«And now, I am firmly convinced, he has seized upon my criticism of his treatment of the slave girl Tara as a pretext for ridding himself of me.»
«But if you could escape and reach Gathol,» suggested Turan.
«I have thought of that,» mused A-Kor; «but how much better off would I be? In the eyes of the Gatholians I would be, not a Gatholian; but a stranger and doubtless they would accord me the same treatment that we of Manator accord strangers.»
«Could you convince them that you are the son of the Princess Haja your welcome would be assured,» said Turan; «while on the other hand you could purchase your freedom and citizenship with a brief period of labor in the diamond mines.»
«How know you all these things?» asked A-Kor. «I thought you were from Helium.»
«I am a panthan,» replied Turan, «and I have served many countries, among them Gathol.»
«It is what the slaves from Gathol have told me,» said A-Kor, thoughtfully, «and my mother, before O-Tar sent her to live at Manatos. I think he must have feared her power and influence among the slaves from Gathol and their descendants, who number perhaps a million people throughout the land of Manator.»
«Are these slaves organized?» asked Turan.
A-Kor looked straight into the eyes of the panthan for a long moment before he replied. «You are a man of honor,» he said; «I read it in your face, and I am seldom mistaken in my estimate of a man; but-«and he leaned closer to the other-«even the walls have ears,» he whispered, and Turan's question was answered.
It was later in the evening that warriors came and unlocked the fetter from Turan's ankle and led him away to appear before O-Tar, the jeddak. They conducted him toward the palace along narrow, winding streets and broad avenues; but always from the balconies there looked down upon them in endless ranks the silent people of the city. The palace itself was filled with life and activity. Mounted warriors galloped through the corridors and up and down the runways connecting adjacent floors. It seemed that no one walked within the palace other than a few slaves. Squealing, fighting thoats were stabled in magnificent halls while their riders, if not upon some duty of the palace, played at jetan with small figures carved from wood.
Turan noted the magnificence of the interior architecture of the palace, the lavish expenditure of precious jewels and metals, the gorgeous mural decorations which depicted almost exclusively martial scenes, and principally duels which seemed to be fought upon jetan boards of heroic size. The capitals of many of the columns supporting the ceilings of the corridors and chambers through which they passed were wrought into formal likenesses of jetan pieces-everywhere there seemed a suggestion of the game. Along the same path that Tara of Helium had been led Turan was conducted toward the throne room of O-Tar the jeddak, and when he entered the Hall of Chiefs his interest turned to wonder and admiration as he viewed the ranks of statuesque thoatmen decked in their gorgeous, martial panoply. Never, he thought, had he seen upon Barsoom more soldierly figures or thoats so perfectly trained to perfection of immobility as these. Not a muscle quivered, not a tail lashed, and the riders were as motionless as their mounts-each warlike eye straight to the front, the great spears inclined at the same angle. It was a picture to fill the breast of a fighting man with awe and reverence. Nor did it fail in its effect upon Turan as they conducted him the length of the chamber, where he waited before great doors until he should be summoned into the presence of the ruler of Manator.
* * * * *
When Tara of Helium was ushered into the throne room of O-Tar she found the great hall filled with the chiefs and officers of O-Tar and U-Thor, the latter occupying the place of honor at the foot of the throne, as was his due. The girl was conducted to the foot of the aisle and halted before the jeddak, who looked down upon her from his high throne with scowling brows and fierce, cruel eyes.
«The laws of Manator are just,» said O-Tar, addressing her; «thus is it that you have been summoned here again to be judged by the highest authority of Manator. Word has reached me that you are suspected of being a Corphal. What word have you to say in refutation of the charge?»
Tara of Helium could scarce restrain a sneer as she answered the ridiculous accusation of witchcraft. «So ancient is the culture of my people,» she said, «that authentic history reveals no defense for that which we know existed only in the ignorant and superstitious minds of the most primitive peoples of the past. To those who are yet so untutored as to believe in the existence of Corphals, there can be no argument that will convince them of their error-only long ages of refinement and culture can accomplish their release from the bondage of ignorance. I have spoken.»
«Yet you do not deny the accusation,» said O-Tar.
«It is not worthy the dignity of a denial,» she responded haughtily.
«And I were you, woman,» said a deep voice at her side, «I should, nevertheless, deny it.»
Tara of Helium turned to see the eyes of U-Thor, the great jed of Manatos, upon her. Brave eyes they were, but neither cold nor cruel. O-Tar rapped impatiently upon the arm of his throne. «U-Thor forgets,» he cried, «that O-Tar is the jeddak.»
«U-Thor remembers,» replied the jed of Manatos, «that the laws of Manator permit any who may be accused to have advice and counsel before their judge.»
Tara of Helium saw that for some reason this man would have assisted her, and so she acted upon his advice.
«I deny the charge,» she said, «I am no Corphal.»
«Of that we shall learn,» snapped O-Tar. «U-Dor, where are those who have knowledge of the powers of this woman?»
And U-Dor brought several who recounted the little that was known of the disappearance of E-Med, and others who told of the capture of Ghek and Tara, suggesting by deduction that having been found together they had sufficient in common to make it reasonably certain that one was as bad as the other, and that, therefore, it remained but to convict one of them of Corphalism to make certain the guilt of both. And then O-Tar called for Ghek, and immediately the hideous kaldane was dragged before him by warriors who could not conceal the fear in which they held this creature.
«And you!» said O-Tar in cold accusing tones. «Already have I been told enough of you to warrant me in passing through your heart the jeddak's steel-of how you stole the brains from the warrior U-Van so that he thought he saw your headless body still endowed with life; of how you caused another to believe that you had escaped, making him to see naught but an empty bench and a blank wall where you had been.»
«Ah, O-Tar, but that is as nothing!» cried a young padwar who had come in command of the escort that brought Ghek. «The thing which he did to I-Zav, here, would prove his guilt alone.»
«What did he to the warrior I-Zav?» demanded O-Tar. «Let I-Zav speak!»
The warrior I-Zav, a great fellow of bulging muscles and thick neck, advanced to the foot of the throne. He was pale and still trembling visibly as from a nervous shock.