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The Chessmen of Mars Prelude John Carter Comes to Earth While thus profitably
employed I heard the east door of the
living-room open and someone enter. I thought it was Shea returning to
speak
with me on some matter of tomorrow's work; but when I raised my eyes to
the
doorway that connects the two rooms I saw framed there the figure of a
bronzed
giant, his otherwise naked body trapped with a jewel-encrusted harness
from
which there hung at one side an ornate short-sword and at the other a
pistol of
strange pattern. The black hair, the steel-gray eyes, brave and
smiling, the
noble features — I recognized them at once, and leaping to my feet I
advanced
with outstretched hand. "John Carter!" I cried.
"You?" "None other, my son," he
replied, taking my hand in one
of his and placing the other upon my shoulder. "And what are you doing
here?" I asked. "It has
been long years since you revisited Earth, and never before in the
trappings of
Mars. Lord! but it is good to see you — and not a day older in
appearance than
when you trotted me on your knee in my babyhood. How do you explain it,
John
Carter, Warlord of Mars, or do you try to explain it?" "Why attempt to explain
the inexplicable?" he replied.
"As I have told you before, I am a very old man. I do not know how old
I
am. I recall no childhood; but recollect only having been always as you
see me
now and as you saw me first when you were five years old. You,
yourself, have
aged, though not as much as most men in a corresponding number of
years, which
may be accounted for by the fact that the same blood runs in our veins;
but I
have not aged at all. I have discussed the question with a noted
Martian
scientist, a friend of mine; but his theories are still only theories.
However,
I am content with the fact — I never age, and I love life and the vigor
of
youth. "And now as to your
natural question as to what brings me to
Earth again and in this, to earthly eyes, strange habiliment. We may
thank Kar
Komak, the bowman of Lothar. It was he who gave me the idea upon which
I have
been experimenting until at last I have achieved success. As you know I
have
long possessed the power to cross the void in spirit, but never before
have I
been able to impart to inanimate things a similar power. Now, however,
you see
me for the first time precisely as my Martian fellows see me — you see
the very
short-sword that has tasted the blood of many a savage foeman; the
harness with
the devices of Helium and the insignia of my rank; the pistol that was
presented to me by Tars Tarkas, Jeddak of Thark. "Aside from seeing you,
which is my principal reason for
being here, and satisfying myself that I can transport inanimate things
from
Mars to Earth, and therefore animate things if I so desire, I have no
purpose.
Earth is not for me. My every interest is upon Barsoom — my wife, my
children,
my work; all are there. I will spend a quiet evening with you and then
back to
the world I love even better than I love life." As he spoke he dropped
into the chair upon the opposite side of
the chess table. "You spoke of children,"
I said. "Have you more
than Carthoris?" "A daughter," he replied,
"only a little younger
than Carthoris, and, barring one, the fairest thing that ever breathed
the thin
air of dying Mars. Only Dejah Thoris, her mother, could be more
beautiful than
Tara of Helium." For a moment he fingered
the chessmen idly. "We have a game
on Mars similar to chess," he said, "very similar. And there is a
race there that plays it grimly with men and naked swords. We call the
game
jetan. It is played on a board like yours, except that there are a
hundred
squares and we use twenty pieces on each side. I never see it played
without
thinking of Tara of Helium and what befell her among the chessmen of
Barsoom.
Would you like to hear her story?" I said that I would and
so he told it to me, and now I shall try
to re-tell it for you as nearly in the words of The Warlord of Mars as
I can
recall them, but in the third person. If there be inconsistencies and
errors,
let the blame fall not upon John Carter, but rather upon my faulty
memory,
where it belongs. It is a strange tale and utterly Barsoomian. |