<h2 id="c11">XI <br/><span class="small">ATT THE TERRIBLE</span></h2>
<p>When Myles Cabot left his encampment beside the little
brook, he hastened down stream to where the brook joined
the big river, along the edge of which there stretched a
sandy beach. Falling on his knees, he picked up handful
after handful of the silver sands.</p>
<p>There was still plenty of daylight left for him to examine
the multitude of shiny metallic particles.</p>
<p>There could be no doubt of it, these sands held some
metal which could be separated out in much the same
manner as that in which the California gold miners of 1849
used to wash for gold, but only time would tell whether
or not this metal was the much-to-be-desired platinum which
the radio man needed for the grids, filaments, plates, and
wires of his vacuum tubes.</p>
<p>On the morrow he would wash for this metal, using the
wooden pans which he had brought for that purpose. The
precious dust he would carry back to Vairkingi, melt it into
small lumps if possible, and then try to analyze its composition
in his laboratory.</p>
<p>As he sat on the sandy beach and thus laid his plans,
his thoughts gradually wandered away from scientific lines,
and he began again to worry about Lilla.</p>
<p>It was many days since she had sent the S O S which
had recalled him from earth to Poros. Whatever she had
feared must have happened by now. It was possible that he
would never be able to effect a return to Cupia. Why not then
accept the inevitable, settle down permanently among the
Vairkings, and solace himself as best he could?</p>
<p>Even an ordinarily stalwart soul would have done his
best and have been satisfied with that. But Myles Standish
Cabot possessed that indomitable will which had given rise
to the Porovian proverb: “You cannot kill a Minorian.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_81">81</div>
<p>To such a man, defeat was impossible. He <i>would</i> rescue
the Princess Lilla in the end; that was all there was to it.</p>
<p>So he laid his plans with precision, as he sat on the sandy
shore of the Porovian river in the crimsoning twilight.</p>
<p>Before the velvet darkness completely enveloped the planet,
the earth-man arose from the sands, and began his return
up the valley of the little estuary. But, as he was hurrying
along, and was passing through a small grove of trees, a dark
form noiselessly dropped on him from above.</p>
<p>The creature lit squarely upon his back, wrapping its
furry legs around his abdomen and its furry arms around
his neck. Although taken completely by surprise, Cabot
wrenched the creature’s feet apart and then threw it over
his head as a bucking broncho would throw a rider, a jiujitsu
trick which he had learned from one of the Jap
gymnasts at college.</p>
<p>The Roy, for that is what Cabot’s assailant proved to
be, scrambled quickly to his feet, although a bit stunned,
and crouched, ready to spring at him again. The earth-man
planted his feet firmly apart, clenched his fists, and
awaited the onslaught; then, when the creature charged,
he met him on the point of the jaw with a well-aimed
blow. Down crashed the furry one!</p>
<p>Cabot was rubbing his bruised knuckles and viewing
his fallen antagonist with some satisfaction, when suddenly
he was seized around the knees from behind, and was
hurled prone by one of the neatest football tackles he had
ever experienced.</p>
<p>Squirming quickly to a sitting position, he dealt the Roy
who held his legs a stinging blow beside the ear. The grip
on his knees loosened, and he was just about to scramble
erect, when a third assailant caught him around the
throat and pulled him over backward. Then scores of these
furry savages swarmed upon him from every side. Yet still
he fought, until his elbows were pinioned behind his back, his
eyes were blindfolded, and a gag was placed between his
teeth.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_82">82</div>
<p>Thereupon, he ceased struggling, not because there was no
fight left in him, but rather because he wisely decided to
save his strength for some time when he might really need
it. So he offered no further resistance when he was picked
up and thrown across a pair of brawny shoulders, and carried
off, he knew not whither.</p>
<p>Finally, after what seemed many hours, he was unceremoniously
dumped onto the ground, and then jerked
roughly to his feet.</p>
<p>His bandage was snatched off, and he found himself
standing in the center of a circle of flares, confronting a
large, squat, and particularly repulsive gray-furred Roy,
who sat with some pretense of dignity upon a round boulder
in front of him. Beside him stood another Roy, evidently
the one who had brought him thither.</p>
<p>This one now spoke. “See the pretty Vairking which I
have brought you.”</p>
<p>“If that’s a Vairking,” the fat one remarked, “then I’m
my own father.”</p>
<p>“If he <i>isn’t</i> a Vairking,” the other countered, “then why
does he wear Vairking leather armor? Answer me that.”</p>
<p>“Vairking or not,” the fat one declared, “he will do very
nicely to string up by the heels and shoot arrows at. For
quite evidently, he is no Roy. What say you to that, my
fine target?”</p>
<p>The guard removed the gag.</p>
<p>“I say,” Myles evenly replied, “that you had better not
take any such liberties with me.”</p>
<p>“And why not, furless?” the seated Roy sneered.</p>
<p>“First, let me ask <i>you</i> a question,” Myles said. “Who is
King of the Roies, Grod the Silent or Att the Terrible?”</p>
<p>“Grod the Silent, most assuredly. Why do you ask?”</p>
<p>“And do you know Prince Otto, his son?”</p>
<p>“Otto the Bold? Most assuredly.”</p>
<p>“Know then,” the captive asserted, “that I am no Vairking,
but rather a Minorian, which is a sort of creature I
venture you have never met before. Furthermore, I am a
particular personal friend of Otto the Bold. He will not thank
you to string up Cabot the Minorian by the heels, and shoot
arrows into him. I demand that I be taken before Prince
Otto.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_83">83</div>
<p>Thereat the fat Roy smiled a crafty smile. “I shall take
you before Att the Terrible,” he said.</p>
<p class="tb">It thus became evident that this fat chieftain had falsely
asserted his belief in the kingship of Grod for the purpose
of securing from Myles an admission as to which side the
earth-man favored.</p>
<p>The rest of the night Myles spent on a pile of smelly
bedding in a tent. He was still bound, and was kept under
constant surveillance by a frequently changing guard. By
morning, his arms below the elbows had become completely
numb, in spite of his having loosened his bonds somewhat
by straining against them.</p>
<p>When the velvet night had given place to silver day, the
guard brought some coarse porridge in a rough stone bowl,
which he held to the prisoner’s lips until it was all consumed.
Myles thanked him politely, and then asked if he
would mind chafing the numbed arms.</p>
<p>For reply, the soldier kicked him savagely.</p>
<p>“Get up!” he ordered. “The time is here to start the
march. You’ll wish the rest of you were numb, too, when Att
the Terrible starts shooting arrows into your inverted carcass.”</p>
<p>Presently, Myles was driven into the open, the tents
were struck and loaded onto carts—probably stolen from the
Vairkings—and the furry warriors took up the march, with
their prisoner in their midst. The fat chief alone rode in a
cart; all the others walked.</p>
<p>By straining at the thongs which bound his arms, Myles
further loosened them sufficiently to relieve the pressure on
his blood vessels, and then by wiggling his fingers, he
managed finally to restore the circulation.</p>
<p>After that he began to take some interest in his surroundings.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_84">84</div>
<p>His captors were a coarse-looking lot of brutes, with long
gangling arms, thickset necks, low foreheads, and prognathous
jaws. In general, they more closely resembled the anthropoid
apes of the earth than they resembled the really human,
although furred Vairkings.</p>
<p>Their weapons—wooden spears and swords, and flint
knives—were like those of the Vairkings, only cruder. They
marched without any particular order or discipline, and jested
coarsely with each other as they ambled along.</p>
<p class="tb">After taking in all this, Myles next turned his attention
to the country through which they were passing. The trail
led upward into mountains. This at once aroused his interest.
Here and there he noted what he felt sure must be
zinc-blende. Yes, and cropping out of the rocks on the left
was an unmistakable rosette of galena crystal!</p>
<p>The radio man was sincerely glad that he had been
captured. And so he even joked jovially with the soldiers
around him, until they became quite friendly.</p>
<p>At one point, their route lay across a foaming mountain
stream, by means of a log bridge. As they were crossing
over, one of the furry soldiers had the misfortune to stumble,
and in another instant completely lost his footing and
plunged headlong into the stream below. He happened to
be one who had recently become particularly chummy
with the captive.</p>
<p>“Poor fellow,” one of the guard casually remarked. “It’s
too bad he can’t swim.”</p>
<p>“<i>I</i> can,” Myles shouted. “Quick, some one cut my cords!”</p>
<p>And, before any one could interfere, a young and impetuous
Roy had drawn his knife and severed the earth-man’s
bonds, thus permitting him to dive after the poor creature
who was rapidly being washed down stream by the swift
current.</p>
<p>It had all happened in an instant. A few swift strokes
brought Myles up to the other. But it became no easy matter
to reach the shore. However, the troop of Roies showed
much more interest in regaining their captive, than they
had shown in rescuing their comrade; and thus, by the aid
of their spears, finally dragged the two ashore.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_85">85</div>
<p>Then Cabot was bound again, and the march resumed.
The carts had detoured, and so the fat chief had not seen
the episode.</p>
<p>“Better not tell him, any one,” one of the guard admonished,
“or it will go hard with the youngster. Our leader would
not relish any chance of not being able to present this
furless Vairking to Att the Terrible.”</p>
<p>“And will Att shoot arrows into me?” Myles asked.</p>
<p>“Most assuredly.”</p>
<p>Myles thought to himself: “I guess they are right, especially
if Att knows how I was befriended by Arkilu,
whom he covets!” Then he asked: “And when am I to see
the Terrible One?”</p>
<p>“To-morrow morning,” was the reply.</p>
<p>However, Myles Cabot fell asleep at the encampment that
night wondering when he would get that radio set finished
for a talk with Lilla and wondering whether that really
was galena crystal which he had passed on the road.</p>
<p>But galena crystal wasn’t going to help him any with
Att the Terrible.</p>
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