<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II<br/> <i style="font-size: smaller;">Turgan's Plan</i></h2>
<p class="dropcap newchapter">Content with the Kildare's
answer, Damis followed him
down a corridor and into a large
room set around with benches. The
Kildare did not pause but moved
to the far end of the room and
manipulated a hidden switch. A
portion of the paneled wall swung
inward and through the doorway
thus opened, Turgan led the way.
The corridor in which they found
themselves was dimly lighted by
radium bulbs which Damis shrewdly
suspected had been stolen from
the palace of the Viceroy by Earthmen
employed there. It sloped
steeply downward and Damis estimated
that they were fifty feet below
the level of the ground before
another door opened to Turgan's
manipulation of hidden catches and
admitted them to a large room
equipped with tables and chairs
and well lighted by other radium
bulbs. Damis turned to the Kildare.</p>
<p>"For years there have been rumors
among the Sons of God of
the existence of this place," he
exclaimed, "yet every effort to find
it has been futile. Glavour and his
council have at last decided that
it is merely a myth and that the
underground council chamber does
not exist. You have kept your secret
well, for never has a breath
of suspicion reached him that Turgan
was one of the conspirators
who plotted to overthrow the reign
of the Sons of God."</p>
<p>"Let that, Damis, be a sample of
the earnestness and loyalty of
your new brethren," said the Kildare.
"There are hundreds of
Earthmen who know where this
place is and what secrets it holds,
yet none has ever betrayed it.
Scores have gone to torture and to
the sacrifice of the games without
unsealing their lips. Would a Jovian
have done likewise?"</p>
<p>"To give them due credit, I
think they would have," replied
Damis thoughtfully, "yet their motive
would not have been loyalty,
but stubbornness and a refusal to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</SPAN></span>
subordinate their will to another's.
I thought you said that Lura
would join us here?"</p>
<p class="dropcap">As Damis spoke a door on the
far side of the chamber
opened and a half dozen women
entered. Lura was among them and
with a cry of joy, she ran lightly
forward and threw herself into
Damis' outstretched arms. Turgan
smiled paternally at them for a
moment and then touched his
daughter lightly on the shoulder.</p>
<p>"I have freely and gladly given
my blessing to your union with
Damis," he said. "He is now one
with us. His presence makes victory
possible and enables us to
act at once instead of planning for
years. Damis, you can operate a
space flyer, can you not?"</p>
<p>"Certainly. That is knowledge
which all Nepthalim possess."</p>
<p>A suppressed cheer greeted his
words and the Earthmen crowded
around him, vibrant with excitement.</p>
<p>"The time is at hand!" cried a
stern-faced man in the crimson robe
which marked him an Akildare, an
under-officer of the Earthmen.</p>
<p>"Before I can operate a space
flyer, I will have to have one to
operate," objected Damis.</p>
<p>"That will be supplied," cried a
dozen voices. Turgan's voice rose
above the hubbub of sound.</p>
<p>"Let us proceed in orderly fashion,"
he cried.</p>
<p class="dropcap">The noise died down to silence
and at a gesture from their
ruler, the Earthmen took seats.
Turgan stood beside Damis.</p>
<p>"For the enlightenment of our
new-found brother, I will recite
what has happened and what we
have done, although most of you
know it and many of you have
done your part in bringing it
about.</p>
<p>"Forty years ago, the Earth was
prosperous, peopled with free men,
and happy. While we knew little
of science and lived in mere huts,
yet we worshipped beauty and Him
who ruled all and loved his children.
It was to such a world that
the Jovians came.</p>
<p>"When the first space flyer with
a load of these inhuman monsters
arrived on the earth, we foolishly
took them for the angels whom we
had been taught to believe spent
eternity in glorifying Him. We
welcomed them with our best and
humbly obeyed when they spoke.
This illusion was fostered by the
name the Jovians gave themselves,
the 'Sons of God.' Hortan, their
leader and the father of our new
brother, was a just and kindly man
and he ruled the earth wisely and
well. We learned from them and
they learned from us. That was
the golden age. And the Sons of
God saw that the Daughters of
Man were fair, and they took of
them wives, such as they chose.
And sons were born to them, the
Nepthalim, the mighty men of the
Earth.</p>
<p>"In time other flyers came from
the heavens above and brought
more of the Sons of God to rule
over us. Then Hortan, the Viceroy,
died, and Damis, know you how he
died? You were a babe at the time
and you know nothing. Your father
and your mother, who was my
distant kinswoman, died under the
knives of assassins. It was given
out that they had gone to Jupiter,
yet there were some who knew the
truth. You, the killers sought, but
one of the Earthmen whose heart
bled for your dead mother, spirited
you away. When you had grown to
boyhood, he announced your name
and lineage, although his life paid
for his indiscretion. The same hand
which struck down your father
and your mother struck at him
and struck not unavailingly. You,
since all knew your name and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</SPAN></span>
lineage, he dared not strike, lest
those who love him not, would
appeal to Tubain. Know you the
name of the monster, the traitor to
his ruler and the murderer of your
parents?"</p>
<p class="dropcap">Damis' face had paled during
the recital and when the old
Kildare turned to him, he silently
shook his head.</p>
<p>"It was the monster who now
rules over us as Viceroy and who
profanes the name of God by conferring
it on his master and who
would, if he dared, assume the
name for himself. It was Glavour,
Viceroy of the Earth."</p>
<p>The blood surged back into
Damis' face and he raised a hand
in a dramatic gesture.</p>
<p>"Now I vow that I will never
rest until he lies low in death and
this be the hand that brings him
there!"</p>
<p>A murmur of applause greeted
Damis' announcement and Turgan
went on with his tale.</p>
<p>"With the kind and just Hortan
dead, Glavour assumed the throne
of power, for none dared oppose
him. Once secure, he gave way to
every brutal lust and vice. Your
mother was Hortan's only wife and
he honored her as such, and meant
that the Nepthalim should in time
rule the Earth, but Glavour had
no such ideas. To him, the Daughters
of Man were playthings to
satisfy his brutal lusts. By dozens
and by scores he swept the fairest
of them into his seraglio, heeding
not the bonds of matrimony nor
the wishes of his victims. Only
the fact that my daughter has
been kept from his sight until to-day
has spared her.</p>
<p>"The Earthmen who had been
content to live under Hortan's rule,
rebelled against Glavour but the
rebellion was crushed in blood.
Time and again they rose, but
each time the mighty weapons of
the Jovians stamped out resistance.
At last we realized that craft and
not force must win the battle. This
chamber had been built when Hortan
erected his new capital and none
of the Jovians knew of its location,
so it was chosen as our meeting
place. To-day, Damis, I have
twenty thousand men sworn to do
my bidding and to rise when I
give the word. Many thousands
more will rise when they see others
in arms and know that again the
Sons of Man stand in arms against
the Sons of God."</p>
<p class="dropcap">"There are less than a thousand
Jovians and perhaps
twice that number of Nepthalim
on the Earth, yet that handful
would stand victorious against all
the Earthmen living," said Damis
thoughtfully. "Even I, and I am a
Nepthalim, do not know the secret
weapons in the arsenal of Glavour,
but I know that they are more
powerful than anything we have
ever seen. Forget not, too, that a
radio message to Jupiter will bring
down ships with hundreds, nay,
thousands, of her fighting men with
weapons to overwhelm all opposition."</p>
<p>"Such was the case but it is so
no longer since we number you
among us," replied the Kildare.
"Earthmen are employed in the
communications net which the Jovians
have thrown around the
Earth and it is but a step from
those machines to the huge one
with which they talk to their
mother planet. My spies have been
busy for years and our plans are
all laid. There is one planet which
all the forces of Jupiter have never
been able to conquer; from which
their ships have ever retreated in
defeat."</p>
<p>"Mars!" exclaimed Damis.</p>
<p>"Exactly," replied Turgan. "The
Martians are a peaceful and justice-loving
people, yet they know
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</SPAN></span>
that peace is given only to those
who are ready and able to fight
for it. Ages ago they perfected
weapons before which the Jovians
fly, if they are not destroyed. I
have communicated with the Grand
Mognac of Mars and laid our
plight before him. He has pledged
his aid and has promised us enough
of his weapons to not only destroy
the Jovians and the Nepthalim on
the Earth, but also to prevent other
Jovian ships from ever landing.
The only problem has been how to
get them here. The Martians, not
desiring conquest and content with
their own planet, have never perfected
space flyers. They have
promised us the weapons, but we
must go to Mars and bring them
here. Enough can be transported on
one of the Jovian ships."</p>
<p>"How will we get a ship?" asked
Damis.</p>
<p>"That also has been solved. There
are two Jovian ships kept on the
Earth, ready for instant flight to
Jupiter. They are loosely guarded
for the Sons of God believe that
we have no idea of how to operate
them. We can capture one of them
whenever we desire, but so far such
action would have been useless. Little
by little we have gathered bits
of information about the flyers, but
we had expected to wait for years
before our venture would have a
chance of success. We dared not try
prematurely, for one attempt will be
all that we will ever get. Now we
are ready to strike. You can fly the
ship to Mars and back and with the
Martian weapons, we can sweep the
Jovians from the Earth."</p>
<p class="dropcap">Damis' eyes lighted as Turgan
spoke.</p>
<p>"Your plans are good," he cried,
"and I will fly the ship for you. In
return I ask but one thing: let mine
be the hand which strikes Glavour
down."</p>
<p>"If it can be so done, yours shall
be the hand, oh Nepthalim!" cried
the Akildare who had first spoken
of the ship. Turgan bowed his head
and a murmur of assent came from
the assembled council.</p>
<p>"And now for action!" cried Turgan.
"There is no need to talk
longer. Years ago our plans were
perfected for the capture of the
space ship and each knows the part
assigned to him. Toness, the Akildare,
will rule during my absence,
for I will command the ship, under
Damis. Twelve of our men who
know all that we have been able
to learn will make up the crew.
None of them will take any part
in the capture of the ship for
many lives may be lost in that venture
and we will need the instructed
men to operate the ship
after we capture it. Damis, have
you any addition to make to our
plans?"</p>
<p>"Only one, Turgan. Glavour will
ransack the Earth rather than be
cheated of one he has marked for
his prey. Lura will be safe nowhere
on Earth. Her capture by
the Sons of God will discourage
the timid who will say that if
Turgan cannot protect his own
daughter, how can he free the
Earth? She must go with us."</p>
<p>"Your point is well taken,
Damis," replied the Kildare. "She
shall go. Now to action! Monaill,
are your men ready?"</p>
<p>"They will assemble at my signal,
oh, Kildare."</p>
<p>"Give the signal, for nothing
will be gained by delay. We will
follow behind while you capture
the ship."</p>
<p class="dropcap">Monaill bowed before the
Kildare and hastened from
the council room. In a few words
Turgan gave to Toness the final
orders for the conduct of the conspiracy
during his absence. Followed
by Lura, Damis and three
of the council, he made his way
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</SPAN></span>
to a hidden doorway. Along an
underground passage they made
their way for a quarter of a mile.
A group of figures was seen dimly
ahead of them and nine men
joined the party. Turgan identified
them to Damis as the balance of
the crew.</p>
<p>"Has Monaill passed this way?"
he asked.</p>
<p>"He passed with his band a few
moments ago, oh, Kildare," replied
one of the men. "See, there is the
light which summons us to follow."</p>
<p>He pointed to a tiny light which
had suddenly flashed into brilliance.
Turgan nodded and led the way
forward. At another doorway which
opened to Turgan's touch on a
hidden lever, the party paused. An
instant later there came from a few
hundred yards ahead of them a
hoarse cry of alarm followed by
the roar of a huge whistle.</p>
<p>"The battle has joined!" cried
Turgan. The others crouched, tense
and motionless. From ahead came
the sound of battle. Violet light
showed in short intense flashes. It
was evident that the Jovian guard
of the space ship was fighting valiantly
to protect it. Shaking aside
Turgan's restraining hand, Damis
crept slowly forward.</p>
<p>Two hundred yards from the spot
where he left Turgan he came to a
bend in the passage. The sound of
battle came from just ahead. He
crept forward and peered around
the corner. The passage emerged
from the ground and gave way to
a huge open space which he recognized
as part of the grounds of the
Viceregal palace. Standing on a
launching platform was a Jovian
space ship around which a battle
raged.</p>
<p class="dropcap">Five of the huge Jovians were
battling furiously with a score
of Earthmen. Three dead Jovians
and a dozen crushed forms of Terrestrials
testified to the bitterness
of the fight. The terrible black
tubes of the Jovians were exhausted
and the battle was now being
waged hand to hand, Jovian ax
against Earthly sword. The Terrestrials
were being gradually pressed
back.</p>
<p>A shout came from the distance
and Damis could see a dozen Jovian
guards hastening toward the
scene of the fight, brandishing in
their hands the terrible black tubes.
He turned back and shouted to
Turgan.</p>
<p>"Hasten!" he cried. "In a moment,
Monaill and his men will be
overthrown!"</p>
<p>With a shout the crouching
group of Terrestrials rushed toward
him, but Damis did not wait.
The oncoming Jovians were several
hundred yards away when he
threw himself into the fray. At
his appearance, a cry of dismay
went up from the Earthmen which
was changed to one of mingled
wonder and triumph as Damis
seized the nearest Jovian and bore
the fellow down despite his struggles.
It was a matter of seconds
for him to break the bull neck of
the huge guard and he turned to
grasp another. The four remaining
Jovians backed away but Damis
was not to be denied. He rushed
in and grasped another about the
waist, avoiding the swing of the
forty-pound ax, and dragged him
back. The swords of the Terrestrials
pierced the struggling guard
from the rear and Damis rushed
toward the three survivors.</p>
<p>Heartened by his aid, the remnants
of Monaill's band charged
with him. Two of the Jovians fell
before the swords of the Earthmen
and the third went down before
a blow of Damis' fist. As he
turned back to the ship, Turgan,
followed by the crew of the ship,
dashed up.</p>
<p>"Into the ship!" cried Damis. A
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</SPAN></span>
glance showed that the Jovian
guards were less than two hundred
yards away and were coming on
in huge leaps. The door of the
space ship was open and the band
of Terrestrials clambered in.</p>
<p>"Quick, Damis!" came Lura's
voice.</p>
<p>The Nepthalim turned to enter
but his gaze fell on the six survivors
of Monaill's band.</p>
<p>"In with you!" he cried sharply.</p>
<p class="dropcap">The Terrestrials hesitated but
Damis grasped the nearest of
them by the belt and threw him
bodily into the ship. The others
hesitated no longer but clambered
in. The Jovians were less than
fifty yards away and already deep
violet flashes began to come from
the tubes they carried. Damis
stooped and grasped one of the
dead Jovians. With an effort possible
to only two men on Earth,
himself and Glavour, he raised the
body above his head and hurled
it straight at the oncoming Jovians.
His aim was true and three
of them were swept from their
feet. With a mighty bound, Damis
sprang through the door of the
space ship and the airlock clanged
shut behind him.</p>
<p>The crew of the ship were already
in place, awaiting orders.
There was no time for instruction
and Damis leaped to the control
board. He pulled a lever far down
and in an instant the entire crew
was flat on the floor as though an
enormous weight had pressed them
down. With a superhuman effort,
Damis raised himself enough to
cut off the power. The ship shot
on through the rapidly thinning
air, its sides glowing a dull red.
The heat inside the ship was almost
intolerable.</p>
<p>As the pressure of the enormous
acceleration ceased, the bruised
Terrestrials struggled to their feet.
Damis turned to another lever and
a breath of icy air swept through
the ship.</p>
<p>"This will help for an instant,"
he gasped, "and the cold of space
will soon cool us down. I had to
give the ship a tremendous start
or the tubes of the Sons of God
would have reduced us to elemental
atoms. Keep away from the walls
and don't exert yourselves. I can
handle the ship alone for the
present."</p>
<p class="dropcap">For half an hour the ship
charged on through space.
Damis presently pulled the control
lever down and placed the ship
under power. The walls changed
from dull red to black and the
temperature in the ship grew noticeably
lower. Damis made his way
to one of the walls and tested it
with a moistened finger.</p>
<p>"It's cool enough to touch," he
announced. "Fortunately the insulating
vacuum between the inner
and the outer skins was at its
maximum, otherwise we would
have been roasted alive. The external
wall was almost at the fusing
point. We can move around now."</p>
<p>He posted lookouts at the observing
instruments with which the
ship was equipped and instructed
them in their duties and the manipulation
of the instruments. He
placed one man at the control lever
of the stern rocket-motors. As he
turned away from the control
board he saw Lura standing quietly
in a corner. He opened his arms
and she ran to them with a cry
of joy.</p>
<p>"Oh, Damis, I was so afraid for
you," she gasped, "and I wanted
to hug you when you jumped in
and Father closed the lock behind
you but I knew that you had to
take care of the ship. Were you
hurt at all?"</p>
<p>"Not a bit, darling," he assured
her, "but it was touch and go for
a moment. I didn't know whether
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</SPAN></span>
the guards would dare to disintegrate
the ship without orders from
Glavour. In any event, the blasts of
the stern motors must have hurled
them half a mile. No strength could
stand the blast of gas to which
they were subjected. Are you all
right?"</p>
<p>"Perfectly," she replied; "I never
was in any danger. I was the first
one in the ship and the only chance
I had to be hurt was to have you
overcome and the ship recaptured.
In that case, I had this."</p>
<p>She displayed a small dagger
which she drew from the bosom
of her robe. Damis shuddered and
took the weapon from her.</p>
<p>"Poisoned," he exclaimed as he
glanced at its tip. "You had better
let me take care of it. You might
fall and prick yourself with it."</p>
<p>She surrendered the weapon to
him with a smile and Damis placed
it in a cabinet built against the
wall of the flyer.</p>
<p>"Now go in and lie down," he
told her. "I've got to start plotting
a course to Mars and teaching my
crew how to operate the ship."</p>
<p>"Can't I learn, too?" she objected.
"If anything should happen,
it might be quite a useful bit of
knowledge. Besides, I already understand
celestial geography quite
well and I may be able to help in
the navigation."</p>
<p>Damis looked at her in surprise.</p>
<p>"You a celestial geographer?" he
asked in astonishment. "Where did
you learn it?"</p>
<p>"From my father. He was a famous
heaven-master before the Jovians
came and he taught me."</p>
<p>"That's excellent!" cried Damis.
"I didn't realize we had so much
knowledge at our command. Turgan,
will you take charge of the
navigating after I plot a course?
Lura can assist you. Now, the rest
of you attend to my words and
I'll teach you how to operate the
rocket motors."</p>
<p class="dropcap">The Jovian ship was built along
very simple lines. Batteries of
rocket motors at the bow and stern
and on each of the sides furnished
both motive and steering power.
The Terrestrials were all chosen
men and in three hours Damis announced
himself as satisfied with
their ability to operate the ship
under any normal conditions. With
Turgan and Lura watching and
checking his calculations, he plotted
a course which would intercept
Mars on its orbit.</p>
<p>"Luckily, Mars is approaching us
now," he said, "and we won't have
a stern chase, which is always a
long one. We will be able to reach
Mars, spend several days on it and
return to Earth before ships can
reach the Earth from Jupiter, even
if they are already on the way,
which is highly probable. I'll turn
the ship a little."</p>
<p>Under his direction, the crew
turned the ship in its course until
it was headed for the point in
space where Damis planned to intercept
the red planet. With the
course set to his satisfaction, he
gave orders for the stern motors
to be operated at such a power as
to give the highest acceleration
consistent with comfort for the
crew. There were no windows in
the ship but two observers seated
at instruments kept the entire
heavens under constant observation.
Damis motioned one of them
to stand aside and told Lura to
take his place. She sat down before
a box in which were set two lenses,
eye-distance apart. She looked
through the lenses and gave a cry
of astonishment. Before her appeared
the heavens in miniature
with the entire galaxy of stars displayed
to her gaze. In the center
of the screen was a large disk
thickly marked with pocks.</p>
<p>"The moon," explained Damis.
"We are headed directly toward it
now but we'll shift and go around
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</SPAN></span>
it. We'll pass only a few hundred
miles from its surface, but unfortunately
it will be between us and
the sun and you'll be able to see
nothing. Look in the other observer."</p>
<p class="dropcap">Lura turned to the second instrument.
A large part of the
hemisphere was blotted out by the
Earth which was still only a few
thousand miles away. The sun
showed to one side of the Earth,
but a movable disk was arranged
in the instrument by means of
which it could be shut off from
the gaze of the observer. Despite
the presence of the sun, the stars
shone brilliantly in the intense
black of space.</p>
<p>"How fast are we traveling?"
asked Lura.</p>
<p>"It is impossible to tell exactly,"
he replied. "I can approximate our
speed by a study of the power
consumed in our stern motors and
again I can approximate it by a
series of celestial observations, provided
we do not have to change
our course while I am doing so."</p>
<p>"Isn't there some sort of an instrument
which will tell you how
fast we are going?" she asked in
astonishment.</p>
<p>"Unfortunately not. We are traveling
through no medium which is
dense enough to register on an
instrument. Our course is not
straight, but is necessarily an erratic
one as we are subject to the
gravimetric pull of all of the celestial
bodies. Just now the Earth
supplies most of the pull on us
but as soon as we approach the
moon, we will tend to fall on it
and frequent sideblasts will be
needed to keep us away from it.
Once we get up some speed that
is comparable with light, we can
measure by direct comparison, but
our speed is too low for that now."</p>
<p>"I saw you lay out your course,
but how are we steering?"</p>
<p>"The observer who works on the
front instrument keeps a cross
hair on a fixed star. When the
curving of the ship deviates us
more than five degrees from our
course, a side motor is turned on
until we straighten out again. It
is quite a simple matter and I'll
take the ship myself when we near
Mars. There is no need to be frightened."</p>
<p>"I'm not frightened," said Lura
quickly; "I was just curious. Is there
any danger of hitting a wandering
body?"</p>
<p class="dropcap">"Not much in this zone and at
this speed. When our speed
picks up there will be a slight danger
because the higher our rate of
speed, the more crowded space becomes.
If we were going to Jupiter
we would have to use much more
caution. The asteroid belt lying between
Mars and Jupiter is really
crowded with small bodies but comparatively
few are in the zone between
Earth and Mars. That is one
thing I figured on when I said that
we would have plenty of time to
go to Mars and back before ships
could come from Jupiter. Ships
from Jupiter would be able to develop
a much higher speed than we
will attain were it not for the
asteroid belt. They will have to
travel quite slowly through it, in
portions, not over a few thousand
miles per minute, while we are not
held down that way. Now that we
are really started, it will be best
to set regular watches. I will assign
you as navigator for one watch
if you wish."</p>
<p>"I certainly do want to do my
share."</p>
<p>"All right, we'll let it go that
way. Turgan and I will take the
other two watches until we get
there."</p>
<p>"How soon will that be?"</p>
<p>"About seventeen days. Mars
happens to be only about forty
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</SPAN></span>
million miles away just now. Now
I'll set the watches and divide the
crew."</p>
<p>A short examination showed
Damis that his crew were intelligent
and that his instruction had
been good. Every member knew
his duties. Instead of the two
twelve-hour watches which were
usual on space flyers, the additional
members of the crew who
had been part of Monaill's band
enabled Damis to set only eight-hour
shifts. Each member of the
crew was taught to operate the
offensive ray projectors with which
the flyer was equipped.</p>
<p class="dropcap">Things soon settled down to
routine. No wandering celestial
bodies came close enough to cause
them any real alarm. Once the
novelty of hurtling through space
had passed away, the trip became
monotonous. The Earth, which had
at first filled the field of one of
the observers, dwindled until it
became merely a brilliant green
star. The red speck which was
Mars grew constantly more prominent
as the hours went by and
Damis gave the word to turn on
the bow motors and retard the
speed of the flyer. Several of the
crew had worked in the communications
net which Glavour had
thrown around the Earth and under
orders from Turgan, they began
to call the red planet on the
ship's communicator.</p>
<p>"It is well to let them know
who we are," he said to Damis
when he gave the order. "We are
flying a Jovian ship and since we
have come so far successfully, I
have no desire to be blasted out
of space by their powerful weapons
of defense."</p>
<p>Damis agreed heartily, and for
twelve hours continual attempts
were made to communicate with
their destination. At last their signals
were answered. Despite the
differences in language, they had
no trouble in understanding the
messages. A system of communication
based not on words or sound
forms, but on thought forms, had
been introduced to the Earth by
the Jovians and both Damis and
Turgan were quite familiar with
it. The Martians informed them
that the approaching ship had been
sighted and carefully watched for
several days. As soon as he learned
who the occupants were, the Grand
Mognac of Mars sent a message of
welcome and instructed them on
what part of the planet to land. He
promised that a deputation would
meet them with transportation to
his capital city where he would
welcome them in person and supply
them with the weapons they
sought.</p>
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