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“Stragitzkruml?” he said, then continued when we remained silent.
“Fidlykreepi?”
“Attentottenpotentaten?”
When there was no response to these incomprehensible requests, he turned to a bulky man with a red beard who seemed to be in charge.
“Ili ne parolas konantain lingvojn,” he said in clearly accented Esperanto.
“Well, that’s more like it,” I answered in the same tongue. “Might I ask why you gentlemen find it necessary to pull guns on simple travelers like ourselves?”
“Who are you?” Red-beard said, coming forward.
“I might ask the same of you?”
“I am pointing the guns,” he answered coldly.
“A well-made point and I bow to your logic. We are tourists from the land across the sea….” He interrupted with a short and nasty word.
“That is impossible as we both know since this is the only landmass on this planet. The truth now.”
We both hadn’t known, though we did now. A single continent? What had happened to Mother Earth during those twenty mille
“Would you believe me if I told you we were time travelers?”
This hit the target all right, and he looked startled, while there was a stir of movement among the men close enough to hear what I had said. Red-beard glared them into silence before he spoke again.
“What is your co
A lot depended upon my answer. Truth had worked once, and it might turn the trick again. And he had said “creatures,” which was a giveaway. I couldn’t believe this calm and disciplined force could be associated with the enemy.
“I have come to kill He and wipe out his operation.” This really did produce the right effect, and some of the men even lowered their guns before being growled back into line. Red-beard muttered a command, and one of the men hurried off. We remained in silence until he returned with a green metal cube about the size of his head that he handed over to the commander. It must have been hollow because he carried it easily. Red-beard held it up.
“We have over a hundred of these. They have been floating down out of the sky for the past month, and all of them are identical. A powerful radio source inside leads us to them—but we ca
He slowly held out the cube toward me, and I took it just as gingerly as every gun was trained on my body with careful precision. The metal looked like collapsium, the incredibly tough stuff used for atomic rocket tube liners. I carefully turned it bottom up and read the lines in a single glance before handing it back.
“I can read them,” I said, and they were aware of the new tone in my voice. “The first line says that He and his people will all leave this period exactly 2. 37 days after my arrival here.”
There was a murmur over that, and Angelina beat Red-beard to the punch with the important question.
“What was in the second line?”
I tried to smile, but it didn’t seem much good.
“Oh, that. It says that the planet will be destroyed by atomic explosions as soon as they go.”
Chapter 20
The tent was made of the same gray fabric as the clothes our captors wore and was a chilled refuge from the steambath atmosphere outside. A squat machine whined in one corner, dehumidifying and cooling the air. Even cooler drinks had been produced, and I drained and brooded over mine, trying to see a way out of this dilemma before the deadly deadline was reached. Though guns were still in evidence, an unspoken truce was in effect; Red-beard decided to formalize it.
“I drink with you,” he said. “I am Diyan.”
It seemed very much like a ritual, so I repeated the formula and introduced myself, as did Angelina. After this the weapons vanished, and we were all much more chummy. I sat down where I could benefit from the full breeze of the cooler and decided to ask some questions myself.
“Do you people have any weapons heavier than these handguns?”
“None that are available. The few we brought have been destroyed in battle with He’s forces.”
“Is this continent so big you can’t get more of them here quickly from your country?”
“The size of the continent is of no importance. Our space vessels are very small, and everything must be brought from our home planet.”
I blinked rapidly, feeling I was getting out of my depth.
“You are not from Earth?” I asked.
“Our ancestors were, but we are all native-born Martians.”
“You wouldn’t care to give me a few more facts, would you? The sound of confusion I keep hearing appears to be inside my own head.”
“I am sorry, I thought you knew. Here, let me fill up your glass. The story really begins many thousands of years ago when a sudden change in solar radiation raised the temperature here on Earth. By sudden I of course mean a matter of years, really centuries. As the climate changed and the ice caps melted, the continued existence of life on the surface of the planet was threatened. Coastlines were altered and immense areas of low-lying land inundated; great cities were drowned. This in itself might have been dealt with had it not been for the seismic disturbances brought about by the shifting weight on the Earth’s surface as the poles were freed of their ice burden and the released water covered other areas. Earthquakes and lava flows, sinking lands and the rising of new mountains. All quite terrible, we have seen the recordings many times in our schools. An incredible international effort was launched to terrafy the planet Mars—that is, make it suitable for human habitation. This involved the creation of an atmosphere there with a high carbon dioxide layer to trap the increased radiation of the sun, the transportation of ice mountains from the rings of Saturn, things like this. It was a noble ambition that in the end did succeed, but it bankrupted the nations of Earth who gave their all in this unbelievable effort. Eventually there was dissent and even warfare as weakened governments fell and greedy men fought for more than an equal share of space on the new made world. Through all this the waters continued to rise on Earth and the first Martian settlers struggled against the harsh rigors of a barely livable world to establish the settlements. In history these are known as the Deadly Years because so many people died; the figures are unbelievable. But in the end we survived, and Mars is a green and comfortable world.
“Earth did not fare as well. Contact was lost between the planets, and the survivors of the once-teeming billions here fought a dreadful battle for survival. There are no written records of that period, thousands of years long, but the results are clear enough. This single large continent remained above the sea, as well as some island chains to mark earlier mountain ranges. And madness rules mankind. When we were able, we rebuilt the ancient spaceships and brought what help we could. Our help was not appreciated. The survivors kill strangers on sight and take great pleasure in it. And all men are strangers. The almost-unshielded solar radiation here produced mutants of all kinds among man, plants and animals. Most mutations died off quickly, but the survivors are deadly to a universal degree. So we helped where we could but really did very little. The Earthmen were a continuing danger to each other but not to Mars. That is not until He united them some hundreds of years ago.”
“Has he really lived all that time?”