Burroughs, Edgar Rice - Martian Tales 06 - Master Mind of Mars, The.txt

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The Master Mind of MarsTHE MASTER MIND OF MARS
EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS



Contents
A LETTER
THE HOUSE OF THE DEAD
PREFERMENT
VALLA DIA
THE COMPACT
DANGER
SUSPICIONS
ESCAPE
HANDS UP!
THE PALACE OF MU TEL
PHUNDAHL
XAXA
THE GREAT TUR
BACK TO THAVAS
JOHN CARTER

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MASTER MIND OF MARS
A LETTER
HELIUM, June 8th, 1925
MY DEAR MR. BURROUGHS:
It was in the Fall of nineteen seventeen at an officers' training camp that I 
first became acquainted with John Carter, War Lord of Barsoom, through the pages 
of your novel "A Princess of Mars." The story made a profound impression upon me 
and while my better judgment assured me that it was but a highly imaginative 
piece of fiction, a suggestion of the verity of it pervaded my inner 
consciousness to such an extent that I found myself dreaming of Mars and John 
Carter, of Dejah Thoris, of Tars Tarkas and of Woola as if they had been 
entities of my own experience rather than the figments of your imagination.
It is true that in those days of strenuous preparation there was little time for 
dreaming, yet there were brief moments before sleep claimed me at night and 
these were my dreams. Such dreams! Always of Mars, and during my waking hours at 
night my eyes always sought out the Red Planet when he was above the horizon and 
clung there seeking a solution of the seemingly unfathomable riddle he has 
presented to the Earthman for ages.
Perhaps the thing became an obsession. I know it clung to me all during my 
training camp days, and at night, on the deck of the transport, I would he on my 
back gazing up into the red eye of the god of battle � my god � and wishing 
that, like John Carter, I might be drawn across the great void to the haven of 
my desire.
And then came the hideous days and nights in the trenches � the rats, the 
vermin, the mud � with an occasional glorious break in the monotony when we were 
ordered over the top. I loved it then and I loved the bursting shells, the mad, 
wild chaos of the thundering guns, but the rats and the vermin and the mud � 
God! how I hated them. It sounds like boasting, I know, and I am sorry; but I 
wanted to write you just the truth about myself. I think you will understand. 
And it may account for much that happened afterwards.
There came at last to me what had come to so many others upon those bloody 
fields. It came within the week that I had received my first promotion and my 
captaincy, of which I was greatly proud, though humbly so; realizing as I did my 
youth, the great responsibility that it placed upon me as well as the 
opportunities it offered, not only in service to my country but, in a personal 
way, to the men of my command. We had advanced a matter of two kilometers and 
with a small detachment I was holding a very advanced position when I received 
orders to fall back to the new line. That is the last that I remember until I 
regained consciousness after dark. A shell must have burst among us. What became 
of my men I never knew. It was cold and very dark when I awoke and at first, for 
an instant, I was quite comfortable � before I was fully conscious, I imagine � 
and then I commenced to feel pain. It grew until it seemed unbearable. It was in 
my legs. I reached down to feel them, but my hand recoiled from what it found, 
and when I tried to move my legs I discovered that I was dead from the waist 
down. Then the moon came out from behind a cloud and I saw that I lay within a 
shell hole and that I was not alone � the dead were all about me.
It was a long time before I found the moral courage and the physical strength to 
draw myself up upon one elbow that I might view the havoc that had been done me. 
One look was enough, I sank back in an agony of mental and physical anguish � my 
legs had been blown away from midway between the hips and knees. For some reason 
I was not bleeding excessively, yet I know that I had lost a great deal of blood 
and that I was gradually losing enough to put me out of my misery in a short 
time if I were not soon found; and as I lay there on my back, tortured with 
pain, I prayed that they would not come in time, for I shrank more from the 
thought of going maimed through life than I shrank from the thought of death. 
Then my eyes suddenly focussed upon the bright red eye of Mars and there surged 
through me a sudden wave of hope. I stretched out my arms towards Mars, I did 
not seem to question or to doubt for an instant as I prayed to the god of my 
vocation to reach forth and succour me. I knew that he would do it, my faith was 
complete, and yet so great was the mental effort that I made to throw off the 
hideous bonds of my mutilated flesh that I felt a momentary qualm of nausea and 
then a sharp click as of the snapping of a steel wire, and suddenly I stood 
naked upon two good legs looking down upon the bloody, distorted thing that had 
been I. Just for an instant did I stand thus before I turned my eyes aloft again 
to my star of destiny and with outstretched arms stand there in the cold of that 
French night � waiting.
Suddenly I felt myself drawn with the speed of thought through the trackless 
wastes of interplanetary space. There was an instant of extreme cold and utter 
darkness, then�
But the rest is in the manuscript that, with the aid of one greater than either 
of us, I have found the means to transmit to you with this letter. You and a few 
others of the chosen will believe in it � for the rest it matters not as yet. 
The time will come � but why tell you what you already know?
My salutations and my congratulations � the latter on your good fortune in 
having been chosen as the medium through which Earthmen shall become better 
acquainted with the manners and customs of Barsoom, against the time that they 
shall pass through space as easily as John Carter, and visit the scenes that he 
has described to them through you, as have I.
Your sincere friend,
ULYSSES PAXTON,
Late Captain, ��th Inf., U.S. Army.
THE HOUSE OF THE DEAD
I MUST have closed my eyes involuntarily during the transition for when I opened 
them I was lying flat on my back gazing up into a brilliant, sun-lit sky, while 
standing a few feet from me and looking down upon me with the most mystified 
expression was as strange a looking individual as my eyes ever had rested upon. 
He appeared to be quite an old man, for he was wrinkled and withered beyond 
description. His limbs were emaciated; his ribs showed distinctly beneath his 
shrunken hide; his cranium was large and well developed, which, in conjunction 
with his wasted limbs and torso, lent him the appearance of top heaviness, as 
though he had a head beyond all proportion to his body, which was, I am sure, 
really not the case.
As he stared down upon me through enormous, many lensed spectacles I found the 
opportunity to examine him as minutely in return. He was, perhaps, five feet 
five in height, though doubtless he had been taller in youth, since he was 
somewhat bent; he was naked except for some rather plain and well-worn leather 
harness which supported his weapons and pocket pouches, and one great ornament a 
collar, jewel studded, that he wore around his scraggy neck � such a collar as a 
dowager empress of pork or real estate might barter her soul for, if she had 
one. His skin was red, his scant locks grey. As he looked at me his puzzled 
expression increased in intensity, he grasped his chin between the thumb and 
fingers of his left hand and slowly raising his right hand he scratched his head 
most deliberately. Then he spoke to me, but in a language I did not understand.
At his first words I sat up and shook my head. Then I looked about me. I was 
seated upon a crimson sward within a high walled enclosure, at least two, and 
possibly three, sides of which were formed by the outer walls of a structure 
that in some respects resembled more closely a feudal castle of Europe than any 
familiar form of architecture that comes to my mind. The fa�ade presented to my 
view was ornately carved and of most irregular design, the roof line being so 
broken as to almost suggest a ruin, and yet the whole seemed harmonious and not 
without beauty. Within the enclosure grew a number of trees and shrubs, all 
weirdly strange and all, or almost all, profusely flowering. About them wound 
walks of coloured pebbles among which scintillated what appeared to be rare and 
beautiful gems, so lovely were the strange, unearthly rays that leaped and 
played in the sunshine.
The old man spoke again, peremptorily this time, as though repeating a command 
that had been ignored, but again I shook my head. Then he laid a hand upon one 
of his two swords, but as he drew the weapon I leaped to my feet, with such 
remarkable results that I cannot even now say which of us was the more 
surprised. I must have sailed ten feet into the air and back about twenty feet 
from where I had been sitting; then I was sure that I was upon Mars (not that I 
had for one instant doubted it), for the effects of the lesser gravity, the 
colour of the sward and the skin-hue of the red Martians I had seen described in 
the manuscripts of John Carter, those marvellous and as yet unappreciated 
contributions to the scientific literature of a world. There could be no doubt 
of it, I stood upon the soil of the Red Planet, I had come to the world of my 
dreams � to Barsoom.
So startled was the old man by my agility that he jumped a bit himself, though 
doubtless involuntarily, but, however, with certain results. His spectacles 
tumbled from his nose to the sward, and then it was that I discovered that the 
pitiful old wretch was practically blind when deprived of these artificial aids 
to vision, for he got to his knees and commenced to grope frantically for the 
lost glasses, as though his very life depen...
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