summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--75218-0.txt2785
-rw-r--r--75218-h/75218-h.htm4312
-rw-r--r--75218-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 881018 bytes
-rw-r--r--75218-h/images/img-1.jpgbin0 -> 131741 bytes
-rw-r--r--75218-h/images/img-3.jpgbin0 -> 90245 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
8 files changed, 7114 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/75218-0.txt b/75218-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0879992
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75218-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,2785 @@
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75218 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ Secret of the EARTH STAR
+
+ By
+ HENRY KUTTNER
+
+ [Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
+ Amazing Stories August 1942.
+ Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
+ the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
+
+ _The theft of the Earth Star blazed a trail of death to a weird
+ city under the Sahara._
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: The jewel glowed and death leaped from the gun]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+
+Despite the blazing heat of the hot Indian night, this air-conditioned
+room in the palace was cool and comfortable. It was a bit too luxurious
+for a business office; otherwise, it might have been any New York suite.
+Three men sat at a small glass-topped table, on which stood a Gladstone
+bag.
+
+They rose as two Indians entered, bowing respectfully to the Rajah. The
+latter was a small, weak-faced man with a straggling moustache and lips
+too large and red for his sallow face. He barely acknowledged the
+greetings, his gaze riveted on the leather bag.
+
+“You have the Earth Star?” he asked.
+
+“Yes,” said one of the three Europeans. He opened the bag, unlocked a
+metal case built into it, and withdrew a jewel-case. This he opened and
+placed flat on the table.
+
+The Rajah’s mouth went dry. He could not repress a little shiver. “The
+Earth Star ...” he whispered.
+
+On black velvet the great gem flamed. It was lens-shaped and supernally
+lovely, with rays of living light flaming out from its heart. The colors
+latent within it changed and shifted under the soft illumination. It was
+like a diamond—yet no diamond had ever possessed the wonder of the
+Earth Star.
+
+The Rajah’s secretary breathed deeply. “Carbon,” he murmured. “A
+tree-fern some million years ago—”
+
+One of the Europeans interrupted, though he did not look away from the
+jewel. “A little more than that, sir. It took unusual pressure to make
+the Earth Star. It came from the new cavern mines under the Atlantic,
+you know, when they were taking cores to test from immense depths. A
+tree-fern made the Earth Star—but that fern was somehow buried deeper
+than man has ever thought possible. It’s immensely harder than diamond,
+though it’s carbon, of course. And the only one in existence—”
+
+The Rajah said softly, “There is an Earth Star in the crown of your
+ruler.”
+
+A subdued smile went the rounds of the group. “So there is, and an
+excellent imitation, too. I repeat: you will be the owner of the only
+Earth Star in existence.”
+
+The Rajah placed his slim hand, glittering with invaluable jeweled
+rings, flat on the table-top. “Then it is a bargain. My secretary will
+give you a check.”
+
+Abruptly the moonlight was blotted out. The figure of a man seemed to
+rush out of the night, leaping in through the open window to land
+lightly on the deep carpet. And that window overlooked a sheer abyss,
+reaching down to the river gorge far below.
+
+The sudden movements of the Europeans, and the quick gesture of the
+Rajah’s secretary, were arrested at sight of an oddly shaped pistol in a
+gloved hand. The intruder stood motionless, one hand gripping a light
+metal ladder that extended up through the window and out of sight. He
+wore ordinary flying togs, but his face was hidden by a black silk mask.
+
+“Don’t move,” he said, in a low voice that was obviously disguised.
+“No—don’t do that!” The pistol jerked slightly; otherwise there was no
+indication that the trigger had been pulled. But one of the Europeans
+cursed softly as his arm dropped to his side, paralyzed.
+
+“A neurogun,” the masked man observed pleasantly. “It _can_ kill, you
+know.... I’ll thank you not to move. Now—” He hooked the flexible
+ladder across a chair and moved warily to the table. “The Earth Star,
+eh?”
+
+“Don’t be a fool,” the secretary said. “You can’t hope to sell that.
+It’s unique.”
+
+The intruder did not answer, but his quizzical gaze was amused. The
+tallest of the Europeans snarled, “Sell it? Jackass—haven’t you ever
+heard of the Merlin?”
+
+As he spoke, his foot moved slightly toward the chair to which the
+ladder was attached. He froze as the Merlin turned toward him.
+
+“You recognize me?”
+
+“I’ve heard of you.”
+
+“Good!” The Merlin’s voice was suddenly sharp. “Then listen! I have ways
+of finding out what I want to know. I discovered that certain powers
+ruling your country had decided to sell the Earth Star to our friend the
+Rajah. The price I don’t know, but it must be fabulous. If that money
+were to go to needed purposes, I’d not have come here tonight.”
+
+The tall European kicked the chair gently. The metal ladder slipped off,
+slid across the carpet, and vanished out the window. The Merlin
+apparently did not notice, though his retreat was now cut off.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He went on: “But the money is to be used for armaments. And you
+gentlemen, and those behind you, are trying to foment a new war. As for
+you—” He glanced at the Rajah. “You are a degenerate moron. _Don’t
+move!_ It’s probably the first time you’ve ever heard the truth, but
+you’re going to hear it now. You’re the wealthiest man in the Orient,
+and you inherited your fortune, as well as your powers. You won’t buy
+the Earth Star out of your own treasury, though. It’ll mean taxes for
+your people, who are starving already. Another reason why I’m here.”
+
+The Merlin glanced down. “This bit of carbon is causing trouble, I
+think. So I’ll take it along. The imitation that was made to replace it
+won’t interest the Rajah. So—”
+
+He slipped the jewel in his pocket and moved back toward the window. The
+others watched him narrowly. The Merlin apparently did not notice the
+absence of his metal ladder.
+
+The gun was still steady in one hand, but in the other he now held an
+object like a small flashlight. “You may be interested in knowing how I
+evaded your guards and alarms. I came in a gyroship.”
+
+“But—my motor-killing rays—” The Rajah’s eyes were wide.
+
+“They extend up only 300 feet. I hovered well above that point and came
+down a ladder. And here it is.”
+
+The ladder swung in from the darkness. The Merlin’s voice was amused as
+he slipped the “flashlight” into his flying suit.
+
+“A clever trick—but I have a very powerful magnet. I’ll leave you,
+gentlemen—”
+
+For an instant his attention was distracted as he put one foot on the
+window-sill. Simultaneously the tallest European acted. With a
+deep-voiced oath he sprang forward, seized the Merlin, and clamped one
+hand over the outlaw’s gun-wrist.
+
+“Hold him!” the secretary shrilled. He dived for an alarm buzzer. The
+other Europeans closed in.
+
+The Merlin fought in silence. His opponent was trying to drag him back
+into the room—and that would be fatal. The outlaw dropped his weapon
+and gripped the ladder, with both hands now.
+
+He pulled himself up, putting all his weight on his arms. Inevitably the
+European was lifted too. Overbalanced, the two went arcing into the
+night as clutching fingers missed their mark by a fraction.
+
+“Shoot!” the Rajah screamed. “Shoot him!”
+
+Guns blazed from the window. Dim in the moonlight two figures were
+struggling on a frail metal ladder, suspended above nothingness. A scrap
+of cloth went fluttering down.
+
+“His mask—”
+
+Out of the dark came a voice, sharp and clear.
+
+“_Martell!_”
+
+It rose in a scream. One of the figures went plunging down.
+
+The secretary was at the window, a flashlight in his hand. He focused
+the beam on the quarry, a man in flying togs who kept his face turned
+from the light. Now other rays shot out from the roof, bathing the
+Merlin in merciless brilliance. A shot cracked sharply.
+
+“They’ll get him,” the Rajah said. “I’ve sub-machine guns on the roof.”
+
+The Merlin’s hand lifted, fumbled over the ladder. And—suddenly—he was
+gone! Ladder and outlaw vanished!
+
+The Rajah stared in blank amazement. “How—”
+
+“Automatic winding device in his plane. It just wound him up.” The
+European who spoke looked at his empty gun. “Better get your planes
+after him.”
+
+At a nod from the Rajah the secretary hurried from the room. “We’ll get
+him,” royalty remarked.
+
+“No, you won’t. The Merlin’s got a fast plane. He’s pulled off these
+things before. But this time—well, he lost his mask.”
+
+“Did you recognize him?”
+
+“Stone did, before he fell. He screamed a name. Remember? Martell.”
+
+“A common name,” the Rajah frowned.
+
+“Stone and I worked closely together. He knew no Martells. He recognized
+the name and the face from elsewhere. Newsreels—newspapers—everybody
+knows Seth Martell and his sons. I’ll get in touch with my government
+immediately. May I use your televisor?”
+
+“Yes. Recover the Earth Star, and I’ll buy it.”
+
+“That,” said the European grimly, “is a bargain.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+ Escape
+
+
+Seth Martell’s craggy, strong face was set in harsh lines as he sat
+staring at a folded paper on his desk. Sunlight came warmly through the
+windows of the penthouse apartment above New York, silvering Martell’s
+iron-gray hair and clipped moustache. He looked hard as nails—till he
+lifted his lids and gazed at the three young men before him.
+
+Seth Martell was one of the biggest men in America. Connected with the
+military, high up in the government, his honesty had never been
+questioned, nor his devotion to his country. Always he had been
+unswerving in serving his own ideals, no matter what self-sacrifice it
+entailed. Now—
+
+Now there was pain in his gray eyes.
+
+He looked at his three sons and hesitated, tapping the folded document
+with stubby, calloused fingers.
+
+“Well?”
+
+None of the three spoke.
+
+Martell reached for a buzzer, and then drew back his hand. He looked at
+the tallest of the three.
+
+“Tony. Are you the Merlin?”
+
+Tony—a dark, lean young man, with very keen black eyes and a thin eager
+face—cocked up a quizzical eyebrow. “I, sir? The—”
+
+Martell’s restraint failed for an instant as he snapped, “Answer me!”
+
+Tony sobered. “No, sir,” he said quietly. “I’m not.”
+
+“Phil.”
+
+The second youth, blond and stocky, took a stubby pipe out of his mouth.
+
+“No, sir.”
+
+“Jimmy.”
+
+The third of the trio looked somewhat like Tony, though a less matured
+man. The eagerness in Tony’s face was enthusiasm in Jimmy’s, boyish and
+pleasant. He shot a quick glance at the others, hesitated, and finally
+said, with a little frown, “I’m not the Merlin, sir.”
+
+Martell sighed. “All right. Go in the sun-room and wait, boys. The
+investigators will be in presently.” He sat steadily regarding his nails
+till his sons had departed.
+
+Tony left them at the door. “Be with you directly,” he murmured, and
+hurried off along the corridor. The others went into the room, and ten
+minutes later the oldest of the three came in, his face blandly
+impassive. He went to the window and stood staring out over the
+skyscrapers of New York, waiting on the verge of the 21st century. He
+began to whistle ruminatively.
+
+“Seth insisted on interviewing us before the detecs. Good of him.”
+
+Young Jimmy, nervously lighting a cigarette, nodded. “Damn good. But all
+this.... I don’t understand it.”
+
+Phil’s serious eyes were questioning. “Are you sure? There’s no doubt
+the authorities think one of us is a crook. I wonder—”
+
+There was a little silence. Finally Jimmy asked, “Who is this Merlin,
+anyway?”
+
+“Cleverest crook in the world,” said Tony, turning. “At least, he’s been
+kicking around for two years. That means a lot these days. He’s pretty
+much of a Robin Hood. Only kills in self-defense—and never for personal
+profit.”
+
+Phil broke in, “Plenty of criminals have evaded capture for years, but
+they’re the small fry. Not important enough to attract attention. But
+the Merlin—everyone thinks he’s had years of experience. Remember when
+Janison died? The governor? The Merlin killed him, and nobody knew why
+till they found out Janison was one of the biggest political racketeers
+in the country. He’s a Robin Hood of sorts, but the law won’t stand for
+Robin Hoods.”
+
+“And,” said Tony sardonically, “one of us is the Merlin. So they say.”
+
+Phil grinned. “Which one?”
+
+“Oh, they’ll find out. They’ll chart our psychology—our character
+patterns—and check it with the analysis of the Merlin’s activities.
+Their lie-detectors will tell them which one of us is the Merlin. That’s
+positive identification, you know.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Jimmy crushed out his cigarette, lips working. He swung suddenly on the
+others.
+
+“You’re damn flippant about it! What if it’s true? What if one of us
+_is_ this crook—d’you know what that’ll mean to Seth? His son shown to
+the world as a thief and a murderer. Seth will stick by us; I know that.
+But I know what his honor means to him. He got that silver plate in his
+skull because he thought more of honor than his life. And now—”
+
+“Shut up, Jimmy,” Phil said quietly. “We know all that. But what can we
+do about it?”
+
+Tony murmured, “Our youngest brother is about to suggest that the Merlin
+confess. A touching sentiment. Headlines all over the world announcing
+the news. Seth resigning all his offices immediately—he’d do that.
+Everyone knowing that a son of Seth Martell was—the Merlin.”
+
+Phil said, “The Merlin might ... disappear.”
+
+“He’d have to disappear for good. Suppose I’m the lad, Philip, and
+suppose I disappear. A signed confession would be just as effective. The
+moment I disappear, it proves I’m the Merlin. No one has ever watched
+us. As Seth’s sons, we’re above the routine character-checks. We
+reported to Seth once a month. Otherwise we were free, all of us, with
+plenty of time to do as we pleased. Including brigandage!”
+
+Phil grunted. “Anyway, people can’t simply drop out of sight in this day
+and age. Not with television, specialized wireless, telephotography, and
+so forth. Where the devil could a man hide for years?”
+
+“In the Foreign Legion,” Tony said, and waited. His gaze searched the
+faces of the other two.
+
+Surprise, astonishment, and incredulity showed. And vanished. Into
+Phil’s eyes came a look of dogged grimness. And Jimmy’s face
+showed—excitement.
+
+“The Legion?” he asked.
+
+“Yeah. No extradition. Since 1960, when the company started. No
+government has a hand in the Legion. They rent its services from the
+company, just as the Hessian dukes used to sell their soldiers to fight
+for other countries. When there’s a job to be done too dirty for anyone
+else, they ask the Legion—and waive extradition. The Polar fortresses.
+The Sub-Sahara. The Canal Patrols on Mars. Dangerous space-lane patrols.
+It isn’t like the ancient French Legion. This one’s privately owned,
+and, once you get in, nothing on Earth or Mars can touch you. As long as
+you’re in the Legion. Men don’t live long in it, as a rule.”
+
+“Cheerful thought,” Phil grunted, puffing at his pipe. “By the way,
+which of us _is_ the Merlin?”
+
+Tony smiled. “I’m the guy, lads. And that’s what I’ve been building up
+to. I’m going to drop out of sight. Head for the Legion. And—well, I
+wanted you two to know about it. I can’t tell Seth, of course. But—”
+
+“I’ll be damned,” Phil said in blank amazement. “You’ve got the Earth
+Star?”
+
+“That’s right.”
+
+“Odd. I happen to have it myself. In a hollow tooth.”
+
+“You’re both crazy,” said Jimmy. “I’ve got it.”
+
+Tony shook his head. “It’s no use. There’s no point in the three of us
+going into the Legion. One’s enough. So—”
+
+Phil said, “Wait a minute. Suppose all three of us disappear? Nobody’d
+press a charge against three men, when obviously two were innocent. I
+happen to have the jewel myself—”
+
+“Yeah,” Tony grunted. “But slow down. You’re both going off the
+deep-end. I’m leaving now. Heading for the Legion, and you’re both
+staying here.”
+
+Jimmy said, “We’ll meet you there.”
+
+The argument kept on—with no result. Jimmy and Phil were adamant. Each
+one insisted he had the stolen gem. And, if they didn’t accompany Tony,
+they’d simply go after him on their own hook. “So we’d better stick
+together,” Phil said at last. “We’ll have a better chance that way.”
+
+Tony’s lips were compressed. “You crazy fools! You’d do it, too ...
+well, stay here. I’m going after an amphiplane.”
+
+“What if the investigators get here first?” Phil asked.
+
+“Stall ’em. And keep your eye on that window.”
+
+Jimmy was chewing his lip. “How do you expect to get out? If there are
+guards—”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tony’s grin flashed. “You’ll find out.” He turned to the door—and was
+gone, apparently unruffled. But as he hurried along the passage there
+was a gnawing uneasiness in his mind. Guards would no doubt be watching
+to prevent just such an attempt at escape as this. Only blind luck could
+help now.
+
+He went into the big, gleaming kitchen, a bare room with murals on its
+walls. Every appliance had been built-in, so that stove, tables, and so
+forth, could be swung out from their cubbyholes by the pressure of a
+button. The room was empty.
+
+Tony’s sharp eyes flickered about, resting at last on a panel near by.
+He went to it, swung it open, and revealed a black hole beyond. The
+dumbwaiter. A glance upward informed him that the little car was below,
+though how far he did not know. Deftly Tony swung his legs through the
+hole and seized the ropes in strong fingers.
+
+He closed the panel behind him.
+
+It wasn’t entirely dark. A diffused pale glow filtered down from above,
+and gently, carefully, Tony let himself slip toward the shaft’s bottom.
+It was a long chance. Unless he found footing on the dumbwaiter car
+soon, his fingers would inevitably lose their cramped grip. For this was
+a penthouse apartment in a skyscraper.
+
+Down he went into the shaft. Skin scraped from his hands. It grew
+darker, and below him was only unfathomable blackness. Tony hooked his
+legs about the rope and rested for a few moments, though he dared not
+delay long. Time was vitally important.
+
+Then down he went again. He was in pitch darkness now, every muscle
+strained and beginning to ache. His hands stung painfully. His shoulders
+were throbbing.
+
+Tony’s feet thumped softly upon the peaked top of the car.
+
+Gasping with relief, he relaxed, keeping the ropes wound about his wrist
+so that his weight would not carry the car to the bottom too suddenly.
+But a moment later he was plummeting down, occasionally checking his
+speed when caution grew stronger than the imperative need for haste. Up
+in the penthouse Jimmy and Phil were waiting, perhaps being questioned
+even now by the investigators. And Seth—unseen in the darkness, Tony’s
+face grew grim. Seth was suffering. The old man’s devotion to his
+ideals, to humanity was pitted against his genuine love for his three
+step-sons. And one of those three was the Merlin.
+
+Finally the car thumped against the bottom of the shaft. A little crack
+of light indicated the panel opening into the porter’s cellar. Tony used
+his knife-blade to open it, easing the door outward little by little
+till he discovered that the room was vacant.
+
+The rest was surprisingly easy. A pair of overalls and a cap in a closet
+made a satisfactory disguise, and, carrying a can of rubbish, Tony
+walked blandly past the service man posted on guard outside. He
+deposited his burden on the sidewalk, and without a pause began to hurry
+toward the corner. A hail stopped him.
+
+“You, there! Wait a minute!”
+
+Tony turned. The guard was following him, gaze probing. A thick finger
+thrust out suspiciously.
+
+“Where’re you going?”
+
+The street was almost empty. Tony didn’t wait for the guard. He hastened
+toward him, arms hanging loosely at his side—until the last moment.
+Then, as recognition came into the man’s eyes and as his hand dived into
+a pocket, Tony brought up his fist in a vicious uppercut. The blow was
+delivered at such close quarters that it went unobserved by passers-by.
+The dull thwack of bone against bone was the only sound. Tony caught the
+guard as he fell, pulled him swiftly back into the cellar, and left him
+there. The man was out for the count.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were no other guards. Tony’s progress was not halted again. He
+reached his destination, secured a small, swift amphiplane, equipped
+with gyros, and lifted it through the port in the roof. Luckily, he had
+plenty of money in his pocket—enough to buy the plane instead of
+renting it, had he desired to do so. But, like most ships of this type,
+the instrument board was fitted with a “homing pigeon” device, by which
+the plane could be set to return to its garage along a radio beam
+whenever desired.
+
+Tony’s fingers flickered over the controls. The ship was a honey—small
+and swift, built like a thick cigar, with retractable wings and props.
+He swung up in a wide arc that presently brought him directly over the
+penthouse that was his goal.
+
+Briefly he wondered what had happened there, and whether Phil and Jimmy
+were still waiting. Well—fast work was vital now. The investigators
+were already on guard. Sight of an approaching plane would warn them of
+trouble. Tony checked his controls, took a few deep breaths—and dropped
+faster than was safe. The wind shrieked up into a high-pitched whine
+past the ship, almost beyond the threshold of hearing.
+
+The skyscraper leaped toward him like a driving lance. Its top seemed
+about to impale him. But the controls had been expertly set, and the
+craft fled down safely to one side, stopping with a bone-wrenching jolt
+as the automatics took hold. Tony fought back giddiness and stared out
+through swimming eyes. His blurred vision focused. Too far to the left—
+
+He slid the ship forward. This was the window. Inside, he could see
+Phil’s broad back, and one hand extended in a sign of warning. So the
+investigators had already arrived. But where was Jimmy? Tony couldn’t be
+sure.
+
+A voice he didn’t recognize was talking. One of the investigators ...
+
+“Well, we’ll find him. And the lie-detectors will give us the
+information we want. Trying to frame Seth Martell is the dirtiest thing
+the Merlin ever did.”
+
+Jimmy said, “You’re nuts.”
+
+“Yeah? One of our men saw it. The Merlin was opening Martell’s
+safe—trying to put the Earth Star in it and throw the blame on Martell.
+But he didn’t have time. Our man was too close, and the Merlin had to
+scram in a hurry. Now—which one of you was it?”
+
+Tony’s eyebrows lifted. A new element had entered into the affair.
+Trying to throw the blame on Seth—yeah, that _was_ a hell of a lousy
+trick. So—
+
+Tony whistled softly, and saw Phil jerk aside, crying out something. A
+slim form came hurtling toward the window. Tony got a glimpse of Jimmy’s
+pale young face; then the boy was hurtling out into space, almost
+overshooting the mark in his eagerness. Tony seized his arm and pulled
+him back as he swayed on the ship’s edge. The craft dipped slightly
+under the additional weight, and then lifted again as compensatory
+stabilizers went into action.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From within the room came a crash, and a sharp cry of pain. Phil
+appeared, his face stolid and expressionless. He jumped, landing
+accurately, and immediately whirled. In his hand, Tony saw, was a bronze
+figurine he had snatched up from a table.
+
+“Run for it!” he snapped. There were faces in the window. A gun snarled
+viciously. Phil hurled the figurine with deadly aim, shattering the
+glass above the group, and the investigators dodged back as shards and
+splinters showered them. Almost immediately they were back—but Tony’s
+hands had found the controls.
+
+The ship fled up. As it fled it curved southward, till far below could
+be seen the shining waters of Long Island Sound.
+
+Jimmy said tautly, “They’re coming after us. I can see planes—”
+
+Phil touched a lever. The upper framework of the plane was instantly
+sheathed with transparent walls, making it more than ever resemble a
+fat, shining cigar.
+
+Tony sent the craft rocketing down. Almost at the surface of the water,
+he pulled out into a glide, swooping almost without a splash into the
+Sound. The light was blotted out by green translucence that grew darker
+as the ship slanted into the depths.
+
+“Not too deep,” Phil suggested. “The hull won’t stand a crack-up.”
+
+Tony didn’t answer. He was fingering the controls, trying to get every
+possible bit of speed out of the ship before the pursuers located it
+with their search-rays. If they could reach the outer Atlantic, they’d
+be safe—barring accident. But they were not safe in the Sound.
+
+Abruptly the water ahead sizzled and bubbled with heat. An aerial
+torpedo had been launched. Tony shot up and then almost immediately
+dived again, shifting sharply to the left. Before his companions could
+get their breath, the ship was rushing back along the way it had came,
+retracing its path. Jimmy said sharply, “What the hell—”
+
+Phil’s fingers dug into the youngster’s arm. “Good idea, Tony.”
+
+The latter nodded. “Maybe. We’ll dig in at the mouth of the Hudson.
+They’ll never look for us there. Then tonight we can slip out, take the
+air again—and head for the Company.”
+
+Jimmy said, “Once we’re there, we’re safe. There’s no extradition from
+the Legion, eh?”
+
+“Only to Hell,” Tony remarked, grinning.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+ Legion of the Lost
+
+
+“So,” said the fat little man with the shaved head, “so you want to join
+the Legion. Eh?”
+
+Tony looked him over. The dingy office in the outskirts of the North
+African city was unimpressive. But, somehow, the little man was not. He
+wore dirty white tropical linens, his face glistened with sweat, but to
+the three brothers he represented fate. On his decision their destiny
+would depend.
+
+“Yeah,” Tony said. “We want to join. Well?”
+
+The little man smiled, tapping pudgy fingers on the crowded desk. “Well.
+Let’s see. You passed the physical examination. Your names are—Anthony.
+Phillips. Jameson.” The pale blue eyes sparkled maliciously. “Better
+remember ’em. Sometimes it’s hard at first, but you’ll get used to them.
+I’m sure I don’t know why everyone who enters the Legion changes his
+name. There’s no extradition. However ... You are joining for a term
+of five years. If you wish to leave before then, you can buy your
+freedom if you have the money. If you have not, you must serve your
+term.
+
+“You may try to escape. You may succeed. You may fail, and in that case
+will be assigned to the guards in the uranium pits of Mars. No one has
+ever escaped from there. It is not advisable—” The blue eyes were hard
+as steel now. “It is scarcely wise to attempt escape. Aside from all
+else, when you leave us, you are no longer under the Company’s
+protection.”
+
+He passed a plump hand over his shining head. “Anything more?”
+
+Tony glanced at his brothers and shook his head. “Not a thing. What
+happens next?”
+
+“The Sub-Sahara post needs men. It’s an easy job for recruits, keeping
+the Copts in check and seeing they don’t go outside raiding. Here!” A
+buzzer rang, and soon a man entered, clad in the dull gray uniform of
+the Legion. He saluted casually.
+
+“Sir.”
+
+“Captain Brady,” said the fat little man, “these three are assigned to
+Sub-Sahara. Rookies. Anthony, Phillips, Jameson. Break ’em in.” He
+immediately became engrossed in the papers piled high on his desk.
+
+Tony looked at the officer with interest. He saw a spare figure, and a
+worn, tired face, deeply lined, with sunken eyes and a clipped
+moustache. An adventurer gone to seed, he thought—grown tired.
+
+Brady said, “Come along,” and led the way out of the room. They emerged
+in blazing white sunlight. A helicopter stood a few rods away, and the
+captain gestured toward it.
+
+“_’ntre._ We’ll fly, and talk as we go. Discipline needn’t begin till we
+reach Sub-Sahara, so if you’ve any questions—I’m at your service.”
+
+He pointed toward the plane, and followed the brothers into it. With
+quick, familiar motions he lifted the craft into the air and sent it
+winging southward.
+
+“I’ll stop at Azouad. That’s an oasis on the way. You can get smokes and
+equipment there—personal stuff you may want. That is—if you have any
+money.”
+
+Tony’s eyes narrowed, but he merely said, “We’ve a little.” He shifted
+on the worn leather seat, glancing aside at Captain Brady. The man’s
+haggard face was immobile, the eyes mere slits as he squinted into the
+flaming sunlight.
+
+From the rear of the plane came Jimmy’s voice. “Just what is
+Sub-Sahara?”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Brady’s voice went dull with routine. “Well—twenty years or more ago a
+labyrinth of caverns was discovered under the Sahara. It was inhabited
+by survivors of prehistoric Egyptians—Copts. They were trapped
+underground in some ancient catastrophe, and got along there, gradually
+growing accustomed to their environment. Matter of fact—there was a
+sort of colony in the old pre-dynastic days down there. The Copts worked
+mines, and there was a—well, a city of miners under the Sahara. When
+the entrance was blocked, the miners couldn’t get out—so they stayed
+there.”
+
+“What about food?” Jimmy asked. “And oxygen?”
+
+“There’s a lot about that Copt tribe we don’t know. Food—well, fish and
+mushrooms are staples. The Midnight Sea lies under the Sahara. Ages ago
+the water in it made the desert itself a sea, but it drained underground
+at last. As for oxygen, there must have been outlets before we blasted
+some, though they’ve never been discovered. Possibly through river caves
+that drain into the sea.”
+
+Captain Brady rubbed his eyes with the back of one mahogany hand. “A lot
+we don’t know about the Copts. Savage, ferocious—but marvelous miners.
+The Legion’s posted there to keep order. Prevent raids on the surface
+tribes. The Copts worship Isis, or the Moon—I dunno which. Probably
+they’re the same. Keep clear of them unless you’re armed; don’t monkey
+with their religion; and don’t enter any passages engraved with the
+emblems of the Moon and the sistrum.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Religion, youngster. No white man has ever seen the Ka’aba—the Black
+Stone—at Mecca. It’s sacred to the Moslem, just as the Alu—the group
+of deepest caverns—are sacred to the Copts. They say Amon-Ra is down
+there.”
+
+Jimmy’s eyebrows lifted. “Amon-Ra? The ancient Egyptian god?”
+
+“Right. ‘The Hidden Light.’ We have a sort of armed truce with the
+Copts, provided we don’t interfere too much. When they get out of line,
+we whip them back. Figuratively, of course.” Brady’s hand touched the
+buttoned holster at his thigh.
+
+“What did you say the sacred caves were called?” Phil asked suddenly.
+
+“Alu.”
+
+“What does it mean?”
+
+“The Land of Light.” Brady looked around. His face was alight with
+interest. “Have you studied Egyptology?”
+
+“No—afraid not.”
+
+The captain’s eyes lost their glow. “Um. Bit of a hobby of mine. Land of
+Light—Hidden Light—Isis, the Moon goddess—I’ve always wondered what
+exists in Alu. Never found out. Never expect to. But I shouldn’t be
+surprised if there’s the wreckage of a civilization down there.”
+
+He chuckled. “Not that the commander agrees with me—Commander Desquer,
+you’ll be under him. But he can’t tell me how the Pyramids were built,
+or the explanation of so many mysteries of Egypt. In my opinion, space
+travel was understood ages before Europeans achieved it. Yes ...” He
+nodded thoughtfully. “A puzzle. A nomadic civilization on the Nile, and
+then, without warning, a civilization full-blown and decadent. Where did
+it come from? It was decadent when it reached Egypt. I wonder ...”
+
+He turned to the controls. “Here’s Azouad. Half an hour. You’ll find
+plenty of shops. Don’t buy any wines—they won’t keep in Sub-Sahara.
+Brandy’s good. And pipes wear better than cigarettes in the Legion.”
+
+Below the gyro was a patch of gray on the brownish, rolling Sahara
+plain. Small dots of faded green were visible, trees struggling
+desperately for moisture and life. In a clearing Captain Brady set down
+the ship.
+
+“All out,” he grunted. “_Parte!_ Half an hour, remember.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The brothers watched the lean figure move briskly across the sun-baked
+square, to disappear into the depths of a cantina. Then they looked at
+one another.
+
+“Well!” Jimmy murmured. “So we’re in the Legion!”
+
+“Sub-Sahara. Um. Come on; we’ve only half an hour. Let’s look over
+Azouad.” Tony hesitated, gripped Phil’s arm, and glanced up. “That a
+plane?”
+
+“Yeah.” Phil squinted aloft. “Wait ... not a government plane.
+Private. Anyway, so what? There’s no extradition.”
+
+“I know,” Tony said softly. “But the Earth Star’s plenty valuable.
+Somebody might have ... ideas.”
+
+“Maybe I’d better mail it back home,” Jimmy grinned.
+
+Three glances crossed. And, curiously, at that moment a shadow drifted
+across the brothers—the shadow of a plane, chilling them momentarily
+after the blast of the African sun. It was like an omen.
+
+Phil said, “I wonder which of us really has it?”
+
+“I have,” Tony remarked. “Come along. I want a drink.”
+
+He led the way, shouldering through a crowd of assorted riff-raff, the
+usual scum of a bordertown. Odors of sesame, oils, and less familiar
+stenches were sickeningly strong. Dozens of mongrels roved hungrily
+about; the flies were countless.
+
+They bought smokes and entered a cantina, dark and muggy. A fat native
+served them squareface gin, waddling toward the dim corner where they
+sat. Behind them, Tony noticed, was a door, half opened less to permit
+fresh air to enter than to allow foul to emerge. He pushed it shut with
+a casual foot.
+
+The gin wasn’t good, but it was strong. Also, it was inordinately
+expensive. Jimmy made a wry face.
+
+“Hell of a lot of good money will do us now. We’ve ten minutes. Think
+we’ll like Sub-Sahara?”
+
+“It sounds—interesting,” Phil said slowly. “Captain Brady’s certainly
+hipped on his Land of Light. I wonder what sort the Copts are?”
+
+“Tough hombres,” Tony grunted. There was a brief silence. The waiter
+appeared, refilled glasses, and departed. Then—
+
+“_Merlin!_” a soft voice whispered.
+
+Tony’s fingers tightened around his glass. Phil sat perfectly
+motionless. Jimmy’s head jerked slightly; then he was immobile.
+
+Tony looked around, and the others followed his lead.
+
+Standing beside them was a small, round-faced man, his beady dark eyes
+glinting beneath a sun-helmet, his tropical whites looking freshly
+laundered. His gaze swiveled sharply from one to another of the trio. A
+shadow of disappointment flickered over his features and was gone.
+
+Tony said, “Who the devil are you?”
+
+The stranger flashed white teeth. “The private secretary of a certain
+Rajah. One of you has seen me before. I do not know which one.
+However—”
+
+“He’s crazy,” Phil grunted. “Batty as a bedbug. Drink up, boys.”
+
+“My name is Zadah,” the man went on without heeding the interruption. “I
+know that one of you is the Merlin and has the Earth Star. I want it.”
+
+Tony looked at the man. “Do you think anybody’d who’d stolen a jewel
+would be fool enough to keep it on him?”
+
+“The Merlin would. Because he’d want to make certain that a
+certain—deal—wouldn’t ever be completed. An imitation of the stone was
+made, so perfect that the deception can be discovered only by comparison
+with the original. Someone might try to sell the imitation as the
+original jewel—and the Merlin could block such a transaction only by
+producing the real Earth Star. He won’t get rid of it. Not unless—he’s
+forced to.”
+
+Tony drank gin reflectively. “There’s an offensive odor in this place,”
+he remarked. “Notice it, anybody?”
+
+Zadah said, “I do not want the police to find you or the Earth Star. If
+I recover it myself, the Rajah will pay me any price to have the
+jewel—and the original owners can prove nothing. My private operatives
+have traced you this far. Now—” He took out a small gun. “You will
+stand up and walk one by one through the door behind you. Stay in single
+file. My plane is just near by. We will fly to my country, and there—”
+Again the teeth flashed. “There I think it will not be too hard to learn
+which of you is the Merlin.”
+
+Tony hesitated, remembering the plane he had seen in the sky. Zadah held
+the gun almost hidden under his coat, but of its deadliness there could
+be no doubt. The brothers exchanged glances.
+
+“Stand up!” Zadah whispered.
+
+Tony obeyed. He turned toward the door, opened it, and stepped out into
+sunlight. The others followed. Zadah said, “To the left.”
+
+They moved slowly through an alley, littered with refuse and foul with
+odors. Not a soul was visible—only a stray cur that ran past, tail
+between its legs.
+
+“Across the square. The gun is in my pocket, but I have my finger on the
+trigger. Make no suspicious move.”
+
+Tony’s lips were white. He guessed well enough what would happen once he
+and his brothers were captives aboard the plane. Zadah would not stop at
+torture to achieve his ends. If only—
+
+But there was no sign of help. Across the square they went, toward a
+small gyro in its center. Loungers in the shadows of the low buildings
+eyed the group incuriously as they passed. They walked on, toward a
+cantina, past its door—
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Captain Brady came out. He hesitated, his sunken eyes intent on the
+spectacle. Then he moved like an uncoiled spring.
+
+Zadah sensed danger. He started to whirl, dragging his gun from his
+pocket. But Brady’s hand chopped down viciously, the edge of the palm
+smashing against the secretary’s spine, at the nape of the neck.
+
+A little grunt came from Zadah. He went down like a wet sack of flour.
+Casually Brady bent, picked up the gun, and pocketed it. His humorless
+eyes were without any hint of emotion.
+
+“Time to go,” he said. “Come along.”
+
+Silently the brothers followed Brady to the latter’s plane. Without a
+word they took off, speeding south until the desert-stain of Azouad was
+lost beneath the horizon.
+
+And not once, during the journey, did Captain Brady refer to the affair
+in which he had played Saviour. Tony, grinning to himself, remarked in
+an undertone, “There’s no extradition from the Legion.”
+
+“Yeah,” Phil nodded. “The devil protects his own.”
+
+Jimmy said nothing. He was too busy peering out at the rolling dunes and
+endless plains of the Sahara.
+
+Sub-Sahara! Underground labyrinth—an oasis under a burning, lifeless
+expanse of wilderness! To the three Martells it was, at first, a relief,
+after the flaming heat of the desert. Though even in the beginning there
+was a feeling of oppression as the metal car sank down into its shaft
+and the weight of earth overhead was felt almost tangibly.
+
+It seemed hours later when the car stopped and a panel in its bare side
+slid open. Pale radiance flickered in through the gap, lighting the
+men’s faces eerily. The glow seemed to come from the walls itself.
+
+“Phosphorescent paint,” Brady said, nodding. “Saves trouble. We spray
+the walls and ceiling once a year, and it’s bright enough for our needs.
+Come along.”
+
+The four stepped out into a passageway. It wasn’t long. It ended before
+a metallic door; Brady took a rod from his pocket and held it briefly
+pointed at the lock. The panel opened.
+
+Beyond the threshold lay a cavern.
+
+Huge and dim and alien as a distant world it seemed, a gigantic hollow
+hemisphere in the solid Earth. It was, as far as Tony could judge, about
+two miles in diameter, with a jagged floor that had been cleared in a
+few spots. The dim light filtered down from the ceiling, as sunlight
+through heavy cloud. When Brady spoke, his voice was incongruous in this
+place of silvery soft grayness.
+
+“There’s the fort. Over there—” He pointed. “That’s the entrance to the
+Coptic tunnels. We guard the entrance to the surface. Though the Copts
+haven’t tried to make any surface raids for a long time.” He swung out
+along a rough path, the others following. “They hate the Bedouins, just
+as the ancient Egyptians did. They don’t especially dislike us, unless
+we get in their way. If the mineral deposits the Copts work weren’t
+valuable, though, they’d be left to themselves. But the Legion’s paid to
+make sure the mines are kept active.”
+
+Tony didn’t answer. His eyes were slowly accustoming themselves to this
+strange light. He glanced up at a ceiling that was both visible and
+invisible. No details could be seen. A veil of shining cloud seemed to
+obscure the rock far above. The vault of a world, Tony thought. A world
+created here, perhaps, when the Sahara was a sea instead of a desert.
+What had Brady said a while ago? Something about a prehistoric, mighty
+civilization in ante-dynastic Egypt ... and, far and far below, the
+Copts still worshiped Isis, in the hidden caverns of Alu where no white
+man had ever penetrated. “The wreckage of a civilization down there,”
+Brady had said.
+
+In this eery cavern-world it was easy to believe in almost anything. A
+scrap of half-forgotten verse drifted through Tony’s mind:
+
+ “_But you have seen the hieroglyphs on the great sandstone obelisks,_
+ _And you have talked with Basilisks, and you have walked with
+ hippogriffs_ ...”
+
+They were at the fort. Nothing could be seen beyond a palisade of
+strong, dully-gleaming metal. But a bell rang sharply; a gate opened,
+and a man in legionnaire uniform appeared.
+
+Even in the odd light his face seemed strangely pallid—drained of all
+color, like bleached papyrus. He was gaunt and fleshless almost to the
+point of emaciation, so that his eyes and mouth were black hollows. It
+seemed as though a skull wore the rakish Legion cap atop its dome.
+
+He saluted, and Brady responded.
+
+“Hello, Jacklyn. Tell Commander Desquer I’m here.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Jacklyn stood aside to let the others enter. Tony discovered that within
+the palisade were a dozen metal shacks, prefabricated, and without sign
+of life. So this would be their home from now on!
+
+Brady said, “Well? Didn’t you—”
+
+Jacklyn’s voice was strained. “Glad you’re back, sir. The commander left
+for the surface an hour ago. He got a message.... There’s trouble,
+sir. The Copts—they’ve kidnapped Ruggiero.”
+
+Captain Brady looked at his fingernails. “It’s full moon, isn’t it?”
+
+“Yes, sir.”
+
+“All right. I need four men. Completely armed. We’ll leave as soon as
+they’re ready.”
+
+Jacklyn hurried away. Tony asked, “Is this—the usual thing, down here?”
+
+Brady shook his head. “No. At full moon the Copts choose a victim to
+represent Osiris. The Husband of Isis. Usually it’s all done quietly,
+and the sacrifice is a Copt, of course.”
+
+Jimmy inquired rather weakly, “What sort of sacrifice is it?”
+
+“Degenerate form of Egyptian religion. According to legend, Seth, the
+evil god, was jealous of Osiris. He put him to death, tearing his body
+into fourteen pieces. The Copts are ... literal-minded.”
+
+Brady sucked in his breath. “I wish I knew more of their mythos. The
+ceremony glorifies Isis of the Moon. A Copt has always served before.
+But now ...” He pulled at the clipped gray moustache. “Ruggiero has
+been taken to Alu to be sacrificed. This means trouble—plenty of it.”
+But there was no fear in the sunken eyes; only excited anticipation.
+“Alu! The Land of Light!”
+
+And suddenly Tony understood. For years Brady had wondered about the
+half-mythical cavern world below, a place forbidden to him by rigid
+rules. Now, in the absence of the commander, it was Brady’s duty to
+rescue the kidnapped legionnaire. His duty—and his chance.
+
+Tony said, “Let us go with you, captain. Eh?”
+
+Jimmy and Phil exchanged surprised glances. Then Phil nodded. “Yeah! How
+about it?”
+
+Brady hesitated. “You’re untrained. You don’t know the ropes—”
+
+“We know how to handle guns.”
+
+“Carbon-pistols?”
+
+“We can learn easily enough.”
+
+“Yes ... they’re simple. But—all right,” the captain said with sudden
+decision. “You’re new, and that means you’re not scared stiff of Alu.
+The three of you and Jacklyn. Right!”
+
+He bawled for the skull-faced man. “Jacklyn! Get equipment! I’m taking
+these three recruits. _Allons!_”
+
+Tony grinned at his brothers. Their introduction to the Legion was to be
+exciting, after all—if not fatal!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+ Sub-Sahara
+
+
+Jacklyn said, “Fifty years nearly I’ve been here. It never changes.
+First time I’ve ever seen the Copts get out of hand. Sure, they’d try to
+get out once in a while to butcher the Bedouins, but they never had
+anything against us. Funny.”
+
+The group was marching swiftly through a dim tunnel, Captain Brady in
+the lead, the others trailing. They had been moving for an hour, in a
+labyrinth of passages through which the captain unerringly found his
+way. Now he looked back and remarked:
+
+“That’s right. I know this maze pretty well, but Jacklyn knows it
+blindfolded. He’s practically a Copt himself. Hasn’t been above ground
+for fifty years.”
+
+“You must like it here,” Jimmy remarked.
+
+Jacklyn said, very softly, “It’s hell. You been in New York lately?
+Yeah? How does the old burg look now?”
+
+“It’s changed in fifty years,” Phil said. “But you know that already.”
+
+“Times Square, though—that’s there, eh? I remember I used to feel empty
+whenever I got out of the old town. God, I’d like to see it again—but
+not on a televisor. In fact,” he went on slowly, “I’d like to smell
+fresh air again. Not this artificial ventilation. See starlight and
+green growing things.”
+
+“And the Sun,” Jimmy nodded understandingly. He glanced at Jacklyn—and
+then caught his breath at sight of the expression on the legionnaire’s
+pallid face. Horror—and hate!
+
+It was gone immediately. Jacklyn ignored the remark. He said, “I was one
+of the first spacemen. There’ve been plenty of improvements since my
+time, what with liquid fuels instead of powder, and those new magnetic
+induced-gravity screens they’re working on. But it’s like shipping, I
+guess—steam or sail, it’ll never really change. There’ll be the sea
+under you, or space around you. We—”
+
+“_Sh-h!_” Brady held up a warning finger. “Hold it!”
+
+They paused, but no sound came. The captain relaxed.
+
+“Thought I heard an explosion. Guess not. Well—by the way, are you sure
+you know how to use the carbon-pistols?”
+
+“It’s not hard,” Tony said. He took out his weapon, resembling an
+oversized revolver with a cup-shaped hollow where the hammer should have
+been. From his pocket he withdrew a bit of coal, slipped it into the
+cup, where prongs held it firmly in place, and hefted the gun. “Not so
+easy to sight as a Colt, but the force-charge scatters, doesn’t it?”
+
+Jacklyn said, “Right. Watch the recoil, though. Ease the trigger-button
+down. And don’t run out of coal.”
+
+“Funny,” Tony remarked. “Coal doesn’t seem much good in a pistol.”
+
+Captain Brady laughed a little. “The thing’s based on atomic
+force—liberation of quanta, though I don’t understand the scientific
+principles of it myself. Works only on carbon. Coal’s carbon—and cheap.
+So, if the Copts get out of hand, we fight ’em with the coal they dig
+for us. Rather unfair, but it’s all in the Legion’s work.”
+
+“Practically everything is,” Tony said dryly. “How much farther,
+captain?”
+
+“We’ve been going down steadily—wait! Here’s someone. Don’t touch your
+guns unless I give the word.”
+
+Tony stared ahead. For a second he saw nothing; then abruptly the tunnel
+was filled with a dozen bizarre figures. Clad in skin-fitting garments
+of unfamiliar texture, white-skinned, with blue veins showing plainly
+through the flesh, the men’s faces were aquiline and strong, with beaked
+noses and abnormally large eyes, in which the pupils nearly eclipsed the
+irises. The Copts’ hair—they had none on their faces—was like bleached
+straw, tightly curled. They seemed unarmed, yet Brady’s whole body
+subtly tensed as he stood waiting.
+
+The foremost of the Copts, taller than the rest, and wearing a tapering
+headdress, came forward, hand lifted. He spoke in English.
+
+“Captain Brady, why are you here?”
+
+Brady said, “If any harm comes to a legionnaire, it will not be well
+with the Copts, priest.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The man nodded. “I understand. That was a mistake. Some of our younger
+men—they have already been suitably punished for meddling in affairs
+beyond them. Your legionnaire is back in the fort, Captain Brady. You
+will find him there if you return.”
+
+Tony detected a half-veiled glance the priest sent at his fellows. Brady
+saw it also, and tugged at his moustache.
+
+“You are speaking true words?”
+
+“I speak true words.”
+
+“Suppose we do not believe. Suppose we—go on.”
+
+A stir shook the Copts; they looked at one another askance. The priest
+said, “The Moon passages begin not far from here. Those you may not
+enter.”
+
+Brady seemed undecided. “We shall go back. But if our man is not safely
+in the fort—”
+
+The priest’s smile was apparently guileless. “He will be there.”
+
+“All right. About face! _Allons!_”
+
+Tony turned with the others. But before a foot was lifted there came an
+interruption. The priest’s voice was raised in an urgent command in an
+unfamiliar tongue. He, with the others, had seen the bloodstained,
+tattered, huge figure that sprang out from concealment behind a rock.
+
+“Kill those men!” a bull voice shouted. “Blast ’em down!”
+
+“Commander Desquer!” Brady clipped—and then—
+
+“Out guns!”
+
+For from the ranks of the Copts a pale ray had lanced, striking full
+upon Desquer’s bison chest, bared by a tattered tunic. Another ray
+touched Tony; he felt a wave of intolerable heat as he snatched out the
+carbon-gun at his belt.
+
+_Cr-rack!_ Brady’s weapon snarled viciously, and the heat-ray left Tony.
+He slipped a coal-cartridge into the cup and triggered almost without
+aiming. The deadly little guns worked havoc. But there were almost a
+dozen Copts, and for a few moments the tunnel was a chaotic Maelstrom of
+battle, dominated by Desquer’s deep voice roaring commands.
+
+“Get them! All of them! Aim at their bellies!”
+
+Smoke drifted away. The Copts lay in helpless huddles amid red stains.
+Tony lowered his gun and stared around anxiously. Jimmy was painfully
+rubbing his arm where a heat-ray had cindered the cloth. Phil was
+apparently untouched, and so was Jacklyn, but Captain Brady was rubbing
+his thigh and cursing quietly. As for Commander Desquer, it was
+impossible to judge whether he had been injured in the conflict. He was
+already wounded in a dozen places.
+
+Tony’s fascinated gaze clung to the man. The mighty body was thewed like
+an auroch-bull, the matted, deep chest heaving convulsively with
+exhaustion. The commander’s head was shaved, but nevertheless there was
+something leonine about his face. Shaggy, tufted eyebrows overhung
+glittering small eyes, and thick, sensual lips were pressed tightly
+together. Desquer reminded Tony, somehow, of a Nero or a Caligula—a
+degenerate Roman despot.
+
+Now Desquer flung back his huge head in an arrogant gesture. “Jacklyn!
+See if the priest’s got a healing-ray. We need it.” As the legionnaire
+hurried forward the commander turned his eyes to the others. Tony felt a
+curious shiver ripple down his spine as the cold gaze touched him.
+Desquer looked long and intently at Tony, and not until he had stared
+equally long at Phil and Jimmy did he turn his attention to Brady.
+
+“The fort’s gone,” he said. “The Copts smashed it and massacred every
+man. They blew up the shaft to the surface just after I reached
+Sub-Sahara. I just managed to get away ... the cavern’s overrun with
+’em.”
+
+Jacklyn came back with a small flat box, in which a lens was set. He
+touched a button and turned the lens to focus upon Brady’s thigh.
+
+“Thanks ... up a bit ... You know they kidnapped Ruggiero?”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Desquer nodded “Yes. I found a Copt alone and induced him to give me a
+little information.” He glanced at his hands, took out a small knife,
+and began to clean his nails. “What this means I don’t know. A
+_jehad_—a holy war, possibly. Though it’s without precedent.”
+
+The captain lifted his hand. “Enough, Jacklyn. Tend to the commander.”
+
+But Desquer shook his head impatiently. “No time.” He drew Brady aside,
+as Jacklyn turned to the others. The two officers withdrew a few steps
+and lowered their voices.
+
+Tony stared at the lensed box as Jacklyn used it on Jimmy’s arm. “What
+the devil’s that?”
+
+“A gadget the Copts have. Nobody knows how it works. They don’t
+themselves. It was handed down ... it’s a ray that increases cell
+activity. Builds up cell tissue. Prevents infection ... how’s that?”
+
+“Swell,” said Jimmy, touching his arm. “It still hurts a bit, though.”
+
+“It won’t for long—”
+
+Desquer said, “You three recruits—listen to me. We’re going down. Into
+Alu. Jacklyn, you’ll go for help.”
+
+The skull-faced legionnaire’s body jerked convulsively. He stared at the
+commander.
+
+“For—help?”
+
+Desquer nodded. “Right. You know these caves. There are other openings
+to the surface. Get help. We’ll hide out and wait for you. The Copts
+won’t expect us to go right to their headquarters, so that’s just what
+we’ll do.”
+
+“But—” Jacklyn moistened dry lips. “I’ll have to go to the surface?”
+There was a curious note of horror in his voice.
+
+“Don’t argue. Move! You’ll have a better chance alone than with
+companions, so—_allez!_”
+
+Jacklyn moved a pace away, stopped, and turned back. He said woodenly,
+“I can’t go to the surface, Commander.”
+
+Desquer said very softly, “Why not?”
+
+“Sunlight will kill me.”
+
+There was a little silence.
+
+“Why?”
+
+“I was space-burned. That’s why I joined the Legion. It’s a kind of
+allergy, you know—I was so badly burned in space by direct solar rays
+that even filtered sunlight will kill me now in a few hours.”
+
+Tony felt his stomach move sickeningly. So that was why Jacklyn had
+remained in Sub-Sahara for fifty years. A prison with its mockery of
+freedom—
+
+“Let one of the others go, sir!”
+
+“I’ll go,” Jimmy offered—but Desquer snarled at him.
+
+“Silence! You know these caves, Jacklyn—”
+
+“The captain knows them!”
+
+“He’s badly burned. That heat-ray touched the bone. He couldn’t stand a
+long trek. Here!” Desquer bent over the dead Copts and rapidly began to
+strip them of their garments. “If sunlight will kill you, stay out of
+it.”
+
+“In the desert?”
+
+“Bandages, you fool—bandages! Wrap yourself up in these. Travel by
+night if you have to, after you reach the surface.”
+
+Silently Jacklyn began to don the garments. He said without expression,
+“It will kill me.”
+
+Desquer threw him an armful of clothes and grinned. “You’ll live long
+enough to get help. If the Copts break out of Sub-Sahara, it’ll be like
+rounding up a thousand fleas. Besides, I don’t know what’s back of
+this—but it’s nothing small, I can promise you. If—”
+
+He leaped like a panther. His shod foot came down with a sickening
+crunch on flesh and bone. Tony, startled by the sudden movement, saw
+that Desquer had sprung upon the Coptic priest, from whose hand a
+ray-projector had dropped. The priest’s blood-smeared face, twisted in
+agony, lifted toward the ceiling as he cried out.
+
+“Not dead, eh?” Desquer whispered, his voice taut with savage fury.
+“Well—you soon will be.”
+
+He drew back his foot. But the priest’s lifted arm somehow halted him.
+The Copt dragged himself half erect. His thin voice shrilled, “Go down
+to Alu, fools! But you will be too late. Isis has risen—and with her
+the gods who dwell in Alu. Before the opening to the outer world can be
+cleared again, we shall have triumphed—and the Earth will tremble
+before the power of the Ancients! Aye—the Ancients who ruled over the
+Four Rivers before their sons fled to Egypt!
+
+“Go down to Alu, fools! _You shall find death!_”
+
+The priest fell back—and died.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+ Five Against the Gods
+
+
+Hours had passed. The legionnaires, headed by Commander Desquer, were
+encamped by a small, rocky inlet on the Midnight Sea, a fathomless lake
+of inky water that stretched beyond the limit of vision. A pallid glow
+came from the cavern roof far above, rippling over the surface of the
+tideless, sluggish sea. It was a scene fantastic almost beyond belief,
+and Tony, on guard at the mouth of a crevasse where the others slept,
+could scarcely realize that he was still on Earth, and not beneath the
+surface of some alien world.
+
+They had come far and fast, slipping stealthily past the guards the
+Copts had posted, taking advantage of every unused tunnel, guided more
+by instinct than by knowledge. The city of the Copts they had skirted,
+descending ever deeper to the forbidden gates of Alu. And now, on the
+shore of the Midnight Sea, they were ready for the plunge into the
+unknown.
+
+“We can’t stay here,” Desquer grunted. “They’d find us sooner or later.
+But in Alu we have a chance. The element of surprise will be on our
+side, at least.”
+
+He was right. Tony knew. He shifted uneasily, glancing at the carbon
+pistol and checking its load. His thoughts went back to New York, and
+the civilization of a world that seemed a billion miles distant. A world
+lost to him—and his brothers—forever. And in exchange they had
+gained—this!
+
+A hand fell on Tony’s shoulder. Desquer said, “All right. We’re
+marching.” The commander’s heavy jaw jutted as he stared out over the
+water.
+
+The others appeared one by one, ragged, disheveled, and unshaved. Brady
+was wincing with the pain in his stiffened leg as he walked. Jimmy’s
+face was haggard; he had not the stamina of the others. But Phil seemed
+as sturdy and untroubled as ever.
+
+Desquer turned; his cold eyes took stock of his command. “All right.
+March!”
+
+He led the way. Brady behind him. The brothers followed. Tony caught a
+wink from Phil, and lagged behind somewhat, till the officers were out
+of earshot of a whisper.
+
+“Yeah?”
+
+Phil’s hand touched his tunic pocket. “Somebody searched me while I was
+asleep. I thought I was dreaming, but when I woke up, this pocket was
+unbuttoned.”
+
+Tony’s eyebrows lifted. “Oh-oh!” He squinted ahead. “Who—”
+
+“Dunno. But—somebody. Just thought I’d tell you. We’d better keep our
+eyes peeled after this.”
+
+Phil exchanged a meaningful glance with Tony and increased his pace. The
+latter frowned, trying to figure out what this new development meant.
+The Earth Star? It was scarcely probable that anyone in Sub-Sahara would
+know the details of the theft and its aftermath. More likely the motive
+was merely petty robbery—unless, indeed, Phil had actually dreamed it.
+But in his heart, somehow, Tony sensed impending danger. The baleful
+fires of the Earth Star still burned far below the surface of the
+planet.
+
+Desquer? He could scarcely know anything of the jewel. Brady? Perhaps
+the encounter with Zadah, the Rajah’s secretary, had aroused the
+captain’s suspicions. Or—Jimmy? Was he searching for the Earth Star,
+trying to learn which of his brothers carried it? That might have been
+more plausible had not Jimmy kept insisting, with his brothers, that he
+himself had stolen the gem.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tony’s face did not change, but his hand touched the butt of the
+carbon-pistol. He felt safer with the weapon at his thigh. For a time he
+plodded on, every sense alert for sign of danger. The immediate peril
+was from the Copts, of course.
+
+None of the underground race appeared as the group skirted the Midnight
+Sea. They came at last to a tunnel mouth where Desquer paused,
+hesitating, to confer with Brady. The latter pointed to a sign cut out
+of the rock above the entrance—a full moon surmounted by a crescent.
+
+“Moon and sistrum,” the captain nodded. “This is one of the forbidden
+gateways. A door to Alu.”
+
+Desquer grunted. “Very well. Come along. Watch out for traps.”
+
+They entered the tunnel. It was darker, though a vague illumination
+filtered from the walls and roof, due, perhaps, to some sort of
+radioactivity. The passage slanted down steeply. It was apparently
+little used, and in spots almost blocked by debris, where the
+legionnaires had to crawl through painfully. Desquer’s bull strength
+came in useful there. The giant commandant was untiring, and there came
+a time when he was almost carrying Brady along as the captain’s weak leg
+grew weaker.
+
+“Wonder if Jacklyn will make it,” Jimmy muttered to Tony.
+
+“God knows. If he doesn’t, we’re in the soup.”
+
+Phil grinned. “What if he does? We’re still in Alu!”
+
+The tunnel grew steeper. Now half-obliterated carvings were visible on
+the walls, symbols that bore the trace of immeasurable antiquity. One
+sign puzzled Tony; it was a cross within a circle. It reminded him,
+somehow, of the dying Coptic priest’s words—“... the Ancients who
+ruled over the Four Rivers before their sons fled to Egypt.” The circled
+cross struck a chord of memory in Tony’s mind, and he knew, somehow,
+that the cross was supposed to represent four rivers. But—try as he
+might—he could recall no more.
+
+There were other carvings, most of them showing the sistrum and the
+lunar disk. They had been cut out of the rock, Tony felt, long before
+the Pharaohs had reigned in Egypt, before the uraeus crown had come to
+represent a dynasty. A little chill touched Tony as he thought of the
+endless centuries that had ravaged the world above and left the road to
+Alu untouched.
+
+Before Egypt—a civilization. And in Alu—_what_?
+
+No premonition troubled Commander Desquer. His great frame marched on
+untiringly, practically carrying the exhausted Brady. Down and down they
+went. Tony’s legs began to ache, and Jimmy was drooping with fatigue.
+Phil’s stolid face showed no emotion, but there were lines of strain
+about his mouth.
+
+Down—and down! Into Earth’s secret heart—into the forbidden land. And
+what caused Tony the most uneasiness was the fact that they went on
+unchallenged. Perhaps the Copts had not discovered the intruders. Or,
+perhaps, the Copts knew that there was no need to guard the road to Alu.
+
+Occasionally Tony would intercept a glance from Desquer, who would
+impartially stare at the three brothers as though in puzzled curiosity.
+But the commander said nothing, till at last they came out in a large
+cavern from which three tunnel-mouths opened, besides the one on the
+threshold of which they stood. Desquer paused, his gaze searching.
+
+“We’ll camp here,” he said shortly. “In the middle. That way, our
+retreat won’t be cut off if the Copts find us. That middle passage is
+our road. Eh, Captain?”
+
+Brady nodded. “Yes. The Moon and sistrum is over it.”
+
+In silence the five moved wearily to the center of the cavern and
+dropped rather than relaxed on the rock floor. They were tired out.
+Desquer alone sat straddle-legged, his gun ready in his hand, icy eyes
+flashing about.
+
+“Sleep,” he said. “I’ll guard.”
+
+Tony gratefully obeyed. Stillness closed over the cave. But—it was
+broken.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Very faintly, as though from an infinite distance, came a rhythmic
+chanting. Muffled and scarcely audible it whispered, almost below the
+threshold of hearing.
+
+Brady’s breath hissed between his teeth. “Hear that?”
+
+Desquer said, “Well?”
+
+“The Chant of Set. Somewhere they’re beginning the ceremony of Osiris,
+where they’ll sacrifice Ruggiero.”
+
+Tony said, “That’s where they tear the victim into pieces, isn’t it?”
+
+“Yes. Commander—” Brady didn’t finish. One look at Desquer’s grim face
+was enough.
+
+“Don’t be a fool, captain. Get your rest—and the rest of you, too.
+You’ll need it. You know well enough we can’t rescue Ruggiero.”
+
+That, Tony thought as he relaxed, was true; but nevertheless he had a
+curiously unpleasant feeling at the base of his spine. Somewhere amid
+these caverns a white man was being horribly sacrificed, and it was not
+a thought conducive to sound sleep. Yet Desquer was right. The
+legionnaires’ only chance was to remain hidden ...
+
+Once Tony roused sleepily to find the Commander lying down and Captain
+Brady on guard. Brady was wandering about the cavern, staring up at the
+carving of the Moon and sistrum. He was a gaunt, scarecrow figure in the
+dim light. As Tony drifted off again to sleep he realized that the faint
+chanting had grown louder—
+
+That it was different now in tone—triumphant!
+
+And then Desquer was shaking Tony’s shoulder, his hand pressed over the
+legionnaire’s lips. The commander’s eyes were glittering brightly.
+
+“_Sh-h!_ Not a sound! Rouse the others.”
+
+Silently Tony obeyed. There was no sign of Captain Brady, he realized.
+
+On cat feet Desquer led the three into the tunnel. Hidden by the first
+turn, he whispered, “Brady’s gone. When I woke up—”
+
+Jimmy asked, “What happened to him? The Copts?”
+
+“Perhaps.”
+
+“But wouldn’t they have killed us, then?”
+
+Desquer passed a hand over his shaven head. “Not necessarily. They may
+have other plans.” He smiled, not pleasantly. “So Brady’s gone. That
+leaves the four of us.” There was an oddly secretive look in the cold
+eyes. “Come on. We’re still heading for Alu.”
+
+“What’s the use?” Tony asked. “If the Copts have discovered us—”
+
+“They may not have. Brady may have gone off to try and save Ruggiero. I
+doubt that, though—but we mustn’t overlook any chances. Alu is our
+destination. So—_allons!_”
+
+The three brothers exchanged glances. One by one their number was being
+cut down. First the entire garrison of the fort; then Jacklyn; now
+Captain Brady. Tony felt a twinge of sympathy for the weatherbeaten old
+soldier. Whatever had happened to the man, Brady would have gone down
+fighting.
+
+“He didn’t try to warn us,” Jimmy muttered.
+
+Desquer grunted. “We don’t know all the weapons of those Copts. Where
+they get them God knows. Every once in a while they’ll pop up with some
+super-scientific device far beyond their power to manufacture. It’s a
+mystery. Maybe we’ll find the answer in Alu.”
+
+That, to Tony, was a strange paradox. A search amid the ruins of a
+forgotten past for the super-science of the future. And yet—whence had
+come the mighty civilization of Egypt? What mystery lay behind the
+cryptic powers of the Copts?
+
+There could be no answer, as yet. The four men marched on, down into the
+depths. They were beneath the Midnight Sea now, Tony decided, since the
+tunnel had curved in a long loop. Not only beneath the Sahara Desert,
+but under a sunken sea as well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Endlessly the road stretched before them. But the end came unexpectedly.
+So exhausted were the four that they scarcely realized that the silvery
+radiance of the tunnel had given place to a reddish glow, brighter and
+reminiscent of volcanic activity. Desquer lifted his hand in warning. He
+went on to reconnoitre, and presently beckoned the others. His burly
+figure was rigid, Tony saw.
+
+And, as he went on, he saw something else. The tunnel ended. It opened
+upon a cavern.
+
+A cavern that was a world!
+
+A world beneath a desert and a sea! Alu, the Land of Light, lay before
+the adventurers, and human eyes had never gazed upon a stranger sight. A
+metropolis of antiquity, with the wrecks of mighty buildings and fallen
+pillars strewing the flat floor of the cave. It was like Pompeii, and
+far older than Pompeii. It was grander than Karnak, more alien than
+crumbling Ang-kor-Vat. In the distance a pyramid rose toward the roof of
+the cave—touching it, supporting it as the fabled tree Yggdrasil is
+supposed to support the Earth.
+
+Red light flamed from beyond the pyramid.
+
+Alu! Old beyond imagination, cradle of a race that had ruled long and
+long ago! Alu, which the Egyptians had incorporated into their mythology
+as their heaven.
+
+The sheer, overwhelming majesty of the panorama struck the men dumb, as
+a hand might strike an impious lip. Huge and desolate and dead the lost
+world stretched before them, holding its secret fast, as it had held it
+since before the Pharaohs reigned. No wonder the pyramids were a
+mystery—built by some alien science. The same science that had reared
+the colossal structures of Alu!
+
+A hundred feet away a square white marble building towered, Doric
+pillars on either side of its open gateway. Some indefinable urge drew
+Tony’s eyes to it.
+
+Desquer said, “Hear that?”
+
+The others listened, but detected no sound. The commander grunted.
+
+“It came from that temple. Get your guns ready. We’re going in. If
+there’s trouble, shoot first.”
+
+The four moved softly across the flat rock of the floor. Halfway to the
+door of the building Jimmy clutched Tony’s arm. He pointed, his face
+chalk-white.
+
+“Look at that!”
+
+Tony followed his brother’s gaze, as did the others. Far away were two
+structures connected by an arched span. Across this span figures were
+moving.
+
+Figures with human bodies—but inhuman heads!
+
+At the distance it was impossible to make out details, but it was plain
+that there was something definitely abnormal about the beings who walked
+across the span. They moved in stately file and were gone. Jimmy
+whispered:
+
+“Remember what the priest said? The gods live in Alu!”
+
+Tony thought of the Egyptian gods, men with the heads of beasts and
+birds and reptiles. Could some monstrous hybrids have survived in this
+cavern? He shrugged off the thought.
+
+“Masks, Jimmy! Don’t be an idiot. Come on.”
+
+Desquer urged them toward the square building. “Quick! We can hide here,
+until we know more about this place. Keep your guns ready.”
+
+The commander’s icy eyes were searching the gloom of the temple as they
+crossed the threshold. The symbol of Osiris, sign of the horned bull,
+was carved everywhere. Crumbling, broken pillars made the interior of
+the temple a labyrinth. The floor was littered with smashed blocks of
+stone.
+
+It was very dim here, but one ray of red light flamed like a sword-blade
+through a gap in the wall and fell directly upon the throne that stood
+on a dais at the farther end of the room. Tony and the others looked
+down a long aisle toward the throne and the statue upon it—the statue
+of a man, clad in stylized flowing robes, with the head of a bull upon
+the human shoulders.
+
+“Come on!” Desquer whispered. He gripped his gun. Tony felt the butt of
+his own weapon cold against his palm as he walked on. The approach to
+the dais seemed endless. Incredible journey amid the wreckage of a
+forgotten civilization! So might a lost soul have journeyed to Osiris
+... A scrap of verse came unbidden to Tony.
+
+ “_Ten hundred shaven priests did bow to Ammon’s altar day and night,_
+ _Ten hundred lamps did wave their light through Ammon’s carven
+ house—and now_
+ _Foul snake and speckled adder with their young ones crawl from stone
+ to stone_
+ _For ruined is the house and prone the great rose-marble monolith!_”
+
+Desquer stopped. His figure stood rock-still for a moment. The gun swung
+up, aimed at the statue on the throne.
+
+And now Tony saw what the commander had already realized. It was no
+statue that faced them. The being was alive!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+ Before the Gods
+
+
+Only one thing could have stopped Desquer’s finger on the trigger—and
+that thing happened. The monster on the throne spoke. Thick and almost
+unintelligible, its voice poured out from the inhuman muzzle, as the
+hands twitched on the arms of the throne.
+
+“Don’t!” the bull-headed creature moaned. “It’s Brady—Brady!”
+
+Sheer amazement petrified Desquer. He lowered his gun at last, shaved
+scalp shining with sweat. Tony swallowed a lump in his dry throat,
+glaring at the hybrid on the dais.
+
+Brady? Captain Brady?
+
+“Those devils did this to me,” the thick voice went on. “Surgery,
+commander—super-surgery. Remember their healing ray? They grafted the
+flesh and skin of a bull on to my head and speeded up the cellular
+activity tremendously with their ray. I—I don’t dare move. This head is
+so heavy it would snap my spine if—if—”
+
+Desquer said in a low voice, “Are we in danger now?” His eyes searched
+the shadows.
+
+“You’re doomed,” Brady mouthed. “Thotmes told me the hellish plan behind
+all this. Thotmes is the high priest. He’s one of the very few that know
+the secret of Alu. He told me—almost everything. It tickled his ego, I
+think, to gloat over his triumph ...”
+
+The bull head lolled forward and came back into place again abruptly.
+Brady said, “Maybe there’s a chance. I don’t know. Your guns ...
+Listen! If you can get to the pyramid and blast the machine out of
+existence—”
+
+“What machine?” Desquer asked.
+
+“The machine that will destroy Europe! The same kind of machine that
+created Earth’s Moon, ages ago! The machine that sank Atlantis!”
+
+Tony’s breath caught in his throat. Atlantis? Now he remembered the
+significance of the sign of the cross-and-circle. It was the symbol of
+Atlantis, the four rivers on the island continent. Softly he whispered,
+“The Ancients who ruled over the Four Rivers before their sons fled to
+Egypt.”
+
+Brady said, “Yes. That’s the secret of Egypt, and its civilization. Men
+have guessed at that before now. Ages ago, when Europe was filled with
+nomadic tribes, Atlantis was a continent of culture and science. It was
+unstable—volcanic activity went on endlessly beneath it. And the land
+began to sink. Thotmes told me how the scientists of Atlantis planned to
+prevent their doom.
+
+“They made a Moon. Out of the bed of the Pacific Ocean they tore part of
+the Earth and sent it driving out into space. They thought that would
+release the pressure under Atlantis and save their civilization.
+
+“They failed. The forces they controlled were too mighty. Atlantis sank,
+taking with it a science such as the world has never known and perhaps
+may never know again. But before the deluge, a few Atlanteans fled
+eastward, through the Pillars of Hercules, to Egypt.”
+
+The bull head nodded. “They were the ancestors of the underground Copts.
+They found Sub-Sahara centuries before the Pharaohs, and they found Alu.
+There they built a city such as had existed in the Atlantean valleys.
+They sent forth some of their number to civilize the Nile peoples, and
+those Atlanteans became the high priests of the gods. They created the
+gods!
+
+“As they created me—they made gods with heads of bulls and crocodiles
+and jackals, to terrify the superstitious tribes that needed tangible
+gods to worship. And then the road to the surface was closed by some
+ancient cataclysm, so that the Atlanteans were trapped here. Some few of
+the priests kept their culture. The others degenerated. They became—the
+Copts.
+
+“But the priests still kept the old religion alive, using their surgery
+and their healing-rays to make new gods, and ruling the Copts through
+fear. Now they plan to make a second Moon, and to raise Atlantis; they
+wish to rule the Earth as they did once, long ago.”
+
+Brady’s thin hands clenched into fists. “They caught me in the cavern
+where I was standing guard—used some sort of paralyzing ray on me. They
+brought me down here and told me what they intend. There’s a machine
+that’s capable of ripping all Europe from the face of the Earth and
+sending it out in space, to be another Moon.”
+
+Tony said, “But that would wreck the world!”
+
+“That is part of their plan. They have lost all their science,
+possessing only a few machines and devices that have come down since the
+days of the Atlantean exodus. And these are gradually losing their
+power. In sunken Atlantis Thotmes and his followers can find weapons and
+secrets that will enable them to rule the world. But first they plan to
+make another moon—to destroy Europe—and to wreck most of the Earth
+with quakes, tidal waves, and storms. They’ll be safe here in Alu.
+They’ll emerge after the Atlantic has drained into the great abyss that
+will be left by the destruction of Europe, and they’ll return to
+Atlantis, west of the Canary Islands.”
+
+“A machine to make a Moon!” Desquer’s voice was almost scornful.
+“Unbelievable!”
+
+“It was done once. The principle is that of vibration. A file of men
+marching in unison can shake down a bridge—you know that. The right
+vibration can wreck a building. Sonic waves can disrupt the molecular
+framework of the Earth, and Thotmes has a machine that can be focused
+_through_ the body of the planet. There will be little temblors in
+Europe at first, then heavy quakes. They will grow stronger. And finally
+the entire continent will be ripped away, and centrifugal force will
+carry it out to its orbit. Thotmes explained it in detail ...”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The bull head jerked forward suddenly. There was a sharp, brittle snap.
+And, slowly, the body of Captain Brady leaned and bent. It toppled.
+
+Desquer sprang forward with a curse. He touched the monstrous muzzle,
+jerked his hand away, and then felt for Brady’s heart-beat. After a
+moment he shrugged.
+
+“Well, he told us enough. Now ...” The commander stood up, his gaze
+traveling slowly from face to face. “Now we must find that machine and
+destroy it—eh?”
+
+He seemed vaguely displeased when the three brothers nodded as one. But
+his words were commonplace enough.
+
+“We need information. _Bon._ First, we must find someone who can supply
+it. Preferably this Thotmes—but we cannot pick and choose, I suppose.”
+
+Jimmy said on impulse, “You believe Captain Brady’s story?”
+
+For answer Desquer waved his hand around. “Look at this. No modern
+civilization built it. I’ve lived in Sub-Sahara for a long time,
+and—well, at least I’ll verify the story before I act. Let me remind
+you that it is not your business to ask questions.” His cold gaze held
+the youngster.
+
+Tony said quickly, “I’ll get the information, commander.”
+
+Desquer nodded. “Very well. I need tell you nothing you do not already
+know. Most of the Copts know English; if not, bring your captive back
+here. We shall wait.”
+
+Tony looked once at the sprawled, terrible body that had been Captain
+Brady, waved casually to Phil and Jimmy—and went out. Along the
+shadowed aisle of pillars he hurried, pausing only when he emerged from
+the temple. There, crouching in the dimness, he paused, looking about.
+
+There was no sign of life. In the distance loomed the tunnel mouth by
+which they had entered Alu. Tony slid along the side of the building and
+peered gingerly around the corner. He could see the arched ramp along
+which the “gods” had passed, but it was vacant now. What was the logical
+course to pursue?
+
+The lost city stretched about for miles, an apparently tenantless ruin.
+Yet it was peopled, Tony knew, by Thotmes the high priest and his
+servitors—perhaps by Copts, though probably not, since the latter were
+confined to their own city above. At the thought Tony involuntarily
+glanced up. Beyond the cavern roof was the Midnight Sea, above that the
+Coptic city, and still further above, Sub-Sahara itself. The weight of
+innumerable tons of Earth pressing down on him was almost suffocating.
+However—
+
+Tony shook off the feeling and set out at random, after taking careful
+bearings. He had a compass, but it was useless in this environment, as
+he found after brief experimentation. But he could gauge direction
+fairly well from the great pyramid, which was visible from almost any
+point in the city of Alu.
+
+He kept in the shadows, which were concealingly dark where the
+flickering red light did not shine. What caused that volcanic glow Tony
+did not know, though he hazarded a few guesses. He went toward the
+pyramid.
+
+It was a metropolis of the dead. Eons ago it had been inhabited, by the
+survivors of sunken Atlantis, but now only the dust of ages filled it.
+Silence, and everywhere the symbol of Isis, Moon-goddess, carved upon
+the stones. Silence ...
+
+The pyramid drew nearer, and Tony was amazed anew at its hugeness. It
+towered up and up to the very ceiling of the cavern, seeming to support
+it like a pillar. Perhaps it did—he could not tell. But as he came
+closer he saw that the pyramid was hollow, for there were lighted
+embrasures here and there in the sloping expanse of its sides.
+
+And still there was no sound, no movement, no trace of life.
+
+Tony grew more cautious, though there seemed no need. An arched opening
+loomed in the side of the pyramid near him, and he slunk toward it
+watchfully. No guards were posted. He hesitated near the threshold.
+Should he take the risk of entering what might be a stronghold of his
+enemies? To search the deserted city was seemingly a vain task, and,
+shrugging, Tony walked boldly toward the opening. But his gun was in his
+hand, and a coal-cartridge in its cup, ready for instant use.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A passageway sloped upward within the pyramid. It was lighted dimly by
+gleaming bars like neon-tubes that ran the length of the ceiling. In the
+vague glow Tony went stealthily on.
+
+The corridor was featureless and without doors—at first. But, suddenly,
+he noticed what had at first evaded his attention, a series of panels
+set in the walls. The secret of their locks was beyond him, until at
+last one seemed simpler than the others. Tony pressed a spring that was
+not too deftly hidden—and the panel opened.
+
+He looked through metal bars into a great cage.
+
+Briefly he thought of a menagerie, and then went sick and dizzy with
+nausea. This was, indeed, a “zoo”—but it did not hold animals. It
+held—gods!
+
+The artificial monsters created by Thotmes and his servants roamed
+within the cage, men with the heads of teratological mythos. Here,
+indeed, were the gods of Egypt, jackal-headed, ibis-headed, bull-headed,
+even some with the heads of crocodiles set hideously upon the human
+shoulders. So brightly lit was the cage that the beings did not see
+Tony, and he drew back swiftly, closing the panel. Obviously he could
+get no information here. He suppressed a strong impulse to use his
+carbon-gun to put these pitiful beings out of the unending nightmare of
+their existence. If this was a sample of Thotmes’ power, it would not be
+well for the Atlantean to rule over Earth!
+
+Tony went on along the corridor. From his slight knowledge of
+Egyptology, he knew that not all of the gods were malevolent, like Set.
+Both Osiris and Amon-Ra were benevolent, and so, indeed, was Isis.
+Perhaps in the beginning the whole religion had been a good one, and had
+become decadent and degenerate with the passage of ages in this hidden
+cavern-world. The obvious parallel was Satanism ...
+
+Yet this wasn’t a question of superstition. It was one of logic and
+science, of cold facts in which the mythology of a race had been rooted.
+Behind the veil of so-called “magic” lay an alien and powerful culture,
+born in Atlantis long before Ur and Akkad had risen in Sumeria, along
+the Tigris and Euphrates.
+
+On and on Tony went, a cold uneasiness rising within him. No one
+appeared to bar his path. More than once he glanced at the
+carbon-gun—but he was unprepared when the floor dropped beneath him,
+and he fell, writhing and twisting, into darkness.
+
+He landed heavily on a hard surface, and went down with a grunt and an
+oath. Before he could rise, he felt the weight of muscular bodies upon
+him. Handicapped by the darkness, he fought doggedly, but the gun was
+torn from his grasp almost at the outset of the struggle. He was not in
+complete blackness; there was a vague dim glow, but Tony’s eyes were not
+conditioned to it, as those of his enemies were. At last he lay
+prostrate, held motionless by iron hands that gripped him.
+
+A deep voice murmured a command. The light grew brighter. Tony blinked,
+staring up from his position spread-eagled on a stone floor. He
+discovered that he was in a bare chamber, with a barred door of metal
+grating set in one wall. Five strong-thewed Copts held him—but almost
+immediately Tony saw that they were not Copts. Their faces lacked the
+degeneracy of the underground mining race. They were cruel instead of
+stupid. Cruel—and arrogant, proud! Proud with the knowledge of a
+culture that stretched back into the mists of a lost antiquity.
+
+One man stood against the wall—and he was a giant. He wore a short
+spade beard, and soft, glossy black hair fell in curled, oily ringlets
+about his face. He was handsome with the beauty of a sword-blade, strong
+and powerful and deadly, and his beaked nose was hooked like a scimitar.
+Pale blue eyes watched Tony unwinkingly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In not-quite-perfect English, he said, “I am Thotmes.” Tony could not
+repress a slight movement, and the blue eyes narrowed; but the priest
+merely smiled. “You know me? That is strange. Perhaps you have spoke
+to ... Osiris!”
+
+He nodded to the priests, who relaxed their grip on Tony. The
+legionnaire sprang up, but made no hostile movement. He stood silent,
+watching Thotmes.
+
+The Atlantean stroked his beard. “You are wise. This will be your
+prison, and, if you cause no trouble, you can live for a time. We do not
+murder unnecessarily.”
+
+“Only nine-tenths of the world’s population,” Tony said gently.
+
+“That,” Thotmes smiled, “is necessary. We are a handful, against
+billions. Not even the powers we shall recover from Atlantis would
+enable us to conquer Earth—unless Earth is already conquered, her
+navies and aircraft and weapons smashed by cataclysms.”
+
+“You actually expect to make a second Moon?” Tony’s voice held
+skepticism. But the priest was not offended.
+
+“Yes. Such a thing was done once before. The machine that made the Moon
+was built in Atlantis, and we have built a duplicate here. It took
+centuries, but at last it is finished. In the heart of the pyramid it
+lies—and already it is in operation.”
+
+“In operation?” Involuntarily Tony glanced around. “I don’t—”
+
+“You feel nothing here and now, of course. Later you may, though we are
+safe in Alu. The machine sets up vibration and molecular disruption in
+certain strata under Europe, and gradually the intensity of the
+vibration will be increased—until Europe shakes itself literally to
+pieces. In a week or even less the final cataclysm will take place.
+Europe will vanish, leaving an abyss into which the waters of the
+Atlantic will pour. And Atlantis will rise again!”
+
+“That,” said Tony, “will be Old Home Week, eh?”
+
+Thotmes didn’t answer. He turned to the others and gestured. One of them
+slid open the barred grating, and the group filed out. The door slammed.
+
+Beyond it, Thotmes smiled at his captive. “Your companions will join you
+soon. We shall not trouble to search for them. They will walk into our
+midst soon enough, and then you will have company.”
+
+“Look out you don’t get your head blown off by one of them,” Tony
+remarked.
+
+Thotmes lost his smile. He tugged at his spade beard and said, “Few men
+jest in Alu. There is always a need for new gods—and you would look
+well with a jackal’s head on your shoulders.”
+
+“You’d look lovely with a rat’s,” Tony agreed, “only you already have
+one.”
+
+The high priest said something indistinguishable, glared and departed.
+Tony was left alone. He shrugged and took stock of his possessions.
+
+He had been searched completely. His pockets were empty. Carbon-gun and
+coal-cartridges had been taken from him. He had no tool by which he
+might leave the cell.
+
+On the other hand, there might possibly be a concealed panel somewhere.
+It took an hour for Tony to convince himself that none existed. Finally
+he sat down and waited. There was nothing else to do. He had got the
+information for which he had come. The machine of the Atlanteans was in
+the heart of the pyramid. But he was unarmed, and had no way of
+conveying a message to Desquer or his brothers. Briefly he wondered what
+was happening to Phil and Jimmy, and how long they would wait. And when
+they got tired of waiting—what would they do?
+
+What could they do—trapped in Alu, city of science and fathomless
+antiquity? Four men, Desquer and the brothers, against the mighty powers
+of the greatest civilization Earth had ever known. Four against the
+might that had made Egypt an invincible empire.
+
+Four against the gods!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+ The Might of Atlantis
+
+
+A thump from above brought Tony from his crouching position to stand
+rigidly erect, gaze riveted to the ceiling. He was in time to see a
+section of it swing down on hinges, letting the body of a man, with arms
+and legs flailing, drop into the prison. Tony sprang forward, breaking
+the man’s fall. It was Phil.
+
+Phil’s blond hair was disheveled, a stubble of yellow beard on his face;
+but his stocky body was as steel-muscled as ever. He still gripped the
+carbon-gun he had been holding, and his eyes met Tony’s with relief.
+
+“You okay?”
+
+“Yeah.” There was no need for more, so deep was the understanding
+between the brothers. Tony said swiftly, “Anybody after you?”
+
+“Didn’t see anybody.”
+
+“Took ’em by surprise, perhaps. But they’ll be along. We’ve got to work
+fast while we’ve a chance of getting out of here.” He glanced at the
+barred door. “We could blast out there with the carbon-gun, but I don’t
+know the road. Hop on my shoulders, kid. We’re going out through the
+ceiling.”
+
+Phil handed his brother the gun and climbed deftly onto Tony’s shoulders
+as the latter knelt. Slowly he rose, steadying Phil with one hand.
+
+“Got—got worried about you when you didn’t show up. I went after you.”
+
+“See if you can open the panel ... Jimmy all right?”
+
+“He’s okay. The kid’s pretty tough ... Got it!”
+
+The hinged panel slid down as Phil’s stubby fingers closed over the edge
+of the opening. Tony heaved up strongly. For a second Phil hung there;
+then his body wriggled up, and his weight was gone from Tony’s
+shoulders.
+
+Simultaneously a cry came from beyond the barred door.
+
+A pale ray lanced out. Tony felt a twinge of agony in his side.
+Involuntarily he flung up the carbon-gun and fired. The metal door
+vanished in a blaze of white fires. Whoever had been beyond it had also
+disappeared without trace.
+
+But there were others coming. Tony traded shots with them. He heard
+Phil’s voice and risked a glance up. Phil was lying flat, his arm
+extended down.
+
+“Jump for it!”
+
+“Can’t,” Tony said. “They’d wing me ...”
+
+“You’ve got to. I can hear them coming up here, too.”
+
+“Beat it. Get back to Desquer. Tell him the machine’s in the base of
+this pyramid. I’m going out this way; there’ll be a better chance of one
+of us getting through if we take different routes. Beat it!”
+
+There was a pause, punctuated by the snarl of the carbon-gun. Then Phil
+said, “Okay. Luck!”
+
+His feet scraped on the stone above. The panel slammed shut. Tony made a
+wry face, realizing that Phil was unarmed. But he had a better chance of
+escape than Tony himself, for a dozen or more of priests was blocking
+the passage that led—perhaps!—to freedom.
+
+Tony fired again. The foremost of the priests went down, and the others
+hesitated. The gun crackled savagely. One priest broke and fled—and the
+others followed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tony hurried after them, every sense on the alert. The passage was
+apparently bare, and silent save for the dying thump of flying feet; but
+he guessed that there might be traps. Would this road lead to escape?
+And—had Phil escaped safely? There was no way of knowing—yet.
+
+The passage stretched empty before Tony. He gripped the gun, feeling in
+its cold metal a reassurance against even the danger of Thotmes and his
+powers. There was no limit to the weapon’s potentialities. The stronger
+the charge, the more effective the results. With a powerful enough
+charge, Tony thought sardonically, he could bring down the whole
+pyramid. Unfortunately he had no ammunition, save for the clip in the
+gun’s butt.
+
+At a side passage he hesitated, realizing that the new tunnel led up.
+The priests would not expect him to take this path—so he did so. And,
+as it turned out, he was wise.
+
+He came out on a little balcony overlooking the sloping ramp of the
+pyramid. Beneath him the massive piles of masonry fled down like
+gigantic steps, and Tony hesitated as he glanced down. A noise from
+behind him, along the passage, helped him make his decision.
+
+It was almost too late. A priest burst into view, mouth open in a
+soundless scream, raising a short metal rod in one hand. Tony flung up
+the carbon-gun and squeezed the trigger. Nothing happened.
+
+The ammunition was exhausted.
+
+Tony’s reaction was involuntary and instinctive. He flung the gun
+straight at the priest’s face and ducked, diving in at his opponent. A
+beam of light lanced out over Tony’s head. Then he crashed into the
+priest’s knees and brought the man down heavily.
+
+There was no time for ethics. Tony struck low and hard. He left the
+priest unconscious and vaulted the balcony’s rail. Down the slope of the
+pyramid he sprang, leaping along the huge steps made by the giant
+blocks, risking his neck at every jump. But—he made it.
+
+Once at the base of the pyramid, he was comparatively safe. Out of the
+red glow the shadows were heavy, and Tony took advantage of them to
+slink away toward the wall of the cavern he could see far ahead of him.
+But before he did so he made a brief scouting trip, hoping to find Phil.
+It was useless. Either Phil had already made good his escape, or else he
+had fallen victim to the priests of Thotmes.
+
+There was no sign of excitement. Tony wondered why. Perhaps the escape
+of prisoners was of little importance to the Atlanteans. They were too
+self-confident—with good reason, it might be. Science that could rip
+the Earth asunder was not easily to be conquered.
+
+Near the door of the Temple of Osiris Tony quickened his pace. The sound
+of hoarse breathing and shuffling footsteps came to his ears. On the
+threshold he hesitated, staring, but saw nothing in the dimness of the
+interior. Wait! Far down beneath the dais were two motionless bodies.
+One was that of Captain Brady, of course. But the other—
+
+Tony broke into a run. Yet he retained caution enough to move as
+silently as possible, though he could hardly repress a shouted question.
+Had the Atlanteans found the intruders in Alu? Was the body that of
+Desquer, or—Jimmy?
+
+It was neither! Tony stumbled over a carbon-gun, snatched it up in one
+motion, and simultaneously saw that beside the figure of Brady lay Phil,
+unconscious and bloodstained, red fluid seeping from a gaping hole in
+his chest. But Tony could spare only one glance at his brother. Beside
+him, between the pillars that towered to the roof, two men were locked
+in conflict—Jimmy and Commander Desquer!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Jimmy was getting the worst of it. He was weaponless and trying to hold
+on to the hand in which Desquer held his gun. The commander was slowly
+breaking his opponent’s grip. No expression showed in the Legion
+officer’s face, but his eyes were black and deadly as wet velvet. Jimmy
+was gasping and bleeding from a cut over one eye, almost exhausted.
+
+Tony said, his voice like a whiplash, “_Drop that gun, Desquer!_”
+
+The commander’s reaction was unexpected. All in one swift motion he
+released Jimmy and flung himself back. Hidden in the shadow of the
+pillars, he fired at Tony.
+
+The shot missed. Tony lifted his own weapon—the one Jimmy had
+apparently dropped—but Desquer was fleeing, dodging in and out like a
+phantom. Why the devil—! Then Tony knew why. Desquer was no coward.
+But, on the other hand, he was no fool. He had run out of ammunition. A
+cartridge belt on the floor, its buckle torn off, explained the reason.
+In the fight Desquer had lost the belt.
+
+He vanished through the door of the temple and was gone. Tony stared at
+Jimmy. “What the hell?”
+
+The boy was white and gasping. “Phil got back. He’d seen you in the
+pyramid—told us where the machine was. But he’d been wounded—”
+
+“Yeah. Keep talking, kid.” Tony was kneeling beside the unconscious form
+of Phil, rendering such first aid as he could.
+
+“Desquer sent me outside to keep guard. I heard Phil yell, and came
+running in. I was just in time to see Desquer—” The boy swallowed. “He
+killed Phil, Tony. Shot him through the chest. I tried to stop him—and
+then you came in.”
+
+Phil’s eyelashes flickered. Tony gave Jimmy the gun. “Okay. Run along
+and keep guard again. Watch out for Desquer. If he shows up—”
+
+“I’ll use the gun.” There was deadly grimness in the young voice.
+Jimmy’s hand closed over the weapon; he hurried off down the dark aisle.
+
+Phil was looking up at his brother, a wry grin twisting his lips. “So
+you got out of the pyramid too, eh? Good.”
+
+“What happened, boy?” Tony was futilely trying to stanch the flow of
+blood.
+
+“Nothing much. Desquer didn’t bandage me up after I got here. He
+searched me, instead. Found nothing, of course. But—he asked me where
+the Earth Star was.”
+
+There was a little silence. Tony whispered, “How—”
+
+“I don’t know. Desquer found out something. He’s after the gem. Thought
+I had it, and when he couldn’t find it on me, he tried to make me talk.
+His methods weren’t very—nice. That’s when I yelled, I guess. I jumped
+at Desquer. Found out I wasn’t as badly wounded as I’d thought. He shot
+me through the chest.”
+
+Phil coughed. “Might as well stop trying, Tony. I’m the first of us to
+go. I’ve a hunch there’ll be another. But one of us three ought to pull
+through.”
+
+“I’ll get Desquer,” Tony said very softly. His thin, dark face was a
+grim mask of copper.
+
+“Thanks. And keep an eye on the kid, will you? I—I—” A gush of blood
+came from Phil’s mouth. He coughed rackingly. Tony hurriedly ripped off
+his shirt to improvise an additional bandage.
+
+But it was useless. Ten minutes later Tony stood silently beside the
+body of his brother, looking down at the stolid features, relaxed
+utterly now in death. The shadows of the temple of Osiris pressed in
+heavily. It was, in a way, fitting that death should have come for Phil
+in Alu, the asphodel land where Egyptians thought the souls went to roam
+endlessly.
+
+Tony turned and walked slowly along the aisle. At the threshold of the
+temple he turned and looked back. Phil would rest there forever,
+perhaps—and it was such a sarcophagus as few men have ever possessed.
+
+“Don’t move,” a low voice commanded. “Not an inch! _Careful!_”
+
+[Illustration: “Don’t move! Not if you value your lives!”]
+
+But Tony’s reaction was involuntary as he whirled. Almost beside him,
+but out of easy reach, was Commander Desquer. In his hand was a
+carbon-gun, and another was in his holster. The man’s glittering eyes
+watched Tony icily from under the shaggy penthouse brows.
+
+“Careful!” Desquer repeated. “Your brother wasn’t.”
+
+“Where is he?”
+
+“There.... He isn’t hurt. He’ll wake up in a few minutes. Just
+stunned. My gun wasn’t loaded, but his was. So—”
+
+Desquer grinned and passed his palm over his shaved scalp. “Revive him.
+Quick!” he barked as Tony hesitated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The latter silently went to where Jimmy lay huddled against the wall of
+the temple. He knelt beside the boy and began to slap his cheeks. He
+glanced up once to see the Commander watching him narrowly.
+
+Desquer said, “Where’s the Earth Star? You got it?”
+
+“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Tony grunted.
+
+“No? Then let me explain. That televisor call that took me to the
+surface—it was from a man named Zadah, the secretary of a certain
+Rajah. He told me all about you. Offered me a fortune if I got the jewel
+back for him. Well—I intend to. I’m sick of the Legion, and this is my
+chance to buy my way out and live like a prince. So—where’s the stone?”
+
+Tony told him, but his remark was unprintable. Desquer’s thick lips
+twisted in a sneer.
+
+“Very well. But I’ll get it, remember that.”
+
+“A lot of good it’ll do you now.”
+
+“I’ll get out of here. But first we’re going to destroy that machine of
+Thotmes. Your brother’s waking up. Bring him along. We’re heading for
+the pyramid.”
+
+Grimly Tony hoisted the half-unconscious Jimmy to his feet and supported
+him. “We’re unarmed. There are scores of priests—”
+
+“You’re going to stay unarmed,” Desquer snapped. “I can handle a gun
+better than any three men. _Allons!_”
+
+Tony grunted and started out, carrying most of Jimmy’s weight on his
+shoulders as the boy slowly recovered from the blow that had stunned
+him. His lips were a tight, pale line. Both he and Jimmy were completely
+in Desquer’s power, and the man was so completely an egotist that he had
+not hesitated to carry out his own plans even in the face of a doom that
+threatened the entire Earth. Ruthless Desquer was—but of his icy
+courage there could be no doubt. Nor of his greed! Tony sensed something
+of the driving power within the man, the desolate years of loneliness in
+Sub-Sahara, a prison worse for Desquer, perhaps, than for any other man
+there.
+
+They moved toward the pyramid, keeping to the shadows. Tony and Jimmy
+preceded their captor, conscious always of the gun leveled unerringly at
+their backs. There was neither sign nor movement to indicate the
+presence of the Atlanteans.
+
+“How do you expect to get to the machine?” Tony asked finally. “It’s
+guarded.”
+
+“I can outshoot a dozen Copts,” Desquer said confidently. “We’re going
+straight in. We’ll find a guide—make him guide us. If anyone gets in
+our way, he’ll regret it. We’re going in, smash the machine, and come
+out again. And then—I’ll find out which of you has the Earth Star.”
+
+Tony didn’t reply. He went on, his mind desperately searching for a
+plan. But it seemed hopeless. There was no way out.
+
+Finally only a broad plaza separated them from the pyramid. At its edge
+the trio paused. Desquer said, “We’ll skirt around to that building—see
+it? It juts into the open space ... I don’t see any guards, but there
+may be some.”
+
+The three were standing in the shadow at the corner of a tall stone
+obelisk. And without warning a score of figures dropped down upon them,
+in utter silence—and with murderous fury.
+
+Desquer’s guns were in his hands. The snarling crackle of the
+carbon-pistols rapped out, awakening echoes in the dead city. Tony could
+not see the commander; he was borne down under a press of bodies,
+struggling furiously. Beside him he heard Jimmy cursing and striking out
+weakly. The Atlantean priests were not using their ray-projectors,
+perhaps because they depended on weight of numbers. That was their
+mistake!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was Desquer’s fearless savagery turned the tide of battle. His guns
+bellowed without ceasing. Thrice he went down, rising at last a
+gargoylish, hideous figure, dripping with blood from a dozen wounds, his
+bare scalp shining blackly in the red light. One by one and two by two
+he killed, mercilessly, viciously, finally clubbing his pistol to
+dispose of the last of the priests, who was atop Tony.
+
+“Can’t waste ammunition,” he growled. “Get up! Both of you! Hurry!”
+
+Tony stood up, Jimmy beside him. A few of the priests _had_ escaped, he
+saw, and were even now fleeing toward the temple. Desquer raised his
+gun, hesitated, and lowered it.
+
+“Come on!”
+
+Tony stared. Scores—no, more than a hundred priests were pouring from
+the pyramid, forming a phalanx massing itself to guard the threshold. In
+the lead stood Thotmes, his spade beard making him easily recognizable.
+The fleeing priests joined their companions, and the little army stood
+in silence.
+
+“Not using their ray-projectors,” Tony said. “Guess they’re good only at
+short range.”
+
+Desquer snarled, “Come on!” His guns snouted forward, urging his
+captives on. Slowly they moved across the plaza.
+
+The commander fired. A priest fell, screaming. The ranks closed in,
+hiding him from view.
+
+Again and again Desquer fired. His gun clicked on an empty chamber; he
+emptied the other one. Then he reached for his belt—and Tony heard him
+curse.
+
+“_Dieu!_ Those damned Copts! The priests—they got my ammunition belt in
+the fight!”
+
+Tony stopped, turned. Desquer was standing straddle-legged, the
+carbon-pistols, futile without coal, pointing at the priests. His face
+was set into rock-hard lines.
+
+Thotmes shouted something and lifted the missing ammunition belt in one
+hand. He raised it tauntingly.
+
+“Got any coal?” Desquer rasped. The other two men shook their heads.
+
+The priests began to move forward.
+
+Tony said, “You can’t destroy the machine now, Desquer. You’ve doomed
+the world—and yourself.”
+
+Desquer’s knuckles were white; he stood as though carven from granite.
+His jet eyes squinted at the oncoming mob.
+
+Jimmy started to laugh. “How do you like it, Desquer?” he mocked.
+“You’re not the commander now. You’re just a guy with an empty gun.
+And—you’re going to die, Desquer. _You’re going to die!_”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ The New Atlantis
+
+
+The tension grew unendurable. The priests were advancing slowly, as
+though assured that their quarry could not escape. In the lead Thotmes
+was smiling and stroking his beard with one hand.
+
+“Surrender,” he called out. “No harm will come to you—for a while. Not
+till we need new beast-gods!”
+
+Desquer’s face went a mottled red. But still there was no fear in the
+man. He faced the throng, still holding his guns—and suddenly sheathed
+one and began to search his pockets. His low voice rapped out.
+
+“Quick, you fools! See if there’s anything on you we can use for
+ammunition. It doesn’t have to be coal—carbon will do.”
+
+Tony shot one hurried glance at the mob of priests. Desquer gave a
+little cry of triumph and brought out a single coal-cartridge from his
+tunic pocket. “Good! Only one, but—” He slipped it into the gun’s
+firing cup.
+
+There was a queer look, almost of amusement, on Tony’s dark face. He
+gripped Jimmy’s arm and whispered, “Wait!”
+
+Desquer stepped forward. He raised his gun and called, “Halt!”
+
+A flashing smile came from Thotmes. The high priest did not reply. He
+kept on....
+
+And Desquer fired.
+
+Thotmes seemed surprised. He paused, lifting his hands to a chest that
+was a gory mass of red ruin. He stared at his bloodstained fingers.
+
+From the priests went up a whisper of terror—as Thotmes fell! The high
+priest of Alu was dead!
+
+Desquer did not pause. He took one step forward, and another, as though
+expecting his enemies to give back. But they did not.
+
+They massed together grimly—and advanced.
+
+This time the commander paused, his thick lips twisting. His hand dived
+into his tunic pocket in a futile gesture. But there was no more
+ammunition.
+
+Tony was smiling. He touched Desquer’s arm.
+
+“I’ve a bullet for you, commander.”
+
+“Eh?” The glittering eyes widened. “Where—”
+
+Desquer’s gaze focused on what Tony held in his palm. Lens-shaped and
+lovely the great gem lay there, flashing in the red light of Alu. Like a
+diamond it was—but it was not a diamond.
+
+Jimmy said breathlessly, “Tony! You—”
+
+“_The Earth Star!_” There was sweat on Desquer’s face.
+
+“Go on,” Tony whispered. “Take it, commander! It’s carbon. You can use
+it as a bullet. A coal-cartridge will kill a man. This jewel’s much
+harder than stone. There’s no limit to the power of a carbon gun. You
+can bring down the pyramid with this—commander!”
+
+Desquer still did not move, and Tony deftly slipped the jewel into the
+gun’s cup. It rested there in its strange setting, beautiful beyond
+imagination, holding within its fiery heart fortunes and grandeur and
+death. A jewel—but it was carbon, too. And Desquer’s eyes did not move
+from the great gem.
+
+“Shoot,” Tony said. “If you do, you lose the Earth Star. If you
+don’t—it means death.”
+
+The commander’s face was shining with sweat. He glanced up once to the
+mob of priests, very close now. His gross frame shook with the agony of
+indecision. To possess the Earth Star—and to know that its possession
+meant certain doom! He had only to squeeze the trigger, and his enemies
+would be blasted out of existence. But if he did that—
+
+He would lose the Earth Star!
+
+He snarled at Tony, “So you were the one! The Merlin—”
+
+“_Fire!_”
+
+Almost involuntarily Desquer brought up the gun and aimed it. He was
+whispering curses under his breath, putting off until the last moment
+the decision that must be made sooner or later. And he dared not wait
+too long. The priests came closer.
+
+The flickering red glow made Desquer’s features scarlet and black; his
+eyes burned balefully, tortured and terrible. He said, “Damn you!
+I—I’ll—”
+
+His finger tightened on the trigger. And—stopped.
+
+For the priests had paused. They were staring at the Earth Star. They,
+too, were frozen motionless.
+
+One cried, “The jewel! The jewel!”
+
+The tableau held. Abruptly the priests gave back, hesitating. Tony heard
+Jimmy’s gasp. He, too, was wondering what this meant.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He was never to know. Perhaps, in long-forgotten ages, another Earth
+Star had been dug out from beneath the Atlantic, to form part of the
+religion of Atlantis. Tony could not know. But he realized that the
+priests recognized the jewel, or thought they did. They bowed before it!
+
+Instantly Desquer realized his opportunity. He said quietly, “Come on.
+We’re going into the pyramid—and smash the machine.”
+
+Tony said, “You’re crazy. The priests won’t stand for _that_!”
+
+Desquer grinned unpleasantly. Without warning the other gun was in his
+hand; he clubbed it and swung. Tony felt a crashing blow on his head as
+he ducked. Gasping with pain, he reeled in and closed with the giant
+commander.
+
+Jimmy had hold of Desquer’s arm but with one sweeping motion the officer
+sent the boy sprawling. Desquer and Tony went down with a crash on the
+stones. Soft cries came from the priests. They began to move forward
+again, their superstitious terror gone.
+
+Desquer’s stubby fingers were sunk into Tony’s throat; he squeezed
+viciously, his tiny eyes glinting. Though he lay undermost, he was
+getting the better of the battle. Tony pumped blow after blow at the
+commander’s face, but apparently without effect. He felt Jimmy at his
+side, saw the boy try to tear the iron fingers from his brother’s neck.
+
+And, too, Tony saw the carbon-pistol lying on the stones near by.
+
+“Jimmy!” His voice was a cracked wheeze. “Gun—pyramid—”
+
+Into Desquer’s eyes sprang murder-light. The fingers contracted, sending
+agony down Tony’s spine. Jimmy understood, though, and dived for the
+pistol. He snatched it up, leveled it at the pyramid and the oncoming
+priests.
+
+Desquer yelled like a beast. His fingers relaxed. Somehow he writhed
+free, sprang up, plunged toward Jimmy.
+
+“Don’t!” he bellowed. “Don’t—”
+
+From the gun’s muzzle burst a raving blast of searing flame. The
+incredible pressure that had made the Earth Star was released. Straight
+through the ranks of the priests it bored an aisle, into the heart of
+the pyramid, melting and wrecking solid stone with the terrific power of
+its thrust. The volcanic fires of Earth itself seemed to be latent in
+that—bullet!
+
+Over the cries of the priests came a rumbling, crashing thunder. A block
+fell, clattering down the pyramid’s side. The structure buckled. Its
+whole side was torn out. The summit toppled and came thundering down,
+amid clouds of smoking dust and ruin.
+
+Tony staggered erect, staring up. Something was happening to the cavern
+roof. The pyramid _had_ been a pillar, supporting it. And now the
+support was gone—
+
+Rocks fell from above. Cracks ran out like a great spider web. Something
+silvery flashed down from above, glinting red in the crimson glow. Tony
+remembered that above Alu was—the Midnight Sea!
+
+And that sunless, tideless ocean was pouring into the cavern world
+through the crevasse that had been torn in its floor!
+
+The falling water became a column, a torrent, a bellowing Niagara. It
+drowned the wreckage of the pyramid. Down the flood came thundering, and
+icy tides lapped at Tony’s feet. He seized Jimmy’s arm, pushed him
+along.
+
+“We’ve got to get out of here!”
+
+“How—how can we?”
+
+“We can try—”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Their voices, raised to shouts, sounded like thin whispers above the
+mighty rush of the ocean that was pouring into Alu. The priests ran
+about aimlessly, and among them, Tony saw, was Commander Desquer. A knot
+of the Atlanteans surrounded the officer. They were trying to pull him
+down, like wolves surrounding a bison. Unarmed, Desquer yet was stronger
+than his opponents.
+
+Silently Jimmy pointed. Tony’s teeth showed in a mirthless grin.
+
+“So what?” his lips formed. He was remembering Phil ...
+
+The brothers plunged along the street, already knee deep in surging
+black water. A louder thunder came from behind them. A new sound filled
+the cavern—a deep hissing, like steam. Beyond the wreck of the pyramid,
+Tony saw with a quick glance, crimson clouds were lifting. So the red
+light of Alu was actually due to volcanic activity. And now the icy
+waters of the Midnight Sea were finding the molten fires of lava—
+
+More rocks fell thunderously. Looking back, Tony saw a single figure
+charging after them—Desquer, a battered, bleeding giant who splashed on
+through the water amid a hail of stone that dropped from the vaulted
+heaven of Alu. All about him that deadly hail dropped. One glance Tony
+had of Desquer rushing on, heavy shoulders hunched, teeth bared in a
+mirthless grin—
+
+Then he was gone! The avalanche from the cracking skies buried him. A
+pile of rocks showed for an instant where he had been, and that, too,
+vanished as the rising waters seethed past.
+
+Tony said nothing, but as he fought past the temple of Osiris where
+Phil’s body lay, he lifted his hand in a queer, quick salute. Perhaps
+Phil would know, now, that his death had been avenged ...
+
+Already the dark tides were seething at the tunnel-mouth that led to the
+upper world. On the threshold Tony paused, to take one last look at
+ruined Alu. The red light was darker now, and somber. The flaming clouds
+boiled up endlessly; the rock shook and quaked underfoot. The Niagara
+that poured from the roof of the cave looked like a solid obelisk, and
+an odd thought came into Tony’s mind.
+
+“A pillar of cloud by day ... and a pillar of smoke by night ...”
+
+Alu, daughter of Atlantis, was dying as the mother continent had died.
+Earth-fires and deluge were slaying her, wiping out all life, wrecking
+the culture that had survived from the misty, unknown eons before Egypt
+was. The huge temples, half submerged in seething tides, were falling in
+ruin. All over the vast cavern darkness was falling.
+
+The arched ramp they had seen on entering Alu was still visible, far
+away. And now Tony saw that there were figures upon it, as there had
+been at first. Figures with strange, misshapen heads—
+
+The pitiable, terrible beast-gods of Alu, created by dead Thotmes’
+science!
+
+One glimpse Tony had of those far figures, outlined blackly against red
+smoke. Then—the ramp fell.
+
+Over Alu the roaring desolation of death and ruin held sway!
+
+Tony turned to the white-faced Jimmy. Already the water was tearing at
+their thighs.
+
+“Come on,” he shouted. “We’re getting out of here. Fast!”
+
+They fled up the tunnel ...
+
+The rest was sheer nightmare. Somehow they found their way, following
+always the passages that led up, hiding from terrified, frantic Copts,
+fleeing through corridors whose walls shook with the grip of earthquake.
+Up and up they went, finding at last a frightened Copt who agreed to
+guide them to the surface. His own world was falling in pieces about
+him, and he wished only to escape. A cave-in crushed him not long after,
+but the passage stretched unbroken before the brothers. They toiled
+on ...
+
+Daylight filtered in yellow brilliance through a crack in the rock.
+Exhausted, haggard, filthy scarecrows, the two squeezed through into
+blazing sunlight. About them lay rolling dunes. They were in a rocky
+little valley.
+
+They dropped to the sand and lay there motionless for hours, scarcely
+conscious of the burning sun.
+
+The soft mutter of a gyro motor woke them. Tony sat up, blinking. He was
+in time to see a plane land softly not far away, and a figure in flying
+uniform step out.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Jimmy was still sleeping. Tony lurched forward to greet the new arrival.
+His eyes were misty with sleep, and he did not at first recognize the
+pilot—not till the latter took out an automatic and held it ready.
+
+Then he saw it was Zadah, the Rajah’s secretary.
+
+Tony stopped, swaying a little, his arms hanging limp at his sides.
+Zadah’s round face was triumphant. The beady eyes shone with triumph.
+
+“Luck,” he said. “I’ve been cruising about for hours just on an off
+chance. I just happened to sight you—”
+
+“The Copts.” Tony said thickly. “They—”
+
+Zadah nodded. “I know. Your legionnaire got through—Jacklyn. There’s an
+army of troopers at the mouth of Sub-Sahara. But—where’s the Earth
+Star? If you escaped, that means Desquer didn’t get it.”
+
+“It’s gone. Desquer got it—and used it. The Earth Star’s destroyed,
+Zadah.”
+
+The other hesitated. Something he saw in Tony’s eyes made him realize
+that the latter spoke truth. Abruptly baffled rage sprang into Zadah’s
+round face.
+
+“Gone! Then—”
+
+He lifted the gun, his lips white with fury at the wreckage of his
+plans. “Maybe! If you’re lying, I’ll find the jewel on your bodies.”
+
+Tony tensed himself for a spring that he knew in advance would be
+futile. But, before he could move, another figure hurled itself forward.
+Jimmy’s slight frame dived at the killer.
+
+Zadah’s gun barked. Jimmy cried out; the Oriental swung his weapon back
+to Tony. But he was too late. His wrist was held in a grip of iron.
+Tony’s dark face was close to his own, and there was death in the somber
+eyes.
+
+Zadah screamed.
+
+Tony said not a word. Very slowly, very carefully, he bent Zadah’s hand
+back. The latter’s finger was still on the trigger. The gun pointed at
+last at the killer’s heart.
+
+Then Tony smiled—and the muscles of his hand contracted.
+
+The report was shatteringly loud in the desert stillness.
+
+Tony let the limp body slide down, and turned back to Jimmy. The boy was
+dead. Zadah’s bullet had made a neat little hole in the brown shirt.
+
+After a moment Tony carried the body of his brother to the plane and put
+it aboard. He followed. He sent the gyro winging up over the desert.
+
+Beneath him the Sahara stretched, a white wilderness under the flaming
+heat of the Sun. To the north could be seen an encampment, the troopers
+that had arrived, too late, at the mouth of Sub-Sahara. Tony set the
+controls and fled beyond them.
+
+The desert gave place to the Mediterranean, and that, in turn, to the
+Pacific Ocean. The cool blueness of night folded down. Moonlight
+silvered the waves.
+
+Tony opened a trap-door in the floor and let the body of his brother
+slide through. Phil rested in the temple of Osiris—and Jimmy would lie
+beneath the waves that hid Atlantis.
+
+He went back to the controls, staring ahead at an empty horizon.
+Westward lay New York. He could go back there now; the motive for
+keeping hidden had vanished. No one would know who the Merlin was. Some
+men might guess, might be convinced that either Phil or Jimmy had stolen
+the Earth Star—but they would never dare make an accusation, and Seth
+Martell would need make no compromises with his honor and his ideals.
+
+Only Tony would know that the Merlin had been his brother Phil.
+
+For ten minutes he had been alone with Phil in the Temple of Osiris.
+And, before the youth died, he had told Tony the truth—that he was the
+Merlin. He had given his brother the Earth Star to keep. But no one
+would ever know that now.
+
+Tony’s throat was tight. He stared at the dim horizon of sky and sea,
+knowing that beyond it lay New York, and a life he could take up again
+where he had left it. A life he must live—alone.
+
+A faint glow brightened to the west. The tallest towers of Manhattan
+were pillars of light against the sky.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75218 ***
diff --git a/75218-h/75218-h.htm b/75218-h/75218-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0f19fd3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75218-h/75218-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,4312 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
+ <title>
+ Secret of the Earth Star | Project Gutenberg
+ </title>
+
+ <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg"/>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ body { margin-left:8%;margin-right:10%; }
+ .it { font-style:italic; }
+ .bold { font-weight:bold; }
+
+ .summary {
+ margin-top:1em;
+ margin-bottom:1em;
+ padding-left:1.5em;
+ padding-right:1.5em;
+ text-indent:0em;
+ text-align-last:center;
+ text-align:center;
+ }
+ .summary .pindent {
+ text-indent:0;
+ text-align-last:center;
+ }
+ p { text-indent:0; margin-top:0.5em; margin-bottom:0.5em;
+ text-align: justify; }
+ div.lgc { }
+ div.lgl { }
+ div.lgc p { text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; }
+ div.lgl p { text-indent: -17px; margin-left:17px; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; }
+ div.lgp { }
+
+ div.lgp p {
+ text-align:left; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;
+ }
+
+ .poetry-container {
+ display:block; text-align:left; margin-left:2em;
+ }
+
+ .stanza-inner {
+ display:inline-block;
+ }
+
+ .stanza-outer {
+ page-break-inside: avoid;
+ }
+
+ .stanza-inner .line0 {
+ display:inline-block;
+ }
+ .stanza-outer .line0 {
+ display:block;
+ }
+
+ h1 {
+ text-align:center;
+ font-weight:normal;
+ page-break-before: always;
+ font-size:1.2em; margin:2em auto 1em auto
+ }
+
+ .sub-head { font-size: smaller; }
+ hr.tbk { border:none; border-bottom:1px solid black; width:30%; margin-left:35%; margin-right:35%; }
+ hr.pbk { border:none; border-bottom:1px solid silver; width:100%; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:2em }
+ .figcenter {
+ text-align:center;
+ margin:1em auto;
+ page-break-inside: avoid;
+ }
+
+ p.caption { text-align:center; margin:0 auto; width:100%; }
+ p.credit { text-align:right; margin:0 auto; width: 100%; }
+
+ p.line { text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; }
+ div.lgp p.line0 { text-indent:-3em; margin:0 auto 0 3em; }
+ .pindent { margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-indent:1.5em; }
+ .noindent { margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-indent:0; }
+ .hang { padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em; }
+ </style>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ .poetry-container { margin-top:.5em; margin-bottom:.5em }
+ .literal-container { margin-top:.5em; margin-bottom:.5em }
+ div.lgc { margin-top:.5em; margin-bottom:.5em }
+ p { margin-top:0em; margin-bottom:0em; }
+ .caption { font-family: sans-serif; }
+ </style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75218 ***</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/img-1.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='caption'>The jewel glowed and death leaped from the gun</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
+<p class='line' style='font-size:3em;'>Secret of the EARTH STAR</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>By</p>
+<p class='line'><span style='font-size:x-large'>HENRY KUTTNER</span></p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from<br />
+ Amazing Stories August 1942.<br />
+ Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that<br />
+ the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
+</p>
+</div> <!-- end rend -->
+
+<div class='summary'>
+<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The theft of the Earth Star blazed a trail
+of death to a weird city under the Sahara.</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER I</h1></div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Despite the blazing heat of the
+hot Indian night, this air-conditioned
+room in the palace was
+cool and comfortable. It was a bit too
+luxurious for a business office; otherwise,
+it might have been any New York
+suite. Three men sat at a small glass-topped
+table, on which stood a Gladstone
+bag.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They rose as two Indians entered,
+bowing respectfully to the Rajah. The
+latter was a small, weak-faced man with
+a straggling moustache and lips too
+large and red for his sallow face. He
+barely acknowledged the greetings, his
+gaze riveted on the leather bag.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You have the Earth Star?” he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” said one of the three Europeans.
+He opened the bag, unlocked a
+metal case built into it, and withdrew
+a jewel-case. This he opened and placed
+flat on the table.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Rajah’s mouth went dry. He
+could not repress a little shiver. “The
+Earth Star .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” he whispered.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On black velvet the great gem flamed.
+It was lens-shaped and supernally lovely,
+with rays of living light flaming out
+from its heart. The colors latent within
+it changed and shifted under the soft
+illumination. It was like a diamond—yet
+no diamond had ever possessed the
+wonder of the Earth Star.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Rajah’s secretary breathed deeply.
+“Carbon,” he murmured. “A tree-fern
+some million years ago—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One of the Europeans interrupted,
+though he did not look away from the
+jewel. “A little more than that, sir. It
+took unusual pressure to make the Earth
+Star. It came from the new cavern
+mines under the Atlantic, you know,
+when they were taking cores to test
+from immense depths. A tree-fern made
+the Earth Star—but that fern was
+somehow buried deeper than man has
+ever thought possible. It’s immensely
+harder than diamond, though it’s carbon,
+of course. And the only one in existence—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Rajah said softly, “There is an
+Earth Star in the crown of your ruler.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A subdued smile went the rounds of
+the group. “So there is, and an excellent
+imitation, too. I repeat: you will
+be the owner of the only Earth Star in
+existence.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Rajah placed his slim hand, glittering
+with invaluable jeweled rings, flat
+on the table-top. “Then it is a bargain.
+My secretary will give you a
+check.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Abruptly the moonlight was blotted
+out. The figure of a man seemed to
+rush out of the night, leaping in through
+the open window to land lightly on the
+deep carpet. And that window overlooked
+a sheer abyss, reaching down to
+the river gorge far below.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The sudden movements of the Europeans,
+and the quick gesture of the Rajah’s
+secretary, were arrested at sight
+of an oddly shaped pistol in a gloved
+hand. The intruder stood motionless,
+one hand gripping a light metal ladder
+that extended up through the window
+and out of sight. He wore ordinary flying
+togs, but his face was hidden by
+a black silk mask.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Don’t move,” he said, in a low voice
+that was obviously disguised. “No—don’t
+do that!” The pistol jerked
+slightly; otherwise there was no indication
+that the trigger had been pulled.
+But one of the Europeans cursed softly
+as his arm dropped to his side, paralyzed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“A neurogun,” the masked man observed
+pleasantly. “It <span class='it'>can</span> kill, you
+know.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’ll thank you not to move.
+Now—” He hooked the flexible ladder
+across a chair and moved warily to the
+table. “The Earth Star, eh?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Don’t be a fool,” the secretary said.
+“You can’t hope to sell that. It’s
+unique.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The intruder did not answer, but his
+quizzical gaze was amused. The tallest
+of the Europeans snarled, “Sell it?
+Jackass—haven’t you ever heard of the
+Merlin?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As he spoke, his foot moved slightly
+toward the chair to which the ladder
+was attached. He froze as the Merlin
+turned toward him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You recognize me?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I’ve heard of you.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Good!” The Merlin’s voice was
+suddenly sharp. “Then listen! I have
+ways of finding out what I want to
+know. I discovered that certain powers
+ruling your country had decided to sell
+the Earth Star to our friend the Rajah.
+The price I don’t know, but it must be
+fabulous. If that money were to go to
+needed purposes, I’d not have come here
+tonight.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The tall European kicked the chair
+gently. The metal ladder slipped off,
+slid across the carpet, and vanished out
+the window. The Merlin apparently did
+not notice, though his retreat was now
+cut off.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He went on: “But the money is to
+be used for armaments. And you
+gentlemen, and those behind you, are
+trying to foment a new war. As for
+you—” He glanced at the Rajah. “You
+are a degenerate moron. <span class='it'>Don’t move!</span>
+It’s probably the first time you’ve ever
+heard the truth, but you’re going to hear
+it now. You’re the wealthiest man in
+the Orient, and you inherited your fortune,
+as well as your powers. You won’t
+buy the Earth Star out of your own
+treasury, though. It’ll mean taxes for
+your people, who are starving already.
+Another reason why I’m here.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Merlin glanced down. “This bit
+of carbon is causing trouble, I think.
+So I’ll take it along. The imitation that
+was made to replace it won’t interest the
+Rajah. So—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He slipped the jewel in his pocket and
+moved back toward the window. The
+others watched him narrowly. The Merlin
+apparently did not notice the absence
+of his metal ladder.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The gun was still steady in one hand,
+but in the other he now held an object
+like a small flashlight. “You may be
+interested in knowing how I evaded
+your guards and alarms. I came in a
+gyroship.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“But—my motor-killing rays—” The
+Rajah’s eyes were wide.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“They extend up only 300 feet. I
+hovered well above that point and came
+down a ladder. And here it is.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The ladder swung in from the darkness.
+The Merlin’s voice was amused
+as he slipped the “flashlight” into his
+flying suit.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“A clever trick—but I have a very
+powerful magnet. I’ll leave you, gentlemen—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For an instant his attention was distracted
+as he put one foot on the window-sill.
+Simultaneously the tallest
+European acted. With a deep-voiced
+oath he sprang forward, seized the Merlin,
+and clamped one hand over the outlaw’s
+gun-wrist.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Hold him!” the secretary shrilled.
+He dived for an alarm buzzer. The
+other Europeans closed in.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Merlin fought in silence. His
+opponent was trying to drag him back
+into the room—and that would be fatal.
+The outlaw dropped his weapon and
+gripped the ladder, with both hands
+now.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He pulled himself up, putting all his
+weight on his arms. Inevitably the
+European was lifted too. Overbalanced,
+the two went arcing into the night as
+clutching fingers missed their mark by
+a fraction.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Shoot!” the Rajah screamed. “Shoot
+him!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Guns blazed from the window. Dim
+in the moonlight two figures were struggling
+on a frail metal ladder, suspended
+above nothingness. A scrap of cloth
+went fluttering down.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“His mask—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Out of the dark came a voice, sharp
+and clear.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Martell!</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It rose in a scream. One of the figures
+went plunging down.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The secretary was at the window, a
+flashlight in his hand. He focused the
+beam on the quarry, a man in flying togs
+who kept his face turned from the light.
+Now other rays shot out from the roof,
+bathing the Merlin in merciless brilliance.
+A shot cracked sharply.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“They’ll get him,” the Rajah said.
+“I’ve sub-machine guns on the roof.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Merlin’s hand lifted, fumbled
+over the ladder. And—suddenly—he
+was gone! Ladder and outlaw vanished!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Rajah stared in blank amazement.
+“How—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Automatic winding device in his
+plane. It just wound him up.” The
+European who spoke looked at his
+empty gun. “Better get your planes
+after him.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At a nod from the Rajah the secretary
+hurried from the room. “We’ll
+get him,” royalty remarked.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“No, you won’t. The Merlin’s got
+a fast plane. He’s pulled off these things
+before. But this time—well, he lost
+his mask.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Did you recognize him?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Stone did, before he fell. He
+screamed a name. Remember? Martell.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“A common name,” the Rajah
+frowned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Stone and I worked closely together.
+He knew no Martells. He recognized
+the name and the face from elsewhere.
+Newsreels—newspapers—everybody
+knows Seth Martell and his sons. I’ll
+get in touch with my government immediately.
+May I use your televisor?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yes. Recover the Earth Star, and
+I’ll buy it.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“That,” said the European grimly,
+“is a bargain.”</p>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER II<br/> <span class='sub-head'>Escape</span></h1></div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Seth Martell’s craggy, strong
+face was set in harsh lines as he sat
+staring at a folded paper on his desk.
+Sunlight came warmly through the windows
+of the penthouse apartment above
+New York, silvering Martell’s iron-gray
+hair and clipped moustache. He looked
+hard as nails—till he lifted his lids and
+gazed at the three young men before
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Seth Martell was one of the biggest
+men in America. Connected with the
+military, high up in the government, his
+honesty had never been questioned, nor
+his devotion to his country. Always he
+had been unswerving in serving his own
+ideals, no matter what self-sacrifice it
+entailed. Now—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now there was pain in his gray eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He looked at his three sons and hesitated,
+tapping the folded document
+with stubby, calloused fingers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Well?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>None of the three spoke.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Martell reached for a buzzer, and
+then drew back his hand. He looked at
+the tallest of the three.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Tony. Are you the Merlin?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony—a dark, lean young man, with
+very keen black eyes and a thin eager
+face—cocked up a quizzical eyebrow.
+“I, sir? The—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Martell’s restraint failed for an instant
+as he snapped, “Answer me!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony sobered. “No, sir,” he said
+quietly. “I’m not.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Phil.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The second youth, blond and stocky,
+took a stubby pipe out of his mouth.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“No, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Jimmy.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The third of the trio looked somewhat
+like Tony, though a less matured
+man. The eagerness in Tony’s face was
+enthusiasm in Jimmy’s, boyish and
+pleasant. He shot a quick glance at the
+others, hesitated, and finally said, with
+a little frown, “I’m not the Merlin, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Martell sighed. “All right. Go in the
+sun-room and wait, boys. The investigators
+will be in presently.” He sat
+steadily regarding his nails till his sons
+had departed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony left them at the door. “Be with
+you directly,” he murmured, and hurried
+off along the corridor. The others
+went into the room, and ten minutes
+later the oldest of the three came in, his
+face blandly impassive. He went to the
+window and stood staring out over the
+skyscrapers of New York, waiting on
+the verge of the 21st century. He began
+to whistle ruminatively.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Seth insisted on interviewing us before
+the detecs. Good of him.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Young Jimmy, nervously lighting a
+cigarette, nodded. “Damn good. But
+all this.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I don’t understand it.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil’s serious eyes were questioning.
+“Are you sure? There’s no doubt the
+authorities think one of us is a crook.
+I wonder—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There was a little silence. Finally
+Jimmy asked, “Who is this Merlin, anyway?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Cleverest crook in the world,” said
+Tony, turning. “At least, he’s been
+kicking around for two years. That
+means a lot these days. He’s pretty
+much of a Robin Hood. Only kills in
+self-defense—and never for personal
+profit.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil broke in, “Plenty of criminals
+have evaded capture for years, but
+they’re the small fry. Not important
+enough to attract attention. But the
+Merlin—everyone thinks he’s had years
+of experience. Remember when Janison
+died? The governor? The Merlin
+killed him, and nobody knew why
+till they found out Janison was one of
+the biggest political racketeers in the
+country. He’s a Robin Hood of sorts,
+but the law won’t stand for Robin
+Hoods.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“And,” said Tony sardonically, “one
+of us is the Merlin. So they say.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil grinned. “Which one?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Oh, they’ll find out. They’ll chart
+our psychology—our character patterns—and
+check it with the analysis of the
+Merlin’s activities. Their lie-detectors
+will tell them which one of us is the
+Merlin. That’s positive identification,
+you know.”</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy crushed out his cigarette,
+lips working. He swung suddenly
+on the others.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You’re damn flippant about it!
+What if it’s true? What if one of us
+<span class='it'>is</span> this crook—d’you know what that’ll
+mean to Seth? His son shown to the
+world as a thief and a murderer. Seth
+will stick by us; I know that. But I
+know what his honor means to him. He
+got that silver plate in his skull because
+he thought more of honor than his life.
+And now—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Shut up, Jimmy,” Phil said quietly.
+“We know all that. But what can we
+do about it?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony murmured, “Our youngest
+brother is about to suggest that the
+Merlin confess. A touching sentiment.
+Headlines all over the world announcing
+the news. Seth resigning all his
+offices immediately—he’d do that.
+Everyone knowing that a son of Seth
+Martell was—the Merlin.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil said, “The Merlin might .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
+disappear.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“He’d have to disappear for good.
+Suppose I’m the lad, Philip, and suppose
+I disappear. A signed confession
+would be just as effective. The moment
+I disappear, it proves I’m the Merlin.
+No one has ever watched us. As Seth’s
+sons, we’re above the routine character-checks.
+We reported to Seth once a
+month. Otherwise we were free, all of
+us, with plenty of time to do as we
+pleased. Including brigandage!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil grunted. “Anyway, people can’t
+simply drop out of sight in this day and
+age. Not with television, specialized
+wireless, telephotography, and so forth.
+Where the devil could a man hide for
+years?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“In the Foreign Legion,” Tony said,
+and waited. His gaze searched the faces
+of the other two.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Surprise, astonishment, and incredulity
+showed. And vanished. Into Phil’s
+eyes came a look of dogged grimness.
+And Jimmy’s face showed—excitement.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“The Legion?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yeah. No extradition. Since 1960,
+when the company started. No government
+has a hand in the Legion. They
+rent its services from the company, just
+as the Hessian dukes used to sell their
+soldiers to fight for other countries.
+When there’s a job to be done too dirty
+for anyone else, they ask the Legion—and
+waive extradition. The Polar fortresses.
+The Sub-Sahara. The Canal
+Patrols on Mars. Dangerous space-lane
+patrols. It isn’t like the ancient French
+Legion. This one’s privately owned,
+and, once you get in, nothing on Earth
+or Mars can touch you. As long as
+you’re in the Legion. Men don’t live
+long in it, as a rule.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Cheerful thought,” Phil grunted,
+puffing at his pipe. “By the way, which
+of us <span class='it'>is</span> the Merlin?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony smiled. “I’m the guy, lads.
+And that’s what I’ve been building up
+to. I’m going to drop out of sight.
+Head for the Legion. And—well, I
+wanted you two to know about it. I
+can’t tell Seth, of course. But—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I’ll be damned,” Phil said in blank
+amazement. “You’ve got the Earth
+Star?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“That’s right.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Odd. I happen to have it myself. In
+a hollow tooth.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You’re both crazy,” said Jimmy.
+“I’ve got it.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony shook his head. “It’s no use.
+There’s no point in the three of us going
+into the Legion. One’s enough.
+So—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil said, “Wait a minute. Suppose
+all three of us disappear? Nobody’d
+press a charge against three men, when
+obviously two were innocent. I happen
+to have the jewel myself—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yeah,” Tony grunted. “But slow
+down. You’re both going off the deep-end.
+I’m leaving now. Heading for the
+Legion, and you’re both staying here.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy said, “We’ll meet you there.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The argument kept on—with no result.
+Jimmy and Phil were adamant.
+Each one insisted he had the stolen gem.
+And, if they didn’t accompany Tony,
+they’d simply go after him on their own
+hook. “So we’d better stick together,”
+Phil said at last. “We’ll have a better
+chance that way.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s lips were compressed. “You
+crazy fools! You’d do it, too .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. well,
+stay here. I’m going after an amphiplane.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“What if the investigators get here
+first?” Phil asked.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Stall ’em. And keep your eye on
+that window.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy was chewing his lip. “How
+do you expect to get out? If there are
+guards—”</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s grin flashed. “You’ll find
+out.” He turned to the door—and
+was gone, apparently unruffled. But as
+he hurried along the passage there was
+a gnawing uneasiness in his mind.
+Guards would no doubt be watching to
+prevent just such an attempt at escape
+as this. Only blind luck could help now.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He went into the big, gleaming
+kitchen, a bare room with murals on its
+walls. Every appliance had been built-in,
+so that stove, tables, and so forth,
+could be swung out from their cubbyholes
+by the pressure of a button. The
+room was empty.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s sharp eyes flickered about,
+resting at last on a panel near by. He
+went to it, swung it open, and revealed
+a black hole beyond. The dumbwaiter.
+A glance upward informed him that the
+little car was below, though how far he
+did not know. Deftly Tony swung his
+legs through the hole and seized the
+ropes in strong fingers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He closed the panel behind him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It wasn’t entirely dark. A diffused
+pale glow filtered down from above, and
+gently, carefully, Tony let himself slip
+toward the shaft’s bottom. It was a
+long chance. Unless he found footing
+on the dumbwaiter car soon, his fingers
+would inevitably lose their cramped
+grip. For this was a penthouse apartment
+in a skyscraper.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Down he went into the shaft. Skin
+scraped from his hands. It grew
+darker, and below him was only unfathomable
+blackness. Tony hooked
+his legs about the rope and rested for
+a few moments, though he dared not
+delay long. Time was vitally important.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Then down he went again. He was in
+pitch darkness now, every muscle
+strained and beginning to ache. His
+hands stung painfully. His shoulders
+were throbbing.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s feet thumped softly upon the
+peaked top of the car.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gasping with relief, he relaxed, keeping
+the ropes wound about his wrist so
+that his weight would not carry the car
+to the bottom too suddenly. But a moment
+later he was plummeting down,
+occasionally checking his speed when
+caution grew stronger than the imperative
+need for haste. Up in the penthouse
+Jimmy and Phil were waiting,
+perhaps being questioned even now by
+the investigators. And Seth—unseen in
+the darkness, Tony’s face grew grim.
+Seth was suffering. The old man’s devotion
+to his ideals, to humanity was
+pitted against his genuine love for his
+three step-sons. And one of those three
+was the Merlin.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally the car thumped against the
+bottom of the shaft. A little crack of
+light indicated the panel opening into
+the porter’s cellar. Tony used his
+knife-blade to open it, easing the door
+outward little by little till he discovered
+that the room was vacant.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The rest was surprisingly easy. A
+pair of overalls and a cap in a closet
+made a satisfactory disguise, and, carrying
+a can of rubbish, Tony walked
+blandly past the service man posted on
+guard outside. He deposited his burden
+on the sidewalk, and without a
+pause began to hurry toward the corner.
+A hail stopped him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You, there! Wait a minute!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony turned. The guard was following
+him, gaze probing. A thick finger
+thrust out suspiciously.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Where’re you going?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The street was almost empty. Tony
+didn’t wait for the guard. He hastened
+toward him, arms hanging loosely at his
+side—until the last moment. Then, as
+recognition came into the man’s eyes
+and as his hand dived into a pocket,
+Tony brought up his fist in a vicious
+uppercut. The blow was delivered at
+such close quarters that it went unobserved
+by passers-by. The dull
+thwack of bone against bone was the
+only sound. Tony caught the guard
+as he fell, pulled him swiftly back into
+the cellar, and left him there. The man
+was out for the count.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There were no other guards.
+Tony’s progress was not halted
+again. He reached his destination, secured
+a small, swift amphiplane,
+equipped with gyros, and lifted it
+through the port in the roof. Luckily,
+he had plenty of money in his pocket—enough
+to buy the plane instead of renting
+it, had he desired to do so. But,
+like most ships of this type, the instrument
+board was fitted with a “homing
+pigeon” device, by which the plane
+could be set to return to its garage along
+a radio beam whenever desired.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s fingers flickered over the controls.
+The ship was a honey—small and
+swift, built like a thick cigar, with retractable
+wings and props. He swung
+up in a wide arc that presently brought
+him directly over the penthouse that
+was his goal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Briefly he wondered what had happened
+there, and whether Phil and Jimmy
+were still waiting. Well—fast work
+was vital now. The investigators were
+already on guard. Sight of an approaching
+plane would warn them of trouble.
+Tony checked his controls, took a few
+deep breaths—and dropped faster than
+was safe. The wind shrieked up into a
+high-pitched whine past the ship, almost
+beyond the threshold of hearing.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The skyscraper leaped toward him
+like a driving lance. Its top seemed
+about to impale him. But the controls
+had been expertly set, and the craft fled
+down safely to one side, stopping with
+a bone-wrenching jolt as the automatics
+took hold. Tony fought back giddiness
+and stared out through swimming
+eyes. His blurred vision focused. Too
+far to the left—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He slid the ship forward. This was
+the window. Inside, he could see Phil’s
+broad back, and one hand extended in
+a sign of warning. So the investigators
+had already arrived. But where was
+Jimmy? Tony couldn’t be sure.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A voice he didn’t recognize was talking.
+One of the investigators .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Well, we’ll find him. And the lie-detectors
+will give us the information
+we want. Trying to frame Seth Martell
+is the dirtiest thing the Merlin ever
+did.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy said, “You’re nuts.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yeah? One of our men saw it. The
+Merlin was opening Martell’s safe—trying
+to put the Earth Star in it and
+throw the blame on Martell. But he
+didn’t have time. Our man was too
+close, and the Merlin had to scram in
+a hurry. Now—which one of you was
+it?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s eyebrows lifted. A new element
+had entered into the affair. Trying
+to throw the blame on Seth—yeah,
+that <span class='it'>was</span> a hell of a lousy trick. So—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony whistled softly, and saw Phil
+jerk aside, crying out something. A
+slim form came hurtling toward the window.
+Tony got a glimpse of Jimmy’s
+pale young face; then the boy was hurtling
+out into space, almost overshooting
+the mark in his eagerness. Tony
+seized his arm and pulled him back as
+he swayed on the ship’s edge. The craft
+dipped slightly under the additional
+weight, and then lifted again as compensatory
+stabilizers went into action.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From within the room came a crash,
+and a sharp cry of pain. Phil appeared,
+his face stolid and expressionless.
+He jumped, landing accurately,
+and immediately whirled. In his hand,
+Tony saw, was a bronze figurine he had
+snatched up from a table.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Run for it!” he snapped. There
+were faces in the window. A gun
+snarled viciously. Phil hurled the figurine
+with deadly aim, shattering the
+glass above the group, and the investigators
+dodged back as shards and splinters
+showered them. Almost immediately
+they were back—but Tony’s
+hands had found the controls.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The ship fled up. As it fled it curved
+southward, till far below could be seen
+the shining waters of Long Island
+Sound.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy said tautly, “They’re coming
+after us. I can see planes—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil touched a lever. The upper
+framework of the plane was instantly
+sheathed with transparent walls, making
+it more than ever resemble a fat,
+shining cigar.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony sent the craft rocketing down.
+Almost at the surface of the water, he
+pulled out into a glide, swooping almost
+without a splash into the Sound. The
+light was blotted out by green translucence
+that grew darker as the ship
+slanted into the depths.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Not too deep,” Phil suggested. “The
+hull won’t stand a crack-up.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony didn’t answer. He was fingering
+the controls, trying to get every possible
+bit of speed out of the ship before
+the pursuers located it with their search-rays.
+If they could reach the outer Atlantic,
+they’d be safe—barring accident.
+But they were not safe in the Sound.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Abruptly the water ahead sizzled and
+bubbled with heat. An aerial torpedo
+had been launched. Tony shot up and
+then almost immediately dived again,
+shifting sharply to the left. Before
+his companions could get their breath,
+the ship was rushing back along the
+way it had came, retracing its path.
+Jimmy said sharply, “What the hell—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil’s fingers dug into the youngster’s
+arm. “Good idea, Tony.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The latter nodded. “Maybe. We’ll
+dig in at the mouth of the Hudson.
+They’ll never look for us there. Then
+tonight we can slip out, take the air
+again—and head for the Company.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy said, “Once we’re there, we’re
+safe. There’s no extradition from the
+Legion, eh?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Only to Hell,” Tony remarked,
+grinning.</p>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER III<br/> <span class='sub-head'>Legion of the Lost</span></h1></div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“So,” said the fat little man with
+the shaved head, “so you want to
+join the Legion. Eh?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony looked him over. The dingy
+office in the outskirts of the North
+African city was unimpressive. But,
+somehow, the little man was not. He
+wore dirty white tropical linens, his face
+glistened with sweat, but to the three
+brothers he represented fate. On his
+decision their destiny would depend.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yeah,” Tony said. “We want to
+join. Well?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The little man smiled, tapping pudgy
+fingers on the crowded desk. “Well.
+Let’s see. You passed the physical examination.
+Your names are—Anthony.
+Phillips. Jameson.” The pale blue
+eyes sparkled maliciously. “Better remember
+’em. Sometimes it’s hard at
+first, but you’ll get used to them. I’m
+sure I don’t know why everyone who
+enters the Legion changes his name.
+There’s no extradition. However .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
+You are joining for a term of five years.
+If you wish to leave before then, you
+can buy your freedom if you have the
+money. If you have not, you must
+serve your term.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You may try to escape. You may
+succeed. You may fail, and in that case
+will be assigned to the guards in the
+uranium pits of Mars. No one has ever
+escaped from there. It is not advisable—”
+The blue eyes were hard as steel
+now. “It is scarcely wise to attempt
+escape. Aside from all else, when you
+leave us, you are no longer under the
+Company’s protection.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He passed a plump hand over his
+shining head. “Anything more?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony glanced at his brothers and
+shook his head. “Not a thing. What
+happens next?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“The Sub-Sahara post needs men.
+It’s an easy job for recruits, keeping
+the Copts in check and seeing they
+don’t go outside raiding. Here!” A
+buzzer rang, and soon a man entered,
+clad in the dull gray uniform of the
+Legion. He saluted casually.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Captain Brady,” said the fat little
+man, “these three are assigned to Sub-Sahara.
+Rookies. Anthony, Phillips,
+Jameson. Break ’em in.” He immediately
+became engrossed in the papers
+piled high on his desk.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony looked at the officer with interest.
+He saw a spare figure, and a
+worn, tired face, deeply lined, with
+sunken eyes and a clipped moustache.
+An adventurer gone to seed, he thought—grown
+tired.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady said, “Come along,” and led
+the way out of the room. They emerged
+in blazing white sunlight. A helicopter
+stood a few rods away, and the captain
+gestured toward it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>’ntre.</span> We’ll fly, and talk as we go.
+Discipline needn’t begin till we reach
+Sub-Sahara, so if you’ve any questions—I’m
+at your service.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He pointed toward the plane, and
+followed the brothers into it. With
+quick, familiar motions he lifted the
+craft into the air and sent it winging
+southward.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I’ll stop at Azouad. That’s an oasis
+on the way. You can get smokes and
+equipment there—personal stuff you
+may want. That is—if you have any
+money.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s eyes narrowed, but he merely
+said, “We’ve a little.” He shifted on
+the worn leather seat, glancing aside at
+Captain Brady. The man’s haggard
+face was immobile, the eyes mere slits
+as he squinted into the flaming sunlight.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From the rear of the plane came Jimmy’s
+voice. “Just what is Sub-Sahara?”</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady’s voice went dull with routine.
+“Well—twenty years or more
+ago a labyrinth of caverns was discovered
+under the Sahara. It was inhabited
+by survivors of prehistoric Egyptians—Copts.
+They were trapped underground
+in some ancient catastrophe,
+and got along there, gradually growing
+accustomed to their environment. Matter
+of fact—there was a sort of colony
+in the old pre-dynastic days down there.
+The Copts worked mines, and there was
+a—well, a city of miners under the Sahara.
+When the entrance was blocked,
+the miners couldn’t get out—so they
+stayed there.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“What about food?” Jimmy asked.
+“And oxygen?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“There’s a lot about that Copt tribe
+we don’t know. Food—well, fish and
+mushrooms are staples. The Midnight
+Sea lies under the Sahara. Ages ago
+the water in it made the desert itself a
+sea, but it drained underground at last.
+As for oxygen, there must have been
+outlets before we blasted some, though
+they’ve never been discovered. Possibly
+through river caves that drain into
+the sea.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Captain Brady rubbed his eyes with
+the back of one mahogany hand. “A lot
+we don’t know about the Copts. Savage,
+ferocious—but marvelous miners.
+The Legion’s posted there to keep order.
+Prevent raids on the surface tribes. The
+Copts worship Isis, or the Moon—I
+dunno which. Probably they’re the
+same. Keep clear of them unless you’re
+armed; don’t monkey with their religion;
+and don’t enter any passages engraved
+with the emblems of the Moon
+and the sistrum.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Why not?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Religion, youngster. No white man
+has ever seen the Ka’aba—the Black
+Stone—at Mecca. It’s sacred to the
+Moslem, just as the Alu—the group of
+deepest caverns—are sacred to the
+Copts. They say Amon-Ra is down
+there.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy’s eyebrows lifted. “Amon-Ra?
+The ancient Egyptian god?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Right. ‘The Hidden Light.’ We
+have a sort of armed truce with the
+Copts, provided we don’t interfere too
+much. When they get out of line, we
+whip them back. Figuratively, of
+course.” Brady’s hand touched the
+buttoned holster at his thigh.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“What did you say the sacred caves
+were called?” Phil asked suddenly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Alu.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“What does it mean?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“The Land of Light.” Brady looked
+around. His face was alight with interest.
+“Have you studied Egyptology?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“No—afraid not.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The captain’s eyes lost their glow.
+“Um. Bit of a hobby of mine. Land
+of Light—Hidden Light—Isis, the
+Moon goddess—I’ve always wondered
+what exists in Alu. Never found out.
+Never expect to. But I shouldn’t be
+surprised if there’s the wreckage of a
+civilization down there.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He chuckled. “Not that the commander
+agrees with me—Commander
+Desquer, you’ll be under him. But he
+can’t tell me how the Pyramids were
+built, or the explanation of so many
+mysteries of Egypt. In my opinion,
+space travel was understood ages before
+Europeans achieved it. Yes .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” He
+nodded thoughtfully. “A puzzle. A
+nomadic civilization on the Nile, and
+then, without warning, a civilization
+full-blown and decadent. Where did it
+come from? It was decadent when it
+reached Egypt. I wonder .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He turned to the controls. “Here’s
+Azouad. Half an hour. You’ll find
+plenty of shops. Don’t buy any wines—they
+won’t keep in Sub-Sahara.
+Brandy’s good. And pipes wear better
+than cigarettes in the Legion.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Below the gyro was a patch of gray
+on the brownish, rolling Sahara plain.
+Small dots of faded green were visible,
+trees struggling desperately for moisture
+and life. In a clearing Captain
+Brady set down the ship.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“All out,” he grunted. “<span class='it'>Parte!</span>
+Half an hour, remember.”</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The brothers watched the lean figure
+move briskly across the sun-baked
+square, to disappear into the
+depths of a cantina. Then they looked
+at one another.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Well!” Jimmy murmured. “So
+we’re in the Legion!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Sub-Sahara. Um. Come on; we’ve
+only half an hour. Let’s look over
+Azouad.” Tony hesitated, gripped
+Phil’s arm, and glanced up. “That a
+plane?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yeah.” Phil squinted aloft. “Wait
+.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. not a government plane. Private.
+Anyway, so what? There’s no extradition.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I know,” Tony said softly. “But
+the Earth Star’s plenty valuable. Somebody
+might have .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ideas.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Maybe I’d better mail it back
+home,” Jimmy grinned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Three glances crossed. And, curiously,
+at that moment a shadow drifted
+across the brothers—the shadow of a
+plane, chilling them momentarily after
+the blast of the African sun. It was
+like an omen.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil said, “I wonder which of us
+really has it?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I have,” Tony remarked. “Come
+along. I want a drink.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He led the way, shouldering through
+a crowd of assorted riff-raff, the usual
+scum of a bordertown. Odors of sesame,
+oils, and less familiar stenches
+were sickeningly strong. Dozens of
+mongrels roved hungrily about; the flies
+were countless.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They bought smokes and entered a
+cantina, dark and muggy. A fat native
+served them squareface gin, waddling
+toward the dim corner where they
+sat. Behind them, Tony noticed, was
+a door, half opened less to permit fresh
+air to enter than to allow foul to emerge.
+He pushed it shut with a casual foot.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The gin wasn’t good, but it was
+strong. Also, it was inordinately expensive.
+Jimmy made a wry face.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Hell of a lot of good money will do
+us now. We’ve ten minutes. Think
+we’ll like Sub-Sahara?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“It sounds—interesting,” Phil said
+slowly. “Captain Brady’s certainly
+hipped on his Land of Light. I wonder
+what sort the Copts are?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Tough hombres,” Tony grunted.
+There was a brief silence. The waiter
+appeared, refilled glasses, and departed.
+Then—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Merlin!</span>” a soft voice whispered.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s fingers tightened around his
+glass. Phil sat perfectly motionless.
+Jimmy’s head jerked slightly; then he
+was immobile.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony looked around, and the others
+followed his lead.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Standing beside them was a small,
+round-faced man, his beady dark eyes
+glinting beneath a sun-helmet, his tropical
+whites looking freshly laundered.
+His gaze swiveled sharply from one to
+another of the trio. A shadow of disappointment
+flickered over his features
+and was gone.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony said, “Who the devil are you?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The stranger flashed white teeth.
+“The private secretary of a certain Rajah.
+One of you has seen me before.
+I do not know which one. However—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“He’s crazy,” Phil grunted. “Batty
+as a bedbug. Drink up, boys.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“My name is Zadah,” the man went
+on without heeding the interruption. “I
+know that one of you is the Merlin and
+has the Earth Star. I want it.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony looked at the man. “Do you
+think anybody’d who’d stolen a jewel
+would be fool enough to keep it on
+him?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“The Merlin would. Because he’d
+want to make certain that a certain—deal—wouldn’t
+ever be completed. An
+imitation of the stone was made, so perfect
+that the deception can be discovered
+only by comparison with the original.
+Someone might try to sell the
+imitation as the original jewel—and the
+Merlin could block such a transaction
+only by producing the real Earth Star.
+He won’t get rid of it. Not unless—he’s
+forced to.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony drank gin reflectively. “There’s
+an offensive odor in this place,” he remarked.
+“Notice it, anybody?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Zadah said, “I do not want the police
+to find you or the Earth Star. If I
+recover it myself, the Rajah will pay
+me any price to have the jewel—and the
+original owners can prove nothing. My
+private operatives have traced you this
+far. Now—” He took out a small gun.
+“You will stand up and walk one by
+one through the door behind you. Stay
+in single file. My plane is just near by.
+We will fly to my country, and there—”
+Again the teeth flashed. “There I think
+it will not be too hard to learn which
+of you is the Merlin.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony hesitated, remembering the
+plane he had seen in the sky. Zadah
+held the gun almost hidden under his
+coat, but of its deadliness there could be
+no doubt. The brothers exchanged
+glances.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Stand up!” Zadah whispered.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony obeyed. He turned toward the
+door, opened it, and stepped out into
+sunlight. The others followed. Zadah
+said, “To the left.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They moved slowly through an alley,
+littered with refuse and foul with odors.
+Not a soul was visible—only a stray
+cur that ran past, tail between its legs.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Across the square. The gun is in
+my pocket, but I have my finger on the
+trigger. Make no suspicious move.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s lips were white. He guessed
+well enough what would happen once he
+and his brothers were captives aboard
+the plane. Zadah would not stop at
+torture to achieve his ends. If only—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But there was no sign of help. Across
+the square they went, toward a small
+gyro in its center. Loungers in the
+shadows of the low buildings eyed the
+group incuriously as they passed. They
+walked on, toward a cantina, past its
+door—</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Captain Brady came out. He
+hesitated, his sunken eyes intent
+on the spectacle. Then he moved like
+an uncoiled spring.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Zadah sensed danger. He started to
+whirl, dragging his gun from his pocket.
+But Brady’s hand chopped down viciously,
+the edge of the palm smashing
+against the secretary’s spine, at the nape
+of the neck.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A little grunt came from Zadah. He
+went down like a wet sack of flour. Casually
+Brady bent, picked up the gun,
+and pocketed it. His humorless eyes
+were without any hint of emotion.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Time to go,” he said. “Come along.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Silently the brothers followed Brady
+to the latter’s plane. Without a word
+they took off, speeding south until the
+desert-stain of Azouad was lost beneath
+the horizon.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And not once, during the journey, did
+Captain Brady refer to the affair in
+which he had played Saviour. Tony,
+grinning to himself, remarked in an undertone,
+“There’s no extradition from
+the Legion.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yeah,” Phil nodded. “The devil
+protects his own.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy said nothing. He was too
+busy peering out at the rolling dunes
+and endless plains of the Sahara.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Sub-Sahara! Underground labyrinth—an
+oasis under a burning, lifeless expanse
+of wilderness! To the three Martells
+it was, at first, a relief, after the
+flaming heat of the desert. Though
+even in the beginning there was a feeling
+of oppression as the metal car sank
+down into its shaft and the weight of
+earth overhead was felt almost tangibly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It seemed hours later when the car
+stopped and a panel in its bare side slid
+open. Pale radiance flickered in through
+the gap, lighting the men’s faces eerily.
+The glow seemed to come from the walls
+itself.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Phosphorescent paint,” Brady said,
+nodding. “Saves trouble. We spray the
+walls and ceiling once a year, and it’s
+bright enough for our needs. Come
+along.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The four stepped out into a passageway.
+It wasn’t long. It ended before
+a metallic door; Brady took a rod from
+his pocket and held it briefly pointed at
+the lock. The panel opened.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Beyond the threshold lay a cavern.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Huge and dim and alien as a distant
+world it seemed, a gigantic hollow hemisphere
+in the solid Earth. It was, as
+far as Tony could judge, about two
+miles in diameter, with a jagged floor
+that had been cleared in a few spots.
+The dim light filtered down from the
+ceiling, as sunlight through heavy cloud.
+When Brady spoke, his voice was incongruous
+in this place of silvery soft
+grayness.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“There’s the fort. Over there—” He
+pointed. “That’s the entrance to the
+Coptic tunnels. We guard the entrance
+to the surface. Though the Copts
+haven’t tried to make any surface raids
+for a long time.” He swung out along
+a rough path, the others following.
+“They hate the Bedouins, just as the
+ancient Egyptians did. They don’t especially
+dislike us, unless we get in their
+way. If the mineral deposits the Copts
+work weren’t valuable, though, they’d
+be left to themselves. But the Legion’s
+paid to make sure the mines are kept
+active.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony didn’t answer. His eyes were
+slowly accustoming themselves to this
+strange light. He glanced up at a ceiling
+that was both visible and invisible.
+No details could be seen. A veil of
+shining cloud seemed to obscure the
+rock far above. The vault of a world,
+Tony thought. A world created here,
+perhaps, when the Sahara was a sea
+instead of a desert. What had Brady
+said a while ago? Something about a
+prehistoric, mighty civilization in ante-dynastic
+Egypt .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and, far and far
+below, the Copts still worshiped Isis, in
+the hidden caverns of Alu where no
+white man had ever penetrated. “The
+wreckage of a civilization down there,”
+Brady had said.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this eery cavern-world it was easy
+to believe in almost anything. A scrap
+of half-forgotten verse drifted through
+Tony’s mind:</p>
+
+
+ <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
+ <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
+<div class='stanza-outer'>
+<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>But you have seen the hieroglyphs on the great sandstone obelisks,</span></p>
+<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And you have talked with Basilisks, and you have walked with hippogriffs</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
+</div>
+</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
+
+<p class='pindent'>They were at the fort. Nothing could
+be seen beyond a palisade of strong,
+dully-gleaming metal. But a bell rang
+sharply; a gate opened, and a man in
+legionnaire uniform appeared.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Even in the odd light his face seemed
+strangely pallid—drained of all color,
+like bleached papyrus. He was gaunt
+and fleshless almost to the point of
+emaciation, so that his eyes and mouth
+were black hollows. It seemed as
+though a skull wore the rakish Legion
+cap atop its dome.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He saluted, and Brady responded.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Hello, Jacklyn. Tell Commander
+Desquer I’m here.”</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jacklyn stood aside to let the others
+enter. Tony discovered that
+within the palisade were a dozen metal
+shacks, prefabricated, and without sign
+of life. So this would be their home
+from now on!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady said, “Well? Didn’t you—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jacklyn’s voice was strained. “Glad
+you’re back, sir. The commander left
+for the surface an hour ago. He got a
+message.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. There’s trouble, sir. The
+Copts—they’ve kidnapped Ruggiero.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Captain Brady looked at his fingernails.
+“It’s full moon, isn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yes, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“All right. I need four men. Completely
+armed. We’ll leave as soon as
+they’re ready.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jacklyn hurried away. Tony asked,
+“Is this—the usual thing, down here?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady shook his head. “No. At full
+moon the Copts choose a victim to represent
+Osiris. The Husband of Isis.
+Usually it’s all done quietly, and the
+sacrifice is a Copt, of course.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy inquired rather weakly,
+“What sort of sacrifice is it?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Degenerate form of Egyptian religion.
+According to legend, Seth, the
+evil god, was jealous of Osiris. He put
+him to death, tearing his body into fourteen
+pieces. The Copts are .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. literal-minded.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady sucked in his breath. “I wish
+I knew more of their mythos. The
+ceremony glorifies Isis of the Moon. A
+Copt has always served before. But
+now .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” He pulled at the clipped
+gray moustache. “Ruggiero has been
+taken to Alu to be sacrificed. This
+means trouble—plenty of it.” But there
+was no fear in the sunken eyes; only
+excited anticipation. “Alu! The Land
+of Light!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And suddenly Tony understood. For
+years Brady had wondered about the
+half-mythical cavern world below, a
+place forbidden to him by rigid rules.
+Now, in the absence of the commander,
+it was Brady’s duty to rescue the kidnapped
+legionnaire. His duty—and his
+chance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony said, “Let us go with you, captain.
+Eh?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy and Phil exchanged surprised
+glances. Then Phil nodded. “Yeah!
+How about it?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady hesitated. “You’re untrained.
+You don’t know the ropes—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“We know how to handle guns.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Carbon-pistols?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“We can learn easily enough.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yes .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. they’re simple. But—all
+right,” the captain said with sudden decision.
+“You’re new, and that means
+you’re not scared stiff of Alu. The three
+of you and Jacklyn. Right!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He bawled for the skull-faced man.
+“Jacklyn! Get equipment! I’m taking
+these three recruits. <span class='it'>Allons!</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony grinned at his brothers. Their
+introduction to the Legion was to be
+exciting, after all—if not fatal!</p>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class='sub-head'>Sub-Sahara</span></h1></div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jacklyn said, “Fifty years nearly
+I’ve been here. It never changes.
+First time I’ve ever seen the Copts get
+out of hand. Sure, they’d try to get
+out once in a while to butcher the
+Bedouins, but they never had anything
+against us. Funny.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The group was marching swiftly
+through a dim tunnel, Captain Brady
+in the lead, the others trailing. They
+had been moving for an hour, in a
+labyrinth of passages through which
+the captain unerringly found his way.
+Now he looked back and remarked:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“That’s right. I know this maze
+pretty well, but Jacklyn knows it blindfolded.
+He’s practically a Copt himself.
+Hasn’t been above ground for
+fifty years.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You must like it here,” Jimmy remarked.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jacklyn said, very softly, “It’s hell.
+You been in New York lately? Yeah?
+How does the old burg look now?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“It’s changed in fifty years,” Phil
+said. “But you know that already.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Times Square, though—that’s there,
+eh? I remember I used to feel empty
+whenever I got out of the old town.
+God, I’d like to see it again—but not
+on a televisor. In fact,” he went on
+slowly, “I’d like to smell fresh air again.
+Not this artificial ventilation. See starlight
+and green growing things.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“And the Sun,” Jimmy nodded understandingly.
+He glanced at Jacklyn—and
+then caught his breath at sight
+of the expression on the legionnaire’s
+pallid face. Horror—and hate!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was gone immediately. Jacklyn
+ignored the remark. He said, “I was
+one of the first spacemen. There’ve
+been plenty of improvements since my
+time, what with liquid fuels instead of
+powder, and those new magnetic induced-gravity
+screens they’re working
+on. But it’s like shipping, I guess—steam
+or sail, it’ll never really change.
+There’ll be the sea under you, or space
+around you. We—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Sh-h!</span>” Brady held up a warning
+finger. “Hold it!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They paused, but no sound came.
+The captain relaxed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Thought I heard an explosion.
+Guess not. Well—by the way, are you
+sure you know how to use the carbon-pistols?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“It’s not hard,” Tony said. He took
+out his weapon, resembling an oversized
+revolver with a cup-shaped hollow
+where the hammer should have
+been. From his pocket he withdrew a
+bit of coal, slipped it into the cup,
+where prongs held it firmly in place,
+and hefted the gun. “Not so easy to
+sight as a Colt, but the force-charge
+scatters, doesn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jacklyn said, “Right. Watch the
+recoil, though. Ease the trigger-button
+down. And don’t run out of coal.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Funny,” Tony remarked. “Coal
+doesn’t seem much good in a pistol.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Captain Brady laughed a little. “The
+thing’s based on atomic force—liberation
+of quanta, though I don’t understand
+the scientific principles of it myself.
+Works only on carbon. Coal’s
+carbon—and cheap. So, if the Copts
+get out of hand, we fight ’em with the
+coal they dig for us. Rather unfair,
+but it’s all in the Legion’s work.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Practically everything is,” Tony
+said dryly. “How much farther, captain?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“We’ve been going down steadily—wait!
+Here’s someone. Don’t touch
+your guns unless I give the word.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony stared ahead. For a second
+he saw nothing; then abruptly the tunnel
+was filled with a dozen bizarre figures.
+Clad in skin-fitting garments of
+unfamiliar texture, white-skinned, with
+blue veins showing plainly through the
+flesh, the men’s faces were aquiline
+and strong, with beaked noses and
+abnormally large eyes, in which the
+pupils nearly eclipsed the irises. The
+Copts’ hair—they had none on their
+faces—was like bleached straw, tightly
+curled. They seemed unarmed, yet
+Brady’s whole body subtly tensed as he
+stood waiting.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The foremost of the Copts, taller
+than the rest, and wearing a tapering
+headdress, came forward, hand lifted.
+He spoke in English.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Captain Brady, why are you here?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady said, “If any harm comes to
+a legionnaire, it will not be well with
+the Copts, priest.”</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The man nodded. “I understand.
+That was a mistake. Some of our
+younger men—they have already been
+suitably punished for meddling in
+affairs beyond them. Your legionnaire
+is back in the fort, Captain Brady. You
+will find him there if you return.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony detected a half-veiled glance
+the priest sent at his fellows. Brady
+saw it also, and tugged at his moustache.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You are speaking true words?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I speak true words.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Suppose we do not believe. Suppose
+we—go on.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A stir shook the Copts; they looked
+at one another askance. The priest
+said, “The Moon passages begin not
+far from here. Those you may not
+enter.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady seemed undecided. “We shall
+go back. But if our man is not safely
+in the fort—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The priest’s smile was apparently
+guileless. “He will be there.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“All right. About face! <span class='it'>Allons!</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony turned with the others. But
+before a foot was lifted there came an
+interruption. The priest’s voice was
+raised in an urgent command in an unfamiliar
+tongue. He, with the others,
+had seen the bloodstained, tattered,
+huge figure that sprang out from concealment
+behind a rock.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Kill those men!” a bull voice
+shouted. “Blast ’em down!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Commander Desquer!” Brady
+clipped—and then—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Out guns!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For from the ranks of the Copts a
+pale ray had lanced, striking full upon
+Desquer’s bison chest, bared by a tattered
+tunic. Another ray touched Tony;
+he felt a wave of intolerable heat as he
+snatched out the carbon-gun at his
+belt.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Cr-rack!</span> Brady’s weapon snarled
+viciously, and the heat-ray left Tony.
+He slipped a coal-cartridge into the
+cup and triggered almost without aiming.
+The deadly little guns worked
+havoc. But there were almost a dozen
+Copts, and for a few moments the tunnel
+was a chaotic Maelstrom of battle,
+dominated by Desquer’s deep voice
+roaring commands.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Get them! All of them! Aim at
+their bellies!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Smoke drifted away. The Copts lay
+in helpless huddles amid red stains.
+Tony lowered his gun and stared
+around anxiously. Jimmy was painfully
+rubbing his arm where a heat-ray
+had cindered the cloth. Phil was
+apparently untouched, and so was Jacklyn,
+but Captain Brady was rubbing
+his thigh and cursing quietly. As for
+Commander Desquer, it was impossible
+to judge whether he had been injured
+in the conflict. He was already
+wounded in a dozen places.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s fascinated gaze clung to the
+man. The mighty body was thewed
+like an auroch-bull, the matted, deep
+chest heaving convulsively with exhaustion.
+The commander’s head was
+shaved, but nevertheless there was
+something leonine about his face.
+Shaggy, tufted eyebrows overhung
+glittering small eyes, and thick, sensual
+lips were pressed tightly together.
+Desquer reminded Tony, somehow, of
+a Nero or a Caligula—a degenerate
+Roman despot.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now Desquer flung back his huge
+head in an arrogant gesture. “Jacklyn!
+See if the priest’s got a healing-ray. We
+need it.” As the legionnaire hurried
+forward the commander turned his eyes
+to the others. Tony felt a curious
+shiver ripple down his spine as the
+cold gaze touched him. Desquer looked
+long and intently at Tony, and not until
+he had stared equally long at Phil
+and Jimmy did he turn his attention
+to Brady.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“The fort’s gone,” he said. “The
+Copts smashed it and massacred every
+man. They blew up the shaft to the
+surface just after I reached Sub-Sahara.
+I just managed to get away .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. the
+cavern’s overrun with ’em.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jacklyn came back with a small flat
+box, in which a lens was set. He
+touched a button and turned the lens
+to focus upon Brady’s thigh.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Thanks .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. up a bit .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You know
+they kidnapped Ruggiero?”</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer nodded “Yes. I found
+a Copt alone and induced him to
+give me a little information.” He
+glanced at his hands, took out a small
+knife, and began to clean his nails.
+“What this means I don’t know. A
+<span class='it'>jehad</span>—a holy war, possibly. Though
+it’s without precedent.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The captain lifted his hand.
+“Enough, Jacklyn. Tend to the commander.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But Desquer shook his head impatiently.
+“No time.” He drew
+Brady aside, as Jacklyn turned to the
+others. The two officers withdrew a
+few steps and lowered their voices.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony stared at the lensed box as
+Jacklyn used it on Jimmy’s arm. “What
+the devil’s that?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“A gadget the Copts have. Nobody
+knows how it works. They don’t themselves.
+It was handed down .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. it’s
+a ray that increases cell activity. Builds
+up cell tissue. Prevents infection .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
+how’s that?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Swell,” said Jimmy, touching his
+arm. “It still hurts a bit, though.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“It won’t for long—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer said, “You three recruits—listen
+to me. We’re going down. Into
+Alu. Jacklyn, you’ll go for help.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The skull-faced legionnaire’s body
+jerked convulsively. He stared at the
+commander.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“For—help?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer nodded. “Right. You know
+these caves. There are other openings
+to the surface. Get help. We’ll hide
+out and wait for you. The Copts won’t
+expect us to go right to their headquarters,
+so that’s just what we’ll do.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“But—” Jacklyn moistened dry
+lips. “I’ll have to go to the surface?”
+There was a curious note of horror in
+his voice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Don’t argue. Move! You’ll have
+a better chance alone than with companions,
+so—<span class='it'>allez!</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jacklyn moved a pace away, stopped,
+and turned back. He said woodenly,
+“I can’t go to the surface, Commander.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer said very softly, “Why
+not?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Sunlight will kill me.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There was a little silence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Why?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I was space-burned. That’s why
+I joined the Legion. It’s a kind of
+allergy, you know—I was so badly
+burned in space by direct solar rays
+that even filtered sunlight will kill me
+now in a few hours.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony felt his stomach move sickeningly.
+So that was why Jacklyn had
+remained in Sub-Sahara for fifty years.
+A prison with its mockery of freedom—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Let one of the others go, sir!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I’ll go,” Jimmy offered—but
+Desquer snarled at him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Silence! You know these caves,
+Jacklyn—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“The captain knows them!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“He’s badly burned. That heat-ray
+touched the bone. He couldn’t stand
+a long trek. Here!” Desquer bent
+over the dead Copts and rapidly began
+to strip them of their garments.
+“If sunlight will kill you, stay out of
+it.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“In the desert?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Bandages, you fool—bandages!
+Wrap yourself up in these. Travel by
+night if you have to, after you reach
+the surface.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Silently Jacklyn began to don the
+garments. He said without expression,
+“It will kill me.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer threw him an armful of
+clothes and grinned. “You’ll live long
+enough to get help. If the Copts break
+out of Sub-Sahara, it’ll be like rounding
+up a thousand fleas. Besides, I
+don’t know what’s back of this—but
+it’s nothing small, I can promise you.
+If—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He leaped like a panther. His shod
+foot came down with a sickening crunch
+on flesh and bone. Tony, startled by
+the sudden movement, saw that
+Desquer had sprung upon the Coptic
+priest, from whose hand a ray-projector
+had dropped. The priest’s blood-smeared
+face, twisted in agony, lifted
+toward the ceiling as he cried out.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Not dead, eh?” Desquer whispered,
+his voice taut with savage fury. “Well—you
+soon will be.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He drew back his foot. But the
+priest’s lifted arm somehow halted him.
+The Copt dragged himself half erect.
+His thin voice shrilled, “Go down to
+Alu, fools! But you will be too late.
+Isis has risen—and with her the gods
+who dwell in Alu. Before the opening
+to the outer world can be cleared again,
+we shall have triumphed—and the
+Earth will tremble before the power
+of the Ancients! Aye—the Ancients
+who ruled over the Four Rivers before
+their sons fled to Egypt!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Go down to Alu, fools! <span class='it'>You shall
+find death!</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The priest fell back—and died.</p>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER V<br/> <span class='sub-head'>Five Against the Gods</span></h1></div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hours had passed. The legionnaires,
+headed by Commander
+Desquer, were encamped by a small,
+rocky inlet on the Midnight Sea, a
+fathomless lake of inky water that
+stretched beyond the limit of vision.
+A pallid glow came from the cavern
+roof far above, rippling over the surface
+of the tideless, sluggish sea. It
+was a scene fantastic almost beyond
+belief, and Tony, on guard at the mouth
+of a crevasse where the others slept,
+could scarcely realize that he was still
+on Earth, and not beneath the surface
+of some alien world.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They had come far and fast, slipping
+stealthily past the guards the Copts
+had posted, taking advantage of every
+unused tunnel, guided more by instinct
+than by knowledge. The city of the
+Copts they had skirted, descending
+ever deeper to the forbidden gates of
+Alu. And now, on the shore of the
+Midnight Sea, they were ready for the
+plunge into the unknown.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“We can’t stay here,” Desquer
+grunted. “They’d find us sooner or
+later. But in Alu we have a chance.
+The element of surprise will be on our
+side, at least.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He was right. Tony knew. He
+shifted uneasily, glancing at the carbon
+pistol and checking its load. His
+thoughts went back to New York, and
+the civilization of a world that seemed
+a billion miles distant. A world lost to
+him—and his brothers—forever. And
+in exchange they had gained—this!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A hand fell on Tony’s shoulder.
+Desquer said, “All right. We’re marching.”
+The commander’s heavy jaw jutted
+as he stared out over the water.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The others appeared one by one,
+ragged, disheveled, and unshaved.
+Brady was wincing with the pain in his
+stiffened leg as he walked. Jimmy’s
+face was haggard; he had not the stamina
+of the others. But Phil seemed as
+sturdy and untroubled as ever.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer turned; his cold eyes took
+stock of his command. “All right.
+March!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He led the way. Brady behind him.
+The brothers followed. Tony caught a
+wink from Phil, and lagged behind
+somewhat, till the officers were out of
+earshot of a whisper.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yeah?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil’s hand touched his tunic pocket.
+“Somebody searched me while I was
+asleep. I thought I was dreaming, but
+when I woke up, this pocket was unbuttoned.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s eyebrows lifted. “Oh-oh!”
+He squinted ahead. “Who—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Dunno. But—somebody. Just
+thought I’d tell you. We’d better keep
+our eyes peeled after this.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil exchanged a meaningful glance
+with Tony and increased his pace. The
+latter frowned, trying to figure out what
+this new development meant. The
+Earth Star? It was scarcely probable
+that anyone in Sub-Sahara would know
+the details of the theft and its aftermath.
+More likely the motive was
+merely petty robbery—unless, indeed,
+Phil had actually dreamed it. But in
+his heart, somehow, Tony sensed impending
+danger. The baleful fires of
+the Earth Star still burned far below
+the surface of the planet.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer? He could scarcely know
+anything of the jewel. Brady? Perhaps
+the encounter with Zadah, the
+Rajah’s secretary, had aroused the captain’s
+suspicions. Or—Jimmy? Was
+he searching for the Earth Star, trying
+to learn which of his brothers carried
+it? That might have been more plausible
+had not Jimmy kept insisting, with
+his brothers, that he himself had stolen
+the gem.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s face did not change, but his
+hand touched the butt of the carbon-pistol.
+He felt safer with the
+weapon at his thigh. For a time he
+plodded on, every sense alert for sign
+of danger. The immediate peril was
+from the Copts, of course.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>None of the underground race appeared
+as the group skirted the Midnight
+Sea. They came at last to a tunnel
+mouth where Desquer paused, hesitating,
+to confer with Brady. The latter
+pointed to a sign cut out of the rock
+above the entrance—a full moon surmounted
+by a crescent.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Moon and sistrum,” the captain
+nodded. “This is one of the forbidden
+gateways. A door to Alu.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer grunted. “Very well. Come
+along. Watch out for traps.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They entered the tunnel. It was
+darker, though a vague illumination filtered
+from the walls and roof, due, perhaps,
+to some sort of radioactivity. The
+passage slanted down steeply. It was
+apparently little used, and in spots almost
+blocked by debris, where the legionnaires
+had to crawl through painfully.
+Desquer’s bull strength came in
+useful there. The giant commandant
+was untiring, and there came a time
+when he was almost carrying Brady
+along as the captain’s weak leg grew
+weaker.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Wonder if Jacklyn will make it,”
+Jimmy muttered to Tony.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“God knows. If he doesn’t, we’re in
+the soup.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil grinned. “What if he does?
+We’re still in Alu!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The tunnel grew steeper. Now half-obliterated
+carvings were visible on the
+walls, symbols that bore the trace of
+immeasurable antiquity. One sign puzzled
+Tony; it was a cross within a circle.
+It reminded him, somehow, of the
+dying Coptic priest’s words—“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
+the Ancients who ruled over the Four
+Rivers before their sons fled to Egypt.”
+The circled cross struck a chord of
+memory in Tony’s mind, and he knew,
+somehow, that the cross was supposed
+to represent four rivers. But—try as
+he might—he could recall no more.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There were other carvings, most of
+them showing the sistrum and the lunar
+disk. They had been cut out of the
+rock, Tony felt, long before the Pharaohs
+had reigned in Egypt, before the
+uraeus crown had come to represent a
+dynasty. A little chill touched Tony
+as he thought of the endless centuries
+that had ravaged the world above and
+left the road to Alu untouched.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Before Egypt—a civilization. And in
+Alu—<span class='it'>what</span>?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>No premonition troubled Commander
+Desquer. His great frame marched on
+untiringly, practically carrying the exhausted
+Brady. Down and down they
+went. Tony’s legs began to ache, and
+Jimmy was drooping with fatigue.
+Phil’s stolid face showed no emotion,
+but there were lines of strain about his
+mouth.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Down—and down! Into Earth’s secret
+heart—into the forbidden land.
+And what caused Tony the most uneasiness
+was the fact that they went on unchallenged.
+Perhaps the Copts had not
+discovered the intruders. Or, perhaps,
+the Copts knew that there was no need
+to guard the road to Alu.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Occasionally Tony would intercept a
+glance from Desquer, who would impartially
+stare at the three brothers as
+though in puzzled curiosity. But the
+commander said nothing, till at last they
+came out in a large cavern from which
+three tunnel-mouths opened, besides the
+one on the threshold of which they
+stood. Desquer paused, his gaze searching.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“We’ll camp here,” he said shortly.
+“In the middle. That way, our retreat
+won’t be cut off if the Copts find us.
+That middle passage is our road. Eh,
+Captain?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady nodded. “Yes. The Moon
+and sistrum is over it.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In silence the five moved wearily to
+the center of the cavern and dropped
+rather than relaxed on the rock floor.
+They were tired out. Desquer alone sat
+straddle-legged, his gun ready in his
+hand, icy eyes flashing about.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Sleep,” he said. “I’ll guard.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony gratefully obeyed. Stillness
+closed over the cave. But—it was
+broken.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Very faintly, as though from an infinite
+distance, came a rhythmic
+chanting. Muffled and scarcely audible
+it whispered, almost below the threshold
+of hearing.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady’s breath hissed between his
+teeth. “Hear that?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer said, “Well?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“The Chant of Set. Somewhere
+they’re beginning the ceremony of Osiris,
+where they’ll sacrifice Ruggiero.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony said, “That’s where they tear
+the victim into pieces, isn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yes. Commander—” Brady didn’t
+finish. One look at Desquer’s grim face
+was enough.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Don’t be a fool, captain. Get your
+rest—and the rest of you, too. You’ll
+need it. You know well enough we
+can’t rescue Ruggiero.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That, Tony thought as he relaxed,
+was true; but nevertheless he had a
+curiously unpleasant feeling at the base
+of his spine. Somewhere amid these
+caverns a white man was being horribly
+sacrificed, and it was not a thought conducive
+to sound sleep. Yet Desquer
+was right. The legionnaires’ only chance
+was to remain hidden .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Once Tony roused sleepily to find the
+Commander lying down and Captain
+Brady on guard. Brady was wandering
+about the cavern, staring up at the carving
+of the Moon and sistrum. He was
+a gaunt, scarecrow figure in the dim
+light. As Tony drifted off again to sleep
+he realized that the faint chanting had
+grown louder—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That it was different now in tone—triumphant!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And then Desquer was shaking
+Tony’s shoulder, his hand pressed over
+the legionnaire’s lips. The commander’s
+eyes were glittering brightly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Sh-h!</span> Not a sound! Rouse the
+others.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Silently Tony obeyed. There was no
+sign of Captain Brady, he realized.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On cat feet Desquer led the three into
+the tunnel. Hidden by the first turn,
+he whispered, “Brady’s gone. When I
+woke up—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy asked, “What happened to
+him? The Copts?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“But wouldn’t they have killed us,
+then?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer passed a hand over his
+shaven head. “Not necessarily. They
+may have other plans.” He smiled, not
+pleasantly. “So Brady’s gone. That
+leaves the four of us.” There was an
+oddly secretive look in the cold eyes.
+“Come on. We’re still heading for
+Alu.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“What’s the use?” Tony asked. “If
+the Copts have discovered us—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“They may not have. Brady may
+have gone off to try and save Ruggiero.
+I doubt that, though—but we mustn’t
+overlook any chances. Alu is our destination.
+So—<span class='it'>allons!</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The three brothers exchanged
+glances. One by one their number was
+being cut down. First the entire garrison
+of the fort; then Jacklyn; now
+Captain Brady. Tony felt a twinge of
+sympathy for the weatherbeaten old soldier.
+Whatever had happened to the
+man, Brady would have gone down
+fighting.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“He didn’t try to warn us,” Jimmy
+muttered.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer grunted. “We don’t know all
+the weapons of those Copts. Where
+they get them God knows. Every once
+in a while they’ll pop up with some
+super-scientific device far beyond their
+power to manufacture. It’s a mystery.
+Maybe we’ll find the answer in Alu.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That, to Tony, was a strange paradox.
+A search amid the ruins of a forgotten
+past for the super-science of the
+future. And yet—whence had come
+the mighty civilization of Egypt?
+What mystery lay behind the cryptic
+powers of the Copts?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There could be no answer, as yet.
+The four men marched on, down into
+the depths. They were beneath the
+Midnight Sea now, Tony decided, since
+the tunnel had curved in a long loop.
+Not only beneath the Sahara Desert,
+but under a sunken sea as well.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Endlessly the road stretched before
+them. But the end came unexpectedly.
+So exhausted were the
+four that they scarcely realized that
+the silvery radiance of the tunnel had
+given place to a reddish glow, brighter
+and reminiscent of volcanic activity.
+Desquer lifted his hand in warning.
+He went on to reconnoitre, and presently
+beckoned the others. His burly
+figure was rigid, Tony saw.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And, as he went on, he saw something
+else. The tunnel ended. It
+opened upon a cavern.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A cavern that was a world!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A world beneath a desert and a sea!
+Alu, the Land of Light, lay before the
+adventurers, and human eyes had never
+gazed upon a stranger sight. A metropolis
+of antiquity, with the wrecks
+of mighty buildings and fallen pillars
+strewing the flat floor of the cave. It
+was like Pompeii, and far older than
+Pompeii. It was grander than Karnak,
+more alien than crumbling Ang-kor-Vat.
+In the distance a pyramid
+rose toward the roof of the cave—touching
+it, supporting it as the fabled
+tree Yggdrasil is supposed to support
+the Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Red light flamed from beyond the
+pyramid.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Alu! Old beyond imagination, cradle
+of a race that had ruled long and
+long ago! Alu, which the Egyptians
+had incorporated into their mythology
+as their heaven.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The sheer, overwhelming majesty of
+the panorama struck the men dumb, as
+a hand might strike an impious lip.
+Huge and desolate and dead the lost
+world stretched before them, holding
+its secret fast, as it had held it since
+before the Pharaohs reigned. No wonder
+the pyramids were a mystery—built
+by some alien science. The same
+science that had reared the colossal
+structures of Alu!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A hundred feet away a square white
+marble building towered, Doric pillars
+on either side of its open gateway.
+Some indefinable urge drew Tony’s
+eyes to it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer said, “Hear that?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The others listened, but detected no
+sound. The commander grunted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“It came from that temple. Get
+your guns ready. We’re going in. If
+there’s trouble, shoot first.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The four moved softly across the
+flat rock of the floor. Halfway to the
+door of the building Jimmy clutched
+Tony’s arm. He pointed, his face
+chalk-white.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Look at that!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony followed his brother’s gaze, as
+did the others. Far away were two
+structures connected by an arched
+span. Across this span figures were
+moving.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Figures with human bodies—but inhuman
+heads!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At the distance it was impossible to
+make out details, but it was plain that
+there was something definitely abnormal
+about the beings who walked
+across the span. They moved in stately
+file and were gone. Jimmy whispered:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Remember what the priest said?
+The gods live in Alu!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony thought of the Egyptian gods,
+men with the heads of beasts and birds
+and reptiles. Could some monstrous
+hybrids have survived in this cavern?
+He shrugged off the thought.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Masks, Jimmy! Don’t be an idiot.
+Come on.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer urged them toward the
+square building. “Quick! We can
+hide here, until we know more about
+this place. Keep your guns ready.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The commander’s icy eyes were
+searching the gloom of the temple as
+they crossed the threshold. The symbol
+of Osiris, sign of the horned bull,
+was carved everywhere. Crumbling,
+broken pillars made the interior of the
+temple a labyrinth. The floor was littered
+with smashed blocks of stone.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was very dim here, but one ray of
+red light flamed like a sword-blade
+through a gap in the wall and fell directly
+upon the throne that stood on a
+dais at the farther end of the room.
+Tony and the others looked down a
+long aisle toward the throne and the
+statue upon it—the statue of a man,
+clad in stylized flowing robes, with the
+head of a bull upon the human shoulders.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Come on!” Desquer whispered.
+He gripped his gun. Tony felt the butt
+of his own weapon cold against his
+palm as he walked on. The approach
+to the dais seemed endless. Incredible
+journey amid the wreckage of a forgotten
+civilization! So might a lost
+soul have journeyed to Osiris .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. A
+scrap of verse came unbidden to Tony.</p>
+
+
+ <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
+ <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
+<div class='stanza-outer'>
+<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Ten hundred shaven priests did bow to Ammon’s altar day and night,</span></p>
+<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Ten hundred lamps did wave their light through Ammon’s carven house—and now</span></p>
+<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Foul snake and speckled adder with their young ones crawl from stone to stone</span></p>
+<p class='line0'><span class='it'>For ruined is the house and prone the great rose-marble monolith!</span>”</p>
+</div>
+</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer stopped. His figure stood
+rock-still for a moment. The gun
+swung up, aimed at the statue on the
+throne.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And now Tony saw what the commander
+had already realized. It was
+no statue that faced them. The being
+was alive!</p>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER VI<br/> <span class='sub-head'>Before the Gods</span></h1></div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Only one thing could have stopped
+Desquer’s finger on the trigger—and
+that thing happened. The monster
+on the throne spoke. Thick and almost
+unintelligible, its voice poured out from
+the inhuman muzzle, as the hands
+twitched on the arms of the throne.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Don’t!” the bull-headed creature
+moaned. “It’s Brady—Brady!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Sheer amazement petrified Desquer.
+He lowered his gun at last, shaved
+scalp shining with sweat. Tony swallowed
+a lump in his dry throat, glaring
+at the hybrid on the dais.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady? Captain Brady?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Those devils did this to me,” the
+thick voice went on. “Surgery, commander—super-surgery.
+Remember their healing ray? They grafted the
+flesh and skin of a bull on to my head
+and speeded up the cellular activity
+tremendously with their ray. I—I
+don’t dare move. This head is so heavy
+it would snap my spine if—if—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer said in a low voice, “Are
+we in danger now?” His eyes searched
+the shadows.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You’re doomed,” Brady mouthed.
+“Thotmes told me the hellish plan behind
+all this. Thotmes is the high
+priest. He’s one of the very few that
+know the secret of Alu. He told me—almost
+everything. It tickled his ego,
+I think, to gloat over his triumph .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The bull head lolled forward and
+came back into place again abruptly.
+Brady said, “Maybe there’s a chance.
+I don’t know. Your guns .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Listen!
+If you can get to the pyramid and blast
+the machine out of existence—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“What machine?” Desquer asked.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“The machine that will destroy
+Europe! The same kind of machine
+that created Earth’s Moon, ages ago!
+The machine that sank Atlantis!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s breath caught in his throat.
+Atlantis? Now he remembered the
+significance of the sign of the cross-and-circle.
+It was the symbol of Atlantis,
+the four rivers on the island continent.
+Softly he whispered, “The Ancients
+who ruled over the Four Rivers
+before their sons fled to Egypt.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady said, “Yes. That’s the secret
+of Egypt, and its civilization. Men
+have guessed at that before now. Ages
+ago, when Europe was filled with nomadic
+tribes, Atlantis was a continent
+of culture and science. It was unstable—volcanic
+activity went on endlessly
+beneath it. And the land began to sink.
+Thotmes told me how the scientists of
+Atlantis planned to prevent their doom.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“They made a Moon. Out of the
+bed of the Pacific Ocean they tore part
+of the Earth and sent it driving out
+into space. They thought that would
+release the pressure under Atlantis and
+save their civilization.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“They failed. The forces they controlled
+were too mighty. Atlantis sank,
+taking with it a science such as the
+world has never known and perhaps
+may never know again. But before the
+deluge, a few Atlanteans fled eastward,
+through the Pillars of Hercules, to
+Egypt.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The bull head nodded. “They were
+the ancestors of the underground
+Copts. They found Sub-Sahara centuries
+before the Pharaohs, and they
+found Alu. There they built a city
+such as had existed in the Atlantean
+valleys. They sent forth some of their
+number to civilize the Nile peoples, and
+those Atlanteans became the high
+priests of the gods. They created the
+gods!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“As they created me—they made
+gods with heads of bulls and crocodiles
+and jackals, to terrify the superstitious
+tribes that needed tangible gods to
+worship. And then the road to the surface
+was closed by some ancient cataclysm,
+so that the Atlanteans were
+trapped here. Some few of the priests
+kept their culture. The others degenerated.
+They became—the Copts.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“But the priests still kept the old
+religion alive, using their surgery and
+their healing-rays to make new gods,
+and ruling the Copts through fear.
+Now they plan to make a second Moon,
+and to raise Atlantis; they wish to rule
+the Earth as they did once, long ago.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Brady’s thin hands clenched into
+fists. “They caught me in the cavern
+where I was standing guard—used
+some sort of paralyzing ray on me.
+They brought me down here and told
+me what they intend. There’s a machine
+that’s capable of ripping all
+Europe from the face of the Earth and
+sending it out in space, to be another
+Moon.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony said, “But that would wreck
+the world!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“That is part of their plan. They
+have lost all their science, possessing
+only a few machines and devices that
+have come down since the days of the
+Atlantean exodus. And these are gradually
+losing their power. In sunken
+Atlantis Thotmes and his followers can
+find weapons and secrets that will enable
+them to rule the world. But first
+they plan to make another moon—to
+destroy Europe—and to wreck most of
+the Earth with quakes, tidal waves,
+and storms. They’ll be safe here in
+Alu. They’ll emerge after the Atlantic
+has drained into the great abyss that
+will be left by the destruction of
+Europe, and they’ll return to Atlantis,
+west of the Canary Islands.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“A machine to make a Moon!”
+Desquer’s voice was almost scornful.
+“Unbelievable!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“It was done once. The principle is
+that of vibration. A file of men marching
+in unison can shake down a bridge—you
+know that. The right vibration
+can wreck a building. Sonic waves
+can disrupt the molecular framework
+of the Earth, and Thotmes has a machine
+that can be focused <span class='it'>through</span> the
+body of the planet. There will be little
+temblors in Europe at first, then heavy
+quakes. They will grow stronger.
+And finally the entire continent will be
+ripped away, and centrifugal force will
+carry it out to its orbit. Thotmes explained
+it in detail .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The bull head jerked forward suddenly.
+There was a sharp, brittle
+snap. And, slowly, the body of Captain
+Brady leaned and bent. It toppled.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer sprang forward with a
+curse. He touched the monstrous
+muzzle, jerked his hand away, and
+then felt for Brady’s heart-beat. After
+a moment he shrugged.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Well, he told us enough. Now
+.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” The commander stood up, his
+gaze traveling slowly from face to face.
+“Now we must find that machine and
+destroy it—eh?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He seemed vaguely displeased when
+the three brothers nodded as one. But
+his words were commonplace enough.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“We need information. <span class='it'>Bon.</span> First,
+we must find someone who can supply
+it. Preferably this Thotmes—but we
+cannot pick and choose, I suppose.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy said on impulse, “You believe
+Captain Brady’s story?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For answer Desquer waved his hand
+around. “Look at this. No modern
+civilization built it. I’ve lived in Sub-Sahara
+for a long time, and—well, at
+least I’ll verify the story before I act.
+Let me remind you that it is not your
+business to ask questions.” His cold
+gaze held the youngster.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony said quickly, “I’ll get the information,
+commander.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer nodded. “Very well. I
+need tell you nothing you do not already
+know. Most of the Copts know
+English; if not, bring your captive
+back here. We shall wait.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony looked once at the sprawled,
+terrible body that had been Captain
+Brady, waved casually to Phil and
+Jimmy—and went out. Along the
+shadowed aisle of pillars he hurried,
+pausing only when he emerged from
+the temple. There, crouching in the
+dimness, he paused, looking about.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There was no sign of life. In the
+distance loomed the tunnel mouth by
+which they had entered Alu. Tony slid
+along the side of the building and
+peered gingerly around the corner. He
+could see the arched ramp along which
+the “gods” had passed, but it was vacant
+now. What was the logical course
+to pursue?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The lost city stretched about for
+miles, an apparently tenantless ruin.
+Yet it was peopled, Tony knew, by
+Thotmes the high priest and his servitors—perhaps
+by Copts, though probably
+not, since the latter were confined
+to their own city above. At the
+thought Tony involuntarily glanced up.
+Beyond the cavern roof was the Midnight
+Sea, above that the Coptic city,
+and still further above, Sub-Sahara itself.
+The weight of innumerable tons
+of Earth pressing down on him was
+almost suffocating. However—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony shook off the feeling and set
+out at random, after taking careful
+bearings. He had a compass, but it
+was useless in this environment, as he
+found after brief experimentation.
+But he could gauge direction fairly
+well from the great pyramid, which
+was visible from almost any point in
+the city of Alu.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He kept in the shadows, which were
+concealingly dark where the flickering
+red light did not shine. What caused
+that volcanic glow Tony did not know,
+though he hazarded a few guesses. He
+went toward the pyramid.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was a metropolis of the dead.
+Eons ago it had been inhabited, by the
+survivors of sunken Atlantis, but now
+only the dust of ages filled it. Silence,
+and everywhere the symbol of Isis,
+Moon-goddess, carved upon the stones.
+Silence .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The pyramid drew nearer, and Tony
+was amazed anew at its hugeness. It
+towered up and up to the very ceiling
+of the cavern, seeming to support it
+like a pillar. Perhaps it did—he could
+not tell. But as he came closer he saw
+that the pyramid was hollow, for there
+were lighted embrasures here and there
+in the sloping expanse of its sides.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And still there was no sound, no
+movement, no trace of life.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony grew more cautious, though
+there seemed no need. An arched
+opening loomed in the side of the pyramid
+near him, and he slunk toward it
+watchfully. No guards were posted.
+He hesitated near the threshold.
+Should he take the risk of entering
+what might be a stronghold of his
+enemies? To search the deserted city
+was seemingly a vain task, and, shrugging,
+Tony walked boldly toward the
+opening. But his gun was in his hand,
+and a coal-cartridge in its cup, ready
+for instant use.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A passageway sloped upward
+within the pyramid. It was
+lighted dimly by gleaming bars like
+neon-tubes that ran the length of the
+ceiling. In the vague glow Tony went
+stealthily on.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The corridor was featureless and
+without doors—at first. But, suddenly,
+he noticed what had at first
+evaded his attention, a series of panels
+set in the walls. The secret of their
+locks was beyond him, until at last
+one seemed simpler than the others.
+Tony pressed a spring that was not too
+deftly hidden—and the panel opened.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He looked through metal bars into a
+great cage.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Briefly he thought of a menagerie,
+and then went sick and dizzy with
+nausea. This was, indeed, a “zoo”—but
+it did not hold animals. It held—gods!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The artificial monsters created by
+Thotmes and his servants roamed
+within the cage, men with the heads of
+teratological mythos. Here, indeed,
+were the gods of Egypt, jackal-headed,
+ibis-headed, bull-headed, even some
+with the heads of crocodiles set hideously
+upon the human shoulders. So
+brightly lit was the cage that the beings
+did not see Tony, and he drew back
+swiftly, closing the panel. Obviously
+he could get no information here. He
+suppressed a strong impulse to use his
+carbon-gun to put these pitiful beings
+out of the unending nightmare of their
+existence. If this was a sample of
+Thotmes’ power, it would not be well
+for the Atlantean to rule over Earth!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony went on along the corridor.
+From his slight knowledge of Egyptology,
+he knew that not all of the gods
+were malevolent, like Set. Both Osiris
+and Amon-Ra were benevolent, and so,
+indeed, was Isis. Perhaps in the beginning
+the whole religion had been a
+good one, and had become decadent
+and degenerate with the passage of
+ages in this hidden cavern-world. The
+obvious parallel was Satanism .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Yet this wasn’t a question of superstition.
+It was one of logic and science,
+of cold facts in which the mythology of
+a race had been rooted. Behind the
+veil of so-called “magic” lay an alien
+and powerful culture, born in Atlantis
+long before Ur and Akkad had risen in
+Sumeria, along the Tigris and Euphrates.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On and on Tony went, a cold uneasiness
+rising within him. No one appeared
+to bar his path. More than
+once he glanced at the carbon-gun—but
+he was unprepared when the floor
+dropped beneath him, and he fell, writhing
+and twisting, into darkness.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He landed heavily on a hard surface,
+and went down with a grunt and an
+oath. Before he could rise, he felt the
+weight of muscular bodies upon him.
+Handicapped by the darkness, he
+fought doggedly, but the gun was torn
+from his grasp almost at the outset of
+the struggle. He was not in complete
+blackness; there was a vague dim glow,
+but Tony’s eyes were not conditioned
+to it, as those of his enemies were. At
+last he lay prostrate, held motionless
+by iron hands that gripped him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A deep voice murmured a command.
+The light grew brighter. Tony blinked,
+staring up from his position spread-eagled
+on a stone floor. He discovered
+that he was in a bare chamber, with a
+barred door of metal grating set in one
+wall. Five strong-thewed Copts held
+him—but almost immediately Tony
+saw that they were not Copts. Their
+faces lacked the degeneracy of the
+underground mining race. They were
+cruel instead of stupid. Cruel—and
+arrogant, proud! Proud with the
+knowledge of a culture that stretched
+back into the mists of a lost antiquity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One man stood against the wall—and
+he was a giant. He wore a short
+spade beard, and soft, glossy black
+hair fell in curled, oily ringlets about
+his face. He was handsome with the
+beauty of a sword-blade, strong and
+powerful and deadly, and his beaked
+nose was hooked like a scimitar. Pale
+blue eyes watched Tony unwinkingly.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In not-quite-perfect English, he said,
+“I am Thotmes.” Tony could not
+repress a slight movement, and the
+blue eyes narrowed; but the priest
+merely smiled. “You know me? That
+is strange. Perhaps you have spoke
+to .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Osiris!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He nodded to the priests, who relaxed
+their grip on Tony. The legionnaire
+sprang up, but made no hostile
+movement. He stood silent, watching
+Thotmes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Atlantean stroked his beard.
+“You are wise. This will be your prison,
+and, if you cause no trouble, you
+can live for a time. We do not murder
+unnecessarily.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Only nine-tenths of the world’s population,”
+Tony said gently.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“That,” Thotmes smiled, “is necessary.
+We are a handful, against billions.
+Not even the powers we shall
+recover from Atlantis would enable us
+to conquer Earth—unless Earth is already
+conquered, her navies and aircraft
+and weapons smashed by cataclysms.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You actually expect to make a second
+Moon?” Tony’s voice held skepticism.
+But the priest was not offended.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yes. Such a thing was done once
+before. The machine that made the
+Moon was built in Atlantis, and we
+have built a duplicate here. It took
+centuries, but at last it is finished. In
+the heart of the pyramid it lies—and
+already it is in operation.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“In operation?” Involuntarily Tony
+glanced around. “I don’t—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You feel nothing here and now, of
+course. Later you may, though we are
+safe in Alu. The machine sets up vibration
+and molecular disruption in
+certain strata under Europe, and gradually
+the intensity of the vibration will
+be increased—until Europe shakes itself
+literally to pieces. In a week or
+even less the final cataclysm will take
+place. Europe will vanish, leaving an
+abyss into which the waters of the Atlantic
+will pour. And Atlantis will rise
+again!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“That,” said Tony, “will be Old
+Home Week, eh?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thotmes didn’t answer. He turned
+to the others and gestured. One of
+them slid open the barred grating, and
+the group filed out. The door slammed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Beyond it, Thotmes smiled at his
+captive. “Your companions will join
+you soon. We shall not trouble to
+search for them. They will walk into
+our midst soon enough, and then you
+will have company.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Look out you don’t get your head
+blown off by one of them,” Tony remarked.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thotmes lost his smile. He tugged
+at his spade beard and said, “Few men
+jest in Alu. There is always a need
+for new gods—and you would look well
+with a jackal’s head on your shoulders.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You’d look lovely with a rat’s,”
+Tony agreed, “only you already have
+one.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The high priest said something indistinguishable,
+glared and departed.
+Tony was left alone. He shrugged and
+took stock of his possessions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He had been searched completely.
+His pockets were empty. Carbon-gun
+and coal-cartridges had been taken
+from him. He had no tool by which
+he might leave the cell.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the other hand, there might possibly
+be a concealed panel somewhere.
+It took an hour for Tony to convince
+himself that none existed. Finally he
+sat down and waited. There was nothing
+else to do. He had got the information
+for which he had come. The
+machine of the Atlanteans was in the
+heart of the pyramid. But he was unarmed,
+and had no way of conveying
+a message to Desquer or his brothers.
+Briefly he wondered what was happening
+to Phil and Jimmy, and how long
+they would wait. And when they got
+tired of waiting—what would they do?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What could they do—trapped in Alu,
+city of science and fathomless antiquity?
+Four men, Desquer and the brothers,
+against the mighty powers of the
+greatest civilization Earth had ever
+known. Four against the might that
+had made Egypt an invincible empire.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Four against the gods!</p>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER VII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>The Might of Atlantis</span></h1></div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A thump from above brought Tony
+from his crouching position to
+stand rigidly erect, gaze riveted to the
+ceiling. He was in time to see a section
+of it swing down on hinges, letting
+the body of a man, with arms and legs
+flailing, drop into the prison. Tony
+sprang forward, breaking the man’s
+fall. It was Phil.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil’s blond hair was disheveled, a
+stubble of yellow beard on his face;
+but his stocky body was as steel-muscled
+as ever. He still gripped the
+carbon-gun he had been holding, and
+his eyes met Tony’s with relief.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You okay?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yeah.” There was no need for
+more, so deep was the understanding
+between the brothers. Tony said
+swiftly, “Anybody after you?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Didn’t see anybody.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Took ’em by surprise, perhaps.
+But they’ll be along. We’ve got to work
+fast while we’ve a chance of getting
+out of here.” He glanced at the barred
+door. “We could blast out there with
+the carbon-gun, but I don’t know the
+road. Hop on my shoulders, kid.
+We’re going out through the ceiling.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil handed his brother the gun and
+climbed deftly onto Tony’s shoulders
+as the latter knelt. Slowly he rose,
+steadying Phil with one hand.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Got—got worried about you when
+you didn’t show up. I went after you.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“See if you can open the panel .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
+Jimmy all right?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“He’s okay. The kid’s pretty tough
+.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Got it!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The hinged panel slid down as Phil’s
+stubby fingers closed over the edge of
+the opening. Tony heaved up strongly.
+For a second Phil hung there; then
+his body wriggled up, and his weight
+was gone from Tony’s shoulders.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Simultaneously a cry came from beyond
+the barred door.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A pale ray lanced out. Tony felt a
+twinge of agony in his side. Involuntarily
+he flung up the carbon-gun and
+fired. The metal door vanished in a
+blaze of white fires. Whoever had been
+beyond it had also disappeared without
+trace.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But there were others coming. Tony
+traded shots with them. He heard
+Phil’s voice and risked a glance up.
+Phil was lying flat, his arm extended
+down.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Jump for it!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Can’t,” Tony said. “They’d wing
+me .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You’ve got to. I can hear them
+coming up here, too.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Beat it. Get back to Desquer. Tell
+him the machine’s in the base of this
+pyramid. I’m going out this way;
+there’ll be a better chance of one of us
+getting through if we take different
+routes. Beat it!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There was a pause, punctuated by
+the snarl of the carbon-gun. Then Phil
+said, “Okay. Luck!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>His feet scraped on the stone above.
+The panel slammed shut. Tony made
+a wry face, realizing that Phil was unarmed.
+But he had a better chance of
+escape than Tony himself, for a dozen
+or more of priests was blocking the
+passage that led—perhaps!—to freedom.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony fired again. The foremost of
+the priests went down, and the others
+hesitated. The gun crackled savagely.
+One priest broke and fled—and the
+others followed.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony hurried after them, every
+sense on the alert. The passage
+was apparently bare, and silent save
+for the dying thump of flying feet; but
+he guessed that there might be traps.
+Would this road lead to escape? And—had
+Phil escaped safely? There was
+no way of knowing—yet.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The passage stretched empty before
+Tony. He gripped the gun, feeling in
+its cold metal a reassurance against
+even the danger of Thotmes and his
+powers. There was no limit to the
+weapon’s potentialities. The stronger
+the charge, the more effective the results.
+With a powerful enough charge,
+Tony thought sardonically, he could
+bring down the whole pyramid. Unfortunately
+he had no ammunition,
+save for the clip in the gun’s butt.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At a side passage he hesitated, realizing
+that the new tunnel led up.
+The priests would not expect him to
+take this path—so he did so. And, as
+it turned out, he was wise.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He came out on a little balcony overlooking
+the sloping ramp of the pyramid.
+Beneath him the massive piles of
+masonry fled down like gigantic steps,
+and Tony hesitated as he glanced down.
+A noise from behind him, along the
+passage, helped him make his decision.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was almost too late. A priest
+burst into view, mouth open in a soundless
+scream, raising a short metal rod
+in one hand. Tony flung up the carbon-gun
+and squeezed the trigger. Nothing
+happened.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The ammunition was exhausted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s reaction was involuntary and
+instinctive. He flung the gun straight
+at the priest’s face and ducked, diving
+in at his opponent. A beam of light
+lanced out over Tony’s head. Then he
+crashed into the priest’s knees and
+brought the man down heavily.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There was no time for ethics. Tony
+struck low and hard. He left the priest
+unconscious and vaulted the balcony’s
+rail. Down the slope of the pyramid he
+sprang, leaping along the huge steps
+made by the giant blocks, risking his
+neck at every jump. But—he made it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Once at the base of the pyramid, he
+was comparatively safe. Out of the red
+glow the shadows were heavy, and Tony
+took advantage of them to slink away
+toward the wall of the cavern he could
+see far ahead of him. But before he
+did so he made a brief scouting trip,
+hoping to find Phil. It was useless.
+Either Phil had already made good his
+escape, or else he had fallen victim to
+the priests of Thotmes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There was no sign of excitement.
+Tony wondered why. Perhaps the
+escape of prisoners was of little importance
+to the Atlanteans. They were too
+self-confident—with good reason, it
+might be. Science that could rip the
+Earth asunder was not easily to be conquered.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Near the door of the Temple of Osiris
+Tony quickened his pace. The sound
+of hoarse breathing and shuffling footsteps
+came to his ears. On the threshold
+he hesitated, staring, but saw nothing
+in the dimness of the interior. Wait!
+Far down beneath the dais were two motionless
+bodies. One was that of Captain
+Brady, of course. But the other—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony broke into a run. Yet he retained
+caution enough to move as silently
+as possible, though he could hardly
+repress a shouted question. Had the
+Atlanteans found the intruders in Alu?
+Was the body that of Desquer, or—Jimmy?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was neither! Tony stumbled over
+a carbon-gun, snatched it up in one motion,
+and simultaneously saw that beside
+the figure of Brady lay Phil, unconscious
+and bloodstained, red fluid seeping
+from a gaping hole in his chest. But
+Tony could spare only one glance at his
+brother. Beside him, between the pillars
+that towered to the roof, two men
+were locked in conflict—Jimmy and
+Commander Desquer!</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy was getting the worst of it.
+He was weaponless and trying to
+hold on to the hand in which Desquer
+held his gun. The commander was
+slowly breaking his opponent’s grip.
+No expression showed in the Legion officer’s
+face, but his eyes were black and
+deadly as wet velvet. Jimmy was gasping
+and bleeding from a cut over one
+eye, almost exhausted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony said, his voice like a whiplash,
+“<span class='it'>Drop that gun, Desquer!</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The commander’s reaction was unexpected.
+All in one swift motion he released
+Jimmy and flung himself back.
+Hidden in the shadow of the pillars, he
+fired at Tony.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The shot missed. Tony lifted his
+own weapon—the one Jimmy had apparently
+dropped—but Desquer was
+fleeing, dodging in and out like a phantom.
+Why the devil—! Then Tony
+knew why. Desquer was no coward.
+But, on the other hand, he was no fool.
+He had run out of ammunition. A cartridge
+belt on the floor, its buckle torn
+off, explained the reason. In the fight
+Desquer had lost the belt.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He vanished through the door of the
+temple and was gone. Tony stared at
+Jimmy. “What the hell?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The boy was white and gasping.
+“Phil got back. He’d seen you in the
+pyramid—told us where the machine
+was. But he’d been wounded—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Yeah. Keep talking, kid.” Tony
+was kneeling beside the unconscious
+form of Phil, rendering such first aid as
+he could.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Desquer sent me outside to keep
+guard. I heard Phil yell, and came running
+in. I was just in time to see Desquer—”
+The boy swallowed. “He
+killed Phil, Tony. Shot him through
+the chest. I tried to stop him—and
+then you came in.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil’s eyelashes flickered. Tony gave
+Jimmy the gun. “Okay. Run along
+and keep guard again. Watch out for
+Desquer. If he shows up—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I’ll use the gun.” There was deadly
+grimness in the young voice. Jimmy’s
+hand closed over the weapon; he hurried
+off down the dark aisle.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil was looking up at his brother, a
+wry grin twisting his lips. “So you got
+out of the pyramid too, eh? Good.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“What happened, boy?” Tony was
+futilely trying to stanch the flow of
+blood.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Nothing much. Desquer didn’t
+bandage me up after I got here. He
+searched me, instead. Found nothing,
+of course. But—he asked me where
+the Earth Star was.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There was a little silence. Tony
+whispered, “How—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know. Desquer found out
+something. He’s after the gem.
+Thought I had it, and when he couldn’t
+find it on me, he tried to make me talk.
+His methods weren’t very—nice.
+That’s when I yelled, I guess. I jumped
+at Desquer. Found out I wasn’t as badly
+wounded as I’d thought. He shot me
+through the chest.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Phil coughed. “Might as well stop
+trying, Tony. I’m the first of us to go.
+I’ve a hunch there’ll be another. But
+one of us three ought to pull through.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I’ll get Desquer,” Tony said very
+softly. His thin, dark face was a grim
+mask of copper.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Thanks. And keep an eye on the
+kid, will you? I—I—” A gush of
+blood came from Phil’s mouth. He
+coughed rackingly. Tony hurriedly
+ripped off his shirt to improvise an additional
+bandage.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But it was useless. Ten minutes
+later Tony stood silently beside the
+body of his brother, looking down at the
+stolid features, relaxed utterly now in
+death. The shadows of the temple of
+Osiris pressed in heavily. It was, in a
+way, fitting that death should have
+come for Phil in Alu, the asphodel land
+where Egyptians thought the souls went
+to roam endlessly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony turned and walked slowly along
+the aisle. At the threshold of the temple
+he turned and looked back. Phil
+would rest there forever, perhaps—and
+it was such a sarcophagus as few men
+have ever possessed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Don’t move,” a low voice commanded.
+“Not an inch! <span class='it'>Careful!</span>”</p>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/img-3.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='caption'>“Don’t move! Not if you value your lives!”</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But Tony’s reaction was involuntary
+as he whirled. Almost beside him, but
+out of easy reach, was Commander
+Desquer. In his hand was a carbon-gun,
+and another was in his holster. The
+man’s glittering eyes watched Tony
+icily from under the shaggy penthouse
+brows.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Careful!” Desquer repeated. “Your
+brother wasn’t.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Where is he?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“There.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. He isn’t hurt. He’ll
+wake up in a few minutes. Just
+stunned. My gun wasn’t loaded, but his
+was. So—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer grinned and passed his palm
+over his shaved scalp. “Revive him.
+Quick!” he barked as Tony hesitated.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The latter silently went to where
+Jimmy lay huddled against the wall
+of the temple. He knelt beside the boy
+and began to slap his cheeks. He
+glanced up once to see the Commander
+watching him narrowly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer said, “Where’s the Earth Star?
+You got it?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know what you’re talking
+about,” Tony grunted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“No? Then let me explain. That
+televisor call that took me to the surface—it
+was from a man named Zadah,
+the secretary of a certain Rajah. He
+told me all about you. Offered me a
+fortune if I got the jewel back for him.
+Well—I intend to. I’m sick of the
+Legion, and this is my chance to buy
+my way out and live like a prince. So—where’s
+the stone?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony told him, but his remark was
+unprintable. Desquer’s thick lips twisted
+in a sneer.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Very well. But I’ll get it, remember
+that.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“A lot of good it’ll do you now.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I’ll get out of here. But first we’re
+going to destroy that machine of Thotmes.
+Your brother’s waking up. Bring
+him along. We’re heading for the pyramid.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Grimly Tony hoisted the half-unconscious
+Jimmy to his feet and supported
+him. “We’re unarmed. There are
+scores of priests—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“You’re going to stay unarmed,”
+Desquer snapped. “I can handle a gun
+better than any three men. <span class='it'>Allons!</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony grunted and started out, carrying
+most of Jimmy’s weight on his
+shoulders as the boy slowly recovered
+from the blow that had stunned him.
+His lips were a tight, pale line. Both he
+and Jimmy were completely in Desquer’s
+power, and the man was so completely
+an egotist that he had not hesitated
+to carry out his own plans even in
+the face of a doom that threatened the
+entire Earth. Ruthless Desquer was—but
+of his icy courage there could be no
+doubt. Nor of his greed! Tony sensed
+something of the driving power within
+the man, the desolate years of loneliness
+in Sub-Sahara, a prison worse for
+Desquer, perhaps, than for any other
+man there.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They moved toward the pyramid,
+keeping to the shadows. Tony and
+Jimmy preceded their captor, conscious
+always of the gun leveled unerringly
+at their backs. There was neither sign
+nor movement to indicate the presence
+of the Atlanteans.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“How do you expect to get to the
+machine?” Tony asked finally. “It’s
+guarded.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I can outshoot a dozen Copts,”
+Desquer said confidently. “We’re going
+straight in. We’ll find a guide—make
+him guide us. If anyone gets in
+our way, he’ll regret it. We’re going
+in, smash the machine, and come out
+again. And then—I’ll find out which
+of you has the Earth Star.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony didn’t reply. He went on, his
+mind desperately searching for a plan.
+But it seemed hopeless. There was no
+way out.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally only a broad plaza separated
+them from the pyramid. At its edge
+the trio paused. Desquer said, “We’ll
+skirt around to that building—see it?
+It juts into the open space .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I don’t
+see any guards, but there may be some.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The three were standing in the
+shadow at the corner of a tall stone
+obelisk. And without warning a score
+of figures dropped down upon them, in
+utter silence—and with murderous
+fury.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer’s guns were in his hands.
+The snarling crackle of the carbon-pistols
+rapped out, awakening echoes
+in the dead city. Tony could not see
+the commander; he was borne down
+under a press of bodies, struggling furiously.
+Beside him he heard Jimmy
+cursing and striking out weakly. The
+Atlantean priests were not using their
+ray-projectors, perhaps because they
+depended on weight of numbers. That
+was their mistake!</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was Desquer’s fearless savagery
+turned the tide of battle. His guns
+bellowed without ceasing. Thrice he
+went down, rising at last a gargoylish,
+hideous figure, dripping with blood from
+a dozen wounds, his bare scalp shining
+blackly in the red light. One by one
+and two by two he killed, mercilessly,
+viciously, finally clubbing his pistol to
+dispose of the last of the priests, who
+was atop Tony.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Can’t waste ammunition,” he
+growled. “Get up! Both of you!
+Hurry!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony stood up, Jimmy beside him.
+A few of the priests <span class='it'>had</span> escaped, he saw,
+and were even now fleeing toward the
+temple. Desquer raised his gun, hesitated,
+and lowered it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Come on!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony stared. Scores—no, more than
+a hundred priests were pouring from
+the pyramid, forming a phalanx massing
+itself to guard the threshold. In the
+lead stood Thotmes, his spade beard
+making him easily recognizable. The
+fleeing priests joined their companions,
+and the little army stood in silence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Not using their ray-projectors,”
+Tony said. “Guess they’re good only
+at short range.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer snarled, “Come on!” His
+guns snouted forward, urging his captives
+on. Slowly they moved across the
+plaza.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The commander fired. A priest fell,
+screaming. The ranks closed in, hiding
+him from view.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Again and again Desquer fired. His
+gun clicked on an empty chamber; he
+emptied the other one. Then he reached
+for his belt—and Tony heard him curse.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Dieu!</span> Those damned Copts! The
+priests—they got my ammunition belt
+in the fight!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony stopped, turned. Desquer was
+standing straddle-legged, the carbon-pistols,
+futile without coal, pointing at
+the priests. His face was set into rock-hard
+lines.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thotmes shouted something and
+lifted the missing ammunition belt in
+one hand. He raised it tauntingly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Got any coal?” Desquer rasped. The
+other two men shook their heads.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The priests began to move forward.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony said, “You can’t destroy the
+machine now, Desquer. You’ve doomed
+the world—and yourself.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer’s knuckles were white; he
+stood as though carven from granite.
+His jet eyes squinted at the oncoming
+mob.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy started to laugh. “How do
+you like it, Desquer?” he mocked.
+“You’re not the commander now.
+You’re just a guy with an empty gun.
+And—you’re going to die, Desquer.
+<span class='it'>You’re going to die!</span>”</p>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER VIII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>The New Atlantis</span></h1></div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The tension grew unendurable. The
+priests were advancing slowly, as
+though assured that their quarry could
+not escape. In the lead Thotmes was
+smiling and stroking his beard with one
+hand.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Surrender,” he called out. “No
+harm will come to you—for a while.
+Not till we need new beast-gods!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer’s face went a mottled red.
+But still there was no fear in the man.
+He faced the throng, still holding his
+guns—and suddenly sheathed one and
+began to search his pockets. His low
+voice rapped out.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Quick, you fools! See if there’s
+anything on you we can use for ammunition.
+It doesn’t have to be coal—carbon
+will do.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony shot one hurried glance at the
+mob of priests. Desquer gave a little
+cry of triumph and brought out a single
+coal-cartridge from his tunic pocket.
+“Good! Only one, but—” He slipped
+it into the gun’s firing cup.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There was a queer look, almost of
+amusement, on Tony’s dark face. He
+gripped Jimmy’s arm and whispered,
+“Wait!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer stepped forward. He raised
+his gun and called, “Halt!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A flashing smile came from Thotmes.
+The high priest did not reply. He kept
+on.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And Desquer fired.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thotmes seemed surprised. He
+paused, lifting his hands to a chest that
+was a gory mass of red ruin. He stared
+at his bloodstained fingers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From the priests went up a whisper
+of terror—as Thotmes fell! The high
+priest of Alu was dead!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer did not pause. He took one
+step forward, and another, as though
+expecting his enemies to give back. But
+they did not.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They massed together grimly—and
+advanced.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This time the commander paused, his
+thick lips twisting. His hand dived into
+his tunic pocket in a futile gesture. But
+there was no more ammunition.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony was smiling. He touched Desquer’s
+arm.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“I’ve a bullet for you, commander.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Eh?” The glittering eyes widened.
+“Where—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer’s gaze focused on what Tony
+held in his palm. Lens-shaped and
+lovely the great gem lay there, flashing
+in the red light of Alu. Like a diamond
+it was—but it was not a diamond.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy said breathlessly, “Tony!
+You—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>The Earth Star!</span>” There was sweat
+on Desquer’s face.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Go on,” Tony whispered. “Take it,
+commander! It’s carbon. You can
+use it as a bullet. A coal-cartridge will
+kill a man. This jewel’s much harder
+than stone. There’s no limit to the
+power of a carbon gun. You can bring
+down the pyramid with this—commander!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer still did not move, and Tony
+deftly slipped the jewel into the gun’s
+cup. It rested there in its strange setting,
+beautiful beyond imagination,
+holding within its fiery heart fortunes
+and grandeur and death. A jewel—but
+it was carbon, too. And Desquer’s eyes
+did not move from the great gem.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Shoot,” Tony said. “If you do, you
+lose the Earth Star. If you don’t—it
+means death.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The commander’s face was shining
+with sweat. He glanced up once to the
+mob of priests, very close now. His
+gross frame shook with the agony of
+indecision. To possess the Earth Star—and
+to know that its possession meant
+certain doom! He had only to squeeze
+the trigger, and his enemies would be
+blasted out of existence. But if he did
+that—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He would lose the Earth Star!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He snarled at Tony, “So you were the
+one! The Merlin—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Fire!</span>”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Almost involuntarily Desquer brought
+up the gun and aimed it. He was whispering
+curses under his breath, putting
+off until the last moment the decision
+that must be made sooner or later. And
+he dared not wait too long. The priests
+came closer.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The flickering red glow made Desquer’s
+features scarlet and black; his
+eyes burned balefully, tortured and terrible.
+He said, “Damn you! I—I’ll—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>His finger tightened on the trigger.
+And—stopped.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For the priests had paused. They
+were staring at the Earth Star. They,
+too, were frozen motionless.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One cried, “The jewel! The jewel!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The tableau held. Abruptly the
+priests gave back, hesitating. Tony
+heard Jimmy’s gasp. He, too, was wondering
+what this meant.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He was never to know. Perhaps,
+in long-forgotten ages, another
+Earth Star had been dug out from beneath
+the Atlantic, to form part of the
+religion of Atlantis. Tony could not
+know. But he realized that the priests
+recognized the jewel, or thought they
+did. They bowed before it!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Instantly Desquer realized his opportunity.
+He said quietly, “Come on.
+We’re going into the pyramid—and
+smash the machine.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony said, “You’re crazy. The
+priests won’t stand for <span class='it'>that</span>!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer grinned unpleasantly. Without
+warning the other gun was in his
+hand; he clubbed it and swung. Tony
+felt a crashing blow on his head as he
+ducked. Gasping with pain, he reeled
+in and closed with the giant commander.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy had hold of Desquer’s arm
+but with one sweeping motion the officer
+sent the boy sprawling. Desquer
+and Tony went down with a crash on
+the stones. Soft cries came from the
+priests. They began to move forward
+again, their superstitious terror gone.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer’s stubby fingers were sunk
+into Tony’s throat; he squeezed viciously,
+his tiny eyes glinting. Though
+he lay undermost, he was getting the
+better of the battle. Tony pumped
+blow after blow at the commander’s
+face, but apparently without effect. He
+felt Jimmy at his side, saw the boy try
+to tear the iron fingers from his brother’s
+neck.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And, too, Tony saw the carbon-pistol
+lying on the stones near by.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Jimmy!” His voice was a cracked
+wheeze. “Gun—pyramid—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Into Desquer’s eyes sprang murder-light.
+The fingers contracted, sending
+agony down Tony’s spine. Jimmy understood,
+though, and dived for the
+pistol. He snatched it up, leveled it
+at the pyramid and the oncoming
+priests.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Desquer yelled like a beast. His
+fingers relaxed. Somehow he writhed
+free, sprang up, plunged toward Jimmy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Don’t!” he bellowed. “Don’t—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From the gun’s muzzle burst a raving
+blast of searing flame. The incredible
+pressure that had made the Earth Star
+was released. Straight through the
+ranks of the priests it bored an aisle,
+into the heart of the pyramid, melting
+and wrecking solid stone with the terrific
+power of its thrust. The volcanic
+fires of Earth itself seemed to be latent
+in that—bullet!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Over the cries of the priests came
+a rumbling, crashing thunder. A block
+fell, clattering down the pyramid’s side.
+The structure buckled. Its whole side
+was torn out. The summit toppled and
+came thundering down, amid clouds
+of smoking dust and ruin.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony staggered erect, staring up.
+Something was happening to the cavern
+roof. The pyramid <span class='it'>had</span> been a pillar,
+supporting it. And now the support
+was gone—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rocks fell from above. Cracks ran
+out like a great spider web. Something
+silvery flashed down from above, glinting
+red in the crimson glow. Tony remembered
+that above Alu was—the
+Midnight Sea!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And that sunless, tideless ocean was
+pouring into the cavern world through
+the crevasse that had been torn in its
+floor!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The falling water became a column,
+a torrent, a bellowing Niagara. It
+drowned the wreckage of the pyramid.
+Down the flood came thundering, and
+icy tides lapped at Tony’s feet. He
+seized Jimmy’s arm, pushed him along.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“We’ve got to get out of here!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“How—how can we?”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“We can try—”</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Their voices, raised to shouts,
+sounded like thin whispers above
+the mighty rush of the ocean that was
+pouring into Alu. The priests ran about
+aimlessly, and among them, Tony saw,
+was Commander Desquer. A knot of
+the Atlanteans surrounded the officer.
+They were trying to pull him down, like
+wolves surrounding a bison. Unarmed,
+Desquer yet was stronger than his opponents.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Silently Jimmy pointed. Tony’s teeth
+showed in a mirthless grin.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“So what?” his lips formed. He was
+remembering Phil .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The brothers plunged along the
+street, already knee deep in surging
+black water. A louder thunder came
+from behind them. A new sound filled
+the cavern—a deep hissing, like steam.
+Beyond the wreck of the pyramid, Tony
+saw with a quick glance, crimson clouds
+were lifting. So the red light of Alu
+was actually due to volcanic activity.
+And now the icy waters of the Midnight
+Sea were finding the molten fires of
+lava—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>More rocks fell thunderously. Looking
+back, Tony saw a single figure
+charging after them—Desquer, a battered,
+bleeding giant who splashed on
+through the water amid a hail of stone
+that dropped from the vaulted heaven
+of Alu. All about him that deadly hail
+dropped. One glance Tony had of Desquer
+rushing on, heavy shoulders
+hunched, teeth bared in a mirthless
+grin—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Then he was gone! The avalanche
+from the cracking skies buried him. A
+pile of rocks showed for an instant
+where he had been, and that, too, vanished
+as the rising waters seethed past.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony said nothing, but as he fought
+past the temple of Osiris where Phil’s
+body lay, he lifted his hand in a queer,
+quick salute. Perhaps Phil would
+know, now, that his death had been
+avenged .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Already the dark tides were seething
+at the tunnel-mouth that led to the upper
+world. On the threshold Tony
+paused, to take one last look at ruined
+Alu. The red light was darker now,
+and somber. The flaming clouds boiled
+up endlessly; the rock shook and
+quaked underfoot. The Niagara that
+poured from the roof of the cave
+looked like a solid obelisk, and an odd
+thought came into Tony’s mind.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“A pillar of cloud by day .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and
+a pillar of smoke by night .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Alu, daughter of Atlantis, was dying
+as the mother continent had died.
+Earth-fires and deluge were slaying
+her, wiping out all life, wrecking the
+culture that had survived from the
+misty, unknown eons before Egypt
+was. The huge temples, half submerged
+in seething tides, were falling
+in ruin. All over the vast cavern darkness
+was falling.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The arched ramp they had seen on
+entering Alu was still visible, far away.
+And now Tony saw that there were
+figures upon it, as there had been at
+first. Figures with strange, misshapen
+heads—</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The pitiable, terrible beast-gods of
+Alu, created by dead Thotmes’ science!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One glimpse Tony had of those far
+figures, outlined blackly against red
+smoke. Then—the ramp fell.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Over Alu the roaring desolation of
+death and ruin held sway!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony turned to the white-faced Jimmy.
+Already the water was tearing at
+their thighs.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Come on,” he shouted. “We’re getting
+out of here. Fast!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They fled up the tunnel .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The rest was sheer nightmare.
+Somehow they found their way, following
+always the passages that led up,
+hiding from terrified, frantic Copts,
+fleeing through corridors whose walls
+shook with the grip of earthquake. Up
+and up they went, finding at last a
+frightened Copt who agreed to guide
+them to the surface. His own world
+was falling in pieces about him, and he
+wished only to escape. A cave-in
+crushed him not long after, but the
+passage stretched unbroken before the
+brothers. They toiled on .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Daylight filtered in yellow brilliance
+through a crack in the rock. Exhausted,
+haggard, filthy scarecrows, the
+two squeezed through into blazing
+sunlight. About them lay rolling
+dunes. They were in a rocky little
+valley.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They dropped to the sand and lay
+there motionless for hours, scarcely
+conscious of the burning sun.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The soft mutter of a gyro motor
+woke them. Tony sat up, blinking. He
+was in time to see a plane land softly
+not far away, and a figure in flying uniform
+step out.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jimmy was still sleeping. Tony
+lurched forward to greet the new
+arrival. His eyes were misty with
+sleep, and he did not at first recognize
+the pilot—not till the latter took out
+an automatic and held it ready.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Then he saw it was Zadah, the
+Rajah’s secretary.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony stopped, swaying a little, his
+arms hanging limp at his sides. Zadah’s
+round face was triumphant. The
+beady eyes shone with triumph.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Luck,” he said. “I’ve been cruising
+about for hours just on an off chance.
+I just happened to sight you—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“The Copts.” Tony said thickly.
+“They—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Zadah nodded. “I know. Your
+legionnaire got through—Jacklyn.
+There’s an army of troopers at the
+mouth of Sub-Sahara. But—where’s
+the Earth Star? If you escaped, that
+means Desquer didn’t get it.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“It’s gone. Desquer got it—and
+used it. The Earth Star’s destroyed,
+Zadah.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The other hesitated. Something he
+saw in Tony’s eyes made him realize
+that the latter spoke truth. Abruptly
+baffled rage sprang into Zadah’s round
+face.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“Gone! Then—”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He lifted the gun, his lips white with
+fury at the wreckage of his plans.
+“Maybe! If you’re lying, I’ll find the
+jewel on your bodies.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony tensed himself for a spring that
+he knew in advance would be futile.
+But, before he could move, another
+figure hurled itself forward. Jimmy’s
+slight frame dived at the killer.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Zadah’s gun barked. Jimmy cried
+out; the Oriental swung his weapon
+back to Tony. But he was too late.
+His wrist was held in a grip of iron.
+Tony’s dark face was close to his own,
+and there was death in the somber
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Zadah screamed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony said not a word. Very slowly,
+very carefully, he bent Zadah’s hand
+back. The latter’s finger was still on
+the trigger. The gun pointed at last
+at the killer’s heart.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Then Tony smiled—and the muscles
+of his hand contracted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The report was shatteringly loud in
+the desert stillness.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony let the limp body slide down,
+and turned back to Jimmy. The boy
+was dead. Zadah’s bullet had made a
+neat little hole in the brown shirt.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>After a moment Tony carried the
+body of his brother to the plane and
+put it aboard. He followed. He sent
+the gyro winging up over the desert.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Beneath him the Sahara stretched, a
+white wilderness under the flaming heat
+of the Sun. To the north could be seen
+an encampment, the troopers that had
+arrived, too late, at the mouth of Sub-Sahara.
+Tony set the controls and fled
+beyond them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The desert gave place to the Mediterranean,
+and that, in turn, to the Pacific
+Ocean. The cool blueness of
+night folded down. Moonlight silvered
+the waves.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony opened a trap-door in the floor
+and let the body of his brother slide
+through. Phil rested in the temple of
+Osiris—and Jimmy would lie beneath
+the waves that hid Atlantis.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He went back to the controls, staring
+ahead at an empty horizon. Westward
+lay New York. He could go back there
+now; the motive for keeping hidden
+had vanished. No one would know
+who the Merlin was. Some men might
+guess, might be convinced that either
+Phil or Jimmy had stolen the Earth Star—but
+they would never dare make
+an accusation, and Seth Martell would
+need make no compromises with his
+honor and his ideals.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Only Tony would know that the
+Merlin had been his brother Phil.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For ten minutes he had been alone
+with Phil in the Temple of Osiris. And,
+before the youth died, he had told Tony
+the truth—that he was the Merlin.
+He had given his brother the Earth Star
+to keep. But no one would ever
+know that now.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Tony’s throat was tight. He stared
+at the dim horizon of sky and sea,
+knowing that beyond it lay New York,
+and a life he could take up again
+where he had left it. A life he must
+live—alone.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A faint glow brightened to the west.
+The tallest towers of Manhattan were
+pillars of light against the sky.</p>
+
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>[The end of <span class='it'>Secret of the Earth Star</span> by Henry Kuttner]</p>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75218 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with fpgen.py 4.64b on 2023-01-07 00:26:56 GMT -->
+</html>
+
diff --git a/75218-h/images/cover.jpg b/75218-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1d2f0f8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75218-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/75218-h/images/img-1.jpg b/75218-h/images/img-1.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7d3636
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75218-h/images/img-1.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/75218-h/images/img-3.jpg b/75218-h/images/img-3.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4caee16
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75218-h/images/img-3.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+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
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f302e3d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #75218 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75218)