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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54096 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54096)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Olga Romanoff, by George Chetwynd Griffith,
-Illustrated by Fred T. Jane
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Olga Romanoff
-
-
-Author: George Chetwynd Griffith
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 2, 2017 [eBook #54096]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLGA ROMANOFF***
-
-
-E-text prepared by MFR, Craig Kirkwood, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 54096-h.htm or 54096-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/54096/54096-h/54096-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/54096/54096-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/olgaromanoff00grif
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- Text enclosed by equal signs is in bold face (=bold=).
-
- A dtailed Transcriber’s Note is at the end.
-
-
-
-
-
-OLGA ROMANOFF
-
- * * * * *
-
-MORRISON AND GIBB, PRINTERS, EDINBURGH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: EVIL IN SUCH A SHAPE MIGHT BE SOMETHING MORE THAN GOOD.
-(_Frontispiece._) _See page 176._]
-
-
-OLGA ROMANOFF.
-
-by
-
-GEORGE GRIFFITH.
-
-Author of
-“The Angel of the Revolution,” “The Outlaws of the Air,”
-“Valdar the Oft-Born,” “Briton or Boer?” “The Romance of
-Golden Star,” etc., etc.
-
- “_And so they waited--waited while the ages-old snow and
- ice melted from the bare, black rocks under the fierce
- breath of the fire-storm; while the ocean of flame
- seethed and roared and eddied about them, licking up the
- seas and melted snows, and fighting with them as fire
- and water have fought since the world began; while the
- foundations of the Southern Pole quivered and rocked
- beneath their feet, and the walls of their refuge quaked
- and cracked with the throes of the writhing earth, and
- cosmos was dissolved into chaos once more._”--p. 368.
-
-With Sixteen Illustrations by Fred T. Jane.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co., Ltd.
-
-1897.
-
-Copyrighted Abroad.] [All Foreign Rights Reserved.
-
- * * * * *
-
- TO HIRAM STEVENS MAXIM
-
- THE FIRST MAN WHO HAS FLOWN BY MECHANICAL MEANS AND SO
- APPROACHED MOST NEARLY TO THE LONG-SOUGHT IDEAL OF AERIAL
- NAVIGATION
-
- THE FOLLOWING PAGES ARE INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- PROLOGUE 1
-
- CHAP.
-
- I. THE SURRENDER OF THE WORLD-THRONE 8
-
- II. A CROWNLESS KING 14
-
- III. TSARINA OLGA 26
-
- IV. A SON OF THE GODS 35
-
- V. A VISION FROM THE CLOUDS 47
-
- VI. DEED AND DREAM 53
-
- VII. THE SPELL OF CIRCE 66
-
- VIII. THE NEW TERROR 75
-
- IX. THE FLIGHT OF THE “REVENGE” 83
-
- X. STRANGE TIDINGS TO AERIA 94
-
- XI. THE SNAKE IN EDEN 102
-
- XII. THE BATTLE OF KERGUELEN 110
-
- XIII. THE SYREN’S STRONGHOLD 129
-
- XIV. FROM THE SEA TO THE AIR 138
-
- XV. OLGA IN COUNCIL 146
-
- XVI. KHALID THE MAGNIFICENT 159
-
- XVII. AN UNHOLY ALLIANCE 174
-
- XVIII. A MOMENTOUS COMMISSION 188
-
- XIX. FACE TO FACE AGAIN 202
-
- XX. THE CALL TO ARMS 215
-
- XXI. THE HOME-COMING 226
-
- XXII. THE EVE OF BATTLE 243
-
- XXIII. THE FIRST BLOW 253
-
- XXIV. WAR AT ITS WORST 271
-
- XXV. A MESSAGE FROM MARS 289
-
- XXVI. SENTENCE OF DEATH 303
-
- XXVII. ALMA SPEAKS 314
-
- XXVIII. THE SIGN IN THE SKY 319
-
- XXIX. THE TRUCE OF GOD 325
-
- XXX. THE SHADOW OF DEATH 338
-
- XXXI. THE LAST BATTLE 350
-
- XXXII. THE SHE-WOLF TO HER LAIR 359
-
- EPILOGUE 369
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- EVIL IN SUCH A SHAPE MIGHT BE SOMETHING MORE THAN GOOD
- _Frontispiece_
-
- NOT A VESTIGE OF OUR AIR-SHIP OR HER CREATORS REMAINED 22
-
- AS SHE GAZED UPON IT, THE FIRES DIED AWAY 57
-
- FLINGING LONG STREAMS OF RADIANCE FOR MILES INTO THE SKY 83
-
- THE CLOUDS WERE RENT AND ROLLED UP INTO VAST SHADOWY BILLOWS 122
-
- THE COMBINED SQUADRONS SWEPT ACROSS THE MOUNTAIN BARRIER 237
-
- BATTERIES WHICH WOULD BE ABLE TO SURROUND AERIA WITH A ZONE OF
- STORM AND FLAME 248
-
- THE FOUR HUNDRED BATTLESHIPS OF THE TWO SQUADRONS ROSE INTO
- THE AIR 252
-
- THREE OF THE AIR-SHIPS SEEMED TO BREAK-UP AND ROLL OVER 259
-
- A GREAT BATTLESHIP LEAPT UP OUT OF THE NETHER WATERS 266
-
- THE “ISMA” SWOOPED DOWN 281
-
- A FEARFUL SCENE UNFOLDED ITSELF AS THEY SWEPT UP OVER PARIS 286
-
- “ONLY YOU CAN BID ME LIVE, ALMA” 317
-
- STILL THE FIGHT WENT ON AT LONG RANGES 354
-
- THE BLAZING SKY WAS LITERALLY RAINING FIRE OVER SEA AND LAND 367
-
- OLGA ROMANOFF HAD SURVIVED THE DOOM OF THE WORLD 374
-
- * * * * *
-
-OLGA ROMANOFF.
-
-
-
-
-PROLOGUE. THE PROPHECY OF NATAS.
-
-
- _These are the last words of Israel di Murska, known in the days of
- strife as Natas, the Master of the Terror, given to the Children
- of Deliverance dwelling in the land of Aeria, in the twenty-fifth
- year of the Peace, which, in the reckoning of the West, is the year
- nineteen hundred and thirty._
-
-MY life is lived, and the wings of the Angel of Death overshadow me
-as I write; but before the last summons comes, I must obey the spirit
-within me that bids me tell of the things that I have seen, in order
-that the story of them shall not die, nor be disguised by false
-reports, as the years multiply and the mists gather over the graves of
-those who, with me, have seen and wrought them.
-
-For this reason the words that I write shall be read publicly in the
-ears of you and your children and your children’s children, until they
-shall see a sign in heaven to tell them that the end is at hand. No man
-among you shall take away from that which I have written, nor yet add
-anything to it; and every fifth year, at the Festival of Deliverance,
-which is held on the Anniversary of Victory,[1] this writing of mine
-shall be read, that those who shall hear it with understanding may lay
-its warnings to heart, and that the lessons of the Great Deliverance
-may never be forgotten among you.
-
-It was in the days before the beginning of peace that I, Natas the Jew,
-cast down and broken by the hand of the Tyrant, conceived and created
-that which was known as the Terror. The kings of the earth and their
-servants trembled before my invisible presence, for my arm was long and
-my hand was heavy; yet no man knew where or when I should strike--only
-that the blow would be death to him on whom it should fall, and that
-nowhere on earth should he find a safe refuge from it.
-
-In those days the earth was ruled by force and cunning, and the nations
-were armed camps set one against the other. Millions of men, who had
-no quarrel with their neighbours, stood waiting for the word of their
-rulers to blast the fair fields of earth with the fires of war, and to
-make desolate the homes of those who had done them no wrong.
-
-In the third year of the twentieth century, Richard Arnold, the
-Englishman, conquered the empire of the air, and made the first ship
-that flew as a bird does, of its own strength and motion. He joined the
-Brotherhood of Freedom, then known among men as the Terrorists, of whom
-I, Natas, was the Master, and then he built the aerial fleet which,
-in the day of Armageddon, gave us the victory over the tyrants of the
-earth.
-
-At the same time, Alan Tremayne, a noble of the English people, into
-whose soul I had caused my spirit to enter in order that he might serve
-me and bring the day of deliverance nearer, caused all the nations of
-the Anglo-Saxon race to join hands, from the West unto the East, in a
-league of common blood and kindred; and they, in the appointed hour,
-stood between the sons and daughters of men and those who would have
-enslaved them afresh.
-
-The chief of these was Alexander Romanoff, last of the Tsars, or
-Tyrants, of Russia, whose armies, leagued with those of France, Italy,
-Spain, and certain lesser Powers, and assisted by a great fleet
-of war-balloons that could fly, though slowly, wherever they were
-directed, swept like a destroying pestilence from the western frontiers
-of Russia to the eastern shores of Britain; and when they had gained
-the mastery of Europe, invaded England and laid siege to London.
-
-But here their path of conquest was brought to an end, for Alan
-Tremayne and his brothers of the Terror called upon the men of
-Anglo-Saxondom to save their Motherland from her enemies, and they rose
-in their wrath, millions strong, and fell upon them by land and sea,
-and would have destroyed them utterly, as I had bidden them do, but
-that Natasha, who was my daughter and was known in those days as the
-Angel of the Revolution, pleaded for the remnant of them, and they were
-spared.
-
-But the Russians we slew without mercy to the last man of those who had
-stood in arms against us, saving only the Tyrant and his princes and
-the leaders of his armies. These we took prisoners and sent, with their
-wives and their children, to die in their own prison-land in Siberia,
-as they had sent thousands of innocent men and women to die before them.
-
-This was my judgment upon them for the wrong that they had done to me
-and mine, for in the hour of victory I spared not those who had not
-known how to spare. Now they are dead, and their graves are nameless.
-Their name is a byword among men, for they were strong and they used
-their strength to do evil.
-
-So we made an end of tyranny among the nations, and when the world-war
-was at length brought to an end, we disbanded all the armies that were
-upon land and sank the warships that were left upon the sea, that
-men might no more fight with each other. War, that had been called
-honourable since the world began, we made a crime of blood-guiltiness,
-for which the life of him who sought to commit it should pay; and as a
-crime, you, the children of those who have delivered the nations from
-it, shall for ever hold it to be.
-
-We leave you the command of the air, and that is the command of the
-world; but should it come to pass--as in the progress of knowledge it
-may well do--that others in the world outside Aeria shall learn to
-navigate the air as you do, you shall go forth to battle with them and
-destroy them utterly, for we have made it known through all the earth
-that he who seeks to build a second navy of the air shall be accounted
-an enemy of peace, whose purpose it is to bring war upon the earth
-again.
-
-Forget not that the blood-lust is but tamed, not quenched, in the
-souls of men, and that long years must pass before it is purged from
-the world for ever. We have given peace on earth, and to you, our
-children, we bequeath the sacred trust of keeping it. We have won our
-world-empire by force, and by force you must maintain it.
-
-In the day of battle we shed the blood of millions without ruth to
-win it, and so far the end has justified the means we used. Since the
-sun set upon Armageddon, and the right to make war was taken from the
-rulers of the nations, we have governed a realm of peace and prosperity
-which every year has seen better and happier than that which went
-before.
-
-No man has dared to draw the sword upon his brother, or by force or
-fraud to take that which was not his by right. The soil of earth has
-been given back to the use of her sons, and their wealth has already
-multiplied a hundredfold on every hand. Kings have ruled with wisdom
-and justice, and senates have ceased their wranglings to soberly seek
-out and promote the welfare of their own countries, and to win the
-respect and friendship of others.
-
-Yet many of these are the same men who, but a few years ago, rent each
-other like wild beasts in savage strife for the meanest ends; who
-betrayed their brothers and slaughtered their neighbours, that the rich
-might be richer, and the strong stronger, in the pitiless battle for
-wealth and power. They have become peaceful and honest with each other,
-because we have compelled them to be so, and because they know that
-the penalty of wrong-doing in high places is destruction swift and
-certain as the stroke of the hand of Fate itself.
-
-They know that no man stands so high that our hand cannot cast him down
-to the dust, and that no spot of earth is so secret and so distant
-that the transgressor of our laws can find in it a refuge from our
-vengeance. We stand between the few strong and cunning who would
-oppress, and the many weak and simple who could not resist them; and
-when we are gone, you will hear the voice of duty calling you to take
-our places.
-
-When you stand where we do now, remember who you are and the tremendous
-trust that is laid upon you. You are the children of the chosen out of
-many nations, masters of the world, and, under Heaven, the arbiters
-of human destiny. You shall rule the world as we have ruled it for a
-hundred years from now. If in that time men shall not have learnt the
-ways of wisdom and justice, you may be sure that they will never learn
-them, and deserve only to be left to their own foolishness. Since the
-world began, the path of life has never lain so fair and straight
-before the sons of men as it does now, and never was it so easy to do
-the right and so hard to do the wrong.
-
-So, for a hundred years to come, you shall keep them in the path in
-which we have set them, and those that would wilfully turn aside from
-it you shall destroy without mercy, lest they lead others into misery
-and bring the evil days upon earth again.
-
-At the twenty-fifth celebration of the Festival of Deliverance, you
-shall give back the sceptre of the world-empire into the hands of the
-children of those from whom we took it,--because they wielded it for
-oppression, and not for mercy. At that time you shall make it known
-throughout the earth that men are once more free to do good or evil,
-according to their choice, and that as they choose well or ill so shall
-they live or die.
-
-And woe to them in those days if, knowing the good, they shall turn
-aside to do evil! Beyond the clouds that gather over the sunset of
-my earthly life, I see a sign in heaven as of a flaming sword, whose
-hilt is in the hand of the Master of Destiny, and whose blade is
-outstretched over the habitations of men.
-
-As they shall choose to do good or evil, so shall that sword pass away
-from them or fall upon them, and consume them utterly in the midst of
-their pride. And if they, knowing the good, shall elect to do evil, it
-shall be with them as of old the Prophet said of the men of Babylon the
-Great: Their cities shall be a desolation, a dry land and a wilderness;
-a land wherein no man dwelleth, neither shall any son of man pass
-thereby.
-
-For from among the stars of heaven, whose lore I have learned and whose
-voices I have heard, there shall come the messenger of Fate, and his
-shape shall be that of a flaming fire, and his breath as the breath of
-a pestilence that men shall feel and die in the hour that it breathes
-upon them.
-
-Out of the depths beyond the light of the sun he shall come, and
-your children of the fifth generation shall behold his approach. The
-sister-worlds shall see him pass with fear and trembling, wondering
-which of them he shall smite, but if he be not restrained or turned
-aside by the Hand which guides the stars in their courses, it shall go
-hard with this world and the men of it in the hour of his passing.
-
-Then shall the highways of the earth be waste, and the wayfaring of
-men cease. Earth shall languish and mourn for her children that are no
-more, and Death shall reign amidst the silence, sole sovereign of many
-lands!
-
-But you, so long as you continue to walk in the way of wisdom, shall
-live in peace until the end, whether it shall come then or in the ages
-that shall follow. And if it shall come then, you shall await it with
-fortitude, knowing that this life is but a single link in the chain of
-existence which stretches through infinity; and that, if you shall be
-found worthy, you shall be taught how a chosen few among your sons and
-daughters shall survive the ruin of the world, to be the parents of the
-new race, and replenish the earth and possess it.
-
-Out of the Valley of the Shadow of Death I stretch forth my hands in
-blessing to you, the children of the coming time, and pray that the
-peace which the men of the generation now passing away have won through
-strife and toil in the fiery days of the Terror, may be yours and
-endure unbroken unto the end.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] The 8th of December, on which day, in the year 1904, the armies
-of the Anglo-Saxon Federation and the aerial navy of the Terrorists
-defeated and almost annihilated the hosts of the Franco-Slavonian
-League, then besieging London under the command of Alexander Romanoff,
-last of the Tsars of Russia, and so made possible the universal
-disarmament which took place the following year.--_The Angel of the
-Revolution_, chap. xlvi.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I. THE SURRENDER OF THE WORLD-THRONE.
-
-
-A HUNDRED years had passed since Natas, the Master of the Terror,
-had given into the hands of Richard Arnold his charge to the future
-generations of the Aerians--as the descendants of the Terrorists who
-had colonised the mountain-walled valley of Aeria, in Central Africa,
-were now called; since the man, who had planned and accomplished the
-greatest revolution in the history of the world, had given his last
-blessing to his companions-in-arms and their children, and had “turned
-his face to the wall and died.”
-
-It was midday, on the 8th of December 2030, and the rulers of all the
-civilised States of the world were gathered together in St. Paul’s
-Cathedral to receive, from the hands of a descendant of Natas in the
-fourth generation, the restoration of the right of independent national
-rule which, on the same spot a hundred and twenty-five years before,
-had been taken from the sovereigns of Europe and vested in the Supreme
-Council of the Anglo-Saxon Federation.
-
-The period of tutelage had passed. Under the wise and firm rule of the
-Council and the domination of the Anglo-Saxon race, the Golden Age had
-seemed to return to the world. For a hundred and twenty-five years
-there had been peace on earth, broken only by the outbreak and speedy
-suppression of a few tribal wars among the more savage races of Africa
-and Malaysia. Now the descendants of those who had been victors and
-vanquished in the world-war of 1904, had met to give back and assume
-the freedom and the responsibility of national independence.
-
-The vast cathedral was thronged, as it had been on the momentous day
-when Natas had pronounced his judgment on the last of the Tyrants of
-Russia, and ended the old order of things in Europe. But it was filled
-by a very different assembly to that which had stood within its walls
-on the morrow of Armageddon.
-
-Then the stress and horror of a mighty conflict had set its stamp
-on every face. Hate had looked out of eyes in which the tears were
-scarcely dry, and hungered fiercely for the blood of the oppressor. The
-clash of arms, the stern command, and the pitiless words of doom had
-sounded then in ears which but a few hours before had listened to the
-roar of artillery and the thunder of battle. That had been the dawn of
-the morrow of strife; this was the zenith of the noon of peace.
-
-Now, in all the vast assembly, no hand held a weapon, no face was there
-which showed a sign of sorrow, fear, or anger, and in no heart, save
-only two among the thousands, was there a thought of hate or bitterness.
-
-For three days past the Festival of Deliverance had been celebrated all
-over the civilised world, and now, in the centre of the city which had
-come to be the capital, not only of the vast domains of Anglo-Saxondom,
-but of the whole world, a solemn act of renunciation was to be
-performed, upon the issues of which the fate of all humanity would
-hang; for the members of the Supreme Council had come through the skies
-from their seat of empire in Aeria to abdicate the world-throne in
-obedience to the command of the dead Master, from whom their ancestors
-had derived it.
-
-At a table, drawn across the front of the chancel, sat the President
-and the twelve men who with him had up to this hour shared the empire
-of the human race. Below the steps, on the floor of the cathedral,
-sat, in a wide semicircle, the rulers of the kingdoms and republics
-of the earth, assembled to hear the last word of their over-lords,
-and to receive from them the power and responsibility of maintaining
-or forfeiting, as the event should prove, the blessings which had
-multiplied under the sovereignty of the Aerians.
-
-The President of the Council was the direct descendant not only of Alan
-Tremayne, its first President, but also of Richard Arnold and Natasha;
-for their eldest son, born in the first year of the Peace, had married
-the only daughter of Tremayne, and their first-born son had been his
-father’s father.
-
-Although the average physique of civilised man had immensely improved
-under the new order of things, the Aerians, descendants of the pick of
-the nations of Europe, were as far superior to the rest of the assembly
-as the latter would have been to the men and women of the nineteenth
-century; but even amongst the members of the Council, the splendid
-stature and regal dignity of Alan Arnold, the President, stamped him
-as a born ruler of men, whose title rested upon something higher than
-election or inheritance.
-
-At the last stroke of twelve, the President rose in his place, and, in
-the midst of an almost breathless silence, read the message of Natas to
-the great congregation. This done, he laid the parchment down on the
-table and, beginning from the outbreak of the world-war, rapidly and
-lucidly sketched out the vast and beneficent changes in the government
-of society that its issues had made possible.
-
-He traced the marvellous development of the new civilisation, which, in
-four generations, had raised men from a state of half-barbarous strife
-and brutality to one of universal peace and prosperity; from inhuman
-and unsparing competition to friendly co-operation in public, and
-generous rivalry in private concerns; from horrible contrasts of wealth
-and misery to a social state in which the removal of all unnatural
-disabilities in the race of life had made them impossible.
-
-He showed how, in the evil times which, as all men hoped, had been
-left behind for ever, the strong and the unscrupulous ruthlessly
-oppressed the weak and swindled the honest and the straightforward. Now
-dishonesty was dishonourable in fact as well as in name; the game of
-life was played fairly, and its prizes fell to all who could win them,
-by native genius or earnest endeavour.
-
-There were no inequalities, save those which Nature herself had imposed
-upon all men from the beginning of time. There were no tyrants and no
-slaves. That which a man’s labour of hand or brain had won was his,
-and no man might take toll of it. All useful work was held in honour,
-and there was no other road to fame or fortune save that of profitable
-service to humanity.
-
-“This,” said the President in conclusion, “is the splendid heritage
-that we of the Supreme Council, which is now to cease to exist as such,
-have received from our forefathers, who won it for us and for you on
-the field of the world’s Armageddon. We have preserved their traditions
-intact, and obeyed their commands to the letter; and now the hour has
-come for us, in obedience to the last of those commands, to resign our
-authority and to hand over that heritage to you, the rulers of the
-civilised world, to hold in trust for the peoples over whom you have
-been appointed to reign.
-
-“When I have done speaking I shall no longer be President of the
-Senate, which for a hundred and twenty-five years has ruled the world
-from pole to pole and east to west. You and your parliaments are
-henceforth free to rule as you will. We shall take no further part in
-the control of human affairs outside our domain, saving only in one
-concern.
-
-“In the days when our command was established, the only possible basis
-of all rule was force, and our supremacy was based on the force that
-we could bring to bear upon those who might have ventured to oppose us
-or revolted against our rule. We commanded, and we will still command,
-the air, and I should not be doing my duty, either to my own people or
-to you, if I did not tell you that the Aerians, not as the world-rulers
-that they have been, but as the citizens of an independent State, mean
-to keep that power in their own hands at all costs.
-
-“The empire of earth and sea, saving only the valley of Aeria, is yours
-to do with as you will. The empire of the air is ours,--the heritage
-that we have received from the genius of that ancestor of mine who
-first conquered it.
-
-“That we have not used it in the past to oppress you is the most
-perfect guarantee that we shall not do so in the future, but let all
-the nations of the earth clearly understand, that we shall accept any
-attempt to dispute it with us as a declaration of war upon us, and that
-those who make that attempt will either have to exterminate us or be
-exterminated themselves. This is not a threat, but a solemn warning;
-and the responsibility of once more bringing the curse of war and all
-its attendant desolation upon the earth, will lie heavily upon those
-who neglect it.
-
-“A few more needful words and I have done. The message of the Master,
-which I have read to you, contains a prophecy, as to the fulfilment of
-which neither I nor any man here may speak with certainty. It may be
-that he, with clearer eyes than ours, saw some tremendous catastrophe
-impending over the world, a catastrophe which no human means could
-avert, and beneath which human strength and genius could only bow with
-resignation.
-
-“By what spirit he was inspired when he uttered the prophecy, it is not
-for us to say. But before you put it aside as an old man’s dream, let
-me ask you to remember, that he who uttered it was a man who was able
-to plan the destruction of one civilisation, and to prepare the way for
-another and a better.
-
-“Such a man, standing midway between the twin mysteries of life and
-death, might well see that which is hidden from our grosser sight. But
-whether the prophecy itself shall prove true or false, it shall be well
-for you and for your children’s children if you and they shall receive
-the lesson that it teaches as true.
-
-“If, in the days that are to come, the world shall be overwhelmed with
-a desolation that none shall escape, will it not be better that the end
-shall come and find men doing good rather than evil? As you now set the
-peoples whom you govern in the right or the wrong path, so shall they
-walk.
-
-“This is the lesson of all the generations that have gone before us,
-and it shall also be true of those that are to come after us. As the
-seed is, so is the harvest; therefore see to it that you, who are
-now the free rulers of the nations, so discharge the awful trust and
-responsibility which is thus laid upon you, that your children’s
-children shall not, perhaps in the hour of Humanity’s last agony, rise
-up and curse your memory rather than bless it. I have spoken!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II. A CROWNLESS KING.
-
-
-LATE in the evening of the same day two of the President’s
-audience--the only two who had heard his words with anger and
-hatred instead of gratitude and joy--were together in a small but
-luxuriously-furnished room, in an octagonal turret which rose from one
-of the angles of a large house on the southern slope of the heights of
-Hampstead.
-
-One was a very old man, whose once giant frame was wasted and shrunken
-by the slow siege of many years, and on whose withered, care-lined
-features death had already set its fatal seal. The other was a young
-girl, in all the pride and glory of budding womanhood, and beautiful
-with the dark, imperious beauty that is transmitted, like a priceless
-heirloom, along a line of proud descent unstained by any drop of
-base-born blood.
-
-Yet in her beauty there was that which repelled as well as attracted.
-No sweet and gentle woman-soul looked out of the great, deep eyes,
-that changed from dusky-violet to the blackness of a starless night as
-the sun and shade of her varying moods swept over her inner being. Her
-straight, dark brows were almost masculine in their firmness; and the
-voluptuous promise of her full, red, sensuous lips was belied by the
-strength of her chin and the defiant poise of her splendid head on the
-strongly-moulded throat, whose smooth skin showed so dazzlingly white
-against the dark purple velvet of the collar of her dress.
-
-It was a beauty to enslave and command rather than to woo and win; the
-fatal loveliness of a Cleopatra, a Lucrezia, or a Messalina; a charm to
-be used for evil rather than for good. In a few years she would be such
-a woman as would drive men mad for the love of her, and, giving no love
-in return, use them for her own ends, and cast them aside with a smile
-when they could serve her no longer.
-
-The old man was lying on a low couch of magnificent furs, against whose
-dark lustre the grey pallor of his skin and the pure, silvery whiteness
-of his still thick hair and beard showed up in strong contrast. He
-had been asleep for the last four hours, resting after the exertion
-of going to the cathedral, and the girl was sitting watching him with
-anxious eyes, every now and then leaning forward to catch the faint
-sound of his slow and even breathing, and make sure that he was still
-alive.
-
-A clock in one of the corners of the room chimed a quarter to nine,
-as the old man raised his hand to his brow and opened his eyes. They
-rested for a moment on the girl’s face, and then wandered inquiringly
-about the room, as though he expected someone else to be present. Then
-he said in a low, weak voice--
-
-“What time is it? Has Serge come yet?”
-
-“No,” said the girl, glancing up at the clock; “that was only a quarter
-to nine, and he is not due until the hour.”
-
-“No; I remember. I don’t suppose he can be here much before. Meanwhile
-get me the draught ready, so that I shall have strength to do what has
-to be done before”--
-
-“Are you sure it is necessary for you to take that terrible drug? Why
-should you sacrifice what may be months or even years of life, to gain
-a few hours’ renewed youth?”
-
-The girl’s voice trembled as she spoke, and her eyes melted in a sudden
-rush of tears. The one being that she loved in all the world was this
-old man, and he had just told her to prepare his death-draught.
-
-“Do as I bid you, child,” he said, raising his voice to a querulous
-cry, “and do it quickly, while there is yet time. Why do you talk to me
-of a few more months of life--to me, whose eyes have seen the snows
-of a hundred winters whitening the earth? I tell you that, drug or no
-drug, I shall not see the setting of to-morrow’s sun. As I slept, I
-heard the rush of the death-angel’s wings through the night, and the
-wind of them was cold upon my brow. Do as I bid you, quick--there is
-the door-telephone. Serge is here!”
-
-As he spoke, a ring sounded in the lower part of the house. Accustomed
-to blind obedience from her infancy, the girl choked back her rising
-tears and went to a little cupboard let into the wall, out of which she
-took two small vials, each containing about a fluid ounce of colourless
-liquid. She placed a tumbler in the old man’s hand, and emptied the
-vials into it simultaneously.
-
-There was a slight effervescence, and the two colourless liquids
-instantly changed to deep red. The moment that they did so, the dying
-man put the glass to his lips and emptied it at a gulp. Then he threw
-himself back upon his pillows, and let the glass fall from his hand
-upon the floor. At the same moment a little disc of silver flew out at
-right angles to the wall near the door, and a voice said--
-
-“Serge Nicholaivitch is here to command.”
-
-“Serge Nicholaivitch is welcome. Let him ascend!” said the girl,
-walking towards the transmitter, and replacing the disc as she ceased
-speaking.
-
-A few moments later there was a tap on the door. The girl opened
-it and admitted a tall, splendidly-built young fellow of about
-twenty-two, dressed, according to the winter costume of the time, in
-a close-fitting suit of dark-blue velvet, long boots of soft, brown
-leather that came a little higher than the knee, and a long, fur-lined,
-hooded cloak, which was now thrown back, and hung in graceful folds
-from his broad shoulders.
-
-As he entered, the girl held out her hand to him in silence. A bright
-flush rose to her clear, pale cheeks as he instantly dropped on one
-knee and kissed it, as in the old days a favoured subject would have
-kissed the hand of a queen.
-
-“Welcome, Serge Nicholaivitch, Prince of the House of Romanoff! Your
-bride and your crown are waiting for you!”
-
-The words came clear and strong from the lips which, but a few minutes
-before, had barely been able to frame a coherent sentence. The strange
-drug had wrought a miracle of restoration. Fifty years seemed to have
-been lifted from the shoulders of the man who would never see another
-sunrise.
-
-The light of youth shone in his eyes, and the flush of health on
-his cheeks. The deep furrows of age and care had vanished from his
-face, and, saving only for his long, white hair, if one who had seen
-Alexander Romanoff, the last of the Tsars of Russia, on the battlefield
-of Muswell Hill could have come back to earth, he would have believed
-that he saw him once more in the flesh.
-
-Without any assistance he rose from the couch, and drew himself up to
-the full of his majestic height. As he did so the young man dropped
-on his knee before him, as he had done before the girl, and said in
-Russian--
-
-“The honour is too great for my unworthiness. May heaven make me worthy
-of it!”
-
-“Worthy you are now, and shall remain so long as you shall keep
-undefiled the faith and honour of the Imperial House from which you are
-sprung,” replied the old man in the same language, raising him from his
-knee as he spoke. Then he laid his hands on the young man’s shoulders,
-and, looking him straight in the eyes, went on--
-
-“Serge Nicholaivitch, you know why I have bidden you come here
-to-night. Speak now, without fear or falsehood, and tell me whether you
-come prepared to take that which I have to give you, and to do that
-which I shall ask of you. If there is any doubt in your soul, speak it
-now and go in peace; for the task that I shall lay upon you is no light
-one, nor may it be undertaken without a whole heart and a soul that is
-undivided by doubt.”
-
-The young man returned his burning gaze with a glance as clear and
-steady as his own, and replied--
-
-“It is for your Majesty to give and for me to take--for you to command
-and for me to obey. Tell me your will, and I will do it to the death.
-In the hour that I fail, may heaven’s mercy fail me too, and may I die
-as one who is not fit to live!”
-
-“Spoken like a true son of Russia!” said the old man, taking his hands
-from his shoulders and beckoning the girl to his side. Then he placed
-them side by side before an _ikon_ fastened to the eastern wall, with
-an ever-burning lamp in front of it. He bade them kneel down and join
-hands, and as they did so he took his place behind them and, raising
-his hands as though in invocation above their heads, he said in slow,
-solemn tones--
-
-“Now, Serge Nicholaivitch and Olga Romanoff, sole heirs on earth of
-those who once were Tsars of Russia, swear before heaven and all its
-holy saints that, when this body of mine shall have been committed to
-the flames, you will take my ashes to Petersburg and lay them in the
-Church of Peter and Paul, and that when that is done, you will go to
-the Lossenskis at Moscow, and there, in the Uspènski Sobōr, where your
-ancestors were crowned, take each other for wedded wife and husband,
-according to the ancient laws of Russia and the rites of the orthodox
-church.”
-
-The oath was taken by each of the now betrothed pair in turn, and then
-Paul Romanoff, great-grandson of Alexander, the Last of the Tsars,
-raised them from their knees and kissed each of them on the forehead.
-Then, taking from his neck a gold chain with a small key attached to
-it, he went to one of the oak panels, from which the walls of the room
-were lined, and pushed aside a portion of the apparently solid beading,
-disclosing a keyhole into which he inserted the key.
-
-He turned the key and pulled, and the panel swung slowly out like a
-door. It was lined with three inches of solid steel, and behind it was
-a cavity in the wall, from which came the sheen of gold and the gleam
-of jewels. A cry of amazement broke at the same moment from the lips of
-both Olga and Serge, as they saw what the glittering object was.
-
-Paul Romanoff took it out of the steel-lined cavity, and laid it
-reverently on the table, saying, as he did so--
-
-“To-morrow I shall be dead, and this house and all that is in it will
-be yours. There is my most precious possession, the Imperial crown
-of Russia, stolen when the Kremlin was plundered in the days of the
-Terror, and restored secretly to my father by the faith and devotion of
-one of the few who remained loyal after the fall of the Empire.
-
-“In a few hours it will be yours. I leave it to you as a sacred
-heritage from the past for you to hand on to the future, and with it
-you shall receive and hand on a heritage of hate and vengeance, which
-you shall keep hot in your hearts and in the hearts of your children
-against the day of reckoning when it comes.
-
-“Now sit down on the divan yonder, and listen with your ears and your
-hearts as well, for these are the last words that I shall speak with
-the lips of flesh, and you must remember them, that you may tell them
-to your children, and perchance to their children after them, as I
-now tell them to you; for the hour of vengeance may not come in your
-day nor yet in theirs, though in the fulness of time it shall surely
-come, and therefore the story must never be forgotten while a Romanoff
-remains to remember it.”
-
-The old man, on whom the strange drug that he had taken was still
-exercising its wonderful effects, threw himself into an easy-chair
-as he spoke, and motioned them with his hand towards a second low
-couch against one of the walls, covered with cushions and draped with
-neutral-tinted, silken hangings.
-
-Olga, moving, as it seemed, with the unconscious motion of a
-somnambulist, allowed her form to sink back upon the cushions until
-she half sat and half reclined on them; and Serge, laying one of the
-cushions on the floor, sat at her feet, and drew one of her hands
-unresistingly over his shoulder, and kept it there as though she were
-caressing him. Thus they waited for Paul Romanoff to teach them the
-lesson that they had sworn to teach in turn to the generations that
-were to come.
-
-The old man regarded them in silence for a moment or two, and as he did
-so the angry fire died out of his eyes, and his lips parted in a faint
-smile as he said, rather in soliloquy to himself than to them--
-
-“As it was in the beginning, it is now and for ever shall be until the
-end! Empires wax and wane, and dynasties rise and fall! Revolutions
-come and go, and the face of the world is changed, but the mystery of
-the sex, the beauty of woman, and the love of man, endure changeless as
-Destiny, for they are Destiny itself!”
-
-As he spoke, the fixed, rigid look melted from Olga’s face. The bright
-flush rose again to her cheeks, and she bowed her royal head, and
-looked almost tenderly at the blond, ruddy, young giant at her feet.
-After all, he was her fate, and she might well have had a worse one.
-
-Then after a brief pause, Paul Romanoff began to speak again, slowly
-and quietly, with his eyes fixed on the glittering symbol of the
-vanished sovereignty of his House, as though he were addressing it, and
-communing with the mournful memories that it recalled from the past.
-
-“It is a hundred and twenty-five years since the hand of Natas, the
-Jew, came forth out of the unknown, and struck you from the brow of the
-Last of the Tsars. On the day that Natas died, I was born, a hundred
-years ago. There are barely a score of men left on earth who have seen
-and spoken with the men who saw the Great Revolt and the beginning
-of the Terror, and I alone, of the elder line of Romanoff, remain to
-pass the story of our House’s shame and ruin on, so that it may not be
-forgotten against the day of vengeance, that I have waited for in vain.
-
-“But I have no time left for dreams or vain regrets. Listen, Children
-of the Present, and take my words with you into the future that it is
-not given to me to see.”
-
-He passed his hands upwards over his eyes and brow, and then went on,
-speaking now directly to Olga and Serge, in a quick, earnest tone, as
-though he feared that his fictitious strength would fail him before he
-could say what he had to say--
-
-“When Alexander, the last of the crowned Emperors of Russia, fell down
-dead on the morning after he reached the mines of Kara, to which the
-Terrorists had exiled him as a convict for life, those who remained
-of his family, and who had taken no part in the war, were allowed to
-return to Europe, on condition that they lived the lives of private
-citizens and sought no share in the government of any country to which
-they were allied by marriage or otherwise.
-
-“Only two of those who had survived the march to Siberia were able to
-avail themselves of this permission, and these were Olga, the daughter
-of Alexander, and Serge Nicholaivitch, the youngest son of his nephew
-Nicholas. These two settled at the Court of Denmark, and there, two
-years later, Olga married Prince Ingeborg. Her first-born son, the only
-one of her children who lived beyond infancy, was my father, as my own
-first-born son was yours, Olga Romanoff.
-
-“Serge married Dagmar, the youngest daughter of the House of Denmark,
-three years later, and from him you, Serge Nicholaivitch, are descended
-in the fourth generation. Thus in you will be united the only two
-remaining branches of the once mighty House of Romanoff. May the day
-come when, in you or your children, its ancient glories shall be
-restored!”
-
-“Amen!” said Olga and Serge in a single breath, and as she uttered
-the words, Olga’s eyes fell on the lost crown upon the table, and for
-the moment they seemed to flame with the inner fires of a quenchless
-rage. Paul Romanoff’s eyes answered hers flash for flash, for the same
-hatred and longing for revenge possessed them both--the old man who had
-carried the weight of a hundred years to the brink of the grave, and
-the young girl whose feet were still lingering on the dividing line
-between girlhood and womanhood.
-
-Then he went on, speaking with an added tone of fierceness in his
-voice--
-
-“From the day of my birth until this, the night of my death, it has
-been impossible to do anything to recover that which was lost in the
-Great Revolt. Not that stout hearts and keen brains and willing hands
-have been wanting for the work; but because the strong arm of the
-Terror has encircled the earth with unbreakable bonds; because its eye
-has never slept; and because its hand has hurled infallible destruction
-upon all who have dared to take the first step towards freedom.
-
-“Natas spoke truly when he said that the Terrorists had ruled the world
-by force, and Alan Arnold to-day spoke truly after him when he said
-that the supremacy of the Aerians was based upon the force that they
-could bring to bear upon any who revolted against them, through their
-possession of the empire of the air.
-
-“It is this priceless possession that gives them the command of the
-world, and for a hundred years they have guarded it so jealously, that
-they have slain without mercy all who have ventured to take even the
-first step towards an independent solution of the mighty problem which
-Richard Arnold solved a hundred and twenty-six years ago.
-
-“The last man who died in this cause was my only son, and your father,
-Olga. Remember that, for it is not the least item in the legacy of
-revenge that I bequeath to you to-night. He had devoted his life, as
-many others had done before him, to the task of discovering the secret
-of the motive power of the Terrorists’ air-ships.
-
-“The year you were born, success had crowned the efforts of ten years
-of tireless labour. Working with the utmost secrecy in a lonely hut
-buried in the forests of Norway, he and six others, who were, as he
-thought, devoted to him and the glorious cause of wresting the empire
-of the world from the grasp of the Terrorists, had built an air-ship
-that would have been swifter and more powerful than any of their aerial
-fleet.
-
-“Two days before she was ready to take the air, one of his men
-deserted. The traitor was never seen again, but the next night a
-Terrorist vessel descended from the clouds, and in a few minutes not
-a vestige of our air-ship or her creators remained. Only a blackened
-waste in the midst of the forest was left to show the scene of their
-labours. Within forty-eight hours, it was known all over the civilised
-world that Vladimir Romanoff and his associates had been killed by
-order of the Supreme Council, for endeavouring to build an air-ship in
-defiance of its commands.
-
-[Illustration: NOT A VESTIGE OF OUR AIR-SHIP OR HER CREATORS REMAINED.
-_Page 22._]
-
-“Such are the enemies against whom you will have to contend. They are
-still virtually the masters of the world, and the task before you
-is to wrest that mastery from them. It is no light task, but it is not
-impossible; for these Aerians are, after all, but men and women as you
-are, and what they have done, other men and women can surely do.
-
-“The Great Secret cannot always remain theirs alone. While they
-actively controlled the nations, nothing could be done against them,
-for their hand was everywhere and their eyes saw everything. But now
-they have abdicated the throne of the world, and left the nations to
-rule themselves as they can. For a time things will go on in their
-present grooves, but that will not be for long.
-
-“I, who am their bitterest enemy on earth, am forced to confess that
-the Terrorists have proved themselves to be the wisest as well as
-the strongest of despots. Under their rule the world has become a
-paradise--for the _canaille_ and the multitude. But they have curbed
-the mob as well as the king, and abolished the demagogue as well as the
-despot. Now the strong hand is lifted and the bridle loosed; and before
-many years have passed, the brute strength of the multitude will have
-begun to assert itself.
-
-“The so-called kings of the earth, who rule now in a mockery of
-royalty, will speedily find that the real kings of the old days ruled
-because, in the last resource, they had armies and navies at their
-command and could enforce obedience. These are but the puppets of
-the popular will, and now that the moral and physical support of the
-Supreme Council and its aerial fleet is taken from them, they will see
-democracy run rampant, and, having no strength to stem the tide, they
-will have to float with it or be submerged by it.
-
-“In another generation the voice of the majority, the blind, brute
-force of numbers, will rule everything on earth. What government there
-may be, will be a mere matter of counting heads. Individual freedom
-will by swift degrees vanish from the earth, and human society will
-become a huge machine, grinding all men down to the same level until
-the monotony of life becomes unendurable.
-
-“Hitherto all democracies in the history of the world have been ended
-by military despotisms, but now military despotism has been made
-impossible, and so democracy will run riot, until it plunges the world
-into social chaos.
-
-“This may come in your time or in your children’s, but it is the
-opportunity for which you must work and wait. Even now you will find in
-every nation, thousands of men and women who are chafing against the
-limitations imposed on individual aspirations and ambition; and as the
-rule of democracy spreads and becomes heavier, the number of these will
-increase, until at last revolt will become possible, nay, inevitable.
-
-“Of this revolt you must make yourselves the guiding-spirits. The work
-will be long and arduous, but you have all your lives before you, and
-the reward of success will be glorious beyond all description.
-
-“Not only will you restore the House of Romanoff to its ancient glories
-in yourselves and your children, but you will enthrone it in an even
-higher place than that which your ancestor had almost won for it, when
-these thrice-accursed Terrorists turned the tide of battle against him
-on the threshold of the conquest of the world.
-
-“Do not shrink from the task, or despair because you are now only two
-against the world. Think of Natas and the mighty work that he did, and
-remember that he was once only one against the world which in the day
-of battle he fought and conquered.
-
-“Above all things, never let your eyes wander from the land of the
-Aerians. That once conquered and the world is yours to do with as
-you will. To do that, you must first conquer the air as they have
-done. Aeria itself, by all reports, is such a paradise as the sun
-nowhere else shines upon. Some day, whether by force or cunning, it
-may be yours; and when it is, the world also will be yours to be your
-footstool and your plaything, and all the peoples of the earth shall be
-your servants to do your bidding.
-
-“Yes, I can see, through the mists of the coming years and beyond the
-grave that opens at my feet, aerial navies, flying the Eagle of Russia
-and scaling the mighty battlements of Aeria, hurling their lightnings
-far and wide in the work of vengeance long delayed! Behind the battle,
-I see darkness that my weak eyes cannot pierce, but yours shall see
-clearly where mine are clouded with the falling mists of death.
-
-“The shadows are closing round me, and the sands in the glass are
-almost run out. Yet one thing remains to be done. Since Alexander
-Romanoff died at the mines of Kara, no Tsar of Russia has been crowned.
-Now I, Paul Romanoff, his rightful heir, will crown myself after the
-fashion of my ancestors, and then I will crown you, the daughter of my
-murdered son, and you will place the diadem on your husband’s brow when
-God has made you one!”
-
-So saying, the old man rose from his seat, with his face flushed and
-his eyes aglow with the light of ecstasy. Olga and Serge rose to
-their feet, half in fear and half in wonder, as they looked upon his
-transfigured countenance.
-
-He lifted the Imperial crown from the table, and then, drawing himself
-up to the full height of his majestic stature, raised it high above his
-head, and lowered it slowly down towards his brow.
-
-The jewelled circlet of gold had almost touched the silver of his snowy
-hair when the light suddenly died out of his eyes, leaving the glaze
-of death behind it. He gasped once for breath, and then his mighty
-form shrank together and pitched forward in a huddled heap at their
-feet, flinging the crown with a dull crash to the floor, and sending it
-rolling away into a corner of the room.
-
-“God grant that may not be an omen, Olga!” said Serge, covering his
-eyes with his hands to shut out the sudden horror of the sight.
-
-“Omen or not, I will do his bidding to the end,” said the girl slowly
-and solemnly. Then her pent-up passion of grief burst forth in a long,
-wailing cry, and she flung herself down on the prostrate form of the
-only friend she had ever known and loved, and laid her cheek upon his,
-and let the welling tears run from her eyes over those that had for
-ever ceased to weep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III. TSARINA OLGA.
-
-
-THREE days after his death, the body of Paul Romanoff was reduced to
-ashes in the Highgate Crematorium, a magnificent building, in the
-sombre yet splendid architecture of ancient Egypt, which stood in
-the midst of what had once been Highgate Cemetery, and what was now
-a beautiful garden, shaded by noble trees, and in summer ablaze with
-myriads of flowers.
-
-Not a grave or a headstone was to be seen, for burial in the earth had
-been abolished throughout the civilised world for nearly a century.
-In the vast galleries of the central building, thousands of urns,
-containing the ashes of the dead, reposed in niches inscribed with
-the name and date of death, but these mostly belonged to the poorer
-classes, for the wealthy as a rule devoted a chamber in their own
-houses to this purpose.
-
-The body was registered in the great Book of the Dead at the
-Crematorium as that of Paul Ivanitch, and the only two mourners signed
-their names, “Serge Ivanitch and Olga Ivanitch, grand-children of the
-deceased.” The reason for this was, that for more than a century the
-name of Romanoff had been proscribed in all the nations of Europe. It
-was believed that the Vladimir Romanoff who had been executed by the
-Supreme Council, for attempting to solve the forbidden problem, was the
-last of his race, and Paul had taken great pains not to disturb this
-belief.
-
-Long before his son had met with his end, he had called himself Paul
-Ivanitch, and settled in London and practised his profession as a
-sculptor, in which he had won both fame and fortune. Olga had lived
-with him since her father’s death, and Serge, who at the time the
-narrative opens had just completed his studies at the Art University of
-Rome, had passed as her brother.
-
-They took the urn containing the ashes of the old man back with them
-to the house, which now belonged, with all its contents, to Olga and
-Serge. On the morning after his death, a notice, accompanied by an
-abstract of his will, had been inserted in _The Official Gazette_, the
-journal devoted exclusively to matters of law and government.
-
-Paul Romanoff had, however, left two wills behind him, one which had to
-be made public in compliance with the law, and one which was intended
-only for the eyes of Olga and Serge. This second will reposed, with
-the crown of Russia, in the secret recess in the wall of the octagonal
-chamber; and the instructions endorsed upon it stated that it was to
-be opened by Serge in the presence of Olga, after they had brought
-his ashes back to the house and had been legally confirmed in their
-possession of his property.
-
-Consequently, on the evening of the 11th, the two shut themselves into
-the room, and Olga, who since her grandfather’s death had worn the key
-of the recess on a chain round her neck, unlocked the secret door and
-gave the will to Serge. As she did so, a sudden fancy seized her. She
-took the crown from its resting-place, and, standing in front of a long
-mirror which occupied one of the eight sides of the room from roof to
-floor, poised it above the lustrous coils of her hair with both hands,
-and said, half to Serge and half to herself--
-
-“What age could not accomplish, youth shall do! By my own right, and
-with my own hands, I am crowned Tsarina, Empress of the Russias in
-Europe and Asia. As the great Catherine was, so will I be--and more,
-for I will be Mistress of the West and the East. I will have kings for
-my vassals and senates for my servants, and I will rule as no other
-woman has ruled before me since Semiramis!”
-
-As she uttered the daring words, whose fulfilment seemed beyond the
-dreams of the wildest imagination, she placed the crown upon her brow
-and stood, clothed in imperial purple from head to foot, the very
-incarnation of loveliness and royal majesty. Serge looked up as she
-spoke, and gazed for a moment entranced upon her. Then he threw himself
-upon his knees before her, and, raising the hem of her robe to his
-lips, said in a voice half choked with love and passion--
-
-“And I, who am also of the imperial blood, will be the first to salute
-you Tsarina and mistress! You have taken me as your lover, let me also
-be the first of your subjects. I will serve you as woman never was
-served before. You shall be my mistress--my goddess, and your words
-shall be my laws before all other laws. If you bid me do evil, it
-shall be to me as good, and I will do it. I will kill or leave alive
-according to your pleasure, and I will hold my own life as cheap as any
-other in your service; for I love you, and my life is yours!”
-
-Olga looked down upon him with the light of triumph in her eyes. No
-woman ever breathed to whom such words would not have been sweet; but
-to her they were doubly sweet, because they were a spontaneous tribute
-to the power of her beauty and the strength of her royal nature, and an
-earnest of her future sway over other men.
-
-More than this, too, they had been won without an effort, from the lips
-of the man whom she had always been taught to look upon as higher than
-other men, in virtue of his descent from her own ancestry, and the
-blood-right that he shared with her to that throne which it was to be
-their joint life-task to re-establish.
-
-If she did not love him, it was rather because ambition and the
-inborn lust of power engrossed her whole being, than from any lack of
-worthiness on his part. Of all the men she had ever seen, none compared
-with him in strength and manliness save one--and he, bitter beyond
-expression as the thought was to her, was so far above her as she was
-now, that he seemed to belong to another world and to another order of
-beings.
-
-As their eyes met, a thrill that was almost akin to love passed through
-her soul, and, acting on the impulse of the moment, she took the crown
-from her own head and held it above his as he knelt at her feet, and
-said--
-
-“Not as my subject or my servant, but as my co-ruler and helpmate, you
-shall keep that oath of yours, Serge Nicholaivitch. We have exchanged
-our vows, and in a few days I shall be your wife. We will wed as
-equals; and so now I crown you, as it is my right to do. Rise, my lord
-the Tsar, and take your crown!”
-
-Serge put up his hands and took the crown from hers at the moment that
-she placed it on his brow. He rose to his feet, holding it on his head
-as he said solemnly--
-
-“So be it, and may the God of our fathers help me to wear it worthily
-with you, and to restore to it the glory that has been taken from it by
-our enemies!”
-
-Then he laid it reverently down on the table and turned to Olga, who
-was still standing before the mirror looking at her own lovely image,
-as though in a dream of future glory. He took her unresisting in his
-arms, and kissed her passionately again and again, bringing the bright
-blood to her cheeks and the light of a kindred passion to her eyes, and
-murmuring between the kisses--
-
-“But you, darling, are worth all the crowns of earth, and I am still
-your slave, because your beauty and your sweetness make me so.”
-
-“Then slave you shall be!” she said, giving him back kiss for kiss,
-well knowing that with every pressure of her intoxicating lips she
-riveted the chains of his bondage closer upon his soul.
-
-To an outside observer, what had taken place would have seemed but
-little better than boy-and-girl’s play, the phantasy of two young and
-ardent souls dreaming a romantic and impossible dream of power and
-glory that had vanished, never to be brought back again. And yet, if
-such a one had been able to look forward through little more than a
-single lustrum, he would have seen that, in the mysterious revolutions
-of human affairs, it is usually the seemingly impossible that becomes
-possible, and the most unexpected that comes to pass.
-
-The secret will of Paul Romanoff, to the study of which the two lovers
-addressed themselves when they awoke from the dream of love and empire
-into which Olga’s phantasy had plunged them both, would, if it had been
-made public, have given a by no means indefinite shape to such vague
-dreams of world-revolution as were inspired in thoughtful minds, even
-in the thirty-first year of the twenty-first century.
-
-It was a voluminous document of many pages, embodying the result of
-nearly eighty years of tireless scheming and patient research in the
-field of science as well as in that of politics. Paul Romanoff had
-lived his life with but one object, and that was, to prepare the way
-for the accomplishment of a revolution which should culminate in the
-subversion of the state of society inaugurated by the Terrorists, and
-the re-establishment, at anyrate in the east of Europe, of autocratic
-rule in the person of a scion of the House of Romanoff. All that he had
-been able to do towards the attainment of this seemingly impossible
-project was crystallised in the document bequeathed to Olga and Serge.
-
-It was divided into three sections. The first of these was mostly
-of a personal nature, and contained details which it would serve no
-purpose of use or interest to reproduce here. It will therefore suffice
-to say, that it contained a list of the names and addresses of four
-hundred men and women scattered throughout Europe and America, each of
-whom was the descendant of some prince or noble, some great landowner
-or millionaire, who had suffered degradation or ruin at the hands of
-the Terrorists during the reorganisation of society, after the final
-triumph of the Anglo-Saxon Federation in 1904.
-
-The second section of the will was of a purely scientific and technical
-character. It was a theoretical arsenal of weapons for the arming of
-those who, if they were to succeed at all, could only do so by bringing
-back that which it had cost such an awful expenditure of blood and
-suffering to banish from the earth in the days of the Terror. The
-designs of Paul Romanoff, and the vast aspirations of those to whom he
-had bequeathed the crown of the great Catherine, could have but one
-result if they ever passed from the realm of fancy to that of deeds.
-
-If the clock was to be put back, only the armed hand could do it, and
-that hand must be so armed that it could strike at first secretly, and
-yet with paralysing effect. The few would have to array themselves
-against the many, and if they triumphed, it would have to be by the
-possession of some such means of terrorism and irresistible destruction
-as those who had accomplished the revolution of 1904 had wielded in
-their aerial fleet.
-
-By far the most important part of this section of the will consisted of
-plans and diagrams of various descriptions of air-ships and submarine
-vessels, accompanied by minute directions for building and working
-them. Most of these were from the hand of Vladimir Romanoff, Olga’s
-father; but of infinitely more importance even than all these was a
-detailed description, on the last page but two of the section, of the
-solution of a problem which had been attempted in the last decade of
-the nineteenth century, but which was still unsolved so far as the
-world at large was concerned.
-
-This was the direct transformation of the solar energy locked up
-in coal into electrical energy, without loss either by waste or
-transference. How vast and yet easily controlled a power this would
-be in the hands of those who were able to wield it, may be guessed
-from the fact that, in the present day, less than ten per cent. of the
-latent energy of coal is developed as electrical power even in the most
-perfect systems of conversion.
-
-All the rest is wasted between the furnace of the steam-engine and
-the dynamo. It was to electrical power, obtained direct from coal and
-petroleum, that Vladimir Romanoff trusted for the motive force of his
-air-ships and submarine vessels, and which he had already employed
-with experimental success as regards the former, when his career was
-cut short by the swift and pitiless execution of the sentence of the
-Supreme Council.
-
-The remainder of this section was occupied by a list of chemical
-formulæ for the most powerful explosives then known to science, and
-minute instructions for their preparation. At the bottom of the page
-which contained these, there was a little strip of parchment, fastened
-by one end to the binding of the other sheets, and covered with very
-small writing.
-
-Olga’s eyes, wandering down over the maze of figures which crowded the
-page, reached it before Serge’s did. One quick glance told her that it
-was something very different to the rest. She laid one hand carelessly
-over it, and with the other softly caressed Serge’s crisp, golden
-curls. As he looked round in response to the caress, their eyes met,
-and she said in her sweet, low, witching voice--
-
-“Dearest, I have a favour to ask of you.”
-
-“Not a favour to ask, but a command to give, you mean. Speak, and you
-are obeyed. Have I not sworn obedience?” he replied, laying his hand
-upon her shoulder and drawing her lovely face closer to his as he spoke.
-
-“No, it is only a favour,” she said, with such a smile as Antony might
-have seen on the lips of Cleopatra. “I want you to leave me alone for
-a little time--for half an hour--and then come back and finish reading
-this with me. You know my brain is not as strong as yours, and I feel a
-little bewildered with all the wonderful things that there are in this
-legacy of my father’s father.
-
-“Before we go any further, I should like to read it all through again
-by myself, so as to understand it thoroughly. So suppose you go to your
-smoking-room for a little, and leave me to do so. I shall not take very
-long, and then we will go over the rest together.”
-
-“But we have only a couple more pages to read, sweet one, and then I
-will go over it all again with you, and explain anything that you have
-not understood.”
-
-As he spoke, Serge’s eyes never wavered for a moment from hers. Could
-he but have broken their spell, he might have seen that she was hiding
-something from him under her little, white hand and shapely arm.
-She brought her red, smiling lips still nearer to his as she almost
-whispered in reply--
-
-“Well, it is only a girl’s whim, after all, but still I am a girl.
-Come, now, I will give you a kiss for twenty minutes’ solitude, and
-when you come back, and we have finished our task, you shall have as
-many more as you like.”
-
-The sweet, tempting lips came closer still, and the witching spell of
-her great dusky eyes grew stronger as she spoke. How was he to know
-what was hanging in the balance in that fateful moment? He was but a
-hot-blooded youth of twenty, and he worshipped this lovely, girlish
-temptress, who had not yet seen seventeen summers, with an adoration
-that blinded him to all else but her and her intoxicating beauty.
-
-He drew her yielding form to him until he could feel her heart beating
-against his, and as their lips met, the promised kiss came from hers
-to his. He returned it threefold, and then his arm slipped from her
-shoulder to her waist, and he lifted her like a child from her chair,
-and carried her, half laughing and half protesting, to the door,
-claimed and took another kiss before he released her, and then put her
-down and left her alone without another word.
-
-“Alas, poor Serge!” she said, as the door closed behind him; “you are
-not the first man who has lost the empire of the world for a woman’s
-kiss. Before, I saw that you were my equal and helpmate, now you and
-all other men--yes, not even excepting he who seems so far above me
-now--shall be my slaves and do my bidding, so blindly that they shall
-not even know they are doing it.
-
-“Yes, the weapons of war are worth much, but what are they in
-comparison with the souls of the men who will have to use them!”
-
-In half an hour Serge came back to finish the reading of the will
-with her. The little slip of paper had been removed so skilfully that
-it would have been impossible for him to have even guessed that it had
-ever been attached to the parchment, or that it was now lying hidden in
-the bosom of the girl who would have killed him without the slightest
-scruple to gain the unsuspected possession of it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV. A SON OF THE GODS.
-
-
-ON the day but one following the reading of Paul Romanoff’s secret
-will, Olga and Serge set out for St. Petersburg, to convey his ashes
-to their last resting-place in the Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul in
-the Fortress of Petropaulovski, where reposed the dust of the Tyrants
-of Russia, from Peter the Great to Alexander II. of Russia, now only
-remembered as the chief characters in the dark tragedy of the days
-before the Revolution.
-
-The intense love of the Russians for their country had survived the
-tremendous change that had passed over the face of society, and it was
-still the custom to bring the ashes of those who claimed noble descent
-and deposit them in one of their national churches, even when they had
-died in distant countries.
-
-The station from which they started was a splendid structure of
-marble, glass, and aluminium steel, standing in the midst of a vast,
-abundantly-wooded garden, which occupied the region that had once been
-made hideous by the slums and sweating-dens of Southwark. The ground
-floor was occupied by waiting-rooms, dining-saloons, conservatories,
-and winter-gardens, for the convenience and enjoyment of travellers;
-and from these lifts rose to the upper storey, where the platforms and
-lines lay under an immense crystal arch.
-
-Twelve lines ran out of the station, divided into three sets of four
-each. Of these, the centre set was entirely devoted to continental
-traffic, and the lines of this system stretched without a break from
-London to Pekin.
-
-The cars ran suspended on a single rail upheld by light, graceful
-arches of a practically unbreakable alloy of aluminium, steel, and
-zinc, while about a fifth of their weight was borne by another single
-insulating rail of forged glass,--the rediscovery of the lost art of
-making which had opened up immense possibilities to the engineers of
-the twenty-first century.
-
-Along this lower line the train ran, not on wheels, but on lubricated
-bearings, which glided over it with no more friction than that of a
-steel skate on ice. On the upper rail ran double-flanged wheels with
-ball-bearings, and this line also conducted the electric current from
-which the motive-power was derived.
-
-The two inner lines of each set were devoted to long-distance, express
-traffic, and the two outer to intermediate transit, corresponding to
-the ordinary trains of the present day. Thus, for example, the train by
-which Olga and Serge were about to travel, stopped only at Brussels,
-Berlin, Königsberg, Moscow, Nijni Novgorod, Tomsk, Tobolsk, Irkutsk,
-and Pekin, which was reached by a line running through the Salenga
-valley and across the great desert of Shamoo, while from Irkutsk
-another branch of the line ran north-eastward viâ Yakutsk to the East
-Cape, where the Behring Bridge united the systems of the Old World and
-the New.
-
-The usual speed of the expresses was a hundred and fifty miles an
-hour, rising to two hundred on the long runs; and that of the ordinary
-trains, from a hundred to a hundred and fifty. Higher speeds could of
-course be attained on emergencies, but these had been found to be quite
-sufficient for all practical purposes.
-
-The cars were not unlike the Pullmans of the present day, save that
-they were wider and roomier, and were built not of wood and iron,
-but of aluminium and forged glass. Their interiors were, of course,
-absolutely impervious to wind and dust, even at the highest speed
-of the train, although a perfect system of ventilation kept their
-atmosphere perfectly fresh.
-
-The long-distance trains were fitted up exactly as moving hotels, and
-the traveller, from London to Pekin or Montreal, was not under the
-slightest necessity of leaving the train, unless he chose to do so,
-from end to end of the journey.
-
-One more advantage of railway travelling in the twenty-first century
-may be mentioned here. It was entirely free, both for passengers
-and baggage. Easy and rapid transit being considered an absolute
-necessity of a high state of civilisation, just as armies and navies
-had once been thought to be, every self-supporting person paid a small
-travelling tax, in return for which he or she was entitled to the
-freedom of all the lines in the area of the Federation.
-
-In addition to this tax, the municipality of every city or town through
-which the lines passed, set apart a portion of their rent-tax for the
-maintenance of the railways, in return for the advantages they derived
-from them.
-
-Under this reasonable condition of affairs, therefore, all that an
-intending traveller had to do was to signify the date of his departure
-and his destination to the superintendent of the nearest station, and
-send his heavier baggage on in advance by one of the trains devoted to
-the carriage of freight. A place was then allotted to him, and all he
-had to do was to go and take possession of it.
-
-The Continental Station was comfortably full of passengers when Olga
-and Serge reached it, about fifteen minutes before the departure of the
-Eastern express; for people were leaving the Capital of the World in
-thousands just then, to spend Christmas and New Year with friends in
-the other cities of Europe, and especially to attend the great Winter
-Festival that was held every year in St. Petersburg in celebration of
-the anniversary of Russian freedom.
-
-Ten minutes before the express started, they ascended in one of the
-lifts to the platform, and went to find their seats. As they walked
-along the train, Olga suddenly stopped and said, almost with a gasp--
-
-“Look, Serge! There are two Aerians, and one of them is”--
-
-“Who?” said Serge, almost roughly. “I didn’t know you had any
-acquaintances among the Masters of the World.”
-
-The son of the Romanoffs hated the very name of the Aerians, so
-bitterly that even the mere suspicion that his idolised betrothed
-should have so much as spoken to one of them was enough to rouse his
-anger.
-
-“No, I haven’t,” she replied quietly, ignoring the sudden change in his
-manner; “but both you and I have very good reason for wishing to make
-their distinguished acquaintance. I recognise one of these because he
-sat beside Alan Arnold, the President of the Council, in St. Paul’s,
-when they were foolish enough to relinquish the throne of the world in
-obedience to an old man’s whim.
-
-“The taller of the two standing there by the pillar is the younger
-counterpart of the President, and if his looks don’t belie him, he can
-be no one but the son of Alan Arnold, and therefore the future ruler
-of Aeria, and the present or future possessor of the Great Secret. Do
-you see now why it is necessary that we should--well, I will say, make
-friends of those two handsome lads?”
-
-Olga spoke rapidly and in Russian, a tongue then scarcely ever heard
-and very little understood even among educated people, who, whatever
-their nationality, made English their language of general intercourse.
-The words “handsome lads” had grated harshly upon Serge’s ears, but he
-saw the force of Olga’s question at once, and strove hard to stifle the
-waking demon of jealousy that had been roused more by her tone and the
-quick bright flush on her cheek than by her words, as he answered--
-
-“Forgive me, darling, for speaking roughly! Their hundred years of
-peace have not tamed my Russian blood enough to let me look upon my
-enemies without anger. Of course, you are right; and if they are going
-by the express, as they seem to be, we should be friendly enough by the
-time we reach Königsberg.”
-
-“I am glad you agree with me,” said Olga, “for the destinies of the
-world may turn on the events of the next few hours. Ah, the Fates
-are kind! Look! There is Alderman[2] Heatherstone talking to them. I
-suppose he has come to see them off, for no doubt they have been the
-guests of the City during the Festival. Come, he will very soon make us
-known to each other.”
-
-A couple of minutes later the Alderman, who had been an old friend
-of Paul Ivanitch, the famous sculptor, had cordially greeted them
-and introduced them to the two Aerians, whose names he gave as Alan
-Arnoldson, the son of the President of the late Supreme Council, and
-Alexis Masarov, a descendant of the Alexis Mazanoff who had played such
-a conspicuous part in the war of the Terror. They were just starting on
-the tour of the world, and were bound for St. Petersburg to witness the
-Winter Festival.
-
-Olga had been more than justified in speaking of them as she had done.
-Both in face and form, they were the very ideal of youthful manhood.
-Both of them stood over six feet in the long, soft, white leather boots
-which rose above their knees, meeting their close-fitting, grey tunics
-of silk-embroidered cloth, confined at the waist by belts curiously
-fashioned of flat links of several different metals, and fastened in
-front by heavy buckles of gold studded with great, flashing gems.
-
-From their broad shoulders hung travelling-cloaks of fine, blue cloth,
-lined with silver fur and kept in place across the breast by silver
-chains and clasps of a strange, blue metal, whose lustre seemed to come
-from within like that of a diamond or a sapphire.
-
-On their heads they wore no other covering than their own thick,
-curling hair, which they wore somewhat in the picturesque style of
-the fourteenth century, and a plain, broad band of the gleaming blue
-metal, from which rose above the temples a pair of marvellously-chased,
-golden wings about four inches high--the insignia of the Empire of the
-Air, and the sign which distinguished the Aerians from all the other
-peoples of the earth.
-
-As Olga shook hands with Alan, she looked up into his dark-blue eyes,
-with a glance such as he had never received from a woman before--a
-glance in which he seemed instinctively to read at once love and hate,
-frank admiration and equally undisguised defiance. Their eyes held each
-other for a moment of mutual fascination which neither could resist,
-and then the dark-fringed lids fell over hers, and a faint flush rose
-to her cheeks as she replied to his words of salutation--
-
-“Surely the pleasure will rather be on our side, with travelling
-companions from the other world! For my own part, I seem to remind
-myself somewhat of one of the daughters of men whom the Sons of the
-Gods”--
-
-She stopped short in the middle of her daring speech, and looked up at
-him again as much as to say--
-
-“So much for the present. Let the Fates finish it!” and then, appearing
-to correct herself, she went on, with a half-saucy, half-deprecating
-smile on her dangerously-mobile lips--
-
-“You know what I mean; not exactly that, but something of the sort.”
-
-“More true, I fancy, of the daughter of men than of the supposed Sons
-of the Gods,” retorted Alan, with a laugh, half startled by her words,
-and wholly charmed by the indescribable fascination of the way in which
-she said them; “for the daughters of men were so fair that the Sons of
-the Gods lost heaven itself for their sakes.”
-
-“Even so!” said Olga, looking him full in the eyes, and at that moment
-the signal sounded for them to take their places in the cars.
-
-A couple of minutes after they had taken their seats, the train drew
-out of the station with an imperceptible, gliding motion, so smooth and
-frictionless that it seemed rather as though the people standing on the
-platform were sliding backwards than that the train was moving forward.
-The speed increased rapidly, but so evenly that, almost before they
-were well aware of it, the passengers were flying over the snow-covered
-landscape, under the bright, heatless sun and pale, steel-blue sky of
-a perfect winter’s morning, at a hundred miles an hour, the speed ever
-increasing as they sped onward.
-
-The line followed the general direction of the present route to Dover,
-which was reached in about half an hour. Without pausing for a moment
-in its rapid flight, the express swept out from the land over the
-Channel Bridge, which spanned the Straits from Dover to Calais at a
-height of 200 feet above the water.
-
-Travelling at a speed of three miles a minute, seven minutes sufficed
-for the express to leap, as it were, from land to land. As they swept
-along in mid-air over the waves, Olga pointed down to them and said to
-Alan, who was sitting in the armchair next her own--
-
-“Imagine the time when people had to take a couple of hours getting
-across here in a little, dirty, smoky steamboat, mingling their sorrows
-and their sea-sickness in one common misery! I really think this
-Channel Bridge is worthy even of your admiration. Come now, you have
-not admired anything yet”--
-
-“Pardon me,” said Alan, with a look and a laugh that set Serge’s teeth
-gritting against each other, and brought the ready blood to Olga’s
-cheeks; “on the contrary, I have been absorbed in admiration ever since
-we started.”
-
-“But not apparently of our engineering triumphs,” replied Olga frankly,
-taking the compliment to herself, and seeming in no way displeased with
-it. “It would seem that the polite art of flattery is studied to some
-purpose in Aeria.”
-
-“There you are quite wrong,” returned Alan, still speaking in the same
-half-jocular, half-serious vein. “Before all things, we Aerians are
-taught to tell the absolute truth under all circumstances, no matter
-whether it pleases or offends; so, you see, what is usually known as
-flattery could hardly be one of our arts, since, as often as not, it is
-a lie told in the guise of truth, for the sake of serving some hidden
-and perhaps dishonest end.”
-
-The blow so unconsciously delivered struck straight home, and the flush
-died from Olga’s cheek, leaving her for the moment so white that her
-companion anxiously asked if she was unwell.
-
-“No,” she said, recovering her self-possession under the impulse of
-sudden anger at the weakness she had betrayed. “It is nothing. This is
-the first time for a year or so that I have travelled by one of these
-very fast trains, and the speed made me a little giddy just for the
-instant. I am quite well, really, so please go on.
-
-“You know, that wonderful fairyland of yours is a subject of
-everlasting interest and curiosity to us poor outsiders who are
-denied a glimpse of its glories, and it is so very rarely that one of
-us enjoys the privilege that is mine just now, that I hope you will
-indulge my feminine curiosity as far as your good nature is able to
-temper your reserve.”
-
-As she uttered her request, Alan’s smiling face suddenly became grave
-almost to sternness. The laughing light died out of his eyes, and she
-saw them darken in a fashion that at once convinced her that she had
-begun by making a serious mistake.
-
-He looked up at her, with a shadow in his eyes and a slight frown on
-his brow. He spoke slowly and steadily, but with a manifest reluctance
-which he seemed to take little or no trouble to conceal.
-
-“I am sorry that you have asked me to talk on what is a forbidden
-subject to every Aerian, save when he is speaking with one of his own
-nation. I see you have been looking at these two golden wings on the
-band round my head. I will tell you what they mean, and then you will
-understand why I cannot say all that I know you would like me to say.
-
-“They are to us what the toga virilis was to the Romans of old, the
-insignia of manhood and responsibility. When a youth of Aeria reaches
-the age of twenty he is entitled to wear these wings as a sign that he
-is invested with all the rights and duties of a citizen of the nation
-which has conquered and commands the Empire of the Air.
-
-“One of these duties is, that in all the more serious relations of life
-he shall remain apart from all the peoples of the world save his own,
-and shall say nothing that will do anything to lift the veil which it
-has pleased our forefathers in their wisdom to draw round the realm of
-Aeria. Before we assume the citizenship of which these wings are the
-symbol we never visit the outside world save to make air voyages, for
-the purpose of learning the physical facts of the earth’s shape and the
-geography of land and sea.
-
-“Immediately after we have assumed it we do as Alexis and I are now
-doing--travel for a year or so through the different countries of the
-outside world, in order to get our knowledge of men and things as they
-exist beyond the limits of our own country.
-
-“The fact that we do so,--under a pledge solemnly and publicly given,
-of never revealing anything which could lead even to a possibility of
-other peoples of the earth overtaking us in the progress which we have
-made in the arts and sciences,--is my excuse for refusing to tell you
-what your very natural curiosity has asked.”
-
-Olga saw instantly that she had struck a false note, and was not slow
-to make good her mistake. She laid her hand upon his arm, with that
-pretty gesture which Serge knew so well, and watched now with much
-bitter feelings, and said, in a tone that betrayed no trace of the
-consuming passion within her--
-
-“Forgive me! Of course, you will see that I did not know I was
-trenching on forbidden grounds. I can well understand why such secrets
-as yours must be, should be kept. You have been masters of the world
-for more than a century, and even now, although you have formally
-abdicated the throne of the world, it would be absurd to deny that you
-still hold the destinies of humanity in your hands.
-
-“The secrets which guard so tremendous a power as that may well be
-religiously kept and held more sacred than anything else on earth.
-Still, you have mistaken me if you thought I asked for any of these.
-All I really wanted was, that you should tell me something that would
-give me just a glimpse of what human life is like in that enchanted
-land of yours”--
-
-Alan laid his hands upon hers, which was still resting upon his arm,
-and interrupted her even more earnestly than before.
-
-“Even that I cannot tell you. With us, the man who gives a pledge
-and breaks it, even in the spirit though not in the letter, is not
-considered worthy to live, and therefore I must be silent.”
-
-Instead of answering with her lips, Olga turned her hand palm upwards,
-and clasped his with a pressure which he returned before he very well
-knew what he was doing; and while the magic of her clasp was still
-stealing along his nerves, Serge broke in, with a harsh ring in his
-voice--
-
-“But pardon me for interrupting what seems a very pleasant conversation
-with my--my sister, I should like to ask, with all due deference to the
-infinitely superior wisdom of the rulers of Aeria, whether it is not
-rather a risky thing for you to travel thus about the world, possessing
-secrets which any man or woman would almost be willing to die even to
-know for a few minutes, when, after all, you are but human even as the
-rest of humanity are?
-
-“You, for instance, are only two among millions; how would you protect
-yourselves against the superior force of numbers? Supposing you were
-taken unawares under circumstances which make your superior knowledge
-unavailing. You know, human nature is the same yesterday, to-day, and
-to-morrow, despite the superficial varnish of civilisation.
-
-“The passions of men are only curbed, not dead. There may be men
-on earth to-day who, to gain such knowledge as you possess, would
-even resort to the tortures used by the Inquisition in the sixteenth
-century. Suppose you found yourself in the power of such men as that,
-what then? Would you still preserve your secret intact, do you think?”
-
-Alan heard him to the end without moving a muscle of his face, and
-without even withdrawing his hand from Olga’s clasp. But at the last
-sentence he snatched it suddenly away, half-turned in his seat, and
-faced him. Then, looking him straight in the eyes, he said in a tone
-as cold and measured as might have been used by a judge sentencing a
-criminal to death--
-
-“We do not fear anything of the sort, simply because each one of us
-holds the power of life and death in his hands. If you laid a hand on
-me now in anger, or with an intent to do me harm, you would be struck
-dead before you could raise a finger in your own defence.
-
-“Do you think that we, who are as far in advance of you as you are
-in advance of the men of a hundred years ago, would trust ourselves
-amongst those who might be our enemies were we not amply protected
-against you? Tell me, have you ever read a book, written nearly two
-hundred years ago in the Victorian Age, called _The Coming Race_?”
-
-“Yes,” said Serge, thinking, as he spoke, of the possibilities
-contained in the secret will of Paul Romanoff, “I have read it, and so
-has Olga. What of it?”
-
-“Well,” said Alan quietly, without moving his eyes from those of Serge.
-“I had better tell you at once that we have realised, to all intents
-and purposes, the dream that Lytton dreamt when he wrote that book.
-I can tell you so much without breaking the pledge of which I have
-spoken. All that the Vril-Ya did in his dream we have accomplished in
-reality, and more than that.
-
-“Our empire is not bounded by the roofs of subterranean caverns, but
-only by the limits of the planet’s atmosphere. We can soar beyond the
-clouds and dive beneath the seas. We have realised what he called the
-Vril force as a sober, scientific fact; and if I thought that you, for
-instance, were my enemy, I could strike you dead without so much as
-laying a hand on you. And if a dozen like you tried to overcome me by
-superior brute force, they would all meet with the same fate.
-
-“I’m afraid this sounds somewhat like boasting,” he continued in a
-more gentle tone, and dropping his eyes to the floor of the car, “but
-the turn the conversation has taken obliged me to say what I have
-done. Suppose we give it another turn and change the subject. We have
-unintentionally got upon rather uncomfortable ground.”
-
-Serge and Olga were not slow to take the pointed hint, and so the talk
-drifted into general and more harmless channels.
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[2] The good old word had now regained its ancient and uncorrupted
-meaning.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V. A VISION FROM THE CLOUDS.
-
-
-AT Königsberg, which was reached in nine hours after leaving London,
-that is to say, soon after seven o’clock in the evening, the Eastern
-express divided: five of the cars went northward to St. Petersburg,
-carrying those passengers who were going to participate in the Winter
-Festival, while the other five which made up the train went on to
-Moscow and the East.
-
-During the twenty minutes’ stop at Berlin, Olga had found an
-opportunity of having a few words in private with Serge, and had
-succeeded in persuading him, much against his will, of the necessity of
-postponing their marriage, and therefore their visit to Moscow, for the
-execution of a daring and suddenly-conceived plan which she had thought
-out, but which she had then no time to explain to him.
-
-Serge, though very loath to postpone even for a day or two the
-consummation of his hopes and the hour which should make Olga
-irrevocably his, so far as human laws could bind her to him, was so far
-under the domination of her imperious will that, as soon as he saw that
-she had determined to have her own way, he yielded with the best grace
-he could.
-
-Olga chided him gently and yet earnestly for his outbreak of temper
-towards Alan, and told him plainly that, where such tremendous
-issues were concerned as those which were involved in the struggle
-which sooner or later they must wage with the Aerians, no personal
-considerations whatever could be permitted a moment’s serious thought.
-If she could sacrifice her own feelings, and disguise her hatred of the
-tyrants of the world under the mask of friendliness, for the sake of
-the ends to which both their lives were devoted, surely he, if he were
-at all worthy of her love, could so far trust her as to restrain the
-unreasoning jealousy of which he had already been guilty.
-
-Either, she told him, he must trust to her absolutely for the present,
-or he must take the management of affairs into his own hands; and,
-as she said in conclusion, he must find some influence stronger than
-hers in their dealings with him who would one day be the ruler of
-Aeria, and, therefore, the real master of the world, should it ever be
-possible to dispute the empire of Earth with the Aerians.
-
-From the influence which she exercised over himself, Serge knew only
-too well that he could not hope to rival her in this regard where a man
-was concerned, and so he perforce agreed to her proposal, and for the
-present left the conduct of affairs in her hands.
-
-A telephonic message was therefore sent from Königsberg to the friends
-who expected them at Vorobièvŏ, near Moscow, to tell them of the
-change in their plans; and when the train once more glided out over the
-frozen plains of the North, the four were once more seated together in
-the brilliantly-lighted car, which flashed like a meteor through the
-gathering darkness of the winter’s night.
-
-About half an hour after they had passed what had once been the
-jealously-guarded Russian frontier, a dazzling gleam of light suddenly
-blazed down from the black darkness overhead, and Olga, who was sitting
-by one of the windows of the car, bent forward and said--
-
-“Look there! What is that? There is a bright light shining down out of
-the clouds on the train.”
-
-Alan saw the flash across the window, and, without even troubling to
-look up at its source, said--
-
-“Oh, I suppose that’ll be the air-ship that was ordered to meet us at
-St. Petersburg. You know, we usually have one of them in attendance,
-when we trust ourselves alone among our possible enemies of the outer
-world.”
-
-The last sentence was spoken with a quiet irony, which brought home
-both to Olga and Serge the not very pleasant conviction that their
-previous conversation had by no means been forgotten. Serge, perhaps
-fearing to give utterance to his thoughts, remained silent, but Olga
-looked at Alan with a half-saucy smile, and said almost mockingly--
-
-“Your Majesties of Aeria may well esteem yourselves impregnable, while
-you have such a bodyguard as that at your beck and call. I suppose that
-air-ship would not have the slightest difficulty in blowing this train,
-and all it contains, off the face of the earth at a moment’s notice, if
-it had orders to do so?”
-
-“Not the slightest,” said Alan quietly. “But in proof of the fact that
-it has no such hostile intentions, you shall, if you please, take
-a voyage beyond the clouds in it the day after to-morrow, from St.
-Petersburg.”
-
-“What!” said Olga, her cheeks flushing and her eyes lighting up at the
-very idea of such an experience. “Do you really mean to say that you
-would permit a daughter of the earth, as I am told you call the women
-who have not the good fortune to be born in Aeria, to go on board one
-of those wonderful air-ships of yours, and taste the forbidden delights
-of spurning the earth and sharing, even for an hour, your Empire of the
-Air?”
-
-“Why not?” replied Alan, with a laugh. “What harm would be done by
-taking you for a trip beyond the clouds? We are not so selfish as all
-that; and if the novel experience would give you any pleasure, we have
-a perfect right to ask you to enjoy it. Will you come?”
-
-“Surely there is scarcely any need for me to say ‘yes.’ Why, do you
-know, I believe I would give five years of my life for as many hours on
-board that air-ship of yours,” said Olga; “and if you will do as you
-say, you will make me your debtor for ever. Indeed, how could a poor
-earth-dweller such as I am repay a favour like that.”
-
-“Ah, if only you were an Aerian, I should not have much difficulty in
-telling you how you could do that,” retorted Alan, with almost boyish
-candour. “As it is, I am afraid I must be satisfied for my reward with
-the pleasure of knowing that I have given you a pleasurable experience.”
-
-“Your Majesty has put that so prettily, that it almost atones for
-the sense of hopeless inferiority which, I need hardly tell you, is
-just a trifle bitter to my feminine pride,” said Olga, in the same
-half-bantering tone she had used all along.
-
-Before a reply had risen to Alan’s lips, the conversation was
-interrupted by the air-ship suddenly swooping down from the clouds to
-the level of the windows of the train, which was now flying along over
-a wide, treeless plain at a speed of fully two hundred miles an hour.
-
-As the search-lights of the aerial vessel flashed along the windows
-of the cars, the blinds, which had been drawn down at nightfall, were
-sprung up again by the passengers, who were all eager to get a glimpse
-of one of the marvellous vessels which so rarely came within close view
-of the dwellers upon earth.
-
-The air-ship, on which all eyes were now bent with such intense
-curiosity, was a beautifully-proportioned vessel, built chiefly of some
-unknown metal, which shone with a brilliant, pale-blue lustre. Her hull
-was about two hundred feet from stem to stern, not counting a long,
-ramlike projection which stretched some twenty-five feet in front of
-the stem, with its point level with the keel, or rather, with the three
-keels,--the centre one shallow and the two others very deep,--which
-were obviously shaped so as to enable the craft either to stand upright
-on land or to sail upon the water if desired.
-
-From each of her sides spread out two great wings, not unlike
-palm-leaves in shape, measuring some hundred feet from point to point,
-and about twice the width of the vessel’s deck, which was, as nearly as
-could be judged, twenty feet amidships.
-
-These wings were made of some white, lustrous material, which shone
-with a somewhat more metallic sheen than silk would have done, and
-were divided into a vast number of sections by transverse ribs. These
-sections vibrated and undulated rhythmically from front to rear with
-enormous rapidity, and evidently not only sustained the vessel in the
-air, but also aided in her propulsion.
-
-Three seemingly solid discs, which glittered brilliantly in the light
-from the train, marked the positions of the air-ship’s propellers, of
-which one revolved on a shaft in a straight line with the centre of
-the deck, while the shafts of the other two were inclined outwards at
-a slight angle from the middle line. From the deck rose three slender,
-raking masts, apparently placed there for ornament rather than use,
-unless indeed they were employed for signalling purposes.
-
-The whole deck was covered completely from end to end by a curved roof
-of glass, and formed a spacious chamber pervaded by a soft, diffused
-light, the origin of which was invisible, and which showed about half
-a dozen figures clad in the graceful costume of the Aerians, and all
-wearing the headdress with golden wings. From under the domed, crystal
-roof projected ten long, slender guns,--two over the bows, two over the
-stern, and three over each side, at equal intervals.
-
-Such was the wonderful craft which swept down from the darkness of the
-wintry sky, in full view of the passengers in the cars, and lighted up
-the snowy landscape for three or four miles ahead and astern with the
-dazzling rays of her two search-lights.
-
-Although, as has been said, the express was moving at quite two
-hundred miles an hour, the air-ship swept up alongside it with as
-much apparent ease as though it had been stationary. Amid the murmurs
-of irrepressible admiration which greeted it from the passengers, it
-glided smoothly nearer and nearer, until the side of one of its wings
-was within ten feet of the car windows.
-
-Alan and Alexis stood up and saluted their comrades on the deck, then
-a few rapid, unintelligible signals made with the hand passed between
-them, a parting salute was waved from the air-ship to the express; and
-then, with a speed that seemed to rival that of the lightning-bolt, the
-cruiser of the air darted forward and upward, and in ten seconds was
-lost beyond the clouds.
-
-“Well, now that you have seen one of our aerial fleet at close
-quarters,” said Alan, turning to Olga and Serge, “what do you think of
-her?”
-
-“A miracle!” they both exclaimed in one breath; and then Olga went on,
-her voice trembling with an irresistible agitation--
-
-“I can hardly believe that such a marvel is the creation of merely
-human genius. There is something appalling in the very idea of the
-awful power lying in the hands of those who can create and command
-such a vessel as that. You Aerians may well look down on us poor
-earth-dwellers, for truly you have made yourselves as gods.”
-
-She spoke earnestly, and for once with absolute honesty, for the
-vision of the air-ship had awed her completely for the time being.
-Alan appeared for the moment as a god in her eyes, until she saw his
-lips curve in a very human smile, and heard his voice say, without the
-slightest assumption of superiority in its tone--
-
-“No, not as gods; but only as men who have developed under the most
-favourable circumstances possible, and who have known how to make the
-best of their advantages.”
-
-“God or man,” said Olga in her soul, while her lips were smiling
-acknowledgment of his modesty, “by this time to-morrow you shall be my
-slave, and I will be mistress both of you and your air-ship!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI. DEED AND DREAM.
-
-
-WHEN Olga went to her room that night in St. Petersburg, instead of
-going to bed, she unpacked from her valise a series of articles which
-seemed strange possessions for a young girl of not quite seventeen to
-travel with on her wedding journey.
-
-First came a tiny spirit furnace from which, by the aid of an
-arrangement something like the modern blow-pipe, an intense heat could
-be obtained. Then a delicate pair of scales, a glass pestle and mortar,
-and a couple of glass liquid-measures, and lastly, half a dozen little
-phials filled with variously-coloured liquids, and as many little
-packets of powders, that looked like herbs ground very finely.
-
-When she had placed these out on the table, after having carefully
-locked the door of her room, and seen that the windows were completely
-shuttered and curtained, she drew from the bosom of her dress a gold
-chain, at the end of which was fastened, together with the key of
-the secret recess in the wall of the turret chamber of the house at
-Hampstead, a small bag of silk, out of which she took a little roll
-of parchment,--the slip which she had abstracted from Paul Romanoff’s
-secret will after she had persuaded Serge, with her false kisses, to
-leave her alone for a while.
-
-She seated herself at the table, drew the electric reading-lamp which
-stood on it close to her, laid the slip down in front of her, keeping
-it unrolled by means of a couple of little weights, and studied it
-intently for several minutes. Then she made a series of calculations
-on another sheet of paper, and compared the result carefully with some
-figures on the slip.
-
-She made them three times over before she was satisfied that they were
-absolutely correct, and then, with all the care and deliberation of
-a chemical analyst performing a delicate and important experiment,
-she proceeded to weigh out tiny quantities of the powders, and to mix
-them very carefully in the little glass mortar. This done, she emptied
-the mixture into a little platinum crucible, which she placed on the
-furnace, at the same time applying a gentle heat.
-
-Then she turned her attention to the phials, measuring off quantities
-of their contents with the most scrupulous exactitude, mixing them two
-and two, and adding this mixture to a third, and so on, in a certain
-order which was evidently prearranged, as she constantly referred to
-the slip of parchment and her own calculations as she was mixing them.
-
-By the time she finished this part of her work, she had obtained from
-the various coloured liquids one perfectly colourless and odourless, of
-a specific gravity apparently considerably in excess of that of water,
-although, at the same time, it was extremely mobile and refractive.
-She held it up to the light, looking at it with her eyelids somewhat
-screwed up, and with a cruel smile on her pretty lips.
-
-“So far, so good,” she said in a voice little higher than a whisper.
-“The lives of fifty strong men in that couple of ounces of harmless
-looking fluid! If anyone could see me just now, I fancy they would take
-me rather for a witch or a poisoner of the fifteenth century than for a
-girl of the twenty-first.
-
-“Well, my friend Alan, your mysterious power may kill more quickly,
-but not more surely than this; and this, too, will take a man out of
-the world so easily that not even he himself will know that he is
-going,--not even when he sinks into the sleep from which he will awake
-on the other side of the shadows.
-
-“So much for the bodies of our enemies, and now for their souls! I
-don’t want to kill wholesale, at least, not just yet; and as for you,
-my Alan, you are far too splendid, too glorious a man to be killed, to
-say nothing of your being so much more useful alive. No, I have a very
-much pleasanter fate in store for you.”
-
-Just then a little cloud as of incense smoke began to rise from the
-crucible in which were the mixed powders, and a faint, pleasant perfume
-began to diffuse itself. She stopped her soliloquy, measured off
-exactly half of the liquid, and patiently poured it, drop by drop, into
-the crucible, at the same time gradually increasing the heat.
-
-The vapour gradually disappeared, and the perfume died away. When she
-had poured in the last drop, she began slowly stirring the mixture
-with a glass rod. It gradually assumed the consistency of thick syrup,
-and after stirring it for three minutes by her watch, which lay on the
-table beside her, she extinguished the electric lamp and waited.
-
-In a few seconds a pale, orange-coloured flame appeared hovering over
-the crucible. As its ghostly light fell upon her anxious features, she
-caught sight of herself in a mirror let into the wall on the opposite
-side of the table. She started back in her chair with an irrepressible
-shudder. For the first time in her life she saw herself as she really
-was.
-
-The weird, unearthly light of the flame changed the clear, pale olive
-of her skin into a sallow red, and cast what looked like a mist of
-vapour tinged with blood across the dark lustre of her dusky eyes. It
-seemed as though the light that she had called forth from the darkness
-had melted the beautiful mask which hid her inner self from the eyes
-of men, and revealed her naked soul incarnate in the evil shape that
-should have belonged to it.
-
-Suddenly the flame vanished, she turned on the switch of the lamp,
-placed a platinum cover over the crucible with a pair of light, curved
-tongs, and, with a quick half-turn, screwed it hermetically down. Then
-she turned the heat of the furnace on to the full, rose from her chair,
-and stretched herself, with her linked hands above her head, till her
-lithe, girlish form was drawn up to its full height in front of the
-mirror.
-
-She looked dreamily from under her half-closed lids at the perfect
-picture presented by the reflection, and then her tightly-closed lips
-melted into a smile, and she said softly to herself--
-
-“Ah, that is a different sort of picture. I wonder what Alan would
-have thought if he could have seen _that_ one? I don’t think I should
-have taken my trip in the air-ship to-morrow if he had done. Well, I
-have seen myself as I am--what four generations of inherited hate and
-longing for revenge have made me.
-
-“In the light of that horrible flame I might have sat for the portrait
-of the lost soul of Lucrezia Borghia. Ah, well, if mine is lost, it
-shall be lost for something worth the exchange. ‘Better to rule in Hell
-than serve in Heaven,’ as old Milton said, and after all--who knows?
-
-“Bah! that is enough of dreaming, when the time for doing is so near. I
-must get some sleep to-night, or my eyes will have lost some of their
-brightness by to-morrow.”
-
-So saying, she busied herself putting away her phials, and powders, and
-apparatus. The half of the colourless liquid she had left she carefully
-decanted into a tiny flask, over the stopper of which she screwed a
-silver cap that had a little ring on the top, and this she hung on
-the chain round her neck. She replaced the slip of parchment in its
-silken bag, and carefully burnt the paper on which she had made her
-calculations.
-
-By this time the bottom of the crucible was glowing red hot. She noted
-the time that had elapsed since she had screwed the cap down, waited
-five minutes longer, and then extinguished the furnace, undressed, and
-got into bed, and in half an hour was sleeping as quietly as a little
-child. She had set the chime of her repeating watch to sound at six,
-and hung the watch close above her head.
-
-Calm as her sleep was at first, it was by no means dreamless, and her
-dreams were well fitted to be those of a guilty soul slumbering after a
-work of death.
-
-She saw herself standing with Alan on the glass-domed deck of the
-air-ship, beneath the light of a clear, white moon sailing high in the
-heavens, and a host of brilliant stars glittering out of the deep-blue
-depths beyond it. Far below them lay an unbroken cloud-sea of dazzling
-whiteness, which stretched away into the infinite distance on all
-sides, until it seemed to blend with the moonlight and melt into the
-sky.
-
-Then the scene changed, and the air-ship swept downwards in a wide,
-spiral curve, and plunged through the noiseless billows of the shadowy
-sea. As she did so, a fearful chorus of sounds rose up from the earth
-below.
-
-The moonlight and starlight were gone, and in their place the lurid
-glare of burning cities and blazing forests cast a fearful radiance up
-through the great eddying waves of smoke, and reflected itself on the
-under surface of the clouds; now the air-ship swept hither and thither
-with bewildering rapidity, like the incarnation of some fearful spirit
-of destruction. Alan had vanished, and she was giving orders rapidly,
-and men were working the long, slender guns in a grim silence that
-contrasted weirdly with the horrible din that rose from the earth.
-
-She saw neither smoke nor flame from the guns, nor heard any sound as
-they were discharged, but every time she raised her hand, the motion
-was followed within a few seconds by a shaking of the atmosphere, a
-dull roar from the earth, and the outburst of vast, dazzling masses of
-flame, before which the blaze of the conflagration paled.
-
-She looked down with fierce exultation upon the scene of carnage and
-destruction; and as she gazed upon it, the fires died away, the roar of
-the explosions began to sound like echoes in the distance, and when the
-landscape of her dreamland took definite shape again, the air-ship was
-hovering over a vast, oval valley, walled in by mighty mountain masses,
-surmounted by towering peaks, on some of which crests of everlasting
-snow and ice shone undissolved in the rays of the tropical sun.
-
-[Illustration: AS SHE GAZED UPON IT, THE FIRES DIED AWAY. _Page 57._]
-
-The valley itself was of such incomparable and fairy-like beauty, that
-it seemed to belong rather to the realm of imagination than to the
-world of reality. A great lake lay in the centre, its emerald shores
-lined with groves of palms and orange-trees, and fringed with verdant
-islets spangled with many coloured flowers.
-
-On the northern shore of the lake lay a splendid city of marble
-palaces, surrounded by shady gardens, and divided from each other by
-broad, straight streets, smooth as ivory and spotless as snow, and
-lined with double rows of wide-spreading trees, which cast a pleasant
-shade along their sides.
-
-In the midst of a vast square, in the centre of the city, rose an
-immense building of marble of perfect whiteness, surmounted by a great
-golden dome, which in turn was crowned by the silver shape of a woman
-with great spreading wings, which blazed and scintillated in the
-sunlight as though they had been fashioned of sheets of crystal, pure
-and translucent as diamonds.
-
-All over the valley, villas and palaces of marble were scattered in
-cool ravines and on shaded, wooded slopes; and as far as her eye could
-reach, vast expanses of garden land, emerald pastures, and golden corn
-fields stretched away over hill and vale, until the most remote were
-met by the cool, dark forests which clothed the middle slopes of the
-all-encircling mountains, and themselves gave place higher up to dark,
-frowning precipices, vast walls of living rock, rising thousands of
-feet sheer upwards, and ending in the mighty peaks which stood like
-eternal sentinels guarding this enchanted realm.
-
-If she had had her will, she would have gazed for ever upon this
-delightful scene; but the spirit of the dream was not to be controlled,
-and it faded from her sight just as the picture of death and desolation
-had done. As it faded away, Alan, who had now come back to her side,
-laid his hand upon her shoulder, and, looking at her with mournful
-eyes, said wearily--
-
-“That was your first and last glimpse of heaven. Now comes the
-judgment!”
-
-As he spoke, the air-ship soared upwards again, and was instantly
-enveloped in a cloud of impenetrable darkness. She sped on and on in
-utter silence through the gloom, which was so dense that it seemed
-to cast the rays of the ship’s electric lights back upon her as she
-floated amidst it. Presently the deathlike silence was broken by a low,
-weird sound, that seemed like a wail of universal agony rising up from
-the earth beneath.
-
-Then, far ahead and high up in the sky, appeared a faint light, which
-grew and brightened until the darkness melted away before it; and Olga
-saw the air-ship floating near enough to the earth for her to see that
-all its vegetation was withered and yellow, and the beds of its streams
-almost dry, with only little, thin rivulets trickling sluggishly along
-them.
-
-Millions of people seemed wandering listlessly and aimlessly about the
-streets of the cities and the parched fields of the open country, ever
-and anon stretching their hands as though in appeal up to the dark,
-moonless sky, in which the fearful shape of light and fiery mist was
-growing every moment brighter and vaster.
-
-It grew and grew until it arched half the horizon with its tremendous
-curve; and then out of the midst of it came a huge, dazzling globe of
-fire, from the rim of which shot forth great flames of every colour,
-some of which seemed to descend to the surface of the earth like long
-fiery tongues that licked up the seething lakes in wreathing clouds of
-steam, which hissed and roared as they rose like ascending cataracts.
-
-She looked down between them at the earth. The myriads of figures were
-there still, but now they lay prone and lifeless on the ground, as
-though the last agony of mankind were past. The light of the blazing
-globe grew more and more dazzling, and the heat more and more intense.
-The speed of the air-ship slackened visibly, although the wings and
-propellers were working at their utmost speed, and it was falling
-rapidly, as though there was no longer any air to support it.
-
-She gasped for breath in the choking, burning atmosphere of the deck
-chamber, and then a swift, vivid wave of light seemed to sweep through
-her brain, and she woke with a choking gasp of terror, with the chimes
-of her watch ringing sweetly in her ears, telling her that the vision
-had been but a dream of a night that had passed.
-
-Wide awake in an instant, she got out of bed and turned on the electric
-lamp. As the room had been perfectly warmed all night by the electric
-conduction-stoves, which were then in almost universal use, she only
-stopped to throw a fur-lined cloak round her shoulders before she went
-to remove the cap of the crucible.
-
-She peered anxiously into the vessel, and saw about two fluid ounces of
-a dark, glittering liquid, from the surface of which the light of the
-lamp was reflected as though from a mirror. With hands that trembled
-slightly, in spite of the great effort she made to keep her nerves in
-check, she poured the precious fluid into one of the glass measures
-that she had used the night before.
-
-Seen through the glass, its colour was a deep, brilliant blue, and,
-like the white liquid first prepared, shone as though with an inherent,
-light-giving power of its own. She held it up admiringly to the light,
-and said to herself, with the same cruel smile that had curved her lips
-when she had contemplated the other fluid--
-
-“How beautiful it is! It might be made of sapphires dissolved in some
-potent essence. In reality, it is an elixir capable of dissolving the
-souls of men. Ah, my proud Masters of the World, we shall soon see how
-much your boasted powers avail you against this and a woman’s wit and
-hatred!
-
-“And you, my splendid Alan, before to-morrow night you shall be at my
-feet! Two drops of this, and that proud, strong soul of yours shall
-melt away like a snowflake under warm rain, and you shall be my slave
-and do my bidding, and never know that you are not as free as you are
-now.
-
-“The days have gone by when men sought the Elixir of Life, but Paul
-Romanoff sought and found the Elixir of Death,--death of the body or
-of the soul, as the possessor of it shall will; and he is gone, and I,
-alone of all the children of men, possess it!”[3]
-
-She set the measure down on the table, and took out of her valise a
-similar little flask to the one which held the white liquid. In this
-she carefully poured the contents of the measure, screwed the cap on as
-before, and hung it with the other on the chain round her neck. Then,
-woman-like, she turned to the mirror, threw back her cloak a little,
-and gazed at the reflection of the two flasks, which shone like two
-great gems upon her white skin.
-
-“There is such a necklace as woman never wore before, since woman first
-delighted in gems,--a necklace that all the jewels in the world could
-not buy. How pretty they look!”
-
-So saying, she turned away from the mirror and carefully put away all
-traces of the work she had been engaged in, then she threw off her
-cloak and turned the lamp out and got into bed again, to wait until the
-attendant called her at eight o’clock as she had directed.
-
-She did not go to sleep again, but lay with wide-open eyes looking at
-the darkness, and conjuring out of it visions of love and war, and the
-world-wide empire which she believed to be now almost within her grasp.
-In all these visions, two figures stood out prominently--those of Serge
-and Alan, her lover that had been and the lover that was to be,--if
-only the elixir did its work as its discoverer had said it would.
-
-As such thoughts as these passed through her brain, a new and perhaps
-a nobler conception of her mission of revenge took possession of her.
-In the past, Natasha had won the love of the man whose genius had made
-possible, nay, irresistible, the triumph of that revolution which had
-subverted the throne of her ancestors, and sent the last of the Tsars
-of Russia to die like a felon in chains amidst the snows of Siberia.
-
-What more magnificent vengeance could she, the last surviving daughter
-of the Romanoffs, win than the enslavement of the man descended not
-only from Natasha and Richard Arnold, but also from that Alan Tremayne
-whose name he bore, and who, as first President of the Anglo-Saxon
-Federation, had ensured the victory of the Western races over the
-Eastern?
-
-The empire of freedom and peace, which Richard Arnold had won for
-Natasha’s sake, this son of the line of Natas should convert, at her
-bidding, into an empire such as she longed to rule over,--an empire in
-which men should be her slaves and women her handmaidens. For her sake
-the wave of Destiny should flow back again; she would be the Semiramis
-of a new despotism.
-
-What was the freedom or the happiness of the mass of mankind to her?
-If she could raise herself above them, and put her foot upon their
-necks, why should she not do so? By force the leaders of the Terror had
-overthrown the despotisms of the Old World; why should not she employ
-the self-same force to seat herself, with the man she loved in spite of
-all her hereditary hatred, upon the throne of the world, and reign with
-him in that glorious land whose beauties had been revealed to her in
-the vision which surely had been something more than a dream?
-
-Thus thinking and dreaming, and illumining the darkness with her own
-visions of glories to come, she lay in a kind of ecstasy, until a knock
-at the door warned her that the time for dreaming had passed and the
-hour for action had arrived.
-
-A brief half-hour sufficed for her toilet, and she entered the room
-of the hotel, in which Serge was awaiting her, dressed to perfection
-in her plain, clinging robe of royal purple, and self-composed as
-though she had passed the night in the most innocent and dreamless of
-slumbers. She submitted to his greeting kiss with as good a grace as
-possible, and yet with an inward shrinking which almost amounted to
-loathing, born of the visions which were still floating in her mind.
-
-She shuddered almost invisibly as he released her from his embrace, and
-then the bright blood rose to her cheeks, and a sudden light shone in
-her eyes, as the thought possessed her, that not many hours would pass
-before a far nobler lover would take her in his arms, and would press
-sweeter kisses upon her lips,--the lips which had sworn fealty and
-devotion to the enemies of his race.
-
-Serge, with the true egotism of the lover, took the blush to himself,
-and said, with a laugh of boyish frankness--
-
-“Travelling and Russian air seem to agree with your Majesty. Evidently
-you have slept well your first night on Russian soil. I was half
-afraid that what happened yesterday, and your conversation with that
-golden-winged braggart from Aeria, would have sufficiently disturbed
-you to give you a more or less sleepless night, but you look as fresh
-and as lovely as though you had slept in the most perfect peace at
-home.”
-
-The anger that these unthinking words awoke in her soul, brought back
-the bright flush to Olga’s cheeks and the light into her eyes, and
-again Serge mistook the sign, as indeed he might well have done; and
-so he entirely mistook the meaning of her words when she replied, with
-a laugh, of the true significance of which he had not the remotest
-conception--
-
-“On the contrary, how was it possible that I could have anything
-but the sweetest sleep and the most pleasant dreams, after such a
-delightful journey and the making of such pleasant acquaintances?
-Do you not think the Fates have favoured us beyond our wildest
-expectations, in thus bringing our enemies so unconsciously across our
-path at the very outset of our campaign against them?
-
-“But really, these Aerians are delightful fellows. No, don’t frown at
-me like that, because you know as well as I do, that in that chivalrous
-good-nature of theirs lies our best hope of success.”
-
-As she spoke she went up to him, and laid her two hands upon his
-shoulder, and went on looking up into his eyes with a seductive
-softness in hers.
-
-“I am afraid I made you terribly jealous yesterday; but really, Serge,
-you must remember that in diplomacy, and diplomacy alone, lies our only
-chance of advantage in the circumstances which the kindly Fates appear
-to have specially created for our benefit.
-
-“The time for you to act will come later on, and when it comes, I know
-you will acquit yourself like the true Romanoff that you are; but for
-the present--well, you know these Aerians are men, and where diplomacy
-alone is in the question, it is better that a woman should deal with
-them. You will trust me for the present,--won’t you, Serge?”
-
-For all answer, he took her face between his hands, put her head back,
-and kissed her, saying as he released her--
-
-“Yes, darling; I will trust you not only now, but for ever. You are
-wiser than I am in these things. Do as you please; I will obey.”
-
-As he spoke, the door opened, and an attendant came in with two little
-cups of coffee on a silver salver. He placed it on the table, told
-them that breakfast would be ready for them in the morning-room in ten
-minutes, and retired. As they sipped their coffee, Olga said to Serge--
-
-“Now, we shall meet our enemies at breakfast, and I want you to be a
-great deal more cordial and friendly than you were yesterday. Our own
-feelings concern ourselves alone, but in our outward conduct we owe
-something to the sacred cause which we both have at heart. You can
-imagine how great a sacrifice I am making in my relations with those
-whom I have been taught to hate from my cradle.
-
-“I can see as well as you do, perhaps better, that this future ruler of
-Aeria admires me in his own boyish way. If I can bring myself to appear
-complaisant, surely it is not too much to ask you to look upon it with
-indifference, or even with interest,--a brotherly interest, you know;
-for you must remember that he knows me only as your sister.
-
-“Now, I want you to ask them to come and have breakfast with us at
-our table, and to exert yourself to appear agreeable to them, even as
-I shall; and above all things, promise me that you will fall in with
-any suggestions that I may make as regards our trip in this wonderful
-air-ship which we are to make to-morrow.
-
-“There is no time now to explain to you what I mean, but I swear to
-you, by the blood that flows in both our veins, that if I can only
-carry through, without any let or hindrance, the plans that I have
-already formed--that before forty-eight hours have passed that air-ship
-shall no longer be under Alan Arnoldson’s command.”
-
-He looked at her for a moment with almost incredulous admiration. She
-returned his inquiring glance with a steady, unwavering gaze, which
-made suspicion impossible. All his life he had grown up to look upon
-her as sharing with him the one hope that was left of restoring the
-ancient fortunes of their family. More than this they had been lovers
-ever since either of them knew the meaning of love.
-
-How then could he have dreamt that behind so fair an appearance lay
-as dark and treacherous a design as the brain of an ambitious woman
-had ever conceived? Intoxicated by her beauty and the memory of
-his lifelong love, he took a couple of steps towards her, took her
-unresisting into his arms again, and said passionately--
-
-“Give me another kiss, darling, and on your lips I will swear to trust
-you always and do your bidding even to the death.”
-
-She returned his kiss with a passion so admirably simulated that his
-resolve was thrice strengthened by it, and then she released herself
-gently from his embrace, saying--
-
-“Even so, unto the death if needs be,--as I shall serve our sacred
-cause to the end, cost what it may! Come, it is time that we went down
-to breakfast.”
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[3] Such a poison as this is no figment of the imagination. It has
-been known to Oriental adepts in poisoning for many centuries, and the
-Borghias were certainly familiar with it. A kindred drug was used by
-the Russian agents who kidnapped the late Prince Alexander of Bulgaria,
-though in his case the injury was permanent. It reduced him from one
-of the most able and daring princes in Europe to a mental and moral
-cripple, who was perfectly content to live in the obscurity to which
-his enemies had consigned him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII. THE SPELL OF CIRCE
-
-
-BREAKFAST passed off very pleasantly, and by the time it was over Serge
-was upon much better terms with the two Aerians than he had been on the
-previous day. He had taken Olga’s warning and appeal to heart, and he
-had done so all the more easily for the reason that he felt somewhat
-ashamed of himself for the ill-temper and bad manners of which he had
-been guilty, and which their two new acquaintances had repaid with such
-dignified courtesy and good humour.
-
-His frankly-expressed apology was accepted with such perfect good
-nature, unmixed with even a suspicion of condescension, that he felt at
-ease with them at once, and even began to regret that his destiny made
-it impossible for him to be their friend instead of their enemy.
-
-The discussion of their plans for the day occupied the rest of
-the meal. They had a whole twenty-four hours before them, for the
-_Ithuriel_ would not be back from San Francisco, where she was going
-when she passed the train, until ten o’clock on the following morning,
-so it was arranged that they would begin the day with a sleigh drive--a
-luxury which not even Aeria could afford,--then the two Aerians were to
-see the sights of the city under the guidance of Olga and Serge, and
-perform the chief of the duties that brought them to St. Petersburg.
-
-After luncheon they were to have a couple of hours on the ice in the
-park, into which the Yusupoff Gardens of the nineteenth century had
-been expanded, after which they would see the ice palaces illuminated
-at dusk, then dine, and finish the day at the opera. When the air-ship
-arrived, a rapid flight was to be taken across Europe over the Alps
-and back to Moscow, across Italy, Greece, and the Black Sea, which
-would enable Alan and Alexis to deposit their guests with their Moscow
-friends soon after nightfall.
-
-The sleigh drive took the form of a race, on the plain stretching
-towards Lake Ladoga, between the two troikas driven by Serge and Olga,
-who had so managed matters that she had Alan for a companion, and who,
-not a little to Serge’s disgust, won it, after a desperate struggle,
-by a head. The race was a revelation to the two Aerians, and when Alan
-handed Olga out of the sleigh after they had trotted quietly back to
-the city, the interest which she had excited in him during the railway
-journey had already begun to deepen into a sentiment much more pleasing
-and dangerous.
-
-The rest of the morning was devoted to driving about the city, and to
-paying a visit to the ancient fortress of Peter and Paul, which alone
-of all the fortress prisons of Russia had been preserved intact as
-a fitting monument of fallen despotism and a warning to all future
-generations. Once at least in his life every man in Aeria visited this
-fortress, as good Moslems visit Mecca, and this was the duty which Alan
-and Alexis were now performing.
-
-In one of the horrible dungeons deep down in the foundations of the
-fortress, under the waters of the Neva, they were shown a massive gold
-plate riveted on to the rough, damp, stone wall. Its surface was kept
-brightly polished, and it looked strangely incongruous with the gloom
-and squalor of the cell. On it stood an inscription in platinum letters
-let into the gold:
-
-“_In this cell Israel di Murska, afterwards known as Natas, the Master
-of the Terror, was imprisoned in the year 1881, previous to his exile
-to Siberia by order of Alexander Romanoff the last of the Tyrants of
-Russia._”
-
-With feelings wide asunder as love and hate, or gratitude and revenge,
-the descendant of Natas and the daughter of the Romanoffs stood in
-front of this memorial plate, and read the simple and yet pregnant
-words. Alan and Alexis both bent their heads as if in reverence for
-a moment, but Olga and Serge gazed at it with heads erect and eyes
-glowing with the fires of anger, in a silence that was broken by Alan
-saying--
-
-“Liberty surely never had a stranger temple than this, and yet this
-dungeon is to us what the Tomb of the Prophet is to the Moslems. I
-wonder what the Last of the Tsars would have thought if he could have
-foreseen even a little part of all that sprang from the tragedy that
-was begun in this dismal cell?”
-
-“He would have killed him,” said Olga, carried away for the moment by
-an irrepressible burst of passion, “and then there would have been no
-Natas, no Terror, and no Terrorist air-fleet, and Alexander Romanoff
-would have died master of the world instead of a chained felon in
-Siberia! Your ancestor, Richard Arnold, would have starved in his
-garret, or killed himself in despair, as many other geniuses did before
-him, and”--
-
-“And the world would have remained the slave-market of tyrants and the
-shambles of murderous men. Let us thank God that Natas lived to do his
-work!” said Alan in a tone of solemn reverence, wondering not a little
-at Olga’s strange outburst, and yet not having the remotest idea of its
-true cause.
-
-Neither Olga nor Serge could reply to this speech. They would have
-bitten their tongues through rather than say “Amen” to it, and
-anything else they dare not have said. After a moment more of somewhat
-constrained silence, Olga turned towards the door and said--
-
-“Come! Let us go, the air of this place poisons me!”
-
-When they got on the ice after lunch, Olga was not a little astonished
-to find that, perfect as she and Serge were in skating, the two Aerians
-were little inferior to them, despite the fact that they had just left
-their tropical home for the first time.
-
-“How is this?” said Olga to Alan, as, hand in hand, they went sweeping
-over the ice in long, easy curves. “I suppose you manufacture your ice
-for skating purposes in Aeria?”
-
-“No,” he said. “Some of our mountains rise above the snow-line, and in
-their upper valleys they have little lakes, so, when we want a skating
-surface, we just pump the water up and flood them and let it freeze.
-Besides this--I don’t think there is any harm in my telling you that we
-have a sort of wheel-skate which runs quite as easily as steel does on
-ice.”
-
-“Ah,” said Olga, possessed by a sudden thought. “Then I suppose that
-is why the streets of your splendid city are so broad, and white, and
-smooth?”
-
-Quietly as the words were spoken, Alan’s hand tightened upon hers as he
-heard them with a grip that almost made her cry out with pain. It was
-some moments before he recovered from his astonishment sufficiently to
-ask her the meaning of her unexpected and amazing question. She greeted
-his question with a saucy smile and a mocking, upward glance, and said
-quietly--
-
-“Simply because I have seen them!”
-
-It was a bow drawn at a venture. She had suddenly determined to test
-the truth of her vision and hazard a description from it of the unknown
-land.
-
-“You have seen them?” cried Alan, now more amazed than ever. “But,
-pardon me, even at the risk of contradicting you I must tell you that
-that is impossible. No one not a born Aerian has set eyes on Aeria for
-more than a hundred years.”
-
-“So you think perhaps,” she said in the same quiet, half-mocking tone.
-“Well now, listen and tell me whether this description is entirely
-incorrect. If it is correct you need say nothing, if it is not you can
-tell me so.”
-
-And then she began, while he listened in a silence of utter
-stupefaction, and described the valley and city of Aeria as she had
-seen them in her dream-vision. When she had finished he was silent for
-several moments, and then said in a voice that told her that she had
-really seen it as though with the eyes of flesh--
-
-“What are you? A sorceress, or--No, you cannot be an Aerian girl in
-disguise, for none ever leaves the country till she is married.”
-
-“Then as I cannot be the latter,” said Olga, “you must, I suppose,
-consider me the former. Now I shall take my revenge for your reticence
-in the train yesterday, and tell you no more. We are quits to that
-extent at least, and now we will go back to my brother, if you please.”
-
-With this Alan was forced to be content. Indeed, he could not have
-pursued the subject without breaking his oath, and so a few minutes
-later it came about that Olga and Serge were skating together in an
-unfrequented part of the lake, and here Olga took an opportunity that
-she might not have again of telling him as much as she thought fit for
-him to know of her plans for capturing the air-ship on the following
-day.
-
-“I needn’t tell you,” said she, “that this air-ship is worth everything
-to us, and that therefore we must be ready to go to any extremities to
-get possession of it. It is the first step to the command of the world,
-for you heard Alan say to-day that she is the swiftest vessel in the
-whole Aerian fleet.”
-
-“But to do that we must first overcome the crew,” said Serge, looking
-anxiously about to see if there was anyone within earshot. “How are we
-going to do that--two of us against ten or a dozen, armed with powers
-we know nothing about?”
-
-“We must find means to drug them--to poison them, if necessary, during
-to-morrow’s voyage,” came the reply, in a whisper that made his heart
-stand still for the moment with utter horror.
-
-“Good God! is that really necessary? It seems a horrible thing to do,
-when they are trusting us and taking us as their guests,” he said in a
-low, trembling tone.
-
-“Yes,” she replied, with a well simulated shudder; “it is horrible, I
-know, but it is necessary. Remember that we have solemnly sworn war to
-the knife against this people, and that, armed as they are, all open
-assault is impossible; therefore they must be struck in secret, or not
-at all.
-
-“Now listen. I have brought with me a flask which my grandfather gave
-me a day or two before he died. It contains enough of a tasteless,
-powerful narcotic to send twenty people to sleep so that nothing will
-wake them for several hours. I will give you half of this to-night and
-keep half myself, and one of us must find an opportunity to get the
-crew to take it in their wine, or whatever they may drink, for they are
-sure to have one or two meals while we are on board.
-
-“To-night I will send instructions in cypher to the Lossenskis in
-Vorobièvŏ to tell them that as many as possible of the Friends must be
-ready for action by eight to-morrow night, and must wait, if necessary,
-night after night till we come. If all goes well we shall select the
-new crew of the _Ithuriel_ from them before we see two more sunrises.
-In fact, by the time we return from our voyage we must have absolute
-control of the vessel.
-
-“Such an opportunity as this will never offer itself again, and I, for
-my part, am determined to risk anything, not excepting life itself,
-to take the best advantage of it. It would be madness to allow any
-scruples to stand in our way when the Empire of the Air is almost
-within our grasp.”
-
-“And none shall, so far as I am concerned,” replied Serge in a low,
-steady voice that showed that his horror at the deed they contemplated
-had succumbed, at least for the moment, to the tremendous temptation
-offered by the prospect of success.
-
-“Spoken like a true Romanoff!” said Olga, looking up at him with a
-sweet smile of approval. “As the deed is so shall the reward be. Now
-we must get back to our friends. We will find a means to get an hour
-together before to-night to arrange matters further, and we will have
-Alan and Alexis to supper with us after the opera, and then I will
-begin my share of the work. Once the air-ship is ours, we can hide
-her in one of the ravines of the Caucasus, hold a council of war in
-the villa at Vorobièvŏ, and set about the work of the Revolution in
-regular fashion.”
-
-The rest of the day was spent in accordance with the plans already
-agreed on. Olga and Serge had tea together in their private room before
-going to the theatre, and put the finishing touches to their plans for
-the momentous venture of the following day; and Alan and Alexis, all
-unsuspecting, accepted their invitation to supper after their return
-from the opera-house.
-
-The seemingly innocent and pleasant little supper, which passed off so
-merrily in the private sitting-room occupied by Olga and Serge, had
-but one incident which calls for description here, and even that was
-unnoticed not only by the two guests, but by Serge himself.
-
-Just before midnight, Olga proposed that, in accordance with the
-ancient custom of Russia, they should drink a glass of punch, brewed
-in the Russian style; and as she volunteered to brew it herself, it is
-needless to say that the invitation was at once accepted.
-
-The apparatus stood upon a little table in one corner of the room. For
-a single minute her back was turned to the three sitting at the table
-in the centre; her share in the conversation was not interrupted for
-an instant, and no one saw a couple of drops of sparkling, blue liquid
-fall into each of three of the glasses from the little flask that she
-held concealed in the palm of her hand, and when she turned round
-with the little silver tray on which the glasses stood, the flask was
-resting at the bottom of her dress-pocket.
-
-She handed a glass to each of them, and then took her own up from the
-side-table where she had left it. She went to her place, and, holding
-her glass up, said simply--
-
-“Here’s to that which each of us has nearest at heart!” and drank.
-
-All followed suit, and as the clock chimed twelve a few minutes later,
-the two Aerians took their leave, and left Olga and Serge alone.
-
-“You said you would begin your share of the work to-night,” said he, as
-soon as they were alone. “Have you done so?”
-
-“If you do your work to-morrow as successfully as I have done mine
-to-night,” replied Olga, looking steadily into his eyes as she spoke,
-“the Empire of the Air will no longer be theirs.”
-
-Serge returned her glance in silence. He wanted to speak, but some
-superior power seemed to have laid a spell upon his will, and as long
-as Olga’s burning eyes were fixed on his, his tongue was paralysed,
-nay, more than this, his mind even refused to shape the sentences that
-he would have liked to speak. Olga held him mute before her for several
-minutes, and then she said quietly, still keeping her eyes fixed on
-his--
-
-“Now speak, and tell me what you would do if I told you that I
-preferred Alan as a lover to you, and that I would rather a thousand
-times be his slave and plaything than your wife.”
-
-“I should say that you are the mistress of my destiny, that I have no
-law but your will, and that it is for you to give me joy or pain, as
-seems good to you.”
-
-Serge spoke the unnatural words in a calm, passionless tone, rather
-as though he were speaking in a sort of hypnotic trance than in full
-command of his senses. A strange, subtle influence had been stealing
-through his veins and over his nerves ever since he had drunk the
-liquor which Olga had prepared.
-
-He seemed perfectly incapable of resisting any suggestion that
-might have been made to him. His will was paralysed, but even the
-consciousness of this fact was fading from his mind. All his passions
-were absolutely in abeyance. Even his love for Olga failed to inspire
-him with any jealous resentment of words which half an hour before
-would have goaded him to frenzy. He heard them as though they concerned
-someone else.
-
-The ruin of his life’s hopes, which they implied so distinctly, had
-no meaning for him; so far as his volition was concerned he was an
-automaton, ready to obey without question the dictates of her imperious
-will.
-
-“That will do,” said Olga, in the tone of a mistress addressing a
-servant. “Now go to bed and sleep well, and remember the work that lies
-before you to-morrow.”
-
-“I will,” said Serge, and without another word, without attempting to
-take his customary good-night kiss, he walked out of the room, leaving
-her to the enjoyment of her victory and the contemplation of triumphs
-that now seemed almost certain to her.
-
-Punctual to its appointed time, the air-ship appeared in mid-air over
-the city a few minutes before ten the next morning. It sank slowly and
-gracefully to within a hundred feet of the ground over the garden of
-the hotel in which the two Aerians and their new friends were staying.
-
-Signals were rapidly exchanged as before between Alan and one of the
-crew standing on the afterpart of the deck. Then it sank down on to one
-of the snow-covered lawns of the garden, a door opened in the glass
-covering of the deck, a short, light, folding ladder with hand-rails
-dropped out of it to the ground, and Alan, springing up three or four
-of the steps, held out his hand to Olga, saying--
-
-“Come along! we shall have a crowd round us in another minute.”
-
-This was true, for the appearance of the air-ship had already attracted
-hundreds of people in the streets, and many of them had already made
-their way into the gardens of the hotel in order to get a closer view
-of her.
-
-Olga, feeling not a little like a queen ascending a throne, ran lightly
-up the steps, followed by Serge and Alexis. The moment they got on to
-the deck the ladder was drawn up, the glass door slid noiselessly to,
-and Alan at once presented them to his friends on deck.
-
-While the introductions were taking place, the wings of the air-ship
-began to vibrate and undulate with a wavy motion from forward aft, at
-first slowly, and then more and more swiftly, her propeller whirled
-round, and the wonderful craft rose without a jar or a tremor from the
-earth. Then the propellers began to revolve faster and faster, and
-she shot forward and upward over the trees amid the admiring murmurs
-of the crowds in the streets about the hotel. But little did those
-light-hearted sightseers dream, any more than did the captain and
-crew of the _Ithuriel_, that this aerial pleasure-cruise was destined
-to mark the beginning of a tragedy that would involve the whole of
-civilised humanity in a catastrophe so colossal that the like of it had
-never been seen or even dreamt of on earth before. From the wit of a
-woman and the weakness of a man were now to be evolved the elements of
-destruction that ere long should lay the world in ruins.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII. THE NEW TERROR.
-
-
-FIVE years had passed since the _Ithuriel_ had vanished like a cloud
-from the sky, leaving, so far as the air-ship itself was concerned, no
-more trace than if she had soared into space beyond the sphere of the
-earth’s attraction and departed to another planet.
-
-All the rest of the winter of 2030-1, tidings had been sought most
-anxiously, but in vain, by the kindred and friends of those who
-had formed her crew during the ill-fated voyage on which she had
-disappeared into the unknown. The earth had been ransacked east and
-west, north and south, by the aerial fleet in search of the missing
-_Ithuriel_, but without result.
-
-She had been traced to St. Petersburg and Vorobièvŏ, but there, like
-the phantom craft of the Flying Dutchman, she had melted into thin
-air so far as any result of the search could show. But when the snows
-thawed on the mountains of Norway, and the bodies of eight Aerians
-who had formed her crew on her last fatal voyage were discovered by a
-couple of foresters in a melting snowdrift on the very spot on which
-Vladimir Romanoff had been killed with his companions by order of the
-Supreme Council, a thrill both of horror and excitement ran through the
-whole civilised world.
-
-That their death was intimately connected with the disappearance of the
-air-ship was instantly plain to everyone, and the only inference which
-could be drawn from such a conclusion was that at last some power,
-silent, mysterious, and intangible, had come into existence prepared to
-dispute the empire of the world with the Aerians, and, more than this,
-had already struck them a deadly blow which it was utterly beyond their
-power to return.
-
-The effects of this discovery were exactly what Olga had anticipated.
-From the first time since their ancestors had conquered the earth and
-made war impossible, the supreme authority of the Aerians was called
-into question. It was quite beyond their power to conceal the fact
-that their flagship had either deserted or been captured, incredible
-as either alternative seemed. The Central Council therefore wisely
-accepted the situation, and immediately after the discovery of the
-bodies the President published a full account of her last voyage, as
-far as was known, in the columns of _The European Review_, the leading
-newspaper of the day in the Old World.
-
-The only clue to the fate of the air-ship seemed to lie in the fact
-that at St. Petersburg a youth and young girl with whom Alan and Alexis
-had made friends on their journey from London had gone on board the
-_Ithuriel_ for a trip to the clouds. But this led to nothing. Who was
-to recognise the daughter of the Tsar and the last male scion of the
-House of Romanoff in Olga and Serge Ivanitch, who had never been known
-as anything but the orphan grandchildren of Paul Ivanitch, the sculptor.
-
-More than this, even to entertain for a moment the supposition that
-this boy and girl--for they were known to be little more--could by any
-possible means have overcome the ten Aerians, armed as they were with
-their terrible death-power, and then have vanished into space with the
-air-ship would have been to shatter the supremacy of the Aerians at a
-blow.
-
-Even as it was, the wildest and most dangerous rumours began to fly
-from lip to lip and nation to nation all round the world, and for the
-first time since the days of the Terror the “Earth Folk” began to think
-of the Aerians rather as men like themselves than as the superior race
-which they had hitherto regarded them.
-
-The President of Aeria at once issued a proclamation asking, in the
-interests of peace and public security, for the assistance of all the
-civilised peoples of the earth in his efforts to discover the lost
-air-ship, and also conditionally declaring a war of extermination on
-any Power or nation which either concealed the whereabouts of the
-_Ithuriel_ or gave any assistance to those who might be in possession
-of her. This proclamation was published simultaneously in all the
-newspapers of the world, and produced a most profound sensation
-wherever it was read.
-
-The terrible magic of the ominous word “war” roused at once the
-deathless spirit of combativeness that had lain dormant for all these
-years. It was impossible not to recognise the fact that this mysterious
-power, which had come unseen into existence and had snatched the finest
-vessel in the Aerian navy from the possession of the Council with such
-daring and skill that not a trace of her was to be found, could have
-but one object in view, and that was to dispute the Empire of the Air
-with the descendants of the Terrorists.
-
-This could mean nothing else than the outbreak, sooner or later, of
-a strife that would be a veritable battle of the gods, a struggle
-which would shake the world and convulse human society throughout its
-whole extent. The general sense of peace and security in which men had
-lived for four generations was shattered at a stroke by the universal
-apprehension of the blow that all men felt to be inevitable, but which
-would be struck no man knew when or how.
-
-A year passed, and nothing happened. The world went on its way in
-peace, the Aerian patrols circled the earth with a moving girdle of
-aerial cruisers, ready to give instantaneous warning of the first
-reappearance of the lost _Ithuriel_; but nothing was discovered. If
-she still existed, she was so skilfully concealed as to be practically
-beyond the reach of human search.
-
-Then without the slightest warning, while Anglo-Saxondom was in
-the midst of the hundred and thirtieth celebration of the Festival
-of Deliverance, the civilised world was started out of the sense of
-security into which it had once more begun to fall by the publication,
-in _The European Review_, of the following piece of intelligence:--
-
- A MYSTERY OF THE SEA.
-
- DISAPPEARANCE OF THREE TRANSPORTS.
-
- It is our duty to chronicle the astounding and disquieting fact that
- the three transports, _Massilia_, _Ceres_, and _Astræa_, belonging
- respectively to the Eastern, Southern, and Western Services, have
- disappeared.
-
- The first left New York for Southampton four days ago, and should
- have arrived yesterday. The Central Atlantic signalling station
- reported her “All well” at midday on Tuesday, and this is the last
- news that has been heard of her. The second was reported from Cape
- Verd Station on her voyage from Cape Town to Marseilles, and there
- all trace of her is lost, as she never reached the Canary Station.
- The third was last heard of from Station No. 2 in the Indian Ocean,
- which is situated at the intersection of the 80th meridian of east
- longitude with the 20th parallel of south latitude; she was on her
- way from Melbourne to Alexandria, and should have touched at Aden two
- days ago.
-
- The disappearance of these three magnificent vessels, filled as
- they were with passengers and loaded with cargoes of enormous value
- both in money and material, can only be described as a calamity of
- world-wide importance. Unhappily, too, the mystery which surrounds
- their fate invests it with a sinister aspect which it is impossible
- to ignore.
-
- That their loss is the result of accident or shipwreck it is almost
- impossible to believe. They represented the latest triumphs of modern
- shipbuilding. All were over forty thousand tons in measurement, and
- had engines capable of driving them at a speed of fifty nautical
- miles an hour through the water.
-
- For fifty years no ocean transport has suffered shipwreck or even
- serious injury, so completely has modern engineering skill triumphed
- over the now conquered elements. Added to this, no storms of even
- ordinary violence have occurred along their routes. After passing the
- stations at which they were last reported, they vanished, and that is
- all that is known about them.
-
- The President of Aeria has desired us to state that he has ordered
- his submarine squadrons stationed at Zanzibar, Ascension, and Fayal,
- to explore the ocean beds along the routes pursued by the transports.
- Until we receive news of the result of their investigation it will be
- well to refrain from further comment on this mysterious misfortune
- which has suddenly and unexpectedly fallen upon the world, and in
- doing so we shall only express the fervent desire of all civilised
- men and women when we express the hope that this calamity, grievous
- as it is, may not be the precursor of even greater misfortunes to
- come.
-
-It would be almost impossible for us of the present day to form any
-adequate estimate of the thrill of horror and consternation which this
-brief and temperately-worded narration of the mysterious loss of the
-three transports sent through the world of the twenty-first century.
-Not only was it the first event of the kind that had occurred within
-the memory of living men, but, saving the loss of the _Ithuriel_, it
-was the first dark cloud that had appeared in the clear heaven of peace
-and prosperity for more than a hundred and twenty years.
-
-But terrible as was the state of excitement and anxiety into which it
-threw the nations of the world, it gave place to a still deeper horror
-and bewilderment when day after day passed and no tidings were received
-of the three submarine squadrons, consisting of three vessels each,
-which had been sent to inquire into the fate of the transports. They
-dived beneath the waves of the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic, and that
-was the last that was ever seen of them.
-
-Month after month went by, every week bringing news of some fresh
-calamity at sea--of the disappearance of transport after transport
-along the great routes of ocean travel, of squadron after squadron
-of submarine cruisers which plunged into the abysses of the sea to
-discover and attack the mysterious enemy of mankind that lay hidden in
-the depths, and which never reappeared on the surface. Whether they
-were captured or destroyed it was impossible to say, simply because no
-member of their crews ever returned to tell the tale.
-
-Whatever doubt there had been as to the existence or hostile nature
-of this ocean terror that was paralysing the trade of the world was
-speedily set at rest by a discovery made in the spring of the year 2032
-by a party of divers who descended to repair a fault in one of the
-Atlantic cables about two hundred miles west of Ireland.
-
-There, lying in the Atlantic ooze, they found the shattered fragments
-of the _Sirius_, a transport which had disappeared about a month
-before. The great hull of the splendid vessel had been torn asunder by
-some explosive of tremendous power, and, more than this, her hold had
-been rifled of all its treasure and the most valuable portions of its
-cargo. After this there no longer remained any doubt that the depths
-of the ocean were the hunting-ground of some foe of society, one at
-least of whose objects was plunder.
-
-The President and Council of Aeria found themselves at last confronted
-and baffled by an enemy who could neither be seen nor reached in his
-hiding-place, wherever it might be, beneath the surface of the waters.
-Thousands of lives had been sacrificed, and treasure in millions had
-been lost by the end of the first year of what men had now come to call
-the New Terror.
-
-New fleets of submarine cruisers were built and held in readiness
-in all the great ports of the world, and these scoured the ocean
-depths in all directions with no further result than the swift and
-silent annihilation of vessel after vessel by some power which struck
-irresistibly out of the darkness and then vanished the moment that the
-blow had been delivered.
-
-As yet, however, no enemy appeared on land or in the air, nor were any
-tidings heard of the lost _Ithuriel_, or her captain and lieutenant.
-The Aerians had replaced her with ten almost identical vessels and had
-raised the strength of their navy to two hundred and fifty vessels,
-one hundred of which were kept in readiness in Aeria, while the other
-hundred and fifty were distributed in small squadrons at twenty-four
-stations, half of which were in the Western hemisphere and half in the
-Eastern.
-
-The submarine warfare had now practically ceased. Nearly two hundred
-vessels belonging to Aeria, Britain, and America, had been captured or
-destroyed by an enemy which at the period at which this portion of the
-narrative opens was as supreme throughout the realm of the waters as
-the Aerians were in the air. To the menace of the air-ships this hidden
-foe replied by severing all the oceanic cables and paralysing the
-communication of the world save overland and through the air.
-
-Thus, at the end of six years after the capture of the _Ithuriel_ by
-Olga Romanoff more than half the work of those who had brought peace on
-earth after the Armageddon of 1904 had been undone. All over the world,
-not even excepting in Aeria, men lived in a state of constant anxiety
-and apprehension, not knowing where or how their invisible enemy would
-strike them next.
-
-The Masters of the World were supreme no longer, for a new power had
-arisen which, within the limits of the seas, had proved itself stronger
-than they were. Communication between continent and continent had
-almost ceased, save where the Aerian air-ships were employed. In six
-short years the peace of the world had been destroyed and the stability
-of society shaken.
-
-Among the nations of Anglo-Saxondom the change had manifested itself by
-a swift decadence into the worst forms of unbridled democracy. Men’s
-minds were unhinged, and the most extravagant opinions found acceptance.
-
-Parliaments had already been made annual and were fast sinking into
-machines for registering the ever-changing opinions of rival factions
-and their leaders. Sovereigns and presidents were little better than
-popular puppets existing on sufferance. In short, all that Paul
-Romanoff had prophesied was coming to pass more rapidly than even he
-had expected so far as the area of the Anglo-Saxon Federation was
-concerned.
-
-In the Moslem Empire affairs were different, but no less threatening.
-The Sultan Khalid the Magnificent, as he was justly styled by his
-admirers, saw clearly that the time must come when this mysterious
-enemy would emerge from the waters and attempt the conquest of the
-land, and for three years past he had been manufacturing weapons
-and forming armies against the day of battle which he considered
-inevitable, and which he longed for rather than dreaded.
-
-Thus, while Anglo-Saxondom was lapsing into the anarchy of unrestrained
-democracy, the Moslem monarch was preparing to take advantage of the
-issue of events which, skilfully turned to account, might one day make
-him master of the world.
-
-Such was the condition of affairs throughout the world on the 1st of
-May 2036, and then the long-expected came in strange and terrible
-shape. At midnight a blaze of light was seen far up in the sky over
-the city of Aeria. A moment later something that must have been a
-small block of metal fell from a tremendous height in the square in the
-centre of the city, and was shivered to fragments by the force of its
-fall.
-
-On the splintered pavement where it fell was found a little roll of
-parchment addressed to the President. It was taken to him, and he
-opened it and read these words:--
-
- To Alan Arnold, President of Aeria.
-
- If you want your son Alan and his friend Alexis, go and look for them
- on an island which you will find near the intersection of the 40th
- parallel of south latitude and the 120th meridian of west longitude
- in the South Pacific. They have served my turn, and I have done with
- them. Perhaps they will be able to tell you how I have conquered the
- Empire of the Sea. Before long I shall have wrested the Empire of the
- Air from you as well.
-
- OLGA ROMANOFF.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX. THE FLIGHT OF THE “REVENGE.”
-
-
-ASTOUNDING, almost stupefying, as were the tidings conveyed by this
-letter, which had dropped like a veritable bolt from the blue, the
-challenge contained in the last sentence and the ominous name with
-which it was signed were matters of infinitely greater and more instant
-importance.
-
-Alan Arnold was the responsible President of Aeria first and a father
-afterwards. He lost not a moment in speculating upon the strange fate
-of his son and first-born. The safety not only of Aeria, but of the
-world, demanded his first attention, and he gave it.
-
-Crushing the missive in his hand he took two swift strides to a
-telephone in the wall of the room in which he had received the message
-from the skies and delivered several rapid orders through it. If they
-had been the words of a demi-god instead of those of a man their
-effects could scarcely have been more instantaneous or marvellous.
-
-On a hundred mountain-peaks all round the great valley of Aeria
-enormous lights blazed out simultaneously, flinging long streams
-of radiance, dazzling and intense, for miles into the sky towards
-all points of the compass, and at the same moment fifty air-ships
-soared up from their stations all round the mountains, flashing their
-search-lights ahead and astern in all directions.
-
-[Illustration: FLINGING LONG STREAMS OF RADIANCE FOR MILES INTO THE
-SKY. _Page 83._]
-
-It was a scene of unearthly wonder and magnificence, a scene such as
-could only have been made possible by the triumphant genius of a race
-of men, heirs of all the best that earth could give them, who had
-turned the favour of circumstance to the utmost advantage.
-
-Three minutes sufficed for the aerial cruisers to clear the mountains,
-and as they did so the wide-sweeping rays of fifty search-lights,
-assisted by the blazing orbs which crowned every mountain-peak,
-illuminated the darkness for many miles outside the valley. In the
-midst of the sea of light thus projected through the semi-darkness
-of the starlit heavens the flying shape of an air-ship was detected
-speeding away to the south-eastward.
-
-Instantly the prows of the whole squadron were turned towards her,
-and the first aerial race in the history of the world began. The
-pursuing air-ships spread themselves out in a huge semicircle, at the
-extremities of which were the two swiftest vessels in the fleet, almost
-exact counterparts of the lost _Ithuriel_. One of these bore the same
-name as the stolen flag-ship, and the other had been named the _Ariel_,
-after the first vessel built by Richard Arnold, the conqueror of the
-air, a hundred and thirty-two years before.
-
-These two vessels carried ten guns each, and were capable of a maximum
-speed of five hundred miles an hour, the highest velocity that it had
-so far been found possible to attain. The others were somewhat smaller
-craft, mounting eight guns each, and capable of a speed of about four
-hundred miles an hour. The chase, either because she could not travel
-faster or for some hidden reason, allowed the pursuing squadron to gain
-upon her until she was only some five miles ahead of its two foremost
-vessels, which were travelling at the highest speed attainable by the
-whole flotilla.
-
-She showed no lights, and so in order to keep her in view it was
-necessary for her pursuers to keep their search-lights constantly
-sweeping the skies ahead of them, lest they should lose sight of her in
-the semi-darkness.
-
-This placed the Aerian fleet at a serious disadvantage, which very
-soon became apparent, for before the pursuit had lasted an hour the
-chase opened fire with her stern guns and shell after shell charged
-with some terrific explosive began bursting along the line of the
-pursuing squadron, producing fearful concussions in the atmosphere, and
-causing the pursuers to rock and toss in the shaken air like ships on a
-stormy sea.
-
-The _Ithuriel_ and the _Ariel_, at the two extremities of the
-semicircle, replied with a rapid converging fire from their bow guns
-in the hope of reaching the now invisible chase. All the projectiles
-were, of course, time-shells, but the speed at which the vessels were
-travelling not only made the aim hopeless, but caused such an in-rush
-of air into the muzzles of the guns that the projectiles, checked in
-their course through the barrels, flew wild and exploded at random,
-often in dangerous proximity to the vessels themselves.
-
-Hence, after about a dozen shots had been fired, the commanders of the
-two vessels found themselves compelled to cease firing, and to trust to
-speed alone to overtake the enemy. On the other hand, this disadvantage
-to them was all in favour of the chase, which was able to work her
-two stern guns without the slightest impediment. Before long she got
-the range of her pursuers, and at last a shell burst fairly under
-one of the smaller vessels. A brilliant flash of light, blue as the
-lightning-bolt, illuminated her for an instant, and in that instant her
-companions saw her stop and shiver like a stricken bird in mid-air, and
-then plunge downwards like a stone to the earth.
-
-Olga Romanoff, standing on the deck of what had once been the
-_Ithuriel_, flag-ship of the Aerian fleet, and now renamed the
-_Revenge_, saw this catastrophe, as the others had done, through her
-night-glasses. She lowered them from her eyes, and said to a dark-eyed,
-black-haired young fellow, who was commanding the gun that had done the
-execution--
-
-“Bravo, Boris Lossenski! Did you sight that gun?”
-
-Boris drew himself up and saluted, saying--
-
-“Yes, Majesty, I did.”
-
-“Then for that you shall be a Prince henceforth, and if you can bring
-another down you shall command an air-ship of your own when this fight
-is over.”
-
-Boris saluted again, and ordered the gun to be reloaded. Before
-it could be discharged a shell from the port gun, which had been
-fired as Olga spoke, struck another of the Aerian vessels square on
-the fore-quarter. The flash of the exploding projectile was almost
-instantaneously followed by the outburst of a vast dazzling mass of
-flame which illumined for the instant the whole scene of the aerial
-battle.
-
-The air-ship with all its cargo of explosives blew up like one huge
-shell, and the frightful concussion of the atmosphere induced by the
-explosion hurled the two vessels that were close on either side of her
-like feathers into space, turning them completely over and flinging
-them to the earth six thousand feet below. A few moments later they
-struck the ground simultaneously, two great spouts of flame shot up
-from the spots where they struck, and when the darkness closed over
-them again four of the pursuing squadron had been annihilated.
-
-“Better still, Levin Ostroff!” cried Olga, as she saw the awful effects
-of this last shot. “For that you too shall be a Prince of the Empire
-and command an air-ship on our next expedition. Now, Boris, let us see
-if you can beat that!”
-
-“Yes, Majesty,” said Boris again, knitting his brows and clenching
-his teeth in anger at his rival’s superior success. He glanced along
-the line of the pursuers and saw four of the Aerian squadron flying
-close together. He brought the gun to bear upon the two inner ones,
-took careful aim, and despatched the projectile on its errand of
-destruction. The moment he had released it he said to the two men who
-were working under him--
-
-“Load again, quickly!”
-
-The command was instantly obeyed, and scarcely had the explosion of
-the first blazed out than a second shell was sent after it. The very
-firmament seemed split in twain by the frightful results of the two
-well-aimed shots, each of which had found its mark on the two inner
-vessels with fatal accuracy.
-
-Great sheets of flame leapt out in all directions from the focus of the
-explosion, and in the midst of their dazzling radiance those on board
-the _Revenge_ saw the two outside air-ships of the four roll over and
-dive head foremost into the dark abyss below them. They struck the
-earth as the others had done, and vanished into annihilation in the
-midst of the momentary mist of fire.
-
-This last catastrophe made it plain to the commanders of the _Ithuriel_
-and the _Ariel_ that to continue the chase under such conditions meant
-the destruction in detail of all the smaller ships of the squadron.
-Those on board the _Revenge_ saw signals rapidly flash from one end of
-the line, and instantaneously answered from the other end.
-
-“Ah!” said Olga. “My Lords of the Air seem to have had enough of it for
-the present. Look, the small fry are falling to the rear; our reception
-has been a little too hot for them. I wonder what they are going to do
-now. Cease firing, and let us watch them. You two gunners have done
-gloriously and earned quite enough laurels for your first battle.”
-
-It soon became evident that the Aerians had decided to send their
-smaller craft back. From the speed of the _Revenge_, and the terrible
-accuracy and destructiveness of her guns, the commanders of the
-squadron were now convinced that she was either the lost _Ithuriel_, or
-some vessel even superior to her, built upon the same plan.
-
-This being so, to have continued the pursuit under such conditions with
-the smaller craft would simply have been to court destruction for them
-in detail. It was impossible for them to use their guns effectively at
-the speed at which they were travelling, while, as had been so terribly
-proved, the chase could use hers with perfect ease.
-
-The flying fight could thus only result under present conditions in the
-ignominious defeat of the squadron by the single vessel as long as she
-was able to keep ahead. The only hope of success lay, therefore, in a
-trial of speed and manœuvring skill between her and the _Ithuriel_ and
-_Ariel_, so orders were flashed to the smaller vessels to return to
-Aeria with the mournful tidings of the destruction of eight of their
-number.
-
-As they vanished into the darkness behind, Olga divined instantly the
-tactics that were to be adopted. She saw the converging search-lights
-of the two remaining air-ships begin to glow brighter and brighter in
-the rear of the _Revenge_, proving that they had increased their speed.
-
-“So, it is going to be a race, is it!” she said, half to herself.
-“Well, we will see if we can lead them into the trap. How fast are we
-going, Boris?”
-
-He went to the engine-room, and returned saying--
-
-“Four hundred miles an hour, Majesty.”
-
-“Make it five,” replied Olga.
-
-He saluted, and transmitted the order to the engineer. The lights of
-the pursuers immediately began to recede again, then they seemed to
-stop.
-
-“That will do!” said Olga. “They have reached the limit of their speed.
-Keep to the southward, and see that they come no nearer.”
-
-The three air-ships were, in fact, now travelling at their utmost
-speed. If anything, the advantage was slightly in favour of the
-_Revenge_, thanks to the high efficiency of the motive-power which had
-been applied to her in accordance with the directions left by Olga’s
-father, and transmitted in the will of Paul Romanoff.
-
-So all the rest of the night and on into the next day pursuers and
-pursued sped on with fearful velocity through the air. They passed over
-Africa and out above the ocean, and still on and on they swept until
-the Southern Sea was crossed and the mighty ice-barrier that fences in
-the South Pole gleamed out white upon the horizon.
-
-This was passed, and still they rushed on over the dreary wastes of
-Antarctica. The pole was crossed along the 40th meridian, and then they
-swept northward until the smoke-cloud that crowned the crest of Mount
-Erebus rose above the snow-clouds that hid the earth. The _Revenge_
-headed straight towards this and swept over it, followed at a distance
-of about ten miles by her pursuers.
-
-Then with a mighty upward sweep she leapt two thousand feet higher
-still, came to equilibrium, and discharged a shell downwards on to
-the ice. The explosion was answered by the rising of a flotilla of
-air-ships, which seemed to have sprung out of the bowels of the earth.
-
-Thirty vessels as large as herself rose simultaneously through the
-clouds and spread themselves out in a wide circle round the two Aerian
-vessels, which thus found themselves surrounded by an overwhelming
-force and dominated by the _Revenge_ floating far above them with her
-ten guns pointed down upon them.
-
-To an observer so placed as to be able to command a view of the
-situation it would have seemed that nothing short of the surrender or
-annihilation of the _Ithuriel_ and the _Ariel_ could have been the
-outcome of it.
-
-So evidently thought Olga and those in command of the Russian aerial
-fleet, for, although for one brief instant the two Aerian vessels lay
-at their mercy, they failed to take advantage of it, and in losing
-this one precious moment they reckoned without the superior skill and
-perfect control of their air-ships possessed by those of whom they
-thought to make an easy prey.
-
-What really happened took place with such stupefying suddenness that
-they were taken completely off their guard. The _Ithuriel_ and the
-_Ariel_ lay end on to each other in the midst of the circle of their
-enemies. Each mounted ten guns, and of these every one was available.
-The crews of both vessels, trained by constant practice to the highest
-point of efficiency, knew exactly what to do without so much as an
-order being given.
-
-Automatically the twenty guns were trained in the twinkling of an eye,
-each on a Russian vessel, and discharged simultaneously. A moment later
-the two vessels sank like stones through the thick clouds below them;
-and while the heavens above were shaken with the combined explosions
-of the twenty projectiles, each of which had found its mark with
-unerring accuracy, they had regained their equilibrium a thousand feet
-from the surface of the ice, and darted away full speed northward.
-
-To such a fearful pitch of efficiency had their guns and projectiles
-been brought that, while the aim was unerring if once a fair sight was
-obtained, nothing shaped by human hands could withstand the impact of
-their shells without destruction. Twenty out of the thirty vessels of
-the Russian fleet collapsed, and, as it were, shrivelled up under the
-frightful energy of the Aerian projectiles. Twenty masses of flame
-blazed out over the grey surface of the cloud-sea, and in another
-moment the fragments of the vessels it had taken so many months of
-labour and such wondrous skill to construct were lying scattered far
-and wide over the snow and ice of the Antarctic desert.
-
-The awful suddenness with which this destruction had been accomplished
-deprived Olga and her subordinates of all power of thought for the
-moment. They heard the roar of the explosions, and saw a mist of flame
-burst out round them as though all the fires of Mount Erebus had broken
-loose at once, and then came the silence of speechless horror and
-stupefaction. It was more like the work of omnipotent fiends than of
-men. The bolts of heaven themselves could have done nothing like it.
-
-Then the moment of the shock passed, and those who survived remembered
-what they ought never to have forgotten--that, armed as they were
-with weapons which under favourable circumstances were absolutely
-irresistible, the first shot meant victory for those who fired it, and
-destruction for their enemies. Odds of mere numbers went for nothing,
-for each air-ship was equal to ten others provided she could send her
-ten projectiles home first, and this is just what had happened.
-
-All this had passed in a twentieth of the time that it has taken to
-describe it, and by the time Olga and her subordinates grasped the
-extent of the calamity that had overtaken them the two Aerian vessels,
-darting through the air at five hundred miles an hour, had swept
-far out of range of their guns, and were moreover so hidden by the
-cloud-sea, that they had no idea which course they had taken.
-
-Olga stamped her foot upon the deck, and, in a paroxysm of unrestrained
-passion, literally screamed with rage as she ordered the _Revenge_ to
-sink below the clouds. Less than two minutes sufficed for the remains
-of the fleet, that had been thirty-one strong five minutes before and
-now only numbered eleven vessels, to sink through the clouds.
-
-A rapid glance round showed them the _Ithuriel_ and the _Ariel_, tiny
-specks far out over the waste of snow and ice, speeding away to the
-northward. To give chase was out of the question, for scarcely had they
-sighted them than they vanished as completely as though they had melted
-into the atmosphere; and so Olga signalled for her remaining vessels
-to proceed to their secret haven in the snowy solitudes of the South,
-while the _Ithuriel_ and her consort sped onward on their homeward
-voyage, to carry the news of the terrible vengeance that they had taken
-for the destruction of the eight air-ships which had been annihilated
-by the guns of the _Revenge_.
-
-Twenty hours sufficed for the two Aerian vessels to pass over a quarter
-of the earth’s circumference, and carry their tidings of vengeance
-and victory to Aeria, and shortly after noon on the day but one after
-Olga had dropped her challenge from the skies, a meeting of the Ruling
-Council was held at the President’s house in order to consider the
-startling and pregnant events which had taken place, and to determine
-the plan of the war which, after a hundred and thirty years of
-unquestioned supremacy, they were now called upon to wage not only for
-the mastery of the world, but for the very lives and liberties of the
-citizens of Aeria.
-
-It had of course been impossible to conceal from the inhabitants of the
-valley the gravity of the startling events which had taken place in
-such rapid succession, nor did the President and Council consider any
-such concealment desirable. There were no demagogues and no politics
-in Aeria, and therefore there was no need for any State secrets save
-those which contained the essentials of aerial navigation.
-
-There was also no fear of panic in a community which contained no
-ignorant or criminal classes, and so, while the Council was sitting,
-the strange tidings were promulgated throughout the length and breadth
-of the valley. Marvellous and disquieting as they were they yet gave
-rise to very few external signs of excitement. They were gravely,
-earnestly, and even anxiously discussed, for they brought with them a
-prophecy of calamities to come, the probability of whose realisation
-was too plain to be ignored.
-
-But ever since the days of the Terror each generation of Aerians had
-been carefully trained to recognise the fact that the progress of
-science and the restlessness of human invention in the world outside
-their borders must, sooner or later, produce some challenge to their
-supremacy and some attempt to dispute with them the Empire of the Air.
-Now, after four generations--in spite of all the elaborate precautions
-that had been taken, the stringent laws that had been enacted and more
-than once mercilessly enforced--the crisis had come.
-
-It was now impossible to doubt that by some means, which so far seemed
-almost superhuman, the flag-ship of their fleet had been stolen, and
-the son of the President kidnapped with his greatest friend. More than
-this, the news brought back by the _Ithuriel_ and the _Ariel_ proved
-beyond all doubt that means had been found to build a large fleet of
-aerial warships without even arousing the suspicions of the Council.
-And, worst and most sinister sign of all, there was also the fact,
-proved by Olga’s letter to the President, that the moving spirit in
-this defiant revolt against the supremacy of Aeria was one who bore the
-ill-omened and still hated name of Romanoff.
-
-As has been said, there was no panic that night in Aeria, but still
-many a man and woman anxiously asked, either aloud or in his or her
-own soul, whether in the mysterious revolution of human affairs it
-might not be about to come to pass that she who had wrought this
-apparent miracle might not yet be able to avenge the terrible fate
-of her ancestor, the Last of the Tsars. Then, with this thought
-came a universal revulsion of horror at the prospect of such a crime
-against humanity and a deep resolve to exact the penalty for it to the
-uttermost.
-
-If war was to be brought once more upon the earth, those who brought
-it would find Aeria worthy of its splendid traditions and ready, if
-necessary, to reconquer the earth as the founders of its empire had
-done in the Armageddon of 1904. Fierce as that mighty struggle had
-been, its horrors would pale before those of a conflict in which
-conquest would mean extermination, for if Aeria was forced once more
-to draw the sword it would not be sheathed until there was peace again
-on earth, even if that peace were to be but the silence of universal
-desolation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X. STRANGE TIDINGS TO AERIA.
-
-
-THE sitting of the Council lasted until nightfall, and just as the
-western mountains were throwing their huge shadows over the lovely
-valley, two more air-ships passed between two of the southward peaks
-and alighted in the great square in the centre of the city. They were
-the two vessels which had been sent to the island indicated in Olga’s
-letter to bring back the long-lost Alan and Alexis.
-
-It would be vain to attempt to describe the feelings with which the
-President and the father of Alexis went, as they thought, to receive
-their sons, but the air-ships had returned without them, and in
-their stead they brought a written message which conveyed tidings no
-less strange and startling than those brought from Antarctica by the
-_Ithuriel_ and her consort.
-
-It was a letter from Alan to his father, and as soon as he received it
-from the captain of one of the air-ships, who had found it nailed to a
-tree on the island, he took his friend into his library, and there the
-two fathers read it together.
-
-After briefly but circumstantially recounting the capture of the
-flag-ship by Olga by means of her subtle drugs, and showing how, by
-using the power they gave her, she had kept them in mental slavery
-for years, forcing them to employ their skill and knowledge in aiding
-her to build her aerial and submarine fleets out of the spoils of
-the destroyed ocean transports, from which the latter had taken an
-incalculable amount of treasure, Alan’s letter concluded thus:--
-
- I will now tell you the reason why Alexis and myself have not waited
- for the air-ship which we knew you would send for us as soon as you
- received the message which Olga Romanoff told us she would despatch
- to you. We consider that by our weakness and folly--or, in truth, I
- should rather say mine, for it was I who invited these treacherous
- guests on board the _Ithuriel_--we have not only brought endless
- calamities upon the world, but we have also forfeited our right to
- the citizenship of Aeria.
-
- What the judgment of the Council would be upon us I don’t know, but
- we are resolved that, whatever it might have been, you and Alexis’s
- father shall be spared the sorrow of pronouncing sentence upon your
- own sons. Some day perhaps we may win at least the right to plead our
- cause before you. At present we have none, and until we have won it
- you shall not see us again unless you capture us by force.
-
- We were sent here in the _Narwhal_, the swiftest and most powerful
- vessel of the Russian submarine fleet. Only a few days ago an
- accident revealed to Alexis for the first time during our long mental
- slavery the means which this woman, who is as beautiful as an angel
- and as merciless as a fiend, had used to keep us in subjection. We
- took the utmost care to give her no suspicion of his discovery, and
- although we drank no more of her poison we acted exactly as though we
- were still under its influence.
-
- In what could only have been mockery she gave us back our belts and
- coronets, bidding us wear them “when we returned to our kingdom,” as
- she put it. We shall never wear the winged circlets again till we
- have regained the right to do so, but the belts and a couple of brace
- of magazine pistols which we took before we left her stronghold in
- Antarctica stood us in good stead.
-
- We have killed the crew of the _Narwhal_, and taken possession of
- her. She is far swifter and more powerful than any vessel in our
- submarine navy, for she can be driven at a hundred and fifty miles an
- hour through the water, and can destroy anything that floats in or
- on the sea with a blow of her ram, and, more than this, she carries
- a torpedo battery which has an effective range of two miles, and can
- strike and destroy anything within that distance without giving the
- slightest warning of her presence.
-
- There are fifty vessels of this type in the Russian fleet, but the
- _Narwhal_ is at least thirty miles an hour faster than any of them.
- An attack will probably be made by the Russians on our station at
- Kerguelen Island within a week by submarine vessels and a small
- squadron of air-ships, and there we shall begin our operations
- against the enemy. If you have any reply to make to this letter we
- will wait for it at sea off Kerguelen, and then begin the campaign we
- have planned. We shall never rest until we have either destroyed the
- Russian fleet in detail or have died in the attempt to do so.
-
- If we ever return it will be to restore to you the supremacy of the
- sea, and then, and not till then, we will ask you to pardon our fault
- and will willingly submit to such further conditions as you may see
- fit to impose upon us before you give us back--if ever you do--the
- rights which we have lost.
-
- With all love and duty to yourself, and loving remembrances to the
- dear ones in Aeria, your son
-
- ALAN.
-
-At the foot of the letter was a postscript signed by Alexis, indorsing
-all that Alan had said, save with regard to his sole responsibility for
-the calamity that had ensued from the admission of Olga and Serge on
-board the _Ithuriel_.
-
-The two fathers discussed the strange, and, to them, most affecting
-communication for nearly an hour in private, and then another meeting
-of the Council was called to consider it and pronounce authoritatively
-upon it. The President read the letter aloud in a voice which betrayed
-no trace of the deep emotion that moved his inmost being, and then left
-the Council chamber with Maurice Masarov, so that their presence might
-not embarrass their colleagues.
-
-The simple, manly straightforwardness of Alan’s letter appealed far
-more eloquently to the Council than excuses or prayers for forgiveness
-would have done. It was plain, too, that after the first indiscretion
-of taking the strangers on board the air-ship, no moral responsibility
-or blame could be laid on Alan and Alexis for what they had done under
-the influence of a drug which had paralysed their moral sense.
-
-The Council, therefore, not only accepted the conditions of the letter,
-but without a dissentient voice, agreed to confer the first and second
-commands of the Aerian submarine fleets and stations for the time being
-upon Alan and Alexis, with permission to call in the aid of the nearest
-aerial squadron when necessary. This decision was despatched forthwith
-by an air-ship to Kerguelen, and within an hour all Aeria was talking
-of nothing else than the strange fate of the two youths who for five
-years had been mourned as dead.
-
-Later on that evening, when the twin snow-clad peaks which towered
-high above the city of Aeria had lost the pink afterglow of the
-departed sunlight, and were beginning to gleam with a whiter radiance
-in the level beams of the newly-risen moon, a girl was standing on
-the spacious terrace of a marble villa which stood on the summit of a
-rounded eminence a couple of miles from the western verge of the city.
-
-She had just crossed the threshold of womanhood. The next sun that
-would rise would be that of her twentieth birthday. Yet for two years
-she had worn the silver circle and crystal wings, for in Aeria a girl
-became of legal age at eighteen, though she took no share in the civil
-life of the community until she was married, an event which, as a
-rule, took place not long after she was invested with the symbol of
-citizenship.
-
-It was an exceedingly rare event for an Aerian girl to reach the eve
-of her twentieth year unmarried, for the sexes in the Central-African
-paradise were very evenly balanced, and, as was natural in a very high
-state of civilisation, where families seldom exceeded three or four
-children, celibacy in either sex was looked upon as a public misfortune
-and a private reproach.
-
-But Alma Tremayne, the girl who was standing on the terrace of her
-father’s house on this most eventful evening, had become an exception
-to the rule through circumstances so sad and strange that her
-loneliness was an honour rather than a reproach. There were many of the
-wearers of the golden wings who had sought long and ardently to win her
-from the allegiance which forbade her to look with favouring eyes upon
-any of them.
-
-She was beautiful in a land where all women were fair, a land where,
-under the most favourable conditions that could be conceived, a race
-of almost more than human strength and beauty had been evolved, and
-she came of a family scarcely second in honour even to that of the
-President, for she was the direct descendant in the fifth generation of
-Alan Tremayne, first President of the Anglo-Saxon Federation, through
-his son Cyril born two years after the daughter who had married the
-first-born son of Natasha and Richard Arnold.
-
-More than five years before she and Alan had plighted their
-boy-and-girl troth on the eve of his departure on the fateful voyage
-from which he had never returned, and of which no tidings had reached
-Aeria until a few hours before. To the simple vow which her girlish
-lips had then spoken she had remained steadfast even when, as the years
-went by and still no tidings came of her lost lover, she, in common
-with her own kindred, had begun to mourn him as dead.
-
-It is true that she was in love rather with a memory than with a man,
-yet with some natures such a love as this is stronger than any other,
-more ideal and more lasting, and exempt from the danger of growing cold
-in fruition. So strong was the hold that this ideal love had taken upon
-her being that the idea of even accepting the love and homage of any
-other man appeared as sacrilegious to her as the embrace of an earthly
-lover would have seemed to a nun of the Middle Ages.
-
-And so, with a single companion in her solitary state, she stood aside
-and watched with patient, unregretful eyes the wedded happiness of her
-more fortunate friends. This companion was Isma Arnold, Alan’s sister,
-who had a double reason for doing as Alma had done.
-
-Not only had she resolved never to marry while her brother’s fate
-remained uncertain, but she, too, had also made her choice among the
-youths of Aeria, and in such matters an Aerian girl seldom chose twice.
-So she waited for Alexis as Alma did for Alan, hoping even against her
-convictions, and keeping his memory undefiled in the sacred shrine of
-her maiden soul.
-
-No artist could have dreamed of a fairer picture than Alma standing
-there on the terrace overlooking the stately city and the dark shining
-lake at her feet. She was clad in soft, clinging garments of whitest
-linen and finest silk of shimmering, pearly grey, edged with a dainty
-embroidery of gold and silver thread.
-
-Her dress, confined at the waist with a girdle of interlinked azurine
-and gold, clothed without concealing the beauties of her perfect
-form, and her hair, crowned by her crystal-winged coronet, flowed
-unrestrained, after the custom of the maidens of Aeria, over her
-shoulders in long and lustrous waves of dusky brown. There was a shadow
-in the great deep grey eyes which looked up as though in mute appeal to
-the starlight, the shadow of a sorrow which can never come to a woman
-more than once.
-
-All these years she had loved in cheerful patience and perfect faith
-the man for whose memory she had lived in maiden widowhood--and now,
-who could measure the depth of the darkness, darker than the shadow of
-death itself, that had fallen across her life, severing the past from
-the present with a chasm that seemed impassable, and leaving the future
-but a barren, loveless waste to be trodden by her in weariness and
-loneliness until the end!
-
-All these years she had loved an ideal man, one of her own splendid
-race, the very chosen of the earth, as pure in his unblemished manhood
-as she was in the stainless maidenhood that she had held so sacred
-for his sake even while she thought him dead--and, lo! the years had
-passed, and he had come back to life, but how? Hers was not the false
-innocence of ignorance. She knew the evil and the good, and because she
-knew both shrank from contamination with the horror born of knowledge.
-
-She had seen both Olga’s letter and Alan’s, and those two terrible
-sentences, “They have served my turn, and I have done with them,” and
-“She is as beautiful as an angel and as merciless as a fiend,” kept
-ringing their fatal changes through her brain in pitiless succession,
-forcing all the revolting possibilities of their meaning into her
-tortured soul till her reason seemed to reel under their insupportable
-stress.
-
-Mocking voices spoke to her out of the night, and told her of the
-unholy love that such a woman would, in the plenitude of her unnatural
-power, have for such a man; how she would subdue him, and make him
-not only her lover but her slave; how she would humble his splendid
-manhood, and play with him until her evil fancy was sated, and then
-cast him aside--as she had done--like a toy of which she had tired.
-
-Better a thousand times that he had died as his murdered comrades had
-died--in the northern snowdrift into which this Syren of the Skies had
-cast them, to sleep the sleep that knew neither dreams nor waking!
-Better for him and her that he had gone before her into the shadows,
-and had remained her ideal love until, hand in hand, they could begin
-their lives anew upon a higher plane of existence.
-
-As these thoughts passed and repassed through her mind with pitiless
-persistence, her lovely face grew rigid and white under the starlight,
-and, but for the nervous twining and untwining of her fingers as her
-hands clasped and unclasped behind her, her motionless form might have
-been carved out of stone. For the first time since peace had been
-proclaimed on earth, a hundred and thirty-two years ago, the flames of
-war had burst forth again, and for the first time in the story of her
-race the snake had entered the now no longer enchanted Eden of Aeria.
-
-It was hers to suffer the first real agony of soul that any woman of
-her people had passed through since Natasha, in the palm-grove down
-yonder by the lake, had told Richard Arnold of her love on the night
-that he had received the Master’s command to take her to another man to
-be his wife.
-
-There were no tears in the fixed, wide-open eyes that stared almost
-sightlessly up to the skies, in which the stars were now paling in the
-growing light of the moon. The torment of her torturing thoughts was
-too great for that.
-
-She was growing blind and dizzy under the merciless stress of them,
-when--it might have been just in time to save her from the madness that
-seemed the only outcome of her misery--the sweet, silvery tones of a
-girl’s voice floated through the still, scented air uttering her name--
-
-“Alma!”
-
-The sound mercifully recalled her wandering senses in an instant. It
-was the voice of her friend, of the sister of her now doubly-lost
-lover, and it reproved the selfishness of her great sorrow by reminding
-her that she was not suffering alone. As the sound of her name reached
-her ear the rigidity of her form relaxed, the light came back to her
-eyes, and turning her head she looked in the direction whence it came.
-
-There was a soft whirring of wings in the still air of the tropic
-night, and out of the half-darkness floated a shape that looked like a
-realisation of one of the Old-World fairy-tales. It was a vessel some
-twenty-five feet long by five wide, built of white, polished metal, and
-shaped something like an old Norse galley, with its high, arching prow
-fashioned like the breast and neck of a swan.
-
-From the sides projected a pair of wide, rapidly-undulating wings, and
-in the open space between these stood on the floor of the boat the
-figure of a girl whose loose, golden hair floated out behind her with
-the rapid motion of her fairy craft.
-
-There was no need for words of greeting between the two girl friends.
-Alma knew the kindly errand on which Isma had come, and as she stepped
-out she went towards her with hands outstretched in silent welcome.
-
-As their hands met, and the two girls stood face to face, motionless
-for a moment, they made an exquisite contrast of opposite types of
-womanly beauty--Alma tall and stately, with a proudly-carried head,
-clear, pale skin, grey eyes, and perfectly regular features, and Isma,
-a year younger and a good inch shorter, slender of form yet strong and
-lithe of limb, with golden, silky hair and sunny-blue eyes, fresh, rosy
-skin, and mobile features which scarcely ever seemed to wear the same
-expression for a couple of minutes together--as sweet a daughter of
-delight as ever man could look upon with eyes of love and longing.
-
-But she was grave enough now, for her friend’s sorrow was hers too, and
-its shadow lay with equal darkness upon her. The ready tears welled
-up under her dark lashes as she looked upon Alma’s white, drawn face
-and dry, burning eyes, and her low, sweet voice was broken by a sob
-as, passing her arm round her waist, she drew her towards the boat and
-said--
-
-“Come, dear, this sorrow belongs to me as well as you and we must help
-each other to bear it. I have brought my new boat so that we can take
-a flight round the valley and talk about it quietly. If two heads are
-better than one, so are two hearts.”
-
-Alma’s only reply to the invitation was a sad, sweet smile, and a
-gentle caress, but the welcome, loving sympathy had come when it was
-most sorely needed, and so she got into the aerial boat with Isma, and
-a few moments later the beautiful craft was bearing them at an easy
-speed southward down the valley.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI. THE SNAKE IN EDEN.
-
-
-NO more perfect place could have been imagined for an exchange of
-confidences and sympathy between two girls situated as Alma and Isma
-were than the oval, daintily-cushioned interior of the _Cygna_, as Isma
-had called her swan-prowed craft.
-
-Skirting the mountains, at a distance of about five hundred yards from
-them, and at a height of about as many feet from the summits of the
-undulating foothills below, the _Cygna_ sped quietly along at a speed
-of some twenty-five miles an hour. The temperature of the tropic night
-was so soft and warm, and the air was so dry that it was not even
-necessary for them to make use of the light wraps that lay in the stern
-of the boat.
-
-Isma reclined in the after part of the broad, low seat which ran round
-the inside, with one hand resting lightly upon a little silver lever
-which could be used for working the rudder-fan, in addition to the
-tiller-ropes, which she held in her hands while standing up. Alma sat
-almost upright amidships, with one hand clasped on the rail of polished
-satin-wood which ran round the well of the boat, her head turned away
-from Isma and her eyes fixed upon two dim points of light far away to
-the southward, which marked the position of the two moonlit, snowy
-peaks which guarded the southern confines of the valley.
-
-For several minutes they proceeded thus in silence, which neither
-seemed inclined to break. At length Isma looked up at a planet that
-was shining redly over the northern mountains, and, possessed by a
-sudden inspiration, said--
-
-“Look, Alma, there is Mars returning to our skies!”
-
-“Yes,” said Alma, turning round and gazing from beneath her
-slightly-frowning brows at the ruddy planet; “it is a fitting time
-for him to come back now that, after all these years of peace and
-happiness, human wickedness and ambition have brought the curse of war
-back again on earth.”
-
-“Yes,” said Isma. “If there were anything in what the old astrologers
-used to say we could look upon his rising as an omen. And yet we have
-very little reason surely for taking as an emblem of war a world in
-which wars have been unheard of for thousands of years.”
-
-“I wonder when that time will come on earth?” said Alma bitterly. “If
-ever it does! We terrestrials seem to be too hopelessly wicked and
-foolish for such wisdom as that.
-
-“Mankind will never have a fairer opportunity of working out its
-redemption than it had after the Terror, and yet here, after four
-generations of peaceful happiness and prosperity, the wickedness of one
-woman is able to set the world ablaze again. Our forefathers were wise,
-but they would have been wiser still if they had stamped that vile
-brood out utterly. Their evil blood has been the one drop of venom that
-has poisoned the whole world’s cup of happiness!”
-
-As Alma spoke these last words her grey eyes grew dark with sudden
-passion under her straight-drawn brows. Her breast heaved with a sudden
-wave of emotion, and the sentences came quickly and fiercely from the
-lips which Isma had never heard speak in anger before.
-
-“Yes,” she replied, rather sadly than angrily, “perhaps it would have
-been better for the world if they had done so, or, at anyrate, if they
-had shut them up for life, as they did the criminals and the insane in
-the middle of the last century. But we must remember, even in our own
-sorrow and anger, that this Olga Romanoff is in her way not altogether
-unlike our own Angel was in hers.”
-
-“Surely you’re speaking sacrilege now!” interrupted Alma. “How can the
-evil be like the good under any circumstances?”
-
-“No, I am not,” said Isma, with a smile. “Remember how Natasha was
-trained up by the Master in undying hate of Russian tyranny, and how
-she inherited the legacy of revenge from her mother and him. No doubt
-this Olga has done the same, and she has been taught to look upon us as
-the Terrorists looked upon the Tsar and his family.
-
-“We are the descendants of those who flung her ancestor from his
-throne, extinguished his dynasty, and sent him to die in Siberia. I
-would kill her with my own hand if I could, and believe that I was
-ridding the world of a curse, but surely we two daughters of Aeria are
-wise enough to be just even to such an enemy as she is.”
-
-“But she has done worse than kill us,” Alma almost hissed between her
-clenched teeth. “If she had a thousand lives and we took them one by
-one they would not expiate her crime against us, or equal the hopeless
-misery that she has brought upon us.
-
-“What is mere death, the swift transition from one stage of existence
-to another, compared with the hopeless death-in-life to which her
-wanton wickedness has condemned you and me, or to the calamities which
-she has brought upon the world?”
-
-“It is nothing, I grant you,” said Isma. “But still I do not agree with
-you about that hopeless death-in-life, as you call it. Our present
-sorrow is great and heavy enough, God knows, but for me at least it is
-not hopeless, nor will it be for you when the first stress of the storm
-is over.”
-
-“What do you mean?” cried Alma, almost as fiercely as before, and
-leaning forward and looking through the dusk into her face as though
-she hardly credited her ears. “Do you mean to say that either you or I
-could ever”--
-
-“Yes,” said Isma, interrupting her, and speaking now with eager
-animation. “Yes, I mean just what you were going to say. And some day,
-I believe, you will think as I do.”
-
-Alma shook her head in mournful incredulity, and Isma noticing the
-gesture went on--
-
-“Yes, you will! The reason that you do not agree with me now is that
-yours is a deeper and stronger nature than mine. You are like the sea,
-and I am like the lake. Your grief and anger struck you dumb at first.
-
-“You were in a stupor when I found you on the terrace, and now the
-depths of your nature are broken up and the storm is raging, and until
-it is over you will see nothing but your own sorrow and anger.
-
-“But with me the storm broke out at once, and I ran to my room and
-threw myself upon my bed and sobbed and wailed until my mother thought
-I was going mad. You have not wept yet, and it will be well for you
-when you do. Your nature is prouder than mine, and it will take longer
-to melt, but it must melt some time, for we are both women, after all,
-and then you will see hope through your tears, as I did.”
-
-Alma shook her head again, and said in a low, sad, steady voice--
-
-“I can never see hope until I can see Alan as he was when he left me,
-and you know that is impossible.”
-
-“You will never see him again as he was,” replied Isma gently. “But
-that is no reason why you should not see him better than he was.”
-
-“Better?” exclaimed Alma, with an involuntary note of scorn in her
-voice, which brought a quick flush to Isma’s cheek, and a flash into
-her eyes for her brother’s sake. “Better! How can that be?”
-
-“Just as the man who has fallen and risen again of his own native
-strength, is better and stronger than the man who has never been
-tempted,” replied Isma almost hotly.
-
-“Remember the lessons we have learnt from the people of Mars since we
-learnt to communicate with them. You know how they have gone through
-civilisation after civilisation until they have refined everything out
-of human nature that makes it human except their animal existence and
-their intellectual faculties.
-
-“They have no passions and they make no mistakes. What we call love
-they call sexual suitability, the mechanical arrangement into which
-they have refined our ruling passion. Do you remember how almost
-impossible Vassilis, after he had perfected the code of signals, found
-it to make even their brightest and most advanced intellects understand
-the meaning of jealousy?”
-
-The skilfully-aimed shot struck home instantly. A bright wave of colour
-swept from Alma’s throat up to her brow. Her eyes shone like two pale
-fires in the dusk, and her hand grasped the rail on which it was
-resting till the bones and sinews stood out distinct in it. She seemed
-to gasp for breath a moment before she found her voice, but when she
-spoke her tone seemed to ring and vibrate like a bell in the sudden
-strength of her unloosed passion.
-
-“Yes,” she said. “Yes, you innocent-looking little Isma! You are wiser
-than I am after all. I did not know the meaning of that word till
-Olga’s letter fell from the sky, but I know it now. My God, how I hate
-that woman!”
-
-“She is not a woman,” replied Isma, speaking in the unconscious pride
-of her pure descent. “She is a baseborn animal, for she has used her
-beauty for the vilest ends, yet I am glad to hear you say that you hate
-her for Alan’s sake, as I do, and--and for Alexis’s. While you can hate
-you can love, and some day you will love Alan--the real Alan, not your
-ideal lover--all the better because you have hated Olga for his sake.”
-
-“What?” almost wailed Alma, in the intensity of her anger and misery.
-“After he has held her in his arms--after his lips have kissed
-hers--after”--
-
-“Yes, even after that. When your first bitterness has passed, as mine
-has, you will be more just, and remember the influence under which he
-did so--if he did. Do you hold yourself responsible for what you think
-or do in your dreams, or do you not believe what Alan said in his
-letter about the drug? You know too much about chemistry not to know
-that such horrible poisons have existed for centuries.”
-
-“Yes, yes, I know that, and I know that he has no share in the moral
-guilt; but how can I ever forget he has been what those cruel words
-of Olga’s told us she had made of him?” replied Alma, her face growing
-cold and hard again as she spoke.
-
-“Alma,” said Isma, with gentle dignity, yet with a note of keen
-reproach in her voice, “surely you are forgetting that you are speaking
-of my brother as well as of your lover. No, I am not angry, for I
-am too sad myself not to understand your sorrow. But I want you to
-remember that I who have lost both a lover and a brother am asking you
-to be patient and to hope with me.
-
-“We have never seen Alan and Alexis as they are. We only remember them
-as two handsome boys who had never seen or known evil. When we meet
-them again, as I firmly believe we shall, they will be men who have
-passed through the fire; for if they do not pass through it and come
-out stronger and better than they were, rest assured we shall never
-meet on earth again.
-
-“Alan would no more come to you now than you would go to him. When he
-believes himself worthy of you he will come for you as Alexis will come
-for me, and then”--
-
-She stopped short in her eloquent pleading, for Alma, at last melted
-and overcome by her sweet unselfishness and loving logic, had felt the
-springs of her own woman’s nature unloosed, and with a low, wailing cry
-had sunk down upon the cushions towards her, and was sobbing out her
-sorrow on her lap. Isma said nothing more, for her end was achieved.
-She laid her left hand caressingly on Alma’s hair, and with her right
-she pulled the steering-lever back and swung the _Cygna_ round until
-her prow pointed towards home again.
-
-When they reached the villa they found the President’s private yacht
-resting on the terrace, for Alan’s father and mother had come over
-after the Council meeting to discuss with Alma’s parents the more
-intimate family aspect of the strange events which had cleared up in
-such terrible fashion the mystery which had so long shrouded the fate
-of the sons of the two chief families in Aeria.
-
-So revolting was the idea of their mental servitude to such an enemy
-of the human race as they could not but believe Olga Romanoff to be,
-and so frightful were the consequences that must infallibly befall
-humanity in consequence of it, that their parents would rather have
-known them dead than living under such degrading circumstances. To the
-Aerians, far advanced as they were beyond the standards of the present
-day, both in religion and philosophy, the conception of death was one
-which included no terrors and no more regret than was natural and
-common to all humanity at parting with a kinsman or a friend.
-
-As they were destined to prove, when face to face with a crisis
-unparalleled in the history of humanity, they regarded death merely
-as a natural and necessary transition from one state of existence to
-another, which would be higher or lower according to the preponderance
-of good or evil done in this life.
-
-If, therefore, the parents and kinsmen of those who were now exiles
-and wanderers upon the ocean wastes could have chosen, they would
-infinitely rather have known that Alan and Alexis had shared the fate
-of their companions in the Norwegian snowdrift than they would have
-learnt that for six years they had been the slaves and playthings of a
-woman who, as they guessed from Alan’s letter, combined the ambition
-of a Semiramis with the vices of a Messalina, and who had used the
-skill and knowledge which they had acquired and inherited as Princes of
-the Air with the avowed purpose of subverting the dominion of Aeria,
-undoing all that their ancestors had done, and bringing back the evil
-era of strife, bloodshed, and political slavery.
-
-So, too, with Alma. As she had told Isma, she would a thousand times
-rather have seen her lover dead than degraded to such base uses.
-Although she, like everyone else in Aeria, admitted that the strange
-circumstances absolved both Alan and Alexis from all moral blame and
-responsibility, she, in common with her own father and mother, and
-perhaps, also, with others not less intimately concerned, found it
-impossible to forget or ignore the taint of such an association, and to
-look upon it as a stain that might never be washed away.
-
-Indeed, the only member of the family council who openly proclaimed
-her belief that the two exiles would, if ever they returned, come back
-to Aeria better and stronger men than those who had known no evil was
-Isma, who repeated, with all the winning eloquence at her command, all
-the arguments that she had used to Alma during their cruise together.
-Whether Alma and the others would ever come round to her view could of
-course only be proved by time, but it is nevertheless certain that when
-the family council at last separated the hearts of its members were
-less sore than they would have been had Alan and Alexis not possessed
-such an advocate as the girl who had so good a double reason for
-pleading their causes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII. THE BATTLE OF KERGUELEN.
-
-
-THE Council of Aeria possessed, as has already been said,
-four-and-twenty stations, scattered over the oceans of the world, which
-it used as depôts for the submarine fleets, by means of which, acting
-in co-operation with its aerial squadrons, it had made any attempt at
-naval warfare hopeless until the disasters described at the beginning
-of this book proved that an enemy, in this respect at least, more
-powerful than itself, had successfully challenged its empire of the sea.
-
-Of these stations the most important in the Southern hemisphere
-was that on Kerguelen Island, or Desolation Land, situated at the
-intersection of the 49th parallel of south latitude with the 69th
-meridian of east longitude. This lonely fragment of land in the midst
-of the ocean, barren of surface, and swept by the almost constant
-storms of long winters, had been chosen, first, because of its
-situation on the southern limits of the Indian Ocean, equidistant
-between Africa and Australia, and, secondarily, because of its numerous
-and sheltered deep-water harbours, so admirably adapted for vessels
-which were perfectly independent of storm.
-
-Added to this, the island contained large supplies of coal, from which
-the motive-power of both the submarine vessels and the air-ships was
-now derived by direct conversion of its solar energy into electrical
-force through the secret processes known only to the President and two
-members of the Council.
-
-So far the Russians had not ventured to make any attack upon this
-stronghold, so strongly was it defended, not only by its submarine
-squadrons and systems of mines, guarding the entrances to all the
-harbours, but also by the large force of air-ships which had been
-stationed there since the new naval warfare had broken out.
-
-The warning which Alan had conveyed in his letter to his father was
-based on the knowledge that a general attack was soon to be made upon
-it both by air and sea, with the object of crippling the power of the
-Aerians in the Southern Ocean. No time had been lost in acting upon
-this warning. The aerial squadron was increased to forty, with the
-_Ariel_ as flagship, and twenty new submarine vessels, the largest and
-best possessed by the Aerians, had been despatched from Port Natal to
-reinforce the fleet of thirty-five already at Kerguelen Island. With
-these must of course be counted the _Narwhal_, under the command of
-Alan and Alexis.
-
-The strength of the attacking force could only be guessed at, as even
-Alan did not know it, but it was not expected that, however strong a
-force the Russians might bring up by sea, they would be able, after the
-disaster of Antarctica, to muster more than a dozen air-ships.
-
-The Aerian headquarters was at Christmas Harbour, on the northern shore
-of the island. This is an admirably-sheltered inlet running westward
-into the land between Cape François and Arch Point, and its upper and
-narrower half forms an oval basin nearly a mile long by a quarter of
-a mile broad, walled in by high perpendicular basaltic cliffs, and
-containing a depth of water varying from two to sixteen fathoms, as
-compared with twenty-five to thirty fathoms in its outer half.
-
-North of the harbour, Table Mount rises to a height of thirteen hundred
-feet, and to the south is a huge mass of basalt over eleven hundred
-feet high. On both of these elevations were mounted batteries of guns
-capable of throwing projectiles of great size and enormous explosive
-energy to a distance of several miles. There were altogether twelve of
-these batteries placed on various heights about the island, and the
-guns composing them were mounted on swivels, which enabled them to be
-trained so as to throw the projectile either into the sea or high up
-into the air.
-
-Soon after daybreak on the fourth day after Alan’s letter had been
-received the outlook on Cape François, a bold mass of basalt to
-the north of the outer bay, telephoned “_Narwhal_ in sight” to the
-settlement at the head of the harbour. Immediately on this message
-being received the commander of the station, named Max Ernstein, a
-man of about thirty-four, and the most daring and skilful submarine
-navigator and engineer in the service of the Council, went on board his
-own vessel, the _Cachalot_, and set out to welcome the long-lost son of
-the President and convey to him the commission which had been sent out
-by air-ship from Aeria.
-
-The _Cachalot_, which may as well be described here as elsewhere as
-a type of the submarine warship of the time, was a double-pointed
-cylinder, built of plates of nickelised aluminium steel, not riveted,
-but electrically fused at the joints, so that they formed a continuous
-mass equally impervious all over, and presenting no seams or overlaps.
-
-The cylinder was a hundred and fifty feet from point to point, with
-a midship’s diameter of forty feet. The forward end was armed with a
-sheathing of azurine, the metal peculiar to the mines of Aeria, which
-would cut and pierce steel as a diamond cuts glass. This sheathing
-formed a ram, which was by no means the least formidable portion of the
-warship’s armament.
-
-The upper part of the cylinder was flattened so as to form an oval deck
-forty feet long by fifteen wide. A centre section of this deck, three
-feet wide, could be opened by means of a lateral slide which allowed
-of the elevation of a gun twenty-five feet long, which could be used
-either for discharging torpedoes by water or for throwing projectiles
-through the air.
-
-It could be aimed and fired from below the deck without the
-artillerists even seeing the objects aimed at, save in an arrangement
-of mirrors, so adjusted that when the object appeared in the centre of
-the lowest of them, the gun could be fired with the certainty of the
-projectile reaching its mark. Four underwater torpedo tubes, two ahead
-and two astern, completed the armament of the submarine warship.
-
-When under water the deck could be hermetically closed, and sliding
-plates could be drawn over the opening of the torpedo tubes, so that
-from stem to stern of the cylinder there were no excrescences to impede
-the progress of the vessel through the water with the sole exception
-of a dome of thick forged glass just forward of the deck, under which
-stood the helmsman, who gave place to the commander of the vessel when
-she went into action. Her powerful four-bladed screw, driven by engines
-almost precisely similar to those of the air-ships, gave her a maximum
-speed of a hundred miles an hour.
-
-The _Cachalot_ ran at twenty-five miles an hour down the harbour, and
-as soon as he got abreast of Cape François Captain Ernstein, who was
-standing on deck, saw a small red flag apparently rising from the waves
-about a mile to seaward. A similar flag was soon flying from a movable
-flagstaff on the _Cachalot_, and a few minutes later she was lying
-alongside the _Narwhal_.
-
-This vessel was a very leviathan of the deep, and as she lay three
-parts submerged in the water Captain Ernstein calculated that she
-could hardly be less than two hundred feet in length and forty-five in
-diameter amidships. She appeared to be built on very much the same plan
-as the _Cachalot_ and of the same materials, saving only, of course,
-the ram of azurine, which was replaced by one of nickel steel.
-
-As the _Cachalot_ got alongside, a slide was drawn back in the
-deck of the _Narwhal_ and the head and shoulders of a man dressed
-in close-fitting seal-fur appeared. It was Alan, little changed in
-physical appearance since the fatal day that he invited Olga Romanoff
-on board the _Ithuriel_, save that he had grown a moustache and beard,
-which he wore trimmed somewhat in the Elizabethan style, and that the
-frank, open expression of the boy had given place to a grave, almost
-sad, sternness, which marked the man who had lived and suffered.
-
-Max Ernstein recognised him at once and saluted as though greeting
-a superior officer, for, although all the Aerians were friends and
-comrades, the etiquette of rank and discipline was scrupulously
-observed amongst them when on active service.
-
-“What do you salute me for?” said Alan gravely, as he reached the deck
-and came to the side on which the _Cachalot_ lay. “Do you not see that
-I am no longer wearing the golden wings? Are you the officer in command
-of the station?”
-
-“Yes, Admiral Arnold,” returned the other, in the same formal tone and
-at the same time presenting the letter from the Council. “I suppose you
-have forgotten me. I am Max Ernstein, in command of the naval fleet at
-Kerguelen. That letter will explain why I saluted and why I have come
-to hand over my command to you.”
-
-Before he replied Alan ran his eye rapidly over the letter. As he did
-so the pale bronze of his face flushed crimson for a moment, and he
-turned his head away from Ernstein, brushed his hand quickly across his
-eyes, and then read the letter again more deliberately. Then he turned
-and said in a voice that he vainly strove to keep steady--
-
-“This is more than I have deserved or could expect, but obedience is
-the first duty, so I accept the command. Come on board, Ernstein; of
-course I recognised you, but until I knew how I stood with the Council
-I looked upon myself as an outlaw, and therefore no friend or comrade
-for you.”
-
-The captain of the _Cachalot_ had a gangway-plank brought up and passed
-from one vessel to the other, and in another moment he was standing
-beside Alan on the deck of the _Narwhal_, and their hands were joined
-in a firm clasp.
-
-“That’s the first honest hand that I have grasped for six years, except
-Alexis’,” said Alan, as he returned the clasp with a grip that showed
-his physical forces had been by no means impaired by his long mental
-servitude. “Come down into the cabin, we shall find him there.”
-
-He led the way below, and as soon as Alexis had been told the
-unexpected good news, which seemed to affect him even more deeply than
-it had Alan, the three sat down at the table in the saloon of the
-_Narwhal_, a plain but comfortably furnished room, about twenty-five
-feet long by fifteen broad and ten high, to discuss a plan of
-operations in view of the expected attack on the station.
-
-Alan at once assumed the authority with which he had been invested by
-the Council, and made minute inquiries into the nature and extent of
-the defending force at his disposal.
-
-“I think that ought to be quite sufficient, not only to defeat, but
-pretty well destroy any force that the Russians can bring against us,”
-said Alan, as soon as Ernstein had finished his description. “We have
-much more to fear from the air-ships than from the submarine boats,
-because the _Narwhal_ would give a very good account of them, even by
-herself. Have any more vessels of the type of the _Ithuriel_ been built
-since the old _Ithuriel_ was lost?”
-
-“Yes,” replied Ernstein; “but only ten, I am sorry to say. One of them
-is here, as I told you just now, but we have forty of the others, and I
-don’t suppose the Russians can bring more than a dozen against us.”
-
-“What do you mean?” said Alan. “They have fifty, every one of them
-as fast and as powerful as the old _Ithuriel_. I ought to know,” he
-continued grimly, “for they were every one of them built under my own
-eyes.”
-
-“I beg your pardon,” said Ernstein. “I ought to have told you before
-now that we have already won our first victory, and that though we lost
-eight vessels we destroyed twenty of the Russians’.” And then he went
-on to give Alan and Alexis a rapid description of the pursuit of the
-_Revenge_, and the havoc wrought at the end of it by the _Ithuriel_ and
-the _Ariel_.
-
-“That is glorious news!” said Alan. “But they have thirty ships at
-their disposal still, and I expect they will bring at least twenty of
-these against us, and they are all swifter than ours saving only the
-_Ariel_. Of course my command ends with the shore, but I think it will
-be as well if the captain of the _Ariel_ were to come on board the
-_Narwhal_ so that we could arrange our plans of defence together--I for
-the sea, and he for the air.”
-
-“But why not come ashore and see him?” said Ernstein. “He and all of us
-will be delighted to see you on the island.”
-
-“No,” said Alan, shaking his head. “Alexis and I have promised each
-other never to leave the _Narwhal_ until the Russian sea power is
-crippled. The day that we set foot on dry land again will be the day
-that we give back the supremacy of the sea to the Council, so if we two
-Admirals of the Sea and Air are to meet, the commander of the _Ariel_
-must come here.”
-
-“Very well,” said Ernstein. “I understand you. Write a note and I will
-send the _Cachalot_ back with it. She will bring him back in under half
-an hour, for he was up at the settlement when I left.”
-
-Alan wrote the letter forthwith, and the _Cachalot_ departed,
-returning, as her captain had said, in less than half an hour, with
-Edward Forrest, the commander of the _Ariel_. He was a lean, wiry,
-active man of about forty-five, of mixed English, Scotch, and Aerian
-descent, with short, crisp, curly black hair and smooth-shaven face,
-rather sharp, regular features, and a pair of keen grey eyes which
-seemed to look into the very brain of the person he was talking to--a
-man of prompt decisions and few words, and one of the most able aerial
-navigators that Aeria could boast of.
-
-He held the rank of admiral, and was responsible for the station of
-Kerguelen, and the command of the southern seas. He greeted Alan and
-Alexis courteously, but a trifle stiffly, as though he thought that
-their indiscretion had been somewhat lightly dealt with by the Council.
-This, however, was no business of his, for the first law of Aeria
-was that the decisions of the President and Council were not open to
-criticism by any private or official citizen whatever his rank or
-experience.
-
-Therefore, after reading, as a matter of form, the commission sent to
-Alan and Alexis, he addressed himself at once to the business of the
-moment, and before they had been discussing the plan of defence for
-many minutes he was forced to admit to himself that the President’s
-son, young as he was, was more than his master both in aerial and naval
-tactics.
-
-For the greater part of the morning plan after plan was suggested,
-thrashed out, and either accepted or thrown aside, and when he took his
-leave he shook hands with both Alan and Alexis far more cordially than
-he had done in greeting, and said with brief, blunt candour--
-
-“This is not the first time that a woman has used a man to upset the
-peace of the world, and I tell you honestly that I once thought you
-had both turned traitors. I don’t think so now, and I am heartily glad
-you are back. If you could only have returned three years ago a lot of
-trouble might have been saved, but I must confess that you have both
-learnt more in five years than I have in twenty. I will follow your
-instructions to the letter.”
-
-“What is done is done,” said Alan, smiling, and yet with a grave
-dignity that showed Admiral Forrest that, despite all that had
-happened, he was standing in the presence of his master. “The work in
-hand now is to regain what we have lost, and if every man does his duty
-we shall do so. I think everything is arranged now, and as we have no
-time to lose I will say good-morning.”
-
-He held out his hand as he spoke, and Admiral Forrest took his
-dismissal and his leave at the same time.
-
-Captain Ernstein took six men out of the _Cachalot_ and placed them at
-the disposal of Alan and Alexis, for the working of the _Narwhal_, and
-then took his leave to execute his part of the plan of defence.
-
-It was a bitterly cold day, for the southern winter had already
-set in in all its severity. The sea to the north of the island was
-comparatively smooth, but swept every now and then with violent gusts
-of wind from the southward. The sky was entirely covered by thick
-masses of cold grey cloud, every now and then torn up into great
-rolling masses by the sudden blasts of icy wind from the pole, which
-drove fierce storms of hard frozen snow across the bare and desolate
-island.
-
-But the roughness of the elements was a matter of small concern to
-the crews of the air-ships and the submarine cruisers, for both were
-independent alike of sea and storm. The former could literally ride
-upon the wings of the fiercest gale that ever blew. Their interiors
-were warm and wind-proof, and their machinery was powerful enough to
-drive them four and five times as fast as the air-currents in which
-they floated, while the latter had only to sink a few feet below the
-level of the waves to find perfect calm.
-
-The days, in short, were past when men had been at the mercy of the
-elements, and so the atmospheric conditions which would have made a
-modern naval attack upon a rocky and exposed coast almost impossible
-were not even taken into account in preparing to meet the threatened
-assault on Kerguelen Island.
-
-No one knew when or how the first assault would be delivered. All that
-was known was that, unless Olga and her advisers had completely altered
-their plans, the attack would take place either that day or the next,
-and consequently ceaseless vigilance was necessary on sea and land and
-in the air.
-
-In accordance with the plan arranged on board the _Narwhal_, ten
-air-ships rose above the clouds to an altitude of five thousand
-feet, and from each of these an electric thread hung down to as many
-signal-stations on the island, all of which were connected with the
-headquarters at the top of Christmas Harbour.
-
-Twenty cruisers patrolled the coast at a distance of a mile from the
-land, and two miles outside these the _Narwhal_ ran to and fro along
-the northern shore. All the more important inlets which had sufficient
-depth of water for submarine attack were guarded with mines and chains
-of torpedoes, so disposed that no vessel could possibly enter without
-firing them, and so giving warning of the locality of the attack.
-
-The afternoon passed without any alarm, and at nightfall the clouds
-sent down a blinding storm of snow, which, added to the intense
-darkness, made vision impossible both on land and sea, although high
-above the clouds the ten air-ships floated in a calm, clear atmosphere,
-under the brilliant constellations of the southern hemisphere.
-
-No attack seemed possible without warning, either by sea or above the
-clouds, for the hostile air-ships could not approach without being seen
-from a great distance through the clear, starlit sky, and without their
-lights, which would instantly betray their presence, it was impossible
-for the submarine vessels even to find the coast.
-
-Hour after hour passed, and still no hostile sign rewarded the
-vigilance of the defenders. No one of the present day could have
-guessed that all the preparations had been made for such a battle as
-had never been fought before on sea or land, or in the air.
-
-Nothing was visible but the snow-covered earth and the storm-swept sea,
-for the sentinel ships, floating far above the clouds, were beyond
-the reach of vision. And yet, if the combined fleets of the modern
-world had attacked Kerguelen that night, not a ship would have escaped
-to tell the tale of annihilation, so terrible were the engines of
-destruction which waited but the signal of battle to strike their swift
-and irresistible blows.
-
-It was about half-past six o’clock the next morning when Alexis, who
-was on watch in the conning-tower of the _Narwhal_, saw a faint beam of
-light illuminating the water a long way ahead. He instantly signalled
-to Alan--“Enemy in sight. Back. I am going to ram.”
-
-Alan, unwilling to leave the new crew, who were not yet perfectly
-acquainted with the working of the machinery, had taken command of the
-engine-room alternately with Alexis, who was now taking his four hours’
-watch in the conning-tower, and to whom the fortune of war had given
-the honour of striking the first blow. The _Narwhal_ backed rapidly,
-and as she did so Alexis turned a small wheel in the side of the
-conning-tower, and the whole chamber sank into the hull of the vessel.
-
-As soon as it stopped he pulled a lever and a heavy steel sheet slid
-over the opening where the glass dome had been. In front of him as he
-stood at the steering-wheel was a long, very slender needle hung with
-extreme delicacy on a pivot, up which an electric current constantly
-passed.
-
-This needle was terrestrially insulated by a magnet which always swung
-opposite to the magnetic pole, and when acted upon only by the steel of
-the vessel’s fabric, swung indifferently as long as there was no other
-vessel within a thousand yards of the _Narwhal_. But the moment one
-came within that distance the needle pointed towards it with unerring
-accuracy, as it was doing at the present moment.
-
-Alexis allowed the vessel to back until he saw the needle begin to
-waver. Then he knew that the thousand-yard limit had been reached, and
-signalled--
-
-“Full speed ahead.”
-
-The next moment the engines were reversed and the _Narwhal_ bore down
-on her invisible prey. The needle became rigid again. Alexis kept it
-pointing dead ahead as the _Narwhal_ gathered way and rushed silently
-but with irresistible force upon her victim.
-
-She passed over the thousand yards in forty seconds. Then came a dull,
-rending crash, a slight shiver of the mighty fabric, and then she
-swept on her way as though she had passed through a couple of inches
-of planking instead of the steel hull of a submarine warship more than
-two-thirds her own size.
-
-And so in silence and darkness, without the discharge of a gun or the
-flash of a shot or an audible cry of human pain, the work of death and
-destruction began and ended. In the passing of an instant a warship
-had been destroyed which could have annihilated a fleet of modern
-battleships in detail without once appearing above the surface of the
-water.
-
-The moment that the shock told Alexis that the ram of the _Narwhal_
-had done its work, he signalled “Stop,” and as the vessel slowed down
-he watched the momentous fluctuations of the needle in front of him.
-It oscillated for an instant and then became still again, pointing to
-another victim hidden away somewhere under the dark waters. He brought
-the vessel round until it pointed ahead again, and then once more the
-leviathan plunged forward at full speed on her errand of destruction.
-
-Thirty seconds later a rasping tearing sound, told him that he had
-ripped the side out of a second Russian vessel; and again he stopped,
-and again the fatal tell-tale needle pointed to a mark on which he
-hurled his irresistible ram. So the work went on, and vessel after
-vessel was torn to pieces and sunk in the midst of the darkness and
-silence of the wintry sea, without even a warning having been given
-either to the consorts of the destroyed vessels or to those nearer in
-shore, all of which were, of course, outside the range of the needle’s
-indication. But for this fact Alexis would have been unable to do his
-work, for he would not have known whether he was ramming friend or foe.
-
-When the ram had found its mark for the twelfth time, the needle
-oscillated vaguely to and fro, showing that within a thousand-yards
-radius at least there were no more victims to be found. Then the
-_Narwhal_ rose to the surface of the water, and Alexis resumed his
-watch as the vessel patrolled the coast again at a speed of fifty miles
-an hour.
-
-Alan now came and relieved Alexis from his watch. As he entered the
-conning-tower he said--
-
-“How many is that you’ve settled? A dozen, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes,” said Alexis, “but I can hardly think they can have been anything
-but scouts, and so we shall have the main fleet to tackle yet.”
-
-“Do you think any of them have got through?” said Alan. “You know they
-may have approached from east and west as well, and if so they are
-lying inside of us.”
-
-“No,” replied Alexis, “I don’t think they would do that. You see we
-have the advantage of them in this way. They can’t see ten yards in
-front of them unless there is bright sunshine on the water, or unless
-they turn their lights on to the full, in which case they would betray
-their presence at once.
-
-“Then they don’t know what has become of the _Narwhal_, and probably
-think that she has been attacked by an overwhelming force, or blown up
-by some lucky torpedo. They daren’t go inshore in force for fear of
-springing a mine, and so you may depend upon it the twelve we have
-destroyed were scouts, prowling about very slowly and waiting for
-daylight to examine the coast and find a way into Christmas Harbour.
-
-“They must have been in single line, and we had the luck to catch one
-of the end ones first, and so we sank the lot in the order in which
-they were floating. I don’t think we can do anything more till daylight
-except run up and down the coast and keep a sharp look-out to seaward
-and on the needle.”
-
-“I suppose you’re right,” said Alan. “You’d better go and get an hour’s
-sleep if you can.”
-
-“There won’t be much sleep for any of us till to-night,” said Alexis
-quickly, pointing to the clouds over the island. “Look! the row has
-begun in the air already.”
-
-Alan glanced up and saw a series of intensely bright flashes stream
-downwards through the clouds, which at the same moment were rent and
-rolled up into vast shadowy billows by some tremendous concussion of
-the atmosphere above them. There could be only one explanation of this.
-The attack on the island had begun from the air, and the flashes were
-those of the first shots of the aerial bombardment.
-
-[Illustration: THE CLOUDS WERE RENT AND ROLLED UP INTO VAST SHADOWY
-BILLOWS. _Page 122._]
-
-What had really happened was this.
-
-A fleet of fifty submarine warships, under the command of Michael
-Lossenski, the eldest son of Orloff Lossenski, who was now Olga
-Romanoff’s chief adviser in the conduct of the war that she had
-commenced with the Aerians, had reached the northern coast of Kerguelen
-Island about four o’clock in the morning in order to co-operate with
-an aerial squadron of fifteen vessels led by the _Revenge_, under the
-command, nominally, of Lossenski’s second son Boris, but really of Olga
-herself.
-
-As Alexis had surmised, the twelve vessels destroyed by the _Narwhal_
-were scouts sent out to, if possible, feel their way to the entrance
-of Christmas Harbour, which was known to be the headquarters of the
-station.
-
-These were to have returned to the fleet with all the intelligence they
-could get as to bearings and soundings, and the position of mines
-and the defending fleet. Then at daybreak, that is to say about eight
-o’clock, the whole squadron was to have advanced to the entrance to the
-harbour, ramming any of the defenders who barred their way, and then,
-after sending a swarm of torpedoes into the mouth of the bay to explode
-the mines and blow up any submarine defences that might exist, to have
-made a rush for the inner bay at the same time that the air-ships
-engaged the land defences.
-
-The naval portion of the programme was completely frustrated by the
-destruction of the scouts, while the aerial attack was foiled by the
-look-outs stationed above the clouds. Soon after seven it became light
-enough at their altitude for the powerful glasses of their commanders
-to make out the fifteen Russian air-ships coming up from the southward
-at a distance of about twenty miles.
-
-A few minutes later they were themselves discovered by the Russians,
-and Olga, to her intense chagrin, saw at a glance that all hope of a
-surprise was gone. By some means or other the Aerians had received
-intelligence of the attack, and were ready for it.
-
-The terrible experience taught by the disaster of Antarctica warned her
-and her lieutenants that any approach, now that they were seen, must be
-made with the utmost caution, for they had no precise knowledge as to
-the range of the Aerian guns. All they knew was that it was very great,
-and that where one of their projectiles found its mark destruction
-followed instantly.
-
-Added to this, there was another difficulty. The dense masses of cloud
-completely hid both sea and land from their view, and made accurate
-shooting at the land defences impossible. Consequently there was
-nothing for it but to fight the battle out in the upper regions of the
-air, against a force of whose actual strength they were ignorant. They
-dare not attempt to surround the ten air-ships, which hung stationary
-over the island, for this meant bringing all their guns into play,
-while they could only use half of their own.
-
-While they were debating on a plan of operations, two new factors in
-the coming struggle were swiftly and unexpectedly brought into play. As
-soon as the news of their arrival had been telegraphed to headquarters,
-the _Ariel_ took the air and passed under the clouds to the rear of
-the Russian squadron. Ten miles behind them, she swept round sharply,
-and with her wings inclined to the utmost, and her engines working at
-the fullest capacity, she took a mighty upward swoop, passed through
-the clouds like a flash of light, and before the Russians knew what
-had happened, she was floating three thousand feet above them, out of
-reach of their guns, and hurling projectile after projectile into their
-midst. Three of their ships, struck almost simultaneously, were torn
-into a thousand fragments, and vanished through the clouds.
-
-It was the glare and shock of this explosion that Alexis had seen
-from the conning-tower of the _Narwhal_. The remaining Russian ships
-instantly scattered and sank through the clouds to seek a refuge from
-the foe whose deadly blows they were completely unable to return.
-
-But the moment they appeared on the under-side of the cloud-sea, all
-the guns of the land batteries opened fire in all directions with
-time-shells, and so rapid were the discharges, and so terrible the
-energy of the explosives, that the whole firmament above the island
-seemed ablaze with them, while the concussions of the nether atmosphere
-were so tremendous and continuous, that it would have been madness for
-the Russian air-ships to have approached within the zone of fire with
-which the Aerians had covered and encircled their positions.
-
-The clouds were torn and broken up into vast whirling masses, which
-completely obscured the view of the Russians, and rendered anything
-like accurate shooting in the direction of the island impossible. Worse
-than this, the range of the great land guns, fired at an elevation
-of forty-five degrees, was so enormous that they were forced by the
-incessantly exploding projectiles, which were hurled up into the air in
-all directions, to retire to a distance which, beyond the most random
-shooting, the results of which were spent upon the rocks of the island
-and the sea, rendered their own guns useless.
-
-Rise up through the clouds they dare not, for they knew the _Ariel_ was
-still there, and that the first ship that showed herself would be an
-almost helpless mark for one of the ten guns which, for the time being,
-commanded the heavens. There seemed nothing for it but an ignominious
-retreat, for, as Boris Lossenski said to Olga when, furious with rage
-and mortification, she reproached him with a lack both of skill and
-courage, an attack upon a volcano in full eruption would have been
-child’s play to an assault at close quarters on Kerguelen Island.
-
-Their one hope of success had lain in a surprise, and that, by some
-unaccountable means, had been made impossible. They had reckoned only
-on the air-ships and the submarine defences, and even these they had
-expected to take unawares. The terrible power of the battery guns,
-which were able to spread their seas of fire through the air and to
-shake the very firmament itself with their projectiles, had been a
-revelation to them.
-
-They could not train their own guns without seeing their mark, and
-neither flame nor smoke betrayed the position of the batteries, while
-on the other hand the artillerists on the island had simply to surround
-the station with a zone of fire and a continuous series of atmospheric
-convulsions through which no air-ship could have passed without the
-risk of overturning or completely collapsing.
-
-So Olga was at last convinced that her choice lay between abandonment
-of the attack or running the gauntlet of fire in the almost forlorn
-hope of engaging the land batteries and an aerial fleet of unknown
-strength at close quarters.
-
-Baffled and defeated, and yet convinced that to continue the unequal
-contest under its present conditions would be merely to court still
-more disastrous defeat, and even probable destruction, Olga at last
-allowed Lossenski to give the signal for retreat, and the Russian
-squadron withdrew to a position twelve miles northward of the island.
-Its departure was seen both from the air and the land, and the
-cannonade immediately stopped.
-
-Meanwhile Alan had run the _Narwhal_ into the mouth of Christmas
-Harbour flying his red flag. He was met by the _Cachalot_, and,
-after telling Captain Ernstein what he had done, and learning of the
-repulse of the Russians in the aerial battle, he directed forty of the
-submarine vessels to follow him out to sea to look for the Russian
-flotilla.
-
-All the craft were furnished with tell-tale needles similar to the
-one on board the _Narwhal_, for it is impossible to see a sufficient
-distance under water to effectively attack an enemy as agile as the
-submarine warships were, and this fact had led to the universal
-employment of the needles.
-
-As it was now quite light, the whole Aerian squadron, with the
-exception of five vessels whose duty it was to act as scouts under
-water, proceeded seaward on the surface of the waves, keeping a
-sharp look-out for the remains of the Russian fleet, which they soon
-discovered lying about five miles off the island. They could make out
-thirty-five of the long, black, half-submerged hulls lying together
-like a school of whales with the waves breaking over them as over
-sunken rocks.
-
-Alan immediately signalled from his conning-tower in the manual
-sign-language, used by the Aerians to communicate between their
-air-ships, to his consorts, and ordered them to scatter and form a wide
-circle round the Russian squadron at a distance of a mile, and a depth
-of two fathoms, but on no account to approach within a thousand yards
-of them. When they had reached their positions they were to rise to the
-surface and each was to discharge a couple of torpedoes towards the
-centre of the circle. After that they were to retire and leave the rest
-to him.
-
-The moment the order had been passed through the fleet, everyone of the
-vessels disappeared and proceeded to her station. The _Narwhal_ sank
-at the same time until nothing but the glass dome of her conning-tower
-remained above the water.
-
-By carefully noting the course steered by the compass, and accurately
-measuring the distance travelled by the number of revolutions of the
-propeller, each captain was able to place his craft in the desired
-position.
-
-So perfectly, indeed, was the manœuvre performed that when the vessels
-rose to the surface they formed a circle two miles in diameter, in the
-centre of which lay, within a space of about two hundred yards square,
-the Russian flotilla, the commanders of which, afraid to advance nearer
-to the shore without the intelligence which they still awaited from
-their scouts, and confounded by the awful spectacle presented by the
-aerial battle, of the issue of which they were utterly ignorant, were
-waiting in bewilderment and indecision the issue of the events which
-had taken such a marvellous and unexpected turn.
-
-The manœuvre ordered by Alan had been executed so promptly and secretly
-that the Russians were not even aware that they were surrounded until
-torpedo after torpedo, coming in from all points of the compass, began
-exploding in their midst, hurling vast masses of water and foam up
-into the air, tearing their plates and crippling their propellers, and
-disabling half their number before they had time to recover from the
-confusion into which the sudden attack had thrown them.
-
-To communicate signals from one vessel to another under such
-circumstances was impossible, and so united action was out of the
-question. All that the captains of the vessels could see was that
-there were enemies upon all sides of them. The explosion of the eighty
-torpedoes had churned the water up into a mass of seething foam, in the
-midst of which fifteen vessels were lying crippled and helpless on the
-surface, while six more had been sent to the bottom.
-
-This was bad enough, but while the captains of those which had escaped
-were recovering from the stupefaction into which this sudden disaster
-had thrown them Alan saw his chance, and as soon as the last torpedo
-had exploded headed the _Narwhal_ full speed into the midst of them.
-Then followed a scene which would have beggared all description.
-
-The great ship, moving at a speed of nearly three miles a minute, tore
-her way through the half-crippled squadron, hurling everything she
-struck to the bottom of the sea. Every Russian vessel that was able to
-do so after the first assault sank out of the way of the terrible ram
-of the _Narwhal_ and headed off at full speed into the open sea.
-
-But for those that were partially or wholly disabled there was no
-escape. Alan standing in his conning-tower, his teeth clenched and his
-blue eyes almost black with the fierce passion of battle and revenge,
-whirled his steering-wheel this way and that, and as the steel monster
-swung round in rapid curves in obedience to the rudder, he hurled her
-again and again upon his practically helpless victims, piercing them
-through and through as though their plates had been cardboard instead
-of steel.
-
-When the last one had gone down he left the conning-tower, hoisted his
-flagstaff, and flew a signal to his consorts to return to harbour. What
-had become of the Russian vessels that had escaped he neither knew nor,
-for the present, cared.
-
-The victory of the Aerians both at sea and in the air was complete, and
-he was certain that the Russians had received such a lesson as would
-convince them that Kerguelen Island was impregnable to any assault that
-they could make upon it, unless they were able to take its defenders by
-surprise--a contingency which was justly considered impossible.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII. THE SYREN’S STRONGHOLD.
-
-
-AS soon as the first pitched battle in the world-war was over, a
-lengthy and detailed report of the attack on Kerguelen and its repulse
-was drawn up by Alan, Captain Ernstein, and Admiral Forrest for
-presentation to the Council. To this report Alan added a supplement,
-which is here reproduced in his own words.
-
-“From what I know of the designs of Olga Romanoff and her advisers I
-am convinced that the defeats which have been inflicted upon them will
-merely have the effect of checking, and not putting a stop to, their
-operations against the peace and freedom of the world.
-
-“I have seen and heard enough during the last five years to feel
-satisfied that there exists a very widespread conspiracy, the object
-of which is the restoration of the Romanoff dynasty, in the person
-of Olga, the breaking up of the Anglo-Saxon Federation, and the
-inauguration of an era of personal despotism and popular slavery.
-
-“As far as we have been able to learn, this conspiracy embraces
-practically all the descendants of those families who lost their
-rank, official position, or property during the reconstitution of
-Russia after the fall of the Romanoffs. These people have, of course,
-everything to gain and not much to lose by the destruction of the
-present order of things, and Olga has promised them, no doubt quite
-sincerely, that in the event of her triumph they shall be restored to
-all that their ancestors lost.
-
-“As a matter of fact, the greater part of Russia will be divided
-amongst them should she ever accomplish her designs. The old order
-of things, as it existed before the days of Alexander II., is to be
-completely reinstated. The lower orders of the people are to be reduced
-once more to serfdom, and the trading classes to a condition very
-little better.
-
-“If they resist they are to be terrorised into submission by the
-air-ships, and all who raise their voices for freedom are to be
-banished to Siberia, which is once more to be the prison-land of the
-Russian Empire. A large standing army is to be kept constantly on the
-war-footing, while the sea navy and the aerial fleet are to be kept up
-to such a strength as to be able to hold the rest of the Continent in
-practical subjection.
-
-“In short, Olga aspires to nothing less than the throne of an empire
-which shall stretch from the Yellow Sea to the Atlantic Ocean. I am
-afraid, too, that there can be no doubt but that this conspiracy is
-not only favoured, but actually assisted, by large numbers of people
-throughout the Federation area.
-
-“In fact, during the latter part of our stay at Mount Terror, the
-stronghold was visited by men of all nations, who, of course, came
-and went away in the submarine vessels, and who openly promised to do
-everything they could to further what they called the cause of the
-New Revolution in their own countries, on the understanding that the
-old evils of capitalism and private ownership of land by which their
-ancestors had grown wealthy are to be restored.
-
-“This will, I trust, be enough to show you that the triumph of Olga
-Romanoff means nothing less than the complete undoing of all the work
-that was done in the days of the Terror.
-
-“We have proved so far that Kerguelen, and, therefore, Aeria, is
-impregnable to attack save by surprise, which will now, of course,
-be impossible. But, on the other hand, the force at the disposal of
-Olga and her allies is still so strong that all our present resources
-will have to be kept constantly employed to protect ourselves, and
-this leaves the world at the mercy of any Power which can obtain
-the assistance of the Russians’ aerial navy, which still numbers
-twenty-seven vessels, all equal to our best ships.
-
-“In addition to these they possess a submarine navy of at least forty
-vessels, all of which are swifter and more powerful than ours, with the
-exception of the _Narwhal_. I therefore suggest that the whole of the
-resources at the command of the Council shall at once be devoted to the
-building of at least fifty air-ships of the _Ithuriel_ type, and the
-same number of submarine battleships like the _Narwhal_, complete plans
-of which I enclose.
-
-“Until this additional force is at our command, I think it would
-be useless to attempt the destruction of the Russian stronghold in
-Antarctica, and until this is destroyed there can be no hope of
-peace. This stronghold, which I will now attempt to describe for the
-information of the Council, is one of the most marvellous places on
-earth.
-
-“It lies in and about Mount Terror and the Parry Mountains, which run
-from it towards the pole behind the ice-barrier of Antarctica. Nearly
-ten years ago a Russian explorer named Kishenov reached the ice-barrier
-and made the discoveries which have enabled the Russian revolutionists
-to create their stronghold. In addition to his ship, he took with him
-three aerostats, which were chiefly constructed during his voyage, and
-also a small submarine vessel, which he took out in sections and put
-together at sea.
-
-“He skirted the coast of Victoria Land, and was stopped by the ice in
-latitude 78°, as all other Antarctic explorers by sea have been since
-the voyage of Sir James Ross. The season was a singularly fine and open
-one, and two days after his arrival he inflated one of his aerostats
-and crossed the great barrier, to make a thorough exploration of the
-unknown land. Kishenov was the first man, not an Aerian, who had ever
-seen what there was on the other side of the Antarctic ice-wall.
-
-“But he discovered far more than our explorers did, for while he was
-in the neighbourhood of Mount Terror an earthquake, accompanying a
-violent eruption of Mount Erebus, made a huge fissure in the south
-side of Mount Terror. After waiting three days to make sure that
-the earthquake had subsided, he and two of his officers entered the
-crevice, which they found to be over two hundred feet wide at the level
-of the land ice.
-
-“Furnished with storage batteries and electric lights, they penetrated
-into the interior of the mountain and found that it was pierced in
-all directions with great galleries and enormous chambers, hollowed
-out by volcanic forces during the period of Mount Terror’s activity.
-Four days were spent altogether in exploring this subterranean region,
-the existence of which was kept a profound secret by Kishenov and his
-officers.
-
-“Not the least strange and, as it has proved, one of the most valuable
-portions of his discovery was the finding of a subterranean lake in the
-heart of Mount Terror, the temperature of which was kept far above the
-freezing point by the heat which the interior of the mountain derived
-from the neighbouring fires of Mount Erebus. Finding the lake to be
-salt water, he concluded that it must have some connection with the
-open sea, and so the next day he and the same two officers entered the
-submarine boat and penetrated underneath the ice-barrier.
-
-“After a search of five hours, the search-lights of the boat revealed
-a huge tunnel leading south-west into the land, that is to say, direct
-for Mount Terror. They followed this tunnel up for a distance of nearly
-five miles, and then struck the end. They now rose, and finally found
-themselves floating on the surface of the lake in the interior of the
-mountain.
-
-“One of Kishenov’s officers, a man named Louis Khemski, was a member
-of the Russian Revolutionary Society, whose existence only became
-known five years ago. After the capture of the _Ithuriel_ the heads
-of this society met, and to them this man communicated the secret
-of Mount Terror. Kishenov and the other officer refused to join the
-revolutionists, and were assassinated.
-
-“Khemski was at once taken on board the _Ithuriel_, now renamed the
-_Revenge_, and guided her to the fissure leading into Mount Terror. Its
-outer portion was of course filled and covered with ice and snow, but
-as soon as Khemski had found its position by his landmarks, a couple
-of shells speedily reopened it, and it was here that the _Revenge_ lay
-hidden while you were ransacking the world for her.
-
-“Olga inherited from her grandfather, the father of the Vladimir
-Romanoff who was executed for disobeying the order of the Council, all
-the plans and directions necessary for the building both of air-ships
-and submarine vessels, and as soon as this perfect stronghold and
-hiding-place was discovered, her accomplices in the conspiracy for the
-restoration of the Russian monarchy at once devoted their fortunes to
-the supply of money and materials. The _Revenge_ made one more voyage
-to Russia, and by travelling at full speed at a great elevation managed
-to make it unobserved.
-
-“The services of the cleverest engineers and most skilful craftsmen
-among the revolutionists were secured. Transports were chartered and
-sent out to Antarctica loaded with materials. On the shores of the
-subterranean lake the first squadron of submarine vessels was built,
-and then began the system of ocean terrorism which soon paralysed the
-trade of the world.
-
-“Piracy was carried on with utter ruthlessness. Transports were sunk by
-the vessels, and then plundered by divers of the treasure which they
-carried, and which was employed to purchase new materials and to repay
-those who had furnished the first funds.
-
-“Alexis and myself were kept by Olga, as I said in my first letter,
-under the influence of a drug which completely paralysed our volitional
-power, and were compelled to reveal all we knew concerning our own
-air-ships, submarine vessels, guns, and explosives. And in this manner
-was created and equipped the force which will be employed to dispute
-with us the empire of the world unless we are able to extirpate it
-utterly.”
-
-While the despatch to the Council was being drawn up, the _Narwhal_
-had been lying in the inner basin of Christmas Harbour, renewing her
-store of motive power from the generating station ashore. As soon
-as the engineer in charge reported that her power-reservoirs were
-full, and Alan had delivered the despatch for conveyance to Aeria by
-air-ship, Alexis, who had been apparently buried in a brown study for
-the last two hours or so, asked Alan to come with him into his private
-cabin, and as soon as the two friends were alone together he said to
-him--
-
-“Look here, old man! While you fellows have been drawing up that
-despatch, and talking about the impossibility of attacking the
-stronghold at Mount Terror, I’ve been doing some thinking, and I’ve
-come to the conclusion that as far as an under-sea attack is concerned,
-it isn’t quite so hopeless as you’ve made out.”
-
-“I shall be only too delighted to hear you prove us wrong,” replied
-Alan, his eyes brightening at the prospect, for he knew Alexis too
-well not to be sure that he would not have spoken in this way unless
-he had pretty solid reasons for doing so. “Say on, my friend; I am all
-attention.”
-
-“Get out to sea, then, as fast as ever you can,” said Alexis, “for
-there’s not an hour to be lost if you adopt my plan, and if you don’t
-we can just come back.”
-
-“Very well,” said Alan. “What’s the course?”
-
-“Clear the islands and head away southward as hard as you can go,”
-replied Alexis briefly.
-
-The excitement of the battle in which he had played such a terrible
-part had left Alan in just the frame of mind to listen to the project
-of a desperate adventure, such as he instinctively knew was now in his
-friend’s mind. Without hesitating further he went into the saloon,
-summoned the crew of the _Narwhal_, and said to them--
-
-“Alexis and I have decided upon an enterprise which will end either in
-very great injury to our enemies or our own destruction. You have seen
-enough to-day to know that in the warfare we are engaged in there are
-only two choices: victory or destruction. We don’t want to take anyone
-against his will to what may be certain death. Those who care to go
-ashore may do so.”
-
-Not a man moved. An athletic sailor named George Cosmo, who held the
-post of chief engineer, saluted, and said briefly--
-
-“We shall all go, sir. What are the orders?”
-
-“Get out of the harbour as fast as you can, and as soon as you are
-clear of the islands sink two fathoms, steer a straight course due
-south-east, and put her through the water as hard as she’ll go,”
-replied Alan.
-
-Cosmo saluted again, and left the room with his comrades to execute the
-order.
-
-“Now, my friend,” said Alan, turning to Alexis as soon as they were
-alone again, “what is your plan?”
-
-“Simply this,” replied Alexis. “Mount Terror, or at any rate the
-mouth of the submarine tunnel, is in round numbers three thousand
-geographical miles from here. Our speed is thirty miles an hour faster
-than that of Olga’s squadron. That means that even if they go back at
-once and at full speed we shall be there four or five hours before them.
-
-“They, I think, have had quite enough fighting for to-day, and I don’t
-believe they’ll attack the island again--first, because they know that
-they can’t take our sea defences by surprise, and, second, because they
-think the _Narwhal_ will remain on guard.
-
-“Either they will go off on a raiding expedition somewhere else with
-the air-ships--in which case we can’t follow them, for we don’t know
-where they’re going--or they will return to Mount Terror at an easy
-speed of fifty or sixty miles an hour. They will never dream that
-you and I will venture to attack the stronghold single-handed, and,
-therefore, that is just what I propose to do.”
-
-“That will be odds of about forty to one against the _Narwhal_,”
-replied Alan, somewhat gravely. “Unless we can destroy it completely
-before they get back. But go on. Let’s hear the rest. I don’t think you
-can propose anything too desperate for me now that I have really tasted
-the blood of the enemy.”
-
-“Well, what I propose is not to destroy the stronghold, simply because
-it would be impossible to do that by sea. I merely propose to get
-quietly into the tunnel, go to that narrow part about two miles from
-the entrance, fix a dozen torpedoes with time-fuses up against the roof
-of the tunnel, and then clear out into the open water.
-
-“When those twelve torpedoes go off if they don’t bring a few thousand
-tons of rock down into the tunnel and block it pretty securely I’ll
-grant I know very little about explosives.”
-
-“Good so far, very good!” said Alan. “I confess I envy you that idea.
-What next?”
-
-“Well, after that,” replied Alexis. “You see we shall have shut in the
-vessels that are inside and shut out those that are outside. The ones
-inside will be no use for some time, for it will take the divers a good
-many days to open the tunnel again, even if they ever do.
-
-“As for those outside, we can lie in wait for them if they return, and
-trust to the _Narwhal’s_ speed and strength to sink as many of them as
-we can, or else, if they don’t put in an appearance, we can come home
-with the consciousness that we have done about all the damage in our
-power. Now, what do you think?”
-
-Alan was silent for a few moments, weighing the pros and cons of the
-desperate venture--for desperate it was, in spite of the incomparable
-speed and strength of the splendid vessel he commanded.
-
-It was easy enough, always supposing that it could be accomplished
-without interruption; but to be caught in the tunnel, as was quite
-possible, between a force inside and one outside meant almost certain
-destruction, for if the _Narwhal_ was not rammed and sunk in a space
-too narrow for her to turn she would be certain to be blown up by the
-torpedoes which would be launched against her.
-
-In the end, the very character of the desperate venture, combined with
-the magnitude of the injury it would do to the enemy, overcame the
-scruples of his prudence. He put his hand on Alexis’ shoulder, and
-giving him a gentle shake, said with a laugh--
-
-“Bravo, old philosopher! You’ve done more with your thinking than we
-have with our talking and writing. We’ll do it, if there isn’t a square
-foot of the _Narwhal_ left when the business is over.”
-
-“I knew you’d say that,” said Alexis. “Now let’s have some dinner and
-go to sleep, for we shall want it.”
-
-It was then very nearly midday, and the _Narwhal_ had cleared the
-islands, and, with her prow pointed direct for the north-eastern
-extremity of Wilkes’s Land, was rushing at full speed through the
-water about twelve feet below the surface of the sea. For twenty hours
-she sped silently and swiftly and unseen on her way, swept round the
-ice-barrier that fences the northern promontory of Victoria Land and
-into the bay dominated by the fiery crest of Mount Erebus.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV. FROM THE SEA TO THE AIR.
-
-
-TWENTY-FOUR hours after she had reached Mount Terror the _Narwhal_ came
-into the inner basin of Christmas Harbour, running easily along the
-surface, with the red flag flying at her flagstaff. The news spread
-rapidly through the little settlement, the dwellers in which had been
-wondering greatly at her sudden disappearance, and there was quite a
-crowd on the jetty as she ran alongside. Max Ernstein was among it, and
-as the battleship came to a standstill he saw to his amazement Alan
-spring ashore and come towards him with outstretched hands.
-
-“Why, what does this mean?” he said, as he grasped his hand. “I thought
-you told me you were never going to leave the _Narwhal_ until”--
-
-“Until we had done what we have done,” said Alan with a laugh, as he
-returned his hand-clasp with a grip that made the bones crack. “We have
-destroyed a good half of what remained of the Russian sea navy, and,
-what’s more, we’ve blown up the entrance to their submarine dockyard,
-and completely crippled them as far as building or equipping new
-vessels is concerned until they can find a new harbour.”
-
-“Magnificent!” exclaimed Ernstein. “Glorious! You’ll be wearing the
-golden wings again in forty-eight hours.”
-
-“If I am,” said Alan, flushing with pleasure at the thought, “the
-credit will be due to Alexis, and not to me. It was his idea entirely.
-But never mind that now. We’ve suffered rather badly, and only just
-escaped with our lives. Five out of six of the _Narwhal’s_ crew are
-disabled, and I want you to get them out and send them away to Aeria as
-soon as possible. Meanwhile Alexis and I will write our despatch to the
-Council.”
-
-His instructions were obeyed at once, and the invalids were transferred
-to the _Vega_, the air-ship that was to convey them to Aeria, and in
-her luxurious state-rooms their hurts were attended to by the best
-skill on the island while the despatch was being drawn up.
-
-It was brief, plain, almost formal in language, and confined entirely
-to statement of bare fact, and in little more than an hour after the
-arrival of the _Narwhal_ at Christmas Harbour the _Vega_ had risen into
-the air, and was speeding on her way towards Aeria.
-
-Meanwhile the news of the daring venture and brilliant exploits of Alan
-and Alexis and their comrades spread like wildfire through the island,
-and everyone who was not engaged on duties that could not be left came
-to the settlement to see and congratulate the two heroes of the hour,
-whose strange and romantic fate, so well known to every Aerian, had
-thus suddenly been glorified by the triumph of the genius and daring
-which had proved capable of wresting victory from defeat and glory from
-misfortune.
-
-Although some were more demonstrative, none were heartier or more
-sincere in their congratulations than Edward Forrest, the admiral of
-the station, and, unknown to Alan and Alexis, he and Ernstein had
-sent a joint despatch by the _Vega_, strongly urging both the justice
-and the policy of at once restoring to the full rights of citizenship
-the two men who had proved themselves possessed of such extraordinary
-ability.
-
-If the battle for the empire of the world was to be fought over again,
-the command of the forces of Aeria could not be entrusted to any hands
-so able and so daring as those of the President’s son and his friend
-and companion in misfortune and victory. The triumphs at Kerguelen and
-Antarctica had really been due to them alone. They had given warning
-of the attack on the station, and it was due to the skill and boldness
-of their strategy that it had been foiled with such disaster to the
-enemy.
-
-This of itself was much, but it had not satisfied either their ambition
-or their devotion, for, after it had been accomplished, they had
-carried the war almost single-handed in the Russian stronghold, and
-there, under circumstances of unparalleled danger to themselves, they
-had struck a blow which could not fail to cripple the sea-power of the
-enemy, and so influence to an incalculable extent the ultimate issue of
-the war which, ere long, might be raging over the whole world.
-
-That night, while the almost constant storms of the southern winter
-were sweeping over the barren surface of Desolation Land, a feast was
-held in the central hall of the headquarters at Christmas Harbour in
-honour of the double victory and the return of the two chief heroes
-of it from their long captivity. The next day was spent in a rigorous
-inspection of all the defences of the island and the machinery and
-ammunition of the air-ships and submarine vessels. At six o’clock
-in the evening, twenty-six hours after she had started, the _Vega_
-returned from Aeria, bringing the reply of the Council to the
-despatches which she had taken.
-
- The Council has heard with great satisfaction of the repulse of the
- attack on the station at Kerguelen and of the distinguished services
- rendered by Alan Arnold and Alexis Mazarov, both at Kerguelen and
- Mount Terror.
-
- In recognition of the great skill and devotion they have displayed,
- the Council invites them to assume the command of the air-ship
- _Ithuriel_, and to make use of that vessel to execute such plans and
- purposes as in their discretion will best serve the interests of the
- State of Aeria for a period of one year from the present date. They
- will be supplied with motive power and all stores and materials of
- war at any of the oceanic stations.
-
- The Council accepts the recommendation contained in the supplement to
- the first despatch, and has given orders for the immediate building
- of a hundred air-ships of the _Ithuriel_ class and the same number
- of submarine battleships of the _Narwhal_ type. These are expected
- to be ready for service at the end of the year, by which time the
- Council hopes to be able to call upon Alan Arnold and Alexis Mazarov
- to assume the duties of admiral and vice-admiral of the aerial
- navies, and at the same time to restore to them full privileges of
- citizenship in Aeria.
-
- The admiral and officers of Kerguelen will give all assistance in
- the carrying out of these directions, and will make and transmit all
- necessary reports in connection with them. No further hostilities
- are to be undertaken for the present by the aerial or sea forces, but
- they will maintain a strict watch against all possible surprises on
- the part of the enemy, and be ready to repel any assault which may be
- made. This order does not apply to the air-ship _Ithuriel_.
-
- Given in the Council Hall of Aeria on the Eleventh day of May in the
- hundred and thirty-second year of the Deliverance.
-
- ALAN ARNOLD, President.
- FRANCIS TREMAYNE, Vice-President.
-
- To Edward Forrest,
- Admiral in Command at the Station of Kerguelen.
-
-Such was the reply of the Council to the news of the daring foray
-made by the _Narwhal_ upon the stronghold of Mount Terror, and the
-suggestions of Admiral Forrest and Captain Ernstein. Although it did
-not precisely adopt the latter, which, indeed, the Council was well
-justified in looking upon as inspired rather by enthusiasm than the
-judicial spirit proper to the occasion, it was even more satisfactory
-both to Alan and Alexis than an immediate recall would have been.
-
-True, they had done great and brilliant service in the first few days
-of their return to freedom. They had virtually crippled the Russian
-sea-power by the blows which they had so skilfully, so swiftly, and so
-daringly struck, but neither of them felt that this was a sufficient
-achievement to warrant their full restoration to all that they had lost
-through the fatal error that they had made on board the old _Ithuriel_.
-
-Both, indeed, longed ardently for just such further opportunity of
-devoting themselves to the service of their race and country as this
-order offered them. In command of the new _Ithuriel_, one of the
-swiftest and most formidable aerial warships in existence, there was no
-telling the damage that they might do to the enemy or what service they
-might render to their friends.
-
-They knew that, as regarded the Russian force, the odds against them
-were about twenty-four to one, and they also knew that Olga and her
-lieutenants would lose no time in increasing their navy to the utmost
-extent in their power in preparation for the war of extermination that
-was now inevitable.
-
-They had a year before them during which they would have an absolutely
-free hand, and all the supplies that the resources of Aeria could give
-them. True, it was a year of exile and probation, but they gladly
-welcomed the test of fidelity and devotion which it offered, and which,
-worthily passed through, would mean restoration of all they had lost,
-and a return to their friends and kindred in their beloved valley of
-Aeria armed with powers and responsibilities which would make them
-practically the arbiters of the destinies of their people, and perhaps
-of the whole human race.
-
-But the _Vega_ had brought something more to the two friends and exiles
-than the reply of the Council to their despatches, for immediately he
-landed her captain handed to Alan a small sealed packet addressed to
-him in the handwriting of his sister Isma. When he opened it, as he
-did at the first opportunity that found him alone, he found that it
-contained two letters and two chromatic photographs.
-
-The letters were from his parents and sister. His father’s was, as may
-well be imagined, very different from the cold and formal despatch that
-he had signed as President of the Council. It was full of tender and
-loving sympathy for him in the strange fate that had overtaken him,
-and, while it entirely absolved them of all moral blame for the loss of
-the flagship and the lives of his companions, it exhorted him earnestly
-to apply himself without useless regrets to the work of the year of
-probation which the Council had seen fit to impose upon him, and it
-ended with an assurance that the happiest day that had been known in
-Aeria within the memory of its citizens would be that on which the
-golden wings would be replaced on their foreheads in the Council Hall
-of the city.
-
-To this letter was added another, written by Alan’s mother, and written
-as only a mother can write to her son. Strong and well tried as he was,
-there were tears in Alan’s eyes when he had finished reading these two
-letters, but they did not remain there long after he had begun the one
-from his sister.
-
-Isma, proud beyond measure of the exploits of her brother and the man
-she still looked upon as her lover, and absolutely assured that when
-the time came both would return covered with honour, wrote in the
-highest spirits. As it was an invariable rule of life among the Aerians
-to be perfectly frank with one another, and to take every precaution to
-avoid those misunderstandings which in a less perfect state of society
-had produced so much personal and social suffering, she told him in
-plain yet tender language exactly what had passed between her and Alma
-on the night that his first letter had been received.
-
-Yet she said nothing that in any way committed either Alma or himself
-to a renewal of the troth which had been broken by the designs of Olga
-Romanoff, and though she sent her remembrances to Alexis, she sent them
-as though to a friend, tacitly giving both to understand that no words
-of love must pass between the two exiles and their former sweethearts
-until they met again upon equal terms.
-
-But there was another message not contained in the letter, or written
-in any words, which said more than all that she had written, and this
-was conveyed by the photographs, which she sent without a word of
-allusion to them. As Alan looked upon them the six years of mental
-slavery and degrading servitude to the daughter of the enemies of his
-race passed away for the moment, and he saw himself standing with Alma
-in one of the groves of Aeria plighting his boyish troth on the night
-before he started on his fatal voyage in the _Ithuriel_.
-
-The face that looked at him with such marvellous lifelikeness, with all
-its perfection of form and exquisite colouring, reproduced with the
-most absolute fidelity, was the same face that had been upturned to his
-to receive his kisses on that never-to-be-forgotten night. And yet, in
-another sense, it was not the same.
-
-That had been the sunny, smiling face of a girl to whom sorrow and evil
-were as absolutely unknown as they would be to an angel in heaven, but
-this was the face of a woman who had lived and thought and suffered.
-
-And when he remembered that whatever of sorrow or suffering she had
-known had been on his account, the last lingering traces of the vile
-spells of the evilly beautiful Syren of the Skies, who had so fatally
-bewitched him, vanished from his soul, and the old love revived within
-him pure and strong, and intensified tenfold by the knowledge of the
-great reparation that he owed to the girl upon whose life he had
-brought the only shadow it had ever known.
-
-He knew that their hands would never meet again until all that had been
-lost was regained, at whatever cost of labour or devotion that might
-be necessary on his part, but he also knew that in all these years no
-other man had been found worthy to fill the place that he had once
-occupied, and which he was resolved to win back or die in the attempt,
-and this knowledge made him look forward to the mighty struggle which
-lay before him with an eagerness that augured well for its issue.
-
-He had gone into his own cabin on board the _Ithuriel_, which was being
-rapidly prepared for her roving commission, to read his letters in
-solitude. He put Alma’s photograph on the table, and sat before it with
-his eyes fixed upon it until every line of form and tint of colour was
-indelibly impressed anew upon his memory.
-
-Then he kissed it as reverently as a devotee of old might have kissed
-a sacred relic, and then he attached the oval miniature to a chain of
-alternate links of azurine and gold, and hung it round his neck inside
-his tunic, registering a mental vow that if death came before he once
-more wore the golden wings, it should find it lying nearest his heart.
-
-“This,” he said, speaking to himself, as he took Isma’s photograph up
-from the table, and looked fondly upon the radiantly lovely face that
-looked out from its frame, “is evidently not intended for me. Isma
-doesn’t say who it’s for, but I fancy that there is some one on board
-the _Ithuriel_ who has a very much better right to it than I have. I
-wonder if Alexis is in his room?”
-
-So saying, he left his cabin and found his friend still deep in the
-perusal of two lengthy letters from his father and mother.
-
-“So you have had letters from home as well, old man? I hope they’ve
-been as pleasant reading as mine have,” he said, going to the couch on
-which Alexis was sitting, and holding one hand behind his back.
-
-“Yes, they’re from my father and mother, and so they can scarcely be
-anything else, so far as what they do say. It’s what they don’t say
-that gives me the only cause to find fault with them. But still that, I
-suppose, would be expecting too much under the circumstances.”
-
-He ended with something very like a sigh, and Alan replied as gravely
-as he could--
-
-“And what might that be, my knight of the rueful countenance? Don’t you
-think the Council have treated us splendidly, and given us a glorious
-opportunity of winning back all that the daughter of the Tsar has
-robbed us of?”
-
-“Of course, I do,” replied Alexis, looking up at him with a flush on
-his cheeks. “But for all that there is one thing still, something that
-I am not ashamed to say I value above everything else that I have lost
-or can regain.”
-
-“And that is--?”
-
-“Well, to put it plainly,” replied Alexis, the flush deepening as he
-spoke, “these two letters don’t contain one single word about Isma.
-Now you know what I mean. Of course, I am ready to do everything that
-the Council may call upon us to do, and the moment that I know I have
-won back the right to wear the golden wings will be the proudest of my
-life, but it will be far from the happiest if I only go back to Aeria
-to find Isma another man’s wife, and what else can I think when they
-don’t so much as mention her name?”
-
-“Be of good cheer, my friend,” replied Alan with a laugh, putting one
-hand on his shoulder, and taking the other from behind his back. “You
-will never find that, I can promise you. I am the bringer of good
-tidings. There, take those and feast your eyes and your heart on them
-in solitude as I have just been doing on something else.”
-
-So saying he put Isma’s letter and photograph into Alexis’ hand, and
-without another word left him to gather courage and comfort from them
-as he had himself done.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV. OLGA IN COUNCIL.
-
-
-THE remains of the Russian submarine squadron, numbering now only
-seventeen vessels, headed out northward into the open sea, after
-leaving their disabled consorts to their fate. In the brief space
-occupied by her first rush they had recognised the _Narwhal_ both
-by her size and speed, and one of the captains avowed that he had
-recognised Alan Arnold, Olga’s late captive, standing under the
-glass dome of the conning-tower, steering the great vessel upon her
-devastating course.
-
-Twenty miles out from the island they rose to the surface and made
-out the aerial fleet some five miles to the southward, hovering at an
-elevation of about a thousand feet, and evidently on the look-out for
-them. Michael Lossenski, who had escaped the ram of the _Narwhal_, ran
-up his flagstaff, and flew a signal which soon brought the air-ships
-bearing down upon them. The _Revenge_ sank down to the surface of the
-water, and took Lossenski off his ship in order that he might report
-himself.
-
-Olga and his father received the first news of the defeat of their
-naval forces with cold displeasure; but when Michael told them that
-more than half the fleet had been destroyed by the _Narwhal_, and that
-it was believed that Alan was in command of her, Olga’s anger blazed
-out into fury, and she cried passionately--
-
-“You fools and cowards to have fled like that from one ship and one
-man! Could not seventeen of you have overcome that one vessel? Had you
-no rams, no torpedoes, that you fled before this single foe?”
-
-He took the bitter rebuke in silence. He knew that he had failed both
-in duty and courage, and that a reply would only make matters worse.
-Olga looked at him for a moment, with eyes burning with scorn and
-anger. Then she rose from her seat, and, pointing to the door of the
-saloon, said--
-
-“Go! You have disgraced yourself and us. Take your ships back to Mount
-Terror, and await our further commands.”
-
-With bowed head and face flushed with shame, the disgraced man walked
-in silence out of the saloon and left Olga alone with his father. As
-soon as he had gone Olga began striding up and down the saloon, her
-hands clenched and her eyes, black with passion, glittering fiercely
-under her straight-drawn brows.
-
-Orloff Lossenski knew her too well not to let her anger take its course
-uninterrupted, so he sat and watched her, and waited for her to speak
-first. At last she stopped in front of him, and said in a low fierce
-voice, that was almost hoarse with the strength of her passion--
-
-“So! you were right, my friend. I was a fool, an idiot, to let those
-two escape. I ought to have killed them, as you advised. They were of
-no further use to us, and we could have done without them. Yes, truly I
-was a fool, such a fool as love makes of every woman!”
-
-“Not of every woman, Majesty,” replied Lossenski in a low soothing
-tone, that was not without a trace of irony. “If I may say it without
-disrespect, your ancestress, the great Catherine, knew how to combine
-love and wisdom. When she wearied of a lover, or had no further use for
-a man, she never left him the power of revenging his dismissal.”
-
-“Yes, yes,” she replied. “I know that; but I did not weary of this man,
-this king among men, for whose love I would have sold my soul. I only
-wearied of my own attempts to win it. You know what I mean, Lossenski,
-and you can understand me, for you have confessed that he was well
-worthy of the sacrifice.
-
-“You know that when he seemed my lover he was only my slave--that I
-could not compel the man to love me, but only the passive machine that
-I had made of him, and you know, too, that the moment I had let him
-regain his freedom of will he would have loathed and cursed me, as no
-doubt he is doing now.
-
-“Why did I not kill him? How could I, when I loved him better than my
-own life, and all my dreams of empire? Why, I could not even kill the
-other one because he was Alan’s friend, and because he would have hated
-me still more for doing so.
-
-“But, after all,” she continued, speaking somewhat more calmly, “it is
-not setting them free that has done the mischief. It is the treason
-or the miracle that enabled them to capture the _Narwhal_. I would
-give a good deal to know how that was done. They cannot have done it
-themselves, for I had given them enough of the drug to deprive them of
-all will-power for at least twenty-four hours, and I told that traitor,
-Turgenieff, who must have betrayed the attack on Kerguelen, to give
-them more when he landed them on the island.”
-
-“But is your Majesty sure that they took the drug?” said Lossenski,
-interrupting her for the first time. “Did you give it with your own
-hand, or see them take it with your own eyes?”
-
-“No!” said Olga, with a start. “I did not. I sent it to them by my
-maid, Anna, but she swore that she put it in their wine, and when they
-had finished their last meal the decanter was empty.”
-
-“That was a grave mistake, Majesty,” said Lossenski, in a tone of
-respectful reproof, “and one which may yet cost you the empire of the
-world. It is such trifles as that which destroy the grandest schemes.”
-
-“I know! I know!” said Olga impatiently. “You may think me a fool and
-a weakling, but I could not bring myself to see or speak to Alan again
-after I had at last resolved to give up the hopeless task of winning
-him, and send him away.
-
-“But for that mistake the _Narwhal_ would still have been ours, and we
-should have taken Kerguelen unawares. He could have told his people
-nothing else that would have harmed us, for the more he tells them
-about Mount Terror the more impossible they will see any attack upon
-it to be. No, no, it was all that one fatal mistake! But there, it
-tortures me to talk about it! Tell me, my old friend and counsellor,
-what we are to do to repair the damage?”
-
-Exhausted by her fierce and sudden outburst of passion, and the
-bitterness of her regret, Olga threw herself into a chair and sat
-waiting for Lossenski to speak. He remained silent for several moments,
-buried in thought, and then he began speaking in the low, deliberate
-tone of a man who has weighty counsels to impart.
-
-“We cannot deny, Majesty, that we have been worsted in our two first
-encounters with these Aerians, but we must learn wisdom and patience
-from defeat. It seems plain to me that the Aerians are too strong for
-us as we are.
-
-“When we attacked them we forgot that, while we are children in
-warfare, they are perfect masters of it. They have preserved the
-traditions of their fathers, and for four generations they have been
-trained in the use of the weapons which we have only just learnt to
-use. Therefore my advice is that we do not attack them again for the
-present.”
-
-“But,” interrupted Olga, “in any case, they will attack us, and we
-shall still have to fight.”
-
-“Not of necessity, your Highness,” replied Lossenski. “You see they
-have not pursued us, and the reason for this is that they know that
-both our air-ships and our submarine vessels are swifter and more
-powerful than theirs, with two or three exceptions.
-
-“They will not attack us till they can do so on equal terms, and we
-must take care that they never do that. You have plenty of treasure and
-plenty of men at your command. Let us retire to our stronghold again
-and devote ourselves to increasing our strength both by sea and in the
-air, until we have made ourselves invulnerable.
-
-“And remember, too, Majesty,” he continued with an added meaning
-in his tone, “Aeria is not the world. There are vast possibilities
-before you in other directions. I am convinced now that we have made a
-mistake in attacking the Aerians first. Russia is ripe for revolt, and
-great quantities of arms have already been manufactured. The tribes
-of Western Asia need only a leader to take the field, and the Sultan
-Khalid could put an army millions strong into the field within a few
-months.
-
-“On the other hand, Anglo-Saxondom is a babel of conflicting opinions,
-and the mob rules throughout its length and breadth. Where everyone is
-master there can be no leaders, and those who are without leaders are
-the natural prey of the strong hand.
-
-“They are wealthy and weak, and divided among themselves. The Aerians
-have given them over to their own devices. Why should you not, when we
-have repaired the damage we have suffered, take your aerial squadron to
-Moscow, proclaim the new revolution, and crown yourself Tsarina in the
-Kremlin?”
-
-In speaking thus Orloff Lossenski was really only putting into formal
-shape the project which it had all along been the aim of Olga and her
-adherents to carry out. There was nothing new in the suggestion save
-the proposition that the revolution should be proclaimed in Russia, and
-that Olga should crown herself Tsarina before, instead of after, the
-attempted subjugation of Aeria.
-
-Up to the present it had been believed that nothing could possibly be
-done until the power of the Aerians was either crushed or crippled,
-but the battle of Kerguelen had clearly shown that this was a task far
-beyond their present resources. Even the mastery of the sea was now no
-longer theirs, thanks to the two fatal mistakes which Olga had made,
-first in setting Alan and Alexis free, and second in sending them away
-from Mount Terror in the swiftest and most powerful vessel in their
-sea-navy.
-
-Why she had been guilty of this last imprudence she could not even
-explain to herself. It was one of those mistakes, made in pure
-thoughtlessness, which again and again have marred the greatest schemes
-of conquest. Another vessel would have done just as well, save that she
-would not have performed the errand quite so quickly; but the _Narwhal_
-happened to be in readiness at the moment, and as Peter Turgenieff, her
-commander, was one of Olga’s most trusted sea-captains, she had given
-him the order to convey Alan and Alexis to the island, and so the fatal
-error had been committed.
-
-It must, however, be remembered that when she made it, it was
-impossible for her to foresee its disastrous outcome. She implicitly
-believed that the two Aerians were completely under the influence of
-the will-poison, and so utterly unable to think or act independently,
-or to form and execute the daring design which they had so successfully
-accomplished.
-
-But now that the mistake had been made, Orloff Lossenski saw that
-the course he suggested to his mistress offered the only hope of
-counteracting it. His advice pointed out the shortest road to the
-attainment of the designs of Olga and her followers; and he gave it
-in all sincerity, for he was absolutely devoted to Olga’s person and
-fortune, and the realisation of her ambition was the dearest dream of
-his own life.
-
-It meant, too, the restoration of his own order to all its ancient
-rights and privileges with the added wealth and dignity that would be
-won by conquest. It meant the establishment of a Russian empire far
-greater and more powerful than that of the last of the Tsars, for its
-power would extend from the Pacific coast of Asia to the Atlantic coast
-of Europe.
-
-Olga heard him with flushed cheeks and shining eyes, and, when he had
-done speaking, she rose to her feet again and faced him, looking every
-inch a queen, in the ripe beauty of her perfect womanhood, and said,
-in tones from which every trace of her former anger and sorrow had
-vanished--
-
-“Well spoken, Orloff Lossenski! That is worthy counsel for you to give
-and for me to hear. I will follow it, for it is wise as well as bold,
-and the day that I crown myself in the Kremlin you shall be the first
-noble in Russia. But, stop--what of the Sultan? Surely he and his
-armies will have to be reckoned with?”
-
-“True,” said Lossenski. “But if he will not listen to reason, cannot
-your air-ships destroy his armies like swarms of locusts, lay his
-cities in ruins, and sweep him and his dynasty from the face of the
-earth?”
-
-“Yes, that is true again,” replied Olga. “Provided that the Aerians did
-not come to his aid.”
-
-“They would not do that, I think,” he replied.
-
-“But to make that impossible why should you not make an alliance with
-him and offer to help him with your air-ships and submarine navy to
-the conquest of the world, on the condition of the restoration of the
-Russian Empire and the division of the world between you? Remember that
-as long as you kept the command of your navies of the air and the sea
-you could always keep him to the terms when once made.”
-
-As the old man ceased speaking Olga laid her hand upon his shoulder,
-and said in a low, clear, steady voice that spoke of a great resolution
-finally taken--
-
-“My friend, you are the wisest of counsellors, and when I regain my
-throne you shall be the first Minister of the Empire. I will pardon
-your son for his failure to-day for the sake of his father’s wisdom,
-and we will say no more about disaster and defeat. We will look forward
-only to victory and the empire that it will bring us!”
-
-But when the defeated squadrons arrived at Mount Terror Olga was rudely
-awakened from her dreams of empire by the tidings of the disaster that
-had occurred during her absence.
-
-The damage inflicted by the _Narwhal_ was speedily proved to be
-irreparable. For a distance of nearly a mile the roof of the tunnel had
-sunk bodily down, blocking it for ever. Millions of tons of rock and
-earth had fallen into the submarine channel, and all hope of clearing
-it again was out of the question.
-
-The explosion of the twelve torpedoes had not only brought down all
-the rocks in their vicinity, but it had so shaken the earth in both
-directions that a general subsidence had taken place, forming a barrier
-which was so vast and massive that its removal, even if possible, would
-have taken many months of labour; and so there was no avoiding the
-dismal conclusion that their submarine dockyard was useless, and, for
-the present at least, their sea-power crippled.
-
-The effects of the explosion in the interior of the mountain, though
-bad enough, were much less serious. Nearly seventy men, or more than
-half the total garrison that had been left behind, had been either
-killed or maimed for life. The six submarine warships that had been
-lying in the lake were, of course, useless now that their way to the
-sea was barred, and five of the twelve air-ships which had been lying
-in the vast cavern whose floor formed the shores of the subterranean
-lake were so seriously injured that considerable repairs would be
-necessary for them.
-
-The whole of the lower level of the vast system of chambers and
-galleries which pierced the interior of the mountain in all directions
-had been flooded by the volumes of water projected from the lake by the
-explosion. Workshops, laboratories, and building-slips had been wrecked
-or thrown into complete confusion, and the appearance of the whole of
-the level was that of a place which had been swept by a tornado.
-
-As soon as the amount of the damage done had been estimated, Olga
-called a council of war, composed of twelve of her most skilled and
-trusted adherents, in a chamber which was led up to by a path sloping
-steeply up from the shores of the lake. This chamber was an almost
-perfect oval, about sixty feet long by twenty wide, and about thirty
-high.
-
-Neither its temperature nor its internal appointments would have given
-any idea of the fact that it was situated at the uttermost end of the
-earth, and buried under the eternal snows of Antarctica. The rough rock
-walls had been smoothed and hung with silken hangings, against which
-statues of the purest marble gleamed white, and pictures, some of vast
-size and exquisite execution, brought the scenes of sunnier lands to
-the eyes of the occupants.
-
-Electric light-globes hung in festoons all around, shedding a mild
-diffused lustre over the luxurious furniture of the chamber. The floor
-of lava, smoothed and polished, was covered with priceless carpets into
-whose thick pile the foot sank noiseless, as though into soft, shallow
-snow.
-
-Treasures, both of art and luxury, which had been plundered from ocean
-transports that had fallen victims to the rams of the submarine
-cruisers were scattered about in lavish profusion that was almost
-barbaric in its excess. Behind the hangings of the walls ran an
-elaborate system of pipes which circulated fresh air drawn from the
-exterior of the mountain, and, heated by passing through electric
-furnaces, at once warmed and ventilated this council-chamber of the
-extraordinary woman who, in virtue of her strange conquest of the air,
-had come to be known among her followers as the Syren of the Skies.
-
-Human art and science had completely conquered both the ruggedness of
-Nature and the inclemency of the elements, and had transformed these
-gloomy caverns, excavated by the volcanic fires of former ages out of
-the heart of Mount Terror, into warm, well-lighted, and airy abodes,
-capable of sheltering several hundred human beings from the rigours
-even of the Antarctic winter.
-
-This subterranean retreat and stronghold was roughly divided into two
-levels, on the lower of which were situated the chambers and galleries
-which served for the performance of all the work necessary for the
-building of the air-ships and submarine vessels, while the upper was
-devoted to store-rooms and dwelling-places for the followers and
-assistants of the Queen of this strange realm.
-
-No other region could have presented such a marvellous contrast to the
-sunlit and flower-scented paradise which was the home of their mortal
-enemies, the race with which they had dared to dispute the empire of
-the world. The powers of darkness and of light could hardly have been
-better typified than were these two contending forces by the different
-characters of their respective strongholds.
-
-When the Council of War, summoned at Olga’s bidding by Orloff
-Lossenski, had assembled in the Central Chamber, a pair of heavy purple
-velvet curtains parted, and the Syren entered from the gallery, which
-had been hewn through the solid rock and which communicated with her
-private suite of apartments. The members of the Council rose as she
-entered and greeted her as subjects were wont to greet their sovereigns
-in the days before the Terror.
-
-She acknowledged their reverence with a royal condescension, and took
-her seat on a raised divan at the inner end of the chamber. Beckoning
-Lossenski to her side, she exchanged a few words with him in an
-undertone, and then called upon Andrei Levin, the Secretary of the
-Council, to enumerate the nature and extent of the losses they had
-sustained in their brief but disastrous first attempt to cope with the
-mighty race which had dominated the world for nearly a century and a
-half.
-
-When Levin had finished, it was found that, in addition to the
-irreparable damage done to the submarine dockyard, no less than
-thirty-five submarine cruisers had been destroyed or rendered useless,
-while twenty-three air-ships had been annihilated by the projectiles
-of the Aerians. This left an available fighting force of twenty-eight
-submarine and twenty-four aerial warships fit for service.
-
-It had been calculated that it would take at least a month of hard work
-to get the subterranean arsenal into such working order as would enable
-them to repair their losses, and after this at least twelve months
-would have to elapse before they had brought their fighting force up to
-the strength it had possessed but five short days before.
-
-In addition to their losses in ships and war materials, more than a
-hundred of Olga’s chosen and most devoted followers had lost their
-lives in the terrible warfare which knew no sparing of life, and it
-would be necessary to draft more men from Russia to replace them before
-the work could be carried on upon an adequate scale.
-
-Olga listened to the catalogue of disasters with frowning brows and
-eyes gleaming with hardly-suppressed fury. When it was over, she rose
-and spoke in a voice whose wonderful music and witchery seemed to charm
-all sense of misfortune for the time being out of the hearts of her
-listeners. A born queen of men, she knew when to wither with her scorn
-or to charm with her sweetness, and she was well aware that this hour
-of defeat and disaster was no time for reproaches or rebuke.
-
-So her voice was low and sweet, and almost pleading, as she reviewed
-the situation, which, for the moment, seemed so dark, and appealed to
-her followers, through those who commanded them, not to yield before a
-sudden and temporary misfortune, but to learn from defeat the lessons
-of victory. She reminded them of all that their ancestors and hers had
-lost at the hands of the Terrorists, the forefathers of the hated and
-arrogant Aerians, and she painted in glowing colours the glory and the
-boundless wealth that would be the reward of victory.
-
-Heavy as their losses had been, there was no reason why they should
-not repair them. She reminded them how, five years before, they had
-possessed but a single air-ship, and were only a weak and scattered
-body of revolutionaries. Now they possessed, even after all they had
-lost, an aerial fleet superior to all the vessels of the Aerian navies
-save two, and submarine cruisers swifter and more powerful than any
-that floated, save only the stolen _Narwhal_. More than this, they were
-now supported by a vast organisation numbering thousands of devoted men
-and women, any one of whom would give his or her life for the cause for
-which they were fighting.
-
-She only spoke for a quarter of an hour or so, but every word went
-home, and when she concluded with an appeal to their loyalty and
-devotion, the twelve members of the Council rose with one accord
-to their feet, and there and then spontaneously renewed the oaths
-of fealty to her person and dynasty which they had taken when they
-enlisted in her service. Every man of them was a scion of some once
-noble Russian house, and her cause was theirs in virtue of personal
-interest as well as that sentiment of blind, unreasoning loyalty which
-even four generations of freedom had failed to eradicate from the
-Russian blood.
-
-Olga thanked them with a tremor in her voice which, whether it was
-real or not, spoke to them with far greater eloquence than words, and
-then she bade Lossenski lay before the Council the plans which she
-had already discussed with him for the future conduct of the vast
-enterprise which had opened so inauspiciously.
-
-Lossenski rose at once, and for over two hours unfolded a vast and
-subtly-conceived scheme, which has been very briefly outlined in a
-previous chapter, and the results of the working out of which will
-become apparent in due course.
-
-At the end of the discussion which followed it was decided that a
-transport should be purchased as soon as possible in a Russian port and
-sent out to Antarctica with fresh supplies of men and materials.
-
-A flotilla of twelve marine cruisers was told off to convoy her on her
-voyage, and protect her from possible attack in case the Aerians should
-suspect or discover the purpose to which she was devoted.
-
-As no more submarine vessels could be built in Antarctica--for
-the fearful cold of the outside waters made such work totally
-impossible--all efforts were to be concentrated upon the increase of
-the aerial navy, and a hundred air-ships, in addition to those already
-in existence, was fixed upon as the minimum strength that it would be
-safe to depend upon, when the hour for the final struggle came.
-
-No force was to be wasted, if possible, upon minor attacks or isolated
-engagements, for the Russians, like the Aerians, had learnt that, under
-the conditions of the new warfare, skirmishes only meant destruction in
-detail and loss of strength entirely disproportionate to the advantage
-gained.
-
-Thus virtually the same decisions were arrived at in Aeria and
-Antarctica. Both sides resolved to husband their resources and increase
-their strength, and then to risk everything upon the issue of one
-mighty conflict, a veritable struggle of the gods, in which both
-equally recognised that the defeated would be annihilated and the
-victors would remain undisputed masters of the world.
-
-Finally, it was decided that Orloff Lossenski should depart at once
-with a formal offer of alliance to the Sultan of the Moslem Empire,
-and that a day later Olga should follow with a squadron of twenty
-air-ships and give him the alternative of alliance or immediate war.
-
-If, as was confidently expected, he chose alliance, five submarine
-cruisers were to be given to him, so that he might use them as models
-for the construction of a fleet which should be powerful enough to
-sweep the Aerian warships from the seas, and which would be supplied
-with the secret motive power at a station to be established at Larnaka
-under Russian control.
-
-Then, when all was in readiness for the world-war, Olga was to be
-proclaimed Tsarina in Moscow, and the standard of absolute monarchy
-once more reared over the re-erected throne of the House of Romanoff.
-Anglo-Saxondom was to be invaded and conquered, and Aeria itself
-attacked and either subdued or depopulated and laid waste.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI. KHALID THE MAGNIFICENT.
-
-
-A FEW minutes before midnight on the fifteenth of May, in the year
-2036, Khalid the Magnificent, lord and master of the greatest and most
-splendid realm that had ever been ruled over by a single man since
-the world began, stood alone on the spacious terrace of his palace
-in Alexandria, gazing up at the myriads of stars that shone in the
-cloudless firmament above him, and dreaming one of those dreams of
-world-wide empire which had haunted the soul of such men as he from the
-days of Rameses the Great until his own.
-
-He was a man of thirty-four, tall, swarthy, and athletic, with the
-proud aquiline features of the Arab, the dark, alternately flashing and
-melting eyes of the Circassian, and the strong, reposeful dignity of
-the Turk--a man whom women looked upon with love and men with respect
-that was often akin to dread.
-
-The lord of seven hundred million subjects who, even in those days, so
-strong was still the faith and loyalty of the Moslem, looked upon him
-only as something less than Allah and the Prophet whose sacred blood
-flowed in his veins, his soaring ambition was not content even with the
-splendid inheritance that he had received from his ancestors.
-
-In his being were closely blended those elements of religious
-enthusiasm and worldly ambition which had made the men of the Golden
-Age of Islam such irresistible conquerors and such mighty rulers of
-men. He had pondered over the past history of his faith and his people
-from the times of the Prophet down to his own, until he had come to
-believe himself the man chosen by Destiny to subjugate the world, and
-to compel all men, from pole to pole, and east to west, to accept
-the rule and faith of Islam, and to confess the unity of God and the
-apostleship of Mohammed.
-
-He saw in the vast area of the Anglo-Saxon Federation, which now, in
-name at least, dominated Europe, America, and Australasia, only a
-collection of democratic and ill-governed States in which the mob ruled
-by blind counting of heads, and in which religion had been refined into
-a mere philosophy of life and morals, the last word of which seemed to
-him to be: Make the best of to-day, lest to-morrow should never come.
-
-In his own breast the flame of the fierce, uncompromising faith of
-Islam burnt, undimmed by the mists of the centuries that had passed
-since the first Moslem armies had emerged from the deserts of Arabia to
-conquer the greater part of the Roman world.
-
-Why should he not send forth his armies, as the Khalifs of old had
-done, to plant the banner of the Crescent over the subjugated realms of
-Christendom, and rule, the greatest of the Commanders of the Faithful,
-sovereign lord of a Moslem world?
-
-It was a splendid destiny, but there was a power in the world, located
-in one tiny spot of earth, and yet, so far as he knew, universal
-and irresistible, before which the armies which he had called into
-existence would be as helpless as a swarm of locusts before a forest
-fire.
-
-This power possessed the empire of the air, and therefore of the earth.
-In the days of the Terror it had led the Anglo-Saxon race to the
-conquest of the world. Would it sit idly now behind the bulwarks of
-Aeria and watch his armies conquering the domains of Anglo-Saxondom?
-
-Was it not far more likely that those terrible air-ships would be sent
-forth to hurl their destroying lightnings from the skies and overwhelm
-his armies and his cities in irretrievable ruin? These Aerians had
-ruled the world for a hundred and twenty-five years, and yet had
-committed no act of aggression upon the rightful liberties of any
-nation. How, therefore, could he believe that they would hold their
-mighty hand while he carried fire and sword through the habitations of
-their blood and kindred?
-
-If he gave the word for war, within forty-eight hours after he had
-spoken more than ten millions of men, armed with weapons of fearful
-precision and destructive power, would stand ready to do his bidding
-and to carry the banner of the Crescent to the uttermost ends of the
-earth; but of what use would be their numbers, their valour, or their
-devotion with a squadron of aerial cruisers wheeling above them and
-hurling death and destruction upon them from the inaccessible heights
-of the sky?
-
-He remembered how his ancestor Mohammed Reshad had been stopped in his
-career of conquest, and how his victorious armies had been decimated
-and thrown into confusion by a flotilla of air-ships and war-balloons
-which a dozen cruisers of the present Aerian navy would have swept
-from the skies in a few minutes. Intolerable as the thought was to his
-haughty soul, the truth remained that, in the midst of all his power
-and splendour, he was as helpless as a child before the real masters of
-the world. He had armies and fleets, but he could not make war without
-their permission or the assurance of their neutrality, save with the
-certainty of disaster and defeat.
-
-What would he not give for a squadron of these aerial battleships? Half
-his empire, willingly, and yet he knew that even an attempt to build a
-single air-ship would be the signal for his own death and the end of
-the dominion of his dynasty.
-
-He had no knowledge of the momentous events which had just been taking
-place on the other side of the world. He still believed implicitly
-in the unquestioned supremacy of the Aerians throughout the domain
-of the skies, although he was well aware that some mysterious power
-had successfully disputed with them the command of the seas, and he
-remembered the stern threat of immediate war and annihilation that the
-President of Aeria had promulgated against any who should even help in
-the concealment of the air-ship that had been lost six years before,
-and, so far as the world at large was concerned, had never been heard
-of since.
-
-Anglo-Saxondom, and therefore Christendom, lay at his mercy but for
-this guardian power of the air. Its millions were unarmed and its
-wealth unprotected. Its indolent and luxurious democracies, occupied
-solely with social experiments and the increase of their material
-magnificence, would be crushed almost without resistance by his
-splendidly armed and disciplined legions.
-
-The Crescent would replace the Cross above their temples, and the world
-would be a Moslem planet but for this empire of the air, universal and
-unconquerable, which barred his way to the dominion of the world and
-the final triumph of his faith.
-
-For the hundredth time he had revolved the hopeless dilemma in his
-mind, alternately looking upon the conquests he longed for, and on the
-splendid but useless forces at his command, when a huge, strange shape
-dropped swiftly and silently out of the sky overhead, and, as though in
-answer to the unspoken call of his intense longing, one of those very
-air-ships of which he had been thinking with such angry despair swept
-with a majestic downward sloping curve out of the dusk of the night,
-and ran up close alongside the low parapet of the terrace on which he
-was standing.
-
-It was the first time he had ever seen one of these marvellous vessels,
-which were the talk and the wonder of the world, at such close
-quarters. Paralysed for the moment by mingled curiosity and amazement,
-he recoiled with a startled invocation to the Prophet on his lips, and
-then stood staring at it in silence, wondering whether the strange
-apparition meant the visit of a friend or an enemy.
-
-While he was standing thus the air-ship drifted as silently as a shadow
-over the parapet, and sank gently down until it rested on the marble
-floor of the vast terrace. Then a sliding door opened in the after-part
-of the glass dome which covered the deck from stem to stern, a light
-metal stairway fell from it, and three men richly and yet simply
-dressed descended to the terrace and advanced to where he stood.
-
-Two of them halted at a respectful distance, and the third, a man whose
-dignity of bearing was enhanced by the snowy whiteness of his hair and
-beard, advanced alone, and with a grave and courteous gesture of salute
-said in English, the language of universal intercourse--
-
-“Am I right in believing this to be the palace of his Majesty the
-Sultan?”
-
-It was some moments before Khalid recovered his composure sufficiently
-to answer the question, simple as it was. His wonder was increased
-tenfold when he saw that his visitor from the skies did not wear the
-golden wings which were the insignia of the Aerians.
-
-Was it possible that some other inhabitants of the earth had, in spite
-of the rigid prohibition of the Supreme Council, managed to build an
-aerial navy? His heart leapt with exultation at the thought. Obeying
-the impulse of the moment, he took a stride forward and held out his
-hand, saying--
-
-“I know not who you are, or whence you come, but if you come in
-friendship there is my hand in welcome. This is the palace, and I am
-Khalid, the Commander of the Faithful. What is your errand?”
-
-His visitor took the outstretched hand, and, bending low over it,
-replied in a tone of the deepest respect--
-
-“I am honoured and fortunate beyond measure! I trust your Majesty will
-pardon the strangeness of my coming for the importance of the mission
-that brings me.”
-
-“Say on, sir, and tell me freely who you are and what your mission is,
-for I am all impatience to know,” said the Sultan, speaking even more
-cordially than before.
-
-“I am Orloff Lossenski,” replied the ambassador from the skies, “and I
-am the bearer of a message from my mistress, Olga Romanoff, by right of
-descent Tsarina of the Russias, and deprived of her lawful rights of
-rule by the Terrorists who reign in Aeria.”
-
-“Then you are enemies of the Aerians?” broke in the Sultan, “and you
-possess air-ships like that marvellous craft yonder! How have you--but
-pardon me, I have interrupted you. You can satisfy my curiosity later
-on.”
-
-“Her Majesty, my mistress, possesses a large fleet of air-ships, of
-which this is one,” replied Lossenski, “and she has sent me as her
-envoy to give your Majesty this letter which will explain my mission in
-full. At this hour to-morrow night the Tsarina will come in person to
-receive your answer to it.”
-
-As he spoke he presented a letter to the Sultan, and then drew back a
-pace. Khalid took the missive without a word and walked towards one of
-the electric lamps with which the terrace was lighted, breaking the
-seal as he went. This is what he read--
-
- To Khalid the Magnificent,
- Sultan of the Moslems.
-
- You have dreams of world-wide conquest, but the fear of the power of
- the Aerians restrains you from putting them into action. You command
- armies and fleets, but they are useless and helpless because you
- cannot fight in the air as well as on land and sea.
-
- I can give you the power of doing this, and I will help you to the
- conquest of the world if you will help me to regain the dominions
- that were stolen from my ancestors in the days of the Terror.
-
- Twenty-four hours after you receive this I will come for your answer
- to it. If you agree to the general terms I have no fear but that the
- details will be easily arranged between us. This is brought to you by
- Orloff Lossenski, my chief counsellor and responsible minister, who,
- at your Majesty’s desire, will lay the particulars of my proposals
- before you in full.
-
- OLGA ROMANOFF,
- Tsarina of the Russias.
-
-Hardly had the Sultan finished the perusal of this strangely curt and
-yet all-pregnant letter when a cry from Lossenski’s two attendants
-caused him to look up. If what he had seen but a few minutes before had
-amazed him, what he saw now fairly stupefied him. A second air-ship,
-similar in size and shape to the first, but with a hull of a strangely
-lustrous blue metal, had dropped without sign or sound out of space,
-and was hovering exactly above Lossenski’s vessel with her ten long
-slender guns pointing in all directions.
-
-A moment later she seemed to drop bodily on to the Russian air-ship,
-splintering her thin steel masts with the weight of her hull, and yet
-stopping in her descent before she crushed in the glass dome of the
-deck. The next instant a score of men slipped swiftly over the side and
-gained the open door of the Russians’ deck-chamber. Then there came a
-sound of fierce cries and oaths, and the quick crackling reports of
-repeating pistols.
-
-The envoy’s two companions turned as though to fly, but two shots fired
-in quick succession brought them down before they had made a couple
-of strides. Then a dozen men leapt down upon the terrace and covered
-Lossenski and the Sultan with their pistols before they had time to
-recover from the stupefaction into which the suddenness of the attack
-had thrown them.
-
-The next moment a man, whose splendid stature raised him a good head
-above the Russian and the Moslem, came down the steps from the deck of
-the now captured air-ship. As he advanced towards them Khalid, brave
-and haughty as he was, looked up at him almost as he might have looked
-upon the visible shape of one of the angels of his faith.
-
-He was dressed in the Aeria costume, save for the fact that, instead of
-azurine and gold, his winged coronet was black and lustrous as polished
-jet. In his left hand he carried a magazine pistol, and in his right
-a long slender rapier with a blade of azurine that gleamed with an
-intense blue radiance in the light of the electric lamps.
-
-“Orloff Lossenski, you are our prisoner! Go back to your ship or you
-will be shot where you stand. Sultan Khalid, have you received that
-letter in your hand from this man?”
-
-Alan’s words came quick and stern, but before they were spoken the
-Sultan had put a golden whistle to his lips and blown a shrill call, in
-instant obedience to which a stream of armed guards issued from a door
-of the palace opening on to the terrace, spread out into a semi-circle,
-and in turn Alan and his companions were covered by a hundred rifles.
-
-“Now, sir, whoever you are,” exclaimed the Sultan, recovering at once
-his courage and his composure, “you are _my_ prisoner! Throw down your
-arms, or”--
-
-“Stop!” cried Alan, in a voice that rang clearly over the whole
-terrace. “Don’t you see that your palace is under our guns? Fire a
-shot, and in an hour it shall be a heap of ruins.”
-
-Khalid had forgotten the air-ships for the moment. He glanced up at the
-two rows of guns, and saw in the lighted interiors of the deck-chambers
-men standing ready to rain death and ruin in every direction.
-
-Lossenski, too, grasped the suddenly changed situation in an instant.
-He knew far better than the Sultan did what would be the effect of
-a discharge of that awful artillery upon the palace and the city,
-and more than this, he saw the hopeless ruin of his mistress’s plans
-that would follow the death of the Sultan. He turned to him with an
-appealing gesture, and said--
-
-“Your Majesty, for the sake of all you hold dear, send back your
-guards! I surrender to save you!” and then, with a glare of impotent
-hate at Alan, he turned and walked quickly towards the air-ships.
-
-Nothing could have brought the terrible power of the Aerians home to
-the mind of Khalid the Magnificent more convincingly than the position
-in which he now stood. Absolute master of the greatest empire on earth,
-he stood on the terrace of his own palace, in the midst of his own
-capital, and with thousands of soldiers within call, as helpless as a
-child.
-
-But before he could force the words of surrender from his reluctant
-lips an event occurred which, brave as he was, struck terror to his
-heart. Alan had raised his rapier to command the attention of his men
-at the guns, and the captain of the Sultan’s guards, thinking he was
-going to strike his master, rushed forward and struck at the uplifted
-blade with his scimitar. As the steel rang upon the azurine the
-Damascus blade splintered to the hilt.
-
-With a cry half of rage and half of fear the Moslem whipped a pistol
-out of his sash, but before he could level it the bright blue blade
-descended swiftly, and when its point was within a foot of his
-assailant’s eyes Alan dropped his own pistol and pressed a jewel in the
-centre of his belt-clasp. As he did so a pale blue flame leapt from the
-point of his sword, and the Moslem, without as much as a sigh, dropped
-dead on the floor of the terrace.
-
-“Mashallah!” cried the Sultan, recoiling in ungovernable terror. “What
-are you, man or fiend, that you carry the lightnings in your hand?”
-
-“A man like yourself, Sultan, and one who wishes your Majesty no evil,”
-replied Alan. “I am Alan Arnold, the son of the President of Aeria, and
-therefore your friend, unless you choose to make me your enemy. I am at
-present in command of the cruiser _Ithuriel_, and we have followed that
-Russian vessel for over five thousand miles to find out what his errand
-was. When he landed on your palace we guessed it, I think, pretty
-nearly. Lossenski came to propose an alliance between your Majesty and
-his mistress, Olga Romanoff, did he not?”
-
-Before he replied the Sultan, seeing some of his guards advancing
-again, and being now convinced that resistance was both unnecessary and
-impossible, ordered them to take away the body of their comrade and
-those of the two Russians who had been shot. Then he turned to Alan,
-and said with politeness that was perhaps more Oriental than sincere--
-
-“Pardon my ignorance, Prince of the Air! I did not know that I was
-speaking to the son of one who is above all the kings of the earth.
-That slave deserved his death for raising his arm against your
-Highness. Yes, you are right. The Russian came to me with such a
-proposal from her you name. Here is her letter. She styles herself
-Tsarina of the Russias, but I have never heard her name before. Who is
-she?”
-
-“I will tell your Majesty,” said Alan, taking the letter which the
-Sultan now held out to him without hesitation, “for no one can tell
-you better than I can. She is the last living child of the House
-of Romanoff. She is beautiful beyond description, and evil beyond
-comprehension. She aspires to rule in fact as what she styles herself
-in name, and to bring back the gloom of despotism and oppression on the
-earth.
-
-“She and her accomplices are responsible for that terrorism of the seas
-which has paralysed international commerce for more than five years,
-and they are also in possession of a fleet of about thirty air-ships.
-How they were enabled to construct them there is now no time to
-explain. Suffice it to say that they have them, that they have dared to
-challenge the forces of Aeria to a contest for the empire of the world,
-and that during the fortnight they have been fighting they have had
-very much the worst of it.
-
-“We have practically crippled their sea-power, blown up their submarine
-dockyard, and destroyed about half of their aerial fleet. I tell you
-this in order that you may receive her proposals with your eyes open.
-The course of events has made your Majesty to a great extent the
-arbiter of the destinies of humanity.
-
-“Olga Romanoff knows that you have a splendid army at command, that you
-have illimitable wealth to spend on war material, and that an alliance
-between you would be irresistible. As an independent sovereign it is,
-of course, within your right, as it is within your power, to conclude
-this alliance if you think fit. Do so if you choose; but remember that
-if you do you must assume the tremendous responsibility of plunging the
-whole world into war, and bringing inconceivable desolation upon your
-fellow-creatures. You will be allying yourself with the worst enemies
-of humanity--nay, with the only enemies that humanity has on earth.
-
-“This Olga Romanoff is called by her followers the Syren of the Skies,
-and the name is an apt one, for she is a very syren, armed with arts
-that can charm a man’s heart out of his breast, make him forget his
-duty to himself and his loyalty to his race, and, like Circe of old,
-reduce him to an animal that exists only for the execution of her will
-and the gratification of her desires. I speak with knowledge; for I
-have felt, and through me the world will feel, the terrible force of
-her spells, and I tell you frankly, as man speaking honestly with man,
-that if you make this alliance there will be war between your people
-and mine to the death.
-
-“As far as a single man can do so, you hold the fate of mankind in your
-hand, and within the next forty-eight hours you will decide it. Now I
-have done my duty, and given you such warning as I can. You will answer
-for your decision at the bar of God, and it is not for me to say more.
-
-“Whether we meet again as enemies or not, let us part friends, and let
-me implore you, for the love of God and your kind, to rest content with
-what the Fates have already given you. You have raised the Moslem power
-to a pitch of splendour and dominion far beyond all its former glories.
-You have all that man could ask for”--
-
-“Yes, as a man,” interrupted the Sultan, who up to this point had
-listened with silent attention to Alan’s quick, earnest words. “But not
-all that the Commander of the Faithful may be content with. I know not
-what the religion of your people is, but you know that the laws of mine
-command me, as they command every true Moslem, to plant the banner of
-the Prophet over the habitations of the infidel and to give the enemies
-of the Faith the choice between the sword and the Koran.
-
-“It is not for mere conquest that I have created my armies and my
-fleet. It is in obedience to the commands of Heaven, which has given me
-the means of conquering the earth for Islam.”
-
-Khalid spoke rapidly and fiercely with heaving breast and eyes blazing
-with the lurid light of fanaticism. Alan heard him out in silence. Then
-his hand fell heavily on the Moslem’s shoulder, and holding him at
-arm’s length he looked him straight in the eyes and said, slowly and
-deliberately--
-
-“Sultan, a man’s faith, by whatever name it may be called, is no
-concern of ours. He is responsible for it to his God, and there is an
-end of it. But when you tell me that your faith commands you to force
-it with fire and sword upon the consciences of those who hold another
-creed, then I tell you to your face that you are a fanatic and a
-persecutor.
-
-“Blood enough and to spare has been shed in the wars of creeds, and
-if I believed that you meant to revive the warfare between Cross and
-Crescent, I would strike you dead where you stand, as I struck your
-slave down just now. But I cannot believe it either of you or any other
-enlightened man.
-
-“I am not in any mood to utter empty threats, but I am speaking no
-idle words when I tell you that the hour in which you make war on
-Christendom, either for political or religious conquest, shall be the
-hour in which you will hear the voice of Destiny speaking your own doom.
-
-“More than that, I ask you now to pledge me your word as an honest
-man and a ruling King that for twelve months from now, at the very
-least, you will neither draw a sword nor fire a shot either against
-Anglo-Saxondom or any other Power.”
-
-He stopped, and took his hand from the Sultan’s shoulder. Khalid
-recoiled and drew himself up to the full height of his royal stature as
-he replied--
-
-“Prince of the Air--demi-god almost as you are--you must learn that
-the Commander of the Faithful is not to be dictated to on the roof of
-his own palace, even by you. Am I your slave that you should lay these
-commands upon me?”
-
-Before he made any reply in words Alan communicated a few rapid orders
-to those in command of the two air-ships in the Aerian sign-language.
-The _Ithuriel_ rose from above the _Vindaya_, as the Russian air-ship
-was named, and both vessels ranged themselves alongside the front of
-the terrace. The Sultan watched this manœuvre in helpless silence, well
-knowing that whatever it imported he was powerless to resist. Then Alan
-went on--
-
-“Not my slave, Sultan, but my fellow-man, and as such I will, if I
-can, and by any means within my power, prevent you from committing such
-a colossal crime as that which I am afraid I must now believe you are
-contemplating. Now listen well, for my words mean much.
-
-“Those two air-ships could lay your capital, vast and splendid as it
-is, in ruins before to-morrow’s sun rises, and as surely as those stars
-are shining above us they shall do so unless you give me the pledge I
-ask for. I ask it in the name of all humanity, and I will not spare a
-few thousands of lives to enforce it.”
-
-“If you could!” ejaculated the Sultan, half involuntarily. “I have
-heard much of your wonderful air-ships, but do you know that I have a
-hundred thousand soldiers in the city, and that I have hundreds of guns
-which will hurl their projectiles for miles into the air? If only one
-of the hundreds struck either of those vessels of yours, she would fall
-like a stone and be dashed to pieces on the earth. The fighting would
-not be all on one side.”
-
-His tone grew more and more defiant as he went on, and Alan saw that
-some stern lesson would be necessary to induce him to give the pledge
-upon which the safety of millions depended. In quiet, even tones, that
-contrasted strongly with those of the Moslem, he said--
-
-“We of Aeria are not accustomed to boast our prowess lightly, and I
-am threatening nothing that I cannot do. Still, I do not wish you to
-give the pledge I ask save in the fullest knowledge. If you will trust
-yourself with me on board the _Ithuriel_ for an hour under my pledge of
-your safe return I will prove to you to demonstration that your city
-would be as defenceless beneath our guns as a collection of tents would
-be. The moon is high enough now to give us plenty of light for the
-experiment if you think fit to make it.”
-
-The Sultan hesitated for a few moments, as though in doubt whether
-he would be permitted to return if he once allowed the _Ithuriel_ to
-carry him away from the earth. Then he remembered that no man had ever
-known the Aerian who had broken his word. He looked into Alan’s strong,
-frank face, and read there an absolute assurance that his safety would
-be respected. Then, with a slight inclination of his head, he said--
-
-“Your words are wise. I will come, and if you convince me that you can
-do as you say I will swear by the holy name of the Prophet that I will
-make no war upon any man for a year from now.”
-
-Alan signalled to the _Ithuriel_, which ran in close to the terrace.
-The door of the deck-chamber opened, a gangway was run out, and for the
-first time in his life Sultan Khalid trod the deck of a cruiser of the
-air. The _Ithuriel_ and the _Vindaya_ at once mounted up into the now
-brightly moonlit atmosphere.
-
-The Sultan saw the myriad lights of his splendid capital sink swiftly
-down into a vast abyss that seemed to open beneath him. The dim horizon
-widened out until it enclosed an immense expanse of pale grey desert to
-the south, while to the north a dark stretch of sea spread out farther
-than the eye could reach. Up and up the air-ships soared until the
-lights of Alexandria glimmered like a faint white mist at the bottom of
-a seemingly unfathomable gulf. At length Alan, who was standing beside
-him, pointed down and said--
-
-“There is your city. If I gave the word, a hundred shells a minute
-would be rained on to it from here. Do you think your guns could reach
-us?”
-
-“No,” said the Sultan, striving in vain to repress a shudder at the
-fearful prospect disclosed by Alan’s words. “But how could your shells
-strike that little patch of light which is miles away, and thousands of
-feet below us?”
-
-“That, too, I will prove to you, but not at the expense of your city.”
-
-He sent an order to the engine-room, and the _Ithuriel_ swerved round
-to the northward and, followed by the _Vindaya_, swept out over the
-Mediterranean, in the direction of Crete.
-
-Half an hour’s flight at full speed brought them in sight of a small
-rocky islet which showed like a black spot on the surface of the
-moonlit sea. The two air-ships were stopped six thousand feet above
-the water, and about four miles from the heap of rocks. Alan then gave
-orders for each of the ships to train four guns upon it.
-
-“Now,” he said to the Sultan, “fix your glass on that mass of rocks
-down yonder and watch what happens.”
-
-As he spoke he raised his hand and the eight guns were discharged
-simultaneously. The Sultan heard no report and saw no flash, but a few
-seconds later he saw through the night glasses that Alan had given him
-a vast mass of flame of dazzling brilliancy burst out over the islet,
-covering it completely, for the moment, with a mist of fire.
-
-“Now you shall see the effects of our shells,” said Alan. The two
-vessels sank rapidly down in a slanting direction towards the spot
-where the projectiles had struck. A hundred feet from the surface of
-the water they stopped, and Alan said--
-
-“Now look for the island.”
-
-Khalid swept the sea with his glass. The islet had vanished, the waves
-were breaking over what seemed to be a sunken reef, and that was all.
-With hands that trembled, in spite of all that he could do to keep them
-steady, he took the glass from his eyes, saying in a voice that was
-shaken by irresistible emotion--
-
-“God is great, and I am but a man, while you are as demigods. It is
-enough! I will give the pledge you ask for.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII. AN UNHOLY ALLIANCE.
-
-
-WITHIN a couple of hours after the destruction of the islet Sultan
-Khalid was back in his palace, and the _Ithuriel_ and the _Vindaya_ had
-departed with their prisoners of war for Kerguelen.
-
-Alan, quite content with the advantage he had gained by obtaining the
-Sultan’s pledge of peace for a year, in comparison with which even the
-capture of one of the Russian air-ships was of trifling importance, had
-determined not to run the needless risk of an encounter with Olga’s
-fleet, for he had learnt the strength of it from Lossenski, and saw
-that it would be madness to attack it.
-
-Added to this there was far more important work in hand for him to
-do, for it was absolutely imperative that a full report of what he
-had discovered with regard to the proposed alliance between Olga and
-the Sultan should be laid before the Council with as little delay as
-possible, for if it ever became an accomplished fact it could not fail
-to enormously complicate the coming struggle for the mastery of the
-world.
-
-Therefore, as soon as he had placed a prize crew on board the
-_Vindaya_, under the command of Alexis, he gave orders for the two
-air-ships to proceed southward at full speed, having bidden the Sultan
-farewell on the terrace of his palace, and left him to draw what moral
-he could from the brief but startling experience that the midnight
-hours had brought him.
-
-A few minutes before twelve on the following night the inhabitants of
-Alexandria were thrown into a state of the most intense excitement by a
-marvellous appearance in the southern heavens. Long streams of light,
-which in power and brilliancy excelled even the great electric suns
-with which the city was lighted, shot down out of the skies, flashing
-hither and thither, and sweeping the earth below it in vast curves of
-radiance.
-
-Now they streamed out in a huge fan of endless horizontal rays which
-seemed to reach to the horizon, and now they crossed each other in
-a network of beams, changing their positions with a rapidity which
-dazzled and bewildered the beholders. Then they were projected
-vertically to the zenith as though challenging the stars, and then they
-blazed straight down upon the earth, bringing into strong relief of
-light and shadow everything they fell upon.
-
-Instantly the spacious streets were crowded with excited throngs
-of people, and millions of eyes were cast heavenwards watching the
-approach of the Syren and her aerial squadron.
-
-The twenty air-ships swept up out of the south at a speed of about
-a hundred miles an hour in the form of a wide crescent, with the
-_Revenge_ in the centre. They slowed down as they neared the city,
-and the concentrated blaze of their lights soon fell upon the
-Sultan’s palace, the magnificent proportions of which distinguished
-it conspicuously even from the thousands of splendid edifices which
-adorned the Moslem metropolis.
-
-Then, still keeping their relative positions with perfect accuracy, the
-winged vessels sank downwards and wheeled round until they faced the
-eastern terrace on which stood the Sultan with his Grand Vizier and
-the chief officers of his household, awaiting the coming of his aerial
-visitors.
-
-The flotilla stopped a hundred feet from the terrace. Its search-lights
-were extinguished, but the strange and beautiful shapes of the cruisers
-of the air stood out sharply defined against the bright background
-formed by the myriad lights of the city.
-
-The _Revenge_, flying the long vanished Imperial Standard of Russia,
-with its crowned black eagle on a broad ground of gold, at the mizzen,
-the white flag of peace at the main, and the Star and Crescent of the
-Moslem Empire at the fore, floated slowly forward till her shining ram
-projected over the parapet and her three keels rested lightly upon it.
-
-Then one of the forward doors of the deck-chamber was drawn back by
-some invisible agency, and the Sultan saw standing in the opening such
-a vision of loveliness as he had never imagined even in his dreams of
-the houris of Paradise. Clothed, according to her invariable custom,
-in a plain clinging robe of royal purple, with no other ornament than
-a coronet, consisting of a plain broad band of gold from which rose
-above her temples two wings of silver filigree thickly encrusted with
-diamonds, Olga Romanoff stood upon the deck of her flagship the perfect
-incarnation of royal dignity and womanly beauty.
-
-Khalid, who had advanced to the parapet as the squadron approached,
-saw instantly that this could be none other than the woman whom Alan
-Arnold had described as beautiful beyond description and evil beyond
-comprehension. Few men had seen so many beautiful women as he had, and
-there were scores of them waiting in his harem for the favouring glance
-that none could win from him; but no sooner did his upward glance rest
-upon the vision that was looking down upon him from the doorway of the
-deck-chamber of the _Revenge_ than his eyes fell and his head bowed
-in the involuntary homage that the supreme beauty of such a woman has
-always claimed from such a man.
-
-Evil she might be, but evil in such a shape might be something more
-than good in the eyes of some men, and of these Khalid the Magnificent
-was one. His hot Arab blood was aflame the instant that he looked upon
-her intoxicating loveliness, and half her errand was accomplished
-before a word had passed between them.
-
-She returned his greeting with a gracious inclination of her
-wing-crowned head, and as she did so he said--
-
-“The Tsarina is welcome! My house and all that is in it is hers if she
-will honour me by entering it, for she will make it more beautiful by
-her presence.”
-
-“Your Majesty’s welcome is sweet in my ears,” she answered, almost
-insensibly adopting his Oriental style of speech, “for I come as a
-friend and I hope to go as an ally.”
-
-The gangway stairs dropped as she spoke, and as they did so the Sultan
-made a sign and a pair of attendants brought forward some steps covered
-with crimson velvet, which they placed so that she could descend from
-the parapet, to which the Sultan himself ascended to meet her as she
-came down. Taking her hand on the parapet, he led her down to the
-terrace with the grace of a king and the deference of a courtier. Then
-he bent low over her hand and kissed it, and as he did so the attendant
-officers of his empire bowed in silent and respectful salutation.
-
-Olga was at once conducted to one of the state apartments of the palace
-in which the Sultan was wont to receive his most distinguished guests.
-She was treated with even more respect than would have been accorded to
-one of the crowned monarchs of the earth, for not only her wonderful
-beauty and royal carriage, but the marvellous manner of her coming and
-the tremendous power represented by the flotilla of air-ships inspired
-both the Sultan and his subjects with a deference that amounted almost
-to homage.
-
-Then, too, the mystery and romance which invested her name and family
-and fortune distinguished her as a woman apart from all other women
-in the world. It might be, as Alan had told the Sultan, that she was
-really the enemy of the human race, that her true object was to destroy
-the peace of the world, and rekindle the fires of war on earth, but
-still the present romance was stronger than the future, and possibly
-problematical, reality, and so it would hardly be too much to say that
-Olga had succeeded in removing the impression left by Alan on Khalid’s
-mind before she had been an hour under his roof.
-
-She naturally expected that one of the first to receive her would be
-the ambassador who had preceded her, but, after looking anxiously for
-him and not finding him either on the terrace or in the reception-room,
-she turned to Khalid and said--
-
-“I do not see my ambassador here, and yet he must have arrived, since
-your Majesty tells me that you have been expecting me.”
-
-The Sultan’s face darkened, and his brows slightly contracted, as he
-replied--
-
-“Tsarina, I have been waiting for an opportunity to tell you what
-cannot but be unwelcome news. Your ambassador, Orloff Lossenski, is not
-here”--
-
-“What!” cried Olga, half rising from her seat, “not here! Surely he has
-not presumed to leave before my arrival? I can hardly believe that of
-him.”
-
-“He has gone, nevertheless,” said the Sultan, “though not by his will
-or mine, I can assure you. Scarcely had his vessel alighted on the
-terrace yonder, and he had disembarked, when an Aerian cruiser dropped
-down as silently as a shadow from the skies.
-
-“Whence it came I know not, but it would seem that these Aerians see
-everything, and that their hands reach everywhere. In a moment she had
-dropped upon your ambassador’s vessel, splintering her masts, and yet
-so softly did she alight that the glass dome was not broken. Then her
-crew streamed out of the doors of the deck-chamber, and the next I knew
-was that your ambassador and I were covered by half a score of pistols
-and rifles and commanded to stand still on pain of death.
-
-“Then Alan Arnold alighted, forced your envoy to surrender, struck
-one of my guards dead by some mysterious lightning that flashed from
-his sword, and, after carrying me away into the air over the sea and
-blasting a rock out of the waters to prove to me the power of his guns,
-brought me back honourably and in safety to await your coming. Truly
-these Aerians are more as gods than men!”
-
-Furious as the unexpected tidings made her, Olga yet managed to
-restrain her anger sufficiently to reply with wonderful coolness--
-
-“Your Majesty gives me sad and bitter news; but it is the fortune of
-war, and I must not complain. The air-ship that is taken by surprise
-is lost, and Orloff Lossenski fell a victim to his own carelessness.”
-
-Then her mood changed swiftly, and a soft and musical laugh came from
-her smiling lips as she went on--
-
-“But it is a poor revenge, after all. That same Alan Arnold, the son of
-the great President of Aeria, was my would-be lover and slave for over
-five years. For my sake he turned traitor to his name and race, gave
-up the _Revenge_ to me and told me all the jealously-guarded secrets
-of aerial navigation. He killed my brother in a quarrel, but he was
-useful, so I let him live--a prisoner of war, till I had done with him.
-Then I set him free, when, perhaps, I ought to have kept him safe, to
-go and tell his people what a fool I had made of him. I suppose he did
-not tell your Majesty that?”
-
-“No,” laughed Khalid in reply, wondering what magic she had used to
-accomplish so marvellous a charm, “he did not. But such a miracle
-proves that you have been truly named the Syren of the Skies, as he
-said you are, for no other woman could have worked such a wonder and
-disputed the empire of the air with the masters of the world.”
-
-“That is true,” replied Olga, lowering her voice to a tone of intense
-earnestness, “and the fact that I did it single-handed proves, I hope,
-that with good friends and true allies I can do more than dispute that
-empire with the Aerians, these despots of peace who have made the world
-a paradise of the commonplace, and fettered all strongest and most
-aspiring spirits so that they might be equal with the coward and the
-fool.
-
-“But those are matters which I would discuss with your Majesty in
-private, and it is too late in the night to go into them now. You tell
-me that Alan Arnold has shown you what his air-ships can do. If your
-Majesty will honour the _Revenge_ by being my guest for to-morrow I
-will show you that mine are in nowise inferior to them.
-
-“Indeed, as I have told you, the _Revenge_ is an Aerian ship, built in
-the enchanted land of Aeria, and if you will to-morrow she shall carry
-you over the whole of your dominions, and after that over those other
-dominions that shall be yours if you approve the plans that I will lay
-before you.”
-
-She paused and looked at Khalid with cheeks glowing and eyes shining
-with enthusiasm and passion. He returned her glance with one no less
-fiery and passionate as he replied--
-
-“I will be your guest, as you say, but the honour and the favour will
-be to me, your Majesty--for Majesty you are, crowned by the hand of
-favouring Nature with that which makes all men your subjects. Your
-air-ships shall rest in the garden of my palace to-night, and an hour
-after sunrise you shall find me ready for another journey to the
-skies, for my first experience has given me a taste for more. Till
-then farewell. The memory of your eyes will make me dream of Paradise
-to-night!”
-
-There was that in his tone which told Olga that his words meant more
-than a neatly turned Oriental compliment, and as he stooped and kissed
-her hand in leave-taking she said half in jest and half in earnest--
-
-“And I shall dream of the nearer glories of the world-empire which your
-Majesty and I may in the not very distant future divide between us.”
-
-“Or share together!” said Khalid in his soul, as he raised his head
-again and their eyes met.
-
-At the appointed time the next morning the squadron rose into the air
-from the palace gardens. In order to produce as widespread an effect
-as possible, Olga had extended her invitation to the Grand Vizier
-and about a score of the Sultan’s highest officials, including the
-commanders of his armies and fleets who happened to be in Alexandria
-at the time. These were distributed among the twenty air-ships, but
-Olga took care to arrange matters so that only the Grand Vizier should
-accompany the Sultan on board the _Revenge_.
-
-In order that the Vizier, who was a cool-headed, wary, far-seeing man
-of nearly seventy, and therefore beyond the power of her own personal
-spells, might not interfere with her designs upon his master, she lost
-no time in placing him under the power of the drug which she had
-already used with such disastrous results to the world.
-
-Although he had said nothing about it, she felt certain that Khalid
-must have been warned by Alan of the danger of taking anything to eat
-or drink from her hands, and therefore she had decided to make no
-attempt upon his liberty of will, unless it became absolutely necessary
-to do so; but the Vizier was easily taken unawares, and she had little
-difficulty in causing him to drink a cup of coffee while her chief
-engineer was explaining the working of the machinery to the Sultan in
-the engine-room.
-
-The coffee, of course, contained a sufficient quantity of the drug to
-deprive the Vizier of all power of opposing her will or resisting her
-suggestions for many hours to come. So far as all independent advice
-was concerned, he was safely disposed of.
-
-The air-ships rose to an elevation of some two thousand feet, and at
-a speed of two hundred miles an hour ran first along the valley of
-the Nile to the southward. At Khartoum they swerved to the eastward,
-crossed the mountains of the Red Sea littoral at a height of nine
-thousand feet, then sank again and skirted the Arabian coast until
-Mecca, the sacred city of Islam, came in sight.
-
-The ancient temple of the Kaaba, containing the tomb of the Prophet,
-still stood, almost unchanged by the hand of time, amid the splendid
-buildings, verdant gardens, and long groves of palms with which the new
-Mecca of the twenty-first century was adorned. Pointing down towards
-it, Olga said to the Sultan, who was standing by her side on the deck,
-dazzled by the splendours of the swiftly-changing prospects of the
-scene below--
-
-“There is the Holy City, which your Majesty may some day make the
-religious capital of the world. That would be an achievement worthy of
-the Commander of the Faithful and the descendant of the Prophet, would
-it not?”
-
-Khalid looked down at the city, over which they were now speeding in
-the direction of Medinah, and was silent for a few moments; then he
-raised his eyes to hers and said--
-
-“Even so; but have you counted the cost of achieving it to me and my
-people? Before the banner of the Crescent could float over a world-wide
-empire of Islam we should have to triumph in a war which would involve
-the whole human race, and this means that we should first have to
-destroy those who have been lords of the earth and of the air for more
-than a century.”
-
-“The Aerians are but men,” said Olga, a trifle coldly. “Why should your
-Majesty fear them if you are armed with the same weapons that they
-wield? I suppose Alan Arnold has threatened you and your people with
-nothing less than annihilation should you conclude this alliance with
-me? But why should you fear? I have met the Aerians in battle, and you
-see I am not annihilated.”
-
-“I do not fear them as personal enemies,” replied Khalid proudly, “but
-only as the possible destroyers of my people, who would be defenceless
-against them. Think of the destruction you could rain upon the sacred
-city down yonder, while it could strike no blow in return. That would
-be the fate of Alexandria and all the capitals of my empire, and while
-my armies were marching to the conquest of Christendom our homes would
-be laid in ruins and our wives and children slain without mercy.
-
-“Show me,” he continued, speaking more earnestly and rapidly, “how they
-are to be protected against this, and our alliance may become possible.”
-
-“It is purely a matter of relative strength,” replied Olga. “Do you
-know why this squadron of mine is allowed to pursue its way unmolested,
-although the Aerians know of its existence? It is because, although,
-as Alan Arnold truly told you, by superior skill and experience in
-handling their ships they have been able to destroy about half my
-fleet, I am still stronger in the air than they are, and they know that
-we have now gained the experience which we lacked.
-
-“They have only three vessels, counting the one you saw captured, as
-swift and powerful as this, while I have twenty-six. None of their
-smaller vessels dare venture within reach of my guns, for to do so
-would be to meet certain destruction. They are doubtless building
-others as strong and swift as these in preparation for the struggle
-which they know must come. But if we join hands against them we shall
-be stronger than they will be when the year of your truce is ended.
-
-“My engineers shall teach yours how to build air-ships in all respects
-equal to these, and submarine cruisers, a dozen of which could destroy
-your present navies in a day. With all the resources of your empire
-at command, you could possess in a year from now an aerial navy of a
-thousand ships and a sea fleet of equal strength.
-
-“Then you would be strong enough to sweep the seas from pole to pole,
-and to storm the mountain battlements of Aeria itself. You must not
-forget that what the Aerians could do to your cities you could do to
-Aeria and to all the capitals of Christendom. City for city, you could
-take your revenge, until”--
-
-“Until the whole earth was laid waste and the habitations of men were
-desolate,” broke in Khalid, overwhelmed by the horror of the prospect.
-“It is too great a price to pay, even for the empire of the world and
-the supremacy of Islam, even if we survived the ruin that we should
-have brought upon the world.”
-
-“Too great if there were any need to pay it,” said Olga quickly, seeing
-that her lust of conquest and revenge had carried her too far. “But
-matters will never come to such a pass as that.
-
-“Our battlefields will be the countries that we shall invade and
-conquer, not our own, and enough air-ships can be devoted to the
-defence of your cities to repel any attack the Aerians may make upon
-them. Your Majesty must not forget, too, that they will not dare to
-send any very large force away from Aeria, for they well know that the
-final battle for the possession of the earth will have to be fought out
-round the summits of its mountains.”
-
-“You are right and I was wrong, Tsarina,” said the Sultan in an altered
-tone, “and the Prophet has said of the infidel, ‘Such as are stubborn
-and refuse the true faith ye shall slay without mercy. Kill them
-wherever ye find them’--but alas”--
-
-He stopped suddenly and looked at her, and she could see a smile
-moving his lips under his black beard and moustache. She divined
-instantly what was passing in his mind, and saw the opportunity for a
-stroke of diplomacy which, base as it was, she made without a moment’s
-hesitation. Before he could continue, she turned and faced him, looking
-into his eyes with a glance that dazzled him, and said in a low, quick,
-earnest tone--
-
-“I know what you would say, Sultan Khalid. You would say that I and my
-people are infidels in your eyes, and therefore worthy of destruction.
-I have thought of that--but the deck is too public a place for the
-discussion of such a matter. Call your Vizier and we will retire to my
-own saloon and talk of it there.”
-
-Khalid obeyed, wondering what was coming next from the lips of the
-Syren whose fatal beauty of person and subtlety of mind were luring
-him on to plunge into an ocean of blood of which no human eyes could
-see the further shore--if it had one at all--and as soon as the three
-were seated in the room, which had once been Alan’s, Olga, addressing
-the Vizier first, rapidly but very clearly sketched out the project
-that had been suggested to her by Lossenski, and then, turning to the
-Sultan, she said--
-
-“There seems now but one real bar to such an alliance, and that is the
-difference in our faiths, or, I should rather say, in our creeds. I
-have not ignored this; nay, I have pondered it deeply and earnestly.
-Creeds change with times, and Russia, like the rest of Europe, has now
-no real, living faith like yours. But you shall give it to them if
-you wish, and the day that I am proclaimed Empress of the Russias the
-Crescent shall shine on the towers of the Kremlin.”
-
-“What do I hear?” cried Khalid, springing to his feet in amazement at
-her astounding words; “you and your people will accept the Koran and
-acknowledge the Prophet?”
-
-“I will and they shall,” said Olga calmly and firmly, committing
-herself to the huge apostasy without a tremor in her voice. “Remember,
-too, that millions who should by right be my subjects in Asia are
-already good Moslems. If the Russians refuse to obey me in this
-they will be rebels, and you shall do with them as you will do with
-the other peoples of Christendom if they remain stubborn. Let your
-Majesty’s chief minister and favourite counsellor speak and say whether
-or not I have spoken fairly.”
-
-“Speak, Musa al Ghazi!” said the Sultan, in a voice that betrayed
-intense emotion, “and weigh your words well, for many and great issues
-may depend upon them.”
-
-“Commander of the Faithful!” said the old man, speaking slowly and
-with some hesitation, as though he were repeating a lesson hardly yet
-learnt, “I can speak but the words that my soul echoes from without. A
-strange power has seemed to take possession of me, and I speak as one
-to whom another has taught what he should say.
-
-“Yet the words seem wise to me, and I will speak them, lest, not doing
-so, I should have to answer for my negligence. If it is written that
-you shall be the one chosen of Heaven to plant the Crescent where
-now falls the shadow of the Cross, and reign supreme, sole lord of a
-Moslem world, then have the means been sent to you by the hand of her
-who gives you the means of measuring strength with the masters of the
-nations, by whose pleasure we possess that which we have, and without
-whose countenance your Majesty would not much longer remain Commander
-of the Faithful.
-
-“I would not willingly speak words of offence, but it is necessary to
-recognise that the Moslem practises his faith only by permission of
-those who, if they hold any, hold another.”
-
-“By the Beard of the Prophet, thou hast said it, Musa! I am a King
-by permission, a High Priest of Islam by sufferance of the infidel!”
-exclaimed Khalid, as the hot blood rushed to his swarthy cheeks and the
-fire of fanaticism leapt into his eyes.
-
-“But I will be so mean a thing no longer than the time of the truce to
-which I have pledged my word. In the blood of the infidel I will wipe
-out this shame on Islam, yea, though the whole earth shall be drenched
-with the blood and tears that shall be licked up by the fires of war.
-It is my destiny, and I will do it, or my name shall perish from the
-earth for ever!
-
-“Tsarina Olga, I have seen and heard enough. Let us return to my palace
-and arrange the terms of our alliance; and when you have sworn upon
-the Koran that you will take Allah for your God and Mohammed for your
-Prophet, I will sign them, and together we will conquer the world for
-Islam. It is kismet, and that which is written shall be done!”
-
-Olga looked upon the splendid figure of the Sultan as he stood before
-her, his athletic form dilated and his face glorified by the passion of
-religious fervour that was burning within him, and as she did so a new
-light dawned upon her. She saw that this strong, fiery soul might some
-day conquer even hers, and fuse it into itself.
-
-It would be an unholy union, a love bought with apostasy from her faith
-and sealed with treachery to her people and the trust that she had
-inherited from her forefathers; but what were apostasy and treachery to
-her now that the love she had stained her soul with blood and untold
-crime to win was lost to her for ever?
-
-Earthly pomp and power, the pomp of imperial rule and the power
-of life and death, of happiness and misery, over millions of her
-fellow-creatures were well worth living for, and with them might come
-love again, or if not love, then passion, fierce and all-consuming, for
-this one king of earth who dared to be a king in fact as well as in
-name, and then--Before she could make any reply to the Sultan’s words,
-the slow, measured tones of the Vizier sounded again, saying--
-
-“If I may speak again, Majesties”--
-
-“Say on, good Musa!” said the Sultan, “for so far thou hast spoken the
-words of wisdom.”
-
-“I would say,” continued the old man, “that even as the winged steed
-Alborak bore the Prophet from earth to the Seventh Heaven, so may it
-be written that the winged ship of Tsarina Olga shall bear thee, my
-Master, into that Paradise of love which so far thou hast sought and
-not found.”
-
-“What say you, well-named Syren of the Skies, to that?” said Khalid,
-taking a step towards the couch on which Olga was sitting, and making a
-half-appealing gesture with both his hands.
-
-She rose to her feet and faced him. One look into his passion-lighted
-eyes told her that the victory was already won, and that strength could
-now give place to softness. She dropped her eyes before his burning
-gaze, and, crossing her hands upon her bosom with a pretty semblance of
-submission, said, in a low, sweet tone that he heard now for the first
-time--
-
-“All things are possible, and if this be possible, then more than
-Cleopatra lost for Antony I will win for you, and you shall reign sole
-Cæsar of a subject world. As for me, when that comes to pass, let it be
-to me as it shall seem good in the eyes of my lord the King!”
-
-And so saying she bowed slightly before him and turned and passed out
-of the saloon, seeing the vision of him whom she had loved in vain
-through the mist of tears which rose in that instant to her eyes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII. A MOMENTOUS COMMISSION.
-
-
-TWELVE hours after they had left the Sultan on the terrace of his
-palace, the _Ithuriel_ and the _Vindaya_ dropped through the clouds on
-to the snow-covered surface of Kerguelen Island, and within an hour
-the despatch-vessel _Vega_ was speeding away north-westward to Aeria
-with a full account of the results achieved by the first cruise of the
-_Ithuriel_.
-
-The twenty-four hours which would have to elapse before the reply of
-the Council could be received were employed in repairing the damage
-done to the _Vindaya_, and in renewing the motive-power and ammunition
-of both vessels. Sundry small but effective improvements in the
-mechanism and appointments of the _Vindaya_ were also made, and last,
-but by no means least important, the name of the prize was changed.
-
-“You are henceforth her commander, old fellow,” said Alan to Alexis
-when the question of the new name came up, “and therefore it is for you
-to say what her name shall be.”
-
-“I knew you would say that,” replied Alexis, his grave, thoughtful face
-lighting up with a quick flush and an almost boyish smile, “and, of
-course, I needn’t tell you what name I should like above all things to
-give her, but, then, you see”--
-
-“I see nothing but a quite unaccountable embarrassment written
-largely upon those ingenuous features of yours, my blushing Achates,”
-interrupted Alan, with a laugh that deepened the color on his friend’s
-cheeks.
-
-“Well, you see, I’m not quite sure whether she would like it under the
-circumstances,” said Alexis hesitatingly.
-
-“I didn’t know that air-ships had any choice in the question of their
-names any more than children have,” said Alan, gravely stroking his
-beard and looking at his friend with a laugh in his eyes.
-
-“Don’t assume a density that the gods have not given you,” laughed
-Alexis in return. “You know very well who the she is to whom I refer.
-Now, suppose you were going to name and command the _Vindaya_, what
-would you call her?”
-
-“I would do as you want to do, my friend,” said Alan, laughing outright
-now, “although, I fear, with more chance of getting snubbed for my
-temerity, and trust to winning forgiveness from the lips of her
-name-mother by good service and hard hitting.”
-
-“Perfectly reasoned!” exclaimed Alexis, “and so henceforth, until I
-have express orders to call her something else--the _Forlorn Hope_,
-for instance--she shall be the _Isma_, and on her decks I will win the
-right to ask--I mean to wear the golden wings again, or else she will
-never cross the confines of Aeria.”
-
-“You will win more than the golden wings, I hope and believe,” said
-Alan, now very serious again, “for you evidently have a better chance
-of forgiveness than I have, though I don’t despair, mind you, for I am
-determined never to go back to Aeria unless I feel that I can fairly
-ask Alma to forgive what is past. And if she refuses I will hunt Olga
-Romanoff to the ends of the earth till I take her alive, and then I
-will carry her to Aeria, and at Alma’s feet I will strike her dead with
-my own hand so that she may know the truth!”
-
-“Amen,” said Alexis, striding forward and taking his hand. “And if Alma
-says ‘No’ to you I will never see Isma’s face again till I have helped
-you to clip the Syren’s wings, and take her to meet her just reward. It
-is a bargain! Between us we will bring these proud damozels to sweet
-reasonableness. Now let us go and get a bottle of sparkling Aerian, and
-rename the _Vindaya_ in proper form.”
-
-Thus it came to pass that when the _Ithuriel_ next took the air her
-consort bore the name that was dearest to her commander’s heart.
-
-The anxiously-expected _Vega_ did not return till nearly thirty hours
-after her departure. The delay proved that the Council had considered
-the tidings that she had brought of great importance, and had therefore
-taken some time to deliberate over them. This turned out to be the
-case, and the decision arrived at by the rulers of Aeria showed that
-they looked upon the crisis as grave in the last degree.
-
-The return despatch stated that within twenty-four hours after the
-arrival of the _Vega_ at Kerguelen a fleet of fifty air-ships would
-be at the disposal of Alan and Alexis, who were ordered to place
-themselves at the head of it and proceed with all speed to Alexandria,
-taking Orloff Lossenski and the other Russian prisoners with them.
-
-Alan was to be the bearer of an ultimatum to the Sultan confirming,
-in the name of the President and Council of Aeria, the provisional
-declaration of war which he had threatened as the result of an alliance
-with Olga Romanoff, and stating that at sunrise on the 16th of May in
-the following year, hostilities would be commenced against him, and
-continued to the point of extermination so far as all men who bore arms
-were concerned.
-
-He was also called upon to order the Russian squadron to leave his
-capital, should it still be there, within two hours. If he refused, or
-if Olga declined to remove her ships, they were to be engaged there and
-then, and, if possible, destroyed at all costs. This latter part of the
-message was to be conveyed to Olga in a different form by the hands of
-Lossenski, who was then to be set at liberty with his fellow-prisoners.
-
-If Olga consented to go within the given time, it would be necessary
-to allow her to depart unmolested, as the superior speed of her ships
-would place the bulk of the Aerian fleet at a hopeless disadvantage in
-a pursuit, and expose it to certain destruction. If she insisted on
-fighting, then, of course, the hazard of battle must be taken, and the
-Council relied upon the commanders of its fleet to do their duty as
-their judgment should point it out to them. No specific terms were to
-be made with Olga and her adherents, but hostilities were, if possible,
-to be avoided until the Sultan’s year of truce had expired, and the new
-Aerian fleet was ready to take the air.
-
-If no fighting took place Alan was to proceed with his squadron to
-London with a third despatch to the King of Britain, as head of the
-Anglo-Saxon Federation, advising him, in the face of the threatening
-danger, to call together the rulers of Anglo-Saxondom and take
-immediate measures for mutual defence against the Moslems in case
-they should invade Europe when the year of truce was up. For this
-purpose arms in any quantities that might be needed would be sent out
-from Aeria, and the Aerians would undertake the task of drilling the
-newly-formed armies and instructing them in the use of the weapons.
-
-In addition to this the necessary works and power-stations for building
-and equipping at least a thousand of the largest air-ships were to
-be established under Aerian control in England, and at the same time
-dockyards were to be set up for the construction of an equal number of
-submarine vessels of the _Narwhal_ type. It was, however, to be made an
-absolute condition of this assistance and protection that the armies
-and aerial and sea navies were to be entirely officered by Aerians, and
-were to be under the unquestioned control of the President of Aeria.
-
-This condition was, for obvious reasons, held by the Council to be
-absolutely essential to success. Divided commands in the face of a foe
-which would obey blindly the orders of a single chief who had already
-shown that he could create armies and fleets of high efficiency, would
-mean inevitable failure and disaster. Therefore the absolute control
-of Anglo-Saxondom must once more be placed in the hands of the Supreme
-Council until the danger was passed and peace was restored, or Aeria
-would fight the battle alone and leave the nations of Anglo-Saxondom to
-their fate.
-
-The immediate effect of the orders brought by the _Vega_ was to throw
-the station of Kerguelen into a state of the most intense activity.
-Alan at once assumed command by common consent, and, assisted by
-Alexis, Admiral Forrest, and Captain Ernstein, got everything in
-readiness for the reception of the coming squadron from Aeria. All
-the defences of the station were also thoroughly inspected, from the
-air-ships floating above the clouds to the submarine mines which
-guarded the entrances to the harbours, and a general plan of the now
-inevitable campaign was sketched out at a council of war held on the
-evening of the _Vega’s_ return.
-
-It is scarcely necessary to say that the orders from headquarters
-put both Alan and Alexis into the highest spirits. They had already
-vindicated their claim to the confidence of the Council and their
-fellow-countrymen, and the claim had been allowed without stint or
-hesitation.
-
-Though their year of probation had only just begun they found
-themselves intrusted with a mission, dangerous it is true, but also of
-the most supreme importance, and Alan in particular felt his pulses
-thrill with justifiable pride when he found himself charged with
-the glorious task of doing almost exactly what his great ancestor,
-Alan Tremayne, had done a hundred and thirty years before, when
-he marshalled the millions of Anglo-Saxondom against the leagued
-despotisms of Europe and overthrew them in the mighty conflict which
-had given peace on earth for nearly five generations.
-
-Whether he would succeed as the Chief of the Terror had done depended
-not upon himself so much as on Anglo-Saxondom itself. If the once
-conquering race of earth had kept intact its old martial strength and
-imperial spirit through the long years of peace and prosperity as its
-kindred in Aeria had done, all would be well, and the disturbers of the
-welfare of humanity would pay dearly and bitterly for their tremendous
-crime.
-
-But if, like the Romans of old, they had allowed the tropical
-atmosphere of material luxury to relax the fibres of their once sturdy
-nature and weaken the arms which had once enclosed the world in their
-embrace, then his mission would fail, however eloquently he might urge
-it. A desolation infinitely greater than that which overwhelmed Rome
-or Byzantium would fall upon Anglo-Saxondom, and its name would be the
-only monument of its vanished glory.
-
-But the _Vega_ brought something more to Alan and Alexis than the
-despatches and orders of the Council. This was a letter from Isma to
-Alan, filled with the tenderest expressions of delight at the triumphs
-which he and his “companion in arms” had already achieved, and of brave
-and hopeful confidence in them, despite the terrible dangers that they
-were going forth to confront.
-
-The letter concluded with the significant sentence--“When you come back
-in triumph, as I know you will, there will not be one heart in Aeria
-that will not beat more gladly for your sakes, not one hand that will
-not be stretched out to greet you either in friendship or in love.
-Remember this against the day of battle, and in the day of peace you
-shall see how true my words are.”
-
-Although the letter made no mention of Alma, save as one of the
-intimate friends who sent their “loving greetings” to the two men who
-were going to lead the navy of Aeria to what might be the first battle
-of a war that would be the most colossal and unsparing struggle ever
-waged on earth, Alan was able to read enough between the lines to give
-him hope.
-
-He knew enough of Alma’s proud and sensitive nature to fully understand
-why no word had come directly from her to him, and also to recognise
-that the task of winning her back from her estrangement would be no
-light one. Indeed, of the two tasks which lay before him, the conquest
-of the world and the reconquest of Alma’s heart, he looked with less
-misgiving upon the former than he did upon the latter. Still he by no
-means despaired, and what he had said to Alexis was justified in his
-mind by the belief that in Isma he had the most eloquent of advocates
-always at Alma’s side, pleading his cause even better than he could do
-it himself, at anyrate for the present.
-
-As for Alexis, his lover’s eyes and more sanguine temperament found
-in the letter ample justification for the re-naming of the _Vindaya_,
-and if he forgot to return the precious sheet of paper to Alan after
-he had read its contents, it was because he honestly felt that he had
-the better right to it, and his companion in love and war apparently
-recognised this, for he carefully refrained from asking him for it.
-Thus well comforted with new-born hope, and impatiently longing
-to begin the momentous work in hand, whether it was to be war or
-diplomacy, they awaited the arrival of the promised fleet from Aeria,
-which was expected to alight on the surface of Kerguelen about noon on
-the day after the arrival of the _Vega_.
-
-A few minutes before twelve o’clock on the 19th of May one of the
-look-out vessels floating five thousand feet above the clouds which
-overhung Desolation Land telephoned, “Fleet from Aeria in sight,”
-and half an hour after the receipt of the anxiously-expected news at
-headquarters the fifty air-ships were grouped round the power-station
-at the head of Christmas Harbour, renewing the motive power which had
-been expended on the voyage from Aeria.
-
-When this operation was completed the fleet was equipped for a voyage
-of thirty thousand miles if necessary. As every vessel was completely
-furnished with all stores and munitions of war, no further preparations
-had been made, and Alan was able to give the signal for the flotilla to
-take the air in little more than an hour after its arrival at Kerguelen.
-
-It was divided into two divisions of twenty-five ships each, one led
-by the _Ithuriel_ and the other by the _Isma_, and these rose into
-the air, formed in two straight lines each about a quarter of a mile
-long. The two flagships flew one on either flank, and slightly ahead
-and above the main body. This formation enabled any signals made from
-either of them to be instantly seen by every ship in the fleet.
-
-The distance to be traversed was five thousand eight hundred
-geographical miles, and the voyage was performed at a speed of four
-hundred miles an hour without incident.
-
-At daybreak on the 20th, the two divisions were floating in a wide
-circle six thousand feet above Alexandria at a sufficient distance
-to be practically invisible from the city, which nevertheless lay
-completely at the mercy of the four hundred guns which were trained
-upon it, and which, if the terms of the Council’s ultimatum were not
-accepted by the Sultan and Olga, would reduce it to a wilderness of
-ruins within an hour from the signal to fire being given.
-
-That the Russians were still the guests of the Sultan was made apparent
-as soon as the light became strong enough for their squadron to be seen
-resting on the earth in the gardens of the palace, with one look-out
-ship stationed about fifteen hundred feet above the roof of the palace.
-When all the ships were in their stations the _Ithuriel_ and the _Isma_
-ran up close to each other, and Alexis boarded the flagship to receive
-his final instructions from Alan, who had undertaken the perilous duty
-of conveying the ultimatum to the Sultan and his possible ally.
-
-Orloff Lossenski was on board the _Ithuriel_, and Alan requested him to
-be present when Alexis received his orders. As he shook hands with the
-Vice-Admiral, Alan said--
-
-“I have asked Orloff Lossenski to hear our last arrangements made so
-that he may recognise as well as we do that this is a matter of life
-and death for all of us. For my own part, I am determined that the
-wishes of the Council shall be obeyed, or the _Ithuriel_ and her crew
-shall be buried with our enemies in the ruins of Alexandria.
-
-“We have not been seen yet from the Russian look-out ship, but they
-will of course see the _Ithuriel_ going down. I shall descend flying
-a flag of truce, and I feel certain that the Sultan will recognise it
-himself and compel his allies to do so. But if not, if a single shot is
-fired, or if the Russian squadron attempts to rise in the air until my
-return, you are to give the signal to open fire upon the city, and the
-fleet is not to cease firing until it is destroyed.
-
-“You are to forget that you are destroying friends as well as foes, for
-I and all on board the _Ithuriel_ recognise that the honour of Aeria
-and the safety of the world demand the sacrifice, and we are resolved
-to make it.
-
-“I not only order this as your superior in command, I ask it as a
-friend and brother in arms. I know you would gladly die in the same
-cause if necessary, and so you must not hesitate to kill me and destroy
-the _Ithuriel_ if the fortune of war compels you to do so.”
-
-Alan’s speech, spoken with the perfect steadiness of an unalterable
-resolve, found a fitting response in the breast of his companion in
-arms. Still holding his friend’s hand in what might be a farewell
-clasp, Alexis simply replied--
-
-“I see the necessity, and I will obey to the letter! God grant that you
-may all return safe and sound; but if you don’t, you shall have such a
-tomb as no man ever had before. Good-bye.”
-
-“Good-bye,” said Alan in the same steady tone, and then their hands
-parted, and Alexis returned to his ship.
-
-“Now, Orloff Lossenski,” said Alan, turning to the Russian, “you have
-heard my instructions, and you know that they will be obeyed. Neither
-you nor your mistress have any right to expect mercy at my hands, and
-you shall have none. Obey my orders to the letter, and see that your
-mistress does the same, or Alexandria will be in ruins, before that sun
-reaches the zenith.”
-
-“I have heard and I will obey, for the fortune of war is with you and
-I must,” replied Lossenski, completely overmastered by the heroic
-devotion displayed by Alan in what bade fair to be a crisis in the fate
-of the world.
-
-A broad white flag of truce was now flown from the aftermast of the
-_Ithuriel_. At the fore flew as a greeting to the Sultan the Star and
-Crescent of Islam, while above both at the main floated the sky-blue
-banner of Aeria, emblazoned with the golden wings united by a mailed
-hand armed with a dagger. With every man at his station and every gun
-ready for instant use, the flagship dropped swiftly down towards the
-Russian vessel floating over the palace.
-
-Within a mile of her the signal, “We bring despatches to the Sultan,”
-flew from the signal staff at the stern. The captain of the Russian
-scout-ship read the signal and at once telephoned to the palace, with
-which his ship was connected by an electric thread, for instructions.
-
-The _Ithuriel_ then flew a second signal, “If you rise we shall fire,”
-and this he was forced to obey as the Aerian vessel was too far above
-him for his guns to come into play. He therefore replied with the
-signal, “I have asked for instructions. Wait for reply.” A few minutes
-later Alan, keeping the Russian well under his guns, saw her drop
-down to the earth and alight on the flat roof of the palace, on which
-several figures could be seen moving about and scanning the skies with
-glasses, which were speedily centred on the _Ithuriel_.
-
-Then a white flag was run up to the top of a flagstaff on one of the
-minarets of the palace, a similar one was hoisted by the Russian
-air-ship, and she rose towards the _Ithuriel_. Alan, feeling now sure
-that the flag of truce would be respected for the Sultan’s sake,
-allowed the ship to come stern on to the _Ithuriel_ until the two were
-within speaking distance.
-
-As she approached, the Russian swung her stern guns out laterally,
-and Alan did the same with his, so that for the time being neither
-ship could injure the other. The stern doors were then opened, and the
-Russian captain delivered a message to the effect that the Sultan had
-just risen for morning prayers, and would receive the captain of the
-_Ithuriel_ in half an hour. The Aerian vessel could therefore descend
-without fear.
-
-“There is no question of fear,” replied Alan shortly. “I have not come
-alone. Use your glasses and you will see that the city is surrounded,
-but we shall respect the truce if you do.”
-
-The Russian stepped back with a hurried gesture and seized his glasses.
-It was now quite light enough for him to see at that elevation a wide
-circle of points of flashing blue light reflected from the hulls of the
-Aerian fleet. He put down his glasses and replied--
-
-“So I see! You would not have got here if patrols had been sent out as
-I advised.”
-
-“Or else your patrols would not have come back,” said Alan, turning on
-his heel and walking forward.
-
-Half an hour later the white flag on the minaret was dipped three times
-as an invitation for the _Ithuriel_ to descend, and Alan, determined
-to guard against any possible treachery on the part of the Russian
-scout-ship, signalled to it to precede him, and so the two vessels sank
-down and alighted almost together on the roof of the palace.
-
-The Sultan surrounded by his ministers was awaiting them, and as
-soon as salutes had been exchanged Alan handed him the ultimatum of
-the Council. As Khalid read the brief but pregnant message his brows
-contracted, and an angry flush showed through the bronze of his skin.
-
-He read it twice over, stroking his beard slowly and deliberately as he
-did so. Then he looked up and said to Alan in a tone from which he made
-no effort to banish the accents of anger--
-
-“Was not my word enough? Have I not promised that I would make no war
-for a year? By what right do you order me to compel my friend and ally
-to leave my city within two hours?”
-
-At the word “ally” Alan’s face assumed an expression of wrathful
-sternness, and he replied--
-
-“By the right which has always governed the issues of war--the power to
-compel obedience.”
-
-“To compel!” cried the Sultan, in a still angrier tone. “What! with one
-air-ship against twenty? Not even a Prince of the Air could do that.”
-
-“No Prince of the Air would be mad enough to make the attempt,” replied
-Alan coldly. “Ask the captain of your scout-ship, and he will tell
-you that your city is surrounded; and I can tell you that four hundred
-guns are trained upon it at this moment, and that the firing of a shot,
-or the rising of any air-ship but my own from the ground, will be the
-signal for them all to be discharged. I need not tell your Majesty what
-the result of that would be.”
-
-Khalid recoiled with a cry that was almost one of fear. He knew
-instinctively that Alan was speaking the literal truth, without the
-confirmation given by the captain of the scout-ship. He saw, too, that
-Olga had deceived him, or at anyrate had been grievously mistaken,
-when she had said that the Aerians would not send a fleet after her
-squadron. They had done so, and so skilfully had its movements been
-ordered, that the city had been taken by surprise, and lay at its mercy.
-
-Brave as he was, the strange terrors of the situation sent a thrill
-of fear through his soul. There he stood, the proudest king on earth,
-on the roof of his palace, beneath the smiling sky of an Egyptian
-summer morning; and yet that smiling sky was charged with death and
-destruction a hundredfold greater than if the thunder-clouds were
-lowering on it, ready to hurl their lightnings upon the earth.
-
-He could see nothing but the blue heavens and the eastern sunlight
-shining over the roofs of his capital; and yet he knew that the man
-standing before him could, with a single signal, reduce the splendid
-city to heaps of shattered, shapeless ruins, and bury its inhabitants
-and its guests in one common tomb.
-
-Then what seemed to be a saving thought flashed through his mind, and
-he said, almost in a tone of banter--
-
-“But in that case we should not die alone, unless you have taught those
-unsparing guns of yours to distinguish between friend and foe--the
-signal for our destruction would be the signal for yours as well.”
-
-“Even so!” replied Alan gravely. “That is a contingency which I have
-foreseen. Orloff Lossenski, tell his Majesty what my last orders to the
-fleet were.”
-
-The Russian stepped forward, and after saluting the Sultan said--
-
-“I heard the orders given, Majesty, and they were to that effect.
-Friends and foes are to be destroyed alike, and nothing is to be left
-of Alexandria but its ruins.
-
-“I am also charged with a message to my mistress, the Tsarina, which
-tells her that if she does not leave within two hours her ships will
-be attacked in the city, and that, too, would be disaster; and if my
-words have still any weight with her I shall advise compliance with the
-order of the Council. Will your Majesty permit me to be conducted to my
-mistress in order that I may deliver my message in due form?”
-
-The Sultan did not seem to hear the request at all. The idea that
-Alan and his crew should thus deliberately devote themselves and
-their beautiful vessel to annihilation in the event of their orders
-being disobeyed appalled and unnerved him. He knew nothing, save by
-tradition, of the heights of heroism to which men can rise under
-the stimulus of war, and he looked upon the man who had so calmly
-pronounced the provisional death sentence of himself and his companions
-as something more than human, as beings of a higher order, to fight
-against whom would be impious rashness rather than courage.
-
-It was a situation that would have shaken the nerves of the sternest
-and most experienced soldier of the nineteenth century, and so it was
-no wonder that his spirit, unbraced by the discipline of war, shrank
-from facing its terrors. He saw, too, that there was literally no
-choice save between submission and destruction. To save, not only the
-lives of himself and his people, but also those of his guests and
-allies, he and they must submit and obey this imperious mandate.
-
-“It is the will of God!” he said, bowing his head slightly towards
-Alan as he spoke. “They who cannot fight must yield. Hereafter we may
-meet upon more equal terms, and then to-day’s humiliation shall not be
-forgotten.”
-
-Alan inclined his head in reply, and said--
-
-“So be it! As your Majesty has seemingly decided to involve the world
-in the horrors of war, it is not for me to say any more. When the day
-of battle comes, let the fortune of war decide between us. Meanwhile,
-Orloff Lossenski, it is time that you took the Council’s message to
-your mistress.”
-
-“Give it to me,” said the Sultan, stepping forward with outstretched
-hands, “and I will take it to her, if she has risen yet.”
-
-“There is no need for that,” said a voice a few yards beyond Alan. “I
-am here, and I will take it.”
-
-As the sweet, low, even tones, now so hatefully familiar, reached
-Alan’s ears he turned sharply round, with a blaze of ungovernable anger
-in his eyes, and saw Olga, calm and self-possessed in all the pride of
-her imperial beauty, walking towards the group from an arched doorway
-that led up from the interior of the palace.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX. FACE TO FACE AGAIN.
-
-
-SMILING and self-possessed as Olga appeared when she gained the roof of
-the palace, she had passed through a perfect purgatory of conflicting
-and agonising emotions since the news of the arrival of the _Ithuriel_
-had reached her in her room. Her tremendous and, but for the fact of
-her strange, hopeless love, incomprehensible blunder in setting Alan
-and Alexis free, instead of either killing them or keeping them in
-life-long captivity, had already borne terrible fruit; but this visit,
-made at the very moment when her plans were apparently crowned with
-success, seemed to threaten nothing less than the complete ruin of all
-her schemes.
-
-She knew instinctively that the city must be surrounded by an
-overwhelming force of Aerian ships, for a single one to venture
-thus into the midst of her own squadron, and, judging by her own
-tactics, she expected nothing less than immediate annihilation as
-the alternative to surrender. But even more bitter than this was the
-thought of meeting, not only as a freeman, but as the commander of
-the Aerian navy, the man who but a few days ago had been her docile,
-unresisting slave, robbed of the highest attribute of his manhood by
-the Circe-spell that she had cast over him, and which she now knew was
-broken for ever.
-
-And, more than this, she must now meet as an implacable enemy the man
-whom, in spite of herself, she still loved with all the passion of
-her fiery nature, and who, now that he was free again, could but look
-upon her not only with hatred, but with disgust. This, so far as her
-own feelings were concerned, was the miserable end of her scheming, but
-there was no help for it. She had deliberately sown the wind, and now
-the time was approaching for her to reap the whirlwind.
-
-She thought of her dream in St. Petersburg, and a new and awful meaning
-was made apparent to her in those few minutes of mental torture before
-she went to meet her well-beloved enemy face to face. She saw herself
-mistress of a conquered world, seated on a lonely throne, wailing over
-her own broken heart in the midst of a desolation that she had brought
-upon the earth--for nothing.
-
-This, it seemed, was to be the penalty of the unspeakable crime she
-had committed to gain possession of the air-ship, a hopeless love that
-should turn all the fruits of conquest, if she ever won them, into
-the bitter ashes of the Dead Sea apples in her mouth, a love not only
-unrequited, but repaid with righteous horror and almost divine disgust.
-
-And yet, despite all this, her marvellous fortitude and royal pride
-came to her aid to help her to bear herself bravely before her enemies,
-and so, with a smile on her lips and a hell of raging passions in
-her bosom, she ascended to take her part in the debate, big with the
-destiny of a world, that was being held on the palace roof.
-
-As Alan turned and confronted her in all the strength and splendour
-of the manhood that not even her almost superhuman arts had been able
-to tarnish or weaken, and looked at her with the stern, steady gaze
-without one sign of recognition in the eyes that shone blue-black
-beneath his straight-drawn brows, her heart stood still and seemed
-turned to ice in her breast, and for one brief moment her foot faltered
-and the light died out of her eyes and the colour from her cheeks.
-
-Then she caught the Sultan’s gaze turned inquiringly upon her; her
-indomitable spirit rose to the emergency, and her self-possession
-returned. Passing Alan by with a slight inclination of her head which
-did not conceal the mocking smile which curled her dainty lips, she
-went to Khalid and, holding out her hand, said in steady, musical tones
-which, do what he would to resist it, sent a thrill to Alan’s heart--
-
-“Where is the message that my faithless servant brings from the tyrants
-of the world?”
-
-The Sultan gave it to her, and as she read it Lossenski stood silent
-like the rest, but with head bowed down in shame and sorrow. When she
-reached the last word of the despatch the crimson deepened on her
-cheeks and her hands closed convulsively on the paper. Then with a
-quick movement she tore it in twain, flung the two fragments to the
-ground, and then, looking up with eyes blazing with passion, she cried--
-
-“I should be a slave to obey! Lossenski, signal to the squadron to
-rise. Boris, train a gun on that ship and blow her to pieces if a man
-moves on board of her. Out of the way there, Alan Arnold. If you lift a
-hand I will shoot you like a dog!”
-
-As she spoke she snatched a pistol out of her belt and had almost
-levelled it at Alan’s heart, when, like a flash of lightning, his
-rapier leapt from its sheath, and as the pistol came up it was dashed
-from her hand.
-
-“I could have killed you with less trouble,” he said, in quick stern
-accents, raising the glittering blue blade to a level with her eyes,
-and keeping it outstretched towards her. “Have you forgotten what I
-told you, or that I am no longer under your vile spell? If those orders
-are obeyed I will kill you now, though you do wear a woman’s shape. The
-city is surrounded, and if one vessel rises from the earth, Alexandria
-will be in ruins in an hour. Now, give the signal for its destruction
-if you dare, and let the earth be rid of you!”
-
-“And of you, my gallant Knight of the Air, who draws his sword upon a
-woman!” she almost hissed at him in her fury. “Yes, I dare and I will.
-Lossenski”--
-
-In another moment the fate of the world would have been changed; but,
-before the order could be repeated, the Sultan strode forward and
-placed himself between Alan and Olga with outstretched arms--
-
-“No, Tsarina! that order shall not be given on my palace or in my
-hearing. You have forgotten our agreement and my oath. I have sworn
-on the Koran that there shall be no war between Islam and Aeria for a
-year, and by the glory of Allah there shall be none!
-
-“What have I and my people done that you should bring this destruction
-upon them? Your servant shall be shot if he opens his lips, and if
-you must fight, go into the desert and do it; but that will end our
-alliance, for you will have broken the peace to which I have sworn, and
-made me a liar. It is enough! Let us talk like reasonable beings, and
-not quarrel like children.”
-
-Olga was conquered for the time being, and she saw it. Few as had been
-the moments of the Sultan’s speech, they were enough to allow her agile
-intellect to get the better of her anger, and to convince her that it
-would have led her to suicide in another minute.
-
-Her manner changed with a swiftness that was almost miraculous. Her
-long, thick lashes fell, hiding the still burning fires of her eyes.
-Her attitude changed from one of defiance to one of deference, and as
-she stepped back a pace or two, she said in a totally altered voice--
-
-“Your Majesty has justly rebuked me. My anger overcame my reason for
-the moment. My hatred of these tyrants of the air is not a thing of
-to-day or of yesterday, as you know, but the legacy of generations of
-wrong and robbery, and the arrogance of this man, who but a few days
-ago was my slave, and now ventures to dictate terms of war or peace
-to me, was more than my patience or my temper could bear. I have done
-wrong, and in atonement I will promise, on the honour of a Romanoff, to
-be bound absolutely by such engagement as your Majesty may make until
-the period of your truce is expired.”
-
-So saying, she retired to a distant part of the terrace, beckoning
-Lossenski to follow her. Throwing herself on a seat in full view but
-out of earshot of the group she had left, she bade him tell her the
-story of the loss of the _Vindaya_, and how he came to be the bearer of
-the message of the Council of Aeria to her.
-
-Lossenski told the story simply and truthfully, and as he finished, the
-Grand Vizier approached, and after an obeisance, made with Oriental
-reverence, said--
-
-“Tsarina, my master commands me to inform you that he has settled all
-matters with the Prince of the Air save one, and to settle that he
-craves your assistance. Will it please you to come and speak with him?”
-
-“I will come,” said Olga, rising and following him with the words of
-Lossenski fresh in her ears.
-
-“Tsarina Olga,” said the Sultan, coming to meet her as she approached
-the group amidst which Alan was still standing, “I have come to an
-agreement with Alan Arnold upon all points but one, and that one only
-you can decide.
-
-“He asserts that six years ago he took you and your brother as guests
-on board the air-ship, which you now call the _Revenge_, that you
-drugged the wine drunk by him and his comrades, and, sparing only him
-and his friend Alexis Masarov, you poisoned the rest of the crew, and
-threw them out on to the snows of Norway, after which you kept him and
-Alexis under your influence by means of a drug, which deprived them of
-their will-power and forced them to reveal the secrets of the air-ship
-to you and assist you in building your fleet.”
-
-“And has your Majesty given credence to such a monstrous story, or do
-you only wish to hear me give it the contradiction which its absurdity
-and falsity deserve? If the former, the sooner I and my ships leave
-your city, never to return save as enemies, the better. If the latter,
-you shall soon be satisfied.”
-
-Olga spoke with an air of angered innocence which completely deceived
-the Sultan, anxious as he was to find the extraordinary story false,
-and he hastily replied--
-
-“It is the latter that I desire, of course. I was obliged to say that
-if you were unable to deny the accusation it would be impossible for me
-to continue an alliance with one who had been guilty of a crime which
-my faith and the customs of my race denounce as vile beyond all human
-measure. But I refused to believe it against you until your own lips
-had confessed it, or undeniable evidence had proved it, and therefore I
-have asked you to come and let us know the truth.”
-
-“I thank you, Sultan Khalid, for your confidence and your chivalry,”
-she said, looking up into his eyes with a glance that rendered all
-denial from her once and for ever unnecessary. “You shall hear me deny
-the foul falsehood to my traducer’s face.”
-
-Stung to fresh fury by the knowledge that Alan had sought to expose
-her in her true nature to the man whom she sought to make her slave
-in his place, she strode forward to within three paces of where he
-was standing, and, drawing herself up to the full height of her
-royal stature, she faced him with pale cheeks and blazing eyes, her
-beauty so transfigured by anger that the Moslems standing about her
-instinctively shrank back, awe-stricken by such an incarnation of wrath
-and loveliness as no man of them had ever dreamed of before. Even Alan
-himself forgot his hate and disgust for the moment in the contemplation
-of her almost miraculous beauty and the indescribable dignity with
-which her anger invested her, and waited in silence that was almost
-respectful for the tempest of wrath and reproach which he saw was about
-to be let loose on him.
-
-Her lips trembled mutely for a moment or two before any sound came from
-them, but when she spoke her tone was low and clear, though almost
-hoarse with passion, and shaken by the manifest effort she made to keep
-it under control.
-
-“So this is the return that your chivalry makes for my generosity in
-giving you life and liberty when you were lost to the world; when I
-might have killed you, as I see now that I should have done, without a
-single soul among your people knowing anything of your fate!
-
-“I expected that you would take up arms against me, for your people and
-mine are enemies to the death; and I knew, too, that the love which
-I had spurned would not be long in turning to active hate. But you
-excelled my expectations--you, one of the Princes of the Air, the scion
-of a race that holds itself above all the other races of the earth, the
-son of a man who but a few years ago was lord and master of the world!
-You come in the guise of open and honourable warfare to smirch with
-your foul lies the fame of a woman for whose sake you made yourself a
-traitor to your people and a murderer of your own comrades. A pretty
-story, forsooth, to tell in the ears of my friends and allies. Do you
-take them for children or fools that you expect them to believe it?
-
-“Imagine such a miracle, your Majesty,” she continued, turning, with
-the clear ring of a mocking laugh in her voice, to the Sultan, “imagine
-this Alan Arnold, son of the President of Aeria, with his friend and
-lieutenant, Alexis Masarov, and a crew of eight Aerians on board their
-flagship, armed with the most tremendous means of destruction ever
-invented by human genius, and each man of them, moreover, possessing in
-his own person the power of life and death, as he himself has proved
-before your own eyes.
-
-“These kings among men invite two casual acquaintances for a trip to
-the clouds, and these two guests, a youth of twenty and a girl not
-seventeen, unarmed and without assistance, seize their ship, kill
-eight of their invincibly armed comrades, and lead the captain and his
-lieutenant away captive. And how? By means of some mysterious drugs,
-subtle and irresistible poisons, of which such a boy and girl could not
-possibly have known either the composition or the use, and which they
-would have been afraid to employ if they had done.
-
-“But let me come to the facts as they are,” she went on, turning again
-to Alan, who stood literally dumfounded before her, amazed beyond
-power of thought or speech by the audacity of her words. “It is you
-who are the liar, the traitor, and the murderer. It is you who killed
-my brother before my eyes because he sought to protect me from your
-violence; and it is you and your friend Alexis who, of your own free
-will, struck your comrades dead, threw them out of the air-ship upon
-the Norwegian snows, and then, in the hope of gaining my favour, took
-the _Ithuriel_ to Vorobièvo, near Moscow, and delivered her into the
-hands of my friends.
-
-“I have fifty men within call at this moment who will swear that this
-is true. Orloff Lossenski, you are one of them. Were you not at the
-villa at Vorobièvo when these two came with me in the _Ithuriel_ and
-delivered her into your hands; and did you not find the corpse of my
-brother Serge in one of the state rooms with his neck bruised and
-blackened by the grip of his murderer?”
-
-“Yes, Majesty,” replied Lossenski, stepping forward as he was
-addressed. “That is true, though they told us at the time that your
-brother had been killed in a struggle with their comrades.”
-
-“And is it true,” continued Olga, “that they accompanied me into your
-villa and had supper with us as friends, and did not I forgive the
-death of my brother for the sake of the advantages which the possession
-of the air-ship, which they consented to surrender to us, would be to
-the cause of the revolution in Russia to which we were pledged?”
-
-“That is also true, Majesty; and there are several here now with the
-squadron who can also testify to the fact.”
-
-“And also,” interrupted Olga, “to the fact that these two traitors
-worked willingly to help us to secrete the air-ship, and finally to
-take her to Mount Terror, and there explained the working of her
-machinery to us and helped us to build other air-ships and submarine
-vessels, and commanded these in their attacks upon the commerce of our
-enemies. Is that true, also?”
-
-“It is, Majesty,” again replied Lossenski. “Shall I summon the crews of
-our ships that they also may testify to it lest my word should not be
-enough?”
-
-“Is it your Majesty’s wish that they shall be called?” asked Olga,
-again turning to the Sultan, who all this time had been standing
-shifting his gaze from her face to Alan’s, and from Alan’s back again
-to hers, horrified by the fearful accusations with which she had
-replied to the story, of the falsity of which he was already thoroughly
-convinced.
-
-“They can be called if Alan Arnold desires it,” he said, in grave,
-deliberate tones. “But would it not be better that he should speak
-first? At present we have two words against one. Has he any proof that
-what you say is false?” he continued, looking inquiringly towards Alan.
-
-“I have none but my own word and that of Alexis, up yonder in the
-skies, and him I cannot--and if I could, under the circumstances,
-I would not--call,” said Alan, who by this time had recovered his
-self-possession. “If your Majesty proposes to judge between us
-according to spoken testimony, I say at once that I will accept no such
-tests, for I well know that this woman could produce a hundred of her
-accomplices who would swear anything she bade them swear.
-
-“She has given me the lie with equal skill and audacity. I can only
-give her the lie in return, if not as skilfully, at least as boldly,
-and with a knowledge that I am telling the truth. Your Majesty can
-believe her story or mine, as you choose. If you believe hers, I am
-willing to do you the justice of confessing that you will be judging
-according to the weight of testimony, such as it is, for that is
-certainly against me.”
-
-“And so I must judge,” replied the Sultan coldly. “I cannot believe
-your story, for it seems to be impossible, while the Tsarina’s has
-every appearance of truth. Into your motives I have neither the right
-nor the wish to inquire, and all that is left for me to say is that
-what I have heard has finally decided me to espouse the cause of the
-Tsarina and her friends against those who have wronged and slandered
-her, be the cost to me and my people what it may.
-
-“We shall keep the truce if you do, and in the day of strife let the
-God of Battles decide between us. My answer to your Council’s message
-shall be ready for you in half an hour. Farewell!”
-
-So saying, Khalid the Magnificent turned his back upon Alan, and
-walked, followed by his Vizier and his ministers, to the doorway
-leading to the interior of the palace. Olga, pausing for a moment to
-cast one glance of triumphant hatred at her discredited foe, beckoned
-to Lossenski, and followed the Sultan without a word.
-
-Alan, amazed and enraged beyond measure by the unexpected turn that
-affairs had taken, and yet confident in his own knowledge of the truth,
-turned on his heel, and went back on board the _Ithuriel_, where he
-went into his own cabin and sat down to write his directions for
-enforcing the order of the Council with regard to the evacuation of the
-city by the Russian squadron.
-
-He bitterly regretted that the orders of the Council did not permit him
-to destroy the Russian air-ships there and then while they lay at his
-mercy. But the orders were explicit, and forbade him even to pursue
-them after they had left Alexandria, unless they committed an act of
-hostility against him.
-
-If he could have done so, he would have fought them at all hazards,
-and then, if he had conquered, he would have been able to enforce the
-general prohibition of the Council against building air-ships upon the
-Sultan; but as disobedience was not to be thought of, he could only
-carry out his orders, and hope that the judgment of the Council might
-prove in the end superior to his own.
-
-At the end of the half-hour he was summoned to meet the Grand Vizier,
-who brought the reply of his master. This ran as follows:--
-
- In the Name of the Most Merciful God!
-
- Khalid, Commander of the Faithful, to Alan Arnold, President of Aeria.
-
- I have received your message from the hands of your son. I shall
- faithfully observe the terms of the truce I promised to him, and of
- which he has told you.
-
- As my city lies for the time being at the mercy of your fleet, I can
- only save my people and my guests from destruction by agreeing to
- your demands. The Russian air-ships shall leave Alexandria within an
- hour of the delivery of this to your son. But this is to tell you
- that I have made alliance with Olga Romanoff, rightful Tsarina of
- the Russias, and that when the year of truce has expired, I will no
- longer be a king merely in name and hold my power and dignity at your
- pleasure.
-
- At the end of the year of truce there shall be war between you and
- me and your people and mine unless before then you shall recognise
- my independence in due form and my right to create such armaments
- as I think fit for the protection of my dominions against yourself
- or any other Power, and unless you consent to restore Olga Romanoff
- to the throne and dignity which is hers by right, and of which your
- ancestors robbed her in the days of the Terror.
-
- If you do this there shall be peace between us, but if not, there
- shall be war, and we will fight until the God of Battles has decided
- between us, and given to you or to me the dominion of the world.
-
-Alan’s brows contracted slightly as he read this defiant missive, but
-there was a half-pitying smile on his lips when he said to the Vizier
-as he handed him the instructions he had just written--
-
-“I am deeply sorry--sorry for him and his people, and, indeed, for the
-whole human race--that he has been misled into writing words which in
-a year’s time will set the world in a blaze. Our reply to this will be
-written in blood and fire, and the smoking ruins of cities throughout
-the length and breadth of his dominions. But he has chosen, and he and
-you must abide by his choice. I cannot believe that he knows what he is
-doing, and if you are a faithful friend and servant you will counsel
-peace and moderation.”
-
-“My master,” said the Vizier haughtily, “does not seek advice from his
-enemies; more than ever would it be impossible for him to do so when
-their lips are fresh-stained with lies.”
-
-Alan’s hand instinctively sprang to the hilt of his rapier, and in
-another moment the Vizier’s life would have paid for the insult, but
-when the blade was half out of its sheath his self-control returned,
-and he thrust it back again, saying--
-
-“You are an old man and an ambassador, so you are safe. You shall live
-so that you may some day find out for yourself where the truth in this
-matter lies. Who knows but that the Syren may before long put you or
-your master under her spell. If she does you will drink something from
-her hand, and when you have drunk it you will have no will but hers;
-you will obey her blindly, and the thoughts that you speak shall be
-only those she suggests to you.”
-
-Later on that day, when the excitement of the hour had passed, Musa
-al Ghazi remembered these words, and the strange acquiescence which he
-had given to Olga’s plans in the saloon of the _Revenge_. If he had
-remembered it while Alan was speaking, millions of innocent lives might
-possibly have been saved, and the curse of war averted from the world
-for many more generations, perhaps for ever. But he did not, and so
-events took their logical course. As it was, he made no direct reply to
-Alan’s words, but handed him another paper, saying--
-
-“I have been commissioned also to give you this. The instructions
-agreed upon shall be obeyed, and now I have only to remind you that you
-are no longer my master’s guest.”
-
-With that he saluted with frigid dignity and turned away towards the
-palace door.
-
-Alan looked after him for a moment with a smile half of contempt and
-half of pity, then he opened the paper in his hand. As he expected, it
-was from Olga, and, beginning without any form of address, it ran thus--
-
- I shall obey your orders and leave the city, not because I will,
- but because I must, in order to save the Sultan and his people from
- destruction. I will also undertake to refrain from hostilities until
- the Sultan’s truce expires, provided you do not molest me. If you do,
- or if the Sultan is subjected to any unreasonable commands or acts
- of oppression, I will consider the truce at an end, and I will not
- only recommence my submarine attacks upon the world’s commerce, but I
- will send out my air-ships and scatter death and destruction far and
- wide over the earth, without mercy and without discrimination between
- enemies or neutrals; it is therefore for you to choose whether the
- issue between us shall be fought out when the time comes, and in
- fair and honourable warfare, or whether the dogs of war shall be let
- loose at once. I have still thirty air-ships, and as many submarine
- cruisers, and I can do what I say.
-
- OLGA ROMANOFF.
-
-“No doubt,” said Alan to himself. “I’m afraid we shall have to accept
-your terms. I didn’t think that even you would be capable of such a
-colossal crime as that; but now I know something like the full capacity
-of your wickedness, and if you threaten it you will do it.
-
-“With those thirty ships, if you have as many as that, and I suppose
-you must have twenty-four or twenty-five at least, you could wreck half
-the great cities of the world in six months, and we could do little or
-nothing to stop you. We have only eleven ships equal in speed to yours,
-and most of those must be kept in call of Aeria.
-
-“I would give my life and my ship willingly for permission to fight it
-out here and now, and yet, after all, that would be frightful cruelty
-and injustice to the unoffending thousands who would lose their lives
-by the destruction of the city, so I suppose it must be peace for a
-year, and then--ah, what then?”
-
-His soliloquy began on the terrace and ended on the deck of the
-_Ithuriel_. He gave the order to rise into the air, and the aerial
-cruiser soared slowly upwards, still flying the flag of truce as
-a signal to her consorts that the mission had been successfully
-accomplished. As he felt certain that the Sultan would carry out the
-directions agreed upon to the letter, he left the city without any
-misgivings, and in a few minutes the _Ithuriel_ was floating alongside
-her consort the _Isma_, and Alan and Alexis had clasped hands once
-more.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX. THE CALL TO ARMS.
-
-
-WITHIN an hour the wondering inhabitants of Alexandria saw the Russian
-fleet rise a thousand feet into the air and form in two columns of
-line ahead. Then the Aerian fleet ranged itself in two long lines five
-hundred feet outside them and a thousand feet above them. A time-shell
-from the _Ithuriel_ gave the signal to start, and the two fleets leapt
-forward to the south-east at a speed of a hundred miles an hour, and
-in a few minutes had vanished over the desert. The speed was quickly
-increased to two hundred miles, and so they sped on all day and through
-the next night--the Russian ships being forced to show their lights
-while the Aerians remained in darkness--until, when morning dawned and
-Olga and her captains looked for Alan’s fleet they found that it had
-vanished, and that they were floating alone over the solitudes of the
-Southern Ocean.
-
-They had been escorted like offending school children out of harm’s
-way, and then left to their own devices. It was a bitterly humiliating
-ending to an expedition which had really produced such important
-results, but there was no possibility of present revenge, and so Olga
-gave the order to proceed straight to Mount Terror, intending to begin
-there and then the working out of her part of the compact that she had
-made with the Sultan.
-
-This arrangement was briefly to the following effect:--Olga placed at
-Khalid’s disposal all the necessary plans for the construction of both
-air-ships and submarine vessels, and also supplied members of her own
-immediate retinue, well skilled in the work, to supervise the building,
-which was, of course, to be carried out with the utmost secrecy and
-speed, so as to guard, as far as practicable, against the possible
-destruction of the factories and dockyards by the Aerians.
-
-The Sultan had engaged to find money and material for building a
-thousand air-ships, and the same number of submarine cruisers,
-within the year, and these were to be supplied with motive power at
-conversion-stations established at the dockyards under the exclusive
-control of certain of Olga’s lieutenants.
-
-The secret of this motive power, which was identical save for slight
-differences in the process of conversion with that possessed by the
-Aerians--that is to say, electrical energy derived directly from
-atomised carbon and vaporised petroleum--was retained in her own
-keeping by Olga, who had simply promised that an unlimited supply of it
-should be forthcoming as it was wanted.
-
-She had insisted on a strict engagement that no one not authorised by
-her should even approach the conversion-stations, and she had given the
-Sultan and his ministers distinctly to understand that any attempt to
-discover the secret of the process would terminate the alliance, and
-expose the cities of the Moslem empire to destruction.
-
-At the expiration of the year of truce, the Sultan’s army and navy,
-supported by the immense aerial fleet that would then be in existence,
-was to be in complete readiness for any emergencies. Olga was to be
-proclaimed Tsarina in Moscow, and the House of Romanoff formally
-restored in her person. If any portions of Russia refused to receive
-her, they were to be terrorised into submission by the air-ships.
-
-The tribesmen of Western and Central Asia were to be armed as rapidly
-as possible, so as to be ready to form a reserve force for compelling
-the submission of the Russians if they resisted the new order of
-things, and to participate in the invasion of Europe, which was to
-take place at several points as soon as the Holy War of Islam was
-proclaimed, and Cross and Crescent once more confronted each other on
-the battlefield.
-
-Meanwhile, too, the resources of the dockyard at Mount Terror were
-to be strained to the utmost, and the conspiracy in Russia for the
-restoration of Olga to the throne of the Romanoffs was to be developed
-by every means that money could purchase or skill devise.
-
-The scheme of defence arranged by the Council of Aeria had already been
-completed, and it was to execute this that the Aerian fleet had left
-the Russian squadron during the night. Indeed, the Russians had been
-travelling southward alone for more than eight hours before they had
-discovered the fact. As soon as it became impossible for them to see
-the Aerian vessels these had stopped, in accordance with a prearranged
-plan, and had wheeled round and steered for London across the African
-continent at a height of about ten thousand feet.
-
-Flying at the full speed of the smaller vessels, a twenty-hour flight
-carried the fleet over the eight thousand miles which separated its
-starting-point from the capital of the world, and about six o’clock
-in the evening of the 21st of May the fifty-two vessels, flying the
-Aerian and British flags, appeared in the air over the open space
-which is now called Hyde Park, and, to the amazement of the astonished
-citizens, dropped quietly to the earth and lay open to the unrestricted
-inspection of the thousands who speedily gathered in the park to avail
-themselves of the unwonted spectacle, and to learn, if possible, the
-reason of the unexpected visit.
-
-No attempt was made by the crews of the ships to prevent the sightseers
-from seeing all they could of the exteriors of the vessels, which
-were arranged on the sward in two long lines, so that they could walk
-down between them and admire their beautiful shape and wonderful
-construction at their leisure. A sentry was stationed by each vessel
-to warn the sightseers not to approach too close to the wings and
-propellers, and that was the only precaution taken.
-
-Alan learnt soon after landing that King Albert the Second, the fourth
-in descent from Edward VII., who was King during the War of the
-Terror, was at Windsor, and that the House of Commons and the Senate,
-which for over a hundred years had filled the place of the old House of
-Lords, had dissolved for the spring recess, and would not meet again
-until after the General Election, which was held every 1st of June.
-
-He therefore caused a message to be sent to His Majesty at Windsor,
-requesting him to name a time for an interview on the following day,
-and then, sufficient watches having been set on all the vessels, he and
-Alexis, with the majority of the crews, took a few hours’ leave, not
-a little glad of the opportunity of stretching their legs on _terra
-firma_, after their three days’ confinement to the air-ships.
-
-The reply which he received from the King fixed eleven o’clock in
-the morning of the 22nd as the time of the interview for which he
-had asked, and, just as the castle clock was beginning to sound the
-strokes of the hour, the _Ithuriel_ swept up out of the distance
-towards Windsor Castle, and, after hovering for a moment in mid-air,
-sank quietly down until she rested on that portion of the terrace which
-overlooks the Home Park. Her arrival had been announced to the King as
-soon as she hove in sight, and he was on the terrace ready to receive
-his visitors when she alighted.
-
-Albert II., King of England, Emperor of Britain, and President of
-the Anglo-Saxon Federation, was a monarch only in name. Nothing but
-the trappings of sovereignty remained to himself or his station, and
-he would not even have retained these had it not been for the fact
-that, during its hundred years of actual rule, the Supreme Council had
-insisted upon the maintenance of the monarchical principle in those
-countries where it had obtained at the end of the nineteenth century.
-
-The first formal greetings over, the King caused Alan to be escorted to
-his private apartments in the castle, and as soon as they were alone
-together in the room which he reserved for his own special use, he
-motioned Alan to a seat and, throwing himself back upon a lounge with
-an air of weariness which accorded but ill with the hour of the day, he
-said in a somewhat querulous tone--
-
-“We are quite alone now and you can speak with perfect freedom. I am
-sure it must be important business that has brought you here with a
-whole fleet of your air-ships, and I shall be glad if you will tell me
-at once what it is. I hope nothing has occurred to imperil our peace
-and safety?”
-
-“On the contrary, your Majesty,” replied Alan. “I regret to say that my
-errand is to tell you that, not only is that the case, but that it is a
-practical certainty that within twelve months from now the whole world
-will be plunged into war.”
-
-“What! what!” exclaimed the King, jerking himself up to a sitting
-posture. “Surely you don’t mean that? I thought that no war would be
-possible without the permission of your Council. Surely you would not
-allow the nations of the world to go to war with each other again, and
-repeat all the horrors that happened a hundred and thirty years ago?”
-
-“Your Majesty forgets that when we renounced the control of the world
-six years ago we gave back to the nations the right of making war upon
-each other, although we hardly believed that they would be foolish
-enough and wicked enough to exercise it. That, however, is beside
-the question, because war is now inevitable, and, what is even more
-important, the Council of Aeria is unhappily powerless to prevent it.”
-
-“Eh! what is that?” exclaimed the King, this time rising to his feet
-and facing Alan with an air of petulant reproach. “Powerless to prevent
-it? You, with all your fleets of air-ships and submarine vessels?
-You, who have called yourselves the masters of the world for nearly a
-century and a half--you cannot stop war?”
-
-“We cannot do so, your Majesty,” said Alan, also rising to his
-feet, “simply because I regret to say that we no longer possess the
-undisputed empire of the air, and therefore, in a measure at least, we
-have lost the command of the world.
-
-“As for the responsibility which your words impute to us, I must tell
-you at once that it does not exist. The rulers of the world, and
-yourself among them, voluntarily and with full knowledge accepted
-perfect freedom, and therefore the individual responsibility that is
-inseparable from it. You knew that from the time we resigned the
-world-throne you were free to make war upon each other, on land and by
-sea.
-
-“It is your fault and not ours that you are now so defenceless that you
-have cause to fear the war against which you ask us to protect you.
-You have known for nearly four years that the Sultan of Islam has been
-creating armies and fleets, and diligently training millions of his
-subjects in that art of war which we hoped was to be forgotten for ever
-among men.
-
-“Did you suppose, you Kings and Princes of the Anglo-Saxon Federation,
-that Khalid the Magnificent, a man of boundless ambition, was creating
-these armies and fleets simply to play with them? Could you not see
-that nothing but some dream of world-wide conquest could be inspiring
-him to do this, and do you need to be told that the realms of
-Christendom offered him the only possible area of conquest in the world?
-
-“What have you done to defend yourselves, or to prepare against
-a possible day of battle? You have done nothing. Saving your
-international police, now little more than an ornamental body of
-officials, the Federation does not possess a single soldier. You have
-seen the Sultan building battleships and arming them with the deadliest
-weapons that skill and science could devise, and you, with all your
-wealth, and skill, and knowledge, have not built a single vessel that
-would be of use in time of war.
-
-“I understand that the Council has warned you again and again that
-the Sultan’s designs could not have been peaceable, and yet your
-Parliaments have not voted a single pound for the defence of your homes
-and your riches.”
-
-“Ah, yes!” broke in the King, now in an apologetic tone, for he was
-completely cowed by the direct, earnest force of Alan’s reproving
-words. “That is it! You must not blame myself or my fellow-monarchs,
-you must blame the Parliaments. We can do nothing without them; they
-have usurped all the power that formerly belonged to Kings. It is this
-democracy that has weakened us and left us defenceless. Every man
-thinks himself a ruler, and so there are no rulers, except in name.
-Every man has a vote, therefore every man must be consulted about
-everything, and so nothing can be done but what the multitude wishes.
-They want only riches, splendid buildings and cities, light work, and
-comfortable lives. That is all they have cared about, and so that is
-all they have got. If we, their Kings and duly appointed rulers, could
-have done as we wished to do affairs would have been very different;
-but it is impossible to rule where every man fancies himself a king!”
-
-“That is but a poor excuse, King Albert,” replied Alan sternly and yet
-somewhat sadly. “It is the old story of Greece and Rome and Byzantium
-over again. The weakness of the rulers has been the strength of the
-demagogues, and that has always spelt national decay from the days of
-Cleon until now.
-
-“I might ask you how it comes that Sultan Khalid has been able to keep
-his millions of subjects in hand and to be to-day the sole actual ruler
-of the greatest empire the world has ever seen; but neither you nor
-I have any more time to waste, either in reproaching each other or
-regretting what cannot now be helped.”
-
-“No, no!” said the King, almost appealingly. “That is quite
-right--quite right. Tell me, if you please, what has really happened to
-bring about this terrible danger which threatens us, and let us see if
-we cannot yet protect ourselves.”
-
-“You can yet make such preparations as will at least enable you to
-meet your enemies on equal terms,” replied Alan, following the King’s
-example, and seating himself again, “and it is to put before you a
-necessary scheme of defence that I have come here, and when I have
-described it you will see that we Aerians have not forgotten that our
-ancestors once led Anglo-Saxondom to the conquest of the world.”
-
-“Pray proceed,” said the King, sitting up on his lounge again. “I can
-assure you that I am all attention.”
-
-Alan then began, and told in detail all that was necessary for the King
-to know of what had happened during the last six years, concluding
-with a graphic narrative of startling vividness of the marvellous
-and momentous events that had been crowded so thickly into the last
-twenty-one days.
-
-It would not be saying too much to state that the close of the recital,
-which he had listened to with the most anxious attention, left King
-Albert in a state of nervous excitement that bordered closely upon
-absolute panic. He had heard enough to show him that the splendid
-fabric of Anglo-Saxon civilisation would, if left in its present
-defenceless state, totter and fall like a house of cards at the first
-onslaught of its powerful and disciplined enemies.
-
-He saw that its wealth and splendour, like those of the effete empires
-of old, were a source of weakness and not of strength, a temptation to
-its foes and an encumbrance to itself.
-
-Then, as Alan went on to describe the scheme of defence proposed by
-the Council of Aeria, he seemed to find support and consolation in the
-quiet, masterful tones of the man who, without a tremor in his voice,
-could calmly discuss the prospect of a war which would involve the
-whole of humanity in one colossal struggle, which could have no other
-result than an indescribably appalling loss of human life and the
-complete subjection, if not destruction, of those who were vanquished
-in it.
-
-Yet when he had finished King Albert shook his head sadly and
-doubtfully, and said--
-
-“Yes, yes, it is a splendid scheme, a scheme worthy of you and your
-wonderful race, but it can only be accomplished if our Parliaments
-agree together to sanction it and support it. I hope with all my heart
-that they will do so, but I sadly fear that not even your influence,
-and the fearful danger which threatens them, will make them agree one
-with another.
-
-“Of late years, since the power of the democracy has increased so
-enormously, they wrangle for weeks over the smallest matters of
-municipal government. As for national policy, they seem to have
-forgotten what it means. I may be wrong, and with all my soul I hope I
-am, but I sadly fear they will never consent to what they will call a
-military despotism, even to save themselves. The elections take place
-during the last four days of this month, and by that time the news that
-you have brought me shall be published everywhere, so that the people
-may know what is before them, but everything will depend upon the men
-and women whom they return to Parliament.”
-
-“Ah,” interrupted Alan, stroking his beard to conceal a smile, “I had
-forgotten for the moment. You have lady legislators now as well as
-male ones. We were ungallant enough to refuse them admittance to the
-Parliament during our period of control.”
-
-“Yes,” said the King, with a smile that had but little mirth in it.
-“But we have progressed fast since then. In our Parliament men and
-women were almost equally balanced in both Chambers, and scarcely any
-business was done during the year.”
-
-“Which proves,” said Alan, “that what was called our discourtesy and
-unfairness was not so very unwise after all.”
-
-The interview ended shortly after this remark, for the time for action
-had already arrived. Alan had learnt enough from the King’s own lips
-to see that he was merely a crowned puppet in the hands of the rival
-parties, which contended in both Chambers for the favour of the
-democracy and the continuance of office. He therefore saw further that,
-if anything was to be done in working out the scheme of international
-defence, he would have to take the initiative.
-
-As full discretion had been given to him in his commission from the
-Council of Aeria, he did not scruple to half-persuade and half-frighten
-the King into investing him with such authority as he could give,
-and, armed with this, he went to work that very day with a vigour and
-promptness which amazed the feeble monarch, and raised a storm of
-indignation among the members of the two Chambers who were seeking
-re-election.
-
-A very short experience of these people proved to him that nothing must
-be hoped from them. Day after day he met committees and deputations of
-them, who argued with him and wrangled among themselves until he was
-utterly disgusted and out of patience with them.
-
-At last, on the evening of the 27th, after he had spent the whole
-day in striving to convince a joint-committee, consisting of twenty
-members of each Chamber, of the tremendous danger which threatened the
-Federation, and the immediate and urgent necessity of united action in
-preparing to meet it, he lost the last remnants of his temper, and,
-springing to his feet, he faced them with anger in his eyes and scorn
-on his lips, and said--
-
-“We have talked enough, ladies and gentlemen! I came here expecting to
-find the old spirit of Anglo-Saxondom still alive, and so far as you
-are concerned I find it dead. You are not patriots or competent rulers.
-You are simply members of a noisy and verbose debating society! When
-absolute destruction at the hands of a well-armed and implacable foe
-is threatening your country and your allies, you talk of averting the
-calamity by discussion and arbitration, instead of armed resistance.
-By all means discuss and arbitrate, if you can, but also prepare
-for battle in case it proves, as I am certain it will prove, to be
-inevitable. Do you suppose that the lamb can argue with the wolf, or
-that the rich and defenceless man can save his wealth from the armed
-plunderer by mere force of argument or an appeal to his moral sense? If
-you do, you are something worse than simple, you are guilty of a folly
-which is a crime against those who have committed their affairs to your
-keeping.
-
-“But I, like most of my people, have Anglo-Saxon blood in my veins, and
-I will not leave my kindred defenceless. I bear an English name, and
-that name and my descent shall be my title to do what I now tell you
-I am going to do. In my own person, and with the full authority and
-sanction of the Council of Aeria and your own lawful monarch, I here
-and now reassert the supremacy over the realms of Anglo-Saxondom which
-my father resigned in St. Paul’s Cathedral six years and a half ago!
-Hold your elections if you choose, and conduct your noisy pretence at
-government according to your own tastes, but do not expect me to be
-guided or bound by any enactments that you may choose to make. You may
-call this a revolution if you will. So it is, but remember that your
-foolishness has made it necessary! I can make Anglo-Saxondom ready to
-meet its enemies on equal terms when the day of battle comes, as come
-it surely will in less than twelve months from now, and, God helping
-me, I will do it! You either cannot or will not do this, but I will
-take good care that you do not prevent it being done.
-
-“I believe that the old spirit which won the Armageddon of 1904 still
-survives in Anglo-Saxon breasts, and I believe that it will respond to
-the call to arms which shall be heard throughout the length and breadth
-of the Federation before another sun has set. To-morrow I shall take
-possession of the means of intercommunication, and I warn you that you
-will oppose me at your peril.
-
-“You know that I have a force at command before which you are as
-helpless as the worms that crawl in the earth, and as there is a heaven
-above me I will use it without ruth or scruple if I see that the
-interests of Anglo-Saxondom require me to do so. You have your choice,
-to act with me or to remain neutral. Oppose me, and I will destroy you
-as traitors and enemies to your country and your race!”
-
-So saying, Alan turned his back upon the committees, and strode out of
-the room in which he had met them, leaving them speechless with anger
-and dismay.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI. THE HOME-COMING.
-
-
-THE eastern mountains were still casting their long shadows over the
-lawns and fields, the vineyards and the gardens of Aeria on the morning
-of the eleventh of May in the year 2037 of the Christian Era and the
-hundred and thirty-third year of the Peace, but the whole population
-of the lovely valley were already afoot and abroad, for this was the
-most momentous day that had been in the history of the colony since
-Richard Arnold had first crossed the Northern Ridge with Natasha beside
-him in the conning-tower of the little _Ariel_, in those days the only
-air-ship that existed in the world, to lay the foundations of that
-throne from which their descendants had ruled the nations of the earth
-for a century and a quarter.
-
-To-day the year of probation imposed by the Council upon Alan Arnoldson
-and his companion in misfortune, in exile, and in victory, was to
-expire, and the long-lost wanderers were to return to their home and
-kindred.
-
-Very soon after it became light hundreds of aerial boats and yachts
-of every variety of design and ornamentation that the taste and skill
-of the most highly-cultivated race of people the world had ever seen
-could devise, came floating in towards the vast city of Aeria from the
-marble palaces and villas which were scattered throughout the length
-and breadth of the central African Paradise.
-
-Along the broad, smooth white roads, too, which led from the southern
-portions of the valley, round the lake to the northern shore on which
-the city stood, groups of people, with here and there husbands and
-wives and pairs of yet unwedded lovers, were gliding in long, swift,
-easy curves on noiseless wheel-skates over the polished marble of the
-pavements.
-
-Bright with the gayest and yet most perfectly-harmonised colours,
-blazing with jewels and precious metals, from their gold or
-crystal-winged coronets to the burnished silver framework of their
-skates, splendid in stature, and glowing with perfect health--if some
-man of the present day could have beheld these dwellers in Aeria on
-their way to hold high festival in their capital, he would have thought
-that he had strayed into some other and higher sphere, inhabited by
-some glorified race of beings who had left the toils and cares and
-pollutions of earth far behind them on some lower plane of existence.
-
-Doubtless, indeed, from some such sphere the reincarnated spirits of
-those who, a hundred and thirty-three years before, had passed through
-the tremendous ordeal of the Terror, and in their hour of well-won
-triumph had made such a splendid future possible for their descendants,
-looked down with approving eyes, not undarkened by a shade of sorrow
-for woes to come, upon this glorious scene of the fruition of the
-harvest that they had sown, this realisation of the long-sought ideal
-of human brotherhood, where there was no evil because men had learnt at
-last that good was better than evil.
-
-Vast as was the stately city, which was at once the capital and the
-only town of Aeria, it was soon comfortably filled by the brilliant
-throngs of visitors that came pouring into it by road and through
-the air. The broad white streets, lined with their double groves of
-palms and tree-ferns, soon blazed with colour, and became vocal with
-greetings and laughter, and all the houses which lined them were thrown
-open to all visitors who chose to come and claim hospitality for the
-day of rejoicing.
-
-On the terrace in front of her father’s villa, on the slopes that rose
-to the west of the city, Alma stood with Isma watching the brilliant
-scene below and around them, and speculating on the coming events
-of the day which for them had a supreme interest, such as no other
-inhabitant of the valley could feel.
-
-“It will be a right royal home-coming for our two heroes, won’t it,
-Alma?” said Isma, slipping her little hand through her friend’s arm;
-“almost worthy of the great deeds that they have done to regain what
-will be given back to them to-day--and yet, alas! there is to be a spot
-on the sun of happiness for all that. Alma, are you still quite sure
-that poor Alan will have to come back and not find that which above all
-other things he comes to seek?”
-
-A faint flush rose to Alma’s cheeks as she replied, in a low, steady
-tone--
-
-“Yes, Isma, alas! as you say, I am still sure of that, supposing always
-that he really does come to seek what you mean. I know that no man ever
-lived more worthy the love of woman than he is. Yet, God help me, I
-cannot give mine.
-
-“I know, too, that he will come back to-day crowned with more honour
-than any Aerian, save Alexis, ever won before him since the days of our
-ancestors--and yet whenever I permit myself even to dream of him as a
-lover, a dark, beautiful, cruel face looks with black, burning eyes
-into mine, and two sweet, scornfully-smiling lips say in a whisper that
-sounds almost like a serpent’s hiss--‘You may take him now, for I have
-done with him. Take him and ask him to tell you how well he and I loved
-when my spell was strong upon him and he forgot both you and all his
-kindred for sake of me.’
-
-“It is horrible, horrible beyond all thought or speech, but it is so,
-Isma, and I, of all the thousands of Aeria who will make merry to-day,
-shall be sad at heart and praying for the night to come.”
-
-“I don’t believe it, Alma, however sincerely you may do so--as, of
-course, you do,” replied Isma impatiently. “It is not your true and
-loving self that is speaking. It is the woman who has been brooding
-over a shattered idol that never really was a man of flesh and blood.
-
-“I tell you again--and before that sun has set you will confess in
-your own heart that I am right--that you have never known the Alan who
-is coming home to-day any more than I have known the Alexis who is
-coming home with him. Neither you nor I have ever seen two such men as
-they will be--men who have passed through such experiences as no other
-Aerians ever had, who have suffered and conquered, dared and done, like
-them.
-
-“You must put away those morbid fancies of yours, dearest; they are not
-worthy of you any more than Olga Romanoff is worthy to cause you an
-hour’s unhappiness. Never mind thinking about Alan as a lover now. I
-tell you you have never seen him, therefore it will be time enough for
-you to begin to do that when you do see him.
-
-“For my own part, I don’t mind telling you--of course, strictly between
-ourselves--that though I can hardly say that I love Alexis as he is
-now, since I do not know what he is like, I am quite prepared to fall
-in love with him all over again on the slightest provocation. And now,
-after that confession, I think we had better close the discussion and
-get ready to go over to the city.”
-
-This frank avowal, uttered as it was with a delightful candour quite
-irresistible in its charm, brought a smile to Alma’s lips in spite of
-her own sombre thoughts. She slipped her arm round Isma’s waist, and
-led her towards one of the long windows which opened out on to the
-terrace under the pillared portico which ran the whole length of the
-front of the villa.
-
-“I quite agree with you,” she said. “If that tell-tale face of yours
-is no better masked than it is now, when you meet your Alexis I don’t
-think you will have long to wait for the provocation. Ah, well, I
-suppose--in fact, I am sure--that you take by far the wiser view, and I
-would give anything to be able to look upon Alan as you are ready to do
-on Alexis.
-
-“But no, it’s no use; do what I will I cannot think of him apart from
-that Syren who has held him in the bondage of her spells all these
-years. I know it is unreasonable, and yet he seems, even now that he
-has regained his freedom, to belong to her more than he ever did to me.”
-
-“That, my dear Alma,” replied Isma, half seriously and half in jest,
-“is as nearly absurd as anything that such a serious and cultivated
-person as yourself could say. If I could give you a share of my
-more trivial temperament you would just say that you are still so
-desperately jealous of Olga Romanoff that you cannot bring yourself to
-think of Alan as a possible lover until you feel quite sure that he
-hates her as intensely as you do. That may not be a very heroic way of
-putting it, but I think we shall find it pretty near the truth before
-you have known the new Alan very long.”
-
-Alma laughed more musically than mirthfully at this sally, but made
-no reply to it in words. There was, perhaps, more truth in the
-half-bantering, half-reproachful words than she would have cared to
-admit, even to her best-beloved and most confidential friend, and so
-she took a wise refuge in silence, from which Isma, in the gladness of
-her own heart, drew her own conclusions.
-
-It might have been that there were depths in Alma’s nature which not
-even their life-long friendship and their common sorrow had enabled her
-to fathom, but for the present she was quite satisfied that jealousy of
-Olga and anger at the advantage which Alma believed her to have taken
-of her power were the sole reasons that prevented her from regarding
-Alan as she had confessed herself ready and willing to regard Alexis.
-
-When they left the terrace the two girls had breakfast together in
-Alma’s own room in a privacy which the other members of the family
-tacitly respected, knowing as they did that the events of the day would
-bear a totally different significance for them to that which they would
-have for all the other inhabitants of the valley.
-
-By the time the sun began to show his disc above the ridges of the
-eastern mountains they were on their way to the city with Alma’s mother
-and father in one of the aerial boats that were used for transit about
-the interior of the valley.
-
-They alighted on the flat roof of the President’s official residence,
-a splendid palace of the purest white marble, which stood on the
-northern side of the great square, from the centre of which rose the
-golden-domed building which served the Aerians as a meeting-place on
-all public occasions. It was here that the decrees of the Council were
-promulgated, and here, too, on every seventh day were held the simply
-impressive religious services prescribed by the Aerian form of worship.
-
-Soon after they had arrived at the President’s house a great
-mellow-toned bell sounded the hour of six from the cupola above the
-dome, and, as the last stroke died away, a chorus of silvery chimes
-rose up from a hundred towers in different parts of the city, and went
-floating across the lake and down the valley to the southward, caught
-up and echoed as it went by peals from the thousand palaces and villas
-scattered about the lower slopes of the mountains.
-
-This was the signal for the commencement of the first ceremony of the
-day, and the gaily-dressed, smiling throngs of visitors to the city
-began to file in orderly, leisurely fashion into the eight wide-open
-doors which led to the interior of the vast temple in the middle of the
-central square.
-
-In the midst of the immense open area under the dome was a space about
-twenty feet square, enclosed by low railings of massive gold, and in
-this stood three tall pillars of marble without a single flaw or vein
-to mar their perfect whiteness from base to capital. On each of them
-stood an urn of exquisite shape, each carved out of a solid block of
-crystal, and each containing a small quantity of ashes.
-
-Each pillar bore an inscription in letters of gold let into the
-marble. The centre one was slightly higher than the other two, and its
-inscription consisted of the single word
-
- “NATAS.”
-
-The urns on the other two pillars contained a larger quantity of ashes.
-On the pillar to the right hand, facing the main entrance to the
-temple, were the words--
-
- RICHARD ARNOLD,
- First Conqueror of the Air.
-
- NATASHA,
- The Angel of the Revolution.
-
-And on that to the left--
-
- ALAN TREMAYNE,
- First President of the Anglo-Saxon Federation.
-
- MURIEL TREMAYNE,
- His Wife.
-
-The square in which these pillars stood was the most sacred spot on all
-the earth in the eyes of the Aerians, sanctified as it was by the ashes
-of those who had made possible the Great Deliverance, and brought peace
-on earth after countless ages of strife. Every tongue was silent, and
-every head was bowed in reverence as those who entered the temple first
-caught sight of the pillars and their priceless burdens.
-
-Then the vast and ever-swelling congregation ranged itself in orderly
-files, all fronting towards an elevated rostrum which stood at one of
-the angles of the great square under the dome, formed by the junction
-of the four naves, with their long pillared aisles which ran towards
-the four points of the compass.
-
-Suddenly all the carillons that were still ringing out over the city
-ceased, and in the midst of the perfect silence the President ascended
-the rostrum to address the expectant assembly. Although he spoke but
-a little above his ordinary tone, every word could be heard with
-perfect distinctness throughout the immense interior of the building,
-for a system of electric transmitters, a development of the modern
-telephone, carried his voice simultaneously to a hundred parts of the
-walls, so that those who were standing farthest from him heard quite as
-distinctly as those who were close to the rostrum.
-
-He began by a brief narration of all that had happened to Aeria and the
-world since the fatal day on which Olga Romanoff had set foot on the
-deck of the _Ithuriel_ to the present moment, and made no attempt to
-conceal or to minimise the tremendous and disastrous consequences that
-had flowed from that fatal and yet innocent mistake on the part of his
-son.
-
-He confessed that the empire of the air, that priceless legacy which
-they had received from its first conqueror, had been lost, and that,
-not only the outside nations of the earth, but even Aeria itself stood
-upon the eve of a conflict in comparison with which even the War of the
-Terror itself would prove almost insignificant. All that had been won
-then had now to be fought for over again, and fought for with weapons
-the destructiveness of which made impossible any estimate of the
-carnage and desolation that were about to burst upon the world.
-
-Then he described how Alan and Alexis, acting under the orders of the
-Council, had, after vainly trying to arouse the rulers and senates
-of Anglo-Saxondom to a sense of their danger and responsibility,
-proclaimed martial law throughout the whole area of the Federation,
-reasserted the supremacy which the Council had resigned nearly seven
-years before, and taken the direct conduct of affairs into their own
-hands.
-
-He told how the manhood of Europe, America, Southern Africa, and
-Australia had, under the influence of their appeals, roused itself from
-the sloth of prosperity and the vain dreams of democracy, and under
-their leadership had mustered millions upon millions strong to oppose
-those who determined to rivet the chains of despotism once more upon
-the limbs of free men.
-
-The energy and devotion of the two men whose exile was to end that
-day had accomplished this miracle in less than a twelvemonth. All the
-mechanical resources of the Federation had been simultaneously devoted
-to the building of an aerial navy, which already numbered nearly a
-thousand vessels, and more than a hundred dockyards had achieved
-the construction of a navy of over a thousand submarine warships,
-while millions of small-arms had been sent out from Aeria, or
-manufactured in the arsenals of the Federation for the equipment of the
-newly-created armies.
-
-What the issue would be of the mighty struggle which would begin in
-six days, no man could tell, but all that could be done to give the
-victory to Aeria and the Federation had been done, and the rest lay
-in the hands of the God of Battles, who had given their ancestors the
-victory in the days of the Terror. The President concluded his address
-by saying--
-
-“Those through whom, if not by whom, this calamity has undoubtedly
-fallen upon the world, have been recalled to Aeria by the Council,
-after nearly seven years of exile, to receive reinstatement in
-their long-forfeited rights of citizenship, but even now they will
-not reassume those rights unless their welcome home is unanimous.
-Therefore, while their ships are still outside our mountains, if any
-citizen of Aeria has, even at this eleventh hour, any reason to give
-why they should not be permitted to recross the barriers which separate
-us from the rest of the world, let him or her come forward now and
-state it.”
-
-He ceased, and for a few moments there was perfect silence throughout
-the vast congregation. Not a man or woman moved or spoke, and all
-eyes were turned on the President, waiting for him to speak again. In
-a voice whose now unrestrained emotion contrasted strongly with the
-former impassiveness of his tones he said--
-
-“Then their welcome shall be unmarred by any voice of dissent! As the
-father of one of the exiles I thank you for endorsing the sanction
-which, as President of the Council, I have believed it my duty to give
-to the return of my son Alan and his friend and companion, Alexis
-Masarov, who fell with him and with him has risen again.”
-
-Hardly had the last word left his lips when salvo after salvo of aerial
-artillery roared out from mid-air all round the mountains, and came
-echoing down the upper gorges and ravines to tell the people of Aeria
-that the fleet which had been sent out to escort the returning exiles
-was already in sight.
-
-So spacious were the approaches to the vast building that in less than
-ten minutes from the time the President had left the rostrum on hearing
-the salutes from the sky not a soul remained within its precincts.
-
-Outside the Council Hall the scene was such as to baffle all attempts
-at adequate description. Hundreds of aerial craft, fashioned in every
-conceivable variety of design that the educated fancy of their owners
-could suggest, soared up from various parts of the city and its
-environs, and made towards the Ridge to the north of the valley.
-
-The summit was about four thousand feet above the slope on which the
-city stood, and it was quite within the capacity of the pleasure-craft
-to scale this height. So their glittering wings beat the cool, fresh
-air of the morning with rapid strokes, and the whole flotilla of them
-soared upwards until their occupants were able to see over the mighty
-rock-wall, and the illimitable landscape beyond opened out before their
-expectant gaze.
-
-The President, the Vice-President, and the twelve members of the
-Council with their families had embarked on one of the new aerial
-battleships, two hundred and fifty of which had been constructed
-during the past year. The _Avenger_, as she had been named, in view of
-the fact that she was henceforth to be placed under Alan’s immediate
-command as flagship of the combined Aerian and Federation fleets, was
-the largest aerial cruiser then in existence, and embodied the highest
-structural skill to which the engineers of Aeria had attained.
-
-From the stern to the point of her ram she was two hundred and
-seventy-five feet in length, with a midships beam of thirty feet. She
-was sustained in the air on two pairs of wings, one working under the
-other. Of these, the lower and larger pair measured two hundred feet
-from point to point and fifty feet in their greatest breadth, while
-the upper pair, working nearly flush with the deck, were two-thirds of
-their size.
-
-She carried ten guns on each broadside, and two bow and two stern
-chasers of a range limited only by the possibility of taking aim at the
-object to be destroyed, and her propellers were capable of driving her
-through the air at the hitherto unheard-of speed of six hundred miles
-an hour.[4]
-
-The _Avenger_, attended by an escort of fifty cruisers of somewhat
-smaller dimensions than her own, rapidly out-distanced the flotilla of
-pleasure-craft, and passing over the Ridge at a speed of sixty miles an
-hour, stopped at an elevation of a thousand feet above it.
-
-From here those on her deck could see the vast oval of the valley
-encircled by the sentinel ships which now constantly patrolled the
-mountain bulwarks of Aeria, and which were launching hundreds of
-time-shells up into the air from their outer broadsides and producing
-a continuous roar of explosions which formed such a greeting salute as
-had never been heard on earth or in the air before.
-
-Presently an answering roll of thunder was heard far away to the north,
-growing every moment louder and louder.
-
-“There they come at last!” cried Isma, who was standing with Alma in
-the bow of the _Avenger_, eagerly scanning the northern heavens through
-a pair of field-glasses. “I can see the flashes of the shells quite
-distinctly.”
-
-As she spoke she handed the glasses to Alma, and noticed, not without a
-little smile of satisfaction, that her hands trembled slightly as she
-raised them to her eyes.
-
-“Yes, they are coming,” said Alma, in a tone that might have been a
-good deal steadier than it was. “I can see the sun shining upon the
-hulls of the ships. They are coming up very fast, evidently.”
-
-“Of course they are!” laughed Isma. “After the poor fellows have been
-shut out all this time from the delights of Aeria, it is only natural
-that they should hasten their home-coming. Look, look! you can see them
-without the glasses now. What a swarm of them there seems to be!”
-
-As she spoke an immense fleet, numbering nearly five hundred vessels
-spread out in the form of a vast crescent, the arc of which was turned
-towards Aeria, swept up out of the blue distance, their polished
-hulls glittering in the bright sunlight. In the centre of the arc and
-slightly elevated above the rest, shone the blue hull and the white
-glistening wings of the _Ithuriel_, and close in her wake followed the
-_Isma_.
-
-When the advancing fleet was within five miles of the mountains it
-slowed down from four hundred to about fifty miles an hour. At the same
-instant the other fleet ran up the Aerian and Federation flags and the
-simply eloquent signal, “Welcome Home!” flew from the lofty foremast
-of the _Avenger_. It was instantly acknowledged by the _Ithuriel_, and
-then on all the five hundred vessels the Aerian and Federation flags
-were run to the mastheads and dipped three times in greeting.
-
-Then the two points of the vast crescent that they formed swung slowly
-and regularly forward until the arc was inverted and the _Ithuriel_ and
-the _Isma_ came along side by side midway between the two horns.
-
-When the two fleets were within half a mile of each other the
-_Avenger_, with twenty-five of her consorts on each side, swung round
-into line with their prows pointing towards the mountains, and in this
-order, at fifty miles an hour and an elevation of a thousand feet above
-the Ridge, the combined squadrons swept across the mountain barrier,
-and Alan and Alexis, each steering his own vessel in the conning-tower,
-saw for the first time, after nearly seven years of exile, the
-incomparable beauties of the Aerian landscape opening out before their
-eyes.
-
-[Illustration: THE COMBINED SQUADRONS SWEPT ACROSS THE MOUNTAIN
-BARRIER. _Page 237._]
-
-Following the movements of the leading squadron, they dipped as soon
-as they had passed over the Ridge, and were met on their downward
-flight by the hundreds of pleasure-craft which were waiting for them in
-mid-air.
-
-Thousands of gaily-coloured handkerchiefs were waved in welcome to
-them, and many a greeting in the sign-language passed from the crews
-of the warships to the occupants of the pleasure-craft and back again,
-for some of the former had been on foreign service for nearly a year,
-and there were many pleasant relationships to be renewed which had been
-interrupted by the calls of duty.
-
-Far below the home-comers could see the spacious streets of the great
-city, brilliant with the gaily attired throngs who had come to welcome
-them, and heard the greeting chorus of thousands of bells chiming in
-gladsome peals from hundreds of towers and minarets scattered over the
-city and its environs.
-
-Signals were now flown from the _Avenger_ directing the whole of
-Alan’s fleet, excepting the _Ithuriel_ and the _Isma_, to alight on a
-great sloping plain to the northward of the city, where their crews
-were to disembark and then proceed to the central hall of the Temple.
-Acting on previous orders, the consorts of the _Avenger_ did the same.
-The pleasure-craft fluttered downwards on to the housetops, and so
-the three battleships were left alone in the air, the _Ithuriel_ now
-floating on the right of the _Avenger_ and the _Isma_ on the left.
-
-Amid the welcoming cheers of the throngs which now filled the great
-square they sank slowly down, and at length alighted on the roof of the
-President’s palace. Then the doors of the deck-chambers opened and a
-last and loudest cheer of all rose up as, in full view of the assembled
-thousands in the square, the President and Maurice Masarov once more
-clasped hands with their long-exiled sons.
-
-Then they descended into the interior of the palace, followed by the
-Council and the other guests on board the _Avenger_.
-
-In the President’s room, the same in which he had received Olga
-Romanoff’s challenge from the skies, Alan and Alexis were welcomed
-home again by those who were nearest and dearest to them. Only their
-immediate kindred were present, for, in the nature of the case, the
-occasion could have been nothing but a private one. Nor could mere
-words of description do justice to the tender pathos of the scene that
-was enacted in that inner chamber, for but few words were spoken even
-by the actors in it. The emotions of such a moment were too intense and
-overpowering for speech, and so heart spoke to heart almost in silence.
-
-Alma, who had, of course, remained outside in the reception-room of the
-palace with the Council and her parents, felt even more keenly than she
-had expected the truth of the prophecy that she had uttered to Isma an
-hour or so before. Amidst all the thousands of Aeria she was the only
-one whose heart was heavy on that day of universal rejoicing.
-
-Once, and once only, her eyes had met Alan’s, but the single swift
-glance had been more than enough to tell her how far they now stood
-apart. She had seen the light of pleasure and triumph suddenly die out
-of his eyes and the bright flush on his cheek pale as he looked at her.
-
-There had not even been a greeting smile on his lips as he bowed his
-cold, grave salutation to her and then turned away to look down upon
-the city and the splendid prospect of the valley that was opening
-before him. This had happened up in mid-air, just as the ships had
-crossed the Ridge in close order, and she had not been able to trust
-herself to look at him again even when they had disembarked on the roof
-of the palace.
-
-The swift telegraphy of that one glance had been enough to tell her
-that it was not the fond, light-hearted lover of her girlhood that had
-come back, but a strong, stern, and prematurely grave man, who knew all
-and more than she knew of the new relation between them, and who knew
-also that they could not meet as they had parted, and so accepted the
-changed conditions with a proud reserve that drew a sharp dividing line
-between them which, for all she knew, might never be crossed.
-
-Though outwardly she was calm and perfectly self-possessed, she waited
-in a suspense that almost amounted to mental agony for the moment when
-the greetings in the President’s room would be over and Alan and Alexis
-would be brought out to be formally presented to the Council. Then
-their hands would have to meet and words would have to pass between
-them.
-
-Meet as strangers they could not, for everyone knew--even he knew--why
-she had refused all these years to wed with any other man, nor yet
-could they meet as lovers, as Isma and Alexis had perhaps done by this
-time, for between them the shadow had fallen, and even if there was
-love in their hearts there could be none upon their lips.
-
-If Olga Romanoff could have looked into Alma’s soul at that moment, she
-would have seen something very like a fulfilment of a prophecy she had
-made on board the old _Ithuriel_ six years and a half before to Alan,
-when she first heard of her rival--“By your hand I will wring her heart
-dry, and cast it aside to wither like an apple shaken from the tree!”
-In those moments of suspense it seemed to Alma that even now her heart
-was withering under the blight of this great sorrow that had fallen
-upon her life after all her years of loving and patient waiting.
-
-At last she heard footsteps and voices in the corridor that led from
-the private apartments of the palace. They were coming, and almost
-mechanically she turned her eyes towards the curtains which screened
-the doorway through which they would enter. They parted, and Alan came
-in walking by his father’s side and with Isma hanging laughing on his
-arm.
-
-She shrank back a little as she saw Isma look at her for a moment and
-then say something to Alan. But he appeared to take no notice, and
-walked forward with his father to where the members of the Council were
-waiting to receive him. She heard the President say the formal words of
-presentation, and saw the rulers of Aeria one after another grasp his
-hands, and then those of Alexis, greeting them heartily as they did so.
-
-Then the little group opened, and she saw, as in a waking dream, Alan’s
-tall form striding towards her with both hands outstretched, and heard
-a voice that was his, and yet not his, so deep a ring of unwonted
-gravity was there in it, say--
-
-“Are you going to be the only one who has no greeting for the prodigal,
-Alma? Have you forgotten that we were sweethearts once, and therefore
-surely may be friends now?”
-
-There was an emphasis on the word “friends” that was perhaps
-imperceptible to all ears but hers, but she caught it, and took her cue
-from it instantly. With admirable tact he had, in that one word, shown
-her the only basis on which it would be possible for them to take part
-together in the society of the valley.
-
-As man and woman they must be to one another as friends whose
-friendship was sweetened by the recollection that long ago, as boy and
-girl, they had been lovers. She accepted the situation with a sense of
-thankfulness and infinite relief, and, frankly placing her hands in his
-and summoning all her self-command to her aid, she looked steadily up
-into his bronzed, bearded face, and said gravely and sweetly--
-
-“You know that that is not so, Alan, and if my welcome is a little
-tardy it is none the less sincere for that reason. There were others
-who had a prior claim, and so I waited, for it is only right that
-friends should come after kindred. Welcome home! I suppose we are going
-to the Council Hall now, to see what we are all longing so much to
-see--the Golden Wings once more upon your brows.”
-
-“Yes,” replied Alan colouring slightly, as he noticed her upward glance
-at his sable head-gear, “we are going there immediately, I believe,
-but,” he continued in a lower tone and still holding her hand in his,
-“long and anxiously as I have looked forward to to-day and its promise,
-half of that promise will be betrayed unless you tell me first that you
-believe I have fairly won the right to wear the Golden Wings again.
-Tell me, now, do you in your heart think so?”
-
-“If you have not done so,” she replied, only keeping her voice steady
-by a supreme effort, “then it would be hopeless for any man to look for
-forgiveness on earth. You have fallen and you have risen again, and
-to-day there are no two men in Aeria more worthy of honour than you and
-Alexis are.”
-
-He looked down into the clear depths of her soft grey eyes as she
-spoke, and in another instant he might have forgotten that which sealed
-his lips to all words of love, and all the reserve to which he had been
-schooling himself for so long, but at that moment Alma’s mother came
-towards them saying that the President was ready to take Alan to the
-Council Hall, and--this with a smile--that thousands should not be kept
-waiting for the sake of one. Her words recalled him to himself, and,
-with an inclination of his black-plumed head, he said--
-
-“That is enough, for now I know that I have heard the truth from the
-lips of my severest judge, and I am well content with it. I have not
-lost everything if you believe that I have regained my honour.”
-
-“We all believe that, Alan,” said Alma’s mother before her daughter
-could reply; “and, more than that, I know of no one in Aeria who thinks
-that you ever really lost it. Now go to your father. He is thinking of
-the thousands who are waiting anxiously for you in the Council Hall.
-You can finish this conversation later on.”
-
-He accepted the dismissal with a smile, and as he went back he saw Isma
-slip away from Alexis’ side with a tell-tale blush on her lovely face,
-and, giving him a saucy, laughing glance as she passed him, run lightly
-across the room to Alma’s side.
-
-“Well,” she said, reading too swiftly and not very correctly the
-altered expression of her friend’s face, “have you made friends, then,
-after all? I thought you would, and--oh, Alma, I _am_ so happy!”
-
-“Yes,” replied Alma gravely, though she could not repress a smile at
-the radiant face that looked up at hers, “we have made friends. But you
-seem to have done something more than that. Your explanations”--
-
-“There were no explanations at all,” interrupted Isma, rosy red from
-neck to brow. “When we met in the room he picked me up in his arms
-before everybody and kissed me--and after that of course there was
-nothing to be said.”
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[4] Those readers who may be inclined to think this speed extravagant
-or impossible are requested to remember that the most recent
-experiments in aerodynamics have proved that the higher the speed of
-an aerial machine the less is the power required to support and propel
-it, or, to quote the words of Professor Langley, of the Smithsonian
-Institute, “One horse-power will transport a larger weight at twenty
-miles an hour than at ten, a still larger at forty miles an hour than
-at twenty, and so on with increasing economy of power with each higher
-speed up to some remote limit not yet attained in experiment.” Granted
-therefore the practically illimitable energy of the motive power
-supposed to be at the command of the Aerians, there is no reason why a
-ship of the dimensions of the _Avenger_ should not be propelled at the
-enormous speed mentioned in the text.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII. THE EVE OF BATTLE.
-
-
-AN irregular procession was now formed, at the head of which walked the
-two returned exiles, each with his father by his side, and followed by
-the rest of the company. They passed out of the reception-room, down
-the wide entrance-hall, and out of the great arched portal which opened
-on to the square.
-
-As they appeared at the top of the spacious flight of marble steps
-which led from it down to the pavement, a mighty cheer of welcome went
-up from a hundred thousand throats, the peals of bells in the four
-towers which rose from the angles of the Council Hall sent forth the
-signal to all the other belfries of the city, and, amidst the jubilant
-chorus that instantly burst forth, the scene of the reinvestiture
-was reached. Then the great bell in the dome tolled out one sonorous
-warning note, and instantly there was silence on the earth and in the
-air.
-
-This was at the moment that the procession, after passing half round
-the square along the broad path left for it by the cheering throng,
-halted in front of the main entrance to the Temple of Aeria, which
-faced towards the south, in the middle of the magnificent façade
-fronting a marble-paved avenue of double rows of palms and tree-ferns
-which ran in a straight line for three miles down to the shores of the
-lake.
-
-The Aerians had progressed far beyond the stage of semi-barbaric pomp
-and display, and so the ceremony of restoring to Alan and Alexis the
-rights of citizenship, of which the Golden Wings were the symbol,
-solemn as it was, was also simple in the extreme.
-
-As the vast curtains which hung over the main doors of the Temple swung
-aside to admit them, they fell out of the procession and doffed their
-sable head-gear. The President and his fellow Councillors went on and
-took up their position in front of the three pillars under the centre
-of the dome.
-
-Then a guard of honour, composed of a hundred of their shipmates and
-companions-in-arms from Kerguelen, marched up to the door and formed
-into two files, between which Alan and Alexis walked down the aisle
-through the space left by the orderly throng that filled the vast
-building from the floor to the topmost tier of the rows of seats which
-rose half-way up the lofty walls, and so came in front of the President
-and the Council.
-
-Here their guard halted and formed a semicircle, leaving them in the
-open space within it. A breathless silence fell upon the assembled
-thousands as they dropped on one knee before the President. Then, in a
-voice whose every accent rang distinctly to the farthest corners of the
-huge building, he said--
-
-“Alan Arnold and Alexis Masarov, the year of your probation ended with
-the rising of this morning’s sun. You have been tried and you have not
-been found wanting, and that of which the arch-enemy of our race robbed
-you for a time you have regained by manly valour and patient devotion.
-
-“Therefore, by command of the Supreme Council, and with the consent of
-all the citizens of Aeria, I restore to you the symbols of those rights
-which you lost and have regained.
-
-“In the presence of God and this assembly, and on the holy ground
-that is sanctified by the ashes of those mighty ancestors of ours who
-bequeathed to us the empire of the world, I replace the Golden Wings
-upon your brows, in the full belief that from the higher and happier
-sphere they now inhabit they are looking down with approval upon the
-act.
-
-“Rise now, recrowned Princes of the Air, and in the near approaching
-day of battle go forth with fearless hearts and stainless honour to do
-that which the voice of duty and the needs of humanity shall bid you
-do!”
-
-As he ceased speaking he held out a hand to each of them, and so they
-rose to their feet again, once more wearing the Golden Wings, once more
-free and equal amidst their peers of the Royal race of Aeria. As they
-did so a burst of jubilant melody rolled out, apparently from all parts
-of the Temple at once.
-
-It was the opening chorus of a triumphal march which the greatest
-living musician of Aeria, and therefore of the world, had composed in
-honour of the day and the event, and as its splendid harmonies rolled
-out from the hidden organ through the vast interior, and through the
-open portals into the square beyond, the great assembly filed out in
-four streams from the Temple, and all Aeria made ready to give itself
-up to feasting and merry-making for the rest of the day.
-
-For three days Aeria kept high festival in honour of the home-coming
-of the son of the President and his companion in exile, but for all
-that there was sterner business in hand than merry-making for those
-in authority. Save in the almost impossible event of overtures of
-peace being received from the Sultan, war which, in the nature of the
-circumstances, could hardly fail to be universal, would actually begin
-at daybreak on the 16th of May, that is to say in five days after the
-return of Alan and Alexis.
-
-The greater part, therefore, even of the days of rejoicing was really
-spent in hard work by those upon whom had devolved the tremendous
-responsibility of counteracting as far as was possible the designs of
-conquest and oppression to which Olga Romanoff, by means of her fatal
-beauty and subtle diplomacy, had succeeded in irrevocably committing
-Khalid the Magnificent.
-
-Early on the morning of the day following the reinvestiture of Alan
-and Alexis with the symbols of Aerian citizenship a council of war was
-held in the President’s palace, which was attended by all the members
-of the ruling Council, the chief engineers of the settlement, and the
-admirals in command of the aerial and sea navies and the squadrons
-posted at the various stations throughout the world.
-
-Before this assembly Alan, who had already entered upon the active
-discharge of his duties as Commander-in-Chief of all the forces of
-Aeria and the Federation, laid the details of his plans of attack and
-defence, and invited criticism upon them.
-
-The same day Alan transferred his flag and his crew from the _Ithuriel_
-to the _Avenger_, while Alexis took possession of a splendid vessel of
-the same type, to which the name _Orion_ had been given, after that of
-the air-ship commanded by Alan Tremayne in the battle of Armageddon.
-Alexis, however, had very little difficulty in obtaining the consent
-of the Council to his substituting another name for this, with the
-consequence that the prize taken from the enemy resumed her Russian
-name, and remained in Aeria as a trophy of the skill of her captors.
-
-Perhaps in his heart Alan would have dearly liked to have made a
-similar change in the name of the _Avenger_, but it was impossible for
-him to propose it, situated as he was with regard to Alma.
-
-Alexis and Isma had taken the shortest, and therefore the wisest,
-course out of the terribly delicate and embarrassing position which
-had been created by the unholy passions and ruthless treachery of Olga
-Romanoff. They had tacitly agreed to ignore it _in toto_, and to begin
-again where they had left off nearly seven years before, and thus it
-came to pass that Isma’s own pretty hands spilled the christening wine
-over the shapely bows of her formidable namesake.
-
-The first use that Alan made of his new ship was to test her immense
-capabilities to the utmost, so that he might know what demands he might
-safely make upon her in possible emergencies. He rushed her at full
-speed round the mountain bulwarks of Aeria, a distance of two hundred
-and fifty miles, and found that she completed the circuit in just
-twenty-five minutes, which gave a speed of six hundred miles an hour.
-Alexis followed, and covered the same distance in twenty-seven minutes
-and a half in the _Isma_.
-
-These trials proved that the new Aerian vessels were from fifty to
-seventy-five miles an hour faster than the models on which their
-enemies had been building their new fleets--a fact which, unless Olga
-and her ally had made a corresponding improvement in their battleships,
-might be expected to have a considerable effect on the issue of the
-coming war.
-
-After the speed-trials the soaring powers of the two vessels were
-tried, and it was demonstrated that their machinery was sufficiently
-powerful to carry them to altitudes beyond which it was not possible
-for human beings to breathe. After this all the defences of Aeria were
-visited and examined in detail, and then on the second day after their
-arrival in the valley Alan and Alexis divided all the air-ships at
-their disposal into two squadrons, each numbering nearly four hundred
-vessels, one of which, commanded by Alan, guarded the valley, while
-the other, under Alexis, constituted an attacking force, the duty of
-which was to find out, if possible, any weak point in the defensive
-organisation.
-
-From noon to midnight the mimic battle went on in strict accordance
-with the accepted rules of aerial warfare, but though Alexis and the
-captains of his fleet tried everything that skill or daring could
-suggest, the defence proved too strong for them, and during the whole
-twelve hours they were unable to bring a single vessel into such a
-position that she could send a shell into Aeria without previously
-exposing herself to a fire that must have annihilated her in an instant.
-
-This aerial review was the concluding spectacle of the festivities, and
-it was watched by the occupants of thousands of pleasure-craft, whose
-interest in it was sharpened by the knowledge that before many days a
-conflict such as it portrayed might be raging in deadly earnest round
-the mountain bulwarks of their hitherto inviolate domain.
-
-So consummate was the skill displayed by Alan in this defence that
-as soon as the _Avenger_ touched ground after the review was over
-he was summoned to the Council Chamber in the President’s palace to
-receive the thanks of the Senate and cordial expression of the perfect
-confidence that the people of Aeria would feel, whatever the magnitude
-of the war might prove to be, while the conduct of the campaign was in
-his hands and those of Alexis, whose tactics had also been so perfect
-that, without once putting a single ship in danger, he had made it
-impossible for Alan to do anything more than remain strictly on the
-defensive.
-
-On the following day, the 14th, the motive power of all the vessels
-was renewed, ammunition laid in, and all the guns and engines minutely
-inspected, so that there might be no chance of failure when the moment
-of trial came. Then the final arrangements for the defence of Aeria
-itself were perfected, and when that was done, the Vale of Paradise, as
-its inhabitants fondly called their lovely land, was a vast fortress
-compared with which the strongholds of the present day would be as
-harmless and defenceless as molehills.
-
-Four hundred aerial battleships of what were now called the first and
-second classes, ranging in speed from four to five hundred and fifty
-miles an hour and mounting from ten to twenty guns each, were to patrol
-the outer walls of the mountains, at distances of five and ten miles
-from them and at elevations varying from two to ten thousand feet.
-These were divided into two fleets of two hundred each which relieved
-each other every six hours, so that their supply of motive power might
-be constantly renewed.
-
-In addition to these, two squadrons of twenty-five of the most powerful
-warships of the newest type alternately kept watch and ward against
-surprise in the upper regions of the air from fifteen to twenty
-thousand feet above the valley, while all round the great circuit of
-the mountains were planted in the most favourable positions nearly a
-thousand land batteries mounting three, five, and ten guns each, which,
-if necessary, would be able to surround Aeria with a zone of storm and
-flame which nothing living could pass and still live.
-
-[Illustration: BATTERIES WHICH WOULD BE ABLE TO SURROUND AERIA WITH A
-ZONE OF STORM AND FLAME. _Page 248._]
-
-By day the range of vision from the decks of the sentinel ships would
-make surprise impossible, and at night the great electric suns on the
-summits of the mountains, aided by hundreds of search-lights flashing
-through the darkness in every direction, made an attack under cover
-of the darkness almost equally hopeless.
-
-The news of the alliance between Olga and the Sultan had acted like a
-trumpet-call to battle on the proud and martial spirit of the Aerians.
-Generation after generation their young men had been trained in the
-arts of war as well as in those of peace, for the wisdom of their
-ancestors had foreseen that, in the ordinary progress of science, it
-was impossible for many generations to pass without some independent
-solution of the problem of aerial navigation, which must, sooner or
-later, result in a challenge of their supremacy.
-
-Consequently, all through the years of profound peace which the outside
-world had enjoyed under their rule, their vigilance had never slept for
-a moment, and their men and ships and materials of war were kept in the
-highest possible state of efficiency. Thus, though the Aerian nation
-numbered little more than a million souls, inhabiting a territory
-of some two hundred and fifty square miles, the amount of effective
-strength that it was able to put forth on an emergency was totally
-disproportionate to its size.
-
-Living in a region of inexhaustible fertility and boundless mineral
-wealth, with no idle or mere consuming classes, no politics, and
-no laws that a child of ten could not understand, they led simple,
-natural, and busy lives, accumulating immense public and private
-riches, which were as constantly expended in increasing the splendour
-and power of the State, which, as a whole, was the expression of the
-wealth and patriotism of its citizens.
-
-No sooner had the alliance of their enemies become an accomplished
-fact than they devoted the whole of their vast resources to increasing
-their offensive and defensive armaments to the utmost of their power.
-Reserves of material that had been stored up year after year had been
-drawn upon, the mighty natural forces that they had brought into
-subjection laboured night and day for them, and ships and machinery
-and guns came into existence as though at the bidding of some race of
-magicians.
-
-Magazines were filled with immense stores of ammunition, potential
-death and destruction such as had never been wielded by human hands
-before--and commanders and officers for all the battleships of the
-Federation had been sent out as each squadron of vessels was completed.
-
-In a word, Aeria had donned her panoply of war, and stood armed at
-all points, ready to fight the world if necessary in defence of the
-priceless heritage which its citizens had received from their fathers,
-the giants who in the days of the Terror had taken despotism and
-oppression by the throat and flung them headlong out of the world.
-
-The defences of Aeria were to be under the immediate command of the
-President. All the oceanic stations, save Kerguelen, Teneriffe,
-Bermuda, and Hawaii, had been abandoned so as to permit of greater
-concentration of forces, while fifty new ones had been established in
-different parts of Europe and the British Islands, for here the brunt
-of the attack was to be expected, and here the enemy must be met and
-crushed if Anglo-Saxon civilisation was to be saved from a new era of
-militarism and personal oppression.
-
-Alan and Alexis were to take command of the Western and Eastern fleets
-into which the aerial forces were to be divided, Alan in the West
-with Britain as his chief base of operation, and Alexis in the East
-with the Balkan Peninsula as his base between the Russian and Moslem
-headquarters.
-
-The naval fleets, in three divisions, the Atlantic, Mediterranean, and
-Pacific squadrons, had already received their general instructions,
-and were waiting at their various rendezvous for the outbreak of
-hostilities. The Atlantic squadron blocked the Straits of Gibraltar,
-the Narrow Seas of Britain, and the approaches to the Baltic, the
-Mediterranean division patrolled the Inland Sea from Gibraltar to
-Cyprus, and the Pacific fleet were blockading the southern approach to
-the Red Sea, ready to operate against any junction of the Indian and
-African sea forces of the Sultan.
-
-At midnight, on the 14th, Alan and Alexis were to set out for their
-respective fields of operation, and that evening there was a farewell
-banquet given by the Council in the President’s palace in honour of
-them and the commanders of their ships. Many a hearty toast was given
-and drunk in the sparkling golden wine of Aeria, and many a hearty
-God-speed and loving farewell passed between those who remained at home
-and those who were going forth to do battle for them and for the peace
-of the world in distant skies, and to pass through the fiery storm of
-such warfare as had never been waged in the world before.
-
-Just before twelve, when the fleets were ready to take the air, and
-the last farewells were being said, the _Avenger_ and the _Isma_ were
-lying on the roof of the President’s palace, and their commanders were
-standing by the gangway steps which hung down from the deck-chambers,
-the centres of two little groups of grave, silent men and sorrowing
-women, their nearest and dearest in a land where all were friends.
-
-The last blessings of fathers and mothers had been given and taken,
-and then came the hardest farewells of all. Isma and Alexis parted as
-declared lovers will part as long as the Fates are cruel, but when
-Alan took Alma’s hands in his for the last time, and looked down upon
-the pale loveliness of her perfect face and into the clear calm depths
-of her eyes, the word that he had been longing to say ever since his
-return died upon his lips.
-
-The contrast between her stainless purity and the darkness of the blot
-that Olga’s unholy passion had placed upon his life rose up in all its
-horror for the hundredth time before him, and once more the impassable
-gulf opened between them. All that he could say was--
-
-“Good-bye, Alma! You, too, will wish me God-speed, won’t you?”
-
-“With all my heart, yes, Alan,” she replied in low, sweet, steady
-tones. “God guard you in your good work and send you back in safety to
-us. You will come back rich in honours and followed by the blessings of
-the world you are going to rescue from the oppressors”--
-
-“Or I shall never come! Good-bye, Alma, good-bye, all!” he said,
-breaking upon her speech, for he could bear to hear no more, and as he
-spoke he stooped and kissed her forehead as he had kissed Isma’s a few
-moments before. Then he turned and ran up the steps just as Alexis took
-his last kiss and did the same.
-
-As they gained the decks of their ships the great bell in the dome
-of the Temple boomed out the first stroke of twelve. At the sixth
-stroke the electric suns on the summits of the mountains blazed out
-simultaneously at a hundred points, a long, deep roar of thunder rolled
-round the bulwarks of Aeria, and with search-lights flashing out ahead
-and astern, the four hundred battleships of the two squadrons rose into
-the air and swept up towards the Ridge.
-
-[Illustration: THE FOUR HUNDRED BATTLESHIPS OF THE TWO SQUADRONS ROSE
-INTO THE AIR. _Page 252._]
-
-A thousand feet above it they stopped and hung for a moment motionless
-in mid-air. Then the roar of a thousand shells exploding far up
-in the quaking sky answered the salutes from the sentinel ships,
-and then, still signalling farewells with their search-lights, the
-squadrons swept out into the ocean of darkness that loomed round the
-light-girdled realm of Aeria.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII. THE FIRST BLOW.
-
-
-THE night of the 15th of May 2037 was passed in an agony of
-apprehension by nearly the whole of civilised humanity. The long
-threatened and universally feared thunder-cloud of war had at last
-loomed up over the serene horizon of peace in full view of the whole
-world.
-
-Although the events of the last six years had to some extent prepared
-the minds of men for the impending disaster, now that the last hour of
-the long peace was really about to strike there were very, very few
-among the millions of non-combatants who were able to rise superior to
-the universal panic.
-
-The ocean terrorism which had paralysed the commerce of the world five
-years and a half before, fearful as it had been, was, so far as the
-bulk of humanity was concerned, a terror of the unseen. Ships had gone
-out to sea and had vanished into the depths, leaving no trace behind
-them, but the hand that struck the blow had remained invisible.
-
-Now, however, this same terror, magnified a thousandfold, was to come
-close up to the shores of lands whose inhabitants had never known what
-it was for man to raise his hand against his brother. To-morrow the sun
-would rise as usual, the earth would smile, the sea would dance, and
-the air grow bright and warm under his beams, yet air and earth and sea
-would be wholly strange to the eyes of men, for they would be invested
-with terrors hitherto only pictured by the fears of panic.
-
-The air would be charged with death. Beneath the laughing waves great
-battleships would be speeding swiftly, silently, and invisibly on their
-errands of destruction, and the fair face of earth would be scarred by
-the harrow of battle, and seared with the fires of murderous passion.
-
-The ocean traffic of the world had been almost wholly at a standstill
-for nearly a month. Transports which could complete their voyages
-before the end of the truce had done so; but since the 1st of May only
-short voyages had been attempted, for it was known that escape from the
-attack of a submarine battleship would be absolutely impossible for any
-vessels that floated on the surface of the water.
-
-The immediate results of this had of course been the dislocation of
-trade and commerce and ever-increasing scarcity of food in the great
-centres of population. Impossible, absurd even, as it still seemed to
-those who had not thoroughly recognised the tremendous gravity of the
-situation, the inhabitants of the magnificent cities of the old and new
-worlds were actually within measurable distance, even before a blow had
-been struck, of seeing the spectre of Famine cross the threshold of
-their palaces.
-
-In a few days communications by land would be as difficult and as
-dangerous as those by sea, for, swift as the trains were, their speed
-was far excelled by that of the slowest air-ship, which could wreck
-them with a single shot. Bridges would be destroyed, stations blown
-up, and lines cut in a hundred places at once, till railway travelling
-would have to cease all over the world.
-
-Thus the most splendid civilisation of all the ages stood trembling
-on the verge of destruction at the moment when the sleepless eyes
-of the inhabitants of Alexandria saw the first faint glow of the
-dawn brightening the eastern sky. No one knew where or how the first
-blow would be struck in the strange and terrible warfare for the
-commencement of which the rising of that morning’s sun gave the signal.
-
-There were scarcely any elements in common with the war of the
-nineteenth century save the slaughter and destruction that it would
-entail. There could be no marshalling of fleets or warships on the
-sea, for to be detected by an enemy would be coming very near to being
-destroyed. Every blow would have to be struck swiftly, silently, and
-without warning, for only one could be struck, and to fail would be to
-be lost.
-
-So, too, in the air, as had been proved at Kerguelen and Mount Terror.
-Everything would depend upon the supreme strategy which enabled the
-first fatal shot to be sent home that would decide battle after battle
-without hope for the vanquished to recover from their defeat.
-
-But after all it would be on land that the terrors of the new warfare
-would be most fearfully manifested. It needed but little effort of
-the highly-strung imaginations of those who were waiting for the
-world-tragedy to begin to picture vast armies, magnificent in their
-strength and splendid in their equipments, marching to grapple with
-each other on some field of Titanic strife. Suddenly and without
-warning they would be smitten by an invisible foe floating far above
-the clouds, or perhaps visible only as a tiny speck of light high in
-the central blue.
-
-Their battalions would be torn to pieces, their regiments decimated
-and thrown into confusion, their commanders--the brains of the huge
-organisms--would have no such protection as they had in the wars of
-former times, for the aerial artillery would reach everywhere, and the
-Commander-in-Chief in his headquarters would be as much exposed as the
-private in his bivouac.
-
-Thus the brain would be destroyed and the body reduced to impotence;
-disciplined armies would become lawless and unregulated hordes in a few
-days or weeks, and the organised slaughter of the battlefield would be
-exchanged for the butchery and plunder of the city carried by assault.
-
-It was little wonder, then, that the world watched the ending of its
-last night of peace and the dawning of its first day of battle with
-feelings such as men had not felt for five generations, if, indeed,
-ever before in the history of man.
-
-It was not a mere war of nations with which men were confronted. The
-evil genius of a single woman had achieved the unheard-of feat of
-dividing the human race into two hostile forces so nearly balanced
-in strength that mutual destruction seemed a not improbable issue of
-what might after all prove to be the death-struggle of humanity, the
-collapse of civilisation and the sinking of a remnant of mankind back
-to the level of barbarians whose children would wander amidst the ruins
-of their forefathers’ habitations, and wonder what race of demigods had
-created the wondrous fabrics whose very fragments were splendid.
-
-As the dawn flew round the world on that momentous morning every
-eye was turned towards the heavens, on every lip there was but one
-question: Where will the first blow be struck? and in every heart there
-was but one thought: Will it reach me or my dear ones?
-
-The focus of all human interest was for a moment Alexandria, for it
-was known that from there the main expeditionary force was to be sent
-out to, if possible, effect a landing on the shores of Italy, while
-other expeditions were to start from Tripoli, Tunis, and Oran to
-effect landings in France and Spain. The bridge across the Straits
-of Gibraltar from Point Cires to Gualdamesi was to all intents and
-purposes neutral, since it would have been madness to send trains
-conveying troops across it when a single shot from the British battery
-at Gibraltar would have shattered the bridge to fragments.
-
-The forces destined by the Sultan for the invasion of Europe would,
-therefore, either have to be conveyed in swift transports by sea,
-protected by squadrons of air-ships and flotillas of submarine
-battleships, or else they would have to go by land round the Levant by
-Syria, and so through Asia Minor to the shores of the Dardanelles and
-the Bosphorus.
-
-As the European shores of these two straits were known to be defended
-by concealed batteries mounting guns a single shot from which would
-blow the biggest transport afloat out of the water, the Sultan had
-decided to make the attempt to invade Italy, France, and Spain by sea,
-while the Russian forces, with their Asiatic allies, were to attack the
-central nations from the east.
-
-So far, therefore, as could be foreseen, the Mediterranean would
-once more be the arena of strife, and on some part of its shores or
-its waters the first blow of the war would be struck. Every possible
-preparation for the attack upon Europe had been finally completed
-immediately after the return of Khalid from the coronation of Olga
-on the 11th, but beyond the fact that the coasts of Europe, from the
-Straits of Dover to the Golden Horn, were patrolled by Federation
-battleships, nothing was known of the dispositions which had been made
-for the defence of Europe.
-
-Gibraltar, Minorca, Cape Spartivento, Mount Ida in Candia and Olympus
-in Cyprus formed a chain of Federation posts which, while they had been
-made impregnable to all attack save long-sustained bombardment from
-the air, rendered any attempt on the part of large fleets to cross the
-Mediterranean an extremely hazardous venture.
-
-These stations were connected from Gibraltar to Cyprus by telephonic
-cables, buried beneath the floor of the sea to hide them from the
-enemy’s cruisers, and also by patrols of battleships constantly moving
-to and fro in touch with each other along the whole line, and this was
-the first barrier through which the Moslem Sultan had to force his way
-before he could land his armies upon the shores of Southern Europe.
-
-This, too, formed what may be termed the first line of defence of the
-Federation and of Christendom, and although neither the Sultan nor
-the Tsarina was wholly aware of the fact, it had been strengthened to
-such a degree that it was expected to prove unbreakable even under the
-impact of the immense forces that would be brought to bear upon it.
-
-When the sun at last rose over the hills of Syria and Sinai, and the
-watchers in the streets and on the housetops of Alexandria heard the
-voice of the Muezzin calling the first hour of prayer and the last
-hour of the world’s peace, the bright blue waves of the Inland Sea lay
-smiling and sparkling in its earliest beams, betraying not a trace
-of the hidden forces which waited but for the signal that might come
-either from land or sea or sky to begin the work of desolation.
-
-The harbours of the city were thronged with shipping, great transports
-lined the miles of quays whose network fronted the seaward verge of
-the Moslem capital. Some of the basins swarmed with the half-submerged
-hulls of scores of battleships waiting to take up their position as
-convoys to the flotilla which, if the Sultan’s plans succeeded, would,
-within the next twelve hours, land nearly four million troops on
-European soil.
-
-In the air, at elevations varying from five hundred to ten thousand
-feet, a squadron of two hundred aerial cruisers kept watch and ward
-against a surprise from the upper regions of the air. By the time the
-day had fully dawned, land and sea and sky had been scanned in vain for
-a sign of an enemy’s presence.
-
-The sailing of the flotilla of transports had been fixed for six
-o’clock by Alexandrian time, and already the battleships were moving
-out into the open to take up their places in advance of the fleet of
-transports. Fifty air-ships had ranged themselves in a long line to
-seaward at an elevation of two thousand feet to protect the transports
-from an aerial assault, and the transports themselves were moving
-out to form in the basin behind the breakwater, whence they were to
-commence their voyage.
-
-Sultan Khalid, on board his aerial flagship _Al Borak_--named after the
-winged steed which, according to the old legend, had borne the Prophet
-from earth to the threshold of the Seventh Heaven--superintended in
-person the last preparations for the departure of his great armament.
-Flying hither and thither, now soaring and now sinking, he inspected
-first the cruisers of the air and then the flotillas of the seas, and
-at last, when all was ready, he took his place by one of the bow guns
-of the _Al Borak_ to fire the shot that was to be the signal for the
-expedition to start.
-
-But a higher intelligence and a greater tactical ability than his had
-already determined that the signal should be given in very different
-fashion. Fifty miles to the south towards the Lybian desert, high in
-air, fifteen thousand feet above the earth, a solitary air-ship hung
-suspended in the central blue.
-
-As the sun rose she had moved slowly forward towards the city. As she
-came within sight of it, Alan Arnold standing in her conning-tower
-saw through a telescope that commanded a range of a hundred miles the
-disposition of the aerial fleet above Alexandria. He marked down a
-group of five air-ships floating some five thousand feet above the
-centre of the city, and singled them out as the first victims of the
-war.
-
-He was, of course, far out of range of gun-fire, and to have gone
-within range and fired on them would have been to expose his single
-ship to a concentrated hail of projectiles which would have scattered
-her in dust through the sky. So he determined to open the game of death
-and destruction by a stroke as dramatic as it was terrible.
-
-He remembered how his ancestor, Richard Arnold, in the first
-_Ithuriel_, had rammed the Russian war-balloons to the north of Muswell
-Hill, and resolved to eclipse even that marvellous stroke of tactics.
-Obeying his will like a living creature, the mighty fabric under his
-control sank five thousand feet and then began to gather way on a
-slanting course towards the Moslem air-ships.
-
-The propellers whirled faster and faster, and the quadruple wings
-undulated with ever-increasing velocity until the crowds in the streets
-of Alexandria saw something like a swift flash of blue light stream
-downward from the southern sky, and heard a long screaming roar as
-though the firmament was being rent in twain above them.
-
-Then three of the air-ships floating in line above their heads seemed
-to break up and roll over. The crowds held their breath and pointed
-upwards with one accord in sudden horror, as the crippled air-ships
-dropped like stones towards the earth. In another moment they struck
-it, and then, as though the central fires of the earth had burst
-through in the heart of the great city, there came a crash and a shock
-that shook the ground like an earthquake spasm.
-
-[Illustration: THREE OF THE AIR-SHIPS SEEMED TO BREAK UP AND ROLL OVER.
-_Page 259._]
-
-A vast dazzling volume of flame shot up from amidst a wide circle of
-blackened ruin, towers fell and roofs collapsed all round the focus of
-the explosion, the whole atmosphere above the city was convulsed, and
-the very sea itself seemed to writhe under the stress of the mighty
-shock, and so, leaving death and ruin and consternation behind her,
-the _Avenger_ swept out over the Mediterranean at a speed that the eye
-could scarcely follow, after striking the first blow in the world-war
-of the twenty-first century.
-
-To say that this sudden and unexpected catastrophe spread panic through
-the Moslem capital would be but a very inadequate description of the
-_Avenger’s_ first blow in the world-war. Consternation, wild and
-unbounded, blanched every cheek, and made every heart stand still as
-the mighty roar of the explosion burst upon the deafened ears of the
-inhabitants and then instantly died into silence, broken only by the
-crash of falling ruins and the screams and groans of the wounded and
-dying.
-
-The red spectre of war in its most frightful form had suddenly appeared
-to the terrified and horror-stricken vision of millions of men and
-women, scarce one of whom had ever seen a deed of violence done.
-
-Khalid, like a wise leader, did all he could to prevent the panic
-spreading to the troops on board the transports by issuing peremptory
-orders for the expedition to start at once. At the same time he
-signalled for half a dozen air-ships to ascend as far as possible and
-attempt to discover the source from which the inexplicable attack had
-come, an errand destined to be entirely fruitless.
-
-In orderly succession the hundred huge transports, each carrying from
-eight to ten thousand men, left the outer basin in two long lines in
-the rear of the fifty air-ships already in position.
-
-A hundred submarine battleships took up their stations five hundred
-yards in advance of the first line of transports. Fifty of these sank
-to a depth of thirty feet, and shot two thousand yards ahead as soon as
-the whole flotilla was in motion, while the other fifty ran along the
-surface of the water with their conning-towers just showing above the
-waves, ready to sink in obedience to any signal that their commanders
-might receive from the air-ships, which commanded an immense range of
-vision over the waters.
-
-To all appearance the enemy was content with the one terrible blow
-that had already been struck. The smooth, sunlit sea betrayed no trace
-of a hostile vessel, and as far as the glasses of those on board the
-air-ships could sweep the sky nothing but the blue atmosphere, flecked
-here and there with white, fleecy clouds, could be seen.
-
-But the Moslem commanders were far from being deceived by these
-peaceful appearances. From Sultan Khalid, who was commanding the
-expedition in person, to the engineers who worked the transports, all
-knew that the invisible line of the Federation patrols had to be passed
-somewhere in the depths of the sea before the shores of Italy could be
-reached.
-
-The speed of the three flotillas was limited to twenty-five miles an
-hour, in order that there might be no headlong running into danger,
-and the commander of each of the submerged battleships had orders to
-rise to the surface the instant that his tell-tale needle denoted the
-presence of an enemy, and signal the fact to the rest of the squadron.
-The transports were then to stop, and were not to resume their passage
-until the battleships had cleared the way for them. The first division
-was to engage the enemy, while the second was to remain on the surface
-ready to defend the transports in case of need.
-
-For six hours the expedition proceeded on its way north-west by west
-from Alexandria without interruption. The intention was to pass about
-a hundred miles to the south of the Federation post at Candia, between
-which island and the Cape Spartivento the ocean patrol would most
-likely be met with.
-
-Soon after twelve those on board the Sultan’s flagship detected
-half a dozen little points of light shining amidst the waves to the
-north-westward. They could be nothing else but the scout-ships of the
-patrol; and although they were nearly ten miles away, a couple of
-shells were discharged at them from the _Al Borak’s_ bow gun, more as a
-warning to the Moslem flotilla than in the hope of doing any damage.
-Whether they did or not was never known, for before the explosion of
-the shells was seen in the water the points of light had vanished.
-
-Signals were at once made from the flagship ordering the transports to
-stop, and the second division of battleships to stand by to protect
-them. A dozen remained on the surface of the water, running round and
-round the now stationary troopships in concentric circles. The others
-sank to varying depths, and scattered until the vague fluctuations of
-their needles showed that they were more than a thousand yards from
-each other and the transports.
-
-As the first division had orders to keep more than two miles in advance
-as soon as an enemy was discovered, there would be no danger of ramming
-friend instead of foe. It ran on for seven miles after the main body
-stopped. It was moving in a single line, the vessels being at an equal
-distance apart, so that, with the exception of the two ships at the
-extremities of the line, the attraction of the steel hulls on the
-needles should be neutralised, and therefore only give indications of
-vessels ahead.
-
-At the end of the seventh mile the tell-tales ceased their wavering
-motions and began to point steadily, in slightly varying directions,
-ahead. The moment they did so the engines were stopped and the flotilla
-rose to the surface of the water. Their commanders found themselves
-out of sight of the transports, but the _Al Borak_, attended by ten
-other air-ships, was floating about a thousand feet above them. From
-the flagship’s mainmast-head flew the signal--“Fleet eight miles to the
-rear. Enemy ahead. Sink and ram.”
-
-The order was instantly obeyed by the whole division, and the fifty
-battleships simultaneously sank out of sight to engage the invisible
-enemy, while the Sultan and his companions on board the air-ships
-waited in intense anxiety to see what the next few fateful minutes
-would bring forth.
-
-No human eye could see what work of death might be going on down in the
-depths of the sea. Even those who took part in it would know it only by
-its results, and of these only the victors would know anything. They
-would reappear on the surface of the waves, but the vanquished would
-never rise again.
-
-Minute after minute passed and still the anxious watchers on the
-air-ships saw nothing. The bright, sunlit waves rippled on over the
-abyss in which the conflict must by this time be almost over. Five,
-ten, fifteen minutes passed, and still no sign. Had Khalid been a mile
-or two farther on and closer down to the surface of the sea, he would
-have seen streams of air-bubbles rising swiftly here and there and
-instantly breaking. But from where he was he could see nothing.
-
-Five more minutes went by and suspense gave place to apprehension. Had
-the whole of the first division simply sunk to its destruction into
-some invisible trap that had been laid for it deep down in the watery
-abyss? If not, how came it that not even one of the battleships had
-risen to the surface to tell the tale of victory or defeat?
-
-Khalid knew that the squadron would obey orders and hurl itself at full
-speed, that is to say, at some hundred and fifty miles an hour, upon
-the enemy the moment the tell-tales found their mark. In two or three
-minutes--five at the outside--their rams must either have done their
-work or failed to do it. If they had done it they would have risen to
-the surface; if they had failed and themselves escaped destruction they
-would still have risen.
-
-Now twenty minutes had passed and not one of the fifty battleships had
-reappeared. What could this mean but disaster?
-
-And disaster it did mean, but great as it was it was as nothing
-compared with the frightful catastrophe which followed close upon
-it. All eyes on board the air-ships were so intently fixed upon that
-portion of the sea where the squadron was expected to rise again that
-no one thought for the moment of looking back towards the transports
-until the dull rumbling roar of a series of explosions came rolling up
-out of the distance.
-
-Instantly every glass was turned in the direction whence the sound
-came, and Khalid saw his great fleet of troopships tossing about in
-the midst of a wild commotion of the waves, out of which vast masses of
-white water spouted as if from the depths of the sea, and amidst these
-ship after ship heeled over and sank into the white seething waters.
-
-Uttering a cry of rage and despair, he headed the _Al Borak_ at full
-speed towards the scene of the disaster. In three minutes he was
-floating over it, helpless to do anything to avert or even delay the
-swift destruction that was overwhelming the splendid fleet. Distracted
-by impotent rage and passionate sorrow for the fate of his soldiers and
-sailors, who were being slain hopelessly and by wholesale beneath his
-eyes, he watched the awful submarine storm rage on, wrecking ship after
-ship, and swallowing them up with all the thousands on board in the
-boiling gulfs which opened ever and anon amidst the waves.
-
-When the first panic passed, the transports which were still uninjured
-scattered and headed away as fast as their engines would drive them to
-the southward, where the only chance of safety seemed to lie. But there
-was no escape for them from their invisible and merciless enemies.
-
-The fate of one magnificent transport, the flagship of the fleet,
-may be described as an illustration of the general disaster. She
-was a vessel of fifty thousand tons measurement, and her crew and
-complement of troops numbered together nearly twenty-five thousand.
-She escaped the first discharge from the submarine torpedoes unharmed,
-and heading southward with her triple propellers revolving at their
-utmost velocity, rushed through the water at a speed of more than forty
-nautical miles an hour.
-
-She had scarcely gained a mile on her course when the glass-domed
-conning-tower of a battleship appeared for an instant above the waves.
-Before Khalid, not knowing whether it was friend or foe, could make up
-his mind to fire on it, it disappeared again.
-
-A few seconds later the great ship stopped and shuddered with some
-mighty shock, as though she had run head-on to a sunken reef, and
-heeled over to one side. Then came a dull roar, a huge column of white
-foaming water rose up under her side amidships, and she broke in two
-and vanished in the midst of a white space of swirling eddies.
-
-Such scenes as this were occurring simultaneously in twenty different
-parts of the naval battlefield. The foe never showed himself save for
-an instant. Then came the blow that meant destruction, and the victim
-vanished. There was none of the pomp and pageantry of modern naval
-warfare; no splendid armaments of mighty ironclads and stately cruisers
-vomiting thunder and flame and storms of shot and shell at each other,
-nor were there any rolling masses of battle smoke to darken the
-brightness of the sky.
-
-The occupants of an open boat five miles away would not have known that
-the most deadly sea-fight ever waged since men had first gone down to
-the sea in ships was being fought out under that smiling May-day sky.
-
-One after another the flying transports were overtaken, rammed, or
-blown up and sunk by the pitiless monsters which unceasingly darted
-hither and thither a few feet below the surface of the water, and in
-less than two hours after the first alarm had been given the last of
-the hundred transports which had sailed that morning from Alexandria
-had gone down a shattered wreck into the abysses of the Inland Sea.
-
-There was no chance of saving the drowning wretches who managed to
-escape from the eddies of the sinking ships, as there would have
-been in a naval battle of to-day. The air-ships could not do so
-without sinking to the waves, and so making themselves marks for the
-irresistible rams and torpedoes of their enemies, who themselves could
-not be merciful, even if they would, shut up as they were in the steel
-leviathans whose only use was destruction.
-
-Khalid the Magnificent, with a heart well-nigh breaking with rage and
-shame and sorrow, watched in passionate helplessness the destruction
-of his splendid fleet and the drowning, like rats in a pond, of the
-soldiers who were to have borne the banner of the Crescent over the
-conquered fields of Christendom.
-
-More than a million men had perished beneath his eyes, and he had not
-been able to fire a shot to help them, although he was in command of
-an aerial fleet which could have dispersed an army or wrecked a city
-between sunrise and noon.
-
-But the strangest part of the strange battle was yet to come. After
-the last of the transports had disappeared, the attack ceased and the
-assailants vanished. In a few minutes the sea was as calm and bright as
-ever, and only a few bits of broken wooden wreckage floating here and
-there betrayed the fact that anything out of the common had happened.
-
-The remnant of the Moslem squadron rose to the surface and signalled
-for instructions. Only twenty of them remained uninjured out of
-the hundred that had gone into the fight. Before the signals could
-be returned there was a loud hiss and a swirling noise as of some
-huge body rushing at a furious speed through the water, and a great
-battleship leapt up out of the nether waters, and hurled herself at
-a speed of nearly two hundred miles an hour into the midst of the
-floating squadron.
-
-[Illustration: A GREAT BATTLESHIP LEAPT UP OUT OF THE NETHER WATERS.
-_Page 266._]
-
-Her gleaming ram of azurine tore its way through the sides of three
-vessels in such swift succession that, almost before their fragments
-had time to sink, her huge bulk vanished under the waves again. But
-hardly was her work done than a second battleship charged into the
-paralysed squadron, sending two of its members to the bottom and
-crippling three more before she, too, vanished into the safe obscurity
-of the depths.
-
-A third was met by a storm of shells from the air-ships, which burst
-round her and under her just as she came to the surface, and blew her
-out of the water in fragments. Heedless of this, a fourth plunged
-fiercely through the foaming area of the explosion, and had wrecked
-two more Moslem vessels before a shell smashed her propeller and laid
-her helpless on the water. Two of the Moslems instantly backed out and
-rushed at her, tearing two great ragged holes in her side and sinking
-her instantly, only to be sunk themselves in turn by a fifth charge
-from below.
-
-Scarcely had this last foe disappeared in safety than a swarm of
-torpedoes, converging from all sides, encircled the remaining Moslem
-battleships. Some plunged beneath the waves to escape them, but
-these never reappeared. The remainder, torn and twisted and shattered
-by a series of explosions that flung the water mountains high all round
-them, sank like stones, and when the sea once more settled down, the
-grim work of death had been completed.
-
-The fate which had so swiftly overwhelmed the expedition that had
-set out from Alexandria had almost simultaneously befallen four
-other expeditions which had started at the same hour from Tripoli,
-Tunis, Algiers, and Oran. The one disaster had been an almost exact
-reproduction of the others.
-
-The same order, formation, and tactics had been observed in each of the
-five cases, and each of the five squadrons of transports and fleets of
-submarine battleships had been overwhelmed and completely destroyed
-by the same mysterious fate. Of five hundred transports and the same
-number of battleships which Sultan Khalid had possessed at sunrise on
-that fatal 16th of May not a single one remained by sundown, and of the
-more than three million souls who had manned the five fleets not one
-man survived.
-
-Of the strength or the losses of the enemy that had wrought this
-appalling and unheard-of destruction within such a brief space of time
-nothing could, in the nature of the case, be known by those who had
-seen only some of its effects from the decks of the air-ships which
-floated almost helplessly over the waves which were engulfing their
-naval consorts. The work of annihilation had for the most part been
-done in the dim and silent depths of the sea, and all that they knew
-was the number of those of their own comrades who had gone to battle
-and never returned.
-
-And yet to all practical intents and purposes these five stupendous
-blows which had simultaneously crushed the Moslem sea-power and half
-crippled the military strength of the Sultan had been struck by one
-hand. In other words, the victory of the Mediterranean was due to two
-inventions which had been made and perfected by Max Ernstein, who had
-been transferred from Kerguelen and appointed Admiral in Command of the
-whole Mediterranean forces of the Federation.
-
-One of these was a highly improved form of an apparatus which had
-just come into use on board battleships and cruisers when the War of
-the Terror broke out. This was an electrical contrivance which gave
-warning, more or less reliable, of the approach of torpedoes, by
-translating the aqueous vibrations set up by them into sound-waves,
-which increased in intensity as the hidden destroyer came nearer.
-
-This invention had been lost sight of when all the warships of the
-world were sunk in the South Atlantic after the proclamation of
-the Universal Peace. Ernstein’s was therefore a new discovery, or
-rediscovery, but the advantages of his position, far ahead of the
-scientific skill of the nineteenth century, had enabled him to produce
-a much more perfect instrument, and his apparatus, which was attached
-to all the battleships of the Federation, not only gave warning of
-the approach of an enemy, but indicated his direction, the number of
-revolutions at which his propellers were working, and his distance at
-any given moment.
-
-This not only enabled the commander of a Federation battleship to
-detect the presence of an enemy, but it enabled him to distinguish
-between friend and foe. As soon as the phonetic indicator showed that
-another ship was approaching he stopped his own propellers, started
-them, and stopped them again.
-
-The vibrations thus set up and interrupted would be conveyed to the
-indicator of the approaching ship, if she had one, and she would at
-once return the signal. If the signal was not returned it was safe
-to conclude that the coming vessel was an enemy and could be rammed
-accordingly.
-
-When this invention replaced the tell-tale needle that had been in
-use a year before, an alteration in tactics became necessary, and the
-fighting order became more extended. A mile instead of a thousand yards
-was now the limit within which the Federation battleships were not
-permitted to approach each other, save under special circumstances.
-Every vessel acted as an independent unit, subject only to the general
-instructions.
-
-Ernstein’s second invention was of a simpler but none the less
-effective character. Knowing that the Moslem and Russian squadrons
-would be forced to trust entirely to their tell-tale magnetised
-needles, he had devised a plan for making these worse than useless. As
-soon as the phonetic indicator told him that an enemy was coming, the
-commander of each of his battleships dropped a thin rope of insulated
-wire down thirty or forty feet into the water below him.
-
-The lower end of this cable was a powerful electro-magnet, through
-which a current of electricity was kept passing along the wires. The
-attraction of this magnet was far stronger than that of the hull of
-the vessel, and consequently the needles of the enemy were deflected
-downwards, and gave a totally erroneous idea as to the depth at which
-the Federation ship was floating.
-
-Thus when the first division of the Moslem submarine squadron charged
-at what its commanders thought were the hulls of their enemies, their
-rams passed harmlessly underneath them, merely striking the magnet
-and knocking it aside. The moment they had passed the magnet, its
-attraction swung their needles back, and showed that some mysterious
-mistake had been committed, but before they had time to turn and seek
-the mark afresh the Federation ships were upon them, and their rams had
-rent their way into their sides.
-
-In this manner every ship of the first division had been destroyed
-within three minutes after it had made its first and last charge.
-Then the Federationists had risen to the surface for an instant
-to reconnoitre by means of the arrangement of mirrors previously
-described, and sinking again had worked their way back towards the
-transports, formed in a huge circle round them, and had sent torpedo
-after torpedo into their midst.
-
-As soon as the flotilla had been thrown into confusion they had
-converged until they could communicate with each other by means of
-their submarine signals, and after that they had attacked the enemy
-singly. Ship after ship charged into the _mêlée_, did her work, and
-retired, if she escaped destruction, to give place to another.
-
-Only twenty Federation ships had been engaged in each of the five
-battles, and of these forty in all had been destroyed, a loss utterly
-disproportionate to the gigantic damage that had been done to the enemy.
-
-Khalid the Magnificent divined intuitively that the disaster
-which had overwhelmed the expedition which he had commanded in
-person was only a portion of a result achieved by some elaborate
-and consummately-conceived scheme of defence which must have been
-simultaneously put into operation against his other expeditions. What
-had succeeded against his own might well have been expected to have
-succeeded against them.
-
-He at once despatched four squadrons of ten air-ships each to Tripoli
-and Tunis, Algiers and Oran, with orders to collect all attainable
-information, and to return to Alexandria as soon after sunset as
-possible. Then he turned the prows of the remainder of his fleet
-towards his capital, and gave the signal for full speed ahead.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV. WAR AT ITS WORST.
-
-
-WITHOUT even pausing to see the effects of his charge upon the
-three air-ships above Alexandria, Alan kept the _Avenger_ going at
-full speed, soaring up into the higher regions of the atmosphere
-with her prow pointed to the north-east. About three hours later
-she was floating at an elevation of nearly five miles above Moscow,
-not stationary, but sweeping round and round in vast circles on her
-quadruple wings after the manner of the condors of the Andes, which
-thus sustain themselves on almost motionless wings at vast elevations
-and very small expenditure of force.
-
-Below an immense expanse of country lay in unclouded clearness under
-the glasses of the captain of the ship and George Cosmo, late engineer
-of the _Narwhal_, who was now chief engineer of the Aerian flagship.
-
-Not only Moscow, but a dozen other towns lay at the mercy of the
-_Avenger’s_ twenty-four guns, and yet no shot was fired, for Alan,
-despite the tremendous debt of vengeance that he owed to her who now,
-at last in very fact crowned Tsarina of the Russias, held her court
-at Moscow, was yet extremely loth to involve non-combatants in the
-destruction which he knew must follow the discharge of his guns.
-
-Added to this, his present designs were rather to reconnoitre than to
-destroy. He was in command of the fastest and most powerful air-ship in
-the world, and the task that he had set himself was to supervise the
-whole of the complicated arrangements that had been made for repelling
-the coming attack upon the Federation by the Moslems and Russians.
-
-Thus he had started soon after midnight from Gibraltar, one of the
-chief power-stations and depôts in Europe. Thence he had run along
-the African coast over Oran, Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli, noting the
-sleepless activity of the brilliantly-lighted towns, the swarming
-transports and battleships in their harbours, and the crowds of anxious
-watchers in their streets. Then he had got round to the south of
-Alexandria, as has been seen, and there struck the first blow in the
-war.
-
-Now, his object was to discover what disposition of troops were being
-made for the invasion of Austria and Germany. Another scout-ship would
-be by this time floating over St. Petersburg, and another over Odessa,
-and these were to report to him at noon.
-
-He had kept the _Avenger_ moving with sufficient rapidity to make it
-extremely difficult for her to be seen from the earth, as he wanted to
-see without being seen, and he remained undiscovered until nearly noon.
-All this time trains had been seen running in swift succession into
-Moscow from the east and out to the west, evidently conveying troops to
-the frontier.
-
-A large fleet of air-ships, numbering apparently between two and three
-hundred vessels, were seen lying in four squadrons on the open space
-about the Kremlin, and others were constantly flying into and out of
-the city in all directions.
-
-A few minutes after half-past eleven, Cosmo, after a long look through
-his glasses, called to Alan, who was looking out from the other side of
-the deck--
-
-“I fancy they must have seen us at last. Three ships are coming up on
-this side as if they wanted to investigate.”
-
-Alan crossed over and soon picked out the Russian vessels rising in
-long spiral sweeps from the earth about three miles to the northward
-and coming up very fast.
-
-“They seem to have learned something in tactics during the year,” he
-said. “They evidently know better than to rise perpendicularly while
-they suspect we are up here. They think they’ll be much more difficult
-to hit coming up like that.”
-
-“Yes,” said Cosmo. “But we can soon show them the mistake in that idea.
-What are you going to do with them?”
-
-“Destroy them, of course,” replied Alan. “It doesn’t matter about
-giving the alarm now. I think it’s pretty certain that the Russians are
-going to concentrate at Kieff, Vitebsk, Dünaburg, and Vilna, and those
-four squadrons down there are intended to cover them. We’d better let
-them concentrate, and make the fighting as short and sharp as possible.
-It would be a waste of time to destroy them here in detail, and the
-moral effect wouldn’t be anything like as good. What do you think?”
-
-“I don’t think there’ll be any fighting,” replied Cosmo, “unless
-between the air-ships. The most hardened troops of the nineteenth
-century would have broken and run like a lot of sheep under our shells,
-and these poor fellows, who have never seen a battle in their lives,
-will do the same.
-
-“I don’t believe we shall have any land fighting at all to speak of
-during the whole war. There will be nothing but massacres from the air
-on both sides. Still, I think you’re both wise and merciful in waiting
-until you can hit hard, though perhaps from the strictly military point
-of view we ought to have Moscow in ruins by sundown.”
-
-“I won’t do that,” said Alan, shaking his head decisively. “There are
-three or four millions of women and children in it who have done no
-harm, and I’ll shed no more blood than I’m obliged to. We had better
-destroy those fellows, however, before they get too close. You know
-what to do.”
-
-“Very well,” said Cosmo. “You’ll take the deck, I suppose?”
-
-Alan nodded, and Cosmo saluted and went into the conning-tower. The
-_Avenger_ now altered her course, so that her circling flight took her
-to the northward, above the three Russian air-ships that were sweeping
-round and round so fast that it would have been impossible to train a
-gun upon them.
-
-As soon as she got over them the _Avenger_ quickened her course until
-she was flying round in the same circles and at the same speed as the
-Russians. This, of course, made her relatively stationary with regard
-to them, and it was now possible to take aim. Two of the broadside
-guns, one on each side, were much shorter than the others, and had been
-specially constructed for firing almost vertically downwards.
-
-Alan stood by one of these and trained it on the first of the Russian
-vessels, which were coming up in a spiral line. At the right moment
-he pressed the button in the breech and released the projectile. The
-shot struck the Russian amidships. They saw the glass deck of the roof
-splinter, then the blaze of the explosion flashed out, the air quaked,
-and the next moment the fragments of the Russian warship were falling
-back upon the earth.
-
-A second and a third shot followed as the other two came into position,
-and when Alan looked down towards the city again he saw that the four
-squadrons had taken the alarm, and were rising from the earth and
-scattering in all directions. This was just what he wanted, for it
-relieved him of the scruples which had prevented him from firing on
-them while they lay within the precincts of the city.
-
-In an instant the crew of the _Avenger_ were at their guns, and shell
-after shell sped on its downward way after the flying ships. Although,
-under the circumstances, the aim was necessarily hurried, for the
-captains of the Russian vessels, seeing the terrible disadvantage at
-which they were placed, had put on their utmost speed, the guns of the
-_Avenger_ were so smartly handled that nearly a score of the Russians
-were either blown to fragments or crippled before the squadron escaped
-out of range.
-
-“Well done!” said Alan. “That will teach them to keep a little smarter
-look-out next time.” And then he went on to himself--“I wonder whether
-_she_ was on board one of those that are lying in little pieces down
-there? I suppose that would be too good luck to hope for, and yet I
-don’t know, I think her end ought to be something different to that. I
-wonder what it really will be?”
-
-He ordered his men to cease firing now, and placed the _Avenger_ once
-more in her old position over Moscow, keeping her at a great elevation
-to guard against surprise from the squadron he had scattered. A few
-minutes later two air-ships were reported coming from the south and
-north. The flash of the sun on their blue hulls proclaimed them friends.
-
-They were the vessels bringing the reports from St. Petersburg and
-Odessa, and these reports were to the effect that during the whole
-of the morning trains had been pouring through from the eastward and
-all the surrounding country towards the Austro-German frontier. Other
-reports from the westward had been received by the commanders of these
-two vessels to the effect that the Russian troops were massing along
-the frontier and seemingly preparing to invade the Federation area from
-the four points already selected by Alan.
-
-He at once despatched orders by these two courier-vessels to the
-depôts at Königsberg, Thorn, Breslau, and Budapesth to assemble four
-squadrons of fifty vessels each, which were to be over the points of
-concentration at daybreak on the following morning.
-
-These ships were to maintain their greatest possible elevation--that
-is to say, about three miles and a half--until the sun rose, then if
-the sky were clear they were to bombard the towns at once from that
-height; if not they were to use all precautions against surprise in
-passing through the clouds, and then the commanders were to use their
-own discretion as to the plan of operation, but Odessa, Kieff, Vitebsk,
-and Dünaburg were to be destroyed at all hazards as soon as it was
-certain that the invading forces were concentrated there, and preparing
-to march eastward.
-
-As soon as these orders had been despatched the _Avenger_ left Moscow,
-and started at full speed for Gibraltar, where she arrived about four
-o’clock in the afternoon.
-
-Here Alan, after once more inspecting the land batteries and the
-aerial defences of this important outpost of the Federation, received
-news of the annihilation of the four Moslem expeditions, and heartily
-congratulated Admiral Ernstein on the complete success of his
-operations.
-
-It was at once apparent that the Sultan would not risk a second loss so
-enormous as this even if he had sufficient transports left and could
-persuade any more of his people to brave the terrors of such another
-sea-fight. This being so, only two alternatives would be open to him,
-either he must give up all idea of invading Europe by land or sea, or
-else he must attempt to force the bridges across the Dardanelles and
-the Straits of Gibraltar, and cross into Europe _viâ_ Turkey and Spain.
-
-Both these bridges, the main highways between Europe, Africa, and Asia
-Minor, were guarded on the European side by batteries of enormous
-strength, similar to those which guarded the Federation posts in the
-Mediterranean. They were magnificent structures, each four hundred feet
-broad, carrying twelve lines of railway as well as carriage drives and
-promenades, and, once in the hands of the enemy, troops could be poured
-across them in tens of thousands every hour.
-
-Alan, after a brief conference with Ernstein, decided to pursue the
-same tactics here as he was going to make use of on the Russian
-frontier. The bridges were to be left completely open, but their
-supporting pillars were to be mined with torpedoes, connected by
-electric wires with the batteries.
-
-If the Sultan attempted to force them, his men were to be allowed
-to concentrate on the African and Asiatic shores and to occupy the
-bridges, then the bridges were to be blown up and the forces on the
-opposite side to be dispersed by the batteries and the air-ships.
-
-The message to the Dardanelles bridge was despatched by telephone over
-the cables connecting Gibraltar with Candia and Gallipoli, and similar
-instructions were sent on from Gallipoli to Constantinople, in case any
-attempt should be made to force the bridge which spanned the Bosphorus.
-
-The Mediterranean patrol was to be maintained as before, and three
-air-ships were sent out to reconnoitre the African coast from Ceuta to
-Port Said during the night, and learn what they could of the Sultan’s
-intentions.
-
-The rest of the evening and the greater part of the night were spent
-by Alan receiving and answering reports from the northern coast of
-the Mediterranean, the Russian frontier, and the principal cities of
-Europe, and in assuring himself that everything was ready, so far as
-was possible, to meet the storm that must infallibly burst over the
-Continent within the next few days.
-
-What would have been in the nineteenth century a matter of weeks was
-now only one of days and hours. The enormously-developed system of
-intercommunication made transit, even for very large numbers of men
-and between very distant points, rapid to a degree undreamt of in the
-present century.
-
-Trains could travel at two hundred miles an hour along the hundreds
-of quadruple lines which covered the Continent with their gigantic
-network, aerial cruisers could fly at more than twice this speed,
-and squadrons of submarine battleships could cleave their silent and
-invisible way through the ocean depths at a hundred and fifty miles an
-hour.
-
-It was, therefore, almost impossible to tell without certain
-information where and how the blows of the enemy would be struck,
-or from how many points the European area of the Federation might
-be assailed at once, and vast indeed were the responsibilities and
-anxieties which weighed upon the man whose single brain was the centre
-of this vast and complicated system of defence, and on whose decisions
-would depend the safety or the destruction of millions of human beings.
-
-Alan had managed to get four hours’ sleep in the afternoon between
-Moscow and Gibraltar, and he snatched two hours more before midnight.
-Then he was called, and the _Avenger_ was just about to take the air
-to return to the Russian frontier, so that he might supervise the
-operations there, when the look-out on the summit of the Rock of
-Gibraltar saw and answered the Aerian private signal from the sky, and
-a few minutes later a fleet of more than a hundred air-ships dropped
-down out of the darkness and hovered over what is now called the
-neutral ground between the Rock and Spain.
-
-One of these alighted at the signal station itself. It was the _Isma_,
-and within three minutes after she had touched the ground Alan was
-shaking hands with Alexis and asking him what brought him back so soon
-from the East.
-
-“I have come back because there is nothing much more to do there,” said
-Alexis. “Have you had any fighting here?”
-
-“Yes,” said Alan; “or, at anyrate, a big massacre.”
-
-And then he described what had befallen the Sultan’s expeditions.
-
-“Horrible but necessary, I suppose!” replied Alexis, not without a
-shudder at the news. “I have been doing my damage on land. I didn’t
-wait for the enemy to begin hostilities, so as soon as day broke we got
-to work. We have wrecked Ekaterinburg, Slatonsk, Orenburg, and Uralsk,
-and blocked the four roads into Russia from Asia.
-
-“The Tsarina’s Asiatic forces had concentrated there in large numbers
-ready to come into Europe. We found some air-ships intended to cover
-them, but we had the best of the elevation, and smashed them up. The
-slaughter has been something perfectly frightful. I had a hundred and
-fifty ships in action, and there isn’t a man left of the Asiatic troops
-that is not getting back to where he came from as fast as he can go.
-
-“The towns are mere heaps of ruins and the railways utterly useless. I
-left twenty ships to patrol the frontier and stop any further movements
-into Russia, and twenty more are strung out in a line from the Caspian
-to the head of the Red Sea to cut communications between Asia and
-Africa.
-
-“We came westward over Odessa this afternoon, and had a skirmish,
-in which, I am sorry to say, I lost five ships, but we destroyed
-twenty Russians, blew up the dockyard, and shelled the city by way of
-punishment. And now I’ve got myself and a hundred and thirty ships to
-place at your disposal for the present. There is nothing more to be
-feared from the East, for by to-morrow night, I think, the Asiatics
-will be thoroughly terrorised.”
-
-“You have done more than I have in the way of slaughter and
-destruction,” said Alan. “But there will be some fearful work along the
-Russian frontier to-morrow morning. The Tsarina, as you call her, is
-concentrating her forces at Kieff, Vitebsk, Dünaburg, and Vilna for a
-descent upon Germany. I have ordered those four places to be destroyed
-as soon as possible after sunrise, and I am just starting now, so you
-had better come with me and order your ships to follow us.”
-
-Both the commanders felt, as their combined squadrons were winging
-their way towards the Russian frontier, that the events of the next
-twenty-four hours or so would go far towards deciding the issues of the
-war, and therefore the fate of the world.
-
-Alexis had given up the command of the _Isma_ for the night to his
-first lieutenant, and was travelling on board the _Avenger_, in order
-that he and Alan might finally arrange their plans for the terrible
-deeds that were to be done on the following day. Both of them were
-serious almost to depression, for it must be remembered that neither
-possessed that love of fighting and slaughter which distinguishes the
-professional soldier of the nineteenth century.
-
-Armed with the most awful weapons ever wielded by human hands, they
-had already, within the space of a few hours, hurled millions of their
-fellow-creatures into eternity and made thousands of homes desolate
-which a couple of days ago were happy. Now they were going to repeat
-the tragedy, on how vast a scale neither of them knew. Before the next
-sunset a red line of blood and flame would mark the frontier between
-Russia and Germany.
-
-All the horrors of months of the older warfare would be concentrated
-into those few fatal hours. Those who were to do battle in the air
-would hurl their irresistible lightnings at each other more as gods
-than as men, while on earth the unresisting swarms could only stand in
-helpless agony of suspense waiting for the death from which there was
-no possibility of flying.
-
-Within a hundred miles of the frontier the two fleets stopped, and
-Alexis went on board his own vessel. It was then a few minutes after
-three in the morning, that is to say, about an hour before sunrise, and
-the warships were floating in a serene and cloudless atmosphere at an
-elevation of nearly four miles, or about twenty thousand feet. It was
-already quite light enough at that elevation for signals to be plainly
-seen, and a rapid interchange of these took place, communicating the
-final instructions from the flagships to the commanders of the smaller
-squadrons into which the fleets were to be divided.
-
-Just as the last signal had been answered, and the vessels were about
-to separate, a tiny speck of light was seen far away to the westward. A
-hundred powerful field-glasses were instantly turned upon it, and soon
-showed it to be a hostile air-ship coming up very fast at an elevation
-of about three miles. The silvery sheen of her hull instantly betrayed
-the fact that she was neither an Aerian nor a Federation vessel, for
-the former were blue and the latter painted dull grey. A moment’s
-reflection showed that she must have sighted the Aerian fleet, and if
-she got past would take tidings of its presence to the frontier and
-destroy all hope of a surprise.
-
-Within twenty seconds of her true nature being made out a signal was
-flying from the mizzenmast of the _Isma_, which read, “Shall I stop
-her?” “Yes. Cripple her if you can. Don’t fire unless necessary,” came
-the reply from the _Avenger_, and the _Isma_ at once darted away on her
-errand.
-
-Alexis, of course, understood that if he struck the enemy with a shell
-her fragments would fall to the earth, and might probably give the
-impression that a battle was being fought in the air, and, as they
-were now so near to the Russian frontier, this was to be avoided if
-possible. He therefore determined to cripple her without destroying
-her, and, if he could manage it, to capture her in mid-air, a feat that
-had never been performed before under similar conditions.
-
-He descended until the _Isma_ was only floating about a thousand feet
-higher than the enemy, and then began to fly round and round in a wide
-circle, at a speed which made it practically impossible for her to
-be hit with a shell, save by the merest chance. The stranger, on
-sighting the fleet, slowed down and swung round to the northward, so as
-to have the advantage of being able to present her stern chasers to the
-enemy.
-
-This gave Alexis the opportunity he wanted. The instant that her stern
-was visible, the _Isma_ swooped down, and rushed at her at such a speed
-that she looked more like a stream of blue light flashing through the
-sky than a solid material body. Those on board her saw this flash dart
-past their stern. Their ship shivered from stem to stern with some
-shock that came so swiftly that not until the _Isma_ was almost out of
-sight did they realise the damage that had been done.
-
-[Illustration: THE “ISMA” SWOOPED DOWN. _Page 281._]
-
-The ram of the Aerian had cut through the barrels of the two stern guns
-and the shafts of the three propellers as cleanly as a razor would have
-divided so many straws. Sustained and propelled only by her wings, she
-dropped from two hundred miles an hour to about twenty-five, and then
-the _Isma_ reappeared in the sky above her, flying the signal, “Will
-you surrender?”
-
-Her commander saw that the brilliant and almost miraculous manœuvre of
-the _Isma_ had placed him utterly at her mercy. If he refused, a single
-shell would send him and his ship and crew in fragments to the earth,
-while none of his guns could touch the Aerian, floating as she did a
-thousand feet above him, so he bowed to necessity and sent the white
-flag to his masthead. Alexis then signalled again, ordering him to
-unload all his guns and leave the breeches open, and when he had seen
-this done he sank down to a level with her, passed a steel-wire rope on
-board her, and towed her away in triumph to the fleet.
-
-The brilliant achievement delighted the Aerians as much as it
-confounded the crew of the captured vessel, especially when it was
-discovered that she was the _Haroun_, a Moslem warship taking a message
-from the Sultan to the Tsarina at Moscow.
-
-Khalid’s letter, which had been despatched the night before from
-Algiers, informed Olga of the disaster that had overtaken the Crescent
-in the Mediterranean, and of his determination to avenge it by
-storming the bridges of Gibraltar, the Dardanelles, and the Bosphorus,
-and pouring his remaining troops over them into Europe as soon as he
-could concentrate them.
-
-Far more important than this, however, was a notification of his
-intention to at once lead a fleet of two hundred and fifty air-ships to
-the west of Europe, and there destroy city after city on his eastward
-course until they joined forces and proceeded, if necessary, to
-devastate the rest of the Continent.
-
-The Moslem’s guns were now rendered useless, and she was left to her
-own devices to fall an easy prey to the first enemy that might attack
-her. The Aerian fleet then divided into fifty squadrons of five vessels
-each, and these winged their way towards the Russian frontier, ever
-soaring higher and higher, until their wings were beating the rarefied
-air at an altitude of over three miles.
-
-Odessa, Kieff, Gomel, Vitebsk, Dünaburg, and Riga were all covered by
-the time the sun rose. Scores of Russian air-ships were seen by the
-various squadrons darting about hither and thither along the frontier
-at varying elevations, evidently on the look-out for an enemy.
-
-It was not many minutes before the Aerian squadrons were discovered
-by these, and they instantly got away out of range, and then swerving
-round sought to rise to a similar altitude so as to place themselves on
-equal terms with the Aerians.
-
-But long before this attempt could be made the work of death had begun,
-and two thousand guns were raining their projectiles, charged with
-inevitable destruction, upon the devoted cities. They were swarming
-with men who had come through the interior of Russia during the night
-for the invasion of Europe, but there were no troops on land to oppose
-them, for Alan had seen that there would be no need for these.
-
-Within an hour the six cities were so many vast shambles, and still
-the relentless rain of death kept falling from the skies. Houses and
-public buildings crumbled into dust under the terrific impact of the
-explosions.
-
-The streets were torn up as if by earthquakes, the railways running in
-and out were utterly wrecked, and the victims of the pitiless attack,
-panic-stricken and mad with fear and agony, rushed aimlessly hither
-and thither through the bloody, fire-scorched streets and amidst the
-falling ruins until inevitable death overtook them and ended their
-tortures of mind and body.
-
-There was no escape even as there was no mercy. Thousands fled out
-into the country only to find the same rain of death falling upon the
-villages. It seemed as though the unclouded heavens of that May morning
-were raining fire and death from every point upon the devoted earth,
-and yet no source of destruction was to be seen.
-
-But ere long new horrors were added to the desolation which had already
-befallen the cities. Terrific explosions burst out high up in the air,
-vast dazzling masses of flame blazed out, mocking the sunlight with
-their brightness, and then vanishing in an instant, and after them came
-showers of bits of metal and ragged fragments of human bodies, all that
-remained of some great cruiser of the air and her crew.
-
-The Russian squadrons, numbering in all about three hundred warships,
-by flying several miles to the eastward and then doubling on a
-constantly ascending course had by this time gained a sufficient
-elevation to train their guns upon the Aerians, and as soon as they had
-done this the aerial battle became general along a curved line more
-than a thousand miles in length, extending from Odessa to Riga.
-
-George Cosmo had been right when he said that there would be little or
-no land fighting, for along that line, from the Baltic to the Black
-Sea, there was scarcely a man left alive by midday who was not mad with
-fear and horror at the frightful effects of the aerial assault.
-
-On land as well as on sea fighting was impossible. Armies and fleet
-could exist only in the absence of the air-ships, and they were
-everywhere. Cities lay utterly at their mercy, and nothing shaped by
-the hand of man could withstand the impact of their projectiles.
-
-But all day long the fight went on in the skies above the Russian
-frontier, yet not at all after the fashion imagined by the poet of the
-nineteenth century, who wrote, as he thought prophetically, of
-
- Airy navies grappling in the central blue.
-
-The first and chief endeavour of the captain of every vessel was to
-avoid the shots of his opponents and to get his own home. It was brains
-and machinery pitted against brains and machinery, and grappling was
-never thought of.
-
-The air-ship which could gain and maintain a greater elevation than her
-opponent infallibly destroyed her, and so, too, did the one that could
-fly unhurt at full speed along the line of battle and use her stern
-guns upon those which became relatively stationary enough for her to
-take aim at them.
-
-It would have been a magnificent spectacle for an observer who could
-have followed the contending squadrons in their swift and complicated
-evolutions. He would have seen the blue and the silver hulls flashing
-to and fro as though apparently engaged in some harmless trial of
-speed, then, without the slightest warning, without a puff of smoke or
-the faintest sound of a report, the long, deadly guns would do their
-work.
-
-The moment of vantage would come, and the silent and invisible
-messengers of annihilation would be sped upon their way; then, with a
-roar and a shock that convulsed the firmament, a mist of flame would
-envelop the ship that had been struck, and when it vanished she would
-have vanished too, falling in a rain of fragments towards the earth
-nearly twenty thousand feet below.
-
-It was a battle not so much for victory as for destruction. There could
-be no victory save to those who survived after having annihilated their
-enemies, and this was the sole object of the struggle. High in air
-above the contending squadrons, the _Avenger_ and the _Isma_ swept to
-and fro along the line, raised by their superior soaring powers beyond
-the zone of battle, and from their decks the two admirals commanded
-the fight, and, like very Joves above the tempest, hurled their
-destroying bolts from their terrible guns far and wide over the scene
-of strife.
-
-From morning to night both Alan and Alexis sought in vain for the blue
-hull of the _Revenge_ among the Russian squadron. Unless Olga was on
-board one of the other ships she was either engaged in some work of
-destruction elsewhere or was directing the operations of her forces and
-learning the disasters that had overtaken them in her palace in Moscow
-or St. Petersburg.
-
-It had been previously ordered that, as soon as it became too dark to
-take accurate aim with the guns, those vessels of the Aerian fleet
-which had survived the battle were to fly westward and rendezvous at
-midnight on the summit of the Schneekoppe, one of the peaks of the
-Giant Mountains to the north-east of Bohemia, whence, as soon as the
-amount of damage had been ascertained, the remainder of it, if strong
-enough, was to set out and if possible intercept the Moslem fleet
-before it could form a junction with the Russians.
-
-When the last vessel had alighted on the summit of the mountain
-it was found that out of a fleet numbering two hundred and fifty
-warships only a hundred and eighty remained--the rest were scattered
-in undistinguishable fragments along the Russian frontier. As for
-the amount of damage that had been done to the enemy as a set-off to
-this heavy loss, the Aerian commanders could form no even approximate
-estimate of it.
-
-All they knew was that the six frontier cities, and a score or so
-of smaller towns and villages, were now mere heaps of ruins, vast
-charnel-houses choked with unnumbered corpses. The Russian army of
-invasion must have been practically annihilated, and certainly its
-remnants would be too hopelessly demoralised by the unspeakable horrors
-it had survived to be of the slightest use for further fighting.
-
-As soon as the roll had been called, the fleet, in two squadrons of
-ninety vessels each, took the air and crossed the mountains to Gorlitz,
-which had been selected a year before as a convenient spot for the
-establishment of an arsenal and power-station, standing as it does at
-the angle of intersection of two great mountains which form the natural
-bulwarks of Bohemia.
-
-Here the stock of motive-power and the ammunition of all the vessels
-were renewed, and at daybreak the squadrons were just about to take
-the air when a telephonic message was received from Paris that a
-large fleet of air-ships had appeared above the city and had begun to
-bombard it. This message had been sent in compliance with a system of
-intercommunication which Alan had instituted between all the great
-cities of Europe, and all the power-stations and rendezvous throughout
-the Continent.
-
-The moment an enemy appeared over any town messages were to be sent to
-all the stations simultaneously, and detachments of warships were to be
-despatched to the threatened point as soon as the warning was received.
-
-It will be seen that this system would enable a very large force to
-be concentrated upon any threatened point, and, in fact, before the
-sun was two degrees above the horizon of Paris, eight squadrons of
-Federation warships, including the two under the command of Alan
-and Alexis, were flying at full speed from all four points of the
-compass towards the city which for over half a century had been the
-acknowledged capital of the Continent.
-
-Little more than an hour sufficed for the _Avenger_ and the _Isma_ to
-pass over the six hundred miles which separated Gorlitz from Paris.
-Flying at their utmost speed they left their squadrons to follow the
-two admirals, knowing that every captain could be implicitly trusted to
-do the work allotted to his ship without further orders.
-
-The object of Alan and Alexis was to get first to the scene of action,
-and to avail themselves of the superior soaring powers of their two
-vessels to deliver an assault upon the Moslems which they could not
-reply to.
-
-A fearful scene unfolded itself before them as they swept up out of the
-eastward over Paris. The vast and splendid city was surrounded by a
-huge circle formed of at least two hundred Moslem warships floating at
-an elevation of some three miles, and pouring a tempest of projectiles
-from hundreds of guns indiscriminately into the area crowded with
-stately buildings and nearly ten millions of inhabitants.
-
-[Illustration: A FEARFUL SCENE UNFOLDED ITSELF AS THEY SWEPT UP OVER
-PARIS. _Page 286._]
-
-Nearly three miles above the centre of the city floated a solitary
-scout-ship ready to signal warning of the approach of an enemy. Fires
-were already raging in hundreds of places all over the city. The
-streets were swarming with terrified throngs of citizens who had rushed
-out to escape the flames and the falling buildings, only to meet the
-hundreds of shells that were constantly bursting among them, rending
-their bodies to fragments by scores at a time.
-
-Such was the beginning of Khalid the Magnificent’s revenge for the
-disaster of the Mediterranean--a vengeance which proved that, in his
-breast at least, the savage spirit of the ancient warfare was still
-untamed.
-
-The _Avenger_ and the _Isma_ gained an altitude of four miles above the
-doomed city, half a dozen shells from their guns struck the scout-ship
-and reduced her to dust before she had time to make a signal in
-warning, and then the forty-four guns began to send a radiating hail of
-projectiles upon the Moslem fleet. Shell after shell found its mark in
-spite of the vast range, and ship after ship collapsed and dropped in
-fragments or blew up like a huge shell.
-
-But before the fifth round had been fired a strange thing happened. A
-single Aerian warship rushed up at full speed out of the south, and as
-soon as she sighted the _Avenger_ signalled, “Orders from the Council.
-Come alongside.” The new-comer soared upwards as they sank to meet her,
-and the three ships met and stopped some three miles and a half above
-the earth. The stern of the _Azrael_, as the messenger-ship was named,
-was brought close up to that of the _Avenger_, the deck doors were
-opened, a gangway thrown across, and the captain boarded the flagship
-and placed a sealed despatch in Alan’s hand.
-
-He opened it, and to his unspeakable astonishment read--
-
- AERIA, May 16th, 6 P.M.
-
- All Aerians are to return at once with their ships to Aeria, and take
- no further part in the fighting. The Federation fleets may be left in
- the hands of foreign crews and commanders, to whom the power-stations
- and batteries are to be given up. This order is to be obeyed with the
- least possible delay.
-
- ALAN ARNOLD, President.
-
- To the Admirals in command of the Federation Fleets.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV. A MESSAGE FROM MARS.
-
-
-IN order to adequately explain the origin of the peremptory recall
-which, although of course he obeyed it without question, seemed so
-incomprehensible to Alan, it will be necessary to go back to the night
-of the 12th of May.
-
-While all Aeria was rejoicing over the return of the exiles and
-their restoration to the rights of citizenship, there was one of
-the inhabitants of the Valley who took little or no part in the
-festivities. This was Vassilis Cosmo, a man of between forty-six and
-forty-seven, and elder brother of the George Cosmo who had been chief
-engineer of the _Narwhal_, and was now first officer of the _Avenger_.
-
-A striking distinction of personality and temperament had, ever since
-he had reached a thinking age, marked him as one apart from the rest of
-his fellow-countrymen.
-
-He had little or none of the gaiety of disposition and social
-cordiality that were the salient characteristics of the Aerians as a
-people. He was serious almost to taciturnity, solitary and studious,
-and wholly engrossed in a single pursuit--the study of astronomy in its
-bearing on the great problem of interplanetary communication.
-
-After twenty years of constant labour, assisted by all the knowledge
-and inventive progress which had placed the Aerians so far ahead of the
-rest of the world, he had at length solved this problem and realised
-the dream of ages six years before Olga Romanoff had dropped her
-defiance from the skies.
-
-As yet, however, his success had been confined to one planet, and this,
-as will have been learnt from the conversation between Alma and Isma on
-that memorable night on which Alan’s letter had been received from the
-island, was the planet Mars.
-
-After infinite toil and innumerable failures, he had at length
-succeeded in establishing an intelligible system of what may here be
-described as photo-telegraphy, in which the rays of light passing
-between the earth and Mars were made to perform the functions of the
-electric wires in modern telegraphy.
-
-His alphabet, so to speak, consisted of a hundred great electric suns
-disposed at equal intervals on the mountain peaks round the great oval
-of the Valley. These were in direct communication with the observatory
-of Aeria, which was situated at a height of sixteen thousand feet on
-Mount Austral, the highest of the two snow-capped peaks which stood at
-the southern end of the Valley.
-
-A single switch key enabled him, when sitting by the huge telescope
-which embodied all the highest optical science of Aeria, to light
-and extinguish these brilliant globes as he chose, and it was by
-lighting and extinguishing them at certain intervals that he was able
-to transmit his signals to the Martian astronomer, who was waiting to
-receive them, and to reply to them by similar means across the gulf
-of thirty-four million miles which separates the two planets at their
-nearest approach to each other.
-
-Momentous as were the events of the last few days, they were dwarfed
-to utter insignificance by the irregular and apparently meaningless
-recurrences of a tiny point of light in the centre of a great concave
-mirror situated at the base of the huge barrel of the telescope,
-through the side aperture of which Vassilis Cosmo was looking a few
-minutes before midnight on that memorable 12th of May.
-
-The point of light appeared and vanished, and reappeared again at
-irregular intervals, which the astronomer noted on an automatic
-registering instrument beside him. The moment the flash appeared
-he pressed a button, which he held down till it disappeared, then
-he released it, waited till the flash reappeared, and repeated the
-operation so long as the signals came.
-
-For nearly five hours he received and registered the signals recorded
-by his reflector in silence, broken only by the monotonous ticking
-of the clockwork which, working synchronously with the movements of
-the two orbs, kept the image of Mars exactly in the centre of the
-object-glass, and by the soft whirring of the registering instrument.
-
-Never before had human eyes read such a message as he read, sitting
-that night in silence and solitude in his observatory amid the snows,
-far above the lovely valley in which his countrymen were still holding
-high revel.
-
-Well might his hands tremble and his eyes grow dim with something more
-than long watching when he reversed the mechanism of the register and a
-narrow slip of paper, divided by cross-lines into equal spaces a tenth
-of an inch long, issued from a slit in one end, and began to run slowly
-over a revolving drum.
-
-On the tape was a series of straight black lines running longitudinally
-along it. They were of unequal length, and divided from each other
-by unequal spaces. Before the exact import of the message could be
-gained the length of each of these lines, and that of the space
-which separated it from the next, had to be accurately measured, but
-Vassilis knew his own code so perfectly that he had been able to read
-the general drift of the communication that had been sent along the
-light-rays from the sister world by approximately guessing the duration
-of the flashes and the intervals between them.
-
-Day was beginning to dawn by the time the long tape had been unrolled
-and pinned down in equal lengths on a board for measuring. For more
-than five hours he had not uttered a syllable or even an exclamation,
-although he had received from another world what appeared to be
-tantamount, not only to his own death-sentence, but to that of the
-whole human race.
-
-But when the slips were at length pinned out and he had run his
-practised eye deliberately over the fatal marks, his white lips parted
-and a deep groan broke from his chest. He was alone in the observatory,
-or perhaps not even this sign of emotion would have escaped him.
-
-With his hands pressed to his temples as though his brain were reeling
-under the frightful intelligence that had just been conveyed to it, he
-stood in front of the board and gasped in short, broken sentences--
-
-“God of mercy, can that be really true! Has the world only four months
-more to live? Surely I have made some mistake--and yet everything
-has worked as usual. There has been no hitch. It has been a splendid
-night for transmission and they--no, they had not made a mistake for
-a thousand years, they are past it. It must--but no, I can do nothing
-more this morning. I should go mad if I did. I must think of it quietly
-and sleep a little if I can, and then I will transcribe it.”
-
-He left the telescope tower and went out on to a little platform at the
-rear of the observatory which commanded a view of the whole Valley. He
-looked out over the lovely landscape lying calm and silent beneath the
-paling stars, and involuntarily exclaimed aloud--
-
-“Is it for this that we have conquered the earth and bridged the
-abysses of space--for this that we have made ourselves as gods among
-men and throned ourselves here in this lovely land, lords of the world
-and masters of the nations?
-
-“How shall I tell them down yonder? And yet, has not the Master told
-them already: ‘His shape shall be that of a flaming fire.’ ‘Your
-children of the fifth generation shall behold his approach’? Yes, the
-two exiles we welcomed back last night are the fifth generation from
-the Angel, and _that_ will truly be a flaming fire, and truly it will
-go hard with this world and the men of it in the hour of its passing,
-as the Master has said.”
-
-After a vain attempt to seek refuge from his thoughts in sleep he
-boarded his aerial yacht and went to the city to mingle with the
-merry-makers, more for appearance’ sake than from inclination, but he
-kept his own counsel strictly, for more reasons than one. The next
-night, as soon as Mars was high enough in the heavens, about half-past
-ten, the dwellers in the Valley saw the great lights on the mountain
-tops flash out and darken at irregular intervals time after time and
-hour after hour, until all but those in the sentinel ships went to
-rest, saying--
-
-“Vassilis is talking to our neighbours in Mars. He will have something
-to tell us to-morrow.”
-
-But when the next day came he had nothing to tell. He had spent the
-night repeating the message, sign for sign and word for word, and
-asking for confirmation lest he should have made any mistake in
-receiving it. Then in agonised anxiety he had waited for the reply on
-which he now felt the fate of mankind depended. It came with a terrible
-clearness and brevity, which left no room for doubt--
-
-“Message read correctly. There is no error in our calculations.
-Terrestrial humanity is doomed, and must prepare to meet its fate.”
-
-So far as he was concerned he was satisfied. He knew that a mistake was
-impossible to the finished science of the Martian astronomers, compared
-with whom he was but as a little child in knowledge. But still he kept
-his own counsel, for there was no need for him to cast the sudden
-shadow of death over the rejoicings of his countrymen.
-
-At length the fleets departed, and Aeria, armed at all points, was
-awaiting the possible onslaught of her foes. These she would doubtless
-hurl back in triumphant disdain from her bulwarks, but far, far away in
-the depths of space, beyond even the range of the great equatorial on
-Mount Austral, there was approaching an enemy whose assault men could
-only meet with resignation or despair, as the case might be. Resistance
-was as much out of the question as escape.
-
-Early on the morning of the 16th, soon after the _Avenger_ had struck
-the first blow in the world-war, Vassilis presented himself at the
-President’s palace and asked for an interview with him.
-
-The President received him a few minutes later in his private room. It
-was the first time in his life that the silent, reserved astronomer had
-ever asked for an official interview, and as the President entered the
-room he held out his hand, saying--
-
-“Good morning, Vassilis. We have seen very little of you lately, even
-less than usual. Have you come to see me about the work which has kept
-you from joining in the general rejoicings? I’m sure it must have been
-very important.”
-
-“Yes, President, it was--the most important that a terrestrial student
-of astronomy could be engaged upon,” replied Vassilis, speaking slowly
-and very gravely.
-
-The President looked curiously for a moment into his clear, thoughtful
-eyes, and noticed the lines of care on his pale, worn features, so
-different to those of the rest of his countrymen. Then he said, with an
-anxious ring in his voice--
-
-“What is the matter, Vassilis? You look worn and ill, as though you had
-just passed through some great sorrow. Have you been keeping too long
-vigils with the stars? Tell me, what is it?”
-
-Vassilis was silent for a moment as though he might have been wondering
-whether the President, strong as he was, would have strength to bear
-the blow that he must strike in his next sentence. The awful news had
-come to him slowly, sign by sign and word by word, and so he had been
-in a measure prepared for it when its full meaning became clear. But
-upon Alan Arnold it must fall at a single stroke. Still the words had
-to be spoken, and after a good minute’s pause he said--
-
-“President, I bring you the most terrible news that one man can bring
-to another. The Master’s prophecy is about to be fulfilled. Three
-nights ago I received through the photo-telegraph what I believe to be
-the death-sentence of humanity upon earth. Here is the transcript of
-the message.”
-
-Save for a sudden pallor and a quick uplifting of the eyelids, Alan
-Arnold betrayed no more emotion as he took the roll of paper which
-Vassilis handed to him, than he had done when he received his son’s
-letter from the island.
-
-“It does not come to me unexpected,” he said in his firm quiet tones.
-“Your children and mine, Vassilis, are of the fifth generation, and
-it was foretold that they should see the sign in the sky. And so the
-threatened doom is not to pass us by?”
-
-“No,” replied Vassilis. “Not unless some miracle happens, and there are
-no miracles in the astronomy or the mathematics of Mars. The Martians
-are long past the age of miracles or mistakes. These are the data and
-the calculations upon which the conclusion is based. I have repeated
-them back to Mars and received confirmation of them.
-
-“I have also verified the times and distances and velocities myself,
-and have been unable to find the slightest error. As far as I can see,
-there is not the remotest chance of escape. The human race has only
-four months, five days, and twenty-three hours to live from midnight
-to-night.”
-
-“It is the will of God!” said the President solemnly, slightly bending
-his head as he spoke. “It is not for us to question the designs of
-Eternal Wisdom, save in so far as we may strive to understand them.
-Death has always been inevitable to all of us, and this will only be
-dying together instead of alone. Do you wish anything done with these
-calculations?”
-
-“Yes,” said Vassilis. “I would suggest that you appoint a committee of
-our best mathematicians and astronomers to examine and verify them once
-more, detail by detail, so that assurance may, if possible, be made
-surer. I shall receive another message from Mars to-night, and it will
-be well for the committee to be with me in the observatory. With the
-public aspect of the question I have, of course, nothing to do, that
-lies in the hands of yourself and the Council.”
-
-“Very well,” said the President, “what you wish shall be done at once,
-and the Council will meet this morning to consider what public steps
-are to be taken.”
-
-Within half an hour after the conclusion of the momentous interview the
-Council had met, and the most immediate result of its deliberations
-on the tremendous tidings that had come from the sister world was the
-issue of the order for the instant return of all Aerians who were
-abroad which had been delivered to Alan on the deck of the _Avenger_ on
-the morning of the 18th.
-
-Immediately on receiving his father’s letter, Alan signalled, “Cease
-firing and follow,” to the _Isma_, and the three Aerian vessels started
-southward towards Gibraltar, leaving Paris to its fate. At Gibraltar,
-which was reached in two hours and a half, he found that, in accordance
-with the orders of the Council, messages had already been sent out to
-all the stations within the European area of the Federation for all
-Aerians to rendezvous at the Rock as soon as possible.
-
-The same orders had been transmitted along the telephonic cables
-which connected the marine stations of the Mediterranean for all the
-battleships on service to go into their respective harbours, so that
-their crews might land and be picked up by air-ships which had already
-been despatched for them.
-
-Before the evening Aerian vessels had begun to come in from all parts
-of Europe, where they had been stationed, and their crews brought
-terrible descriptions of the scenes of carnage and destruction they had
-left to obey the summons. The Federation leaders were in despair at
-their apparent desertion by their potent allies, while their enemies
-were already rejoicing at the disappearance of the Aerian warships from
-all points of the scene of war.
-
-By midnight the last Aerian vessel had come in, and, after the command
-of the Rock, the last station of which the Aerians retained command,
-had been handed over to the British forces, the flotilla, numbering
-nearly four hundred warships, rose into the air just as two large
-Moslem squadrons, one fresh from the destruction of Paris, and the
-other from Alexandria and the east of Europe, converged upon the
-Rock, and, without warning, opened a furious fire of shells upon it.
-The great guns from the batteries replied, and the fleets, under the
-command of Alan and Alexis, after sending a rapid hail of shells among
-the Moslem vessels as a parting salute, soared into the upper regions
-of the air and headed southward for home, leaving a fiery chaos of
-death and destruction behind them.
-
-Two hours after daybreak on the 19th the fleet crossed the Northern
-Ridge, and sank to earth on the sloping plateau behind the city. Alan
-at once disembarked, and went to his father’s palace to report himself.
-
-The sudden and unexpected return of the fleet, which had left to do
-battle for the empire of the world but three days and a half before,
-filled all the inhabitants of the Valley with amazement, for no one
-outside the Council and the committee appointed to verify the message
-received from Mars yet knew of the doom that was menacing the world.
-
-Alan was received at the door of his palace by his father, who, after
-their greetings had been exchanged, took him at once to the room in
-which the Council were already assembled, and there in the presence of
-his colleagues made him acquainted with the reason for his recall.
-
-Inured as he was to the unsparing warfare in which human life had to be
-counted as almost a negligible quantity, a warfare in which there was
-no middle course between life and death, Alan, after the first shock
-of surprise and horror had passed, faced the tremendous crisis with a
-calmness and resignation worthy of the traditions of his family and his
-race.
-
-For years he had carried his life in his hands, and now that the end of
-all things seemed near he was prepared to look inevitable death calmly
-in the face. He heard the reading of the message in silence, and then,
-when he saw that they were waiting for him to speak, he said quietly--
-
-“What is to be must be! We cannot argue with the workings of the
-universe.” Then he paused for a moment, and went on--“I have come back
-with my comrades in obedience to orders. May I now ask why, if death is
-coming to the whole human race, we were not permitted to die in battle
-for the right against the wrong rather than to wait here in inaction
-and suspense until we are burnt to death on the funeral pyre of the
-world?”
-
-He spoke the last words almost hotly, for the first thought that had
-risen in his mind after hearing the doom that was about to overtake
-humanity was that the debt he owed to Olga Romanoff must now for ever
-remain unpaid at his hands. This thought was so unbearable to him that
-before any reply could be made to his question he broke out again, this
-time speaking rapidly and almost angrily--
-
-“If, as you tell me, the world has only a few weeks to live, why should
-I wait here for death when I have work to do elsewhere? What does it
-matter whether I die scorched to a cinder in the fire-mist or am blown
-to pieces by a Russian shell? I have a debt to pay, a stain upon my
-honour and my manhood to wipe out before I die.
-
-“And so, too, has Alexis. Will you not give us an air-ship and let us
-find a crew of volunteers that we may go back to the war and hunt our
-enemy, and the enemy of humanity, down, and either destroy her or find
-an honourable death in the attempt to do so?”
-
-As he ended his impassioned appeal his father rose from his seat, and
-laid his hand upon his shoulder and said gravely, and yet not without a
-note of admiration in his voice--
-
-“My son, those are brave and honourable words, and they prove that you
-are no unworthy son of the race you belong to. But they are still the
-words of passion rather than reason. Remember that in the presence
-of the universal doom that now overhangs the human race not only
-private vengeance but even the strife of nations sinks into utter
-insignificance. A heavier hand than yours will punish the sin for which
-she who has wronged you will soon have to answer at the bar of Eternal
-Justice. Remember how it was said of old, ‘Vengeance is mine, saith the
-Lord. I will repay.’”
-
-“That is true, father,” replied Alan, now speaking in his habitual tone
-of respect. “But why should not the instrument of that vengeance be the
-hand of him whom she has so bitterly wronged? You know what I mean, and
-so do all in this room.
-
-“Has she not so polluted my manhood and stained my honour that I must
-meet, apart from Alma, the fate that I could have shared with her with
-no more regret than that we had to die instead of live together? Is
-it not better that she should know I died in the attempt to wipe that
-stain away than see me waiting for death with it still upon me?”
-
-“That is for Alma as well as for you to decide,” said Francis Tremayne,
-rising from his seat as he spoke. “How do you know that she is
-unwilling to meet her end hand-in-hand with you?”
-
-“I have looked into her eyes and seen no love in them,” replied Alan,
-flushing to his temples with shame and anger. “Her old love for me is
-dead, as it may well be. How could I expect her purity to mate with
-my”--
-
-“Stop, Alan!” exclaimed his father before he had time to utter the
-shameful word that was on his lips. “Those are no words for you to
-speak or for me to hear, especially at such a time as this. If any
-stain ever rested upon you you have more than purged it already. The
-man who is found worthy the confidence of the rulers of Aeria is worthy
-the respect, if not the love, of any woman in the State. Whether Alma
-loves you still or not is a question for her own heart to answer, but
-you must not call yourself unworthy in my hearing.”
-
-“Nor yet in mine,” said Alma’s father warmly. “If the shadow of death
-had not fallen across all our life-ways as it has done, there is no
-man who wears the Golden Wings that I would so willingly see Alma join
-hands with as yourself. If I, her father, hold you worthy to live with
-her, surely you cannot hold yourself unworthy to die with her.”
-
-As he spoke he held out his hand to Alan, and he, unable to find words
-to answer him, grasped it in silence, broken only by a murmur of
-approval from the assembled members of the Council.
-
-“Thank you, my friend, for saying that!” said the President to
-Tremayne. “Alan can ask no better assurance unless he has it from
-Alma’s own lips. But now I have something more to say, something
-that will give the true reason for my recall of all the Aerians who
-were beyond our borders. Let the words you are now going to hear be
-heard with all respect, for they are not mine but those of the Master
-himself.”
-
-Amidst an expectant silence he now resumed his place at the head of the
-Council table, and bidding Alan and the Vice-President to be seated,
-took a long parchment envelope brown with age from the breast of his
-tunic and said--
-
-“This contains the last words of him who prophesied the doom with
-which humanity now stands confronted, and who thus speaks to us from
-the past, and gives us good counsel and comfort in the hour of our
-perplexity and sorrow. It has been handed down with its seal unbroken
-from father to son for four generations, and now it has fallen to me to
-break the seal and read what no eyes but those of Natas and my own have
-ever seen. This is the endorsement upon the cover--
-
- ‘_To the son or daughter of my line who shall be the head of the
- House of Arnold in the fifth generation from me:--When the world is
- threatened with the final ruin that I have foreshadowed, open this
- and read my words to all who are then dwelling in Aeria._
-
- NATAS.’”
-
-The President paused, and everyone waited with most anxious expectation
-as he opened the envelope and took from it four square sheets of
-parchment. He unfolded them and went on--
-
-“When Vassilis Cosmo brought me the transcription of the message from
-Mars I saw that the time had come to obey the injunction endorsed on
-this envelope. I opened it, and this is what I read:--
-
- ‘The interpretation of the prophecy concerning the possible
- destruction of the world in the fifth generation from now, written by
- me in the twenty-fifth year of the Peace, and commanded to be read
- every fifth year in the ears of the descendants of those now dwelling
- in Aeria.
-
- ‘When the War of the Terror was over, and there was peace on earth,
- I devoted the declining years of my life to the study of that
- noblest of all sciences which teaches the lore of the stars and the
- constitution of the universe. In the fifteenth year of the Peace,
- that is to say, in the year of the Christian Era 1920, a new star
- appeared towards the constellation of Andromeda, which shone with
- great brilliancy for thirty-five nights, and then faded gradually
- away into the abysses of space.
-
- ‘Seeking into the causes of this phenomenon, I found that it was due
- to the collision of two opaque bodies beyond the bounds of the solar
- system, which doubtless had been travelling towards each other for
- centuries through space. So enormous was the heat evolved by the
- conversion of the motion of the two bodies, that their materials
- were resolved into their component elements, and what had been two
- bodies as solid as the earth, though immensely larger, now became an
- enormous fire-mist, a chaos of blazing storms and burning billows of
- incandescent matter.
-
- ‘I observed it closely from the time of its first appearance until
- the most powerful telescope at my command could no longer detect it.
- I found that, vastly remote as it was, the course which it pursued
- until it was lost to view proved that it was still within the sphere
- of the sun’s attraction, and that therefore a time must come when it
- would reach its point of greatest distance, and return.
-
- ‘Such calculations as I was able to make during the brief period
- of my observation, showed that it would re-enter the confines of
- the solar system in one hundred and twelve years from then, and,
- travelling with constantly accelerated motion would become visible to
- the inhabitants of the earth five years later. I learnt, too, that
- unless it should be deflected from its path by the attraction of
- bodies unknown to terrestrial astronomers it would cross the orbit of
- the earth in the month of September in the year 2037, that is to say,
- in the fifth generation of men from my own day.
-
- ‘If my calculations are correct, the earth will during that month
- pass through an ocean of fire that will destroy all living things
- upon its surface, both plants and animals.
-
- ‘For the space of ten hours, or, it may well be, more, while the
- planet is passing through the fire-mist, there will be no water upon
- the face of the earth, but the whole globe will be surrounded with a
- vast nebulous mantle of steam. At the end of this time it will emerge
- from the fiery sea, the steam-cloud will be recondensed and fall in
- a deluge upon the land, and the world, with a changed face, with new
- oceans and new continents, will pursue her impassive way, lifeless,
- through space.
-
- ‘But even in the face of so tremendous a cataclysm as this, it is
- not for human genius to despair or human faith to be confounded. The
- new earth may be repeopled, and you may be the parents of the new
- humanity. Though innumerable millions shall die, yet the chosen few
- will be saved, if the Master of Destiny shall permit, and from among
- you the chosen few shall come.
-
- ‘The caverns of Mount Austral are deep and cool, and enclosed by
- walls of living rock, deep rooted in the foundations of the world. In
- those days, if you shall have made good use of the heritage we leave
- you, you shall be almost as gods in skill and knowledge, and you
- shall find a means to make this a fortress whose strength shall defy
- the convulsions of the elements and preserve a remnant of human life
- upon the earth.
-
- ‘When you have done this, you that remain shall prepare to meet
- the inevitable end, for only a few among your many thousands can
- be saved. Yet, if you have grown in wisdom and faith as well as in
- knowledge and skill, you shall not disquiet yourselves about this,
- for sooner or later death is certain to all, and you will but pass
- together through the shadows instead of singly.
-
- ‘When the final hour comes, and the breath of the blazing firmament
- is hot upon your brows, may He in whose Hand the fate of worlds and
- races lies, give you strength and wisdom to compose yourselves for
- death as men who know that it is but the dreamless sleep that parts
- to-morrow from to-day.’
-
-“Those are the words of the Master,” said the President, reverently
-laying down the parchment sheets on the table before him. “And it is
-for us to hear and obey. You will now see why it was necessary for all
-our sons that had gone forth to battle to be recalled, for among them
-there are many who can justly lay claim to be of the flower of Aerian
-manhood.
-
-“To-morrow I will read the message from Mars and the commands of the
-Master, in the temple, to a congregation of all the fathers and mothers
-in Aeria, and then it shall be their task to prepare their children for
-the doom which awaits them in common with the rest of humanity. The
-remainder of to-day we will devote to the task of considering how the
-commands of the Master may be best obeyed.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI. SENTENCE OF DEATH.
-
-
-AT ten o’clock on the following morning the great temple of Aeria was
-filled by a congregation of men and matrons who had been summoned
-together to hear what may, without exaggeration, be described as the
-death-sentence of the world and the funeral oration of the human race.
-
-As had been previously decided by the President and Council, only the
-heads of families were present. Of these, some had but just welcomed
-their first-born into the world, while others, standing almost on the
-brink of the grave, could see their children of the fourth generation
-growing up from infancy to youth.
-
-When the President commenced his address by reading in solemnly
-impressive tones the prophecy of Natas, those present knew
-instinctively what they had been called together to hear. The
-possibility of the world being overwhelmed by some tremendous
-catastrophe in the fifth generation from the year of the Peace was no
-new or unawaited prospect to the Aerians.
-
-Therefore there was no panic, no sudden outburst of sorrow or dismay,
-among the grave, earnest congregation assembled in the temple when the
-President, having read the prophecy, went on to say--
-
-“It is now my solemn duty as Chief Magistrate of Aeria to tell you, the
-heads of the families of our race, that, in the mysterious workings
-of destiny, which we can only accept with reverence and resignation,
-the time has come for us to prepare to meet, with the fortitude worthy
-of our position among the races of mankind, the doom which is as
-inevitable as it is universal. The confirmation of the prophecy of
-Natas has come to us across the abysses of space from one of those
-sister worlds which, as the Master said, should see with fear and
-trembling the passing of the messenger of Fate.
-
-“On the night of Tuesday last, Vassilis Cosmo received from the planet
-Mars a photogrammic message, the transcription of which into our
-language reads thus--
-
- ‘A cometary body, primarily formed by the meeting of two extinguished
- astral spheres at 10 hrs. 38 min. 42 sec. on the night of the 13th
- of October, in the year 1920, terrestrial reckoning, will cross the
- orbit of the earth at 11 hrs. 55 min. 22 sec. on the night of the
- 23rd of September next, time corrected to the meridian of Aeria.
-
- ‘At this hour the earth will arrive at the point of intersection,
- and will pass obliquely through the central portion or nucleus of
- the body. This portion is composed of incandescent metallic gases
- interspersed with semi-fluid masses, which on contact with the
- earth’s atmosphere will probably be vaporised.
-
- ‘The constituents of the incandescent nucleus are iron, gold,
- tellurium, chromium, oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon, with smaller
- quantities of many other substances which spectrum analysis will
- disclose to you on the appearance of the comet which will become
- visible from Aeria at 8 hrs. 13 min. P.M. on the 15th of July,
- when its right ascension will be 15 hrs. 24 min. 17 sec, and its
- declination north 10 deg. 42 min. 17 sec. Here follow the detailed
- calculations upon which the foregoing conclusions are based.’
-
-“With these calculations,” continued the President, “this is neither
-the time nor the place to deal, for I know that all here will be
-satisfied when I say that for the last three days they have been
-submitted to the critical examination of our best astronomers and
-mathematicians, and that not the slightest flaw has been found in them.
-
-“This being so, the only course left open to us as reasonable beings is
-to prepare to look the inevitable in the face, and to play our part in
-the closing scene of the life-drama of humanity as men and women who
-believe that the life we are living here is but a stage on our journey
-through infinity, and that the fiery sign which will soon appear in the
-heavens will be to us but a beacon light on the ultimate shore of Time
-casting a guiding ray over the ocean of Eternity.”
-
-He paused for a moment and looked down upon the hushed throng at his
-feet. The instantaneous silence was broken by a long, low, inarticulate
-murmur. Thousands of pale faces were upturned towards him, from
-thousands of eyes there came one appealing upward glance, and then
-every head in the great assembly was bowed in silence and resignation.
-
-The death-sentence had been passed. There was no appeal from it, and
-there was no rebellion against it. The voice of Fate had spoken, and it
-was not for such men as the Aerians to sacrifice their reason or their
-dignity by cavilling at it.
-
-The President bent his head with the rest, and for several moments
-there was silence throughout the vast area of the temple. Then he took
-up from the desk in front of the rostrum the four sheets of parchment
-which contained the last message and commands of Natas, and read them
-out to the assembly.
-
-The perusal was listened to in breathless silence. It was like his
-voice speaking across the generations from the urn containing his ashes
-and standing there in their midst. When the President had finished, he
-laid the sheets down again and said--
-
-“Thus the eye of the Master, looking across the years which separated
-his day from ours, has seen one gleam of light, one ray of hope
-piercing the black pall of desolation which is about to fall upon the
-world, and it is for us to follow where he has pointed the way.
-
-“I have now discharged the first part of the solemn and terrible duty
-which has devolved upon me. It is now for you to communicate the
-tidings you have heard to your families, a task which, however awful
-it may be for loving parents to be charged with, you will yet find
-strength to perform, even as your children shall find strength to hear
-their inevitable doom from those lips which will best know how to
-soften the tidings of death to them.
-
-“When you have done this we will set about making the choice of those
-who, if it shall please the Master of Destiny, shall be the Children
-of Deliverance and the parents of the new race that shall repeople the
-earth when cosmos once more succeeds to chaos.
-
-“If that shall be permitted, then we, who shall never see the new
-world, may yet go down to the grave knowing that we shall live again
-in our children, for these will be the children, not only of a few
-families among us, but sons and daughters of Aeria, the most perfect
-flower of our race, and in them, if we choose them wisely, the world,
-purged by fire of the dross of human wickedness, will find a new
-destiny, and the Golden Age shall return to earth once more.”
-
-As the President finished speaking, he held up his hands as though in
-blessing, and once more every head was bent. Then the great doors of
-the temple swung open, the assembly divided into four streams, and
-passed silently as a congregation of shadows out of the building.
-
-That night the story of the world’s approaching doom was told in every
-home in Aeria. Children on the threshold of youth learnt that for them
-youth would never come; youths and maidens on the verge of manhood
-and womanhood learnt that the bright promise of their lives could now
-never be fulfilled; and lovers just about to join hands for life saw
-the grave opening at their feet, and parting them in their earthly
-personalities for ever. That they would meet again upon a higher plane
-of existence was the first and most firmly held article of their faith,
-but so far as the affairs of this world were concerned the end was in
-sight.
-
-In a less highly developed, a less perfectly organised, state of
-society, the almost immediate result would have been the end of all
-control, and the dissolution of all but the most elementary bonds of
-interest or affection that exist between men and men.
-
-But in Aeria this was not possible. The firm belief, ingrained into
-the very being of all who had reached the age of thought, that where
-men left off here, whether in good or evil, they would begin their
-lives again hereafter, precluded even the thought of such a lapse into
-social anarchy and individual sin.
-
-For, happily for them, the union of true religion with true philosophy
-had now been accomplished in a national faith, and the result was that
-even the terrors of the universal end which was so near failed to shake
-the fortitude that was founded on a basis firmer than that of the world
-itself.
-
-Though every home in the valley had its tragedy that night, a tragedy
-too sacred in its unspeakable solemnity for any mere words to describe
-it, when the next morning came the first bitterness of death had
-already passed.
-
-Saving only the little children, who, too young to understand, laughed
-and played and sang in the sunlight as usual, in happy unconsciousness
-of their coming fate, the dwellers in Aeria rose with the next sunrise
-from their sleepless couches and went about their daily associations
-much as they had done the day before.
-
-They did so rather as a matter of routine and discipline than of
-necessity, for now nothing more was necessary on earth. They had ample
-supplies of food to last them beyond the time when they would have no
-more need of it. It was of no use to dress the gardens and vineyards,
-or to till the fields that would be blasted into wildernesses before
-the harvest could be reaped.
-
-There was no need to pursue further the triumphs of creative art and
-science which had transfigured Aeria into a paradise and a fairyland,
-for in a few weeks all these would be crumbled to dust with their own
-sepulchres--and yet they took up the work that lay nearest to their
-hands and went on with it as though they believed that there were still
-ages of life before humanity, and that the empire of Aeria was to
-endure for ever.
-
-They knew that in work only lay the refuge from the torment of
-apprehension which might in the end drive even their highly disciplined
-minds into the delirium of despair and transform their orderly paradise
-into a pandemonium of anarchy and terror.
-
-As soon as the first shock of inevitable horror had passed, as it did
-during that first terrible night when the death-sentence went from lip
-to lip throughout the land, their proud spirits rose superior to their
-physical fears and conquered them, and they resolved that, until the
-fatal hour came, nothing short of the dissolution of the world should
-put an end to social order in Aeria.
-
-They were the royal race of earth, and when death came they would meet
-it crowned and sceptred in the gates of their palaces, and die as men
-who had solved the secret of life and death and so had no fear.
-
-With the war that was raging beyond their borders they had now
-no personal concern. The quarrels of men and nations were as the
-bickerings of children in the presence of the fate that would so soon
-involve the world in ruin. And yet the rulers of Aeria were not willing
-that this fate should overtake their fellow-men in the delirium of
-blood-drunkenness.
-
-They recognised that their duty to the nations bade them send the
-warning of the world’s approaching fate far and wide through the earth
-and call for the cessation of strife, so that humanity might set its
-house in order and prepare to meet its end.
-
-Whether the warning would be received or not was another matter. It was
-possible that both the Tsarina and the Sultan would laugh it to scorn,
-and pursue their path of now certain conquest through carnage and
-devastation to the end. That, however, was their concern.
-
-As soon as the Council decided to despatch an envoy to summon the
-warring nations to cease their strife for the now more than ever
-worthless prizes of earthly empire, and to prepare for the cataclysm
-which would so soon dissolve all empires and kingdoms to nothing in the
-fiery crucible of the coming chaos, Alan at once renewed his petition
-and asked to be allowed to man the _Avenger_ with a crew of volunteers
-and convey the warning to the Sultan and the Tsarina.
-
-Since his second return to Aeria no word of love had passed between
-him and Alma. He was still too proud to become a suitor even to her,
-knowing as he did that she had looked upon him as polluted by his
-involuntary relations with Olga. As before, they had met as friends
-whose friendship was warmed by the memory of an early but bygone love.
-
-They had talked calmly and dispassionately of the coming end of earthly
-things, but neither of them had let fall any hint of a desire to meet
-it hand and hand with the other. His lips were sealed by the pride and
-anger of humiliation and hers by a spiritual exaltation which in the
-presence of approaching death raised her above the consideration of
-earthly love to the contemplation of even more solemn and holier things.
-
-Then there happened an entirely unexpected event, which completely
-changed their relationship in an instant. On the third day after the
-delivery of the message in the temple a company composed of twenty
-old men, the heads of the noblest families in Aeria, presented to the
-President in Council, a petition, signed by every father and mother
-in the nation, praying that all in whose veins flowed the blood of
-Natas, Richard Arnold, and Alan Tremayne should, irrespective of all
-other considerations, be included among those who were destined to
-seek in the caverns of Mount Austral the one chance of escape from the
-universal doom.
-
-So obvious and so weighty were the reasons advanced in support of the
-petition that when, like all other matters of State, it was put to the
-vote of the Council, the only dissentient voices were those of the
-President and the Vice-President.
-
-The immediate effect of this decision--from which, by the laws of
-Aeria, there was no appeal--was that Alma, Isma, and Alan were exempted
-from the ordeal of selection and numbered beforehand among the Children
-of Deliverance.
-
-The President took upon himself the duty of communicating this decision
-to those whom it so deeply concerned. He told Alan first, and this was
-the half-expected reply that he received--
-
-“No, father, I have never disobeyed you or the Council, as you know,
-but I tell you now frankly that I will not take advantage of what is
-after all only the accident of birth to save my life in such a crisis
-as this.
-
-“Not only are there thousands of others in Aeria as good as I am, but
-I have already told you that, save under one condition, which you know
-as well as I do can never be realised, I have not the slightest desire
-to survive the ruin of the world. You may call this disobedience,
-rebellion, if you will, but it is my last resolve, and in such a time
-as this one does not make resolves lightly.”
-
-Alan said this standing facing his father in his private study. The
-President looked at him for a moment or two with eyes which, though
-grave, were neither reproving nor reproachful. Then he said with the
-shadow of a smile upon his lips--
-
-“It is both disobedience and rebellion, my son, but though the Chief
-Magistrate must condemn it, your father cannot. I know, too, that not
-even the Council of Aeria can now enforce its commands. After all, the
-last penalty is but death, and that is a mockery now.
-
-“I fully understand, too, the spirit in which you refuse the reprieve
-from the general doom, and prefer instead a mission which can scarcely
-end save in honourable death. It is the most noble one that you can
-choose, and you of all other men are the man to perform it.
-
-“You have shown our enemies that you can strike hard in battle, so if
-they believe anyone they will believe you when you go to them with a
-message of peace enforced by such a solemn warning as you will take.”
-
-“Thank you, father,” replied Alan simply, “not for what you say of me,
-but for the consent that your words imply. But what about the air-ship
-and her crew? I can do nothing without them, yet I cannot have them
-without the consent of the Council. Can you get that for me?”
-
-“I believe so,” said the President. “And if I can I will, since you are
-resolved to go, and since the honour of our name compels me to consent.
-But I must tell you that I feel sure that it will only be given
-conditionally.”
-
-“And what will the condition be?”
-
-“That if you survive your mission you will return to Aeria before the
-end comes. They will have a right to demand that, for it is no part of
-your duty to deprive your companions of the chance of life, slender
-though it may be, that will remain for those who may be among the
-chosen.”
-
-“That is true,” replied Alan, bending his head in acquiescence. “If we
-escape with our lives they shall return, though I shall not”--
-
-“You will not return, Alan? Why, where are you going? Surely you are
-not going to leave Aeria again, and at such a time as this; you, who
-are already one of the chosen, a first-born son of the Master’s line!”
-
-It was Alan’s mother who spoke. She had entered the room just as he
-had uttered the last sentence, and the ominous words struck a sudden
-chill to her heart. She came towards him with her eyes full of tears of
-apprehension and her hands stretched out pleadingly towards him.
-
-Now that the first terror of the crisis was past, and there was
-one definite, however slender, hope of safety, she clung to it
-passionately for Alan’s sake with a faith that made light of all the
-fearful difficulties which lay in the way of its realisation. In the
-sublime egotism of her mother-love the fate of a world shrank into
-insignificance in comparison with the one chance of safety for her only
-son.
-
-“Yes, mother,” replied Alan, taking her hands in his and bending down
-until his lips touched her upturned brow. “I am going to leave Aeria
-again to proclaim the Truce of God against the hour of His judgment,
-and I have just told my father that I shall not return”--
-
-“No, no, my boy, you must not say that. You must not rob us of the one
-ray of light in this awful darkness that is falling upon us--of our
-one hope in all the world’s despair!” cried his mother, letting go his
-hands and laying her own upon his shoulders as she looked up into his
-face with eyes that were now overflowing with tears.
-
-“You will not leave us now, surely, for if we lost you we could not
-even take the chance of life ourselves, for it would not be worth
-having.”
-
-“Nor would it be worth having, my mother, either to you or to me,” he
-replied, gently laying his hand on hers, “if I lived and left untried
-the attempt that it is my plain duty to make. You would see me a lonely
-and unmated man among the parents of the new race, a man with a shadow
-upon his name, and the memory of an unfulfilled duty behind him.
-
-“Remember that it is I who have brought the guilt of blood back
-again upon earth. Would you have me outlive all the millions of my
-fellow-creatures with the knowledge that I had not made one effort to
-bring back that peace on earth which was lost through me before the
-last summons comes to all humanity?”
-
-“Alan is right, wife,” interrupted the President, before she could make
-any reply to her son’s appeal. “It is his duty to save, if he can, his
-fellow-creatures from being overwhelmed in the midst of their madness
-and their sin. Remember that, according to our faith, as all these
-millions, who are now drunk with battle and slaughter, and mad with the
-rage of conquest and revenge, end this life, so they must begin the
-next.
-
-“There is time for him to speak and for them to hear, but whether they
-hear him or not, if he has spoken he has done his duty. Is it not
-better that if needs be he should die doing it than live and leave it
-undone?”
-
-The weighty words, spoken as they were in a tone of blended affection
-and authority, found a fitting echo in his wife’s breast. She stood
-for a moment between her husband and her son, looking from the one to
-the other. Then she dried her tears, and replied in a tone of gentle
-dignity and resignation--
-
-“Yes, I see. You are right and I was wrong. It is his duty to go, and
-he must go. But,” she continued, turning to Alan with the sudden light
-of a new hope in her eyes, “if I bid you ‘God-speed,’ my son, you will
-promise one thing, won’t you?”
-
-“Yes, mother, I will--whatever it is.”
-
-“Then promise me that if it shall be proved possible for you to live in
-happiness as well as in honour, you will come back.”
-
-“Yes,” he replied, smiling gravely as he once more took her
-outstretched hands. “I will promise that as gladly as I would promise
-to enter Heaven if I saw the gates open before me.”
-
-“Then you shall go, and God go with you and bring you back in safety
-to us!” she said. Then, turning abruptly, she went out of the room,
-leaving them both wondering at her words.
-
-This took place early on the morning of the 21st of May. An hour later
-the President had applied in Alan’s name for the permission of the
-Council for him to select a crew of twenty volunteers and to take
-the _Avenger_ to Europe on his mission to the warring peoples and to
-proclaim peace on earth and breathing space for humanity to prepare for
-its end. But then a new difficulty presented itself. Alexis, in spite
-of all Alan’s remonstrances to the contrary, declared that he should
-never leave Aeria without him.
-
-“I have shared in your exile and your return,” he said, in answer to
-all arguments, “and, by the honour of the Golden Wings, I swear that I
-will either go with you now or you shall see me fall dead the moment
-that you leave the earth!”
-
-This was the only oath that ever was heard upon the lips of an Aerian,
-and it was irrevocable, so, as there was no choice, Alan was forced to
-consent, and Alexis made ready to bid a last farewell to Aeria and all
-its dear associations.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII. ALMA SPEAKS.
-
-
-THAT night Alan, with his heart too full even for the society of his
-own home, went out of the city a little before midnight and walked down
-towards the western shore of the lake, where there still stood the same
-grove of palms in which, more than a hundred and thirty years before,
-Natasha and Richard Arnold had plighted their despairing troth and
-under the shadow of what threatened to be an eternal separation spoken
-the first words of love that had ever passed their lips.
-
-It was not altogether accident that guided his steps in this direction,
-for all day he had been reviewing the strange chain of events which
-united the fate of his ancestors with his own, and it was natural that
-the most romantic episode in their lives should inspire him with a
-desire to see the scene of it once more.
-
-So it came about that he stood, on what he believed to be his last
-night in Aeria, beneath the self-same ancient palms which five
-generations before had heard Natasha confess her love for the man who
-had sworn to give her in exchange for it that empire of peace which he,
-their descendant, had been the means of losing.
-
-The story was, of course, familiar to him in its minutest details,
-and as he stood there, his own heart heavy with a hopeless sorrow, he
-pictured his great ancestor standing on the same spot, holding the
-means of universal conquest in his hands, and yet accounting all things
-as worthless because the empire within his grasp must lack the supreme
-crown of a woman’s love.
-
-Then, looking back through the mists of the years that had gone by
-since then, he seemed to see the very shape of the Angel moving over
-the soft green sward where now the broad marble-paved roadway gleamed
-white beneath the trees, and to hear the musical murmur of her voice
-even as Richard Arnold had heard it on that eventful night.
-
-“Alan!”
-
-Was he dreaming, or was it the voice of his ancestress speaking to his
-soul in that hour of his lonely sorrow? A pale, shimmering, ghostly
-shape flitted across the quivering plumes of the palm-trees, dropped
-softly to the ground, and Alma stood before him in the well of her
-aerial boat.
-
-Before his amazement had permitted him to utter a word she had stepped
-out and was coming towards him with outstretched hands, saying--
-
-“They told me I should find you here. Alan, I have come to ask you to
-forgive me if you--before you go upon this mission of yours, if go you
-must.”
-
-“To forgive you, Alma!” he exclaimed, recoiling a pace in sheer
-astonishment at her presence and her words. “What can I have to forgive
-_you_? Is it not rather”--
-
-“No, Alan, it is not,” she said quickly, still holding out her hands to
-him and looking up at him with faintly flushed cheeks and shining eyes.
-“I see it all clearly now. Isma was right. It is I who have sinned
-against you, and it is for me to ask forgiveness.”
-
-“How can you ask that of me, Alma? How have you harmed me?” he asked,
-still bewildered by her beauty and the enigmas that she spoke in, yet
-taking her hands, and, as if by instinct, drawing her towards him.
-
-“I will answer that afterwards,” she said quickly, as though inspired
-by some sudden thought. “But tell me, first, are you quite resolved to
-go upon this mission?”
-
-“Yes,” he said with an almost imperceptible quiver in his voice. “Have
-I not had a great, if not a guilty, share in bringing this curse upon
-the world, and is it not fitting that I should give my last days to the
-task, however hopeless, of bringing back peace on earth so that men may
-die sane and not mad?”
-
-“But, Alan, is that a higher duty than you owe to your family and your
-people? You know that in you centre all their hopes for the future,
-if there is to be one. With you would die the name of Arnold, and the
-direct line of Natas and Natasha.”
-
-“And with me they would die even if I went with the Children of
-Deliverance into the caverns of Mount Austral and survived the ruin of
-the world. How can you mock me like that, Alma? Have I not suffered
-enough for my weakness and my folly that you would condemn me to wander
-an exile in the wilderness that the world will be when it has passed
-through its baptism of fire?
-
-“What is the swift death of battle or the short agony of the
-conflagration of the world compared with the long death-in-life that I
-should drag out alone in the new world that may arise from the ruins of
-this one?”
-
-“And why alone, Alan?”
-
-“Why alone? Can you ask me that, Alma? Surely you are mocking me now.
-Can you ask why I should be alone if I survived with the remnant of our
-people? Do you not even yet know why I choose the certainty of death
-rather than the chance of life?”
-
-“But, Alan, what if I were to tell you that you would not go alone to
-the caverns, and that if the chosen few survive you will not wander
-alone on the wilderness of the new world?”
-
-“I should tell you, Alma, that you meant to sacrifice yourself to save
-me, and that I would not accept the sacrifice even at your hands.”
-
-“Sacrifice! No, Alan, I would not outlive the world, even with you,
-on those terms. A woman of Aeria does not sell herself even for
-sentiment. This is no time for secrets or false shame, and I tell you
-frankly that if you had accepted the order of the Council, you should
-have lived and I would have died.
-
-“But your rebellion proved to me that Isma was right when she rebuked
-my false pride by saying that the man who has fallen and risen again is
-better and stronger than he who has never suffered”--
-
-“But, Alma, remember”--
-
-“No, you must not interrupt me now, or what ought to be said may never
-be spoken. I know what you were going to say. You were going to tell me
-to remember that Olga Romanoff is still alive. Let her live--and let
-God judge her for her sins in the judgment that is so soon to come!
-What have we to do with her?”
-
-“Nothing, Alma, after you have said that, for it tells me that in
-your eyes the stain is purged and the fault forgiven. I will take the
-message to her as to the rest of the world. If she receives it in peace
-then there shall be peace, and God shall judge between us”--
-
-“And if not?”
-
-“Then I will pit my single ship against hers and her fleet and only one
-of us, if either, shall see the end.”
-
-“And if that is you--what then?”
-
-“Then it will be for you--under Heaven--to speak the words of life or
-death, for only you can bid me live, Alma.”
-
-[Illustration: “ONLY YOU CAN BID ME LIVE, ALMA.” _Page 317._]
-
-As he spoke the great lights on the mountain tops suddenly blazed
-out, shone for a few moments, and were extinguished again. It was the
-answering signal to one from Mars; but it joined two souls as well as
-two worlds, for by its light Alan saw on Alma’s face and in her eyes
-the one reprieve from death that honour would permit him to accept.
-
-Without waiting for the words that her now smiling lips were opening to
-utter, he took her unresisting in his arms. Then her proudly carried,
-wing-crowned head drooped at last in sweet submission, and rested on
-his heart; and as he turned her face up to his to take his kiss of
-re-betrothal, he said--
-
-“That tells me that I may live. Now we are immortal, you and I, for
-this kiss is our eternity!”
-
-Then their lips met, and for the instant Time had no more beginning
-or end. The impending ruin of the world was forgotten; for Love had
-spoken, and the very voice of Doom itself was silent amidst the
-happiness of their heedless souls.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII. THE SIGN IN THE SKY.
-
-
-WHEN the news of what had happened at midnight in the palm grove was
-published the next morning far and wide through the valley of Aeria it
-would have been impossible to imagine that an irrevocable sentence of
-death was overhanging the land and all its inhabitants, save those who
-were to be selected to take the one chance that remained of surviving
-the chaos that was to come.
-
-There was no one in the valley to whom Alan’s story was not familiar in
-all its details, there was not a single heart that had not in the midst
-of its own happiness sympathised with him and Alma in their sorrow,
-and so, when that sorrow was at last turned into joy, everyone forgot
-for the moment the fate whose approach was so near and so certain, and
-rejoiced with them in the happiness that was great enough to raise them
-above the gloom that was already stealing over the world.
-
-But in the midst of the general rejoicing came the decision of the
-Council upon the request which Alan had submitted to his father, and
-this, though he was forced to confess it wise and just, was by no means
-what, in his enthusiasm, he could have wished. The rulers of Aeria
-absolutely refused to permit any of the air-ships to leave the valley
-for at least two months to come.
-
-They recognised with perfect approval the nobility of the resolve which
-Alan had taken to carry the message of the world’s approaching end to
-those nations which he had been, partially at least, responsible for
-plunging into the horrors of war, but they insisted that the concerns
-of Aeria must, in their eyes, take precedence of those of the outside
-world.
-
-There was much to do, and the time for doing it was short. What was
-perhaps the greatest engineering task in the history of the world had
-to be conceived and completed within the next four months, and as Alan
-and Alexis were admittedly the two most skilful practical engineers in
-the State, the Council declined to allow them to run the almost certain
-risk of death at the hands of their enemies when their knowledge and
-skill ought to be devoted to the work of ensuring, as far as possible,
-the preservation of that remnant of the human race who should be
-destined to seek safety in the caverns of Mount Austral.
-
-When the completion of that work was made certain, then permission
-would be freely given to them and their companions to go forth and
-proclaim their warning to the world, subject only to the condition that
-they were to take every precaution consistent with the honour of their
-race to return while there was yet time for them to take their places
-among the Children of Deliverance should the selection fall upon them.
-
-Meanwhile, telephonic messages were to be sent to all those portions
-of the world with which Aeria was still in communication, conveying
-the exact terms of the warning that had been received from Mars, and
-calling upon the astronomers in all the observatories on the globe to
-verify the calculations for themselves, and publish their conclusions
-to their respective nations as quickly as possible.
-
-With these terms Alan was of necessity obliged to be content. Indeed,
-when he came to review them in sober thought, he saw that, while
-nothing was to be lost, much was to be gained by submission to them.
-
-Though he still refused, even in spite of the knowledge that he would
-share with Alma the future if there was to be one, to obey the order of
-the Council which exempted him from the ordeal of selection, he thought
-and worked with just as much ardour as though the safety of the whole
-of the dwellers in Aeria, as well as his own, hung upon his efforts.
-
-The caverns of Mount Austral, like those of other limestone formations
-in various parts of the world, had been formed in some remote
-geological period by the solvent action of water charged with carbonic
-gas upon the limestone rocks.
-
-The entrance to them, discovered very soon after the valley had been
-colonised by the Terrorists in the first decade of the twentieth
-century, was situated on the inner slopes of the mountain about eight
-hundred feet above the level of the lake, which occupied the central
-portion of the valley.
-
-This lake, although fed by hundreds of streams from the surrounding
-mountains, always preserved the same level, in spite of the fact that
-it had no visible outlet. Those who first explored the caverns found
-the explanation of this phenomenon.
-
-Below the floors of the vast chambers which penetrated the heart of the
-mountain for a distance of nearly three miles there ran a deep chasm,
-through which rushed in a black, swift, silent stream the surplus
-waters of the lake. This stream was nearly a thousand feet below the
-entrance to the caverns and half that distance below the floor of the
-lowest chambers and galleries.
-
-The scheme conceived by Alan and Alexis and their fellow-workers was
-in fact nothing less than the damming of this subterranean stream by a
-mighty sluice-gate composed of one huge sheet of metal which, running
-down into grooves cut in the solid rock and metal-sheathed, should
-completely close the inner mouth of the tunnel by which the waters
-entered the caverns.
-
-This, once successfully fixed in its place, would deprive the lake
-of its only known outlet. The streams would go on flowing from the
-mountains and the waters of the lake would rise. The upper entrance
-would, when the fatal moment came, also be closed, not by one such
-door, but by three that would slide down one behind the other in the
-upper tunnel, which, with a diameter of about thirty feet and a height
-of almost fifty, ran for nearly a quarter of a mile from the side of
-the mountain to the first of the chambers.
-
-The spaces between these doors would be filled with ice artificially
-frozen, and shafts to allow for expansion should the ice melt and the
-water boil would run from them vertically, piercing the mountain-side.
-When the waters rose to the level of the entrance the doors would be
-lowered and the space filled with water and frozen. Then the waters
-would go on rising, the entrance would be submerged, and the defences
-of the fortress in which the remnant of humanity was to make its last
-stand for life would be complete.
-
-But in addition to these outer defences there was an enormous amount of
-work to be done in fitting the interior of the caverns to receive those
-for whom they were to form an asylum.
-
-They were already lighted by myriads of electric lamps, but the source
-of light was outside, and this had to be replaced by power-stations
-inside. Provision had to be made for keeping the air pure and vital,
-for supplying food and drink for an almost indefinite time, and for
-storing up a sufficiency of seeds and roots and treasures of art and
-creative skill, so that the new world might be clothed again with
-verdure and nothing essential of the splendid civilisation of Aeria be
-lost.
-
-Such, in the briefest outline, was the momentous task to which the
-Aerians devoted all their splendid genius and unconquerable energies,
-and day by day and week by week they toiled at it, while the fatal hour
-which was to witness the last agony of man upon earth swiftly drew
-nearer and nearer.
-
-The messages to the outside world had been sent and replied to. Those
-to the astronomers and to the governments of the Federation had been
-acknowledged in formal terms, which thinly concealed the incredulity
-with which they had been received.
-
-Olga had treated the message with the silent disdain of a conquering
-autocrat--such, as in sober truth, she now was. The Sultan had replied
-to it in a despatch in which the dignity of a victorious despot and the
-fatalism of the religious fanatic were characteristically blended.
-Then one by one the telephonic communications with the various parts of
-the world ceased; messages were sent out and repeated, but no answer
-came back.
-
-First Europe, then Britain, then South Africa, America, and Australia,
-ceased to respond to the signals; and by the beginning of July Aeria
-was completely isolated from the rest of the world--probably the only
-stronghold that now remained unsubdued by the conquering fleets of the
-Sultan and the Tsarina.
-
-Still the sentinel ships, hanging high in air over the valley, and
-constantly patrolling the outer slopes of the mountains, saw no sign
-of hostile approach. The last messages that had been received from the
-great cities of the Federation had told brief but fearful stories of
-the desolation that was following in the path of Moslem and Russian
-conquest.
-
-The bridges of Gibraltar and the Bosphorus had been forced, and
-thousands after thousands of Moslem troops had been poured into Europe.
-Frenzied by fanaticism and the new-born lust of battle and conquest,
-the hordes of Asiatic tribesmen who had escaped the one terrific
-onslaught of the fleet under the command of Alexis had, now that the
-guardian ships were withdrawn, been hurried through Russia, and hurled
-upon the wealthy and almost defenceless cities of Western Europe.
-
-The Federation was on the point of utter collapse, divided in its
-counsels, confused in its plans of defence, its armies undisciplined,
-and its fleets disorganised and daily diminishing in number and
-effectiveness.
-
-In America, Australia, and Southern Africa there was anarchy on earth
-and terror in the air. Cities had been terrorised into capitulation
-by aerial squadrons, and then looted and burnt, and their ruins given
-up to be the miserable prey of the revolutionaries who now, as ever,
-had taken advantage of the universal panic to revolt against all
-government, and deny all rights but that which they claimed to prey
-upon the helpless, all liberty that was not license, and all property
-that was not plunder.
-
-The last tidings of all that came from Europe were received from
-Britain, and, after recounting the destruction of London and the
-collapse of the Government, concluded with the news that Olga had
-publicly embraced the faith of Islam, and, in conjunction with the
-Sultan, whom she was to marry as soon as the conquest of Europe was
-finally complete, was forcibly converting her Russian subjects to the
-creed of the Koran.
-
-So the affairs of the world stood when the sun went down on the 15th
-of July. On the meridian of Aeria it set at nine minutes to eight; at
-thirteen minutes past eight, according to the calculations made by the
-Martian and verified by the Aerian astronomers, the herald of Fate
-would approach within the range of terrestrial vision.
-
-Before the brief period of tropical twilight had passed every telescope
-in the valley was turned to that spot in the constellation of Andromeda
-at which it was predicted to become visible. As the revolving earth
-swept Aeria into the shadow of night every light was extinguished, for
-it was known that the astronomers of Mars would be anxiously watching
-for a signal that would announce the correctness or the error of their
-calculations.
-
-Vassilis Cosmo, seated at the eye-piece of the great equatorial
-telescope on Mount Austral, with his hand on the switch which
-controlled the electric currents that were waiting to do his bidding,
-watched the fields of space darken, and the stars of Andromeda shine
-out. Just a little below the line which joins the Square of Pegasus
-with the constellation of Cassiopeia, he saw, as usual, the oval,
-luminous cloud of the great nebula in Andromeda.
-
-Four degrees towards the zenith, above the centre of the star-cloud,
-a tiny fan-shaped spray, faint and pale as a dissolving puff of white
-smoke, was floating in the black abyss of space. Precisely at the
-thirteenth minute of the hour he turned the switch, and the great
-suns on the mountain-tops blazed out and flashed the signal to the
-sister-world to tell its inhabitants that their prediction had been
-fulfilled to the second.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX. THE TRUCE OF GOD.
-
-
-BY the 30th of July the work in the caverns was so far advanced that
-the Council was able to authorise the departure of Alan and his
-companions for the outside world. The great vertical sluice-door, a
-huge sheet of steel forty feet long, twenty wide, and eighteen inches
-thick, and footed with a great indiarubber pad, was in its place,
-suspended at the top of the steel-lined grooves, which had been sunk
-three feet into each of the rock walls of the chasm into which the
-water-tunnel from the lake opened.
-
-On the morning of the 30th it was sent down into its final position.
-The momentous experiment proved completely successful. The huge mass
-of metal descended slowly over the mouth of the tunnel into the black,
-swift stream at the bottom of the chasm. As its enormous weight crushed
-the indiarubber pad down into all the inequalities of the floor the
-outrush of the waters instantly stopped, and the channel ran dry save
-for the fierce jets of water which spouted out over the top of the
-plate.
-
-The crevices through which these came were easily plugged, and when
-this was done it was found that the waters of the lake were rising at
-the rate of three feet an hour. This proved that, whether the lake had
-another outlet or not, the damming of the subterranean channels would
-be quite sufficient to flood the whole valley.
-
-The gate was then raised again, and the waters permitted to flow as
-before. The triple doors at the entrance to the cavern were already
-in position when this was done, as the task of placing them had
-necessarily been much easier than the construction of the water-gate.
-Nothing but details now remained to be completed, and there was
-therefore no reason for any further postponement of Alan’s mission.
-
-Alexis had also succeeded in carrying his point, and getting permission
-to accompany Alan in the _Isma_. He had had no difficulty in satisfying
-the Council that the risk would be enormously diminished by sending
-two air-ships instead of one, for while Alan descended to the earth to
-convey his message to a hostile city, he would be able to remain in the
-air, dominating it with his guns, and ready to lay it in ruins if the
-flag of truce were not respected.
-
-But the two friends had gained even more than this, for in answer to
-their earnest pleadings, in which it may be suspected they were not
-altogether unsupported by those as vitally concerned as themselves,
-a joint family council had decided that, under the unparalleled
-circumstances of the case, there was no valid reason for refusing
-consent to their immediate union with the two faithful brides who had
-waited so long and so patiently for their lords.
-
-Therefore, on the morning of the 31st, it came to pass that they stood
-upon the spot sanctified by the ashes of their great ancestors, and
-took each other for man and wife, for life or death, as the hazard of
-the world’s fate might decide, in the presence of a vast congregation
-of those who stood with feet already touching the brink of the valley
-of the shadow of death.
-
-No bridal so strange or solemn had ever been celebrated in the world
-before. It was human love and hope and genius, serene and confident
-in the presence of the most awful catastrophe that had ever befallen
-humanity, defying the fate that was about to overwhelm a world in
-destruction.
-
-That evening, as the sun was touching the tops of the western
-mountains, the last preparations for the voyage were completed, the
-last farewells exchanged, and the _Isma_ and the _Avenger_, now renamed
-the _Alma_ by the hands of her name-mother, rose into the air amid
-salvoes of aerial artillery, and winged their way northward over the
-Ridge.
-
-As they sped out over the plains of Northern Africa the sun sank,
-and out of the north-western heavens shone the luminous haze of the
-Fire-Cloud, which had now grown in visible magnitude until the two
-fan-like wings which spread out from its central nucleus spanned an arc
-of twenty degrees in the heavens.
-
-As the two air-ships sped on their northward course towards Alexandria,
-where Alan had decided to make his first attempt to stay the progress
-of the world-war, the two pairs of new-wedded lovers watched with
-anxious eyes from the decks of their flying craft the terrible portent
-in the skies whose meaning they above all others on earth were so well
-qualified to read.
-
-There could be no doubt now, even apart from all the elaborate
-calculations which had been made, that the prediction of the Martian
-astronomers was far more likely to be fulfilled than contradicted by
-the event.
-
-Yet, so great was the happiness they found in this strange fulfilment
-of the faint hopes of years of almost hopeless waiting that, even
-as they journeyed on through the night with this threatening sign
-of approaching ruin pouring its angry light out of the skies, their
-talk was still rather of love and life and hope than of the death and
-desolation which they knew to be overhanging their race with such
-remorseless certainty.
-
-They had lived and loved, and their love had found fruition. What
-more could they have asked of Fate than this, even if they could have
-prolonged their lives indefinitely by a mere effort of will? As Alan
-had said to Alma at the moment of their re-betrothal in the palm-grove,
-they were immortal now, and for them the death of a world was but an
-accident on the onward progress of an evolution in which such souls as
-theirs, veritable sparks of the divine fire itself, were the dominating
-factors.
-
-As the Fire-Cloud paled in the West, and the eastern heavens brightened
-with the fore-glow of the coming dawn, the captains of the two vessels
-were roused by the signals from the conning-towers which told them that
-Alexandria was in sight.
-
-As soon as he got on deck Alan signalled to the _Isma_ to come close
-alongside. As she did so and the morning greetings were exchanged, Alma
-appeared on deck, and suggested that Alexis and Isma should come and
-have breakfast on board the flagship, so that the two captains could
-discuss their final plans before descending to the city.
-
-The invitation was of course accepted, and an hour later the _Alma_
-commenced her descent towards the Sultan’s palace, above which, from a
-lofty flagstaff, the banner of Islam was floating lazily in the early
-morning breeze. She flew no other ensign save a broad white flag of
-truce that streamed out from the signal-mast at her stern.
-
-The whole city seemed asleep, secure in the conquests that had already
-been won. A single air-ship floated two thousand feet above the palace,
-and as he approached her Alan, keeping her well under his guns, flew
-from his mainmast the signal--“We come in peace. Will you respect the
-flag?”
-
-The Moslem captain saw at a glance that a single shell would annihilate
-his vessel, and that the _Alma_ was perfectly protected by her consort,
-circling two thousand feet above him, so he signalled, “Yes, come
-alongside.” The _Alma_ descended and swung round until she came on a
-level with the Moslem vessel, then she ran alongside within speaking
-distance, the doors of the deck-chambers were opened, and Alan, after
-exchanging salutes, asked her captain whether the Sultan was in his
-capital.
-
-“Yes,” replied the Moslem. “He is down yonder in his palace awaiting
-the coming of the Tsarina, for they are to join hands to-day and reign
-lord and mistress of the world they have conquered.”
-
-“Is the world, then, conquered?” asked Alan, with a smile on his lips
-and a note of scornful pity in his voice.
-
-“Yes,” said the Moslem. “East and west, north and south, the world is
-ours, saving only your own little land, and for that, I suppose, you
-have come to make terms of peace.”
-
-“I have not come to make terms of peace for Aeria, but for the world,”
-replied Alan gravely. “But of that I must speak with your master. When
-will he be able to give me an audience?”
-
-“That I cannot say,” was the reply, “or even that he will hear you
-at all. But, pardon! I did not know that the angels of Paradise
-accompanied the Aerians on their voyages. Descend in peace, my master
-will receive you.”
-
-As he was speaking Alma, crowned with her crystal wings, and radiant
-with a beauty which, to the Moslem’s eyes, seemed something superhuman,
-had come from the after part of the vessel to Alan’s side. It was the
-first time that he had ever seen a woman of Aeria; and, with the innate
-chivalry of his race, he paid his involuntary homage to her as he would
-have done to an incarnation of one of the poetic dreams of his faith.
-
-Then salutes were exchanged again between the two captains and the
-_Alma_ sank swiftly downwards until she hovered twenty feet above the
-terrace on which Alan had first spoken with the Sultan on the night
-that he captured the _Vindaya_.
-
-The approach of the Aerian warship had already summoned a party of
-guards to the roof, and after a brief parley a message was carried to
-the Sultan from Alan. A few minutes later Khalid stepped out of the
-doorway leading from the interior of the palace, magnificently attired
-as though for some great ceremonial.
-
-He looked up and saw Alan standing with Alma by his side on the
-after-deck of his ship. He saw, too, that the flag of truce was flying
-from the stern and that the guns were laid alongside instead of being
-pointed down upon the city. He raised his hand in salute and said--
-
-“I see you come in the guise of peace. If that is so you are welcome.”
-
-“It is peace if your Majesty will have it so,” replied Alan, returning
-his salute, and at the same time making a sign for the _Alma_ to
-descend to the roof of the palace. As her keels touched the floor of
-the terrace, the steps fell from the after doorway, and he came down,
-leaving Alma standing on deck by the open door.
-
-“Will not your companion honour my palace by touching its roof with her
-foot?” said Khalid, looking up at Alma as he exchanged greetings with
-Alan.
-
-“My companion, Sultan, is the wife of the man whom you turned your back
-upon on this very spot as a liar, a traitor, and a murderer,” said
-Alan, looking him straight in the eyes. “How, then, could she honour
-your palace by setting foot on its roof?”
-
-For a moment the Sultan was abashed into silence by the directness of
-the rebuke, and then his Oriental subtlety and quickness of thought
-came to his aid, and, bending his head with royal dignity, he said--
-
-“The angels do not mate with such men as that. The Tsarina must have
-been misled by appearances, perhaps, indeed, carried away by her
-hereditary hatred of your people. It is impossible that any but a true
-man could have won the love of such a woman. You tell me that you come
-as friends and not as enemies, so, for the hour, let there be peace,
-not war, between us. While you are my guests my city is yours, and
-all that it contains. I pledge my honour for your safety, so let the
-Daughter of the Air descend that I may hear from her lips the music of
-her voice.”
-
-Turning aside, half to hide a smile at the Oriental metaphor of the
-Sultan’s speech, Alan went to the foot of the steps and held out his
-hand to Alma. As she alighted on the terrace he led her towards him,
-saying--
-
-“This is my wife. Yesterday morning she was Alma Tremayne, a daughter
-in the fifth generation of the first President of the Federation. Her
-ancestor and yours made terms of peace after the War of the Terror. It
-is, therefore, more fitting that you should hear from her lips than
-from mine the message that we bring.”
-
-“My ears are waiting,” said Khalid, bending low over the hand that Alma
-held out to him as Alan spoke. “It would be a strange message that
-would not be welcome from such lips.”
-
-From one whom she could have looked upon as an equal such language
-as this would have jarred sorely upon Alma, accustomed as she was to
-the frank directness of her own people’s speech. But from Khalid she
-tolerated it as she would have tolerated the extravagance of a child,
-and as he raised his head again she looked at him with eyes that
-dazzled him afresh, intoxicated as he already was with her, to him,
-strange and almost unearthly beauty, and said in a voice such as he had
-never heard before--
-
-“Thank you, Sultan, for your welcome, but surely there is little need
-for me to tell you what message we bring. Last night you saw it written
-in letters of fire across the heavens. Has not the voice of God spoken
-bidding you and your people to cease the cruel warfare that you are
-waging upon the world and to prepare for the end of which that is a
-sign?”
-
-As she spoke she raised her hand and pointed to where the shape of the
-Fire-Cloud now hung in the sky like a white mist paling before the
-light of the rising sun.
-
-“You rejected our first warning, as perhaps was natural, but now that
-you have seen the confirmation of it shining among the stars, surely
-you will no longer reject it.”
-
-The last words were spoken in a gentle, pleading tone, which no man
-could have heard without being moved by them.
-
-“Daughter of the Air,” replied the Sultan, following her hand with his
-eyes, “I have seen, and in a measure I believe, your message, though
-my interpretation of it may be other than yours. If the end of the
-world is at hand, the Commander of the Faithful will know how to meet
-it as a true believer should. It is not impossible that there may be
-peace between us yet in the last hours of earthly life, for I would not
-willingly make war on a people that has daughters such as you.”
-
-“Not for our sake, Sultan, but for the sake of all who have survived
-this terrible warfare of yours we are come to plead with you for
-peace,” said Alma. “This is no time for hate and strife and bloodshed.
-There will be horrors enough upon earth before long without any made
-by the fury of man. It is in your power to give peace to the world and
-breathing space to meet its end. Why will you not give it?”
-
-“You forget it is not I alone who can give peace,” replied Khalid. “If
-that were so”--
-
-Before he could speak another word a salvo of aerial artillery shook
-the air above the city. All looked up towards the northern sky, whence
-the sound proceeded, and saw a squadron of twenty silvery-hulled
-air-ships flying the Moslem and Russian flags, and escorting in two
-divisions a warship, from whose flagstaff flew the imperial standard
-of Russia, and whose shining hull of azurine proclaimed her the lost
-_Ithuriel_.
-
-Alan grasped the perilous situation in an instant, and was just about
-to tell Alma to go back on board their own ship when the Sultan,
-divining his intention, took a step forward and said--
-
-“Do you think that Khalid cannot protect his guests or that his ally
-will not respect the hospitality of his house? You are safe. If a hair
-of your head were harmed the Tsarina and I would be enemies and she
-would come to her death instead of her bridal, for that is what brings
-her here. There is truce between us for this day at least, and she
-shall not break it.”
-
-As he ceased speaking the twenty air-ships opened out into a long line
-and remained suspended five hundred feet above the palace, while the
-_Revenge_ continued her downward flight and alighted at the farther end
-of the terrace from where they were standing.
-
-The after door of the deck-chamber opened as she touched the marble
-pavement, the steps dropped down, and Olga descended, attired as usual
-in a plain robe of royal purple, over which hung a travelling mantle
-of pearl-grey cloth as fine and soft as silk and lined with the then
-almost priceless fur of the silver fox.
-
-Her head was uncovered save for a plain golden fillet, from which rose
-a pair of slender silver wings so thickly encrusted with diamonds
-that they seemed entirely fashioned of the flashing gems. The golden
-fillet shone out brightly yellow against the lustrous black of her
-thickly-coiled hair, and the diamond wings blazed and scintillated in
-the sunlight with every movement of her head.
-
-As she descended the steps she was followed by Orloff Lossenski and
-a guard of honour of twelve of her officers, splendidly dressed, and
-armed to the teeth, who, as soon as they landed, drew their swords,
-which were now only used as ornamental insignia of rank, and ranged
-themselves in two lines, one on either side of her.
-
-Before the _Revenge_ had alighted the Sultan had made a sign to one of
-the sentries, who blew a long, clear blast on a silver bugle, which
-was instantly answered by a hundred others from various parts of the
-city. At the sound the Moslem metropolis seemed to wake from sleep into
-universal activity.
-
-Thousands of soldiers in brilliant uniforms poured into the empty
-streets, the Moslem and Russian flags ran up to a thousand flagstaffs,
-squadron after squadron of aerial cruisers soared up from the earth and
-saluted with salvoes of artillery, which shook the very firmament and
-brought Alexis down to within three thousand feet of the palace roof
-in the belief that Alan and Alma had fallen victims to some treachery,
-and that the time had come for him to avenge them by laying the city in
-ruins, as he had promised to do in such an event.
-
-A single glance through his field-glasses showed him the true state of
-affairs, so he contented himself with keeping his crew at quarters with
-every gun trained on a Russian or a Moslem air-ship and ready to spread
-death and ruin far and wide should any harm happen to the _Alma_ or her
-crew.
-
-While this was taking place the Sultan’s bodyguard had filed out on to
-the terrace resplendent with gorgeous uniforms and glittering weapons,
-and between the two long lines that they formed Khalid advanced to
-meet his bride, leaving Alan and Alma interested and not unanxious
-spectators of the strange and unexpected scene.
-
-They met half-way down the double line, and as Olga held out the hand
-over which Khalid bowed low as he raised it to his lips, she said, with
-a glance of undisguised hate towards Alan and Alma and a mocking smile
-on her lips--
-
-“Your Majesty’s generosity is unbounded! I see that you have invited
-to our wedding-feast the only enemies with whom we have yet to measure
-swords!”
-
-“They have not come as enemies, Tsarina,” replied Khalid, as he raised
-his head and looked with but half-restrained ardour on the beauty that
-was so soon to be his. “Nor yet have they come at my invitation. Alan
-Arnold and his wife”--
-
-“His what!” interrupted Olga, her cheeks burning and her eyes flashing
-with a sudden blaze of uncontrollable anger.
-
-“His wife, Tsarina,” replied Khalid, somewhat coldly. “The son of
-Natasha and Richard Arnold has mated with the daughter of Alan
-Tremayne, and they have come in the fifth generation to warn you, the
-daughter of the House of Romanoff, and me, the son of the line of
-Mohammed Reshad, to cease our warfare upon the nations and prepare for
-the universal end which, they tell us, is at hand.”
-
-Khalid spoke, as Olga thought, half in jest and half in earnest, so she
-continued in the same mocking tone in which she had first spoken--
-
-“Then if that is so, if all human enmities are soon to be purged by the
-all-destroying fires, we may as well meet in peace for the moment. Will
-your Majesty honour me by presenting me to your uninvited guests?”
-
-“Uninvited, but still my guests, Tsarina,” replied Khalid gravely, “and
-therefore I need not ask you”--
-
-“No, Sultan,” said Olga, interrupting him, “you need ask me nothing.
-You need not fear that I shall not respect the hospitality of your
-house, even when extended to them.”
-
-As she spoke she gave him her hand again and he led her between the
-silent, rigid ranks of his guards to where Alan and Alma were standing.
-
-Since men and women had learned to love and hate there had been no
-such strange meeting between two women as that which now took place
-between Alma and Olga. It was the first time that Olga had ever seen a
-woman of the race to which Alan belonged, and Alma, for the first time
-confronted with a daughter of the “earth-folk,” saw in Olga Romanoff
-at once the most beautiful woman outside the confines of Aeria and the
-incarnation of everything that she had been trained to look upon as
-evil.
-
-While the Sultan was speaking the words of presentation their eyes met,
-and Alma thought of that sentence in Alan’s letter to his father, “She
-is as beautiful as an angel and as merciless as a fiend,” while Olga
-looked back to the time when she first heard Alma’s name and hated
-her for the sake of him who now stood beside her, her lover and her
-husband--the man _she_ had held in bondage for years without winning
-one voluntary caress from him.
-
-Alma’s first emotion was one of wonder. Hitherto, she had seen nothing
-beautiful that was not at the same time good, for in Aeria the
-conceptions of beauty and goodness were inseparable. But here was a
-woman of almost perfect physical loveliness, after her own type, who
-was beyond all doubt guilty of the most colossal crime that a human
-soul had conceived or a human hand had carried out since men first
-learned to sin.
-
-The world, which ten years before had been a paradise of peace,
-prosperity, and enlightened progress, was now a wilderness of misery
-and an inferno of strife, fast lapsing back into barbarism--and all
-this was her doing.
-
-As this thought came to Alma’s mind, standing out distinct among all
-the others that were forcing themselves upon her, wonder gave place to
-unspeakable horror, and as Olga approached, with the light of hate
-still burning in her eyes and the same mocking smile upon her lips, she
-instinctively shrank back as though to avoid contact with some unclean
-thing. As she did so her hand slipped through Alan’s arm and a visible
-shudder ran through her form.
-
-Marvellous as Olga’s power of self-control and dissimulation was, she
-failed entirely to restrain the passion which such a reception aroused
-within her. It was the first time in her life that she had ever stood
-in the presence of a woman untainted by a spot of sin or shame, and
-this woman recoiled from her in visible loathing, beautiful and mighty
-as she was, at the very zenith of her conquering career and on the
-morning of her promised union with the man who, as she believed, would
-before many days share the empire of the world with her.
-
-Hardened as she was, the mute rebuke cut her to the quick. The flush
-on her cheeks died out and left her so pale for the moment that her
-face looked almost ghastly with its grey lips and black burning eyes.
-This daughter of a higher race had at a single glance pierced the
-splendid mask which covered the fearful deformity of her true nature.
-She thought of the night long ago in the bedroom at St. Petersburg when
-by the light of the unearthly flame hovering above her poison-still she
-had seen her image in the mirror.
-
-Then pride and anger came to her rescue. The blood returned to her
-cheeks and lips, she drew herself up to the full height of her queenly
-stature, and as the Sultan spoke the words of presentation she slightly
-inclined her head, and then raising it again said, in low, even tones,
-whose wonderful music sent a chill to Alma’s heart--
-
-“This is a pleasant surprise, Alan Arnold. I little thought that after
-our last parting we should meet again, save in battle, much less did I
-think that you would honour my bridal by bringing your own bride to it.
-Still, as the Sultan tells me, there is truce for to-day, and, so far
-as to my enemy, you are welcome.”
-
-“We have not come as guests to your bridal, Tsarina,” said Alan
-coldly and gravely, “nor have we come to make truce as between mortal
-enemies. The enmities of men and nations are but as child’s-play now.
-We have come to proclaim the Truce of God against the hour of His final
-judgment.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX. THE SHADOW OF DEATH.
-
-
-“AH, I see,” said Olga. “You have come to tell us this wonderful story
-about the comet, and the message you say you have received from Mars,
-over again. You are not the first who have prophesied the end of the
-world by such means, nor will you be the last to be discredited by the
-event.
-
-“Once for all, then, let me save misunderstanding by telling you that I
-don’t believe a word of it, and therefore nothing that you can say will
-have any effect on the course of action that I have determined upon.
-You are of course at liberty to preach your truce elsewhere and at your
-own risk, though I fear it will be but the voice of one crying in the
-wilderness.”
-
-“Yes, truly in the wilderness,” said Alma before Alan could reply, “but
-a wilderness that you have made with your own hand, Tsarina. You who
-have been the evil genius of the world, have you not done harm enough,
-now that the world has only a few more weeks to live?”
-
-“According to the idle tale you bring us,” interrupted Olga, repressing
-with a barely successful effort the anger aroused afresh within her by
-the serene tone in which Alma spoke. It sounded rather like the voice
-of an angel speaking to a mortal than of one woman addressing another,
-and even to herself Olga was forced to admit that there could be no
-question of equality between this daughter of the air and herself.
-
-“It is no idle tale,” replied Alma, almost in the same tone which
-she might have used in reproving a wayward child, “it is not even a
-prophecy, it is a mathematical certainty, and if you understood you
-would believe.”
-
-“You are wasting time and your own breath,” said Olga scornfully. “You
-are not my guests but the Sultan’s, yet he may allow me to say that we
-have other demands upon our attention more important than listening to
-such sentimentalism as this.”
-
-Before Alma could answer, Alan turned to the Sultan as though not
-deigning to reply to Olga’s insulting speech.
-
-“Your Majesty, I see that this is no time to perform the mission upon
-which I came. We did not expect the presence of the Tsarina here.
-Had we done so we should not have come, for I know how vain it would
-be to reason with her. I came prepared to satisfy the most skilful
-astronomers in your kingdom that what I say is absolutely true, and I
-ventured to hope that you, if satisfied by their assurances, would give
-peace to the world for the remnant of its days.
-
-“But even so it is not for us to interrupt or even to introduce an
-unpleasant element into the doings of to-day, so, with your Majesty’s
-permission, I will leave the calculations with your minister and
-relieve you and the Tsarina of our unwelcome presence.”
-
-All this time the Grand Vizier, Musa al Ghazi, had been standing a
-little to the rear of the group stroking his beard nervously and
-looking anxiously from one to the other. He seemed about to speak, when
-Khalid said to Alan with a courtesy which contrasted strongly with
-Olga’s contemptuous demeanour--
-
-“I thank you, Prince of the Air. As matters stand I think that will be
-the most reasonable as well as the most convenient course. Though I am
-far from convinced that you are not mistaken, yet I can assure you that
-the best skill in my domains shall examine what you leave us. Musa!”
-
-The old man turned pale as his master pronounced his name, and stepped
-forward with a visible agitation, which was by no means accounted for
-by the circumstances of the strange situation. Instead of waiting for
-Khalid’s commands he said as he made his obeisance before him--
-
-“Commander of the Faithful, I am here; but before your Majesty bids me
-take these papers from the hands of Alan Arnold I would ask permission
-to say a word that must be said in private.”
-
-“In private, Musa?” said Khalid, frowning slightly and passing his hand
-down his beard. “This is hardly a time for State secrets.”
-
-“It is but my duty to my master that bids me speak,” replied the old
-man, again bending before him. “A moment will suffice for the speaking
-of what I have to say.”
-
-Musa’s tone was so earnest and his anxiety so palpable, that Khalid
-without more ado made his excuses to the Tsarina and his unexpected
-guests and stepped aside out of earshot with his Vizier.
-
-“Well, Musa, what is it that is so pressing and yet so private?” he
-asked, a trifle impatiently.
-
-“My master,” replied the old minister, in a voice that now trembled
-with emotion, “there is no need to examine the calculations from Aeria.
-An hour before daybreak Hakem ben Amru, your chief astronomer at the
-observatory of Memphis, came to me and told me that he had completed
-his own calculations of the curve and period of the comet, and that,
-allowing for difference in longitude between our meridian and that of
-Aeria, the prediction from Mars will be fulfilled beyond all doubt at
-midnight on the 23rd of September.”
-
-This was testimony which it was impossible for Khalid to question.
-Musa’s sincerity was beyond all question and Hakem ben Amru was the
-most renowned astronomer in the world outside Aeria. Khalid recoiled
-a pace as though he had been struck, and said in a voice hoarse with
-sudden emotion--
-
-“Why did you not tell me this before, Musa?”
-
-“Because I would not mar my master’s happiness for this day at least,”
-replied Musa. “If it be true that the end of earthly things is at hand
-a day is of but small account. To tell you would neither hasten nor
-delay the end. But Alan Arnold’s words forced me to speak, for I knew
-that Hakem would speak if I did not.”
-
-Khalid laid his hand upon the old man’s shoulder and said gravely but
-kindly--
-
-“It was well thought, Musa, and I thank you for your consideration,
-evil as your news is. It is Kismet, and the will of Allah must be done!”
-
-So saying he turned away and walked with slow steps and downcast eyes
-to where Olga was standing talking to Orloff Lossenski with her back
-turned in open contempt upon Alma and Alan. A single glance at his face
-told her that Musa had had no pleasant tidings to impart.
-
-“Your Majesty looks grave,” she said. “Has Musa given you news of some
-disaster to our forces?”
-
-“More than that, Tsarina,” replied Khalid. “He has brought me
-confirmation that I cannot doubt of the truth of the message from
-Aeria.”
-
-“What!” exclaimed Olga in a quick passionate tone that all standing
-near could hear. “The confirmation of that thrice-told tale with which
-these people are trying to impose on our fears! Surely your Majesty is
-jesting now?”
-
-“No, Tsarina, it is no subject for jesting but only for earnest and
-solemn thought,” answered Khalid seriously.
-
-“I neither can nor _will_ believe it!” cried Olga passionately, her
-long-restrained anger completely overcoming her prudence and her whole
-soul rising in ungovernable revolt. “Believe or not as you will, I will
-not. It cannot be possible; it is too monstrous for all credence!
-
-“Why, one would think the very Fates themselves were fighting against
-us if that were true, and were bringing the world to an end just as we
-have conquered it for our own!
-
-“As for these Aerians,” she continued, turning upon Alan and Alma and
-taking a couple of steps towards them, “they have come here with this
-wild story to cover an attempt to make terms with us before it is too
-late. It is a trick to deceive you, but it shall not succeed in my
-presence. Do you not remember how, upon this very spot little more than
-a year ago, I showed you this same Alan Arnold, who now comes preaching
-about his Truce of God, as the shameless liar and traitor that he is.”
-
-She had thrown off all disguise and all restraint now. Hatred was
-shining out of her eyes and open scorn was upon her lips. She waved her
-hand with a contemptuous gesture towards them and went on--
-
-“If you have come to ask for terms of peace, be honest and say so. You
-need not fear to speak, for there may be conditions on which we will
-let you live.”
-
-Khalid was about to utter some reproof, and Alan’s hand had gone
-instinctively to the hilt of his rapier, when Alma stepped forward and
-faced Olga, her own eyes now burning dark with anger and her cheeks
-flushed with the hot blood which Olga’s insult had called to them.
-
-“Make terms with you!” she said, looking down upon her from the height
-of her splendid stature. “With you, who have laid the earth waste and
-made the habitations of men desolate--with you, whom I could strike
-dead at my feet without staining my hand by laying it upon you! It is
-for you to make terms, if you can, not with us but with the Heaven
-whose justice you have outraged and whose patience you have scorned!
-
-“Cease this idle talk of battle and conquest, this impious defiance of
-the decrees of Fate! Can you make terms with God? If so, then when you
-see His sign blazing in the heavens to-night cause it to change its
-path and pass aside from the earth. If not kneel down and pray, not for
-your life, for that would be useless, but for strength to meet your end
-in the midst of the desolation that you have created!”
-
-Olga heard her in silence to the end, her whole being shaken with the
-tempest of passion that Alma’s words set raging in her breast. For
-a moment she stood speechless, white to the lips, and trembling in
-every limb from very rage. Then she suddenly stepped back a pace, and
-cried in a voice more like the cry of a wild animal in pain than human
-speech--
-
-“Whether the world lives or not _you_ shall not, whatever comes!” and
-as she spoke she snatched a pistol out of her girdle and levelled it at
-Alma’s heart. Before she could spring the lock Alan had snatched Alma
-up in his arms and Khalid, with a cry of horror and anger, had sprung
-forward and grasped Olga’s wrist.
-
-The bullet flew high, cutting one of the wings off Alan’s coronet in
-its flight. Half a dozen strides took him alongside his ship, and in
-another instant he was standing on her deck, his left arm round Alma’s
-waist holding her behind him and his right hand grasping one of his
-pistols.
-
-He raised his arm and the pistol flashed. At the same moment he stamped
-on the deck and the _Alma_ leapt a thousand feet obliquely into the
-air. The second before the pistol flashed Olga turned her head as
-though she were going to fire again, and the motion saved her life, for
-Alan’s bullet, instead of piercing her brain, as it was meant to do,
-cut a straight red gash across her forehead from temple to temple and
-buried itself in the breast of Orloff Lossenski as he sprang forward to
-snatch his mistress out of the line of fire.
-
-He pitched forward and dropped, and Khalid, forgetting everything else
-in the horror of the moment, caught Olga in his arms as a rain of blood
-streamed down over her face and a shrill scream of pain and rage burst
-from her lips.
-
-Although there were nearly three hundred warships floating in the air
-above Alexandria, and though the rapidly-enacted tragedy on the roof
-of the palace could be distinctly seen from their decks, the _Alma_
-escaped scathless, for the simple reason that, so terrible was the
-energy developed by the projectiles in use, that had one struck her as
-she left the terrace the palace itself would have been wrecked, and
-every living being within a radius of two hundred yards from the focus
-of the explosion would have been instantly killed.
-
-Consequently, the captains of the Russian and Moslem ships had to look
-on in angry impotence as she leapt out of range, joined her consort,
-and with her soared away westward until a height of fifteen thousand
-feet was reached, and so vanished from the sight of their discomfited
-enemies.
-
-From Alexandria they crossed the Mediterranean and Europe to Britain by
-way of Italy, the Valley of the Rhone, and Paris, at a height of some
-five thousand feet from the land. What they saw more than justified the
-reports which had reached Aeria. The fairest countries of Europe were
-now only blackened deserts and wasted wildernesses.
-
-They flew all day over deserted fields and towns and cities that were
-little better than heaps of blackened ruins, and when night fell and
-the Fire-Cloud blazed out of the sky, its glare was answered by flames
-rising from the earth, and huge patches of mingled smoke and flame
-which marked the sites of other towns which were only now falling
-victims to the destroyers.
-
-Society had practically come to an end. People who a few weeks before
-had been wealthy watched almost with apathy the plunder of their homes
-and the burning of their palaces by the armed bands of robbers which
-sprang up everywhere. There was no longer any protection for life and
-property. If anarchists on the earth did not burn and slay and plunder,
-their enemies in the air would, and even if they did not, what did
-it matter if friends and foes, plunderers and plundered, were to be
-consumed together in the fire that was about to fall from heaven?
-
-Amidst the universal terror Alma, with her almost unearthly beauty,
-the calm dignity of her bearing, and the sweetness and gentleness of
-her loving counsels, passed through the devastated lands rather like
-an angel of mercy than a woman of the same flesh and blood as the
-distracted panic-stricken crowds through which she moved by Alan’s
-side, speaking her message in a voice that seemed to be an echo from
-some other world.
-
-When the _Alma_ and the _Isma_ reached London ten days after leaving
-Alexandria, they found the vast and once splendid metropolis of the
-world a wide waste of broken, blackened, and in some places still
-smoking ruins. Of its fifteen millions of inhabitants barely three
-millions remained to people its fragments. All the rest had either fled
-soon after the first assault, or had fallen in the pitiless carnage
-that had been let loose upon them.
-
-They remained three days amidst the ruins of London, listening to
-the most heartrending tales of suffering and cruelty, and giving in
-return such consolation as they could. Then they took the air again,
-and journeyed on westward over the once fair and smiling English land
-that was now a wilderness amidst which plague and famine, anarchy and
-destruction, stalked triumphant, while the few who listened to their
-message waited in despairing terror for the fate that could hardly be
-worse than what they had passed through since the fatal 16th of May.
-
-From England they crossed the Atlantic to America, and from America
-they sped over the Pacific to Australia, finding everywhere the same
-desolation upon the face of the earth, and the same terror and despair
-in the minds of men. But for the awful reality before their eyes, it
-would have been impossible for them to believe that the civilisation
-which had seemed so strong and splendid four months before, could have
-collapsed as it had done into such utter chaos.
-
-In those four short months the whole tragedy of human life on earth
-seemed to have been re-enacted. The frenzy and panic of war had
-degenerated into a universal delirium. Men, women, and children had
-gone mad by millions. Religious fanatics, impostors, and enthusiasts,
-if possible more insane than their hearers, preached the wildest and
-most blasphemous doctrines, and uttered the most hideous prophecies,
-not only as to the approaching end of the world, but of the imaginary
-eternal horrors that were to follow it.
-
-The art and science and culture of five hundred years had been
-forgotten in those few weeks of madness, and mankind had sunk back
-wholesale into the grossest superstitions of the Dark Ages. Every
-night, when the flaming shape of the Fire-Cloud blazed out among the
-stars, millions fell down on their knees and greeted it with prayers
-and invocations, as savages had once been wont to worship their
-fetishes.
-
-By the end of August, when the fiery arc overarched more than
-two-thirds of the heavens and rivalled the sunlight itself in
-brightness, the degeneration of humanity had advanced to such a fearful
-stage of intellectual and moral depravity, that even human sacrifices
-were offered to appease the wrath of the deity who was believed to have
-taken the shape of the Fire-Cloud. Under the influence of delirium the
-human mind had gone back through twenty-five centuries, and the worship
-of Baal and Moloch had returned upon earth.
-
-Only a small minority of men and women preserved their senses amidst
-the universal madness. These greeted the Aerians as friends, and heard
-their message, and promised to remain steadfast to the end, but as
-day after day went by and the terror grew and the nations plunged
-deeper and deeper into the saturnalia of frenzy and despair, the task
-undertaken by Alan and Alma grew more and more hopeless, and when the
-last day of August came, they at length confessed to themselves that it
-was useless to pursue it any further.
-
-This, too, was the day on which the term of absence granted by the
-Council expired, and so at nightfall, after having carried their
-message round the whole world and passed it, by the mouths of those
-who were willing to listen, through many lands, they at length
-reluctantly turned their prows homeward, and, with hearts sickened by
-all the unspeakable horrors they had witnessed, soared upward into
-the luridly-lighted heavens, leaving the world to the fate which
-in twenty-three days more would overwhelm the conquerors and the
-conquered, the few sane and the many mad, in universal and inevitable
-destruction.
-
-Alan timed his arrival so that the _Alma_ and her consort crossed the
-Ridge a few minutes after sunrise on the 1st of September. As they
-alighted in the central square of the city and disembarked to greet
-the group of friends and kindred who were waiting to receive them, a
-strange stillness struck their ears and sent a mysterious chill to
-their hearts.
-
-The splendid capital of Aeria seemed like a city of the dead. Its broad
-white streets and squares were empty, there were no boats on the lake,
-and no aerial yachts in the air as there were wont to be at sunrise.
-The gardens were deserted and silent, even the songs of birds which had
-welled up from them in a chorus of greeting to the coming sun were now
-hushed, and the birds themselves were flying restlessly from branch
-to branch, twittering and calling to each other, frightened sharers
-in the universal fear. It was not long before Alan learnt from his
-father the explanation of this strange and mournful change in the life
-of the valley. A few days after their departure a mysterious epidemic
-had appeared among the people of Aeria. First the old, then the
-middle-aged, and then the young had been silently and swiftly stricken
-down, first in hundreds and then in thousands.
-
-There was no sign of physical disease, no apparent source of physical
-infection, and none of the horrors which characterised the plagues that
-were decimating the outside world. Those attacked by it went to bed
-in apparently robust health, and in the morning they were found dead
-with an expression of perfect peace upon their features and no marks of
-disease upon their bodies.
-
-That was all that was publicly known. There had been, and, as the
-President told his son, there would be no inquiry into the cause or
-origin of the epidemic. Whether those who died died voluntarily, or
-whether the visitation was a merciful release from the torment and
-terror of the general doom, it was not for those who survived to ask.
-
-It was enough for them that the Shadow of Death had begun to steal
-silently and swiftly over the land of the royal race who had raised the
-dignity of humanity to a height untouched before in the story of man.
-They were content to know that their friends and kindred were permitted
-to die in painless peace rather than forced to writhe out their last
-hours in torture amidst the conflagration of the world.
-
-All day and all night for nearly a month the fires of a hundred
-crematoria had burned, and day and night the funeral processions had
-never ceased passing through their gates. The population of Aeria,
-which had been over a million at the end of July, was now little more
-than a hundred thousand, and these were hourly dwindling under the
-mysterious epidemic.
-
-Those who had returned in the _Alma_ and the _Isma_ accepted all
-without question and applied themselves with all their energy to the
-performance of the solemn duties that remained to them.
-
-The work in the caverns of Mount Austral was now almost completed, and
-the minute calculations which had been made had shown that it would be
-possible for two hundred and fifty souls to find a refuge in them for
-ten days if necessary.
-
-Sufficient supplies of food had been already stored, the machinery for
-lighting the caverns was complete, and solid oxygen had been enclosed
-in steel reservoirs to supply what would be consumed by respiration,
-while provision had also been made for continually abstracting the
-carbonic acid and other injurious constituents from the respired air.
-
-Everything that human genius and skill at their best could do to ensure
-the preservation of this remnant of humanity, had been done, and by
-the 15th of September the caverns were finally ready for occupation.
-Only one more task now remained to be completed, and this was the
-selection of those who were to survive, provided that the precautions
-taken proved adequate. Unspeakably pathetic as this work of selection
-was, it was performed with a calm and apparently passionless precision
-worthy of the unparalleled solemnity of the occasion and the splendid
-traditions of those who accomplished it.
-
-The field of selection was first narrowed by confining it to those
-who had been regularly betrothed when the first message was received
-from Mars. From these first the physically perfect were chosen, then
-the strongest and the fairest of these, and finally those who to
-their physical perfections added the highest intellectual and moral
-qualities.
-
-The work was performed by the Ruling Council assisted by a council of
-an equal number of matrons who had what had once been accounted the
-misfortune to be childless. Neither joy nor sorrow was shown, at least
-in public, either by those who were chosen or by those upon whom the
-joint Council was forced to pronounce sentence of death by rejecting
-them.
-
-The natural joy of the chosen was lost in the universal sorrow of the
-now inevitable parting, and those who were destined not to survive,
-satisfied with the perfect justice with which the selection had been
-made, consoled each other with the knowledge that they would die hand
-in hand and be spared the sorrow of surviving all who were nearest and
-dearest to them.
-
-On the morning of the 18th, the temple of Aeria witnessed the last
-ceremony that would ever take place within its walls. This was
-the marriage of those who, unless their last refuge shared in the
-destruction that was about to bring chaos upon earth, were to be the
-parents of the new race that was to repeople the world.
-
-The survivors of the whole nation now barely filled the vast interior
-of the temple. The solemn words which bound youth and maid together as
-man and wife to face side by side the last ordeal that humanity would
-ever have to pass through were spoken in the midst of a silence which
-reigned not only in the temple but now throughout the whole valley.
-
-All the sentinel ships had now been withdrawn save one, which, from a
-height of fifteen thousand feet, still kept watch and ward against the
-coming of the foe that was even yet expected. But this was the only
-sign of life within the confines of Aeria, and when the solemn ceremony
-was ended and the assembly filed out of the doors, the members of it
-betook themselves almost in silence to their homes, there to make their
-final preparations for life or death as Destiny had selected them to
-live or die.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI. THE LAST BATTLE.
-
-
-AT sunset on the 15th the sluice-door had been finally lowered into
-its place and the pent-up waters of the lake of Aeria had risen nearly
-forty feet by the next morning. Only the upper parts of the villas on
-its banks were visible and its area was so enormously increased that
-the whole appearance of the valley was altered.
-
-Rising at first at the rate of three feet an hour, a rate which of
-course decreased as the area became greater, the waters would reach the
-entrance to the caverns soon after sunset on the evening of the fatal
-23rd.
-
-A little before midnight on the 21st the _Orion_, the sentinel ship
-that was on guard at the time, sank swiftly down with the news that she
-had made out by the light of the Fire-Cloud which, lurid and ghastly as
-it was, was as brilliant and penetrating as that of the sun at noonday,
-a large fleet of air-ships approaching from the northwards. The city
-was by this time almost entirely submerged. Only a few minarets and
-towers and the top of the great golden dome of the temple surmounted by
-its crystal-winged figure, showed above the surface.
-
-The remnant of the people of Aeria, now reduced to less than seven
-thousand souls, including those chosen to take refuge in the caverns,
-were occupying the villas on the slopes of Mount Austral about the
-entrance to the caverns. Six thousand of them were men who had lived
-solely in the hope of such an attack as was now about to be made and
-which would enable them to die fighting the common enemy of mankind to
-the last in defence of their beloved native land.
-
-Not even now, when the hand of Destiny had set a definite limit to all
-human hopes and fears, and when the remainder of their own lives could
-be counted by hours, could this faithful remnant of the Aerians endure
-the thought that what had been their paradise and their home should be
-violated and polluted by the appearance of their foes.
-
-Therefore they had lived for this last battle, and five hundred
-air-ships were waiting to carry them into the air to engage in the
-last fight that ever would be fought on earth. All their friends and
-kindred, saving only the Children of Deliverance, as in fond fancy they
-had called the little band of the chosen ones, were now dead, and the
-few hours of life that were left to them had nothing more to give them.
-
-So they received with a grim joy the summons to battle which had been
-so long expected. Four thousand of them manned the air-ships, the rest
-occupied the mountain batteries, and within a quarter of an hour of the
-bringing of the news the war-ships had mounted into the air, and the
-great guns of the batteries were ready to hurl their projectiles upon
-the advancing foe.
-
-It was a spectacle to make angels weep and devils laugh, this last
-marshalling of the forces of human hate and hostility in the closing
-hours of the life of humanity and on the threshold of eternity. It
-seemed that the Tragedy of Man was to be played out to the bitter end,
-and that human strife was only to cease on earth with the destruction
-of the world. This, too, was the work of a single woman inspired by
-quenchless hatred and insatiable ambition and a pride of spirit which,
-in its haughty incredulity, still refused to believe that the end of
-her conquering career had come.
-
-Pitiless and without scruple to the end, Olga, while she was recovering
-from her wound under the shelter of the Sultan’s roof, had managed,
-with the aid of her waiting-woman Anna, not only to poison the Grand
-Vizier Musa and Hakem the astronomer, but also to bring Khalid himself
-into the same state of moral slavery in which she had so long held Alan
-and Alexis.
-
-It was she who had brought this fleet from Alexandria to Aeria. Once
-under the fatal spell of her will-poison, she had commanded Khalid
-to revoke the orders that he had given for peace, and he had obeyed.
-A fleet of more than five hundred air-ships had been collected, and,
-taking Khalid with her on board the _Revenge_, so that there should be
-no chance of his recovering his volition, she had come to fulfil the
-prophecy which Paul Romanoff uttered when in the last hour of his life
-he had declared that one day the Eagle of Russia should fly over the
-battlements of Aeria.
-
-All the materials for constructing ten air-ships had been taken into
-the caverns, so that in the event of the remnant surviving the empire
-of the air should still be theirs, but the _Alma_ and the _Isma_ still
-lay outside the entrance when the other ships had risen into the air.
-
-At the supreme moment a controversy had arisen as to whether or not
-Alan and Alexis--the latter of whom had been placed without question
-among the chosen, not only because of his unequalled engineering skill,
-but also because without him a daughter of the House of Arnold would
-have died of her own will--should or should not take part with their
-companions in the near approaching conflict.
-
-This dispute was brought to a sudden close by Alan, who, with a sudden
-inspiration, cut short all the loving entreaties that were being made
-to him to take refuge in the caverns and avoid the chance which in
-the heat of the conflict might destroy with him the male line of the
-descendants of the first conqueror of the air.
-
-“Do you not see,” he said, “that it is quite possible that their fleet
-may be twice as strong as ours, and that in spite of all our gallant
-forlorn hope can do they may cross the mountains and send their shells
-into the valley?
-
-“What if one of them exploded here and wrecked the outworks and the
-entrance to the caverns? All hope, even for us, would then be lost,
-the doors could not be lowered, and we should either have to let the
-waters of the lake flow out or they would flow into the caverns by the
-upper entrance and ruin all our labours.
-
-“We have proved that the _Alma_ and the _Isma_ are the two best
-air-ships in existence. They can soar higher and travel faster than
-any others. Would it not be madness to deprive our defending force of
-them, and would it not be cowardice in us not to do all we can to save
-all that is left for us to hope for on earth? I for one shall go, and I
-don’t believe that I shall go alone.”
-
-“If the _Alma_ goes the _Isma_ goes too,” said Alexis. “Alan is right.
-We should be cowards to turn our backs on the enemy at the last moment.”
-
-“And if you go, we go,” said Alma and Isma in a breath. “If you live we
-will live with you, but we will not live without you.”
-
-There was no answer to such reasoning as this, nor was there any longer
-any law on earth save that of individual will. The first motive power
-that had swayed the world was the last that survived and would be the
-last to die. Those of the old crews of the two air-ships who were found
-among the chosen at once came forward to take their places, and with
-them came too those who had elected to take the hazard of life or death
-with them.
-
-“There shall be no widows in the new world,” said they. And so every
-man who rose into the air on board the two great warships carried with
-him the woman without whom the one last chance of life would not have
-been worth taking.
-
-As they left the earth the remainder of the little company retired into
-the caverns, leaving two sentinels posted at the outer door ready to
-give the alarm in case it should be necessary to lower the doors. As
-they did so a long, dull, distant roar came from the northward telling
-that the last battle of man with man had begun.
-
-In accordance with a plan hastily arranged before they rose, the _Alma_
-was to guard the northern end of the valley, while the _Isma_ kept
-watch over the southern. They soared up and up until the peaks of the
-mountains were a good five thousand feet below them.
-
-From this elevation those on board the _Alma_ could see the enemy’s
-fleet stretching out in a huge crescent, made up of tiny points of
-light which shone in the unnatural glare that illumined the earth and
-sky, and ever and anon they saw enormous spheres of flame blaze out
-along the line as the projectiles from the land batteries burst in
-front of them. The gunners were only trying their range and the enemy
-were still beyond it.
-
-The explosion of the projectiles told the assailants that Aeria was
-on the alert, still prepared for battle and still, for all they knew,
-as impregnable as ever. Seeing this, they ceased their advance and a
-battle of tactics preceded the pitiless struggle which only the victors
-would survive.
-
-Hour after hour the Moslem and Russian air-ships strove to out-soar the
-Aerians, or to make a rush in twos and threes that would bring them
-within range of the charmed circle of the mountains. But no sooner
-did one of them sweep up at full speed out of the distance and slow
-down sufficiently to train her guns than the atmosphere about her
-was convulsed with a mighty shock and changed instantly into a mist
-of fire, and when this vanished she had vanished too, shattered to
-fragments which dropped in a rain of molten metal thousands of feet to
-the earth below.
-
-Morning came, the flaming arch of the Fire-Cloud sank lower and lower
-in the heavens until it stretched a broad band of lurid light round
-the western horizon, and an unclouded sun brought the last dawn but
-one that the terror-maddened myriads of earth would ever see. Still
-the fight went on at long ranges; still ship after ship of the hostile
-fleet made its desperate effort to cross the invisible barrier which
-was drawn all round Aeria by the range of its protecting guns, only
-to be overturned and hurled to the earth by the shock of an exploding
-projectile or to be fairly struck and dissolved to dust.
-
-[Illustration: STILL THE FIGHT WENT ON AT LONG RANGES. _Page 354._]
-
-No matter how high they attempted to soar, the _Alma_ and the _Isma_
-were still above them, and if the shells from the land batteries failed
-to do their work the guns of the air-ships did it for them and the
-result was the same--annihilation.
-
-The night of the 22nd was spent in incessant attack and defence. The
-crews of the Aerian ships, grown desperate in their supreme despair,
-now left the mountains and sallied forth into the open, engaging the
-enemy ship for ship and gun for gun in a last determined effort to
-destroy them, or be destroyed, and far out from the still untouched
-battlements of Aeria the fight raged fast and furious.
-
-There now was no thought of safety in the hearts of the Aerians. They
-had come forth to kill and be killed. The rules of aerial tactics were
-utterly neglected. They laid their guns alongside and, rushing through
-the air at their utmost speed, they hurled themselves with the ram
-upon every Moslem or Russian vessel that they could meet or overtake,
-crashing into her with irresistible force and going with her into
-annihilation as their two cargoes of shells exploded under the shock.
-
-The last sun rose and saw the fight still going on. What had begun as
-the greatest battle in the history of war had now dwindled down to a
-series of single combats. At length the end came. It was a few minutes
-after midday that the last blow in the battle was struck. Ten Russian
-and Moslem air-ships, all that remained of the great fleet that Olga
-had brought against Aeria, formed in line ten miles from the Ridge and
-made a last attempt to break through the defences.
-
-Flying through a storm of shells from the land batteries, seven of
-them were torn to pieces and the other three, just as they reached the
-Ridge, were met obliquely by the five remaining vessels of the Aerian
-fleet. The same moment the _Alma’s_ broadside was discharged upon them,
-friend and foe vanished together in a mist of flame--and so ended the
-assault and defence of Aeria.
-
-“We can go down now!” said Alan in a broken voice to Alma, who was
-standing white and speechless with horror at his side in the bows of
-the air-ship. “It is all over! God rest their gallant souls, for they
-left the world like brave men and true Aerians!”
-
-“Amen!” sighed Alma. Then, after a brief pause, she said--“I wonder
-whether Olga Romanoff is alive or dead?”
-
-The two air-ships now sank together and alighted close to the entrance
-to the caverns.
-
-There the splendid fabrics were reluctantly abandoned, their crews
-disembarked, taking with them everything they wished to preserve, and
-a minute inspection was made for the last time of the triple doors and
-the machinery for lowering them and filling the spaces between them
-with water to be frozen as soon as they were in their places.
-
-This occupied the time until the evening, and then all went once more
-into the open air to take what might be their last look at the sun. The
-waters of the lake were now within a few feet of the entrance, creeping
-more and more slowly upwards, and across the vast expanse of water,
-lying unruffled by the lightest breeze, fell the mingled rays of the
-sinking sun and the brightening Fire-Cloud.
-
-There was not a cloud in the heavens and no breath of wind relieved
-the almost suffocating heat of the inert and sultry air. It seemed as
-though all terrestrial nature lay paralysed in a stupor of terror,
-waiting for the fire-blast that would wither it into death and ruin.
-
-As the sun sank down behind the veil of flame his disc loomed redly
-and dully through it. Long streams of fire, blue and green and orange,
-darted across the disc and leapt and played round its circumference
-until it sank finally out of sight. The little group on the shore of
-the lake gazed at each other in silence as it disappeared.
-
-Their faces looked wan and ghastly in the awful light that now reigned
-supreme in the heavens. Most of them turned away in grief and horror
-too deep for words, and with one last look at earth and sky, crept into
-the caverns, unable any longer to support the terror of the scene.
-
-But a few remained, determined to see the fearful drama played out to
-the end, if they could, and among these were Alan and Alexis, whose
-duty kept them by the doors, the President and Francis Tremayne, and
-Alma and Isma, whom nothing could persuade to leave their husbands’
-sides.
-
-No human eyes had ever beheld so magnificent or so awful a display of
-celestial splendours as they beheld during the three hours that they
-stood in the doorway after sunset. The Fire-Cloud now covered almost
-the whole heavens, and its enormous nucleus blazed like a gigantic
-sun down out of the zenith with a heat and radiance that were almost
-insupportable.
-
-Huge masses of flame leapt out continuously, as though hurled from its
-fiery heart, and were projected far beyond its circumference, while
-the incandescent cloud-mass which surrounded it was torn and convulsed
-by internal commotions which spread out and out in enormous waves of
-many-coloured fires until they disappeared below the horizon.
-
-Still there was neither sound nor breath of wind upon earth, only the
-awful stillness in which the world waited for the hour of its doom
-to strike. At last, towards ten o’clock, the water began to lap the
-threshold of the entrance, and Alan, pointing to it, said--
-
-“Come, we must take our last look at the world! It is time to lower the
-doors.”
-
-The words were scarcely out of his mouth before a low dull booming
-sound came echoing down the gorges of Mount Austral. They looked up
-and saw huge masses of snow and ice loosened from its upper heights
-gliding, at first slowly and then more and more swiftly, down towards
-the valley beneath, a mighty avalanche which in a few minutes more
-would carry irresistible ruin in its path.
-
-“In with you all!” cried Alan. “Quick! That is the beginning of the
-end; the snows are melting and the waters will be over us in another
-hour.”
-
-All but he and Alexis hurried in, and they, grasping the levers on
-either side of the door, pulled them, and the enormous sheet of steel
-descended quickly along its grooves and shut them in from the outer
-world, upon which chaos was about to fall.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII. THE SHE-WOLF TO HER LAIR.
-
-
-IN the mysterious revolution of human things it came about that the
-only spectator of the closing scene of the tragedy of humanity who
-endured and survived its final terrors was the woman to whom it had
-been due that the fire from heaven had fallen upon a world mad with the
-frenzy and agony of war instead of sane and calm with the sanity and
-calmness of peace and reason.
-
-On the issue of the Battle of Aeria, Olga and, under her unnaturally
-acquired influence, the Sultan, had staked the empire of the world
-and lost it. Before the fight had been raging many hours even she was
-forced to admit that Aeria was impregnable to any assault that she
-could deliver. But when the Aerians began to practise the desperate
-tactics of the second day it became manifest that nothing but
-annihilation awaited the invading fleet, out-matched as it was in speed
-and gun-power by the new Aerian warships and the land batteries.
-
-With eyes burning with rage and envy she had watched through her
-glasses the incomparable _Alma_ floating serenely at her unattainable
-altitude far above the battle-storm, and she had pictured Alan, her
-former slave, standing upon her deck perhaps--bitterest thought of
-all--with his wedded love beside him, and like a very arbiter of war
-hurling his destroying lightnings far and wide upon her ships until
-the supreme moment came in which he would descend like a very god from
-the upper air, and, hand in hand with Alma, strike the last terrible
-blow which would end the last conflict of man with man and leave
-neither friend nor foe alive to tell what the issue had been.
-
-It would be a glorious end, worthy of him and the splendid traditions
-of his race, and she loathed herself for the craven fear that had
-seized upon her in the fateful hour of battle, and made her incapable
-of challenging the same fate at his hands. Khalid himself would have
-done so without hesitation, but she had robbed him of his manhood and
-debased him, as she had debased every other human being that had fallen
-under her influence.
-
-She had spent nearly the whole of the night of the 22nd on deck,
-and when the awful radiance of the Fire-Cloud was for the last time
-succeeded by the light of day, even her haughty spirit had at last
-bowed before the supernatural terrors that were multiplying about her.
-For the first time since she had brought bloodshed back into the world
-a thrill of panic shuddered through her soul, and, for the first time,
-she learnt the meaning of fear.
-
-Then, too, came a longing which for the time being overmastered
-all other considerations. The elementary animal instinct of
-self-preservation rose up within her with irresistible force and
-conquered the hate and the ambition whose objects would have vanished
-when another sun had risen.
-
-Her thoughts went back to her old stronghold in the snowy solitudes
-of Antarctica, to the deep dark caverns of Mount Terror. Surely those
-mighty walls of living rock, shrouded in eternal ice and snow, would
-give her an asylum in which she could defy the fate that was about to
-overwhelm humanity--and what then? For a moment an awful vision of
-the unspeakable loneliness of such a survival amidst the ruins of the
-world struck such terror to her heart that she almost resolved to head
-the _Revenge_ into the thick of the fight that was still raging round
-Aeria, and die rather than face it. Then the vision passed, and the
-terrors of the present blotted out the fear of the future.
-
-The last sun that the human race would ever see was just rising when
-she sent for Boris Lossenski, who was still commanding the _Revenge_
-under her, and said abruptly, and without even consulting Khalid, who
-was standing by her side--
-
-“There is nothing but death to be found here. We will escape if we can.
-Head the ship for Mount Terror and make her fly as she has never flown
-before. Don’t spare either the engines or the power. We must be there
-before nightfall if possible.”
-
-Boris saluted and obeyed in silence, and Olga turned to Khalid and said
-in a tone of weariness and almost of despair--
-
-“It is no use fighting any longer. The Fates themselves are against
-us, and I--yes, I have been frightened into belief at last. A shameful
-confession is it not?”
-
-“Not shameful but only reasonable,” he replied. “All I regret is that
-you did not believe sooner, and save this last slaughter of these
-gallant people.”
-
-“What is done, is done!” she said with a half-regretful glance at the
-mountains of Aeria, which were now rapidly fading away into the blue
-distance; “it is only a question of sooner instead of later. Indeed, it
-seems hardly worth while even for us to attempt to live when, even if
-we survive, only the ruins of the world can be ours. And yet”--
-
-“Yet sweeter would be life with you even in a wilderness of death than
-destruction that might be eternal parting,” replied Khalid in low tones
-that thrilled with passion. “Nay, what dearer destiny could man desire
-than to be the Adam of a new world of which you were the Eve?”
-
-The words of her husband--for Khalid was her husband now as well as her
-slave--brought a sudden flush to Olga’s face, and this was succeeded by
-an almost deathly pallor. She put up her hand to the broadened circlet
-of gold which concealed the terrible scar of the wound made by Alan’s
-bullet, and said almost in a whisper--
-
-“You and I--yes, you and I may live. We _will_! But if we do we must
-save ourselves alone.”
-
-And with that she left him abruptly and went to her own room with the
-plan of her last crime already shaped in her mind.
-
-She was the only woman on board the _Revenge_. Her maid Anna had been
-left behind at Alexandria, a maniac driven mad by the universal terror.
-What of Boris and the twenty-five men who formed the air-ship’s crew?
-If they were permitted to survive to the time when there would be no
-law but might, she would be the one woman in the world--one woman,
-beautiful and almost defenceless, among those who, though now her
-servants, would then be ready to slay each other in the dispute as to
-which of them should be her master.
-
-Such a thought in such a mind as hers could have but one outcome. When
-the hour for the midday meal arrived, she bade Boris invite the whole
-crew into the main saloon, saying that, as this might be the last meal
-that any of them would eat, they would take it together. Then, as
-though moved by some sudden gracious fancy, she filled for every man
-with her own hands a glass of the best and oldest wine that had been
-reserved for her own use.
-
-Khalid, rigid Moslem as he was, refused it, and she only touched it
-with her lips, but the others drained their glasses and drank death at
-her hands, even as the Aerians had drunk it in the same fashion and at
-the same table seven years before.
-
-But this time it was fated that her sin should find her out more
-quickly. Later on in the afternoon Boris, to his amazement and alarm,
-found every man of his crew succumbing to an irresistible drowsiness,
-and soon this began to affect himself. A terrible thought at once
-flashed into his ever-suspicious mind. Fighting against the stupor that
-was stealing over his senses, he took a deep draught of strong spirit.
-
-This conquered the poison for a time and cleared his intellect
-sufficiently for him to see what his pitiless mistress had done, and
-then there rose up in his mind a desperate longing for vengeance on
-the murderess who had used him and his companions as long as they were
-useful and then poisoned them like so many rats.
-
-He took out his pistol and examined it to see if it was charged, and
-then, with the poison and the spirit fighting in his brain for mastery,
-he made his way from the engine-room to the quarter-deck, where Olga
-and Khalid were standing, watching with strained, fascinated eyes and
-faces that looked livid and corpse-like in the unnatural light of the
-Fire-Cloud, the long tongues of many-coloured flame that were shooting
-like so many gigantic serpents down from the zenith, as though they
-would lick the life-blood out of the world that now lay panting for
-breath and paralysed with fear beneath them.
-
-Just as he reached the top of the companion-way a mist swam before
-Boris’s eyes, his brain reeled, and he stumbled forward on to the deck,
-discharging his pistol aimlessly as he did so. The bullet struck and
-broke to fragments against the bulwarks. Khalid and Olga turned round
-to see him lying on his side with savagely-gleaming eyes, livid face,
-and foam-flecked lips, trying to raise himself on one hand and take aim
-at them with the other.
-
-As Khalid sprang forward Olga’s ever-ready pistol came out of her belt.
-She cried to Khalid to get out of the line of fire, but just as she
-spoke Boris made his last effort, and, taking what aim he could, pulled
-the trigger. Khalid stopped short and clasped his hand to his right
-side. Then Olga, with a low cry of fury breaking from her white lips
-through her clenched teeth, sent a bullet through Boris’s brain just as
-he was struggling to bring his pistol up again.
-
-“Are you hurt, Khalid?” she asked with a deadly fear at her heart as
-she crossed the deck to where he was standing with his hand still
-pressed to his side.
-
-“Yes,” he gasped. “He has shot me through the lung.”
-
-Then he coughed, and Olga saw drops of blood on his black beard and
-moustache. Without wasting any time in useless words she helped him
-down into the saloon and set herself at once to examine and dress his
-wound. The bullet had entered between the fourth and fifth ribs on the
-right side, drilled a clean hole through the lower lobe of the right
-lung, and passed out at the back without touching any bone.
-
-With perfect rest and quiet there was nothing to prevent recovery from
-such a wound, but Olga shuddered as she thought of its consequences in
-their present situation. If Khalid succumbed, as he well might do under
-the unknown terrors and dangers of the night that was now so near, she
-would have to choose between killing herself beside him, or, if the
-rock-chambers of Mount Terror proved a safe asylum, living mateless and
-alone until she starved to death on the wilderness that the world would
-be when it had passed through its baptism of fire.
-
-She satisfied Khalid’s whispered request for an explanation of Boris’s
-attempt on their lives by saying that he had probably made himself
-drunk in an attempt to fortify himself against the terrors that were
-multiplying around him. Then she went through the ship and in a few
-minutes came back and said--
-
-“I shall have to take the ship to Mount Terror myself. It was not only
-Boris, for every man of the crew is dead drunk. Think of them making
-such brutes of themselves at such a time!
-
-“No,” she continued, putting her hand on his shoulder as she saw him
-make an attempt to rise. “You must not move yet; you will want all your
-strength when we get there, for you will have to regulate the engines
-while I am in the conning-tower. As for these animals, we will leave
-them to their fate.”
-
-A couple of hours later she went on deck to see whether Mount Terror,
-or at anyrate the smoke-crest of Mount Erebus, was in sight, for the
-_Revenge_ had now been flying almost long enough to have reached the
-confines of Antarctica. The speed was, however, so great that nothing
-was distinctly visible. There was only the flaming heaven above and a
-grey blur beneath, so she went to the engine-room and slowed down to a
-hundred miles an hour.
-
-Then she helped Khalid to the engineer’s seat in front of the
-controlling levers and took her place in the conning-tower. She had
-scarcely been at her post half an hour before she saw the huge white
-cones of the twin mountains of Antarctica shining against the dull
-grey sky beyond, one of them crowned as she had last seen it by a long
-stream of smoke that rose almost vertically in the windless air.
-
-She signalled to Khalid to reduce the speed, first to fifty and then
-to thirty miles an hour, allowing the _Revenge_ at the same time to
-sink gently down towards the ice-covered continent. She crossed the
-well-remembered bay in which the _Narwhal_ had performed her terrible
-exploit, swept over the ice-wall at an elevation of a hundred feet,
-swung the ship round and stopped her in front of the great cleft in the
-side of Mount Terror.
-
-No human foot seemed to have trodden the Antarctic solitude from the
-day she left it to crown herself Tsarina of the Russias to this one on
-which she brought her flagship back with its crew of murdered men to
-seek her last chance of life amidst the general doom which she could
-now almost bring herself to believe she had directly brought upon the
-world.
-
-She ran the _Revenge_ slowly into the vast portal that yawned black
-and deep before her between the snow slopes of the mountain, and then,
-turning on the search-light, took her along the great gallery which
-led to the shore of the subterranean lake, and there lowered her for
-the last time to the earth. Then she and Khalid disembarked, he moving
-slowly and painfully, and she supporting him as well as she was able,
-and watching him with the intense anxiety of a supreme selfishness
-which had now centred itself upon him as the one possibility of making
-her life endurable.
-
-Thus did Tsarina Olga and Khalid the Magnificent, conquerors of the
-earth and sharers of the world-throne, come back, one wounded almost to
-death, and the other half distraught with fear and perplexity, to take
-refuge at the uttermost ends of the earth from the assault of the foe
-that had confounded all their schemes of conquest.
-
-Leaving the _Revenge_ in the great gallery, she led him to the council
-chamber and laid him on the cushions of the luxurious divan on which
-she had been wont to hold her audiences. There she examined and
-redressed his wound, and then for the next three hours she busied
-herself bringing supplies of food and drink from the ship and preparing
-for the final siege which their last stronghold would so soon have to
-endure.
-
-Then the fancy took her to go once more into the air to take one more
-look at the world and the splendours of the fate that was menacing
-it. Nineteen hours had passed since she gave the order to head the
-_Revenge_ for Mount Terror. Sixteen of these had been consumed in the
-most rapid flight that the air-ship had ever accomplished. So fast had
-the _Revenge_ flown westward and southward that the sun had almost
-seemed to stand still waiting for her journey to be accomplished, but
-still it had slowly sunk farther and farther down into the luminous
-mist that now seemed to fill the whole sky.
-
-The difference between the longitude of Aeria and Mount Terror had
-lengthened the last fateful day by nearly five hours, but now the end
-was very near at hand, and here even, on the very confines of the
-world, life had little more than four hours to live. To the north the
-whole sky was flaming out into indescribable splendours, and the long
-fire-streams radiating from the nucleus now seemed to be literally
-holding the planet in their clasp. Enormous meteors were bursting out
-from the heart of the flaming cloud and exploding without a sound in
-the ever-silent abysses of space.
-
-She stood rooted to the spot by the weird and awful glories of the
-spectacle, and for the time being seemed to forget even Khalid and the
-indescribable dangers that were threatening them both. Instead of being
-daunted, her spirit rose as though in response to the splendours before
-her. She felt that she was standing upon Nature’s funeral pyre watching
-the conflagration of the world she had ruined. Saving only Khalid there
-was not another human being within thousands of miles of her, and in
-her loneliness her soul seemed to expand and rise to a nobility that it
-had never known before.
-
-She saw the utter insignificance and contemptibility of the human
-strife which had been superseded and silenced by this majestic assault
-of the primal forces of Nature, and for the first time in her life she
-thought of herself and her sins with a disgust and shame that humbled
-her in her own eyes to the dust.
-
-So she stood and watched, oblivious of everything but the celestial
-glories above and around her, until a rapid series of frightful
-explosions seemed to run roaring round the whole horizon. She looked
-up with shaded eyes towards the zenith. The central mass had suddenly
-become convulsed and expanded until it looked as though the whole sky
-had been transformed into an ocean of fire torn by incessant storms.
-
-Huge masses of many-coloured flame were falling from it in all
-directions on the devoted earth, and as each of these entered the
-atmosphere it burst into myriads of fragments which fell in swarms
-until the blazing sky was literally raining fire over sea and land.
-
-[Illustration: THE BLAZING SKY WAS LITERALLY RAINING FIRE OVER SEA AND
-LAND. _Page 367._]
-
-The Fire-Cloud had at last invaded the outer confines of the earth’s
-atmosphere.
-
-All this while there had been no change in the Antarctic cold of the
-air, but soon after the first storm of explosions roared out Olga felt
-a puff of warm tainted air blow across her face. Then came another and
-another, and then she heard what had never been heard before on the
-slopes of Mount Terror--the sound of running water. The snows were
-melting, and soon there would come avalanche and deluge.
-
-She hurried back into the council chamber, convinced that it was no
-longer safe to remain in the open air. She made the great bronze doors
-fast and covered them with layer after layer of thick heavy curtains.
-Every other opening into the chamber she closed up as tightly as
-possible. In the nature of the case they were compelled to trust to the
-supply of air already in it to last them through the ordeal.
-
-Then she went and sat down on the divan by Khalid’s side, and, taking
-his hand in hers, bent over him and kissed him on the lips, saying--
-
-“Now we must wait for life or death together!”
-
-And so they waited--waited while the ages-old snow and ice melted from
-the bare black rocks under the fierce breath of the fire-storm; while
-the ocean of flame seethed and roared and eddied about them, licking up
-the seas and melted snows and fighting with them as fire and water have
-fought since the world began; while the foundations of the Southern
-Pole quivered and rocked beneath their feet, and the walls of their
-refuge quaked and cracked with the throes of the writhing earth, and
-cosmos was dissolved into chaos once more.
-
-
-
-
-EPILOGUE. “VENGEANCE IS MINE.”
-
-
-“THE temperature has been normal now for three hours. Don’t you think
-we may venture to raise the sluice-gate?”
-
-“I see nothing against it. If the world is not habitable again now it
-never will be. It is a good two days since the contact now, and if the
-atmosphere had been burnt up or carried away by the attraction of the
-comet it would either be much colder or much hotter than that.”
-
-“Very well then, up it comes, and then we shall get our last question
-answered.”
-
-It was Alan who thus questioned and answered his father. All had gone
-well with the refugees of Mount Austral and the remnant of the Aerian
-race. Their science and their faith in themselves had been triumphantly
-justified by the event and had carried them safely through the sternest
-ordeal that man had ever been called upon to face.
-
-And now there was only one more chance to be met, one more problem to
-be solved. The temperature showed that the earth still possessed an
-atmosphere, but was that atmosphere capable of supporting human life?
-If yes, all would be well and they could go forth into the wasted world
-and possess and replenish it. If no, then all their labour would have
-been in vain and they might as well have died in battle or with those
-friends and kin who had taken their silent and dignified farewell of
-the world in the last days of the State of Aeria.
-
-They had a calorimeter and a pressure-gauge communicating with the
-outer world to tell the temperature and the height of the water in the
-valley. The former, after rising for a few hours to over a thousand
-degrees, had now sunk back to normal, while the latter stood at thirty
-feet above the entrance doors to the cavern.
-
-The machinery for raising the sluice-gate was put into motion and
-they watched it with almost breathless anxiety lest the straining or
-shifting of the rocks, which had been very perceptible during the
-terrific convulsions which had apparently lasted for nearly ten hours,
-should have so dislocated the grooves that the gate could not be raised.
-
-There were a few preliminary creaks and groans, a hitch and an
-increased strain on the lifting chains, and then the great sheet of
-steel rose easily and smoothly to the top of the channel and the
-pent-up waters rushed forth in a black boiling flood through the narrow
-opening and roared away, foaming and tossing along the bottom of the
-crevasse, once more on their way to their unknown destination.
-
-Very soon after this it was discovered that the waters were subsiding
-much more rapidly than could be accounted for by the volume that
-escaped through the subterranean channel. It was therefore necessary
-to conclude that there must have been some convulsion in another part
-of the mountains which had opened a fresh channel from the lake to the
-outer world.
-
-The next step was to raise the two inner of the three doors which
-guarded the entrance to the caverns. The raising of the first one
-showed the ice still intact between it and the second, and this had to
-be broken up and removed before the second could be reached. Then the
-middle door was raised an inch or so and the water spurted out from
-beneath it.
-
-Was this the water of the melted ice or was it that which filled the
-valley? Had their outer door stood firm or had it cracked or shrivelled
-up under the heat of the furnace through which the earth had passed? It
-flowed for ten minutes and then slackened and stopped. The outer door
-had held fast. Then, in case of accidents, the middle one was lowered
-again and they waited until the waters should have sufficiently
-subsided to enable them to challenge the last hazard on which their
-fate depended.
-
-The sluice-gate had been raised at what would be four o’clock on the
-morning of the 26th of September, if the cataclysm through which the
-earth had passed had not so far affected the terrestrial economy
-as to alter the relations of day and night. Twelve hours later the
-pressure-gauge ceased to act, showing that the rapidly-sinking waters
-of the lake had reached the threshold of the outer door. The time had
-now come to ask the question on the answer to which the lives of the
-remnant of humanity depended--was the atmosphere breathable or not?
-
-That was the one question which occupied, to the momentary exclusion of
-all others, the mind of every Aerian who was in the caverns. The middle
-gate was lifted, and every heart stood still as Alan and Alexis strode
-forward into the dark passage and grasped the levers which actuated the
-lifting mechanism of the outer one.
-
-They took one glance back at the anxious faces which showed so white in
-the gleam of the electric lamps, and then they pulled. The machinery
-creaked and groaned as the power was applied. Then came a rending sound
-and a dull crash. The door lifted a little, quivered and dropped again,
-and remained immovable.
-
-“The machinery has broken down!” said Alan, going back into the
-gallery. “There must have been a land-slip over the doorway.”
-
-“What will you do then?” said Alma. “Surely we have not escaped the
-conflagration of the world to be buried alive after all!”
-
-“No,” he said, looking down at her with a reassuring smile. “It can
-hardly be as bad as that. Unless a whole mountain has fallen in front
-of the door, we shall soon find a way out.”
-
-The first thing to be done was to get rid of the door, and this Alan
-accomplished in summary fashion by undermining it with drills, and
-then, after he had sent everyone into the inner recesses of the
-caverns, tearing it to fragments with a small quantity of the explosive
-used in the shells.
-
-A mass of earth and stones came rolling into the gallery immediately
-after the explosion, then an excavating machine was run up on
-hastily-laid rails and was soon boring its way into the obstructing
-mass. A distance of ten yards was tunnelled and then there was a rattle
-and whir in front of the machine, which told that the work was done.
-There was a cloud of dust from pulverised stones and earth and then
-came a rush of fresh warm air and a gleam of sunlight through the
-opening.
-
-“Thank God the atmosphere is still there and the sun is still shining!”
-cried Alan, as he drew the machine back and ran out into the open air.
-
-He looked about him for a few moments and then turned and walked back
-to his companions, who were already crowding towards the opening with
-faces glad with new hope and drawing deep breaths of the life-giving
-air, which the mysterious alchemy of Nature had restored unchanged to
-the earth. He stopped them with a gesture and said--
-
-“Don’t go out yet till we have made the tunnel safe. You will find an
-awful change out yonder. Aeria is no longer a paradise. It is only a
-swamp surrounded by naked rocks!”
-
-And so they found it to be when they at length passed out through the
-tunnel and stood upon the black oozy shores of the dreary lake which
-still half filled what had once been the lovely land of Aeria.
-
-The once verdure-clad mountains rose up bare and gaunt and blackened,
-a vast circle of ragged rock, unrelieved by a blade of grass or a
-single tree of all the myriads that had clothed their slopes three days
-before. It seemed as though the clock of Time had been put back through
-countless ages and the world was once more as it had been before the
-first forms of life appeared upon it.
-
-But still the air that fanned their cheeks was fresh and warm and
-sweet, and the afternoon sun was shining across the western peaks out
-of a cloudless sky of purest blue. The calm had come after the storm
-and the world was waiting to begin its life anew. The _Alma_ and the
-_Isma_ had utterly vanished, and were probably buried deep in the black
-slimy mud. Of the city of Aeria not a vestige was visible.
-
-The first thing that Alan did as soon as the last momentous question
-had thus been asked and answered was to ask his father to order one of
-the smaller air-ships, which had been stored in sections in the cavern,
-to be put together and charged with motive-power as rapidly as possible.
-
-“Certainly if you wish it,” he replied; “but what is your reason for
-being in such a hurry to reassert your empire of the air?”
-
-“I can tell you now,” said Alan in reply, “what there would have been
-no need to tell you if, well, if we had not been able to leave the
-caverns. Just after sunrise on the last day of the battle Bruno Vincent
-brought the _Orion_ as near as he could to the _Alma_ and told me by
-signal that he had seen the _Revenge_ leave the fight and head away at
-full speed to the southward and westward. That means, I think, that
-Olga’s courage failed her at the last and that she meant to try the
-forlorn hope of saving herself in her old stronghold at Mount Terror. I
-am going to see whether she is alive or dead.”
-
-“And suppose by a miracle you should find her alive. What then?” said
-Alma, who had overheard his request, coming up to him and looking up
-into his face with melting eyes as she slipped her hand caressingly
-through his arm.
-
-“The world is beginning its life anew in us, dear,” he replied with
-tenderness in his eyes but none in his voice, “and there shall be no
-snake in our Eden if I”--
-
-“If you have to be the Cain of the new world to prevent it!”
-interrupted Alma, reading his dark meaning at a glance, and
-interpreting it with a directness and force that startled him. “No,
-Alan, that must not be! If she has escaped the vengeance of God you may
-well forego yours. I can hardly think that she is still alive, but it
-is right that we should go and see”--
-
-“We!” echoed Alan before she could finish. “Do you mean that you will
-come with me? No, Alma, you must not do that. Remember that if she has
-by any chance escaped, the crew of the _Revenge_ may be alive too, and
-then we may have to fight”--
-
-“No, no, Alan, not that! not that!” she cried with a gesture of horror.
-“The world has done with fighting, for there is nothing left to fight
-about. We will go as friends with open hands to them, and the new life
-of the world shall be begun with the forgiveness of our enemies. Who
-are we that we should judge after the Voice of God has spoken?”
-
-In the end she had her way, and so it came to pass that soon after
-sunrise on the following day an air-ship, which a hundred skilled and
-willing hands had toiled all night in fitting together and equipping
-for her voyage, rose into the air above the ghastly wilderness that had
-once been Aeria, and winged her way towards the southern pole.
-
-Twenty hours later she sank down on to the ice that had already
-re-covered the rocks in front of the fissure in the side of Mount
-Terror, and as she did so a figure came forth out in the darkness into
-the half light of the polar morning.
-
-“Look! There she is!” said Alma in an awe-stricken whisper to Alan.
-“Alone in this awful place! Come, let us go to her.”
-
-As she spoke the gangway steps were lowered and she descended them
-first, followed by Alan, his father, Alexis, and Isma. Some strange
-influence held the others back as she advanced with outstretched hands
-and words of kindly greeting on her lips towards the piteous wreck of
-womanhood that slowly emerged from the gloom of the chasm.
-
-Olga Romanoff had survived the doom of the world, but the hand of a
-just vengeance had fallen heavily upon her. Her once splendid form was
-shrunken as though three score years had passed over her in as many
-hours. Her left side was half paralysed and her shaking limbs hung
-loosely as she tottered along.
-
-[Illustration: OLGA ROMANOFF HAD SURVIVED THE DOOM OF THE WORLD. _Page
-374._]
-
-Her golden fillet and jewelled wings had been cast away, leaving bare
-the great livid scar that crossed her forehead; her white, drawn face
-was seamed with deep lines marked by agony and terror, and the thick
-masses of the once glorious hair that hung about her head and shoulders
-were streaked with grey and clotted with blood.
-
-The fire had died out of her eyes and the red from her shrivelled
-lips, and the weak broken voice in which she answered Alma’s greeting
-quavered like that of an old woman in her dotage.
-
-“I have been expecting you,” she said as Alma took her trembling hands
-in hers. “I thought you would come. You have come for Alan, haven’t
-you? He is yonder, but he is dead. I kept him alive as long as I could
-but he was wounded, and when the world was changed to hell for my sins
-the fire choked him.
-
-“I tried to die too, but it wouldn’t kill me. There was air enough for
-me and I wanted to give it to him to breathe but he wouldn’t take it.
-I suppose you have been dead and are an angel now like those others
-behind you. Come, I will take you to him. It is dark but I know the
-way.”
-
-The moment she began to speak Alma saw the awful calamity that had
-befallen her. The haughty daring spirit that had essayed and almost
-achieved the conquest of the world was dissolved in the bitter waters
-of the Marah of Madness. The soul that had quailed before no human fear
-had collapsed into imbecility under the superhuman terrors which she
-alone had witnessed and survived. Without a word she suffered her to
-lead her into the gloom, beckoning to the others to follow. They turned
-on the electric lamps they had brought with them and entered the chasm.
-
-They reached the black ash-strewn floor of the gloomy subterranean
-lake in the heart of the mountain, and Alan, pausing for a moment,
-flashed the light of his lamp round the vast chamber that had once been
-so terribly familiar to him. The walls were burnt and blackened, and
-here and there masses of rock and boulders had been calcined to dust
-as though the long pent-up lava that had once flowed in fiery torrents
-over them had again been let loose.
-
-Then the light fell upon something that was not rock and which gave
-back a dull metallic sheen. He took a few strides towards it and soon
-recognised it as all that was left of the once shapely and beautiful
-_Ithuriel_, the old flagship of the Aerian fleet with which he had lost
-the mastery of his own manhood and his people the empire of the air.
-
-The crystal dome of the roof was gone and lay in patches of congealed
-glass about the blackened and shrivelled-up deck. The wings were burnt
-away and the transverse ribs of azurine stood out bare and twisted like
-the bones of a skeleton, and in the fore part of the hull a great gap
-showed where her magazine had taken fire and burnt with such terrific
-heat that it had melted even the azurine plates of which she was built.
-
-“The poor old _Ithuriel_ has flown her last flight!” he said to himself
-with a sigh as he turned away and followed the others, thinking sadly
-of all that had come to pass since he had last trodden her deck.
-
-Olga, holding Alma by the hand, led the way from the lower gallery to
-the council chamber. As she pulled the curtain aside from the doorway a
-puff of foul air that seemed to bear a faint smell of blood was wafted
-in their faces. Alan called Alma back, fearing that she would faint in
-the sickening atmosphere, and at the sound of his voice Olga stopped
-short and looked back with a reawakened gleam in her eyes.
-
-“Who is that?” she cried, pressing her hand to her brow. “Why, it is
-Alan! But no, Alan is here--here. He has been with me all the time
-since Khalid shot him. My God, can he have come to life again?”
-
-Her voice rose to a shrill wavering scream as she said this. She
-dropped Alma’s hand and ran with faltering, stumbling steps towards a
-divan on which lay the form of a man whose black beard and moustache
-were thickly clotted with blood. She stopped and bent over it for a
-moment, then she raised herself and faced them with her hands locked in
-her hair and the light of frenzied insanity blazing in her eyes.
-
-“No! No!” she cried in a voice, half a scream and half a wail, that
-rang weirdly through the great chamber. “He is dead still and that is
-only his ghost. Oh, Alan, my love, Alan! Why could I not die with you?
-Curse the hand that wounded you. Curse”--
-
-In the one syllable her voice died away from a scream to a whisper, and
-at the same instant the paralysis, which had already smitten her once,
-laid its swift icy hand on her heart and brain. She swayed to and fro
-for a moment and then fell forward across the corpse of the man whose
-love for her had plunged the world into madness on the eve of its doom.
-
-“What an awful end!” gasped Alma, shuddering in the close embrace she
-had sought in Alan’s arms. “And yet, Alan, she loved you to the end
-through all. That love for you was the one true thing in her life, and
-for its sake I will say God forgive her! Come, let us go!”
-
-THE END.
-
-MORRISON AND GIBB, PRINTERS, EDINBURGH.
-
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-
-_With numerous Illustrations by Fred. T. Jane and Edwin S. Hope_,
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-THE ANGEL OF THE REVOLUTION.
-
-A TALE OF THE COMING TERROR.
-
-BY GEORGE GRIFFITH.
-
-In this Romance of Love, War, and Revolution, the action takes place
-ten years hence, and turns upon the solution of the problem of aerial
-navigation, which enables a vast Secret Society to decide the issue of
-the coming world-war, for which the great nations of the earth are now
-preparing. Battles such as have hitherto only been vaguely dreamed of
-are fought on land and sea and in the air. Aerial navies engage armies
-and fleets and fortresses, and fight with each other in an unsparing
-warfare, which has for its prize the empire of the world. Unlike
-all other essays in prophetic fiction, it deals with the events of
-to-morrow, and with characters familiar in the eyes of living men. It
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-the most thrilling situations and startling incidents taken from real
-everyday life that have ever appeared in print. They are written with
-all the vividness of description and fascination of style which gained
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-readers.
-
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-THE GREAT WAR IN ENGLAND IN 1897.
-
-BY WILLIAM LE QUEUX,
-
-AUTHOR OF “GUILTY BONDS,” “STRANGE TALES OF A NIHILIST,” ETC.
-
-There is a curious division of opinion upon the merits of Mr. WILLIAM
-LE QUEUX’S remarkable book, “The Great War in England in 1897.” The
-Author has performed a task never before attempted, namely, to forecast
-an invasion of the whole of England and Scotland, and the reviewers
-have taken him to task very freely. It has received the warmest
-commendation from the Duke of Cambridge, the Duke of Connaught, Lord
-Wolseley, Lord Roberts, and Lord George Hamilton; and the “Service”
-papers, who should know something of our army and navy, unanimously
-praise it. _The Admiralty and Horse Guards Gazette_ says:--“Mr. Le
-Queux is a vivid writer, and his work gives evidence of care and
-thoroughness. =The book is the best of its kind= we have come across.”
-_The United Service Gazette_ says that the author has studied the
-tactical and strategical problems thoroughly, and that “=the book
-will do a national service=”; while _The Naval and Military Record_
-and the _Army and Navy Gazette_ say that Mr. Le Queux has special
-qualifications for the task he has carried out so successfully. Most of
-the influential daily papers have also eulogised it strongly, amongst
-them the _Times_, _Standard_, _World_, _Sketch_, _Nottingham Daily
-Guardian_, _Scotsman_, _Glasgow Herald_, _Yorkshire Post_, _Aberdeen
-Free Press_, _Bradford Argus_, _Manchester Courier_, _Western Morning
-News_, _Bristol Mercury_, and the _Liverpool Courier_. _The Newcastle
-Daily Chronicle_ devoted a column to a review of a most commendatory
-character. _The Daily Graphic_ says it is “=the most comprehensive
-and thrilling of anything yet attempted=.” Three of the most powerful
-papers on the Continent, the Paris _Figaro_, the Milan _Secolo_, and
-the Rome _Opinione_, have devoted leading articles to the problems put
-forward by the Author, all three journals declaring that =the work
-is unique=, while _The Sheffield Daily Telegraph_ says it is “=the
-sensation= as well as =the success= of the book season.” That it is
-phenomenally successful is proved by the fact that =Five Editions were
-sold within four weeks=.
-
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-THE CAPTAIN OF THE MARY ROSE.
-
-_A TALE OF TO-MORROW._
-
-BY W. LAIRD CLOWES,
-
-U.S. NAVAL INSTITUTE.
-
-With 60 Illustrations by the Chevalier de Martino and Fred. T. Jane.
-
-This work has been truly described by the public press as an intensely
-realistic and stirring romance of the near future. It describes the
-wonderful adventures of an armour-clad cruiser, built on the Tyne,
-which takes part in a great Naval War that suddenly breaks out between
-France and Great Britain. The dashing way in which the vessel is
-handled, her narrow escapes, the boldness of her successful attacks
-upon the enemy, and the heroic conduct of her commander and crew, form
-altogether a narrative of most absorbing interest, and full of exciting
-scenes and situations.
-
-THE FOLLOWING ARE A FEW PRESS OPINIONS.
-
-“Deserves something more than a mere passing notice.”--_The Times._
-
-“Full of exciting situations.... Has manifold attractions for all sorts
-of readers.”--_Army and Navy Gazette._
-
-“The most notable book of the season.”--_The Standard._
-
-“A clever book. Mr. Clowes is pre-eminent for literary touch and
-practical knowledge of naval affairs.”--_Daily Chronicle._
-
-“Mr. W. Laird Clowes’ exciting story.”--_Daily Telegraph._
-
-“We read ‘The Captain of the Mary Rose’ at a sitting.”--_The Pall Mall
-Gazette._
-
-“Written with no little spirit and imagination.... A stirring romance
-of the future.”--_Manchester Guardian._
-
-“Is of a realistic and exciting character.... Designed to show what the
-naval warfare of the future may be.”--_Glasgow Herald._
-
-“One of the most interesting volumes of the year.”--_Liverpool Journal
-of Commerce._
-
-“It is well told and magnificently illustrated.”--_United Service
-Magazine._
-
-“Full of absorbing interest.”--_Engineers’ Gazette._
-
-“Is intensely realistic, so much so that after commencing the story
-every one will be anxious to read to the end.”--_Dundee Advertiser._
-
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-
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-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
-Footnotes have been moved to the end of each chapter and relabeled
-consecutively through the document.
-
-Illustrations have been moved to paragraph breaks near where they are
-mentioned.
-
-Punctuation has been made consistent.
-
-Variations in spelling and hyphenation were retained as they appear in
-the original publication, except that obvious typographical errors have
-been corrected.
-
-The following changes were made:
-
-p. 40: himself changed to herself (correct herself, she)
-
-p. 46: of changed to so (and so the)
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLGA ROMANOFF***
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-<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Olga Romanoff, by George Chetwynd Griffith,
-Illustrated by Fred T. Jane</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
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-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
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-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Olga Romanoff</p>
-<p>Author: George Chetwynd Griffith</p>
-<p>Release Date: February 2, 2017 [eBook #54096]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLGA ROMANOFF***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by MFR, Craig Kirkwood,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
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- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/olgaromanoff00grif">
- https://archive.org/details/olgaromanoff00grif</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 597px;">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/front_cover.jpg" width="597" height="850" alt="Cover." />
-</div>
-
-<p id="half-title">OLGA ROMANOFF</p>
-
-<p class="center smallfont">MORRISON AND GIBB, PRINTERS, EDINBURGH.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<div id="Fig_Frontispiece" class="figcenter" style="width: 442px;">
-<img src="images/i_004.jpg" width="442" height="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Evil in such a Shape might be something more than Good.</span>
-(<em>Frontispiece.</em>) <em>See <a href="#Ref_176">page 176</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 416px;">
-<img src="images/title_page.jpg" width="416" height="650" alt="Title page." />
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="boxtitlepage">
-
-<h1 style="text-align:left">OLGA<br />
-ROMANOFF.</h1>
-
-<div class="center">
-<div class="inlinecolumn12">
-<p class="p2 center"><span class="xsmallfont">BY</span><br />
-<span class="largefont">GEORGE GRIFFITH.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center xsmallfont">AUTHOR OF</p>
-
-<p class="center xsmallfont">“THE ANGEL OF THE REVOLUTION,” “THE OUTLAWS<br />
-OF THE AIR,” “VALDAR THE OFT-BORN,” “BRITON<br />
-OR BOER?” “THE ROMANCE OF GOLDEN STAR,”<br />
-ETC., ETC.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="inlinecolumn12">
-<p class="smallfont">“<em>And so they waited&mdash;waited
-while the ages-old snow and ice
-melted from the bare, black rocks
-under the fierce breath of the fire-storm;
-while the ocean of flame
-seethed and roared and eddied
-about them, licking up the seas
-and melted snows, and fighting
-with them as fire and water have
-fought since the world began; while
-the foundations of the Southern
-Pole quivered and rocked beneath
-their feet, and the walls of their
-refuge quaked and cracked with
-the throes of the writhing earth,
-and cosmos was dissolved into
-chaos once more.</em>”&mdash;<a href="#Ref_368">p. 368</a>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p4" style="text-align:left">WITH SIXTEEN ILLUSTRATIONS<br />
-BY FRED T. JANE.</p>
-
-<p class="center p2">LONDON:<br />
-SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, HAMILTON, KENT &amp; CO., <span class="smcap">Ltd.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center smallfont">1897.<br />
-<span style="padding-right:3.5em"><span class="smcap">Copyrighted Abroad.</span>]</span><span style="padding-left:3.5em">[<span class="smcap">All Foreign Rights Reserved.</span></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p class="center" style="line-height:2"><span class="smallfont">TO</span><br />
-<span class="largefont">HIRAM STEVENS MAXIM</span></p>
-
-<p class="center smallfont" style="line-height:2">THE FIRST MAN WHO HAS FLOWN<br />
-BY MECHANICAL MEANS<br />
-AND SO APPROACHED MOST NEARLY<br />
-TO THE LONG-SOUGHT IDEAL<br />
-OF<br />
-AERIAL NAVIGATION</p>
-
-<p class="center smallfont" style="line-height:2">THE FOLLOWING PAGES ARE INSCRIBED<br />
-BY<br />
-<span class="largefont">THE AUTHOR</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="toc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
-<tr><td class="tocchapter"></td><td class="toctitle"></td><td class="tocpage">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter"></td><td class="toctitle">PROLOGUE</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter" style="padding-top:1em">CHAP.</td><td class="toctitle"></td><td class="tocpage"></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">I.</td><td class="toctitle">THE SURRENDER OF THE WORLD-THRONE</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_8">8</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">II.</td><td class="toctitle">A CROWNLESS KING</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_14">14</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">III.</td><td class="toctitle">TSARINA OLGA</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_26">26</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">IV.</td><td class="toctitle">A SON OF THE GODS</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_35">35</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">V.</td><td class="toctitle">A VISION FROM THE CLOUDS</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">VI.</td><td class="toctitle">DEED AND DREAM</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">VII.</td><td class="toctitle">THE SPELL OF CIRCE</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">VIII.</td><td class="toctitle">THE NEW TERROR</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">IX.</td><td class="toctitle">THE FLIGHT OF THE “REVENGE”</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">X.</td><td class="toctitle">STRANGE TIDINGS TO AERIA</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XI.</td><td class="toctitle">THE SNAKE IN EDEN</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XII.</td><td class="toctitle">THE BATTLE OF KERGUELEN</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XIII.</td><td class="toctitle">THE SYREN’S STRONGHOLD</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XIV.</td><td class="toctitle">FROM THE SEA TO THE AIR</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XV.</td><td class="toctitle">OLGA IN COUNCIL</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XVI.</td><td class="toctitle">KHALID THE MAGNIFICENT</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XVII.</td><td class="toctitle">AN UNHOLY ALLIANCE</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_174">174</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XVIII.</td><td class="toctitle">A MOMENTOUS COMMISSION</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XIX.</td><td class="toctitle">FACE TO FACE AGAIN</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_202">202</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XX.</td><td class="toctitle">THE CALL TO ARMS</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXI.</td><td class="toctitle">THE HOME-COMING</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_226">226</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXII.</td><td class="toctitle">THE EVE OF BATTLE</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXIII.</td><td class="toctitle">THE FIRST BLOW</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXIV.</td><td class="toctitle">WAR AT ITS WORST</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_271">271</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXV.</td><td class="toctitle">A MESSAGE FROM MARS</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_289">289</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXVI.</td><td class="toctitle">SENTENCE OF DEATH</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_303">303</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXVII.</td><td class="toctitle">ALMA SPEAKS</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_314">314</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXVIII.</td><td class="toctitle">THE SIGN IN THE SKY</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_319">319</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXIX.</td><td class="toctitle">THE TRUCE OF GOD</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_325">325</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXX.</td><td class="toctitle">THE SHADOW OF DEATH</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_338">338</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXXI.</td><td class="toctitle">THE LAST BATTLE</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_350">350</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">XXXII.</td><td class="toctitle">THE SHE-WOLF TO HER LAIR</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_359">359</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter"></td><td class="toctitle" style="padding-top:1em">EPILOGUE</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_369">369</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="toc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="Illustrations">
-<tr><td class="toctitle"></td><td class="tocpage">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">EVIL IN SUCH A SHAPE MIGHT BE SOMETHING MORE THAN GOOD</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_Frontispiece"><em>Frontispiece</em></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">NOT A VESTIGE OF OUR AIR-SHIP OR HER CREATORS REMAINED</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_22">22</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">AS SHE GAZED UPON IT, THE FIRES DIED AWAY</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_57">57</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">FLINGING LONG STREAMS OF RADIANCE FOR MILES INTO THE SKY</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_83">83</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">THE CLOUDS WERE RENT AND ROLLED UP INTO VAST SHADOWY BILLOWS</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_122">122</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">THE COMBINED SQUADRONS SWEPT ACROSS THE MOUNTAIN BARRIER</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_237">237</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">BATTERIES WHICH WOULD BE ABLE TO SURROUND AERIA WITH A ZONE OF STORM AND FLAME</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_248">248</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">THE FOUR HUNDRED BATTLESHIPS OF THE TWO SQUADRONS ROSE INTO THE AIR</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_252">252</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">THREE OF THE AIR-SHIPS SEEMED TO BREAK-UP AND ROLL OVER</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_259">259</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">A GREAT BATTLESHIP LEAPT UP OUT OF THE NETHER WATERS</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_266">266</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">THE “ISMA” SWOOPED DOWN</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_281">281</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">A FEARFUL SCENE UNFOLDED ITSELF AS THEY SWEPT UP OVER PARIS</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_286">286</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">“ONLY YOU CAN BID ME LIVE, ALMA”</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_317">317</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">STILL THE FIGHT WENT ON AT LONG RANGES</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_354">354</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">THE BLAZING SKY WAS LITERALLY RAINING FIRE OVER SEA AND LAND</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_367">367</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="toctitle">OLGA ROMANOFF HAD SURVIVED THE DOOM OF THE WORLD</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#Fig_374">374</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center xxlargefont boldfont">OLGA ROMANOFF.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="no-break">PROLOGUE.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE PROPHECY OF NATAS.</span></h2>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><em>These are the last words of Israel di Murska, known in the days of strife as
-Natas, the Master of the Terror, given to the Children of Deliverance dwelling in
-the land of Aeria, in the twenty-fifth year of the Peace, which, in the reckoning
-of the West, is the year nineteen hundred and thirty.</em></p></blockquote>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_m.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-M">MY life is lived, and the wings of the Angel of Death
-overshadow me as I write; but before the last
-summons comes, I must obey the spirit within
-me that bids me tell of the things that I have
-seen, in order that the story of them shall not die,
-nor be disguised by false reports, as the years multiply and the
-mists gather over the graves of those who, with me, have seen
-and wrought them.</p>
-
-<p>For this reason the words that I write shall be read
-publicly in the ears of you and your children and your
-children’s children, until they shall see a sign in heaven to tell
-them that the end is at hand. No man among you shall take
-away from that which I have written, nor yet add anything to
-it; and every fifth year, at the Festival of Deliverance, which
-is held on the Anniversary of Victory,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> this writing of mine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-shall be read, that those who shall hear it with understanding
-may lay its warnings to heart, and that the lessons of the
-Great Deliverance may never be forgotten among you.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the days before the beginning of peace that I,
-Natas the Jew, cast down and broken by the hand of the
-Tyrant, conceived and created that which was known as the
-Terror. The kings of the earth and their servants trembled
-before my invisible presence, for my arm was long and my
-hand was heavy; yet no man knew where or when I should
-strike&mdash;only that the blow would be death to him on whom it
-should fall, and that nowhere on earth should he find a safe
-refuge from it.</p>
-
-<p>In those days the earth was ruled by force and cunning,
-and the nations were armed camps set one against the other.
-Millions of men, who had no quarrel with their neighbours,
-stood waiting for the word of their rulers to blast the fair
-fields of earth with the fires of war, and to make desolate the
-homes of those who had done them no wrong.</p>
-
-<p>In the third year of the twentieth century, Richard Arnold,
-the Englishman, conquered the empire of the air, and made
-the first ship that flew as a bird does, of its own strength and
-motion. He joined the Brotherhood of Freedom, then known
-among men as the Terrorists, of whom I, Natas, was the
-Master, and then he built the aerial fleet which, in the day of
-Armageddon, gave us the victory over the tyrants of the earth.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, Alan Tremayne, a noble of the English
-people, into whose soul I had caused my spirit to enter in order
-that he might serve me and bring the day of deliverance
-nearer, caused all the nations of the Anglo-Saxon race to join
-hands, from the West unto the East, in a league of common
-blood and kindred; and they, in the appointed hour, stood
-between the sons and daughters of men and those who would
-have enslaved them afresh.</p>
-
-<p>The chief of these was Alexander Romanoff, last of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-Tsars, or Tyrants, of Russia, whose armies, leagued with those
-of France, Italy, Spain, and certain lesser Powers, and assisted
-by a great fleet of war-balloons that could fly, though slowly,
-wherever they were directed, swept like a destroying pestilence
-from the western frontiers of Russia to the eastern shores of
-Britain; and when they had gained the mastery of Europe,
-invaded England and laid siege to London.</p>
-
-<p>But here their path of conquest was brought to an end, for
-Alan Tremayne and his brothers of the Terror called upon the
-men of Anglo-Saxondom to save their Motherland from her
-enemies, and they rose in their wrath, millions strong, and fell
-upon them by land and sea, and would have destroyed them
-utterly, as I had bidden them do, but that Natasha, who was
-my daughter and was known in those days as the Angel of the
-Revolution, pleaded for the remnant of them, and they were
-spared.</p>
-
-<p>But the Russians we slew without mercy to the last man
-of those who had stood in arms against us, saving only the
-Tyrant and his princes and the leaders of his armies. These
-we took prisoners and sent, with their wives and their children,
-to die in their own prison-land in Siberia, as they had sent
-thousands of innocent men and women to die before them.</p>
-
-<p>This was my judgment upon them for the wrong that they
-had done to me and mine, for in the hour of victory I spared
-not those who had not known how to spare. Now they are
-dead, and their graves are nameless. Their name is a byword
-among men, for they were strong and they used their
-strength to do evil.</p>
-
-<p>So we made an end of tyranny among the nations, and
-when the world-war was at length brought to an end, we disbanded
-all the armies that were upon land and sank the warships
-that were left upon the sea, that men might no more
-fight with each other. War, that had been called honourable
-since the world began, we made a crime of blood-guiltiness, for
-which the life of him who sought to commit it should pay; and
-as a crime, you, the children of those who have delivered the
-nations from it, shall for ever hold it to be.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We leave you the command of the air, and that is the
-command of the world; but should it come to pass&mdash;as in the
-progress of knowledge it may well do&mdash;that others in the
-world outside Aeria shall learn to navigate the air as you do,
-you shall go forth to battle with them and destroy them
-utterly, for we have made it known through all the earth that
-he who seeks to build a second navy of the air shall be
-accounted an enemy of peace, whose purpose it is to bring war
-upon the earth again.</p>
-
-<p>Forget not that the blood-lust is but tamed, not quenched,
-in the souls of men, and that long years must pass before it
-is purged from the world for ever. We have given peace on
-earth, and to you, our children, we bequeath the sacred trust
-of keeping it. We have won our world-empire by force, and
-by force you must maintain it.</p>
-
-<p>In the day of battle we shed the blood of millions without
-ruth to win it, and so far the end has justified the means
-we used. Since the sun set upon Armageddon, and the
-right to make war was taken from the rulers of the nations,
-we have governed a realm of peace and prosperity which
-every year has seen better and happier than that which went
-before.</p>
-
-<p>No man has dared to draw the sword upon his brother, or
-by force or fraud to take that which was not his by right. The
-soil of earth has been given back to the use of her sons, and
-their wealth has already multiplied a hundredfold on every
-hand. Kings have ruled with wisdom and justice, and senates
-have ceased their wranglings to soberly seek out and promote
-the welfare of their own countries, and to win the respect and
-friendship of others.</p>
-
-<p>Yet many of these are the same men who, but a few years
-ago, rent each other like wild beasts in savage strife for the
-meanest ends; who betrayed their brothers and slaughtered
-their neighbours, that the rich might be richer, and the strong
-stronger, in the pitiless battle for wealth and power. They
-have become peaceful and honest with each other, because we
-have compelled them to be so, and because they know that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-penalty of wrong-doing in high places is destruction swift and
-certain as the stroke of the hand of Fate itself.</p>
-
-<p>They know that no man stands so high that our hand
-cannot cast him down to the dust, and that no spot of earth is
-so secret and so distant that the transgressor of our laws can
-find in it a refuge from our vengeance. We stand between
-the few strong and cunning who would oppress, and the many
-weak and simple who could not resist them; and when we
-are gone, you will hear the voice of duty calling you to take
-our places.</p>
-
-<p>When you stand where we do now, remember who you are
-and the tremendous trust that is laid upon you. You are the
-children of the chosen out of many nations, masters of the
-world, and, under Heaven, the arbiters of human destiny.
-You shall rule the world as we have ruled it for a hundred
-years from now. If in that time men shall not have learnt
-the ways of wisdom and justice, you may be sure that they
-will never learn them, and deserve only to be left to their own
-foolishness. Since the world began, the path of life has never
-lain so fair and straight before the sons of men as it does
-now, and never was it so easy to do the right and so hard to
-do the wrong.</p>
-
-<p>So, for a hundred years to come, you shall keep them in the
-path in which we have set them, and those that would wilfully
-turn aside from it you shall destroy without mercy, lest
-they lead others into misery and bring the evil days upon
-earth again.</p>
-
-<p>At the twenty-fifth celebration of the Festival of Deliverance,
-you shall give back the sceptre of the world-empire into
-the hands of the children of those from whom we took it,&mdash;because
-they wielded it for oppression, and not for mercy. At
-that time you shall make it known throughout the earth that
-men are once more free to do good or evil, according to
-their choice, and that as they choose well or ill so shall they
-live or die.</p>
-
-<p>And woe to them in those days if, knowing the good, they
-shall turn aside to do evil! Beyond the clouds that gather<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-over the sunset of my earthly life, I see a sign in heaven as
-of a flaming sword, whose hilt is in the hand of the Master
-of Destiny, and whose blade is outstretched over the habitations
-of men.</p>
-
-<p>As they shall choose to do good or evil, so shall that sword
-pass away from them or fall upon them, and consume them
-utterly in the midst of their pride. And if they, knowing the
-good, shall elect to do evil, it shall be with them as of old the
-Prophet said of the men of Babylon the Great: Their cities
-shall be a desolation, a dry land and a wilderness; a land
-wherein no man dwelleth, neither shall any son of man
-pass thereby.</p>
-
-<p>For from among the stars of heaven, whose lore I have
-learned and whose voices I have heard, there shall come the
-messenger of Fate, and his shape shall be that of a flaming fire,
-and his breath as the breath of a pestilence that men shall feel
-and die in the hour that it breathes upon them.</p>
-
-<p>Out of the depths beyond the light of the sun he shall
-come, and your children of the fifth generation shall behold his
-approach. The sister-worlds shall see him pass with fear and
-trembling, wondering which of them he shall smite, but if he
-be not restrained or turned aside by the Hand which guides
-the stars in their courses, it shall go hard with this world and
-the men of it in the hour of his passing.</p>
-
-<p>Then shall the highways of the earth be waste, and the
-wayfaring of men cease. Earth shall languish and mourn for
-her children that are no more, and Death shall reign amidst
-the silence, sole sovereign of many lands!</p>
-
-<p>But you, so long as you continue to walk in the way of
-wisdom, shall live in peace until the end, whether it shall come
-then or in the ages that shall follow. And if it shall come
-then, you shall await it with fortitude, knowing that this life is
-but a single link in the chain of existence which stretches
-through infinity; and that, if you shall be found worthy, you
-shall be taught how a chosen few among your sons and
-daughters shall survive the ruin of the world, to be the parents
-of the new race, and replenish the earth and possess it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Out of the Valley of the Shadow of Death I stretch forth
-my hands in blessing to you, the children of the coming time,
-and pray that the peace which the men of the generation now
-passing away have won through strife and toil in the fiery
-days of the Terror, may be yours and endure unbroken unto
-the end.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_019.jpg" width="350" height="58" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE SURRENDER OF THE WORLD-THRONE.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_a.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-A">A HUNDRED years had passed since Natas, the
-Master of the Terror, had given into the hands of
-Richard Arnold his charge to the future generations
-of the Aerians&mdash;as the descendants of the
-Terrorists who had colonised the mountain-walled
-valley of Aeria, in Central Africa, were now
-called; since the man, who had planned and accomplished
-the greatest revolution in the history of the world, had
-given his last blessing to his companions-in-arms and their
-children, and had “turned his face to the wall and died.”</p>
-
-<p>It was midday, on the 8th of December 2030, and the
-rulers of all the civilised States of the world were gathered
-together in St. Paul’s Cathedral to receive, from the hands of a
-descendant of Natas in the fourth generation, the restoration of
-the right of independent national rule which, on the same spot
-a hundred and twenty-five years before, had been taken from
-the sovereigns of Europe and vested in the Supreme Council of
-the Anglo-Saxon Federation.</p>
-
-<p>The period of tutelage had passed. Under the wise and
-firm rule of the Council and the domination of the Anglo-Saxon
-race, the Golden Age had seemed to return to the world.
-For a hundred and twenty-five years there had been peace on
-earth, broken only by the outbreak and speedy suppression of
-a few tribal wars among the more savage races of Africa and
-Malaysia. Now the descendants of those who had been victors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-and vanquished in the world-war of 1904, had met to give back
-and assume the freedom and the responsibility of national
-independence.</p>
-
-<p>The vast cathedral was thronged, as it had been on the
-momentous day when Natas had pronounced his judgment on
-the last of the Tyrants of Russia, and ended the old order of
-things in Europe. But it was filled by a very different assembly
-to that which had stood within its walls on the morrow of
-Armageddon.</p>
-
-<p>Then the stress and horror of a mighty conflict had set its
-stamp on every face. Hate had looked out of eyes in which
-the tears were scarcely dry, and hungered fiercely for the
-blood of the oppressor. The clash of arms, the stern command,
-and the pitiless words of doom had sounded then in ears which
-but a few hours before had listened to the roar of artillery and
-the thunder of battle. That had been the dawn of the morrow
-of strife; this was the zenith of the noon of peace.</p>
-
-<p>Now, in all the vast assembly, no hand held a weapon, no
-face was there which showed a sign of sorrow, fear, or anger,
-and in no heart, save only two among the thousands, was there
-a thought of hate or bitterness.</p>
-
-<p>For three days past the Festival of Deliverance had been
-celebrated all over the civilised world, and now, in the centre
-of the city which had come to be the capital, not only of the
-vast domains of Anglo-Saxondom, but of the whole world, a
-solemn act of renunciation was to be performed, upon the
-issues of which the fate of all humanity would hang; for the
-members of the Supreme Council had come through the skies
-from their seat of empire in Aeria to abdicate the world-throne
-in obedience to the command of the dead Master, from whom
-their ancestors had derived it.</p>
-
-<p>At a table, drawn across the front of the chancel, sat the
-President and the twelve men who with him had up to this
-hour shared the empire of the human race. Below the steps,
-on the floor of the cathedral, sat, in a wide semicircle, the
-rulers of the kingdoms and republics of the earth, assembled to
-hear the last word of their over-lords, and to receive from them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-the power and responsibility of maintaining or forfeiting, as the
-event should prove, the blessings which had multiplied under
-the sovereignty of the Aerians.</p>
-
-<p>The President of the Council was the direct descendant
-not only of Alan Tremayne, its first President, but also of
-Richard Arnold and Natasha; for their eldest son, born in the
-first year of the Peace, had married the only daughter of Tremayne,
-and their first-born son had been his father’s father.</p>
-
-<p>Although the average physique of civilised man had
-immensely improved under the new order of things, the
-Aerians, descendants of the pick of the nations of Europe,
-were as far superior to the rest of the assembly as the latter
-would have been to the men and women of the nineteenth
-century; but even amongst the members of the Council, the
-splendid stature and regal dignity of Alan Arnold, the President,
-stamped him as a born ruler of men, whose title rested
-upon something higher than election or inheritance.</p>
-
-<p>At the last stroke of twelve, the President rose in his place,
-and, in the midst of an almost breathless silence, read the
-message of Natas to the great congregation. This done, he
-laid the parchment down on the table and, beginning from the
-outbreak of the world-war, rapidly and lucidly sketched out
-the vast and beneficent changes in the government of society
-that its issues had made possible.</p>
-
-<p>He traced the marvellous development of the new civilisation,
-which, in four generations, had raised men from a state
-of half-barbarous strife and brutality to one of universal peace
-and prosperity; from inhuman and unsparing competition to
-friendly co-operation in public, and generous rivalry in private
-concerns; from horrible contrasts of wealth and misery to a
-social state in which the removal of all unnatural disabilities
-in the race of life had made them impossible.</p>
-
-<p>He showed how, in the evil times which, as all men hoped,
-had been left behind for ever, the strong and the unscrupulous
-ruthlessly oppressed the weak and swindled the honest and the
-straightforward. Now dishonesty was dishonourable in fact as
-well as in name; the game of life was played fairly, and its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-prizes fell to all who could win them, by native genius or
-earnest endeavour.</p>
-
-<p>There were no inequalities, save those which Nature herself
-had imposed upon all men from the beginning of time. There
-were no tyrants and no slaves. That which a man’s labour of
-hand or brain had won was his, and no man might take toll of
-it. All useful work was held in honour, and there was no
-other road to fame or fortune save that of profitable service to
-humanity.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” said the President in conclusion, “is the splendid
-heritage that we of the Supreme Council, which is now to cease
-to exist as such, have received from our forefathers, who won
-it for us and for you on the field of the world’s Armageddon.
-We have preserved their traditions intact, and obeyed their
-commands to the letter; and now the hour has come for us,
-in obedience to the last of those commands, to resign our
-authority and to hand over that heritage to you, the rulers of
-the civilised world, to hold in trust for the peoples over whom
-you have been appointed to reign.</p>
-
-<p>“When I have done speaking I shall no longer be President
-of the Senate, which for a hundred and twenty-five years has
-ruled the world from pole to pole and east to west. You and
-your parliaments are henceforth free to rule as you will. We
-shall take no further part in the control of human affairs
-outside our domain, saving only in one concern.</p>
-
-<p>“In the days when our command was established, the only
-possible basis of all rule was force, and our supremacy was
-based on the force that we could bring to bear upon those who
-might have ventured to oppose us or revolted against our rule.
-We commanded, and we will still command, the air, and I
-should not be doing my duty, either to my own people or to
-you, if I did not tell you that the Aerians, not as the world-rulers
-that they have been, but as the citizens of an independent
-State, mean to keep that power in their own hands at
-all costs.</p>
-
-<p>“The empire of earth and sea, saving only the valley of
-Aeria, is yours to do with as you will. The empire of the air<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-is ours,&mdash;the heritage that we have received from the genius
-of that ancestor of mine who first conquered it.</p>
-
-<p>“That we have not used it in the past to oppress you is the
-most perfect guarantee that we shall not do so in the future,
-but let all the nations of the earth clearly understand, that we
-shall accept any attempt to dispute it with us as a declaration
-of war upon us, and that those who make that attempt will
-either have to exterminate us or be exterminated themselves.
-This is not a threat, but a solemn warning; and the responsibility
-of once more bringing the curse of war and all its
-attendant desolation upon the earth, will lie heavily upon those
-who neglect it.</p>
-
-<p>“A few more needful words and I have done. The message
-of the Master, which I have read to you, contains a prophecy,
-as to the fulfilment of which neither I nor any man here may
-speak with certainty. It may be that he, with clearer eyes
-than ours, saw some tremendous catastrophe impending over
-the world, a catastrophe which no human means could avert,
-and beneath which human strength and genius could only bow
-with resignation.</p>
-
-<p>“By what spirit he was inspired when he uttered the
-prophecy, it is not for us to say. But before you put it aside
-as an old man’s dream, let me ask you to remember, that he
-who uttered it was a man who was able to plan the destruction
-of one civilisation, and to prepare the way for another and a
-better.</p>
-
-<p>“Such a man, standing midway between the twin mysteries
-of life and death, might well see that which is hidden from our
-grosser sight. But whether the prophecy itself shall prove
-true or false, it shall be well for you and for your children’s
-children if you and they shall receive the lesson that it teaches
-as true.</p>
-
-<p>“If, in the days that are to come, the world shall be overwhelmed
-with a desolation that none shall escape, will it not
-be better that the end shall come and find men doing good
-rather than evil? As you now set the peoples whom you
-govern in the right or the wrong path, so shall they walk.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“This is the lesson of all the generations that have gone
-before us, and it shall also be true of those that are to come
-after us. As the seed is, so is the harvest; therefore see to it
-that you, who are now the free rulers of the nations, so discharge
-the awful trust and responsibility which is thus laid
-upon you, that your children’s children shall not, perhaps in
-the hour of Humanity’s last agony, rise up and curse your
-memory rather than bless it. I have spoken!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_025.jpg" width="350" height="57" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">A CROWNLESS KING.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_l.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-L">LATE in the evening of the same day two of the
-President’s audience&mdash;the only two who had
-heard his words with anger and hatred instead
-of gratitude and joy&mdash;were together in a small
-but luxuriously-furnished room, in an octagonal
-turret which rose from one of the angles of a large house on
-the southern slope of the heights of Hampstead.</p>
-
-<p>One was a very old man, whose once giant frame was
-wasted and shrunken by the slow siege of many years, and on
-whose withered, care-lined features death had already set its
-fatal seal. The other was a young girl, in all the pride and glory
-of budding womanhood, and beautiful with the dark, imperious
-beauty that is transmitted, like a priceless heirloom, along a line
-of proud descent unstained by any drop of base-born blood.</p>
-
-<p>Yet in her beauty there was that which repelled as well as
-attracted. No sweet and gentle woman-soul looked out of the
-great, deep eyes, that changed from dusky-violet to the blackness
-of a starless night as the sun and shade of her varying
-moods swept over her inner being. Her straight, dark brows
-were almost masculine in their firmness; and the voluptuous
-promise of her full, red, sensuous lips was belied by the
-strength of her chin and the defiant poise of her splendid head
-on the strongly-moulded throat, whose smooth skin showed so
-dazzlingly white against the dark purple velvet of the collar of
-her dress.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was a beauty to enslave and command rather than to
-woo and win; the fatal loveliness of a Cleopatra, a Lucrezia, or
-a Messalina; a charm to be used for evil rather than for good.
-In a few years she would be such a woman as would drive men
-mad for the love of her, and, giving no love in return, use them
-for her own ends, and cast them aside with a smile when they
-could serve her no longer.</p>
-
-<p>The old man was lying on a low couch of magnificent furs,
-against whose dark lustre the grey pallor of his skin and the
-pure, silvery whiteness of his still thick hair and beard showed
-up in strong contrast. He had been asleep for the last four
-hours, resting after the exertion of going to the cathedral, and
-the girl was sitting watching him with anxious eyes, every
-now and then leaning forward to catch the faint sound of his
-slow and even breathing, and make sure that he was still alive.</p>
-
-<p>A clock in one of the corners of the room chimed a quarter
-to nine, as the old man raised his hand to his brow and opened
-his eyes. They rested for a moment on the girl’s face, and then
-wandered inquiringly about the room, as though he expected
-someone else to be present. Then he said in a low, weak
-voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“What time is it? Has Serge come yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the girl, glancing up at the clock; “that was only
-a quarter to nine, and he is not due until the hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; I remember. I don’t suppose he can be here much
-before. Meanwhile get me the draught ready, so that I shall
-have strength to do what has to be done before”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure it is necessary for you to take that terrible
-drug? Why should you sacrifice what may be months or even
-years of life, to gain a few hours’ renewed youth?”</p>
-
-<p>The girl’s voice trembled as she spoke, and her eyes melted
-in a sudden rush of tears. The one being that she loved in all
-the world was this old man, and he had just told her to prepare
-his death-draught.</p>
-
-<p>“Do as I bid you, child,” he said, raising his voice to a
-querulous cry, “and do it quickly, while there is yet time.
-Why do you talk to me of a few more months of life&mdash;to me,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-whose eyes have seen the snows of a hundred winters whitening
-the earth? I tell you that, drug or no drug, I shall not
-see the setting of to-morrow’s sun. As I slept, I heard the rush
-of the death-angel’s wings through the night, and the wind of
-them was cold upon my brow. Do as I bid you, quick&mdash;there
-is the door-telephone. Serge is here!”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke, a ring sounded in the lower part of the house.
-Accustomed to blind obedience from her infancy, the girl
-choked back her rising tears and went to a little cupboard let
-into the wall, out of which she took two small vials, each containing
-about a fluid ounce of colourless liquid. She placed a
-tumbler in the old man’s hand, and emptied the vials into it
-simultaneously.</p>
-
-<p>There was a slight effervescence, and the two colourless
-liquids instantly changed to deep red. The moment that they
-did so, the dying man put the glass to his lips and emptied it
-at a gulp. Then he threw himself back upon his pillows, and
-let the glass fall from his hand upon the floor. At the same
-moment a little disc of silver flew out at right angles to the
-wall near the door, and a voice said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Serge Nicholaivitch is here to command.”</p>
-
-<p>“Serge Nicholaivitch is welcome. Let him ascend!” said
-the girl, walking towards the transmitter, and replacing the disc
-as she ceased speaking.</p>
-
-<p>A few moments later there was a tap on the door. The
-girl opened it and admitted a tall, splendidly-built young
-fellow of about twenty-two, dressed, according to the winter
-costume of the time, in a close-fitting suit of dark-blue velvet,
-long boots of soft, brown leather that came a little higher than
-the knee, and a long, fur-lined, hooded cloak, which was now
-thrown back, and hung in graceful folds from his broad
-shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>As he entered, the girl held out her hand to him in silence.
-A bright flush rose to her clear, pale cheeks as he instantly
-dropped on one knee and kissed it, as in the old days a favoured
-subject would have kissed the hand of a queen.</p>
-
-<p>“Welcome, Serge Nicholaivitch, Prince of the House of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-Romanoff! Your bride and your crown are waiting for
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>The words came clear and strong from the lips which, but a
-few minutes before, had barely been able to frame a coherent
-sentence. The strange drug had wrought a miracle of restoration.
-Fifty years seemed to have been lifted from the shoulders
-of the man who would never see another sunrise.</p>
-
-<p>The light of youth shone in his eyes, and the flush of health
-on his cheeks. The deep furrows of age and care had vanished
-from his face, and, saving only for his long, white hair, if one
-who had seen Alexander Romanoff, the last of the Tsars of
-Russia, on the battlefield of Muswell Hill could have come
-back to earth, he would have believed that he saw him once
-more in the flesh.</p>
-
-<p>Without any assistance he rose from the couch, and drew
-himself up to the full of his majestic height. As he did so the
-young man dropped on his knee before him, as he had done
-before the girl, and said in Russian&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The honour is too great for my unworthiness. May
-heaven make me worthy of it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Worthy you are now, and shall remain so long as you
-shall keep undefiled the faith and honour of the Imperial House
-from which you are sprung,” replied the old man in the same
-language, raising him from his knee as he spoke. Then he laid
-his hands on the young man’s shoulders, and, looking him
-straight in the eyes, went on&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Serge Nicholaivitch, you know why I have bidden you
-come here to-night. Speak now, without fear or falsehood,
-and tell me whether you come prepared to take that which I
-have to give you, and to do that which I shall ask of you. If
-there is any doubt in your soul, speak it now and go in peace;
-for the task that I shall lay upon you is no light one, nor may
-it be undertaken without a whole heart and a soul that is
-undivided by doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>The young man returned his burning gaze with a glance as
-clear and steady as his own, and replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“It is for your Majesty to give and for me to take&mdash;for you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-to command and for me to obey. Tell me your will, and I will
-do it to the death. In the hour that I fail, may heaven’s mercy
-fail me too, and may I die as one who is not fit to live!”</p>
-
-<p>“Spoken like a true son of Russia!” said the old man, taking
-his hands from his shoulders and beckoning the girl to his
-side. Then he placed them side by side before an <em>ikon</em> fastened
-to the eastern wall, with an ever-burning lamp in front of it.
-He bade them kneel down and join hands, and as they did so
-he took his place behind them and, raising his hands as though
-in invocation above their heads, he said in slow, solemn tones&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Serge Nicholaivitch and Olga Romanoff, sole heirs on
-earth of those who once were Tsars of Russia, swear before
-heaven and all its holy saints that, when this body of mine
-shall have been committed to the flames, you will take my
-ashes to Petersburg and lay them in the Church of Peter and
-Paul, and that when that is done, you will go to the Lossenskis
-at Moscow, and there, in the Uspènski Sobōr, where your
-ancestors were crowned, take each other for wedded wife and
-husband, according to the ancient laws of Russia and the rites
-of the orthodox church.”</p>
-
-<p>The oath was taken by each of the now betrothed pair in
-turn, and then Paul Romanoff, great-grandson of Alexander, the
-Last of the Tsars, raised them from their knees and kissed each
-of them on the forehead. Then, taking from his neck a gold
-chain with a small key attached to it, he went to one of the
-oak panels, from which the walls of the room were lined, and
-pushed aside a portion of the apparently solid beading, disclosing
-a keyhole into which he inserted the key.</p>
-
-<p>He turned the key and pulled, and the panel swung slowly
-out like a door. It was lined with three inches of solid steel,
-and behind it was a cavity in the wall, from which came the
-sheen of gold and the gleam of jewels. A cry of amazement
-broke at the same moment from the lips of both Olga and
-Serge, as they saw what the glittering object was.</p>
-
-<p>Paul Romanoff took it out of the steel-lined cavity, and laid
-it reverently on the table, saying, as he did so&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow I shall be dead, and this house and all that is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-in it will be yours. There is my most precious possession, the
-Imperial crown of Russia, stolen when the Kremlin was
-plundered in the days of the Terror, and restored secretly to my
-father by the faith and devotion of one of the few who remained
-loyal after the fall of the Empire.</p>
-
-<p>“In a few hours it will be yours. I leave it to you as a
-sacred heritage from the past for you to hand on to the future,
-and with it you shall receive and hand on a heritage of hate
-and vengeance, which you shall keep hot in your hearts and in
-the hearts of your children against the day of reckoning when
-it comes.</p>
-
-<p>“Now sit down on the divan yonder, and listen with your
-ears and your hearts as well, for these are the last words that I
-shall speak with the lips of flesh, and you must remember them,
-that you may tell them to your children, and perchance to
-their children after them, as I now tell them to you; for the
-hour of vengeance may not come in your day nor yet in theirs,
-though in the fulness of time it shall surely come, and therefore
-the story must never be forgotten while a Romanoff
-remains to remember it.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man, on whom the strange drug that he had taken
-was still exercising its wonderful effects, threw himself into an
-easy-chair as he spoke, and motioned them with his hand
-towards a second low couch against one of the walls, covered
-with cushions and draped with neutral-tinted, silken hangings.</p>
-
-<p>Olga, moving, as it seemed, with the unconscious motion of a
-somnambulist, allowed her form to sink back upon the cushions
-until she half sat and half reclined on them; and Serge, laying
-one of the cushions on the floor, sat at her feet, and drew one
-of her hands unresistingly over his shoulder, and kept it there
-as though she were caressing him. Thus they waited for Paul
-Romanoff to teach them the lesson that they had sworn to teach
-in turn to the generations that were to come.</p>
-
-<p>The old man regarded them in silence for a moment or two,
-and as he did so the angry fire died out of his eyes, and his lips
-parted in a faint smile as he said, rather in soliloquy to himself
-than to them&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“As it was in the beginning, it is now and for ever shall be
-until the end! Empires wax and wane, and dynasties rise and
-fall! Revolutions come and go, and the face of the world is
-changed, but the mystery of the sex, the beauty of woman, and
-the love of man, endure changeless as Destiny, for they are
-Destiny itself!”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke, the fixed, rigid look melted from Olga’s face.
-The bright flush rose again to her cheeks, and she bowed her
-royal head, and looked almost tenderly at the blond, ruddy,
-young giant at her feet. After all, he was her fate, and she
-might well have had a worse one.</p>
-
-<p>Then after a brief pause, Paul Romanoff began to speak
-again, slowly and quietly, with his eyes fixed on the glittering
-symbol of the vanished sovereignty of his House, as though he
-were addressing it, and communing with the mournful memories
-that it recalled from the past.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a hundred and twenty-five years since the hand of
-Natas, the Jew, came forth out of the unknown, and struck you
-from the brow of the Last of the Tsars. On the day that Natas
-died, I was born, a hundred years ago. There are barely a score
-of men left on earth who have seen and spoken with the men
-who saw the Great Revolt and the beginning of the Terror, and
-I alone, of the elder line of Romanoff, remain to pass the story
-of our House’s shame and ruin on, so that it may not be forgotten
-against the day of vengeance, that I have waited for in
-vain.</p>
-
-<p>“But I have no time left for dreams or vain regrets. Listen,
-Children of the Present, and take my words with you into the
-future that it is not given to me to see.”</p>
-
-<p>He passed his hands upwards over his eyes and brow, and
-then went on, speaking now directly to Olga and Serge, in a
-quick, earnest tone, as though he feared that his fictitious
-strength would fail him before he could say what he had to say&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“When Alexander, the last of the crowned Emperors of
-Russia, fell down dead on the morning after he reached the
-mines of Kara, to which the Terrorists had exiled him as a convict
-for life, those who remained of his family, and who had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-taken no part in the war, were allowed to return to Europe, on
-condition that they lived the lives of private citizens and sought
-no share in the government of any country to which they were
-allied by marriage or otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>“Only two of those who had survived the march to Siberia
-were able to avail themselves of this permission, and these were
-Olga, the daughter of Alexander, and Serge Nicholaivitch, the
-youngest son of his nephew Nicholas. These two settled at the
-Court of Denmark, and there, two years later, Olga married
-Prince Ingeborg. Her first-born son, the only one of her
-children who lived beyond infancy, was my father, as my own
-first-born son was yours, Olga Romanoff.</p>
-
-<p>“Serge married Dagmar, the youngest daughter of the House
-of Denmark, three years later, and from him you, Serge Nicholaivitch,
-are descended in the fourth generation. Thus in you
-will be united the only two remaining branches of the once
-mighty House of Romanoff. May the day come when, in you
-or your children, its ancient glories shall be restored!”</p>
-
-<p>“Amen!” said Olga and Serge in a single breath, and as
-she uttered the words, Olga’s eyes fell on the lost crown upon
-the table, and for the moment they seemed to flame with the
-inner fires of a quenchless rage. Paul Romanoff’s eyes answered
-hers flash for flash, for the same hatred and longing for revenge
-possessed them both&mdash;the old man who had carried the weight
-of a hundred years to the brink of the grave, and the young girl
-whose feet were still lingering on the dividing line between
-girlhood and womanhood.</p>
-
-<p>Then he went on, speaking with an added tone of fierceness
-in his voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“From the day of my birth until this, the night of my
-death, it has been impossible to do anything to recover that
-which was lost in the Great Revolt. Not that stout hearts and
-keen brains and willing hands have been wanting for the work;
-but because the strong arm of the Terror has encircled the earth
-with unbreakable bonds; because its eye has never slept; and
-because its hand has hurled infallible destruction upon all who
-have dared to take the first step towards freedom.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Natas spoke truly when he said that the Terrorists had
-ruled the world by force, and Alan Arnold to-day spoke truly
-after him when he said that the supremacy of the Aerians was
-based upon the force that they could bring to bear upon any
-who revolted against them, through their possession of the
-empire of the air.</p>
-
-<p>“It is this priceless possession that gives them the command
-of the world, and for a hundred years they have guarded it so
-jealously, that they have slain without mercy all who have
-ventured to take even the first step towards an independent
-solution of the mighty problem which Richard Arnold solved a
-hundred and twenty-six years ago.</p>
-
-<p>“The last man who died in this cause was my only son, and
-your father, Olga. Remember that, for it is not the least item
-in the legacy of revenge that I bequeath to you to-night. He
-had devoted his life, as many others had done before him, to
-the task of discovering the secret of the motive power of the
-Terrorists’ air-ships.</p>
-
-<p>“The year you were born, success had crowned the efforts of
-ten years of tireless labour. Working with the utmost secrecy
-in a lonely hut buried in the forests of Norway, he and six
-others, who were, as he thought, devoted to him and the glorious
-cause of wresting the empire of the world from the grasp of the
-Terrorists, had built an air-ship that would have been swifter
-and more powerful than any of their aerial fleet.</p>
-
-<p>“Two days before she was ready to take the air, one of his
-men deserted. The traitor was never seen again, but the next
-night a Terrorist vessel descended from the clouds, and in a few
-minutes <a id="Ref_22"></a>not a vestige of our air-ship or her creators remained.
-Only a blackened waste in the midst of the forest was left to
-show the scene of their labours. Within forty-eight hours, it
-was known all over the civilised world that Vladimir Romanoff
-and his associates had been killed by order of the Supreme
-Council, for endeavouring to build an air-ship in defiance of its
-commands.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_22" class="figcenter" style="width: 463px;">
-<img src="images/i_035.jpg" width="463" height="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Not a Vestige of our Air-Ship or her Creators remained.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_22">Page 22</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Such are the enemies against whom you will have to contend.
-They are still virtually the masters of the world, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-task before you is to wrest that mastery from them. It is no
-light task, but it is not impossible; for these Aerians are, after
-all, but men and women as you are, and what they have done,
-other men and women can surely do.</p>
-
-<p>“The Great Secret cannot always remain theirs alone.
-While they actively controlled the nations, nothing could be
-done against them, for their hand was everywhere and their
-eyes saw everything. But now they have abdicated the throne
-of the world, and left the nations to rule themselves as they can.
-For a time things will go on in their present grooves, but that
-will not be for long.</p>
-
-<p>“I, who am their bitterest enemy on earth, am forced to confess
-that the Terrorists have proved themselves to be the wisest
-as well as the strongest of despots. Under their rule the world
-has become a paradise&mdash;for the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">canaille</i> and the multitude.
-But they have curbed the mob as well as the king, and abolished
-the demagogue as well as the despot. Now the strong hand is
-lifted and the bridle loosed; and before many years have passed,
-the brute strength of the multitude will have begun to assert
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>“The so-called kings of the earth, who rule now in a
-mockery of royalty, will speedily find that the real kings of the
-old days ruled because, in the last resource, they had armies and
-navies at their command and could enforce obedience. These
-are but the puppets of the popular will, and now that the moral
-and physical support of the Supreme Council and its aerial
-fleet is taken from them, they will see democracy run rampant,
-and, having no strength to stem the tide, they will have to float
-with it or be submerged by it.</p>
-
-<p>“In another generation the voice of the majority, the blind,
-brute force of numbers, will rule everything on earth. What
-government there may be, will be a mere matter of counting
-heads. Individual freedom will by swift degrees vanish from
-the earth, and human society will become a huge machine,
-grinding all men down to the same level until the monotony of
-life becomes unendurable.</p>
-
-<p>“Hitherto all democracies in the history of the world have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-been ended by military despotisms, but now military despotism
-has been made impossible, and so democracy will run riot, until
-it plunges the world into social chaos.</p>
-
-<p>“This may come in your time or in your children’s, but it is
-the opportunity for which you must work and wait. Even
-now you will find in every nation, thousands of men and women
-who are chafing against the limitations imposed on individual
-aspirations and ambition; and as the rule of democracy spreads
-and becomes heavier, the number of these will increase, until
-at last revolt will become possible, nay, inevitable.</p>
-
-<p>“Of this revolt you must make yourselves the guiding-spirits.
-The work will be long and arduous, but you have all
-your lives before you, and the reward of success will be glorious
-beyond all description.</p>
-
-<p>“Not only will you restore the House of Romanoff to its
-ancient glories in yourselves and your children, but you will
-enthrone it in an even higher place than that which your
-ancestor had almost won for it, when these thrice-accursed
-Terrorists turned the tide of battle against him on the threshold
-of the conquest of the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not shrink from the task, or despair because you are
-now only two against the world. Think of Natas and the
-mighty work that he did, and remember that he was once only
-one against the world which in the day of battle he fought and
-conquered.</p>
-
-<p>“Above all things, never let your eyes wander from the land
-of the Aerians. That once conquered and the world is yours
-to do with as you will. To do that, you must first conquer the
-air as they have done. Aeria itself, by all reports, is such a
-paradise as the sun nowhere else shines upon. Some day,
-whether by force or cunning, it may be yours; and when it is,
-the world also will be yours to be your footstool and your plaything,
-and all the peoples of the earth shall be your servants to
-do your bidding.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I can see, through the mists of the coming years and
-beyond the grave that opens at my feet, aerial navies, flying the
-Eagle of Russia and scaling the mighty battlements of Aeria,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-hurling their lightnings far and wide in the work of vengeance
-long delayed! Behind the battle, I see darkness that my weak
-eyes cannot pierce, but yours shall see clearly where mine are
-clouded with the falling mists of death.</p>
-
-<p>“The shadows are closing round me, and the sands in the
-glass are almost run out. Yet one thing remains to be done.
-Since Alexander Romanoff died at the mines of Kara, no Tsar
-of Russia has been crowned. Now I, Paul Romanoff, his rightful
-heir, will crown myself after the fashion of my ancestors,
-and then I will crown you, the daughter of my murdered son,
-and you will place the diadem on your husband’s brow when
-God has made you one!”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, the old man rose from his seat, with his face
-flushed and his eyes aglow with the light of ecstasy. Olga and
-Serge rose to their feet, half in fear and half in wonder, as they
-looked upon his transfigured countenance.</p>
-
-<p>He lifted the Imperial crown from the table, and then,
-drawing himself up to the full height of his majestic stature,
-raised it high above his head, and lowered it slowly down
-towards his brow.</p>
-
-<p>The jewelled circlet of gold had almost touched the silver of
-his snowy hair when the light suddenly died out of his eyes,
-leaving the glaze of death behind it. He gasped once for
-breath, and then his mighty form shrank together and pitched
-forward in a huddled heap at their feet, flinging the crown with
-a dull crash to the floor, and sending it rolling away into a
-corner of the room.</p>
-
-<p>“God grant that may not be an omen, Olga!” said Serge,
-covering his eyes with his hands to shut out the sudden horror
-of the sight.</p>
-
-<p>“Omen or not, I will do his bidding to the end,” said the
-girl slowly and solemnly. Then her pent-up passion of grief
-burst forth in a long, wailing cry, and she flung herself down
-on the prostrate form of the only friend she had ever known
-and loved, and laid her cheek upon his, and let the welling tears
-run from her eyes over those that had for ever ceased to weep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">TSARINA OLGA.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_t.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-T">THREE days after his death, the body of Paul
-Romanoff was reduced to ashes in the Highgate
-Crematorium, a magnificent building, in the
-sombre yet splendid architecture of ancient
-Egypt, which stood in the midst of what had
-once been Highgate Cemetery, and what was now a beautiful
-garden, shaded by noble trees, and in summer ablaze with
-myriads of flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Not a grave or a headstone was to be seen, for burial in the
-earth had been abolished throughout the civilised world for
-nearly a century. In the vast galleries of the central building,
-thousands of urns, containing the ashes of the dead, reposed in
-niches inscribed with the name and date of death, but these
-mostly belonged to the poorer classes, for the wealthy as a rule
-devoted a chamber in their own houses to this purpose.</p>
-
-<p>The body was registered in the great Book of the Dead at
-the Crematorium as that of Paul Ivanitch, and the only two
-mourners signed their names, “Serge Ivanitch and Olga
-Ivanitch, grand-children of the deceased.” The reason for this
-was, that for more than a century the name of Romanoff had
-been proscribed in all the nations of Europe. It was believed
-that the Vladimir Romanoff who had been executed by the
-Supreme Council, for attempting to solve the forbidden problem,
-was the last of his race, and Paul had taken great pains not to
-disturb this belief.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Long before his son had met with his end, he had called
-himself Paul Ivanitch, and settled in London and practised his
-profession as a sculptor, in which he had won both fame and
-fortune. Olga had lived with him since her father’s death,
-and Serge, who at the time the narrative opens had just completed
-his studies at the Art University of Rome, had passed
-as her brother.</p>
-
-<p>They took the urn containing the ashes of the old man back
-with them to the house, which now belonged, with all its contents,
-to Olga and Serge. On the morning after his death, a
-notice, accompanied by an abstract of his will, had been inserted
-in <cite>The Official Gazette</cite>, the journal devoted exclusively
-to matters of law and government.</p>
-
-<p>Paul Romanoff had, however, left two wills behind him,
-one which had to be made public in compliance with the law,
-and one which was intended only for the eyes of Olga and
-Serge. This second will reposed, with the crown of Russia, in
-the secret recess in the wall of the octagonal chamber; and the
-instructions endorsed upon it stated that it was to be opened
-by Serge in the presence of Olga, after they had brought his
-ashes back to the house and had been legally confirmed in their
-possession of his property.</p>
-
-<p>Consequently, on the evening of the 11th, the two shut
-themselves into the room, and Olga, who since her grandfather’s
-death had worn the key of the recess on a chain
-round her neck, unlocked the secret door and gave the will
-to Serge. As she did so, a sudden fancy seized her. She took
-the crown from its resting-place, and, standing in front of
-a long mirror which occupied one of the eight sides of the
-room from roof to floor, poised it above the lustrous coils of
-her hair with both hands, and said, half to Serge and half to
-herself&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“What age could not accomplish, youth shall do! By my
-own right, and with my own hands, I am crowned Tsarina,
-Empress of the Russias in Europe and Asia. As the great
-Catherine was, so will I be&mdash;and more, for I will be Mistress of
-the West and the East. I will have kings for my vassals and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-senates for my servants, and I will rule as no other woman has
-ruled before me since Semiramis!”</p>
-
-<p>As she uttered the daring words, whose fulfilment seemed
-beyond the dreams of the wildest imagination, she placed the
-crown upon her brow and stood, clothed in imperial purple
-from head to foot, the very incarnation of loveliness and royal
-majesty. Serge looked up as she spoke, and gazed for a
-moment entranced upon her. Then he threw himself upon his
-knees before her, and, raising the hem of her robe to his lips,
-said in a voice half choked with love and passion&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“And I, who am also of the imperial blood, will be the first
-to salute you Tsarina and mistress! You have taken me as
-your lover, let me also be the first of your subjects. I will
-serve you as woman never was served before. You shall be
-my mistress&mdash;my goddess, and your words shall be my laws
-before all other laws. If you bid me do evil, it shall be to me
-as good, and I will do it. I will kill or leave alive according
-to your pleasure, and I will hold my own life as cheap as
-any other in your service; for I love you, and my life is
-yours!”</p>
-
-<p>Olga looked down upon him with the light of triumph in
-her eyes. No woman ever breathed to whom such words
-would not have been sweet; but to her they were doubly sweet,
-because they were a spontaneous tribute to the power of her
-beauty and the strength of her royal nature, and an earnest of
-her future sway over other men.</p>
-
-<p>More than this, too, they had been won without an effort,
-from the lips of the man whom she had always been taught to
-look upon as higher than other men, in virtue of his descent
-from her own ancestry, and the blood-right that he shared with
-her to that throne which it was to be their joint life-task to
-re-establish.</p>
-
-<p>If she did not love him, it was rather because ambition and
-the inborn lust of power engrossed her whole being, than from
-any lack of worthiness on his part. Of all the men she had
-ever seen, none compared with him in strength and manliness
-save one&mdash;and he, bitter beyond expression as the thought was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-to her, was so far above her as she was now, that he seemed to
-belong to another world and to another order of beings.</p>
-
-<p>As their eyes met, a thrill that was almost akin to love
-passed through her soul, and, acting on the impulse of the
-moment, she took the crown from her own head and held it
-above his as he knelt at her feet, and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Not as my subject or my servant, but as my co-ruler and
-helpmate, you shall keep that oath of yours, Serge Nicholaivitch.
-We have exchanged our vows, and in a few days I shall be
-your wife. We will wed as equals; and so now I crown you,
-as it is my right to do. Rise, my lord the Tsar, and take your
-crown!”</p>
-
-<p>Serge put up his hands and took the crown from hers at
-the moment that she placed it on his brow. He rose to his
-feet, holding it on his head as he said solemnly&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“So be it, and may the God of our fathers help me to wear
-it worthily with you, and to restore to it the glory that has
-been taken from it by our enemies!”</p>
-
-<p>Then he laid it reverently down on the table and turned to
-Olga, who was still standing before the mirror looking at her
-own lovely image, as though in a dream of future glory. He
-took her unresisting in his arms, and kissed her passionately
-again and again, bringing the bright blood to her cheeks and the
-light of a kindred passion to her eyes, and murmuring between
-the kisses&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“But you, darling, are worth all the crowns of earth, and I
-am still your slave, because your beauty and your sweetness
-make me so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then slave you shall be!” she said, giving him back kiss
-for kiss, well knowing that with every pressure of her intoxicating
-lips she riveted the chains of his bondage closer upon
-his soul.</p>
-
-<p>To an outside observer, what had taken place would have
-seemed but little better than boy-and-girl’s play, the phantasy
-of two young and ardent souls dreaming a romantic and
-impossible dream of power and glory that had vanished, never
-to be brought back again. And yet, if such a one had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-able to look forward through little more than a single lustrum,
-he would have seen that, in the mysterious revolutions of
-human affairs, it is usually the seemingly impossible that
-becomes possible, and the most unexpected that comes to
-pass.</p>
-
-<p>The secret will of Paul Romanoff, to the study of which the
-two lovers addressed themselves when they awoke from the
-dream of love and empire into which Olga’s phantasy had
-plunged them both, would, if it had been made public, have
-given a by no means indefinite shape to such vague dreams of
-world-revolution as were inspired in thoughtful minds, even in
-the thirty-first year of the twenty-first century.</p>
-
-<p>It was a voluminous document of many pages, embodying
-the result of nearly eighty years of tireless scheming and
-patient research in the field of science as well as in that of
-politics. Paul Romanoff had lived his life with but one object,
-and that was, to prepare the way for the accomplishment of a
-revolution which should culminate in the subversion of the
-state of society inaugurated by the Terrorists, and the re-establishment,
-at anyrate in the east of Europe, of autocratic rule in
-the person of a scion of the House of Romanoff. All that he
-had been able to do towards the attainment of this seemingly
-impossible project was crystallised in the document bequeathed
-to Olga and Serge.</p>
-
-<p>It was divided into three sections. The first of these was
-mostly of a personal nature, and contained details which it
-would serve no purpose of use or interest to reproduce here.
-It will therefore suffice to say, that it contained a list of the
-names and addresses of four hundred men and women scattered
-throughout Europe and America, each of whom was the
-descendant of some prince or noble, some great landowner
-or millionaire, who had suffered degradation or ruin at the
-hands of the Terrorists during the reorganisation of society,
-after the final triumph of the Anglo-Saxon Federation in
-1904.</p>
-
-<p>The second section of the will was of a purely scientific and
-technical character. It was a theoretical arsenal of weapons<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-for the arming of those who, if they were to succeed at all, could
-only do so by bringing back that which it had cost such an
-awful expenditure of blood and suffering to banish from the
-earth in the days of the Terror. The designs of Paul Romanoff,
-and the vast aspirations of those to whom he had bequeathed
-the crown of the great Catherine, could have but one
-result if they ever passed from the realm of fancy to that of
-deeds.</p>
-
-<p>If the clock was to be put back, only the armed hand could
-do it, and that hand must be so armed that it could strike at
-first secretly, and yet with paralysing effect. The few would
-have to array themselves against the many, and if they
-triumphed, it would have to be by the possession of some such
-means of terrorism and irresistible destruction as those who
-had accomplished the revolution of 1904 had wielded in their
-aerial fleet.</p>
-
-<p>By far the most important part of this section of the will
-consisted of plans and diagrams of various descriptions of air-ships
-and submarine vessels, accompanied by minute directions
-for building and working them. Most of these were from the
-hand of Vladimir Romanoff, Olga’s father; but of infinitely
-more importance even than all these was a detailed description,
-on the last page but two of the section, of the solution of a
-problem which had been attempted in the last decade of the
-nineteenth century, but which was still unsolved so far as the
-world at large was concerned.</p>
-
-<p>This was the direct transformation of the solar energy
-locked up in coal into electrical energy, without loss either by
-waste or transference. How vast and yet easily controlled a
-power this would be in the hands of those who were able to
-wield it, may be guessed from the fact that, in the present day,
-less than ten per cent. of the latent energy of coal is developed
-as electrical power even in the most perfect systems of conversion.</p>
-
-<p>All the rest is wasted between the furnace of the steam-engine
-and the dynamo. It was to electrical power, obtained
-direct from coal and petroleum, that Vladimir Romanoff trusted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-for the motive force of his air-ships and submarine vessels, and
-which he had already employed with experimental success as
-regards the former, when his career was cut short by the
-swift and pitiless execution of the sentence of the Supreme
-Council.</p>
-
-<p>The remainder of this section was occupied by a list of
-chemical formulæ for the most powerful explosives then
-known to science, and minute instructions for their preparation.
-At the bottom of the page which contained these, there
-was a little strip of parchment, fastened by one end to the
-binding of the other sheets, and covered with very small
-writing.</p>
-
-<p>Olga’s eyes, wandering down over the maze of figures which
-crowded the page, reached it before Serge’s did. One quick
-glance told her that it was something very different to the rest.
-She laid one hand carelessly over it, and with the other softly
-caressed Serge’s crisp, golden curls. As he looked round in
-response to the caress, their eyes met, and she said in her sweet,
-low, witching voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Dearest, I have a favour to ask of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a favour to ask, but a command to give, you mean.
-Speak, and you are obeyed. Have I not sworn obedience?” he
-replied, laying his hand upon her shoulder and drawing her
-lovely face closer to his as he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it is only a favour,” she said, with such a smile as
-Antony might have seen on the lips of Cleopatra. “I want
-you to leave me alone for a little time&mdash;for half an hour&mdash;and
-then come back and finish reading this with me. You know
-my brain is not as strong as yours, and I feel a little bewildered
-with all the wonderful things that there are in this legacy of
-my father’s father.</p>
-
-<p>“Before we go any further, I should like to read it all
-through again by myself, so as to understand it thoroughly.
-So suppose you go to your smoking-room for a little, and leave
-me to do so. I shall not take very long, and then we will go
-over the rest together.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we have only a couple more pages to read, sweet one,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-and then I will go over it all again with you, and explain anything
-that you have not understood.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke, Serge’s eyes never wavered for a moment from
-hers. Could he but have broken their spell, he might have seen
-that she was hiding something from him under her little, white
-hand and shapely arm. She brought her red, smiling lips still
-nearer to his as she almost whispered in reply&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it is only a girl’s whim, after all, but still I am a
-girl. Come, now, I will give you a kiss for twenty minutes’
-solitude, and when you come back, and we have finished our
-task, you shall have as many more as you like.”</p>
-
-<p>The sweet, tempting lips came closer still, and the witching
-spell of her great dusky eyes grew stronger as she spoke. How
-was he to know what was hanging in the balance in that fateful
-moment? He was but a hot-blooded youth of twenty, and he
-worshipped this lovely, girlish temptress, who had not yet seen
-seventeen summers, with an adoration that blinded him to all
-else but her and her intoxicating beauty.</p>
-
-<p>He drew her yielding form to him until he could feel her
-heart beating against his, and as their lips met, the promised
-kiss came from hers to his. He returned it threefold, and then
-his arm slipped from her shoulder to her waist, and he lifted
-her like a child from her chair, and carried her, half laughing
-and half protesting, to the door, claimed and took another kiss
-before he released her, and then put her down and left her alone
-without another word.</p>
-
-<p>“Alas, poor Serge!” she said, as the door closed behind him;
-“you are not the first man who has lost the empire of the world
-for a woman’s kiss. Before, I saw that you were my equal and
-helpmate, now you and all other men&mdash;yes, not even excepting
-he who seems so far above me now&mdash;shall be my slaves and do
-my bidding, so blindly that they shall not even know they are
-doing it.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, the weapons of war are worth much, but what are
-they in comparison with the souls of the men who will have
-to use them!”</p>
-
-<p>In half an hour Serge came back to finish the reading of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-the will with her. The little slip of paper had been removed
-so skilfully that it would have been impossible for him to have
-even guessed that it had ever been attached to the parchment,
-or that it was now lying hidden in the bosom of the girl who
-would have killed him without the slightest scruple to gain the
-unsuspected possession of it.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_048.jpg" width="350" height="59" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">A SON OF THE GODS.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_o.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-O">ON the day but one following the reading of Paul
-Romanoff’s secret will, Olga and Serge set out for
-St. Petersburg, to convey his ashes to their last
-resting-place in the Cathedral of SS. Peter and
-Paul in the Fortress of Petropaulovski, where
-reposed the dust of the Tyrants of Russia, from Peter the Great
-to Alexander <span class="smcap">II.</span> of Russia, now only remembered as the
-chief characters in the dark tragedy of the days before the
-Revolution.</p>
-
-<p>The intense love of the Russians for their country had
-survived the tremendous change that had passed over the
-face of society, and it was still the custom to bring the ashes
-of those who claimed noble descent and deposit them in one
-of their national churches, even when they had died in distant
-countries.</p>
-
-<p>The station from which they started was a splendid structure
-of marble, glass, and aluminium steel, standing in the
-midst of a vast, abundantly-wooded garden, which occupied
-the region that had once been made hideous by the slums and
-sweating-dens of Southwark. The ground floor was occupied
-by waiting-rooms, dining-saloons, conservatories, and winter-gardens,
-for the convenience and enjoyment of travellers; and
-from these lifts rose to the upper storey, where the platforms
-and lines lay under an immense crystal arch.</p>
-
-<p>Twelve lines ran out of the station, divided into three sets<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-of four each. Of these, the centre set was entirely devoted to
-continental traffic, and the lines of this system stretched without
-a break from London to Pekin.</p>
-
-<p>The cars ran suspended on a single rail upheld by light,
-graceful arches of a practically unbreakable alloy of aluminium,
-steel, and zinc, while about a fifth of their weight was borne by
-another single insulating rail of forged glass,&mdash;the rediscovery
-of the lost art of making which had opened up immense possibilities
-to the engineers of the twenty-first century.</p>
-
-<p>Along this lower line the train ran, not on wheels, but on
-lubricated bearings, which glided over it with no more friction
-than that of a steel skate on ice. On the upper rail ran
-double-flanged wheels with ball-bearings, and this line also
-conducted the electric current from which the motive-power
-was derived.</p>
-
-<p>The two inner lines of each set were devoted to long-distance,
-express traffic, and the two outer to intermediate
-transit, corresponding to the ordinary trains of the present
-day. Thus, for example, the train by which Olga and Serge
-were about to travel, stopped only at Brussels, Berlin, Königsberg,
-Moscow, Nijni Novgorod, Tomsk, Tobolsk, Irkutsk, and
-Pekin, which was reached by a line running through the
-Salenga valley and across the great desert of Shamoo, while
-from Irkutsk another branch of the line ran north-eastward
-viâ Yakutsk to the East Cape, where the Behring Bridge united
-the systems of the Old World and the New.</p>
-
-<p>The usual speed of the expresses was a hundred and fifty
-miles an hour, rising to two hundred on the long runs; and that
-of the ordinary trains, from a hundred to a hundred and fifty.
-Higher speeds could of course be attained on emergencies, but
-these had been found to be quite sufficient for all practical
-purposes.</p>
-
-<p>The cars were not unlike the Pullmans of the present day,
-save that they were wider and roomier, and were built not of
-wood and iron, but of aluminium and forged glass. Their
-interiors were, of course, absolutely impervious to wind and
-dust, even at the highest speed of the train, although a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-perfect system of ventilation kept their atmosphere perfectly
-fresh.</p>
-
-<p>The long-distance trains were fitted up exactly as moving
-hotels, and the traveller, from London to Pekin or Montreal,
-was not under the slightest necessity of leaving the train,
-unless he chose to do so, from end to end of the journey.</p>
-
-<p>One more advantage of railway travelling in the twenty-first
-century may be mentioned here. It was entirely free,
-both for passengers and baggage. Easy and rapid transit
-being considered an absolute necessity of a high state of
-civilisation, just as armies and navies had once been thought
-to be, every self-supporting person paid a small travelling tax,
-in return for which he or she was entitled to the freedom of all
-the lines in the area of the Federation.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to this tax, the municipality of every city or
-town through which the lines passed, set apart a portion of
-their rent-tax for the maintenance of the railways, in return
-for the advantages they derived from them.</p>
-
-<p>Under this reasonable condition of affairs, therefore, all that
-an intending traveller had to do was to signify the date of his
-departure and his destination to the superintendent of the
-nearest station, and send his heavier baggage on in advance by
-one of the trains devoted to the carriage of freight. A place
-was then allotted to him, and all he had to do was to go and
-take possession of it.</p>
-
-<p>The Continental Station was comfortably full of passengers
-when Olga and Serge reached it, about fifteen minutes before
-the departure of the Eastern express; for people were leaving
-the Capital of the World in thousands just then, to spend
-Christmas and New Year with friends in the other cities of
-Europe, and especially to attend the great Winter Festival that
-was held every year in St. Petersburg in celebration of the
-anniversary of Russian freedom.</p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes before the express started, they ascended in
-one of the lifts to the platform, and went to find their seats.
-As they walked along the train, Olga suddenly stopped and
-said, almost with a gasp&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Look, Serge! There are two Aerians, and one of them
-is”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” said Serge, almost roughly. “I didn’t know you
-had any acquaintances among the Masters of the World.”</p>
-
-<p>The son of the Romanoffs hated the very name of the
-Aerians, so bitterly that even the mere suspicion that his
-idolised betrothed should have so much as spoken to one of
-them was enough to rouse his anger.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I haven’t,” she replied quietly, ignoring the sudden
-change in his manner; “but both you and I have very good
-reason for wishing to make their distinguished acquaintance.
-I recognise one of these because he sat beside Alan Arnold, the
-President of the Council, in St. Paul’s, when they were foolish
-enough to relinquish the throne of the world in obedience to
-an old man’s whim.</p>
-
-<p>“The taller of the two standing there by the pillar is the
-younger counterpart of the President, and if his looks don’t
-belie him, he can be no one but the son of Alan Arnold, and
-therefore the future ruler of Aeria, and the present or future
-possessor of the Great Secret. Do you see now why it is
-necessary that we should&mdash;well, I will say, make friends of
-those two handsome lads?”</p>
-
-<p>Olga spoke rapidly and in Russian, a tongue then scarcely
-ever heard and very little understood even among educated
-people, who, whatever their nationality, made English their
-language of general intercourse. The words “handsome lads”
-had grated harshly upon Serge’s ears, but he saw the force of
-Olga’s question at once, and strove hard to stifle the waking
-demon of jealousy that had been roused more by her tone and
-the quick bright flush on her cheek than by her words, as he
-answered&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive me, darling, for speaking roughly! Their hundred
-years of peace have not tamed my Russian blood enough to let
-me look upon my enemies without anger. Of course, you are
-right; and if they are going by the express, as they seem to
-be, we should be friendly enough by the time we reach
-Königsberg.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I am glad you agree with me,” said Olga, “for the destinies
-of the world may turn on the events of the next few hours.
-Ah, the Fates are kind! Look! There is Alderman<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> Heatherstone
-talking to them. I suppose he has come to see them off,
-for no doubt they have been the guests of the City during
-the Festival. Come, he will very soon make us known to
-each other.”</p>
-
-<p>A couple of minutes later the Alderman, who had been an
-old friend of Paul Ivanitch, the famous sculptor, had cordially
-greeted them and introduced them to the two Aerians, whose
-names he gave as Alan Arnoldson, the son of the President of
-the late Supreme Council, and Alexis Masarov, a descendant
-of the Alexis Mazanoff who had played such a conspicuous
-part in the war of the Terror. They were just starting on the
-tour of the world, and were bound for St. Petersburg to witness
-the Winter Festival.</p>
-
-<p>Olga had been more than justified in speaking of them as
-she had done. Both in face and form, they were the very ideal
-of youthful manhood. Both of them stood over six feet in the
-long, soft, white leather boots which rose above their knees,
-meeting their close-fitting, grey tunics of silk-embroidered
-cloth, confined at the waist by belts curiously fashioned of
-flat links of several different metals, and fastened in front by
-heavy buckles of gold studded with great, flashing gems.</p>
-
-<p>From their broad shoulders hung travelling-cloaks of fine,
-blue cloth, lined with silver fur and kept in place across the
-breast by silver chains and clasps of a strange, blue metal,
-whose lustre seemed to come from within like that of a
-diamond or a sapphire.</p>
-
-<p>On their heads they wore no other covering than their
-own thick, curling hair, which they wore somewhat in the
-picturesque style of the fourteenth century, and a plain, broad
-band of the gleaming blue metal, from which rose above the
-temples a pair of marvellously-chased, golden wings about four
-inches high&mdash;the insignia of the Empire of the Air, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-sign which distinguished the Aerians from all the other peoples
-of the earth.</p>
-
-<p>As Olga shook hands with Alan, she looked up into his
-dark-blue eyes, with a glance such as he had never received
-from a woman before&mdash;a glance in which he seemed instinctively
-to read at once love and hate, frank admiration and
-equally undisguised defiance. Their eyes held each other
-for a moment of mutual fascination which neither could
-resist, and then the dark-fringed lids fell over hers, and a
-faint flush rose to her cheeks as she replied to his words of
-salutation&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Surely the pleasure will rather be on our side, with
-travelling companions from the other world! For my own
-part, I seem to remind myself somewhat of one of the
-daughters of men whom the Sons of the Gods”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She stopped short in the middle of her daring speech, and
-looked up at him again as much as to say&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“So much for the present. Let the Fates finish it!”
-and then, appearing to correct <a id="Ref_40"></a>herself, she went on, with a
-half-saucy, half-deprecating smile on her dangerously-mobile
-lips&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“You know what I mean; not exactly that, but something
-of the sort.”</p>
-
-<p>“More true, I fancy, of the daughter of men than of the
-supposed Sons of the Gods,” retorted Alan, with a laugh, half
-startled by her words, and wholly charmed by the indescribable
-fascination of the way in which she said them; “for the
-daughters of men were so fair that the Sons of the Gods lost
-heaven itself for their sakes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Even so!” said Olga, looking him full in the eyes, and at
-that moment the signal sounded for them to take their places
-in the cars.</p>
-
-<p>A couple of minutes after they had taken their seats, the
-train drew out of the station with an imperceptible, gliding
-motion, so smooth and frictionless that it seemed rather as
-though the people standing on the platform were sliding backwards
-than that the train was moving forward. The speed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-increased rapidly, but so evenly that, almost before they
-were well aware of it, the passengers were flying over the
-snow-covered landscape, under the bright, heatless sun and
-pale, steel-blue sky of a perfect winter’s morning, at a
-hundred miles an hour, the speed ever increasing as they sped
-onward.</p>
-
-<p>The line followed the general direction of the present route
-to Dover, which was reached in about half an hour. Without
-pausing for a moment in its rapid flight, the express swept out
-from the land over the Channel Bridge, which spanned the
-Straits from Dover to Calais at a height of 200 feet above the
-water.</p>
-
-<p>Travelling at a speed of three miles a minute, seven minutes
-sufficed for the express to leap, as it were, from land to land.
-As they swept along in mid-air over the waves, Olga pointed
-down to them and said to Alan, who was sitting in the armchair
-next her own&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Imagine the time when people had to take a couple of
-hours getting across here in a little, dirty, smoky steamboat,
-mingling their sorrows and their sea-sickness in one common
-misery! I really think this Channel Bridge is worthy even of
-your admiration. Come now, you have not admired anything
-yet”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me,” said Alan, with a look and a laugh that set
-Serge’s teeth gritting against each other, and brought the ready
-blood to Olga’s cheeks; “on the contrary, I have been absorbed
-in admiration ever since we started.”</p>
-
-<p>“But not apparently of our engineering triumphs,” replied
-Olga frankly, taking the compliment to herself, and seeming in
-no way displeased with it. “It would seem that the polite art
-of flattery is studied to some purpose in Aeria.”</p>
-
-<p>“There you are quite wrong,” returned Alan, still speaking
-in the same half-jocular, half-serious vein. “Before all things,
-we Aerians are taught to tell the absolute truth under all
-circumstances, no matter whether it pleases or offends; so, you
-see, what is usually known as flattery could hardly be one of
-our arts, since, as often as not, it is a lie told in the guise of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-truth, for the sake of serving some hidden and perhaps dishonest
-end.”</p>
-
-<p>The blow so unconsciously delivered struck straight home,
-and the flush died from Olga’s cheek, leaving her for the moment
-so white that her companion anxiously asked if she was unwell.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she said, recovering her self-possession under the
-impulse of sudden anger at the weakness she had betrayed.
-“It is nothing. This is the first time for a year or so that I
-have travelled by one of these very fast trains, and the speed
-made me a little giddy just for the instant. I am quite well,
-really, so please go on.</p>
-
-<p>“You know, that wonderful fairyland of yours is a subject
-of everlasting interest and curiosity to us poor outsiders who
-are denied a glimpse of its glories, and it is so very rarely that
-one of us enjoys the privilege that is mine just now, that I hope
-you will indulge my feminine curiosity as far as your good
-nature is able to temper your reserve.”</p>
-
-<p>As she uttered her request, Alan’s smiling face suddenly
-became grave almost to sternness. The laughing light died out
-of his eyes, and she saw them darken in a fashion that at once
-convinced her that she had begun by making a serious mistake.</p>
-
-<p>He looked up at her, with a shadow in his eyes and a slight
-frown on his brow. He spoke slowly and steadily, but with a
-manifest reluctance which he seemed to take little or no
-trouble to conceal.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry that you have asked me to talk on what is a
-forbidden subject to every Aerian, save when he is speaking with
-one of his own nation. I see you have been looking at these
-two golden wings on the band round my head. I will tell you
-what they mean, and then you will understand why I cannot
-say all that I know you would like me to say.</p>
-
-<p>“They are to us what the toga virilis was to the Romans of
-old, the insignia of manhood and responsibility. When a youth
-of Aeria reaches the age of twenty he is entitled to wear these
-wings as a sign that he is invested with all the rights and duties
-of a citizen of the nation which has conquered and commands
-the Empire of the Air.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“One of these duties is, that in all the more serious relations
-of life he shall remain apart from all the peoples of the world
-save his own, and shall say nothing that will do anything to
-lift the veil which it has pleased our forefathers in their wisdom
-to draw round the realm of Aeria. Before we assume the
-citizenship of which these wings are the symbol we never visit
-the outside world save to make air voyages, for the purpose of
-learning the physical facts of the earth’s shape and the
-geography of land and sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Immediately after we have assumed it we do as Alexis and
-I are now doing&mdash;travel for a year or so through the different
-countries of the outside world, in order to get our knowledge of
-men and things as they exist beyond the limits of our own
-country.</p>
-
-<p>“The fact that we do so,&mdash;under a pledge solemnly and
-publicly given, of never revealing anything which could lead
-even to a possibility of other peoples of the earth overtaking us
-in the progress which we have made in the arts and sciences,&mdash;is
-my excuse for refusing to tell you what your very natural
-curiosity has asked.”</p>
-
-<p>Olga saw instantly that she had struck a false note, and
-was not slow to make good her mistake. She laid her hand
-upon his arm, with that pretty gesture which Serge knew so
-well, and watched now with much bitter feelings, and said, in a
-tone that betrayed no trace of the consuming passion within
-her&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive me! Of course, you will see that I did not know
-I was trenching on forbidden grounds. I can well understand
-why such secrets as yours must be, should be kept. You have
-been masters of the world for more than a century, and even
-now, although you have formally abdicated the throne of the
-world, it would be absurd to deny that you still hold the destinies
-of humanity in your hands.</p>
-
-<p>“The secrets which guard so tremendous a power as that
-may well be religiously kept and held more sacred than
-anything else on earth. Still, you have mistaken me if you
-thought I asked for any of these. All I really wanted was, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-you should tell me something that would give me just a
-glimpse of what human life is like in that enchanted land of
-yours”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Alan laid his hands upon hers, which was still resting
-upon his arm, and interrupted her even more earnestly than
-before.</p>
-
-<p>“Even that I cannot tell you. With us, the man who gives
-a pledge and breaks it, even in the spirit though not in the
-letter, is not considered worthy to live, and therefore I must be
-silent.”</p>
-
-<p>Instead of answering with her lips, Olga turned her hand
-palm upwards, and clasped his with a pressure which he returned
-before he very well knew what he was doing; and while the
-magic of her clasp was still stealing along his nerves, Serge
-broke in, with a harsh ring in his voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“But pardon me for interrupting what seems a very pleasant
-conversation with my&mdash;my sister, I should like to ask, with all
-due deference to the infinitely superior wisdom of the rulers of
-Aeria, whether it is not rather a risky thing for you to travel
-thus about the world, possessing secrets which any man or
-woman would almost be willing to die even to know for a few
-minutes, when, after all, you are but human even as the rest of
-humanity are?</p>
-
-<p>“You, for instance, are only two among millions; how
-would you protect yourselves against the superior force
-of numbers? Supposing you were taken unawares under
-circumstances which make your superior knowledge unavailing.
-You know, human nature is the same yesterday,
-to-day, and to-morrow, despite the superficial varnish of
-civilisation.</p>
-
-<p>“The passions of men are only curbed, not dead. There
-may be men on earth to-day who, to gain such knowledge as you
-possess, would even resort to the tortures used by the Inquisition
-in the sixteenth century. Suppose you found yourself in the
-power of such men as that, what then? Would you still preserve
-your secret intact, do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>Alan heard him to the end without moving a muscle of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-face, and without even withdrawing his hand from Olga’s clasp.
-But at the last sentence he snatched it suddenly away, half-turned
-in his seat, and faced him. Then, looking him straight
-in the eyes, he said in a tone as cold and measured as
-might have been used by a judge sentencing a criminal to
-death&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“We do not fear anything of the sort, simply because each
-one of us holds the power of life and death in his hands. If
-you laid a hand on me now in anger, or with an intent to do me
-harm, you would be struck dead before you could raise a finger
-in your own defence.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think that we, who are as far in advance of you
-as you are in advance of the men of a hundred years ago, would
-trust ourselves amongst those who might be our enemies were
-we not amply protected against you? Tell me, have you ever
-read a book, written nearly two hundred years ago in the
-Victorian Age, called <cite>The Coming Race</cite>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Serge, thinking, as he spoke, of the possibilities
-contained in the secret will of Paul Romanoff, “I have read it,
-and so has Olga. What of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Alan quietly, without moving his eyes from
-those of Serge. “I had better tell you at once that we have
-realised, to all intents and purposes, the dream that Lytton
-dreamt when he wrote that book. I can tell you so much
-without breaking the pledge of which I have spoken. All that
-the Vril-Ya did in his dream we have accomplished in reality,
-and more than that.</p>
-
-<p>“Our empire is not bounded by the roofs of subterranean
-caverns, but only by the limits of the planet’s atmosphere.
-We can soar beyond the clouds and dive beneath the seas.
-We have realised what he called the Vril force as a sober,
-scientific fact; and if I thought that you, for instance, were
-my enemy, I could strike you dead without so much as
-laying a hand on you. And if a dozen like you tried to overcome
-me by superior brute force, they would all meet with the
-same fate.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid this sounds somewhat like boasting,” he continued<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-in a more gentle tone, and dropping his eyes to the floor
-of the car, “but the turn the conversation has taken obliged me
-to say what I have done. Suppose we give it another turn and
-change the subject. We have unintentionally got upon rather
-uncomfortable ground.”</p>
-
-<p>Serge and Olga were not slow to take the pointed hint, and
-<a id="Ref_46"></a>so the talk drifted into general and more harmless channels.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_060.jpg" width="350" height="58" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">A VISION FROM THE CLOUDS.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_a.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-A">AT Königsberg, which was reached in nine hours after
-leaving London, that is to say, soon after seven
-o’clock in the evening, the Eastern express divided:
-five of the cars went northward to St. Petersburg,
-carrying those passengers who were going to
-participate in the Winter Festival, while the other
-five which made up the train went on to Moscow and the East.</p>
-
-<p>During the twenty minutes’ stop at Berlin, Olga had found
-an opportunity of having a few words in private with Serge,
-and had succeeded in persuading him, much against his will, of
-the necessity of postponing their marriage, and therefore their
-visit to Moscow, for the execution of a daring and suddenly-conceived
-plan which she had thought out, but which she had
-then no time to explain to him.</p>
-
-<p>Serge, though very loath to postpone even for a day or two
-the consummation of his hopes and the hour which should make
-Olga irrevocably his, so far as human laws could bind her to him,
-was so far under the domination of her imperious will that, as
-soon as he saw that she had determined to have her own way,
-he yielded with the best grace he could.</p>
-
-<p>Olga chided him gently and yet earnestly for his outbreak
-of temper towards Alan, and told him plainly that, where such
-tremendous issues were concerned as those which were involved
-in the struggle which sooner or later they must wage with the
-Aerians, no personal considerations whatever could be permitted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-a moment’s serious thought. If she could sacrifice her
-own feelings, and disguise her hatred of the tyrants of the
-world under the mask of friendliness, for the sake of the
-ends to which both their lives were devoted, surely he, if
-he were at all worthy of her love, could so far trust her as to
-restrain the unreasoning jealousy of which he had already
-been guilty.</p>
-
-<p>Either, she told him, he must trust to her absolutely for the
-present, or he must take the management of affairs into his own
-hands; and, as she said in conclusion, he must find some
-influence stronger than hers in their dealings with him who
-would one day be the ruler of Aeria, and, therefore, the real
-master of the world, should it ever be possible to dispute the
-empire of Earth with the Aerians.</p>
-
-<p>From the influence which she exercised over himself, Serge
-knew only too well that he could not hope to rival her in this
-regard where a man was concerned, and so he perforce agreed
-to her proposal, and for the present left the conduct of affairs
-in her hands.</p>
-
-<p>A telephonic message was therefore sent from Königsberg
-to the friends who expected them at Vorobièvŏ, near Moscow,
-to tell them of the change in their plans; and when the train
-once more glided out over the frozen plains of the North, the
-four were once more seated together in the brilliantly-lighted
-car, which flashed like a meteor through the gathering darkness
-of the winter’s night.</p>
-
-<p>About half an hour after they had passed what had once
-been the jealously-guarded Russian frontier, a dazzling gleam of
-light suddenly blazed down from the black darkness overhead,
-and Olga, who was sitting by one of the windows of the car,
-bent forward and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Look there! What is that? There is a bright light shining
-down out of the clouds on the train.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan saw the flash across the window, and, without even
-troubling to look up at its source, said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I suppose that’ll be the air-ship that was ordered to
-meet us at St. Petersburg. You know, we usually have one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-them in attendance, when we trust ourselves alone among our
-possible enemies of the outer world.”</p>
-
-<p>The last sentence was spoken with a quiet irony, which
-brought home both to Olga and Serge the not very pleasant conviction
-that their previous conversation had by no means been
-forgotten. Serge, perhaps fearing to give utterance to his
-thoughts, remained silent, but Olga looked at Alan with a half-saucy
-smile, and said almost mockingly&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesties of Aeria may well esteem yourselves
-impregnable, while you have such a bodyguard as that at your
-beck and call. I suppose that air-ship would not have the
-slightest difficulty in blowing this train, and all it contains, off
-the face of the earth at a moment’s notice, if it had orders to
-do so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not the slightest,” said Alan quietly. “But in proof of the
-fact that it has no such hostile intentions, you shall, if you
-please, take a voyage beyond the clouds in it the day after to-morrow,
-from St. Petersburg.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” said Olga, her cheeks flushing and her eyes lighting
-up at the very idea of such an experience. “Do you really
-mean to say that you would permit a daughter of the earth, as
-I am told you call the women who have not the good fortune
-to be born in Aeria, to go on board one of those wonderful air-ships
-of yours, and taste the forbidden delights of spurning the
-earth and sharing, even for an hour, your Empire of the Air?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” replied Alan, with a laugh. “What harm
-would be done by taking you for a trip beyond the clouds?
-We are not so selfish as all that; and if the novel experience
-would give you any pleasure, we have a perfect right to ask you
-to enjoy it. Will you come?”</p>
-
-<p>“Surely there is scarcely any need for me to say ‘yes.’
-Why, do you know, I believe I would give five years of my life
-for as many hours on board that air-ship of yours,” said Olga;
-“and if you will do as you say, you will make me your debtor
-for ever. Indeed, how could a poor earth-dweller such as I am
-repay a favour like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, if only you were an Aerian, I should not have much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-difficulty in telling you how you could do that,” retorted Alan,
-with almost boyish candour. “As it is, I am afraid I must be
-satisfied for my reward with the pleasure of knowing that I
-have given you a pleasurable experience.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesty has put that so prettily, that it almost atones
-for the sense of hopeless inferiority which, I need hardly tell
-you, is just a trifle bitter to my feminine pride,” said Olga, in
-the same half-bantering tone she had used all along.</p>
-
-<p>Before a reply had risen to Alan’s lips, the conversation was
-interrupted by the air-ship suddenly swooping down from the
-clouds to the level of the windows of the train, which was now
-flying along over a wide, treeless plain at a speed of fully two
-hundred miles an hour.</p>
-
-<p>As the search-lights of the aerial vessel flashed along the
-windows of the cars, the blinds, which had been drawn down at
-nightfall, were sprung up again by the passengers, who were all
-eager to get a glimpse of one of the marvellous vessels which so
-rarely came within close view of the dwellers upon earth.</p>
-
-<p>The air-ship, on which all eyes were now bent with such
-intense curiosity, was a beautifully-proportioned vessel, built
-chiefly of some unknown metal, which shone with a brilliant,
-pale-blue lustre. Her hull was about two hundred feet from
-stem to stern, not counting a long, ramlike projection which
-stretched some twenty-five feet in front of the stem, with its
-point level with the keel, or rather, with the three keels,&mdash;the
-centre one shallow and the two others very deep,&mdash;which were
-obviously shaped so as to enable the craft either to stand
-upright on land or to sail upon the water if desired.</p>
-
-<p>From each of her sides spread out two great wings, not
-unlike palm-leaves in shape, measuring some hundred feet from
-point to point, and about twice the width of the vessel’s deck,
-which was, as nearly as could be judged, twenty feet amidships.</p>
-
-<p>These wings were made of some white, lustrous material,
-which shone with a somewhat more metallic sheen than silk
-would have done, and were divided into a vast number of
-sections by transverse ribs. These sections vibrated and
-undulated rhythmically from front to rear with enormous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-rapidity, and evidently not only sustained the vessel in the air,
-but also aided in her propulsion.</p>
-
-<p>Three seemingly solid discs, which glittered brilliantly in
-the light from the train, marked the positions of the air-ship’s
-propellers, of which one revolved on a shaft in a straight line
-with the centre of the deck, while the shafts of the other two
-were inclined outwards at a slight angle from the middle line.
-From the deck rose three slender, raking masts, apparently
-placed there for ornament rather than use, unless indeed they
-were employed for signalling purposes.</p>
-
-<p>The whole deck was covered completely from end to end by
-a curved roof of glass, and formed a spacious chamber pervaded
-by a soft, diffused light, the origin of which was invisible, and
-which showed about half a dozen figures clad in the graceful
-costume of the Aerians, and all wearing the headdress with
-golden wings. From under the domed, crystal roof projected
-ten long, slender guns,&mdash;two over the bows, two over the stern,
-and three over each side, at equal intervals.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the wonderful craft which swept down from the
-darkness of the wintry sky, in full view of the passengers in the
-cars, and lighted up the snowy landscape for three or four miles
-ahead and astern with the dazzling rays of her two search-lights.</p>
-
-<p>Although, as has been said, the express was moving at quite
-two hundred miles an hour, the air-ship swept up alongside it
-with as much apparent ease as though it had been stationary.
-Amid the murmurs of irrepressible admiration which greeted
-it from the passengers, it glided smoothly nearer and nearer,
-until the side of one of its wings was within ten feet of the car
-windows.</p>
-
-<p>Alan and Alexis stood up and saluted their comrades on the
-deck, then a few rapid, unintelligible signals made with the hand
-passed between them, a parting salute was waved from the air-ship
-to the express; and then, with a speed that seemed to rival
-that of the lightning-bolt, the cruiser of the air darted forward
-and upward, and in ten seconds was lost beyond the clouds.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now that you have seen one of our aerial fleet at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-close quarters,” said Alan, turning to Olga and Serge, “what do
-you think of her?”</p>
-
-<p>“A miracle!” they both exclaimed in one breath; and then
-Olga went on, her voice trembling with an irresistible agitation&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I can hardly believe that such a marvel is the creation of
-merely human genius. There is something appalling in the
-very idea of the awful power lying in the hands of those who
-can create and command such a vessel as that. You Aerians
-may well look down on us poor earth-dwellers, for truly you
-have made yourselves as gods.”</p>
-
-<p>She spoke earnestly, and for once with absolute honesty, for
-the vision of the air-ship had awed her completely for the time
-being. Alan appeared for the moment as a god in her eyes,
-until she saw his lips curve in a very human smile, and heard
-his voice say, without the slightest assumption of superiority in
-its tone&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“No, not as gods; but only as men who have developed under
-the most favourable circumstances possible, and who have known
-how to make the best of their advantages.”</p>
-
-<p>“God or man,” said Olga in her soul, while her lips were
-smiling acknowledgment of his modesty, “by this time to-morrow
-you shall be my slave, and I will be mistress both of
-you and your air-ship!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_066.jpg" width="350" height="61" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">DEED AND DREAM.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_w.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-W">WHEN Olga went to her room that night in St.
-Petersburg, instead of going to bed, she unpacked
-from her valise a series of articles which seemed
-strange possessions for a young girl of not quite
-seventeen to travel with on her wedding journey.</p>
-
-<p>First came a tiny spirit furnace from which, by the aid of
-an arrangement something like the modern blow-pipe, an intense
-heat could be obtained. Then a delicate pair of scales, a
-glass pestle and mortar, and a couple of glass liquid-measures,
-and lastly, half a dozen little phials filled with variously-coloured
-liquids, and as many little packets of powders, that
-looked like herbs ground very finely.</p>
-
-<p>When she had placed these out on the table, after having
-carefully locked the door of her room, and seen that the
-windows were completely shuttered and curtained, she drew
-from the bosom of her dress a gold chain, at the end of which
-was fastened, together with the key of the secret recess in the
-wall of the turret chamber of the house at Hampstead, a small
-bag of silk, out of which she took a little roll of parchment,&mdash;the
-slip which she had abstracted from Paul Romanoff’s secret will
-after she had persuaded Serge, with her false kisses, to leave her
-alone for a while.</p>
-
-<p>She seated herself at the table, drew the electric reading-lamp
-which stood on it close to her, laid the slip down in front
-of her, keeping it unrolled by means of a couple of little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-weights, and studied it intently for several minutes. Then
-she made a series of calculations on another sheet of paper,
-and compared the result carefully with some figures on the
-slip.</p>
-
-<p>She made them three times over before she was satisfied
-that they were absolutely correct, and then, with all the care
-and deliberation of a chemical analyst performing a delicate
-and important experiment, she proceeded to weigh out tiny
-quantities of the powders, and to mix them very carefully in
-the little glass mortar. This done, she emptied the mixture
-into a little platinum crucible, which she placed on the furnace,
-at the same time applying a gentle heat.</p>
-
-<p>Then she turned her attention to the phials, measuring off
-quantities of their contents with the most scrupulous exactitude,
-mixing them two and two, and adding this mixture to a
-third, and so on, in a certain order which was evidently prearranged,
-as she constantly referred to the slip of parchment
-and her own calculations as she was mixing them.</p>
-
-<p>By the time she finished this part of her work, she had
-obtained from the various coloured liquids one perfectly colourless
-and odourless, of a specific gravity apparently considerably
-in excess of that of water, although, at the same time, it was
-extremely mobile and refractive. She held it up to the light,
-looking at it with her eyelids somewhat screwed up, and with
-a cruel smile on her pretty lips.</p>
-
-<p>“So far, so good,” she said in a voice little higher than a
-whisper. “The lives of fifty strong men in that couple of
-ounces of harmless looking fluid! If anyone could see me just
-now, I fancy they would take me rather for a witch or a
-poisoner of the fifteenth century than for a girl of the twenty-first.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, my friend Alan, your mysterious power may kill
-more quickly, but not more surely than this; and this, too,
-will take a man out of the world so easily that not even he
-himself will know that he is going,&mdash;not even when he sinks into
-the sleep from which he will awake on the other side of the
-shadows.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“So much for the bodies of our enemies, and now for their
-souls! I don’t want to kill wholesale, at least, not just yet;
-and as for you, my Alan, you are far too splendid, too glorious
-a man to be killed, to say nothing of your being so much more
-useful alive. No, I have a very much pleasanter fate in store
-for you.”</p>
-
-<p>Just then a little cloud as of incense smoke began to rise
-from the crucible in which were the mixed powders, and a
-faint, pleasant perfume began to diffuse itself. She stopped
-her soliloquy, measured off exactly half of the liquid, and
-patiently poured it, drop by drop, into the crucible, at the
-same time gradually increasing the heat.</p>
-
-<p>The vapour gradually disappeared, and the perfume died
-away. When she had poured in the last drop, she began
-slowly stirring the mixture with a glass rod. It gradually
-assumed the consistency of thick syrup, and after stirring it
-for three minutes by her watch, which lay on the table beside
-her, she extinguished the electric lamp and waited.</p>
-
-<p>In a few seconds a pale, orange-coloured flame appeared
-hovering over the crucible. As its ghostly light fell upon her
-anxious features, she caught sight of herself in a mirror let into
-the wall on the opposite side of the table. She started back in
-her chair with an irrepressible shudder. For the first time in
-her life she saw herself as she really was.</p>
-
-<p>The weird, unearthly light of the flame changed the clear,
-pale olive of her skin into a sallow red, and cast what looked
-like a mist of vapour tinged with blood across the dark lustre
-of her dusky eyes. It seemed as though the light that she
-had called forth from the darkness had melted the beautiful
-mask which hid her inner self from the eyes of men, and
-revealed her naked soul incarnate in the evil shape that should
-have belonged to it.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the flame vanished, she turned on the switch of
-the lamp, placed a platinum cover over the crucible with a
-pair of light, curved tongs, and, with a quick half-turn, screwed
-it hermetically down. Then she turned the heat of the furnace
-on to the full, rose from her chair, and stretched herself, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-her linked hands above her head, till her lithe, girlish form was
-drawn up to its full height in front of the mirror.</p>
-
-<p>She looked dreamily from under her half-closed lids at
-the perfect picture presented by the reflection, and then her
-tightly-closed lips melted into a smile, and she said softly to
-herself&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, that is a different sort of picture. I wonder what
-Alan would have thought if he could have seen <em>that</em> one?
-I don’t think I should have taken my trip in the air-ship to-morrow
-if he had done. Well, I have seen myself as I am&mdash;what
-four generations of inherited hate and longing for revenge
-have made me.</p>
-
-<p>“In the light of that horrible flame I might have sat for the
-portrait of the lost soul of Lucrezia Borghia. Ah, well, if mine
-is lost, it shall be lost for something worth the exchange.
-‘Better to rule in Hell than serve in Heaven,’ as old Milton
-said, and after all&mdash;who knows?</p>
-
-<p>“Bah! that is enough of dreaming, when the time for doing
-is so near. I must get some sleep to-night, or my eyes will
-have lost some of their brightness by to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, she busied herself putting away her phials, and
-powders, and apparatus. The half of the colourless liquid she
-had left she carefully decanted into a tiny flask, over the
-stopper of which she screwed a silver cap that had a little ring
-on the top, and this she hung on the chain round her neck.
-She replaced the slip of parchment in its silken bag, and carefully
-burnt the paper on which she had made her calculations.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the bottom of the crucible was glowing red
-hot. She noted the time that had elapsed since she had
-screwed the cap down, waited five minutes longer, and then
-extinguished the furnace, undressed, and got into bed, and in
-half an hour was sleeping as quietly as a little child. She had
-set the chime of her repeating watch to sound at six, and hung
-the watch close above her head.</p>
-
-<p>Calm as her sleep was at first, it was by no means dreamless,
-and her dreams were well fitted to be those of a guilty soul
-slumbering after a work of death.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She saw herself standing with Alan on the glass-domed deck
-of the air-ship, beneath the light of a clear, white moon sailing
-high in the heavens, and a host of brilliant stars glittering out
-of the deep-blue depths beyond it. Far below them lay an
-unbroken cloud-sea of dazzling whiteness, which stretched away
-into the infinite distance on all sides, until it seemed to blend
-with the moonlight and melt into the sky.</p>
-
-<p>Then the scene changed, and the air-ship swept downwards
-in a wide, spiral curve, and plunged through the noiseless
-billows of the shadowy sea. As she did so, a fearful chorus of
-sounds rose up from the earth below.</p>
-
-<p>The moonlight and starlight were gone, and in their place
-the lurid glare of burning cities and blazing forests cast a fearful
-radiance up through the great eddying waves of smoke, and
-reflected itself on the under surface of the clouds; now the air-ship
-swept hither and thither with bewildering rapidity, like
-the incarnation of some fearful spirit of destruction. Alan had
-vanished, and she was giving orders rapidly, and men were
-working the long, slender guns in a grim silence that contrasted
-weirdly with the horrible din that rose from the earth.</p>
-
-<p>She saw neither smoke nor flame from the guns, nor heard
-any sound as they were discharged, but every time she raised
-her hand, the motion was followed within a few seconds by a
-shaking of the atmosphere, a dull roar from the earth, and the
-outburst of vast, dazzling masses of flame, before which the
-blaze of the conflagration paled.</p>
-
-<p>She looked down with fierce exultation upon the scene of
-carnage and destruction; and <a id="Ref_57"></a>as she gazed upon it, the fires
-died away, the roar of the explosions began to sound like
-echoes in the distance, and when the landscape of her dreamland
-took definite shape again, the air-ship was hovering over
-a vast, oval valley, walled in by mighty mountain masses, surmounted
-by towering peaks, on some of which crests of everlasting
-snow and ice shone undissolved in the rays of the
-tropical sun.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_57" class="figcenter" style="width: 425px;">
-<img src="images/i_072.jpg" width="425" height="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">As she gazed upon it, the Fires died away.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_57">Page 57</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The valley itself was of such incomparable and fairy-like
-beauty, that it seemed to belong rather to the realm of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-imagination than to the world of reality. A great lake lay in
-the centre, its emerald shores lined with groves of palms and
-orange-trees, and fringed with verdant islets spangled with
-many coloured flowers.</p>
-
-<p>On the northern shore of the lake lay a splendid city of
-marble palaces, surrounded by shady gardens, and divided from
-each other by broad, straight streets, smooth as ivory and spotless
-as snow, and lined with double rows of wide-spreading
-trees, which cast a pleasant shade along their sides.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of a vast square, in the centre of the city,
-rose an immense building of marble of perfect whiteness,
-surmounted by a great golden dome, which in turn was
-crowned by the silver shape of a woman with great spreading
-wings, which blazed and scintillated in the sunlight as though
-they had been fashioned of sheets of crystal, pure and translucent
-as diamonds.</p>
-
-<p>All over the valley, villas and palaces of marble were
-scattered in cool ravines and on shaded, wooded slopes; and as
-far as her eye could reach, vast expanses of garden land,
-emerald pastures, and golden corn fields stretched away over
-hill and vale, until the most remote were met by the cool, dark
-forests which clothed the middle slopes of the all-encircling
-mountains, and themselves gave place higher up to dark,
-frowning precipices, vast walls of living rock, rising thousands
-of feet sheer upwards, and ending in the mighty peaks
-which stood like eternal sentinels guarding this enchanted
-realm.</p>
-
-<p>If she had had her will, she would have gazed for ever upon
-this delightful scene; but the spirit of the dream was not to be
-controlled, and it faded from her sight just as the picture of
-death and desolation had done. As it faded away, Alan, who
-had now come back to her side, laid his hand upon her shoulder,
-and, looking at her with mournful eyes, said wearily&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“That was your first and last glimpse of heaven. Now
-comes the judgment!”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke, the air-ship soared upwards again, and was
-instantly enveloped in a cloud of impenetrable darkness. She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-sped on and on in utter silence through the gloom, which was
-so dense that it seemed to cast the rays of the ship’s electric
-lights back upon her as she floated amidst it. Presently the
-deathlike silence was broken by a low, weird sound, that
-seemed like a wail of universal agony rising up from the earth
-beneath.</p>
-
-<p>Then, far ahead and high up in the sky, appeared a faint
-light, which grew and brightened until the darkness melted
-away before it; and Olga saw the air-ship floating near enough
-to the earth for her to see that all its vegetation was withered
-and yellow, and the beds of its streams almost dry, with only
-little, thin rivulets trickling sluggishly along them.</p>
-
-<p>Millions of people seemed wandering listlessly and aimlessly
-about the streets of the cities and the parched fields of the
-open country, ever and anon stretching their hands as though
-in appeal up to the dark, moonless sky, in which the fearful
-shape of light and fiery mist was growing every moment
-brighter and vaster.</p>
-
-<p>It grew and grew until it arched half the horizon with its
-tremendous curve; and then out of the midst of it came a
-huge, dazzling globe of fire, from the rim of which shot forth
-great flames of every colour, some of which seemed to descend
-to the surface of the earth like long fiery tongues that licked up
-the seething lakes in wreathing clouds of steam, which hissed
-and roared as they rose like ascending cataracts.</p>
-
-<p>She looked down between them at the earth. The myriads
-of figures were there still, but now they lay prone and lifeless
-on the ground, as though the last agony of mankind were past.
-The light of the blazing globe grew more and more dazzling,
-and the heat more and more intense. The speed of the air-ship
-slackened visibly, although the wings and propellers were
-working at their utmost speed, and it was falling rapidly, as
-though there was no longer any air to support it.</p>
-
-<p>She gasped for breath in the choking, burning atmosphere
-of the deck chamber, and then a swift, vivid wave of light
-seemed to sweep through her brain, and she woke with a
-choking gasp of terror, with the chimes of her watch ringing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-sweetly in her ears, telling her that the vision had been but a
-dream of a night that had passed.</p>
-
-<p>Wide awake in an instant, she got out of bed and turned
-on the electric lamp. As the room had been perfectly warmed
-all night by the electric conduction-stoves, which were then
-in almost universal use, she only stopped to throw a fur-lined
-cloak round her shoulders before she went to remove the cap
-of the crucible.</p>
-
-<p>She peered anxiously into the vessel, and saw about two
-fluid ounces of a dark, glittering liquid, from the surface of
-which the light of the lamp was reflected as though from a
-mirror. With hands that trembled slightly, in spite of the
-great effort she made to keep her nerves in check, she poured
-the precious fluid into one of the glass measures that she had
-used the night before.</p>
-
-<p>Seen through the glass, its colour was a deep, brilliant blue,
-and, like the white liquid first prepared, shone as though with
-an inherent, light-giving power of its own. She held it up
-admiringly to the light, and said to herself, with the same cruel
-smile that had curved her lips when she had contemplated the
-other fluid&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“How beautiful it is! It might be made of sapphires
-dissolved in some potent essence. In reality, it is an elixir
-capable of dissolving the souls of men. Ah, my proud Masters
-of the World, we shall soon see how much your boasted powers
-avail you against this and a woman’s wit and hatred!</p>
-
-<p>“And you, my splendid Alan, before to-morrow night you
-shall be at my feet! Two drops of this, and that proud, strong
-soul of yours shall melt away like a snowflake under warm
-rain, and you shall be my slave and do my bidding, and never
-know that you are not as free as you are now.</p>
-
-<p>“The days have gone by when men sought the Elixir of Life,
-but Paul Romanoff sought and found the Elixir of Death,&mdash;death
-of the body or of the soul, as the possessor of it shall will; and he
-is gone, and I, alone of all the children of men, possess it!”<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
-<p>She set the measure down on the table, and took out of
-her valise a similar little flask to the one which held the white
-liquid. In this she carefully poured the contents of the
-measure, screwed the cap on as before, and hung it with the
-other on the chain round her neck. Then, woman-like, she
-turned to the mirror, threw back her cloak a little, and gazed
-at the reflection of the two flasks, which shone like two great
-gems upon her white skin.</p>
-
-<p>“There is such a necklace as woman never wore before,
-since woman first delighted in gems,&mdash;a necklace that all the
-jewels in the world could not buy. How pretty they look!”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, she turned away from the mirror and carefully
-put away all traces of the work she had been engaged in, then
-she threw off her cloak and turned the lamp out and got into
-bed again, to wait until the attendant called her at eight
-o’clock as she had directed.</p>
-
-<p>She did not go to sleep again, but lay with wide-open eyes
-looking at the darkness, and conjuring out of it visions of love
-and war, and the world-wide empire which she believed to be
-now almost within her grasp. In all these visions, two figures
-stood out prominently&mdash;those of Serge and Alan, her lover
-that had been and the lover that was to be,&mdash;if only the elixir
-did its work as its discoverer had said it would.</p>
-
-<p>As such thoughts as these passed through her brain, a new
-and perhaps a nobler conception of her mission of revenge
-took possession of her. In the past, Natasha had won the love
-of the man whose genius had made possible, nay, irresistible,
-the triumph of that revolution which had subverted the throne
-of her ancestors, and sent the last of the Tsars of Russia to die
-like a felon in chains amidst the snows of Siberia.</p>
-
-<p>What more magnificent vengeance could she, the last
-surviving daughter of the Romanoffs, win than the enslavement
-of the man descended not only from Natasha and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-Richard Arnold, but also from that Alan Tremayne whose
-name he bore, and who, as first President of the Anglo-Saxon
-Federation, had ensured the victory of the Western races over
-the Eastern?</p>
-
-<p>The empire of freedom and peace, which Richard Arnold
-had won for Natasha’s sake, this son of the line of Natas
-should convert, at her bidding, into an empire such as she
-longed to rule over,&mdash;an empire in which men should be her
-slaves and women her handmaidens. For her sake the wave
-of Destiny should flow back again; she would be the Semiramis
-of a new despotism.</p>
-
-<p>What was the freedom or the happiness of the mass of
-mankind to her? If she could raise herself above them, and
-put her foot upon their necks, why should she not do so? By
-force the leaders of the Terror had overthrown the despotisms
-of the Old World; why should not she employ the self-same
-force to seat herself, with the man she loved in spite of
-all her hereditary hatred, upon the throne of the world, and
-reign with him in that glorious land whose beauties had been
-revealed to her in the vision which surely had been something
-more than a dream?</p>
-
-<p>Thus thinking and dreaming, and illumining the darkness
-with her own visions of glories to come, she lay in a kind of
-ecstasy, until a knock at the door warned her that the time
-for dreaming had passed and the hour for action had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>A brief half-hour sufficed for her toilet, and she entered
-the room of the hotel, in which Serge was awaiting her, dressed
-to perfection in her plain, clinging robe of royal purple, and
-self-composed as though she had passed the night in the most
-innocent and dreamless of slumbers. She submitted to his
-greeting kiss with as good a grace as possible, and yet with an
-inward shrinking which almost amounted to loathing, born of
-the visions which were still floating in her mind.</p>
-
-<p>She shuddered almost invisibly as he released her from his
-embrace, and then the bright blood rose to her cheeks, and a
-sudden light shone in her eyes, as the thought possessed her, that
-not many hours would pass before a far nobler lover would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-take her in his arms, and would press sweeter kisses upon her
-lips,&mdash;the lips which had sworn fealty and devotion to the
-enemies of his race.</p>
-
-<p>Serge, with the true egotism of the lover, took the blush to
-himself, and said, with a laugh of boyish frankness&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Travelling and Russian air seem to agree with your
-Majesty. Evidently you have slept well your first night on
-Russian soil. I was half afraid that what happened yesterday,
-and your conversation with that golden-winged braggart from
-Aeria, would have sufficiently disturbed you to give you a more
-or less sleepless night, but you look as fresh and as lovely as
-though you had slept in the most perfect peace at home.”</p>
-
-<p>The anger that these unthinking words awoke in her soul,
-brought back the bright flush to Olga’s cheeks and the light
-into her eyes, and again Serge mistook the sign, as indeed he
-might well have done; and so he entirely mistook the meaning
-of her words when she replied, with a laugh, of the true
-significance of which he had not the remotest conception&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“On the contrary, how was it possible that I could have
-anything but the sweetest sleep and the most pleasant dreams,
-after such a delightful journey and the making of such pleasant
-acquaintances? Do you not think the Fates have favoured us
-beyond our wildest expectations, in thus bringing our enemies
-so unconsciously across our path at the very outset of our
-campaign against them?</p>
-
-<p>“But really, these Aerians are delightful fellows. No,
-don’t frown at me like that, because you know as well as I
-do, that in that chivalrous good-nature of theirs lies our best
-hope of success.”</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke she went up to him, and laid her two hands
-upon his shoulder, and went on looking up into his eyes with
-a seductive softness in hers.</p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid I made you terribly jealous yesterday; but
-really, Serge, you must remember that in diplomacy, and
-diplomacy alone, lies our only chance of advantage in the
-circumstances which the kindly Fates appear to have specially
-created for our benefit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The time for you to act will come later on, and when it
-comes, I know you will acquit yourself like the true Romanoff
-that you are; but for the present&mdash;well, you know these
-Aerians are men, and where diplomacy alone is in the question,
-it is better that a woman should deal with them. You will
-trust me for the present,&mdash;won’t you, Serge?”</p>
-
-<p>For all answer, he took her face between his hands, put her
-head back, and kissed her, saying as he released her&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, darling; I will trust you not only now, but for ever.
-You are wiser than I am in these things. Do as you please;
-I will obey.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke, the door opened, and an attendant came in
-with two little cups of coffee on a silver salver. He placed it
-on the table, told them that breakfast would be ready for them
-in the morning-room in ten minutes, and retired. As they
-sipped their coffee, Olga said to Serge&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Now, we shall meet our enemies at breakfast, and I want
-you to be a great deal more cordial and friendly than you
-were yesterday. Our own feelings concern ourselves alone,
-but in our outward conduct we owe something to the sacred
-cause which we both have at heart. You can imagine how
-great a sacrifice I am making in my relations with those whom
-I have been taught to hate from my cradle.</p>
-
-<p>“I can see as well as you do, perhaps better, that this
-future ruler of Aeria admires me in his own boyish way. If I
-can bring myself to appear complaisant, surely it is not too
-much to ask you to look upon it with indifference, or even
-with interest,&mdash;a brotherly interest, you know; for you must
-remember that he knows me only as your sister.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, I want you to ask them to come and have breakfast
-with us at our table, and to exert yourself to appear agreeable
-to them, even as I shall; and above all things, promise me that
-you will fall in with any suggestions that I may make as
-regards our trip in this wonderful air-ship which we are to
-make to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no time now to explain to you what I mean, but
-I swear to you, by the blood that flows in both our veins, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-if I can only carry through, without any let or hindrance, the
-plans that I have already formed&mdash;that before forty-eight
-hours have passed that air-ship shall no longer be under Alan
-Arnoldson’s command.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her for a moment with almost incredulous
-admiration. She returned his inquiring glance with a steady,
-unwavering gaze, which made suspicion impossible. All his
-life he had grown up to look upon her as sharing with him the
-one hope that was left of restoring the ancient fortunes of their
-family. More than this they had been lovers ever since either
-of them knew the meaning of love.</p>
-
-<p>How then could he have dreamt that behind so fair an
-appearance lay as dark and treacherous a design as the brain
-of an ambitious woman had ever conceived? Intoxicated by
-her beauty and the memory of his lifelong love, he took a
-couple of steps towards her, took her unresisting into his arms
-again, and said passionately&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Give me another kiss, darling, and on your lips I will
-swear to trust you always and do your bidding even to the
-death.”</p>
-
-<p>She returned his kiss with a passion so admirably simulated
-that his resolve was thrice strengthened by it, and then she
-released herself gently from his embrace, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Even so, unto the death if needs be,&mdash;as I shall serve our
-sacred cause to the end, cost what it may! Come, it is time
-that we went down to breakfast.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_081.jpg" width="350" height="59" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE SPELL OF CIRCE</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_b.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-B">BREAKFAST passed off very pleasantly, and by
-the time it was over Serge was upon much better
-terms with the two Aerians than he had been on
-the previous day. He had taken Olga’s warning
-and appeal to heart, and he had done so all the
-more easily for the reason that he felt somewhat ashamed of
-himself for the ill-temper and bad manners of which he had
-been guilty, and which their two new acquaintances had repaid
-with such dignified courtesy and good humour.</p>
-
-<p>His frankly-expressed apology was accepted with such
-perfect good nature, unmixed with even a suspicion of condescension,
-that he felt at ease with them at once, and even began
-to regret that his destiny made it impossible for him to be their
-friend instead of their enemy.</p>
-
-<p>The discussion of their plans for the day occupied the rest
-of the meal. They had a whole twenty-four hours before them,
-for the <em>Ithuriel</em> would not be back from San Francisco, where
-she was going when she passed the train, until ten o’clock on
-the following morning, so it was arranged that they would
-begin the day with a sleigh drive&mdash;a luxury which not even
-Aeria could afford,&mdash;then the two Aerians were to see the
-sights of the city under the guidance of Olga and Serge, and
-perform the chief of the duties that brought them to St.
-Petersburg.</p>
-
-<p>After luncheon they were to have a couple of hours on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-ice in the park, into which the Yusupoff Gardens of the nineteenth
-century had been expanded, after which they would see
-the ice palaces illuminated at dusk, then dine, and finish the
-day at the opera. When the air-ship arrived, a rapid flight
-was to be taken across Europe over the Alps and back to
-Moscow, across Italy, Greece, and the Black Sea, which would
-enable Alan and Alexis to deposit their guests with their
-Moscow friends soon after nightfall.</p>
-
-<p>The sleigh drive took the form of a race, on the plain
-stretching towards Lake Ladoga, between the two troikas
-driven by Serge and Olga, who had so managed matters that
-she had Alan for a companion, and who, not a little to Serge’s
-disgust, won it, after a desperate struggle, by a head. The
-race was a revelation to the two Aerians, and when Alan
-handed Olga out of the sleigh after they had trotted quietly
-back to the city, the interest which she had excited in him
-during the railway journey had already begun to deepen into
-a sentiment much more pleasing and dangerous.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the morning was devoted to driving about the
-city, and to paying a visit to the ancient fortress of Peter and
-Paul, which alone of all the fortress prisons of Russia had
-been preserved intact as a fitting monument of fallen despotism
-and a warning to all future generations. Once at least in his
-life every man in Aeria visited this fortress, as good Moslems
-visit Mecca, and this was the duty which Alan and Alexis
-were now performing.</p>
-
-<p>In one of the horrible dungeons deep down in the foundations
-of the fortress, under the waters of the Neva, they were
-shown a massive gold plate riveted on to the rough, damp,
-stone wall. Its surface was kept brightly polished, and it
-looked strangely incongruous with the gloom and squalor of
-the cell. On it stood an inscription in platinum letters let
-into the gold:</p>
-
-<p>“<em>In this cell Israel di Murska, afterwards known as Natas,
-the Master of the Terror, was imprisoned in the year 1881,
-previous to his exile to Siberia by order of Alexander Romanoff
-the last of the Tyrants of Russia.</em>”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>With feelings wide asunder as love and hate, or gratitude
-and revenge, the descendant of Natas and the daughter of the
-Romanoffs stood in front of this memorial plate, and read the
-simple and yet pregnant words. Alan and Alexis both bent
-their heads as if in reverence for a moment, but Olga and Serge
-gazed at it with heads erect and eyes glowing with the fires of
-anger, in a silence that was broken by Alan saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Liberty surely never had a stranger temple than this, and
-yet this dungeon is to us what the Tomb of the Prophet is to
-the Moslems. I wonder what the Last of the Tsars would have
-thought if he could have foreseen even a little part of all that
-sprang from the tragedy that was begun in this dismal cell?”</p>
-
-<p>“He would have killed him,” said Olga, carried away for
-the moment by an irrepressible burst of passion, “and then
-there would have been no Natas, no Terror, and no Terrorist
-air-fleet, and Alexander Romanoff would have died master of the
-world instead of a chained felon in Siberia! Your ancestor,
-Richard Arnold, would have starved in his garret, or killed himself
-in despair, as many other geniuses did before him, and”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“And the world would have remained the slave-market of
-tyrants and the shambles of murderous men. Let us thank
-God that Natas lived to do his work!” said Alan in a tone
-of solemn reverence, wondering not a little at Olga’s strange
-outburst, and yet not having the remotest idea of its true cause.</p>
-
-<p>Neither Olga nor Serge could reply to this speech. They
-would have bitten their tongues through rather than say
-“Amen” to it, and anything else they dare not have said.
-After a moment more of somewhat constrained silence, Olga
-turned towards the door and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Come! Let us go, the air of this place poisons me!”</p>
-
-<p>When they got on the ice after lunch, Olga was not a little
-astonished to find that, perfect as she and Serge were in skating,
-the two Aerians were little inferior to them, despite the fact
-that they had just left their tropical home for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>“How is this?” said Olga to Alan, as, hand in hand, they
-went sweeping over the ice in long, easy curves. “I suppose
-you manufacture your ice for skating purposes in Aeria?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“No,” he said. “Some of our mountains rise above the
-snow-line, and in their upper valleys they have little lakes, so,
-when we want a skating surface, we just pump the water up
-and flood them and let it freeze. Besides this&mdash;I don’t think
-there is any harm in my telling you that we have a sort of
-wheel-skate which runs quite as easily as steel does on ice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” said Olga, possessed by a sudden thought. “Then I
-suppose that is why the streets of your splendid city are so
-broad, and white, and smooth?”</p>
-
-<p>Quietly as the words were spoken, Alan’s hand tightened
-upon hers as he heard them with a grip that almost made her
-cry out with pain. It was some moments before he recovered
-from his astonishment sufficiently to ask her the meaning of
-her unexpected and amazing question. She greeted his question
-with a saucy smile and a mocking, upward glance, and said
-quietly&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Simply because I have seen them!”</p>
-
-<p>It was a bow drawn at a venture. She had suddenly determined
-to test the truth of her vision and hazard a description
-from it of the unknown land.</p>
-
-<p>“You have seen them?” cried Alan, now more amazed
-than ever. “But, pardon me, even at the risk of contradicting
-you I must tell you that that is impossible. No one not a born
-Aerian has set eyes on Aeria for more than a hundred years.”</p>
-
-<p>“So you think perhaps,” she said in the same quiet, half-mocking
-tone. “Well now, listen and tell me whether this
-description is entirely incorrect. If it is correct you need say
-nothing, if it is not you can tell me so.”</p>
-
-<p>And then she began, while he listened in a silence of utter
-stupefaction, and described the valley and city of Aeria as she
-had seen them in her dream-vision. When she had finished
-he was silent for several moments, and then said in a voice
-that told her that she had really seen it as though with the
-eyes of flesh&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“What are you? A sorceress, or&mdash;No, you cannot be an
-Aerian girl in disguise, for none ever leaves the country till
-she is married.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Then as I cannot be the latter,” said Olga, “you must, I
-suppose, consider me the former. Now I shall take my revenge
-for your reticence in the train yesterday, and tell you no more.
-We are quits to that extent at least, and now we will go back
-to my brother, if you please.”</p>
-
-<p>With this Alan was forced to be content. Indeed, he could
-not have pursued the subject without breaking his oath, and
-so a few minutes later it came about that Olga and Serge were
-skating together in an unfrequented part of the lake, and
-here Olga took an opportunity that she might not have again
-of telling him as much as she thought fit for him to know of
-her plans for capturing the air-ship on the following day.</p>
-
-<p>“I needn’t tell you,” said she, “that this air-ship is worth
-everything to us, and that therefore we must be ready to go to
-any extremities to get possession of it. It is the first step to
-the command of the world, for you heard Alan say to-day that
-she is the swiftest vessel in the whole Aerian fleet.”</p>
-
-<p>“But to do that we must first overcome the crew,” said
-Serge, looking anxiously about to see if there was anyone within
-earshot. “How are we going to do that&mdash;two of us against
-ten or a dozen, armed with powers we know nothing about?”</p>
-
-<p>“We must find means to drug them&mdash;to poison them, if
-necessary, during to-morrow’s voyage,” came the reply, in a
-whisper that made his heart stand still for the moment with
-utter horror.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God! is that really necessary? It seems a horrible
-thing to do, when they are trusting us and taking us as their
-guests,” he said in a low, trembling tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she replied, with a well simulated shudder; “it is
-horrible, I know, but it is necessary. Remember that we have
-solemnly sworn war to the knife against this people, and that,
-armed as they are, all open assault is impossible; therefore
-they must be struck in secret, or not at all.</p>
-
-<p>“Now listen. I have brought with me a flask which my
-grandfather gave me a day or two before he died. It contains
-enough of a tasteless, powerful narcotic to send twenty people
-to sleep so that nothing will wake them for several hours. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-will give you half of this to-night and keep half myself, and
-one of us must find an opportunity to get the crew to take it
-in their wine, or whatever they may drink, for they are sure to
-have one or two meals while we are on board.</p>
-
-<p>“To-night I will send instructions in cypher to the
-Lossenskis in Vorobièvŏ to tell them that as many as possible
-of the Friends must be ready for action by eight to-morrow
-night, and must wait, if necessary, night after night till we
-come. If all goes well we shall select the new crew of the
-<em>Ithuriel</em> from them before we see two more sunrises. In fact,
-by the time we return from our voyage we must have absolute
-control of the vessel.</p>
-
-<p>“Such an opportunity as this will never offer itself again,
-and I, for my part, am determined to risk anything, not excepting
-life itself, to take the best advantage of it. It would be
-madness to allow any scruples to stand in our way when the
-Empire of the Air is almost within our grasp.”</p>
-
-<p>“And none shall, so far as I am concerned,” replied Serge
-in a low, steady voice that showed that his horror at the deed
-they contemplated had succumbed, at least for the moment,
-to the tremendous temptation offered by the prospect of
-success.</p>
-
-<p>“Spoken like a true Romanoff!” said Olga, looking up at
-him with a sweet smile of approval. “As the deed is so shall
-the reward be. Now we must get back to our friends. We
-will find a means to get an hour together before to-night to
-arrange matters further, and we will have Alan and Alexis to
-supper with us after the opera, and then I will begin my share
-of the work. Once the air-ship is ours, we can hide her in one
-of the ravines of the Caucasus, hold a council of war in the
-villa at Vorobièvŏ, and set about the work of the Revolution
-in regular fashion.”</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the day was spent in accordance with the plans
-already agreed on. Olga and Serge had tea together in their
-private room before going to the theatre, and put the finishing
-touches to their plans for the momentous venture of the
-following day; and Alan and Alexis, all unsuspecting, accepted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-their invitation to supper after their return from the opera-house.</p>
-
-<p>The seemingly innocent and pleasant little supper, which
-passed off so merrily in the private sitting-room occupied by
-Olga and Serge, had but one incident which calls for description
-here, and even that was unnoticed not only by the two
-guests, but by Serge himself.</p>
-
-<p>Just before midnight, Olga proposed that, in accordance
-with the ancient custom of Russia, they should drink a glass of
-punch, brewed in the Russian style; and as she volunteered to
-brew it herself, it is needless to say that the invitation was
-at once accepted.</p>
-
-<p>The apparatus stood upon a little table in one corner of the
-room. For a single minute her back was turned to the three
-sitting at the table in the centre; her share in the conversation
-was not interrupted for an instant, and no one saw a couple
-of drops of sparkling, blue liquid fall into each of three of the
-glasses from the little flask that she held concealed in the palm
-of her hand, and when she turned round with the little silver
-tray on which the glasses stood, the flask was resting at the
-bottom of her dress-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>She handed a glass to each of them, and then took her own
-up from the side-table where she had left it. She went to her
-place, and, holding her glass up, said simply&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s to that which each of us has nearest at heart!” and
-drank.</p>
-
-<p>All followed suit, and as the clock chimed twelve a few
-minutes later, the two Aerians took their leave, and left Olga
-and Serge alone.</p>
-
-<p>“You said you would begin your share of the work to-night,”
-said he, as soon as they were alone. “Have you done so?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you do your work to-morrow as successfully as I have
-done mine to-night,” replied Olga, looking steadily into his eyes
-as she spoke, “the Empire of the Air will no longer be theirs.”</p>
-
-<p>Serge returned her glance in silence. He wanted to speak,
-but some superior power seemed to have laid a spell upon his
-will, and as long as Olga’s burning eyes were fixed on his, his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-tongue was paralysed, nay, more than this, his mind even
-refused to shape the sentences that he would have liked to
-speak. Olga held him mute before her for several minutes,
-and then she said quietly, still keeping her eyes fixed on his&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Now speak, and tell me what you would do if I told you
-that I preferred Alan as a lover to you, and that I would rather
-a thousand times be his slave and plaything than your wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should say that you are the mistress of my destiny, that
-I have no law but your will, and that it is for you to give me
-joy or pain, as seems good to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Serge spoke the unnatural words in a calm, passionless tone,
-rather as though he were speaking in a sort of hypnotic trance
-than in full command of his senses. A strange, subtle influence
-had been stealing through his veins and over his nerves
-ever since he had drunk the liquor which Olga had prepared.</p>
-
-<p>He seemed perfectly incapable of resisting any suggestion
-that might have been made to him. His will was paralysed,
-but even the consciousness of this fact was fading from his
-mind. All his passions were absolutely in abeyance. Even
-his love for Olga failed to inspire him with any jealous resentment
-of words which half an hour before would have goaded
-him to frenzy. He heard them as though they concerned
-someone else.</p>
-
-<p>The ruin of his life’s hopes, which they implied so distinctly,
-had no meaning for him; so far as his volition was concerned
-he was an automaton, ready to obey without question the
-dictates of her imperious will.</p>
-
-<p>“That will do,” said Olga, in the tone of a mistress addressing
-a servant. “Now go to bed and sleep well, and remember
-the work that lies before you to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will,” said Serge, and without another word, without
-attempting to take his customary good-night kiss, he walked
-out of the room, leaving her to the enjoyment of her victory
-and the contemplation of triumphs that now seemed almost
-certain to her.</p>
-
-<p>Punctual to its appointed time, the air-ship appeared in
-mid-air over the city a few minutes before ten the next<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-morning. It sank slowly and gracefully to within a hundred
-feet of the ground over the garden of the hotel in which the
-two Aerians and their new friends were staying.</p>
-
-<p>Signals were rapidly exchanged as before between Alan and
-one of the crew standing on the afterpart of the deck. Then
-it sank down on to one of the snow-covered lawns of the
-garden, a door opened in the glass covering of the deck, a short,
-light, folding ladder with hand-rails dropped out of it to the
-ground, and Alan, springing up three or four of the steps, held
-out his hand to Olga, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Come along! we shall have a crowd round us in another
-minute.”</p>
-
-<p>This was true, for the appearance of the air-ship had already
-attracted hundreds of people in the streets, and many of them
-had already made their way into the gardens of the hotel in
-order to get a closer view of her.</p>
-
-<p>Olga, feeling not a little like a queen ascending a throne,
-ran lightly up the steps, followed by Serge and Alexis. The
-moment they got on to the deck the ladder was drawn up, the
-glass door slid noiselessly to, and Alan at once presented them
-to his friends on deck.</p>
-
-<p>While the introductions were taking place, the wings of the
-air-ship began to vibrate and undulate with a wavy motion
-from forward aft, at first slowly, and then more and more
-swiftly, her propeller whirled round, and the wonderful craft
-rose without a jar or a tremor from the earth. Then the propellers
-began to revolve faster and faster, and she shot forward
-and upward over the trees amid the admiring murmurs of the
-crowds in the streets about the hotel. But little did those
-light-hearted sightseers dream, any more than did the captain
-and crew of the <em>Ithuriel</em>, that this aerial pleasure-cruise was
-destined to mark the beginning of a tragedy that would involve
-the whole of civilised humanity in a catastrophe so colossal
-that the like of it had never been seen or even dreamt of on
-earth before. From the wit of a woman and the weakness of
-a man were now to be evolved the elements of destruction that
-ere long should lay the world in ruins.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE NEW TERROR.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_f.jpg" width="79" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-F">FIVE years had passed since the <em>Ithuriel</em> had
-vanished like a cloud from the sky, leaving, so
-far as the air-ship itself was concerned, no more
-trace than if she had soared into space beyond
-the sphere of the earth’s attraction and departed
-to another planet.</p>
-
-<p>All the rest of the winter of 2030-1, tidings had been
-sought most anxiously, but in vain, by the kindred and friends
-of those who had formed her crew during the ill-fated voyage
-on which she had disappeared into the unknown. The earth
-had been ransacked east and west, north and south, by the
-aerial fleet in search of the missing <em>Ithuriel</em>, but without result.</p>
-
-<p>She had been traced to St. Petersburg and Vorobièvŏ, but
-there, like the phantom craft of the Flying Dutchman, she had
-melted into thin air so far as any result of the search could
-show. But when the snows thawed on the mountains of
-Norway, and the bodies of eight Aerians who had formed her
-crew on her last fatal voyage were discovered by a couple of
-foresters in a melting snowdrift on the very spot on which
-Vladimir Romanoff had been killed with his companions by
-order of the Supreme Council, a thrill both of horror and
-excitement ran through the whole civilised world.</p>
-
-<p>That their death was intimately connected with the disappearance
-of the air-ship was instantly plain to everyone,
-and the only inference which could be drawn from such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-conclusion was that at last some power, silent, mysterious, and
-intangible, had come into existence prepared to dispute the
-empire of the world with the Aerians, and, more than this, had
-already struck them a deadly blow which it was utterly beyond
-their power to return.</p>
-
-<p>The effects of this discovery were exactly what Olga had
-anticipated. From the first time since their ancestors had
-conquered the earth and made war impossible, the supreme
-authority of the Aerians was called into question. It was
-quite beyond their power to conceal the fact that their flagship
-had either deserted or been captured, incredible as either
-alternative seemed. The Central Council therefore wisely
-accepted the situation, and immediately after the discovery of
-the bodies the President published a full account of her last
-voyage, as far as was known, in the columns of <cite>The European
-Review</cite>, the leading newspaper of the day in the Old
-World.</p>
-
-<p>The only clue to the fate of the air-ship seemed to lie in the
-fact that at St. Petersburg a youth and young girl with whom
-Alan and Alexis had made friends on their journey from
-London had gone on board the <em>Ithuriel</em> for a trip to the clouds.
-But this led to nothing. Who was to recognise the daughter
-of the Tsar and the last male scion of the House of Romanoff
-in Olga and Serge Ivanitch, who had never been known as
-anything but the orphan grandchildren of Paul Ivanitch, the
-sculptor.</p>
-
-<p>More than this, even to entertain for a moment the supposition
-that this boy and girl&mdash;for they were known to be
-little more&mdash;could by any possible means have overcome the
-ten Aerians, armed as they were with their terrible death-power,
-and then have vanished into space with the air-ship
-would have been to shatter the supremacy of the Aerians at a
-blow.</p>
-
-<p>Even as it was, the wildest and most dangerous rumours
-began to fly from lip to lip and nation to nation all round the
-world, and for the first time since the days of the Terror the
-“Earth Folk” began to think of the Aerians rather as men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-like themselves than as the superior race which they had
-hitherto regarded them.</p>
-
-<p>The President of Aeria at once issued a proclamation asking,
-in the interests of peace and public security, for the assistance
-of all the civilised peoples of the earth in his efforts to discover
-the lost air-ship, and also conditionally declaring a war
-of extermination on any Power or nation which either concealed
-the whereabouts of the <em>Ithuriel</em> or gave any assistance
-to those who might be in possession of her. This proclamation
-was published simultaneously in all the newspapers of the
-world, and produced a most profound sensation wherever it
-was read.</p>
-
-<p>The terrible magic of the ominous word “war” roused at
-once the deathless spirit of combativeness that had lain dormant
-for all these years. It was impossible not to recognise the fact
-that this mysterious power, which had come unseen into existence
-and had snatched the finest vessel in the Aerian navy
-from the possession of the Council with such daring and skill
-that not a trace of her was to be found, could have but one
-object in view, and that was to dispute the Empire of the Air
-with the descendants of the Terrorists.</p>
-
-<p>This could mean nothing else than the outbreak, sooner or
-later, of a strife that would be a veritable battle of the gods, a
-struggle which would shake the world and convulse human
-society throughout its whole extent. The general sense of
-peace and security in which men had lived for four generations
-was shattered at a stroke by the universal apprehension of the
-blow that all men felt to be inevitable, but which would be
-struck no man knew when or how.</p>
-
-<p>A year passed, and nothing happened. The world went on
-its way in peace, the Aerian patrols circled the earth with a
-moving girdle of aerial cruisers, ready to give instantaneous
-warning of the first reappearance of the lost <em>Ithuriel</em>; but
-nothing was discovered. If she still existed, she was so
-skilfully concealed as to be practically beyond the reach of
-human search.</p>
-
-<p>Then without the slightest warning, while Anglo-Saxondom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-was in the midst of the hundred and thirtieth celebration of
-the Festival of Deliverance, the civilised world was started out
-of the sense of security into which it had once more begun to
-fall by the publication, in <cite>The European Review</cite>, of the following
-piece of intelligence:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="center largefont">A MYSTERY OF THE SEA.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Disappearance of Three Transports.</span></p>
-
-<p>It is our duty to chronicle the astounding and disquieting fact that the
-three transports, <em>Massilia</em>, <em>Ceres</em>, and <em>Astræa</em>, belonging respectively to the
-Eastern, Southern, and Western Services, have disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>The first left New York for Southampton four days ago, and should have
-arrived yesterday. The Central Atlantic signalling station reported her “All
-well” at midday on Tuesday, and this is the last news that has been heard of
-her. The second was reported from Cape Verd Station on her voyage from
-Cape Town to Marseilles, and there all trace of her is lost, as she never reached
-the Canary Station. The third was last heard of from Station No. 2 in the
-Indian Ocean, which is situated at the intersection of the 80th meridian of east
-longitude with the 20th parallel of south latitude; she was on her way from
-Melbourne to Alexandria, and should have touched at Aden two days ago.</p>
-
-<p>The disappearance of these three magnificent vessels, filled as they were with
-passengers and loaded with cargoes of enormous value both in money and
-material, can only be described as a calamity of world-wide importance. Unhappily,
-too, the mystery which surrounds their fate invests it with a sinister
-aspect which it is impossible to ignore.</p>
-
-<p>That their loss is the result of accident or shipwreck it is almost impossible
-to believe. They represented the latest triumphs of modern shipbuilding. All
-were over forty thousand tons in measurement, and had engines capable of
-driving them at a speed of fifty nautical miles an hour through the water.</p>
-
-<p>For fifty years no ocean transport has suffered shipwreck or even serious
-injury, so completely has modern engineering skill triumphed over the now
-conquered elements. Added to this, no storms of even ordinary violence have
-occurred along their routes. After passing the stations at which they were last
-reported, they vanished, and that is all that is known about them.</p>
-
-<p>The President of Aeria has desired us to state that he has ordered his submarine
-squadrons stationed at Zanzibar, Ascension, and Fayal, to explore the
-ocean beds along the routes pursued by the transports. Until we receive news
-of the result of their investigation it will be well to refrain from further comment
-on this mysterious misfortune which has suddenly and unexpectedly fallen upon
-the world, and in doing so we shall only express the fervent desire of all civilised
-men and women when we express the hope that this calamity, grievous as it is,
-may not be the precursor of even greater misfortunes to come.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It would be almost impossible for us of the present day to
-form any adequate estimate of the thrill of horror and consternation
-which this brief and temperately-worded narration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-of the mysterious loss of the three transports sent through the
-world of the twenty-first century. Not only was it the first
-event of the kind that had occurred within the memory of
-living men, but, saving the loss of the <em>Ithuriel</em>, it was the
-first dark cloud that had appeared in the clear heaven of
-peace and prosperity for more than a hundred and twenty
-years.</p>
-
-<p>But terrible as was the state of excitement and anxiety into
-which it threw the nations of the world, it gave place to a still
-deeper horror and bewilderment when day after day passed
-and no tidings were received of the three submarine squadrons,
-consisting of three vessels each, which had been sent to
-inquire into the fate of the transports. They dived beneath
-the waves of the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic, and that was
-the last that was ever seen of them.</p>
-
-<p>Month after month went by, every week bringing news of
-some fresh calamity at sea&mdash;of the disappearance of transport
-after transport along the great routes of ocean travel, of
-squadron after squadron of submarine cruisers which plunged
-into the abysses of the sea to discover and attack the mysterious
-enemy of mankind that lay hidden in the depths, and
-which never reappeared on the surface. Whether they were
-captured or destroyed it was impossible to say, simply because
-no member of their crews ever returned to tell the tale.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever doubt there had been as to the existence or
-hostile nature of this ocean terror that was paralysing the trade
-of the world was speedily set at rest by a discovery made in the
-spring of the year 2032 by a party of divers who descended to
-repair a fault in one of the Atlantic cables about two hundred
-miles west of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>There, lying in the Atlantic ooze, they found the shattered
-fragments of the <em>Sirius</em>, a transport which had disappeared
-about a month before. The great hull of the splendid vessel
-had been torn asunder by some explosive of tremendous
-power, and, more than this, her hold had been rifled of all its
-treasure and the most valuable portions of its cargo. After
-this there no longer remained any doubt that the depths of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-the ocean were the hunting-ground of some foe of society, one
-at least of whose objects was plunder.</p>
-
-<p>The President and Council of Aeria found themselves at last
-confronted and baffled by an enemy who could neither be seen
-nor reached in his hiding-place, wherever it might be, beneath
-the surface of the waters. Thousands of lives had been sacrificed,
-and treasure in millions had been lost by the end of the
-first year of what men had now come to call the New Terror.</p>
-
-<p>New fleets of submarine cruisers were built and held in
-readiness in all the great ports of the world, and these scoured
-the ocean depths in all directions with no further result than
-the swift and silent annihilation of vessel after vessel by some
-power which struck irresistibly out of the darkness and then
-vanished the moment that the blow had been delivered.</p>
-
-<p>As yet, however, no enemy appeared on land or in the
-air, nor were any tidings heard of the lost <em>Ithuriel</em>, or her
-captain and lieutenant. The Aerians had replaced her with
-ten almost identical vessels and had raised the strength of
-their navy to two hundred and fifty vessels, one hundred of
-which were kept in readiness in Aeria, while the other
-hundred and fifty were distributed in small squadrons at
-twenty-four stations, half of which were in the Western
-hemisphere and half in the Eastern.</p>
-
-<p>The submarine warfare had now practically ceased. Nearly
-two hundred vessels belonging to Aeria, Britain, and America,
-had been captured or destroyed by an enemy which at the
-period at which this portion of the narrative opens was as
-supreme throughout the realm of the waters as the Aerians
-were in the air. To the menace of the air-ships this hidden
-foe replied by severing all the oceanic cables and paralysing
-the communication of the world save overland and through
-the air.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, at the end of six years after the capture of the
-<em>Ithuriel</em> by Olga Romanoff more than half the work of those
-who had brought peace on earth after the Armageddon of 1904
-had been undone. All over the world, not even excepting in
-Aeria, men lived in a state of constant anxiety and apprehension,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-not knowing where or how their invisible enemy would
-strike them next.</p>
-
-<p>The Masters of the World were supreme no longer, for a
-new power had arisen which, within the limits of the seas, had
-proved itself stronger than they were. Communication
-between continent and continent had almost ceased, save
-where the Aerian air-ships were employed. In six short
-years the peace of the world had been destroyed and the
-stability of society shaken.</p>
-
-<p>Among the nations of Anglo-Saxondom the change had
-manifested itself by a swift decadence into the worst forms
-of unbridled democracy. Men’s minds were unhinged, and
-the most extravagant opinions found acceptance.</p>
-
-<p>Parliaments had already been made annual and were fast
-sinking into machines for registering the ever-changing
-opinions of rival factions and their leaders. Sovereigns
-and presidents were little better than popular puppets existing
-on sufferance. In short, all that Paul Romanoff had
-prophesied was coming to pass more rapidly than even he had
-expected so far as the area of the Anglo-Saxon Federation was
-concerned.</p>
-
-<p>In the Moslem Empire affairs were different, but no less
-threatening. The Sultan Khalid the Magnificent, as he was
-justly styled by his admirers, saw clearly that the time must
-come when this mysterious enemy would emerge from the
-waters and attempt the conquest of the land, and for three
-years past he had been manufacturing weapons and forming
-armies against the day of battle which he considered inevitable,
-and which he longed for rather than dreaded.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, while Anglo-Saxondom was lapsing into the anarchy
-of unrestrained democracy, the Moslem monarch was preparing
-to take advantage of the issue of events which, skilfully turned
-to account, might one day make him master of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the condition of affairs throughout the world on
-the 1st of May 2036, and then the long-expected came in
-strange and terrible shape. At midnight a blaze of light was
-seen far up in the sky over the city of Aeria. A moment later<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-something that must have been a small block of metal fell
-from a tremendous height in the square in the centre of the
-city, and was shivered to fragments by the force of its fall.</p>
-
-<p>On the splintered pavement where it fell was found a little
-roll of parchment addressed to the President. It was taken to
-him, and he opened it and read these words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>To Alan Arnold, President of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>If you want your son Alan and his friend Alexis, go and look for them on an
-island which you will find near the intersection of the 40th parallel of south
-latitude and the 120th meridian of west longitude in the South Pacific. They
-have served my turn, and I have done with them. Perhaps they will be able
-to tell you how I have conquered the Empire of the Sea. Before long I shall
-have wrested the Empire of the Air from you as well.</p>
-
-<p class="marginrightindent"><span class="smcap">Olga Romanoff.</span></p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_098.jpg" width="350" height="59" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE FLIGHT OF THE “REVENGE.”</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_a.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-A">ASTOUNDING, almost stupefying, as were the
-tidings conveyed by this letter, which had
-dropped like a veritable bolt from the blue, the
-challenge contained in the last sentence and the
-ominous name with which it was signed were
-matters of infinitely greater and more instant
-importance.</p>
-
-<p>Alan Arnold was the responsible President of Aeria first
-and a father afterwards. He lost not a moment in speculating
-upon the strange fate of his son and first-born. The safety
-not only of Aeria, but of the world, demanded his first attention,
-and he gave it.</p>
-
-<p>Crushing the missive in his hand he took two swift strides
-to a telephone in the wall of the room in which he had
-received the message from the skies and delivered several
-rapid orders through it. If they had been the words of a
-demi-god instead of those of a man their effects could scarcely
-have been more instantaneous or marvellous.</p>
-
-<p>On a hundred mountain-peaks all round the great valley of
-Aeria enormous lights blazed out simultaneously, <a id="Ref_83"></a>flinging long
-streams of radiance, dazzling and intense, for miles into the
-sky towards all points of the compass, and at the same moment
-fifty air-ships soared up from their stations all round the
-mountains, flashing their search-lights ahead and astern in all
-directions.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_83" class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i_100.jpg" width="600" height="419" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Flinging long Streams of Radiance for Miles into the Sky.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_83">Page 83</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was a scene of unearthly wonder and magnificence, a
-scene such as could only have been made possible by the
-triumphant genius of a race of men, heirs of all the best that
-earth could give them, who had turned the favour of circumstance
-to the utmost advantage.</p>
-
-<p>Three minutes sufficed for the aerial cruisers to clear the
-mountains, and as they did so the wide-sweeping rays of fifty
-search-lights, assisted by the blazing orbs which crowned
-every mountain-peak, illuminated the darkness for many miles
-outside the valley. In the midst of the sea of light thus projected
-through the semi-darkness of the starlit heavens the
-flying shape of an air-ship was detected speeding away to the
-south-eastward.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly the prows of the whole squadron were turned
-towards her, and the first aerial race in the history of the
-world began. The pursuing air-ships spread themselves out
-in a huge semicircle, at the extremities of which were the two
-swiftest vessels in the fleet, almost exact counterparts of the
-lost <em>Ithuriel</em>. One of these bore the same name as the stolen
-flag-ship, and the other had been named the <em>Ariel</em>, after the
-first vessel built by Richard Arnold, the conqueror of the air,
-a hundred and thirty-two years before.</p>
-
-<p>These two vessels carried ten guns each, and were capable
-of a maximum speed of five hundred miles an hour, the
-highest velocity that it had so far been found possible to
-attain. The others were somewhat smaller craft, mounting
-eight guns each, and capable of a speed of about four hundred
-miles an hour. The chase, either because she could not travel
-faster or for some hidden reason, allowed the pursuing squadron
-to gain upon her until she was only some five miles ahead of
-its two foremost vessels, which were travelling at the highest
-speed attainable by the whole flotilla.</p>
-
-<p>She showed no lights, and so in order to keep her in view it
-was necessary for her pursuers to keep their search-lights
-constantly sweeping the skies ahead of them, lest they should
-lose sight of her in the semi-darkness.</p>
-
-<p>This placed the Aerian fleet at a serious disadvantage, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-very soon became apparent, for before the pursuit had lasted an
-hour the chase opened fire with her stern guns and shell after
-shell charged with some terrific explosive began bursting along
-the line of the pursuing squadron, producing fearful concussions
-in the atmosphere, and causing the pursuers to rock and toss
-in the shaken air like ships on a stormy sea.</p>
-
-<p>The <em>Ithuriel</em> and the <em>Ariel</em>, at the two extremities of the
-semicircle, replied with a rapid converging fire from their
-bow guns in the hope of reaching the now invisible chase.
-All the projectiles were, of course, time-shells, but the speed
-at which the vessels were travelling not only made the aim
-hopeless, but caused such an in-rush of air into the muzzles
-of the guns that the projectiles, checked in their course
-through the barrels, flew wild and exploded at random, often
-in dangerous proximity to the vessels themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Hence, after about a dozen shots had been fired, the commanders
-of the two vessels found themselves compelled to
-cease firing, and to trust to speed alone to overtake the enemy.
-On the other hand, this disadvantage to them was all in favour
-of the chase, which was able to work her two stern guns
-without the slightest impediment. Before long she got the
-range of her pursuers, and at last a shell burst fairly under
-one of the smaller vessels. A brilliant flash of light, blue as
-the lightning-bolt, illuminated her for an instant, and in that
-instant her companions saw her stop and shiver like a stricken
-bird in mid-air, and then plunge downwards like a stone to
-the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Olga Romanoff, standing on the deck of what had once been
-the <em>Ithuriel</em>, flag-ship of the Aerian fleet, and now renamed
-the <em>Revenge</em>, saw this catastrophe, as the others had done,
-through her night-glasses. She lowered them from her eyes,
-and said to a dark-eyed, black-haired young fellow, who was
-commanding the gun that had done the execution&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Bravo, Boris Lossenski! Did you sight that gun?”</p>
-
-<p>Boris drew himself up and saluted, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Majesty, I did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then for that you shall be a Prince henceforth, and if you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-can bring another down you shall command an air-ship of your
-own when this fight is over.”</p>
-
-<p>Boris saluted again, and ordered the gun to be reloaded.
-Before it could be discharged a shell from the port gun, which
-had been fired as Olga spoke, struck another of the Aerian
-vessels square on the fore-quarter. The flash of the exploding
-projectile was almost instantaneously followed by the outburst
-of a vast dazzling mass of flame which illumined for the
-instant the whole scene of the aerial battle.</p>
-
-<p>The air-ship with all its cargo of explosives blew up like
-one huge shell, and the frightful concussion of the atmosphere
-induced by the explosion hurled the two vessels that were
-close on either side of her like feathers into space, turning
-them completely over and flinging them to the earth six
-thousand feet below. A few moments later they struck the
-ground simultaneously, two great spouts of flame shot up
-from the spots where they struck, and when the darkness
-closed over them again four of the pursuing squadron had been
-annihilated.</p>
-
-<p>“Better still, Levin Ostroff!” cried Olga, as she saw
-the awful effects of this last shot. “For that you too shall
-be a Prince of the Empire and command an air-ship on
-our next expedition. Now, Boris, let us see if you can beat
-that!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Majesty,” said Boris again, knitting his brows and
-clenching his teeth in anger at his rival’s superior success. He
-glanced along the line of the pursuers and saw four of the
-Aerian squadron flying close together. He brought the gun
-to bear upon the two inner ones, took careful aim, and
-despatched the projectile on its errand of destruction. The
-moment he had released it he said to the two men who were
-working under him&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Load again, quickly!”</p>
-
-<p>The command was instantly obeyed, and scarcely had the
-explosion of the first blazed out than a second shell was sent
-after it. The very firmament seemed split in twain by the
-frightful results of the two well-aimed shots, each of which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-had found its mark on the two inner vessels with fatal
-accuracy.</p>
-
-<p>Great sheets of flame leapt out in all directions from the
-focus of the explosion, and in the midst of their dazzling
-radiance those on board the <em>Revenge</em> saw the two outside air-ships
-of the four roll over and dive head foremost into the
-dark abyss below them. They struck the earth as the others
-had done, and vanished into annihilation in the midst of the
-momentary mist of fire.</p>
-
-<p>This last catastrophe made it plain to the commanders of
-the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the <em>Ariel</em> that to continue the chase under
-such conditions meant the destruction in detail of all the
-smaller ships of the squadron. Those on board the <em>Revenge</em>
-saw signals rapidly flash from one end of the line, and instantaneously
-answered from the other end.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” said Olga. “My Lords of the Air seem to have had
-enough of it for the present. Look, the small fry are falling
-to the rear; our reception has been a little too hot for them.
-I wonder what they are going to do now. Cease firing, and
-let us watch them. You two gunners have done gloriously
-and earned quite enough laurels for your first battle.”</p>
-
-<p>It soon became evident that the Aerians had decided to
-send their smaller craft back. From the speed of the <em>Revenge</em>,
-and the terrible accuracy and destructiveness of her guns, the
-commanders of the squadron were now convinced that she was
-either the lost <em>Ithuriel</em>, or some vessel even superior to her,
-built upon the same plan.</p>
-
-<p>This being so, to have continued the pursuit under such
-conditions with the smaller craft would simply have been to
-court destruction for them in detail. It was impossible for
-them to use their guns effectively at the speed at which they
-were travelling, while, as had been so terribly proved, the chase
-could use hers with perfect ease.</p>
-
-<p>The flying fight could thus only result under present
-conditions in the ignominious defeat of the squadron by the
-single vessel as long as she was able to keep ahead. The
-only hope of success lay, therefore, in a trial of speed and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-manœuvring skill between her and the <em>Ithuriel</em> and <em>Ariel</em>, so
-orders were flashed to the smaller vessels to return to Aeria
-with the mournful tidings of the destruction of eight of their
-number.</p>
-
-<p>As they vanished into the darkness behind, Olga divined
-instantly the tactics that were to be adopted. She saw the
-converging search-lights of the two remaining air-ships begin
-to glow brighter and brighter in the rear of the <em>Revenge</em>,
-proving that they had increased their speed.</p>
-
-<p>“So, it is going to be a race, is it!” she said, half to herself.
-“Well, we will see if we can lead them into the trap. How
-fast are we going, Boris?”</p>
-
-<p>He went to the engine-room, and returned saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Four hundred miles an hour, Majesty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Make it five,” replied Olga.</p>
-
-<p>He saluted, and transmitted the order to the engineer.
-The lights of the pursuers immediately began to recede again,
-then they seemed to stop.</p>
-
-<p>“That will do!” said Olga. “They have reached the limit
-of their speed. Keep to the southward, and see that they come
-no nearer.”</p>
-
-<p>The three air-ships were, in fact, now travelling at their
-utmost speed. If anything, the advantage was slightly in
-favour of the <em>Revenge</em>, thanks to the high efficiency of the
-motive-power which had been applied to her in accordance
-with the directions left by Olga’s father, and transmitted in
-the will of Paul Romanoff.</p>
-
-<p>So all the rest of the night and on into the next day
-pursuers and pursued sped on with fearful velocity through
-the air. They passed over Africa and out above the ocean,
-and still on and on they swept until the Southern Sea was
-crossed and the mighty ice-barrier that fences in the South
-Pole gleamed out white upon the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>This was passed, and still they rushed on over the dreary
-wastes of Antarctica. The pole was crossed along the 40th
-meridian, and then they swept northward until the smoke-cloud
-that crowned the crest of Mount Erebus rose above the snow-clouds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-that hid the earth. The <em>Revenge</em> headed straight towards
-this and swept over it, followed at a distance of about
-ten miles by her pursuers.</p>
-
-<p>Then with a mighty upward sweep she leapt two thousand
-feet higher still, came to equilibrium, and discharged a shell
-downwards on to the ice. The explosion was answered by the
-rising of a flotilla of air-ships, which seemed to have sprung
-out of the bowels of the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Thirty vessels as large as herself rose simultaneously
-through the clouds and spread themselves out in a wide circle
-round the two Aerian vessels, which thus found themselves
-surrounded by an overwhelming force and dominated by the
-<em>Revenge</em> floating far above them with her ten guns pointed
-down upon them.</p>
-
-<p>To an observer so placed as to be able to command a view
-of the situation it would have seemed that nothing short of
-the surrender or annihilation of the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the <em>Ariel</em>
-could have been the outcome of it.</p>
-
-<p>So evidently thought Olga and those in command of the
-Russian aerial fleet, for, although for one brief instant the
-two Aerian vessels lay at their mercy, they failed to take
-advantage of it, and in losing this one precious moment they
-reckoned without the superior skill and perfect control of their
-air-ships possessed by those of whom they thought to make an
-easy prey.</p>
-
-<p>What really happened took place with such stupefying
-suddenness that they were taken completely off their guard.
-The <em>Ithuriel</em> and the <em>Ariel</em> lay end on to each other in the
-midst of the circle of their enemies. Each mounted ten guns,
-and of these every one was available. The crews of both
-vessels, trained by constant practice to the highest point of
-efficiency, knew exactly what to do without so much as an
-order being given.</p>
-
-<p>Automatically the twenty guns were trained in the twinkling
-of an eye, each on a Russian vessel, and discharged simultaneously.
-A moment later the two vessels sank like stones
-through the thick clouds below them; and while the heavens<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-above were shaken with the combined explosions of the
-twenty projectiles, each of which had found its mark with
-unerring accuracy, they had regained their equilibrium a
-thousand feet from the surface of the ice, and darted away
-full speed northward.</p>
-
-<p>To such a fearful pitch of efficiency had their guns and
-projectiles been brought that, while the aim was unerring if
-once a fair sight was obtained, nothing shaped by human
-hands could withstand the impact of their shells without
-destruction. Twenty out of the thirty vessels of the Russian
-fleet collapsed, and, as it were, shrivelled up under the frightful
-energy of the Aerian projectiles. Twenty masses of flame
-blazed out over the grey surface of the cloud-sea, and in
-another moment the fragments of the vessels it had taken so
-many months of labour and such wondrous skill to construct
-were lying scattered far and wide over the snow and ice of the
-Antarctic desert.</p>
-
-<p>The awful suddenness with which this destruction had
-been accomplished deprived Olga and her subordinates of all
-power of thought for the moment. They heard the roar of the
-explosions, and saw a mist of flame burst out round them as
-though all the fires of Mount Erebus had broken loose at once,
-and then came the silence of speechless horror and stupefaction.
-It was more like the work of omnipotent fiends than of
-men. The bolts of heaven themselves could have done nothing
-like it.</p>
-
-<p>Then the moment of the shock passed, and those who
-survived remembered what they ought never to have forgotten&mdash;that,
-armed as they were with weapons which under favourable
-circumstances were absolutely irresistible, the first shot
-meant victory for those who fired it, and destruction for their
-enemies. Odds of mere numbers went for nothing, for each
-air-ship was equal to ten others provided she could send her
-ten projectiles home first, and this is just what had happened.</p>
-
-<p>All this had passed in a twentieth of the time that it
-has taken to describe it, and by the time Olga and her subordinates
-grasped the extent of the calamity that had overtaken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-them the two Aerian vessels, darting through the air at five
-hundred miles an hour, had swept far out of range of their
-guns, and were moreover so hidden by the cloud-sea, that they
-had no idea which course they had taken.</p>
-
-<p>Olga stamped her foot upon the deck, and, in a paroxysm
-of unrestrained passion, literally screamed with rage as she
-ordered the <em>Revenge</em> to sink below the clouds. Less than two
-minutes sufficed for the remains of the fleet, that had been
-thirty-one strong five minutes before and now only numbered
-eleven vessels, to sink through the clouds.</p>
-
-<p>A rapid glance round showed them the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the
-<em>Ariel</em>, tiny specks far out over the waste of snow and ice,
-speeding away to the northward. To give chase was out of
-the question, for scarcely had they sighted them than they
-vanished as completely as though they had melted into the
-atmosphere; and so Olga signalled for her remaining vessels
-to proceed to their secret haven in the snowy solitudes of the
-South, while the <em>Ithuriel</em> and her consort sped onward on their
-homeward voyage, to carry the news of the terrible vengeance
-that they had taken for the destruction of the eight air-ships
-which had been annihilated by the guns of the <em>Revenge</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty hours sufficed for the two Aerian vessels to pass
-over a quarter of the earth’s circumference, and carry their
-tidings of vengeance and victory to Aeria, and shortly after
-noon on the day but one after Olga had dropped her challenge
-from the skies, a meeting of the Ruling Council was held at
-the President’s house in order to consider the startling and
-pregnant events which had taken place, and to determine the
-plan of the war which, after a hundred and thirty years of
-unquestioned supremacy, they were now called upon to wage
-not only for the mastery of the world, but for the very lives
-and liberties of the citizens of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>It had of course been impossible to conceal from the
-inhabitants of the valley the gravity of the startling events
-which had taken place in such rapid succession, nor did the
-President and Council consider any such concealment desirable.
-There were no demagogues and no politics in Aeria, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-therefore there was no need for any State secrets save those
-which contained the essentials of aerial navigation.</p>
-
-<p>There was also no fear of panic in a community which
-contained no ignorant or criminal classes, and so, while the
-Council was sitting, the strange tidings were promulgated
-throughout the length and breadth of the valley. Marvellous
-and disquieting as they were they yet gave rise to very few
-external signs of excitement. They were gravely, earnestly,
-and even anxiously discussed, for they brought with them a
-prophecy of calamities to come, the probability of whose realisation
-was too plain to be ignored.</p>
-
-<p>But ever since the days of the Terror each generation of
-Aerians had been carefully trained to recognise the fact that
-the progress of science and the restlessness of human invention
-in the world outside their borders must, sooner or later, produce
-some challenge to their supremacy and some attempt to
-dispute with them the Empire of the Air. Now, after four
-generations&mdash;in spite of all the elaborate precautions that had
-been taken, the stringent laws that had been enacted and more
-than once mercilessly enforced&mdash;the crisis had come.</p>
-
-<p>It was now impossible to doubt that by some means, which
-so far seemed almost superhuman, the flag-ship of their fleet
-had been stolen, and the son of the President kidnapped with
-his greatest friend. More than this, the news brought back by
-the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the <em>Ariel</em> proved beyond all doubt that means
-had been found to build a large fleet of aerial warships without
-even arousing the suspicions of the Council. And, worst and
-most sinister sign of all, there was also the fact, proved by
-Olga’s letter to the President, that the moving spirit in this
-defiant revolt against the supremacy of Aeria was one who
-bore the ill-omened and still hated name of Romanoff.</p>
-
-<p>As has been said, there was no panic that night in Aeria,
-but still many a man and woman anxiously asked, either aloud
-or in his or her own soul, whether in the mysterious revolution
-of human affairs it might not be about to come to pass that
-she who had wrought this apparent miracle might not yet be
-able to avenge the terrible fate of her ancestor, the Last of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-the Tsars. Then, with this thought came a universal revulsion
-of horror at the prospect of such a crime against humanity and
-a deep resolve to exact the penalty for it to the uttermost.</p>
-
-<p>If war was to be brought once more upon the earth, those
-who brought it would find Aeria worthy of its splendid traditions
-and ready, if necessary, to reconquer the earth as the
-founders of its empire had done in the Armageddon of 1904.
-Fierce as that mighty struggle had been, its horrors would
-pale before those of a conflict in which conquest would mean
-extermination, for if Aeria was forced once more to draw the
-sword it would not be sheathed until there was peace again on
-earth, even if that peace were to be but the silence of universal
-desolation.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_111.jpg" width="350" height="54" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">STRANGE TIDINGS TO AERIA.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_t.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-T">THE sitting of the Council lasted until nightfall,
-and just as the western mountains were throwing
-their huge shadows over the lovely valley, two
-more air-ships passed between two of the southward
-peaks and alighted in the great square in
-the centre of the city. They were the two vessels which had
-been sent to the island indicated in Olga’s letter to bring back
-the long-lost Alan and Alexis.</p>
-
-<p>It would be vain to attempt to describe the feelings with
-which the President and the father of Alexis went, as they
-thought, to receive their sons, but the air-ships had returned
-without them, and in their stead they brought a written message
-which conveyed tidings no less strange and startling than
-those brought from Antarctica by the <em>Ithuriel</em> and her
-consort.</p>
-
-<p>It was a letter from Alan to his father, and as soon as he
-received it from the captain of one of the air-ships, who had
-found it nailed to a tree on the island, he took his friend into
-his library, and there the two fathers read it together.</p>
-
-<p>After briefly but circumstantially recounting the capture of
-the flag-ship by Olga by means of her subtle drugs, and showing
-how, by using the power they gave her, she had kept them in
-mental slavery for years, forcing them to employ their skill and
-knowledge in aiding her to build her aerial and submarine fleets
-out of the spoils of the destroyed ocean transports, from which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-the latter had taken an incalculable amount of treasure, Alan’s
-letter concluded thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>I will now tell you the reason why Alexis and myself have not waited for the
-air-ship which we knew you would send for us as soon as you received the
-message which Olga Romanoff told us she would despatch to you. We consider
-that by our weakness and folly&mdash;or, in truth, I should rather say mine, for it
-was I who invited these treacherous guests on board the <em>Ithuriel</em>&mdash;we have not
-only brought endless calamities upon the world, but we have also forfeited our
-right to the citizenship of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>What the judgment of the Council would be upon us I don’t know, but we
-are resolved that, whatever it might have been, you and Alexis’s father shall be
-spared the sorrow of pronouncing sentence upon your own sons. Some day
-perhaps we may win at least the right to plead our cause before you. At present
-we have none, and until we have won it you shall not see us again unless you
-capture us by force.</p>
-
-<p>We were sent here in the <em>Narwhal</em>, the swiftest and most powerful vessel
-of the Russian submarine fleet. Only a few days ago an accident revealed to
-Alexis for the first time during our long mental slavery the means which this
-woman, who is as beautiful as an angel and as merciless as a fiend, had used to
-keep us in subjection. We took the utmost care to give her no suspicion of his
-discovery, and although we drank no more of her poison we acted exactly as
-though we were still under its influence.</p>
-
-<p>In what could only have been mockery she gave us back our belts and
-coronets, bidding us wear them “when we returned to our kingdom,” as she put
-it. We shall never wear the winged circlets again till we have regained the
-right to do so, but the belts and a couple of brace of magazine pistols which we
-took before we left her stronghold in Antarctica stood us in good stead.</p>
-
-<p>We have killed the crew of the <em>Narwhal</em>, and taken possession of her. She
-is far swifter and more powerful than any vessel in our submarine navy, for she
-can be driven at a hundred and fifty miles an hour through the water, and can
-destroy anything that floats in or on the sea with a blow of her ram, and, more
-than this, she carries a torpedo battery which has an effective range of two miles,
-and can strike and destroy anything within that distance without giving the
-slightest warning of her presence.</p>
-
-<p>There are fifty vessels of this type in the Russian fleet, but the <em>Narwhal</em> is
-at least thirty miles an hour faster than any of them. An attack will probably
-be made by the Russians on our station at Kerguelen Island within a week by
-submarine vessels and a small squadron of air-ships, and there we shall begin
-our operations against the enemy. If you have any reply to make to this letter
-we will wait for it at sea off Kerguelen, and then begin the campaign we have
-planned. We shall never rest until we have either destroyed the Russian fleet
-in detail or have died in the attempt to do so.</p>
-
-<p>If we ever return it will be to restore to you the supremacy of the sea, and
-then, and not till then, we will ask you to pardon our fault and will willingly
-submit to such further conditions as you may see fit to impose upon us before
-you give us back&mdash;if ever you do&mdash;the rights which we have lost.</p>
-
-<p>With all love and duty to yourself, and loving remembrances to the dear
-ones in Aeria, your son</p>
-
-<p class="marginrightindent"><span class="smcap">Alan</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the foot of the letter was a postscript signed by Alexis,
-indorsing all that Alan had said, save with regard to his sole
-responsibility for the calamity that had ensued from the
-admission of Olga and Serge on board the <em>Ithuriel</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The two fathers discussed the strange, and, to them, most
-affecting communication for nearly an hour in private, and
-then another meeting of the Council was called to consider it
-and pronounce authoritatively upon it. The President read
-the letter aloud in a voice which betrayed no trace of the deep
-emotion that moved his inmost being, and then left the Council
-chamber with Maurice Masarov, so that their presence might
-not embarrass their colleagues.</p>
-
-<p>The simple, manly straightforwardness of Alan’s letter
-appealed far more eloquently to the Council than excuses or
-prayers for forgiveness would have done. It was plain, too,
-that after the first indiscretion of taking the strangers on board
-the air-ship, no moral responsibility or blame could be laid on
-Alan and Alexis for what they had done under the influence of a
-drug which had paralysed their moral sense.</p>
-
-<p>The Council, therefore, not only accepted the conditions of
-the letter, but without a dissentient voice, agreed to confer the
-first and second commands of the Aerian submarine fleets and
-stations for the time being upon Alan and Alexis, with permission
-to call in the aid of the nearest aerial squadron when
-necessary. This decision was despatched forthwith by an air-ship
-to Kerguelen, and within an hour all Aeria was talking of
-nothing else than the strange fate of the two youths who for
-five years had been mourned as dead.</p>
-
-<p>Later on that evening, when the twin snow-clad peaks which
-towered high above the city of Aeria had lost the pink afterglow
-of the departed sunlight, and were beginning to gleam
-with a whiter radiance in the level beams of the newly-risen
-moon, a girl was standing on the spacious terrace of a marble
-villa which stood on the summit of a rounded eminence a couple
-of miles from the western verge of the city.</p>
-
-<p>She had just crossed the threshold of womanhood. The
-next sun that would rise would be that of her twentieth birthday.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-Yet for two years she had worn the silver circle and
-crystal wings, for in Aeria a girl became of legal age at eighteen,
-though she took no share in the civil life of the community until
-she was married, an event which, as a rule, took place not long
-after she was invested with the symbol of citizenship.</p>
-
-<p>It was an exceedingly rare event for an Aerian girl to reach
-the eve of her twentieth year unmarried, for the sexes in the
-Central-African paradise were very evenly balanced, and, as
-was natural in a very high state of civilisation, where families
-seldom exceeded three or four children, celibacy in either sex
-was looked upon as a public misfortune and a private reproach.</p>
-
-<p>But Alma Tremayne, the girl who was standing on the
-terrace of her father’s house on this most eventful evening, had
-become an exception to the rule through circumstances so sad
-and strange that her loneliness was an honour rather than a
-reproach. There were many of the wearers of the golden wings
-who had sought long and ardently to win her from the allegiance
-which forbade her to look with favouring eyes upon any of
-them.</p>
-
-<p>She was beautiful in a land where all women were fair, a land
-where, under the most favourable conditions that could be conceived,
-a race of almost more than human strength and beauty
-had been evolved, and she came of a family scarcely second in
-honour even to that of the President, for she was the direct
-descendant in the fifth generation of Alan Tremayne, first
-President of the Anglo-Saxon Federation, through his son Cyril
-born two years after the daughter who had married the first-born
-son of Natasha and Richard Arnold.</p>
-
-<p>More than five years before she and Alan had plighted their
-boy-and-girl troth on the eve of his departure on the fateful
-voyage from which he had never returned, and of which no tidings
-had reached Aeria until a few hours before. To the simple
-vow which her girlish lips had then spoken she had remained
-steadfast even when, as the years went by and still no tidings
-came of her lost lover, she, in common with her own kindred,
-had begun to mourn him as dead.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that she was in love rather with a memory than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-with a man, yet with some natures such a love as this is stronger
-than any other, more ideal and more lasting, and exempt from
-the danger of growing cold in fruition. So strong was the hold
-that this ideal love had taken upon her being that the idea of
-even accepting the love and homage of any other man appeared
-as sacrilegious to her as the embrace of an earthly lover would
-have seemed to a nun of the Middle Ages.</p>
-
-<p>And so, with a single companion in her solitary state, she
-stood aside and watched with patient, unregretful eyes the
-wedded happiness of her more fortunate friends. This companion
-was Isma Arnold, Alan’s sister, who had a double reason
-for doing as Alma had done.</p>
-
-<p>Not only had she resolved never to marry while her brother’s
-fate remained uncertain, but she, too, had also made her choice
-among the youths of Aeria, and in such matters an Aerian girl
-seldom chose twice. So she waited for Alexis as Alma did for
-Alan, hoping even against her convictions, and keeping his
-memory undefiled in the sacred shrine of her maiden soul.</p>
-
-<p>No artist could have dreamed of a fairer picture than Alma
-standing there on the terrace overlooking the stately city and
-the dark shining lake at her feet. She was clad in soft, clinging
-garments of whitest linen and finest silk of shimmering, pearly
-grey, edged with a dainty embroidery of gold and silver thread.</p>
-
-<p>Her dress, confined at the waist with a girdle of interlinked
-azurine and gold, clothed without concealing the beauties of
-her perfect form, and her hair, crowned by her crystal-winged
-coronet, flowed unrestrained, after the custom of the maidens of
-Aeria, over her shoulders in long and lustrous waves of dusky
-brown. There was a shadow in the great deep grey eyes which
-looked up as though in mute appeal to the starlight, the shadow
-of a sorrow which can never come to a woman more than once.</p>
-
-<p>All these years she had loved in cheerful patience and
-perfect faith the man for whose memory she had lived in maiden
-widowhood&mdash;and now, who could measure the depth of the
-darkness, darker than the shadow of death itself, that had fallen
-across her life, severing the past from the present with a chasm
-that seemed impassable, and leaving the future but a barren,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-loveless waste to be trodden by her in weariness and loneliness
-until the end!</p>
-
-<p>All these years she had loved an ideal man, one of her own
-splendid race, the very chosen of the earth, as pure in his unblemished
-manhood as she was in the stainless maidenhood that
-she had held so sacred for his sake even while she thought him
-dead&mdash;and, lo! the years had passed, and he had come back to
-life, but how? Hers was not the false innocence of ignorance.
-She knew the evil and the good, and because she knew both
-shrank from contamination with the horror born of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>She had seen both Olga’s letter and Alan’s, and those two
-terrible sentences, “They have served my turn, and I have done
-with them,” and “She is as beautiful as an angel and as merciless
-as a fiend,” kept ringing their fatal changes through her
-brain in pitiless succession, forcing all the revolting possibilities
-of their meaning into her tortured soul till her reason seemed to
-reel under their insupportable stress.</p>
-
-<p>Mocking voices spoke to her out of the night, and told her
-of the unholy love that such a woman would, in the plenitude
-of her unnatural power, have for such a man; how she would
-subdue him, and make him not only her lover but her slave;
-how she would humble his splendid manhood, and play with
-him until her evil fancy was sated, and then cast him aside&mdash;as
-she had done&mdash;like a toy of which she had tired.</p>
-
-<p>Better a thousand times that he had died as his murdered
-comrades had died&mdash;in the northern snowdrift into which this
-Syren of the Skies had cast them, to sleep the sleep that knew
-neither dreams nor waking! Better for him and her that he
-had gone before her into the shadows, and had remained her
-ideal love until, hand in hand, they could begin their lives anew
-upon a higher plane of existence.</p>
-
-<p>As these thoughts passed and repassed through her mind
-with pitiless persistence, her lovely face grew rigid and white
-under the starlight, and, but for the nervous twining and
-untwining of her fingers as her hands clasped and unclasped
-behind her, her motionless form might have been carved out of
-stone. For the first time since peace had been proclaimed on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-earth, a hundred and thirty-two years ago, the flames of war
-had burst forth again, and for the first time in the story of her
-race the snake had entered the now no longer enchanted Eden
-of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>It was hers to suffer the first real agony of soul that any
-woman of her people had passed through since Natasha, in the
-palm-grove down yonder by the lake, had told Richard Arnold
-of her love on the night that he had received the Master’s
-command to take her to another man to be his wife.</p>
-
-<p>There were no tears in the fixed, wide-open eyes that stared
-almost sightlessly up to the skies, in which the stars were now
-paling in the growing light of the moon. The torment of her
-torturing thoughts was too great for that.</p>
-
-<p>She was growing blind and dizzy under the merciless stress
-of them, when&mdash;it might have been just in time to save her from
-the madness that seemed the only outcome of her misery&mdash;the
-sweet, silvery tones of a girl’s voice floated through the still,
-scented air uttering her name&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Alma!”</p>
-
-<p>The sound mercifully recalled her wandering senses in an
-instant. It was the voice of her friend, of the sister of her
-now doubly-lost lover, and it reproved the selfishness of her
-great sorrow by reminding her that she was not suffering alone.
-As the sound of her name reached her ear the rigidity of her
-form relaxed, the light came back to her eyes, and turning her
-head she looked in the direction whence it came.</p>
-
-<p>There was a soft whirring of wings in the still air of the
-tropic night, and out of the half-darkness floated a shape that
-looked like a realisation of one of the Old-World fairy-tales. It
-was a vessel some twenty-five feet long by five wide, built of
-white, polished metal, and shaped something like an old Norse
-galley, with its high, arching prow fashioned like the breast and
-neck of a swan.</p>
-
-<p>From the sides projected a pair of wide, rapidly-undulating
-wings, and in the open space between these stood on the floor
-of the boat the figure of a girl whose loose, golden hair floated
-out behind her with the rapid motion of her fairy craft.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was no need for words of greeting between the two
-girl friends. Alma knew the kindly errand on which Isma had
-come, and as she stepped out she went towards her with hands
-outstretched in silent welcome.</p>
-
-<p>As their hands met, and the two girls stood face to face,
-motionless for a moment, they made an exquisite contrast of
-opposite types of womanly beauty&mdash;Alma tall and stately, with
-a proudly-carried head, clear, pale skin, grey eyes, and perfectly
-regular features, and Isma, a year younger and a good inch
-shorter, slender of form yet strong and lithe of limb, with
-golden, silky hair and sunny-blue eyes, fresh, rosy skin, and
-mobile features which scarcely ever seemed to wear the same
-expression for a couple of minutes together&mdash;as sweet a daughter
-of delight as ever man could look upon with eyes of love and
-longing.</p>
-
-<p>But she was grave enough now, for her friend’s sorrow was
-hers too, and its shadow lay with equal darkness upon her.
-The ready tears welled up under her dark lashes as she looked
-upon Alma’s white, drawn face and dry, burning eyes, and her
-low, sweet voice was broken by a sob as, passing her arm round
-her waist, she drew her towards the boat and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Come, dear, this sorrow belongs to me as well as you and
-we must help each other to bear it. I have brought my new
-boat so that we can take a flight round the valley and talk
-about it quietly. If two heads are better than one, so are two
-hearts.”</p>
-
-<p>Alma’s only reply to the invitation was a sad, sweet smile,
-and a gentle caress, but the welcome, loving sympathy had
-come when it was most sorely needed, and so she got into the
-aerial boat with Isma, and a few moments later the beautiful
-craft was bearing them at an easy speed southward down the
-valley.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE SNAKE IN EDEN.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_n.jpg" width="78" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-N">NO more perfect place could have been imagined
-for an exchange of confidences and sympathy
-between two girls situated as Alma and Isma
-were than the oval, daintily-cushioned interior
-of the <em>Cygna</em>, as Isma had called her swan-prowed
-craft.</p>
-
-<p>Skirting the mountains, at a distance of about five hundred
-yards from them, and at a height of about as many feet from
-the summits of the undulating foothills below, the <em>Cygna</em> sped
-quietly along at a speed of some twenty-five miles an hour.
-The temperature of the tropic night was so soft and warm, and
-the air was so dry that it was not even necessary for them to
-make use of the light wraps that lay in the stern of the boat.</p>
-
-<p>Isma reclined in the after part of the broad, low seat which
-ran round the inside, with one hand resting lightly upon a little
-silver lever which could be used for working the rudder-fan, in
-addition to the tiller-ropes, which she held in her hands while
-standing up. Alma sat almost upright amidships, with one
-hand clasped on the rail of polished satin-wood which ran round
-the well of the boat, her head turned away from Isma and her
-eyes fixed upon two dim points of light far away to the southward,
-which marked the position of the two moonlit, snowy
-peaks which guarded the southern confines of the valley.</p>
-
-<p>For several minutes they proceeded thus in silence, which
-neither seemed inclined to break. At length Isma looked up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-at a planet that was shining redly over the northern mountains,
-and, possessed by a sudden inspiration, said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Look, Alma, there is Mars returning to our skies!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Alma, turning round and gazing from beneath
-her slightly-frowning brows at the ruddy planet; “it is a fitting
-time for him to come back now that, after all these years of
-peace and happiness, human wickedness and ambition have
-brought the curse of war back again on earth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Isma. “If there were anything in what the old
-astrologers used to say we could look upon his rising as an omen.
-And yet we have very little reason surely for taking as an
-emblem of war a world in which wars have been unheard of
-for thousands of years.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder when that time will come on earth?” said Alma
-bitterly. “If ever it does! We terrestrials seem to be too
-hopelessly wicked and foolish for such wisdom as that.</p>
-
-<p>“Mankind will never have a fairer opportunity of working
-out its redemption than it had after the Terror, and yet here,
-after four generations of peaceful happiness and prosperity, the
-wickedness of one woman is able to set the world ablaze again.
-Our forefathers were wise, but they would have been wiser still
-if they had stamped that vile brood out utterly. Their evil
-blood has been the one drop of venom that has poisoned the
-whole world’s cup of happiness!”</p>
-
-<p>As Alma spoke these last words her grey eyes grew dark
-with sudden passion under her straight-drawn brows. Her
-breast heaved with a sudden wave of emotion, and the sentences
-came quickly and fiercely from the lips which Isma had never
-heard speak in anger before.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she replied, rather sadly than angrily, “perhaps it
-would have been better for the world if they had done so, or,
-at anyrate, if they had shut them up for life, as they did the
-criminals and the insane in the middle of the last century.
-But we must remember, even in our own sorrow and anger,
-that this Olga Romanoff is in her way not altogether unlike
-our own Angel was in hers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Surely you’re speaking sacrilege now!” interrupted Alma.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-“How can the evil be like the good under any circumstances?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I am not,” said Isma, with a smile. “Remember how
-Natasha was trained up by the Master in undying hate of
-Russian tyranny, and how she inherited the legacy of revenge
-from her mother and him. No doubt this Olga has done the
-same, and she has been taught to look upon us as the Terrorists
-looked upon the Tsar and his family.</p>
-
-<p>“We are the descendants of those who flung her ancestor
-from his throne, extinguished his dynasty, and sent him to die
-in Siberia. I would kill her with my own hand if I could, and
-believe that I was ridding the world of a curse, but surely we
-two daughters of Aeria are wise enough to be just even to such
-an enemy as she is.”</p>
-
-<p>“But she has done worse than kill us,” Alma almost hissed
-between her clenched teeth. “If she had a thousand lives and
-we took them one by one they would not expiate her crime
-against us, or equal the hopeless misery that she has brought
-upon us.</p>
-
-<p>“What is mere death, the swift transition from one stage
-of existence to another, compared with the hopeless death-in-life
-to which her wanton wickedness has condemned you and
-me, or to the calamities which she has brought upon the world?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is nothing, I grant you,” said Isma. “But still I do
-not agree with you about that hopeless death-in-life, as you
-call it. Our present sorrow is great and heavy enough, God
-knows, but for me at least it is not hopeless, nor will it be for
-you when the first stress of the storm is over.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” cried Alma, almost as fiercely as
-before, and leaning forward and looking through the dusk into
-her face as though she hardly credited her ears. “Do you mean
-to say that either you or I could ever”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Isma, interrupting her, and speaking now with
-eager animation. “Yes, I mean just what you were going to
-say. And some day, I believe, you will think as I do.”</p>
-
-<p>Alma shook her head in mournful incredulity, and Isma
-noticing the gesture went on&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you will! The reason that you do not agree with me
-now is that yours is a deeper and stronger nature than mine.
-You are like the sea, and I am like the lake. Your grief and
-anger struck you dumb at first.</p>
-
-<p>“You were in a stupor when I found you on the terrace,
-and now the depths of your nature are broken up and the
-storm is raging, and until it is over you will see nothing but
-your own sorrow and anger.</p>
-
-<p>“But with me the storm broke out at once, and I ran to my
-room and threw myself upon my bed and sobbed and wailed
-until my mother thought I was going mad. You have not
-wept yet, and it will be well for you when you do. Your nature
-is prouder than mine, and it will take longer to melt, but it
-must melt some time, for we are both women, after all, and
-then you will see hope through your tears, as I did.”</p>
-
-<p>Alma shook her head again, and said in a low, sad, steady
-voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I can never see hope until I can see Alan as he was when
-he left me, and you know that is impossible.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will never see him again as he was,” replied Isma
-gently. “But that is no reason why you should not see him
-better than he was.”</p>
-
-<p>“Better?” exclaimed Alma, with an involuntary note of
-scorn in her voice, which brought a quick flush to Isma’s cheek,
-and a flash into her eyes for her brother’s sake. “Better! How
-can that be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just as the man who has fallen and risen again of his own
-native strength, is better and stronger than the man who has
-never been tempted,” replied Isma almost hotly.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember the lessons we have learnt from the people of
-Mars since we learnt to communicate with them. You know
-how they have gone through civilisation after civilisation until
-they have refined everything out of human nature that makes
-it human except their animal existence and their intellectual
-faculties.</p>
-
-<p>“They have no passions and they make no mistakes. What
-we call love they call sexual suitability, the mechanical arrangement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-into which they have refined our ruling passion. Do you
-remember how almost impossible Vassilis, after he had perfected
-the code of signals, found it to make even their brightest
-and most advanced intellects understand the meaning of
-jealousy?”</p>
-
-<p>The skilfully-aimed shot struck home instantly. A bright
-wave of colour swept from Alma’s throat up to her brow. Her
-eyes shone like two pale fires in the dusk, and her hand grasped
-the rail on which it was resting till the bones and sinews stood
-out distinct in it. She seemed to gasp for breath a moment
-before she found her voice, but when she spoke her tone seemed
-to ring and vibrate like a bell in the sudden strength of her
-unloosed passion.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she said. “Yes, you innocent-looking little Isma!
-You are wiser than I am after all. I did not know the
-meaning of that word till Olga’s letter fell from the sky, but
-I know it now. My God, how I hate that woman!”</p>
-
-<p>“She is not a woman,” replied Isma, speaking in the
-unconscious pride of her pure descent. “She is a baseborn
-animal, for she has used her beauty for the vilest ends, yet I
-am glad to hear you say that you hate her for Alan’s sake, as I
-do, and&mdash;and for Alexis’s. While you can hate you can love,
-and some day you will love Alan&mdash;the real Alan, not your
-ideal lover&mdash;all the better because you have hated Olga for his
-sake.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” almost wailed Alma, in the intensity of her anger
-and misery. “After he has held her in his arms&mdash;after his
-lips have kissed hers&mdash;after”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, even after that. When your first bitterness has
-passed, as mine has, you will be more just, and remember the
-influence under which he did so&mdash;if he did. Do you hold yourself
-responsible for what you think or do in your dreams, or do
-you not believe what Alan said in his letter about the drug?
-You know too much about chemistry not to know that such
-horrible poisons have existed for centuries.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes, I know that, and I know that he has no share in
-the moral guilt; but how can I ever forget he has been what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-those cruel words of Olga’s told us she had made of him?”
-replied Alma, her face growing cold and hard again as she
-spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Alma,” said Isma, with gentle dignity, yet with a note of
-keen reproach in her voice, “surely you are forgetting that you
-are speaking of my brother as well as of your lover. No, I am
-not angry, for I am too sad myself not to understand your
-sorrow. But I want you to remember that I who have lost
-both a lover and a brother am asking you to be patient and to
-hope with me.</p>
-
-<p>“We have never seen Alan and Alexis as they are. We
-only remember them as two handsome boys who had never
-seen or known evil. When we meet them again, as I firmly
-believe we shall, they will be men who have passed through
-the fire; for if they do not pass through it and come out stronger
-and better than they were, rest assured we shall never meet on
-earth again.</p>
-
-<p>“Alan would no more come to you now than you would go
-to him. When he believes himself worthy of you he will come
-for you as Alexis will come for me, and then”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She stopped short in her eloquent pleading, for Alma, at
-last melted and overcome by her sweet unselfishness and loving
-logic, had felt the springs of her own woman’s nature unloosed,
-and with a low, wailing cry had sunk down upon the cushions
-towards her, and was sobbing out her sorrow on her lap. Isma
-said nothing more, for her end was achieved. She laid her left
-hand caressingly on Alma’s hair, and with her right she pulled
-the steering-lever back and swung the <em>Cygna</em> round until her
-prow pointed towards home again.</p>
-
-<p>When they reached the villa they found the President’s
-private yacht resting on the terrace, for Alan’s father and
-mother had come over after the Council meeting to discuss with
-Alma’s parents the more intimate family aspect of the strange
-events which had cleared up in such terrible fashion the mystery
-which had so long shrouded the fate of the sons of the two
-chief families in Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>So revolting was the idea of their mental servitude to such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-an enemy of the human race as they could not but believe Olga
-Romanoff to be, and so frightful were the consequences that
-must infallibly befall humanity in consequence of it, that their
-parents would rather have known them dead than living under
-such degrading circumstances. To the Aerians, far advanced
-as they were beyond the standards of the present day, both in
-religion and philosophy, the conception of death was one which
-included no terrors and no more regret than was natural and
-common to all humanity at parting with a kinsman or a friend.</p>
-
-<p>As they were destined to prove, when face to face with a
-crisis unparalleled in the history of humanity, they regarded
-death merely as a natural and necessary transition from one
-state of existence to another, which would be higher or lower
-according to the preponderance of good or evil done in this
-life.</p>
-
-<p>If, therefore, the parents and kinsmen of those who were
-now exiles and wanderers upon the ocean wastes could have
-chosen, they would infinitely rather have known that Alan
-and Alexis had shared the fate of their companions in the
-Norwegian snowdrift than they would have learnt that for six
-years they had been the slaves and playthings of a woman who,
-as they guessed from Alan’s letter, combined the ambition of a
-Semiramis with the vices of a Messalina, and who had used
-the skill and knowledge which they had acquired and inherited
-as Princes of the Air with the avowed purpose of subverting
-the dominion of Aeria, undoing all that their ancestors had
-done, and bringing back the evil era of strife, bloodshed, and
-political slavery.</p>
-
-<p>So, too, with Alma. As she had told Isma, she would a
-thousand times rather have seen her lover dead than degraded
-to such base uses. Although she, like everyone else in Aeria,
-admitted that the strange circumstances absolved both Alan
-and Alexis from all moral blame and responsibility, she, in
-common with her own father and mother, and perhaps, also,
-with others not less intimately concerned, found it impossible
-to forget or ignore the taint of such an association, and to look
-upon it as a stain that might never be washed away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Indeed, the only member of the family council who openly
-proclaimed her belief that the two exiles would, if ever they
-returned, come back to Aeria better and stronger men than
-those who had known no evil was Isma, who repeated, with all
-the winning eloquence at her command, all the arguments that
-she had used to Alma during their cruise together. Whether
-Alma and the others would ever come round to her view could
-of course only be proved by time, but it is nevertheless certain
-that when the family council at last separated the hearts of its
-members were less sore than they would have been had Alan
-and Alexis not possessed such an advocate as the girl who had
-so good a double reason for pleading their causes.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_127.jpg" width="350" height="59" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE BATTLE OF KERGUELEN.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_t.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-T">THE Council of Aeria possessed, as has already been
-said, four-and-twenty stations, scattered over the
-oceans of the world, which it used as depôts for
-the submarine fleets, by means of which, acting
-in co-operation with its aerial squadrons, it had
-made any attempt at naval warfare hopeless until the disasters
-described at the beginning of this book proved that an enemy,
-in this respect at least, more powerful than itself, had successfully
-challenged its empire of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Of these stations the most important in the Southern hemisphere
-was that on Kerguelen Island, or Desolation Land,
-situated at the intersection of the 49th parallel of south
-latitude with the 69th meridian of east longitude. This lonely
-fragment of land in the midst of the ocean, barren of surface,
-and swept by the almost constant storms of long winters, had
-been chosen, first, because of its situation on the southern limits
-of the Indian Ocean, equidistant between Africa and Australia,
-and, secondarily, because of its numerous and sheltered deep-water
-harbours, so admirably adapted for vessels which were
-perfectly independent of storm.</p>
-
-<p>Added to this, the island contained large supplies of coal,
-from which the motive-power of both the submarine vessels
-and the air-ships was now derived by direct conversion of its
-solar energy into electrical force through the secret processes
-known only to the President and two members of the Council.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So far the Russians had not ventured to make any attack
-upon this stronghold, so strongly was it defended, not only by
-its submarine squadrons and systems of mines, guarding the
-entrances to all the harbours, but also by the large force of
-air-ships which had been stationed there since the new naval
-warfare had broken out.</p>
-
-<p>The warning which Alan had conveyed in his letter to his
-father was based on the knowledge that a general attack was
-soon to be made upon it both by air and sea, with the object of
-crippling the power of the Aerians in the Southern Ocean. No
-time had been lost in acting upon this warning. The aerial
-squadron was increased to forty, with the <em>Ariel</em> as flagship,
-and twenty new submarine vessels, the largest and best
-possessed by the Aerians, had been despatched from Port Natal
-to reinforce the fleet of thirty-five already at Kerguelen Island.
-With these must of course be counted the <em>Narwhal</em>, under the
-command of Alan and Alexis.</p>
-
-<p>The strength of the attacking force could only be guessed
-at, as even Alan did not know it, but it was not expected that,
-however strong a force the Russians might bring up by sea,
-they would be able, after the disaster of Antarctica, to muster
-more than a dozen air-ships.</p>
-
-<p>The Aerian headquarters was at Christmas Harbour, on the
-northern shore of the island. This is an admirably-sheltered
-inlet running westward into the land between Cape François
-and Arch Point, and its upper and narrower half forms an oval
-basin nearly a mile long by a quarter of a mile broad, walled
-in by high perpendicular basaltic cliffs, and containing a depth
-of water varying from two to sixteen fathoms, as compared
-with twenty-five to thirty fathoms in its outer half.</p>
-
-<p>North of the harbour, Table Mount rises to a height of
-thirteen hundred feet, and to the south is a huge mass of basalt
-over eleven hundred feet high. On both of these elevations
-were mounted batteries of guns capable of throwing projectiles
-of great size and enormous explosive energy to a distance of
-several miles. There were altogether twelve of these batteries
-placed on various heights about the island, and the guns<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-composing them were mounted on swivels, which enabled them
-to be trained so as to throw the projectile either into the sea or
-high up into the air.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after daybreak on the fourth day after Alan’s letter
-had been received the outlook on Cape François, a bold mass of
-basalt to the north of the outer bay, telephoned “<em>Narwhal</em> in
-sight” to the settlement at the head of the harbour. Immediately
-on this message being received the commander of
-the station, named Max Ernstein, a man of about thirty-four,
-and the most daring and skilful submarine navigator and
-engineer in the service of the Council, went on board his own
-vessel, the <em>Cachalot</em>, and set out to welcome the long-lost son of
-the President and convey to him the commission which had
-been sent out by air-ship from Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>The <em>Cachalot</em>, which may as well be described here as elsewhere
-as a type of the submarine warship of the time, was a
-double-pointed cylinder, built of plates of nickelised aluminium
-steel, not riveted, but electrically fused at the joints, so that
-they formed a continuous mass equally impervious all over, and
-presenting no seams or overlaps.</p>
-
-<p>The cylinder was a hundred and fifty feet from point to
-point, with a midship’s diameter of forty feet. The forward
-end was armed with a sheathing of azurine, the metal peculiar
-to the mines of Aeria, which would cut and pierce steel as a
-diamond cuts glass. This sheathing formed a ram, which was
-by no means the least formidable portion of the warship’s
-armament.</p>
-
-<p>The upper part of the cylinder was flattened so as to form
-an oval deck forty feet long by fifteen wide. A centre section
-of this deck, three feet wide, could be opened by means
-of a lateral slide which allowed of the elevation of a gun
-twenty-five feet long, which could be used either for discharging
-torpedoes by water or for throwing projectiles through the
-air.</p>
-
-<p>It could be aimed and fired from below the deck without the
-artillerists even seeing the objects aimed at, save in an arrangement
-of mirrors, so adjusted that when the object appeared in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-the centre of the lowest of them, the gun could be fired with
-the certainty of the projectile reaching its mark. Four underwater
-torpedo tubes, two ahead and two astern, completed the
-armament of the submarine warship.</p>
-
-<p>When under water the deck could be hermetically closed,
-and sliding plates could be drawn over the opening of the
-torpedo tubes, so that from stem to stern of the cylinder there
-were no excrescences to impede the progress of the vessel
-through the water with the sole exception of a dome of thick
-forged glass just forward of the deck, under which stood the
-helmsman, who gave place to the commander of the vessel
-when she went into action. Her powerful four-bladed screw,
-driven by engines almost precisely similar to those of the air-ships,
-gave her a maximum speed of a hundred miles an hour.</p>
-
-<p>The <em>Cachalot</em> ran at twenty-five miles an hour down the
-harbour, and as soon as he got abreast of Cape François
-Captain Ernstein, who was standing on deck, saw a small red
-flag apparently rising from the waves about a mile to seaward.
-A similar flag was soon flying from a movable flagstaff on
-the <em>Cachalot</em>, and a few minutes later she was lying alongside
-the <em>Narwhal</em>.</p>
-
-<p>This vessel was a very leviathan of the deep, and as she lay
-three parts submerged in the water Captain Ernstein calculated
-that she could hardly be less than two hundred feet in
-length and forty-five in diameter amidships. She appeared
-to be built on very much the same plan as the <em>Cachalot</em> and of
-the same materials, saving only, of course, the ram of azurine,
-which was replaced by one of nickel steel.</p>
-
-<p>As the <em>Cachalot</em> got alongside, a slide was drawn back in the
-deck of the <em>Narwhal</em> and the head and shoulders of a man
-dressed in close-fitting seal-fur appeared. It was Alan, little
-changed in physical appearance since the fatal day that he
-invited Olga Romanoff on board the <em>Ithuriel</em>, save that he had
-grown a moustache and beard, which he wore trimmed somewhat
-in the Elizabethan style, and that the frank, open expression
-of the boy had given place to a grave, almost sad, sternness,
-which marked the man who had lived and suffered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Max Ernstein recognised him at once and saluted as though
-greeting a superior officer, for, although all the Aerians were
-friends and comrades, the etiquette of rank and discipline was
-scrupulously observed amongst them when on active service.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you salute me for?” said Alan gravely, as he
-reached the deck and came to the side on which the <em>Cachalot</em>
-lay. “Do you not see that I am no longer wearing the golden
-wings? Are you the officer in command of the station?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Admiral Arnold,” returned the other, in the same
-formal tone and at the same time presenting the letter from the
-Council. “I suppose you have forgotten me. I am Max
-Ernstein, in command of the naval fleet at Kerguelen. That
-letter will explain why I saluted and why I have come to hand
-over my command to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Before he replied Alan ran his eye rapidly over the letter.
-As he did so the pale bronze of his face flushed crimson for a
-moment, and he turned his head away from Ernstein, brushed
-his hand quickly across his eyes, and then read the letter
-again more deliberately. Then he turned and said in a voice
-that he vainly strove to keep steady&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“This is more than I have deserved or could expect, but
-obedience is the first duty, so I accept the command. Come on
-board, Ernstein; of course I recognised you, but until I knew
-how I stood with the Council I looked upon myself as an outlaw,
-and therefore no friend or comrade for you.”</p>
-
-<p>The captain of the <em>Cachalot</em> had a gangway-plank brought
-up and passed from one vessel to the other, and in another
-moment he was standing beside Alan on the deck of the
-<em>Narwhal</em>, and their hands were joined in a firm clasp.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the first honest hand that I have grasped for six
-years, except Alexis’,” said Alan, as he returned the clasp with
-a grip that showed his physical forces had been by no means
-impaired by his long mental servitude. “Come down into the
-cabin, we shall find him there.”</p>
-
-<p>He led the way below, and as soon as Alexis had been told
-the unexpected good news, which seemed to affect him even
-more deeply than it had Alan, the three sat down at the table<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-in the saloon of the <em>Narwhal</em>, a plain but comfortably furnished
-room, about twenty-five feet long by fifteen broad and ten high,
-to discuss a plan of operations in view of the expected attack
-on the station.</p>
-
-<p>Alan at once assumed the authority with which he had been
-invested by the Council, and made minute inquiries into the
-nature and extent of the defending force at his disposal.</p>
-
-<p>“I think that ought to be quite sufficient, not only to defeat,
-but pretty well destroy any force that the Russians can bring
-against us,” said Alan, as soon as Ernstein had finished his
-description. “We have much more to fear from the air-ships
-than from the submarine boats, because the <em>Narwhal</em> would give
-a very good account of them, even by herself. Have any more
-vessels of the type of the <em>Ithuriel</em> been built since the old
-<em>Ithuriel</em> was lost?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Ernstein; “but only ten, I am sorry to say.
-One of them is here, as I told you just now, but we have forty
-of the others, and I don’t suppose the Russians can bring more
-than a dozen against us.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” said Alan. “They have fifty, every
-one of them as fast and as powerful as the old <em>Ithuriel</em>. I
-ought to know,” he continued grimly, “for they were every one
-of them built under my own eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon,” said Ernstein. “I ought to have told
-you before now that we have already won our first victory, and
-that though we lost eight vessels we destroyed twenty of the
-Russians’.” And then he went on to give Alan and Alexis a
-rapid description of the pursuit of the <em>Revenge</em>, and the havoc
-wrought at the end of it by the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the <em>Ariel</em>.</p>
-
-<p>“That is glorious news!” said Alan. “But they have thirty
-ships at their disposal still, and I expect they will bring at
-least twenty of these against us, and they are all swifter than
-ours saving only the <em>Ariel</em>. Of course my command ends
-with the shore, but I think it will be as well if the captain of
-the <em>Ariel</em> were to come on board the <em>Narwhal</em> so that we could
-arrange our plans of defence together&mdash;I for the sea, and he for
-the air.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But why not come ashore and see him?” said Ernstein.
-“He and all of us will be delighted to see you on the island.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Alan, shaking his head. “Alexis and I have
-promised each other never to leave the <em>Narwhal</em> until the
-Russian sea power is crippled. The day that we set foot on dry
-land again will be the day that we give back the supremacy of
-the sea to the Council, so if we two Admirals of the Sea and Air
-are to meet, the commander of the <em>Ariel</em> must come here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Ernstein. “I understand you. Write a
-note and I will send the <em>Cachalot</em> back with it. She will bring
-him back in under half an hour, for he was up at the settlement
-when I left.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan wrote the letter forthwith, and the <em>Cachalot</em> departed,
-returning, as her captain had said, in less than half an hour,
-with Edward Forrest, the commander of the <em>Ariel</em>. He was a
-lean, wiry, active man of about forty-five, of mixed English,
-Scotch, and Aerian descent, with short, crisp, curly black hair
-and smooth-shaven face, rather sharp, regular features, and a
-pair of keen grey eyes which seemed to look into the very
-brain of the person he was talking to&mdash;a man of prompt decisions
-and few words, and one of the most able aerial navigators
-that Aeria could boast of.</p>
-
-<p>He held the rank of admiral, and was responsible for the
-station of Kerguelen, and the command of the southern seas.
-He greeted Alan and Alexis courteously, but a trifle stiffly, as
-though he thought that their indiscretion had been somewhat
-lightly dealt with by the Council. This, however, was no
-business of his, for the first law of Aeria was that the decisions
-of the President and Council were not open to criticism
-by any private or official citizen whatever his rank or experience.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, after reading, as a matter of form, the commission
-sent to Alan and Alexis, he addressed himself at once to
-the business of the moment, and before they had been discussing
-the plan of defence for many minutes he was forced to
-admit to himself that the President’s son, young as he was, was
-more than his master both in aerial and naval tactics.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>For the greater part of the morning plan after plan was
-suggested, thrashed out, and either accepted or thrown aside,
-and when he took his leave he shook hands with both Alan
-and Alexis far more cordially than he had done in greeting, and
-said with brief, blunt candour&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“This is not the first time that a woman has used a man to
-upset the peace of the world, and I tell you honestly that I
-once thought you had both turned traitors. I don’t think so
-now, and I am heartily glad you are back. If you could only
-have returned three years ago a lot of trouble might have been
-saved, but I must confess that you have both learnt more in
-five years than I have in twenty. I will follow your instructions
-to the letter.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is done is done,” said Alan, smiling, and yet with a
-grave dignity that showed Admiral Forrest that, despite all that
-had happened, he was standing in the presence of his master.
-“The work in hand now is to regain what we have lost, and if
-every man does his duty we shall do so. I think everything
-is arranged now, and as we have no time to lose I will say
-good-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>He held out his hand as he spoke, and Admiral Forrest took
-his dismissal and his leave at the same time.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Ernstein took six men out of the <em>Cachalot</em> and
-placed them at the disposal of Alan and Alexis, for the working
-of the <em>Narwhal</em>, and then took his leave to execute his part
-of the plan of defence.</p>
-
-<p>It was a bitterly cold day, for the southern winter had
-already set in in all its severity. The sea to the north of the
-island was comparatively smooth, but swept every now and
-then with violent gusts of wind from the southward. The
-sky was entirely covered by thick masses of cold grey cloud,
-every now and then torn up into great rolling masses by the
-sudden blasts of icy wind from the pole, which drove fierce
-storms of hard frozen snow across the bare and desolate
-island.</p>
-
-<p>But the roughness of the elements was a matter of small
-concern to the crews of the air-ships and the submarine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-cruisers, for both were independent alike of sea and storm.
-The former could literally ride upon the wings of the fiercest
-gale that ever blew. Their interiors were warm and wind-proof,
-and their machinery was powerful enough to drive them
-four and five times as fast as the air-currents in which they
-floated, while the latter had only to sink a few feet below the
-level of the waves to find perfect calm.</p>
-
-<p>The days, in short, were past when men had been at the
-mercy of the elements, and so the atmospheric conditions
-which would have made a modern naval attack upon a rocky
-and exposed coast almost impossible were not even taken into
-account in preparing to meet the threatened assault on Kerguelen
-Island.</p>
-
-<p>No one knew when or how the first assault would be
-delivered. All that was known was that, unless Olga and her
-advisers had completely altered their plans, the attack would
-take place either that day or the next, and consequently ceaseless
-vigilance was necessary on sea and land and in the air.</p>
-
-<p>In accordance with the plan arranged on board the
-<em>Narwhal</em>, ten air-ships rose above the clouds to an altitude of
-five thousand feet, and from each of these an electric thread
-hung down to as many signal-stations on the island, all of
-which were connected with the headquarters at the top of
-Christmas Harbour.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty cruisers patrolled the coast at a distance of a mile
-from the land, and two miles outside these the <em>Narwhal</em> ran
-to and fro along the northern shore. All the more important
-inlets which had sufficient depth of water for submarine attack
-were guarded with mines and chains of torpedoes, so disposed
-that no vessel could possibly enter without firing them, and so
-giving warning of the locality of the attack.</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon passed without any alarm, and at nightfall
-the clouds sent down a blinding storm of snow, which, added
-to the intense darkness, made vision impossible both on land
-and sea, although high above the clouds the ten air-ships floated
-in a calm, clear atmosphere, under the brilliant constellations
-of the southern hemisphere.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>No attack seemed possible without warning, either by sea
-or above the clouds, for the hostile air-ships could not approach
-without being seen from a great distance through the clear,
-starlit sky, and without their lights, which would instantly
-betray their presence, it was impossible for the submarine
-vessels even to find the coast.</p>
-
-<p>Hour after hour passed, and still no hostile sign rewarded
-the vigilance of the defenders. No one of the present day
-could have guessed that all the preparations had been made
-for such a battle as had never been fought before on sea or
-land, or in the air.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing was visible but the snow-covered earth and the
-storm-swept sea, for the sentinel ships, floating far above the
-clouds, were beyond the reach of vision. And yet, if the
-combined fleets of the modern world had attacked Kerguelen
-that night, not a ship would have escaped to tell the tale of
-annihilation, so terrible were the engines of destruction which
-waited but the signal of battle to strike their swift and
-irresistible blows.</p>
-
-<p>It was about half-past six o’clock the next morning when
-Alexis, who was on watch in the conning-tower of the <em>Narwhal</em>,
-saw a faint beam of light illuminating the water a long way
-ahead. He instantly signalled to Alan&mdash;“Enemy in sight.
-Back. I am going to ram.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan, unwilling to leave the new crew, who were not yet
-perfectly acquainted with the working of the machinery, had
-taken command of the engine-room alternately with Alexis,
-who was now taking his four hours’ watch in the conning-tower,
-and to whom the fortune of war had given the honour of
-striking the first blow. The <em>Narwhal</em> backed rapidly, and as she
-did so Alexis turned a small wheel in the side of the conning-tower,
-and the whole chamber sank into the hull of the vessel.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as it stopped he pulled a lever and a heavy steel
-sheet slid over the opening where the glass dome had been.
-In front of him as he stood at the steering-wheel was a long,
-very slender needle hung with extreme delicacy on a pivot,
-up which an electric current constantly passed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This needle was terrestrially insulated by a magnet which
-always swung opposite to the magnetic pole, and when acted
-upon only by the steel of the vessel’s fabric, swung indifferently
-as long as there was no other vessel within a thousand yards of
-the <em>Narwhal</em>. But the moment one came within that distance
-the needle pointed towards it with unerring accuracy, as it was
-doing at the present moment.</p>
-
-<p>Alexis allowed the vessel to back until he saw the needle
-begin to waver. Then he knew that the thousand-yard limit
-had been reached, and signalled&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Full speed ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>The next moment the engines were reversed and the <em>Narwhal</em>
-bore down on her invisible prey. The needle became
-rigid again. Alexis kept it pointing dead ahead as the <em>Narwhal</em>
-gathered way and rushed silently but with irresistible
-force upon her victim.</p>
-
-<p>She passed over the thousand yards in forty seconds. Then
-came a dull, rending crash, a slight shiver of the mighty
-fabric, and then she swept on her way as though she had
-passed through a couple of inches of planking instead of the
-steel hull of a submarine warship more than two-thirds her
-own size.</p>
-
-<p>And so in silence and darkness, without the discharge of a
-gun or the flash of a shot or an audible cry of human pain, the
-work of death and destruction began and ended. In the
-passing of an instant a warship had been destroyed which
-could have annihilated a fleet of modern battleships in detail
-without once appearing above the surface of the water.</p>
-
-<p>The moment that the shock told Alexis that the ram of the
-<em>Narwhal</em> had done its work, he signalled “Stop,” and as the
-vessel slowed down he watched the momentous fluctuations of
-the needle in front of him. It oscillated for an instant and
-then became still again, pointing to another victim hidden
-away somewhere under the dark waters. He brought the
-vessel round until it pointed ahead again, and then once more
-the leviathan plunged forward at full speed on her errand of
-destruction.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thirty seconds later a rasping tearing sound, told him that
-he had ripped the side out of a second Russian vessel; and
-again he stopped, and again the fatal tell-tale needle pointed
-to a mark on which he hurled his irresistible ram. So the
-work went on, and vessel after vessel was torn to pieces and
-sunk in the midst of the darkness and silence of the wintry
-sea, without even a warning having been given either to the
-consorts of the destroyed vessels or to those nearer in shore,
-all of which were, of course, outside the range of the needle’s
-indication. But for this fact Alexis would have been unable to
-do his work, for he would not have known whether he was
-ramming friend or foe.</p>
-
-<p>When the ram had found its mark for the twelfth time,
-the needle oscillated vaguely to and fro, showing that within
-a thousand-yards radius at least there were no more victims to
-be found. Then the <em>Narwhal</em> rose to the surface of the water,
-and Alexis resumed his watch as the vessel patrolled the coast
-again at a speed of fifty miles an hour.</p>
-
-<p>Alan now came and relieved Alexis from his watch. As he
-entered the conning-tower he said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“How many is that you’ve settled? A dozen, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Alexis, “but I can hardly think they can have
-been anything but scouts, and so we shall have the main fleet
-to tackle yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think any of them have got through?” said Alan.
-“You know they may have approached from east and west as
-well, and if so they are lying inside of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Alexis, “I don’t think they would do that.
-You see we have the advantage of them in this way. They
-can’t see ten yards in front of them unless there is bright
-sunshine on the water, or unless they turn their lights on to
-the full, in which case they would betray their presence at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>“Then they don’t know what has become of the <em>Narwhal</em>,
-and probably think that she has been attacked by an overwhelming
-force, or blown up by some lucky torpedo. They
-daren’t go inshore in force for fear of springing a mine, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-so you may depend upon it the twelve we have destroyed were
-scouts, prowling about very slowly and waiting for daylight to
-examine the coast and find a way into Christmas Harbour.</p>
-
-<p>“They must have been in single line, and we had the luck
-to catch one of the end ones first, and so we sank the lot in
-the order in which they were floating. I don’t think we can
-do anything more till daylight except run up and down the
-coast and keep a sharp look-out to seaward and on the
-needle.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you’re right,” said Alan. “You’d better go and
-get an hour’s sleep if you can.”</p>
-
-<p>“There won’t be much sleep for any of us till to-night,”
-said Alexis quickly, pointing to the clouds over the island.
-“Look! the row has begun in the air already.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan glanced up and saw a series of intensely bright
-flashes stream downwards through the <a id="Ref_122"></a>clouds, which at the
-same moment were rent and rolled up into vast shadowy
-billows by some tremendous concussion of the atmosphere
-above them. There could be only one explanation of this.
-The attack on the island had begun from the air, and the
-flashes were those of the first shots of the aerial bombardment.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_122" class="figcenter" style="width: 441px;">
-<img src="images/i_141.jpg" width="441" height="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">The Clouds were rent and rolled up into vast shadowy Billows.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_122">Page 122</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>What had really happened was this.</p>
-
-<p>A fleet of fifty submarine warships, under the command of
-Michael Lossenski, the eldest son of Orloff Lossenski, who
-was now Olga Romanoff’s chief adviser in the conduct of the
-war that she had commenced with the Aerians, had reached
-the northern coast of Kerguelen Island about four o’clock in
-the morning in order to co-operate with an aerial squadron
-of fifteen vessels led by the <em>Revenge</em>, under the command,
-nominally, of Lossenski’s second son Boris, but really of Olga
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>As Alexis had surmised, the twelve vessels destroyed by the
-<em>Narwhal</em> were scouts sent out to, if possible, feel their way to
-the entrance of Christmas Harbour, which was known to be
-the headquarters of the station.</p>
-
-<p>These were to have returned to the fleet with all the intelligence
-they could get as to bearings and soundings, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-position of mines and the defending fleet. Then at daybreak,
-that is to say about eight o’clock, the whole squadron was to
-have advanced to the entrance to the harbour, ramming any
-of the defenders who barred their way, and then, after sending
-a swarm of torpedoes into the mouth of the bay to explode the
-mines and blow up any submarine defences that might exist,
-to have made a rush for the inner bay at the same time that
-the air-ships engaged the land defences.</p>
-
-<p>The naval portion of the programme was completely frustrated
-by the destruction of the scouts, while the aerial attack
-was foiled by the look-outs stationed above the clouds. Soon
-after seven it became light enough at their altitude for the
-powerful glasses of their commanders to make out the fifteen
-Russian air-ships coming up from the southward at a distance
-of about twenty miles.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later they were themselves discovered by the
-Russians, and Olga, to her intense chagrin, saw at a glance
-that all hope of a surprise was gone. By some means or other
-the Aerians had received intelligence of the attack, and were
-ready for it.</p>
-
-<p>The terrible experience taught by the disaster of Antarctica
-warned her and her lieutenants that any approach, now that
-they were seen, must be made with the utmost caution, for
-they had no precise knowledge as to the range of the Aerian
-guns. All they knew was that it was very great, and that
-where one of their projectiles found its mark destruction
-followed instantly.</p>
-
-<p>Added to this, there was another difficulty. The dense
-masses of cloud completely hid both sea and land from their
-view, and made accurate shooting at the land defences impossible.
-Consequently there was nothing for it but to fight the
-battle out in the upper regions of the air, against a force of
-whose actual strength they were ignorant. They dare not
-attempt to surround the ten air-ships, which hung stationary
-over the island, for this meant bringing all their guns into
-play, while they could only use half of their own.</p>
-
-<p>While they were debating on a plan of operations, two new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-factors in the coming struggle were swiftly and unexpectedly
-brought into play. As soon as the news of their arrival had
-been telegraphed to headquarters, the <em>Ariel</em> took the air and
-passed under the clouds to the rear of the Russian squadron.
-Ten miles behind them, she swept round sharply, and with her
-wings inclined to the utmost, and her engines working at the
-fullest capacity, she took a mighty upward swoop, passed
-through the clouds like a flash of light, and before the
-Russians knew what had happened, she was floating three
-thousand feet above them, out of reach of their guns, and
-hurling projectile after projectile into their midst. Three
-of their ships, struck almost simultaneously, were torn into
-a thousand fragments, and vanished through the clouds.</p>
-
-<p>It was the glare and shock of this explosion that Alexis had
-seen from the conning-tower of the <em>Narwhal</em>. The remaining
-Russian ships instantly scattered and sank through the clouds
-to seek a refuge from the foe whose deadly blows they were
-completely unable to return.</p>
-
-<p>But the moment they appeared on the under-side of the
-cloud-sea, all the guns of the land batteries opened fire in all
-directions with time-shells, and so rapid were the discharges,
-and so terrible the energy of the explosives, that the whole
-firmament above the island seemed ablaze with them, while
-the concussions of the nether atmosphere were so tremendous
-and continuous, that it would have been madness for the
-Russian air-ships to have approached within the zone of fire with
-which the Aerians had covered and encircled their positions.</p>
-
-<p>The clouds were torn and broken up into vast whirling
-masses, which completely obscured the view of the Russians,
-and rendered anything like accurate shooting in the direction
-of the island impossible. Worse than this, the range of the
-great land guns, fired at an elevation of forty-five degrees, was
-so enormous that they were forced by the incessantly exploding
-projectiles, which were hurled up into the air in all directions,
-to retire to a distance which, beyond the most random
-shooting, the results of which were spent upon the rocks of the
-island and the sea, rendered their own guns useless.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Rise up through the clouds they dare not, for they knew
-the <em>Ariel</em> was still there, and that the first ship that showed
-herself would be an almost helpless mark for one of the ten
-guns which, for the time being, commanded the heavens. There
-seemed nothing for it but an ignominious retreat, for, as Boris
-Lossenski said to Olga when, furious with rage and mortification,
-she reproached him with a lack both of skill and courage,
-an attack upon a volcano in full eruption would have been
-child’s play to an assault at close quarters on Kerguelen
-Island.</p>
-
-<p>Their one hope of success had lain in a surprise, and that,
-by some unaccountable means, had been made impossible.
-They had reckoned only on the air-ships and the submarine
-defences, and even these they had expected to take unawares.
-The terrible power of the battery guns, which were able to
-spread their seas of fire through the air and to shake the very
-firmament itself with their projectiles, had been a revelation
-to them.</p>
-
-<p>They could not train their own guns without seeing their
-mark, and neither flame nor smoke betrayed the position of
-the batteries, while on the other hand the artillerists on the
-island had simply to surround the station with a zone of fire
-and a continuous series of atmospheric convulsions through
-which no air-ship could have passed without the risk of overturning
-or completely collapsing.</p>
-
-<p>So Olga was at last convinced that her choice lay between
-abandonment of the attack or running the gauntlet of fire
-in the almost forlorn hope of engaging the land batteries and
-an aerial fleet of unknown strength at close quarters.</p>
-
-<p>Baffled and defeated, and yet convinced that to continue
-the unequal contest under its present conditions would be
-merely to court still more disastrous defeat, and even probable
-destruction, Olga at last allowed Lossenski to give the signal
-for retreat, and the Russian squadron withdrew to a position
-twelve miles northward of the island. Its departure was seen
-both from the air and the land, and the cannonade immediately
-stopped.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Alan had run the <em>Narwhal</em> into the mouth of
-Christmas Harbour flying his red flag. He was met by the
-<em>Cachalot</em>, and, after telling Captain Ernstein what he had done,
-and learning of the repulse of the Russians in the aerial battle,
-he directed forty of the submarine vessels to follow him out to
-sea to look for the Russian flotilla.</p>
-
-<p>All the craft were furnished with tell-tale needles similar
-to the one on board the <em>Narwhal</em>, for it is impossible to see a
-sufficient distance under water to effectively attack an enemy
-as agile as the submarine warships were, and this fact had
-led to the universal employment of the needles.</p>
-
-<p>As it was now quite light, the whole Aerian squadron, with
-the exception of five vessels whose duty it was to act as scouts
-under water, proceeded seaward on the surface of the waves,
-keeping a sharp look-out for the remains of the Russian fleet,
-which they soon discovered lying about five miles off the
-island. They could make out thirty-five of the long, black,
-half-submerged hulls lying together like a school of whales
-with the waves breaking over them as over sunken rocks.</p>
-
-<p>Alan immediately signalled from his conning-tower in the
-manual sign-language, used by the Aerians to communicate
-between their air-ships, to his consorts, and ordered them to
-scatter and form a wide circle round the Russian squadron at
-a distance of a mile, and a depth of two fathoms, but on no
-account to approach within a thousand yards of them. When
-they had reached their positions they were to rise to the surface
-and each was to discharge a couple of torpedoes towards
-the centre of the circle. After that they were to retire and
-leave the rest to him.</p>
-
-<p>The moment the order had been passed through the fleet,
-everyone of the vessels disappeared and proceeded to her
-station. The <em>Narwhal</em> sank at the same time until nothing but
-the glass dome of her conning-tower remained above the water.</p>
-
-<p>By carefully noting the course steered by the compass, and
-accurately measuring the distance travelled by the number of
-revolutions of the propeller, each captain was able to place his
-craft in the desired position.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So perfectly, indeed, was the manœuvre performed that
-when the vessels rose to the surface they formed a circle two
-miles in diameter, in the centre of which lay, within a space
-of about two hundred yards square, the Russian flotilla, the
-commanders of which, afraid to advance nearer to the shore
-without the intelligence which they still awaited from their
-scouts, and confounded by the awful spectacle presented by
-the aerial battle, of the issue of which they were utterly
-ignorant, were waiting in bewilderment and indecision the
-issue of the events which had taken such a marvellous and
-unexpected turn.</p>
-
-<p>The manœuvre ordered by Alan had been executed so
-promptly and secretly that the Russians were not even aware
-that they were surrounded until torpedo after torpedo, coming
-in from all points of the compass, began exploding in their
-midst, hurling vast masses of water and foam up into the air,
-tearing their plates and crippling their propellers, and disabling
-half their number before they had time to recover
-from the confusion into which the sudden attack had thrown
-them.</p>
-
-<p>To communicate signals from one vessel to another under
-such circumstances was impossible, and so united action was
-out of the question. All that the captains of the vessels could
-see was that there were enemies upon all sides of them. The
-explosion of the eighty torpedoes had churned the water up
-into a mass of seething foam, in the midst of which fifteen
-vessels were lying crippled and helpless on the surface, while
-six more had been sent to the bottom.</p>
-
-<p>This was bad enough, but while the captains of those which
-had escaped were recovering from the stupefaction into which
-this sudden disaster had thrown them Alan saw his chance,
-and as soon as the last torpedo had exploded headed the
-<em>Narwhal</em> full speed into the midst of them. Then followed a
-scene which would have beggared all description.</p>
-
-<p>The great ship, moving at a speed of nearly three miles a
-minute, tore her way through the half-crippled squadron,
-hurling everything she struck to the bottom of the sea. Every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-Russian vessel that was able to do so after the first assault
-sank out of the way of the terrible ram of the <em>Narwhal</em> and
-headed off at full speed into the open sea.</p>
-
-<p>But for those that were partially or wholly disabled there
-was no escape. Alan standing in his conning-tower, his
-teeth clenched and his blue eyes almost black with the fierce
-passion of battle and revenge, whirled his steering-wheel this
-way and that, and as the steel monster swung round in rapid
-curves in obedience to the rudder, he hurled her again and
-again upon his practically helpless victims, piercing them
-through and through as though their plates had been cardboard
-instead of steel.</p>
-
-<p>When the last one had gone down he left the conning-tower,
-hoisted his flagstaff, and flew a signal to his consorts
-to return to harbour. What had become of the Russian
-vessels that had escaped he neither knew nor, for the present,
-cared.</p>
-
-<p>The victory of the Aerians both at sea and in the air was
-complete, and he was certain that the Russians had received
-such a lesson as would convince them that Kerguelen Island
-was impregnable to any assault that they could make upon it,
-unless they were able to take its defenders by surprise&mdash;a contingency
-which was justly considered impossible.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_148.jpg" width="350" height="60" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE SYREN’S STRONGHOLD.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_a.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-A">AS soon as the first pitched battle in the world-war
-was over, a lengthy and detailed report of the
-attack on Kerguelen and its repulse was drawn
-up by Alan, Captain Ernstein, and Admiral
-Forrest for presentation to the Council. To this
-report Alan added a supplement, which is here
-reproduced in his own words.</p>
-
-<p>“From what I know of the designs of Olga Romanoff and
-her advisers I am convinced that the defeats which have been
-inflicted upon them will merely have the effect of checking,
-and not putting a stop to, their operations against the peace
-and freedom of the world.</p>
-
-<p>“I have seen and heard enough during the last five years to
-feel satisfied that there exists a very widespread conspiracy,
-the object of which is the restoration of the Romanoff dynasty,
-in the person of Olga, the breaking up of the Anglo-Saxon
-Federation, and the inauguration of an era of personal despotism
-and popular slavery.</p>
-
-<p>“As far as we have been able to learn, this conspiracy
-embraces practically all the descendants of those families who
-lost their rank, official position, or property during the reconstitution
-of Russia after the fall of the Romanoffs. These
-people have, of course, everything to gain and not much to
-lose by the destruction of the present order of things, and Olga
-has promised them, no doubt quite sincerely, that in the event<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-of her triumph they shall be restored to all that their ancestors
-lost.</p>
-
-<p>“As a matter of fact, the greater part of Russia will be
-divided amongst them should she ever accomplish her designs.
-The old order of things, as it existed before the days of
-Alexander <span class="smcap">II.</span>, is to be completely reinstated. The lower
-orders of the people are to be reduced once more to serfdom,
-and the trading classes to a condition very little better.</p>
-
-<p>“If they resist they are to be terrorised into submission by
-the air-ships, and all who raise their voices for freedom are to
-be banished to Siberia, which is once more to be the prison-land
-of the Russian Empire. A large standing army is to be
-kept constantly on the war-footing, while the sea navy and the
-aerial fleet are to be kept up to such a strength as to be able to
-hold the rest of the Continent in practical subjection.</p>
-
-<p>“In short, Olga aspires to nothing less than the throne of
-an empire which shall stretch from the Yellow Sea to the
-Atlantic Ocean. I am afraid, too, that there can be no doubt
-but that this conspiracy is not only favoured, but actually
-assisted, by large numbers of people throughout the Federation
-area.</p>
-
-<p>“In fact, during the latter part of our stay at Mount Terror,
-the stronghold was visited by men of all nations, who, of
-course, came and went away in the submarine vessels, and who
-openly promised to do everything they could to further what
-they called the cause of the New Revolution in their own
-countries, on the understanding that the old evils of capitalism
-and private ownership of land by which their ancestors had
-grown wealthy are to be restored.</p>
-
-<p>“This will, I trust, be enough to show you that the triumph
-of Olga Romanoff means nothing less than the complete
-undoing of all the work that was done in the days of the
-Terror.</p>
-
-<p>“We have proved so far that Kerguelen, and, therefore,
-Aeria, is impregnable to attack save by surprise, which will
-now, of course, be impossible. But, on the other hand, the
-force at the disposal of Olga and her allies is still so strong that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-all our present resources will have to be kept constantly
-employed to protect ourselves, and this leaves the world at the
-mercy of any Power which can obtain the assistance of the
-Russians’ aerial navy, which still numbers twenty-seven vessels,
-all equal to our best ships.</p>
-
-<p>“In addition to these they possess a submarine navy of at
-least forty vessels, all of which are swifter and more powerful
-than ours, with the exception of the <em>Narwhal</em>. I therefore
-suggest that the whole of the resources at the command of the
-Council shall at once be devoted to the building of at least
-fifty air-ships of the <em>Ithuriel</em> type, and the same number of
-submarine battleships like the <em>Narwhal</em>, complete plans of
-which I enclose.</p>
-
-<p>“Until this additional force is at our command, I think it
-would be useless to attempt the destruction of the Russian
-stronghold in Antarctica, and until this is destroyed there can
-be no hope of peace. This stronghold, which I will now
-attempt to describe for the information of the Council, is one
-of the most marvellous places on earth.</p>
-
-<p>“It lies in and about Mount Terror and the Parry Mountains,
-which run from it towards the pole behind the ice-barrier
-of Antarctica. Nearly ten years ago a Russian explorer
-named Kishenov reached the ice-barrier and made the discoveries
-which have enabled the Russian revolutionists to
-create their stronghold. In addition to his ship, he took with
-him three aerostats, which were chiefly constructed during his
-voyage, and also a small submarine vessel, which he took out
-in sections and put together at sea.</p>
-
-<p>“He skirted the coast of Victoria Land, and was stopped by
-the ice in latitude 78°, as all other Antarctic explorers by sea
-have been since the voyage of Sir James Ross. The season
-was a singularly fine and open one, and two days after his
-arrival he inflated one of his aerostats and crossed the great
-barrier, to make a thorough exploration of the unknown land.
-Kishenov was the first man, not an Aerian, who had ever seen
-what there was on the other side of the Antarctic ice-wall.</p>
-
-<p>“But he discovered far more than our explorers did, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-while he was in the neighbourhood of Mount Terror an earthquake,
-accompanying a violent eruption of Mount Erebus,
-made a huge fissure in the south side of Mount Terror. After
-waiting three days to make sure that the earthquake had subsided,
-he and two of his officers entered the crevice, which
-they found to be over two hundred feet wide at the level of
-the land ice.</p>
-
-<p>“Furnished with storage batteries and electric lights, they
-penetrated into the interior of the mountain and found that it
-was pierced in all directions with great galleries and enormous
-chambers, hollowed out by volcanic forces during the period of
-Mount Terror’s activity. Four days were spent altogether in
-exploring this subterranean region, the existence of which was
-kept a profound secret by Kishenov and his officers.</p>
-
-<p>“Not the least strange and, as it has proved, one of the most
-valuable portions of his discovery was the finding of a subterranean
-lake in the heart of Mount Terror, the temperature
-of which was kept far above the freezing point by the heat
-which the interior of the mountain derived from the neighbouring
-fires of Mount Erebus. Finding the lake to be salt
-water, he concluded that it must have some connection with
-the open sea, and so the next day he and the same two officers
-entered the submarine boat and penetrated underneath the ice-barrier.</p>
-
-<p>“After a search of five hours, the search-lights of the boat
-revealed a huge tunnel leading south-west into the land, that
-is to say, direct for Mount Terror. They followed this tunnel
-up for a distance of nearly five miles, and then struck the end.
-They now rose, and finally found themselves floating on the
-surface of the lake in the interior of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>“One of Kishenov’s officers, a man named Louis Khemski,
-was a member of the Russian Revolutionary Society, whose
-existence only became known five years ago. After the capture
-of the <em>Ithuriel</em> the heads of this society met, and to them
-this man communicated the secret of Mount Terror. Kishenov
-and the other officer refused to join the revolutionists, and were
-assassinated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Khemski was at once taken on board the <em>Ithuriel</em>, now
-renamed the <em>Revenge</em>, and guided her to the fissure leading
-into Mount Terror. Its outer portion was of course filled and
-covered with ice and snow, but as soon as Khemski had found
-its position by his landmarks, a couple of shells speedily reopened
-it, and it was here that the <em>Revenge</em> lay hidden while
-you were ransacking the world for her.</p>
-
-<p>“Olga inherited from her grandfather, the father of the
-Vladimir Romanoff who was executed for disobeying the order
-of the Council, all the plans and directions necessary for the
-building both of air-ships and submarine vessels, and as soon
-as this perfect stronghold and hiding-place was discovered, her
-accomplices in the conspiracy for the restoration of the Russian
-monarchy at once devoted their fortunes to the supply of
-money and materials. The <em>Revenge</em> made one more voyage to
-Russia, and by travelling at full speed at a great elevation
-managed to make it unobserved.</p>
-
-<p>“The services of the cleverest engineers and most skilful
-craftsmen among the revolutionists were secured. Transports
-were chartered and sent out to Antarctica loaded with
-materials. On the shores of the subterranean lake the first
-squadron of submarine vessels was built, and then began the
-system of ocean terrorism which soon paralysed the trade of
-the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Piracy was carried on with utter ruthlessness. Transports
-were sunk by the vessels, and then plundered by divers of the
-treasure which they carried, and which was employed to purchase
-new materials and to repay those who had furnished the
-first funds.</p>
-
-<p>“Alexis and myself were kept by Olga, as I said in my first
-letter, under the influence of a drug which completely paralysed
-our volitional power, and were compelled to reveal all we
-knew concerning our own air-ships, submarine vessels, guns,
-and explosives. And in this manner was created and equipped
-the force which will be employed to dispute with us the empire
-of the world unless we are able to extirpate it utterly.”</p>
-
-<p>While the despatch to the Council was being drawn up,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-the <em>Narwhal</em> had been lying in the inner basin of Christmas
-Harbour, renewing her store of motive power from the generating
-station ashore. As soon as the engineer in charge
-reported that her power-reservoirs were full, and Alan had
-delivered the despatch for conveyance to Aeria by air-ship,
-Alexis, who had been apparently buried in a brown study for
-the last two hours or so, asked Alan to come with him into
-his private cabin, and as soon as the two friends were alone
-together he said to him&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, old man! While you fellows have been drawing
-up that despatch, and talking about the impossibility of
-attacking the stronghold at Mount Terror, I’ve been doing
-some thinking, and I’ve come to the conclusion that as far as
-an under-sea attack is concerned, it isn’t quite so hopeless as
-you’ve made out.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be only too delighted to hear you prove us wrong,”
-replied Alan, his eyes brightening at the prospect, for he knew
-Alexis too well not to be sure that he would not have spoken
-in this way unless he had pretty solid reasons for doing so.
-“Say on, my friend; I am all attention.”</p>
-
-<p>“Get out to sea, then, as fast as ever you can,” said Alexis,
-“for there’s not an hour to be lost if you adopt my plan, and
-if you don’t we can just come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Alan. “What’s the course?”</p>
-
-<p>“Clear the islands and head away southward as hard as you
-can go,” replied Alexis briefly.</p>
-
-<p>The excitement of the battle in which he had played such
-a terrible part had left Alan in just the frame of mind to
-listen to the project of a desperate adventure, such as he
-instinctively knew was now in his friend’s mind. Without
-hesitating further he went into the saloon, summoned the
-crew of the <em>Narwhal</em>, and said to them&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Alexis and I have decided upon an enterprise which will
-end either in very great injury to our enemies or our own
-destruction. You have seen enough to-day to know that in
-the warfare we are engaged in there are only two choices:
-victory or destruction. We don’t want to take anyone against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-his will to what may be certain death. Those who care to go
-ashore may do so.”</p>
-
-<p>Not a man moved. An athletic sailor named George Cosmo,
-who held the post of chief engineer, saluted, and said briefly&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“We shall all go, sir. What are the orders?”</p>
-
-<p>“Get out of the harbour as fast as you can, and as soon as
-you are clear of the islands sink two fathoms, steer a straight
-course due south-east, and put her through the water as hard
-as she’ll go,” replied Alan.</p>
-
-<p>Cosmo saluted again, and left the room with his comrades
-to execute the order.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, my friend,” said Alan, turning to Alexis as soon as
-they were alone again, “what is your plan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Simply this,” replied Alexis. “Mount Terror, or at any
-rate the mouth of the submarine tunnel, is in round numbers
-three thousand geographical miles from here. Our speed is
-thirty miles an hour faster than that of Olga’s squadron.
-That means that even if they go back at once and at full
-speed we shall be there four or five hours before them.</p>
-
-<p>“They, I think, have had quite enough fighting for to-day,
-and I don’t believe they’ll attack the island again&mdash;first,
-because they know that they can’t take our sea defences by
-surprise, and, second, because they think the <em>Narwhal</em> will
-remain on guard.</p>
-
-<p>“Either they will go off on a raiding expedition somewhere
-else with the air-ships&mdash;in which case we can’t follow
-them, for we don’t know where they’re going&mdash;or they will
-return to Mount Terror at an easy speed of fifty or sixty miles
-an hour. They will never dream that you and I will venture
-to attack the stronghold single-handed, and, therefore, that is
-just what I propose to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“That will be odds of about forty to one against the
-<em>Narwhal</em>,” replied Alan, somewhat gravely. “Unless we can
-destroy it completely before they get back. But go on. Let’s
-hear the rest. I don’t think you can propose anything too
-desperate for me now that I have really tasted the blood of the
-enemy.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, what I propose is not to destroy the stronghold,
-simply because it would be impossible to do that by sea. I
-merely propose to get quietly into the tunnel, go to that
-narrow part about two miles from the entrance, fix a dozen
-torpedoes with time-fuses up against the roof of the tunnel,
-and then clear out into the open water.</p>
-
-<p>“When those twelve torpedoes go off if they don’t bring
-a few thousand tons of rock down into the tunnel and
-block it pretty securely I’ll grant I know very little about
-explosives.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good so far, very good!” said Alan. “I confess I envy
-you that idea. What next?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, after that,” replied Alexis. “You see we shall have
-shut in the vessels that are inside and shut out those that are
-outside. The ones inside will be no use for some time, for it
-will take the divers a good many days to open the tunnel
-again, even if they ever do.</p>
-
-<p>“As for those outside, we can lie in wait for them if they
-return, and trust to the <em>Narwhal’s</em> speed and strength to sink
-as many of them as we can, or else, if they don’t put in an
-appearance, we can come home with the consciousness that we
-have done about all the damage in our power. Now, what do
-you think?”</p>
-
-<p>Alan was silent for a few moments, weighing the pros and
-cons of the desperate venture&mdash;for desperate it was, in spite
-of the incomparable speed and strength of the splendid vessel
-he commanded.</p>
-
-<p>It was easy enough, always supposing that it could be
-accomplished without interruption; but to be caught in the
-tunnel, as was quite possible, between a force inside and one
-outside meant almost certain destruction, for if the <em>Narwhal</em>
-was not rammed and sunk in a space too narrow for her to
-turn she would be certain to be blown up by the torpedoes
-which would be launched against her.</p>
-
-<p>In the end, the very character of the desperate venture,
-combined with the magnitude of the injury it would do to the
-enemy, overcame the scruples of his prudence. He put his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-hand on Alexis’ shoulder, and giving him a gentle shake, said
-with a laugh&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Bravo, old philosopher! You’ve done more with your
-thinking than we have with our talking and writing. We’ll
-do it, if there isn’t a square foot of the <em>Narwhal</em> left when the
-business is over.”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew you’d say that,” said Alexis. “Now let’s have
-some dinner and go to sleep, for we shall want it.”</p>
-
-<p>It was then very nearly midday, and the <em>Narwhal</em> had
-cleared the islands, and, with her prow pointed direct for the
-north-eastern extremity of Wilkes’s Land, was rushing at full
-speed through the water about twelve feet below the surface
-of the sea. For twenty hours she sped silently and swiftly
-and unseen on her way, swept round the ice-barrier that
-fences the northern promontory of Victoria Land and into
-the bay dominated by the fiery crest of Mount Erebus.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_157.jpg" width="350" height="59" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">FROM THE SEA TO THE AIR.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_t.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-T">TWENTY-FOUR hours after she had reached
-Mount Terror the <em>Narwhal</em> came into the inner
-basin of Christmas Harbour, running easily along
-the surface, with the red flag flying at her flagstaff.
-The news spread rapidly through the little
-settlement, the dwellers in which had been wondering greatly
-at her sudden disappearance, and there was quite a crowd on
-the jetty as she ran alongside. Max Ernstein was among it,
-and as the battleship came to a standstill he saw to his amazement
-Alan spring ashore and come towards him with outstretched
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, what does this mean?” he said, as he grasped his
-hand. “I thought you told me you were never going to leave
-the <em>Narwhal</em> until”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Until we had done what we have done,” said Alan with a
-laugh, as he returned his hand-clasp with a grip that made the
-bones crack. “We have destroyed a good half of what remained
-of the Russian sea navy, and, what’s more, we’ve blown up the
-entrance to their submarine dockyard, and completely crippled
-them as far as building or equipping new vessels is concerned
-until they can find a new harbour.”</p>
-
-<p>“Magnificent!” exclaimed Ernstein. “Glorious! You’ll be
-wearing the golden wings again in forty-eight hours.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I am,” said Alan, flushing with pleasure at the thought,
-“the credit will be due to Alexis, and not to me. It was his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-idea entirely. But never mind that now. We’ve suffered rather
-badly, and only just escaped with our lives. Five out of six
-of the <em>Narwhal’s</em> crew are disabled, and I want you to get them
-out and send them away to Aeria as soon as possible. Meanwhile
-Alexis and I will write our despatch to the Council.”</p>
-
-<p>His instructions were obeyed at once, and the invalids were
-transferred to the <em>Vega</em>, the air-ship that was to convey them
-to Aeria, and in her luxurious state-rooms their hurts were
-attended to by the best skill on the island while the despatch
-was being drawn up.</p>
-
-<p>It was brief, plain, almost formal in language, and confined
-entirely to statement of bare fact, and in little more than an
-hour after the arrival of the <em>Narwhal</em> at Christmas Harbour
-the <em>Vega</em> had risen into the air, and was speeding on her way
-towards Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the news of the daring venture and brilliant
-exploits of Alan and Alexis and their comrades spread like
-wildfire through the island, and everyone who was not engaged
-on duties that could not be left came to the settlement to see
-and congratulate the two heroes of the hour, whose strange and
-romantic fate, so well known to every Aerian, had thus suddenly
-been glorified by the triumph of the genius and daring which
-had proved capable of wresting victory from defeat and glory
-from misfortune.</p>
-
-<p>Although some were more demonstrative, none were heartier
-or more sincere in their congratulations than Edward Forrest,
-the admiral of the station, and, unknown to Alan and Alexis,
-he and Ernstein had sent a joint despatch by the <em>Vega</em>, strongly
-urging both the justice and the policy of at once restoring to
-the full rights of citizenship the two men who had proved
-themselves possessed of such extraordinary ability.</p>
-
-<p>If the battle for the empire of the world was to be fought
-over again, the command of the forces of Aeria could not be
-entrusted to any hands so able and so daring as those of the
-President’s son and his friend and companion in misfortune
-and victory. The triumphs at Kerguelen and Antarctica had
-really been due to them alone. They had given warning of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-the attack on the station, and it was due to the skill and boldness
-of their strategy that it had been foiled with such disaster
-to the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>This of itself was much, but it had not satisfied either their
-ambition or their devotion, for, after it had been accomplished,
-they had carried the war almost single-handed in the Russian
-stronghold, and there, under circumstances of unparalleled
-danger to themselves, they had struck a blow which could not
-fail to cripple the sea-power of the enemy, and so influence to
-an incalculable extent the ultimate issue of the war which, ere
-long, might be raging over the whole world.</p>
-
-<p>That night, while the almost constant storms of the southern
-winter were sweeping over the barren surface of Desolation
-Land, a feast was held in the central hall of the headquarters
-at Christmas Harbour in honour of the double victory and the
-return of the two chief heroes of it from their long captivity.
-The next day was spent in a rigorous inspection of all the
-defences of the island and the machinery and ammunition of
-the air-ships and submarine vessels. At six o’clock in the
-evening, twenty-six hours after she had started, the <em>Vega</em>
-returned from Aeria, bringing the reply of the Council to the
-despatches which she had taken.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The Council has heard with great satisfaction of the repulse of the attack
-on the station at Kerguelen and of the distinguished services rendered by Alan
-Arnold and Alexis Mazarov, both at Kerguelen and Mount Terror.</p>
-
-<p>In recognition of the great skill and devotion they have displayed, the
-Council invites them to assume the command of the air-ship <em>Ithuriel</em>, and to
-make use of that vessel to execute such plans and purposes as in their discretion
-will best serve the interests of the State of Aeria for a period of one year from
-the present date. They will be supplied with motive power and all stores and
-materials of war at any of the oceanic stations.</p>
-
-<p>The Council accepts the recommendation contained in the supplement to
-the first despatch, and has given orders for the immediate building of a hundred
-air-ships of the <em>Ithuriel</em> class and the same number of submarine battleships of
-the <em>Narwhal</em> type. These are expected to be ready for service at the end of the
-year, by which time the Council hopes to be able to call upon Alan Arnold and
-Alexis Mazarov to assume the duties of admiral and vice-admiral of the aerial
-navies, and at the same time to restore to them full privileges of citizenship in
-Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>The admiral and officers of Kerguelen will give all assistance in the carrying
-out of these directions, and will make and transmit all necessary reports in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-connection with them. No further hostilities are to be undertaken for the
-present by the aerial or sea forces, but they will maintain a strict watch against
-all possible surprises on the part of the enemy, and be ready to repel any assault
-which may be made. This order does not apply to the air-ship <em>Ithuriel</em>.</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent:-2em; padding-left:6em">Given in the Council Hall of Aeria on the Eleventh day
-of May in the hundred and thirty-second year of the
-Deliverance.</p>
-
-<p class="center" style="padding-left:6em"><span class="smcap">Alan Arnold</span>, President.<br />
-<span class="smcap" style="padding-left:4em">Francis Tremayne</span>, Vice-President.</p>
-
-<p>To Edward Forrest,<br />
-<span style="padding-left:1.5em">Admiral in Command at the Station of Kerguelen.</span></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Such was the reply of the Council to the news of the
-daring foray made by the <em>Narwhal</em> upon the stronghold of
-Mount Terror, and the suggestions of Admiral Forrest and
-Captain Ernstein. Although it did not precisely adopt the
-latter, which, indeed, the Council was well justified in looking
-upon as inspired rather by enthusiasm than the judicial spirit
-proper to the occasion, it was even more satisfactory both to
-Alan and Alexis than an immediate recall would have been.</p>
-
-<p>True, they had done great and brilliant service in the first
-few days of their return to freedom. They had virtually
-crippled the Russian sea-power by the blows which they had so
-skilfully, so swiftly, and so daringly struck, but neither of them
-felt that this was a sufficient achievement to warrant their full
-restoration to all that they had lost through the fatal error that
-they had made on board the old <em>Ithuriel</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Both, indeed, longed ardently for just such further opportunity
-of devoting themselves to the service of their race and
-country as this order offered them. In command of the new
-<em>Ithuriel</em>, one of the swiftest and most formidable aerial warships
-in existence, there was no telling the damage that they
-might do to the enemy or what service they might render to
-their friends.</p>
-
-<p>They knew that, as regarded the Russian force, the odds
-against them were about twenty-four to one, and they also knew
-that Olga and her lieutenants would lose no time in increasing
-their navy to the utmost extent in their power in preparation
-for the war of extermination that was now inevitable.</p>
-
-<p>They had a year before them during which they would have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-an absolutely free hand, and all the supplies that the resources
-of Aeria could give them. True, it was a year of exile and probation,
-but they gladly welcomed the test of fidelity and devotion
-which it offered, and which, worthily passed through,
-would mean restoration of all they had lost, and a return to
-their friends and kindred in their beloved valley of Aeria
-armed with powers and responsibilities which would make them
-practically the arbiters of the destinies of their people, and
-perhaps of the whole human race.</p>
-
-<p>But the <em>Vega</em> had brought something more to the two
-friends and exiles than the reply of the Council to their
-despatches, for immediately he landed her captain handed to
-Alan a small sealed packet addressed to him in the handwriting
-of his sister Isma. When he opened it, as he did at the
-first opportunity that found him alone, he found that it contained
-two letters and two chromatic photographs.</p>
-
-<p>The letters were from his parents and sister. His father’s
-was, as may well be imagined, very different from the cold and
-formal despatch that he had signed as President of the Council.
-It was full of tender and loving sympathy for him in the
-strange fate that had overtaken him, and, while it entirely
-absolved them of all moral blame for the loss of the flagship
-and the lives of his companions, it exhorted him earnestly to
-apply himself without useless regrets to the work of the year
-of probation which the Council had seen fit to impose upon
-him, and it ended with an assurance that the happiest day that
-had been known in Aeria within the memory of its citizens
-would be that on which the golden wings would be replaced on
-their foreheads in the Council Hall of the city.</p>
-
-<p>To this letter was added another, written by Alan’s mother,
-and written as only a mother can write to her son. Strong
-and well tried as he was, there were tears in Alan’s eyes when
-he had finished reading these two letters, but they did not
-remain there long after he had begun the one from his sister.</p>
-
-<p>Isma, proud beyond measure of the exploits of her brother
-and the man she still looked upon as her lover, and absolutely
-assured that when the time came both would return covered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-with honour, wrote in the highest spirits. As it was an invariable
-rule of life among the Aerians to be perfectly frank with
-one another, and to take every precaution to avoid those misunderstandings
-which in a less perfect state of society had
-produced so much personal and social suffering, she told him in
-plain yet tender language exactly what had passed between
-her and Alma on the night that his first letter had been
-received.</p>
-
-<p>Yet she said nothing that in any way committed either
-Alma or himself to a renewal of the troth which had been
-broken by the designs of Olga Romanoff, and though she sent
-her remembrances to Alexis, she sent them as though to a
-friend, tacitly giving both to understand that no words of love
-must pass between the two exiles and their former sweethearts
-until they met again upon equal terms.</p>
-
-<p>But there was another message not contained in the letter,
-or written in any words, which said more than all that she had
-written, and this was conveyed by the photographs, which she
-sent without a word of allusion to them. As Alan looked upon
-them the six years of mental slavery and degrading servitude
-to the daughter of the enemies of his race passed away for the
-moment, and he saw himself standing with Alma in one of the
-groves of Aeria plighting his boyish troth on the night before
-he started on his fatal voyage in the <em>Ithuriel</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The face that looked at him with such marvellous lifelikeness,
-with all its perfection of form and exquisite colouring,
-reproduced with the most absolute fidelity, was the same face
-that had been upturned to his to receive his kisses on that
-never-to-be-forgotten night. And yet, in another sense, it was
-not the same.</p>
-
-<p>That had been the sunny, smiling face of a girl to whom
-sorrow and evil were as absolutely unknown as they would be
-to an angel in heaven, but this was the face of a woman who
-had lived and thought and suffered.</p>
-
-<p>And when he remembered that whatever of sorrow or suffering
-she had known had been on his account, the last lingering
-traces of the vile spells of the evilly beautiful Syren of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-Skies, who had so fatally bewitched him, vanished from his
-soul, and the old love revived within him pure and strong, and
-intensified tenfold by the knowledge of the great reparation
-that he owed to the girl upon whose life he had brought the
-only shadow it had ever known.</p>
-
-<p>He knew that their hands would never meet again until all
-that had been lost was regained, at whatever cost of labour
-or devotion that might be necessary on his part, but he also
-knew that in all these years no other man had been found
-worthy to fill the place that he had once occupied, and which
-he was resolved to win back or die in the attempt, and this
-knowledge made him look forward to the mighty struggle
-which lay before him with an eagerness that augured well for
-its issue.</p>
-
-<p>He had gone into his own cabin on board the <em>Ithuriel</em>,
-which was being rapidly prepared for her roving commission,
-to read his letters in solitude. He put Alma’s photograph on
-the table, and sat before it with his eyes fixed upon it until
-every line of form and tint of colour was indelibly impressed
-anew upon his memory.</p>
-
-<p>Then he kissed it as reverently as a devotee of old might
-have kissed a sacred relic, and then he attached the oval
-miniature to a chain of alternate links of azurine and gold,
-and hung it round his neck inside his tunic, registering a
-mental vow that if death came before he once more wore the
-golden wings, it should find it lying nearest his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” he said, speaking to himself, as he took Isma’s
-photograph up from the table, and looked fondly upon the
-radiantly lovely face that looked out from its frame, “is
-evidently not intended for me. Isma doesn’t say who it’s for,
-but I fancy that there is some one on board the <em>Ithuriel</em> who
-has a very much better right to it than I have. I wonder if
-Alexis is in his room?”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, he left his cabin and found his friend still deep
-in the perusal of two lengthy letters from his father and
-mother.</p>
-
-<p>“So you have had letters from home as well, old man? I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-hope they’ve been as pleasant reading as mine have,” he said,
-going to the couch on which Alexis was sitting, and holding
-one hand behind his back.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they’re from my father and mother, and so they can
-scarcely be anything else, so far as what they do say. It’s
-what they don’t say that gives me the only cause to find fault
-with them. But still that, I suppose, would be expecting too
-much under the circumstances.”</p>
-
-<p>He ended with something very like a sigh, and Alan replied
-as gravely as he could&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“And what might that be, my knight of the rueful
-countenance? Don’t you think the Council have treated us
-splendidly, and given us a glorious opportunity of winning
-back all that the daughter of the Tsar has robbed us of?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, I do,” replied Alexis, looking up at him with a
-flush on his cheeks. “But for all that there is one thing
-still, something that I am not ashamed to say I value above
-everything else that I have lost or can regain.”</p>
-
-<p>“And that is&mdash;?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, to put it plainly,” replied Alexis, the flush deepening
-as he spoke, “these two letters don’t contain one single
-word about Isma. Now you know what I mean. Of course, I
-am ready to do everything that the Council may call upon us
-to do, and the moment that I know I have won back the right
-to wear the golden wings will be the proudest of my life, but it
-will be far from the happiest if I only go back to Aeria to find
-Isma another man’s wife, and what else can I think when they
-don’t so much as mention her name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Be of good cheer, my friend,” replied Alan with a laugh,
-putting one hand on his shoulder, and taking the other from
-behind his back. “You will never find that, I can promise
-you. I am the bringer of good tidings. There, take those and
-feast your eyes and your heart on them in solitude as I have
-just been doing on something else.”</p>
-
-<p>So saying he put Isma’s letter and photograph into Alexis’
-hand, and without another word left him to gather courage
-and comfort from them as he had himself done.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">OLGA IN COUNCIL.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_t.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-T">THE remains of the Russian submarine squadron,
-numbering now only seventeen vessels, headed
-out northward into the open sea, after leaving
-their disabled consorts to their fate. In the brief
-space occupied by her first rush they had recognised
-the <em>Narwhal</em> both by her size and speed, and one of the
-captains avowed that he had recognised Alan Arnold, Olga’s
-late captive, standing under the glass dome of the conning-tower,
-steering the great vessel upon her devastating course.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty miles out from the island they rose to the surface
-and made out the aerial fleet some five miles to the southward,
-hovering at an elevation of about a thousand feet, and evidently
-on the look-out for them. Michael Lossenski, who had escaped
-the ram of the <em>Narwhal</em>, ran up his flagstaff, and flew a signal
-which soon brought the air-ships bearing down upon them.
-The <em>Revenge</em> sank down to the surface of the water, and took
-Lossenski off his ship in order that he might report himself.</p>
-
-<p>Olga and his father received the first news of the defeat of
-their naval forces with cold displeasure; but when Michael
-told them that more than half the fleet had been destroyed by
-the <em>Narwhal</em>, and that it was believed that Alan was in command
-of her, Olga’s anger blazed out into fury, and she cried
-passionately&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“You fools and cowards to have fled like that from one
-ship and one man! Could not seventeen of you have overcome<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-that one vessel? Had you no rams, no torpedoes, that you fled
-before this single foe?”</p>
-
-<p>He took the bitter rebuke in silence. He knew that he had
-failed both in duty and courage, and that a reply would only
-make matters worse. Olga looked at him for a moment, with
-eyes burning with scorn and anger. Then she rose from her
-seat, and, pointing to the door of the saloon, said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Go! You have disgraced yourself and us. Take your ships
-back to Mount Terror, and await our further commands.”</p>
-
-<p>With bowed head and face flushed with shame, the disgraced
-man walked in silence out of the saloon and left Olga alone with
-his father. As soon as he had gone Olga began striding up and
-down the saloon, her hands clenched and her eyes, black with
-passion, glittering fiercely under her straight-drawn brows.</p>
-
-<p>Orloff Lossenski knew her too well not to let her anger take
-its course uninterrupted, so he sat and watched her, and waited
-for her to speak first. At last she stopped in front of him, and
-said in a low fierce voice, that was almost hoarse with the
-strength of her passion&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“So! you were right, my friend. I was a fool, an idiot, to
-let those two escape. I ought to have killed them, as you advised.
-They were of no further use to us, and we could have
-done without them. Yes, truly I was a fool, such a fool as love
-makes of every woman!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not of every woman, Majesty,” replied Lossenski in a low
-soothing tone, that was not without a trace of irony. “If I
-may say it without disrespect, your ancestress, the great
-Catherine, knew how to combine love and wisdom. When she
-wearied of a lover, or had no further use for a man, she never
-left him the power of revenging his dismissal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes,” she replied. “I know that; but I did not
-weary of this man, this king among men, for whose love I would
-have sold my soul. I only wearied of my own attempts to win
-it. You know what I mean, Lossenski, and you can understand
-me, for you have confessed that he was well worthy of
-the sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>“You know that when he seemed my lover he was only my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-slave&mdash;that I could not compel the man to love me, but only
-the passive machine that I had made of him, and you know,
-too, that the moment I had let him regain his freedom of will he
-would have loathed and cursed me, as no doubt he is doing now.</p>
-
-<p>“Why did I not kill him? How could I, when I loved him
-better than my own life, and all my dreams of empire? Why,
-I could not even kill the other one because he was Alan’s friend,
-and because he would have hated me still more for doing so.</p>
-
-<p>“But, after all,” she continued, speaking somewhat more
-calmly, “it is not setting them free that has done the mischief.
-It is the treason or the miracle that enabled them to capture
-the <em>Narwhal</em>. I would give a good deal to know how that was
-done. They cannot have done it themselves, for I had given
-them enough of the drug to deprive them of all will-power for
-at least twenty-four hours, and I told that traitor, Turgenieff,
-who must have betrayed the attack on Kerguelen, to give them
-more when he landed them on the island.”</p>
-
-<p>“But is your Majesty sure that they took the drug?” said
-Lossenski, interrupting her for the first time. “Did you give
-it with your own hand, or see them take it with your own eyes?”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” said Olga, with a start. “I did not. I sent it to
-them by my maid, Anna, but she swore that she put it in their
-wine, and when they had finished their last meal the decanter
-was empty.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was a grave mistake, Majesty,” said Lossenski, in a
-tone of respectful reproof, “and one which may yet cost you
-the empire of the world. It is such trifles as that which destroy
-the grandest schemes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know! I know!” said Olga impatiently. “You may
-think me a fool and a weakling, but I could not bring myself
-to see or speak to Alan again after I had at last resolved to give
-up the hopeless task of winning him, and send him away.</p>
-
-<p>“But for that mistake the <em>Narwhal</em> would still have been ours,
-and we should have taken Kerguelen unawares. He could
-have told his people nothing else that would have harmed us,
-for the more he tells them about Mount Terror the more impossible
-they will see any attack upon it to be. No, no, it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-all that one fatal mistake! But there, it tortures me to talk
-about it! Tell me, my old friend and counsellor, what we are
-to do to repair the damage?”</p>
-
-<p>Exhausted by her fierce and sudden outburst of passion, and
-the bitterness of her regret, Olga threw herself into a chair and
-sat waiting for Lossenski to speak. He remained silent for
-several moments, buried in thought, and then he began speaking
-in the low, deliberate tone of a man who has weighty counsels
-to impart.</p>
-
-<p>“We cannot deny, Majesty, that we have been worsted in
-our two first encounters with these Aerians, but we must learn
-wisdom and patience from defeat. It seems plain to me that
-the Aerians are too strong for us as we are.</p>
-
-<p>“When we attacked them we forgot that, while we are
-children in warfare, they are perfect masters of it. They have
-preserved the traditions of their fathers, and for four generations
-they have been trained in the use of the weapons which we
-have only just learnt to use. Therefore my advice is that we
-do not attack them again for the present.”</p>
-
-<p>“But,” interrupted Olga, “in any case, they will attack us,
-and we shall still have to fight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not of necessity, your Highness,” replied Lossenski.
-“You see they have not pursued us, and the reason for this is
-that they know that both our air-ships and our submarine
-vessels are swifter and more powerful than theirs, with two or
-three exceptions.</p>
-
-<p>“They will not attack us till they can do so on equal
-terms, and we must take care that they never do that. You
-have plenty of treasure and plenty of men at your command.
-Let us retire to our stronghold again and devote ourselves to
-increasing our strength both by sea and in the air, until we
-have made ourselves invulnerable.</p>
-
-<p>“And remember, too, Majesty,” he continued with an added
-meaning in his tone, “Aeria is not the world. There are vast
-possibilities before you in other directions. I am convinced
-now that we have made a mistake in attacking the Aerians
-first. Russia is ripe for revolt, and great quantities of arms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-have already been manufactured. The tribes of Western Asia
-need only a leader to take the field, and the Sultan Khalid could
-put an army millions strong into the field within a few months.</p>
-
-<p>“On the other hand, Anglo-Saxondom is a babel of conflicting
-opinions, and the mob rules throughout its length and
-breadth. Where everyone is master there can be no leaders,
-and those who are without leaders are the natural prey of the
-strong hand.</p>
-
-<p>“They are wealthy and weak, and divided among themselves.
-The Aerians have given them over to their own devices.
-Why should you not, when we have repaired the damage
-we have suffered, take your aerial squadron to Moscow, proclaim
-the new revolution, and crown yourself Tsarina in the
-Kremlin?”</p>
-
-<p>In speaking thus Orloff Lossenski was really only putting
-into formal shape the project which it had all along been the
-aim of Olga and her adherents to carry out. There was nothing
-new in the suggestion save the proposition that the revolution
-should be proclaimed in Russia, and that Olga should crown
-herself Tsarina before, instead of after, the attempted subjugation
-of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>Up to the present it had been believed that nothing could
-possibly be done until the power of the Aerians was either
-crushed or crippled, but the battle of Kerguelen had clearly
-shown that this was a task far beyond their present resources.
-Even the mastery of the sea was now no longer theirs, thanks
-to the two fatal mistakes which Olga had made, first in setting
-Alan and Alexis free, and second in sending them away from
-Mount Terror in the swiftest and most powerful vessel in their
-sea-navy.</p>
-
-<p>Why she had been guilty of this last imprudence she could
-not even explain to herself. It was one of those mistakes, made
-in pure thoughtlessness, which again and again have marred
-the greatest schemes of conquest. Another vessel would have
-done just as well, save that she would not have performed the
-errand quite so quickly; but the <em>Narwhal</em> happened to be in
-readiness at the moment, and as Peter Turgenieff, her commander,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-was one of Olga’s most trusted sea-captains, she had
-given him the order to convey Alan and Alexis to the island,
-and so the fatal error had been committed.</p>
-
-<p>It must, however, be remembered that when she made it, it
-was impossible for her to foresee its disastrous outcome. She
-implicitly believed that the two Aerians were completely under
-the influence of the will-poison, and so utterly unable to think
-or act independently, or to form and execute the daring design
-which they had so successfully accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>But now that the mistake had been made, Orloff Lossenski
-saw that the course he suggested to his mistress offered the only
-hope of counteracting it. His advice pointed out the shortest
-road to the attainment of the designs of Olga and her followers;
-and he gave it in all sincerity, for he was absolutely devoted to
-Olga’s person and fortune, and the realisation of her ambition
-was the dearest dream of his own life.</p>
-
-<p>It meant, too, the restoration of his own order to all its
-ancient rights and privileges with the added wealth and dignity
-that would be won by conquest. It meant the establishment
-of a Russian empire far greater and more powerful than that
-of the last of the Tsars, for its power would extend from the
-Pacific coast of Asia to the Atlantic coast of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Olga heard him with flushed cheeks and shining eyes, and,
-when he had done speaking, she rose to her feet again and faced
-him, looking every inch a queen, in the ripe beauty of her perfect
-womanhood, and said, in tones from which every trace of
-her former anger and sorrow had vanished&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Well spoken, Orloff Lossenski! That is worthy counsel
-for you to give and for me to hear. I will follow it, for it is
-wise as well as bold, and the day that I crown myself in the
-Kremlin you shall be the first noble in Russia. But, stop&mdash;what
-of the Sultan? Surely he and his armies will have to be
-reckoned with?”</p>
-
-<p>“True,” said Lossenski. “But if he will not listen to reason,
-cannot your air-ships destroy his armies like swarms of locusts,
-lay his cities in ruins, and sweep him and his dynasty from the
-face of the earth?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that is true again,” replied Olga. “Provided that the
-Aerians did not come to his aid.”</p>
-
-<p>“They would not do that, I think,” he replied.</p>
-
-<p>“But to make that impossible why should you not make an
-alliance with him and offer to help him with your air-ships and
-submarine navy to the conquest of the world, on the condition
-of the restoration of the Russian Empire and the division of
-the world between you? Remember that as long as you kept
-the command of your navies of the air and the sea you could
-always keep him to the terms when once made.”</p>
-
-<p>As the old man ceased speaking Olga laid her hand upon
-his shoulder, and said in a low, clear, steady voice that spoke of
-a great resolution finally taken&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“My friend, you are the wisest of counsellors, and when I
-regain my throne you shall be the first Minister of the Empire.
-I will pardon your son for his failure to-day for the sake of his
-father’s wisdom, and we will say no more about disaster and
-defeat. We will look forward only to victory and the empire
-that it will bring us!”</p>
-
-<p>But when the defeated squadrons arrived at Mount Terror
-Olga was rudely awakened from her dreams of empire by the
-tidings of the disaster that had occurred during her absence.</p>
-
-<p>The damage inflicted by the <em>Narwhal</em> was speedily proved
-to be irreparable. For a distance of nearly a mile the roof
-of the tunnel had sunk bodily down, blocking it for ever.
-Millions of tons of rock and earth had fallen into the submarine
-channel, and all hope of clearing it again was out of the
-question.</p>
-
-<p>The explosion of the twelve torpedoes had not only brought
-down all the rocks in their vicinity, but it had so shaken the
-earth in both directions that a general subsidence had taken
-place, forming a barrier which was so vast and massive that its
-removal, even if possible, would have taken many months of
-labour; and so there was no avoiding the dismal conclusion that
-their submarine dockyard was useless, and, for the present at
-least, their sea-power crippled.</p>
-
-<p>The effects of the explosion in the interior of the mountain,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-though bad enough, were much less serious. Nearly seventy
-men, or more than half the total garrison that had been left
-behind, had been either killed or maimed for life. The six
-submarine warships that had been lying in the lake were, of
-course, useless now that their way to the sea was barred, and
-five of the twelve air-ships which had been lying in the vast
-cavern whose floor formed the shores of the subterranean lake
-were so seriously injured that considerable repairs would be
-necessary for them.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the lower level of the vast system of chambers
-and galleries which pierced the interior of the mountain in all
-directions had been flooded by the volumes of water projected
-from the lake by the explosion. Workshops, laboratories, and
-building-slips had been wrecked or thrown into complete confusion,
-and the appearance of the whole of the level was that
-of a place which had been swept by a tornado.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the amount of the damage done had been estimated,
-Olga called a council of war, composed of twelve of her
-most skilled and trusted adherents, in a chamber which was
-led up to by a path sloping steeply up from the shores of the
-lake. This chamber was an almost perfect oval, about sixty
-feet long by twenty wide, and about thirty high.</p>
-
-<p>Neither its temperature nor its internal appointments would
-have given any idea of the fact that it was situated at the
-uttermost end of the earth, and buried under the eternal snows
-of Antarctica. The rough rock walls had been smoothed and
-hung with silken hangings, against which statues of the purest
-marble gleamed white, and pictures, some of vast size and
-exquisite execution, brought the scenes of sunnier lands to the
-eyes of the occupants.</p>
-
-<p>Electric light-globes hung in festoons all around, shedding
-a mild diffused lustre over the luxurious furniture of the
-chamber. The floor of lava, smoothed and polished, was
-covered with priceless carpets into whose thick pile the foot
-sank noiseless, as though into soft, shallow snow.</p>
-
-<p>Treasures, both of art and luxury, which had been plundered
-from ocean transports that had fallen victims to the rams<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-of the submarine cruisers were scattered about in lavish profusion
-that was almost barbaric in its excess. Behind the
-hangings of the walls ran an elaborate system of pipes which
-circulated fresh air drawn from the exterior of the mountain,
-and, heated by passing through electric furnaces, at once warmed
-and ventilated this council-chamber of the extraordinary woman
-who, in virtue of her strange conquest of the air, had come to
-be known among her followers as the Syren of the Skies.</p>
-
-<p>Human art and science had completely conquered both the
-ruggedness of Nature and the inclemency of the elements, and
-had transformed these gloomy caverns, excavated by the volcanic
-fires of former ages out of the heart of Mount Terror, into
-warm, well-lighted, and airy abodes, capable of sheltering several
-hundred human beings from the rigours even of the Antarctic
-winter.</p>
-
-<p>This subterranean retreat and stronghold was roughly
-divided into two levels, on the lower of which were situated
-the chambers and galleries which served for the performance
-of all the work necessary for the building of the air-ships and
-submarine vessels, while the upper was devoted to store-rooms
-and dwelling-places for the followers and assistants of the
-Queen of this strange realm.</p>
-
-<p>No other region could have presented such a marvellous
-contrast to the sunlit and flower-scented paradise which was
-the home of their mortal enemies, the race with which they
-had dared to dispute the empire of the world. The powers of
-darkness and of light could hardly have been better typified
-than were these two contending forces by the different characters
-of their respective strongholds.</p>
-
-<p>When the Council of War, summoned at Olga’s bidding by
-Orloff Lossenski, had assembled in the Central Chamber, a pair
-of heavy purple velvet curtains parted, and the Syren entered
-from the gallery, which had been hewn through the solid rock
-and which communicated with her private suite of apartments.
-The members of the Council rose as she entered and greeted
-her as subjects were wont to greet their sovereigns in the days
-before the Terror.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She acknowledged their reverence with a royal condescension,
-and took her seat on a raised divan at the inner end of
-the chamber. Beckoning Lossenski to her side, she exchanged
-a few words with him in an undertone, and then called upon
-Andrei Levin, the Secretary of the Council, to enumerate the
-nature and extent of the losses they had sustained in their
-brief but disastrous first attempt to cope with the mighty race
-which had dominated the world for nearly a century and
-a half.</p>
-
-<p>When Levin had finished, it was found that, in addition to
-the irreparable damage done to the submarine dockyard, no
-less than thirty-five submarine cruisers had been destroyed or
-rendered useless, while twenty-three air-ships had been annihilated
-by the projectiles of the Aerians. This left an available
-fighting force of twenty-eight submarine and twenty-four aerial
-warships fit for service.</p>
-
-<p>It had been calculated that it would take at least a month
-of hard work to get the subterranean arsenal into such working
-order as would enable them to repair their losses, and after this
-at least twelve months would have to elapse before they had
-brought their fighting force up to the strength it had possessed
-but five short days before.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to their losses in ships and war materials, more
-than a hundred of Olga’s chosen and most devoted followers
-had lost their lives in the terrible warfare which knew no
-sparing of life, and it would be necessary to draft more men
-from Russia to replace them before the work could be carried
-on upon an adequate scale.</p>
-
-<p>Olga listened to the catalogue of disasters with frowning
-brows and eyes gleaming with hardly-suppressed fury. When
-it was over, she rose and spoke in a voice whose wonderful
-music and witchery seemed to charm all sense of misfortune
-for the time being out of the hearts of her listeners. A born
-queen of men, she knew when to wither with her scorn or to
-charm with her sweetness, and she was well aware that this
-hour of defeat and disaster was no time for reproaches or
-rebuke.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So her voice was low and sweet, and almost pleading, as
-she reviewed the situation, which, for the moment, seemed so
-dark, and appealed to her followers, through those who commanded
-them, not to yield before a sudden and temporary
-misfortune, but to learn from defeat the lessons of victory.
-She reminded them of all that their ancestors and hers had
-lost at the hands of the Terrorists, the forefathers of the hated
-and arrogant Aerians, and she painted in glowing colours the
-glory and the boundless wealth that would be the reward of
-victory.</p>
-
-<p>Heavy as their losses had been, there was no reason why
-they should not repair them. She reminded them how, five
-years before, they had possessed but a single air-ship, and
-were only a weak and scattered body of revolutionaries. Now
-they possessed, even after all they had lost, an aerial fleet
-superior to all the vessels of the Aerian navies save two, and
-submarine cruisers swifter and more powerful than any that
-floated, save only the stolen <em>Narwhal</em>. More than this, they
-were now supported by a vast organisation numbering
-thousands of devoted men and women, any one of whom
-would give his or her life for the cause for which they were
-fighting.</p>
-
-<p>She only spoke for a quarter of an hour or so, but every
-word went home, and when she concluded with an appeal to
-their loyalty and devotion, the twelve members of the Council
-rose with one accord to their feet, and there and then spontaneously
-renewed the oaths of fealty to her person and
-dynasty which they had taken when they enlisted in her
-service. Every man of them was a scion of some once noble
-Russian house, and her cause was theirs in virtue of personal
-interest as well as that sentiment of blind, unreasoning loyalty
-which even four generations of freedom had failed to eradicate
-from the Russian blood.</p>
-
-<p>Olga thanked them with a tremor in her voice which,
-whether it was real or not, spoke to them with far greater
-eloquence than words, and then she bade Lossenski lay before
-the Council the plans which she had already discussed with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-him for the future conduct of the vast enterprise which had
-opened so inauspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>Lossenski rose at once, and for over two hours unfolded a
-vast and subtly-conceived scheme, which has been very briefly
-outlined in a previous chapter, and the results of the working
-out of which will become apparent in due course.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the discussion which followed it was decided
-that a transport should be purchased as soon as possible in a
-Russian port and sent out to Antarctica with fresh supplies of
-men and materials.</p>
-
-<p>A flotilla of twelve marine cruisers was told off to convoy
-her on her voyage, and protect her from possible attack in case
-the Aerians should suspect or discover the purpose to which
-she was devoted.</p>
-
-<p>As no more submarine vessels could be built in Antarctica&mdash;for
-the fearful cold of the outside waters made such work
-totally impossible&mdash;all efforts were to be concentrated upon
-the increase of the aerial navy, and a hundred air-ships, in
-addition to those already in existence, was fixed upon as the
-minimum strength that it would be safe to depend upon, when
-the hour for the final struggle came.</p>
-
-<p>No force was to be wasted, if possible, upon minor attacks
-or isolated engagements, for the Russians, like the Aerians,
-had learnt that, under the conditions of the new warfare,
-skirmishes only meant destruction in detail and loss
-of strength entirely disproportionate to the advantage
-gained.</p>
-
-<p>Thus virtually the same decisions were arrived at in Aeria
-and Antarctica. Both sides resolved to husband their resources
-and increase their strength, and then to risk everything upon
-the issue of one mighty conflict, a veritable struggle of the gods,
-in which both equally recognised that the defeated would be
-annihilated and the victors would remain undisputed masters
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, it was decided that Orloff Lossenski should depart
-at once with a formal offer of alliance to the Sultan of the
-Moslem Empire, and that a day later Olga should follow with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-a squadron of twenty air-ships and give him the alternative of
-alliance or immediate war.</p>
-
-<p>If, as was confidently expected, he chose alliance, five submarine
-cruisers were to be given to him, so that he might use
-them as models for the construction of a fleet which should
-be powerful enough to sweep the Aerian warships from the
-seas, and which would be supplied with the secret motive
-power at a station to be established at Larnaka under Russian
-control.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when all was in readiness for the world-war, Olga
-was to be proclaimed Tsarina in Moscow, and the standard of
-absolute monarchy once more reared over the re-erected throne
-of the House of Romanoff. Anglo-Saxondom was to be invaded
-and conquered, and Aeria itself attacked and either subdued or
-depopulated and laid waste.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_178.jpg" width="350" height="58" alt="" />
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-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
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-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">KHALID THE MAGNIFICENT.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_a.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-A">A FEW minutes before midnight on the fifteenth of
-May, in the year 2036, Khalid the Magnificent,
-lord and master of the greatest and most splendid
-realm that had ever been ruled over by a single
-man since the world began, stood alone on the
-spacious terrace of his palace in Alexandria,
-gazing up at the myriads of stars that shone in the cloudless
-firmament above him, and dreaming one of those dreams of
-world-wide empire which had haunted the soul of such men as
-he from the days of Rameses the Great until his own.</p>
-
-<p>He was a man of thirty-four, tall, swarthy, and athletic,
-with the proud aquiline features of the Arab, the dark, alternately
-flashing and melting eyes of the Circassian, and the
-strong, reposeful dignity of the Turk&mdash;a man whom women
-looked upon with love and men with respect that was often
-akin to dread.</p>
-
-<p>The lord of seven hundred million subjects who, even in
-those days, so strong was still the faith and loyalty of the
-Moslem, looked upon him only as something less than Allah
-and the Prophet whose sacred blood flowed in his veins, his
-soaring ambition was not content even with the splendid
-inheritance that he had received from his ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>In his being were closely blended those elements of religious
-enthusiasm and worldly ambition which had made the men of
-the Golden Age of Islam such irresistible conquerors and such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-mighty rulers of men. He had pondered over the past history
-of his faith and his people from the times of the Prophet down
-to his own, until he had come to believe himself the man
-chosen by Destiny to subjugate the world, and to compel all
-men, from pole to pole, and east to west, to accept the rule
-and faith of Islam, and to confess the unity of God and the
-apostleship of Mohammed.</p>
-
-<p>He saw in the vast area of the Anglo-Saxon Federation,
-which now, in name at least, dominated Europe, America, and
-Australasia, only a collection of democratic and ill-governed
-States in which the mob ruled by blind counting of heads, and
-in which religion had been refined into a mere philosophy of
-life and morals, the last word of which seemed to him to be:
-Make the best of to-day, lest to-morrow should never come.</p>
-
-<p>In his own breast the flame of the fierce, uncompromising
-faith of Islam burnt, undimmed by the mists of the centuries
-that had passed since the first Moslem armies had emerged
-from the deserts of Arabia to conquer the greater part of the
-Roman world.</p>
-
-<p>Why should he not send forth his armies, as the Khalifs of
-old had done, to plant the banner of the Crescent over the
-subjugated realms of Christendom, and rule, the greatest of
-the Commanders of the Faithful, sovereign lord of a Moslem
-world?</p>
-
-<p>It was a splendid destiny, but there was a power in the
-world, located in one tiny spot of earth, and yet, so far as he
-knew, universal and irresistible, before which the armies which
-he had called into existence would be as helpless as a swarm
-of locusts before a forest fire.</p>
-
-<p>This power possessed the empire of the air, and therefore
-of the earth. In the days of the Terror it had led the Anglo-Saxon
-race to the conquest of the world. Would it sit idly
-now behind the bulwarks of Aeria and watch his armies conquering
-the domains of Anglo-Saxondom?</p>
-
-<p>Was it not far more likely that those terrible air-ships
-would be sent forth to hurl their destroying lightnings from
-the skies and overwhelm his armies and his cities in irretrievable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-ruin? These Aerians had ruled the world for a hundred
-and twenty-five years, and yet had committed no act of
-aggression upon the rightful liberties of any nation. How,
-therefore, could he believe that they would hold their mighty
-hand while he carried fire and sword through the habitations
-of their blood and kindred?</p>
-
-<p>If he gave the word for war, within forty-eight hours after
-he had spoken more than ten millions of men, armed with
-weapons of fearful precision and destructive power, would
-stand ready to do his bidding and to carry the banner of the
-Crescent to the uttermost ends of the earth; but of what use
-would be their numbers, their valour, or their devotion with a
-squadron of aerial cruisers wheeling above them and hurling
-death and destruction upon them from the inaccessible heights
-of the sky?</p>
-
-<p>He remembered how his ancestor Mohammed Reshad had
-been stopped in his career of conquest, and how his victorious
-armies had been decimated and thrown into confusion by a
-flotilla of air-ships and war-balloons which a dozen cruisers
-of the present Aerian navy would have swept from the skies
-in a few minutes. Intolerable as the thought was to his
-haughty soul, the truth remained that, in the midst of all his
-power and splendour, he was as helpless as a child before the
-real masters of the world. He had armies and fleets, but he
-could not make war without their permission or the assurance
-of their neutrality, save with the certainty of disaster and
-defeat.</p>
-
-<p>What would he not give for a squadron of these aerial
-battleships? Half his empire, willingly, and yet he knew
-that even an attempt to build a single air-ship would be the
-signal for his own death and the end of the dominion of his
-dynasty.</p>
-
-<p>He had no knowledge of the momentous events which had
-just been taking place on the other side of the world. He still
-believed implicitly in the unquestioned supremacy of the
-Aerians throughout the domain of the skies, although he was
-well aware that some mysterious power had successfully disputed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-with them the command of the seas, and he remembered
-the stern threat of immediate war and annihilation that the
-President of Aeria had promulgated against any who should
-even help in the concealment of the air-ship that had been
-lost six years before, and, so far as the world at large was
-concerned, had never been heard of since.</p>
-
-<p>Anglo-Saxondom, and therefore Christendom, lay at his
-mercy but for this guardian power of the air. Its millions
-were unarmed and its wealth unprotected. Its indolent and
-luxurious democracies, occupied solely with social experiments
-and the increase of their material magnificence, would be
-crushed almost without resistance by his splendidly armed
-and disciplined legions.</p>
-
-<p>The Crescent would replace the Cross above their temples,
-and the world would be a Moslem planet but for this empire
-of the air, universal and unconquerable, which barred his way
-to the dominion of the world and the final triumph of his
-faith.</p>
-
-<p>For the hundredth time he had revolved the hopeless
-dilemma in his mind, alternately looking upon the conquests
-he longed for, and on the splendid but useless forces at his
-command, when a huge, strange shape dropped swiftly and
-silently out of the sky overhead, and, as though in answer to
-the unspoken call of his intense longing, one of those very
-air-ships of which he had been thinking with such angry
-despair swept with a majestic downward sloping curve out of
-the dusk of the night, and ran up close alongside the low
-parapet of the terrace on which he was standing.</p>
-
-<p>It was the first time he had ever seen one of these marvellous
-vessels, which were the talk and the wonder of the
-world, at such close quarters. Paralysed for the moment by
-mingled curiosity and amazement, he recoiled with a startled
-invocation to the Prophet on his lips, and then stood staring at
-it in silence, wondering whether the strange apparition meant
-the visit of a friend or an enemy.</p>
-
-<p>While he was standing thus the air-ship drifted as silently
-as a shadow over the parapet, and sank gently down until it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-rested on the marble floor of the vast terrace. Then a sliding
-door opened in the after-part of the glass dome which covered
-the deck from stem to stern, a light metal stairway fell from it,
-and three men richly and yet simply dressed descended to the
-terrace and advanced to where he stood.</p>
-
-<p>Two of them halted at a respectful distance, and the third,
-a man whose dignity of bearing was enhanced by the snowy
-whiteness of his hair and beard, advanced alone, and with a
-grave and courteous gesture of salute said in English, the
-language of universal intercourse&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Am I right in believing this to be the palace of his
-Majesty the Sultan?”</p>
-
-<p>It was some moments before Khalid recovered his composure
-sufficiently to answer the question, simple as it was.
-His wonder was increased tenfold when he saw that his visitor
-from the skies did not wear the golden wings which were the
-insignia of the Aerians.</p>
-
-<p>Was it possible that some other inhabitants of the earth
-had, in spite of the rigid prohibition of the Supreme Council,
-managed to build an aerial navy? His heart leapt with exultation
-at the thought. Obeying the impulse of the moment, he
-took a stride forward and held out his hand, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I know not who you are, or whence you come, but if you
-come in friendship there is my hand in welcome. This is the
-palace, and I am Khalid, the Commander of the Faithful.
-What is your errand?”</p>
-
-<p>His visitor took the outstretched hand, and, bending low
-over it, replied in a tone of the deepest respect&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I am honoured and fortunate beyond measure! I trust
-your Majesty will pardon the strangeness of my coming for
-the importance of the mission that brings me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say on, sir, and tell me freely who you are and what your
-mission is, for I am all impatience to know,” said the Sultan,
-speaking even more cordially than before.</p>
-
-<p>“I am Orloff Lossenski,” replied the ambassador from the
-skies, “and I am the bearer of a message from my mistress,
-Olga Romanoff, by right of descent Tsarina of the Russias,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-and deprived of her lawful rights of rule by the Terrorists who
-reign in Aeria.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you are enemies of the Aerians?” broke in the
-Sultan, “and you possess air-ships like that marvellous craft
-yonder! How have you&mdash;but pardon me, I have interrupted
-you. You can satisfy my curiosity later on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Her Majesty, my mistress, possesses a large fleet of air-ships,
-of which this is one,” replied Lossenski, “and she has
-sent me as her envoy to give your Majesty this letter which
-will explain my mission in full. At this hour to-morrow
-night the Tsarina will come in person to receive your answer
-to it.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke he presented a letter to the Sultan, and then
-drew back a pace. Khalid took the missive without a word
-and walked towards one of the electric lamps with which the
-terrace was lighted, breaking the seal as he went. This is
-what he read&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p style="text-indent:-2em; padding-left:4em">To Khalid the Magnificent,<br />
-Sultan of the Moslems.</p>
-
-<p>You have dreams of world-wide conquest, but the fear of the power of the
-Aerians restrains you from putting them into action. You command armies
-and fleets, but they are useless and helpless because you cannot fight in the air
-as well as on land and sea.</p>
-
-<p>I can give you the power of doing this, and I will help you to the conquest
-of the world if you will help me to regain the dominions that were stolen from
-my ancestors in the days of the Terror.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty-four hours after you receive this I will come for your answer to it.
-If you agree to the general terms I have no fear but that the details will be
-easily arranged between us. This is brought to you by Orloff Lossenski, my
-chief counsellor and responsible minister, who, at your Majesty’s desire, will
-lay the particulars of my proposals before you in full.</p>
-
-<p class="center" style="padding-left:6em"><span class="smcap">Olga Romanoff</span>,<br />
-<span style="padding-left:8em">Tsarina of the Russias.</span></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Hardly had the Sultan finished the perusal of this strangely
-curt and yet all-pregnant letter when a cry from Lossenski’s
-two attendants caused him to look up. If what he had seen
-but a few minutes before had amazed him, what he saw now
-fairly stupefied him. A second air-ship, similar in size and
-shape to the first, but with a hull of a strangely lustrous blue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-metal, had dropped without sign or sound out of space, and
-was hovering exactly above Lossenski’s vessel with her ten
-long slender guns pointing in all directions.</p>
-
-<p>A moment later she seemed to drop bodily on to the
-Russian air-ship, splintering her thin steel masts with the
-weight of her hull, and yet stopping in her descent before she
-crushed in the glass dome of the deck. The next instant a
-score of men slipped swiftly over the side and gained the
-open door of the Russians’ deck-chamber. Then there came
-a sound of fierce cries and oaths, and the quick crackling
-reports of repeating pistols.</p>
-
-<p>The envoy’s two companions turned as though to fly, but
-two shots fired in quick succession brought them down before
-they had made a couple of strides. Then a dozen men leapt
-down upon the terrace and covered Lossenski and the Sultan
-with their pistols before they had time to recover from the
-stupefaction into which the suddenness of the attack had
-thrown them.</p>
-
-<p>The next moment a man, whose splendid stature raised him
-a good head above the Russian and the Moslem, came down
-the steps from the deck of the now captured air-ship. As he
-advanced towards them Khalid, brave and haughty as he was,
-looked up at him almost as he might have looked upon the
-visible shape of one of the angels of his faith.</p>
-
-<p>He was dressed in the Aeria costume, save for the fact
-that, instead of azurine and gold, his winged coronet was
-black and lustrous as polished jet. In his left hand he carried
-a magazine pistol, and in his right a long slender rapier with
-a blade of azurine that gleamed with an intense blue radiance
-in the light of the electric lamps.</p>
-
-<p>“Orloff Lossenski, you are our prisoner! Go back to
-your ship or you will be shot where you stand. Sultan
-Khalid, have you received that letter in your hand from this
-man?”</p>
-
-<p>Alan’s words came quick and stern, but before they were
-spoken the Sultan had put a golden whistle to his lips and
-blown a shrill call, in instant obedience to which a stream of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-armed guards issued from a door of the palace opening on to
-the terrace, spread out into a semi-circle, and in turn Alan and
-his companions were covered by a hundred rifles.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, sir, whoever you are,” exclaimed the Sultan, recovering
-at once his courage and his composure, “you are <em>my</em>
-prisoner! Throw down your arms, or”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Stop!” cried Alan, in a voice that rang clearly over the
-whole terrace. “Don’t you see that your palace is under
-our guns? Fire a shot, and in an hour it shall be a heap of
-ruins.”</p>
-
-<p>Khalid had forgotten the air-ships for the moment. He
-glanced up at the two rows of guns, and saw in the lighted
-interiors of the deck-chambers men standing ready to rain
-death and ruin in every direction.</p>
-
-<p>Lossenski, too, grasped the suddenly changed situation in
-an instant. He knew far better than the Sultan did what
-would be the effect of a discharge of that awful artillery upon
-the palace and the city, and more than this, he saw the hopeless
-ruin of his mistress’s plans that would follow the death
-of the Sultan. He turned to him with an appealing gesture,
-and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesty, for the sake of all you hold dear, send back
-your guards! I surrender to save you!” and then, with a
-glare of impotent hate at Alan, he turned and walked quickly
-towards the air-ships.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could have brought the terrible power of the
-Aerians home to the mind of Khalid the Magnificent more
-convincingly than the position in which he now stood. Absolute
-master of the greatest empire on earth, he stood on the
-terrace of his own palace, in the midst of his own capital,
-and with thousands of soldiers within call, as helpless as a
-child.</p>
-
-<p>But before he could force the words of surrender from his
-reluctant lips an event occurred which, brave as he was, struck
-terror to his heart. Alan had raised his rapier to command
-the attention of his men at the guns, and the captain of the
-Sultan’s guards, thinking he was going to strike his master,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-rushed forward and struck at the uplifted blade with his
-scimitar. As the steel rang upon the azurine the Damascus
-blade splintered to the hilt.</p>
-
-<p>With a cry half of rage and half of fear the Moslem
-whipped a pistol out of his sash, but before he could level it
-the bright blue blade descended swiftly, and when its point
-was within a foot of his assailant’s eyes Alan dropped his own
-pistol and pressed a jewel in the centre of his belt-clasp. As
-he did so a pale blue flame leapt from the point of his sword,
-and the Moslem, without as much as a sigh, dropped dead on
-the floor of the terrace.</p>
-
-<p>“Mashallah!” cried the Sultan, recoiling in ungovernable
-terror. “What are you, man or fiend, that you carry the
-lightnings in your hand?”</p>
-
-<p>“A man like yourself, Sultan, and one who wishes your
-Majesty no evil,” replied Alan. “I am Alan Arnold, the son
-of the President of Aeria, and therefore your friend, unless you
-choose to make me your enemy. I am at present in command
-of the cruiser <em>Ithuriel</em>, and we have followed that Russian
-vessel for over five thousand miles to find out what his errand
-was. When he landed on your palace we guessed it, I think,
-pretty nearly. Lossenski came to propose an alliance between
-your Majesty and his mistress, Olga Romanoff, did he not?”</p>
-
-<p>Before he replied the Sultan, seeing some of his guards
-advancing again, and being now convinced that resistance
-was both unnecessary and impossible, ordered them to take
-away the body of their comrade and those of the two Russians
-who had been shot. Then he turned to Alan, and said with
-politeness that was perhaps more Oriental than sincere&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon my ignorance, Prince of the Air! I did not
-know that I was speaking to the son of one who is above all
-the kings of the earth. That slave deserved his death for
-raising his arm against your Highness. Yes, you are right.
-The Russian came to me with such a proposal from her you
-name. Here is her letter. She styles herself Tsarina of the
-Russias, but I have never heard her name before. Who is
-she?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I will tell your Majesty,” said Alan, taking the letter
-which the Sultan now held out to him without hesitation,
-“for no one can tell you better than I can. She is the last
-living child of the House of Romanoff. She is beautiful
-beyond description, and evil beyond comprehension. She
-aspires to rule in fact as what she styles herself in name, and
-to bring back the gloom of despotism and oppression on the
-earth.</p>
-
-<p>“She and her accomplices are responsible for that terrorism
-of the seas which has paralysed international commerce for
-more than five years, and they are also in possession of a
-fleet of about thirty air-ships. How they were enabled to
-construct them there is now no time to explain. Suffice it to
-say that they have them, that they have dared to challenge
-the forces of Aeria to a contest for the empire of the world,
-and that during the fortnight they have been fighting they
-have had very much the worst of it.</p>
-
-<p>“We have practically crippled their sea-power, blown up
-their submarine dockyard, and destroyed about half of their
-aerial fleet. I tell you this in order that you may receive her
-proposals with your eyes open. The course of events has
-made your Majesty to a great extent the arbiter of the
-destinies of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>“Olga Romanoff knows that you have a splendid army
-at command, that you have illimitable wealth to spend on
-war material, and that an alliance between you would be
-irresistible. As an independent sovereign it is, of course,
-within your right, as it is within your power, to conclude this
-alliance if you think fit. Do so if you choose; but remember
-that if you do you must assume the tremendous responsibility
-of plunging the whole world into war, and bringing inconceivable
-desolation upon your fellow-creatures. You will be
-allying yourself with the worst enemies of humanity&mdash;nay,
-with the only enemies that humanity has on earth.</p>
-
-<p>“This Olga Romanoff is called by her followers the Syren
-of the Skies, and the name is an apt one, for she is a very
-syren, armed with arts that can charm a man’s heart out of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-breast, make him forget his duty to himself and his loyalty to
-his race, and, like Circe of old, reduce him to an animal that
-exists only for the execution of her will and the gratification
-of her desires. I speak with knowledge; for I have felt, and
-through me the world will feel, the terrible force of her spells,
-and I tell you frankly, as man speaking honestly with man,
-that if you make this alliance there will be war between your
-people and mine to the death.</p>
-
-<p>“As far as a single man can do so, you hold the fate of mankind
-in your hand, and within the next forty-eight hours you
-will decide it. Now I have done my duty, and given you such
-warning as I can. You will answer for your decision at the
-bar of God, and it is not for me to say more.</p>
-
-<p>“Whether we meet again as enemies or not, let us part
-friends, and let me implore you, for the love of God and
-your kind, to rest content with what the Fates have already
-given you. You have raised the Moslem power to a pitch of
-splendour and dominion far beyond all its former glories.
-You have all that man could ask for”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, as a man,” interrupted the Sultan, who up to this
-point had listened with silent attention to Alan’s quick,
-earnest words. “But not all that the Commander of the
-Faithful may be content with. I know not what the religion
-of your people is, but you know that the laws of mine command
-me, as they command every true Moslem, to plant the
-banner of the Prophet over the habitations of the infidel and
-to give the enemies of the Faith the choice between the sword
-and the Koran.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not for mere conquest that I have created my armies
-and my fleet. It is in obedience to the commands of Heaven,
-which has given me the means of conquering the earth for
-Islam.”</p>
-
-<p>Khalid spoke rapidly and fiercely with heaving breast and
-eyes blazing with the lurid light of fanaticism. Alan heard
-him out in silence. Then his hand fell heavily on the
-Moslem’s shoulder, and holding him at arm’s length he looked
-him straight in the eyes and said, slowly and deliberately&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Sultan, a man’s faith, by whatever name it may be called,
-is no concern of ours. He is responsible for it to his God,
-and there is an end of it. But when you tell me that your
-faith commands you to force it with fire and sword upon the
-consciences of those who hold another creed, then I tell you
-to your face that you are a fanatic and a persecutor.</p>
-
-<p>“Blood enough and to spare has been shed in the wars
-of creeds, and if I believed that you meant to revive the warfare
-between Cross and Crescent, I would strike you dead
-where you stand, as I struck your slave down just now. But
-I cannot believe it either of you or any other enlightened man.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not in any mood to utter empty threats, but I am
-speaking no idle words when I tell you that the hour in which
-you make war on Christendom, either for political or religious
-conquest, shall be the hour in which you will hear the voice
-of Destiny speaking your own doom.</p>
-
-<p>“More than that, I ask you now to pledge me your word
-as an honest man and a ruling King that for twelve months
-from now, at the very least, you will neither draw a sword
-nor fire a shot either against Anglo-Saxondom or any other
-Power.”</p>
-
-<p>He stopped, and took his hand from the Sultan’s shoulder.
-Khalid recoiled and drew himself up to the full height of his
-royal stature as he replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Prince of the Air&mdash;demi-god almost as you are&mdash;you must
-learn that the Commander of the Faithful is not to be dictated
-to on the roof of his own palace, even by you. Am I your
-slave that you should lay these commands upon me?”</p>
-
-<p>Before he made any reply in words Alan communicated a
-few rapid orders to those in command of the two air-ships in
-the Aerian sign-language. The <em>Ithuriel</em> rose from above the
-<em>Vindaya</em>, as the Russian air-ship was named, and both vessels
-ranged themselves alongside the front of the terrace. The
-Sultan watched this manœuvre in helpless silence, well knowing
-that whatever it imported he was powerless to resist.
-Then Alan went on&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Not my slave, Sultan, but my fellow-man, and as such I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-will, if I can, and by any means within my power, prevent
-you from committing such a colossal crime as that which I
-am afraid I must now believe you are contemplating. Now
-listen well, for my words mean much.</p>
-
-<p>“Those two air-ships could lay your capital, vast and
-splendid as it is, in ruins before to-morrow’s sun rises, and as
-surely as those stars are shining above us they shall do so
-unless you give me the pledge I ask for. I ask it in the name
-of all humanity, and I will not spare a few thousands of lives
-to enforce it.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you could!” ejaculated the Sultan, half involuntarily.
-“I have heard much of your wonderful air-ships, but do you
-know that I have a hundred thousand soldiers in the city, and
-that I have hundreds of guns which will hurl their projectiles
-for miles into the air? If only one of the hundreds struck
-either of those vessels of yours, she would fall like a stone and
-be dashed to pieces on the earth. The fighting would not be
-all on one side.”</p>
-
-<p>His tone grew more and more defiant as he went on, and
-Alan saw that some stern lesson would be necessary to induce
-him to give the pledge upon which the safety of millions
-depended. In quiet, even tones, that contrasted strongly with
-those of the Moslem, he said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“We of Aeria are not accustomed to boast our prowess
-lightly, and I am threatening nothing that I cannot do. Still,
-I do not wish you to give the pledge I ask save in the fullest
-knowledge. If you will trust yourself with me on board the
-<em>Ithuriel</em> for an hour under my pledge of your safe return I
-will prove to you to demonstration that your city would be as
-defenceless beneath our guns as a collection of tents would be.
-The moon is high enough now to give us plenty of light for
-the experiment if you think fit to make it.”</p>
-
-<p>The Sultan hesitated for a few moments, as though in
-doubt whether he would be permitted to return if he once
-allowed the <em>Ithuriel</em> to carry him away from the earth. Then
-he remembered that no man had ever known the Aerian who
-had broken his word. He looked into Alan’s strong, frank<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-face, and read there an absolute assurance that his safety
-would be respected. Then, with a slight inclination of his
-head, he said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Your words are wise. I will come, and if you convince
-me that you can do as you say I will swear by the holy name
-of the Prophet that I will make no war upon any man for a
-year from now.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan signalled to the <em>Ithuriel</em>, which ran in close to the
-terrace. The door of the deck-chamber opened, a gangway was
-run out, and for the first time in his life Sultan Khalid trod
-the deck of a cruiser of the air. The <em>Ithuriel</em> and the
-<em>Vindaya</em> at once mounted up into the now brightly moonlit
-atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>The Sultan saw the myriad lights of his splendid capital
-sink swiftly down into a vast abyss that seemed to open
-beneath him. The dim horizon widened out until it enclosed
-an immense expanse of pale grey desert to the south, while to
-the north a dark stretch of sea spread out farther than the eye
-could reach. Up and up the air-ships soared until the lights
-of Alexandria glimmered like a faint white mist at the bottom
-of a seemingly unfathomable gulf. At length Alan, who was
-standing beside him, pointed down and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“There is your city. If I gave the word, a hundred shells
-a minute would be rained on to it from here. Do you think
-your guns could reach us?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the Sultan, striving in vain to repress a shudder
-at the fearful prospect disclosed by Alan’s words. “But how
-could your shells strike that little patch of light which is
-miles away, and thousands of feet below us?”</p>
-
-<p>“That, too, I will prove to you, but not at the expense of
-your city.”</p>
-
-<p>He sent an order to the engine-room, and the <em>Ithuriel</em>
-swerved round to the northward and, followed by the <em>Vindaya</em>,
-swept out over the Mediterranean, in the direction of Crete.</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour’s flight at full speed brought them in sight of
-a small rocky islet which showed like a black spot on the
-surface of the moonlit sea. The two air-ships were stopped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-six thousand feet above the water, and about four miles from
-the heap of rocks. Alan then gave orders for each of the
-ships to train four guns upon it.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” he said to the Sultan, “fix your glass on that
-mass of rocks down yonder and watch what happens.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke he raised his hand and the eight guns were
-discharged simultaneously. The Sultan heard no report and
-saw no flash, but a few seconds later he saw through the
-night glasses that Alan had given him a vast mass of flame of
-dazzling brilliancy burst out over the islet, covering it completely,
-for the moment, with a mist of fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you shall see the effects of our shells,” said Alan.
-The two vessels sank rapidly down in a slanting direction
-towards the spot where the projectiles had struck. A hundred
-feet from the surface of the water they stopped, and Alan
-said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Now look for the island.”</p>
-
-<p>Khalid swept the sea with his glass. The islet had
-vanished, the waves were breaking over what seemed to be
-a sunken reef, and that was all. With hands that trembled,
-in spite of all that he could do to keep them steady, he took
-the glass from his eyes, saying in a voice that was shaken by
-irresistible emotion&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“God is great, and I am but a man, while you are as demigods.
-It is enough! I will give the pledge you ask for.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_193.jpg" width="350" height="62" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">AN UNHOLY ALLIANCE.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_w.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-W">WITHIN a couple of hours after the destruction of the
-islet Sultan Khalid was back in his palace, and
-the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the <em>Vindaya</em> had departed with
-their prisoners of war for Kerguelen.</p>
-
-<p>Alan, quite content with the advantage he
-had gained by obtaining the Sultan’s pledge of peace for a year,
-in comparison with which even the capture of one of the Russian
-air-ships was of trifling importance, had determined not to run
-the needless risk of an encounter with Olga’s fleet, for he had
-learnt the strength of it from Lossenski, and saw that it would
-be madness to attack it.</p>
-
-<p>Added to this there was far more important work in hand
-for him to do, for it was absolutely imperative that a full report
-of what he had discovered with regard to the proposed alliance
-between Olga and the Sultan should be laid before the Council
-with as little delay as possible, for if it ever became an accomplished
-fact it could not fail to enormously complicate the
-coming struggle for the mastery of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, as soon as he had placed a prize crew on board
-the <em>Vindaya</em>, under the command of Alexis, he gave orders for
-the two air-ships to proceed southward at full speed, having
-bidden the Sultan farewell on the terrace of his palace, and left
-him to draw what moral he could from the brief but startling
-experience that the midnight hours had brought him.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes before twelve on the following night the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-inhabitants of Alexandria were thrown into a state of the most
-intense excitement by a marvellous appearance in the southern
-heavens. Long streams of light, which in power and brilliancy
-excelled even the great electric suns with which the city was
-lighted, shot down out of the skies, flashing hither and thither,
-and sweeping the earth below it in vast curves of radiance.</p>
-
-<p>Now they streamed out in a huge fan of endless horizontal
-rays which seemed to reach to the horizon, and now they
-crossed each other in a network of beams, changing their positions
-with a rapidity which dazzled and bewildered the
-beholders. Then they were projected vertically to the zenith
-as though challenging the stars, and then they blazed straight
-down upon the earth, bringing into strong relief of light and
-shadow everything they fell upon.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly the spacious streets were crowded with excited
-throngs of people, and millions of eyes were cast heavenwards
-watching the approach of the Syren and her aerial squadron.</p>
-
-<p>The twenty air-ships swept up out of the south at a speed
-of about a hundred miles an hour in the form of a wide crescent,
-with the <em>Revenge</em> in the centre. They slowed down as they
-neared the city, and the concentrated blaze of their lights soon
-fell upon the Sultan’s palace, the magnificent proportions of
-which distinguished it conspicuously even from the thousands
-of splendid edifices which adorned the Moslem metropolis.</p>
-
-<p>Then, still keeping their relative positions with perfect
-accuracy, the winged vessels sank downwards and wheeled
-round until they faced the eastern terrace on which stood the
-Sultan with his Grand Vizier and the chief officers of his household,
-awaiting the coming of his aerial visitors.</p>
-
-<p>The flotilla stopped a hundred feet from the terrace. Its
-search-lights were extinguished, but the strange and beautiful
-shapes of the cruisers of the air stood out sharply defined
-against the bright background formed by the myriad lights of
-the city.</p>
-
-<p>The <em>Revenge</em>, flying the long vanished Imperial Standard of
-Russia, with its crowned black eagle on a broad ground of gold,
-at the mizzen, the white flag of peace at the main, and the Star<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-and Crescent of the Moslem Empire at the fore, floated slowly
-forward till her shining ram projected over the parapet and her
-three keels rested lightly upon it.</p>
-
-<p>Then one of the forward doors of the deck-chamber was
-drawn back by some invisible agency, and the Sultan saw standing
-in the opening such a vision of loveliness as he had never
-imagined even in his dreams of the houris of Paradise. Clothed,
-according to her invariable custom, in a plain clinging robe of
-royal purple, with no other ornament than a coronet, consisting
-of a plain broad band of gold from which rose above her
-temples two wings of silver filigree thickly encrusted with
-diamonds, Olga Romanoff stood upon the deck of her flagship
-the perfect incarnation of royal dignity and womanly beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Khalid, who had advanced to the parapet as the squadron
-approached, saw instantly that this could be none other than
-the woman whom Alan Arnold had described as beautiful
-beyond description and evil beyond comprehension. Few men
-had seen so many beautiful women as he had, and there were
-scores of them waiting in his harem for the favouring glance
-that none could win from him; but no sooner did his upward
-glance rest upon the vision that was looking down upon him
-from the doorway of the deck-chamber of the <em>Revenge</em> than his
-eyes fell and his head bowed in the involuntary homage that the
-supreme beauty of such a woman has always claimed from such
-a man.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Ref_176"></a>Evil she might be, but evil in such a shape might be something
-more than good in the eyes of some men, and of these
-Khalid the Magnificent was one. His hot Arab blood was
-aflame the instant that he looked upon her intoxicating loveliness,
-and half her errand was accomplished before a word had
-passed between them.</p>
-
-<p>She returned his greeting with a gracious inclination of her
-wing-crowned head, and as she did so he said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The Tsarina is welcome! My house and all that is in it
-is hers if she will honour me by entering it, for she will make
-it more beautiful by her presence.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesty’s welcome is sweet in my ears,” she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-answered, almost insensibly adopting his Oriental style of
-speech, “for I come as a friend and I hope to go as an ally.”</p>
-
-<p>The gangway stairs dropped as she spoke, and as they did
-so the Sultan made a sign and a pair of attendants brought
-forward some steps covered with crimson velvet, which they
-placed so that she could descend from the parapet, to which the
-Sultan himself ascended to meet her as she came down. Taking
-her hand on the parapet, he led her down to the terrace with
-the grace of a king and the deference of a courtier. Then he
-bent low over her hand and kissed it, and as he did so the
-attendant officers of his empire bowed in silent and respectful
-salutation.</p>
-
-<p>Olga was at once conducted to one of the state apartments
-of the palace in which the Sultan was wont to receive his most
-distinguished guests. She was treated with even more respect
-than would have been accorded to one of the crowned monarchs
-of the earth, for not only her wonderful beauty and royal
-carriage, but the marvellous manner of her coming and the
-tremendous power represented by the flotilla of air-ships inspired
-both the Sultan and his subjects with a deference that
-amounted almost to homage.</p>
-
-<p>Then, too, the mystery and romance which invested her
-name and family and fortune distinguished her as a woman
-apart from all other women in the world. It might be, as Alan
-had told the Sultan, that she was really the enemy of the
-human race, that her true object was to destroy the peace of
-the world, and rekindle the fires of war on earth, but still
-the present romance was stronger than the future, and possibly
-problematical, reality, and so it would hardly be too much to say
-that Olga had succeeded in removing the impression left by
-Alan on Khalid’s mind before she had been an hour under his
-roof.</p>
-
-<p>She naturally expected that one of the first to receive her
-would be the ambassador who had preceded her, but, after
-looking anxiously for him and not finding him either on the
-terrace or in the reception-room, she turned to Khalid and
-said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I do not see my ambassador here, and yet he must have
-arrived, since your Majesty tells me that you have been expecting
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>The Sultan’s face darkened, and his brows slightly contracted,
-as he replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Tsarina, I have been waiting for an opportunity to tell you
-what cannot but be unwelcome news. Your ambassador, Orloff
-Lossenski, is not here”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“What!” cried Olga, half rising from her seat, “not here!
-Surely he has not presumed to leave before my arrival? I can
-hardly believe that of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“He has gone, nevertheless,” said the Sultan, “though not
-by his will or mine, I can assure you. Scarcely had his vessel
-alighted on the terrace yonder, and he had disembarked, when
-an Aerian cruiser dropped down as silently as a shadow from
-the skies.</p>
-
-<p>“Whence it came I know not, but it would seem that these
-Aerians see everything, and that their hands reach everywhere.
-In a moment she had dropped upon your ambassador’s vessel,
-splintering her masts, and yet so softly did she alight that the
-glass dome was not broken. Then her crew streamed out of
-the doors of the deck-chamber, and the next I knew was
-that your ambassador and I were covered by half a score of
-pistols and rifles and commanded to stand still on pain of
-death.</p>
-
-<p>“Then Alan Arnold alighted, forced your envoy to surrender,
-struck one of my guards dead by some mysterious lightning
-that flashed from his sword, and, after carrying me away into
-the air over the sea and blasting a rock out of the waters to
-prove to me the power of his guns, brought me back honourably
-and in safety to await your coming. Truly these Aerians are
-more as gods than men!”</p>
-
-<p>Furious as the unexpected tidings made her, Olga yet
-managed to restrain her anger sufficiently to reply with wonderful
-coolness&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesty gives me sad and bitter news; but it is the
-fortune of war, and I must not complain. The air-ship that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-is taken by surprise is lost, and Orloff Lossenski fell a victim to
-his own carelessness.”</p>
-
-<p>Then her mood changed swiftly, and a soft and musical
-laugh came from her smiling lips as she went on&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“But it is a poor revenge, after all. That same Alan Arnold,
-the son of the great President of Aeria, was my would-be lover
-and slave for over five years. For my sake he turned traitor
-to his name and race, gave up the <em>Revenge</em> to me and told me
-all the jealously-guarded secrets of aerial navigation. He
-killed my brother in a quarrel, but he was useful, so I let him
-live&mdash;a prisoner of war, till I had done with him. Then I set
-him free, when, perhaps, I ought to have kept him safe, to go
-and tell his people what a fool I had made of him. I suppose
-he did not tell your Majesty that?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” laughed Khalid in reply, wondering what magic she
-had used to accomplish so marvellous a charm, “he did not.
-But such a miracle proves that you have been truly named the
-Syren of the Skies, as he said you are, for no other woman
-could have worked such a wonder and disputed the empire of
-the air with the masters of the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is true,” replied Olga, lowering her voice to a tone
-of intense earnestness, “and the fact that I did it single-handed
-proves, I hope, that with good friends and true allies
-I can do more than dispute that empire with the Aerians,
-these despots of peace who have made the world a paradise
-of the commonplace, and fettered all strongest and most
-aspiring spirits so that they might be equal with the coward
-and the fool.</p>
-
-<p>“But those are matters which I would discuss with your
-Majesty in private, and it is too late in the night to go into
-them now. You tell me that Alan Arnold has shown you what
-his air-ships can do. If your Majesty will honour the <em>Revenge</em>
-by being my guest for to-morrow I will show you that mine
-are in nowise inferior to them.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, as I have told you, the <em>Revenge</em> is an Aerian ship,
-built in the enchanted land of Aeria, and if you will to-morrow
-she shall carry you over the whole of your dominions, and after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-that over those other dominions that shall be yours if you
-approve the plans that I will lay before you.”</p>
-
-<p>She paused and looked at Khalid with cheeks glowing and
-eyes shining with enthusiasm and passion. He returned
-her glance with one no less fiery and passionate as he
-replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I will be your guest, as you say, but the honour and the
-favour will be to me, your Majesty&mdash;for Majesty you are,
-crowned by the hand of favouring Nature with that which
-makes all men your subjects. Your air-ships shall rest in the
-garden of my palace to-night, and an hour after sunrise you
-shall find me ready for another journey to the skies, for my
-first experience has given me a taste for more. Till then farewell.
-The memory of your eyes will make me dream of Paradise
-to-night!”</p>
-
-<p>There was that in his tone which told Olga that his words
-meant more than a neatly turned Oriental compliment, and as
-he stooped and kissed her hand in leave-taking she said half in
-jest and half in earnest&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“And I shall dream of the nearer glories of the world-empire
-which your Majesty and I may in the not very distant
-future divide between us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or share together!” said Khalid in his soul, as he raised
-his head again and their eyes met.</p>
-
-<p>At the appointed time the next morning the squadron rose
-into the air from the palace gardens. In order to produce as
-widespread an effect as possible, Olga had extended her invitation
-to the Grand Vizier and about a score of the Sultan’s
-highest officials, including the commanders of his armies and
-fleets who happened to be in Alexandria at the time. These
-were distributed among the twenty air-ships, but Olga took
-care to arrange matters so that only the Grand Vizier should
-accompany the Sultan on board the <em>Revenge</em>.</p>
-
-<p>In order that the Vizier, who was a cool-headed, wary, far-seeing
-man of nearly seventy, and therefore beyond the power
-of her own personal spells, might not interfere with her
-designs upon his master, she lost no time in placing him under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-the power of the drug which she had already used with such
-disastrous results to the world.</p>
-
-<p>Although he had said nothing about it, she felt certain that
-Khalid must have been warned by Alan of the danger of
-taking anything to eat or drink from her hands, and therefore
-she had decided to make no attempt upon his liberty of will,
-unless it became absolutely necessary to do so; but the Vizier
-was easily taken unawares, and she had little difficulty in
-causing him to drink a cup of coffee while her chief engineer
-was explaining the working of the machinery to the Sultan in
-the engine-room.</p>
-
-<p>The coffee, of course, contained a sufficient quantity of the
-drug to deprive the Vizier of all power of opposing her will
-or resisting her suggestions for many hours to come. So far as
-all independent advice was concerned, he was safely disposed of.</p>
-
-<p>The air-ships rose to an elevation of some two thousand
-feet, and at a speed of two hundred miles an hour ran first
-along the valley of the Nile to the southward. At Khartoum
-they swerved to the eastward, crossed the mountains of the
-Red Sea littoral at a height of nine thousand feet, then sank
-again and skirted the Arabian coast until Mecca, the sacred
-city of Islam, came in sight.</p>
-
-<p>The ancient temple of the Kaaba, containing the tomb of
-the Prophet, still stood, almost unchanged by the hand of time,
-amid the splendid buildings, verdant gardens, and long groves
-of palms with which the new Mecca of the twenty-first
-century was adorned. Pointing down towards it, Olga said to
-the Sultan, who was standing by her side on the deck, dazzled
-by the splendours of the swiftly-changing prospects of the
-scene below&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“There is the Holy City, which your Majesty may some
-day make the religious capital of the world. That would be
-an achievement worthy of the Commander of the Faithful and
-the descendant of the Prophet, would it not?”</p>
-
-<p>Khalid looked down at the city, over which they were now
-speeding in the direction of Medinah, and was silent for a few
-moments; then he raised his eyes to hers and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Even so; but have you counted the cost of achieving it
-to me and my people? Before the banner of the Crescent
-could float over a world-wide empire of Islam we should have
-to triumph in a war which would involve the whole human
-race, and this means that we should first have to destroy those
-who have been lords of the earth and of the air for more than
-a century.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Aerians are but men,” said Olga, a trifle coldly.
-“Why should your Majesty fear them if you are armed with
-the same weapons that they wield? I suppose Alan Arnold
-has threatened you and your people with nothing less than
-annihilation should you conclude this alliance with me? But
-why should you fear? I have met the Aerians in battle, and
-you see I am not annihilated.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not fear them as personal enemies,” replied Khalid
-proudly, “but only as the possible destroyers of my people,
-who would be defenceless against them. Think of the destruction
-you could rain upon the sacred city down yonder, while it
-could strike no blow in return. That would be the fate of
-Alexandria and all the capitals of my empire, and while my
-armies were marching to the conquest of Christendom our
-homes would be laid in ruins and our wives and children slain
-without mercy.</p>
-
-<p>“Show me,” he continued, speaking more earnestly and
-rapidly, “how they are to be protected against this, and our
-alliance may become possible.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is purely a matter of relative strength,” replied Olga.
-“Do you know why this squadron of mine is allowed to pursue
-its way unmolested, although the Aerians know of its existence?
-It is because, although, as Alan Arnold truly told you, by
-superior skill and experience in handling their ships they have
-been able to destroy about half my fleet, I am still stronger in
-the air than they are, and they know that we have now gained
-the experience which we lacked.</p>
-
-<p>“They have only three vessels, counting the one you saw
-captured, as swift and powerful as this, while I have twenty-six.
-None of their smaller vessels dare venture within reach of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-my guns, for to do so would be to meet certain destruction.
-They are doubtless building others as strong and swift as these
-in preparation for the struggle which they know must come.
-But if we join hands against them we shall be stronger than
-they will be when the year of your truce is ended.</p>
-
-<p>“My engineers shall teach yours how to build air-ships in
-all respects equal to these, and submarine cruisers, a dozen of
-which could destroy your present navies in a day. With all
-the resources of your empire at command, you could possess in
-a year from now an aerial navy of a thousand ships and a sea
-fleet of equal strength.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you would be strong enough to sweep the seas from
-pole to pole, and to storm the mountain battlements of Aeria
-itself. You must not forget that what the Aerians could do
-to your cities you could do to Aeria and to all the capitals of
-Christendom. City for city, you could take your revenge,
-until”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Until the whole earth was laid waste and the habitations
-of men were desolate,” broke in Khalid, overwhelmed by the
-horror of the prospect. “It is too great a price to pay, even for
-the empire of the world and the supremacy of Islam, even if
-we survived the ruin that we should have brought upon the
-world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Too great if there were any need to pay it,” said Olga
-quickly, seeing that her lust of conquest and revenge had
-carried her too far. “But matters will never come to such a
-pass as that.</p>
-
-<p>“Our battlefields will be the countries that we shall invade
-and conquer, not our own, and enough air-ships can be devoted
-to the defence of your cities to repel any attack the Aerians
-may make upon them. Your Majesty must not forget, too,
-that they will not dare to send any very large force away from
-Aeria, for they well know that the final battle for the possession
-of the earth will have to be fought out round the summits of
-its mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are right and I was wrong, Tsarina,” said the Sultan
-in an altered tone, “and the Prophet has said of the infidel,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-‘Such as are stubborn and refuse the true faith ye shall
-slay without mercy. Kill them wherever ye find them’&mdash;but
-alas”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>He stopped suddenly and looked at her, and she could see
-a smile moving his lips under his black beard and moustache.
-She divined instantly what was passing in his mind, and saw
-the opportunity for a stroke of diplomacy which, base as it
-was, she made without a moment’s hesitation. Before he could
-continue, she turned and faced him, looking into his eyes with
-a glance that dazzled him, and said in a low, quick, earnest
-tone&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I know what you would say, Sultan Khalid. You would
-say that I and my people are infidels in your eyes, and therefore
-worthy of destruction. I have thought of that&mdash;but the
-deck is too public a place for the discussion of such a matter.
-Call your Vizier and we will retire to my own saloon and talk
-of it there.”</p>
-
-<p>Khalid obeyed, wondering what was coming next from the
-lips of the Syren whose fatal beauty of person and subtlety of
-mind were luring him on to plunge into an ocean of blood of
-which no human eyes could see the further shore&mdash;if it had
-one at all&mdash;and as soon as the three were seated in the room,
-which had once been Alan’s, Olga, addressing the Vizier first,
-rapidly but very clearly sketched out the project that had
-been suggested to her by Lossenski, and then, turning to the
-Sultan, she said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“There seems now but one real bar to such an alliance, and
-that is the difference in our faiths, or, I should rather say, in
-our creeds. I have not ignored this; nay, I have pondered it
-deeply and earnestly. Creeds change with times, and Russia,
-like the rest of Europe, has now no real, living faith like yours.
-But you shall give it to them if you wish, and the day that I
-am proclaimed Empress of the Russias the Crescent shall shine
-on the towers of the Kremlin.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do I hear?” cried Khalid, springing to his feet in
-amazement at her astounding words; “you and your people
-will accept the Koran and acknowledge the Prophet?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I will and they shall,” said Olga calmly and firmly, committing
-herself to the huge apostasy without a tremor in her
-voice. “Remember, too, that millions who should by right be
-my subjects in Asia are already good Moslems. If the Russians
-refuse to obey me in this they will be rebels, and you shall do
-with them as you will do with the other peoples of Christendom
-if they remain stubborn. Let your Majesty’s chief minister
-and favourite counsellor speak and say whether or not I have
-spoken fairly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Speak, Musa al Ghazi!” said the Sultan, in a voice that
-betrayed intense emotion, “and weigh your words well, for many
-and great issues may depend upon them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Commander of the Faithful!” said the old man, speaking
-slowly and with some hesitation, as though he were repeating
-a lesson hardly yet learnt, “I can speak but the words that my
-soul echoes from without. A strange power has seemed to take
-possession of me, and I speak as one to whom another has
-taught what he should say.</p>
-
-<p>“Yet the words seem wise to me, and I will speak them,
-lest, not doing so, I should have to answer for my negligence.
-If it is written that you shall be the one chosen of Heaven to
-plant the Crescent where now falls the shadow of the Cross,
-and reign supreme, sole lord of a Moslem world, then have the
-means been sent to you by the hand of her who gives you the
-means of measuring strength with the masters of the nations,
-by whose pleasure we possess that which we have, and without
-whose countenance your Majesty would not much longer remain
-Commander of the Faithful.</p>
-
-<p>“I would not willingly speak words of offence, but it is
-necessary to recognise that the Moslem practises his faith only
-by permission of those who, if they hold any, hold another.”</p>
-
-<p>“By the Beard of the Prophet, thou hast said it, Musa! I
-am a King by permission, a High Priest of Islam by sufferance
-of the infidel!” exclaimed Khalid, as the hot blood rushed to
-his swarthy cheeks and the fire of fanaticism leapt into his
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“But I will be so mean a thing no longer than the time of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-the truce to which I have pledged my word. In the blood of
-the infidel I will wipe out this shame on Islam, yea, though
-the whole earth shall be drenched with the blood and tears that
-shall be licked up by the fires of war. It is my destiny,
-and I will do it, or my name shall perish from the earth for
-ever!</p>
-
-<p>“Tsarina Olga, I have seen and heard enough. Let us
-return to my palace and arrange the terms of our alliance;
-and when you have sworn upon the Koran that you will take
-Allah for your God and Mohammed for your Prophet, I will
-sign them, and together we will conquer the world for Islam.
-It is kismet, and that which is written shall be done!”</p>
-
-<p>Olga looked upon the splendid figure of the Sultan as he
-stood before her, his athletic form dilated and his face glorified
-by the passion of religious fervour that was burning within
-him, and as she did so a new light dawned upon her. She saw
-that this strong, fiery soul might some day conquer even hers,
-and fuse it into itself.</p>
-
-<p>It would be an unholy union, a love bought with apostasy
-from her faith and sealed with treachery to her people and the
-trust that she had inherited from her forefathers; but what
-were apostasy and treachery to her now that the love she had
-stained her soul with blood and untold crime to win was lost
-to her for ever?</p>
-
-<p>Earthly pomp and power, the pomp of imperial rule and the
-power of life and death, of happiness and misery, over millions
-of her fellow-creatures were well worth living for, and with
-them might come love again, or if not love, then passion, fierce
-and all-consuming, for this one king of earth who dared to be
-a king in fact as well as in name, and then&mdash;Before she
-could make any reply to the Sultan’s words, the slow, measured
-tones of the Vizier sounded again, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“If I may speak again, Majesties”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Say on, good Musa!” said the Sultan, “for so far thou
-hast spoken the words of wisdom.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would say,” continued the old man, “that even as the
-winged steed Alborak bore the Prophet from earth to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-Seventh Heaven, so may it be written that the winged ship of
-Tsarina Olga shall bear thee, my Master, into that Paradise of
-love which so far thou hast sought and not found.”</p>
-
-<p>“What say you, well-named Syren of the Skies, to that?”
-said Khalid, taking a step towards the couch on which Olga
-was sitting, and making a half-appealing gesture with both his
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>She rose to her feet and faced him. One look into his
-passion-lighted eyes told her that the victory was already won,
-and that strength could now give place to softness. She
-dropped her eyes before his burning gaze, and, crossing her
-hands upon her bosom with a pretty semblance of submission,
-said, in a low, sweet tone that he heard now for the first
-time&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“All things are possible, and if this be possible, then more
-than Cleopatra lost for Antony I will win for you, and you shall
-reign sole Cæsar of a subject world. As for me, when that
-comes to pass, let it be to me as it shall seem good in the eyes
-of my lord the King!”</p>
-
-<p>And so saying she bowed slightly before him and turned
-and passed out of the saloon, seeing the vision of him whom
-she had loved in vain through the mist of tears which rose in
-that instant to her eyes.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_207.jpg" width="350" height="56" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">A MOMENTOUS COMMISSION.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_t.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-T">TWELVE hours after they had left the Sultan on
-the terrace of his palace, the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the
-<em>Vindaya</em> dropped through the clouds on to the
-snow-covered surface of Kerguelen Island, and
-within an hour the despatch-vessel <em>Vega</em> was
-speeding away north-westward to Aeria with a full account
-of the results achieved by the first cruise of the <em>Ithuriel</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The twenty-four hours which would have to elapse before
-the reply of the Council could be received were employed in
-repairing the damage done to the <em>Vindaya</em>, and in renewing
-the motive-power and ammunition of both vessels. Sundry
-small but effective improvements in the mechanism and
-appointments of the <em>Vindaya</em> were also made, and last, but
-by no means least important, the name of the prize was
-changed.</p>
-
-<p>“You are henceforth her commander, old fellow,” said
-Alan to Alexis when the question of the new name came
-up, “and therefore it is for you to say what her name
-shall be.”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew you would say that,” replied Alexis, his grave,
-thoughtful face lighting up with a quick flush and an almost
-boyish smile, “and, of course, I needn’t tell you what name I
-should like above all things to give her, but, then, you
-see”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I see nothing but a quite unaccountable embarrassment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-written largely upon those ingenuous features of yours, my
-blushing Achates,” interrupted Alan, with a laugh that
-deepened the color on his friend’s cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you see, I’m not quite sure whether she would like
-it under the circumstances,” said Alexis hesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know that air-ships had any choice in the
-question of their names any more than children have,” said
-Alan, gravely stroking his beard and looking at his friend
-with a laugh in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t assume a density that the gods have not given
-you,” laughed Alexis in return. “You know very well who
-the she is to whom I refer. Now, suppose you were going
-to name and command the <em>Vindaya</em>, what would you call
-her?”</p>
-
-<p>“I would do as you want to do, my friend,” said Alan,
-laughing outright now, “although, I fear, with more chance
-of getting snubbed for my temerity, and trust to winning forgiveness
-from the lips of her name-mother by good service
-and hard hitting.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perfectly reasoned!” exclaimed Alexis, “and so henceforth,
-until I have express orders to call her something else&mdash;the
-<em>Forlorn Hope</em>, for instance&mdash;she shall be the <em>Isma</em>, and
-on her decks I will win the right to ask&mdash;I mean to wear the
-golden wings again, or else she will never cross the confines
-of Aeria.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will win more than the golden wings, I hope and
-believe,” said Alan, now very serious again, “for you evidently
-have a better chance of forgiveness than I have, though I
-don’t despair, mind you, for I am determined never to go
-back to Aeria unless I feel that I can fairly ask Alma to forgive
-what is past. And if she refuses I will hunt Olga
-Romanoff to the ends of the earth till I take her alive, and
-then I will carry her to Aeria, and at Alma’s feet I will
-strike her dead with my own hand so that she may know the
-truth!”</p>
-
-<p>“Amen,” said Alexis, striding forward and taking his
-hand. “And if Alma says ‘No’ to you I will never see Isma’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-face again till I have helped you to clip the Syren’s wings,
-and take her to meet her just reward. It is a bargain!
-Between us we will bring these proud damozels to sweet
-reasonableness. Now let us go and get a bottle of sparkling
-Aerian, and rename the <em>Vindaya</em> in proper form.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus it came to pass that when the <em>Ithuriel</em> next took the
-air her consort bore the name that was dearest to her commander’s
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>The anxiously-expected <em>Vega</em> did not return till nearly
-thirty hours after her departure. The delay proved that the
-Council had considered the tidings that she had brought of
-great importance, and had therefore taken some time to deliberate
-over them. This turned out to be the case, and the
-decision arrived at by the rulers of Aeria showed that they
-looked upon the crisis as grave in the last degree.</p>
-
-<p>The return despatch stated that within twenty-four hours
-after the arrival of the <em>Vega</em> at Kerguelen a fleet of fifty air-ships
-would be at the disposal of Alan and Alexis, who were
-ordered to place themselves at the head of it and proceed with
-all speed to Alexandria, taking Orloff Lossenski and the other
-Russian prisoners with them.</p>
-
-<p>Alan was to be the bearer of an ultimatum to the Sultan
-confirming, in the name of the President and Council of Aeria,
-the provisional declaration of war which he had threatened as
-the result of an alliance with Olga Romanoff, and stating that
-at sunrise on the 16th of May in the following year, hostilities
-would be commenced against him, and continued to the point
-of extermination so far as all men who bore arms were concerned.</p>
-
-<p>He was also called upon to order the Russian squadron to
-leave his capital, should it still be there, within two hours.
-If he refused, or if Olga declined to remove her ships, they
-were to be engaged there and then, and, if possible, destroyed
-at all costs. This latter part of the message was to be conveyed
-to Olga in a different form by the hands of Lossenski,
-who was then to be set at liberty with his fellow-prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>If Olga consented to go within the given time, it would be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-necessary to allow her to depart unmolested, as the superior
-speed of her ships would place the bulk of the Aerian fleet
-at a hopeless disadvantage in a pursuit, and expose it to certain
-destruction. If she insisted on fighting, then, of course,
-the hazard of battle must be taken, and the Council relied
-upon the commanders of its fleet to do their duty as their
-judgment should point it out to them. No specific terms were
-to be made with Olga and her adherents, but hostilities were,
-if possible, to be avoided until the Sultan’s year of truce
-had expired, and the new Aerian fleet was ready to take the
-air.</p>
-
-<p>If no fighting took place Alan was to proceed with his
-squadron to London with a third despatch to the King of
-Britain, as head of the Anglo-Saxon Federation, advising him,
-in the face of the threatening danger, to call together the
-rulers of Anglo-Saxondom and take immediate measures for
-mutual defence against the Moslems in case they should
-invade Europe when the year of truce was up. For this
-purpose arms in any quantities that might be needed would
-be sent out from Aeria, and the Aerians would undertake the
-task of drilling the newly-formed armies and instructing them
-in the use of the weapons.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to this the necessary works and power-stations
-for building and equipping at least a thousand of the largest
-air-ships were to be established under Aerian control in
-England, and at the same time dockyards were to be set up
-for the construction of an equal number of submarine vessels
-of the <em>Narwhal</em> type. It was, however, to be made an absolute
-condition of this assistance and protection that the armies and
-aerial and sea navies were to be entirely officered by Aerians,
-and were to be under the unquestioned control of the President
-of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>This condition was, for obvious reasons, held by the Council
-to be absolutely essential to success. Divided commands in
-the face of a foe which would obey blindly the orders of a
-single chief who had already shown that he could create
-armies and fleets of high efficiency, would mean inevitable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-failure and disaster. Therefore the absolute control of Anglo-Saxondom
-must once more be placed in the hands of the
-Supreme Council until the danger was passed and peace was
-restored, or Aeria would fight the battle alone and leave the
-nations of Anglo-Saxondom to their fate.</p>
-
-<p>The immediate effect of the orders brought by the <em>Vega</em>
-was to throw the station of Kerguelen into a state of the most
-intense activity. Alan at once assumed command by common
-consent, and, assisted by Alexis, Admiral Forrest, and Captain
-Ernstein, got everything in readiness for the reception of the
-coming squadron from Aeria. All the defences of the station
-were also thoroughly inspected, from the air-ships floating
-above the clouds to the submarine mines which guarded the
-entrances to the harbours, and a general plan of the now
-inevitable campaign was sketched out at a council of war held
-on the evening of the <em>Vega’s</em> return.</p>
-
-<p>It is scarcely necessary to say that the orders from headquarters
-put both Alan and Alexis into the highest spirits.
-They had already vindicated their claim to the confidence of
-the Council and their fellow-countrymen, and the claim had
-been allowed without stint or hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>Though their year of probation had only just begun they
-found themselves intrusted with a mission, dangerous it is
-true, but also of the most supreme importance, and Alan in
-particular felt his pulses thrill with justifiable pride when he
-found himself charged with the glorious task of doing almost
-exactly what his great ancestor, Alan Tremayne, had done a
-hundred and thirty years before, when he marshalled the
-millions of Anglo-Saxondom against the leagued despotisms
-of Europe and overthrew them in the mighty conflict which
-had given peace on earth for nearly five generations.</p>
-
-<p>Whether he would succeed as the Chief of the Terror had
-done depended not upon himself so much as on Anglo-Saxondom
-itself. If the once conquering race of earth had
-kept intact its old martial strength and imperial spirit through
-the long years of peace and prosperity as its kindred in Aeria
-had done, all would be well, and the disturbers of the welfare<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-of humanity would pay dearly and bitterly for their tremendous
-crime.</p>
-
-<p>But if, like the Romans of old, they had allowed the
-tropical atmosphere of material luxury to relax the fibres of
-their once sturdy nature and weaken the arms which had once
-enclosed the world in their embrace, then his mission would
-fail, however eloquently he might urge it. A desolation infinitely
-greater than that which overwhelmed Rome or Byzantium
-would fall upon Anglo-Saxondom, and its name would be the
-only monument of its vanished glory.</p>
-
-<p>But the <em>Vega</em> brought something more to Alan and Alexis
-than the despatches and orders of the Council. This was a
-letter from Isma to Alan, filled with the tenderest expressions
-of delight at the triumphs which he and his “companion in
-arms” had already achieved, and of brave and hopeful confidence
-in them, despite the terrible dangers that they were
-going forth to confront.</p>
-
-<p>The letter concluded with the significant sentence&mdash;“When
-you come back in triumph, as I know you will, there
-will not be one heart in Aeria that will not beat more gladly
-for your sakes, not one hand that will not be stretched out to
-greet you either in friendship or in love. Remember this
-against the day of battle, and in the day of peace you shall
-see how true my words are.”</p>
-
-<p>Although the letter made no mention of Alma, save as one
-of the intimate friends who sent their “loving greetings” to
-the two men who were going to lead the navy of Aeria to
-what might be the first battle of a war that would be the most
-colossal and unsparing struggle ever waged on earth, Alan
-was able to read enough between the lines to give him hope.</p>
-
-<p>He knew enough of Alma’s proud and sensitive nature to
-fully understand why no word had come directly from her to
-him, and also to recognise that the task of winning her back
-from her estrangement would be no light one. Indeed, of the
-two tasks which lay before him, the conquest of the world and
-the reconquest of Alma’s heart, he looked with less misgiving
-upon the former than he did upon the latter. Still he by no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-means despaired, and what he had said to Alexis was justified
-in his mind by the belief that in Isma he had the most
-eloquent of advocates always at Alma’s side, pleading his cause
-even better than he could do it himself, at anyrate for the
-present.</p>
-
-<p>As for Alexis, his lover’s eyes and more sanguine temperament
-found in the letter ample justification for the re-naming
-of the <em>Vindaya</em>, and if he forgot to return the precious sheet
-of paper to Alan after he had read its contents, it was because
-he honestly felt that he had the better right to it, and his
-companion in love and war apparently recognised this, for
-he carefully refrained from asking him for it. Thus well
-comforted with new-born hope, and impatiently longing to
-begin the momentous work in hand, whether it was to be war
-or diplomacy, they awaited the arrival of the promised fleet
-from Aeria, which was expected to alight on the surface of
-Kerguelen about noon on the day after the arrival of the
-<em>Vega</em>.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes before twelve o’clock on the 19th of May
-one of the look-out vessels floating five thousand feet above
-the clouds which overhung Desolation Land telephoned, “Fleet
-from Aeria in sight,” and half an hour after the receipt of the
-anxiously-expected news at headquarters the fifty air-ships
-were grouped round the power-station at the head of Christmas
-Harbour, renewing the motive power which had been
-expended on the voyage from Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>When this operation was completed the fleet was equipped
-for a voyage of thirty thousand miles if necessary. As every
-vessel was completely furnished with all stores and munitions
-of war, no further preparations had been made, and Alan was
-able to give the signal for the flotilla to take the air in little
-more than an hour after its arrival at Kerguelen.</p>
-
-<p>It was divided into two divisions of twenty-five ships each,
-one led by the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the other by the <em>Isma</em>, and these
-rose into the air, formed in two straight lines each about a
-quarter of a mile long. The two flagships flew one on either
-flank, and slightly ahead and above the main body. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-formation enabled any signals made from either of them to
-be instantly seen by every ship in the fleet.</p>
-
-<p>The distance to be traversed was five thousand eight
-hundred geographical miles, and the voyage was performed at
-a speed of four hundred miles an hour without incident.</p>
-
-<p>At daybreak on the 20th, the two divisions were floating in
-a wide circle six thousand feet above Alexandria at a sufficient
-distance to be practically invisible from the city, which nevertheless
-lay completely at the mercy of the four hundred guns
-which were trained upon it, and which, if the terms of the
-Council’s ultimatum were not accepted by the Sultan and
-Olga, would reduce it to a wilderness of ruins within an hour
-from the signal to fire being given.</p>
-
-<p>That the Russians were still the guests of the Sultan was
-made apparent as soon as the light became strong enough for
-their squadron to be seen resting on the earth in the gardens
-of the palace, with one look-out ship stationed about fifteen
-hundred feet above the roof of the palace. When all the ships
-were in their stations the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the <em>Isma</em> ran up close
-to each other, and Alexis boarded the flagship to receive his
-final instructions from Alan, who had undertaken the perilous
-duty of conveying the ultimatum to the Sultan and his possible
-ally.</p>
-
-<p>Orloff Lossenski was on board the <em>Ithuriel</em>, and Alan
-requested him to be present when Alexis received his orders.
-As he shook hands with the Vice-Admiral, Alan said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I have asked Orloff Lossenski to hear our last arrangements
-made so that he may recognise as well as we do that
-this is a matter of life and death for all of us. For my own
-part, I am determined that the wishes of the Council shall be
-obeyed, or the <em>Ithuriel</em> and her crew shall be buried with our
-enemies in the ruins of Alexandria.</p>
-
-<p>“We have not been seen yet from the Russian look-out
-ship, but they will of course see the <em>Ithuriel</em> going down. I
-shall descend flying a flag of truce, and I feel certain that the
-Sultan will recognise it himself and compel his allies to do so.
-But if not, if a single shot is fired, or if the Russian squadron<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-attempts to rise in the air until my return, you are to give the
-signal to open fire upon the city, and the fleet is not to cease
-firing until it is destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>“You are to forget that you are destroying friends as well
-as foes, for I and all on board the <em>Ithuriel</em> recognise that the
-honour of Aeria and the safety of the world demand the
-sacrifice, and we are resolved to make it.</p>
-
-<p>“I not only order this as your superior in command, I ask
-it as a friend and brother in arms. I know you would gladly
-die in the same cause if necessary, and so you must not hesitate
-to kill me and destroy the <em>Ithuriel</em> if the fortune of war
-compels you to do so.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan’s speech, spoken with the perfect steadiness of an
-unalterable resolve, found a fitting response in the breast of
-his companion in arms. Still holding his friend’s hand in
-what might be a farewell clasp, Alexis simply replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I see the necessity, and I will obey to the letter! God
-grant that you may all return safe and sound; but if you
-don’t, you shall have such a tomb as no man ever had before.
-Good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye,” said Alan in the same steady tone, and then
-their hands parted, and Alexis returned to his ship.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Orloff Lossenski,” said Alan, turning to the Russian,
-“you have heard my instructions, and you know that they
-will be obeyed. Neither you nor your mistress have any right
-to expect mercy at my hands, and you shall have none. Obey
-my orders to the letter, and see that your mistress does the
-same, or Alexandria will be in ruins, before that sun reaches
-the zenith.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have heard and I will obey, for the fortune of war is
-with you and I must,” replied Lossenski, completely overmastered
-by the heroic devotion displayed by Alan in what
-bade fair to be a crisis in the fate of the world.</p>
-
-<p>A broad white flag of truce was now flown from the aftermast
-of the <em>Ithuriel</em>. At the fore flew as a greeting to the
-Sultan the Star and Crescent of Islam, while above both at
-the main floated the sky-blue banner of Aeria, emblazoned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-with the golden wings united by a mailed hand armed with
-a dagger. With every man at his station and every gun
-ready for instant use, the flagship dropped swiftly down
-towards the Russian vessel floating over the palace.</p>
-
-<p>Within a mile of her the signal, “We bring despatches to
-the Sultan,” flew from the signal staff at the stern. The captain
-of the Russian scout-ship read the signal and at once
-telephoned to the palace, with which his ship was connected
-by an electric thread, for instructions.</p>
-
-<p>The <em>Ithuriel</em> then flew a second signal, “If you rise we
-shall fire,” and this he was forced to obey as the Aerian
-vessel was too far above him for his guns to come into play.
-He therefore replied with the signal, “I have asked for
-instructions. Wait for reply.” A few minutes later Alan,
-keeping the Russian well under his guns, saw her drop down
-to the earth and alight on the flat roof of the palace, on
-which several figures could be seen moving about and scanning
-the skies with glasses, which were speedily centred on
-the <em>Ithuriel</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Then a white flag was run up to the top of a flagstaff on
-one of the minarets of the palace, a similar one was hoisted
-by the Russian air-ship, and she rose towards the <em>Ithuriel</em>.
-Alan, feeling now sure that the flag of truce would be
-respected for the Sultan’s sake, allowed the ship to come
-stern on to the <em>Ithuriel</em> until the two were within speaking
-distance.</p>
-
-<p>As she approached, the Russian swung her stern guns out
-laterally, and Alan did the same with his, so that for the time
-being neither ship could injure the other. The stern doors
-were then opened, and the Russian captain delivered a message
-to the effect that the Sultan had just risen for morning
-prayers, and would receive the captain of the <em>Ithuriel</em> in half
-an hour. The Aerian vessel could therefore descend without
-fear.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no question of fear,” replied Alan shortly. “I
-have not come alone. Use your glasses and you will see that
-the city is surrounded, but we shall respect the truce if you do.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Russian stepped back with a hurried gesture and seized
-his glasses. It was now quite light enough for him to see at
-that elevation a wide circle of points of flashing blue light
-reflected from the hulls of the Aerian fleet. He put down his
-glasses and replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“So I see! You would not have got here if patrols had
-been sent out as I advised.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or else your patrols would not have come back,” said
-Alan, turning on his heel and walking forward.</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later the white flag on the minaret was dipped
-three times as an invitation for the <em>Ithuriel</em> to descend, and
-Alan, determined to guard against any possible treachery on
-the part of the Russian scout-ship, signalled to it to precede
-him, and so the two vessels sank down and alighted almost
-together on the roof of the palace.</p>
-
-<p>The Sultan surrounded by his ministers was awaiting
-them, and as soon as salutes had been exchanged Alan handed
-him the ultimatum of the Council. As Khalid read the brief
-but pregnant message his brows contracted, and an angry flush
-showed through the bronze of his skin.</p>
-
-<p>He read it twice over, stroking his beard slowly and
-deliberately as he did so. Then he looked up and said
-to Alan in a tone from which he made no effort to banish
-the accents of anger&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Was not my word enough? Have I not promised that
-I would make no war for a year? By what right do you
-order me to compel my friend and ally to leave my city
-within two hours?”</p>
-
-<p>At the word “ally” Alan’s face assumed an expression of
-wrathful sternness, and he replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“By the right which has always governed the issues of
-war&mdash;the power to compel obedience.”</p>
-
-<p>“To compel!” cried the Sultan, in a still angrier tone.
-“What! with one air-ship against twenty? Not even a
-Prince of the Air could do that.”</p>
-
-<p>“No Prince of the Air would be mad enough to make the
-attempt,” replied Alan coldly. “Ask the captain of your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-scout-ship, and he will tell you that your city is surrounded;
-and I can tell you that four hundred guns are trained upon
-it at this moment, and that the firing of a shot, or the rising
-of any air-ship but my own from the ground, will be the
-signal for them all to be discharged. I need not tell your
-Majesty what the result of that would be.”</p>
-
-<p>Khalid recoiled with a cry that was almost one of fear.
-He knew instinctively that Alan was speaking the literal
-truth, without the confirmation given by the captain of the
-scout-ship. He saw, too, that Olga had deceived him, or at anyrate
-had been grievously mistaken, when she had said that the
-Aerians would not send a fleet after her squadron. They had
-done so, and so skilfully had its movements been ordered, that
-the city had been taken by surprise, and lay at its mercy.</p>
-
-<p>Brave as he was, the strange terrors of the situation sent a
-thrill of fear through his soul. There he stood, the proudest
-king on earth, on the roof of his palace, beneath the smiling
-sky of an Egyptian summer morning; and yet that smiling
-sky was charged with death and destruction a hundredfold
-greater than if the thunder-clouds were lowering on it, ready
-to hurl their lightnings upon the earth.</p>
-
-<p>He could see nothing but the blue heavens and the eastern
-sunlight shining over the roofs of his capital; and yet he knew
-that the man standing before him could, with a single signal,
-reduce the splendid city to heaps of shattered, shapeless ruins,
-and bury its inhabitants and its guests in one common tomb.</p>
-
-<p>Then what seemed to be a saving thought flashed through
-his mind, and he said, almost in a tone of banter&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“But in that case we should not die alone, unless you have
-taught those unsparing guns of yours to distinguish between
-friend and foe&mdash;the signal for our destruction would be the
-signal for yours as well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Even so!” replied Alan gravely. “That is a contingency
-which I have foreseen. Orloff Lossenski, tell his Majesty what
-my last orders to the fleet were.”</p>
-
-<p>The Russian stepped forward, and after saluting the Sultan
-said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I heard the orders given, Majesty, and they were to that
-effect. Friends and foes are to be destroyed alike, and
-nothing is to be left of Alexandria but its ruins.</p>
-
-<p>“I am also charged with a message to my mistress, the
-Tsarina, which tells her that if she does not leave within two
-hours her ships will be attacked in the city, and that, too,
-would be disaster; and if my words have still any weight with
-her I shall advise compliance with the order of the Council.
-Will your Majesty permit me to be conducted to my mistress
-in order that I may deliver my message in due form?”</p>
-
-<p>The Sultan did not seem to hear the request at all. The
-idea that Alan and his crew should thus deliberately devote
-themselves and their beautiful vessel to annihilation in the
-event of their orders being disobeyed appalled and unnerved
-him. He knew nothing, save by tradition, of the heights of
-heroism to which men can rise under the stimulus of war, and
-he looked upon the man who had so calmly pronounced the
-provisional death sentence of himself and his companions as
-something more than human, as beings of a higher order, to
-fight against whom would be impious rashness rather than
-courage.</p>
-
-<p>It was a situation that would have shaken the nerves of
-the sternest and most experienced soldier of the nineteenth
-century, and so it was no wonder that his spirit, unbraced by
-the discipline of war, shrank from facing its terrors. He saw,
-too, that there was literally no choice save between submission
-and destruction. To save, not only the lives of himself and
-his people, but also those of his guests and allies, he and they
-must submit and obey this imperious mandate.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the will of God!” he said, bowing his head slightly
-towards Alan as he spoke. “They who cannot fight must
-yield. Hereafter we may meet upon more equal terms, and
-then to-day’s humiliation shall not be forgotten.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan inclined his head in reply, and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“So be it! As your Majesty has seemingly decided to
-involve the world in the horrors of war, it is not for me to say
-any more. When the day of battle comes, let the fortune of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-war decide between us. Meanwhile, Orloff Lossenski, it is
-time that you took the Council’s message to your mistress.”</p>
-
-<p>“Give it to me,” said the Sultan, stepping forward with
-outstretched hands, “and I will take it to her, if she has risen
-yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is no need for that,” said a voice a few yards beyond
-Alan. “I am here, and I will take it.”</p>
-
-<p>As the sweet, low, even tones, now so hatefully familiar,
-reached Alan’s ears he turned sharply round, with a blaze of
-ungovernable anger in his eyes, and saw Olga, calm and self-possessed
-in all the pride of her imperial beauty, walking
-towards the group from an arched doorway that led up from
-the interior of the palace.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_221.jpg" width="350" height="62" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIX.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">FACE TO FACE AGAIN.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_s.jpg" width="78" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-S">SMILING and self-possessed as Olga appeared
-when she gained the roof of the palace, she
-had passed through a perfect purgatory of
-conflicting and agonising emotions since the
-news of the arrival of the <em>Ithuriel</em> had reached
-her in her room. Her tremendous and, but for the fact of
-her strange, hopeless love, incomprehensible blunder in setting
-Alan and Alexis free, instead of either killing them or keeping
-them in life-long captivity, had already borne terrible fruit;
-but this visit, made at the very moment when her plans were
-apparently crowned with success, seemed to threaten nothing
-less than the complete ruin of all her schemes.</p>
-
-<p>She knew instinctively that the city must be surrounded
-by an overwhelming force of Aerian ships, for a single one to
-venture thus into the midst of her own squadron, and, judging
-by her own tactics, she expected nothing less than immediate
-annihilation as the alternative to surrender. But even more
-bitter than this was the thought of meeting, not only as a
-freeman, but as the commander of the Aerian navy, the man
-who but a few days ago had been her docile, unresisting slave,
-robbed of the highest attribute of his manhood by the Circe-spell
-that she had cast over him, and which she now knew was
-broken for ever.</p>
-
-<p>And, more than this, she must now meet as an implacable
-enemy the man whom, in spite of herself, she still loved with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-all the passion of her fiery nature, and who, now that he was
-free again, could but look upon her not only with hatred, but
-with disgust. This, so far as her own feelings were concerned,
-was the miserable end of her scheming, but there was no help
-for it. She had deliberately sown the wind, and now the time
-was approaching for her to reap the whirlwind.</p>
-
-<p>She thought of her dream in St. Petersburg, and a new
-and awful meaning was made apparent to her in those few
-minutes of mental torture before she went to meet her well-beloved
-enemy face to face. She saw herself mistress of a
-conquered world, seated on a lonely throne, wailing over her
-own broken heart in the midst of a desolation that she had
-brought upon the earth&mdash;for nothing.</p>
-
-<p>This, it seemed, was to be the penalty of the unspeakable
-crime she had committed to gain possession of the air-ship, a
-hopeless love that should turn all the fruits of conquest, if she
-ever won them, into the bitter ashes of the Dead Sea apples
-in her mouth, a love not only unrequited, but repaid with
-righteous horror and almost divine disgust.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, despite all this, her marvellous fortitude and royal
-pride came to her aid to help her to bear herself bravely before
-her enemies, and so, with a smile on her lips and a hell of
-raging passions in her bosom, she ascended to take her part in
-the debate, big with the destiny of a world, that was being
-held on the palace roof.</p>
-
-<p>As Alan turned and confronted her in all the strength and
-splendour of the manhood that not even her almost superhuman
-arts had been able to tarnish or weaken, and looked at
-her with the stern, steady gaze without one sign of recognition
-in the eyes that shone blue-black beneath his straight-drawn
-brows, her heart stood still and seemed turned to ice
-in her breast, and for one brief moment her foot faltered
-and the light died out of her eyes and the colour from her
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>Then she caught the Sultan’s gaze turned inquiringly upon
-her; her indomitable spirit rose to the emergency, and her
-self-possession returned. Passing Alan by with a slight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-inclination of her head which did not conceal the mocking
-smile which curled her dainty lips, she went to Khalid
-and, holding out her hand, said in steady, musical tones
-which, do what he would to resist it, sent a thrill to Alan’s
-heart&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Where is the message that my faithless servant brings
-from the tyrants of the world?”</p>
-
-<p>The Sultan gave it to her, and as she read it Lossenski
-stood silent like the rest, but with head bowed down in shame
-and sorrow. When she reached the last word of the despatch
-the crimson deepened on her cheeks and her hands closed
-convulsively on the paper. Then with a quick movement she
-tore it in twain, flung the two fragments to the ground, and
-then, looking up with eyes blazing with passion, she cried&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I should be a slave to obey! Lossenski, signal to the
-squadron to rise. Boris, train a gun on that ship and blow
-her to pieces if a man moves on board of her. Out of the way
-there, Alan Arnold. If you lift a hand I will shoot you like a
-dog!”</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke she snatched a pistol out of her belt and
-had almost levelled it at Alan’s heart, when, like a flash of
-lightning, his rapier leapt from its sheath, and as the pistol
-came up it was dashed from her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I could have killed you with less trouble,” he said, in
-quick stern accents, raising the glittering blue blade to a level
-with her eyes, and keeping it outstretched towards her.
-“Have you forgotten what I told you, or that I am no longer
-under your vile spell? If those orders are obeyed I will kill
-you now, though you do wear a woman’s shape. The city is
-surrounded, and if one vessel rises from the earth, Alexandria
-will be in ruins in an hour. Now, give the signal for its
-destruction if you dare, and let the earth be rid of you!”</p>
-
-<p>“And of you, my gallant Knight of the Air, who draws his
-sword upon a woman!” she almost hissed at him in her fury.
-“Yes, I dare and I will. Lossenski”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>In another moment the fate of the world would have been
-changed; but, before the order could be repeated, the Sultan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-strode forward and placed himself between Alan and Olga with
-outstretched arms&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“No, Tsarina! that order shall not be given on my palace
-or in my hearing. You have forgotten our agreement and my
-oath. I have sworn on the Koran that there shall be no war
-between Islam and Aeria for a year, and by the glory of Allah
-there shall be none!</p>
-
-<p>“What have I and my people done that you should bring
-this destruction upon them? Your servant shall be shot if
-he opens his lips, and if you must fight, go into the desert and
-do it; but that will end our alliance, for you will have broken
-the peace to which I have sworn, and made me a liar. It is
-enough! Let us talk like reasonable beings, and not quarrel
-like children.”</p>
-
-<p>Olga was conquered for the time being, and she saw it.
-Few as had been the moments of the Sultan’s speech, they
-were enough to allow her agile intellect to get the better of
-her anger, and to convince her that it would have led her to
-suicide in another minute.</p>
-
-<p>Her manner changed with a swiftness that was almost
-miraculous. Her long, thick lashes fell, hiding the still
-burning fires of her eyes. Her attitude changed from one of
-defiance to one of deference, and as she stepped back a pace or
-two, she said in a totally altered voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesty has justly rebuked me. My anger overcame
-my reason for the moment. My hatred of these tyrants of the
-air is not a thing of to-day or of yesterday, as you know, but
-the legacy of generations of wrong and robbery, and the
-arrogance of this man, who but a few days ago was my
-slave, and now ventures to dictate terms of war or peace to
-me, was more than my patience or my temper could bear. I
-have done wrong, and in atonement I will promise, on the
-honour of a Romanoff, to be bound absolutely by such engagement
-as your Majesty may make until the period of your truce
-is expired.”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, she retired to a distant part of the terrace,
-beckoning Lossenski to follow her. Throwing herself on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-seat in full view but out of earshot of the group she had left,
-she bade him tell her the story of the loss of the <em>Vindaya</em>,
-and how he came to be the bearer of the message of the
-Council of Aeria to her.</p>
-
-<p>Lossenski told the story simply and truthfully, and as he
-finished, the Grand Vizier approached, and after an obeisance,
-made with Oriental reverence, said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Tsarina, my master commands me to inform you that he
-has settled all matters with the Prince of the Air save one,
-and to settle that he craves your assistance. Will it please
-you to come and speak with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will come,” said Olga, rising and following him with the
-words of Lossenski fresh in her ears.</p>
-
-<p>“Tsarina Olga,” said the Sultan, coming to meet her as she
-approached the group amidst which Alan was still standing,
-“I have come to an agreement with Alan Arnold upon all
-points but one, and that one only you can decide.</p>
-
-<p>“He asserts that six years ago he took you and your
-brother as guests on board the air-ship, which you now call
-the <em>Revenge</em>, that you drugged the wine drunk by him and
-his comrades, and, sparing only him and his friend Alexis
-Masarov, you poisoned the rest of the crew, and threw them
-out on to the snows of Norway, after which you kept him
-and Alexis under your influence by means of a drug, which
-deprived them of their will-power and forced them to reveal
-the secrets of the air-ship to you and assist you in building
-your fleet.”</p>
-
-<p>“And has your Majesty given credence to such a monstrous
-story, or do you only wish to hear me give it the contradiction
-which its absurdity and falsity deserve? If the former, the
-sooner I and my ships leave your city, never to return save
-as enemies, the better. If the latter, you shall soon be
-satisfied.”</p>
-
-<p>Olga spoke with an air of angered innocence which completely
-deceived the Sultan, anxious as he was to find the
-extraordinary story false, and he hastily replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“It is the latter that I desire, of course. I was obliged to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-say that if you were unable to deny the accusation it would
-be impossible for me to continue an alliance with one who
-had been guilty of a crime which my faith and the customs
-of my race denounce as vile beyond all human measure.
-But I refused to believe it against you until your own lips
-had confessed it, or undeniable evidence had proved it, and
-therefore I have asked you to come and let us know the
-truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thank you, Sultan Khalid, for your confidence and your
-chivalry,” she said, looking up into his eyes with a glance that
-rendered all denial from her once and for ever unnecessary.
-“You shall hear me deny the foul falsehood to my traducer’s
-face.”</p>
-
-<p>Stung to fresh fury by the knowledge that Alan had sought
-to expose her in her true nature to the man whom she sought
-to make her slave in his place, she strode forward to within
-three paces of where he was standing, and, drawing herself
-up to the full height of her royal stature, she faced him with
-pale cheeks and blazing eyes, her beauty so transfigured by
-anger that the Moslems standing about her instinctively
-shrank back, awe-stricken by such an incarnation of wrath
-and loveliness as no man of them had ever dreamed of before.
-Even Alan himself forgot his hate and disgust for the moment
-in the contemplation of her almost miraculous beauty and
-the indescribable dignity with which her anger invested her,
-and waited in silence that was almost respectful for the
-tempest of wrath and reproach which he saw was about to
-be let loose on him.</p>
-
-<p>Her lips trembled mutely for a moment or two before any
-sound came from them, but when she spoke her tone was low
-and clear, though almost hoarse with passion, and shaken by
-the manifest effort she made to keep it under control.</p>
-
-<p>“So this is the return that your chivalry makes for my
-generosity in giving you life and liberty when you were lost to
-the world; when I might have killed you, as I see now that I
-should have done, without a single soul among your people
-knowing anything of your fate!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I expected that you would take up arms against me, for
-your people and mine are enemies to the death; and I knew,
-too, that the love which I had spurned would not be long in
-turning to active hate. But you excelled my expectations&mdash;you,
-one of the Princes of the Air, the scion of a race that
-holds itself above all the other races of the earth, the son of a
-man who but a few years ago was lord and master of the
-world! You come in the guise of open and honourable warfare
-to smirch with your foul lies the fame of a woman for
-whose sake you made yourself a traitor to your people and a
-murderer of your own comrades. A pretty story, forsooth, to
-tell in the ears of my friends and allies. Do you take them
-for children or fools that you expect them to believe it?</p>
-
-<p>“Imagine such a miracle, your Majesty,” she continued,
-turning, with the clear ring of a mocking laugh in her voice, to
-the Sultan, “imagine this Alan Arnold, son of the President of
-Aeria, with his friend and lieutenant, Alexis Masarov, and a
-crew of eight Aerians on board their flagship, armed with the
-most tremendous means of destruction ever invented by human
-genius, and each man of them, moreover, possessing in his own
-person the power of life and death, as he himself has proved
-before your own eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“These kings among men invite two casual acquaintances
-for a trip to the clouds, and these two guests, a youth of twenty
-and a girl not seventeen, unarmed and without assistance,
-seize their ship, kill eight of their invincibly armed comrades,
-and lead the captain and his lieutenant away captive. And
-how? By means of some mysterious drugs, subtle and irresistible
-poisons, of which such a boy and girl could not possibly
-have known either the composition or the use, and which they
-would have been afraid to employ if they had done.</p>
-
-<p>“But let me come to the facts as they are,” she went on,
-turning again to Alan, who stood literally dumfounded before
-her, amazed beyond power of thought or speech by the audacity
-of her words. “It is you who are the liar, the traitor, and the
-murderer. It is you who killed my brother before my eyes
-because he sought to protect me from your violence; and it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-you and your friend Alexis who, of your own free will, struck
-your comrades dead, threw them out of the air-ship upon the
-Norwegian snows, and then, in the hope of gaining my favour,
-took the <em>Ithuriel</em> to Vorobièvo, near Moscow, and delivered her
-into the hands of my friends.</p>
-
-<p>“I have fifty men within call at this moment who will swear
-that this is true. Orloff Lossenski, you are one of them. Were
-you not at the villa at Vorobièvo when these two came with
-me in the <em>Ithuriel</em> and delivered her into your hands; and did
-you not find the corpse of my brother Serge in one of the state
-rooms with his neck bruised and blackened by the grip of his
-murderer?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Majesty,” replied Lossenski, stepping forward as he
-was addressed. “That is true, though they told us at the
-time that your brother had been killed in a struggle with their
-comrades.”</p>
-
-<p>“And is it true,” continued Olga, “that they accompanied
-me into your villa and had supper with us as friends, and did
-not I forgive the death of my brother for the sake of the
-advantages which the possession of the air-ship, which they
-consented to surrender to us, would be to the cause of the
-revolution in Russia to which we were pledged?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is also true, Majesty; and there are several here now
-with the squadron who can also testify to the fact.”</p>
-
-<p>“And also,” interrupted Olga, “to the fact that these two
-traitors worked willingly to help us to secrete the air-ship, and
-finally to take her to Mount Terror, and there explained the
-working of her machinery to us and helped us to build other
-air-ships and submarine vessels, and commanded these in
-their attacks upon the commerce of our enemies. Is that true,
-also?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is, Majesty,” again replied Lossenski. “Shall I summon
-the crews of our ships that they also may testify to it lest my
-word should not be enough?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it your Majesty’s wish that they shall be called?”
-asked Olga, again turning to the Sultan, who all this time had
-been standing shifting his gaze from her face to Alan’s, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-from Alan’s back again to hers, horrified by the fearful accusations
-with which she had replied to the story, of the falsity of
-which he was already thoroughly convinced.</p>
-
-<p>“They can be called if Alan Arnold desires it,” he said, in
-grave, deliberate tones. “But would it not be better that he
-should speak first? At present we have two words against
-one. Has he any proof that what you say is false?” he continued,
-looking inquiringly towards Alan.</p>
-
-<p>“I have none but my own word and that of Alexis, up
-yonder in the skies, and him I cannot&mdash;and if I could, under
-the circumstances, I would not&mdash;call,” said Alan, who by this
-time had recovered his self-possession. “If your Majesty proposes
-to judge between us according to spoken testimony, I say
-at once that I will accept no such tests, for I well know that
-this woman could produce a hundred of her accomplices who
-would swear anything she bade them swear.</p>
-
-<p>“She has given me the lie with equal skill and audacity. I
-can only give her the lie in return, if not as skilfully, at least
-as boldly, and with a knowledge that I am telling the truth.
-Your Majesty can believe her story or mine, as you choose. If
-you believe hers, I am willing to do you the justice of confessing
-that you will be judging according to the weight of testimony,
-such as it is, for that is certainly against me.”</p>
-
-<p>“And so I must judge,” replied the Sultan coldly. “I
-cannot believe your story, for it seems to be impossible, while
-the Tsarina’s has every appearance of truth. Into your
-motives I have neither the right nor the wish to inquire, and
-all that is left for me to say is that what I have heard has
-finally decided me to espouse the cause of the Tsarina and her
-friends against those who have wronged and slandered her, be
-the cost to me and my people what it may.</p>
-
-<p>“We shall keep the truce if you do, and in the day of strife
-let the God of Battles decide between us. My answer to
-your Council’s message shall be ready for you in half an hour.
-Farewell!”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, Khalid the Magnificent turned his back upon
-Alan, and walked, followed by his Vizier and his ministers, to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-the doorway leading to the interior of the palace. Olga,
-pausing for a moment to cast one glance of triumphant hatred
-at her discredited foe, beckoned to Lossenski, and followed the
-Sultan without a word.</p>
-
-<p>Alan, amazed and enraged beyond measure by the unexpected
-turn that affairs had taken, and yet confident in his
-own knowledge of the truth, turned on his heel, and went
-back on board the <em>Ithuriel</em>, where he went into his own cabin
-and sat down to write his directions for enforcing the order of
-the Council with regard to the evacuation of the city by the
-Russian squadron.</p>
-
-<p>He bitterly regretted that the orders of the Council did not
-permit him to destroy the Russian air-ships there and then
-while they lay at his mercy. But the orders were explicit,
-and forbade him even to pursue them after they had left
-Alexandria, unless they committed an act of hostility against
-him.</p>
-
-<p>If he could have done so, he would have fought them at all
-hazards, and then, if he had conquered, he would have been
-able to enforce the general prohibition of the Council against
-building air-ships upon the Sultan; but as disobedience was
-not to be thought of, he could only carry out his orders, and
-hope that the judgment of the Council might prove in the end
-superior to his own.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the half-hour he was summoned to meet the
-Grand Vizier, who brought the reply of his master. This ran as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="center">In the Name of the Most Merciful God!</p>
-
-<p class="center">Khalid, Commander of the Faithful, to Alan Arnold, President of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>I have received your message from the hands of your son. I shall faithfully
-observe the terms of the truce I promised to him, and of which he has
-told you.</p>
-
-<p>As my city lies for the time being at the mercy of your fleet, I can only
-save my people and my guests from destruction by agreeing to your demands.
-The Russian air-ships shall leave Alexandria within an hour of the delivery of
-this to your son. But this is to tell you that I have made alliance with Olga
-Romanoff, rightful Tsarina of the Russias, and that when the year of truce has
-expired, I will no longer be a king merely in name and hold my power and
-dignity at your pleasure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the end of the year of truce there shall be war between you and me and
-your people and mine unless before then you shall recognise my independence
-in due form and my right to create such armaments as I think fit for the protection
-of my dominions against yourself or any other Power, and unless you
-consent to restore Olga Romanoff to the throne and dignity which is hers by
-right, and of which your ancestors robbed her in the days of the Terror.</p>
-
-<p>If you do this there shall be peace between us, but if not, there shall be
-war, and we will fight until the God of Battles has decided between us, and
-given to you or to me the dominion of the world.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Alan’s brows contracted slightly as he read this defiant
-missive, but there was a half-pitying smile on his lips when he
-said to the Vizier as he handed him the instructions he had
-just written&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I am deeply sorry&mdash;sorry for him and his people, and, indeed,
-for the whole human race&mdash;that he has been misled into
-writing words which in a year’s time will set the world in a
-blaze. Our reply to this will be written in blood and fire, and
-the smoking ruins of cities throughout the length and breadth
-of his dominions. But he has chosen, and he and you must
-abide by his choice. I cannot believe that he knows what he
-is doing, and if you are a faithful friend and servant you will
-counsel peace and moderation.”</p>
-
-<p>“My master,” said the Vizier haughtily, “does not seek
-advice from his enemies; more than ever would it be impossible
-for him to do so when their lips are fresh-stained with
-lies.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan’s hand instinctively sprang to the hilt of his rapier,
-and in another moment the Vizier’s life would have paid for
-the insult, but when the blade was half out of its sheath his self-control
-returned, and he thrust it back again, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“You are an old man and an ambassador, so you are safe.
-You shall live so that you may some day find out for yourself
-where the truth in this matter lies. Who knows but that the
-Syren may before long put you or your master under her spell.
-If she does you will drink something from her hand, and when
-you have drunk it you will have no will but hers; you will
-obey her blindly, and the thoughts that you speak shall be only
-those she suggests to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Later on that day, when the excitement of the hour had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-passed, Musa al Ghazi remembered these words, and the
-strange acquiescence which he had given to Olga’s plans in the
-saloon of the <em>Revenge</em>. If he had remembered it while Alan
-was speaking, millions of innocent lives might possibly have
-been saved, and the curse of war averted from the world for
-many more generations, perhaps for ever. But he did not, and
-so events took their logical course. As it was, he made no
-direct reply to Alan’s words, but handed him another paper,
-saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I have been commissioned also to give you this. The instructions
-agreed upon shall be obeyed, and now I have only to
-remind you that you are no longer my master’s guest.”</p>
-
-<p>With that he saluted with frigid dignity and turned away
-towards the palace door.</p>
-
-<p>Alan looked after him for a moment with a smile half of
-contempt and half of pity, then he opened the paper in his
-hand. As he expected, it was from Olga, and, beginning without
-any form of address, it ran thus&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>I shall obey your orders and leave the city, not because I will, but because
-I must, in order to save the Sultan and his people from destruction. I will also
-undertake to refrain from hostilities until the Sultan’s truce expires, provided you
-do not molest me. If you do, or if the Sultan is subjected to any unreasonable
-commands or acts of oppression, I will consider the truce at an end, and I will
-not only recommence my submarine attacks upon the world’s commerce, but I
-will send out my air-ships and scatter death and destruction far and wide over
-the earth, without mercy and without discrimination between enemies or
-neutrals; it is therefore for you to choose whether the issue between us shall be
-fought out when the time comes, and in fair and honourable warfare, or whether
-the dogs of war shall be let loose at once. I have still thirty air-ships, and as
-many submarine cruisers, and I can do what I say.</p>
-
-<p class="marginrightindent"><span class="smcap">Olga Romanoff.</span></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>“No doubt,” said Alan to himself. “I’m afraid we shall
-have to accept your terms. I didn’t think that even you would
-be capable of such a colossal crime as that; but now I know
-something like the full capacity of your wickedness, and if you
-threaten it you will do it.</p>
-
-<p>“With those thirty ships, if you have as many as that, and
-I suppose you must have twenty-four or twenty-five at least,
-you could wreck half the great cities of the world in six<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-months, and we could do little or nothing to stop you. We
-have only eleven ships equal in speed to yours, and most of
-those must be kept in call of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>“I would give my life and my ship willingly for permission
-to fight it out here and now, and yet, after all, that would be
-frightful cruelty and injustice to the unoffending thousands
-who would lose their lives by the destruction of the city, so I
-suppose it must be peace for a year, and then&mdash;ah, what
-then?”</p>
-
-<p>His soliloquy began on the terrace and ended on the deck
-of the <em>Ithuriel</em>. He gave the order to rise into the air, and the
-aerial cruiser soared slowly upwards, still flying the flag of
-truce as a signal to her consorts that the mission had been
-successfully accomplished. As he felt certain that the Sultan
-would carry out the directions agreed upon to the letter, he
-left the city without any misgivings, and in a few minutes the
-<em>Ithuriel</em> was floating alongside her consort the <em>Isma</em>, and Alan
-and Alexis had clasped hands once more.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_234.jpg" width="350" height="57" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XX.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE CALL TO ARMS.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_w.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-W">WITHIN an hour the wondering inhabitants of Alexandria
-saw the Russian fleet rise a thousand feet
-into the air and form in two columns of line
-ahead. Then the Aerian fleet ranged itself in
-two long lines five hundred feet outside them and
-a thousand feet above them. A time-shell from the <em>Ithuriel</em>
-gave the signal to start, and the two fleets leapt forward to the
-south-east at a speed of a hundred miles an hour, and in a few
-minutes had vanished over the desert. The speed was quickly
-increased to two hundred miles, and so they sped on all day
-and through the next night&mdash;the Russian ships being forced to
-show their lights while the Aerians remained in darkness&mdash;until,
-when morning dawned and Olga and her captains looked
-for Alan’s fleet they found that it had vanished, and that they
-were floating alone over the solitudes of the Southern Ocean.</p>
-
-<p>They had been escorted like offending school children out
-of harm’s way, and then left to their own devices. It was a
-bitterly humiliating ending to an expedition which had really
-produced such important results, but there was no possibility
-of present revenge, and so Olga gave the order to proceed
-straight to Mount Terror, intending to begin there and then the
-working out of her part of the compact that she had made with
-the Sultan.</p>
-
-<p>This arrangement was briefly to the following effect:&mdash;Olga
-placed at Khalid’s disposal all the necessary plans for the construction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-of both air-ships and submarine vessels, and also
-supplied members of her own immediate retinue, well skilled
-in the work, to supervise the building, which was, of course, to
-be carried out with the utmost secrecy and speed, so as to guard,
-as far as practicable, against the possible destruction of the
-factories and dockyards by the Aerians.</p>
-
-<p>The Sultan had engaged to find money and material for
-building a thousand air-ships, and the same number of submarine
-cruisers, within the year, and these were to be supplied
-with motive power at conversion-stations established at the
-dockyards under the exclusive control of certain of Olga’s
-lieutenants.</p>
-
-<p>The secret of this motive power, which was identical save
-for slight differences in the process of conversion with that
-possessed by the Aerians&mdash;that is to say, electrical energy
-derived directly from atomised carbon and vaporised petroleum&mdash;was
-retained in her own keeping by Olga, who had simply
-promised that an unlimited supply of it should be forthcoming
-as it was wanted.</p>
-
-<p>She had insisted on a strict engagement that no one not
-authorised by her should even approach the conversion-stations,
-and she had given the Sultan and his ministers distinctly to
-understand that any attempt to discover the secret of the process
-would terminate the alliance, and expose the cities of the
-Moslem empire to destruction.</p>
-
-<p>At the expiration of the year of truce, the Sultan’s army
-and navy, supported by the immense aerial fleet that would
-then be in existence, was to be in complete readiness for any
-emergencies. Olga was to be proclaimed Tsarina in Moscow,
-and the House of Romanoff formally restored in her person.
-If any portions of Russia refused to receive her, they were to
-be terrorised into submission by the air-ships.</p>
-
-<p>The tribesmen of Western and Central Asia were to be armed
-as rapidly as possible, so as to be ready to form a reserve force
-for compelling the submission of the Russians if they resisted
-the new order of things, and to participate in the invasion of
-Europe, which was to take place at several points as soon as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-the Holy War of Islam was proclaimed, and Cross and Crescent
-once more confronted each other on the battlefield.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, too, the resources of the dockyard at Mount
-Terror were to be strained to the utmost, and the conspiracy in
-Russia for the restoration of Olga to the throne of the Romanoffs
-was to be developed by every means that money could purchase
-or skill devise.</p>
-
-<p>The scheme of defence arranged by the Council of Aeria
-had already been completed, and it was to execute this that the
-Aerian fleet had left the Russian squadron during the night.
-Indeed, the Russians had been travelling southward alone for
-more than eight hours before they had discovered the fact. As
-soon as it became impossible for them to see the Aerian vessels
-these had stopped, in accordance with a prearranged plan, and
-had wheeled round and steered for London across the African
-continent at a height of about ten thousand feet.</p>
-
-<p>Flying at the full speed of the smaller vessels, a twenty-hour
-flight carried the fleet over the eight thousand miles which
-separated its starting-point from the capital of the world, and
-about six o’clock in the evening of the 21st of May the fifty-two
-vessels, flying the Aerian and British flags, appeared in the
-air over the open space which is now called Hyde Park, and, to
-the amazement of the astonished citizens, dropped quietly to
-the earth and lay open to the unrestricted inspection of the
-thousands who speedily gathered in the park to avail themselves
-of the unwonted spectacle, and to learn, if possible, the reason
-of the unexpected visit.</p>
-
-<p>No attempt was made by the crews of the ships to prevent
-the sightseers from seeing all they could of the exteriors of the
-vessels, which were arranged on the sward in two long lines, so
-that they could walk down between them and admire their
-beautiful shape and wonderful construction at their leisure. A
-sentry was stationed by each vessel to warn the sightseers not
-to approach too close to the wings and propellers, and that was
-the only precaution taken.</p>
-
-<p>Alan learnt soon after landing that King Albert the Second,
-the fourth in descent from Edward <span class="smcap">VII.</span>, who was King during<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-the War of the Terror, was at Windsor, and that the House of
-Commons and the Senate, which for over a hundred years had
-filled the place of the old House of Lords, had dissolved for the
-spring recess, and would not meet again until after the General
-Election, which was held every 1st of June.</p>
-
-<p>He therefore caused a message to be sent to His Majesty at
-Windsor, requesting him to name a time for an interview on
-the following day, and then, sufficient watches having been set
-on all the vessels, he and Alexis, with the majority of the crews,
-took a few hours’ leave, not a little glad of the opportunity of
-stretching their legs on <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">terra firma</i>, after their three days’ confinement
-to the air-ships.</p>
-
-<p>The reply which he received from the King fixed eleven
-o’clock in the morning of the 22nd as the time of the interview
-for which he had asked, and, just as the castle clock was beginning
-to sound the strokes of the hour, the <em>Ithuriel</em> swept up out
-of the distance towards Windsor Castle, and, after hovering for
-a moment in mid-air, sank quietly down until she rested on that
-portion of the terrace which overlooks the Home Park. Her
-arrival had been announced to the King as soon as she hove in
-sight, and he was on the terrace ready to receive his visitors
-when she alighted.</p>
-
-<p>Albert <span class="smcap">II.</span>, King of England, Emperor of Britain, and President
-of the Anglo-Saxon Federation, was a monarch only in name.
-Nothing but the trappings of sovereignty remained to himself
-or his station, and he would not even have retained these had
-it not been for the fact that, during its hundred years of actual
-rule, the Supreme Council had insisted upon the maintenance
-of the monarchical principle in those countries where it had
-obtained at the end of the nineteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>The first formal greetings over, the King caused Alan to be
-escorted to his private apartments in the castle, and as soon as
-they were alone together in the room which he reserved for
-his own special use, he motioned Alan to a seat and, throwing
-himself back upon a lounge with an air of weariness which
-accorded but ill with the hour of the day, he said in a somewhat
-querulous tone&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“We are quite alone now and you can speak with perfect
-freedom. I am sure it must be important business that has
-brought you here with a whole fleet of your air-ships, and I
-shall be glad if you will tell me at once what it is. I hope
-nothing has occurred to imperil our peace and safety?”</p>
-
-<p>“On the contrary, your Majesty,” replied Alan. “I regret
-to say that my errand is to tell you that, not only is that the
-case, but that it is a practical certainty that within twelve
-months from now the whole world will be plunged into war.”</p>
-
-<p>“What! what!” exclaimed the King, jerking himself up
-to a sitting posture. “Surely you don’t mean that? I thought
-that no war would be possible without the permission of your
-Council. Surely you would not allow the nations of the world
-to go to war with each other again, and repeat all the horrors
-that happened a hundred and thirty years ago?”</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesty forgets that when we renounced the control
-of the world six years ago we gave back to the nations the right
-of making war upon each other, although we hardly believed
-that they would be foolish enough and wicked enough to exercise
-it. That, however, is beside the question, because war is now
-inevitable, and, what is even more important, the Council of
-Aeria is unhappily powerless to prevent it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh! what is that?” exclaimed the King, this time rising
-to his feet and facing Alan with an air of petulant reproach.
-“Powerless to prevent it? You, with all your fleets of air-ships
-and submarine vessels? You, who have called yourselves
-the masters of the world for nearly a century and a half&mdash;you
-cannot stop war?”</p>
-
-<p>“We cannot do so, your Majesty,” said Alan, also rising to
-his feet, “simply because I regret to say that we no longer
-possess the undisputed empire of the air, and therefore, in a
-measure at least, we have lost the command of the world.</p>
-
-<p>“As for the responsibility which your words impute to us,
-I must tell you at once that it does not exist. The rulers of
-the world, and yourself among them, voluntarily and with full
-knowledge accepted perfect freedom, and therefore the individual
-responsibility that is inseparable from it. You knew that from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-the time we resigned the world-throne you were free to make
-war upon each other, on land and by sea.</p>
-
-<p>“It is your fault and not ours that you are now so
-defenceless that you have cause to fear the war against which
-you ask us to protect you. You have known for nearly four
-years that the Sultan of Islam has been creating armies and
-fleets, and diligently training millions of his subjects in that art
-of war which we hoped was to be forgotten for ever among men.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you suppose, you Kings and Princes of the Anglo-Saxon
-Federation, that Khalid the Magnificent, a man of boundless
-ambition, was creating these armies and fleets simply to
-play with them? Could you not see that nothing but some
-dream of world-wide conquest could be inspiring him to do
-this, and do you need to be told that the realms of Christendom
-offered him the only possible area of conquest in the world?</p>
-
-<p>“What have you done to defend yourselves, or to prepare
-against a possible day of battle? You have done nothing.
-Saving your international police, now little more than an ornamental
-body of officials, the Federation does not possess a single
-soldier. You have seen the Sultan building battleships and
-arming them with the deadliest weapons that skill and science
-could devise, and you, with all your wealth, and skill, and
-knowledge, have not built a single vessel that would be of use
-in time of war.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand that the Council has warned you again and
-again that the Sultan’s designs could not have been peaceable,
-and yet your Parliaments have not voted a single pound for the
-defence of your homes and your riches.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes!” broke in the King, now in an apologetic tone,
-for he was completely cowed by the direct, earnest force of
-Alan’s reproving words. “That is it! You must not blame
-myself or my fellow-monarchs, you must blame the Parliaments.
-We can do nothing without them; they have usurped all the
-power that formerly belonged to Kings. It is this democracy
-that has weakened us and left us defenceless. Every man
-thinks himself a ruler, and so there are no rulers, except in
-name. Every man has a vote, therefore every man must be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-consulted about everything, and so nothing can be done but
-what the multitude wishes. They want only riches, splendid
-buildings and cities, light work, and comfortable lives. That is
-all they have cared about, and so that is all they have got. If
-we, their Kings and duly appointed rulers, could have done as
-we wished to do affairs would have been very different; but it
-is impossible to rule where every man fancies himself a king!”</p>
-
-<p>“That is but a poor excuse, King Albert,” replied Alan
-sternly and yet somewhat sadly. “It is the old story of Greece
-and Rome and Byzantium over again. The weakness of the
-rulers has been the strength of the demagogues, and that has
-always spelt national decay from the days of Cleon until
-now.</p>
-
-<p>“I might ask you how it comes that Sultan Khalid has been
-able to keep his millions of subjects in hand and to be to-day
-the sole actual ruler of the greatest empire the world has ever
-seen; but neither you nor I have any more time to waste, either
-in reproaching each other or regretting what cannot now be
-helped.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no!” said the King, almost appealingly. “That is
-quite right&mdash;quite right. Tell me, if you please, what has
-really happened to bring about this terrible danger which
-threatens us, and let us see if we cannot yet protect ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can yet make such preparations as will at least enable
-you to meet your enemies on equal terms,” replied Alan, following
-the King’s example, and seating himself again, “and it is to
-put before you a necessary scheme of defence that I have come
-here, and when I have described it you will see that we Aerians
-have not forgotten that our ancestors once led Anglo-Saxondom
-to the conquest of the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pray proceed,” said the King, sitting up on his lounge
-again. “I can assure you that I am all attention.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan then began, and told in detail all that was necessary
-for the King to know of what had happened during the last six
-years, concluding with a graphic narrative of startling vividness
-of the marvellous and momentous events that had been crowded
-so thickly into the last twenty-one days.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It would not be saying too much to state that the close of
-the recital, which he had listened to with the most anxious
-attention, left King Albert in a state of nervous excitement
-that bordered closely upon absolute panic. He had heard
-enough to show him that the splendid fabric of Anglo-Saxon
-civilisation would, if left in its present defenceless state, totter
-and fall like a house of cards at the first onslaught of its powerful
-and disciplined enemies.</p>
-
-<p>He saw that its wealth and splendour, like those of the
-effete empires of old, were a source of weakness and not of
-strength, a temptation to its foes and an encumbrance to itself.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as Alan went on to describe the scheme of defence
-proposed by the Council of Aeria, he seemed to find support
-and consolation in the quiet, masterful tones of the man who,
-without a tremor in his voice, could calmly discuss the prospect
-of a war which would involve the whole of humanity in one
-colossal struggle, which could have no other result than an
-indescribably appalling loss of human life and the complete
-subjection, if not destruction, of those who were vanquished
-in it.</p>
-
-<p>Yet when he had finished King Albert shook his head sadly
-and doubtfully, and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes, it is a splendid scheme, a scheme worthy of you
-and your wonderful race, but it can only be accomplished if our
-Parliaments agree together to sanction it and support it. I
-hope with all my heart that they will do so, but I sadly fear
-that not even your influence, and the fearful danger which
-threatens them, will make them agree one with another.</p>
-
-<p>“Of late years, since the power of the democracy has
-increased so enormously, they wrangle for weeks over the
-smallest matters of municipal government. As for national
-policy, they seem to have forgotten what it means. I may be
-wrong, and with all my soul I hope I am, but I sadly fear they
-will never consent to what they will call a military despotism,
-even to save themselves. The elections take place during the
-last four days of this month, and by that time the news that
-you have brought me shall be published everywhere, so that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-the people may know what is before them, but everything will
-depend upon the men and women whom they return to Parliament.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” interrupted Alan, stroking his beard to conceal a
-smile, “I had forgotten for the moment. You have lady
-legislators now as well as male ones. We were ungallant
-enough to refuse them admittance to the Parliament during
-our period of control.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the King, with a smile that had but little mirth
-in it. “But we have progressed fast since then. In our Parliament
-men and women were almost equally balanced in
-both Chambers, and scarcely any business was done during the
-year.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which proves,” said Alan, “that what was called our discourtesy
-and unfairness was not so very unwise after all.”</p>
-
-<p>The interview ended shortly after this remark, for the time
-for action had already arrived. Alan had learnt enough from
-the King’s own lips to see that he was merely a crowned puppet
-in the hands of the rival parties, which contended in both
-Chambers for the favour of the democracy and the continuance
-of office. He therefore saw further that, if anything was to
-be done in working out the scheme of international defence, he
-would have to take the initiative.</p>
-
-<p>As full discretion had been given to him in his commission
-from the Council of Aeria, he did not scruple to half-persuade
-and half-frighten the King into investing him with such
-authority as he could give, and, armed with this, he went to
-work that very day with a vigour and promptness which
-amazed the feeble monarch, and raised a storm of indignation
-among the members of the two Chambers who were seeking
-re-election.</p>
-
-<p>A very short experience of these people proved to him that
-nothing must be hoped from them. Day after day he met
-committees and deputations of them, who argued with him and
-wrangled among themselves until he was utterly disgusted and
-out of patience with them.</p>
-
-<p>At last, on the evening of the 27th, after he had spent the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-whole day in striving to convince a joint-committee, consisting
-of twenty members of each Chamber, of the tremendous danger
-which threatened the Federation, and the immediate and urgent
-necessity of united action in preparing to meet it, he lost the
-last remnants of his temper, and, springing to his feet, he
-faced them with anger in his eyes and scorn on his lips,
-and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“We have talked enough, ladies and gentlemen! I came
-here expecting to find the old spirit of Anglo-Saxondom still
-alive, and so far as you are concerned I find it dead. You are
-not patriots or competent rulers. You are simply members of
-a noisy and verbose debating society! When absolute destruction
-at the hands of a well-armed and implacable foe is
-threatening your country and your allies, you talk of averting
-the calamity by discussion and arbitration, instead of armed
-resistance. By all means discuss and arbitrate, if you can, but
-also prepare for battle in case it proves, as I am certain it will
-prove, to be inevitable. Do you suppose that the lamb can
-argue with the wolf, or that the rich and defenceless man can
-save his wealth from the armed plunderer by mere force of
-argument or an appeal to his moral sense? If you do, you are
-something worse than simple, you are guilty of a folly which is
-a crime against those who have committed their affairs to your
-keeping.</p>
-
-<p>“But I, like most of my people, have Anglo-Saxon blood in
-my veins, and I will not leave my kindred defenceless. I bear
-an English name, and that name and my descent shall be my
-title to do what I now tell you I am going to do. In my own
-person, and with the full authority and sanction of the Council
-of Aeria and your own lawful monarch, I here and now reassert
-the supremacy over the realms of Anglo-Saxondom which my
-father resigned in St. Paul’s Cathedral six years and a half ago!
-Hold your elections if you choose, and conduct your noisy
-pretence at government according to your own tastes, but do
-not expect me to be guided or bound by any enactments that
-you may choose to make. You may call this a revolution if
-you will. So it is, but remember that your foolishness has made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-it necessary! I can make Anglo-Saxondom ready to meet its
-enemies on equal terms when the day of battle comes, as come
-it surely will in less than twelve months from now, and, God
-helping me, I will do it! You either cannot or will not do
-this, but I will take good care that you do not prevent it being
-done.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe that the old spirit which won the Armageddon of
-1904 still survives in Anglo-Saxon breasts, and I believe that it
-will respond to the call to arms which shall be heard throughout
-the length and breadth of the Federation before another
-sun has set. To-morrow I shall take possession of the means
-of intercommunication, and I warn you that you will oppose
-me at your peril.</p>
-
-<p>“You know that I have a force at command before which
-you are as helpless as the worms that crawl in the earth, and
-as there is a heaven above me I will use it without ruth or
-scruple if I see that the interests of Anglo-Saxondom require
-me to do so. You have your choice, to act with me or to
-remain neutral. Oppose me, and I will destroy you as traitors
-and enemies to your country and your race!”</p>
-
-<p>So saying, Alan turned his back upon the committees, and
-strode out of the room in which he had met them, leaving them
-speechless with anger and dismay.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_245.jpg" width="350" height="59" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXI.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE HOME-COMING.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_t.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-T">THE eastern mountains were still casting their long
-shadows over the lawns and fields, the vineyards
-and the gardens of Aeria on the morning of the
-eleventh of May in the year 2037 of the Christian
-Era and the hundred and thirty-third year of the
-Peace, but the whole population of the lovely valley were
-already afoot and abroad, for this was the most momentous day
-that had been in the history of the colony since Richard Arnold
-had first crossed the Northern Ridge with Natasha beside him
-in the conning-tower of the little <em>Ariel</em>, in those days the only
-air-ship that existed in the world, to lay the foundations of that
-throne from which their descendants had ruled the nations of
-the earth for a century and a quarter.</p>
-
-<p>To-day the year of probation imposed by the Council upon
-Alan Arnoldson and his companion in misfortune, in exile, and
-in victory, was to expire, and the long-lost wanderers were to
-return to their home and kindred.</p>
-
-<p>Very soon after it became light hundreds of aerial boats and
-yachts of every variety of design and ornamentation that the
-taste and skill of the most highly-cultivated race of people the
-world had ever seen could devise, came floating in towards the
-vast city of Aeria from the marble palaces and villas which
-were scattered throughout the length and breadth of the central
-African Paradise.</p>
-
-<p>Along the broad, smooth white roads, too, which led from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-the southern portions of the valley, round the lake to the
-northern shore on which the city stood, groups of people, with
-here and there husbands and wives and pairs of yet unwedded
-lovers, were gliding in long, swift, easy curves on noiseless
-wheel-skates over the polished marble of the pavements.</p>
-
-<p>Bright with the gayest and yet most perfectly-harmonised
-colours, blazing with jewels and precious metals, from their
-gold or crystal-winged coronets to the burnished silver framework
-of their skates, splendid in stature, and glowing with
-perfect health&mdash;if some man of the present day could have
-beheld these dwellers in Aeria on their way to hold high
-festival in their capital, he would have thought that he had
-strayed into some other and higher sphere, inhabited by some
-glorified race of beings who had left the toils and cares and
-pollutions of earth far behind them on some lower plane of
-existence.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless, indeed, from some such sphere the reincarnated
-spirits of those who, a hundred and thirty-three years before,
-had passed through the tremendous ordeal of the Terror, and
-in their hour of well-won triumph had made such a splendid
-future possible for their descendants, looked down with approving
-eyes, not undarkened by a shade of sorrow for woes to
-come, upon this glorious scene of the fruition of the harvest
-that they had sown, this realisation of the long-sought ideal of
-human brotherhood, where there was no evil because men had
-learnt at last that good was better than evil.</p>
-
-<p>Vast as was the stately city, which was at once the capital
-and the only town of Aeria, it was soon comfortably filled by
-the brilliant throngs of visitors that came pouring into it by
-road and through the air. The broad white streets, lined with
-their double groves of palms and tree-ferns, soon blazed with
-colour, and became vocal with greetings and laughter, and all
-the houses which lined them were thrown open to all visitors
-who chose to come and claim hospitality for the day of
-rejoicing.</p>
-
-<p>On the terrace in front of her father’s villa, on the slopes
-that rose to the west of the city, Alma stood with Isma watching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-the brilliant scene below and around them, and speculating
-on the coming events of the day which for them had a supreme
-interest, such as no other inhabitant of the valley could feel.</p>
-
-<p>“It will be a right royal home-coming for our two heroes,
-won’t it, Alma?” said Isma, slipping her little hand through
-her friend’s arm; “almost worthy of the great deeds that they
-have done to regain what will be given back to them to-day&mdash;and
-yet, alas! there is to be a spot on the sun of happiness for
-all that. Alma, are you still quite sure that poor Alan will
-have to come back and not find that which above all other
-things he comes to seek?”</p>
-
-<p>A faint flush rose to Alma’s cheeks as she replied, in a low,
-steady tone&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Isma, alas! as you say, I am still sure of that, supposing
-always that he really does come to seek what you mean.
-I know that no man ever lived more worthy the love of woman
-than he is. Yet, God help me, I cannot give mine.</p>
-
-<p>“I know, too, that he will come back to-day crowned with
-more honour than any Aerian, save Alexis, ever won before
-him since the days of our ancestors&mdash;and yet whenever I permit
-myself even to dream of him as a lover, a dark, beautiful, cruel
-face looks with black, burning eyes into mine, and two sweet,
-scornfully-smiling lips say in a whisper that sounds almost like
-a serpent’s hiss&mdash;‘You may take him now, for I have done with
-him. Take him and ask him to tell you how well he and I
-loved when my spell was strong upon him and he forgot both
-you and all his kindred for sake of me.’</p>
-
-<p>“It is horrible, horrible beyond all thought or speech, but
-it is so, Isma, and I, of all the thousands of Aeria who will
-make merry to-day, shall be sad at heart and praying for the
-night to come.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe it, Alma, however sincerely you may do so&mdash;as,
-of course, you do,” replied Isma impatiently. “It is
-not your true and loving self that is speaking. It is the
-woman who has been brooding over a shattered idol that
-never really was a man of flesh and blood.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you again&mdash;and before that sun has set you will confess<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-in your own heart that I am right&mdash;that you have never
-known the Alan who is coming home to-day any more than I
-have known the Alexis who is coming home with him.
-Neither you nor I have ever seen two such men as they will
-be&mdash;men who have passed through such experiences as no
-other Aerians ever had, who have suffered and conquered,
-dared and done, like them.</p>
-
-<p>“You must put away those morbid fancies of yours, dearest;
-they are not worthy of you any more than Olga Romanoff is
-worthy to cause you an hour’s unhappiness. Never mind
-thinking about Alan as a lover now. I tell you you have
-never seen him, therefore it will be time enough for you to
-begin to do that when you do see him.</p>
-
-<p>“For my own part, I don’t mind telling you&mdash;of course,
-strictly between ourselves&mdash;that though I can hardly say that
-I love Alexis as he is now, since I do not know what he is
-like, I am quite prepared to fall in love with him all over
-again on the slightest provocation. And now, after that confession,
-I think we had better close the discussion and get
-ready to go over to the city.”</p>
-
-<p>This frank avowal, uttered as it was with a delightful
-candour quite irresistible in its charm, brought a smile to
-Alma’s lips in spite of her own sombre thoughts. She slipped
-her arm round Isma’s waist, and led her towards one of the
-long windows which opened out on to the terrace under the
-pillared portico which ran the whole length of the front of the
-villa.</p>
-
-<p>“I quite agree with you,” she said. “If that tell-tale face
-of yours is no better masked than it is now, when you meet
-your Alexis I don’t think you will have long to wait for the
-provocation. Ah, well, I suppose&mdash;in fact, I am sure&mdash;that
-you take by far the wiser view, and I would give anything
-to be able to look upon Alan as you are ready to do on
-Alexis.</p>
-
-<p>“But no, it’s no use; do what I will I cannot think of him
-apart from that Syren who has held him in the bondage of
-her spells all these years. I know it is unreasonable, and yet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-he seems, even now that he has regained his freedom, to
-belong to her more than he ever did to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That, my dear Alma,” replied Isma, half seriously and
-half in jest, “is as nearly absurd as anything that such a
-serious and cultivated person as yourself could say. If I could
-give you a share of my more trivial temperament you would
-just say that you are still so desperately jealous of Olga
-Romanoff that you cannot bring yourself to think of Alan as
-a possible lover until you feel quite sure that he hates her as
-intensely as you do. That may not be a very heroic way of
-putting it, but I think we shall find it pretty near the truth
-before you have known the new Alan very long.”</p>
-
-<p>Alma laughed more musically than mirthfully at this sally,
-but made no reply to it in words. There was, perhaps, more
-truth in the half-bantering, half-reproachful words than she
-would have cared to admit, even to her best-beloved and most
-confidential friend, and so she took a wise refuge in silence,
-from which Isma, in the gladness of her own heart, drew her
-own conclusions.</p>
-
-<p>It might have been that there were depths in Alma’s
-nature which not even their life-long friendship and their
-common sorrow had enabled her to fathom, but for the present
-she was quite satisfied that jealousy of Olga and anger at
-the advantage which Alma believed her to have taken of her
-power were the sole reasons that prevented her from regarding
-Alan as she had confessed herself ready and willing to regard
-Alexis.</p>
-
-<p>When they left the terrace the two girls had breakfast
-together in Alma’s own room in a privacy which the other
-members of the family tacitly respected, knowing as they did
-that the events of the day would bear a totally different
-significance for them to that which they would have for all
-the other inhabitants of the valley.</p>
-
-<p>By the time the sun began to show his disc above the
-ridges of the eastern mountains they were on their way to the
-city with Alma’s mother and father in one of the aerial boats
-that were used for transit about the interior of the valley.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They alighted on the flat roof of the President’s official
-residence, a splendid palace of the purest white marble, which
-stood on the northern side of the great square, from the centre
-of which rose the golden-domed building which served the
-Aerians as a meeting-place on all public occasions. It was
-here that the decrees of the Council were promulgated, and
-here, too, on every seventh day were held the simply impressive
-religious services prescribed by the Aerian form of
-worship.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after they had arrived at the President’s house a great
-mellow-toned bell sounded the hour of six from the cupola
-above the dome, and, as the last stroke died away, a chorus
-of silvery chimes rose up from a hundred towers in different
-parts of the city, and went floating across the lake and down
-the valley to the southward, caught up and echoed as it went
-by peals from the thousand palaces and villas scattered about
-the lower slopes of the mountains.</p>
-
-<p>This was the signal for the commencement of the first
-ceremony of the day, and the gaily-dressed, smiling throngs
-of visitors to the city began to file in orderly, leisurely fashion
-into the eight wide-open doors which led to the interior of the
-vast temple in the middle of the central square.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of the immense open area under the dome was
-a space about twenty feet square, enclosed by low railings of
-massive gold, and in this stood three tall pillars of marble
-without a single flaw or vein to mar their perfect whiteness
-from base to capital. On each of them stood an urn of
-exquisite shape, each carved out of a solid block of crystal,
-and each containing a small quantity of ashes.</p>
-
-<p>Each pillar bore an inscription in letters of gold let into
-the marble. The centre one was slightly higher than the other
-two, and its inscription consisted of the single word</p>
-
-<p class="center">“<span class="smcap">Natas.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>The urns on the other two pillars contained a larger quantity
-of ashes. On the pillar to the right hand, facing the main
-entrance to the temple, were the words&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Richard Arnold</span>,<br />
-First Conqueror of the Air.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Natasha</span>,<br />
-The Angel of the Revolution.</p>
-
-<p>And on that to the left&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Alan Tremayne</span>,<br />
-First President of the Anglo-Saxon Federation.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Muriel Tremayne</span>,<br />
-His Wife.</p>
-
-<p>The square in which these pillars stood was the most
-sacred spot on all the earth in the eyes of the Aerians,
-sanctified as it was by the ashes of those who had made
-possible the Great Deliverance, and brought peace on earth
-after countless ages of strife. Every tongue was silent, and
-every head was bowed in reverence as those who entered the
-temple first caught sight of the pillars and their priceless
-burdens.</p>
-
-<p>Then the vast and ever-swelling congregation ranged itself
-in orderly files, all fronting towards an elevated rostrum which
-stood at one of the angles of the great square under the dome,
-formed by the junction of the four naves, with their long
-pillared aisles which ran towards the four points of the
-compass.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly all the carillons that were still ringing out over
-the city ceased, and in the midst of the perfect silence the
-President ascended the rostrum to address the expectant
-assembly. Although he spoke but a little above his ordinary
-tone, every word could be heard with perfect distinctness
-throughout the immense interior of the building, for a system
-of electric transmitters, a development of the modern telephone,
-carried his voice simultaneously to a hundred parts
-of the walls, so that those who were standing farthest from
-him heard quite as distinctly as those who were close to the
-rostrum.</p>
-
-<p>He began by a brief narration of all that had happened
-to Aeria and the world since the fatal day on which Olga<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-Romanoff had set foot on the deck of the <em>Ithuriel</em> to the
-present moment, and made no attempt to conceal or to
-minimise the tremendous and disastrous consequences that had
-flowed from that fatal and yet innocent mistake on the part
-of his son.</p>
-
-<p>He confessed that the empire of the air, that priceless
-legacy which they had received from its first conqueror, had
-been lost, and that, not only the outside nations of the earth,
-but even Aeria itself stood upon the eve of a conflict in
-comparison with which even the War of the Terror itself
-would prove almost insignificant. All that had been won
-then had now to be fought for over again, and fought for with
-weapons the destructiveness of which made impossible any
-estimate of the carnage and desolation that were about to
-burst upon the world.</p>
-
-<p>Then he described how Alan and Alexis, acting under the
-orders of the Council, had, after vainly trying to arouse the
-rulers and senates of Anglo-Saxondom to a sense of their
-danger and responsibility, proclaimed martial law throughout
-the whole area of the Federation, reasserted the supremacy
-which the Council had resigned nearly seven years before,
-and taken the direct conduct of affairs into their own hands.</p>
-
-<p>He told how the manhood of Europe, America, Southern
-Africa, and Australia had, under the influence of their appeals,
-roused itself from the sloth of prosperity and the vain dreams
-of democracy, and under their leadership had mustered millions
-upon millions strong to oppose those who determined to
-rivet the chains of despotism once more upon the limbs of free
-men.</p>
-
-<p>The energy and devotion of the two men whose exile was
-to end that day had accomplished this miracle in less than a
-twelvemonth. All the mechanical resources of the Federation
-had been simultaneously devoted to the building of an aerial
-navy, which already numbered nearly a thousand vessels, and
-more than a hundred dockyards had achieved the construction
-of a navy of over a thousand submarine warships, while
-millions of small-arms had been sent out from Aeria, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-manufactured in the arsenals of the Federation for the equipment
-of the newly-created armies.</p>
-
-<p>What the issue would be of the mighty struggle which
-would begin in six days, no man could tell, but all that could
-be done to give the victory to Aeria and the Federation had
-been done, and the rest lay in the hands of the God of Battles,
-who had given their ancestors the victory in the days of the
-Terror. The President concluded his address by saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Those through whom, if not by whom, this calamity has
-undoubtedly fallen upon the world, have been recalled to Aeria
-by the Council, after nearly seven years of exile, to receive
-reinstatement in their long-forfeited rights of citizenship, but
-even now they will not reassume those rights unless their
-welcome home is unanimous. Therefore, while their ships are
-still outside our mountains, if any citizen of Aeria has, even at
-this eleventh hour, any reason to give why they should not
-be permitted to recross the barriers which separate us from
-the rest of the world, let him or her come forward now and
-state it.”</p>
-
-<p>He ceased, and for a few moments there was perfect silence
-throughout the vast congregation. Not a man or woman
-moved or spoke, and all eyes were turned on the President,
-waiting for him to speak again. In a voice whose now
-unrestrained emotion contrasted strongly with the former
-impassiveness of his tones he said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Then their welcome shall be unmarred by any voice of
-dissent! As the father of one of the exiles I thank you for
-endorsing the sanction which, as President of the Council, I
-have believed it my duty to give to the return of my son Alan
-and his friend and companion, Alexis Masarov, who fell with
-him and with him has risen again.”</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had the last word left his lips when salvo after
-salvo of aerial artillery roared out from mid-air all round the
-mountains, and came echoing down the upper gorges and
-ravines to tell the people of Aeria that the fleet which had
-been sent out to escort the returning exiles was already in
-sight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So spacious were the approaches to the vast building that
-in less than ten minutes from the time the President had left
-the rostrum on hearing the salutes from the sky not a soul
-remained within its precincts.</p>
-
-<p>Outside the Council Hall the scene was such as to baffle all
-attempts at adequate description. Hundreds of aerial craft,
-fashioned in every conceivable variety of design that the
-educated fancy of their owners could suggest, soared up from
-various parts of the city and its environs, and made towards
-the Ridge to the north of the valley.</p>
-
-<p>The summit was about four thousand feet above the slope
-on which the city stood, and it was quite within the capacity
-of the pleasure-craft to scale this height. So their glittering
-wings beat the cool, fresh air of the morning with rapid
-strokes, and the whole flotilla of them soared upwards until
-their occupants were able to see over the mighty rock-wall,
-and the illimitable landscape beyond opened out before their
-expectant gaze.</p>
-
-<p>The President, the Vice-President, and the twelve members
-of the Council with their families had embarked on one of
-the new aerial battleships, two hundred and fifty of which had
-been constructed during the past year. The <em>Avenger</em>, as she
-had been named, in view of the fact that she was henceforth
-to be placed under Alan’s immediate command as flagship of
-the combined Aerian and Federation fleets, was the largest
-aerial cruiser then in existence, and embodied the highest
-structural skill to which the engineers of Aeria had attained.</p>
-
-<p>From the stern to the point of her ram she was two hundred
-and seventy-five feet in length, with a midships beam of thirty
-feet. She was sustained in the air on two pairs of wings, one
-working under the other. Of these, the lower and larger pair
-measured two hundred feet from point to point and fifty feet
-in their greatest breadth, while the upper pair, working nearly
-flush with the deck, were two-thirds of their size.</p>
-
-<p>She carried ten guns on each broadside, and two bow and
-two stern chasers of a range limited only by the possibility of
-taking aim at the object to be destroyed, and her propellers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-were capable of driving her through the air at the hitherto
-unheard-of speed of six hundred miles an hour.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<p>The <em>Avenger</em>, attended by an escort of fifty cruisers of
-somewhat smaller dimensions than her own, rapidly out-distanced
-the flotilla of pleasure-craft, and passing over the Ridge
-at a speed of sixty miles an hour, stopped at an elevation of
-a thousand feet above it.</p>
-
-<p>From here those on her deck could see the vast oval of
-the valley encircled by the sentinel ships which now constantly
-patrolled the mountain bulwarks of Aeria, and which
-were launching hundreds of time-shells up into the air from
-their outer broadsides and producing a continuous roar of
-explosions which formed such a greeting salute as had never
-been heard on earth or in the air before.</p>
-
-<p>Presently an answering roll of thunder was heard far away
-to the north, growing every moment louder and louder.</p>
-
-<p>“There they come at last!” cried Isma, who was standing
-with Alma in the bow of the <em>Avenger</em>, eagerly scanning the
-northern heavens through a pair of field-glasses. “I can see
-the flashes of the shells quite distinctly.”</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke she handed the glasses to Alma, and noticed,
-not without a little smile of satisfaction, that her hands
-trembled slightly as she raised them to her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they are coming,” said Alma, in a tone that might
-have been a good deal steadier than it was. “I can see the
-sun shining upon the hulls of the ships. They are coming up
-very fast, evidently.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Of course they are!” laughed Isma. “After the poor
-fellows have been shut out all this time from the delights of
-Aeria, it is only natural that they should hasten their home-coming.
-Look, look! you can see them without the glasses
-now. What a swarm of them there seems to be!”</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke an immense fleet, numbering nearly five
-hundred vessels spread out in the form of a vast crescent, the
-arc of which was turned towards Aeria, swept up out of the
-blue distance, their polished hulls glittering in the bright sunlight.
-In the centre of the arc and slightly elevated above the
-rest, shone the blue hull and the white glistening wings of the
-<em>Ithuriel</em>, and close in her wake followed the <em>Isma</em>.</p>
-
-<p>When the advancing fleet was within five miles of the
-mountains it slowed down from four hundred to about fifty
-miles an hour. At the same instant the other fleet ran up the
-Aerian and Federation flags and the simply eloquent signal,
-“Welcome Home!” flew from the lofty foremast of the
-<em>Avenger</em>. It was instantly acknowledged by the <em>Ithuriel</em>,
-and then on all the five hundred vessels the Aerian and
-Federation flags were run to the mastheads and dipped three
-times in greeting.</p>
-
-<p>Then the two points of the vast crescent that they formed
-swung slowly and regularly forward until the arc was inverted
-and the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the <em>Isma</em> came along side by side midway
-between the two horns.</p>
-
-<p>When the two fleets were within half a mile of each other
-the <em>Avenger</em>, with twenty-five of her consorts on each side,
-swung round into line with their prows pointing towards the
-mountains, and in this order, at fifty miles an hour and an
-elevation of a thousand feet above the Ridge, <a id="Ref_237"></a>the combined
-squadrons swept across the mountain barrier, and Alan and
-Alexis, each steering his own vessel in the conning-tower,
-saw for the first time, after nearly seven years of exile, the
-incomparable beauties of the Aerian landscape opening out
-before their eyes.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_237" class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i_258.jpg" width="600" height="415" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">The combined Squadrons swept across the Mountain Barrier.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_237">Page 237</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Following the movements of the leading squadron, they
-dipped as soon as they had passed over the Ridge, and were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-met on their downward flight by the hundreds of pleasure-craft
-which were waiting for them in mid-air.</p>
-
-<p>Thousands of gaily-coloured handkerchiefs were waved in
-welcome to them, and many a greeting in the sign-language
-passed from the crews of the warships to the occupants of the
-pleasure-craft and back again, for some of the former had been
-on foreign service for nearly a year, and there were many
-pleasant relationships to be renewed which had been interrupted
-by the calls of duty.</p>
-
-<p>Far below the home-comers could see the spacious streets
-of the great city, brilliant with the gaily attired throngs who
-had come to welcome them, and heard the greeting chorus
-of thousands of bells chiming in gladsome peals from hundreds
-of towers and minarets scattered over the city and its
-environs.</p>
-
-<p>Signals were now flown from the <em>Avenger</em> directing the
-whole of Alan’s fleet, excepting the <em>Ithuriel</em> and the <em>Isma</em>, to
-alight on a great sloping plain to the northward of the city,
-where their crews were to disembark and then proceed to the
-central hall of the Temple. Acting on previous orders, the
-consorts of the <em>Avenger</em> did the same. The pleasure-craft
-fluttered downwards on to the housetops, and so the three
-battleships were left alone in the air, the <em>Ithuriel</em> now floating
-on the right of the <em>Avenger</em> and the <em>Isma</em> on the left.</p>
-
-<p>Amid the welcoming cheers of the throngs which now filled
-the great square they sank slowly down, and at length alighted
-on the roof of the President’s palace. Then the doors of the
-deck-chambers opened and a last and loudest cheer of all rose
-up as, in full view of the assembled thousands in the square,
-the President and Maurice Masarov once more clasped hands
-with their long-exiled sons.</p>
-
-<p>Then they descended into the interior of the palace, followed
-by the Council and the other guests on board the <em>Avenger</em>.</p>
-
-<p>In the President’s room, the same in which he had received
-Olga Romanoff’s challenge from the skies, Alan and Alexis
-were welcomed home again by those who were nearest and
-dearest to them. Only their immediate kindred were present,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-for, in the nature of the case, the occasion could have
-been nothing but a private one. Nor could mere words of
-description do justice to the tender pathos of the scene that
-was enacted in that inner chamber, for but few words were
-spoken even by the actors in it. The emotions of such a
-moment were too intense and overpowering for speech, and so
-heart spoke to heart almost in silence.</p>
-
-<p>Alma, who had, of course, remained outside in the
-reception-room of the palace with the Council and her
-parents, felt even more keenly than she had expected the
-truth of the prophecy that she had uttered to Isma an hour
-or so before. Amidst all the thousands of Aeria she was the
-only one whose heart was heavy on that day of universal
-rejoicing.</p>
-
-<p>Once, and once only, her eyes had met Alan’s, but the
-single swift glance had been more than enough to tell her how
-far they now stood apart. She had seen the light of pleasure
-and triumph suddenly die out of his eyes and the bright flush
-on his cheek pale as he looked at her.</p>
-
-<p>There had not even been a greeting smile on his lips as
-he bowed his cold, grave salutation to her and then turned
-away to look down upon the city and the splendid prospect of
-the valley that was opening before him. This had happened
-up in mid-air, just as the ships had crossed the Ridge in close
-order, and she had not been able to trust herself to look at
-him again even when they had disembarked on the roof of the
-palace.</p>
-
-<p>The swift telegraphy of that one glance had been enough
-to tell her that it was not the fond, light-hearted lover of her
-girlhood that had come back, but a strong, stern, and prematurely
-grave man, who knew all and more than she knew of
-the new relation between them, and who knew also that they
-could not meet as they had parted, and so accepted the changed
-conditions with a proud reserve that drew a sharp dividing line
-between them which, for all she knew, might never be crossed.</p>
-
-<p>Though outwardly she was calm and perfectly self-possessed,
-she waited in a suspense that almost amounted to mental agony<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-for the moment when the greetings in the President’s room
-would be over and Alan and Alexis would be brought out to be
-formally presented to the Council. Then their hands would
-have to meet and words would have to pass between them.</p>
-
-<p>Meet as strangers they could not, for everyone knew&mdash;even
-he knew&mdash;why she had refused all these years to wed with
-any other man, nor yet could they meet as lovers, as Isma and
-Alexis had perhaps done by this time, for between them the
-shadow had fallen, and even if there was love in their hearts
-there could be none upon their lips.</p>
-
-<p>If Olga Romanoff could have looked into Alma’s soul at
-that moment, she would have seen something very like a
-fulfilment of a prophecy she had made on board the old
-<em>Ithuriel</em> six years and a half before to Alan, when she first
-heard of her rival&mdash;“By your hand I will wring her heart
-dry, and cast it aside to wither like an apple shaken from the
-tree!” In those moments of suspense it seemed to Alma that
-even now her heart was withering under the blight of this
-great sorrow that had fallen upon her life after all her years
-of loving and patient waiting.</p>
-
-<p>At last she heard footsteps and voices in the corridor that
-led from the private apartments of the palace. They were
-coming, and almost mechanically she turned her eyes towards
-the curtains which screened the doorway through which they
-would enter. They parted, and Alan came in walking by his
-father’s side and with Isma hanging laughing on his arm.</p>
-
-<p>She shrank back a little as she saw Isma look at her for a
-moment and then say something to Alan. But he appeared
-to take no notice, and walked forward with his father to where
-the members of the Council were waiting to receive him. She
-heard the President say the formal words of presentation, and
-saw the rulers of Aeria one after another grasp his hands, and
-then those of Alexis, greeting them heartily as they did so.</p>
-
-<p>Then the little group opened, and she saw, as in a waking
-dream, Alan’s tall form striding towards her with both hands
-outstretched, and heard a voice that was his, and yet not his,
-so deep a ring of unwonted gravity was there in it, say&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Are you going to be the only one who has no greeting for
-the prodigal, Alma? Have you forgotten that we were sweethearts
-once, and therefore surely may be friends now?”</p>
-
-<p>There was an emphasis on the word “friends” that was
-perhaps imperceptible to all ears but hers, but she caught it,
-and took her cue from it instantly. With admirable tact he
-had, in that one word, shown her the only basis on which it
-would be possible for them to take part together in the society
-of the valley.</p>
-
-<p>As man and woman they must be to one another as friends
-whose friendship was sweetened by the recollection that long
-ago, as boy and girl, they had been lovers. She accepted the
-situation with a sense of thankfulness and infinite relief, and,
-frankly placing her hands in his and summoning all her self-command
-to her aid, she looked steadily up into his bronzed,
-bearded face, and said gravely and sweetly&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“You know that that is not so, Alan, and if my welcome is
-a little tardy it is none the less sincere for that reason. There
-were others who had a prior claim, and so I waited, for it is
-only right that friends should come after kindred. Welcome
-home! I suppose we are going to the Council Hall now, to
-see what we are all longing so much to see&mdash;the Golden Wings
-once more upon your brows.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Alan colouring slightly, as he noticed her
-upward glance at his sable head-gear, “we are going there
-immediately, I believe, but,” he continued in a lower tone
-and still holding her hand in his, “long and anxiously as I
-have looked forward to to-day and its promise, half of that
-promise will be betrayed unless you tell me first that you
-believe I have fairly won the right to wear the Golden Wings
-again. Tell me, now, do you in your heart think so?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you have not done so,” she replied, only keeping her
-voice steady by a supreme effort, “then it would be hopeless
-for any man to look for forgiveness on earth. You have
-fallen and you have risen again, and to-day there are no two
-men in Aeria more worthy of honour than you and Alexis
-are.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He looked down into the clear depths of her soft grey eyes
-as she spoke, and in another instant he might have forgotten
-that which sealed his lips to all words of love, and all the
-reserve to which he had been schooling himself for so long,
-but at that moment Alma’s mother came towards them saying
-that the President was ready to take Alan to the Council
-Hall, and&mdash;this with a smile&mdash;that thousands should not be
-kept waiting for the sake of one. Her words recalled him to
-himself, and, with an inclination of his black-plumed head, he
-said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“That is enough, for now I know that I have heard the
-truth from the lips of my severest judge, and I am well content
-with it. I have not lost everything if you believe that I
-have regained my honour.”</p>
-
-<p>“We all believe that, Alan,” said Alma’s mother before her
-daughter could reply; “and, more than that, I know of no
-one in Aeria who thinks that you ever really lost it. Now
-go to your father. He is thinking of the thousands who are
-waiting anxiously for you in the Council Hall. You can finish
-this conversation later on.”</p>
-
-<p>He accepted the dismissal with a smile, and as he went
-back he saw Isma slip away from Alexis’ side with a tell-tale
-blush on her lovely face, and, giving him a saucy, laughing
-glance as she passed him, run lightly across the room to
-Alma’s side.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” she said, reading too swiftly and not very correctly
-the altered expression of her friend’s face, “have you made
-friends, then, after all? I thought you would, and&mdash;oh, Alma,
-I <em>am</em> so happy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Alma gravely, though she could not repress
-a smile at the radiant face that looked up at hers, “we have
-made friends. But you seem to have done something more
-than that. Your explanations”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“There were no explanations at all,” interrupted Isma, rosy
-red from neck to brow. “When we met in the room he picked
-me up in his arms before everybody and kissed me&mdash;and after
-that of course there was nothing to be said.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE EVE OF BATTLE.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_a.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-A">AN irregular procession was now formed, at the head
-of which walked the two returned exiles, each
-with his father by his side, and followed by the
-rest of the company. They passed out of the
-reception-room, down the wide entrance-hall, and
-out of the great arched portal which opened on
-to the square.</p>
-
-<p>As they appeared at the top of the spacious flight of marble
-steps which led from it down to the pavement, a mighty cheer
-of welcome went up from a hundred thousand throats, the
-peals of bells in the four towers which rose from the angles of
-the Council Hall sent forth the signal to all the other belfries
-of the city, and, amidst the jubilant chorus that instantly burst
-forth, the scene of the reinvestiture was reached. Then the
-great bell in the dome tolled out one sonorous warning note,
-and instantly there was silence on the earth and in the air.</p>
-
-<p>This was at the moment that the procession, after passing
-half round the square along the broad path left for it by the
-cheering throng, halted in front of the main entrance to the
-Temple of Aeria, which faced towards the south, in the middle
-of the magnificent façade fronting a marble-paved avenue of
-double rows of palms and tree-ferns which ran in a straight
-line for three miles down to the shores of the lake.</p>
-
-<p>The Aerians had progressed far beyond the stage of semi-barbaric
-pomp and display, and so the ceremony of restoring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-to Alan and Alexis the rights of citizenship, of which the
-Golden Wings were the symbol, solemn as it was, was also
-simple in the extreme.</p>
-
-<p>As the vast curtains which hung over the main doors of the
-Temple swung aside to admit them, they fell out of the procession
-and doffed their sable head-gear. The President and
-his fellow Councillors went on and took up their position in
-front of the three pillars under the centre of the dome.</p>
-
-<p>Then a guard of honour, composed of a hundred of their
-shipmates and companions-in-arms from Kerguelen, marched
-up to the door and formed into two files, between which Alan
-and Alexis walked down the aisle through the space left by
-the orderly throng that filled the vast building from the floor
-to the topmost tier of the rows of seats which rose half-way up
-the lofty walls, and so came in front of the President and the
-Council.</p>
-
-<p>Here their guard halted and formed a semicircle, leaving
-them in the open space within it. A breathless silence fell
-upon the assembled thousands as they dropped on one knee
-before the President. Then, in a voice whose every accent
-rang distinctly to the farthest corners of the huge building, he
-said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Alan Arnold and Alexis Masarov, the year of your probation
-ended with the rising of this morning’s sun. You have
-been tried and you have not been found wanting, and that of
-which the arch-enemy of our race robbed you for a time you
-have regained by manly valour and patient devotion.</p>
-
-<p>“Therefore, by command of the Supreme Council, and with
-the consent of all the citizens of Aeria, I restore to you the
-symbols of those rights which you lost and have regained.</p>
-
-<p>“In the presence of God and this assembly, and on the holy
-ground that is sanctified by the ashes of those mighty ancestors
-of ours who bequeathed to us the empire of the world, I replace
-the Golden Wings upon your brows, in the full belief that from
-the higher and happier sphere they now inhabit they are
-looking down with approval upon the act.</p>
-
-<p>“Rise now, recrowned Princes of the Air, and in the near<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-approaching day of battle go forth with fearless hearts and
-stainless honour to do that which the voice of duty and the
-needs of humanity shall bid you do!”</p>
-
-<p>As he ceased speaking he held out a hand to each of them,
-and so they rose to their feet again, once more wearing the
-Golden Wings, once more free and equal amidst their peers of
-the Royal race of Aeria. As they did so a burst of jubilant
-melody rolled out, apparently from all parts of the Temple at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>It was the opening chorus of a triumphal march which the
-greatest living musician of Aeria, and therefore of the world,
-had composed in honour of the day and the event, and as its
-splendid harmonies rolled out from the hidden organ through
-the vast interior, and through the open portals into the square
-beyond, the great assembly filed out in four streams from the
-Temple, and all Aeria made ready to give itself up to feasting
-and merry-making for the rest of the day.</p>
-
-<p>For three days Aeria kept high festival in honour of the
-home-coming of the son of the President and his companion in
-exile, but for all that there was sterner business in hand than
-merry-making for those in authority. Save in the almost
-impossible event of overtures of peace being received from the
-Sultan, war which, in the nature of the circumstances, could
-hardly fail to be universal, would actually begin at daybreak
-on the 16th of May, that is to say in five days after the return
-of Alan and Alexis.</p>
-
-<p>The greater part, therefore, even of the days of rejoicing
-was really spent in hard work by those upon whom had
-devolved the tremendous responsibility of counteracting as
-far as was possible the designs of conquest and oppression to
-which Olga Romanoff, by means of her fatal beauty and subtle
-diplomacy, had succeeded in irrevocably committing Khalid
-the Magnificent.</p>
-
-<p>Early on the morning of the day following the reinvestiture
-of Alan and Alexis with the symbols of Aerian citizenship
-a council of war was held in the President’s palace, which was
-attended by all the members of the ruling Council, the chief<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-engineers of the settlement, and the admirals in command of
-the aerial and sea navies and the squadrons posted at the
-various stations throughout the world.</p>
-
-<p>Before this assembly Alan, who had already entered upon
-the active discharge of his duties as Commander-in-Chief of all
-the forces of Aeria and the Federation, laid the details of his
-plans of attack and defence, and invited criticism upon them.</p>
-
-<p>The same day Alan transferred his flag and his crew from
-the <em>Ithuriel</em> to the <em>Avenger</em>, while Alexis took possession of a
-splendid vessel of the same type, to which the name <em>Orion</em> had
-been given, after that of the air-ship commanded by Alan
-Tremayne in the battle of Armageddon. Alexis, however, had
-very little difficulty in obtaining the consent of the Council to
-his substituting another name for this, with the consequence
-that the prize taken from the enemy resumed her Russian name,
-and remained in Aeria as a trophy of the skill of her captors.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps in his heart Alan would have dearly liked to have
-made a similar change in the name of the <em>Avenger</em>, but it was
-impossible for him to propose it, situated as he was with regard
-to Alma.</p>
-
-<p>Alexis and Isma had taken the shortest, and therefore the
-wisest, course out of the terribly delicate and embarrassing
-position which had been created by the unholy passions and
-ruthless treachery of Olga Romanoff. They had tacitly agreed
-to ignore it <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">in toto</i>, and to begin again where they had left off
-nearly seven years before, and thus it came to pass that Isma’s
-own pretty hands spilled the christening wine over the shapely
-bows of her formidable namesake.</p>
-
-<p>The first use that Alan made of his new ship was to test
-her immense capabilities to the utmost, so that he might know
-what demands he might safely make upon her in possible
-emergencies. He rushed her at full speed round the mountain
-bulwarks of Aeria, a distance of two hundred and fifty miles,
-and found that she completed the circuit in just twenty-five
-minutes, which gave a speed of six hundred miles an hour.
-Alexis followed, and covered the same distance in twenty-seven
-minutes and a half in the <em>Isma</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>These trials proved that the new Aerian vessels were from
-fifty to seventy-five miles an hour faster than the models on
-which their enemies had been building their new fleets&mdash;a fact
-which, unless Olga and her ally had made a corresponding
-improvement in their battleships, might be expected to have a
-considerable effect on the issue of the coming war.</p>
-
-<p>After the speed-trials the soaring powers of the two vessels
-were tried, and it was demonstrated that their machinery was
-sufficiently powerful to carry them to altitudes beyond which
-it was not possible for human beings to breathe. After this all
-the defences of Aeria were visited and examined in detail, and
-then on the second day after their arrival in the valley Alan
-and Alexis divided all the air-ships at their disposal into two
-squadrons, each numbering nearly four hundred vessels, one of
-which, commanded by Alan, guarded the valley, while the
-other, under Alexis, constituted an attacking force, the duty
-of which was to find out, if possible, any weak point in the
-defensive organisation.</p>
-
-<p>From noon to midnight the mimic battle went on in strict
-accordance with the accepted rules of aerial warfare, but
-though Alexis and the captains of his fleet tried everything
-that skill or daring could suggest, the defence proved too strong
-for them, and during the whole twelve hours they were unable
-to bring a single vessel into such a position that she could send
-a shell into Aeria without previously exposing herself to a fire
-that must have annihilated her in an instant.</p>
-
-<p>This aerial review was the concluding spectacle of the
-festivities, and it was watched by the occupants of thousands
-of pleasure-craft, whose interest in it was sharpened by the
-knowledge that before many days a conflict such as it portrayed
-might be raging in deadly earnest round the mountain
-bulwarks of their hitherto inviolate domain.</p>
-
-<p>So consummate was the skill displayed by Alan in this
-defence that as soon as the <em>Avenger</em> touched ground after the
-review was over he was summoned to the Council Chamber in
-the President’s palace to receive the thanks of the Senate and
-cordial expression of the perfect confidence that the people of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-Aeria would feel, whatever the magnitude of the war might
-prove to be, while the conduct of the campaign was in his
-hands and those of Alexis, whose tactics had also been so
-perfect that, without once putting a single ship in danger, he
-had made it impossible for Alan to do anything more than
-remain strictly on the defensive.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day, the 14th, the motive power of all the
-vessels was renewed, ammunition laid in, and all the guns and
-engines minutely inspected, so that there might be no chance
-of failure when the moment of trial came. Then the final
-arrangements for the defence of Aeria itself were perfected, and
-when that was done, the Vale of Paradise, as its inhabitants
-fondly called their lovely land, was a vast fortress compared
-with which the strongholds of the present day would be as
-harmless and defenceless as molehills.</p>
-
-<p>Four hundred aerial battleships of what were now called
-the first and second classes, ranging in speed from four to five
-hundred and fifty miles an hour and mounting from ten to
-twenty guns each, were to patrol the outer walls of the mountains,
-at distances of five and ten miles from them and at
-elevations varying from two to ten thousand feet. These were
-divided into two fleets of two hundred each which relieved each
-other every six hours, so that their supply of motive power
-might be constantly renewed.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to these, two squadrons of twenty-five of the
-most powerful warships of the newest type alternately kept
-watch and ward against surprise in the upper regions of the
-air from fifteen to twenty thousand feet above the valley,
-while all round the great circuit of the mountains were planted
-in the most favourable positions nearly a thousand land
-<a id="Ref_248"></a>batteries mounting three, five, and ten guns each, which, if
-necessary, would be able to surround Aeria with a zone of
-storm and flame which nothing living could pass and still live.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_248" class="figcenter" style="width: 447px;">
-<img src="images/i_271.jpg" width="447" height="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Batteries which would be able to surround Aeria with a zone of Storm
-and Flame.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_248">Page 248</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>By day the range of vision from the decks of the sentinel
-ships would make surprise impossible, and at night the great
-electric suns on the summits of the mountains, aided by
-hundreds of search-lights flashing through the darkness in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-every direction, made an attack under cover of the darkness
-almost equally hopeless.</p>
-
-<p>The news of the alliance between Olga and the Sultan had
-acted like a trumpet-call to battle on the proud and martial
-spirit of the Aerians. Generation after generation their young
-men had been trained in the arts of war as well as in those
-of peace, for the wisdom of their ancestors had foreseen that,
-in the ordinary progress of science, it was impossible for many
-generations to pass without some independent solution of the
-problem of aerial navigation, which must, sooner or later,
-result in a challenge of their supremacy.</p>
-
-<p>Consequently, all through the years of profound peace
-which the outside world had enjoyed under their rule, their
-vigilance had never slept for a moment, and their men and
-ships and materials of war were kept in the highest possible
-state of efficiency. Thus, though the Aerian nation numbered
-little more than a million souls, inhabiting a territory of some
-two hundred and fifty square miles, the amount of effective
-strength that it was able to put forth on an emergency was
-totally disproportionate to its size.</p>
-
-<p>Living in a region of inexhaustible fertility and boundless
-mineral wealth, with no idle or mere consuming classes, no
-politics, and no laws that a child of ten could not understand,
-they led simple, natural, and busy lives, accumulating immense
-public and private riches, which were as constantly expended
-in increasing the splendour and power of the State, which, as
-a whole, was the expression of the wealth and patriotism of
-its citizens.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner had the alliance of their enemies become an
-accomplished fact than they devoted the whole of their vast
-resources to increasing their offensive and defensive armaments
-to the utmost of their power. Reserves of material that had
-been stored up year after year had been drawn upon, the
-mighty natural forces that they had brought into subjection
-laboured night and day for them, and ships and machinery and
-guns came into existence as though at the bidding of some
-race of magicians.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Magazines were filled with immense stores of ammunition,
-potential death and destruction such as had never been
-wielded by human hands before&mdash;and commanders and officers
-for all the battleships of the Federation had been sent out as
-each squadron of vessels was completed.</p>
-
-<p>In a word, Aeria had donned her panoply of war, and stood
-armed at all points, ready to fight the world if necessary in
-defence of the priceless heritage which its citizens had received
-from their fathers, the giants who in the days of the Terror
-had taken despotism and oppression by the throat and flung
-them headlong out of the world.</p>
-
-<p>The defences of Aeria were to be under the immediate
-command of the President. All the oceanic stations, save
-Kerguelen, Teneriffe, Bermuda, and Hawaii, had been abandoned
-so as to permit of greater concentration of forces, while
-fifty new ones had been established in different parts of
-Europe and the British Islands, for here the brunt of the
-attack was to be expected, and here the enemy must be met
-and crushed if Anglo-Saxon civilisation was to be saved from a
-new era of militarism and personal oppression.</p>
-
-<p>Alan and Alexis were to take command of the Western
-and Eastern fleets into which the aerial forces were to be
-divided, Alan in the West with Britain as his chief base of
-operation, and Alexis in the East with the Balkan Peninsula
-as his base between the Russian and Moslem headquarters.</p>
-
-<p>The naval fleets, in three divisions, the Atlantic, Mediterranean,
-and Pacific squadrons, had already received their
-general instructions, and were waiting at their various
-rendezvous for the outbreak of hostilities. The Atlantic
-squadron blocked the Straits of Gibraltar, the Narrow Seas of
-Britain, and the approaches to the Baltic, the Mediterranean
-division patrolled the Inland Sea from Gibraltar to Cyprus,
-and the Pacific fleet were blockading the southern approach to
-the Red Sea, ready to operate against any junction of the
-Indian and African sea forces of the Sultan.</p>
-
-<p>At midnight, on the 14th, Alan and Alexis were to set out
-for their respective fields of operation, and that evening there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-was a farewell banquet given by the Council in the President’s
-palace in honour of them and the commanders of their ships.
-Many a hearty toast was given and drunk in the sparkling
-golden wine of Aeria, and many a hearty God-speed and
-loving farewell passed between those who remained at home
-and those who were going forth to do battle for them and for
-the peace of the world in distant skies, and to pass through the
-fiery storm of such warfare as had never been waged in the
-world before.</p>
-
-<p>Just before twelve, when the fleets were ready to take the
-air, and the last farewells were being said, the <em>Avenger</em> and the
-<em>Isma</em> were lying on the roof of the President’s palace, and their
-commanders were standing by the gangway steps which hung
-down from the deck-chambers, the centres of two little groups
-of grave, silent men and sorrowing women, their nearest and
-dearest in a land where all were friends.</p>
-
-<p>The last blessings of fathers and mothers had been given
-and taken, and then came the hardest farewells of all. Isma
-and Alexis parted as declared lovers will part as long as the
-Fates are cruel, but when Alan took Alma’s hands in his for
-the last time, and looked down upon the pale loveliness of her
-perfect face and into the clear calm depths of her eyes, the
-word that he had been longing to say ever since his return
-died upon his lips.</p>
-
-<p>The contrast between her stainless purity and the darkness
-of the blot that Olga’s unholy passion had placed upon his
-life rose up in all its horror for the hundredth time before
-him, and once more the impassable gulf opened between them.
-All that he could say was&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye, Alma! You, too, will wish me God-speed,
-won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“With all my heart, yes, Alan,” she replied in low, sweet,
-steady tones. “God guard you in your good work and send
-you back in safety to us. You will come back rich in honours
-and followed by the blessings of the world you are going to
-rescue from the oppressors”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Or I shall never come! Good-bye, Alma, good-bye, all!”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-he said, breaking upon her speech, for he could bear to hear
-no more, and as he spoke he stooped and kissed her forehead
-as he had kissed Isma’s a few moments before. Then he
-turned and ran up the steps just as Alexis took his last kiss
-and did the same.</p>
-
-<p>As they gained the decks of their ships the great bell in
-the dome of the Temple boomed out the first stroke of twelve.
-At the sixth stroke the electric suns on the summits of the
-mountains blazed out simultaneously at a hundred points, a
-long, deep roar of thunder rolled round the bulwarks of Aeria,
-and with search-lights flashing out ahead and astern, <a id="Ref_252"></a>the four
-hundred battleships of the two squadrons rose into the air and
-swept up towards the Ridge.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_252" class="figcenter" style="width: 466px;">
-<img src="images/i_277.jpg" width="466" height="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">The four hundred Battleships of the two Squadrons rose into the Air.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_252">Page 252</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A thousand feet above it they stopped and hung for a
-moment motionless in mid-air. Then the roar of a thousand
-shells exploding far up in the quaking sky answered the
-salutes from the sentinel ships, and then, still signalling
-farewells with their search-lights, the squadrons swept out
-into the ocean of darkness that loomed round the light-girdled
-realm of Aeria.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_276.jpg" width="350" height="54" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE FIRST BLOW.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_t.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-T">THE night of the 15th of May 2037 was passed in
-an agony of apprehension by nearly the whole of
-civilised humanity. The long threatened and
-universally feared thunder-cloud of war had at
-last loomed up over the serene horizon of peace
-in full view of the whole world.</p>
-
-<p>Although the events of the last six years had to some
-extent prepared the minds of men for the impending disaster,
-now that the last hour of the long peace was really about to
-strike there were very, very few among the millions of non-combatants
-who were able to rise superior to the universal panic.</p>
-
-<p>The ocean terrorism which had paralysed the commerce of
-the world five years and a half before, fearful as it had been,
-was, so far as the bulk of humanity was concerned, a terror of
-the unseen. Ships had gone out to sea and had vanished into
-the depths, leaving no trace behind them, but the hand that
-struck the blow had remained invisible.</p>
-
-<p>Now, however, this same terror, magnified a thousandfold,
-was to come close up to the shores of lands whose inhabitants
-had never known what it was for man to raise his hand against
-his brother. To-morrow the sun would rise as usual, the earth
-would smile, the sea would dance, and the air grow bright and
-warm under his beams, yet air and earth and sea would be
-wholly strange to the eyes of men, for they would be invested
-with terrors hitherto only pictured by the fears of panic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The air would be charged with death. Beneath the
-laughing waves great battleships would be speeding swiftly,
-silently, and invisibly on their errands of destruction, and the
-fair face of earth would be scarred by the harrow of battle,
-and seared with the fires of murderous passion.</p>
-
-<p>The ocean traffic of the world had been almost wholly at
-a standstill for nearly a month. Transports which could
-complete their voyages before the end of the truce had done
-so; but since the 1st of May only short voyages had been
-attempted, for it was known that escape from the attack of a
-submarine battleship would be absolutely impossible for any
-vessels that floated on the surface of the water.</p>
-
-<p>The immediate results of this had of course been the
-dislocation of trade and commerce and ever-increasing scarcity
-of food in the great centres of population. Impossible, absurd
-even, as it still seemed to those who had not thoroughly
-recognised the tremendous gravity of the situation, the
-inhabitants of the magnificent cities of the old and new
-worlds were actually within measurable distance, even before
-a blow had been struck, of seeing the spectre of Famine cross
-the threshold of their palaces.</p>
-
-<p>In a few days communications by land would be as difficult
-and as dangerous as those by sea, for, swift as the trains were,
-their speed was far excelled by that of the slowest air-ship,
-which could wreck them with a single shot. Bridges would
-be destroyed, stations blown up, and lines cut in a hundred
-places at once, till railway travelling would have to cease all
-over the world.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the most splendid civilisation of all the ages stood
-trembling on the verge of destruction at the moment when
-the sleepless eyes of the inhabitants of Alexandria saw the
-first faint glow of the dawn brightening the eastern sky. No
-one knew where or how the first blow would be struck in the
-strange and terrible warfare for the commencement of which
-the rising of that morning’s sun gave the signal.</p>
-
-<p>There were scarcely any elements in common with the war
-of the nineteenth century save the slaughter and destruction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-that it would entail. There could be no marshalling of
-fleets or warships on the sea, for to be detected by an enemy
-would be coming very near to being destroyed. Every blow
-would have to be struck swiftly, silently, and without
-warning, for only one could be struck, and to fail would be
-to be lost.</p>
-
-<p>So, too, in the air, as had been proved at Kerguelen and
-Mount Terror. Everything would depend upon the supreme
-strategy which enabled the first fatal shot to be sent home
-that would decide battle after battle without hope for the
-vanquished to recover from their defeat.</p>
-
-<p>But after all it would be on land that the terrors of the new
-warfare would be most fearfully manifested. It needed but
-little effort of the highly-strung imaginations of those who
-were waiting for the world-tragedy to begin to picture vast
-armies, magnificent in their strength and splendid in their
-equipments, marching to grapple with each other on some
-field of Titanic strife. Suddenly and without warning they
-would be smitten by an invisible foe floating far above the
-clouds, or perhaps visible only as a tiny speck of light high
-in the central blue.</p>
-
-<p>Their battalions would be torn to pieces, their regiments
-decimated and thrown into confusion, their commanders&mdash;the
-brains of the huge organisms&mdash;would have no such
-protection as they had in the wars of former times, for the
-aerial artillery would reach everywhere, and the Commander-in-Chief
-in his headquarters would be as much exposed as the
-private in his bivouac.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the brain would be destroyed and the body reduced
-to impotence; disciplined armies would become lawless and
-unregulated hordes in a few days or weeks, and the organised
-slaughter of the battlefield would be exchanged for the
-butchery and plunder of the city carried by assault.</p>
-
-<p>It was little wonder, then, that the world watched the
-ending of its last night of peace and the dawning of its first
-day of battle with feelings such as men had not felt for five
-generations, if, indeed, ever before in the history of man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was not a mere war of nations with which men were
-confronted. The evil genius of a single woman had achieved
-the unheard-of feat of dividing the human race into two hostile
-forces so nearly balanced in strength that mutual destruction
-seemed a not improbable issue of what might after all prove to
-be the death-struggle of humanity, the collapse of civilisation
-and the sinking of a remnant of mankind back to the level of
-barbarians whose children would wander amidst the ruins of
-their forefathers’ habitations, and wonder what race of demigods
-had created the wondrous fabrics whose very fragments
-were splendid.</p>
-
-<p>As the dawn flew round the world on that momentous
-morning every eye was turned towards the heavens, on every
-lip there was but one question: Where will the first blow be
-struck? and in every heart there was but one thought: Will
-it reach me or my dear ones?</p>
-
-<p>The focus of all human interest was for a moment
-Alexandria, for it was known that from there the main expeditionary
-force was to be sent out to, if possible, effect a
-landing on the shores of Italy, while other expeditions were
-to start from Tripoli, Tunis, and Oran to effect landings in
-France and Spain. The bridge across the Straits of Gibraltar
-from Point Cires to Gualdamesi was to all intents and purposes
-neutral, since it would have been madness to send trains
-conveying troops across it when a single shot from the British
-battery at Gibraltar would have shattered the bridge to
-fragments.</p>
-
-<p>The forces destined by the Sultan for the invasion of
-Europe would, therefore, either have to be conveyed in swift
-transports by sea, protected by squadrons of air-ships and
-flotillas of submarine battleships, or else they would have to
-go by land round the Levant by Syria, and so through Asia
-Minor to the shores of the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus.</p>
-
-<p>As the European shores of these two straits were known to
-be defended by concealed batteries mounting guns a single
-shot from which would blow the biggest transport afloat out
-of the water, the Sultan had decided to make the attempt to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-invade Italy, France, and Spain by sea, while the Russian
-forces, with their Asiatic allies, were to attack the central
-nations from the east.</p>
-
-<p>So far, therefore, as could be foreseen, the Mediterranean
-would once more be the arena of strife, and on some part of
-its shores or its waters the first blow of the war would be
-struck. Every possible preparation for the attack upon
-Europe had been finally completed immediately after the
-return of Khalid from the coronation of Olga on the 11th, but
-beyond the fact that the coasts of Europe, from the Straits
-of Dover to the Golden Horn, were patrolled by Federation
-battleships, nothing was known of the dispositions which had
-been made for the defence of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Gibraltar, Minorca, Cape Spartivento, Mount Ida in Candia
-and Olympus in Cyprus formed a chain of Federation posts
-which, while they had been made impregnable to all attack
-save long-sustained bombardment from the air, rendered any
-attempt on the part of large fleets to cross the Mediterranean
-an extremely hazardous venture.</p>
-
-<p>These stations were connected from Gibraltar to Cyprus by
-telephonic cables, buried beneath the floor of the sea to hide
-them from the enemy’s cruisers, and also by patrols of battleships
-constantly moving to and fro in touch with each other
-along the whole line, and this was the first barrier through
-which the Moslem Sultan had to force his way before he could
-land his armies upon the shores of Southern Europe.</p>
-
-<p>This, too, formed what may be termed the first line of
-defence of the Federation and of Christendom, and although
-neither the Sultan nor the Tsarina was wholly aware of the
-fact, it had been strengthened to such a degree that it was
-expected to prove unbreakable even under the impact of the
-immense forces that would be brought to bear upon it.</p>
-
-<p>When the sun at last rose over the hills of Syria and Sinai,
-and the watchers in the streets and on the housetops of
-Alexandria heard the voice of the Muezzin calling the first
-hour of prayer and the last hour of the world’s peace, the
-bright blue waves of the Inland Sea lay smiling and sparkling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-in its earliest beams, betraying not a trace of the hidden forces
-which waited but for the signal that might come either from
-land or sea or sky to begin the work of desolation.</p>
-
-<p>The harbours of the city were thronged with shipping,
-great transports lined the miles of quays whose network fronted
-the seaward verge of the Moslem capital. Some of the basins
-swarmed with the half-submerged hulls of scores of battleships
-waiting to take up their position as convoys to the flotilla
-which, if the Sultan’s plans succeeded, would, within the next
-twelve hours, land nearly four million troops on European soil.</p>
-
-<p>In the air, at elevations varying from five hundred to ten
-thousand feet, a squadron of two hundred aerial cruisers kept
-watch and ward against a surprise from the upper regions of
-the air. By the time the day had fully dawned, land and sea
-and sky had been scanned in vain for a sign of an enemy’s
-presence.</p>
-
-<p>The sailing of the flotilla of transports had been fixed for
-six o’clock by Alexandrian time, and already the battleships
-were moving out into the open to take up their places in
-advance of the fleet of transports. Fifty air-ships had ranged
-themselves in a long line to seaward at an elevation of two
-thousand feet to protect the transports from an aerial assault,
-and the transports themselves were moving out to form in the
-basin behind the breakwater, whence they were to commence
-their voyage.</p>
-
-<p>Sultan Khalid, on board his aerial flagship <em>Al Borak</em>&mdash;named
-after the winged steed which, according to the old legend, had
-borne the Prophet from earth to the threshold of the Seventh
-Heaven&mdash;superintended in person the last preparations for the
-departure of his great armament. Flying hither and thither,
-now soaring and now sinking, he inspected first the cruisers
-of the air and then the flotillas of the seas, and at last, when
-all was ready, he took his place by one of the bow guns of the
-<em>Al Borak</em> to fire the shot that was to be the signal for the
-expedition to start.</p>
-
-<p>But a higher intelligence and a greater tactical ability than
-his had already determined that the signal should be given<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-in very different fashion. Fifty miles to the south towards
-the Lybian desert, high in air, fifteen thousand feet above the
-earth, a solitary air-ship hung suspended in the central blue.</p>
-
-<p>As the sun rose she had moved slowly forward towards
-the city. As she came within sight of it, Alan Arnold
-standing in her conning-tower saw through a telescope that
-commanded a range of a hundred miles the disposition of the
-aerial fleet above Alexandria. He marked down a group of
-five air-ships floating some five thousand feet above the centre
-of the city, and singled them out as the first victims of the war.</p>
-
-<p>He was, of course, far out of range of gun-fire, and to have
-gone within range and fired on them would have been to
-expose his single ship to a concentrated hail of projectiles
-which would have scattered her in dust through the sky. So
-he determined to open the game of death and destruction by a
-stroke as dramatic as it was terrible.</p>
-
-<p>He remembered how his ancestor, Richard Arnold, in the
-first <em>Ithuriel</em>, had rammed the Russian war-balloons to the
-north of Muswell Hill, and resolved to eclipse even that
-marvellous stroke of tactics. Obeying his will like a living
-creature, the mighty fabric under his control sank five thousand
-feet and then began to gather way on a slanting course towards
-the Moslem air-ships.</p>
-
-<p>The propellers whirled faster and faster, and the quadruple
-wings undulated with ever-increasing velocity until the crowds
-in the streets of Alexandria saw something like a swift flash of
-blue light stream downward from the southern sky, and heard
-a long screaming roar as though the firmament was being rent
-in twain above them.</p>
-
-<p>Then <a id="Ref_259"></a>three of the air-ships floating in line above their heads
-seemed to break up and roll over. The crowds held their
-breath and pointed upwards with one accord in sudden horror,
-as the crippled air-ships dropped like stones towards the earth.
-In another moment they struck it, and then, as though the
-central fires of the earth had burst through in the heart of the
-great city, there came a crash and a shock that shook the
-ground like an earthquake spasm.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_259" class="figcenter" style="width: 465px;">
-<img src="images/i_286.jpg" width="465" height="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three of the Air-Ships seemed to break up and roll over.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_259">Page 259</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A vast dazzling volume of flame shot up from amidst a
-wide circle of blackened ruin, towers fell and roofs collapsed
-all round the focus of the explosion, the whole atmosphere
-above the city was convulsed, and the very sea itself seemed
-to writhe under the stress of the mighty shock, and so, leaving
-death and ruin and consternation behind her, the <em>Avenger</em>
-swept out over the Mediterranean at a speed that the eye
-could scarcely follow, after striking the first blow in the
-world-war of the twenty-first century.</p>
-
-<p>To say that this sudden and unexpected catastrophe spread
-panic through the Moslem capital would be but a very inadequate
-description of the <em>Avenger’s</em> first blow in the world-war.
-Consternation, wild and unbounded, blanched every cheek,
-and made every heart stand still as the mighty roar of the
-explosion burst upon the deafened ears of the inhabitants and
-then instantly died into silence, broken only by the crash of
-falling ruins and the screams and groans of the wounded and
-dying.</p>
-
-<p>The red spectre of war in its most frightful form had
-suddenly appeared to the terrified and horror-stricken vision
-of millions of men and women, scarce one of whom had ever
-seen a deed of violence done.</p>
-
-<p>Khalid, like a wise leader, did all he could to prevent the
-panic spreading to the troops on board the transports by
-issuing peremptory orders for the expedition to start at once.
-At the same time he signalled for half a dozen air-ships to
-ascend as far as possible and attempt to discover the source
-from which the inexplicable attack had come, an errand
-destined to be entirely fruitless.</p>
-
-<p>In orderly succession the hundred huge transports, each carrying
-from eight to ten thousand men, left the outer basin in two
-long lines in the rear of the fifty air-ships already in position.</p>
-
-<p>A hundred submarine battleships took up their stations
-five hundred yards in advance of the first line of transports.
-Fifty of these sank to a depth of thirty feet, and shot two
-thousand yards ahead as soon as the whole flotilla was in
-motion, while the other fifty ran along the surface of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-water with their conning-towers just showing above the waves,
-ready to sink in obedience to any signal that their commanders
-might receive from the air-ships, which commanded an immense
-range of vision over the waters.</p>
-
-<p>To all appearance the enemy was content with the one
-terrible blow that had already been struck. The smooth,
-sunlit sea betrayed no trace of a hostile vessel, and as far as
-the glasses of those on board the air-ships could sweep the sky
-nothing but the blue atmosphere, flecked here and there with
-white, fleecy clouds, could be seen.</p>
-
-<p>But the Moslem commanders were far from being deceived
-by these peaceful appearances. From Sultan Khalid, who
-was commanding the expedition in person, to the engineers
-who worked the transports, all knew that the invisible line of
-the Federation patrols had to be passed somewhere in the
-depths of the sea before the shores of Italy could be reached.</p>
-
-<p>The speed of the three flotillas was limited to twenty-five
-miles an hour, in order that there might be no headlong running
-into danger, and the commander of each of the submerged
-battleships had orders to rise to the surface the instant that
-his tell-tale needle denoted the presence of an enemy, and signal
-the fact to the rest of the squadron. The transports were then
-to stop, and were not to resume their passage until the battleships
-had cleared the way for them. The first division was to
-engage the enemy, while the second was to remain on the
-surface ready to defend the transports in case of need.</p>
-
-<p>For six hours the expedition proceeded on its way north-west
-by west from Alexandria without interruption. The
-intention was to pass about a hundred miles to the south of the
-Federation post at Candia, between which island and the Cape
-Spartivento the ocean patrol would most likely be met with.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after twelve those on board the Sultan’s flagship
-detected half a dozen little points of light shining amidst the
-waves to the north-westward. They could be nothing else but
-the scout-ships of the patrol; and although they were nearly
-ten miles away, a couple of shells were discharged at them from
-the <em>Al Borak’s</em> bow gun, more as a warning to the Moslem flotilla<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-than in the hope of doing any damage. Whether they did or
-not was never known, for before the explosion of the shells was
-seen in the water the points of light had vanished.</p>
-
-<p>Signals were at once made from the flagship ordering the
-transports to stop, and the second division of battleships to
-stand by to protect them. A dozen remained on the surface
-of the water, running round and round the now stationary
-troopships in concentric circles. The others sank to varying
-depths, and scattered until the vague fluctuations of their needles
-showed that they were more than a thousand yards from each
-other and the transports.</p>
-
-<p>As the first division had orders to keep more than two miles
-in advance as soon as an enemy was discovered, there would be
-no danger of ramming friend instead of foe. It ran on for
-seven miles after the main body stopped. It was moving in a
-single line, the vessels being at an equal distance apart, so that,
-with the exception of the two ships at the extremities of the
-line, the attraction of the steel hulls on the needles should
-be neutralised, and therefore only give indications of vessels
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the seventh mile the tell-tales ceased their
-wavering motions and began to point steadily, in slightly varying
-directions, ahead. The moment they did so the engines
-were stopped and the flotilla rose to the surface of the water.
-Their commanders found themselves out of sight of the transports,
-but the <em>Al Borak</em>, attended by ten other air-ships, was
-floating about a thousand feet above them. From the flagship’s
-mainmast-head flew the signal&mdash;“Fleet eight miles to the rear.
-Enemy ahead. Sink and ram.”</p>
-
-<p>The order was instantly obeyed by the whole division, and
-the fifty battleships simultaneously sank out of sight to engage
-the invisible enemy, while the Sultan and his companions on
-board the air-ships waited in intense anxiety to see what the
-next few fateful minutes would bring forth.</p>
-
-<p>No human eye could see what work of death might be going
-on down in the depths of the sea. Even those who took part in
-it would know it only by its results, and of these only the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-victors would know anything. They would reappear on the
-surface of the waves, but the vanquished would never rise
-again.</p>
-
-<p>Minute after minute passed and still the anxious watchers
-on the air-ships saw nothing. The bright, sunlit waves rippled
-on over the abyss in which the conflict must by this time be
-almost over. Five, ten, fifteen minutes passed, and still no
-sign. Had Khalid been a mile or two farther on and closer
-down to the surface of the sea, he would have seen streams of
-air-bubbles rising swiftly here and there and instantly breaking.
-But from where he was he could see nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Five more minutes went by and suspense gave place to
-apprehension. Had the whole of the first division simply sunk
-to its destruction into some invisible trap that had been laid
-for it deep down in the watery abyss? If not, how came it that
-not even one of the battleships had risen to the surface to tell
-the tale of victory or defeat?</p>
-
-<p>Khalid knew that the squadron would obey orders and hurl
-itself at full speed, that is to say, at some hundred and fifty
-miles an hour, upon the enemy the moment the tell-tales found
-their mark. In two or three minutes&mdash;five at the outside&mdash;their
-rams must either have done their work or failed to do it.
-If they had done it they would have risen to the surface; if
-they had failed and themselves escaped destruction they would
-still have risen.</p>
-
-<p>Now twenty minutes had passed and not one of the fifty
-battleships had reappeared. What could this mean but
-disaster?</p>
-
-<p>And disaster it did mean, but great as it was it was as
-nothing compared with the frightful catastrophe which followed
-close upon it. All eyes on board the air-ships were so intently
-fixed upon that portion of the sea where the squadron was
-expected to rise again that no one thought for the moment
-of looking back towards the transports until the dull rumbling
-roar of a series of explosions came rolling up out of the distance.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly every glass was turned in the direction whence
-the sound came, and Khalid saw his great fleet of troopships<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-tossing about in the midst of a wild commotion of the waves,
-out of which vast masses of white water spouted as if from the
-depths of the sea, and amidst these ship after ship heeled over
-and sank into the white seething waters.</p>
-
-<p>Uttering a cry of rage and despair, he headed the <em>Al Borak</em>
-at full speed towards the scene of the disaster. In three
-minutes he was floating over it, helpless to do anything to avert
-or even delay the swift destruction that was overwhelming the
-splendid fleet. Distracted by impotent rage and passionate
-sorrow for the fate of his soldiers and sailors, who were being
-slain hopelessly and by wholesale beneath his eyes, he watched
-the awful submarine storm rage on, wrecking ship after ship,
-and swallowing them up with all the thousands on board in the
-boiling gulfs which opened ever and anon amidst the waves.</p>
-
-<p>When the first panic passed, the transports which were still
-uninjured scattered and headed away as fast as their engines
-would drive them to the southward, where the only chance of
-safety seemed to lie. But there was no escape for them from
-their invisible and merciless enemies.</p>
-
-<p>The fate of one magnificent transport, the flagship of the
-fleet, may be described as an illustration of the general disaster.
-She was a vessel of fifty thousand tons measurement, and her
-crew and complement of troops numbered together nearly
-twenty-five thousand. She escaped the first discharge from the
-submarine torpedoes unharmed, and heading southward with
-her triple propellers revolving at their utmost velocity, rushed
-through the water at a speed of more than forty nautical miles
-an hour.</p>
-
-<p>She had scarcely gained a mile on her course when the
-glass-domed conning-tower of a battleship appeared for an
-instant above the waves. Before Khalid, not knowing whether
-it was friend or foe, could make up his mind to fire on it, it
-disappeared again.</p>
-
-<p>A few seconds later the great ship stopped and shuddered
-with some mighty shock, as though she had run head-on to a
-sunken reef, and heeled over to one side. Then came a dull
-roar, a huge column of white foaming water rose up under her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-side amidships, and she broke in two and vanished in the midst
-of a white space of swirling eddies.</p>
-
-<p>Such scenes as this were occurring simultaneously in twenty
-different parts of the naval battlefield. The foe never showed
-himself save for an instant. Then came the blow that meant
-destruction, and the victim vanished. There was none of the
-pomp and pageantry of modern naval warfare; no splendid
-armaments of mighty ironclads and stately cruisers vomiting
-thunder and flame and storms of shot and shell at each other,
-nor were there any rolling masses of battle smoke to darken the
-brightness of the sky.</p>
-
-<p>The occupants of an open boat five miles away would not
-have known that the most deadly sea-fight ever waged since
-men had first gone down to the sea in ships was being fought
-out under that smiling May-day sky.</p>
-
-<p>One after another the flying transports were overtaken,
-rammed, or blown up and sunk by the pitiless monsters which
-unceasingly darted hither and thither a few feet below the
-surface of the water, and in less than two hours after the first
-alarm had been given the last of the hundred transports which
-had sailed that morning from Alexandria had gone down a
-shattered wreck into the abysses of the Inland Sea.</p>
-
-<p>There was no chance of saving the drowning wretches who
-managed to escape from the eddies of the sinking ships, as there
-would have been in a naval battle of to-day. The air-ships
-could not do so without sinking to the waves, and so making
-themselves marks for the irresistible rams and torpedoes of their
-enemies, who themselves could not be merciful, even if they
-would, shut up as they were in the steel leviathans whose only
-use was destruction.</p>
-
-<p>Khalid the Magnificent, with a heart well-nigh breaking
-with rage and shame and sorrow, watched in passionate helplessness
-the destruction of his splendid fleet and the drowning,
-like rats in a pond, of the soldiers who were to have borne
-the banner of the Crescent over the conquered fields of
-Christendom.</p>
-
-<p>More than a million men had perished beneath his eyes, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-he had not been able to fire a shot to help them, although he
-was in command of an aerial fleet which could have dispersed
-an army or wrecked a city between sunrise and noon.</p>
-
-<p>But the strangest part of the strange battle was yet to come.
-After the last of the transports had disappeared, the attack ceased
-and the assailants vanished. In a few minutes the sea was as
-calm and bright as ever, and only a few bits of broken wooden
-wreckage floating here and there betrayed the fact that anything
-out of the common had happened.</p>
-
-<p>The remnant of the Moslem squadron rose to the surface
-and signalled for instructions. Only twenty of them remained
-uninjured out of the hundred that had gone into the fight.
-Before the signals could be returned there was a loud hiss and
-a swirling noise as of some huge body rushing at a furious
-speed through the water, and <a id="Ref_266"></a>a great battleship leapt up out of
-the nether waters, and hurled herself at a speed of nearly two
-hundred miles an hour into the midst of the floating squadron.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_266" class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i_295.jpg" width="600" height="417" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">A great Battleship leapt up out of the Nether Waters.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_266">Page 266</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Her gleaming ram of azurine tore its way through the sides
-of three vessels in such swift succession that, almost before
-their fragments had time to sink, her huge bulk vanished under
-the waves again. But hardly was her work done than a second
-battleship charged into the paralysed squadron, sending two of its
-members to the bottom and crippling three more before she, too,
-vanished into the safe obscurity of the depths.</p>
-
-<p>A third was met by a storm of shells from the air-ships,
-which burst round her and under her just as she came to the
-surface, and blew her out of the water in fragments. Heedless
-of this, a fourth plunged fiercely through the foaming area of
-the explosion, and had wrecked two more Moslem vessels before
-a shell smashed her propeller and laid her helpless on the water.
-Two of the Moslems instantly backed out and rushed at her,
-tearing two great ragged holes in her side and sinking her
-instantly, only to be sunk themselves in turn by a fifth charge
-from below.</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely had this last foe disappeared in safety than a swarm
-of torpedoes, converging from all sides, encircled the remaining
-Moslem battleships. Some plunged beneath the waves to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-escape them, but these never reappeared. The remainder, torn
-and twisted and shattered by a series of explosions that flung
-the water mountains high all round them, sank like stones, and
-when the sea once more settled down, the grim work of death
-had been completed.</p>
-
-<p>The fate which had so swiftly overwhelmed the expedition
-that had set out from Alexandria had almost simultaneously
-befallen four other expeditions which had started at the same
-hour from Tripoli, Tunis, Algiers, and Oran. The one disaster
-had been an almost exact reproduction of the others.</p>
-
-<p>The same order, formation, and tactics had been observed in
-each of the five cases, and each of the five squadrons of transports
-and fleets of submarine battleships had been overwhelmed
-and completely destroyed by the same mysterious fate. Of
-five hundred transports and the same number of battleships
-which Sultan Khalid had possessed at sunrise on that fatal
-16th of May not a single one remained by sundown, and of the
-more than three million souls who had manned the five fleets
-not one man survived.</p>
-
-<p>Of the strength or the losses of the enemy that had wrought
-this appalling and unheard-of destruction within such a brief
-space of time nothing could, in the nature of the case, be known
-by those who had seen only some of its effects from the decks
-of the air-ships which floated almost helplessly over the waves
-which were engulfing their naval consorts. The work of
-annihilation had for the most part been done in the dim and
-silent depths of the sea, and all that they knew was the number
-of those of their own comrades who had gone to battle and
-never returned.</p>
-
-<p>And yet to all practical intents and purposes these five
-stupendous blows which had simultaneously crushed the
-Moslem sea-power and half crippled the military strength of
-the Sultan had been struck by one hand. In other words, the
-victory of the Mediterranean was due to two inventions which
-had been made and perfected by Max Ernstein, who had been
-transferred from Kerguelen and appointed Admiral in Command
-of the whole Mediterranean forces of the Federation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One of these was a highly improved form of an apparatus
-which had just come into use on board battleships and
-cruisers when the War of the Terror broke out. This was an
-electrical contrivance which gave warning, more or less reliable,
-of the approach of torpedoes, by translating the aqueous vibrations
-set up by them into sound-waves, which increased in
-intensity as the hidden destroyer came nearer.</p>
-
-<p>This invention had been lost sight of when all the warships
-of the world were sunk in the South Atlantic after the proclamation
-of the Universal Peace. Ernstein’s was therefore a new
-discovery, or rediscovery, but the advantages of his position,
-far ahead of the scientific skill of the nineteenth century, had
-enabled him to produce a much more perfect instrument, and
-his apparatus, which was attached to all the battleships of the
-Federation, not only gave warning of the approach of an enemy,
-but indicated his direction, the number of revolutions at which
-his propellers were working, and his distance at any given
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>This not only enabled the commander of a Federation
-battleship to detect the presence of an enemy, but it enabled
-him to distinguish between friend and foe. As soon as the
-phonetic indicator showed that another ship was approaching
-he stopped his own propellers, started them, and stopped them
-again.</p>
-
-<p>The vibrations thus set up and interrupted would be conveyed
-to the indicator of the approaching ship, if she had one,
-and she would at once return the signal. If the signal was
-not returned it was safe to conclude that the coming vessel was
-an enemy and could be rammed accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>When this invention replaced the tell-tale needle that had
-been in use a year before, an alteration in tactics became
-necessary, and the fighting order became more extended. A
-mile instead of a thousand yards was now the limit within
-which the Federation battleships were not permitted to approach
-each other, save under special circumstances. Every
-vessel acted as an independent unit, subject only to the general
-instructions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Ernstein’s second invention was of a simpler but none the
-less effective character. Knowing that the Moslem and Russian
-squadrons would be forced to trust entirely to their tell-tale
-magnetised needles, he had devised a plan for making these
-worse than useless. As soon as the phonetic indicator told
-him that an enemy was coming, the commander of each of his
-battleships dropped a thin rope of insulated wire down thirty
-or forty feet into the water below him.</p>
-
-<p>The lower end of this cable was a powerful electro-magnet,
-through which a current of electricity was kept passing along
-the wires. The attraction of this magnet was far stronger than
-that of the hull of the vessel, and consequently the needles of
-the enemy were deflected downwards, and gave a totally
-erroneous idea as to the depth at which the Federation ship
-was floating.</p>
-
-<p>Thus when the first division of the Moslem submarine
-squadron charged at what its commanders thought were the
-hulls of their enemies, their rams passed harmlessly underneath
-them, merely striking the magnet and knocking it aside. The
-moment they had passed the magnet, its attraction swung their
-needles back, and showed that some mysterious mistake had
-been committed, but before they had time to turn and seek
-the mark afresh the Federation ships were upon them, and
-their rams had rent their way into their sides.</p>
-
-<p>In this manner every ship of the first division had been
-destroyed within three minutes after it had made its first and
-last charge. Then the Federationists had risen to the surface
-for an instant to reconnoitre by means of the arrangement of
-mirrors previously described, and sinking again had worked
-their way back towards the transports, formed in a huge circle
-round them, and had sent torpedo after torpedo into their midst.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the flotilla had been thrown into confusion they
-had converged until they could communicate with each other
-by means of their submarine signals, and after that they had
-attacked the enemy singly. Ship after ship charged into the
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mêlée</i>, did her work, and retired, if she escaped destruction, to
-give place to another.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Only twenty Federation ships had been engaged in each of
-the five battles, and of these forty in all had been destroyed, a
-loss utterly disproportionate to the gigantic damage that had
-been done to the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Khalid the Magnificent divined intuitively that the disaster
-which had overwhelmed the expedition which he had commanded
-in person was only a portion of a result achieved by
-some elaborate and consummately-conceived scheme of defence
-which must have been simultaneously put into operation
-against his other expeditions. What had succeeded against
-his own might well have been expected to have succeeded
-against them.</p>
-
-<p>He at once despatched four squadrons of ten air-ships each
-to Tripoli and Tunis, Algiers and Oran, with orders to collect
-all attainable information, and to return to Alexandria as soon
-after sunset as possible. Then he turned the prows of the
-remainder of his fleet towards his capital, and gave the signal
-for full speed ahead.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_300.jpg" width="350" height="61" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">WAR AT ITS WORST.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_w.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-W">WITHOUT even pausing to see the effects of his
-charge upon the three air-ships above Alexandria,
-Alan kept the <em>Avenger</em> going at full speed, soaring
-up into the higher regions of the atmosphere
-with her prow pointed to the north-east. About
-three hours later she was floating at an elevation of nearly
-five miles above Moscow, not stationary, but sweeping
-round and round in vast circles on her quadruple wings after
-the manner of the condors of the Andes, which thus sustain
-themselves on almost motionless wings at vast elevations and
-very small expenditure of force.</p>
-
-<p>Below an immense expanse of country lay in unclouded
-clearness under the glasses of the captain of the ship and
-George Cosmo, late engineer of the <em>Narwhal</em>, who was now
-chief engineer of the Aerian flagship.</p>
-
-<p>Not only Moscow, but a dozen other towns lay at the
-mercy of the <em>Avenger’s</em> twenty-four guns, and yet no shot was
-fired, for Alan, despite the tremendous debt of vengeance that
-he owed to her who now, at last in very fact crowned Tsarina
-of the Russias, held her court at Moscow, was yet extremely
-loth to involve non-combatants in the destruction which he
-knew must follow the discharge of his guns.</p>
-
-<p>Added to this, his present designs were rather to reconnoitre
-than to destroy. He was in command of the fastest and
-most powerful air-ship in the world, and the task that he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-set himself was to supervise the whole of the complicated
-arrangements that had been made for repelling the coming
-attack upon the Federation by the Moslems and Russians.</p>
-
-<p>Thus he had started soon after midnight from Gibraltar,
-one of the chief power-stations and depôts in Europe. Thence
-he had run along the African coast over Oran, Algiers, Tunis,
-and Tripoli, noting the sleepless activity of the brilliantly-lighted
-towns, the swarming transports and battleships in
-their harbours, and the crowds of anxious watchers in their
-streets. Then he had got round to the south of Alexandria,
-as has been seen, and there struck the first blow in the war.</p>
-
-<p>Now, his object was to discover what disposition of troops
-were being made for the invasion of Austria and Germany.
-Another scout-ship would be by this time floating over St.
-Petersburg, and another over Odessa, and these were to report
-to him at noon.</p>
-
-<p>He had kept the <em>Avenger</em> moving with sufficient rapidity
-to make it extremely difficult for her to be seen from the
-earth, as he wanted to see without being seen, and he
-remained undiscovered until nearly noon. All this time
-trains had been seen running in swift succession into Moscow
-from the east and out to the west, evidently conveying troops
-to the frontier.</p>
-
-<p>A large fleet of air-ships, numbering apparently between
-two and three hundred vessels, were seen lying in four
-squadrons on the open space about the Kremlin, and others
-were constantly flying into and out of the city in all
-directions.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes after half-past eleven, Cosmo, after a long
-look through his glasses, called to Alan, who was looking out
-from the other side of the deck&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I fancy they must have seen us at last. Three ships are
-coming up on this side as if they wanted to investigate.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan crossed over and soon picked out the Russian vessels
-rising in long spiral sweeps from the earth about three miles
-to the northward and coming up very fast.</p>
-
-<p>“They seem to have learned something in tactics during<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-the year,” he said. “They evidently know better than to rise
-perpendicularly while they suspect we are up here. They
-think they’ll be much more difficult to hit coming up like
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Cosmo. “But we can soon show them the
-mistake in that idea. What are you going to do with them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Destroy them, of course,” replied Alan. “It doesn’t
-matter about giving the alarm now. I think it’s pretty
-certain that the Russians are going to concentrate at Kieff,
-Vitebsk, Dünaburg, and Vilna, and those four squadrons
-down there are intended to cover them. We’d better let
-them concentrate, and make the fighting as short and sharp
-as possible. It would be a waste of time to destroy them here
-in detail, and the moral effect wouldn’t be anything like as
-good. What do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think there’ll be any fighting,” replied Cosmo,
-“unless between the air-ships. The most hardened troops of
-the nineteenth century would have broken and run like a lot
-of sheep under our shells, and these poor fellows, who have
-never seen a battle in their lives, will do the same.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe we shall have any land fighting at all to
-speak of during the whole war. There will be nothing but
-massacres from the air on both sides. Still, I think you’re
-both wise and merciful in waiting until you can hit hard,
-though perhaps from the strictly military point of view we
-ought to have Moscow in ruins by sundown.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t do that,” said Alan, shaking his head decisively.
-“There are three or four millions of women and children in it
-who have done no harm, and I’ll shed no more blood than I’m
-obliged to. We had better destroy those fellows, however,
-before they get too close. You know what to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Cosmo. “You’ll take the deck, I
-suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>Alan nodded, and Cosmo saluted and went into the
-conning-tower. The <em>Avenger</em> now altered her course, so that
-her circling flight took her to the northward, above the
-three Russian air-ships that were sweeping round and round<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-so fast that it would have been impossible to train a gun upon
-them.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as she got over them the <em>Avenger</em> quickened her
-course until she was flying round in the same circles and at
-the same speed as the Russians. This, of course, made her
-relatively stationary with regard to them, and it was now
-possible to take aim. Two of the broadside guns, one on each
-side, were much shorter than the others, and had been specially
-constructed for firing almost vertically downwards.</p>
-
-<p>Alan stood by one of these and trained it on the first of the
-Russian vessels, which were coming up in a spiral line. At
-the right moment he pressed the button in the breech and
-released the projectile. The shot struck the Russian amidships.
-They saw the glass deck of the roof splinter, then the
-blaze of the explosion flashed out, the air quaked, and the next
-moment the fragments of the Russian warship were falling
-back upon the earth.</p>
-
-<p>A second and a third shot followed as the other two came
-into position, and when Alan looked down towards the city
-again he saw that the four squadrons had taken the alarm,
-and were rising from the earth and scattering in all directions.
-This was just what he wanted, for it relieved him of the
-scruples which had prevented him from firing on them while
-they lay within the precincts of the city.</p>
-
-<p>In an instant the crew of the <em>Avenger</em> were at their guns,
-and shell after shell sped on its downward way after the flying
-ships. Although, under the circumstances, the aim was
-necessarily hurried, for the captains of the Russian vessels,
-seeing the terrible disadvantage at which they were placed, had
-put on their utmost speed, the guns of the <em>Avenger</em> were so
-smartly handled that nearly a score of the Russians were either
-blown to fragments or crippled before the squadron escaped
-out of range.</p>
-
-<p>“Well done!” said Alan. “That will teach them to keep
-a little smarter look-out next time.” And then he went on
-to himself&mdash;“I wonder whether <em>she</em> was on board one of those
-that are lying in little pieces down there? I suppose that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-would be too good luck to hope for, and yet I don’t know, I
-think her end ought to be something different to that. I
-wonder what it really will be?”</p>
-
-<p>He ordered his men to cease firing now, and placed the
-<em>Avenger</em> once more in her old position over Moscow, keeping
-her at a great elevation to guard against surprise from the
-squadron he had scattered. A few minutes later two air-ships
-were reported coming from the south and north. The
-flash of the sun on their blue hulls proclaimed them friends.</p>
-
-<p>They were the vessels bringing the reports from St. Petersburg
-and Odessa, and these reports were to the effect that
-during the whole of the morning trains had been pouring
-through from the eastward and all the surrounding country
-towards the Austro-German frontier. Other reports from the
-westward had been received by the commanders of these two
-vessels to the effect that the Russian troops were massing along
-the frontier and seemingly preparing to invade the Federation
-area from the four points already selected by Alan.</p>
-
-<p>He at once despatched orders by these two courier-vessels
-to the depôts at Königsberg, Thorn, Breslau, and Budapesth
-to assemble four squadrons of fifty vessels each, which were
-to be over the points of concentration at daybreak on the
-following morning.</p>
-
-<p>These ships were to maintain their greatest possible elevation&mdash;that
-is to say, about three miles and a half&mdash;until the
-sun rose, then if the sky were clear they were to bombard the
-towns at once from that height; if not they were to use all
-precautions against surprise in passing through the clouds,
-and then the commanders were to use their own discretion as
-to the plan of operation, but Odessa, Kieff, Vitebsk, and Dünaburg
-were to be destroyed at all hazards as soon as it was
-certain that the invading forces were concentrated there, and
-preparing to march eastward.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as these orders had been despatched the <em>Avenger</em>
-left Moscow, and started at full speed for Gibraltar, where she
-arrived about four o’clock in the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>Here Alan, after once more inspecting the land batteries<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-and the aerial defences of this important outpost of the
-Federation, received news of the annihilation of the four
-Moslem expeditions, and heartily congratulated Admiral
-Ernstein on the complete success of his operations.</p>
-
-<p>It was at once apparent that the Sultan would not risk
-a second loss so enormous as this even if he had sufficient
-transports left and could persuade any more of his people to
-brave the terrors of such another sea-fight. This being so,
-only two alternatives would be open to him, either he must
-give up all idea of invading Europe by land or sea, or else he
-must attempt to force the bridges across the Dardanelles and
-the Straits of Gibraltar, and cross into Europe <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">viâ</i> Turkey and
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p>Both these bridges, the main highways between Europe,
-Africa, and Asia Minor, were guarded on the European side
-by batteries of enormous strength, similar to those which
-guarded the Federation posts in the Mediterranean. They
-were magnificent structures, each four hundred feet broad,
-carrying twelve lines of railway as well as carriage drives and
-promenades, and, once in the hands of the enemy, troops could
-be poured across them in tens of thousands every hour.</p>
-
-<p>Alan, after a brief conference with Ernstein, decided to
-pursue the same tactics here as he was going to make use of
-on the Russian frontier. The bridges were to be left completely
-open, but their supporting pillars were to be mined
-with torpedoes, connected by electric wires with the batteries.</p>
-
-<p>If the Sultan attempted to force them, his men were to be
-allowed to concentrate on the African and Asiatic shores and
-to occupy the bridges, then the bridges were to be blown up
-and the forces on the opposite side to be dispersed by the
-batteries and the air-ships.</p>
-
-<p>The message to the Dardanelles bridge was despatched by
-telephone over the cables connecting Gibraltar with Candia and
-Gallipoli, and similar instructions were sent on from Gallipoli
-to Constantinople, in case any attempt should be made to force
-the bridge which spanned the Bosphorus.</p>
-
-<p>The Mediterranean patrol was to be maintained as before,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-and three air-ships were sent out to reconnoitre the African
-coast from Ceuta to Port Said during the night, and learn what
-they could of the Sultan’s intentions.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the evening and the greater part of the night
-were spent by Alan receiving and answering reports from the
-northern coast of the Mediterranean, the Russian frontier, and
-the principal cities of Europe, and in assuring himself that
-everything was ready, so far as was possible, to meet the storm
-that must infallibly burst over the Continent within the next
-few days.</p>
-
-<p>What would have been in the nineteenth century a matter
-of weeks was now only one of days and hours. The enormously-developed
-system of intercommunication made transit,
-even for very large numbers of men and between very distant
-points, rapid to a degree undreamt of in the present century.</p>
-
-<p>Trains could travel at two hundred miles an hour along the
-hundreds of quadruple lines which covered the Continent with
-their gigantic network, aerial cruisers could fly at more than
-twice this speed, and squadrons of submarine battleships could
-cleave their silent and invisible way through the ocean depths
-at a hundred and fifty miles an hour.</p>
-
-<p>It was, therefore, almost impossible to tell without certain
-information where and how the blows of the enemy would be
-struck, or from how many points the European area of the
-Federation might be assailed at once, and vast indeed were the
-responsibilities and anxieties which weighed upon the man
-whose single brain was the centre of this vast and complicated
-system of defence, and on whose decisions would depend the
-safety or the destruction of millions of human beings.</p>
-
-<p>Alan had managed to get four hours’ sleep in the afternoon
-between Moscow and Gibraltar, and he snatched two hours
-more before midnight. Then he was called, and the <em>Avenger</em>
-was just about to take the air to return to the Russian frontier,
-so that he might supervise the operations there, when the look-out
-on the summit of the Rock of Gibraltar saw and answered
-the Aerian private signal from the sky, and a few minutes later
-a fleet of more than a hundred air-ships dropped down out of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-darkness and hovered over what is now called the neutral ground
-between the Rock and Spain.</p>
-
-<p>One of these alighted at the signal station itself. It was
-the <em>Isma</em>, and within three minutes after she had touched the
-ground Alan was shaking hands with Alexis and asking him
-what brought him back so soon from the East.</p>
-
-<p>“I have come back because there is nothing much more to
-do there,” said Alexis. “Have you had any fighting here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Alan; “or, at anyrate, a big massacre.”</p>
-
-<p>And then he described what had befallen the Sultan’s
-expeditions.</p>
-
-<p>“Horrible but necessary, I suppose!” replied Alexis, not
-without a shudder at the news. “I have been doing my
-damage on land. I didn’t wait for the enemy to begin hostilities,
-so as soon as day broke we got to work. We have
-wrecked Ekaterinburg, Slatonsk, Orenburg, and Uralsk, and
-blocked the four roads into Russia from Asia.</p>
-
-<p>“The Tsarina’s Asiatic forces had concentrated there in
-large numbers ready to come into Europe. We found some
-air-ships intended to cover them, but we had the best of the
-elevation, and smashed them up. The slaughter has been
-something perfectly frightful. I had a hundred and fifty ships
-in action, and there isn’t a man left of the Asiatic troops that
-is not getting back to where he came from as fast as he can go.</p>
-
-<p>“The towns are mere heaps of ruins and the railways utterly
-useless. I left twenty ships to patrol the frontier and stop any
-further movements into Russia, and twenty more are strung
-out in a line from the Caspian to the head of the Red Sea to
-cut communications between Asia and Africa.</p>
-
-<p>“We came westward over Odessa this afternoon, and had a
-skirmish, in which, I am sorry to say, I lost five ships, but we
-destroyed twenty Russians, blew up the dockyard, and shelled
-the city by way of punishment. And now I’ve got myself and
-a hundred and thirty ships to place at your disposal for the
-present. There is nothing more to be feared from the East, for
-by to-morrow night, I think, the Asiatics will be thoroughly
-terrorised.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“You have done more than I have in the way of slaughter
-and destruction,” said Alan. “But there will be some fearful
-work along the Russian frontier to-morrow morning. The
-Tsarina, as you call her, is concentrating her forces at Kieff,
-Vitebsk, Dünaburg, and Vilna for a descent upon Germany. I
-have ordered those four places to be destroyed as soon as
-possible after sunrise, and I am just starting now, so you had
-better come with me and order your ships to follow us.”</p>
-
-<p>Both the commanders felt, as their combined squadrons were
-winging their way towards the Russian frontier, that the events
-of the next twenty-four hours or so would go far towards deciding
-the issues of the war, and therefore the fate of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Alexis had given up the command of the <em>Isma</em> for the night
-to his first lieutenant, and was travelling on board the <em>Avenger</em>,
-in order that he and Alan might finally arrange their plans for
-the terrible deeds that were to be done on the following day.
-Both of them were serious almost to depression, for it must be
-remembered that neither possessed that love of fighting and
-slaughter which distinguishes the professional soldier of the
-nineteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>Armed with the most awful weapons ever wielded by
-human hands, they had already, within the space of a few
-hours, hurled millions of their fellow-creatures into eternity
-and made thousands of homes desolate which a couple of days
-ago were happy. Now they were going to repeat the tragedy,
-on how vast a scale neither of them knew. Before the next
-sunset a red line of blood and flame would mark the frontier
-between Russia and Germany.</p>
-
-<p>All the horrors of months of the older warfare would be
-concentrated into those few fatal hours. Those who were to
-do battle in the air would hurl their irresistible lightnings at
-each other more as gods than as men, while on earth the
-unresisting swarms could only stand in helpless agony of
-suspense waiting for the death from which there was no
-possibility of flying.</p>
-
-<p>Within a hundred miles of the frontier the two fleets
-stopped, and Alexis went on board his own vessel. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-then a few minutes after three in the morning, that is to say,
-about an hour before sunrise, and the warships were floating in
-a serene and cloudless atmosphere at an elevation of nearly
-four miles, or about twenty thousand feet. It was already
-quite light enough at that elevation for signals to be plainly
-seen, and a rapid interchange of these took place, communicating
-the final instructions from the flagships to the commanders
-of the smaller squadrons into which the fleets were to
-be divided.</p>
-
-<p>Just as the last signal had been answered, and the vessels
-were about to separate, a tiny speck of light was seen far away
-to the westward. A hundred powerful field-glasses were
-instantly turned upon it, and soon showed it to be a hostile
-air-ship coming up very fast at an elevation of about three
-miles. The silvery sheen of her hull instantly betrayed the
-fact that she was neither an Aerian nor a Federation vessel,
-for the former were blue and the latter painted dull grey. A
-moment’s reflection showed that she must have sighted the
-Aerian fleet, and if she got past would take tidings of its
-presence to the frontier and destroy all hope of a surprise.</p>
-
-<p>Within twenty seconds of her true nature being made out
-a signal was flying from the mizzenmast of the <em>Isma</em>, which
-read, “Shall I stop her?” “Yes. Cripple her if you can.
-Don’t fire unless necessary,” came the reply from the <em>Avenger</em>,
-and the <em>Isma</em> at once darted away on her errand.</p>
-
-<p>Alexis, of course, understood that if he struck the enemy
-with a shell her fragments would fall to the earth, and might
-probably give the impression that a battle was being fought in
-the air, and, as they were now so near to the Russian frontier,
-this was to be avoided if possible. He therefore determined to
-cripple her without destroying her, and, if he could manage it,
-to capture her in mid-air, a feat that had never been performed
-before under similar conditions.</p>
-
-<p>He descended until the <em>Isma</em> was only floating about a
-thousand feet higher than the enemy, and then began to fly
-round and round in a wide circle, at a speed which made it
-practically impossible for her to be hit with a shell, save by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-the merest chance. The stranger, on sighting the fleet,
-slowed down and swung round to the northward, so as to have
-the advantage of being able to present her stern chasers to the
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p>This gave Alexis the opportunity he wanted. The instant
-that her stern was visible, <a id="Ref_281"></a>the <em>Isma</em> swooped down, and rushed
-at her at such a speed that she looked more like a stream of
-blue light flashing through the sky than a solid material body.
-Those on board her saw this flash dart past their stern. Their
-ship shivered from stem to stern with some shock that came
-so swiftly that not until the <em>Isma</em> was almost out of sight did
-they realise the damage that had been done.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_281" class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i_312.jpg" width="600" height="424" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">The “Isma” swooped down.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_281">Page 281</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The ram of the Aerian had cut through the barrels of the
-two stern guns and the shafts of the three propellers as cleanly
-as a razor would have divided so many straws. Sustained and
-propelled only by her wings, she dropped from two hundred
-miles an hour to about twenty-five, and then the <em>Isma</em>
-reappeared in the sky above her, flying the signal, “Will you
-surrender?”</p>
-
-<p>Her commander saw that the brilliant and almost miraculous
-manœuvre of the <em>Isma</em> had placed him utterly at her
-mercy. If he refused, a single shell would send him and his
-ship and crew in fragments to the earth, while none of his
-guns could touch the Aerian, floating as she did a thousand
-feet above him, so he bowed to necessity and sent the white
-flag to his masthead. Alexis then signalled again, ordering
-him to unload all his guns and leave the breeches open, and
-when he had seen this done he sank down to a level with her,
-passed a steel-wire rope on board her, and towed her away in
-triumph to the fleet.</p>
-
-<p>The brilliant achievement delighted the Aerians as much as
-it confounded the crew of the captured vessel, especially when
-it was discovered that she was the <em>Haroun</em>, a Moslem warship
-taking a message from the Sultan to the Tsarina at Moscow.</p>
-
-<p>Khalid’s letter, which had been despatched the night before
-from Algiers, informed Olga of the disaster that had overtaken
-the Crescent in the Mediterranean, and of his determination<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-to avenge it by storming the bridges of Gibraltar, the Dardanelles,
-and the Bosphorus, and pouring his remaining
-troops over them into Europe as soon as he could concentrate
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Far more important than this, however, was a notification
-of his intention to at once lead a fleet of two hundred and
-fifty air-ships to the west of Europe, and there destroy city
-after city on his eastward course until they joined forces and
-proceeded, if necessary, to devastate the rest of the Continent.</p>
-
-<p>The Moslem’s guns were now rendered useless, and she was
-left to her own devices to fall an easy prey to the first enemy
-that might attack her. The Aerian fleet then divided into
-fifty squadrons of five vessels each, and these winged their
-way towards the Russian frontier, ever soaring higher and
-higher, until their wings were beating the rarefied air at an
-altitude of over three miles.</p>
-
-<p>Odessa, Kieff, Gomel, Vitebsk, Dünaburg, and Riga were all
-covered by the time the sun rose. Scores of Russian air-ships
-were seen by the various squadrons darting about hither and
-thither along the frontier at varying elevations, evidently on
-the look-out for an enemy.</p>
-
-<p>It was not many minutes before the Aerian squadrons were
-discovered by these, and they instantly got away out of range,
-and then swerving round sought to rise to a similar altitude so
-as to place themselves on equal terms with the Aerians.</p>
-
-<p>But long before this attempt could be made the work of
-death had begun, and two thousand guns were raining their
-projectiles, charged with inevitable destruction, upon the
-devoted cities. They were swarming with men who had come
-through the interior of Russia during the night for the
-invasion of Europe, but there were no troops on land to
-oppose them, for Alan had seen that there would be no need
-for these.</p>
-
-<p>Within an hour the six cities were so many vast shambles,
-and still the relentless rain of death kept falling from the
-skies. Houses and public buildings crumbled into dust under
-the terrific impact of the explosions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The streets were torn up as if by earthquakes, the railways
-running in and out were utterly wrecked, and the victims of
-the pitiless attack, panic-stricken and mad with fear and
-agony, rushed aimlessly hither and thither through the
-bloody, fire-scorched streets and amidst the falling ruins until
-inevitable death overtook them and ended their tortures of
-mind and body.</p>
-
-<p>There was no escape even as there was no mercy. Thousands
-fled out into the country only to find the same rain of
-death falling upon the villages. It seemed as though the
-unclouded heavens of that May morning were raining fire and
-death from every point upon the devoted earth, and yet no
-source of destruction was to be seen.</p>
-
-<p>But ere long new horrors were added to the desolation
-which had already befallen the cities. Terrific explosions
-burst out high up in the air, vast dazzling masses of flame
-blazed out, mocking the sunlight with their brightness, and
-then vanishing in an instant, and after them came showers
-of bits of metal and ragged fragments of human bodies, all
-that remained of some great cruiser of the air and her crew.</p>
-
-<p>The Russian squadrons, numbering in all about three hundred
-warships, by flying several miles to the eastward and
-then doubling on a constantly ascending course had by this
-time gained a sufficient elevation to train their guns upon the
-Aerians, and as soon as they had done this the aerial battle
-became general along a curved line more than a thousand
-miles in length, extending from Odessa to Riga.</p>
-
-<p>George Cosmo had been right when he said that there
-would be little or no land fighting, for along that line, from
-the Baltic to the Black Sea, there was scarcely a man left alive
-by midday who was not mad with fear and horror at the
-frightful effects of the aerial assault.</p>
-
-<p>On land as well as on sea fighting was impossible. Armies
-and fleet could exist only in the absence of the air-ships, and
-they were everywhere. Cities lay utterly at their mercy, and
-nothing shaped by the hand of man could withstand the
-impact of their projectiles.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But all day long the fight went on in the skies above the
-Russian frontier, yet not at all after the fashion imagined by
-the poet of the nineteenth century, who wrote, as he thought
-prophetically, of</p>
-
-<p class="center">Airy navies grappling in the central blue.</p>
-
-<p>The first and chief endeavour of the captain of every vessel
-was to avoid the shots of his opponents and to get his own
-home. It was brains and machinery pitted against brains and
-machinery, and grappling was never thought of.</p>
-
-<p>The air-ship which could gain and maintain a greater elevation
-than her opponent infallibly destroyed her, and so, too,
-did the one that could fly unhurt at full speed along the line
-of battle and use her stern guns upon those which became
-relatively stationary enough for her to take aim at them.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been a magnificent spectacle for an observer
-who could have followed the contending squadrons in their
-swift and complicated evolutions. He would have seen the
-blue and the silver hulls flashing to and fro as though apparently
-engaged in some harmless trial of speed, then, without
-the slightest warning, without a puff of smoke or the faintest
-sound of a report, the long, deadly guns would do their
-work.</p>
-
-<p>The moment of vantage would come, and the silent and
-invisible messengers of annihilation would be sped upon their
-way; then, with a roar and a shock that convulsed the firmament,
-a mist of flame would envelop the ship that had been
-struck, and when it vanished she would have vanished too,
-falling in a rain of fragments towards the earth nearly twenty
-thousand feet below.</p>
-
-<p>It was a battle not so much for victory as for destruction.
-There could be no victory save to those who survived after
-having annihilated their enemies, and this was the sole
-object of the struggle. High in air above the contending
-squadrons, the <em>Avenger</em> and the <em>Isma</em> swept to and fro along
-the line, raised by their superior soaring powers beyond the
-zone of battle, and from their decks the two admirals commanded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-the fight, and, like very Joves above the tempest,
-hurled their destroying bolts from their terrible guns far and
-wide over the scene of strife.</p>
-
-<p>From morning to night both Alan and Alexis sought in
-vain for the blue hull of the <em>Revenge</em> among the Russian
-squadron. Unless Olga was on board one of the other ships
-she was either engaged in some work of destruction elsewhere
-or was directing the operations of her forces and learning the
-disasters that had overtaken them in her palace in Moscow
-or St. Petersburg.</p>
-
-<p>It had been previously ordered that, as soon as it became
-too dark to take accurate aim with the guns, those vessels of
-the Aerian fleet which had survived the battle were to fly
-westward and rendezvous at midnight on the summit of the
-Schneekoppe, one of the peaks of the Giant Mountains to the
-north-east of Bohemia, whence, as soon as the amount of
-damage had been ascertained, the remainder of it, if strong
-enough, was to set out and if possible intercept the Moslem
-fleet before it could form a junction with the Russians.</p>
-
-<p>When the last vessel had alighted on the summit of the
-mountain it was found that out of a fleet numbering two
-hundred and fifty warships only a hundred and eighty remained&mdash;the
-rest were scattered in undistinguishable fragments
-along the Russian frontier. As for the amount of
-damage that had been done to the enemy as a set-off to this
-heavy loss, the Aerian commanders could form no even
-approximate estimate of it.</p>
-
-<p>All they knew was that the six frontier cities, and a score
-or so of smaller towns and villages, were now mere heaps of
-ruins, vast charnel-houses choked with unnumbered corpses.
-The Russian army of invasion must have been practically
-annihilated, and certainly its remnants would be too hopelessly
-demoralised by the unspeakable horrors it had survived to be
-of the slightest use for further fighting.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the roll had been called, the fleet, in two
-squadrons of ninety vessels each, took the air and crossed the
-mountains to Gorlitz, which had been selected a year before as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-a convenient spot for the establishment of an arsenal and
-power-station, standing as it does at the angle of intersection
-of two great mountains which form the natural bulwarks of
-Bohemia.</p>
-
-<p>Here the stock of motive-power and the ammunition of all
-the vessels were renewed, and at daybreak the squadrons were
-just about to take the air when a telephonic message was
-received from Paris that a large fleet of air-ships had appeared
-above the city and had begun to bombard it. This message had
-been sent in compliance with a system of intercommunication
-which Alan had instituted between all the great cities of
-Europe, and all the power-stations and rendezvous throughout
-the Continent.</p>
-
-<p>The moment an enemy appeared over any town messages
-were to be sent to all the stations simultaneously, and detachments
-of warships were to be despatched to the threatened
-point as soon as the warning was received.</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen that this system would enable a very large
-force to be concentrated upon any threatened point, and, in
-fact, before the sun was two degrees above the horizon of
-Paris, eight squadrons of Federation warships, including the
-two under the command of Alan and Alexis, were flying at
-full speed from all four points of the compass towards the city
-which for over half a century had been the acknowledged
-capital of the Continent.</p>
-
-<p>Little more than an hour sufficed for the <em>Avenger</em> and the
-<em>Isma</em> to pass over the six hundred miles which separated
-Gorlitz from Paris. Flying at their utmost speed they left
-their squadrons to follow the two admirals, knowing that every
-captain could be implicitly trusted to do the work allotted to
-his ship without further orders.</p>
-
-<p>The object of Alan and Alexis was to get first to the scene
-of action, and to avail themselves of the superior soaring
-powers of their two vessels to deliver an assault upon the
-Moslems which they could not reply to.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Ref_286"></a>A fearful scene unfolded itself before them as they swept
-up out of the eastward over Paris. The vast and splendid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-city was surrounded by a huge circle formed of at least
-two hundred Moslem warships floating at an elevation of
-some three miles, and pouring a tempest of projectiles from
-hundreds of guns indiscriminately into the area crowded
-with stately buildings and nearly ten millions of inhabitants.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_286" class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i_319.jpg" width="600" height="424" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">A fearful Scene unfolded itself as they swept up over Paris.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_286">Page 286</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nearly three miles above the centre of the city floated a
-solitary scout-ship ready to signal warning of the approach of
-an enemy. Fires were already raging in hundreds of places
-all over the city. The streets were swarming with terrified
-throngs of citizens who had rushed out to escape the flames
-and the falling buildings, only to meet the hundreds of shells
-that were constantly bursting among them, rending their
-bodies to fragments by scores at a time.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the beginning of Khalid the Magnificent’s revenge
-for the disaster of the Mediterranean&mdash;a vengeance which proved
-that, in his breast at least, the savage spirit of the ancient
-warfare was still untamed.</p>
-
-<p>The <em>Avenger</em> and the <em>Isma</em> gained an altitude of four miles
-above the doomed city, half a dozen shells from their guns
-struck the scout-ship and reduced her to dust before she had
-time to make a signal in warning, and then the forty-four
-guns began to send a radiating hail of projectiles upon the
-Moslem fleet. Shell after shell found its mark in spite of the
-vast range, and ship after ship collapsed and dropped in fragments
-or blew up like a huge shell.</p>
-
-<p>But before the fifth round had been fired a strange thing
-happened. A single Aerian warship rushed up at full speed
-out of the south, and as soon as she sighted the <em>Avenger</em>
-signalled, “Orders from the Council. Come alongside.” The
-new-comer soared upwards as they sank to meet her, and the
-three ships met and stopped some three miles and a half above
-the earth. The stern of the <em>Azrael</em>, as the messenger-ship was
-named, was brought close up to that of the <em>Avenger</em>, the deck
-doors were opened, a gangway thrown across, and the captain
-boarded the flagship and placed a sealed despatch in Alan’s
-hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He opened it, and to his unspeakable astonishment read&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p class="marginrightindent"><span class="smcap">Aeria</span>, May 16th, 6 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span></p>
-
-<p>All Aerians are to return at once with their ships to Aeria, and take no
-further part in the fighting. The Federation fleets may be left in the hands of
-foreign crews and commanders, to whom the power-stations and batteries are to
-be given up. This order is to be obeyed with the least possible delay.</p>
-
-<p class="marginrightindent"><span class="smcap">Alan Arnold</span>, President.</p>
-
-<p>To the Admirals in command of the Federation Fleets.</p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_322.jpg" width="350" height="57" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXV.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">A MESSAGE FROM MARS.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_i.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-I">IN order to adequately explain the origin of the
-peremptory recall which, although of course he
-obeyed it without question, seemed so incomprehensible
-to Alan, it will be necessary to go
-back to the night of the 12th of May.</p>
-
-<p>While all Aeria was rejoicing over the return of the exiles
-and their restoration to the rights of citizenship, there was one
-of the inhabitants of the Valley who took little or no part in
-the festivities. This was Vassilis Cosmo, a man of between
-forty-six and forty-seven, and elder brother of the George
-Cosmo who had been chief engineer of the <em>Narwhal</em>, and was
-now first officer of the <em>Avenger</em>.</p>
-
-<p>A striking distinction of personality and temperament had,
-ever since he had reached a thinking age, marked him as one
-apart from the rest of his fellow-countrymen.</p>
-
-<p>He had little or none of the gaiety of disposition and social
-cordiality that were the salient characteristics of the Aerians
-as a people. He was serious almost to taciturnity, solitary
-and studious, and wholly engrossed in a single pursuit&mdash;the
-study of astronomy in its bearing on the great problem of
-interplanetary communication.</p>
-
-<p>After twenty years of constant labour, assisted by all the
-knowledge and inventive progress which had placed the
-Aerians so far ahead of the rest of the world, he had at length
-solved this problem and realised the dream of ages six years<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-before Olga Romanoff had dropped her defiance from the
-skies.</p>
-
-<p>As yet, however, his success had been confined to one
-planet, and this, as will have been learnt from the conversation
-between Alma and Isma on that memorable night on which
-Alan’s letter had been received from the island, was the planet
-Mars.</p>
-
-<p>After infinite toil and innumerable failures, he had at
-length succeeded in establishing an intelligible system of
-what may here be described as photo-telegraphy, in which the
-rays of light passing between the earth and Mars were made
-to perform the functions of the electric wires in modern
-telegraphy.</p>
-
-<p>His alphabet, so to speak, consisted of a hundred great
-electric suns disposed at equal intervals on the mountain
-peaks round the great oval of the Valley. These were in
-direct communication with the observatory of Aeria, which
-was situated at a height of sixteen thousand feet on Mount
-Austral, the highest of the two snow-capped peaks which
-stood at the southern end of the Valley.</p>
-
-<p>A single switch key enabled him, when sitting by the huge
-telescope which embodied all the highest optical science of
-Aeria, to light and extinguish these brilliant globes as he
-chose, and it was by lighting and extinguishing them at certain
-intervals that he was able to transmit his signals to the
-Martian astronomer, who was waiting to receive them, and to
-reply to them by similar means across the gulf of thirty-four
-million miles which separates the two planets at their nearest
-approach to each other.</p>
-
-<p>Momentous as were the events of the last few days, they
-were dwarfed to utter insignificance by the irregular and
-apparently meaningless recurrences of a tiny point of light in
-the centre of a great concave mirror situated at the base of
-the huge barrel of the telescope, through the side aperture of
-which Vassilis Cosmo was looking a few minutes before midnight
-on that memorable 12th of May.</p>
-
-<p>The point of light appeared and vanished, and reappeared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-again at irregular intervals, which the astronomer noted on an
-automatic registering instrument beside him. The moment
-the flash appeared he pressed a button, which he held down
-till it disappeared, then he released it, waited till the flash
-reappeared, and repeated the operation so long as the signals
-came.</p>
-
-<p>For nearly five hours he received and registered the signals
-recorded by his reflector in silence, broken only by the monotonous
-ticking of the clockwork which, working synchronously
-with the movements of the two orbs, kept the image of Mars
-exactly in the centre of the object-glass, and by the soft
-whirring of the registering instrument.</p>
-
-<p>Never before had human eyes read such a message as he
-read, sitting that night in silence and solitude in his observatory
-amid the snows, far above the lovely valley in which his
-countrymen were still holding high revel.</p>
-
-<p>Well might his hands tremble and his eyes grow dim with
-something more than long watching when he reversed the
-mechanism of the register and a narrow slip of paper, divided
-by cross-lines into equal spaces a tenth of an inch long, issued
-from a slit in one end, and began to run slowly over a revolving
-drum.</p>
-
-<p>On the tape was a series of straight black lines running
-longitudinally along it. They were of unequal length, and
-divided from each other by unequal spaces. Before the exact
-import of the message could be gained the length of each of
-these lines, and that of the space which separated it from the
-next, had to be accurately measured, but Vassilis knew his own
-code so perfectly that he had been able to read the general
-drift of the communication that had been sent along the light-rays
-from the sister world by approximately guessing the
-duration of the flashes and the intervals between them.</p>
-
-<p>Day was beginning to dawn by the time the long tape had
-been unrolled and pinned down in equal lengths on a board for
-measuring. For more than five hours he had not uttered a
-syllable or even an exclamation, although he had received
-from another world what appeared to be tantamount, not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-only to his own death-sentence, but to that of the whole human
-race.</p>
-
-<p>But when the slips were at length pinned out and he had
-run his practised eye deliberately over the fatal marks, his
-white lips parted and a deep groan broke from his chest. He
-was alone in the observatory, or perhaps not even this sign of
-emotion would have escaped him.</p>
-
-<p>With his hands pressed to his temples as though his brain
-were reeling under the frightful intelligence that had just
-been conveyed to it, he stood in front of the board and gasped
-in short, broken sentences&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“God of mercy, can that be really true! Has the world
-only four months more to live? Surely I have made some
-mistake&mdash;and yet everything has worked as usual. There has
-been no hitch. It has been a splendid night for transmission
-and they&mdash;no, they had not made a mistake for a thousand
-years, they are past it. It must&mdash;but no, I can do nothing
-more this morning. I should go mad if I did. I must think
-of it quietly and sleep a little if I can, and then I will
-transcribe it.”</p>
-
-<p>He left the telescope tower and went out on to a little
-platform at the rear of the observatory which commanded
-a view of the whole Valley. He looked out over the lovely
-landscape lying calm and silent beneath the paling stars, and
-involuntarily exclaimed aloud&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Is it for this that we have conquered the earth and
-bridged the abysses of space&mdash;for this that we have made
-ourselves as gods among men and throned ourselves here in
-this lovely land, lords of the world and masters of the nations?</p>
-
-<p>“How shall I tell them down yonder? And yet, has not
-the Master told them already: ‘His shape shall be that of a
-flaming fire.’ ‘Your children of the fifth generation shall
-behold his approach’? Yes, the two exiles we welcomed back
-last night are the fifth generation from the Angel, and <em>that</em>
-will truly be a flaming fire, and truly it will go hard with this
-world and the men of it in the hour of its passing, as the
-Master has said.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After a vain attempt to seek refuge from his thoughts in
-sleep he boarded his aerial yacht and went to the city to
-mingle with the merry-makers, more for appearance’ sake than
-from inclination, but he kept his own counsel strictly, for
-more reasons than one. The next night, as soon as Mars was
-high enough in the heavens, about half-past ten, the dwellers
-in the Valley saw the great lights on the mountain tops flash
-out and darken at irregular intervals time after time and hour
-after hour, until all but those in the sentinel ships went to
-rest, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Vassilis is talking to our neighbours in Mars. He will
-have something to tell us to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>But when the next day came he had nothing to tell. He
-had spent the night repeating the message, sign for sign and
-word for word, and asking for confirmation lest he should have
-made any mistake in receiving it. Then in agonised anxiety
-he had waited for the reply on which he now felt the fate of
-mankind depended. It came with a terrible clearness and
-brevity, which left no room for doubt&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Message read correctly. There is no error in our calculations.
-Terrestrial humanity is doomed, and must prepare to
-meet its fate.”</p>
-
-<p>So far as he was concerned he was satisfied. He knew that
-a mistake was impossible to the finished science of the Martian
-astronomers, compared with whom he was but as a little child
-in knowledge. But still he kept his own counsel, for there
-was no need for him to cast the sudden shadow of death over
-the rejoicings of his countrymen.</p>
-
-<p>At length the fleets departed, and Aeria, armed at all points,
-was awaiting the possible onslaught of her foes. These she
-would doubtless hurl back in triumphant disdain from her
-bulwarks, but far, far away in the depths of space, beyond
-even the range of the great equatorial on Mount Austral, there
-was approaching an enemy whose assault men could only meet
-with resignation or despair, as the case might be. Resistance
-was as much out of the question as escape.</p>
-
-<p>Early on the morning of the 16th, soon after the <em>Avenger</em><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-had struck the first blow in the world-war, Vassilis presented
-himself at the President’s palace and asked for an interview
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>The President received him a few minutes later in his
-private room. It was the first time in his life that the silent,
-reserved astronomer had ever asked for an official interview,
-and as the President entered the room he held out his hand,
-saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Vassilis. We have seen very little of you
-lately, even less than usual. Have you come to see me about
-the work which has kept you from joining in the general
-rejoicings? I’m sure it must have been very important.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, President, it was&mdash;the most important that a terrestrial
-student of astronomy could be engaged upon,” replied
-Vassilis, speaking slowly and very gravely.</p>
-
-<p>The President looked curiously for a moment into his clear,
-thoughtful eyes, and noticed the lines of care on his pale, worn
-features, so different to those of the rest of his countrymen.
-Then he said, with an anxious ring in his voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter, Vassilis? You look worn and ill, as
-though you had just passed through some great sorrow. Have
-you been keeping too long vigils with the stars? Tell me,
-what is it?”</p>
-
-<p>Vassilis was silent for a moment as though he might have
-been wondering whether the President, strong as he was,
-would have strength to bear the blow that he must strike in
-his next sentence. The awful news had come to him slowly,
-sign by sign and word by word, and so he had been in a
-measure prepared for it when its full meaning became clear.
-But upon Alan Arnold it must fall at a single stroke. Still
-the words had to be spoken, and after a good minute’s pause
-he said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“President, I bring you the most terrible news that one
-man can bring to another. The Master’s prophecy is about to
-be fulfilled. Three nights ago I received through the photo-telegraph
-what I believe to be the death-sentence of humanity
-upon earth. Here is the transcript of the message.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Save for a sudden pallor and a quick uplifting of the eyelids,
-Alan Arnold betrayed no more emotion as he took the
-roll of paper which Vassilis handed to him, than he had done
-when he received his son’s letter from the island.</p>
-
-<p>“It does not come to me unexpected,” he said in his firm
-quiet tones. “Your children and mine, Vassilis, are of the fifth
-generation, and it was foretold that they should see the sign
-in the sky. And so the threatened doom is not to pass us by?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Vassilis. “Not unless some miracle happens,
-and there are no miracles in the astronomy or the mathematics
-of Mars. The Martians are long past the age of
-miracles or mistakes. These are the data and the calculations
-upon which the conclusion is based. I have repeated them
-back to Mars and received confirmation of them.</p>
-
-<p>“I have also verified the times and distances and velocities
-myself, and have been unable to find the slightest error. As
-far as I can see, there is not the remotest chance of escape.
-The human race has only four months, five days, and twenty-three
-hours to live from midnight to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is the will of God!” said the President solemnly,
-slightly bending his head as he spoke. “It is not for us to
-question the designs of Eternal Wisdom, save in so far as we
-may strive to understand them. Death has always been
-inevitable to all of us, and this will only be dying together
-instead of alone. Do you wish anything done with these
-calculations?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Vassilis. “I would suggest that you appoint
-a committee of our best mathematicians and astronomers to
-examine and verify them once more, detail by detail, so that
-assurance may, if possible, be made surer. I shall receive
-another message from Mars to-night, and it will be well for
-the committee to be with me in the observatory. With the
-public aspect of the question I have, of course, nothing to do,
-that lies in the hands of yourself and the Council.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said the President, “what you wish shall be
-done at once, and the Council will meet this morning to
-consider what public steps are to be taken.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Within half an hour after the conclusion of the momentous
-interview the Council had met, and the most immediate
-result of its deliberations on the tremendous tidings that had
-come from the sister world was the issue of the order for the
-instant return of all Aerians who were abroad which had been
-delivered to Alan on the deck of the <em>Avenger</em> on the morning
-of the 18th.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately on receiving his father’s letter, Alan signalled,
-“Cease firing and follow,” to the <em>Isma</em>, and the three Aerian
-vessels started southward towards Gibraltar, leaving Paris to
-its fate. At Gibraltar, which was reached in two hours and a
-half, he found that, in accordance with the orders of the Council,
-messages had already been sent out to all the stations within
-the European area of the Federation for all Aerians to rendezvous
-at the Rock as soon as possible.</p>
-
-<p>The same orders had been transmitted along the telephonic
-cables which connected the marine stations of the Mediterranean
-for all the battleships on service to go into their respective
-harbours, so that their crews might land and be picked up by
-air-ships which had already been despatched for them.</p>
-
-<p>Before the evening Aerian vessels had begun to come in from
-all parts of Europe, where they had been stationed, and their
-crews brought terrible descriptions of the scenes of carnage and
-destruction they had left to obey the summons. The Federation
-leaders were in despair at their apparent desertion by their
-potent allies, while their enemies were already rejoicing at the
-disappearance of the Aerian warships from all points of the
-scene of war.</p>
-
-<p>By midnight the last Aerian vessel had come in, and, after
-the command of the Rock, the last station of which the Aerians
-retained command, had been handed over to the British forces,
-the flotilla, numbering nearly four hundred warships, rose into
-the air just as two large Moslem squadrons, one fresh from the
-destruction of Paris, and the other from Alexandria and the
-east of Europe, converged upon the Rock, and, without warning,
-opened a furious fire of shells upon it. The great guns from
-the batteries replied, and the fleets, under the command of Alan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-and Alexis, after sending a rapid hail of shells among the
-Moslem vessels as a parting salute, soared into the upper regions
-of the air and headed southward for home, leaving a fiery
-chaos of death and destruction behind them.</p>
-
-<p>Two hours after daybreak on the 19th the fleet crossed the
-Northern Ridge, and sank to earth on the sloping plateau behind
-the city. Alan at once disembarked, and went to his father’s
-palace to report himself.</p>
-
-<p>The sudden and unexpected return of the fleet, which had
-left to do battle for the empire of the world but three days and
-a half before, filled all the inhabitants of the Valley with
-amazement, for no one outside the Council and the committee
-appointed to verify the message received from Mars yet knew
-of the doom that was menacing the world.</p>
-
-<p>Alan was received at the door of his palace by his father,
-who, after their greetings had been exchanged, took him at once
-to the room in which the Council were already assembled, and
-there in the presence of his colleagues made him acquainted
-with the reason for his recall.</p>
-
-<p>Inured as he was to the unsparing warfare in which human
-life had to be counted as almost a negligible quantity, a warfare
-in which there was no middle course between life and death,
-Alan, after the first shock of surprise and horror had passed,
-faced the tremendous crisis with a calmness and resignation
-worthy of the traditions of his family and his race.</p>
-
-<p>For years he had carried his life in his hands, and now that
-the end of all things seemed near he was prepared to look
-inevitable death calmly in the face. He heard the reading of
-the message in silence, and then, when he saw that they were
-waiting for him to speak, he said quietly&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“What is to be must be! We cannot argue with the workings
-of the universe.” Then he paused for a moment, and went
-on&mdash;“I have come back with my comrades in obedience to orders.
-May I now ask why, if death is coming to the whole human
-race, we were not permitted to die in battle for the right against
-the wrong rather than to wait here in inaction and suspense
-until we are burnt to death on the funeral pyre of the world?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He spoke the last words almost hotly, for the first thought
-that had risen in his mind after hearing the doom that was
-about to overtake humanity was that the debt he owed to Olga
-Romanoff must now for ever remain unpaid at his hands. This
-thought was so unbearable to him that before any reply could
-be made to his question he broke out again, this time speaking
-rapidly and almost angrily&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“If, as you tell me, the world has only a few weeks to live,
-why should I wait here for death when I have work to do elsewhere?
-What does it matter whether I die scorched to a cinder
-in the fire-mist or am blown to pieces by a Russian shell? I
-have a debt to pay, a stain upon my honour and my manhood
-to wipe out before I die.</p>
-
-<p>“And so, too, has Alexis. Will you not give us an air-ship
-and let us find a crew of volunteers that we may go back to
-the war and hunt our enemy, and the enemy of humanity, down,
-and either destroy her or find an honourable death in the
-attempt to do so?”</p>
-
-<p>As he ended his impassioned appeal his father rose from
-his seat, and laid his hand upon his shoulder and said gravely,
-and yet not without a note of admiration in his voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“My son, those are brave and honourable words, and they
-prove that you are no unworthy son of the race you belong to.
-But they are still the words of passion rather than reason.
-Remember that in the presence of the universal doom that now
-overhangs the human race not only private vengeance but even
-the strife of nations sinks into utter insignificance. A heavier
-hand than yours will punish the sin for which she who has
-wronged you will soon have to answer at the bar of Eternal
-Justice. Remember how it was said of old, ‘Vengeance is
-mine, saith the Lord. I will repay.’”</p>
-
-<p>“That is true, father,” replied Alan, now speaking in his
-habitual tone of respect. “But why should not the instrument
-of that vengeance be the hand of him whom she has so bitterly
-wronged? You know what I mean, and so do all in this room.</p>
-
-<p>“Has she not so polluted my manhood and stained my
-honour that I must meet, apart from Alma, the fate that I could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-have shared with her with no more regret than that we had to
-die instead of live together? Is it not better that she should
-know I died in the attempt to wipe that stain away than see
-me waiting for death with it still upon me?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is for Alma as well as for you to decide,” said Francis
-Tremayne, rising from his seat as he spoke. “How do you know
-that she is unwilling to meet her end hand-in-hand with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have looked into her eyes and seen no love in them,”
-replied Alan, flushing to his temples with shame and anger.
-“Her old love for me is dead, as it may well be. How could I
-expect her purity to mate with my”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Stop, Alan!” exclaimed his father before he had time to
-utter the shameful word that was on his lips. “Those are no
-words for you to speak or for me to hear, especially at such a
-time as this. If any stain ever rested upon you you have more
-than purged it already. The man who is found worthy the
-confidence of the rulers of Aeria is worthy the respect, if not
-the love, of any woman in the State. Whether Alma loves you
-still or not is a question for her own heart to answer, but you
-must not call yourself unworthy in my hearing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor yet in mine,” said Alma’s father warmly. “If the
-shadow of death had not fallen across all our life-ways as it
-has done, there is no man who wears the Golden Wings that I
-would so willingly see Alma join hands with as yourself. If I,
-her father, hold you worthy to live with her, surely you cannot
-hold yourself unworthy to die with her.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke he held out his hand to Alan, and he, unable
-to find words to answer him, grasped it in silence, broken only
-by a murmur of approval from the assembled members of the
-Council.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, my friend, for saying that!” said the President
-to Tremayne. “Alan can ask no better assurance unless he
-has it from Alma’s own lips. But now I have something more
-to say, something that will give the true reason for my recall of
-all the Aerians who were beyond our borders. Let the words
-you are now going to hear be heard with all respect, for they
-are not mine but those of the Master himself.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Amidst an expectant silence he now resumed his place at
-the head of the Council table, and bidding Alan and the Vice-President
-to be seated, took a long parchment envelope brown
-with age from the breast of his tunic and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“This contains the last words of him who prophesied the
-doom with which humanity now stands confronted, and who
-thus speaks to us from the past, and gives us good counsel and
-comfort in the hour of our perplexity and sorrow. It has been
-handed down with its seal unbroken from father to son for four
-generations, and now it has fallen to me to break the seal and
-read what no eyes but those of Natas and my own have ever
-seen. This is the endorsement upon the cover&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>‘<em>To the son or daughter of my line who shall be the head of the House of Arnold
-in the fifth generation from me:&mdash;When the world is threatened with the final
-ruin that I have foreshadowed, open this and read my words to all who are then
-dwelling in Aeria.</em></p>
-
-<p class="marginrightindent"><span class="smcap">Natas.</span>’”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The President paused, and everyone waited with most
-anxious expectation as he opened the envelope and took from
-it four square sheets of parchment. He unfolded them and
-went on&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“When Vassilis Cosmo brought me the transcription of the
-message from Mars I saw that the time had come to obey the
-injunction endorsed on this envelope. I opened it, and this is
-what I read:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>‘The interpretation of the prophecy concerning the possible destruction of the
-world in the fifth generation from now, written by me in the twenty-fifth year
-of the Peace, and commanded to be read every fifth year in the ears of the
-descendants of those now dwelling in Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>‘When the War of the Terror was over, and there was peace on earth, I devoted
-the declining years of my life to the study of that noblest of all sciences which
-teaches the lore of the stars and the constitution of the universe. In the
-fifteenth year of the Peace, that is to say, in the year of the Christian Era 1920,
-a new star appeared towards the constellation of Andromeda, which shone with
-great brilliancy for thirty-five nights, and then faded gradually away into the
-abysses of space.</p>
-
-<p>‘Seeking into the causes of this phenomenon, I found that it was due to the
-collision of two opaque bodies beyond the bounds of the solar system, which
-doubtless had been travelling towards each other for centuries through space.
-So enormous was the heat evolved by the conversion of the motion of the two
-bodies, that their materials were resolved into their component elements, and
-what had been two bodies as solid as the earth, though immensely larger,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-now became an enormous fire-mist, a chaos of blazing storms and burning billows
-of incandescent matter.</p>
-
-<p>‘I observed it closely from the time of its first appearance until the most
-powerful telescope at my command could no longer detect it. I found that,
-vastly remote as it was, the course which it pursued until it was lost to view
-proved that it was still within the sphere of the sun’s attraction, and that therefore
-a time must come when it would reach its point of greatest distance, and
-return.</p>
-
-<p>‘Such calculations as I was able to make during the brief period of my
-observation, showed that it would re-enter the confines of the solar system in
-one hundred and twelve years from then, and, travelling with constantly
-accelerated motion would become visible to the inhabitants of the earth five
-years later. I learnt, too, that unless it should be deflected from its path by
-the attraction of bodies unknown to terrestrial astronomers it would cross the
-orbit of the earth in the month of September in the year 2037, that is to say, in
-the fifth generation of men from my own day.</p>
-
-<p>‘If my calculations are correct, the earth will during that month pass through
-an ocean of fire that will destroy all living things upon its surface, both plants
-and animals.</p>
-
-<p>‘For the space of ten hours, or, it may well be, more, while the planet is
-passing through the fire-mist, there will be no water upon the face of the earth,
-but the whole globe will be surrounded with a vast nebulous mantle of steam.
-At the end of this time it will emerge from the fiery sea, the steam-cloud will be
-recondensed and fall in a deluge upon the land, and the world, with a changed
-face, with new oceans and new continents, will pursue her impassive way,
-lifeless, through space.</p>
-
-<p>‘But even in the face of so tremendous a cataclysm as this, it is not for human
-genius to despair or human faith to be confounded. The new earth may be
-repeopled, and you may be the parents of the new humanity. Though
-innumerable millions shall die, yet the chosen few will be saved, if the Master
-of Destiny shall permit, and from among you the chosen few shall come.</p>
-
-<p>‘The caverns of Mount Austral are deep and cool, and enclosed by walls of
-living rock, deep rooted in the foundations of the world. In those days, if you
-shall have made good use of the heritage we leave you, you shall be almost as
-gods in skill and knowledge, and you shall find a means to make this a fortress
-whose strength shall defy the convulsions of the elements and preserve a remnant
-of human life upon the earth.</p>
-
-<p>‘When you have done this, you that remain shall prepare to meet the
-inevitable end, for only a few among your many thousands can be saved. Yet,
-if you have grown in wisdom and faith as well as in knowledge and skill, you
-shall not disquiet yourselves about this, for sooner or later death is certain to all,
-and you will but pass together through the shadows instead of singly.</p>
-
-<p>‘When the final hour comes, and the breath of the blazing firmament is hot
-upon your brows, may He in whose Hand the fate of worlds and races lies, give
-you strength and wisdom to compose yourselves for death as men who know
-that it is but the dreamless sleep that parts to-morrow from to-day.’</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>“Those are the words of the Master,” said the President,
-reverently laying down the parchment sheets on the table<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-before him. “And it is for us to hear and obey. You will
-now see why it was necessary for all our sons that had gone
-forth to battle to be recalled, for among them there are many
-who can justly lay claim to be of the flower of Aerian manhood.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow I will read the message from Mars and the
-commands of the Master, in the temple, to a congregation of all
-the fathers and mothers in Aeria, and then it shall be their task
-to prepare their children for the doom which awaits them in
-common with the rest of humanity. The remainder of to-day
-we will devote to the task of considering how the commands
-of the Master may be best obeyed.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_336.jpg" width="350" height="64" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVI.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">SENTENCE OF DEATH.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_a.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-A">AT ten o’clock on the following morning the great
-temple of Aeria was filled by a congregation of
-men and matrons who had been summoned together
-to hear what may, without exaggeration, be
-described as the death-sentence of the world and
-the funeral oration of the human race.</p>
-
-<p>As had been previously decided by the President and
-Council, only the heads of families were present. Of these,
-some had but just welcomed their first-born into the world,
-while others, standing almost on the brink of the grave, could
-see their children of the fourth generation growing up from
-infancy to youth.</p>
-
-<p>When the President commenced his address by reading
-in solemnly impressive tones the prophecy of Natas, those
-present knew instinctively what they had been called together
-to hear. The possibility of the world being overwhelmed by
-some tremendous catastrophe in the fifth generation from the
-year of the Peace was no new or unawaited prospect to the
-Aerians.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore there was no panic, no sudden outburst of sorrow
-or dismay, among the grave, earnest congregation assembled in
-the temple when the President, having read the prophecy,
-went on to say&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“It is now my solemn duty as Chief Magistrate of Aeria to
-tell you, the heads of the families of our race, that, in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-mysterious workings of destiny, which we can only accept with
-reverence and resignation, the time has come for us to prepare
-to meet, with the fortitude worthy of our position among the
-races of mankind, the doom which is as inevitable as it is
-universal. The confirmation of the prophecy of Natas has
-come to us across the abysses of space from one of those sister
-worlds which, as the Master said, should see with fear and
-trembling the passing of the messenger of Fate.</p>
-
-<p>“On the night of Tuesday last, Vassilis Cosmo received
-from the planet Mars a photogrammic message, the transcription
-of which into our language reads thus&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>‘A cometary body, primarily formed by the meeting of two extinguished
-astral spheres at 10 hrs. 38 min. 42 sec. on the night of the 13th of October, in
-the year 1920, terrestrial reckoning, will cross the orbit of the earth at 11 hrs.
-55 min. 22 sec. on the night of the 23rd of September next, time corrected to
-the meridian of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>‘At this hour the earth will arrive at the point of intersection, and will pass
-obliquely through the central portion or nucleus of the body. This portion is
-composed of incandescent metallic gases interspersed with semi-fluid masses,
-which on contact with the earth’s atmosphere will probably be vaporised.</p>
-
-<p>‘The constituents of the incandescent nucleus are iron, gold, tellurium,
-chromium, oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon, with smaller quantities of many other
-substances which spectrum analysis will disclose to you on the appearance of the
-comet which will become visible from Aeria at 8 hrs. 13 min. <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> on the 15th of
-July, when its right ascension will be 15 hrs. 24 min. 17 sec, and its declination
-north 10 deg. 42 min. 17 sec. Here follow the detailed calculations upon
-which the foregoing conclusions are based.’</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>“With these calculations,” continued the President, “this
-is neither the time nor the place to deal, for I know that all
-here will be satisfied when I say that for the last three days
-they have been submitted to the critical examination of our
-best astronomers and mathematicians, and that not the
-slightest flaw has been found in them.</p>
-
-<p>“This being so, the only course left open to us as reasonable
-beings is to prepare to look the inevitable in the face, and
-to play our part in the closing scene of the life-drama of
-humanity as men and women who believe that the life we are
-living here is but a stage on our journey through infinity, and
-that the fiery sign which will soon appear in the heavens will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-be to us but a beacon light on the ultimate shore of Time
-casting a guiding ray over the ocean of Eternity.”</p>
-
-<p>He paused for a moment and looked down upon the hushed
-throng at his feet. The instantaneous silence was broken by a
-long, low, inarticulate murmur. Thousands of pale faces were
-upturned towards him, from thousands of eyes there came one
-appealing upward glance, and then every head in the great
-assembly was bowed in silence and resignation.</p>
-
-<p>The death-sentence had been passed. There was no appeal
-from it, and there was no rebellion against it. The voice of
-Fate had spoken, and it was not for such men as the Aerians
-to sacrifice their reason or their dignity by cavilling at it.</p>
-
-<p>The President bent his head with the rest, and for several
-moments there was silence throughout the vast area of the
-temple. Then he took up from the desk in front of the
-rostrum the four sheets of parchment which contained the last
-message and commands of Natas, and read them out to the
-assembly.</p>
-
-<p>The perusal was listened to in breathless silence. It was
-like his voice speaking across the generations from the urn
-containing his ashes and standing there in their midst. When
-the President had finished, he laid the sheets down again and
-said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Thus the eye of the Master, looking across the years which
-separated his day from ours, has seen one gleam of light, one
-ray of hope piercing the black pall of desolation which is about
-to fall upon the world, and it is for us to follow where he has
-pointed the way.</p>
-
-<p>“I have now discharged the first part of the solemn and
-terrible duty which has devolved upon me. It is now for you
-to communicate the tidings you have heard to your families, a
-task which, however awful it may be for loving parents to be
-charged with, you will yet find strength to perform, even as
-your children shall find strength to hear their inevitable doom
-from those lips which will best know how to soften the tidings
-of death to them.</p>
-
-<p>“When you have done this we will set about making the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-choice of those who, if it shall please the Master of Destiny,
-shall be the Children of Deliverance and the parents of the
-new race that shall repeople the earth when cosmos once more
-succeeds to chaos.</p>
-
-<p>“If that shall be permitted, then we, who shall never see the
-new world, may yet go down to the grave knowing that we
-shall live again in our children, for these will be the children,
-not only of a few families among us, but sons and daughters of
-Aeria, the most perfect flower of our race, and in them, if we
-choose them wisely, the world, purged by fire of the dross of
-human wickedness, will find a new destiny, and the Golden
-Age shall return to earth once more.”</p>
-
-<p>As the President finished speaking, he held up his hands as
-though in blessing, and once more every head was bent. Then
-the great doors of the temple swung open, the assembly divided
-into four streams, and passed silently as a congregation of
-shadows out of the building.</p>
-
-<p>That night the story of the world’s approaching doom was
-told in every home in Aeria. Children on the threshold of
-youth learnt that for them youth would never come; youths
-and maidens on the verge of manhood and womanhood learnt
-that the bright promise of their lives could now never be
-fulfilled; and lovers just about to join hands for life saw the
-grave opening at their feet, and parting them in their earthly
-personalities for ever. That they would meet again upon a
-higher plane of existence was the first and most firmly held
-article of their faith, but so far as the affairs of this world were
-concerned the end was in sight.</p>
-
-<p>In a less highly developed, a less perfectly organised, state
-of society, the almost immediate result would have been the
-end of all control, and the dissolution of all but the most
-elementary bonds of interest or affection that exist between
-men and men.</p>
-
-<p>But in Aeria this was not possible. The firm belief, ingrained
-into the very being of all who had reached the age of
-thought, that where men left off here, whether in good or
-evil, they would begin their lives again hereafter, precluded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-even the thought of such a lapse into social anarchy and individual
-sin.</p>
-
-<p>For, happily for them, the union of true religion with true
-philosophy had now been accomplished in a national faith, and
-the result was that even the terrors of the universal end which
-was so near failed to shake the fortitude that was founded on
-a basis firmer than that of the world itself.</p>
-
-<p>Though every home in the valley had its tragedy that night,
-a tragedy too sacred in its unspeakable solemnity for any mere
-words to describe it, when the next morning came the first
-bitterness of death had already passed.</p>
-
-<p>Saving only the little children, who, too young to understand,
-laughed and played and sang in the sunlight as usual,
-in happy unconsciousness of their coming fate, the dwellers in
-Aeria rose with the next sunrise from their sleepless couches
-and went about their daily associations much as they had done
-the day before.</p>
-
-<p>They did so rather as a matter of routine and discipline
-than of necessity, for now nothing more was necessary on
-earth. They had ample supplies of food to last them beyond
-the time when they would have no more need of it. It was of
-no use to dress the gardens and vineyards, or to till the fields
-that would be blasted into wildernesses before the harvest could
-be reaped.</p>
-
-<p>There was no need to pursue further the triumphs of
-creative art and science which had transfigured Aeria into a
-paradise and a fairyland, for in a few weeks all these would
-be crumbled to dust with their own sepulchres&mdash;and yet they
-took up the work that lay nearest to their hands and went on
-with it as though they believed that there were still ages of
-life before humanity, and that the empire of Aeria was to
-endure for ever.</p>
-
-<p>They knew that in work only lay the refuge from the
-torment of apprehension which might in the end drive even
-their highly disciplined minds into the delirium of despair
-and transform their orderly paradise into a pandemonium of
-anarchy and terror.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As soon as the first shock of inevitable horror had passed, as
-it did during that first terrible night when the death-sentence
-went from lip to lip throughout the land, their proud spirits
-rose superior to their physical fears and conquered them, and
-they resolved that, until the fatal hour came, nothing short of
-the dissolution of the world should put an end to social order
-in Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>They were the royal race of earth, and when death came
-they would meet it crowned and sceptred in the gates of their
-palaces, and die as men who had solved the secret of life and
-death and so had no fear.</p>
-
-<p>With the war that was raging beyond their borders they
-had now no personal concern. The quarrels of men and
-nations were as the bickerings of children in the presence of
-the fate that would so soon involve the world in ruin. And
-yet the rulers of Aeria were not willing that this fate should
-overtake their fellow-men in the delirium of blood-drunkenness.</p>
-
-<p>They recognised that their duty to the nations bade them
-send the warning of the world’s approaching fate far and wide
-through the earth and call for the cessation of strife, so that
-humanity might set its house in order and prepare to meet
-its end.</p>
-
-<p>Whether the warning would be received or not was another
-matter. It was possible that both the Tsarina and the Sultan
-would laugh it to scorn, and pursue their path of now certain
-conquest through carnage and devastation to the end. That,
-however, was their concern.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the Council decided to despatch an envoy to
-summon the warring nations to cease their strife for the now
-more than ever worthless prizes of earthly empire, and to
-prepare for the cataclysm which would so soon dissolve all
-empires and kingdoms to nothing in the fiery crucible of the
-coming chaos, Alan at once renewed his petition and asked to
-be allowed to man the <em>Avenger</em> with a crew of volunteers and
-convey the warning to the Sultan and the Tsarina.</p>
-
-<p>Since his second return to Aeria no word of love had passed
-between him and Alma. He was still too proud to become a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-suitor even to her, knowing as he did that she had looked upon
-him as polluted by his involuntary relations with Olga. As
-before, they had met as friends whose friendship was warmed
-by the memory of an early but bygone love.</p>
-
-<p>They had talked calmly and dispassionately of the coming
-end of earthly things, but neither of them had let fall any
-hint of a desire to meet it hand and hand with the other. His
-lips were sealed by the pride and anger of humiliation and
-hers by a spiritual exaltation which in the presence of
-approaching death raised her above the consideration of
-earthly love to the contemplation of even more solemn and
-holier things.</p>
-
-<p>Then there happened an entirely unexpected event, which
-completely changed their relationship in an instant. On the
-third day after the delivery of the message in the temple a
-company composed of twenty old men, the heads of the noblest
-families in Aeria, presented to the President in Council, a
-petition, signed by every father and mother in the nation,
-praying that all in whose veins flowed the blood of Natas,
-Richard Arnold, and Alan Tremayne should, irrespective of all
-other considerations, be included among those who were
-destined to seek in the caverns of Mount Austral the one
-chance of escape from the universal doom.</p>
-
-<p>So obvious and so weighty were the reasons advanced in
-support of the petition that when, like all other matters of
-State, it was put to the vote of the Council, the only dissentient
-voices were those of the President and the Vice-President.</p>
-
-<p>The immediate effect of this decision&mdash;from which, by the
-laws of Aeria, there was no appeal&mdash;was that Alma, Isma, and
-Alan were exempted from the ordeal of selection and numbered
-beforehand among the Children of Deliverance.</p>
-
-<p>The President took upon himself the duty of communicating
-this decision to those whom it so deeply concerned. He
-told Alan first, and this was the half-expected reply that he
-received&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“No, father, I have never disobeyed you or the Council, as
-you know, but I tell you now frankly that I will not take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-advantage of what is after all only the accident of birth to
-save my life in such a crisis as this.</p>
-
-<p>“Not only are there thousands of others in Aeria as good
-as I am, but I have already told you that, save under one condition,
-which you know as well as I do can never be realised,
-I have not the slightest desire to survive the ruin of the world.
-You may call this disobedience, rebellion, if you will, but it is
-my last resolve, and in such a time as this one does not make
-resolves lightly.”</p>
-
-<p>Alan said this standing facing his father in his private
-study. The President looked at him for a moment or two
-with eyes which, though grave, were neither reproving nor
-reproachful. Then he said with the shadow of a smile upon
-his lips&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“It is both disobedience and rebellion, my son, but though
-the Chief Magistrate must condemn it, your father cannot.
-I know, too, that not even the Council of Aeria can now
-enforce its commands. After all, the last penalty is but death,
-and that is a mockery now.</p>
-
-<p>“I fully understand, too, the spirit in which you refuse the
-reprieve from the general doom, and prefer instead a mission
-which can scarcely end save in honourable death. It is the
-most noble one that you can choose, and you of all other men
-are the man to perform it.</p>
-
-<p>“You have shown our enemies that you can strike hard in
-battle, so if they believe anyone they will believe you when
-you go to them with a message of peace enforced by such a
-solemn warning as you will take.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, father,” replied Alan simply, “not for what
-you say of me, but for the consent that your words imply.
-But what about the air-ship and her crew? I can do nothing
-without them, yet I cannot have them without the consent of
-the Council. Can you get that for me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe so,” said the President. “And if I can I will,
-since you are resolved to go, and since the honour of our name
-compels me to consent. But I must tell you that I feel sure
-that it will only be given conditionally.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And what will the condition be?”</p>
-
-<p>“That if you survive your mission you will return to Aeria
-before the end comes. They will have a right to demand that,
-for it is no part of your duty to deprive your companions of
-the chance of life, slender though it may be, that will remain
-for those who may be among the chosen.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is true,” replied Alan, bending his head in acquiescence.
-“If we escape with our lives they shall return, though
-I shall not”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“You will not return, Alan? Why, where are you going?
-Surely you are not going to leave Aeria again, and at such a
-time as this; you, who are already one of the chosen, a first-born
-son of the Master’s line!”</p>
-
-<p>It was Alan’s mother who spoke. She had entered the
-room just as he had uttered the last sentence, and the ominous
-words struck a sudden chill to her heart. She came towards
-him with her eyes full of tears of apprehension and her
-hands stretched out pleadingly towards him.</p>
-
-<p>Now that the first terror of the crisis was past, and there
-was one definite, however slender, hope of safety, she clung to
-it passionately for Alan’s sake with a faith that made light of
-all the fearful difficulties which lay in the way of its realisation.
-In the sublime egotism of her mother-love the fate of a world
-shrank into insignificance in comparison with the one chance
-of safety for her only son.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, mother,” replied Alan, taking her hands in his and
-bending down until his lips touched her upturned brow. “I
-am going to leave Aeria again to proclaim the Truce of God
-against the hour of His judgment, and I have just told my
-father that I shall not return”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, my boy, you must not say that. You must not
-rob us of the one ray of light in this awful darkness that is
-falling upon us&mdash;of our one hope in all the world’s despair!”
-cried his mother, letting go his hands and laying her own upon
-his shoulders as she looked up into his face with eyes that
-were now overflowing with tears.</p>
-
-<p>“You will not leave us now, surely, for if we lost you we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
-could not even take the chance of life ourselves, for it would
-not be worth having.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor would it be worth having, my mother, either to you
-or to me,” he replied, gently laying his hand on hers, “if I
-lived and left untried the attempt that it is my plain duty to
-make. You would see me a lonely and unmated man among
-the parents of the new race, a man with a shadow upon his
-name, and the memory of an unfulfilled duty behind him.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember that it is I who have brought the guilt of
-blood back again upon earth. Would you have me outlive all
-the millions of my fellow-creatures with the knowledge that I
-had not made one effort to bring back that peace on earth
-which was lost through me before the last summons comes to
-all humanity?”</p>
-
-<p>“Alan is right, wife,” interrupted the President, before she
-could make any reply to her son’s appeal. “It is his duty to
-save, if he can, his fellow-creatures from being overwhelmed
-in the midst of their madness and their sin. Remember that,
-according to our faith, as all these millions, who are now drunk
-with battle and slaughter, and mad with the rage of conquest
-and revenge, end this life, so they must begin the next.</p>
-
-<p>“There is time for him to speak and for them to hear, but
-whether they hear him or not, if he has spoken he has done his
-duty. Is it not better that if needs be he should die doing it
-than live and leave it undone?”</p>
-
-<p>The weighty words, spoken as they were in a tone of
-blended affection and authority, found a fitting echo in his
-wife’s breast. She stood for a moment between her husband
-and her son, looking from the one to the other. Then she
-dried her tears, and replied in a tone of gentle dignity and
-resignation&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I see. You are right and I was wrong. It is his
-duty to go, and he must go. But,” she continued, turning to
-Alan with the sudden light of a new hope in her eyes, “if I
-bid you ‘God-speed,’ my son, you will promise one thing,
-won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, mother, I will&mdash;whatever it is.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Then promise me that if it shall be proved possible for you
-to live in happiness as well as in honour, you will come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he replied, smiling gravely as he once more took
-her outstretched hands. “I will promise that as gladly as I
-would promise to enter Heaven if I saw the gates open before
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you shall go, and God go with you and bring you
-back in safety to us!” she said. Then, turning abruptly, she
-went out of the room, leaving them both wondering at her
-words.</p>
-
-<p>This took place early on the morning of the 21st of May.
-An hour later the President had applied in Alan’s name for
-the permission of the Council for him to select a crew of twenty
-volunteers and to take the <em>Avenger</em> to Europe on his mission
-to the warring peoples and to proclaim peace on earth and
-breathing space for humanity to prepare for its end. But
-then a new difficulty presented itself. Alexis, in spite of all
-Alan’s remonstrances to the contrary, declared that he should
-never leave Aeria without him.</p>
-
-<p>“I have shared in your exile and your return,” he said, in
-answer to all arguments, “and, by the honour of the Golden
-Wings, I swear that I will either go with you now or you shall
-see me fall dead the moment that you leave the earth!”</p>
-
-<p>This was the only oath that ever was heard upon the lips of
-an Aerian, and it was irrevocable, so, as there was no choice,
-Alan was forced to consent, and Alexis made ready to bid a
-last farewell to Aeria and all its dear associations.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_347.jpg" width="350" height="63" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">ALMA SPEAKS.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_t.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-T">THAT night Alan, with his heart too full even for
-the society of his own home, went out of the
-city a little before midnight and walked down
-towards the western shore of the lake, where
-there still stood the same grove of palms in
-which, more than a hundred and thirty years before, Natasha
-and Richard Arnold had plighted their despairing troth and
-under the shadow of what threatened to be an eternal separation
-spoken the first words of love that had ever passed their
-lips.</p>
-
-<p>It was not altogether accident that guided his steps in this
-direction, for all day he had been reviewing the strange chain
-of events which united the fate of his ancestors with his own,
-and it was natural that the most romantic episode in their
-lives should inspire him with a desire to see the scene of it
-once more.</p>
-
-<p>So it came about that he stood, on what he believed to be
-his last night in Aeria, beneath the self-same ancient palms
-which five generations before had heard Natasha confess her
-love for the man who had sworn to give her in exchange for it
-that empire of peace which he, their descendant, had been the
-means of losing.</p>
-
-<p>The story was, of course, familiar to him in its minutest
-details, and as he stood there, his own heart heavy with a
-hopeless sorrow, he pictured his great ancestor standing on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-same spot, holding the means of universal conquest in his
-hands, and yet accounting all things as worthless because
-the empire within his grasp must lack the supreme crown of
-a woman’s love.</p>
-
-<p>Then, looking back through the mists of the years that had
-gone by since then, he seemed to see the very shape of the
-Angel moving over the soft green sward where now the broad
-marble-paved roadway gleamed white beneath the trees, and to
-hear the musical murmur of her voice even as Richard Arnold
-had heard it on that eventful night.</p>
-
-<p>“Alan!”</p>
-
-<p>Was he dreaming, or was it the voice of his ancestress
-speaking to his soul in that hour of his lonely sorrow? A
-pale, shimmering, ghostly shape flitted across the quivering
-plumes of the palm-trees, dropped softly to the ground, and
-Alma stood before him in the well of her aerial boat.</p>
-
-<p>Before his amazement had permitted him to utter a word
-she had stepped out and was coming towards him with outstretched
-hands, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“They told me I should find you here. Alan, I have come
-to ask you to forgive me if you&mdash;before you go upon this
-mission of yours, if go you must.”</p>
-
-<p>“To forgive you, Alma!” he exclaimed, recoiling a pace in
-sheer astonishment at her presence and her words. “What
-can I have to forgive <em>you</em>? Is it not rather”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“No, Alan, it is not,” she said quickly, still holding out her
-hands to him and looking up at him with faintly flushed
-cheeks and shining eyes. “I see it all clearly now. Isma
-was right. It is I who have sinned against you, and it is for
-me to ask forgiveness.”</p>
-
-<p>“How can you ask that of me, Alma? How have you
-harmed me?” he asked, still bewildered by her beauty and
-the enigmas that she spoke in, yet taking her hands, and, as
-if by instinct, drawing her towards him.</p>
-
-<p>“I will answer that afterwards,” she said quickly, as
-though inspired by some sudden thought. “But tell me,
-first, are you quite resolved to go upon this mission?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he said with an almost imperceptible quiver in his
-voice. “Have I not had a great, if not a guilty, share in
-bringing this curse upon the world, and is it not fitting that
-I should give my last days to the task, however hopeless, of
-bringing back peace on earth so that men may die sane and
-not mad?”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Alan, is that a higher duty than you owe to your
-family and your people? You know that in you centre all
-their hopes for the future, if there is to be one. With you
-would die the name of Arnold, and the direct line of Natas
-and Natasha.”</p>
-
-<p>“And with me they would die even if I went with the
-Children of Deliverance into the caverns of Mount Austral
-and survived the ruin of the world. How can you mock me
-like that, Alma? Have I not suffered enough for my weakness
-and my folly that you would condemn me to wander an
-exile in the wilderness that the world will be when it has
-passed through its baptism of fire?</p>
-
-<p>“What is the swift death of battle or the short agony of
-the conflagration of the world compared with the long death-in-life
-that I should drag out alone in the new world that may
-arise from the ruins of this one?”</p>
-
-<p>“And why alone, Alan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why alone? Can you ask me that, Alma? Surely you
-are mocking me now. Can you ask why I should be alone if
-I survived with the remnant of our people? Do you not even
-yet know why I choose the certainty of death rather than the
-chance of life?”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Alan, what if I were to tell you that you would not
-go alone to the caverns, and that if the chosen few survive
-you will not wander alone on the wilderness of the new
-world?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should tell you, Alma, that you meant to sacrifice yourself
-to save me, and that I would not accept the sacrifice even
-at your hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sacrifice! No, Alan, I would not outlive the world, even
-with you, on those terms. A woman of Aeria does not sell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-herself even for sentiment. This is no time for secrets or
-false shame, and I tell you frankly that if you had accepted
-the order of the Council, you should have lived and I would
-have died.</p>
-
-<p>“But your rebellion proved to me that Isma was right
-when she rebuked my false pride by saying that the man who
-has fallen and risen again is better and stronger than he who
-has never suffered”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“But, Alma, remember”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“No, you must not interrupt me now, or what ought to be
-said may never be spoken. I know what you were going to
-say. You were going to tell me to remember that Olga
-Romanoff is still alive. Let her live&mdash;and let God judge her
-for her sins in the judgment that is so soon to come! What
-have we to do with her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing, Alma, after you have said that, for it tells me
-that in your eyes the stain is purged and the fault forgiven.
-I will take the message to her as to the rest of the world. If
-she receives it in peace then there shall be peace, and God
-shall judge between us”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“And if not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I will pit my single ship against hers and her fleet
-and only one of us, if either, shall see the end.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if that is you&mdash;what then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it will be for you&mdash;under Heaven&mdash;to speak the
-words of life or death, for <a id="Ref_317"></a>only you can bid me live,
-Alma.”</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_317" class="figcenter" style="width: 435px;">
-<img src="images/i_352.jpg" width="435" height="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">“<span class="smcap">Only you can bid me live, Alma.</span>”
-<em><a href="#Ref_317">Page 317</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As he spoke the great lights on the mountain tops suddenly
-blazed out, shone for a few moments, and were extinguished
-again. It was the answering signal to one from Mars; but it
-joined two souls as well as two worlds, for by its light Alan
-saw on Alma’s face and in her eyes the one reprieve from death
-that honour would permit him to accept.</p>
-
-<p>Without waiting for the words that her now smiling lips
-were opening to utter, he took her unresisting in his arms.
-Then her proudly carried, wing-crowned head drooped at last
-in sweet submission, and rested on his heart; and as he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-turned her face up to his to take his kiss of re-betrothal, he
-said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“That tells me that I may live. Now we are immortal,
-you and I, for this kiss is our eternity!”</p>
-
-<p>Then their lips met, and for the instant Time had no more
-beginning or end. The impending ruin of the world was
-forgotten; for Love had spoken, and the very voice of Doom
-itself was silent amidst the happiness of their heedless
-souls.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_354.jpg" width="350" height="60" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE SIGN IN THE SKY.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_w.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-W">WHEN the news of what had happened at midnight
-in the palm grove was published the next morning
-far and wide through the valley of Aeria it would
-have been impossible to imagine that an irrevocable
-sentence of death was overhanging the
-land and all its inhabitants, save those who were to be selected
-to take the one chance that remained of surviving the chaos
-that was to come.</p>
-
-<p>There was no one in the valley to whom Alan’s story was
-not familiar in all its details, there was not a single heart that
-had not in the midst of its own happiness sympathised with
-him and Alma in their sorrow, and so, when that sorrow was
-at last turned into joy, everyone forgot for the moment the fate
-whose approach was so near and so certain, and rejoiced with
-them in the happiness that was great enough to raise them
-above the gloom that was already stealing over the world.</p>
-
-<p>But in the midst of the general rejoicing came the decision
-of the Council upon the request which Alan had submitted to
-his father, and this, though he was forced to confess it wise and
-just, was by no means what, in his enthusiasm, he could have
-wished. The rulers of Aeria absolutely refused to permit any
-of the air-ships to leave the valley for at least two months to
-come.</p>
-
-<p>They recognised with perfect approval the nobility of the
-resolve which Alan had taken to carry the message of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-world’s approaching end to those nations which he had been,
-partially at least, responsible for plunging into the horrors of
-war, but they insisted that the concerns of Aeria must, in their
-eyes, take precedence of those of the outside world.</p>
-
-<p>There was much to do, and the time for doing it was short.
-What was perhaps the greatest engineering task in the history
-of the world had to be conceived and completed within the
-next four months, and as Alan and Alexis were admittedly the
-two most skilful practical engineers in the State, the Council
-declined to allow them to run the almost certain risk of death
-at the hands of their enemies when their knowledge and skill
-ought to be devoted to the work of ensuring, as far as possible,
-the preservation of that remnant of the human race who
-should be destined to seek safety in the caverns of Mount
-Austral.</p>
-
-<p>When the completion of that work was made certain, then
-permission would be freely given to them and their companions
-to go forth and proclaim their warning to the world, subject
-only to the condition that they were to take every precaution
-consistent with the honour of their race to return while there
-was yet time for them to take their places among the Children
-of Deliverance should the selection fall upon them.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, telephonic messages were to be sent to all those
-portions of the world with which Aeria was still in communication,
-conveying the exact terms of the warning that had been
-received from Mars, and calling upon the astronomers in all
-the observatories on the globe to verify the calculations for
-themselves, and publish their conclusions to their respective
-nations as quickly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>With these terms Alan was of necessity obliged to be
-content. Indeed, when he came to review them in sober
-thought, he saw that, while nothing was to be lost, much was
-to be gained by submission to them.</p>
-
-<p>Though he still refused, even in spite of the knowledge that
-he would share with Alma the future if there was to be one,
-to obey the order of the Council which exempted him from
-the ordeal of selection, he thought and worked with just as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-much ardour as though the safety of the whole of the dwellers
-in Aeria, as well as his own, hung upon his efforts.</p>
-
-<p>The caverns of Mount Austral, like those of other limestone
-formations in various parts of the world, had been
-formed in some remote geological period by the solvent
-action of water charged with carbonic gas upon the limestone
-rocks.</p>
-
-<p>The entrance to them, discovered very soon after the valley
-had been colonised by the Terrorists in the first decade of the
-twentieth century, was situated on the inner slopes of the
-mountain about eight hundred feet above the level of the lake,
-which occupied the central portion of the valley.</p>
-
-<p>This lake, although fed by hundreds of streams from the
-surrounding mountains, always preserved the same level, in
-spite of the fact that it had no visible outlet. Those who
-first explored the caverns found the explanation of this
-phenomenon.</p>
-
-<p>Below the floors of the vast chambers which penetrated the
-heart of the mountain for a distance of nearly three miles there
-ran a deep chasm, through which rushed in a black, swift,
-silent stream the surplus waters of the lake. This stream was
-nearly a thousand feet below the entrance to the caverns and
-half that distance below the floor of the lowest chambers and
-galleries.</p>
-
-<p>The scheme conceived by Alan and Alexis and their fellow-workers
-was in fact nothing less than the damming of this
-subterranean stream by a mighty sluice-gate composed of one
-huge sheet of metal which, running down into grooves cut in
-the solid rock and metal-sheathed, should completely close the
-inner mouth of the tunnel by which the waters entered the
-caverns.</p>
-
-<p>This, once successfully fixed in its place, would deprive the
-lake of its only known outlet. The streams would go on
-flowing from the mountains and the waters of the lake would
-rise. The upper entrance would, when the fatal moment came,
-also be closed, not by one such door, but by three that would
-slide down one behind the other in the upper tunnel, which,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-with a diameter of about thirty feet and a height of almost
-fifty, ran for nearly a quarter of a mile from the side of the
-mountain to the first of the chambers.</p>
-
-<p>The spaces between these doors would be filled with ice
-artificially frozen, and shafts to allow for expansion should the
-ice melt and the water boil would run from them vertically,
-piercing the mountain-side. When the waters rose to the level
-of the entrance the doors would be lowered and the space filled
-with water and frozen. Then the waters would go on rising,
-the entrance would be submerged, and the defences of the
-fortress in which the remnant of humanity was to make its last
-stand for life would be complete.</p>
-
-<p>But in addition to these outer defences there was an enormous
-amount of work to be done in fitting the interior of the
-caverns to receive those for whom they were to form an asylum.</p>
-
-<p>They were already lighted by myriads of electric lamps,
-but the source of light was outside, and this had to be replaced
-by power-stations inside. Provision had to be made for keeping
-the air pure and vital, for supplying food and drink for
-an almost indefinite time, and for storing up a sufficiency of
-seeds and roots and treasures of art and creative skill, so that
-the new world might be clothed again with verdure and
-nothing essential of the splendid civilisation of Aeria be lost.</p>
-
-<p>Such, in the briefest outline, was the momentous task to
-which the Aerians devoted all their splendid genius and
-unconquerable energies, and day by day and week by week
-they toiled at it, while the fatal hour which was to witness
-the last agony of man upon earth swiftly drew nearer and nearer.</p>
-
-<p>The messages to the outside world had been sent and
-replied to. Those to the astronomers and to the governments
-of the Federation had been acknowledged in formal terms,
-which thinly concealed the incredulity with which they had
-been received.</p>
-
-<p>Olga had treated the message with the silent disdain of a
-conquering autocrat&mdash;such, as in sober truth, she now was.
-The Sultan had replied to it in a despatch in which the dignity
-of a victorious despot and the fatalism of the religious fanatic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-were characteristically blended. Then one by one the telephonic
-communications with the various parts of the world
-ceased; messages were sent out and repeated, but no answer
-came back.</p>
-
-<p>First Europe, then Britain, then South Africa, America,
-and Australia, ceased to respond to the signals; and by the
-beginning of July Aeria was completely isolated from the rest
-of the world&mdash;probably the only stronghold that now remained
-unsubdued by the conquering fleets of the Sultan and the
-Tsarina.</p>
-
-<p>Still the sentinel ships, hanging high in air over the
-valley, and constantly patrolling the outer slopes of the mountains,
-saw no sign of hostile approach. The last messages that
-had been received from the great cities of the Federation had
-told brief but fearful stories of the desolation that was following
-in the path of Moslem and Russian conquest.</p>
-
-<p>The bridges of Gibraltar and the Bosphorus had been
-forced, and thousands after thousands of Moslem troops had been
-poured into Europe. Frenzied by fanaticism and the new-born
-lust of battle and conquest, the hordes of Asiatic tribesmen
-who had escaped the one terrific onslaught of the fleet under
-the command of Alexis had, now that the guardian ships were
-withdrawn, been hurried through Russia, and hurled upon the
-wealthy and almost defenceless cities of Western Europe.</p>
-
-<p>The Federation was on the point of utter collapse, divided
-in its counsels, confused in its plans of defence, its armies
-undisciplined, and its fleets disorganised and daily diminishing
-in number and effectiveness.</p>
-
-<p>In America, Australia, and Southern Africa there was
-anarchy on earth and terror in the air. Cities had been
-terrorised into capitulation by aerial squadrons, and then
-looted and burnt, and their ruins given up to be the miserable
-prey of the revolutionaries who now, as ever, had taken advantage
-of the universal panic to revolt against all government,
-and deny all rights but that which they claimed to prey upon
-the helpless, all liberty that was not license, and all property
-that was not plunder.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The last tidings of all that came from Europe were received
-from Britain, and, after recounting the destruction of London
-and the collapse of the Government, concluded with the news
-that Olga had publicly embraced the faith of Islam, and, in
-conjunction with the Sultan, whom she was to marry as
-soon as the conquest of Europe was finally complete, was
-forcibly converting her Russian subjects to the creed of the
-Koran.</p>
-
-<p>So the affairs of the world stood when the sun went down
-on the 15th of July. On the meridian of Aeria it set at nine
-minutes to eight; at thirteen minutes past eight, according to
-the calculations made by the Martian and verified by the
-Aerian astronomers, the herald of Fate would approach within
-the range of terrestrial vision.</p>
-
-<p>Before the brief period of tropical twilight had passed every
-telescope in the valley was turned to that spot in the constellation
-of Andromeda at which it was predicted to become
-visible. As the revolving earth swept Aeria into the shadow
-of night every light was extinguished, for it was known that
-the astronomers of Mars would be anxiously watching for a
-signal that would announce the correctness or the error of their
-calculations.</p>
-
-<p>Vassilis Cosmo, seated at the eye-piece of the great equatorial
-telescope on Mount Austral, with his hand on the switch
-which controlled the electric currents that were waiting to do
-his bidding, watched the fields of space darken, and the stars
-of Andromeda shine out. Just a little below the line which
-joins the Square of Pegasus with the constellation of Cassiopeia,
-he saw, as usual, the oval, luminous cloud of the great nebula
-in Andromeda.</p>
-
-<p>Four degrees towards the zenith, above the centre of the
-star-cloud, a tiny fan-shaped spray, faint and pale as a dissolving
-puff of white smoke, was floating in the black abyss of space.
-Precisely at the thirteenth minute of the hour he turned the
-switch, and the great suns on the mountain-tops blazed out and
-flashed the signal to the sister-world to tell its inhabitants that
-their prediction had been fulfilled to the second.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIX.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE TRUCE OF GOD.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_b.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-B">BY the 30th of July the work in the caverns was
-so far advanced that the Council was able to
-authorise the departure of Alan and his companions
-for the outside world. The great vertical
-sluice-door, a huge sheet of steel forty feet long,
-twenty wide, and eighteen inches thick, and footed with a great
-indiarubber pad, was in its place, suspended at the top of the
-steel-lined grooves, which had been sunk three feet into each
-of the rock walls of the chasm into which the water-tunnel
-from the lake opened.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of the 30th it was sent down into its final
-position. The momentous experiment proved completely
-successful. The huge mass of metal descended slowly over
-the mouth of the tunnel into the black, swift stream at the
-bottom of the chasm. As its enormous weight crushed the
-indiarubber pad down into all the inequalities of the floor the
-outrush of the waters instantly stopped, and the channel ran
-dry save for the fierce jets of water which spouted out over the
-top of the plate.</p>
-
-<p>The crevices through which these came were easily plugged,
-and when this was done it was found that the waters of the
-lake were rising at the rate of three feet an hour. This
-proved that, whether the lake had another outlet or not, the
-damming of the subterranean channels would be quite sufficient
-to flood the whole valley.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The gate was then raised again, and the waters permitted to
-flow as before. The triple doors at the entrance to the cavern
-were already in position when this was done, as the task of
-placing them had necessarily been much easier than the construction
-of the water-gate. Nothing but details now remained
-to be completed, and there was therefore no reason for any
-further postponement of Alan’s mission.</p>
-
-<p>Alexis had also succeeded in carrying his point, and getting
-permission to accompany Alan in the <em>Isma</em>. He had had no
-difficulty in satisfying the Council that the risk would be
-enormously diminished by sending two air-ships instead of one,
-for while Alan descended to the earth to convey his message to
-a hostile city, he would be able to remain in the air, dominating
-it with his guns, and ready to lay it in ruins if the flag of truce
-were not respected.</p>
-
-<p>But the two friends had gained even more than this, for in
-answer to their earnest pleadings, in which it may be suspected
-they were not altogether unsupported by those as vitally concerned
-as themselves, a joint family council had decided that,
-under the unparalleled circumstances of the case, there was no
-valid reason for refusing consent to their immediate union with
-the two faithful brides who had waited so long and so patiently
-for their lords.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, on the morning of the 31st, it came to pass that
-they stood upon the spot sanctified by the ashes of their great
-ancestors, and took each other for man and wife, for life or
-death, as the hazard of the world’s fate might decide, in the
-presence of a vast congregation of those who stood with feet
-already touching the brink of the valley of the shadow of
-death.</p>
-
-<p>No bridal so strange or solemn had ever been celebrated in
-the world before. It was human love and hope and genius,
-serene and confident in the presence of the most awful catastrophe
-that had ever befallen humanity, defying the fate that
-was about to overwhelm a world in destruction.</p>
-
-<p>That evening, as the sun was touching the tops of the
-western mountains, the last preparations for the voyage were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-completed, the last farewells exchanged, and the <em>Isma</em> and the
-<em>Avenger</em>, now renamed the <em>Alma</em> by the hands of her name-mother,
-rose into the air amid salvoes of aerial artillery, and
-winged their way northward over the Ridge.</p>
-
-<p>As they sped out over the plains of Northern Africa the
-sun sank, and out of the north-western heavens shone the
-luminous haze of the Fire-Cloud, which had now grown in
-visible magnitude until the two fan-like wings which spread
-out from its central nucleus spanned an arc of twenty degrees
-in the heavens.</p>
-
-<p>As the two air-ships sped on their northward course towards
-Alexandria, where Alan had decided to make his first attempt
-to stay the progress of the world-war, the two pairs of new-wedded
-lovers watched with anxious eyes from the decks of
-their flying craft the terrible portent in the skies whose meaning
-they above all others on earth were so well qualified to read.</p>
-
-<p>There could be no doubt now, even apart from all the
-elaborate calculations which had been made, that the prediction
-of the Martian astronomers was far more likely to be fulfilled
-than contradicted by the event.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, so great was the happiness they found in this strange
-fulfilment of the faint hopes of years of almost hopeless
-waiting that, even as they journeyed on through the night
-with this threatening sign of approaching ruin pouring its
-angry light out of the skies, their talk was still rather of love
-and life and hope than of the death and desolation which
-they knew to be overhanging their race with such remorseless
-certainty.</p>
-
-<p>They had lived and loved, and their love had found fruition.
-What more could they have asked of Fate than this, even if
-they could have prolonged their lives indefinitely by a mere
-effort of will? As Alan had said to Alma at the moment of
-their re-betrothal in the palm-grove, they were immortal now,
-and for them the death of a world was but an accident on the
-onward progress of an evolution in which such souls as theirs,
-veritable sparks of the divine fire itself, were the dominating
-factors.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As the Fire-Cloud paled in the West, and the eastern
-heavens brightened with the fore-glow of the coming dawn,
-the captains of the two vessels were roused by the signals
-from the conning-towers which told them that Alexandria was
-in sight.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as he got on deck Alan signalled to the <em>Isma</em> to
-come close alongside. As she did so and the morning greetings
-were exchanged, Alma appeared on deck, and suggested
-that Alexis and Isma should come and have breakfast on board
-the flagship, so that the two captains could discuss their final
-plans before descending to the city.</p>
-
-<p>The invitation was of course accepted, and an hour later
-the <em>Alma</em> commenced her descent towards the Sultan’s palace,
-above which, from a lofty flagstaff, the banner of Islam was
-floating lazily in the early morning breeze. She flew no other
-ensign save a broad white flag of truce that streamed out from
-the signal-mast at her stern.</p>
-
-<p>The whole city seemed asleep, secure in the conquests that
-had already been won. A single air-ship floated two thousand
-feet above the palace, and as he approached her Alan, keeping
-her well under his guns, flew from his mainmast the signal&mdash;“We
-come in peace. Will you respect the flag?”</p>
-
-<p>The Moslem captain saw at a glance that a single shell
-would annihilate his vessel, and that the <em>Alma</em> was perfectly
-protected by her consort, circling two thousand feet above him,
-so he signalled, “Yes, come alongside.” The <em>Alma</em> descended
-and swung round until she came on a level with the Moslem
-vessel, then she ran alongside within speaking distance, the
-doors of the deck-chambers were opened, and Alan, after
-exchanging salutes, asked her captain whether the Sultan was
-in his capital.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied the Moslem. “He is down yonder in his
-palace awaiting the coming of the Tsarina, for they are to join
-hands to-day and reign lord and mistress of the world they
-have conquered.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is the world, then, conquered?” asked Alan, with a smile
-on his lips and a note of scornful pity in his voice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the Moslem. “East and west, north and south,
-the world is ours, saving only your own little land, and for
-that, I suppose, you have come to make terms of peace.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have not come to make terms of peace for Aeria, but for
-the world,” replied Alan gravely. “But of that I must speak
-with your master. When will he be able to give me an
-audience?”</p>
-
-<p>“That I cannot say,” was the reply, “or even that he will
-hear you at all. But, pardon! I did not know that the angels
-of Paradise accompanied the Aerians on their voyages. Descend
-in peace, my master will receive you.”</p>
-
-<p>As he was speaking Alma, crowned with her crystal wings,
-and radiant with a beauty which, to the Moslem’s eyes,
-seemed something superhuman, had come from the after part
-of the vessel to Alan’s side. It was the first time that he had
-ever seen a woman of Aeria; and, with the innate chivalry of
-his race, he paid his involuntary homage to her as he would have
-done to an incarnation of one of the poetic dreams of his faith.</p>
-
-<p>Then salutes were exchanged again between the two
-captains and the <em>Alma</em> sank swiftly downwards until she
-hovered twenty feet above the terrace on which Alan had first
-spoken with the Sultan on the night that he captured the
-<em>Vindaya</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The approach of the Aerian warship had already summoned
-a party of guards to the roof, and after a brief parley a message
-was carried to the Sultan from Alan. A few minutes later
-Khalid stepped out of the doorway leading from the interior
-of the palace, magnificently attired as though for some great
-ceremonial.</p>
-
-<p>He looked up and saw Alan standing with Alma by his side
-on the after-deck of his ship. He saw, too, that the flag of
-truce was flying from the stern and that the guns were laid
-alongside instead of being pointed down upon the city. He
-raised his hand in salute and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I see you come in the guise of peace. If that is so you
-are welcome.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is peace if your Majesty will have it so,” replied Alan,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
-returning his salute, and at the same time making a sign for
-the <em>Alma</em> to descend to the roof of the palace. As her keels
-touched the floor of the terrace, the steps fell from the after
-doorway, and he came down, leaving Alma standing on deck
-by the open door.</p>
-
-<p>“Will not your companion honour my palace by touching
-its roof with her foot?” said Khalid, looking up at Alma as he
-exchanged greetings with Alan.</p>
-
-<p>“My companion, Sultan, is the wife of the man whom you
-turned your back upon on this very spot as a liar, a traitor,
-and a murderer,” said Alan, looking him straight in the eyes.
-“How, then, could she honour your palace by setting foot on
-its roof?”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the Sultan was abashed into silence by the
-directness of the rebuke, and then his Oriental subtlety and
-quickness of thought came to his aid, and, bending his head
-with royal dignity, he said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The angels do not mate with such men as that. The
-Tsarina must have been misled by appearances, perhaps,
-indeed, carried away by her hereditary hatred of your people.
-It is impossible that any but a true man could have won the
-love of such a woman. You tell me that you come as friends
-and not as enemies, so, for the hour, let there be peace, not war,
-between us. While you are my guests my city is yours, and all
-that it contains. I pledge my honour for your safety, so let the
-Daughter of the Air descend that I may hear from her lips the
-music of her voice.”</p>
-
-<p>Turning aside, half to hide a smile at the Oriental metaphor
-of the Sultan’s speech, Alan went to the foot of the steps
-and held out his hand to Alma. As she alighted on the terrace
-he led her towards him, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“This is my wife. Yesterday morning she was Alma
-Tremayne, a daughter in the fifth generation of the first
-President of the Federation. Her ancestor and yours made
-terms of peace after the War of the Terror. It is, therefore,
-more fitting that you should hear from her lips than from mine
-the message that we bring.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“My ears are waiting,” said Khalid, bending low over the
-hand that Alma held out to him as Alan spoke. “It would
-be a strange message that would not be welcome from such
-lips.”</p>
-
-<p>From one whom she could have looked upon as an equal
-such language as this would have jarred sorely upon Alma,
-accustomed as she was to the frank directness of her own
-people’s speech. But from Khalid she tolerated it as she
-would have tolerated the extravagance of a child, and as he
-raised his head again she looked at him with eyes that dazzled
-him afresh, intoxicated as he already was with her, to him,
-strange and almost unearthly beauty, and said in a voice such
-as he had never heard before&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, Sultan, for your welcome, but surely there is
-little need for me to tell you what message we bring. Last
-night you saw it written in letters of fire across the heavens.
-Has not the voice of God spoken bidding you and your people
-to cease the cruel warfare that you are waging upon the world
-and to prepare for the end of which that is a sign?”</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke she raised her hand and pointed to where the
-shape of the Fire-Cloud now hung in the sky like a white mist
-paling before the light of the rising sun.</p>
-
-<p>“You rejected our first warning, as perhaps was natural,
-but now that you have seen the confirmation of it shining
-among the stars, surely you will no longer reject it.”</p>
-
-<p>The last words were spoken in a gentle, pleading tone, which
-no man could have heard without being moved by them.</p>
-
-<p>“Daughter of the Air,” replied the Sultan, following her
-hand with his eyes, “I have seen, and in a measure I believe,
-your message, though my interpretation of it may be other
-than yours. If the end of the world is at hand, the Commander
-of the Faithful will know how to meet it as a true
-believer should. It is not impossible that there may be peace
-between us yet in the last hours of earthly life, for I would not
-willingly make war on a people that has daughters such as
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not for our sake, Sultan, but for the sake of all who have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
-survived this terrible warfare of yours we are come to plead
-with you for peace,” said Alma. “This is no time for hate
-and strife and bloodshed. There will be horrors enough upon
-earth before long without any made by the fury of man. It is
-in your power to give peace to the world and breathing space
-to meet its end. Why will you not give it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You forget it is not I alone who can give peace,” replied
-Khalid. “If that were so”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Before he could speak another word a salvo of aerial
-artillery shook the air above the city. All looked up towards
-the northern sky, whence the sound proceeded, and saw a
-squadron of twenty silvery-hulled air-ships flying the Moslem
-and Russian flags, and escorting in two divisions a warship,
-from whose flagstaff flew the imperial standard of Russia,
-and whose shining hull of azurine proclaimed her the lost
-<em>Ithuriel</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Alan grasped the perilous situation in an instant, and was
-just about to tell Alma to go back on board their own ship
-when the Sultan, divining his intention, took a step forward
-and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think that Khalid cannot protect his guests or that
-his ally will not respect the hospitality of his house? You are
-safe. If a hair of your head were harmed the Tsarina and I
-would be enemies and she would come to her death instead of
-her bridal, for that is what brings her here. There is truce
-between us for this day at least, and she shall not break it.”</p>
-
-<p>As he ceased speaking the twenty air-ships opened out into
-a long line and remained suspended five hundred feet above
-the palace, while the <em>Revenge</em> continued her downward flight
-and alighted at the farther end of the terrace from where they
-were standing.</p>
-
-<p>The after door of the deck-chamber opened as she
-touched the marble pavement, the steps dropped down, and
-Olga descended, attired as usual in a plain robe of royal
-purple, over which hung a travelling mantle of pearl-grey
-cloth as fine and soft as silk and lined with the then almost
-priceless fur of the silver fox.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Her head was uncovered save for a plain golden fillet, from
-which rose a pair of slender silver wings so thickly encrusted
-with diamonds that they seemed entirely fashioned of the
-flashing gems. The golden fillet shone out brightly yellow
-against the lustrous black of her thickly-coiled hair, and the
-diamond wings blazed and scintillated in the sunlight with
-every movement of her head.</p>
-
-<p>As she descended the steps she was followed by Orloff
-Lossenski and a guard of honour of twelve of her officers,
-splendidly dressed, and armed to the teeth, who, as soon as
-they landed, drew their swords, which were now only used
-as ornamental insignia of rank, and ranged themselves in
-two lines, one on either side of her.</p>
-
-<p>Before the <em>Revenge</em> had alighted the Sultan had made a
-sign to one of the sentries, who blew a long, clear blast on
-a silver bugle, which was instantly answered by a hundred
-others from various parts of the city. At the sound the
-Moslem metropolis seemed to wake from sleep into universal
-activity.</p>
-
-<p>Thousands of soldiers in brilliant uniforms poured into
-the empty streets, the Moslem and Russian flags ran up to
-a thousand flagstaffs, squadron after squadron of aerial
-cruisers soared up from the earth and saluted with salvoes
-of artillery, which shook the very firmament and brought
-Alexis down to within three thousand feet of the palace roof
-in the belief that Alan and Alma had fallen victims to some
-treachery, and that the time had come for him to avenge
-them by laying the city in ruins, as he had promised to do
-in such an event.</p>
-
-<p>A single glance through his field-glasses showed him the
-true state of affairs, so he contented himself with keeping
-his crew at quarters with every gun trained on a
-Russian or a Moslem air-ship and ready to spread death
-and ruin far and wide should any harm happen to the <em>Alma</em>
-or her crew.</p>
-
-<p>While this was taking place the Sultan’s bodyguard had
-filed out on to the terrace resplendent with gorgeous uniforms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-and glittering weapons, and between the two long lines that
-they formed Khalid advanced to meet his bride, leaving Alan
-and Alma interested and not unanxious spectators of the
-strange and unexpected scene.</p>
-
-<p>They met half-way down the double line, and as Olga held
-out the hand over which Khalid bowed low as he raised it to
-his lips, she said, with a glance of undisguised hate towards
-Alan and Alma and a mocking smile on her lips&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesty’s generosity is unbounded! I see that
-you have invited to our wedding-feast the only enemies with
-whom we have yet to measure swords!”</p>
-
-<p>“They have not come as enemies, Tsarina,” replied Khalid,
-as he raised his head and looked with but half-restrained
-ardour on the beauty that was so soon to be his. “Nor
-yet have they come at my invitation. Alan Arnold and his
-wife”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“His what!” interrupted Olga, her cheeks burning and
-her eyes flashing with a sudden blaze of uncontrollable
-anger.</p>
-
-<p>“His wife, Tsarina,” replied Khalid, somewhat coldly.
-“The son of Natasha and Richard Arnold has mated with
-the daughter of Alan Tremayne, and they have come in the
-fifth generation to warn you, the daughter of the House of
-Romanoff, and me, the son of the line of Mohammed
-Reshad, to cease our warfare upon the nations and prepare
-for the universal end which, they tell us, is at hand.”</p>
-
-<p>Khalid spoke, as Olga thought, half in jest and half in
-earnest, so she continued in the same mocking tone in which
-she had first spoken&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Then if that is so, if all human enmities are soon to be
-purged by the all-destroying fires, we may as well meet in
-peace for the moment. Will your Majesty honour me by
-presenting me to your uninvited guests?”</p>
-
-<p>“Uninvited, but still my guests, Tsarina,” replied Khalid
-gravely, “and therefore I need not ask you”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“No, Sultan,” said Olga, interrupting him, “you need
-ask me nothing. You need not fear that I shall not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-respect the hospitality of your house, even when extended
-to them.”</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke she gave him her hand again and he led her
-between the silent, rigid ranks of his guards to where Alan
-and Alma were standing.</p>
-
-<p>Since men and women had learned to love and hate there
-had been no such strange meeting between two women as
-that which now took place between Alma and Olga. It was
-the first time that Olga had ever seen a woman of the race
-to which Alan belonged, and Alma, for the first time confronted
-with a daughter of the “earth-folk,” saw in Olga
-Romanoff at once the most beautiful woman outside the
-confines of Aeria and the incarnation of everything that she
-had been trained to look upon as evil.</p>
-
-<p>While the Sultan was speaking the words of presentation
-their eyes met, and Alma thought of that sentence in Alan’s
-letter to his father, “She is as beautiful as an angel and as
-merciless as a fiend,” while Olga looked back to the time
-when she first heard Alma’s name and hated her for the sake
-of him who now stood beside her, her lover and her husband&mdash;the
-man <em>she</em> had held in bondage for years without winning
-one voluntary caress from him.</p>
-
-<p>Alma’s first emotion was one of wonder. Hitherto, she
-had seen nothing beautiful that was not at the same time
-good, for in Aeria the conceptions of beauty and goodness
-were inseparable. But here was a woman of almost perfect
-physical loveliness, after her own type, who was beyond all
-doubt guilty of the most colossal crime that a human soul
-had conceived or a human hand had carried out since men
-first learned to sin.</p>
-
-<p>The world, which ten years before had been a paradise
-of peace, prosperity, and enlightened progress, was now a
-wilderness of misery and an inferno of strife, fast lapsing
-back into barbarism&mdash;and all this was her doing.</p>
-
-<p>As this thought came to Alma’s mind, standing out distinct
-among all the others that were forcing themselves upon
-her, wonder gave place to unspeakable horror, and as Olga<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-approached, with the light of hate still burning in her eyes
-and the same mocking smile upon her lips, she instinctively
-shrank back as though to avoid contact with some unclean
-thing. As she did so her hand slipped through Alan’s arm
-and a visible shudder ran through her form.</p>
-
-<p>Marvellous as Olga’s power of self-control and dissimulation
-was, she failed entirely to restrain the passion which
-such a reception aroused within her. It was the first time
-in her life that she had ever stood in the presence of a
-woman untainted by a spot of sin or shame, and this woman
-recoiled from her in visible loathing, beautiful and mighty
-as she was, at the very zenith of her conquering career and
-on the morning of her promised union with the man who,
-as she believed, would before many days share the empire of
-the world with her.</p>
-
-<p>Hardened as she was, the mute rebuke cut her to the
-quick. The flush on her cheeks died out and left her so
-pale for the moment that her face looked almost ghastly
-with its grey lips and black burning eyes. This daughter
-of a higher race had at a single glance pierced the splendid
-mask which covered the fearful deformity of her true nature.
-She thought of the night long ago in the bedroom at St.
-Petersburg when by the light of the unearthly flame hovering
-above her poison-still she had seen her image in the
-mirror.</p>
-
-<p>Then pride and anger came to her rescue. The blood
-returned to her cheeks and lips, she drew herself up to the
-full height of her queenly stature, and as the Sultan spoke
-the words of presentation she slightly inclined her head, and
-then raising it again said, in low, even tones, whose wonderful
-music sent a chill to Alma’s heart&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“This is a pleasant surprise, Alan Arnold. I little thought
-that after our last parting we should meet again, save in battle,
-much less did I think that you would honour my bridal by
-bringing your own bride to it. Still, as the Sultan tells me,
-there is truce for to-day, and, so far as to my enemy, you are
-welcome.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“We have not come as guests to your bridal, Tsarina,”
-said Alan coldly and gravely, “nor have we come to make
-truce as between mortal enemies. The enmities of men and
-nations are but as child’s-play now. We have come to
-proclaim the Truce of God against the hour of His final
-judgment.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_373.jpg" width="350" height="62" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXX.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE SHADOW OF DEATH.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_a.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-quoteA">“AH, I see,” said Olga. “You have come to tell
-us this wonderful story about the comet, and
-the message you say you have received from
-Mars, over again. You are not the first who
-have prophesied the end of the world by such
-means, nor will you be the last to be discredited
-by the event.</p>
-
-<p>“Once for all, then, let me save misunderstanding by
-telling you that I don’t believe a word of it, and therefore
-nothing that you can say will have any effect on the course
-of action that I have determined upon. You are of course
-at liberty to preach your truce elsewhere and at your own
-risk, though I fear it will be but the voice of one crying in
-the wilderness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, truly in the wilderness,” said Alma before Alan
-could reply, “but a wilderness that you have made with
-your own hand, Tsarina. You who have been the evil
-genius of the world, have you not done harm enough, now
-that the world has only a few more weeks to live?”</p>
-
-<p>“According to the idle tale you bring us,” interrupted
-Olga, repressing with a barely successful effort the anger
-aroused afresh within her by the serene tone in which Alma
-spoke. It sounded rather like the voice of an angel speaking
-to a mortal than of one woman addressing another, and even
-to herself Olga was forced to admit that there could be no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-question of equality between this daughter of the air and
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>“It is no idle tale,” replied Alma, almost in the same
-tone which she might have used in reproving a wayward
-child, “it is not even a prophecy, it is a mathematical certainty,
-and if you understood you would believe.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are wasting time and your own breath,” said Olga
-scornfully. “You are not my guests but the Sultan’s, yet
-he may allow me to say that we have other demands upon
-our attention more important than listening to such sentimentalism
-as this.”</p>
-
-<p>Before Alma could answer, Alan turned to the Sultan as
-though not deigning to reply to Olga’s insulting speech.</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesty, I see that this is no time to perform the
-mission upon which I came. We did not expect the presence
-of the Tsarina here. Had we done so we should not
-have come, for I know how vain it would be to reason with
-her. I came prepared to satisfy the most skilful astronomers
-in your kingdom that what I say is absolutely true,
-and I ventured to hope that you, if satisfied by their assurances,
-would give peace to the world for the remnant of its
-days.</p>
-
-<p>“But even so it is not for us to interrupt or even to
-introduce an unpleasant element into the doings of to-day,
-so, with your Majesty’s permission, I will leave the calculations
-with your minister and relieve you and the Tsarina of
-our unwelcome presence.”</p>
-
-<p>All this time the Grand Vizier, Musa al Ghazi, had been
-standing a little to the rear of the group stroking his beard
-nervously and looking anxiously from one to the other. He
-seemed about to speak, when Khalid said to Alan with a
-courtesy which contrasted strongly with Olga’s contemptuous
-demeanour&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I thank you, Prince of the Air. As matters stand I
-think that will be the most reasonable as well as the most
-convenient course. Though I am far from convinced that
-you are not mistaken, yet I can assure you that the best<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-skill in my domains shall examine what you leave us.
-Musa!”</p>
-
-<p>The old man turned pale as his master pronounced his
-name, and stepped forward with a visible agitation, which
-was by no means accounted for by the circumstances of the
-strange situation. Instead of waiting for Khalid’s commands
-he said as he made his obeisance before him&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Commander of the Faithful, I am here; but before your
-Majesty bids me take these papers from the hands of Alan
-Arnold I would ask permission to say a word that must be
-said in private.”</p>
-
-<p>“In private, Musa?” said Khalid, frowning slightly and
-passing his hand down his beard. “This is hardly a time for
-State secrets.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is but my duty to my master that bids me speak,”
-replied the old man, again bending before him. “A moment
-will suffice for the speaking of what I have to say.”</p>
-
-<p>Musa’s tone was so earnest and his anxiety so palpable,
-that Khalid without more ado made his excuses to the
-Tsarina and his unexpected guests and stepped aside out of
-earshot with his Vizier.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Musa, what is it that is so pressing and yet so
-private?” he asked, a trifle impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“My master,” replied the old minister, in a voice that now
-trembled with emotion, “there is no need to examine the
-calculations from Aeria. An hour before daybreak Hakem
-ben Amru, your chief astronomer at the observatory of
-Memphis, came to me and told me that he had completed
-his own calculations of the curve and period of the comet,
-and that, allowing for difference in longitude between our
-meridian and that of Aeria, the prediction from Mars will
-be fulfilled beyond all doubt at midnight on the 23rd of
-September.”</p>
-
-<p>This was testimony which it was impossible for Khalid
-to question. Musa’s sincerity was beyond all question and
-Hakem ben Amru was the most renowned astronomer in
-the world outside Aeria. Khalid recoiled a pace as though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-he had been struck, and said in a voice hoarse with sudden
-emotion&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you not tell me this before, Musa?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I would not mar my master’s happiness for this
-day at least,” replied Musa. “If it be true that the end of
-earthly things is at hand a day is of but small account. To
-tell you would neither hasten nor delay the end. But Alan
-Arnold’s words forced me to speak, for I knew that Hakem
-would speak if I did not.”</p>
-
-<p>Khalid laid his hand upon the old man’s shoulder and
-said gravely but kindly&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“It was well thought, Musa, and I thank you for your
-consideration, evil as your news is. It is Kismet, and the
-will of Allah must be done!”</p>
-
-<p>So saying he turned away and walked with slow steps
-and downcast eyes to where Olga was standing talking to
-Orloff Lossenski with her back turned in open contempt
-upon Alma and Alan. A single glance at his face told her
-that Musa had had no pleasant tidings to impart.</p>
-
-<p>“Your Majesty looks grave,” she said. “Has Musa given
-you news of some disaster to our forces?”</p>
-
-<p>“More than that, Tsarina,” replied Khalid. “He has
-brought me confirmation that I cannot doubt of the truth
-of the message from Aeria.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” exclaimed Olga in a quick passionate tone that
-all standing near could hear. “The confirmation of that
-thrice-told tale with which these people are trying to impose
-on our fears! Surely your Majesty is jesting now?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Tsarina, it is no subject for jesting but only for
-earnest and solemn thought,” answered Khalid seriously.</p>
-
-<p>“I neither can nor <em>will</em> believe it!” cried Olga passionately,
-her long-restrained anger completely overcoming her
-prudence and her whole soul rising in ungovernable revolt.
-“Believe or not as you will, I will not. It cannot be possible;
-it is too monstrous for all credence!</p>
-
-<p>“Why, one would think the very Fates themselves were
-fighting against us if that were true, and were bringing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-the world to an end just as we have conquered it for our
-own!</p>
-
-<p>“As for these Aerians,” she continued, turning upon Alan
-and Alma and taking a couple of steps towards them,
-“they have come here with this wild story to cover an
-attempt to make terms with us before it is too late. It is a
-trick to deceive you, but it shall not succeed in my presence.
-Do you not remember how, upon this very spot little more
-than a year ago, I showed you this same Alan Arnold, who
-now comes preaching about his Truce of God, as the shameless
-liar and traitor that he is.”</p>
-
-<p>She had thrown off all disguise and all restraint now.
-Hatred was shining out of her eyes and open scorn was upon
-her lips. She waved her hand with a contemptuous gesture
-towards them and went on&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“If you have come to ask for terms of peace, be honest and
-say so. You need not fear to speak, for there may be conditions
-on which we will let you live.”</p>
-
-<p>Khalid was about to utter some reproof, and Alan’s hand
-had gone instinctively to the hilt of his rapier, when Alma
-stepped forward and faced Olga, her own eyes now burning dark
-with anger and her cheeks flushed with the hot blood which
-Olga’s insult had called to them.</p>
-
-<p>“Make terms with you!” she said, looking down upon her
-from the height of her splendid stature. “With you, who have
-laid the earth waste and made the habitations of men desolate&mdash;with
-you, whom I could strike dead at my feet without
-staining my hand by laying it upon you! It is for you to make
-terms, if you can, not with us but with the Heaven whose
-justice you have outraged and whose patience you have scorned!</p>
-
-<p>“Cease this idle talk of battle and conquest, this impious
-defiance of the decrees of Fate! Can you make terms with
-God? If so, then when you see His sign blazing in the heavens
-to-night cause it to change its path and pass aside from the
-earth. If not kneel down and pray, not for your life, for that
-would be useless, but for strength to meet your end in the
-midst of the desolation that you have created!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Olga heard her in silence to the end, her whole being shaken
-with the tempest of passion that Alma’s words set raging in
-her breast. For a moment she stood speechless, white to the
-lips, and trembling in every limb from very rage. Then she
-suddenly stepped back a pace, and cried in a voice more like
-the cry of a wild animal in pain than human speech&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Whether the world lives or not <em>you</em> shall not, whatever
-comes!” and as she spoke she snatched a pistol out of her
-girdle and levelled it at Alma’s heart. Before she could spring
-the lock Alan had snatched Alma up in his arms and Khalid,
-with a cry of horror and anger, had sprung forward and grasped
-Olga’s wrist.</p>
-
-<p>The bullet flew high, cutting one of the wings off Alan’s
-coronet in its flight. Half a dozen strides took him alongside
-his ship, and in another instant he was standing on her deck,
-his left arm round Alma’s waist holding her behind him and
-his right hand grasping one of his pistols.</p>
-
-<p>He raised his arm and the pistol flashed. At the same
-moment he stamped on the deck and the <em>Alma</em> leapt a thousand
-feet obliquely into the air. The second before the pistol flashed
-Olga turned her head as though she were going to fire again,
-and the motion saved her life, for Alan’s bullet, instead of
-piercing her brain, as it was meant to do, cut a straight red
-gash across her forehead from temple to temple and buried
-itself in the breast of Orloff Lossenski as he sprang forward to
-snatch his mistress out of the line of fire.</p>
-
-<p>He pitched forward and dropped, and Khalid, forgetting
-everything else in the horror of the moment, caught Olga in
-his arms as a rain of blood streamed down over her face and
-a shrill scream of pain and rage burst from her lips.</p>
-
-<p>Although there were nearly three hundred warships floating
-in the air above Alexandria, and though the rapidly-enacted
-tragedy on the roof of the palace could be distinctly seen from
-their decks, the <em>Alma</em> escaped scathless, for the simple reason
-that, so terrible was the energy developed by the projectiles in
-use, that had one struck her as she left the terrace the palace
-itself would have been wrecked, and every living being within<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-a radius of two hundred yards from the focus of the explosion
-would have been instantly killed.</p>
-
-<p>Consequently, the captains of the Russian and Moslem
-ships had to look on in angry impotence as she leapt out of
-range, joined her consort, and with her soared away westward
-until a height of fifteen thousand feet was reached, and so
-vanished from the sight of their discomfited enemies.</p>
-
-<p>From Alexandria they crossed the Mediterranean and
-Europe to Britain by way of Italy, the Valley of the Rhone,
-and Paris, at a height of some five thousand feet from the land.
-What they saw more than justified the reports which had
-reached Aeria. The fairest countries of Europe were now only
-blackened deserts and wasted wildernesses.</p>
-
-<p>They flew all day over deserted fields and towns and cities
-that were little better than heaps of blackened ruins, and when
-night fell and the Fire-Cloud blazed out of the sky, its glare
-was answered by flames rising from the earth, and huge patches
-of mingled smoke and flame which marked the sites of other
-towns which were only now falling victims to the destroyers.</p>
-
-<p>Society had practically come to an end. People who a few
-weeks before had been wealthy watched almost with apathy
-the plunder of their homes and the burning of their palaces by
-the armed bands of robbers which sprang up everywhere.
-There was no longer any protection for life and property. If
-anarchists on the earth did not burn and slay and plunder,
-their enemies in the air would, and even if they did not, what
-did it matter if friends and foes, plunderers and plundered,
-were to be consumed together in the fire that was about to fall
-from heaven?</p>
-
-<p>Amidst the universal terror Alma, with her almost unearthly
-beauty, the calm dignity of her bearing, and the sweetness and
-gentleness of her loving counsels, passed through the devastated
-lands rather like an angel of mercy than a woman of the same
-flesh and blood as the distracted panic-stricken crowds through
-which she moved by Alan’s side, speaking her message in a
-voice that seemed to be an echo from some other world.</p>
-
-<p>When the <em>Alma</em> and the <em>Isma</em> reached London ten days<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-after leaving Alexandria, they found the vast and once splendid
-metropolis of the world a wide waste of broken, blackened, and
-in some places still smoking ruins. Of its fifteen millions of
-inhabitants barely three millions remained to people its fragments.
-All the rest had either fled soon after the first assault,
-or had fallen in the pitiless carnage that had been let loose
-upon them.</p>
-
-<p>They remained three days amidst the ruins of London,
-listening to the most heartrending tales of suffering and cruelty,
-and giving in return such consolation as they could. Then they
-took the air again, and journeyed on westward over the once
-fair and smiling English land that was now a wilderness amidst
-which plague and famine, anarchy and destruction, stalked
-triumphant, while the few who listened to their message waited
-in despairing terror for the fate that could hardly be worse
-than what they had passed through since the fatal 16th of May.</p>
-
-<p>From England they crossed the Atlantic to America, and
-from America they sped over the Pacific to Australia, finding
-everywhere the same desolation upon the face of the earth, and
-the same terror and despair in the minds of men. But for the
-awful reality before their eyes, it would have been impossible
-for them to believe that the civilisation which had seemed so
-strong and splendid four months before, could have collapsed
-as it had done into such utter chaos.</p>
-
-<p>In those four short months the whole tragedy of human life
-on earth seemed to have been re-enacted. The frenzy and
-panic of war had degenerated into a universal delirium. Men,
-women, and children had gone mad by millions. Religious
-fanatics, impostors, and enthusiasts, if possible more insane than
-their hearers, preached the wildest and most blasphemous
-doctrines, and uttered the most hideous prophecies, not only as
-to the approaching end of the world, but of the imaginary
-eternal horrors that were to follow it.</p>
-
-<p>The art and science and culture of five hundred years had
-been forgotten in those few weeks of madness, and mankind
-had sunk back wholesale into the grossest superstitions of the
-Dark Ages. Every night, when the flaming shape of the Fire-Cloud<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
-blazed out among the stars, millions fell down on their
-knees and greeted it with prayers and invocations, as savages
-had once been wont to worship their fetishes.</p>
-
-<p>By the end of August, when the fiery arc overarched more
-than two-thirds of the heavens and rivalled the sunlight itself
-in brightness, the degeneration of humanity had advanced to
-such a fearful stage of intellectual and moral depravity, that
-even human sacrifices were offered to appease the wrath of the
-deity who was believed to have taken the shape of the Fire-Cloud.
-Under the influence of delirium the human mind had
-gone back through twenty-five centuries, and the worship of
-Baal and Moloch had returned upon earth.</p>
-
-<p>Only a small minority of men and women preserved their
-senses amidst the universal madness. These greeted the
-Aerians as friends, and heard their message, and promised to
-remain steadfast to the end, but as day after day went by and
-the terror grew and the nations plunged deeper and deeper into
-the saturnalia of frenzy and despair, the task undertaken by
-Alan and Alma grew more and more hopeless, and when the
-last day of August came, they at length confessed to themselves
-that it was useless to pursue it any further.</p>
-
-<p>This, too, was the day on which the term of absence granted
-by the Council expired, and so at nightfall, after having carried
-their message round the whole world and passed it, by the
-mouths of those who were willing to listen, through many lands,
-they at length reluctantly turned their prows homeward,
-and, with hearts sickened by all the unspeakable horrors they
-had witnessed, soared upward into the luridly-lighted heavens,
-leaving the world to the fate which in twenty-three days more
-would overwhelm the conquerors and the conquered, the few
-sane and the many mad, in universal and inevitable destruction.</p>
-
-<p>Alan timed his arrival so that the <em>Alma</em> and her consort
-crossed the Ridge a few minutes after sunrise on the 1st of
-September. As they alighted in the central square of the city
-and disembarked to greet the group of friends and kindred
-who were waiting to receive them, a strange stillness struck
-their ears and sent a mysterious chill to their hearts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The splendid capital of Aeria seemed like a city of the
-dead. Its broad white streets and squares were empty, there
-were no boats on the lake, and no aerial yachts in the air as
-there were wont to be at sunrise. The gardens were deserted
-and silent, even the songs of birds which had welled up from
-them in a chorus of greeting to the coming sun were now hushed,
-and the birds themselves were flying restlessly from branch to
-branch, twittering and calling to each other, frightened sharers
-in the universal fear. It was not long before Alan learnt from
-his father the explanation of this strange and mournful
-change in the life of the valley. A few days after their departure
-a mysterious epidemic had appeared among the people
-of Aeria. First the old, then the middle-aged, and then the
-young had been silently and swiftly stricken down, first in
-hundreds and then in thousands.</p>
-
-<p>There was no sign of physical disease, no apparent source
-of physical infection, and none of the horrors which characterised
-the plagues that were decimating the outside world.
-Those attacked by it went to bed in apparently robust health,
-and in the morning they were found dead with an expression
-of perfect peace upon their features and no marks of disease
-upon their bodies.</p>
-
-<p>That was all that was publicly known. There had been,
-and, as the President told his son, there would be no inquiry
-into the cause or origin of the epidemic. Whether those who
-died died voluntarily, or whether the visitation was a merciful
-release from the torment and terror of the general doom, it
-was not for those who survived to ask.</p>
-
-<p>It was enough for them that the Shadow of Death had
-begun to steal silently and swiftly over the land of the royal
-race who had raised the dignity of humanity to a height
-untouched before in the story of man. They were content
-to know that their friends and kindred were permitted to die
-in painless peace rather than forced to writhe out their last
-hours in torture amidst the conflagration of the world.</p>
-
-<p>All day and all night for nearly a month the fires of a
-hundred crematoria had burned, and day and night the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-funeral processions had never ceased passing through their
-gates. The population of Aeria, which had been over a
-million at the end of July, was now little more than a
-hundred thousand, and these were hourly dwindling under
-the mysterious epidemic.</p>
-
-<p>Those who had returned in the <em>Alma</em> and the <em>Isma</em>
-accepted all without question and applied themselves with
-all their energy to the performance of the solemn duties
-that remained to them.</p>
-
-<p>The work in the caverns of Mount Austral was now
-almost completed, and the minute calculations which had
-been made had shown that it would be possible for two
-hundred and fifty souls to find a refuge in them for ten days
-if necessary.</p>
-
-<p>Sufficient supplies of food had been already stored, the
-machinery for lighting the caverns was complete, and solid
-oxygen had been enclosed in steel reservoirs to supply what
-would be consumed by respiration, while provision had also
-been made for continually abstracting the carbonic acid and
-other injurious constituents from the respired air.</p>
-
-<p>Everything that human genius and skill at their best
-could do to ensure the preservation of this remnant of
-humanity, had been done, and by the 15th of September the
-caverns were finally ready for occupation. Only one more
-task now remained to be completed, and this was the selection
-of those who were to survive, provided that the precautions
-taken proved adequate. Unspeakably pathetic as this work
-of selection was, it was performed with a calm and apparently
-passionless precision worthy of the unparalleled solemnity of
-the occasion and the splendid traditions of those who accomplished
-it.</p>
-
-<p>The field of selection was first narrowed by confining it to
-those who had been regularly betrothed when the first message
-was received from Mars. From these first the physically
-perfect were chosen, then the strongest and the fairest of
-these, and finally those who to their physical perfections
-added the highest intellectual and moral qualities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The work was performed by the Ruling Council assisted
-by a council of an equal number of matrons who had what
-had once been accounted the misfortune to be childless.
-Neither joy nor sorrow was shown, at least in public, either
-by those who were chosen or by those upon whom the joint
-Council was forced to pronounce sentence of death by rejecting
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The natural joy of the chosen was lost in the universal
-sorrow of the now inevitable parting, and those who were
-destined not to survive, satisfied with the perfect justice with
-which the selection had been made, consoled each other with
-the knowledge that they would die hand in hand and be
-spared the sorrow of surviving all who were nearest and
-dearest to them.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of the 18th, the temple of Aeria witnessed
-the last ceremony that would ever take place within its walls.
-This was the marriage of those who, unless their last refuge
-shared in the destruction that was about to bring chaos upon
-earth, were to be the parents of the new race that was to
-repeople the world.</p>
-
-<p>The survivors of the whole nation now barely filled the
-vast interior of the temple. The solemn words which bound
-youth and maid together as man and wife to face side by side
-the last ordeal that humanity would ever have to pass through
-were spoken in the midst of a silence which reigned not only
-in the temple but now throughout the whole valley.</p>
-
-<p>All the sentinel ships had now been withdrawn save one,
-which, from a height of fifteen thousand feet, still kept watch
-and ward against the coming of the foe that was even yet
-expected. But this was the only sign of life within the
-confines of Aeria, and when the solemn ceremony was ended
-and the assembly filed out of the doors, the members of it
-betook themselves almost in silence to their homes, there to
-make their final preparations for life or death as Destiny had
-selected them to live or die.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXXI.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE LAST BATTLE.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_a.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-A">AT sunset on the 15th the sluice-door had been
-finally lowered into its place and the pent-up
-waters of the lake of Aeria had risen nearly forty
-feet by the next morning. Only the upper parts
-of the villas on its banks were visible and its
-area was so enormously increased that the whole
-appearance of the valley was altered.</p>
-
-<p>Rising at first at the rate of three feet an hour, a rate
-which of course decreased as the area became greater, the
-waters would reach the entrance to the caverns soon after
-sunset on the evening of the fatal 23rd.</p>
-
-<p>A little before midnight on the 21st the <em>Orion</em>, the sentinel
-ship that was on guard at the time, sank swiftly down with
-the news that she had made out by the light of the Fire-Cloud
-which, lurid and ghastly as it was, was as brilliant and penetrating
-as that of the sun at noonday, a large fleet of air-ships
-approaching from the northwards. The city was by this time
-almost entirely submerged. Only a few minarets and towers
-and the top of the great golden dome of the temple surmounted
-by its crystal-winged figure, showed above the surface.</p>
-
-<p>The remnant of the people of Aeria, now reduced to less
-than seven thousand souls, including those chosen to take
-refuge in the caverns, were occupying the villas on the
-slopes of Mount Austral about the entrance to the caverns.
-Six thousand of them were men who had lived solely in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
-hope of such an attack as was now about to be made and
-which would enable them to die fighting the common enemy
-of mankind to the last in defence of their beloved native land.</p>
-
-<p>Not even now, when the hand of Destiny had set a definite
-limit to all human hopes and fears, and when the remainder
-of their own lives could be counted by hours, could this
-faithful remnant of the Aerians endure the thought that
-what had been their paradise and their home should be
-violated and polluted by the appearance of their foes.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore they had lived for this last battle, and five
-hundred air-ships were waiting to carry them into the air to
-engage in the last fight that ever would be fought on earth.
-All their friends and kindred, saving only the Children of
-Deliverance, as in fond fancy they had called the little band
-of the chosen ones, were now dead, and the few hours of life
-that were left to them had nothing more to give them.</p>
-
-<p>So they received with a grim joy the summons to battle
-which had been so long expected. Four thousand of them
-manned the air-ships, the rest occupied the mountain batteries,
-and within a quarter of an hour of the bringing of the news
-the war-ships had mounted into the air, and the great guns
-of the batteries were ready to hurl their projectiles upon the
-advancing foe.</p>
-
-<p>It was a spectacle to make angels weep and devils laugh,
-this last marshalling of the forces of human hate and hostility
-in the closing hours of the life of humanity and on the threshold
-of eternity. It seemed that the Tragedy of Man was to be
-played out to the bitter end, and that human strife was only
-to cease on earth with the destruction of the world. This, too,
-was the work of a single woman inspired by quenchless hatred
-and insatiable ambition and a pride of spirit which, in its
-haughty incredulity, still refused to believe that the end of her
-conquering career had come.</p>
-
-<p>Pitiless and without scruple to the end, Olga, while she
-was recovering from her wound under the shelter of the
-Sultan’s roof, had managed, with the aid of her waiting-woman
-Anna, not only to poison the Grand Vizier Musa and Hakem<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-the astronomer, but also to bring Khalid himself into the
-same state of moral slavery in which she had so long held
-Alan and Alexis.</p>
-
-<p>It was she who had brought this fleet from Alexandria to
-Aeria. Once under the fatal spell of her will-poison, she had
-commanded Khalid to revoke the orders that he had given for
-peace, and he had obeyed. A fleet of more than five hundred air-ships
-had been collected, and, taking Khalid with her on board
-the <em>Revenge</em>, so that there should be no chance of his recovering
-his volition, she had come to fulfil the prophecy which Paul
-Romanoff uttered when in the last hour of his life he had
-declared that one day the Eagle of Russia should fly over the
-battlements of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>All the materials for constructing ten air-ships had been
-taken into the caverns, so that in the event of the remnant
-surviving the empire of the air should still be theirs, but the
-<em>Alma</em> and the <em>Isma</em> still lay outside the entrance when the
-other ships had risen into the air.</p>
-
-<p>At the supreme moment a controversy had arisen as to
-whether or not Alan and Alexis&mdash;the latter of whom had been
-placed without question among the chosen, not only because
-of his unequalled engineering skill, but also because without
-him a daughter of the House of Arnold would have died of
-her own will&mdash;should or should not take part with their companions
-in the near approaching conflict.</p>
-
-<p>This dispute was brought to a sudden close by Alan, who,
-with a sudden inspiration, cut short all the loving entreaties
-that were being made to him to take refuge in the caverns
-and avoid the chance which in the heat of the conflict might
-destroy with him the male line of the descendants of the first
-conqueror of the air.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you not see,” he said, “that it is quite possible that
-their fleet may be twice as strong as ours, and that in spite of
-all our gallant forlorn hope can do they may cross the mountains
-and send their shells into the valley?</p>
-
-<p>“What if one of them exploded here and wrecked the outworks
-and the entrance to the caverns? All hope, even for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-us, would then be lost, the doors could not be lowered, and we
-should either have to let the waters of the lake flow out or
-they would flow into the caverns by the upper entrance and
-ruin all our labours.</p>
-
-<p>“We have proved that the <em>Alma</em> and the <em>Isma</em> are the two
-best air-ships in existence. They can soar higher and travel
-faster than any others. Would it not be madness to deprive
-our defending force of them, and would it not be cowardice in
-us not to do all we can to save all that is left for us to hope
-for on earth? I for one shall go, and I don’t believe that I
-shall go alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“If the <em>Alma</em> goes the <em>Isma</em> goes too,” said Alexis. “Alan
-is right. We should be cowards to turn our backs on the
-enemy at the last moment.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if you go, we go,” said Alma and Isma in a breath.
-“If you live we will live with you, but we will not live
-without you.”</p>
-
-<p>There was no answer to such reasoning as this, nor was
-there any longer any law on earth save that of individual will.
-The first motive power that had swayed the world was the
-last that survived and would be the last to die. Those of the
-old crews of the two air-ships who were found among the
-chosen at once came forward to take their places, and with
-them came too those who had elected to take the hazard of
-life or death with them.</p>
-
-<p>“There shall be no widows in the new world,” said they.
-And so every man who rose into the air on board the two great
-warships carried with him the woman without whom the one
-last chance of life would not have been worth taking.</p>
-
-<p>As they left the earth the remainder of the little company
-retired into the caverns, leaving two sentinels posted at the
-outer door ready to give the alarm in case it should be necessary
-to lower the doors. As they did so a long, dull, distant
-roar came from the northward telling that the last battle of
-man with man had begun.</p>
-
-<p>In accordance with a plan hastily arranged before they rose,
-the <em>Alma</em> was to guard the northern end of the valley, while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
-the <em>Isma</em> kept watch over the southern. They soared up and
-up until the peaks of the mountains were a good five thousand
-feet below them.</p>
-
-<p>From this elevation those on board the <em>Alma</em> could see the
-enemy’s fleet stretching out in a huge crescent, made up of
-tiny points of light which shone in the unnatural glare that
-illumined the earth and sky, and ever and anon they saw
-enormous spheres of flame blaze out along the line as the
-projectiles from the land batteries burst in front of them.
-The gunners were only trying their range and the enemy were
-still beyond it.</p>
-
-<p>The explosion of the projectiles told the assailants that
-Aeria was on the alert, still prepared for battle and still, for
-all they knew, as impregnable as ever. Seeing this, they ceased
-their advance and a battle of tactics preceded the pitiless
-struggle which only the victors would survive.</p>
-
-<p>Hour after hour the Moslem and Russian air-ships strove
-to out-soar the Aerians, or to make a rush in twos and threes
-that would bring them within range of the charmed circle of
-the mountains. But no sooner did one of them sweep up at
-full speed out of the distance and slow down sufficiently to
-train her guns than the atmosphere about her was convulsed
-with a mighty shock and changed instantly into a mist of
-fire, and when this vanished she had vanished too, shattered
-to fragments which dropped in a rain of molten metal
-thousands of feet to the earth below.</p>
-
-<p>Morning came, the flaming arch of the Fire-Cloud sank
-lower and lower in the heavens until it stretched a broad
-band of lurid light round the western horizon, and an
-unclouded sun brought the last dawn but one that the
-terror-maddened myriads of earth would ever see. <a id="Ref_354"></a>Still the
-fight went on at long ranges; still ship after ship of the
-hostile fleet made its desperate effort to cross the invisible
-barrier which was drawn all round Aeria by the range of its
-protecting guns, only to be overturned and hurled to the
-earth by the shock of an exploding projectile or to be fairly
-struck and dissolved to dust.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_354" class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i_391.jpg" width="600" height="415" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Still the Fight went on at Long Ranges.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_354">Page 354</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>No matter how high they attempted to soar, the <em>Alma</em>
-and the <em>Isma</em> were still above them, and if the shells from
-the land batteries failed to do their work the guns of the
-air-ships did it for them and the result was the same&mdash;annihilation.</p>
-
-<p>The night of the 22nd was spent in incessant attack and
-defence. The crews of the Aerian ships, grown desperate in
-their supreme despair, now left the mountains and sallied
-forth into the open, engaging the enemy ship for ship and
-gun for gun in a last determined effort to destroy them, or
-be destroyed, and far out from the still untouched battlements
-of Aeria the fight raged fast and furious.</p>
-
-<p>There now was no thought of safety in the hearts of the
-Aerians. They had come forth to kill and be killed. The
-rules of aerial tactics were utterly neglected. They laid
-their guns alongside and, rushing through the air at their
-utmost speed, they hurled themselves with the ram upon
-every Moslem or Russian vessel that they could meet or
-overtake, crashing into her with irresistible force and going
-with her into annihilation as their two cargoes of shells
-exploded under the shock.</p>
-
-<p>The last sun rose and saw the fight still going on. What
-had begun as the greatest battle in the history of war had
-now dwindled down to a series of single combats. At length
-the end came. It was a few minutes after midday that the
-last blow in the battle was struck. Ten Russian and Moslem
-air-ships, all that remained of the great fleet that Olga had
-brought against Aeria, formed in line ten miles from the Ridge
-and made a last attempt to break through the defences.</p>
-
-<p>Flying through a storm of shells from the land batteries,
-seven of them were torn to pieces and the other three, just
-as they reached the Ridge, were met obliquely by the five
-remaining vessels of the Aerian fleet. The same moment
-the <em>Alma’s</em> broadside was discharged upon them, friend and
-foe vanished together in a mist of flame&mdash;and so ended the
-assault and defence of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>“We can go down now!” said Alan in a broken voice to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
-Alma, who was standing white and speechless with horror at
-his side in the bows of the air-ship. “It is all over! God
-rest their gallant souls, for they left the world like brave men
-and true Aerians!”</p>
-
-<p>“Amen!” sighed Alma. Then, after a brief pause, she
-said&mdash;“I wonder whether Olga Romanoff is alive or dead?”</p>
-
-<p>The two air-ships now sank together and alighted close to
-the entrance to the caverns.</p>
-
-<p>There the splendid fabrics were reluctantly abandoned,
-their crews disembarked, taking with them everything they
-wished to preserve, and a minute inspection was made for the
-last time of the triple doors and the machinery for lowering
-them and filling the spaces between them with water to be
-frozen as soon as they were in their places.</p>
-
-<p>This occupied the time until the evening, and then all went
-once more into the open air to take what might be their last
-look at the sun. The waters of the lake were now within a
-few feet of the entrance, creeping more and more slowly
-upwards, and across the vast expanse of water, lying unruffled
-by the lightest breeze, fell the mingled rays of the sinking sun
-and the brightening Fire-Cloud.</p>
-
-<p>There was not a cloud in the heavens and no breath of
-wind relieved the almost suffocating heat of the inert and
-sultry air. It seemed as though all terrestrial nature lay
-paralysed in a stupor of terror, waiting for the fire-blast that
-would wither it into death and ruin.</p>
-
-<p>As the sun sank down behind the veil of flame his disc
-loomed redly and dully through it. Long streams of fire,
-blue and green and orange, darted across the disc and leapt
-and played round its circumference until it sank finally out
-of sight. The little group on the shore of the lake gazed at
-each other in silence as it disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Their faces looked wan and ghastly in the awful light that
-now reigned supreme in the heavens. Most of them turned
-away in grief and horror too deep for words, and with one
-last look at earth and sky, crept into the caverns, unable any
-longer to support the terror of the scene.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But a few remained, determined to see the fearful drama
-played out to the end, if they could, and among these
-were Alan and Alexis, whose duty kept them by the
-doors, the President and Francis Tremayne, and Alma and
-Isma, whom nothing could persuade to leave their husbands’
-sides.</p>
-
-<p>No human eyes had ever beheld so magnificent or so awful
-a display of celestial splendours as they beheld during the
-three hours that they stood in the doorway after sunset. The
-Fire-Cloud now covered almost the whole heavens, and its
-enormous nucleus blazed like a gigantic sun down out of the
-zenith with a heat and radiance that were almost insupportable.</p>
-
-<p>Huge masses of flame leapt out continuously, as though
-hurled from its fiery heart, and were projected far beyond its
-circumference, while the incandescent cloud-mass which
-surrounded it was torn and convulsed by internal commotions
-which spread out and out in enormous waves
-of many-coloured fires until they disappeared below the
-horizon.</p>
-
-<p>Still there was neither sound nor breath of wind upon
-earth, only the awful stillness in which the world waited for
-the hour of its doom to strike. At last, towards ten o’clock,
-the water began to lap the threshold of the entrance, and Alan,
-pointing to it, said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Come, we must take our last look at the world! It is
-time to lower the doors.”</p>
-
-<p>The words were scarcely out of his mouth before a low
-dull booming sound came echoing down the gorges of Mount
-Austral. They looked up and saw huge masses of snow and
-ice loosened from its upper heights gliding, at first slowly
-and then more and more swiftly, down towards the valley
-beneath, a mighty avalanche which in a few minutes more
-would carry irresistible ruin in its path.</p>
-
-<p>“In with you all!” cried Alan. “Quick! That is the
-beginning of the end; the snows are melting and the waters
-will be over us in another hour.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>All but he and Alexis hurried in, and they, grasping the
-levers on either side of the door, pulled them, and the
-enormous sheet of steel descended quickly along its grooves
-and shut them in from the outer world, upon which chaos
-was about to fall.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_396.jpg" width="350" height="60" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXXII.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">THE SHE-WOLF TO HER LAIR.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_i.jpg" width="76" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-I">IN the mysterious revolution of human things it
-came about that the only spectator of the closing
-scene of the tragedy of humanity who endured
-and survived its final terrors was the woman to
-whom it had been due that the fire from heaven
-had fallen upon a world mad with the frenzy and agony of
-war instead of sane and calm with the sanity and calmness of
-peace and reason.</p>
-
-<p>On the issue of the Battle of Aeria, Olga and, under her
-unnaturally acquired influence, the Sultan, had staked the
-empire of the world and lost it. Before the fight had been
-raging many hours even she was forced to admit that Aeria
-was impregnable to any assault that she could deliver. But
-when the Aerians began to practise the desperate tactics of
-the second day it became manifest that nothing but annihilation
-awaited the invading fleet, out-matched as it was in
-speed and gun-power by the new Aerian warships and the
-land batteries.</p>
-
-<p>With eyes burning with rage and envy she had watched
-through her glasses the incomparable <em>Alma</em> floating serenely
-at her unattainable altitude far above the battle-storm, and
-she had pictured Alan, her former slave, standing upon her
-deck perhaps&mdash;bitterest thought of all&mdash;with his wedded
-love beside him, and like a very arbiter of war hurling his
-destroying lightnings far and wide upon her ships until the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-supreme moment came in which he would descend like a very
-god from the upper air, and, hand in hand with Alma, strike
-the last terrible blow which would end the last conflict of man
-with man and leave neither friend nor foe alive to tell what
-the issue had been.</p>
-
-<p>It would be a glorious end, worthy of him and the splendid
-traditions of his race, and she loathed herself for the craven
-fear that had seized upon her in the fateful hour of battle,
-and made her incapable of challenging the same fate at his
-hands. Khalid himself would have done so without hesitation,
-but she had robbed him of his manhood and debased him, as
-she had debased every other human being that had fallen
-under her influence.</p>
-
-<p>She had spent nearly the whole of the night of the 22nd
-on deck, and when the awful radiance of the Fire-Cloud was
-for the last time succeeded by the light of day, even her haughty
-spirit had at last bowed before the supernatural terrors that
-were multiplying about her. For the first time since she
-had brought bloodshed back into the world a thrill of panic
-shuddered through her soul, and, for the first time, she learnt
-the meaning of fear.</p>
-
-<p>Then, too, came a longing which for the time being
-overmastered all other considerations. The elementary
-animal instinct of self-preservation rose up within her with
-irresistible force and conquered the hate and the ambition
-whose objects would have vanished when another sun had
-risen.</p>
-
-<p>Her thoughts went back to her old stronghold in the
-snowy solitudes of Antarctica, to the deep dark caverns of
-Mount Terror. Surely those mighty walls of living rock,
-shrouded in eternal ice and snow, would give her an asylum
-in which she could defy the fate that was about to overwhelm
-humanity&mdash;and what then? For a moment an awful
-vision of the unspeakable loneliness of such a survival amidst
-the ruins of the world struck such terror to her heart that she
-almost resolved to head the <em>Revenge</em> into the thick of the
-fight that was still raging round Aeria, and die rather than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
-face it. Then the vision passed, and the terrors of the present
-blotted out the fear of the future.</p>
-
-<p>The last sun that the human race would ever see was
-just rising when she sent for Boris Lossenski, who was still
-commanding the <em>Revenge</em> under her, and said abruptly, and
-without even consulting Khalid, who was standing by her
-side&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“There is nothing but death to be found here. We will
-escape if we can. Head the ship for Mount Terror and make
-her fly as she has never flown before. Don’t spare either
-the engines or the power. We must be there before nightfall
-if possible.”</p>
-
-<p>Boris saluted and obeyed in silence, and Olga turned to
-Khalid and said in a tone of weariness and almost of despair&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“It is no use fighting any longer. The Fates themselves
-are against us, and I&mdash;yes, I have been frightened into belief
-at last. A shameful confession is it not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not shameful but only reasonable,” he replied. “All I
-regret is that you did not believe sooner, and save this last
-slaughter of these gallant people.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is done, is done!” she said with a half-regretful
-glance at the mountains of Aeria, which were now rapidly
-fading away into the blue distance; “it is only a question
-of sooner instead of later. Indeed, it seems hardly worth
-while even for us to attempt to live when, even if we survive,
-only the ruins of the world can be ours. And yet”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Yet sweeter would be life with you even in a wilderness
-of death than destruction that might be eternal parting,”
-replied Khalid in low tones that thrilled with passion. “Nay,
-what dearer destiny could man desire than to be the Adam of
-a new world of which you were the Eve?”</p>
-
-<p>The words of her husband&mdash;for Khalid was her husband
-now as well as her slave&mdash;brought a sudden flush to Olga’s
-face, and this was succeeded by an almost deathly pallor.
-She put up her hand to the broadened circlet of gold which
-concealed the terrible scar of the wound made by Alan’s
-bullet, and said almost in a whisper&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“You and I&mdash;yes, you and I may live. We <em>will</em>! But if
-we do we must save ourselves alone.”</p>
-
-<p>And with that she left him abruptly and went to her own
-room with the plan of her last crime already shaped in her
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>She was the only woman on board the <em>Revenge</em>. Her maid
-Anna had been left behind at Alexandria, a maniac driven mad
-by the universal terror. What of Boris and the twenty-five men
-who formed the air-ship’s crew? If they were permitted to
-survive to the time when there would be no law but might,
-she would be the one woman in the world&mdash;one woman,
-beautiful and almost defenceless, among those who, though
-now her servants, would then be ready to slay each other in
-the dispute as to which of them should be her master.</p>
-
-<p>Such a thought in such a mind as hers could have but one
-outcome. When the hour for the midday meal arrived, she
-bade Boris invite the whole crew into the main saloon, saying
-that, as this might be the last meal that any of them would eat,
-they would take it together. Then, as though moved by some
-sudden gracious fancy, she filled for every man with her own
-hands a glass of the best and oldest wine that had been reserved
-for her own use.</p>
-
-<p>Khalid, rigid Moslem as he was, refused it, and she only
-touched it with her lips, but the others drained their glasses
-and drank death at her hands, even as the Aerians had drunk
-it in the same fashion and at the same table seven years
-before.</p>
-
-<p>But this time it was fated that her sin should find her out
-more quickly. Later on in the afternoon Boris, to his amazement
-and alarm, found every man of his crew succumbing to
-an irresistible drowsiness, and soon this began to affect himself.
-A terrible thought at once flashed into his ever-suspicious
-mind. Fighting against the stupor that was stealing over his
-senses, he took a deep draught of strong spirit.</p>
-
-<p>This conquered the poison for a time and cleared his intellect
-sufficiently for him to see what his pitiless mistress had done,
-and then there rose up in his mind a desperate longing for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
-vengeance on the murderess who had used him and his companions
-as long as they were useful and then poisoned them
-like so many rats.</p>
-
-<p>He took out his pistol and examined it to see if it was
-charged, and then, with the poison and the spirit fighting in
-his brain for mastery, he made his way from the engine-room
-to the quarter-deck, where Olga and Khalid were standing,
-watching with strained, fascinated eyes and faces that looked
-livid and corpse-like in the unnatural light of the Fire-Cloud,
-the long tongues of many-coloured flame that were shooting
-like so many gigantic serpents down from the zenith, as
-though they would lick the life-blood out of the world that
-now lay panting for breath and paralysed with fear beneath
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Just as he reached the top of the companion-way a mist
-swam before Boris’s eyes, his brain reeled, and he stumbled
-forward on to the deck, discharging his pistol aimlessly as he
-did so. The bullet struck and broke to fragments against
-the bulwarks. Khalid and Olga turned round to see him
-lying on his side with savagely-gleaming eyes, livid face, and
-foam-flecked lips, trying to raise himself on one hand and take
-aim at them with the other.</p>
-
-<p>As Khalid sprang forward Olga’s ever-ready pistol came
-out of her belt. She cried to Khalid to get out of the line of
-fire, but just as she spoke Boris made his last effort, and, taking
-what aim he could, pulled the trigger. Khalid stopped short
-and clasped his hand to his right side. Then Olga, with a low
-cry of fury breaking from her white lips through her clenched
-teeth, sent a bullet through Boris’s brain just as he was
-struggling to bring his pistol up again.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you hurt, Khalid?” she asked with a deadly fear at
-her heart as she crossed the deck to where he was standing
-with his hand still pressed to his side.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he gasped. “He has shot me through the lung.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he coughed, and Olga saw drops of blood on his black
-beard and moustache. Without wasting any time in useless
-words she helped him down into the saloon and set herself at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
-once to examine and dress his wound. The bullet had entered
-between the fourth and fifth ribs on the right side, drilled a
-clean hole through the lower lobe of the right lung, and passed
-out at the back without touching any bone.</p>
-
-<p>With perfect rest and quiet there was nothing to prevent
-recovery from such a wound, but Olga shuddered as she
-thought of its consequences in their present situation. If
-Khalid succumbed, as he well might do under the unknown
-terrors and dangers of the night that was now so near, she
-would have to choose between killing herself beside him, or,
-if the rock-chambers of Mount Terror proved a safe asylum,
-living mateless and alone until she starved to death on the
-wilderness that the world would be when it had passed through
-its baptism of fire.</p>
-
-<p>She satisfied Khalid’s whispered request for an explanation
-of Boris’s attempt on their lives by saying that he had probably
-made himself drunk in an attempt to fortify himself against the
-terrors that were multiplying around him. Then she went
-through the ship and in a few minutes came back and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I shall have to take the ship to Mount Terror myself.
-It was not only Boris, for every man of the crew is dead drunk.
-Think of them making such brutes of themselves at such a
-time!</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she continued, putting her hand on his shoulder as
-she saw him make an attempt to rise. “You must not move
-yet; you will want all your strength when we get there, for
-you will have to regulate the engines while I am in the
-conning-tower. As for these animals, we will leave them to
-their fate.”</p>
-
-<p>A couple of hours later she went on deck to see whether
-Mount Terror, or at anyrate the smoke-crest of Mount Erebus,
-was in sight, for the <em>Revenge</em> had now been flying almost long
-enough to have reached the confines of Antarctica. The speed
-was, however, so great that nothing was distinctly visible.
-There was only the flaming heaven above and a grey blur
-beneath, so she went to the engine-room and slowed down to
-a hundred miles an hour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then she helped Khalid to the engineer’s seat in front of
-the controlling levers and took her place in the conning-tower.
-She had scarcely been at her post half an hour before she saw
-the huge white cones of the twin mountains of Antarctica
-shining against the dull grey sky beyond, one of them crowned
-as she had last seen it by a long stream of smoke that rose
-almost vertically in the windless air.</p>
-
-<p>She signalled to Khalid to reduce the speed, first to fifty
-and then to thirty miles an hour, allowing the <em>Revenge</em> at the
-same time to sink gently down towards the ice-covered continent.
-She crossed the well-remembered bay in which the
-<em>Narwhal</em> had performed her terrible exploit, swept over the
-ice-wall at an elevation of a hundred feet, swung the ship
-round and stopped her in front of the great cleft in the side of
-Mount Terror.</p>
-
-<p>No human foot seemed to have trodden the Antarctic
-solitude from the day she left it to crown herself Tsarina of the
-Russias to this one on which she brought her flagship back
-with its crew of murdered men to seek her last chance of life
-amidst the general doom which she could now almost bring
-herself to believe she had directly brought upon the world.</p>
-
-<p>She ran the <em>Revenge</em> slowly into the vast portal that yawned
-black and deep before her between the snow slopes of the
-mountain, and then, turning on the search-light, took her along
-the great gallery which led to the shore of the subterranean
-lake, and there lowered her for the last time to the earth.
-Then she and Khalid disembarked, he moving slowly and painfully,
-and she supporting him as well as she was able, and
-watching him with the intense anxiety of a supreme selfishness
-which had now centred itself upon him as the one possibility
-of making her life endurable.</p>
-
-<p>Thus did Tsarina Olga and Khalid the Magnificent, conquerors
-of the earth and sharers of the world-throne, come back,
-one wounded almost to death, and the other half distraught
-with fear and perplexity, to take refuge at the uttermost ends
-of the earth from the assault of the foe that had confounded all
-their schemes of conquest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Leaving the <em>Revenge</em> in the great gallery, she led him to the
-council chamber and laid him on the cushions of the luxurious
-divan on which she had been wont to hold her audiences.
-There she examined and redressed his wound, and then for the
-next three hours she busied herself bringing supplies of food
-and drink from the ship and preparing for the final siege which
-their last stronghold would so soon have to endure.</p>
-
-<p>Then the fancy took her to go once more into the air to
-take one more look at the world and the splendours of the fate
-that was menacing it. Nineteen hours had passed since she
-gave the order to head the <em>Revenge</em> for Mount Terror. Sixteen
-of these had been consumed in the most rapid flight that the
-air-ship had ever accomplished. So fast had the <em>Revenge</em> flown
-westward and southward that the sun had almost seemed to
-stand still waiting for her journey to be accomplished, but still
-it had slowly sunk farther and farther down into the luminous
-mist that now seemed to fill the whole sky.</p>
-
-<p>The difference between the longitude of Aeria and Mount
-Terror had lengthened the last fateful day by nearly five hours,
-but now the end was very near at hand, and here even, on the
-very confines of the world, life had little more than four hours
-to live. To the north the whole sky was flaming out into
-indescribable splendours, and the long fire-streams radiating
-from the nucleus now seemed to be literally holding the planet
-in their clasp. Enormous meteors were bursting out from the
-heart of the flaming cloud and exploding without a sound in
-the ever-silent abysses of space.</p>
-
-<p>She stood rooted to the spot by the weird and awful glories
-of the spectacle, and for the time being seemed to forget even
-Khalid and the indescribable dangers that were threatening
-them both. Instead of being daunted, her spirit rose as though
-in response to the splendours before her. She felt that she was
-standing upon Nature’s funeral pyre watching the conflagration
-of the world she had ruined. Saving only Khalid there was
-not another human being within thousands of miles of her, and
-in her loneliness her soul seemed to expand and rise to a
-nobility that it had never known before.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She saw the utter insignificance and contemptibility of the
-human strife which had been superseded and silenced by this
-majestic assault of the primal forces of Nature, and for the first
-time in her life she thought of herself and her sins with a
-disgust and shame that humbled her in her own eyes to the dust.</p>
-
-<p>So she stood and watched, oblivious of everything but the
-celestial glories above and around her, until a rapid series
-of frightful explosions seemed to run roaring round the whole
-horizon. She looked up with shaded eyes towards the zenith.
-The central mass had suddenly become convulsed and expanded
-until it looked as though the whole sky had been transformed
-into an ocean of fire torn by incessant storms.</p>
-
-<p>Huge masses of many-coloured flame were falling from it
-in all directions on the devoted earth, and as each of these
-entered the atmosphere it burst into myriads of fragments which
-fell in swarms until <a id="Ref_367"></a>the blazing sky was literally raining fire
-over sea and land.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_367" class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/i_406.jpg" width="600" height="422" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">The blazing Sky was literally raining Fire over Sea and Land.</span>
-<em><a href="#Ref_367">Page 367</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Fire-Cloud had at last invaded the outer confines of
-the earth’s atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>All this while there had been no change in the Antarctic
-cold of the air, but soon after the first storm of explosions
-roared out Olga felt a puff of warm tainted air blow across her
-face. Then came another and another, and then she heard
-what had never been heard before on the slopes of Mount
-Terror&mdash;the sound of running water. The snows were melting,
-and soon there would come avalanche and deluge.</p>
-
-<p>She hurried back into the council chamber, convinced that
-it was no longer safe to remain in the open air. She made
-the great bronze doors fast and covered them with layer after
-layer of thick heavy curtains. Every other opening into the
-chamber she closed up as tightly as possible. In the nature of
-the case they were compelled to trust to the supply of air
-already in it to last them through the ordeal.</p>
-
-<p>Then she went and sat down on the divan by Khalid’s side,
-and, taking his hand in hers, bent over him and kissed him on
-the lips, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Now we must wait for life or death together!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><a id="Ref_368"></a>And so they waited&mdash;waited while the ages-old snow and
-ice melted from the bare black rocks under the fierce breath of
-the fire-storm; while the ocean of flame seethed and roared
-and eddied about them, licking up the seas and melted snows
-and fighting with them as fire and water have fought since the
-world began; while the foundations of the Southern Pole
-quivered and rocked beneath their feet, and the walls of their
-refuge quaked and cracked with the throes of the writhing
-earth, and cosmos was dissolved into chaos once more.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/i_408.jpg" width="350" height="55" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>EPILOGUE.<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont ">“VENGEANCE IS MINE.”</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-capi" src="images/i_t.jpg" width="77" height="80" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-capi-quoteT">“THE temperature has been normal now for three
-hours. Don’t you think we may venture to raise
-the sluice-gate?”</p>
-
-<p>“I see nothing against it. If the world is
-not habitable again now it never will be. It is a
-good two days since the contact now, and if the atmosphere
-had been burnt up or carried away by the attraction of the
-comet it would either be much colder or much hotter than that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well then, up it comes, and then we shall get our
-last question answered.”</p>
-
-<p>It was Alan who thus questioned and answered his father.
-All had gone well with the refugees of Mount Austral and the
-remnant of the Aerian race. Their science and their faith in
-themselves had been triumphantly justified by the event and
-had carried them safely through the sternest ordeal that man
-had ever been called upon to face.</p>
-
-<p>And now there was only one more chance to be met, one
-more problem to be solved. The temperature showed that the
-earth still possessed an atmosphere, but was that atmosphere
-capable of supporting human life? If yes, all would be well
-and they could go forth into the wasted world and possess and
-replenish it. If no, then all their labour would have been in
-vain and they might as well have died in battle or with those
-friends and kin who had taken their silent and dignified farewell
-of the world in the last days of the State of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They had a calorimeter and a pressure-gauge communicating
-with the outer world to tell the temperature and the height of
-the water in the valley. The former, after rising for a few
-hours to over a thousand degrees, had now sunk back to normal,
-while the latter stood at thirty feet above the entrance doors to
-the cavern.</p>
-
-<p>The machinery for raising the sluice-gate was put into
-motion and they watched it with almost breathless anxiety lest
-the straining or shifting of the rocks, which had been very perceptible
-during the terrific convulsions which had apparently
-lasted for nearly ten hours, should have so dislocated the grooves
-that the gate could not be raised.</p>
-
-<p>There were a few preliminary creaks and groans, a hitch
-and an increased strain on the lifting chains, and then the
-great sheet of steel rose easily and smoothly to the top of the
-channel and the pent-up waters rushed forth in a black boiling
-flood through the narrow opening and roared away, foaming
-and tossing along the bottom of the crevasse, once more on their
-way to their unknown destination.</p>
-
-<p>Very soon after this it was discovered that the waters were
-subsiding much more rapidly than could be accounted for by
-the volume that escaped through the subterranean channel. It
-was therefore necessary to conclude that there must have been
-some convulsion in another part of the mountains which had
-opened a fresh channel from the lake to the outer world.</p>
-
-<p>The next step was to raise the two inner of the three doors
-which guarded the entrance to the caverns. The raising of the
-first one showed the ice still intact between it and the second,
-and this had to be broken up and removed before the second
-could be reached. Then the middle door was raised an inch or
-so and the water spurted out from beneath it.</p>
-
-<p>Was this the water of the melted ice or was it that which
-filled the valley? Had their outer door stood firm or had it
-cracked or shrivelled up under the heat of the furnace through
-which the earth had passed? It flowed for ten minutes and
-then slackened and stopped. The outer door had held fast.
-Then, in case of accidents, the middle one was lowered again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
-and they waited until the waters should have sufficiently subsided
-to enable them to challenge the last hazard on which
-their fate depended.</p>
-
-<p>The sluice-gate had been raised at what would be four o’clock
-on the morning of the 26th of September, if the cataclysm
-through which the earth had passed had not so far affected the
-terrestrial economy as to alter the relations of day and night.
-Twelve hours later the pressure-gauge ceased to act, showing
-that the rapidly-sinking waters of the lake had reached the
-threshold of the outer door. The time had now come to ask
-the question on the answer to which the lives of the remnant
-of humanity depended&mdash;was the atmosphere breathable or
-not?</p>
-
-<p>That was the one question which occupied, to the momentary
-exclusion of all others, the mind of every Aerian who was
-in the caverns. The middle gate was lifted, and every heart
-stood still as Alan and Alexis strode forward into the dark
-passage and grasped the levers which actuated the lifting
-mechanism of the outer one.</p>
-
-<p>They took one glance back at the anxious faces which
-showed so white in the gleam of the electric lamps, and then
-they pulled. The machinery creaked and groaned as the power
-was applied. Then came a rending sound and a dull crash.
-The door lifted a little, quivered and dropped again, and
-remained immovable.</p>
-
-<p>“The machinery has broken down!” said Alan, going back
-into the gallery. “There must have been a land-slip over the
-doorway.”</p>
-
-<p>“What will you do then?” said Alma. “Surely we have
-not escaped the conflagration of the world to be buried alive
-after all!”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he said, looking down at her with a reassuring smile.
-“It can hardly be as bad as that. Unless a whole mountain
-has fallen in front of the door, we shall soon find a way out.”</p>
-
-<p>The first thing to be done was to get rid of the door, and
-this Alan accomplished in summary fashion by undermining it
-with drills, and then, after he had sent everyone into the inner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
-recesses of the caverns, tearing it to fragments with a small
-quantity of the explosive used in the shells.</p>
-
-<p>A mass of earth and stones came rolling into the gallery
-immediately after the explosion, then an excavating machine
-was run up on hastily-laid rails and was soon boring its way
-into the obstructing mass. A distance of ten yards was
-tunnelled and then there was a rattle and whir in front of the
-machine, which told that the work was done. There was a
-cloud of dust from pulverised stones and earth and then came
-a rush of fresh warm air and a gleam of sunlight through the
-opening.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God the atmosphere is still there and the sun is still
-shining!” cried Alan, as he drew the machine back and ran out
-into the open air.</p>
-
-<p>He looked about him for a few moments and then turned
-and walked back to his companions, who were already crowding
-towards the opening with faces glad with new hope and drawing
-deep breaths of the life-giving air, which the mysterious alchemy
-of Nature had restored unchanged to the earth. He stopped
-them with a gesture and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t go out yet till we have made the tunnel safe. You
-will find an awful change out yonder. Aeria is no longer a
-paradise. It is only a swamp surrounded by naked rocks!”</p>
-
-<p>And so they found it to be when they at length passed out
-through the tunnel and stood upon the black oozy shores of the
-dreary lake which still half filled what had once been the lovely
-land of Aeria.</p>
-
-<p>The once verdure-clad mountains rose up bare and gaunt
-and blackened, a vast circle of ragged rock, unrelieved by a
-blade of grass or a single tree of all the myriads that had
-clothed their slopes three days before. It seemed as though
-the clock of Time had been put back through countless ages
-and the world was once more as it had been before the first
-forms of life appeared upon it.</p>
-
-<p>But still the air that fanned their cheeks was fresh and
-warm and sweet, and the afternoon sun was shining across the
-western peaks out of a cloudless sky of purest blue. The calm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
-had come after the storm and the world was waiting to begin
-its life anew. The <em>Alma</em> and the <em>Isma</em> had utterly vanished,
-and were probably buried deep in the black slimy mud. Of
-the city of Aeria not a vestige was visible.</p>
-
-<p>The first thing that Alan did as soon as the last momentous
-question had thus been asked and answered was to ask his
-father to order one of the smaller air-ships, which had been
-stored in sections in the cavern, to be put together and charged
-with motive-power as rapidly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly if you wish it,” he replied; “but what is your
-reason for being in such a hurry to reassert your empire of the
-air?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can tell you now,” said Alan in reply, “what there
-would have been no need to tell you if, well, if we had not been
-able to leave the caverns. Just after sunrise on the last day
-of the battle Bruno Vincent brought the <em>Orion</em> as near as he
-could to the <em>Alma</em> and told me by signal that he had seen the
-<em>Revenge</em> leave the fight and head away at full speed to the
-southward and westward. That means, I think, that Olga’s
-courage failed her at the last and that she meant to try the
-forlorn hope of saving herself in her old stronghold at Mount
-Terror. I am going to see whether she is alive or dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“And suppose by a miracle you should find her alive.
-What then?” said Alma, who had overheard his request, coming
-up to him and looking up into his face with melting eyes as she
-slipped her hand caressingly through his arm.</p>
-
-<p>“The world is beginning its life anew in us, dear,” he replied
-with tenderness in his eyes but none in his voice, “and there
-shall be no snake in our Eden if I”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“If you have to be the Cain of the new world to prevent
-it!” interrupted Alma, reading his dark meaning at a glance,
-and interpreting it with a directness and force that startled
-him. “No, Alan, that must not be! If she has escaped the
-vengeance of God you may well forego yours. I can hardly
-think that she is still alive, but it is right that we should go
-and see”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“We!” echoed Alan before she could finish. “Do you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
-mean that you will come with me? No, Alma, you must not
-do that. Remember that if she has by any chance escaped, the
-crew of the <em>Revenge</em> may be alive too, and then we may have
-to fight”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, Alan, not that! not that!” she cried with a gesture
-of horror. “The world has done with fighting, for there is
-nothing left to fight about. We will go as friends with open
-hands to them, and the new life of the world shall be begun
-with the forgiveness of our enemies. Who are we that we
-should judge after the Voice of God has spoken?”</p>
-
-<p>In the end she had her way, and so it came to pass that soon
-after sunrise on the following day an air-ship, which a hundred
-skilled and willing hands had toiled all night in fitting together
-and equipping for her voyage, rose into the air above the ghastly
-wilderness that had once been Aeria, and winged her way
-towards the southern pole.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty hours later she sank down on to the ice that had
-already re-covered the rocks in front of the fissure in the side
-of Mount Terror, and as she did so a figure came forth out in
-the darkness into the half light of the polar morning.</p>
-
-<p>“Look! There she is!” said Alma in an awe-stricken whisper
-to Alan. “Alone in this awful place! Come, let us go to her.”</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke the gangway steps were lowered and she
-descended them first, followed by Alan, his father, Alexis, and
-Isma. Some strange influence held the others back as she
-advanced with outstretched hands and words of kindly greeting
-on her lips towards the piteous wreck of womanhood that slowly
-emerged from the gloom of the chasm.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Ref_374"></a>Olga Romanoff had survived the doom of the world, but the
-hand of a just vengeance had fallen heavily upon her. Her
-once splendid form was shrunken as though three score years
-had passed over her in as many hours. Her left side was half
-paralysed and her shaking limbs hung loosely as she tottered
-along.</p>
-
-<div id ="Fig_374" class="figcenter" style="width: 465px;">
-<img src="images/i_415.jpg" width="465" height="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Olga Romanoff had survived the Doom of the World</span>.
-<em><a href="#Ref_374">Page 374</a>.</em></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Her golden fillet and jewelled wings had been cast away,
-leaving bare the great livid scar that crossed her forehead; her
-white, drawn face was seamed with deep lines marked by agony<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-and terror, and the thick masses of the once glorious hair that
-hung about her head and shoulders were streaked with grey and
-clotted with blood.</p>
-
-<p>The fire had died out of her eyes and the red from her
-shrivelled lips, and the weak broken voice in which she
-answered Alma’s greeting quavered like that of an old woman
-in her dotage.</p>
-
-<p>“I have been expecting you,” she said as Alma took her
-trembling hands in hers. “I thought you would come. You
-have come for Alan, haven’t you? He is yonder, but he is dead.
-I kept him alive as long as I could but he was wounded, and
-when the world was changed to hell for my sins the fire choked
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“I tried to die too, but it wouldn’t kill me. There was air
-enough for me and I wanted to give it to him to breathe but he
-wouldn’t take it. I suppose you have been dead and are an
-angel now like those others behind you. Come, I will take you
-to him. It is dark but I know the way.”</p>
-
-<p>The moment she began to speak Alma saw the awful
-calamity that had befallen her. The haughty daring spirit that
-had essayed and almost achieved the conquest of the world
-was dissolved in the bitter waters of the Marah of Madness.
-The soul that had quailed before no human fear had collapsed
-into imbecility under the superhuman terrors which she alone
-had witnessed and survived. Without a word she suffered her
-to lead her into the gloom, beckoning to the others to follow.
-They turned on the electric lamps they had brought with them
-and entered the chasm.</p>
-
-<p>They reached the black ash-strewn floor of the gloomy
-subterranean lake in the heart of the mountain, and Alan,
-pausing for a moment, flashed the light of his lamp round the
-vast chamber that had once been so terribly familiar to him.
-The walls were burnt and blackened, and here and there masses
-of rock and boulders had been calcined to dust as though the
-long pent-up lava that had once flowed in fiery torrents over
-them had again been let loose.</p>
-
-<p>Then the light fell upon something that was not rock and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
-which gave back a dull metallic sheen. He took a few strides
-towards it and soon recognised it as all that was left of the once
-shapely and beautiful <em>Ithuriel</em>, the old flagship of the Aerian
-fleet with which he had lost the mastery of his own manhood
-and his people the empire of the air.</p>
-
-<p>The crystal dome of the roof was gone and lay in patches
-of congealed glass about the blackened and shrivelled-up deck.
-The wings were burnt away and the transverse ribs of azurine
-stood out bare and twisted like the bones of a skeleton, and in
-the fore part of the hull a great gap showed where her magazine
-had taken fire and burnt with such terrific heat that it had
-melted even the azurine plates of which she was built.</p>
-
-<p>“The poor old <em>Ithuriel</em> has flown her last flight!” he said to
-himself with a sigh as he turned away and followed the others,
-thinking sadly of all that had come to pass since he had last
-trodden her deck.</p>
-
-<p>Olga, holding Alma by the hand, led the way from the lower
-gallery to the council chamber. As she pulled the curtain
-aside from the doorway a puff of foul air that seemed to bear a
-faint smell of blood was wafted in their faces. Alan called
-Alma back, fearing that she would faint in the sickening
-atmosphere, and at the sound of his voice Olga stopped short
-and looked back with a reawakened gleam in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is that?” she cried, pressing her hand to her brow.
-“Why, it is Alan! But no, Alan is here&mdash;here. He has been
-with me all the time since Khalid shot him. My God, can he
-have come to life again?”</p>
-
-<p>Her voice rose to a shrill wavering scream as she said this.
-She dropped Alma’s hand and ran with faltering, stumbling
-steps towards a divan on which lay the form of a man whose
-black beard and moustache were thickly clotted with blood.
-She stopped and bent over it for a moment, then she raised
-herself and faced them with her hands locked in her hair and the
-light of frenzied insanity blazing in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“No! No!” she cried in a voice, half a scream and half a
-wail, that rang weirdly through the great chamber. “He is
-dead still and that is only his ghost. Oh, Alan, my love, Alan!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
-Why could I not die with you? Curse the hand that wounded
-you. Curse”&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>In the one syllable her voice died away from a scream to a
-whisper, and at the same instant the paralysis, which had
-already smitten her once, laid its swift icy hand on her heart
-and brain. She swayed to and fro for a moment and then fell
-forward across the corpse of the man whose love for her had
-plunged the world into madness on the eve of its doom.</p>
-
-<p>“What an awful end!” gasped Alma, shuddering in the
-close embrace she had sought in Alan’s arms. “And yet, Alan,
-she loved you to the end through all. That love for you was
-the one true thing in her life, and for its sake I will say God
-forgive her! Come, let us go!”</p>
-
-<p class="center p2">THE END.</p>
-
-<p class="center p2 smallfont">MORRISON AND GIBB, PRINTERS, EDINBURGH.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> The 8th of December, on which day, in the year 1904, the armies of the
-Anglo-Saxon Federation and the aerial navy of the Terrorists defeated and
-almost annihilated the hosts of the Franco-Slavonian League, then besieging
-London under the command of Alexander Romanoff, last of the Tsars of
-Russia, and so made possible the universal disarmament which took place the
-following year.&mdash;<cite>The Angel of the Revolution</cite>, chap. xlvi.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The good old word had now regained its ancient and uncorrupted
-meaning.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Such a poison as this is no figment of the imagination. It has been
-known to Oriental adepts in poisoning for many centuries, and the Borghias
-were certainly familiar with it. A kindred drug was used by the Russian
-agents who kidnapped the late Prince Alexander of Bulgaria, though in his
-case the injury was permanent. It reduced him from one of the most able
-and daring princes in Europe to a mental and moral cripple, who was perfectly
-content to live in the obscurity to which his enemies had consigned him.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Those readers who may be inclined to think this speed extravagant or
-impossible are requested to remember that the most recent experiments in aerodynamics
-have proved that the higher the speed of an aerial machine the less is
-the power required to support and propel it, or, to quote the words of Professor
-Langley, of the Smithsonian Institute, “One horse-power will transport a
-larger weight at twenty miles an hour than at ten, a still larger at forty miles
-an hour than at twenty, and so on with increasing economy of power with each
-higher speed up to some remote limit not yet attained in experiment.” Granted
-therefore the practically illimitable energy of the motive power supposed to be
-at the command of the Aerians, there is no reason why a ship of the dimensions
-of the <em>Avenger</em> should not be propelled at the enormous speed mentioned
-in the text.</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p class="center largefont boldfont">Now ready, Eighth Edition, price 6s. post free,</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>With numerous Illustrations by Fred. T. Jane and Edwin S. Hope</em>,</p>
-
-<p class="center xxlargefont sansseriffont">THE ANGEL OF THE REVOLUTION.</p>
-
-<p class="center xlargefont boldfont">A TALE OF THE COMING TERROR.</p>
-
-<p class="center largefont sansseriffont"><span class="smcap">By GEORGE GRIFFITH.</span></p>
-
-<p>In this Romance of Love, War, and Revolution, the action takes place
-ten years hence, and turns upon the solution of the problem of aerial
-navigation, which enables a vast Secret Society to decide the issue of the
-coming world-war, for which the great nations of the earth are now preparing.
-Battles such as have hitherto only been vaguely dreamed of are fought on
-land and sea and in the air. Aerial navies engage armies and fleets and
-fortresses, and fight with each other in an unsparing warfare, which has for
-its prize the empire of the world. Unlike all other essays in prophetic
-fiction, it deals with the events of to-morrow, and with characters familiar
-in the eyes of living men. It marks an entirely new departure in fiction,
-and opens up possibilities which may become stupendous and appalling
-realities before the present generation of men has passed away.</p>
-
-<p class="center xlargefont"><em>A FEW PRESS OPINIONS.</em></p>
-
-<p>“Since the days of the Arabian Nights’ Entertainments, we know of no writer
-who ‘takes the cake’ like Mr. George Griffith.”&mdash;<cite>Daily Chronicle.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“A really exciting and sensational romance.”&mdash;<cite>Literary World.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“As a work of imagination it takes high rank.”&mdash;<cite>Belfast News Letter.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Full of absorbing interest.”&mdash;<cite>Barrow Herald.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“This powerful story.”&mdash;<cite>Liverpool Mercury.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“An entirely new departure in fiction.”&mdash;<cite>Reynolds’ Newspaper.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Of exceptional brilliancy and power.”&mdash;<cite>Western Figaro.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“This remarkable story.”&mdash;<cite>Weekly Times and Echo.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“There is a fascination about his book that few will be able to resist.”&mdash;<cite>Birmingham
-Gazette.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“This exciting romance.”&mdash;<cite>Licensing World.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“A work of strong imaginative power.”&mdash;<cite>Dundee Courier.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“We must congratulate the author upon the vividness and reality with
-which he draws his unprecedented pictures.”&mdash;<cite>Bristol Mercury.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Is quite enthralling.”&mdash;<cite>Glasgow Herald.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“A striking and fascinating novel.”&mdash;<cite>Hampshire Telegraph.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p class="center boldfont">PRICE 1s. Post Free,</p>
-
-<p class="center xlargefont boldfont">A HEROINE OF THE SLUMS, and other Tales of the Times.</p>
-
-<p class="center largefont sansseriffont"><span class="smcap">By GEORGE GRIFFITH, Author of “The Angel of the Revolution.”</span></p>
-
-<p>These Tales form a series of narratives in which are depicted some of the most thrilling
-situations and startling incidents taken from real everyday life that have ever appeared
-in print. They are written with all the vividness of description and fascination of style
-which gained for their Author so much renown in his highly-popular work, “The Angel of
-the Revolution,” and should prove most attractive to all classes of readers.</p>
-
-<p>“A capital shilling collection of exciting and laughable stories.”&mdash;<cite>Weekly Times and
-Echo.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“A very entertaining shilling’s worth.”&mdash;<cite>N. B. Daily Mail.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“A collection of cleverly written stories.”&mdash;<cite>Bristol Mercury.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“A capital book for a holiday or a railway train.”&mdash;<cite>Scotsman.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“An attractive mélange of fiction, and that of a kind extremely popular in these days.”&mdash;<cite>Dundee
-Advertiser.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p class="center boldfont">PRICE 6s. POST FREE,</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>With numerous Illustrations by T. S. C. Crowther and Captain C. Field,
-In addition to Nine Military Maps</em>,</p>
-
-<p class="center xxlargefont boldfont">THE GREAT WAR IN ENGLAND IN 1897.</p>
-
-<p class="center largefont"><span class="smcap">By WILLIAM LE QUEUX</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="center smallfont">AUTHOR OF “GUILTY BONDS,” “STRANGE TALES OF A NIHILIST,” ETC.</p>
-
-<p>There is a curious division of opinion upon the merits of Mr.
-<span class="smcap">William Le Queux’s</span> remarkable book, “The Great War in England
-in 1897.” The Author has performed a task never before attempted,
-namely, to forecast an invasion of the whole of England and Scotland,
-and the reviewers have taken him to task very freely. It has received
-the warmest commendation from the Duke of Cambridge, the Duke of
-Connaught, Lord Wolseley, Lord Roberts, and Lord George Hamilton;
-and the “Service” papers, who should know something of our army and
-navy, unanimously praise it. <cite>The Admiralty and Horse Guards Gazette</cite>
-says:&mdash;“Mr. Le Queux is a vivid writer, and his work gives evidence of
-care and thoroughness. <b>The book is the best of its kind</b> we
-have come across.” <cite>The United Service Gazette</cite> says that the author
-has studied the tactical and strategical problems thoroughly, and that
-“<b>the book will do a national service</b>”; while <cite>The Naval and
-Military Record</cite> and the <cite>Army and Navy Gazette</cite> say that Mr. Le
-Queux has special qualifications for the task he has carried out so
-successfully. Most of the influential daily papers have also eulogised
-it strongly, amongst them the <cite>Times</cite>, <cite>Standard</cite>, <cite>World</cite>, <cite>Sketch</cite>,
-<cite>Nottingham Daily Guardian</cite>, <cite>Scotsman</cite>, <cite>Glasgow Herald</cite>, <cite>Yorkshire
-Post</cite>, <cite>Aberdeen Free Press</cite>, <cite>Bradford Argus</cite>, <cite>Manchester Courier</cite>,
-<cite>Western Morning News</cite>, <cite>Bristol Mercury</cite>, and the <cite>Liverpool Courier</cite>.
-<cite>The Newcastle Daily Chronicle</cite> devoted a column to a review of a
-most commendatory character. <cite>The Daily Graphic</cite> says it is “<b>the
-most comprehensive and thrilling of anything yet
-attempted</b>.” Three of the most powerful papers on the Continent,
-the Paris <cite>Figaro</cite>, the Milan <cite>Secolo</cite>, and the Rome <cite>Opinione</cite>, have
-devoted leading articles to the problems put forward by the Author,
-all three journals declaring that <b>the work is unique</b>, while <cite>The
-Sheffield Daily Telegraph</cite> says it is “<b>the sensation</b> as well as <b>the
-success</b> of the book season.” That it is phenomenally successful
-is proved by the fact that <b>Five Editions were sold within four
-weeks</b>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<p class="center largefont boldfont">Now ready, Fourth Edition, price 6s. post free,</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Demy 8vo, handsomely bound in cloth gilt</em>,</p>
-
-<p class="center xxlargefont boldfont">THE CAPTAIN OF THE MARY ROSE.</p>
-
-<p class="center largefont"><em>A TALE OF TO-MORROW.</em></p>
-
-<p class="center largefont sansseriffont"><span class="smcap">By W. LAIRD CLOWES</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="center smallfont">U.S. NAVAL INSTITUTE.</p>
-
-<p class="center boldfont">With 60 Illustrations by the Chevalier de Martino and Fred. T. Jane.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 120px;">
-<img src="images/i_422.jpg" width="120" height="8" alt="Curly line." />
-</div>
-
-<p>This work has been truly described by the public press as an intensely
-realistic and stirring romance of the near future. It describes the
-wonderful adventures of an armour-clad cruiser, built on the Tyne,
-which takes part in a great Naval War that suddenly breaks out
-between France and Great Britain. The dashing way in which the
-vessel is handled, her narrow escapes, the boldness of her successful
-attacks upon the enemy, and the heroic conduct of her commander and
-crew, form altogether a narrative of most absorbing interest, and full of
-exciting scenes and situations.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 120px;">
-<img src="images/i_422.jpg" width="120" height="8" alt="Curly line." />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center largefont sansseriffont">THE FOLLOWING ARE A FEW PRESS OPINIONS.</p>
-
-<p>“Deserves something more than a mere passing notice.”&mdash;<cite>The Times.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Full of exciting situations.... Has manifold attractions for all
-sorts of readers.”&mdash;<cite>Army and Navy Gazette.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“The most notable book of the season.”&mdash;<cite>The Standard.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“A clever book. Mr. Clowes is pre-eminent for literary touch and
-practical knowledge of naval affairs.”&mdash;<cite>Daily Chronicle.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Mr. W. Laird Clowes’ exciting story.”&mdash;<cite>Daily Telegraph.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“We read ‘The Captain of the Mary Rose’ at a sitting.”&mdash;<cite>The
-Pall Mall Gazette.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Written with no little spirit and imagination.... A stirring
-romance of the future.”&mdash;<cite>Manchester Guardian.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Is of a realistic and exciting character.... Designed to show
-what the naval warfare of the future may be.”&mdash;<cite>Glasgow Herald.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“One of the most interesting volumes of the year.”&mdash;<cite>Liverpool
-Journal of Commerce.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“It is well told and magnificently illustrated.”&mdash;<cite>United Service
-Magazine.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Full of absorbing interest.”&mdash;<cite>Engineers’ Gazette.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Is intensely realistic, so much so that after commencing the story
-every one will be anxious to read to the end.”&mdash;<cite>Dundee Advertiser.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“The book is splendidly illustrated.”&mdash;<cite>Northern Whig.</cite></p>
-
-<p class="center largefont boldfont">TOWER PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,</p>
-
-<p class="center boldfont">95 MINORIES, LONDON, E.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div><!--Page break for ePub-->
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2 style="margin-top: 0em">Transcriber’s Note:</h2>
-
-<p>Footnotes have been moved to the end of the text just before the
-advertisements and relabeled consecutively through the document.</p>
-
-<p>Illustrations have been moved to paragraph breaks near where they are
-mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>Punctuation has been made consistent.</p>
-
-<p>Variations in spelling and hyphenation were retained as they appear in
-the original publication, except that obvious typographical errors
-have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>The following changes were made:</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Ref_40">p. 40</a>: himself changed to herself (correct herself, she)</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Ref_46">p. 46</a>: of changed to so (and so the)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLGA ROMANOFF***</p>
-<p>******* This file should be named 54096-h.htm or 54096-h.zip *******</p>
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