"Let us be friends," I said.
"Why not?" he asked. "We are surrounded by enemies, and we shall soon be dead."
As we talked, I had been watching an ant extracting honey from one of the honey-pots depending from the ceiling. I watched it clamber down the wall and cross the floor in our direction; and then, suddenly, to my surprise, it leaped upon me and threw me to the ground upon my back and, holding me down, squirted honey into my mouth. It forced me to swallow it, too. When this forced feeding was over, the creature left me.
U-Val laughed, as I spluttered and coughed. "You will get used to it," he said. "They are fattening you for food, and they won't leave it to you to choose the kind or quantity of food which you consume. They know exactly what you should have, in what quantities, and at what intervals to get the best results. They will feed you grain presently, which they have partially digested and regurgitated. It is very good and quite fattening. You will enjoy it."
"I shall vomit," I said, disgustedly.
He shrugged. "Yes, perhaps at first; but after awhile you will become used to it."
"If I don't eat, I sha'n't get fat; and then perhaps they won't kill me," I suggested.
"Don't be too sure of that," he said. "I think we are being fattened for the queen and her young, or perhaps for the warrior ants. If we don't get fat, we shall probably be fed to the slaves and workers."
"Do you think there is any advantage in being eaten by a queen?" I asked.
"It makes no difference to me," he said.
"Possibly one might have a feeling of greater importance."
"You are joking?" he asked.
"Naturally."
"We do not joke much in Ruva," he said, "and certainly I do not feel much like joking here. I am going to die; and I do not wish to die."
"Where is Ruva?" I asked.
"You have never heard of Ruva?" he demanded.
"No," I admitted.
"That is very strange," he said. "It is a most important island-one of The Floating Islands."
"And where are they?" I demanded.
"Now where would an island float?" he demanded. "In the sea, of course."
"But what sea, and where?" I insisted.
"The Bandar Az," he explained. "What other sea is there?"
"Well, I have seen the Korsar Az," I replied, "the Sojar Az, the Darel Az, and the Lural Az. There may be others, too, that I have not heard of or seen."
"There is only one sea," said U-Val, "and that is the Bandar Az. I have heard that far away there are some people who call it the Lural Az; but that is not its name."
"If you live on an island, how do you happen to be a prisoner here on the mainland?" I asked.
"Well, sometimes Ruva floats near the mainland; and when it does we often come ashore to hunt for meat, of which we have little on the island, and to gather fruits and nuts which do not happen to grow there. If we are lucky, we may take back a few men and women as slaves. I was hunting on the mainland when I was captured."
"But suppose you should escape-"
"I shall not escape," he replied.
"But just suppose you should. Would you be able to find Ruva again? Might it not have floated away?"
"Yes; but I would find my canoe. If I could not find it, I would build another one; and then I would follow Ruva. It moves very slowly in a slow current. I should follow it and overtake it."
The ants did not bother us except to feed us, and time hung heavily upon our hands. I learned to eat the food which they forced down me without vomiting, and I recall that I slept many times. The monotony became almost insupportable; and I suggested to U-Val that, as long as we were going to be killed anyway, we might as well be killed trying to make our escape. U-Val didn't agree with me.
"I am going to die too soon, anyway," he said. "I don't want to hasten it."
Once a winged ant came into the room, and all the other ants gathered around it. They were all feeling the newcomer and one another with their sensitive antennae.
"Oh ho!" exclaimed U-Val. "One of us is about to die."
"How do you know? What do you mean?"
"The one with the wings has come to select a meal, possibly for the queen, possibly for the warriors; and as we are the only prisoners here, it will be one of us or maybe both."
"I am going to fight," I said.
"What with?" he demanded. "That little stone knife? You might kill a few of them; but it would do you no good. There are too many of them."
"I am going to fight," I repeated, doggedly. "They can't murder me without a battle."
"All right," said U-Val, "if you want to fight, I'll fight too; but it won't do us any good."
"It will do me some good to kill a few of these hellish creatures."
After the winged ant had conferred awhile with its fellows, it came over to us and felt over our entire bodies with its antennae, sometimes pinching our flesh lightly with its mandibles. When it had completed its examination it returned again to confer with the other ants.
"I think you are the fattest and the tenderest," said U-Val.
"You mean you hope so."
"Well, of course, I do not wish to see you die," he said; "but neither do I wish to die myself. However, whichever one they choose, I will fight, as you suggest."
"We can at least get a little revenge by killing one or two of them," I said.
"Yes, that will be something," he replied.
The winged ant left the chamber, and after awhile two of the great soldier ants came in. Again there was a conference of antennae, after which one of the ants led the two soldiers over toward us. It went directly to U-Val and touched him with its antennae.
"It is I," said U-Val.
"If they start to take you away, use your knife; and I will help you," I said.
The ant that had brought the soldiers over to us went away about its business; and then one of the soldiers advanced upon U-Val with opened mandibles.
"Now!" I called to U-Val, as I drew my stone knife.
Chapter XXI
AS THE warrior ant was about to seize U-Val, he struck at it with his stone knife severing one of its antennae; and at the same instant I leaped upon it from the side, driving my knife into its abdomen. Instantly it turned upon me, trying to seize me in its mandibles; and U-Val struck again, piercing one of its eyes, while I drove my knife home several times in quick succession. The creature rolled over upon its side, writhing and floundering; and we had to beat a hasty retreat to escape the menace of its powerful legs.
The other warrior ant approached its fellow and felt of it; then it backed away, apparently confused; but in some way it must have communicated with the other ants in the room for immediately they became very excited, running hither and thither but finally converging upon us in a body.
They were a menacing sight. Their utter silence, their horrible blank, expressionless faces carried a sinister menace that is indescribable.
The creatures were almost upon us when there was an interruption from above. Rocks and debris commenced to fall into the chamber from the ceiling; and, glancing up, I saw that something was tearing at the opening and enlarging it rapidly. One of the honey-pots fell to the floor and burst. A long, furry nose was thrust through the opening in the ceiling, and a slender tongue reached down into the chamber, licking up the ants, as more of the ceiling fell in to add further to the confusion which suddenly seized them. They seemed to forget us entirely; and immediately there was a scramble for the opening leading into the tunnel. The ants crawled over one another and jammed the entrance in panic; and constantly the great tongue licked them up, and more of the ceiling fell in.
U-Val and I ran and crouched close against the wall at the far side of the chamber in an effort to escape the falling boulders, while above us the beast tore away with powerful claws as it sought to enlarge the opening.