Mark's were?
Fang
whined loudly and then subsided into silence as Mark patted him with a
reassurance he did not feel. Mark tried to tell himself that he just had the
willies, that the worst was over, that Tlaxcan
clearly knew what he was doing and where he was going. That helped some, but
the eerie feeling persisted. Mark kept seeing that dead snake, soft and
horrible under his hand.
Tlaxcan fired up another torch from the dying flames
of the first one and hurled the first one away. It sizzled and hissed as it
fell into a shallow basin of oily water, and then winked out. The new torch
chased the shadows back momentarily, and Mark caught a sudden glimpse of
fantastic rock formations all around him in a somber and brooding series of
archways and branching tunnels, rearing stalagmites and hanging stalactites.
It was weirdly beautiful, and yet infinitely dead. It looked like the cold
surface of the moon.
On
and on they went, with Tlaxcan as sure-footed as
though he were trotting through an open field for exercise. He twisted and
turned, following a trail that Mark could not see. The damp heaviness in the
air increased, almost as if all the weight above them were pushing down on it
with physical force. Far in the distance,
Mark could hear what sounded like the gurgle
of running water. That was all. There was no sound to alarm him, and he
noticed nothing that was the least suspicious. And yet the feeling of dread
stayed with him, seeming to seep through the very air itself.
The
Neanderthals were gone as though they had never existed, and Mark did not
believe that they could have followed them all this way without once betraying
themselves. Either they had gone back to the dead mammoths, or else they were
waiting for them at the mouth of the cave. Neither Mark nor Tlaxcan
was in any hurry to go back and find out for sure, so they kept on going down
into the depths of the cave. Undoubtedly, Mark figured, Tlaxcan
knew of another exit to these caverns than the one by which they had entered.
Otherwise, they were trapped more certainly than they had ever been outside,
and Tlaxcan was not dull-witted in any respect. If the Neanderthals knew of that other exit, too, however . . .
Fang
kept drawing back, afraid to go on, and then hurrying madly to catch up, afraid
to be left behind. What was the matter with him? Mark knew that the wolf-dog
was used to caves, and he had proved his courage many times over on the mammoth
hunt. He didn't scare easily, and if he was scared at all, there was a reason
for it. Such thoughts did little good, however. They could not possibly go
back now, even if they knew for sure that danger lurked in the black depths of
the cave. They could only go forward, down into the earth.
"Not
much farther down now," Tlaxcan said suddenly,
the unexpected sound of his voice startling in the hush of the cave.
156
M'tsis of
Dawn
"Let's
hope not," Mark answered, keeping his voice cheerful. "It should
start getting hot any minute now."
Tlaxcan, of course, did not catch Mark's reference,
but he did not question him. "We have lost the Mroxor,"
he said instead.
"Are you sure?"
Mark asked.
"The
Mroxor will not follow us here," Tlaxcan assured him.
"Why
not, Tlaxcan?"
"This
cave is not a good cave," Tlaxcan
said quietly, summing up all Mark's vague thoughts in a single sentence.
"We are very far from the sun."
The
second torch burned down to a mere twig with a vanishing flame, and Tlaxcan hurriedly lit his last dead branch. Mark was
grateful for the light, as was Fang, who wagged his tail in relief. Light very
decidedly made a difference, and Mark did not even like to think about being
lost in this underground maze in total darkness. He still had three branches of
his own, but he realized that that was none too many. The dead wood burned
fast, and not even Tlaxcan could find his way to the
surface again without a torch. There must be fresh air moving through the cave,
Mark thought, since the torch seemed to be blowing very slightly. It could not
be much, since he could not feel it at all, but its presence was encouraging.
Abruptly,
the cave floor leveled out underfoot. The steady downward grade vanished, and
Mark had been walking so long on a slanting surface that for a moment it was
difficult to adjust his stride to more normal conditions. He had a distinct
impression of open spaces all around, as opposed to the pressing sensations
that sensitive individuals always felt in narrow caves. In the uncertain light
of Tlaxcan's torch, he could not even see the walls
of the cave, and the roof was lost in the shadows above his head. The gurgle of
water was quite close now, and it echoed with surprising loudness against the
distant rocks. They were evidently in a huge underground room of some sort, far
beneath the surface of the earth.
Tlaxcan did not break his stride,
and Mark had to hurry to keep up with him. But the strange, oppressive smell
was even stronger in the vast chamber, and Mark found that it took quite an
effort of will to keep from looking back over his shoulder. The smell, he was
now able to determine, was not one smell but several, all mixed up together.
One of the smells, unless he was very much mistaken, was that of dead fish. At
first thought, this seemed strange, but then he remembered the fish caught in
Mammoth Cave in his own day and age. There was a stream here, and therefore there
could be fish. The other smells he could not yet identify, but there was one
question that needed answering in a hurry.
Who, or what, caught the
fish down here?
No
one answered his unspoken question, but obviously Tlaxcan
had also been doing some figuring with regard to those dead fish. He quickened
his pace, torch held high aloft, and swung his bow around in his free hand so
that it was ready for action. Fang caught the heightened odor too, and whined
and growled by turns.
They
crossed an icy stream, and Mark felt as though he were stepping barefooted
through piles of drifting jellyfish. He did not relish the thought of wading
through water that he could not see, and he was tense and nervous, waiting for
something to happen. Nothing did, however, and they went on through the great
cavern without incident.
Tlaxcan led him into a small branching tunnel that
shortly opened up again into another cave room, this time much smaller than the
one they had just been through, but still a cavern of considerable size. It was
pitch dark, and Tlaxcan's torch was growing dim. Fang
whined constantly, and almost crawled along, flat on the floor. Mark felt the
hair on the back of his neck stand up, and he began to
shiver uncontrollably. Even Tlaxcan slowed his pace,
his breathing harsh and shallow in the stillness.
Something was wrong with the room.
Mark
could not for the life of him figure out what was the matter. The smell was
stronger, but that was all. There was no sound, save for Fang's whining and the
chuckle of water from the cavern behind them. All was darkness, darkness and
silence, and yet . . . Eyes.
There
were two eyes looking at them from the blackness of the cavern. Two eyes where
no eyes could be, glowing with yellow flames in the gloom under the earth.
There was not a sound, only the two unblinking eyes like misplaced stars
watching them. The eyes were bad enough, but their position was worse.
The eyes were a good
fifteen feet off the ground.
"Tlaxcan,"
Mark whispered. "Tlaxcan—"
With
the awful suddenness of a thunderclap when there is not a cloud in the sky, an
ear-splitting roar bellowed through the cave. The sound blasted against Mark's
ears, numbing his brain with fear. It was the most fearful sound he had ever
heard in his life—and coming as it did from fifteen feet off the ground . . .
"Get back, Mark!" shouted Tlaxcan. "Back in that corner!"
Mark
did not move. Frightened as he was, he had not the remotest intention of
leaving Tlaxcan to fight a rear guard delaying action
by himself. Instead, he moved up beside him. Forcing
his nerves to steady down, he took one of his torches and lit it from the dying
flame of Tlaxcan's. The light flared out suddenly,
and he caught a quick glimpse of something enormous and black under the eyes.
The thing roared again.
It started forward.
Tlaxcan
threw his feeble torch with all his strength at the padding figure of darkness,
and the thing snarled hideously, its yellow eyes gleaming. It hesitated,
brushing the flame aside.
"Now," hissed
Mark. "Back together."
To
have only one direction from which to defend themselves,
they backed rapidly into a corner, with Mark holding the torch high in the
gloomy air. Fang growled deep in his throat, no longer afraid now that the
danger was real. He knew that he did not have a chance against the monster
before him, but he was determined to die fighting.
The thing roared again, its
voice wet and ugly.
"Whatever
we're going to do, we'll have to do it quick," Tlaxcan
said evenly. "We need these torches to get out of here."
They
had their backs to the wall, with no room to maneuver. Their supply of light
was going up in smoke. When the light gave out, and left them alone in the
darkness with that monster—Mark tried not to think about it.
They would have to act, and act now. But that
thing
in the cave was not going to sit "back and
smile indulgently while they figured out some way to dispose of it. They would
have to kill it instantly
or not at all. A mere wound
would simply madden it into a headlong charge after its tormentor, and anything
fifteen feet high was apt to take a lot of killing.
They
had no choice. Tlaxcan had evidently figured things
out the same way Mark had, and it was characteristic
of the man that he did not even consult his friend to see who would risk his
life first. With a faint smile on his proud face, Tlaxcan
stepped forward to do battle against the towering monster with a bow and arrow.
Chapter 18
The
Council of War-
I |
laxcan!" Mark reached out and bodily pulled his, friend back into the
relative safety of the corner., Tlaxcan tensed, and
eyed Mark with the questioning look of one who thinks his companion insane.
"You have no weapons," Tlaxcan pointed out
reasonably. "Your job must be to hold the light steady." "You
are mistaken," Mark replied. "I have this." Mark drew his .45
and showed it to Tlaxcan. Before them in the cave the
monster-thing shuffled its huge invisible feet and snarled an angry warning.
Fang growled back at him, making up in heart for what he lacked in size.
Tlaxcan smiled patiently. "You are brave, my
friend," he said, "but bravery is sometimes ill-advised. You cannot
possibly harm the Dweller with that tiny weapon; you could not even get close
enough to use it."
Mark
wasted no time trying to explain to Tlaxcan the
principle of firearms. "This weapon is magic," he said instead.
"With it I have killed the Mroxor, and it will
not fail us. Let me try, at least. I will not have to move from this
spot." Tlaxcan hesitated. He knew that his
friend had the
reputation of having strong medicine, and he knew too
that his chances against the thing in the cave with a bow and arrow were slim
almost to the vanishing point.
"You
hold the light," Mark said, thrusting the torch into his hand. "I
will try my magic."
Tlaxcan held the torch aloft, and with his other
hand he gripped his bow. Magic was all very well, he knew from experience, but
it had a tendency to be un-dependable. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it did
not. It never hurt to have something in reserve.
Mark
himself was far from feeling as confident as he sounded. To be sure, his .45
with its three bullets was a more effective weapon than a bow and arrow could
be, even when the more primitive weapon was handled by such an expert as Tlaxcan. But a pistol, for all his talk about magic, could
not perform miracles. A .45 packed a formidable wallop, but it was not accurate
even at close range. What he needed was a high-powered rifle with rapid-fire
action, and even then he would not have felt completely secure. He was under no
illusions that one shot from the .45 would knock the monster over like a
rabbit. That thing had bulk, and he felt oddly like someone trying to stop a
tank with an air rifle. The thing roared again, deafeningly. It started
forward.
It
was now or never. Mark's nerves were steady, and he
managed to think of the nightmare creature simply as a target. He ignored the
roaring sound and aimed carefully at the thing's yellow eye. He tried to
breathe evenly, and he remembered to squeeze the trigger gently, so as not to
throw the weapon off its aim. He could feel cold sweat dripping down his body.
Mark
fired. The .45 went off with a slamming blast in the still air of the cave, and
Mark had a wild fear that the vibrations from the shot might start a landslide,
sealing them in forever or burying them under tons of rock. The gun kicked back
against his hand, and one yellow eye winked out.
A
terrible roar of pain filled the cave and Mark knew that his shot had struck
home. But the thing was not dead; all Mark could see now was one yellow eye and
the vast bulk of darkness beneath it. The monster screamed in agony, and
launched itself at them like an avalanche.
Mark
did not fire wildly. He aimed for the other eye and squeezed the trigger again.
The shot boomed out when Mark could already feel the thing's fetid breath upon
him, smell the underground monster's terrible nearness. Dimly, he was aware of Tlaxcan dropping the torch and loosing an arrow into the
black bulk. Fang growled deep in his throat and charged to meet the attack.
But
it was not enough. The warm and stinking mass of the monster kept coming, and
before Mark had time to fire his last shot it was upon him. He thrust out his
hands futilely and was thrown back against the cave wall, dropping his gun in
spite of himself. He closed his eyes, waiting for the crush of unseen jaws,
feeling the terrific weight of the thing against him.
Nothing happened.
Mark
opened his eyes. Desperately, he crawled out from under the dark mass, feeling
something wet and sticky on his hands. "Tlaxcan,"
he gasped. "What—"
"It
is dead," Tlaxcan said quietly, a deep respect
in his voice. "You have killed him with your magic."
Reaction set in and Mark was suddenly and
thoroughly sick. Then he felt better. He came back and looked down at the dead
monster that had waited for them in the depths of the earth. Fang was wagging
his busy tail furiously and rubbing against Mark with a grateful affection that
knew no bounds.
"What
was it?" Mark asked, picking up his fallen .45 and returning it to its
holster.
Tlaxcan picked up his torch and held it so that Mark
could see the dead body. Even in death, the thing was formidable. Its eyes were
gone, vanished in bloody spots where the .45 slugs had done their work. An
arrow was buried in its shoulder. It was over fifteen feet in length as it
sprawled on the cave floor, lying in a growing pool of its own blood. It was
covered with long, shaggy black hair, matted with filth. It had only a
suggestion of a tail, and its long snout was open in a death-grin of defiance,
its yellow fangs gleaming in the torchlight.
"It
is Groxur," Tlaxcan
said. "The Dweller under the earth."
This
name, for all its colorful suggestiveness, did not tell Mark what he wanted to
know. He examined the thing as carefully as he could in the flickering light,
but he knew that time was running out on them and they had to hurry if they
were to make it out of the cave before their torches expired. The last one was
already dying, and Tlaxcan lit another. That left
them with just one spare.
There
was no time for curiosity. With Tlaxcan taking the
lead and setting a rapid pace, they left the chamber of death and proceeded on
through the branching tunnel Mark's thoughts were still filled with the sight
of the monster they were leaving behind, and the only animal with which he was
familiar that he could liken the thing to was an enormous bear. That made
sense,, he realized, since the thing evidently lived mostly on fish, at least
while it was in the cave, and he remembered hearing stories about the huge
cave bears that had formerly lived beneath the earth. He shuddered
a little, knowing that never again would he see a bear without visualizing that
horror in the cavern under the world.
On
and on they went. When their torch finally expired, they lit their last one
and hurried on, almost running now. Over and over again, one thought kept
churning through Mark's brain: he had only one bullet left in his .45, and no
prospects for getting any more. If he was ever to get back to the space-time
machine, he would have to do it soon. The .45 had twice saved his life, and he
had a hunch that without it he could not expect to live long in the savage
dawn-world in which he found himself. But how could he possibly return to the
space-time machine? There was only one* chance . . .
It was
morning when Mark and Tlaxcan, with the happily
barking Fang, emerged from the dank cave into the clean air and sunlight of a
new day. Tlaxcan's strategy of
coming out by way of another exit proved successful, the half-men were
nowhere to be seen. They threw away the smoking remnants of their last torch
and worked their way down out of the hills to the plains below. There was no
sign of danger, and they struck out for the valley of the Danequa
with their spirits once more free and high under the rising sun. The news they
carried, of the massacre of the
three Danequa guards by
the Neanderthals, could not dampen their spirits too much. They were too glad
just to be alive themselves.
Their
underground maneuvering had carried them back toward the valley home of the Danequa, and their trip across the plains proved
uneventful. They walked all day, pausing only to cook and eat a deer that Tlaxcan brought down with a well-placed arrow, and they
pushed onward through most of the night. They arrived in the valley of the Danequa early the next morning, just as the Danequa were rising for another day. The tumbling cascades
of the sparkling waterfall, the wonderful green of the grass, the smell of the
clean pine trees—all of it was more beautiful and delightful than it had ever
been before. The two men drank it in with their eyes, and listened to the happy
shouts of the Danequa with new-found warmth in their
tired hearts.
It was good to be home.
Mark
and Tlaxcan reported the details of what they had
seen to the warriors of the Danequa, greeted their
friends, and then both hurried on up to Tlaxcan's
cave. Tlaxcal shooed little Tlax
away, and the two men were asleep in an instant as outraged nature took its
toll. Fang trotted obediently off to what he doubtless considered his own cave
and promptly went to sleep himself.
When
Mark and Tlaxcan awoke, night had come again. The
cold wind whispered through the valley grasses and sighed through the branches
of the lonely pines, and the stars sprinkled the heavens with clusters of
frosted diamonds. In the distance, they could hear the pleasant muted roar of
the great waterfall, now a familiar backdrop against which they enacted the
drama of their lives. And they could hear something else as well. Drums.
Mark
and Tlaxcan got up, feeling much refreshed, and
walked across the valley floor to where they saw the leaping flames of the Danequa fires and heard the rhythmic throbbing of the
brooding drums. The cold wind was fresh in their faces and the tall grasses
brushed softly against their legs as they walked.
"Those
are the council drums," Tlaxcan said quietly.
"My people are holding a council of war."
Mark raised his eyebrows.
"The Mroxor?" he asked.
Tlaxcan nodded.
"They have dared too much," he said. "They have killed our
warriors and they have stolen the quaro which we fought to bring down. This cannot go on. We have fought them
before, and now we must fight them again."
A
great shout went up when the Danequa caught sight of
Mark and Tlaxcan, and they were escorted to the
center of a circle of council members. There Tlaxcan
repeated the story of what they had seen, and told of how Mark had destroyed
the Dweller under the earth with his magic. The story lost nothing in the
telling, and Mark could sense the murmur of respect which ran around the
seated figures about the council fires. Qualxen, the
shaman, all painted up and looking very impressive for the occasion, eyed Mark
with a rather worried look on his face. Mark was getting altogether too
powerful, and if it came to a contest of supernatural skills Qualxen feared that he might be out of a job. Mark smiled
at him in a reassuring way, however, and the shaman relaxed visibly.
Mists of Dawn
One by one, the elders of the Danequa were called upon to give their views on the Mroxor raid and what should be done about it. There was a
great deal of talking, most of it ceremonial in
nature, and it went on far into the night. Mark noticed the thin, pale figure
of Tloron, whom he had not seen since he had first
come among the Danequa, sitting alone by one of the
fires. Tloron was silent, as he always was, and
seemed to be looking into the flames. What did he see there, dancing in the
night? Mark knew that Tloron was a holy person to the
Danequa, but he realized that, oddly enough, he knew
no more about the man now than he had known the first time he had met him. What
was he like, that lonely figure? What did he think in those silent thoughts he
never shared with anyone?
The
general view seemed to be that the Danequa should
organize a return raid upon the Mroxor, in order to
punish them for their actions against the Danequa. In
fact, such an overwhelming majority of the speakers favored this move that Mark
was for some time at a loss to discover why the council went on so far into the
night. Part of the reason was undoubtedly the fact that the meeting was
ceremonial in nature. There were set things to say, set procedures to go
through, all of which were time-consuming. And the Danequa
were in no particular hurry, inasmuch as •such diabolical inventions as watches
had not yet made their appearance in the world. If they finished in time, they
could attend to it tomorrow. If not, the day after that would be fine. If they
had to postpone it a week, or a month, or a year, what real difference did it
make? One time was quite as good as another,
But that was not the whole reason. There was
a decided earnestness about the proceedings that could not be entirely
explained in terms of ceremonialism. The council of the Danequa
was clearly doing its level best to reach a decision, and as far as Mark could
see, every single member but one was in favor of the same plan!
The
one opposing speaker, a middle-aged warrior named Dranqan,
maintained that they had already lost more men than" they could afford. It
seemed to Mark he was not unreasonable in his position. It was his view that
the time was coming for the Danequa to break camp for
the winter and go their separate ways after the herds. They should not waste
warriors in a fight with the Mroxor, which would
after all not benefit them in any way. Dranqan, in a
sense, was the voice of reason. He was not swept away by proud feelings of
revenge, but rather was taking the long-term view of things. Mark suspected
that Dranqan might be around for many years after the
others were dead and gone.
Around
and around the council fire the debate went, each member in turn repeating the
same arguments that he had used before. But Dranqan
would not move from his position, and it became clear to Mark that the social
organization of the Danequa was in some ways an
ultimate democracy; it was not enough to have a clear majority, but rather
every decision had to be unanimous. This system had its drawbacks, to be sure,
and one of them was readily apparent to Mark. What happened if one member held
out indefinitely? Would the meeting go on forever, with nothing ever
accomplished?
Clearly, the system was workable or it would not have been used. Mark saw the way out of the
difficulty in the early hours of the morning. When it became absolutely clear
that Dranqan could not be won over, and Dranqan saw that he could not change the views of the
others, Dranqan simply got up and left, taking with
him those of the Danequa who wished to follow him.
There were no hard feelings on either side, each had its way, and neither group
was hampered by having members who were reluctant in following the policies
set forth by their leaders.
Mark breathed a sigh of relief when it was
finally decided that a raid upon the Mroxor was in
order, to take place as soon as the Danequa could
make ready. Mark had carefully refrained from trying to influence the decision
of his friends one way or the other, since he did not want to be in any way
responsible for the death of any of his fellows. But it was obvious to him that
this raid upon the half-men represented his one and only chance to ever get
back to his space-time machine.
Walking
back through the valley of the Danequa in the pale
light of early morning, with the roar of the friendly waterfall behind him and
the voices of his adopted people around him, Mark knew that he was subtly out
of place. He had won a position in Danequa society,
and he admired them as much as any people he had ever known. But their ways
were not his ways; he was cut off from them by customs and culture that had
been built up in him throughout his life. The hard winter was coming, when the Danequa would split up to roam across the snows of the Ice
Age in search of food, and Mark was by no means
sure that he could survive such an experience.
Twice, his .45
had saved his life, and now
he had but one bullet left.
Mark had found new friends, and wonderful friends, but he missed the old
ones. He thought of his uncle, and the little lodge in New Mexico so many thousands
of years away. He thought of his own Fang, so different from the wolf-dog that
he had found in the dawn of man. No matter what happened here, he realized now
that his life and his future were forever bound up with that of a world yet
unborn.
He had to get back.
A raid with the Danequa would take him back to
the fearful valley of the Neanderthals, and thus back into the vicinity of the
lead sphere of the space-time machine. He would never have another chance as
good as this one; quite possibly he would never have another chance of any
kind.
If he failed . . .
Chapter 19 The Painting
or
the next several days,
preparations and plans were made for the attack on the Neanderthals. From time
immemorial, the leaders of men have known that in order to win a battle you
must first attend to a thousand and one details of careful planning. In Mark's
own time, the ugly game of war had grown into a sprawling chaos of
transportation, supplies, morale, leadership, and armaments. In the days of the
Danequa, with far fewer men involved, it was simpler,
but basically the same problems presented themselves. Arrows and spears had to
be laboriously manufactured by hand, emergency food supplies had to be
prepared, and plans had to be checked and agreed upon. All this took time.
Mark
was acutely aware that he was leaving his valley home for the last time. If he
were successful in his quest, he would again travel through space and time back
to the world into which he had been born. If he failed, it would be because he
was dead. In either event, he would never again see the valley of the Danequa.
There is nothing like the threat of loss to
make one
appreciate what one has. A person never fully understands
the gift of life until he has stared death in the face and felt nothingness
closing in all around him. Similarly, Mark looked at his surroundings with new
eyes, noting every detail of the cascading waterfall, the hills honeycombed
with dry caves, the dark pines with their sweet-smelling needles, and the long
green grasses that rippled like a velvet sea under the blue sky and the great
red flower that was the sun. These were things that he wanted to keep a part of
him always.
Mark
spent much of the time just wandering around the valley with Fang, talking to
the friends he had made in the lost shadows of man's history. Roqan was storming around telling everybody about the way
they would have done it when he was
a young man, while his wife, Roqal, only slightly
happy with the intoxicating kiwow, was working on his weapons. Roqan could not
quite bring himself to compliment Mark directly upon his exploit in killing the
Dweller under the earth, but he did hint that if Mark kept up the good work he
might one day be as good a man as Roqan. As usual,
the twinkle in old Roqan's eyes clearly contradicted
the gruffness of his words. He even forced a cherished stone knife on Mark as a
gift, although he was careful to make it seem that he was almost insulting Mark
to offer it to him.
With
Nranquar, now a fast friend, he spent many long hours
watching the clean water plunge over the waterfall into the sparkling pool
below. He talked across a flickering fire to the shy Tlaxcal,
the wife of Tlaxcan, and finally gave her his steel
pocketknife to help her in her work. Little Tlax, who
by now was treating Mark as one of the family, was currently engaged in trying
to dig a cave of his own in solid rock with a blunt stick he had picked up
somewhere. He made very little progress, but he beamed contentedly most of the
time, and Mark would have been proud to have him for his own son.
Mark
and Qualxen, the shaman, held many long and involved
discussions about the intricate tricks of the magic business. Qualxen now regarded Mark as just about the most powerful
medicine man he had ever heard anything about, and he
was quite proud to be seen in his company since it increased his own stature
among the Danequa. Mark treated the man with
good-natured tolerance, priding himself upon his superior knowledge, until the
shaman looked at him one day and smiled.
"Since
you are leaving soon to return to the land of your fathers," Qualxen said quietly, "you should get to know Tloron before you go. He is a very holy man."
Mark
stared at the shaman. "Leaving?" he said. "I have told you
nothing about leaving."
"You
are going," Qualxen repeated. "You will not
return."
Mark
looked at Qualxen. The shaman smiled cryptically at
him, but said nothing further. A good guess, Mark told himself. Pure and simple coincidence. Nonetheless, his respect for Qualxen jumped
considerably. He had told his plans to no one—how could the shaman have known?
Rationally,
of course, Mark knew that it was all a question of good timing and luck. But,
emotionally, he sometimes wondered. With every succeeding age, the knowledge of the preceding one had been
shown to be worthless superstition—or so some people would like to have you
believe. The age of the twentieth century, too, would pass on and become
obsolete under the merciless tread of time. What would the people of the future
think about the proud knowledge of 1953? How much did man really know, and how
much did he just think
he knew?
All questions of supernatural powers aside,
however, Mark was curious to know more about the silent Tloron.
He sought out Tlaxcan and asked him where Tloron was. Tlaxcan told him he
was at work in a cave far beneath the earth, at work in the sacred chamber of
the Danequa. Tlaxcan did
not actually say the word "sacred" of course—what he said was that
the cavern was strong with power, force, mana; that it was heavy with the spirits of the earth, of the sub-earth, and
of the sky. But his feelings toward the place were closely akin to the concepts
of sacredness, and so it was thus that Mark translated Tlaxcan's
words to himself.
Tlaxcan offered to take Mark down to see Tloron at work, and Mark readily agreed. They took torches
and entered a large cave that was vaguely familiar to Mark, although he was
certain that he had never been in it before that he could remember. They walked
along through the dark tunnels until Mark judged that they were a good two
miles beneath the earth, and still Mark was haunted by a feeling that he had
been through the cave before. He seemed to remember as from a vast distance
each turn and twist that the tunnel took. Where had he seen it before? When?
After
an hour's walk, they noticed a light glowing ahead of them in the cave. They rounded a
corner and stopped, not saying a word, looking at the scene before them.
In
this deep recess of the limestone caverns, far beneath the surface of the
earth, the pitch-black gloom was illuminated by two stone lamps set in the rock
walls. The lamps were filled with animal fat and their wicks were soaked twists
of moss. In the soft light of the stone lamps, the pale Tloron
worked alone, painting with crude clays and berry dyes and charred sticks upon
the side of the cave. He worked very slowly, unsurely, feeling his way. He
stopped often to survey his work with a critical eye.
Mark
stood very still, hardly breathing. He could not express the emotions that
raged within him at that moment. He felt much as an eavesdropper from the future
might have felt in looking over Shakespeare's shoulders when he was writing the
great soliloquy in Hamlet.
Mark knew that he was
having the unique experience of seeing one of the wonders of the world in the
moment of its creation.
What
was the silent Tloron painting? For the most part, he
was working with animal figures. There was a wonderful bison, muscles rippling.
There was a mighty stag, antlers tossing proudly. There was a stately mammoth,
his long trunk curving back along his side. The animals were drawn in profile,
without perspective, and they were vivid with black, brown, red, yellow, and
white coloring. In the soft light of the soapstone lamps, the painting was
startling in its force and clarity.
Startling?
That was hardly the word for it, for Mark had seen the painting before. He had seen it almost fifty-two thousand
years in the future.
When he had visited France with his uncle, he
had been in this same cave, seen this same painting, the colors faded by the
drift of years, but still remarkably well-preserved. This painting now before
his eyes was the first great art in all the history of mankind; it was the
oldest of the masterpieces of man. Mark had seen the painting in 1949, when he
was thirteen years old. Now he was seeing it painted before his very eyes when
he was seventeen years old, and almost fifty-two
thousand years younger in time!
What
could he say to this silent man, who worked all alone under the earth,
fumbling, unsure, reaching out through the darkness for the beauty that he saw
within him? How could he tell Tloron that the work he
was laboring over would be cherished by all men for a longer period than any
other art that would ever be created by man until the end of time?
He
could not say anything. He nudged Tlaxcan, and,
picking up a small dish of red pigment that Tloron
had discarded, he started back the way he had come. He knew that Tloron did not wish to be disturbed, nor did he wish to
chatter his time away. Tloron was doing something great, and Mark had no ill-bred tourist wish to interfere or
hinder him in any way.
"Tloron is a very holy man," Tlaxcan
said, pleased that Mark had not disturbed him. "He makes the game
plentiful and the hunting good."
Mark
nodded, remembering some of the things that Doctor Nye had told him about magic
on their tramps through the mountains of New Mexico. There were two basic types
of magic, black and white—the black used for evil, and the white for good.
Whether the magic was black or white for you depended, of course, on which side
you happened to be at the time. Among the types of white magic, ritual magic to
insure the success of the hunt held a high place. The idea was that you painted
an animal on the cave wall, and just as it appeared there so it would appear in
the fields, ready for the kill. So it was that the first great art in human
history was in part magic—as, in a sense, all great art has been ever since.
Toward
the entrance to the cave, but still well-protected and far underground, Mark
stopped and asked Tlaxcan to hold the torch for him. Tlaxcan smilingly obliged, and Mark took a flat stone about
a foot and a half in diameter and began to draw on it.
"A
little magic of my own," he explained to Tlaxcan,
who did not laugh at him. He had seen the results of Mark's magic before.
With
the pointed end of a rock, Mark carefully sketched a jet aircraft in red dye.
He took his time, and made it accurate enough so that its identity was
unmistakable. Underneath that, he slowly lettered a famous equation: E = MC2.
This was the formula worked out by Albert Einstein, to the effect that energy
equaled mass multiplied by the square of the speed of light, an idea that was
instrumental in the development of atomic energy.
When
he had finished, Mark took the rock and very carefully placed it behind a large
boulder high on a ledge in an out-of-the-way corner of the cave. He smiled to
himself when he had finished, knowing that he now had proof of a sort, in case
he should ever need any, that he had actually been back in space-time to the
land of the Danequa. He started on toward the
entrance of the cave with Tlaxcan. He could tell them
about that stone, and he could take them to it, and there it would be,
fifty-two thousand years old with a drawing of a jet plane and one of
Einstein's equations on it. Of course, everyone would claim that it was a
fake—but then you never could prove anything to people who had decided in
advance not to believe your evidence.
What
would happen, he wondered, if some anthropologist or archaeologist dug up that
stone before he got back to it? He knew for certain that it hadn't been
discovered before he left in the space-time machine in 1953, but what about
after that if he never got back? He could well imagine the absolute dumfounded
confusion of the man who found that stone
associated with Cro-Magnon culture! Even with his layman's knowledge of the
profession, Mark strongly suspected that the hypothetical anthropologist would
promptly bury the stone again and forget about it, rather than attempt to prove
that his find was a genuine one and that someone had evidently known about
Einstein and jet airplanes during the Ice Age.
As
they walked back out of the limestone caverns into the open air and saw the
preparations for the war party all around them, Mark was strongly tempted to
try to tell Tlaxcan something about himself and where
he had come from. He gave up the idea, however, after a moment's reflection.
There were no words in the Danequa language, nor
concepts in the Danequa mind, by which he could
explain the space-time machine and the world of the future to Tlaxcan. The cultures and customs and beliefs they had each
known since childhood, stood between them—and yet Tlaxcan
was one of the best friends that he had ever had, and
Mark
hated to leave him without a word of good-by or an attempt at explanation.
Mark toyed with the idea of taking Tlaxcan back with him in the space-time machine, but he
could see that it would never work out. Tlaxcan would
be far more out of place in Mark's time than Mark was in his; he would be
regarded as a freak, a Cro-Magnon in modern times, a newspaper sensation. And Tlaxcan was no freak; he was a human being, and entitled to
a life of his own.
Mark looked around him at the Danequa, with
the odd feeling of one who sees his own infinitely remote ancestors walking
before him. Time travel played some funny tricks occasionally, and this was one
of them. He knew the Danequa were in every respect
his own ancestors. They were the people who had developed into the modern
populations of Europe and England, and thus those who had largely colonized
America. There probably were not very many of them at this relatively early
time, and it was entirely possible that Mark was very distantly related to all of them, as their extremely distant descendant.
His mind stuck on the subject for a moment;
it was difficult to figure it out to his own satisfaction. Even when you
yourself had become the first real time traveler, time travel posed some
unanswerable questions. For example, what would have happened if he had gone
back in time only two years? He then could have looked up himself at the age of
fifteen, and talked to himself. But if he had done that, wouldn't he have
remembered it at seventeen before he had started back?
Or . . .
But
this was no time for idle speculation. Mark threw himself into the work that
was to determine the future course of his life with energy and enthusiasm, all
the time conscious of the booming waterfall and the lovely valley of the Danequa that he would soon be leaving forever.
The
days rushed by, and at last the war party of the Danequa
moved out across the whispering plains in search of the lurking half-men who
stood between Mark Nye and his destiny.
Chapter ZU Battle in the Dawn
W |
estward
marched the Danequa, across the flowered plains that skirted the blue
hills beyond, around the emerald green lakes carved out of solid rock by the
retreating glacial ice, toward the dark and shadowed valley where the half-men
waited. Westward and ever westward they marched—westward into the setting sun
. . .
The
Neanderthals, Mark thought, were truly a people of the setting sun. They had
been spawned in fitful darkness, and they had lived in the dawning gray twilight
of man. And now their pale sun was setting, setting in the eyes of the Danequa who were inexorably taking their world away from
them forever.
It
was possible even to pity the doomed Neanderthals, horrible as they were to
modern eyes. And, certainly, it was possible to respect them too. The half-men
had roamed the fields and ice sheets of Europe for perhaps one hundred thousand
years. Modern man, counting the Danequa now marching
at his side, had barely existed for half that time. All of man's recorded
history, all of his empires and literature and famous names, had taken place in
a tiny fraction of the time
the Neanderthals had owned the earth. All the
long years since the birth of Christ represented less than one-fiftieth as long
a period as the one hundred thousand years the half-men had flourished.
Pity
the Neanderthal, Mark thought, pity him but remember that you yourself have not
equaled his record. How long would "modern" man last? Would he
destroy himself with his unleashed technology? Was it just egotism that he
fancied himself to be the end product of the evolution of intelligence? What
future species might one day coldly replace humanity, even as humanity now was
replacing the half-men?
But
the Neanderthals were not gone yet, Mark reminded himself grimly. They were
there, they were deadly, and they barred his way back to the space-time
machine. Mark could predict, with some certainty, the outcome of the coming
battle. The Dane qua, surely, would win. They were more intelligent, they had
better weapons, and they had the advantage of surprise. The Neanderthals had no
chance in the long run, even as the American Indian had had no chance against
repeating rifles and disciplined armies. But predicting the general outlines
of future events was not the same thing as predicting what would happen to the individuals involved in them. The Indians had lost, but
they had taken many a white man into the shadows with them. The half-men would
lose, but how many Danequa would die by their side?
During
the night, the Danequa deployed their men. They had
decided against a headlong charge into the valley of the half-men, preferring a
plan that would enable them to take full advantage of the superior range of
their bows and arrows. They could see that the ideal situation would be to
deploy the Danequa archers just within arrow range, but too far away for the Mroxor
spears to be effective. Theoretically, they could thus destroy the half-men
without losing a man of their own.
Theories, however, have an unpleasant way of
not working out under actual conditions. The Danequa
leaders knew that a plan had to be flexible in order to function under battle
conditions, and they knew too that the Neanderthals were not so stupid that
they would permit themselves to stay in an impossible position. They would
either charge the archers or they would retreat into their caves, where they
would be safe as long as their food supply held out. Therefore, with quite
remarkable skill, the Danequa had planned their
movements to take the best possible advantage of the situation and the terrain.
One
small party of Danequa archers filtered down to the
head of the mountain pass and hid themselves among the rocks and pines. The
other warriors stationed themselves along the high sides of the valley, where
their bows could command the entrances to the Mroxor
caves. Mark and Tlaxcan were high
on the mountainside behind a boulder, the silent Fang lying quietly between
them.
Night passed and the dawn came. Mark looked
down into the valley before him and could not repress a shudder as the bestial
half-men shuffled out of their dark caves and prepared to go about the day's
activities. He remembered all too well the hours of horror he had experienced
in that desolate pass, and he knew that only a miracle
had saved him from death at the hands of the half-men. Had he come so far,
dared so much, only to meet death at their hands at last?
Cutting
clear through the babbling growls below them, the voice of Nranquar
shouted a signal. Fang barked fiercely and Mark and Tlaxcan
leaped to their feet. The Neanderthals were caught without a warning of any
sort; the cold valley air was filled with a cloud of whizzing arrows before
they even had time to arm themselves.
The
squat Mroxor, their legs bent and their powerful
bodies covered with pelts of dirty, matted hair, dropped like flies. Their
screams and the cries of their women and children made the air hideous with
sound. Half-men or not, their deaths were tragically horrible.
Mark took no part in the killing, for the
good and simple reason that he had no bow and arrows and his spear was of no
use at long range. He was saving his one precious shot for an emergency, and
the emergency was not yet. Looking down from the heights, the Mroxor below looked like crumpling toys, gruesome miniature
monsters falling on the valley floor.
But
the half-men knew something about fighting themselves. They certainly had no
lack of courage, and they rallied admirably under the storm of arrows. There
was no panic-stricken retreat, no hysteria. Determined to make the best of
things, the ugly creatures dashed into their caves and armed themselves with
spears and axes and knives. Then, seeing all too well that they could be driven
out of the caverns by hunger eventually, they regrouped and shuffled at full speed
across the valley floor, trying to get out of the trap and into the open where
they could fight man-to-man. It was not altogether an admirable plan, but no
men think too clearly when their friends are dropping on all sides of them
under a rain of death.
The
Neanderthals did what they could, knowing that the battle was lost before it
had ever started. They retreated across the valley floor, snarling and growling
their hate, and they took their women and children with them. Only the very
young who were too small to run were left beind. Even
in the dawn of man, war was not a pleasant business.
The
warriors of the Danequa, sensing victory and
remembering the cold bodies of their own friends murdered by the hideous Mroxor, swarmed down from the sides of the mountain,
driving the half-men across the valley floor. Mark and Tlaxcan
ran side by side, with Fang yelping and barking ahead of them. The air shook
with sounds and the shouts of men, and the Danequa
ran unheeding over the still-warm corpses of the Neanderthals they had slain.
Quite
suddenly, the rout stopped. Without any warning of any sort, six of the
half-men stopped short, turned, and charged their attackers. The rest cut off
down a hidden trail out of the valley, neatly evading the trap that had been
set for them in the mouth of the valley where more Danequa
bowmen waited.
Mark
and Tlaxcan, a moment before trotting along in the
flush of victory, found themselves fighting for their
lives in the twinkling of an eye. The six Mroxor,
swinging their stone axes in vicious circles around their bestial heads,
plunged into their midst with snarls and cries that were more than animal-like
in their ferocity. Savagely, they lashed out around them, and the Danequa line crumpled and stopped.
Tlaxcan threw away his bow and went after a
Mroxor with his knife. Mark jabbed one half-man with his lance, and
then fell flat on his face to get out of the way of a whistling stone ax wieldecl by another. Fang jumped the monster, sinking his
strong white teeth into his throat, and old Roqan
stepped coolly back and pierced the shrieking Mroxor
with an arrow. Mark got up and turned to help Tlaxcan,
but there was no need. Tlaxcan had downed his
antagonist, although he himself was smeared with blood that was not entirely
his enemy's.
It was all over in seconds. The six Neanderthals lay dead on the field,
and four of the Danequa were seriously injured. The Mroxor suicide attack had failed, as they, of course, had
known it would. But the heroic rear guard action had served its purpose. During
the milling confusion, the rest of the half-men had made good their escape from
the valley.
Mark's heart sank within him. The Mroxor had
fled out of the valley to the north, out across the great
plains. They were doubly dangerous, maddened as they were by the loss of
their friends, and
they were still between Mark and the space-time machine.
"Come on!" shouted old Roqan, his
eyes blazing. "Are the Danequa women that they
will let the Mroxor slip through their fingers? After them!"
A roar of approval went up from the assembled warriors, and they charged
in a mass out of the valley to pursue the fleeing half-men. Once more, however,
the Mroxor had fooled them.
They were not all
fleeing.
As the Danequa
raced through the mouth of the valley, huge boulders pounded down on them from
the hills above. There were not many of them, and the few half-men who had stayed behind
promptly ducked back out of sight, but even a few boulders bouncing down into a
pass choked with men are no joke. The shattering explosions of the smashing
rocks threw the Danequa into momentary confusion
again, and two warriors were crushed like bugs under the murderous barrage.
When
they had recovered, the escaping Neanderthals had a good lead on them, and
even as they watched, the half-men split into three groups, fanning out across
the great plains and each group taking a different
direction. With grim urgency now, the Danequa
reorganized. A large party of warriors ran off at full speed to intercept the Mroxor bearing toward the east. They had to be stopped at
all costs before they reached the almost unprotected valley of the Danequa, where the Danequa women
and children were. A smaller group charged after the Mroxor
heading west, and another party ran out across the plains directly toward the
north.
Mark,
Tlaxcan, and Nranquar were
in the center group, with Fang racing at their side. The Neanderthals were
running for their lives, snarling like elusive animals through the tall grass
of the plains. The Danequa charged after them,
trying desperately to get within arrow range. The
pell-mell race settled down into a trotting run as it rapidly turned into an
endurance contest.
For
hours they forced themselves on through the tall grasses and the brilliant
flowers, while the sun marched sedately through the blue sky, and the gentle
breezes played unconcernedly across the earth. Mark was strong and hard now,
but he was tiring speedily and nearing complete exhaustion. He could not run
forever, and evening would be upon them soon, forcing them to turn back from
their grim hunt. He forced himself to go on, however, knowing
that every step took him closer to his long-awaited goal. The space-time
machine, if only nothing had happened to it!
You'll
never get another chance, his straining mind whispered, urging him on.
They
were gaining on the half-men now. The Mroxor,
hampered by their women and children, were losing ground. Determined to hold
out until the saving night, the Mroxor suddenly
split up again into still smaller groups. At an unspoken command, the Danequa peeled off their own units to follow them across
the plains. Mark and Tlaxcan were left alone, two of
the Danequa against two of the cornered Mroxor.
On
and on they went, these four creatures playing out the most deadly game of all
across the plains of the Ice Age. Fang's tongue lolled with weariness, and now
the sun was dangerously low in the western sky. Mark
forced every last ounce of strength into the race, every single atom of his
being concentrated on catching those shambling half-men ahead of him. Unless
they caught them before night, they would have to turn back or run the certain
risk of ambush in the tall grass. And the space-time machine was so near—surely
it was just ahead of them!
They
were drawing nearer, the gap was closing. They were gaining, but could they
make it in time?
The long shadows of evening began to creep
across the plains . . .
Chapter 2i k Fifty-Fifty Chance
t was not yet dark, and would not be for at least
another hour, but the light was already uncertain.
The shadows that striped
the plains were confusing;
at a
distance of a hundred yards, a bush and a crouching man looked too much alike
to make for absolute comfort.
The
two men and the dog did not slacken their pace, but Tlaxcan
tossed a questioning look at Mark. Mark clenched his fists, unsure of what he
ought to do. It would be rough indeed to turn back with his goal almost in
sight, but on the other hand it would certainly not do to plunge on to their
deaths on a wild-goose chase. Tlaxcan, of course, had
no interest in the space-time machine, and indeed did not even know of its
existence. He could not abandon Tlaxcan to his fate
just to make good his own escape.
Then
he saw it, actually saw
the great sphere of the
space-time machine bubbling up out of the grasses where he had left it. And at
the same time he saw, right smack in front of him, the Neanderthals.
The two fugitives had doubled low and crept
back
through the fading light to wait for them. They were
through running—they were ready to fight.
Tlaxcan skidded to a halt and whipped an arrow into
his bow. Mark was unable to stop; he simply had to veer off to one side to
avoid running right into a half-man's waiting spear. Heart pounding wildly, he
slipped and fell in the tall grass. He hit rolling, and snatched out his .45 as he rolled. He came up on all fours, the .45 ready in his hand, and instantly was confronted by a terrible problem. Tlaxcan had not succeeded in loosing
an arrow in time, and the more powerful Neanderthal had him down flat on the
ground, trying to slit his throat with a stone knife. Tlaxcan
was obviously nearly unconscious and his strength was slipping. The other
Neanderthal was crouching low for the kill, moving toward Mark through the tall
grass.
Mark had one bullet left in
his .45.
He did
not hesitate; there was no time to think. Mark took careful aim, squeezed the
trigger, and the half-man threatening Tlaxcan dropped
as though he had been clubbed with a crowbar. Mark at once threw the empty gun
with all his might into the bestial face of the advancing Mroxor.
The weapon struck home, staggering the Neanderthal for a moment. Mark leaped
to his feet and grabbed up his spear, and was dismayed to see that the point
had broken off in his fall.
The
half-man recovered himself and moved in again, a stone
knife in his hand. Mark gave ground, using the shaft of his broken lance as a
fencing weapon to keep the Mroxor at bay. He jabbed
desperately, backing all the while, knowing that he was no match for the Neanderthal
in brute strength. If the half-man could once get his viselike hands on him, he would tear
him to pieces.
Mark
thrust and clubbed, keeping on the move. He could smell the Neanderthal's
sweating nearness, see the red blood-lust in the
thing's eyes as he stalked him. Mark's blood ran cold and he fought in a kind
of daze, knowing that he was tired from his long run and that his strength was
failing him.
He
could not escape. He knew that now with icy certainty. He would have to stand
and fight while some power was still left in his muscles. But he didn't fool
himself. The barrel-chested Neanderthal could break him in two as easily as
snapping a twig!
Mark
had no choice. He stopped and stood his ground, using the spear shaft
alternately as a jabbing weapon and as a light club. It was too light, however; time and again, he connected with a solid blow on the
side of the half-man's hairy head, but the Mroxor
just blinked his sunken eyes and kept on coming.
It
was only a question of time. The Neanderthal had been waiting his chance, and
when Mark's swing was just a trifle off its target, the half-man caught the
spear shaft in his long-nailed, dirty hand and wrested it from Mark's grasp
with one contemptuous wrench.
Mark
felt the cold hand of death reach out for him once more. He stood facing the
Neanderthal alone, without arms of any sort. He was too tired to run. His mind
kept functioning somehow, telling him that at no cost must he allow the
half-man to wrestle him, get him at too close quarters.
He
would have to box him. The situation looked hopeless, but Mark was prepared to
fight as long as life burned within him.
Smiling the grim smile of the hopeless, Mark
suddenly stepped forward. With his left he feinted at the surprised half-man,
and when the Neanderthal clumsily tried to catch his fist Mark came up from his
toes with a sizzling right haymaker that caught the half-man on the point of
his hair-matted jaw.
It
was like hitting the side of the Empire State Building. The Neanderthal just
shook his head slowly and moved on in for the kill. Mark had hit him with everything
he had, and it hadn't been enough.
Frantically,
he backed away, not taking his eyes off his foe. The half-man stalked him with
a smothered fury, his hands opening and closing with unmistakable
suggestiveness. Mark took a deep breath. He could go no further. He saw a
jagged, heavy stone lying in the grass near him, but he knew that when he bent
to pick it up the Mroxor would be on him like a flash
and that would be that.
There
was nothing else to do. Mark dived for the stone, and
the Neanderthal snarled and leaped with him. Mark closed his eyes—and then
opened them again in amazement.
The
half-man never reached his prey. The wolf-dog, Fang, had launched himself
through the air like a juggernaut, slamming into the thing and knocking it off
balance. Fang had been with the fallen Tlaxcan, but
now he had rejoined his master, rejoined him with a savage fury that had the
Neanderthal fighting for his very life under an onslaught of powerful, snapping
jaws that ripped and tore at his throat.
Mark
jerked to his feet, swaying, the rock in his hand. The path to the space-time
machine was now clear before him; he had only to run to it and get in, leaving
Fang and Tlaxcan to their own devices. Mark did not even think about it, nor was it heroism on his part,
or stupid bravery. It was just the way he was; he could no more have
abandoned his friends than he could have sprouted wings and flown away into the
heavens.
Mark
charged at the snarling battle and took careful aim with his rock. The
Neanderthal had Fang's throat in his hands now, crushing it like a vise. Fang
held on with a death-hold, but his eyes were bulging piteously, begging Mark
for help.
He
got it. Mark hit the Neanderthal's skull with the jagged rock, pounding the
rock down with all his might. The half-man still did not release the dog.
Mark's rock-filled fist came down again—and again and again.
Maddened
now by a drive he had not known he possessed, Mark snatched up the
Neanderthal's stone knife where it had fallen in the grass and went in for the
kill.
Exhausted, Mark sank down in the grass while
Fang staggered to his feet and licked his face. Mark reached up and scratched
the dog's ears, fighting to get his breath. He felt himself drifting down the
night shadows; it was so pleasant lying in the warm grass . . .
Tlaxcan.
His
memory returning, Mark got wearily to his feet and hurried back to his friend. Tlaxcan was sitting up on the ground, holding his head in
his hands; the Neanderthal Mark had shot still sprawled beside him. Mark
helped him to his feet.
"How do you feel?" he asked.
"Are you all right?"
"I feel. . . That is
enough in itself," Tlaxcan smiled. "Come,
my friend, the night winds are almost upon us."
"I'm not going with you, Tlaxcan," Mark said slowly, his stomach hollow within
him.
Tlaxcan looked at him, the smile vanishing from his
face.
"I must go away," Mark said, trying
to make Tlaxcan understand. "It is not that I
wish to leave my friend, but I must go away."
Tlaxcan hesitated. "You will return,
Mark?"
"Perhaps," Mark said, knowing that
he was lying. He would never see Tlaxcan again.
The blood-red sun was very low in the west,
only its upper tip still showing above the mountains, holding the night
shadows at bay. The long grasses began to ripple under the whisper of the cool
night wind.
Tlaxcan did not argue. No doubt his friend had good
reasons for what he did, and it was not good to question a friend's action.
Mark would go his way, and Tlaxcan would go his. Tlaxcan smiled again and placed his right hand on Mark's
shoulder.
"Orn," he said simply. "We
shall be brothers always."
"Orn," Mark echoed him. "We shall be brothers
always."
With
that, Tlaxcan turned without another word and walked
eastward across the plains, starting the long journey back to his people and
his home. He did not look back.
Fang
sat quite still in the grass, looking up at Mark with questioning eyes. Mark
scratched the wolf-dog's ears and smoothed the soft hair on the back of his
neck.
"You too, old fellow," he told his
dog. "This is your
home. Go with Tlaxcan. Do you understand? Go with Tlaxcan!"
He
pointed after his friend across the fields. Fang whined deep in his throat and
wagged his bushy tail hopefully.
"No," Mark said.
"I must go alone. Go with Tlaxcan!"
The
wolf-dog seemed to understand, with that intuitive knowledge of the strange
ways of their masters that good dogs always have. He looked sorrowfully at Mark
with deep and liquid eyes and trotted slowly away into the gathering gloom,
following Tlaxcan through the shadows.
They were gone. Mark was
alone.
With
a terrible loneliness buried deep within him, Mark set off northward toward the
gray sphere of the space-time machine, invisible now in the darkness. The cold
wind blew in his face, and he felt like an ant crawling across the earth,
alone and unprotected.
He
remembered the dream he had had, so long ago. He had been racing across this
gray world, the half-men snarling behind him. The gray grass had shimmered
beneath a gray-smoke wind that whipped and billowed before his very eyes. And
ahead of him—a great gray sphere, waiting on a cold, gray plain. Even as now ...
Except, of course, that there were no Neanderthals
around now. Or
were there? Had some of them doubled back? What could he do, without any weapon
but the empty .45 he had picked up and the stone knife of the Mroxor?
Suddenly,
the night seemed full of sounds. Ominous sounds. . .
Mark redoubled his pace, and the bulge of the spacetime machine loomed up out of the grayness before
him. It was just as he had left it, a lifetime ago, silent and ghostlike under
the first stars of the night.
A cold chill ran through him as he remembered
the monster half-man who had waited inside the machine in his dream. He told
himself that such thoughts were nonsense, but still it was all
that he could do to throw the gray switch that activated the entry port.
He held his breath. If the port failed to open—
With a mechanical hiss, a strange, foreign
sound here on the plains of the darkening Ice Age, the circular door slid open.
The interior glowed with soft white light, spilling out like cold, shining oil
into the night. Mark stepped through the entry port, feeling nervous and unreal
with the smooth metallic sphere all around him.
The space-time machine was empty. Mark threw
the inside switch, his hands clumsy on the almost-forgotten machinery, and the
circular entry port hissed shut behind him, sealing him in. All was as he had
left it, except that the yellow caution light in the control panel, signifying
that the machine was rebuilding its energy potential, was out.
The green light looked at him like an inviting eye from the panel. The
space-time machine was ready to go.
Wiping his sweating hands on the fur of his
clothing, Mark examined the timing dials before him. He had to be very careful
now, he knew. He wanted to set the space-time machine to arrive back at his
uncle's lodge as shortly as possible after he had first left, in order to spare
Doctor Nye unnecessary, frantic worry. His uncle was in good health, and was
far from being an old man, but Mark well knew that he was the only thing that really counted in
Doctor Nye's life. He lived only for Mark and for his trip back to ancient
Rome, a trip that Mark had unwittingly deprived him of. He had lost his dream,
and if he lost his adopted son as well . . .
The
small pointer, like the fine second hand of a watch, was exact almost to the
second, and Mark decided that fifteen minutes would be an acceptable safety
margin. That would not give his uncle time to worry unduly about him, and would
give Mark enough of a margin to prevent a spine-chilling possibility of getting
back too soon.
For
example, he thought, what would happen if he got back to 1953 fifteen minutes before he had left? Would there be two Marks in the
basement of Doctor Nye's house, and two space-time machines? What would happen
when the explosion occurred and there could only be one? Or would he simply
somehow fade into that other Mark, waiting there with his uncle, and talk with
him until that fatal phone call and the blowup —and then go back in space-time again, repeating his adventures in the Ice Age
endlessly, forever? Would he be destined always to go back too soon, caught up
in an eternal circle of his own devising?
These
were unanswerable questions, and they were questions that Mark was fully
content to leave
unanswered. He took his
time and set the dial with infinite precision. It had been nine o'clock when
the space-time machine had left on its strange journey, and now he set it for
the return at precisely nine-fifteen. He adjusted the other dials with equal
care for the day and the month and the year and then he paused.
There was nothing else to do but throw the
knife
switch that would send him back. He was keenly
aware that he was not an expert at the handling of the controls, and a nagging
fear in his mind told him that he must have made a dreadful mistake somewhere.
And the space-time machine itself was new, untested. It had gotten him back to
the dawn of man, but could it get him safely home again?
Mark figured that he had a
good fifty-fifty chance at least. He smiled grimly at the green eye and threw
the switch.
Chapter 22 H0me
n all-inclusive humming filled the hollow sphere. J It seemed to start in Mark's brain and push its buzzing way down along
his spinal cord, out along his branching nerves, through the pores of his hands
and feet, and out into the space-time machine where it saturated the dry air.
The
green light winked out and the red light took its place. It glowed pinkly
through the graying atmosphere, and seemed to shake in vibrating waves as he
watched. There was the familiar taut feel of electricity in the air, as though tightning were sizzling silently above his head.
Feeling
somewhat dizzy—the tensions generated within the space-time machine evidently
had some effect upon even a healthy human organism—Mark stretched out on the
floor of the sphere and closed his eyes. There was nothing he could do until
the machine stopped; he was a passenger and simply had to wait out his ride,
letting his mechanical engineer take him where he wished to go. These
cybernetic control systems, or "mechanical brains," were wonderful
things, he reflected tiredly. They could perform
the intricate adjustments needed to travel
through space-time in the twinkling of an eye; it would have taken a human
being a lifetime to figure them out. His uncle had once told him that
space-time travel would have been an impossibility
without the robot computers of cybernetics . . .
Even with his eyes closed, Mark could feel the red eye staring at him
through the gray fog. The humming vibrations buzzed through his brain, and he
found it hard to relax. How strange it was, he thought, that this most
fascinating adventure of man was in a very real sense monotonous while you were
going through it. There was absolutely nothing to see in the space-time machine, and very little to do.
It was ironic, too, that he had no idea what time it was. Here in the
midst of the most finely adjusted timing mechanisms ever devised by man, he
had no way of measuring the time interval within the space-time machine itself.
Subjective time, the mind's own reckoning of passing time, was apt to be a
tricky and unreliable business. Mark could not tell how long he lay on the
floor of the sphere; it might have been long minutes, or short hours, or even
speeding days.
Many times, he opened his eyes, only to see nothing. There was only the
gray mist and the red eye and the humming of the vibrations. There was only an
electric nothingness, and within it, lost and invisible, the colossal span of
history marching by on ghost-feet into the shadows that never were.
Time passed, inside and out, and Mark dozed
fitfully. As it had been the first time, the first impression he had that the
space-time machine had stopped came when he suddenly noticed a complete absence
of sound. There was
nothing. It was the dead hush of a tomb.
Mark
opened his eyes. The red light in the control panel had gone off, and the
yellow light had replaced it. Mark jumped to his feet, his heart hammering
against his chest. His palms were wet with sweat as he threw the small switch
that governed the exit. The circular entry port hissed back.
Holding his breath, Mark
stepped outside.
"Stop
right there," a voice said coldly. "Just stop right there."
Mark
crouched back against the space-time machine, his powerful fists clenching for
action. His unaccustomed eyes blinked in the bright light that streamed into
his face. What had happened? Where was he?
What could have gone wrong?
His
vision cleared. Mark stared around him, and laughed almost hysterically with
relief. He was back in his uncle's lead-lined room where he had started, and
through the open door in the wall beyond he could see the equipment-strewn
basement of Doctor Nye's lodge. And the white-haired man before him, a
wicked-looking wrench in his hand, was Doctor Nye.
"Uncle
Bob," Mark said softly. "Don't you know me?"
Doctor
Nye stared and stared, unable to believe his eyes. For the first time, Mark
realized what a strange spectacle he must present, and how different he was
from the boy who had left this room an infinity ago.
He was bronzed and powerful, and his blue jeans and wool shirt had been
replaced by a covering of furs. Hide sandals protected his feet, and a stone knife
was stuck in the belt
around his waist. His long hair was tied in place with a rawhide thong, and his
eyes were no longer the eyes of a boy. Doctor Nye dropped the wrench.
"Mark!" he gasped. "Mark—"
Doctor Nye embraced his adopted son with a trembling gladness and then
stepped back again to stare at him. "I just can't believe it, Mark,"
he whispered. He looked at his watch. "It's nine-fifteen—you've only been
gone fifteen minutes in this time. I was hoping against hope . . ."
Momentarily overcome with emotion, Doctor Nye stopped, running his hands
through his white hair as if to get his mind under control by sheer physical
force. Mark put his arm around his uncle's shoulder, ignoring a strong impulse
simply to put his right hand on his shoulder, Danequa
fashion. He understood that it had all happened so fast for his uncle that he
was unnerved by it all. He had, after all, only discovered his nephew's
absence a few minutes ago, and here Mark was back again, to all intents and
appearances a grown man. It was characteristic of Doctor Nye that he obviously
had not even thought of the loss of his space-time machine, or of his vanished
dream to go back to the Rome of legend. His every thought had been of his boy.
"Upstairs," Doctor Nye said
finally, shaking himself. "Let's go upstairs."
Together, they walked out of the lead-lined
room that housed the space-time machine and through the basement laboratory.
Mark noticed that the machine was approximately two feet nearer the door than
it had been before; an error of two feet and a few sec-
onds in a fifty-thousand-plus years' journey
through space-time was nothing to be ashamed of. They climbed the stairs, went
through the kitchen where the roast was still warming in the oven and die pot
of coffee Mark had started a half-hour or so ago was bubbling merrily, and
entered the sitting room. There was the bust of Caesar by the lamp on the
table, the long shelves full of books, the Navajo rugs on the floor, the walls of lightly varnished pine. It was all just as he
had left it a few short minutes ago, and it was all strange and unreal to the
Mark who had traveled across the ages, as though something remembered from a
dream.
Fang,
who had been awakened earlier by the explosion, stood bolt upright in the best
armchair in the house and growled curiously at Mark. Who was this intruder with
the fur clothes and the long hair tied with rawhide? Fang bristled, and barked
shrilly. Then he eyed Mark more closely, and the stump of his tail began to
wag. Uncertainly, he leaped off the chair and the golden-brown cocker spaniel
puppy trotted across the room and sniffed Mark suspiciously. Satisfied then,
as Mark scratched his ears, Fang wagged the stump of his tail again and
returned to his armchair. He couldn't quite figure it out, but he trusted his
sense of smell more than he did his eyes. He was not excessively glad to see
Mark, of course—after all, his master had just gone downstairs a few minutes
before.
Doctor
Nye sank into a chair, and Mark did likewise. The soft cushions felt curiously
unpleasant; he felt as though he were sinking through to the floor.
Nervously,
Mark clenched and unclenched his fists, trying to get used to his own home
again.
"How long were you gone, Mark?"
Doctor Nye asked finally.
"I'm not sure," Mark said. "A few months, I think."
The English felt awkward in his mouth, like a foreign tongue.
"Fifty thousand years before
Christ," mused Doctor Nye, who had set the dials
himself. And then, oddly: "Are you hungry?"
Mark smiled. "No. What happened—was it the rocket?"
Doctor Nye nodded. "The test rocket went off-course and blew up in
the hills near here," he said. "It was a miracle no one was
hurt."
Mark shifted uncomfortably in the silence.
The very concept of such things as "rockets" was strange to him now;
his whole mental set had changed, his mind was oriented to a different set of
conditions, and he felt like an intruder in his own home.
"I would never have forgiven myself, Mark, if—"
Mark shook his head. "It wasn't your
fault, Uncle Bob," he said. "And I'm grateful, really. I can't talk
about it now, but it was the most wonderful experience I've ever known."
Doctor Nye nodded, understanding. "There'll be plenty of time to
talk later," he said quietly.
"Uncle Bob — I'm so sorry — the space-time machine . . ."
"Forget it, son," Doctor Nye said,
rising and placing his hand on Mark's shoulder in a gesture strangely like that
of the Danequa. "Perhaps, one day, I can rebuild
it again. What man has done once, man can do again.
You
are all that counts, Mark. I do not think that the space-time machine was
wasted. When you left here fifteen minutes ago, you were a boy. Now you are a
man. Your eyes are open, son, and that is something beyond any price."
Mark sat silently for a moment, trying to get
himself adjusted to things. He looked at little Fang dozing in the armchair.
How different the cocker spaniel was from the wolf-dog he had left in the
shadows of the Ice Age!
"It's stopped raining,
hasn't it?" he asked after a short time. "Yes."
"Let's go outside, Uncle Bob. Let's just
go out and walk around for a while."
"Good idea, son," Doctor Nye
smiled. "But first I think you better change your clothes, before someone
takes a pot shot at you for looking like a man from Mars or something."
Mark grinned back, beginning to relax a
little, and hurried up to change. His own clothes were too small for him, but
he made them do. His feet, however, flatly refused to suffer through a pair of
shoes, so he kept his Danequa sandals on. He glanced
at the man who looked back at him out of his mirror, hardly recognizing him.
He felt like a spy, an alien, in his own room and he left rapidly and rejoined
his uncle in the sitting room.
"That's better," Doctor Nye
approved, puffing on his pipe. "Come on. We'll walk up to the Point."
They went outside, into the cool night air
and the silence, and Mark Nye instantly relaxed. There was the smell of the
familiar pines in the air, and the freshly washed earth was heavy with clean scent. The
black clouds had broken above them, and the frosted stars twinkled coldly in
the black sky. A full moon raced along behind the scudding clouds, turning them
into a silver sea and itself into a circular ship of frozen ice that sailed in
and out among them. Mark breathed deeply, glad to be alive.
Neither
man spoke. They walked along the path through the moonlit night until they came
to the Point, and there they stopped. The Point was an outcropping of rock that
looked down into the light-pointed valley below. It was free of trees, and the
soft night wind whispered around it eerily. A transport plane, high in the sky,
winged along above them, its engines muted by distance, its red and green
running lights blinking in the stars.
The
full moon sailed clear of the silver-flecked clouds, and Mark watched it with a
heavy heart. His friends were dead, dead and ashes in the mists of time. Tlaxcan smiled no more, and little Tlax
had lived and dreamed and died and was gone forever. Nranquar,
and Roqan, and the proud Qualxen—where
were they now?
Gone. Lost in the dust of ages . . . Mark looked
at his uncle, puffing his pipe in silence beneath the moon. He was glad to be back with him again. This, after all, was where he belonged.
He had no choice. This was his world, with all its problems, and it was here
that his life must be lived. And yet-There was the full moon. How long ago had
it been that he sang the song of die Danequa beneath
that same full moon, with the excitement of the quaro hunt
racing in his blood? Had it been a few days, a few
months—or almost fifty-two thousand years ago? The moon smiled down on him, and
Mark closed his eyes. Clear and strong across the ages, clean as silver bells,
he heard again the chant of the Danequa . . .
House
of the night House of the moon Darkness walks with us On
the hunt In life, in death In the moon-rays it is finished In the moon-rays it
is ended. O he o-yo o-yo he
o-he O he o-yo o-yo he o-he o—
Mark opened his eyes,
smiling now. Dead? The Danequa
were not dead. Tlaxcan and Tlaxcal
and Roqan and Tloron—they
were all a part of him, friends that he could never see again and yet friends
that would live forever in his heart. Here he belonged, and here he would stay.
But always a part of him, wild and free, would be with the friends he had made
in the dawn of time.
"All right, Uncle Bob," he said. "I'm ready now."
Doctor Nye smiled. "Let's go, son," he said.
Together, side by side, they walked back down the moonlit path that led
to home.