Burroughs, Edgar Rice - Martian Tales 09 - Synthetic Men of Mars.txt

(350 KB) Pobierz
Synthetic Men of MarsSYNTHETIC MEN OF MARS
EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS



Contents
CHAPTER
  Where Is Ras Thavas? 
  The Mission of the Warlord 
  The Invincible Warriors 
  The Secret of the Marshes 
  The Judgment of the Jeds 
  Ras Thavas, the Mind of Mars 
  The Vats of Life 
  The Red Assassin 
  Man Into Hormad 
  I Find Janai 
  War of the Seven Jeds 
  Warrior's Reward 
  John Carter Disappears 
  When the Monster Grows 
  I Find My Master 
  The Jeddak Speaks 
  Escape Us Never 
  Treason Island 
  Night Flight 
  The Mighty Jed of Goolie 
  Duel to the Death 
  Off for Phundahl 
  Captives of Amhor 
  Caged 
  Prince in a Zoo 
  The Bite of the Adder 
  Flight Into Jeopardy 
  The Great Fleet 
  Back Toward Morbus 
  The End of Two Worlds 
  Adventure's End 
[About this etext] 



SYNTHETIC MEN OF MARS
CHAPTER I
WHERE IS RAS THAVAS?
FROM PHUNDAHL at their western extremity, east to Toonol, the Great Toonolian 
Marshes stretch across the dying planet for eighteen hundred earth miles like 
some unclean, venomous, Gargantuan reptile � an oozy marshland through which 
wind narrow watercourses connecting occasional bodies of open water, little 
lakes, the largest of which covers but a few acres. This monotony of marsh and 
jungle and water is occasionally broken by rocky islands, themselves usually 
clothed in jungle verdure, the skeletal remains of an ancient mountain range.
Little is known of the Great Toonolian Marshes in other portions of Barsoom, for 
this inhospitable region is peopled by fierce beasts and terrifying reptiles, by 
remnants of savage aboriginal tribes long isolated, and is guarded at either 
extremity by the unfriendly kingdoms of Phundahl and Toonol which discourage 
intercourse with other nations and are constantly warring upon one another.
Upon an island near Toonol, Ras Thavas, The Master Mind of Mars, had labored in 
his laboratory for nearly a thousand years until Vobis Kan, Jeddak of Toonol, 
turned against him and drove him from his island home and later repulsed a force 
of Phundahlian warriors led by Gor Hajus, the Assassin of Toonol, which had 
sought to recapture the island and restore Ras Thavas to his laboratory upon his 
promise to devote his skill and learning to the amelioration of human suffering 
rather than to prostitute them to the foul purposes of greed and sin.
Following the defeat of his little army, Ras Thavas had disappeared and been all 
but forgotten as are the dead, among which he was numbered by those who had 
known him; but there were some who could never forget him. There was Valla Dia, 
Princess of Duhor, whose brain he had transferred to the head of the hideous old 
Xaxa, Jeddara of Phundahl, that Xaxa might acquire the young and beautiful body 
of Valla Dia. There was Vad Varo, her husband, one time assistant to Ras Thavas, 
who had restored her brain to her own body � Vad Varo, who had been born Ulysses 
Paxton in the United States of America and presumably died in a shell hole in 
France; and there was John Carter, Prince of Helium, Warlord of Mars, whose 
imagination had been intrigued by the tales Vad Varo had told him of the 
marvelous skill of a world's greatest scientist and surgeon.
John Carter had not forgotten Ras Thavas, and when an emergency arose in which 
the skill of this greatest of surgeons was the sole remaining hope, he 
determined to seek him out and find him if he still lived. Dejah Thoris, his 
princess, had suffered an appalling injury in a collision between two swift 
airships; and had lain unconscious for many weeks, her back broken and twisted, 
until the greatest surgeons of all Helium had at last given up all hope. Their 
skill had been only sufficient to keep her alive; it could not mend her.
But how to find Ras Thavas? That was the question. And then he recalled that Vad 
Varo had been the assistant of the great surgeon. Perhaps, if the master could 
not be found, the skill of the pupil might be adequate. Then, too, of all men 
upon Barsoom, Vad Varo would be most likely to know the whereabouts of Ras 
Thavas. And so John Carter determined to go first to Duhor.
He selected from his fleet a small swift cruiser of a new type that had attained 
a speed of four hundred miles an hour � over twice the speed of the older types 
which he had first known and flown through the thin air of Mars. He would have 
gone alone, but Carthoris and Tara and Thuvia pleaded with him not to do so. At 
last he gave in and consented to take one of the officers of his personal 
troops, a young padwar named Vor Daj. To him we are indebted for this remarkable 
tale of strange adventure upon the planet Mars; to him and Jason Gridley whose 
discovery of the Gridley Wave has made it possible for me to receive this story 
over the special Gridley radio receiving set which Jason Gridley built out here 
in Tarzana, and to Ulysses Paxton who translated it into English and sent it 
across some forty million miles of space.
I shall give you the story as nearly as possible in the words of Vor Daj as is 
compatible with clarity. Certain Martian words and idioms which are 
untranslatable, measures of time and of distance will be usually in my own 
words; and there are occasional interpolations of my own that I have not 
bothered to assume responsibility for, since their origin will be obvious to the 
reader. In addition to these, there must undoubtedly have been some editing on 
the part of Vad Varo.
So now to the strange tale as told by Vor Daj.
CHAPTER II
THE MISSION OF THE WARLORD
I AM VOR DAJ. I am a padwar in The Warlord's Guard. By the standards of 
Earthmen, for whom I understand I am writing this account of certain adventures, 
I should long since have been dead of old age; but here on Barsoom, I am still a 
very young man. John Carter has told me that it is a matter worthy of general 
public interest if an Earthman lives a hundred years. The normal life expectancy 
of a Martian is a thousand years from the time that he breaks the shell of the 
egg in which he has incubated for five years and from which he emerges just 
short of physical maturity, a wild creature that must be tamed and trained as 
are the young of the lower orders which have been domesticated by man. And so 
much of that training is martial that it sometimes seems to me that I must have 
stepped from the egg fully equipped with the harness and weapons of a warrior. 
Let this, then, serve as my introduction. It is enough that you know my name and 
that I am a fighting man whose life is dedicated to the service of John Carter 
of Mars.
Naturally I felt highly honored when The Warlord chose me to accompany him upon 
his search for Ras Thavas, even though the assignment seemed of a prosaic nature 
of offering little more than an opportunity to be with The Warlord and to serve 
him and the incomparable Dejah Thoris, his princess. How little I foresaw what 
was in store for me!
It was John Carter's intention to fly first to Duhor, which lies some ten 
thousand five hundred haads, or about four thousand earth miles, northwest of 
the Twin Cities of Helium, where he expected to find Vad Varo, from whom he 
hoped to learn the whereabouts of Ras Thavas, who, with the possible exception 
of Vad Varo, was the only person in the world whose knowledge and skill might 
rescue Dejah Thoris from the grave, upon the brink of which she had lain for 
weeks, and restore her to health.
It was 8:25 (12:13 A.M. Earth Time) when our trim, swift flier rose from the 
landing stage on the roof of The Warlord's palace. Thuria and Cluros were 
speeding across a brilliant starlit sky casting constantly changing double 
shadows across the terrain beneath us that produced an illusion of myriad living 
things in constant, restless movement or a surging liquid world, eddying and 
boiling; quite different, John Carter told me, from a similar aspect above 
Earth, whose single satellite moves at a stately, decorous pace across the vault 
of heaven.
With our directional compass set for Duhor and our motor functioning in silent 
perfection there were no navigational problems to occupy our time. Barring some 
unforeseen emergency, the ship would fly in an air line to Duhor and stop above 
the city. Our sensitive altimeter was set to maintain an altitude of 300 ads 
(approximately 3000 feet), with a safety minimum of 50 ads. In other words, the 
ship would normally maintain an altitude of 300 ads above sea level, but in 
passing over mountainous country it was assured a clearance of not less than 50 
ads (about 490 feet) by a delicate device that actuates the controls as the ship 
approaches any elevation of the land surface that is less than 50 ads beneath 
its keel. I think I may best describe this mechanism by asking you to imagine a 
self-focusing camera which may be set for any distance, beyond which it is 
always in focus. When it approaches an object within less distance than that for 
which it has been adjusted it automatically corrects the focus. It is this 
change that actuates the controls of the ship, causing it to rise until the 
fixed focus is again achieved. So sensitive is this instrument that it functions 
as accurately by starlight as by the brightest sunlight. Only in utter darkness 
would it fail to operate; but even this single limitation is overcome, on the 
rare occasions that the Martian sky is entirely overcast by clouds, through the 
medium of a small beam of light which is directed downward from the keel of the 
ship. 
Secure in our belief in the infallibility of our directional compass, we relaxed 
our vigilance and dozed throughout the night. I have no excuses to offer, nor 
did John Carter upbraid me; for, as he was prompt to admit, the fault was
as much his as mine. As a matter of fact, he took all the blame, saying that the...
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin