Classic Audiobook Collection - The Red Dust by Murray Leinster ~ Full Audiobook [scifi]
Episode Date: March 8, 2023The Red Dust by Murray Leinster audiobook. Genre: scifi You who have read 'The Mad Planet' by Murray Leinster, will welcome the sequel to that story. The world, in a far distant future, is peopled wi...th huge insects and titanic fungus growths. Life has been greatly altered, and tiny Man is now in the process of becoming acclimated to the change. We again meet our hero Burl, but this time a far greater danger menaces the human race. The huge insects are still in evidence, but the terror they inspire is as nothing compared to the deadly Red Dust. You will follow this remarkable story with breathless interest. 'Burl raised his spear, and plunged down on the back of the moving thing, thrusting his spear with all the force he could command. He had fallen upon the shining back of one of the huge, meat-eating beetles, and his spear had slid across the horny armor and then stuck fast, having pierced only the leathery tissue between the insect's head and thorax.' For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 1 (00:34:10) Chapter 2 (01:09:21) Chapter 3 (01:41:37) Chapter 4 (02:16:56) Chapter 5 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Red Dust by Murray Lister, Chapter 1, Prey.
The sky grew gray and then almost white.
The overhanging banks of clouds seemed to withdraw a little from the steaming earth.
Hays that hung always among the mushroom forests and above the fungus hills
grew more tenuous, and the slow, misty rain that dripped the whole night long,
seized reluctantly.
As far as the eye could see, a mad whirl stretched out,
a world of incense-saint cruelties,
and strange, fierce maternal solicitudes.
The insects of the night, the great moths,
whose wings spread far and wide in the dimness,
and the huge fireflies four feet in length,
whose beacons made the earth glow in their pale, weird light,
The insects of the night had sought their hiding-places.
Now the creatures of the day ventured forth.
A great ant-hill towered a hundred feet in the air.
Upon its gravel and boulder-strewn side, a commotion became visible.
The earth crumbled and fell into an invisible opening.
Then a dark chasm appeared, and two slender thread-like antennae pired out.
A warrior ant emerged and stood for an instant in the daylight, looking all about for signs
of danger to the ant city.
He was all of ten inches long, this ant, and his mandibles were fierce and strong.
A second and third warrior came from the inside of the ant-hill, and ran with tiny clickings
about the hillock, waving their antennae restlessly, searching, every searching for a minute
to their city.
They returned to the gateway from which they had made their appearance, evidently bearing
reassuring messages because, shortly after they had re-entered the gateway of the Ant City,
a flood of black, ill-smelling workers poured out of the opening and dispersed upon their
business.
The clicking of their limbs and an occasional whining stridulation made an incessant sound
as they scattered over the earth, foraging among the mushrooms.
and giant cabbages, among the rubbish heaps of the gigantic beehives and wasp colonies,
and among the remains of the tragedies of the night for food for their city.
The city of the ants had begun its daily toil, toil in which everyone shared without
supervision or coercion.
Deep in the recesses of the pyramid galleries were hollowed out and winding passages that led
down a fathomless distance into the earth below. Somewhere in the maze of tunnels, there was a
royal apartment in which the queen-aunt reposed, waited upon by assiduous courtiers, fed by royal
stewards, and combed and rubbed by the hands of her subjects and children. But even the huge monarch
of the city had her constant and pressing duty of maternity. A dozen
times the size of her largest loyal servant, she was no less bound by the unwritten but
imperative laws of the city than they.
From the time of waking to the time of rest she was ordained to be the queen-mother in the
strictest and most literal sense of the word.
Far at intervals to be measured only in terms of minutes, she brought forth a single egg, perhaps
three inches in length, which was a single one.
instantly seized by one of her eager attendants, and carried in haste to the municipal nursery.
There it was placed in a tiny cell a foot or more in left, until a sack-shaped grub appeared,
all soft white body save for a tiny mouth.
Then the nurses took it in charge and fed it with curious tender gestures, until it had
waxed large and fat and slept the sleep of metamorphosis.
When it emerged from its rudimentary cocoon, it took the places of its nurses until its soft skin had hardened into the horny armor of the workers and soldiers, and then it joined the throng of workers that poured out of the city at dawn to forage for food, to bring back its finds, and to share with the warriors and the nurses, the drone males and the young queens and all the other members of its community,
their duties in the city itself.
This was the life of the social insect,
absolute devotion to the cause of its city,
utter abnegation of self-interest
for the sake of its fellows,
and death at their hands when their usefulness was passed.
They neither knew nor expected more or less.
It is a strange instinct that prompts these creatures
to devote their lives to their city,
taking no smallest thought for their individual good, without even the call of maternity or sex
to guide them.
Only the queen knows motherhood.
The others know nothing but toil, for purposes they do not understand, and to an end which
they cannot dream.
At intervals all over the world of Burl's time, these ant-cities rose above the surrounding
ground, some small and barely begun, and others ancient colonies which were truly the continuation
of cities first built when the ants were insects to be crushed beneath the feet of men.
These ancient strongholds towered two, three, or even four hundred feet above the plains,
and their inhabitants would have had to be numbered in millions, if not billions.
Not all the earth was subject to the ants, however.
Bees and wasps and more deadly creatures crawled over and flew over its surface.
The bees were four feet and more in length, and slender-waisted wasps, darted here and there,
praying upon the colossal crickets that sang deep bass music to their mates, and the length
of the crickets was the length of a man and more.
Spiders with bloated bellies waited, motionless in their snares, whose thread
threads were the size of small cables, waiting for some luckless giant insect to be entangled
in the gummy traps, and butterflies fluttered over the festering plains of this new world, tremendous
creatures whose wings could only be measured in terms of yards.
An outcropping of rock jutted up abruptly from a fungus-covered plain.
Fungi and strangely colored moles stained the stone until the shiny quartz was hidden, almost completely
from view, but the hole glistened like tinted crystal from the dank wetness of the night.
Little wisps of vapor curled away from the slopes as the moisture was taken up by the already
moisture-laden air.
Seen from a distance, the outcropping of rock looked innocent and still, but a nearer view showed
many things.
Here, a hunting wasp had come upon a gray worm, and was methodically inserting its sting
into each of the twelve segments of the faintly writhing creature.
Presently the worm would be completely paralyzed, and would be carried to the burrow of the
wasp, where an egg would be laid upon it, from which a tiny maggot would presently hatch.
Then, weeks of agony for the great gray worm, conscious but unable to move, but unable to move,
while the maggot fed upon its living flesh.
There, the tiny spider, youngest of the hatchlings, barely four inches across,
stealthily stalked some other still tinier might,
the little mini-legged larva of the oil beetle, known as the bee-louse.
The almost infinitely small bee-louse was barely two inches long,
and could easily hide in the thick fur of a great bumblebee.
This one small creature would never fulfill its destiny, however.
The hatchling spider sprang.
It was a combat of midgets which was soon over.
When the spider had grown and was feared as a huge black-bellied tarantula,
it would slay monster crickets with the same ease and the same implacable ferocity.
The outcropping of rock looked still and innocent.
There was one point where it overhung, forming a shelf, beneath which the stone fell away
in a sheer drop.
Many colored fungus growths covered the rock, making it a riot of tents and shades.
But hanging from the roof-like projection of the stone there was a strange, drab-white object.
It was in the shape of half a globe, perhaps six feet by six feet at its largest.
A number of little semicircular doors were fixed about its sides like inverted arches, each
closed by a blank wall.
One of them would open, but only one.
The house was like the half of a pallet orange fastened to the roof of rock.
The cables stretched in every direction for yards upon yards, anchoring the habitation firmly.
But the most striking of the things about the house.
still and quiet and innocent, like all the rest of the rock outcropping, were the ghastly
trophies fastened to the outer walls and hanging from long silken chains below.
Here was the hind leg of one of the smaller beetles.
There was the wing case of a flying creature.
Here a snail shell, two feet in diameter, hanging at the end of an inch-thick cable.
They are a boulder that must have weighed thirty or forty pounds, dangling in similar fashion.
But fashioned here and there, haphazard and irregularly, were other more repulsive remnants,
the shrunken-head armor of a beetle, the fierce jaws of a cricket,
the pitiful shreds of a hundred creatures that had formed forgotten meals for the bloated
insect within the home.
Comparatively small, as was the nest of the Clotho spider.
It was decorated as no ogre's castle had ever been adorned.
Legs sucked dry of their contents.
Corslets of horny armor forever to be unused by any creature.
A wing of this insect, the head of that.
And dangling by the longest cord of all, with a silken cable wrapped
carefully about it to keep the parts together, was the shrunken, shrivelled, dried-up body of a long-dead
man. Outside the nest was a place of gruesome relics. Within, it was a place of luxury and ease.
A cushion of softness down filled all the bulging bottom of the hemisphere. A canopy of similarly
luxurious texture interposed itself between the rocky root.
and the dark hideous body of the resting spider.
The eyes of the hairy creature glittered like diamonds, even in the darkness, but the loathsome
attenuated legs were tucked under the round-bellied body, and the spider was at rest.
It had fed.
It waited, motionless, without desires or aversions, without emotions or emotions or perplexities,
Uncomfortable, placid, machine-like contentment, until time should bring the call to feed again.
A fresh carcass had been added to the decorations of the nest only the night before.
For many days the spider would repose in motionless splendor within the silken castle.
When hunger came again, a nocturnal foray, a creature would be pounced upon and slain,
brought bodily to the nest and feasted upon, its body festooned upon the exterior,
and another half-sleeping, half-waking period of dreamful idleness within the sabboretic charnel-house-wood ensue.
Slowly and timidly, half a dozen pink-skinned creatures made their way through the mushroom forest
that led to the outcropping of rock, under which the clotho-spiders' nests,
was slung. They were men, degraded remnants of the once-dominant race. Burl was their leader,
and was distinguished solely by two, three-foot stumps of the feathery golden antennae of
a night-flying moth he had bound to his forehead. In his hand was a horny, chittinous spear,
taken from the body of an unknown flying creature killed by the flames of the burning purple hills. Since
Burl's return from his solitary and involuntary journey, he had been greatly revered by his
tribe.
Hitherto, it had been but a leaderless, formless group of people, creeping to the same hiding
place at nightfall to share in the food of the fortunate, and shudder at the fate of those
who might not appear.
Now Burl had walked boldly to them, bearing upon his back the gray bulk of a labyrinth
spider he had slain with his own hands, and clad in wonderful garments of a gorgeousness they
envied and admired.
They hung upon his words as he struggled to tell them of his adventures, and slowly and
dimly they began to look to him for leadership.
He was wonderful.
For days they had listened breathlessly to the tale of his adventures, but when he demanded
that they follow him in another and more perilous effect.
there, they were appalled.
A peculiar strength of will had come to Burl.
He had seen and done things that no man in the memory of his tribe had seen or done.
He had stood by when the Purple Hills burned and formed a funeral pyre for the hordes
of army ants, and for uncounted thousands of flying creatures.
He had caught a leaping tarantula upon the point of his spear,
and had escaped from the web of a army-auntled.
a banded webbed spider by oiling his body, so that the sticky threads of the snare refused
to hold him fast.
He had attacked and killed a great gray-laborath spider.
But most potent of all, he had returned and had been welcomed by Sayah,
Sea of the swift feet and slender limbs, whose smile roused strange emotions in Burles' breast.
It was the adoring gaze of Asya that had roused Burl to this last pitch of rashness.
Months before, the Clotho spider in the hemispherical silk castle of the gruesome decorations
had killed and eaten one of the men of the tribe.
Burl and the spider's victim had been together when the spider appeared,
and the first faint gray light of morning barely silhouetted the shaggy, horrible creature as a
it leaped from the ambush behind a toadstool toward the fear-stricken pair.
Its attenuated legs were outstretched. Its mandibles gaped wide, its jaws clashed horribly,
as it formed a black blotch in mid-air against the lightning sky. Burl had fled,
screaming, when the other man was seized. Now, however, he was leading half a dozen trembling men
toward the inverted dome in which the spider dozed. Two or three of them bore spears like
Burl himself, but they bore them awkwardly and timorously. Burl himself was possessed of a strange,
fictitious courage. It was the utter recklessness of youth, coupled with the eternal masculine
desire to display prowess before a desired female. The wavering advance came to a halt. Most of the
The naked men stopped from fear, but Burl stopped to invoke his newly discovered inner self
that had furnished him with such marvelous plans.
Quite accidentally he had found that if he persistently asked himself a question, some sort
of answer came from within.
Now he gazed up from a safe distance and asked himself how he and the others were to slay
the Clotho spider.
The nest was some forty feet from the ground on the underside of a shelf of rock.
There was sheer open space beneath it, but it was firmly held to its support by long silken cables
that curled to the upper side of the rock shelf clinging to the stone.
Burle gazed, and presently an idea came to him.
He beckoned to the others to follow him, and they did so,
their knees knocking together from their fright.
At the slightest alarm they would flee, screaming in fear,
but Burl did not plan that there should be any alarm.
He led them to the rear of the singular rock formation,
up the gently sloping side and toward the precipitous edge.
He drew near the point where the rock fell away.
A long tentacle-like silk cable curled up over the edge,
of a little promontory of stone that jutted out into nothingness.
Burl began to feel oddly cold, and something of the panic of the other men communicated itself
to him.
This was one of the anchoring cables that held the spider's castle secure.
He looked and found others, six or seven in all, which performed the task of keeping
the shaggy, horrid ogre's home from falling to the ground below.
His idea did not desert him, however, and he drew back to whisper orders to his followers.
They obeyed him solely because they were afraid, and he spoke in an authoritative tone,
but they did obey, and brought a dozen heavy boulders of perhaps forty pounds weight each.
Burle grasped one of the silken cables at its end, and tore it loose from the rock for a space of perhaps two yards.
His flesh crawled as he did so, but something within him drove him on.
Then, while beads of perspiration stood out on his forehead, induced by nothing less than cold
physical fear, he tied the boulder to the cable.
The first one done, he felt emboldened, and made a second fast and a third.
One of his men stood near the edge of the rock, listening in agonized apprehension.
Burl had soon tied a heavy stone to each of the cables he saw, and as a matter of fact there
was but one of them he failed to notice.
That one had been covered by the flaking mold that took the place of grass upon the rocky
eminence.
There were left upon the promontory several of the boulders for which there was no use, but
Burl did not attempt to double the weights on the cables.
He took his followers aside and explained his plan.
in whispers.
Quaking, they agreed, in trembling, they prepared to carry it out.
One of them stationed himself beside each of the boulders, Burl at the largest.
He gave a signal and half a dozen ripping, tearing sounds broke the sullen silence of the
day.
The boulders clashed and clattered down the rocky side of the precipice, tearing, perhaps peeling
the cables from their adhesion to the stone.
They shot into open space, and jerked violently at the half-globular nest, which was wrenched from
its place by the combined impetus of the six heavy weights.
Burl had flung himself upon his face to watch what he was sure would be the death of the
spider as it fell forty feet and more, imprisoned in its heavily weighted home.
His eyes sparkled with triumph as he saw the ghastly, trophy-laden house,
swaying out from the cliff.
Then he gasped in terror.
One of the cables had not been discovered.
That single cable held the spider's castle from a fall,
though the nest had been torn from its anchorage,
and now dangled heavily on its side in mid-air.
A convulsive struggle seemed to be going on within.
Then one of the arch-like doors opened,
and the spider emerged, evidently in terror, and confused by the light of day, but still venomous
and still deadly.
It found but a single of its anchoring cables intact, that leading to the cliff-top hard by
Burl's head.
The spider sprang for this single cable, its legs grasped the slender thread eagerly,
while it began to climb rapidly up toward the cliff-top.
As with all the creatures of Burl's time, its first thought was of battle, not flight,
and it came up the thin cord with its poison fangs unsheathed, and its mandibles clashing in rage.
The shaggy hair upon its body seemed to bristle with insane ferocity,
and the horrible thin legs moved with desperate haste, as it hastened to meet and wreck vexed.
vengeance upon the cause of its sudden alarm.
Burl's followers fled, uttering shrieks of fear, and Burles storted to his feet, in the grip of a
terrible panic.
Then his hands struck one of the heavy boulders, exerting every ounce of his strength.
He pushed it over the cliff just where the cable appeared above the edge.
For the fraction of a second there was silence.
And then the indescribable.
sound of an impact against a soft body.
There was a gasping cry, and a moment later the curiously muffled clatter of the boulder
striking the earth below.
Somehow the sound suggested that the boulder had struck first upon some soft object.
A faint cry came from the bottom of the hill.
The last of Burles men was leaping to a hiding place among the mushrooms of the forest,
and had seen the sheen of shining armor just before him he cried out and waited for death but only a delicately formed wasp rose heavily into the air bearing beneath it the more and more feebly struggling body of a giant cricket
Burl had stood paralyzed, deprived of the power of movement after casting the boulder over the
cliff.
That one action had taken the last ounce of his initiative.
And if the spider had hauled itself over the rocky edge and darted toward him, slavering
its thick spittle and uttering sounds of mad fury, Burl would not even have screamed as it
seized him.
He was like a dead thing.
the oddly muffled sound of the boulder striking the ground below brought back hope of life and power
of movement.
He peered over the cliff.
The nest still dangled at the end of the single cable, still freighted with its gruesome trophies,
but on the ground below a crushed and horribly writhing form was moving in convulsions of
rage and agony.
Long hairy legs worked desperately from a body that.
that was no more than a mass of pulp flesh.
A ferocious jaw tried to clamp upon something,
and there was no other jaw to meet it.
An evil-smelling, sticky liquid exuded from the mangled, writhing thing upon the earth,
moving in terrible contortions of torment.
Presently, an Aunt drew near, and extended inquisitive antennae at the helpless monster wounded
to death.
A shrill stridulation sounded out, and three or four other foot-long ants hastened
up to wait patiently, just outside the spider's reach, until its struggles should have lessened
enough to make possible the salvage of flesh from the perhaps still-living creature for the
ant-city a mile away.
And Burrell, up on the cliff-top, danced and gesticulated in triumph.
He had killed the Clotho spider.
which had slain one of the tribesmen four months before.
Glory was his.
All the tribesmen had seen the spider living.
Now he would show them the spider dead.
He stopped his dance of triumph and walked down the hill in haughty grandeur.
He would reproach his tenet followers for fleeing from the spider,
leaving him to kill it alone.
Quite naively, Burrell assumed that it was.
his place to give orders, and that of the others to obey. True, no one had attempted to give orders
before, or to enforce their execution, but Burl had reached the eminently wholesome conclusion
that he was a wonderful person whose wishes should be respected. Burl, filled with fresh notions
of his own importance, strutted on toward the hiding-place of the tribe, growing more and more angry
with the other men for having deserted him.
He would reproach them, would probably beat them.
They would be afraid to protest,
and in the future would undoubtedly be afraid to run away.
Burl was quite convinced that running away
was something he could not tolerate in his followers.
Obscurely and conveniently in the extreme back of his mind,
he reasoned that not only did a larger number of men
present at a scene of peril increased the chances of coping with the danger, but they also
increased the chances that the victim selected by the dangerous creature would be another than
himself.
Burle's reasoning was unsophisticated, but sound, perhaps unconscious but nonetheless effective.
He grew quite furious with the deserters.
They had run away.
They had fled from a mere spider.
A shrill wine filled the air and a ten-inch ant dashed at Burl with its mandibles extended
threateningly.
Burl's path had promised to interrupt the salvaging work of the insect, engaged in scraping
shreds of flesh from the corslet of one of the smaller beetles slain the previous night.
The ant dashed at Burl like an infuriated fox-terrier, and Burl scurried away an undignified retreat.
The ant might not be dangerous.
but bites from its formic acid-poisoned mandibles were no trifles.
Burl came to the tangled thicket of mushrooms in which his tribe-folk hid.
The entrance was torturous and difficult to penetrate,
and could be blocked on occasion with stones and towed-stool pulp.
Burl made his way toward the central clearing,
and heard, as he went, the sound of weeping,
and the excited chatter of the tribe's people.
Those who had fled from the rocky cliff had returned with the news that Burl was dead,
and Sayah lay weeping beneath an overshadowing toadstool.
She was not yet the mate of Burl, but the time would come,
when all the tribe would recognize a status dimly different from the usual tribal relationship.
Burl stepped into the clearing, and straightway cuffed the first man he came upon,
then the next and the next.
There was a cry of astonishment,
and the next second instinctive fearful glances at that entrance to the hiding place.
Had Burl fled from the spider, and was it following?
Burl spoke loftily, saying that the spider was dead,
that its legs, each won the length of a man, were still,
and its fierce jaws and deadly poison fangs harmless for evermore.
Ten minutes later he was leading an incredulous, odd little group of pink-skinned people to the
spot below the cliff where the spider actually lay dead, with the ants busily at work upon its remains.
And when he went back to the hiding-place, he donned again his great cloak that was made from the wing
of a magnificent moth, slain by the flames of the purple hills, and he sat down in splendor
upon a crumbling-toed stool, to feast upon the glances of admiration and awe that were sent
toward him. Only Saya held back shyly until he motioned for her to draw near, when she seated
herself at his feet, and gazed up at him with unutterable adoration in her eyes.
But while Burl basked in the radiance of the tribe's admiration, danger was drawing near
them all. For many months there had been strange red mushrooms, growing slowly here and there
all over the earth they knew. The tribes folk had speculated about them, but forbode tasting
them because they were strange, and strange things were usually dangerous and often fatal.
Now those red growths had ripened and grown ready to emit their spores. Their rounded tops had
grown fat, and the tough skin grew taut as if a strange pressure were being applied from within.
And today, while Burl luxuriated in his position of feared and admired great man of his tribe,
at a spot a long distance away upon a hilltop, one of the red mushrooms burst.
The spores inside the taut, tough skin, shot all about as if scattered by an explosion,
and made a little cloud of reddish impalpable dust,
which hung in the air and moved slowly with a sluggish breeze.
A. B. droned into the thin red cloud of dust,
lazily and heavily flying back toward the hive,
but barely had she entered the tinted atmosphere,
when her movements became awkward and convulsive, effortful and excited.
She trembled and twisted in mid-air in a peculiar fashion,
then dropped to the earth while her abdomen moved violently. Bees, like almost all insects,
breathe through spiracles on the undersides of their abdomens. This bee had breathed in
some of the red mushroom's spores. She thrashed about desperately upon the toad stools on which she
had fallen, struggling for breath, for life. After a long time, she was still.
The cloud of red mushroom spores had strangled or poisoned her, and everywhere the red fringe
grew, such explosions were taking place one by one, and wherever the red cloud hung in the air,
creatures were breathing them in and dying in convulsions of strangulation.
End of Chapter 1
Chapter 2 of the Red Dust by Murray Lister.
This Libra Box recording is.
in the public domain.
Chapter 2.
The journey.
Darkness
The soft-blanketing night of the age of fungoids had fallen over all the earth,
and there was blackness everywhere that was not good to have.
Here and there, however, dim bluish lights glowed near the ground.
There, an intermittent glow showed that a firefly had wondered far from the rivers and swamps,
above which most of his kind now congregated.
Now a faintly luminous ball of fire
drifted above the steaming moisture sodden earth.
It was a will-of-the-wisp grown to a yard in diameter.
From the low-hanging banks of clouds
that hung perpetually overhead,
large warm raindrops fell ceaselessly.
A drop, a pause, and then another drop,
added to the already dank moisture of the ground below.
the world of fungus growths flourished on just such dampness and humidity it seemed as if the toadstools and mushrooms could be heard swelling and growing large in the darkness rustlings and stealthy movements sounded furtively through the night
and from above the heavy throb of mighty night wings was continuous the tribe was hidden in the midst of a tangled copse of toadstools too thickly interwoven
for the larger insects to penetrate.
Only the little midgets hid in its recesses during the night-time, and the smaller moths during
the day.
About and among the bases of the toad-stools, however, where their spongy stalks rose from
the humid earth, small beetles roamed, singing cheerfully to themselves in deep bass notes.
They were small and round, some six or eight inches long, and their bellies were pale gray.
And as they went about they emitted sounds which would have been chirps had they been
other than low as the lowest tone of a harp.
They were truffle beetles, in search of the dainty tidbits on which Epicures once had feasted.
Some strange sense seemed to tell them when one of half a dozen varieties of truffle was
beneath them, and they paused in their wondering to dig a tunnel straight down.
A foot, two feet or two yards, all was the same to them.
In time they would come upon the morsel they sought, and would remain at the bottom of their temporary home until it was consumed.
Then another period of wandering, singing their cheerful song, until another likely spot was reached, and another tunnel begun.
In a tiny open space in the center of the toadstool thicket, the tribe-folk slept with the ten.
folk slept with the deep notes of the truffle beetles in their ears.
A new danger had come to them, but they had passed it on to Burrell with a new and childlike
confidence, and considered the matter settled.
They slept, while beneath a glowing mushroom at one side of the clearing.
Burl struggled with his new problem.
He squatted upon the ground in the dim radiance of the shining toadstool, his moth-wing cloak
wrapped about him, his spear in his hand, and his twin golden plumes of the moth antenna
bound to his forehead, but his face was downcast as a child's.
The red mushrooms had begun to burst.
Only that day one of the women seeking edible fungus for the tribal larder had seen the fat
distended globule of the red mushroom.
Its skin was stretched, taut, and glistened in the last.
light.
The woman paid little or no attention to the red growth.
Her ears were attuned to catch sounds that would warn her of danger while her eyes searched
for tidbits that would make a meal for the tribe, and, more particularly, for her small
son, left behind at the hiding-place.
A ripping noise made her start up alert on the instant.
The red envelope of the mushroom had split across the top.
and the thick cloud of a brownish-red dust was spurting in every direction.
It formed a pyramidal cloud some thirty feet in height,
which enlarged and grew thinner with minor eddies within itself.
A little yellow butterfly with wings barely a yard from tip to tip
flap lazily above the mushroom-covered plain.
Its wings beat the air with strokes that seemed like playful taps upon a friendly element.
The butterfly was literally intoxicated with the sheer joy of living.
It had emerged from its cocoon barely two hours before, and was making its maiden flight
above the strange and wonderful world.
It fluttered carelessly into the red-brown cloud of mushroom spores.
The woman was watching the slowly changing form of the spore mist.
She saw the butterfly enter the brownish dust, and then,
her eyes became greedy. There was something the matter with the butterfly. Its wings no longer moved
lazily and gently. They struck out in frenzied hysterical blows that were erratic and wild.
The little yellow creature no longer floated lightly and easily, but dashed here and there,
wildly and without purpose, seeming to be in its death throes. It crashed helplessly against the ground
and lay there moving feebly.
The woman hurried forward.
The wings would be new fabric with which to adorn herself,
and the fragile legs of the butterfly contained choice meat.
She entered the dust cloud.
A stream of intolerable fire,
though the woman had never seen or known of fire,
burned her nostrils and seared her lungs.
She gasped in pain, and the agony was redoubled.
Her eyes smarted as if burning from their sockets and tears blinded her.
The woman instinctively turned about to flee, but before she had gone a dozen yards,
blinded as she was, she stumbled and fell to the ground.
She lay there gasping and uttering moans of pain,
until one of the men of the tribe who had been engaged in foraging nearby saw her
and tried to find out what had injured her.
She could not speak, and he was about to leave.
leave her and tell the other tribe-folk about her, when he heard the clicking of an ant's
limbs.
And rather than have the aunt pick her to pieces bit by bit and leave his curiosity ungratified,
the man put her across his shoulders and bore her back to the hiding-place of the tribe.
It was the tale the woman had told when she partly recovered that caused Burl to sit alone
all that night beneath the shining-toed stool in the little clearing.
puzzling his just-awakened brain to know what to do.
The year before there had been no red mushrooms.
They had appeared only recently, but Burl dimly remembered that one day,
a long time before, there had been a strange breeze which blew for three days and nights,
and that during the time of its blowing, all the tribe had been sick and had wept continually.
Burl had not yet reached the point of mental development when he could associate that breeze with a storm at a distance, or reasoned that the spores of the red mushrooms, had been borne upon the wind to the present resting places of the deadly fungus growths.
Still less could he decide that the breeze had not been deadly only because it was lightly laden with the fatal dust.
He knew simply that unknown red mushrooms had appeared.
that they were everywhere about and that they would burst and that to breathe the red dust they gave out was grievous sickness or death
the tribe slept while the bravely attired figure of burl squatted under the glowing disc of the luminous mushroom his face a picture of querulous perplexity and his heart full of sadness
He had consulted his strange inner self, and no plan had come to him.
He knew the red mushrooms were all about.
They would fill the air with their poison.
He struggled with his problem while his people slumbered,
and the woman who had breathed the mushroom dust sobbed softly in her troubled sleep.
Presently a figure stirred on the farther side of the clearing.
Sayah woke and raised her head.
she saw burl crouching by the shining toadstool his gay attire draggled and unnoticed she watched him for a little and the desolation of his pose awoke her pity
she rose and went to his side taking his hand between her two while she spoke his name softly when he turned and looked at her confusion smote her but the misery in his face brought confidence again
burl's sorrow was inarticulate he could not explain this new responsibility for his people that had come to him but he was comforted by her presence and she sat down beside him
after a long time she slept with her head resting against his side but he continued to question himself continued to demand and escape for his people from the suffering and danger he saw ahead
with the day an answer came when burl had been carried down the river on his fungus raft and had landed in the country of the army ants he had seen great forests of edible mushrooms
and had said to himself that he would bring saya to that place he remembered now that the red mushrooms were there also but the idea of a journey remained
the hunting ground of his tribe had been free of the red fungoids until recently if he traveled far enough he would come to a place where there were still no red-toed-stools then came the decision
he would lead his tribe to a far country he spoke with stern authority when the tribesmen woke talking in few words and in a loud voice holding up his spear as he gave his orders
the timid pink-skinned people obeyed him meekly they had seen the body of the clotho spider he had slain and he had thrown down before them the gray bulk of a labyrinth spider he had thrust through with his spear
now he was to take them through unknown dangers to an unknown haven but they feared to displease him they made light loads of their mushrooms and such meatstuffs as they had
and parceled out what little fabric they still possessed three men bore spears in addition to burl's long shaft and he had persuaded the other three to carry clubs showing them how the weapon should be wielded
the indefinitely brighter spot in the cloud banks above that meant the shining sun had barely gone a quarter of the way across the sky when the trembling band of timid creatures made their way from their hiding-place and set out about a-up
upon their journey. For their course, Burl depended entirely upon chance. He avoided the direction
of the river, however, and the path along which he had returned to his people. He knew the
red bushrooms grew there. Purely by accident, he set his march toward the west, and walked
cautiously on, his tribesfolk following him fearfully. Burl walked ahead, his spear held ready. He
He made a figure at once brave and pathetic, venturing forth in a world of monstrous ferocity
and incredible malignance, armed only with a horny spear, borrowed from a dead insect.
His velvety cloak, made from a moss wing, hung about his figure in graceful foals, however,
and twin golden plumes knotted jauntily from his forehead.
behind him the nearly naked people followed reluctantly here a woman with the baby in her arms their children of nine or ten unable to resist the instinct to play even in the presence of the manifold dangers of the march
they ate hungrily of the lumps of mushroom they had been ordered to carry then a long-legged boy his eyes roving anxiously about in search of danger followed
thirty thousand years of flight from every peril had deeply submerged the competitive nature of humanity after the boy came two men one with a short spear and the other with a club each with a huge mass of edible mushroom under his free
arm, and both badly frightened at the idea of fleeting from dangers they knew and feared,
to dangers they did not know, and consequently feared much more.
So was the caravan spread out.
It made its way across the country with many deviations from a fixed line, and with many
halts and pauses.
Once a shrill stridulation filled all the air before them, a monster sound compounded of in
innumerable clickings and high-pitched cries.
They came to the tip of an eminence and saw a great space of ground, covered with tiny black
bodies locked in combat.
For quite half a mile in either direction, the earth was black with ants, snapping and
biting at each other, locked in vice-like embraces.
Each combatant couple trampled under the feet of the contending armies, with no thought
of surrender or quarter.
The sound of the clashing of fierce jaws upon horny armor, the cries of the maimed,
and strange sounds made by the dying, and above all, the whining battle cry of each of the
fighting hordes made a sustained uproar that was almost deafening.
From either side of the battleground a pathway led back to separate ant cities, a pathway
marked by the hurrying groups of reinforcements rushing to the fight.
Tiny as the ants were, for once no lumbering beetles swaggered insolently in their path,
nor did the hunting spiders mark them out for prey.
Only little creatures, smaller than the combatants themselves, made use of the insect
war for purposes of their own.
These were little gray ants, barely more than four inches long, who scurried about in and among
the fighting creatures with marvelous dexterity, carrying off piecemeal, the bodies of the dead,
and slaying the wounded for the same fate. They hung about the edges of the battle, and invaded
the abandoned areas when the tide of battle shifted insect guerrillas, fighting for their own
hands careless of the origin of the quarrel, espousing no cause, simply salvaging the dead and
the living debris of the combat.
Burl and his little group of followers had to make a wide detour to avoid the battle itself,
and the passage between bodies of reinforcements hurrying to the scene of strife was a matter
of some difficulty.
The ants running rapidly toward the battlefield were hugely excited.
Their antennae waved wildly, and the infrequent wounded one, limping back toward the city,
was instantly and repeatedly challenged.
by the advancing insects. They crossed their antenna with his, and required thorough evidence that
he was of the proper city, before allowing him to proceed. Once they arrived at the battlefield,
they flung themselves into the fray, becoming lost and indistinguishable in the tide of straining,
fighting black bodies. Men in such a battle, without distinguishing marks or battle-cries,
would have fought among themselves as often as against their foes,
but the ants had a much simpler method of identification.
Each ant city possesses its individual odor,
a variant on the scent of pharmac acid,
and each individual of that city is recognized in his world,
quite simply and surely by the way he smells.
The little tribe of human beings passed precariously behind a group of a hundred excited
insect warriors, and before the following group of forty equally excited black insects.
Burle hurried on with his following, putting many miles of perilous territory behind before
nightfall.
Many times during the day they saw the sudden billowing of a red-brown dust-cloud from
the earth, and more than once they came upon the empty skin and drooping stalk of one of the
red mushrooms. And more often still, they came upon the mushrooms themselves, grown fat and
taut, prepared to send their deadly spores into the air when the pressure from within became
more than the leathery skin could stand. That night the tribe hid among the bases of giant
puff-balls, which at a touch shot out a puff of white powder resembling smoke. The powder was
precisely the same in nature as that cast out by the red mushrooms, but its effects were
marvelously and mercifully different.
It was innocuous.
Burl slept soundly this night, having been two days and a night without rest.
But the remainder of his tribe and even Sayah were fearful and afraid, listening ceaselessly
all through the dark hours, for the menacing sound of creatures coming to prey upon
them.
And so for a week the march kept on.
Burl would not allow his tribe to stop to forage for food.
The red mushrooms were all about.
Once one of the little children was caught in a whirling eddy red dust, and its mother rushed
into the deadly stuff to seize it and bring it out.
Then the tribe had to hide for three days, while the two of them recovered from the debilitating
poison. Once, too, they found a half-acre patch of the giant cabbages, there were six of them
full-grown, and a dozen are more smaller ones, and Burl took two men and speared two of the huge
twelve-foot slugs that fed upon the leaves. When the tribe passed on, it was gorged on the fat
meat of the slugs, and there was much soft fur, so that all the tribes folk wore loincloths of
the yellow stuff. There were perils, too, in the journey. On the fourth day of the tribes
traveling, Burrow froze suddenly into stillness. One of the hairy tarantulas, a trapdoor
spider with a black belly, had fallen upon a scaborous beetle, and was devouring it only
a hundred yards ahead. The tribe-folk, trembling, went back for half a mile or more in panic-stricken
silence, and refused to advance until he had led them a detour of two or three miles to one
side of the dangerous spot.
Long, fear-ridden marches through perilous countries unknown to them, through the golden
aisles of yellow mushroom forests, over the flaking surfaces of plains covered with many-colored
rusts and moles, pauses beside turbid pools whose waters were concealed by thick layers of greens
slime, and other evil-smelling ponds which foamed and bubbled slowly, which were covered with
pasty yeasts that rose in strange forms of discolored foam. Fleeting glimpses they had of the
glistening spokes of symmetrical spider's webs, whose least thread it would have been beyond the
power of the strongest of the tribe to break. They passed through a forest of puff-balls,
which boomed when touched and shot a puff of vapor from their open mouths.
Once they saw a long and sinuous insect that fled before them and disappeared into a burrow in the ground,
running with incredible speed upon legs of uncountable number.
It was a centipede all of thirty feet in length,
and when they crossed the path that it followed,
a horrible stench came to their nostrils so that they hurried on.
Long escape from unguessed dangers brought boldness of a sort to the pink-skinned men, and they would have rested.
They went to Burl with their complaint, and he simply pointed with his hands behind them.
There were three little clouds of brownish vapor in the air where they could see along the road they had traversed.
To the right of them a dust-cloud was just settling, and to the left another rose as they looked.
A new trick of the deadly dust became apparent now.
Toward the end of a day in which they had traveled a long distance,
one of the little children ran a little to the left of the route its elders were following.
The earth had taken on a brownish hue,
and the child stirred up the surface mold with its feet.
The brownish dust that had settled there was raised again,
and the child ran crying and choking to its mother,
its lungs burning as with fire and its eyes like hot coals.
Another day would pass before the child could walk.
In a strange country, knowing nothing of the dangers that might assail the tribe
while waiting for the child to recover, Burl looked about for a hiding place.
Far over to the right, a low cliff, perhaps twenty or thirty feet high,
showed sides of crumbling yellow clay, and from where Burl stood,
he could see the dark openings of burrows scattered here and there upon its face.
He watched for a time to see if any bee or wasp inhabited them,
knowing that many kinds of both insects dig burrows for their young,
and do not occupy them themselves.
No dark forms appeared, however, and he led his people toward the openings.
The appearance of the holes confirmed his surmise.
They had been dug months before by my mind.
mining bees and the entrances were weathered and worn.
The tribefolk made their way into the three-foot tunnels and hid themselves, seizing the opportunity
to gorge themselves upon the food they carried.
Burle stationed himself near the outer end of one of the little caves to watch for signs
of danger.
While waiting, he poked cautiously with his spear at a little pile of white and sticky parchment-like
stuff he saw.
within the mouth of the tunnel. Instantly movement became visible. Fifty, sixty, or a hundred
tiny creatures, no more than half an inch in length, tumbled pell-mell from the dirty white heap.
Awkward legs, tiny greenish black bodies and bristles protruding in every direction,
made them strange to look upon. They had tumbled from the whitish heap, and now they made haste to
hide themselves in it again, moving slowly and clumsily with immense effort and laborious
contortions of their bodies.
Burl had never seen any insect progress in such a slow and ineffective fashion before.
He drew one little insect back with the point of his spear and examined it from a safe
distance.
Tiny jaws before the head met like twin sickles, and the whole body was shaped like a rounded diamond
lozenge.
Burl knew that no insect of such small size could be dangerous, and leaned over, then took one
creature in his hand.
It wriggled frantically and slipped from his fingers, dropping upon the soft yellow caterpillar
fur he had about his middle.
Instantly, as if it were a conjuring trick, the little insect vanished.
And Burl searched for a matter of minutes before he found it hidden deep in the long, soft,
of the fur, resting motionless and evidently at ease.
It was a bee-louse, the first larval form of a beetle whose horny armor could be seen
in fragments for yards before the clay cliffside.
Hidden in the openings of the bees' tunnel, it waited until the bee grubs farther back in their
separate cells should complete their changes of form and emerge into the open air, but
passing over the cluster of tiny creatures in the doorway.
As the bees pass, the little bee lice would clamber an eager haste up their hairy legs
and come to rest in the fur above their thoraxes.
Then weeks later, when the bees in turn made other cells and stocked them with honey for the eggs they would lay,
the tiny creatures would slip from their resting places and be left behind in the fully-provisioned cell,
to eat not only the honey the bee had so laboriously acquired but the very grub hatched from the bee's egg burl had no difficulty in detaching the small insect and chasing it away but in doing so discovered three more that had hidden themselves in his furry garment
no doubt thinking it the coat of their natural though unwilling hosts he plucked them away and discovered more and more his garment was the hiding-place for dozens of the creatures
disgusted and annoyed he went out of the cavern to a spot some distance away where he took off his robe and pounded it with the flat side of its spear to dislodge the visitors they dropped out one by one reluctantly and finally and finally
Finally the garment was clean of them.
Then Burl heard a shout from the direction of the mining bee caves, and hastened toward the sound.
It was then drawing toward the time of darkness, but one of the tribesmen had ventured out and
found no less than three of the great imperial mushrooms.
Of the three one had been attacked by a parasitic purple mold, but the gorgeous yellow of
the other two was undimmed.
the people were soon feasting upon the firm flesh.
Burl felt a little pang of jealousy, though he joined in the consumption of the find as readily
as the others, and presently drew a little to one side.
He cast his eyes across the country, level, and unbroken as far as the eye could see.
The small clay cliff was the only inequality visible, and its height cut off all vision on one side,
but the view toward the horizon was unobstructed on three sides, and here and there the black
speck of a monster bee could be seen, droning homeward to its high barborrow, and sometimes
the slender form of a wasp passed overhead, its transparent wings invisible from the rapidity
of their vibrations.
These flew high in the air, but lower down, barely skimming the tops of the many colored
mushrooms and toadstools, fluttering lightly above the swollen fungoids, and touching their dainty
probosciscuses to unspeakable things in default of the fragrant flowers that were normal
food for their races, lower down, flew the multitudes of butterflies the age of mushrooms
had produced.
White and yellow and red and brown, pink and blue and purple and green, every shade and every
color, every size and almost every shape.
They flitted gaily in the air.
There was some so tiny that they would barely have shaded Burl's face, and some beneath whose
slender bodies he could have hidden himself.
They flew in a riot of colors and tents above a world of foul mushroom growths and turgid
slime-covered ponds.
Burl, temporarily out of the limelight, because of the discovery of a store of food,
by another member of the tribe, be thought himself of an idea.
Soon night would come on.
The cloud bank would turn red in the west, and then darkness would lean downward from the sky.
With the coming of that time, these creatures of the day would seek hiding places, and the air
would be given over to the furry moths that flew by night.
He, Burl, would mark the spot where one of the larger creatures alighted and would creep
up upon it with his spear held fast.
His wide blue eyes brightened at the thought, and he sat himself down to watch.
After a long time the soft, down-reaching fingers of the night touched the shaded aisles of
the mushroom forests, and a gentle haze arose above the golden glades.
One by one the gorgeous flyers of the daytime dipped down and furled their painted wings.
The overhanging clouds became darker, finally black, and the slow, deliberate rainfall that lasted
all through the night began.
Burl rose and crept away into the darkness, his spear held in readiness.
Through the black night, beneath deeper blacknesses which were the dark undersides of huge
toadstools, creeping silently, with every sense alert for sign of danger or for hope of giant prey,
Burl made his slow advance.
A glorious butterfly of purple and yellow markings,
whose wings spread out for three yards on either side of its delicately formed body,
had hidden itself barely two hundred yards away.
Burl could imagine it now,
preening its slender limbs and combing from its long and slender probosciscus,
any trace of the delectable foodstuffs on which it had fed during the day.
burl moved slowly and cautiously forward all eyes and ears he heard an indescribable sound in a thicket a little to his left and shifted his course
the sound was the faint whistling of air through the breathing holes along an insect's abdomen then came the delicate rustling of filmy wings being stretched and closed again and the movement of sharply barbed feet upon the soft earth
burl moved in breathless silence holding his spear before him in readiness to plunge it into the gigantic butterfly's soft body
The mushrooms here were grown thickly together, so there was no room for Burl's body to pass
between their stalks, and the rounded heads were deformed and misshapen from their
crowdings.
Burl spent precious moments in trying to force a silent passage, but had to own himself
beaten.
Then he clambered up upon the spongy mass of mushroom heads, trusting to luck that they would
sustain his weight.
The blackness was in.
intense, so that even the forms of objects before him were lost in obscurity.
He moved forward for some ten yards, however, walking gingerly over his precarious foothold.
Then he felt rather than saw the opening before him.
A body moved below him.
Burl raised his spear and with a yell plunged down on the back of the moving thing,
thrusting his spear with all the force he could command.
He landed on a shifting form, but his yell of triumph turned to a scream of terror.
This was not the yielding body of a slender butterfly that he had come upon, nor had his spear
penetrated the creature's soft flesh.
He had fallen upon the shining back of one of those huge meat-eating beetles, and his spear
had slid across the horny armor and then stuck fast.
He pierced only the leathery tissue between the insect's head and thorax.
Burl's terror was pitiable at the realization, but as nothing to the ultimate panic which possessed
him when the creature beneath him uttered a grunt of fright and pain and, spreading its stiff wing-cases
wide, shot upward in a crazy, panic-stricken rocket-like flight toward the sky.
End of Chapter 2.
Chapter 3 of the Red Dust by Murray Lister.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 3. The Sexton Beatles
Burl fell head foremost upon the spongy top of a huge toadstool that split with the impact
and let him through to the ground beneath, powdering him with its fine spores.
He came to rest with his naked shoulder halfway through the yielding flesh of a mushroom stalk,
and lay there for a second, catching his breath to scream again.
Then he heard the whining buzz of his attempted prey.
There was something wrong with the beetle.
Burl Spear had struck it in an awkward spot, and it was rocketing upward in erratic flight
that ended in a crash two or three hundred yards away.
Earl sprang up in an instant.
Perhaps, despite his mistake, he had slain this infinitely more worthy victim.
He rushed toward the spot where it had fallen.
His wide blue eyes pierced the darkness well enough to enable him to shear off from masses
of toad stools, but he could distinguish no details, nothing but forms.
He heard the beetle floundering upon the ground, then heard it mount again into
the air more clumsily than before. Its wing beats no longer kept up a sustained note. They
thrashed the air irregularly and wildly. The flight was zigzag and uncertain, and though longer
than the first had been, it ended similarly in a heavy fall. Another period of floundering,
and the beetle took to the air again just before Burl arrived at the spot. It was obviously
seriously hurt.
And Burl forgot the dangers of the night in his absorption in the chase.
He darted after his prey, flea-footed and agile, taking chances that in cold blood he would
never have thought of.
Twice in the pain-racked struggles of the monster beetle, he arrived at the spot where the gigantic
insect flung itself about madly, insanely, fighting it knew not what, striking out with colossal
wings and legs, dazed and drunk with agony, and each time it managed to get a loft in flight
that was weaker and more purposeless.
Crazy, fleeing from the torturing spear that pierced its very vitals, the beetle blundered
here and there, floundering among the mushroom thickets and spasms that were constantly more
prolonged and more agonized, but nevertheless, flying heavily, lurching drunkenly, managing
to graze the tops of the toadstools in one more despairing tormented flight.
Anne Burrow followed, aflame with the fire of the chase,
arriving at the scene of each successive, panic-stricken struggle on the ground
just after the beetle had taken flight again,
but constantly more closely on the heels of the weakening monster.
At last he came up panting and found the giant lying,
upon the earth, moving feebly, apparently unable to rise.
How far he was from the tribe, Burl did not know, nor did the question occur to him at
the moment.
He waited for the beetle to be still, trembling with excitement and eagerness.
The struggles of the huge form grew more feeble and at last ceased.
Burl moved forward and grasped his spear.
He wrenched at it to thrust again.
In an instant the beetle had roused itself, and was exerting its last atom of strength,
galvanized into action by the agony caused by Burrell's seizure of the spear.
A great wing cover knocked Burl twenty feet, and flung him against the base of a mushroom,
where he lay half stunned.
But then a strangely pungent scent came to his nostrils.
The scent of the red mushrooms.
He staggered to his feet and fled, while behind him the gigantic beetle crashed and floundered.
Burl heard a tearing and ripping sound.
The insect had torn the covering of one of the red mushrooms, tightly packed with the fatal red dust.
At the noise, Burl's speed was doubled, but he could still hear the frantic struggles of the dying beetle grow to a very crescendo of desperation.
The creature broke free and managed to rise in a final flight, fighting for breath and life,
weakened and tortured by the spear and the horrible spores of the red mushrooms.
Then it crashed suddenly to the earth and was still.
The red dust had killed it.
In time to come, Burl might learn to use the red dust as poison gas had been used by his ancestors of 30.
thousand years before, but now he was frightened and alone, lost from his tribe, and with
no faintest notion of how to find them.
He crouched beneath a huge toadstool and waited for dawn, listening with terrified
apprehension for the ripping sound that would mean the bursting of another of the red
mushrooms.
Only the wing beats of night-flying creatures came to his ears, however, and the dissoning
The discordant noises of the four-foot truffle beetles as they roamed the aisles of the mushroom forests,
seeking the places beneath which their instinct told them, Fungoardinthes awaited the courageous
miner.
The eternal dripping of the raindrops, falling at long intervals from the overhanging clouds,
formed a soft obligato to the whole.
Burl listened, knowing there were red-told stools all about, but not once, during
During the hold of the long dark hours, did the rending noise tell of a bursting fungus casting
loose its freight of deadly dust upon the air.
Only when day came again, and the chill dampness of the night was succeeded by the steaming
humidity of the morning did a tall pyramid of brownish red stuff leap suddenly into the air from
a ripped mushroom covering.
Then Burl stood up and looked around.
and there, all over the whole countryside, slowly and at intervals, the cones of fatal red sprang
into the air. Had Burl lived thirty thousand years earlier, he might have likened the effect
to that of shells bursting from a leisurely bombardment, but as it was he saw in them only
fresh and inexorable dangers, added to an already peril-ridden existence.
A hundred yards from where he had hidden during the night the body of his victim lay, crumpled
up and limp.
Burl approached, speculatively.
He had come even before the ants appeared to take their toll of the carcass, and not even a buzzing
flesh-fly had placed its maggots on the unresisting form.
The long, whip-like antenna lay upon the carpet of mold and rust, and the fiercely-toothed
legs were drawn close against the body. The many faceted eyes stared unseeingly, and the
stiff and horny wing cases were rent and torn. When Burl went to the other side of the dead
beetle, he saw something that filled him with elation. His spear had been held between his body
and the beetles during that mad flight, and at the final crash, when Burl shot away from the fear
crazed insect, the weight of his body had forced the spear-point between the joints of the
corselet and the neck.
Even if the red dust had not finished the creature, the spear-wound in time would have ended
its life.
Burl was thrilled once more by his superlative greatness, and conveniently forgot that it was the red
dust that had actually administered the coup de grace.
It was so much more pleasant to look upon himself as.
the mighty slayer, that he hacked off one of the barbed-edged limbs to carry back to his tribe
and evidence of his feet. He took the long antenna, too, as further proof.
Then he remembered that he did not know where his tribe was to be found. He had no faintest
idea of the direction in which the beetle had flown. As a matter of fact, the course of the
beetle had been in turn directed toward every point of the compass, and there was
no possible way of telling the relation of its final landing place to the point from which it
had started. Burl wrestled with his problem for an hour and then gave up in disgust.
He set off at random with the leg of the huge insect flung over his shoulder, and the long
antenna clasped in his hand with his spear. He turned to look at his victim of the night before,
just before plunging into the nearby mushroom forest, and saw that it was already the center
of a mass of tiny black bodies, pulling and hacking at the tough armor, and carving out great
lumps of the succulent flesh to be carried to the nearby Ant City.
In the teeming life of the insect world, death is an opportunity for the survivors.
There is a strangely tense and fearful competition for the bodies of the human beings of the
the slain.
There had been barely an hour of daylight in which the ants might seek for Provinder, yet,
in that little time the freshly killed beetle had been found and was being skillfully and carefully
exploited.
When the body of one of the larger insects fell to the ground, there was a mighty rush, a fierce
race among all the tribes of scavengers to see who should be first.
the ants had come upon the scene, and were inquisitively exploring the carcass long before
even the flesh-flies had arrived, who dropped their living maggots upon the creature.
The blue bottles came still later to daub their masses of white eggs about the delicate membranes
of the eye, and while all the preceding scavengers were at work, furtive beetles and tiny
insects burrowed below the reeking body to attack the highly scented flesh from a fresh angle.
Each working independently of the others, they commonly appeared in the order of the
delicacy of the scents which could lead them to a source of food, though accident could and
sometimes did, afford one group of workers in putrescence and advantage over the others.
Thus, sometimes a blue bottle anticipated even the eager ants, and again the very flesh-flies
dropped their squirming offspring upon a limp farm that was already being undermined by white-bellied
things working in the darkness below the body.
Burl grimaced at the busy ants and buzzing flies, and disappeared into the mushroom forest.
Here for a long time he moved cautiously and silently through the aisle,
of tangled stalks and the spongy round heads of the fungoids.
Now and then he saw one of the red toad-stools, and made a wide detour around it.
Twice they burst within his sight, circumscribed as his vision was by the toad-stools
among which he was traveling.
Each time he ran hastily to put as much distance as possible between himself and the deadly
red dust.
He traveled for an hour of.
more looking constantly for familiar landmarks that might guide him to his tribe.
He knew that if he came upon any place he had seen while with his tribe, he could follow
the path they had traveled, and in time rejoined them.
For many hours he went on alert for signs of danger.
He was quite ignorant of the fact that there were such things as points of the compass, and
though he had a distinct notion that he was not moving in a straight line,
he did not realize that he was actually moving in a colossal half-circle.
After walking steadily for nearly four hours, he was no more than three miles in a direct line
from his starting point. As it happened, his uncertainty of direction was fortunate.
The night before the tribe had been feeding happily upon one of the immense edible
mushrooms when they heard burles abruptly change in cry.
It had begun as a shout of triumph and ended as a scream of fear.
Then they heard hurried wing beats as a creature rose into the air in a scurry of desperation.
The throbbing of huge wings ended in a heavy fall, followed by another flight.
Velvety darkness masked the sky and the tribesmen could only stare off into the blackness
where their leader had vanished and began to tremble.
wondering what they should do in a strange country with no bold chief to guide them.
He was the first man to whom the tribe had ever offered allegiance,
but their submission had been all the more complete for that fact,
and his loss was the more appalling.
Burl had mistaken their lack of timidity.
He had thought it independence and indifference to him.
As a matter of fact, it was security because the tribe felt
safe under his tutelage. Now that he had vanished, and in a fashion that seemed to mean his
death, their old fears returned to them reinforced by the strangeness of their surroundings.
They huddled together and whispered their fright to one another, listening the while in panic-stricken
apprehension for signs of danger. The tribesmen visualized burl, caught in fiercely toothed limbs,
being rent and torn in mid-air by horny, insatiable jaws,
his blood falling in great spurts toward the earth below.
They caught a faint, reedy cry, and shuddered, pressing closer together.
And so, through the long night, they waited in trembling silence.
Had a hunting spider appeared among them,
they would not have lifted a hand to defend themselves,
but would have fled despairingly, would probably have scattered and lost touch with one another,
and spent the remainder of their lives as solitary fugitives,
snatching fear-ridden rest in strange hiding places.
But day came again, and they looked into each other's eyes,
reading in each the self-same panic and fear.
Sayah was probably the most pitiful of all the group.
Burl was to have been her mate.
and her face was white and drawn beyond that of any of the rest of the tribe-folk with the day they did not move but remained clustered about the huge mushroom on which they had been feeding the night before
they spoke in hushed and fearful tones huddled together searching all the horizon for insect enemies saya would not eat but sat still staring before her in unseeing indifference
Burl was dead.
A hundred yards from where they crouched, a red mushroom glistened in the pale light of the new day.
Its tough skin was taut and bulging, resisting the pressure of the spores within.
But slowly, as the morning wore on, some of the moisture that had kept the skin soft and flaccid during the night evaporated.
The skin had a strong tendency to contract like green leather.
when drying.
The spores within it strove to expand.
The opposing forces produced a tension that grew greater and greater,
as more and more of the moisture was absorbed by the air.
At last the skin could hold no longer.
With a ripping sound that could be heard for hundreds of feet,
the tough wrapping split and tore across its top,
and with a hollow booming noise,
the compressed mass of deadly spores rushed into the air, making a pyramidal cloud of reddish-brown dust some sixty feet in height.
The tribesmen quivered at the noise and faced the dust cloud for a fleeting instant,
then ran pell-mell to escape the slowly moving tide of death as the almost imperceptible breeze wafted it slowly toward them.
Men and women, boys and girls, they fled in a mad rush from the deadly stuff, not pausing
to see that even as it advanced, it settled slowly to the ground, nor stopping to observe
its path that they might step aside and let it go safely by.
Sayah fled with the rest, but without their extreme panic.
She fled because the others had done so, and ran more carelessly, struggling with a half-formed
idea that it did not particularly matter whether she were caught or not.
She fell slightly behind the others without being noticed.
Then, quite abruptly, a stone turned under her foot, and she fell headlong, striking her head
violently against a second stone.
Then she lay quite still, while the red cloud billowed slowly toward her, drifting gently
in the faint, hardly perceptible breeze.
it drew nearer and nearer settling slowly but still a huge and menacing mass of deadly dust it gradually flattened out too so that though it had been a rounded cone at first
it flowed over the minor inequalities of the ground as a huge and tenuous leech might have crawled sucking from all breathing creatures the life they had within them
a hundred and fifty yards away a hundred yards away then only fifty yards away from where sail lay unconscious on the earth
eddies within the moving mass could be seen and the edges took on a striated appearance telling of the curling of the dust wreaths in the larger mass of deadly powder
the deliberate advance kept on seemingly almost purposeful it would have seemed possible to draw from the unhurried menacing movement of the poisonous stuff that some maligned intelligence was concealed in it that it was in fact a living creature
But when the misty edges of the cloud were no more than twenty-five yards from Sayya's
prostrate body, a breeze from one side sprang up.
A vagrant, fitful little breeze that first halted the red cloud and threw it into confusion,
and then drove it to one side, so that it passed Sayya without harming her, though a
single-trailing wisp of dark red mist floated very close to her.
Then, for a time, Sayelae still indeed, only her breast rising and falling gently with faint
irregular breaths.
Her head had struck a sharp-edged stone in her fall, and a tiny pool of sticky red had gathered
from the wound.
Perhaps thirty feet from where she lay, three small toad-stools stood in a little clump, their
bases so close together that they seemed but one.
From between two of them, however, just where they parted, twin tufts of reddish threads
appeared, twinkling back and forth and in and out.
As if they had been given some reassuring sign, two slender antenna followed, then bulging
eyes and then a small black body which had bright red-skeloped markings upon the wing
cases.
It was a tiny beetle, no more than eight inches across, a burying-dye-basket.
beetle. It drew near Sayas' body and clambered upon her, explored the ground by her side, moving
all the time in feverish haste, and at last, dived into the ground beneath her shoulder, casting back
a little shower of hastily dug earth as it disappeared. Ten minutes later another similar insect
appeared, and upon the heels of the second a third. Each of them made the same hasty examination,
and each dived under the still form.
Presently the earth seemed to billow at a spot along Sayaside,
then at another.
Perhaps ten minutes after the arrival of a third beetle,
a little rampart had reared itself all about Sayas' body
precisely following the outline of her form.
Then her body moved slightly,
in a number of tiny jerks,
and seemed to settle perhaps,
half an inch into the ground.
The burying beetles were of those who exploited the bodies of the fallen.
Working from below, they excavated the earth from the underside of such prizes as they
came upon, then turned upon their backs and thrust with their legs,
jerking the body so it sank into the shallow excavation they had prepared.
The process would be repeated until at last the whole of the gift of fortune had sunk
below the surrounding surface, and the loosened earth fell in upon the top, thus completing
the inhumation.
Then in the darkness the beetles would feast and rear their young, gorging upon the plentiful
supply of succulent foodstuff they had hidden from jealous fellow scavengers above them.
But Sayah was alive.
Thirty thousand years before, when scientists examined into the habits of the burying beetles, or
The sexton beetles, they had declared that fresh meat or living meat would not be touched.
They based their statement solely upon the fact that the insects, then tiny creatures indeed,
did not appear until the trap meat placed by the investigators had remained untouched for days.
Conditions had changed in thirty thousand years.
The ever-present ants and the sharp-eyed flies were keen rivals of the brightly arrayed beetles,
Usually the tribes of creatures who worked in the darkness below ground came after the ants had taken their toll, and the flies sipped daintily.
When Sayah fell unconscious upon the ground, however, it was the one accident that caused the burying beetle to find her first before the ants had come to tear the flesh from her slender, soft-skinned body.
She breathed gently and irregularly, her face drawn with the sorrow of the night.
before, while desperately hurrying beetles swarmed beneath her body, channeling away the earth
so that she would sink lower and lower into the ground.
An inch and a long weight.
Then she sank slowly a second inch.
The bright red tufts of thread appeared again, and a beetle made his way to the open air.
He moved hastily about inspecting the progress of the work.
He dived below again.
Another inch, and after a long time, another inch was excavated.
Burl stepped out from a group of overshadowing toadstools and halted.
He cast his eyes over the landscape and was struck by its familiarity.
It was, in point of fact, very near the spot he had left the night before in pursuit of a colossal wounded beetle.
Burl moved back and forth, trying to account for the sensation of recognition,
and then trying to approximate the place from which he had last seen it.
He passed within fifty feet of the spot where sail lay now half buried in the ground.
The loose earth cast up about her body had begun to fall in little rivulets upon her.
One of her shoulders was already screened from view.
Burle passed on unseeing.
He was puzzling over the direction from which he had seen the particular.
particular section of countryside before him, perhaps a little further on he would come to the
place. He hurried a little. In a moment he recognized his location. There was the great
edible mushroom, half broken away, from which the tribe had been feeding. There were the mining
bee burrows. His feet stirred up a fine dust, and he stopped short. A red mushroom had
covered the earth with a thin layer of its impalpable durnable.
deadly powder. Burrell understood why the tribe had gone, and a cold sweat came upon his body.
Was Sayas safe? Or had the whole tribe succumbed to the poisonous stuff? Had they all men and women and
children died in convulsions of gasping strangulation? He hurried to retrace his footsteps.
There was a fragment of mushrooms on the ground. Here was a spear cast away by one of the tribesmen
in his flight. Burl broke in her.
to a run. The little excavation into which Sayah was sinking, inch by inch, was all of
twenty-five feet to the right of the path. Burl dashed on, frantic with anxiety about the tribe,
but most of all about Sayah. Sayah's body quivered and sank a fraction more into the earth.
Half a dozen little rivulets of dirt were tumbling upon her body now, in a matter of
of minutes she would be hidden from view.
Burl ran madly past her, too busy searching the mushroom thickets before him with his eyes
to dream of looking upon the ground.
Twenty yards from a huge toadstool thicket, a noise arrested him sharply.
There was a crashing and breaking of the brittle, spongy growths.
Twin tapering antenna appeared, and then a monster beetle lurched into the open space.
Its horrible, gaping jaws stretched wide.
It was all of eight feet long, and its body was held up from the ground by six crooked
saw-tooth limbs.
Its huge, multiple eyes stared with machine-like preoccupation at the world.
It advanced, deliberately, with a clanking and clashing as of a hideous machine.
Burl fled on the instant, running as madly away from the be able.
as he had a moment before been running toward it.
A little depression in the earth was before him.
He did not swerve, but made to leap it.
As he shot over it, however, the glint of pink-skin caught his eye, and there was impressed
upon his brain, with photographic completeness, the picture of Sayah, lying limp and helpless,
sinking slowly into the ground, with tiny rills of earth falling down the sides of the excavation
upon her.
It seemed, to Burl's eye, that she quivered slightly as he saw.
There was a terrific struggle within Burl.
Behind him the colossal meat-eating beetle.
Beneath him, Sayah, whom he loved.
There was certain death lurching toward him on evilly glittering legs, and there was life
for his race and tribe lying in the shallow pit.
He turned, aware with a sudden reckless.
glow that he was throwing away his life, aware that he was deliberately giving himself over
to death, and stood on the side of the little pit nearest the great beetle, his puny spear held
defiantly at the ready. In his left hand he held just such a leg as those which bore the living
creature toward him. He had torn it from the body of just such a monster but a few hours ago,
a monster in whose death he had had a share.
With a yell of insane defiance,
he flung the fiercely toothed limb at his advancing opponent.
These sharp teeth cut into the base of one of the Beatles' antenna,
and it ducked clumsily,
then seized the missile in its fierce jaws and crushed it in frenzy of rage.
There was meat within it, sweet and juicy meat,
that pleased the Beatles' palate.
It forgot the man, standing there waiting for death.
It crunched the missile that had attacked it,
eating the palatable contents of the horny armor,
confusing the blow with the object that had delivered it,
and evidently satisfied that an enemy had been conquered and was being devoured.
A moment later it turned and lumbered off to investigate another mushroom thicket.
And Burle turned quickly and dragged Sayah's limp form from,
the grave that had been prepared for it by the busy insect scavengers.
Earth fell from her shoulders, from her hair, and from the mass of yellow fur about her middle,
and three little beetles with black and red markings scurried and terrified haste for cover,
while Burl bore Sayer to a resting place of soft mold.
Burl was an ignorant savage, and to him Sayah's death-like unconsciousness was like death itself.
But dumb misery smote him, and he laid her down gently, while tears came to his eyes,
and he called her name again and again in an agony of grief.
For an hour he sat there beside her.
A man so lately pleased with himself above all creatures for having slain one huge beetle
and put another to flight, as he would have looked upon it,
now a broken-hearted, little pink-skinned man,
weeping like a child, hunched up and bowed over with sorrow.
Then Sayas slowly opened her eyes and stirred weakly.
End of Chapter 3.
Chapter 4 of the Red Dust by Murray Lindster.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 4
The Forest of Death
They were oblivious to everything but each other,
Sayah, resting and still half-incredulous happiness against Burl's shoulder, while he told her in little jerky sentences of his pursuit of the colossal flying beetle, of his search for the tribe, and then his discovery of her apparently lifeless body.
When he spoke of the monster that had lurched from the mushroom thicket and of the desperation with which he had faced it, Sayah pressed close and looked at him with wondering and wonderful eyes.
she could understand his willingness to die believing her dead a little while before she had felt the same indifference to life
a timid frightened whisper roused them from their absorption and they looked up one of the tribesmen stood upon one foot some distance away staring at them almost convinced that he looked upon the living dead
a sudden movement on the part of either of them would have sent him in a panic back into the mushroom forest two or three blond heads bobbed and vanished among the tangled stalks wide and astonished eyes gazed at the two they had believed the prey of malignant creatures
the tribe had come slowly back to the mushroom they had been eating leaderless and convinced that say it had fallen a victim to the deadly dust instead they found her sitting by the side of their chief apparently restored to them in some miraculous fashion
burle spoke and the pink-skinned people came timorously from their hiding-places they approached warily and formed a half-circle before the seated pair
burl spoke again and presently one of the bravest dared approach and touch him instantly a babel of the crude and labial language spoken by the tribe broke out
Odd questions and exclamations of thankfulness, then curious interrogations fill the air.
Burl for once showed some common sense.
Instead of telling them in his usual, vainglorious fashion, of the adventures he had undergone,
he merely cast down the too long and tapering antenna from the flying beetle that he had torn from its dead body.
They looked at them and recognized their origin.
Amazement and admiration showed upon their faces.
Then Burl rose and abruptly ordered two of the men to make a chair of their hands for Sayah.
She was weak from the effects of the blow she had received.
The two men humbly advanced and did as they were bid.
Then the march was taken up again, more slowly than before, because of Saya as a burden,
but nonetheless steadily.
Burl led his people across the country.
marching in advance, and with every nerve alert for signs of danger, but with more confidence
and less timidity than he had ever displayed before.
All that noon time and that afternoon they filed steadily along the tribesfolk keeping
in a compact group close behind Burl.
The man who had thrown away his spear had recovered it on an order from Burrell, and the
little party fairly bristled with weapons, though Burl knew well that they were liable to be
cast away as impediments if flight should be necessary.
He was determined that his people should learn to fight the great creatures about them,
instead of depending upon their legs for escape.
He had led them in an attack upon great slugs, but they were defenseless creatures,
incapable of more dangerous maneuvers than spasmodic jerkings of their great bodies.
The next time danger should threaten them, and especially if it came while their new awe of him held good,
he was resolved to force them to join him in fighting it.
He had not long to wait for an opportunity to strengthen the spirit of his followers by a successful battle.
The clouds toward the west were taking on a dull red hue, which was the nearest to a sunset
that was ever seen in the world of Burl's experience, when a bumblebee droned heavily over their
heads making for its hive. The little group of people on the ground looked up and saw a scanty
load of pollen packed in the stiff bristles of the insect's hind legs. The bees of the world
had a hard time securing food upon the nearly flowerless planet, but this one had evidently made a
find. Its crop was nearly filled with hard-gathered viscous honey destined for the
Hevel store. It sped onward heavily. Its almost transparent wings mere blurs in the air
from the rapidity of their vibration. Burl saw its many-faceted eyes, staring before it in
worried preoccupation as it soared in laborious speed over his head some fifty feet up.
He dropped his glance, and then his eyes lighted with excitement.
A slender-bodied wasp was shooting upward from an ambush it had found in a thicket of toad's
duels. It darted swiftly and gracefully upon the bee, which swerved and tried to flee.
The droning buzz of the bee's wings rose to a higher note as it strove to increase its speed.
The more delicately formed wasp headed the clumsier insect back.
the bee turned again and fled in terror each of the insects was slightly more than four feet in length but the bee was much the heavier and it could not attain the speed of which the wasp was capable
the graceful form of the hunting insect rapidly overhauled its fleeing prey and the wasp dashed in and closed with the bee at a point almost over the heads of the tribesmen
in a clawing biting tangle of thrashing transparent wings and black bodies the two creatures tumbled to the earth they fell perhaps thirty yards from where burl stood watching
over and over the two insects rolled now one uppermost and then the other the bee was struggling desperately to insert her sting in the more supple body of her adversary she writhed and twisted fighting with jaw and mandible and her
she writhed and twisted fighting with jaw and mandible wing and claw the wasp was uppermost and the bee lay on her back fighting in panic-stricken desperation
the wasp saw an opening her jaws darted in and there was an instant of confusion then suddenly the bee dazed was upright with the wasp upon her a movement too quick for the eye to follow and the bee color
collapsed. The wasp had bitten her in the neck where all the nerve-cords passed, and the
bee was dead. Burl waited a moment more, aflame with excitement. He knew, as did all the
tribesfolk, what might happen next. When he saw the second act of the tragedy well begun,
Burl snapped quick and harsh orders to his spear-armed men, and they followed him in a wavering
line, their weapons tightly clutched.
Knowing the habits of the insects as they were forced to know them, they knew that
the venture was one of the least dangerous they could undertake with fighting creatures
the size of the wasp, but the idea of attacking the great creatures whose sharp
stings could annihilate any of them with a touch, the mere thought of taking the initiative
was appalling.
Had their awe of Burrell been less complete, they would not have drawn.
dreamed of following him.
The second act of the tragedy had begun.
The bee had been slain by the wasp, a carnivorous insect normally,
but the wasp knew that sweet honey was concealed in the half-filled crop of the bee.
Had the bee arrived safely at the hive,
the sweet and sticky liquid would have been discouraged and added to the high-wil store.
Now, though the bee's journey was ended and its flesh was to be crunched and devoured by the
wasp, the honey was the first object of the pirate's solicitude. The dead insect was rolled over
upon its back, and with eager haste the slayer began to exploit the body. Burl and his men were
creeping nearer, but with a gesture Burl made them halt for a moment. The wasp's first move
was to force the disgorgement of the honey from the bee's crop, and with feverish eagerness, it pressed
upon the limp body until the shining sticky liquid appeared.
Then the wasse began, in ghoulish ecstasy, to lick up the sweet stuff, utterly absorbed
in the feast.
Many thousands of years before, the absorption of the then tiny insect had been noticed
when engaged in a similar feat, and it was recorded in books moldered into dust long ages
before Burrough's birth, that its rapture was so great that it was so great that it was so great that
it had been known to fall a victim to a second bandit while engaged in the horrible banquet.
Burl had never read the books, but he had been told that the pirate would continue its feast,
even though seized by a greater enemy, unable to tear itself from the nectar gathered by the
creature it had slain. The tribesmen waited until the wasp had begun its orgy,
licking up the toothsome stuff disgorged by its dead prey. It ate,
in gluttonous haste, blind to all sights, deaf to all sounds, able to think of nothing,
conceive of nothing, but the delights of the liquid it was devouring.
At a signal the tribesmen darted forward.
They wavered when near the slender waist gourmet, however, and Burle was the first to thrust
his spear, with all his strength, into the thinly armored body.
the others took courage. A short, horny spear penetrated the very vitals of the wasp.
A club fell with terrific impact upon the slender waist. There was a crackling, and the long
spidery limbs quivered and writhed while the tribesmen fell back in fear, but without cause.
Burl struck again, and the wasp fell into two writhing halves, helpless for harm.
The pink-skinned men danced in triumph, and the women and children ventured near, delighted.
Only Burl noticed that even as the wasp was dying, sundered and pierced with spears,
its slender tongue licked out in one last ecstatic taste of the nectar that had been its undoing,
burdened with the pollen-covered legs of the giant bee,
and filled with the meat from choice portions of the wasp's musculation.
limbs, the tribe resumed its journey. This time Burl had men behind him, still timid, still prone
to flee at the slightest alarm, but infinitely more dependable than they had been before.
They had attacked and slain a wasp whose sting would have killed any of them. They had done
battle under the leadership of Burl whose spear had struck the first blow. Hitsforth,
They were sharers, in a mild way, of his transcendent glory, and henceforth they were more like
followers of a mighty chief, and last like spineless worshippers of a demi-god whose feats they were
too timid to emulate.
That night they hid among a group of giant puff-balls, feasting on the loads of meat they
had carried thus far with them.
Burl watched them now without jealousy of their good spirits.
he and saya sat a little apart happy to be near each other speaking in low tones after a time darkness fell and the tribe-folk became shapeless bodies speaking in voices that grew drowsy and were silent
the black forms of the toadstools heads and huge puff-balls were but darker against a dark sky the nightly rain began to fall drop by drop drop drop by drop
upon the damp and humid earth.
Only Burl remained awake for a little while,
and his last waking thought was of pride, disinterested pride.
He had the first reward of the ruler,
gratification in the greatness of his people.
The red mushrooms had continued to show their glistening heads,
though Burl thought they were less numerous
than in the territory from which the tribe had fled.
all along the route now to the right now to the left they had burst and sent their masses of deadly dust into the air many times the tribe folk had been forced to make a detour
to avoid a slowly spreading cloud of death-dealing spores once or twice their escapes had been narrow indeed but so far there had been no deaths
burl had observed that the mushrooms normally burst only in the daytime and for a while had thought of causing his followers to do their journeying in the night
only the obvious disadvantages of such a course the difficulty of discovering food and the prowling spiders that roamed in the darkness had prevented him the idea still stayed with him however and two days after the fight with the hunting wasp
He put it in practice.
The tribe came to the top of a small rise in the ground.
For an hour they had been marching and counter-marching
to avoid the suddenly appearing clouds of dust.
Once they had been nearly hemmed in,
and only by mad sprinting did they escape
when three of the dull red clouds seemed to flow together,
closing three sides of a circle.
They came to the little hillock and halted.
before them stretched a plain all of four miles wide covered a brownish brick-red by masses of mushrooms they had seen mushroom forests before and knew of the dangers they presented but there was none so deadly as the plain before them
to the right and left it stretched as far as the eye could see but far away on its farther edge burl caught a glimpse of flowing water
over the plain itself a dull red haze seemed to float it was nothing more or less than a cloud of the deadly spores dispersed and indefinite constantly replenished by the freshly bursting red mushrooms
while the people stood and watched a dozen thick columns of dust rose into the air from scattered points here and there upon the plain settling slowly again but leaving behind them enough of their finely
divided substance, to keep the thin red haze over the whole plain in its original deadly state.
Burl had seen single red mushrooms before, and even small pickets of two or three, but here was
a plain of millions, literally millions upon millions, of the malignant growths. Here was one
fungoyed forest, through whose aisles no monster beetles stalked, and above,
of whose shadow depths no brightly colored butterflies fluttered in joyous abandon.
There were no loud-voiced crickets sitting in its hiding-places, nor bodies of eagerly foraging
ants, searching inquisitively for bits of food.
It was a forest of death, still and silent, quiet and motionless, save for the sullen
columns of red dust, that ever and again shot upward from the torn and ragged envelope
of the bursting mushroom.
Burl and his people watched in wonderment and dismay.
But presently a high resolve came to Burl.
The mushrooms never burst at night, and the deadly dust from a subsided cloud was not deadly
in the morning.
As a matter of fact, the rain that fell every night made it no more than a soddened thin film
of reddish mud by daylight, mud which dried and caked.
Burl did not know what occurred, but knew the result.
At night or in early morning, the danger from the red mushrooms was slight.
Therefore he would lead his people through the very jaws of death that night.
He would lead them through the deadly aisles of this, the forest of malignant growths, the place of lurking annihilation.
It was an act of desperation, and the resolution to carry it through left Burl in a
state of mind, that kept him from observing one thing that would have ended all the struggles
of his tribe at once.
Perhaps a quarter-mile from the edge of the red forest, three or four giant cabbages grew,
thrusting their colossal leaves upward toward the sky.
And on the cabbages a dozen lazy slugs fed leisurely, ignoring completely the red haze
that was never far from them, and sometimes,
covered them. Burrell saw them, but the oddity of their immunity from the effects of the red dust
did not strike him. He was fighting to keep his resolution intact. If he had only realized the
significance of what he saw, however. The slugs were covered with a thick, soft fur. The tribe's
people wore garments of that same material. The fur protected the slugs and could have made the
tribe immune to the deadly red dust if they had only known. The slugs breathed through a row of
tiny holes upon their backs, as the immature insects breathed through holes upon the bottom of
their abdomens, and the soft fur formed a mat of felt which arrested the fine particles of deadly dust
while allowing the pure gas to pass through. It formed, in effect, a natural gas mask which the tribesmen
could have adopted, but which they did not discover or invent.
The remainder of that day they waited in a curious mixture of resolve and fear.
The tribe was rapidly reaching a point where it would follow Burl over a thousand-foot cliff,
and it needed some such blind confidence to make them prepare to go through the forest
of the million deadly mushrooms.
The waiting was a strain, but the actual journey was a nudge.
nightmare.
Burl knew that the tolled-stools did not burst of themselves during the night, but he knew
that the beetle on which he had taken his involuntary ride had crashed against one in the darkness,
and that the fatal dust had poured out.
He warned his people to be cautious and led them down the slope of the hill through the blackness.
For hours they stumbled on, in utter darkness, with the pungent, acrid odor of the red growth,
constantly in their nostrils. They put out their hands and touched the flabby, damp stalks of
the monstrous things. They stumbled and staggered against the leathery skins of the malignant
fungoids. Death was all about them. At no time during all the dark hours of the night
was there a moment when they could not reach out their hands and touch a fungus growth that might
burst at their touch, and fill the air with poisonous dust, so that all of them would die
in gasping, choking agony.
And worst of all, before half an hour was passed, they had lost all sense of direction,
so that they stumbled on blindly through the utter blackness, not knowing whether they were
heading toward the river that might be their salvation, or were wondering hopelessly deeper
and deeper into the silent depths of the forest of strangled things.
When day came again and the mushrooms sent their columns of fatal dust into the air,
would they gasp and fight for breath in the red haze that would float like a tenuous cloud
above the forest?
Would they breathe in flames of fire like torment and die slowly?
Or would the red dust be merciful and slay them quickly?
They felt their way like blind folk, devoid of hope, and curiously unafraid.
Only their hearts were like heavy, cold weights in their breasts, and they shouldered aside
the swollen sacks of the red mushrooms, with a singular apathy as they followed Burl slowly
through the midst of death.
Many times in their journeying, they knew that dead creatures were nearby, moths, perhaps,
that had blundered into a distended growth which had burst upon the impact and killed the thing that had touched it no busy insect scavengers ventured into this plain of silence to salvage the bodies however
the red haze preserved the sanctuary of malignance inviolate during the day no creature might hope to approach its red aisles and dust carpeted clearings
and at night the slow dropping rain fell only upon the rounded heads of the mushrooms in all the space of the forest only the little band of hopeless people
plodding on behind burl in the velvet blackness callously rub shoulders with death in the form of the red and glistening mushrooms over all the dank expanse of the forest the only sound was the dripping of the slow and soddened rainfall
that began at nightfall and lasted until day came again.
The sky began to grow faintly gray as the sun rose behind the banks of overhanging clouds.
Burl stopped short and uttered what was no more than a groan.
He was in a little circular clearing and the twisted monstrous forms of the deadly mushrooms were all about.
There was not yet enough light for colors to appear,
and the hideous, almost obscene shapes of the loathsome growths on every side showed only as mocking, leering silhouettes as of malicious demons, rejoicing at the coming doom of the gray-faced huddled tribefolk.
Burle stood still, drooping in discouragement upon his spear.
The feathery moths' antenna bound upon his forehead, shadowed darkly against the graying sky.
Soon the mushrooms would begin to burst.
Then suddenly he lifted his head.
Encouragement and delight upon his features, he had heard the ripple of running water.
His followers looked at him with dawning hope.
Without a word, Burl began to run, and they followed him more slowly.
His voice came back to them in a shout of delight.
Then they, too, broke into a jogger.
Trot. In a moment they had emerged from the thick tangle of brownish redstocks and were upon
the banks of a wide and swiftly running river, the same river whose gleam Burl had caught the
day before from the farther side of the mushroom forest. Once before Burl had floated down a river
upon a mushroom raft. Then his journey had been involuntary and unlooked for him. He had been carried
far from his tribe and far from Sayah, and his heart had been filled with desolation.
Now he viewed the swiftly running current with eager delight. He cast his eyes up and down the bank.
Here and there the riverbank rose in a low bluff and thick shelf growths stretched out above the
water. Burl was busy in an instant, stabbing the hard growths with his spear and striving to wrench them free.
The tribesmen stared at him, uncomprehending, but at an order from him they did likewise.
Soon a dozen thick masses of firm-like fungus lay upon the shore where it shelved gently into the water.
Burle began to explain what they were to do, but one or two of the men dared remonstrate
saying humbly that they were afraid to part from him.
If they might embark upon the same thing with him, they would be safe,
but otherwise they were afraid.
Burrow cast an apprehensive glance at the sky.
Day was coming rapidly on.
Soon the red mushrooms would begin to shoot their columns of deadly dust into the air.
This was no time to pause and deliberate.
Then Sayas spoke softly.
Burrow listened and made a mighty sacrifice.
He took his gorgeous velvet cloak from his shoulders.
It was made from the wing of the wing of the night.
of a great moth, and tore it into a dozen long, irregular pieces, tearing it along the lines
of the sinews that reinforced it.
He planted his spear upright in the largest piece of shelf fungus, and caused his followers
to do likewise, then fastened the strips of sinew and velvet to his spear-shaft, and ordered
them to do the same with the other spears.
In a matter of minutes the dozen tiny rafts were bobbing on the water, clustered about the larger
central bit.
Then, one by one, the tribefolk took their places and Burl shoved off.
The agglomeration of cranky, unseaworthy bits of shelf fungus moved slowly out from
the shore until the current caught it.
Burl and Saya sat upon the central bit, with the other trustful but somewhat frightened pink-skinned
people all about them.
And as they began to move between the mushroom-lined banks of the river and the mist of the night began to lift from its surface.
Far in the interior of the forest of the red fungoids, a column of red leaped into the air.
The first of the malignant growth had cast its cargo of poisonous dust into the still-humid
atmosphere.
The cone-like column spread out and grew thin, but even after it had shrunk into the earth,
A reddish taint remained in the air about the place where it had been.
The deadly red haze that hung all through the day over the red forest
was in process of formation.
But by that time the unstable fungus crafts were far down the river,
bobbing and twirling in the current,
with the wide-eyed people upon them gazing in wondermen at the shores as they glided by.
The red mushrooms grew less than.
numerous upon the banks. Other growths took their places. Moles and rusts covered the ground
as grass had done in ages past. Mushrooms showed their creamy, rounded heads. Malformed things
with swollen trunks and branches and strange mockery of the trees they had superseded, made their
appearance, and once the tribesmen saw the dark bulk of a hunting spider outlined for a moment
upon the bank.
All the long day they rode upon the current, while the insect life that had been absent
in the neighborhood of the forest of death made its appearance again, bees once more droned overhead,
and wasps and dragonflies.
Four-inch mosquitoes made their appearance, to be fought off by the tribefolk with lusty blows,
and glittering beetles and shining flies, whose bodies glittered with a much,
metallic luster, buzzed and flew above the water.
Huge butterflies once more were seen, dancing above the steaming, festering earth,
in an apparent ecstasy from the mere fact of existence, and all the thousand and one forms
of insect life that flew and crawled and swam and dived, showed themselves to the tribesmen
on the raft.
Water beetles came lazily to the surface to snap with sudden energy.
at mosquitoes buskily laying their eggs in the nearby stagnant water by the river banks.
Burl pointed out to Sayo with some excitement.
There are silver breastplates that shone as they darted under the water again.
And the shell-covered boats of a thousand cadets worms floated in the eddies and backwaters of the stream.
Waterboatmen and whirligigs, almost alone among insects and not having shared in the general increase of
size danced upon the oily waves.
The day wore on as the shores flowed by.
The tribesfolk ate of their burdens of mushroom and meat, and drank from the fresh water of the
river.
Then when afternoon came, the character of the country about the stream changed.
The banks fell away, and the current slackened.
The shores became indefinite, and the river merged itself in.
into a swamp, a vast swamp from which a continual muttering came which the tribesmen heard
for a long time before they saw the swamp itself.
The water seemed to turn black, as black mud took the place of the clay that had formed
its bed, and slowly, here and there, then more frequently, floating green things that were
stationary and did not move with the current appeared.
They were the leaves of water-lilies that had remained with the giant cabbages and very few other plants in the midst of a fungoyed world.
The green leaves were twelve feet across, and any one of them would have floated the whole of Burl's tribe.
Presently they grew numerous so that the channel was made narrow,
and the mushroom rafts passed between rows of the great leaves with here and there a colossal.
waxen blossom, in which three men might have hidden, and which exhaled an almost overpowering
fragrance into the air. And the muttering that had been heard far away grew in volume to an
intermittent, incredibly deep bass roar. It seemed to come from the banks on either side,
and actually was the discardant croaking of the giant frogs, grown to eight feet in length,
which lived and loved in the huge swamp, above which golden butterflies danced in ecstasy,
and which the transcendently beautiful blossoms of the water-lilies filled with fragrance.
The swamp was a place of riotous life.
The green bodies of the colossal frogs perched upon the banks in strange immobility,
and only opening their huge mouths to emit their thunderous crows.
croakings. The green bodies of the frogs blended queerly with the vivid color of the water-lily
leaves. Dragonflies fluttered in their swift and angular flight above the black and reeking mud.
Green bottles and blue bottles and a hundred other species of flies buzzed busily in the misty air,
now and then falling prey to the licking tongues of the frogs.
Bees droned overhead in flight, less preoccupied and worried than elsewhere,
flitting from blossom to blossom of the tremendous water-lilies,
loading their crops with honey and the bristles of their legs with yellow pollen.
Everywhere over the mushroom-covered world,
the air was never quite free from mist and the steamy exhalations of the pools,
but here in the swamps the atmosphere was so heavily laden with moisture
that the bodies of the tribesfolk were covered with glistening droplets,
while the wide, flat, water-lily leaves glittered like platters of jewels from the steam that
had condensed upon their upper surfaces.
The air was full of shining bodies and iridescent wings.
Myriads of tiny midges, no more than three or four inches across their wings, danced above
the slow-flowing water, and butterflies of every imaginable shade and color, from the most delicate
lavender to the most vivid carmine, danced and fluttered, alighting upon the white water-lilies
to sip daintily of their nectar, skimming the surface of the water, enamored of their brightly
tinted reflections.
And the pink-skinned tribesfolk, floating through this fairyland on their mushroom rafts,
gazed with wide eyes at the beauty about them, and drew in great breaths of the intoxicating
fragrance of the great white flowers that floated like elfin boats upon the dark water.
End of Chapter 4.
Chapter 5 of the Red Dust by Murray Lindster.
This Labor Vox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 5.
Out of Bondage
The mist was heavy and thick, and through it the flying creatures darted upon their innumerable
businesses, visible for a large.
an instant in all their colorful beauty, then melting slowly into indefiniteness as they sped
away. The triv folk on the clustered rafts watched them as they darted overhead, and for
hours the little squadron of fungoid vessels floated slowly through the central channel of the
marsh. The river had split into innumerable currents, which meandered, purposely through the
glistening black mud of the swamp, but after a long time they seemed to reassemble, and
Burl could see what had caused the vast morass. Hills appeared on either side of the stream,
which grew higher and steeper, as if the foothills of a mountain chain. Then Burl turned and
peered before him. Rising straight from the low hills, a wall of high mountains rose toward
the sky, and the low-hanging clouds met their rugged flanks but
halfway toward the peaks. To right and left the mountains melted into the tenuous haze,
but ahead they were firm and stalwart, rising and losing their heights in the cloud banks.
They formed a rampart which might have guarded the edge of the world, and the river flowed
more and more rapidly, in a deeper and narrower current, toward a cleft between two rugged
giants that promised to swallow the water and all that might swim in its depths or float upon
its surface. Tall, steep hills rose from either side or the swift current, their sides
covered with flaking moles of an exotic shade of rose-pinkled here and there with lavender and
purple. Rocks, not hidden beneath a coating of fungus, protruded their angular heads from the
hillsides. The river valley became a gorge, and then little more than a caulder.
canyon, with beetling sides that frowned down upon the swift current running beneath them.
The small flotilla passed beneath an overhanging cliff, and then shot out to where the
cliff sides drew apart and formed a deep amphitheater whose top was hidden in the clouds.
And across this open space, on cables all of 500 feet long, a bandit spider had flung its web.
It was a monster of its tribe.
Its belly was swollen to a diameter of no less than two yards,
and its outstretched legs would have touched eight points of a ten-yard circle.
It was hanging motionless in the center of the colossal snare,
as the little group of tribefolk passed underneath,
and they saw the broad bands of yellow and black and silver upon its abdomen.
They shivered as they shivered as.
their little crafts were swept below.
Then they came to a little valley where yellow sand bordered the river and there was the level
space of a hundred yards on either side before the steep sides of the mountains began their
rise.
Here the cluster of mushroom rafts were caught in a little eddy and drawn out of the swiftly
flowing current.
Soon there was a soft and yielding jar.
The rafts had grounded.
by Burl, the tribesmen waited ashore, wonderment and excitement in their hearts.
Burl searched all about with his eyes.
Toad stools and mushrooms, rusts and moles, even giant puffballs grew in the little valley,
but of the deadly red mushrooms he saw none.
A single bee was buzzing slowly over the tangled thickets of fungoids, and the loud voice
of a cricket came in a deafening burst of sound.
re-echoed from the hillsides, but, save for the far-flung web of the bandit spider, a mile or more
away, there was no sign of the deadly creatures that preyed upon men.
Burl began to climb the hillside with his tribe-folk after him.
For an hour they toiled upward through confused masses of fungus of almost every species.
Twice they stopped to seize upon edible fungi and break them into masses they could carry.
and once they paused and made a wide detour around a thicket from which there came a stealthy rustling burle believed that the rustling was merely the sound of a moth or butterfly emerging from its chrysalis but was unwilling to take any chances
He and his people circled the mushroom thicket and mounted higher.
And at last, perhaps six or seven hundred feet above the level of the river,
they came upon a little plateau, going back into a small pocket in the mountainside.
Here they found many of the edible fungoids and no less than a dozen of the giant
cabbages on whose broad leaves many furry grubs were feeding steadily in placidment
with themselves and all the world.
A small stream bubbled up from a tiny basin
and ran swiftly across the plateau,
and there were dense thickets of toad-stools
in which the tribesmen might find secure hiding-places.
The tribe would make itself a new home here.
That night they hid among inextricably tangled masses of mushrooms
and saw with amazement
the multitude of creatures that ventured forth in the darkness.
All the valley and the plateau were illuminated by the shining beacons
of huge but graceful fireflies,
who darted here and there in delight and apparently insecurity.
Upon the earth below also, many tiny lights glowed.
The larvae of the fireflies crawls slowly but happily over the fungus-covered mountainside,
and great glow-worms clambered upon the shining tops of the toadstools and rested there,
twin broad bands of bluish fire burning brightly within their translucent bodies.
They were the females of the firefly race, which never attained to legs and wings,
but crawl all ways upon the earth, merely enlarged creatures in the forms of their own larva.
Moths soared overhead with mighty throbbing wing-beats,
and all the world seemed a paradise through which no evil creatures roamed in search of prey.
And a strange thing came to pass.
Soon after darkness fell upon the earth and the steady drip drop of the rain began,
a musical tinkling sound was heard which grew in volume,
and became a deep-toned roar, which re-echoed and reverberated from the opposite hill-sides,
until it was like melodious and long-continued thunder for a long time the people were puzzled and a little afraid but burle took courage and investigated
he emerged from the concealing thicket and peered cautiously about seeing nothing then he dared move in the direction of the sound and the gleam from a dozen fireflies showed him a sheet of water pouring over a vertical cliff
to the river far below. The rainfall, gentle as it was, when gathered from all the broad
expanse of the mountainside, made a river of its own which had scoured out of bed, and poured
down each night to plunge in a smother of spray and foam through six hundred feet of empty
space to the swiftly flowing river in the center of the valley. It was this sound that had puzzled
the tribefolk, and this sound that lulled them to sleep when Burl at last came back to allay their fears.
The next day they explored their new territory with a boldness of which they would not have
been capable a month before. They found a single great trap-door in the earth, sure sign of
the burrow of a monster spider, and Burl resolved that before many days the spider would be dealt
with. He told his tribe.
men so, and they nodded their heads solemnly instead of shrinking back in terror, as they would
have done not long since.
The tribe was rapidly becoming a group of men capable of taking the aggressive.
They needed Burl's rash leadership, and for many generations they would need bold leaders,
but they were infinitely superior to the timid, rabbit-like creatures they had been.
They bore spears, and they had used them.
They had seen danger and had blindly followed Burl through the forest of strangle things
instead of fleeing weakly from the peril.
They wore soft, yellow fur about their middles, taken from the bodies of giant slugs they had slain.
They had eaten much meat, and preferred its succulent taste to the insipid savour of the
mushrooms that had once been their steady diet.
They knew the acceleration of brave adventure, though they had been forced into adventure by
Burl, and they were far more worthy descendants of their ancestors than those ancestors
had known for many thousand years.
The exploration of their new domain yielded many wonders and a few advantages.
The tribe-folk found that.
that the nearest ant city was miles away, and that the small insects would trouble them
but rarely.
The nightly rush of water down the sloping sides of the mountain made it undesirable for the
sight of an ant colony.
And best of all, back in the little pocket in the mountainside, they found old and disused
cells of hunting wasps.
The walls of the pocket were made of soft sandstone with alternate layers of clay, and the wasps had found digging easy.
There were a dozen or more burrows, the shaft of each some four feet in diameter, and going back into the cliff for nearly thirty feet, where they branched out into a number of cells.
Each of the cells had once held a grub which had grown fat and large upon its horde of paralyzed crickets,
and then had broken away to the outer world to emerge as a full-grown wasp.
Now, however, the laboriously tunneled caverns would furnish a hiding-place for the tribe of men,
a far more secure hiding-place than the center of the mushroom thickets,
and furthermore, a hiding-place which, because more permanent,
would gradually become a possession for which the men would fight.
it is a curious thing that the advancement of a people from a state of savagery and continual warfare to civilization and continual peace
is not made by the elimination of the causes of strife but by the addition of new objects and ideals in defense of which that same people will offer battle a single chrysalis was found securely anchored to the under side of a rock-shelf and burrifice of a
girl detached it with great labor and carried it into one of the burrows though the task was one that was almost beyond his strength he desired the butterfly that would emerge for his own use
he preempted to a solitary burrow a little distant from the others and made preparations for an event that was destined to make his plans wiser and more far-reaching than before
his followers were equally busy with their various burrows gathering stores of soft growth for their couches and later at burrell's suggestion even carrying within the dark caverns the radiant heads of the luminous mushrooms to furnish illumination
the light would be dim and after the mushroom had partly dried it would cease but for a people utterly ignorant of fire it was far from a bad plan
Burl was very happy for that time.
His people looked upon him as a savior,
and obeyed his least order without question.
He was growing to repose some measure of trust in them, too,
as men who began to have some glimmerings of the new-found courage
that had come to him,
and which he had striven hard to implant in their breasts.
The tribe had been a formless gathering of people.
There were six or seven men and as many women, and naturally families had come into being,
sometimes after fierce and absurd fights among the men, but the families were not the sharply
distinct agreements that would have been in a tribe of higher development.
The marriage was but an agreement, terminable at any time, and the men had but little of
the feeling of parenthood, though the women had all the fierce maternal instinct of the insects
about them.
these burrows in which the tribe folk were making their homes would put an end to the casual nature of the marriage bonds they were homes in the making damp and humid burrows without fire or heat but homes nevertheless
the family may come before the home in the development of mankind but it invariably exists when the home has been made the tribe had been made the tribe had been made
The tribe had been upon the plateau for nearly a week,
when Burl found that stirrings and strugglings were going on within the huge cocoon
he had laid close beside the burrow he had chosen for his own.
He cast aside all of the work and waited patiently for the thing he knew was about to happen.
He squatted on his haunches beside the huge oblong cylinder,
his spear in his hand, waiting patiently.
from time to time he nibbled at a bit of edible mushroom.
Burrell had acquired many new traits, among which a little foresight was most prominent,
but he had never conquered the habit of feeling hungry at any and every time that food was
near at hand. He had to wait. He had food, therefore he ate.
The sound of scrapings came from the closed cocoon, caked upon its eyes,
outer side with dirt and mold.
The scrapings and scratching continued, and presently a tiny hole showed which rapidly enlarged.
Tiny jaws and a dry glazed skin became visible, the skin looking as if it had been varnished
with many coats of brown shellac.
Then a malformed head forced its way through and stopped.
All motion seized for a matter of half an hour, then the strange blind head seemed to become
distended to be swelling.
A crack appeared along its upper part, which lengthened and grew wide, and then a second head appeared
from within the first.
This head was soft and downy, and a slender proboscis was curled beneath its lower edge,
the trunk of one of the elephants that had been extinct for many thousand years, soft scales
and fine hairs alternated to cover it, and two immense, many-faceted eyes, gazed mildly at
the world on which it was looking for the first time. The color of the whole was purest milky
white. Slowly and painfully, assessing itself by slender, colorless legs that seemed strangely feeble
and trembling, a butterfly crawled from the cocoon. Its wings were folded and lifeless, without substance
or color, but the body was a perfect white. The butterfly moved a little distance from its cocoon and
slowly unfurled its wings. With the action, life seemed to be pumped into them from some
hidden spring in the insect's body. The slender antenna spread out and wavered gently in the
the warm air. The wings were becoming broad expanses of snowy velvet. A trace of eagerness seemed
to come into the butterfly's actions. Somewhere there in the valley, sweet food and joyous companions
awaited it. Fluttering above the fungoids of the hillsides, surely, there was a mate, with whom
the joys of love were to be shared. Surely upon those gigantic patches of green, half hidden in
the haze, there would be laid tiny golden eggs that in time would hatch into small, fat grubs.
Strath came to the butterfly's limbs.
Its wings were spread and closed with a new assurance.
It spread them once more, and raised them to make the first flight of this new existence
in a marvelous world full of delights and adventures.
Burl struck home with his spear.
The delicate limbs struggled in agony, the wings fluttered helplessly, and in a little while the
butterfly lay still upon the fungus carpeted earth, and Burl leaned over to strip away the great wings
of snow-white velvet, to sever the long and slender antenna, and then to call his tribesmen
and bid them share in the food he had for them.
And there was a feast that afternoon.
The tribesmen sat about the white carcass, cracking open the delicate limbs for the meat within
them, and Burrow made sure that Sayah secured the choicest bits.
The tribesmen were happy.
Then one of the children of the tribe stretched a hand aloft and pointed up the mountainside.
Coming slowly down the slanting earth was a long, narrow file of living animals.
For a time the file seemed to be but one creature, but Burl's keen eyes soon saw that there were many.
They were caterpillars, each one perhaps ten feet long, each with a tiny black head armed with sharp jaws,
and with dull red fur upon their backs.
The rear of the procession was lost in the mist of the low-hanging cloud banks
that covered the mountainside some two thousand feet above the plateau,
but the foremost was no more than three hundred yards away.
Slowly and solemnly, the procession came on,
the black head of the second touching the rear of the first,
and the head of the third touching the rear of the second.
In faultless alignment, without intervals,
they moved steadily down the slanting side of the mountain.
Save the first they seemed absorbed in maintaining their perfect formation, but the leader constantly
rose upon his hinder half and waved the fore part of his body in the air, first to the right
and then to the left, as if searching out the path he would follow.
The tribesfolk watched in amazement, mingled with terror.
Only Burl was calm.
He had never seen a slug that meant danger to man.
and he reasoned that these were at any rate moving slowly so that they could be distanced
by the fleeter-footed human beings, but he also meant to be cautious.
The slow march kept on.
The rear of the procession of caterpillars emerged from the cloud-bank,
and Burle saw that a shining white line was left behind them.
No less than eighty great caterpillars clad in white and dingy red
were solemnly moving down the mountainside,
leaving a path of shining silk behind them.
Head to tail, in single file,
they had no eyes or ears for anything but their procession.
The leader reached the plateau and turned.
He came to the cluster of giant cabbages and ignored them.
He came to a thicket of mushrooms and passed through it,
followed by his devoted band.
Then he came to an open space where the earth was soft and sandy, where sandstone had weathered
and made a great heap of easily moved earth.
The leading caterpillar halted and began to burrow experimentally in the ground.
The result pleased him, and some signals seemed to pass along the 800-foot line of creatures.
The leader began to dig with feet and jaws, working furiously to cover himself completely.
completely with the soft earth. Those immediately behind him abandoned their formation and pressed
forward in haste. Those still farther back moved more hurriedly. All, when they reached the
spot selected by the leader, abandoned any attempt to keep in line, and hastened to find an
unoccupied spot in the open space in which to bury themselves. For perhaps half an hour
the clearing was the scene of intense activity, incredible activity.
activity. Huge, ten-foot bodies burrowed desperately in the whitish earth, digging frantically
to cover themselves. After the half-hour, however, the last of the caterpillars had vanished.
Only an occasional movement of the earth, from the struggle of a buried creature to bury itself
still deeper, and the freshly turned surface, showed that beneath the clearing on the plateau,
So, eighty great slugs were preparing themselves for the sleep of metamorphosis.
The piled up earth and the broad white band of silk, leading back up the hillside until
it became lost in the clouds, alone remained to tell of the visitation.
The tribesmen had watched in amazement.
They had never seen these creatures before.
But they knew, of course, why they had entombed themselves.
Had they known what the scientists of thirty thousand years before had written in weighty and dull books,
they would have deduced from the appearance of the processionary caterpillars, or pine caterpillars,
that somewhere above the bank of clouds there were growing trees and sunlight,
that a moon shone down, and stars twinkled from the blue bolt of a cloudless sky.
But the tribesmen did not know.
They only knew that there, beneath the soft earth, was a mighty store of food for them when
they cared to dig for it, that their provisions for many months were secure, and that
Burle their leader was a great and mighty man for having led them to this land of safety and
plenty.
Burl read their emotions in their eyes, but better than their amazement and wonderment,
was a glance that had nothing whatever to do with his leadership.
of the tribe. And then Burl rose and took the two snowy white velvet cloaks from the wings
of the white butterfly. One of them he flung about his own shoulders, and the other he flung about
Sayah. And then those two stood up before the wide-eyed tribesmen, and Burl spoke.
This is my mate, and my food is her food, and her wrath is my wrath. My burrow is her burrow and
her sorrow is my sorrow. Men whom I have led to this land of plenty, hear me, as ye obey my words,
see to it that the words of Sayah are obeyed likewise, for my spear will loose the life of any man
who angers her. Know that as I am great beyond all other men, so Sayah is great beyond all other
women, for I say it, and it is so. And he drew Saya toward him, trembling slightly, and put his
arm about her waist before all the tribe, and the tribesmen muttered in acquiescent whispers
that what Burl said was true as they had already known. Then, while the pink-skinned men
feasted on the meat Burl had provided for them, he and Sayah went toward the burrow he had made
ready. It was not like the other burrows being set apart from them, and its entrance was
bordered on either side by mushrooms as black as night. All about the entrance the black
mushrooms clustered, a strange species that grew large and scattered its spores abroad, and
then, of its own accord, melted into an inky liquid that flowed away, sinking slowly
into the ground. In a little hollow below the opening of the burrow, an inky
pool had gathered, which reflected the gray clouds above and the shapes of the mushrooms that
overhung its edges.
Burl and Sayah made their way toward the burrow in silence.
A picturesque couple against the black background of the sable mushrooms and the earth made
dark by the inky liquid.
Both of their figures were swallowed in cloaks of unsmurched whiteness and wondrous
softness, and bound to Burroughs forehead, where the feathery, lay
like antenna of a great moth making flowing plumes of purest gold his spear seemed cast from bronze and he was a proud figure as he let's say pass the black pool and to the doorway of their home
they sat there watching while the darkness came on and the moths and fireflies emerged to dance in the night and listened when the rain began it slow deliberate dripping from the heavy clouds above
presently a gentle rumbling began the accumulation of the rain from all the mountain-side forming a torrent that would pour in a six hundred foot drop to the river far below
the sound of the rushing water grew louder and was echoed back from the cliffs on the other side of the valley the fireflies danced like fairy lights in the chasm and all the creatures of the night winged their way aloft to join in the ecstasy of life and love
and then when darkness was complete and only the fitful gleams of the huge fireflies were reflected from the still surface of the black pool beneath their feet burle reached out his hand to saya
sitting beside him in the darkness she yielded shyly and her soft warm hand found his in the obscurity and burl bent over and kissed her on the lips end of chapter five end of the red dust by murray lindster
