Classic Audiobook Collection - Venus Enslaved by Manly Wade Wellman ~ Full Audiobook [scifi]
Episode Date: February 27, 2023Venus Enslaved by Manly Wade Wellman audiobook. Genre: scifi On the sweltering, perilous world of Venus, an Earthman named Planter finds his sentence turned into something far worse than prison: surv...ival among alien jungles, strange predators, and rival powers that treat human life as a resource to be spent. Thrown together with two fellow convicts, the hard-edged Disbro and the unexpectedly formidable Max, Planter expects only heat, hunger, and a quick death. Instead, a sudden encounter with a deadly tentacled creature ends with an even stranger rescue - by Mara, a warrior of a fierce Amazon sisterhood whose weapons are as archaic as they are lethal. The Amazons have their own war to fight, and they see in Planter both a risk and an opportunity. Looming over everything are the Frogmasters of the Veiled Planet, a domineering force whose reach and cruelty threaten to enslave everyone caught in their shadow. Caught between cultures and armed with little more than nerve, improvisation, and uneasy alliances, Planter must decide what kind of man he will be on a planet where freedom is never given - it is taken. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:28:14) Chapter 02 (01:12:41) Chapter 03 (01:38:11) Chapter 04 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Venus enslaved by Manly Wade Wellman, Part One.
Black velvet infinity all around, punctured and patterned with the many-hued jewels of space.
Comforting somehow, because they made the same constellation patterns you used to see on
Earth.
There was the dipper.
There, Scorpio, there Orion.
But the twinkle was shut off.
As though every star had turned cold and sighted.
quietly watchful toward your impudent invasion of emptiness.
So big was the universe that the little recess, which did duty for control room, observation
point, and living cabin seemed even smaller than it was, which was very small indeed.
Planter forgot the dizzy lightness of head and body, here beyond gravity, and turned his
wondering eyes outward from where he lay strapped in his spring-jointed hammock toward the
firmament, and decided that there was nothing in all his past life that he would change
if he could.
Check blast tempo, came the voice of Dispro, just beyond his head, a high, harsh, commanding voice.
Check lubrication loss and check sun direction.
Then brace yourself.
We may land quicker than we thought.
Planter leaned toward the instrument panel that covered most of the bulkhead to the right
of his hammock.
The pale glow from the dials highlighted his face, young bony intent.
Blast tempo-addequate, he called back to Dispro.
Lubrication lost about 7.2, 3.96 degrees off sunward.
Air loss, nil.
Who asked for air-loss?
Snubbed Dispro from his hammock forward.
He was leaner than planter, taller, older.
Even in his insulated cover-off.
bulking against whatever temperature or pressure danger might be threatened by the outer space,
he was of a dangerous elegance of figure and attitude.
His face, framed in tight, cushioned helmet, was so narrow that it seemed compressed
sideways.
Dark eyes crowded together with only a disdainful blade of nose between them,
a mouth short but strong, a chin like the pointed toe of a stylish boot,
a cropped black mustache.
Back on Lost Earth, Dispro had frightened men and fascinated women.
His cunning crime administration had been almost too neat for the police, but not quite,
or he would not have been here with his life barely held in his elegant fingertips.
Venus plumbed center ahead, he told Planter. Have a look.
That last, as if he were granting a favor.
Planter twisted in the hammock.
He saw the taut-slung cocoon that would be Dispros netted body,
the control board, like a bigger, more complex typewriter,
where Dispro could reach and strike key combinations to steer, speed, or otherwise maneuver the ship,
beyond a great round port at its middle, a disk the size of a tabletop.
Against the black airless sky, most of that disk looked as blue as the thick,
thinnest of milk. One smooth edge was brightened to cream, the sunward limb of Venus,
but even the dimmer expanse showed fluffy and gently rippling a swaddling of opaque cloud.
"'That,' said Dispro, "'is our little gray home in the west.'
"'I wonder what's underneath the clouds,' mused Planter for the millionth time.
"'All those science pots, sitting home on the seat of their expensive,
striped pants wonder that snarled Dispro.
That's why they sent eight rockets before us smack into the cloud.
That's why, with eight silences out of a possible eight, they rigged this knife.
That's why, when nobody was fool enough to volunteer, they dug up three convicts,
who were all neatly earmarked to be killed anyway, and gave them a bang at the job.
Three convicts.
Planter, Dispro, and Max.
Planter had forgotten Max, as everyone was apt to, including Max himself.
For Max had been a sturdy athlete, a coming heavyweight champion,
until too many gaily accepted blows had done something to his mind.
Doctors said some concussion unbalanced him,
but not far enough so that he didn't know right and wrong apart when he killed his manager,
for cheating on certain gate receipts.
And so, prison and a sentence to the chair,
with the reprieve that came by recommendation of the Rocket Foundation
on March 30, 2082.
Now Max was in the compartment aft,
keeping the levers kicking that ran the rocket engines.
Show Max how to do a thing,
and he'd keep right on doing it until you pulled him away,
or until he dropped.
What would Max's last name be,
wondered Planter.
He studied the face of Venus.
He sang to himself softly.
"'O thou sublime, sweet evening, star!'
Softly, but not too softly for Disparo's excellent ears.
Dispro chuckled.
"'You know, Opera, Planter?
Pretty fancy for an ex-con.'
"'I know that piece,' said Planter shortly.
Woffram's Hym to Venus from Tanhauser.
It had started him thinking again.
Gwen had played it so often on her violin, played it and sung it.
Those were the days he had known she was married,
down in her red and gold department at the artist's quarters.
He'd been sculpting her.
She had the second best figure he ever saw.
Then he found out about her husband,
for the husband burst in upon them.
The husband had tried to kill Planter, but Planter had killed the husband,
and Gwyn had sworn his life away.
Check elapsed time, Disprobate him.
Fifty-eight days, nine hours, and 54 minutes, point seven, rejoined Planter at once.
Prompt, aren't you? We'll be on Venus before the 64th day.
Planter saw Disprose shift over in his hammock.
I'm going to shave.
then eat. Dispro turned a stud in the wall. His electric razor began to hum. Planter opened a locker
valve and brought forth his own rations, a pack of concentrated solid, compounded of chocolate,
meat extract, several vitamin agents. It would sustain him for hours, but was anything but
a fill to his hunger. He chewed it slowly to make it last longer, and sipped from a snipe-nosed
container of water, slightly effervescent and assidulated.
A few drops escaped between snout and lip, and swam lazily in the gravityless air of the
cabin like shiny little bubbles.
"'Planter,' said Dispro, suddenly pleasant.
"'We're going to fool him.'
He shut off his razor.
Planter took another nibble.
"'Yes, Disprow?'
"'We'll land at the North Pole.'
Planter shook his head.
We can't.
This rocket is set at midpoint on the Venusian disk.
We can.
I've tinkered with the controls.
A break for us, no break for the foundationeers at home.
They're watching us through telescopes.
What they want is our crash on Venus with a great up flare of the exploding fuel.
Then they'll know that we landed and can shake hands.
all round on a successful advancement.
But we're curving away, then in.
I've fixed that.
We'll not blow off and make any signal, but we'll live.
North Pole, mused Planter, pensively.
No spin to Venus up there.
We'll land solidly.
We'll land where it's coolest and none too cool.
Her equator must be two degrees hotter than Satan's
reception hall. The pole may be endurable.
What then? asked Planter.
"'We'll live, I say. Don't you want to live?'
Planter hadn't thought about it lately. But suddenly he knew that he did want to live.
His was a family of considerable longevity. His grandfather had attained the age of
one hundred and seven, and had claimed to remember the end of the Second World War.
Six days to study it over, Disparo was saying.
Then we'll have a try.
If we land alive, we'll laugh.
If we die trying, we'll have nothing to worry about.
Float up here, will you?
Take over. I'm going to have a little sleep.
Through choking steam, white and ever-swelling,
drove the silvery cigar that was the ninth rocket ship
to attempt to voyage across space.
From its snout blossomed sudden flame, blue and red and blue again.
Rocket counterblasts that were designed to act as brakes.
They worked somewhat.
The speed cut from bullet rate to falling rate, from falling rate to flying rate.
Then of a sudden, partial clarity around it.
Within an upper envelope of blinding vapors, Venus had a thinner atmosphere,
partially transparent.
Below showed a surface of fluffy greens,
all sorts of greens,
lettuce, apple, olive, emerald, spinach, sea greens,
vegetation plainly and lots of it.
The ship, steadying in its plunge like a skilled diver,
nosed across toward a wet slate-dark patch
that must be open ground.
From the stern where rocket tubes had ceased blasting,
broke out a massive expanse of fabric, a parachute, another and another.
Down floated the craft, thudding at last upon its resting place.
Planter felt a cramping pain.
He realized that to feel pain one must be alive.
Then his head throbbed.
It hung head downward.
Gravity was back.
He groped for his hammock-fastening.
loosened them, and lowered himself to a standing position beneath, on the round port that
had been forward.
Disparo hung in his hammock, motionless but moaning faintly.
Planter hurriedly freed him and laid him flat on his back.
He fumbled a locker open, brought out a water-pot.
A little spurt between Dispros' short, scornful lips brought him back to consciousness.
"'We made it!'
was Disparo's first comet, full of triumph and savagery.
Help me up.
Thanks.
Oh, we seem to have socked in somewhere, nose first.
He was right.
No sign of light or open air showed through the forward port,
nor the side ports from which planter had been wont to study the reaches of space.
Dispro looked up.
The after bulkhead, now their ceiling had a hatchway.
"'Ease me,' he said to Planter, who made a stirrup of his hands and obliged.
The slightly less gravitational pull of Venus made Dispro more active than on Earth.
He caught Planter's hammock, got his foot on a side bracket for steadiness, and climbed up to the hatch.
A tug at the clamps opened it, and he wriggled through.
"'Wake up, you big buffalo,' Planter heard him snarling.
Max was evidently unconscious up there.
Planter, without a helper to lift him, made shift by climbing Disparo's hammock,
then his own to gain the compartment above.
He'd have died if he had an ounce of brains, commented Disparo, pointing.
Max lay crumpled against the bulkhead close to the great bank of levers he had been working.
In his hands were grasped broken pieces of network from his hammock.
He was out of the lashings when we landed.
Dispro went on.
We were about to hit, and he grabbed hold.
He must have passed out.
But the big lump single-minded, abnormally so.
He hung on without knowing, and the breaking of those strands kept him from crashing full force.
Planter knelt and pulled Max straight.
Max was tremendous, a burly troll in his cover-alls.
His shoulders were almost a yard wide.
his hands like oversized gloves.
His big face, with its broad jaw, heavy dark brows and ruddy cheeks, might have been handsome,
was not the nose smashed in by a blow taken in some old ring battle.
Don't waste water, cautioned Disparo, as planter hunted for the food locker.
I'll bring him out of it.
He knelt and slapped the inert face sharply.
Max's mouth opened, showing a gap where his front teeth had.
been beaten out. He gave a grumbling yell, then sprang erect so suddenly that Dispro,
starting away, almost fell through the hatchway. Max saw Planter, scowled and snorted,
then fell into a boxing stance. He inched forward his mighty fists fiddling hypnotically.
"'Time!' yelled Planter at once. "'This isn't a fight, Max. We've landed safe and alive on Venus.'
Max's eyes widened a little.
He grinned loosely and pulled off his helmet.
His skull was thatched with bushy black hair.
Oh, he said in a deep chiding tone.
I forgot.
Oh.
Forgot?
Echoed Dispro scornfully.
He sounds as if he had the ability to remember.
Planters studied the ports in this compartment.
They too were obscured by
wet-looking grail soil. The ship must be well buried in the crust of Venus.
What if it was completely submerged, a tomb for them? He glanced upward to another hatchway,
one that would lead past the rocket engines.
Don't go up, Max cautioned him thoroughly. Hot up there. Brilliant, was Dispros' ill-humored,
rejoiner. Max actually knows that the engines will be hot.
Planter clapped Max on the big shoulder.
"'It'll be all right,' he reassured the giant.
"'Get me a wrench, will you?
That long shanked one for tightening tube housings will do?'
He scrambled up along the levers, which made a ladder of sorts.
The hatch to the engines had to be loosened with a wrench.
Beyond, as Max had sagely warned him, it was stifling hot.
He avoided gleaming, sweltering,
tubes and housings, scrambling to air a four-foot circle of nuts showed in the bulk heading.
This would be the plate that closed the central stem among the rear rocket jets.
He began to loosen one.
"'Stop that, you fool!'
It was Dispro who had climbed after him and was watching.
Who knows about this lower atmosphere of Venus?
"'I'm going to find out about it,' replied Planter, a little roughly,
for he did not like Dispros matter.
He gave the nut another turn.
Wait, wait, cautioned Dispro.
He climbed all the way into view,
holding up a glass flask with a neck attachment of gauges and pipings.
I got a sample through the lock panel.
Plenty of air bubbles were carried down with us.
Let me work it out before you do anything heroic.
Dispro was right.
He was usually right about technology,
Planter mopped his brow on the sleeve of his cover-all and waited.
Yes, Despros was commenting.
Oxygen, nice article of that, and plenty nitrogen, too.
Just like Earth.
Quite a bit of carbon dioxide.
It'll be from all that vegetation.
Certified breathable.
Go on and unshipped that plate.
Planter did so.
He loosed the last nut and pushed against the plate.
It stirred easily.
The after-part of the ship would still be in the open.
Dispro climbing after him caught his elbow.
"'I go out first,' he announced.
They marked me down as senior of the expedition, one side.
Planter stared quizzically and once again did as Disprow told him.
The lean man thrust up the plate like a trap-door and crept out.
At last, he yelled back.
Men on Venus.
Come on, Planter.
Planter called back to Max, who was bringing up a bundle of articles.
Dispro had chosen for the venture outside.
Two repeating rifles, two pistols, several tools, and tens of food, corals of rope.
Planter helped him with the load, and they got outside with it.
Dispro had slid down the steep bulge of the hull.
He clung to a grab-iron.
his feet just above the gray muck into which they had plunged.
He stared up.
First man to set foot on Venus, he was saying.
Who was second of you, too?
We didn't stop to bother, Planter replied.
What now?
He stared around to answer his own question.
Venus was dull like a very cloudy day at home.
The air was moist but fresh,
and little wreaths and veils of mist kept one from seeing form.
But he made out that they had found lodgment in a sterile-looking clearing with a muddy
floor that might or might not sustain a man's weight.
All around was a crowded wall of vegetation, towering high above the range of his vision into
upper fog, tight grown as a hedge and vigorously fat of twig and leaf.
Planter, no botanists, yet was aware at once of strangeness beyond his power to describe.
He knew that specimens would be gathered and preserved to take home.
To take home?
Home to Earth?
But the ship was almost buried in its mud.
He remembered Disprose-dry comment,
Our little gray home in the West.
They were on Venus, undoubtedly, to stay.
Max beside him gave a sort of gurgling bellow of surprise and fear.
Oh, something's gone.
Mr. Disbro.
For once Max was being articulate.
For once Dispro was being silent.
Glancing down, Planter saw the slender, elegant figure, writhed close against the metal
hull, clutching with both hands the grab-iron.
Dispro stared groundwards, and what could be seen of his face was as white as a wood-boring
grub.
One of his legs was drawn up, knee-bracing against the ground.
the plates, the other stretched out grotesquely as if to point a toe with something in the muck.
It took a second staring study to realize that a whip-like strand of something that gleamed and
tightened was snapped around Disprose's ankle.
Rope Max snapped Plinter.
He made a quick hitch around a rocket tube and lowered himself in a rush.
His free hand grasped the heavy automatic pistol.
He paused in his descent just above disson.
"'studying the black, shiny tether.
"'It protruded from the semi-glutinous mud,
"'which stirred and quivered around the protrusion.
"'A sense was there of rigid grasp
"'and slowly contracting pressure.
"'It was squeezing the captured ankle.
"'It was shortening itself to pull Dispro down.
"'Dispro said nothing because he had caught his breath
"'for an effort at wrenching free.
but he could not do that.
His strong lean fingers were beginning to slip on the grab-iron.
He turned horror-widened eyes toward Planter.
Hang on, muttered Planter, and aimed his pistol.
No, sure shot.
He nevertheless was close to his target.
He fired a fifty-calibre slug, another and another.
Two of them hit the tail, tentacle, or probosciscus.
At once it let go of Dispro, gesticulating wildly.
Blood sprang forth on its shiny enticament.
Venusian blood was red, mused Planter, even as Venusian herbage was green.
Dispro gave a choking gurgle that might have been thanks, relief, or effort.
A moment later he was swarming up Planter's rope like a monkey.
But Planter did not follow.
The appendage he had wounded was.
drawing out of sight like a worm into its hole, but two more just like it had fastened upon
his foot and knee.
He lost his grip and fell into the mud.
It was like a dip into thick gravy.
The stuff lapped and closed over his head, and he let go of the pistol to try to swim.
A couple of laborious strokes brought him back to the surface, gasping and blowing away thick
lumps from nose and mouth.
A moment later two more tentacles were groping and seizing at his shoulder and waist.
Four bonds now tightened upon him like lariots.
Planter seemed to be thinking in two compartments.
One set of thoughts dictated his floundering, desperate struggle.
The other considered the situation with a curiosity, dispassionate, and almost mild.
The creature that snared him was just what he might have expected.
something on the octopus order.
How many science-fiction stories had dealt with such monsters on strange worlds.
The creepy writhings of tentacles appealed to fantasy writers.
The neat, simple, active structure of the brute was logical to the great mechanic who devised nature.
The thing had him, in any case, if he could not kick or struggle or cut free.
Cut free! That was it!
He had a knife in the side pocket of his coveralls.
He dug for it, almost dropped it from his muddy fingers, then yanked open the biggest blade.
He slashed at the nearest tentacle, the one around his waist.
It parted like a cane-stalk before a machete.
The other arms quivered and slackened, plainly shocked by pain.
Planter rolled out of their grip, started to swim away anywhere.
He looked over his shoulder and saw his enemy as it humped itself partially into view.
Not such an octopus after all.
The dispassionate part of planter's brain called the thing an animated tall tree.
The slender tentacles sprouted from a thicker trunk that could curve and writhe and
wallow, but not so readily.
It was of a rubbery gray-brown, and at the upper end, nestled among the tenter.
roots was what must be its mouth.
That mouth opened and shut in almost wistful hunger.
Planter swam furiously.
He wanted to reach and climb the stem of the rocket-chip,
but the thing knew his wish and moved to head him off.
He kicked and fought his way toward the far mass of leaves that bordered this mud-pit.
From among those leaves glowed for an instant a sort of splinter of a sort of splinter of
yellow light. A small object sang over Planter's helmeted head like a bee and struck behind him
with a little chuck. It must have found lodgment against the hall tree-thing, which paused in
its pursuit to flop and spatter the mud with its tentacles. Planter blessed the diversion whatever
it was, and strove nearer to the shore. The forest was alive, he suddenly decided. Out of
its misty tangle a great leafy branch swung knowingly toward him. He clutched at it, brought
away a fat, moist, handful of strange-shaped leaves. His other hand made good its hold on the branch
itself, and with the last of his strength he dragged himself to where roots hummocked above the mud.
Then he saw where the branch had come from. A slim, active figure stood among the stems,
pressing with both hands upon the base of the branch to make it move into the open.
As Planter scrambled to safety, the figure relaxed its helpful shoving,
and the branch moved back toward the perpendicular.
Planter gazed in utter lost unbelief at this stranger.
It was a woman, young, fair, fine-limbed.
She wore the briefest of garments, belted around with strange weapons,
and her feet was shot and cross-guarded,
Buscans.
Upon her tumble of golden curls rode a metal helmet that reminded him of
Grecian antiquity.
Her bare arms, round but strong, cradled something with a stock and butt of a musket,
but with a short, tight-strung bow at its muzzle, surely the pattern of a medieval crossbow.
Her face was of a flawless pink and white beauty, just now stamped with utter disdain,
its short rosy mouth opened and formed words.
Words that planter understood.
You fool, said the girl with the crossbow.
You scurvy fool!
End of part one.
Part two of Venus enslaved by Manly Wade Wellman.
This Libri-Vox recording is in the public domain.
Part two.
Dispro.
barely able to stir for shock and weariness,
climbed only a few hands, breaths out of danger,
before he must stop and wheeze for breath.
At last he could make himself heard.
Max, you pighead, help me!
Oh!
came the grunt of assent from above as the big fellow slid down in turn.
He slipped a thick arm around Disbro,
hoisting the tall, slender body as if it were a bundle of old clothes,
and slid it across a shoulder like the jut of a craig.
Then Max scaled the rope once again to the safe top of the nosed-over-rocket-ship.
Dispro found his own feet and shakily wiped his clear-cut face,
still pale from exertion and terror.
That was close.
Say, ventured Max,
Mr. Planter, he's gone.
Disprow looked around.
The mud expanse around them was stirred up as if by boiling struggles, but there was no sign of planter or the thing with tentacles.
That thing got him, decided Dispro.
But Max shook his heavy head.
Uh-uh, he demurred.
No, the girl, she got him.
Girl?
Echoed Dispro and scowled.
What girl?
Max pointed with a finger like the heft of a ham.
She was in the trees, got him.
Dispro peered at the trees, then at Max.
His skull deepened.
What are you driveling about?
The girl, said Max.
Disbro snorted and skinned his teeth in scorn.
How, he demanded of the misty skies,
do I get mixed up with minus quantities like this?
"'A girl,' the man says, here on Venus.
"'A girl,' repeated Max firmly.
"'Dispro wheeled upon him.
"'Come off of that,' he commanded sharply.
"'Planter's gone, dead.
"'You're all I have to associate with.
"'You'll act sane whether you are or not.'
"'Max's big pained eyes faltered before the glittering accusation of Disprose gaze.
All right, he conceded.
There wasn't any girl there, you idiot.
Max nodded.
I saw, shut up, Disbro cut him off.
No girl, I said.
No girl, repeated Max obediently.
Rain began to fall.
Fat drops the size of marbles.
Back inside, commanded Dispro.
There will be lots of this kind of weather.
We'll have something to eat, then study another way to reach the trees yonder."
"'No girl,' said Max,
"'but I saw.'
The rain that drove Dispro and Max back into their shelter,
filtered through layers of leafage, beginning to wash the mud from planter's clothing.
He stared again at his rescuer.
"'I seem to have understood what you said,' he managed at last.
"'Isn't so strange that?' she flung back in words somehow run together.
"'Ein though you're mad an owl to sport with yonder muckworm.'
And her wide, bright blue eyes flickered toward the danger he had lately avoided.
"'You'll have the tongue of mankind, or no man?'
"'Man enough, young woman,' replied Planter, a little nettled.
"'I suppose it's like the fantasies. We can read each other's minds or something.'
Something, she echoed as if humoring a child.
And I owe you thanks for saving my life.
Oh, twas no great matter, she shouldered the crossbow.
Come for the sky-guards will be about our heels.
She picked her away rapidly among the stream, with the surest and cleverest of feet.
Women on earth were never so graceful or sure, decided Planter, hurrying after.
He was aware that he did not step on the muddy,
surface of Venus, but upon a matted overfloor of roots fallen stems, ground vines,
sometimes great sturdy leaves like lily pads grown to the size of double mattresses.
"'Wait, young lady,' he called.
"'Who are the Skygores you mentioned, and why should they be after us?'
She halted again, swung, and studied him with more of that disdainful curiosity.
"'Tis a gruel-brained idiot,' she decided as if it.
to herself. For that they cast him out. Me thought it was strange that a man should flee of himself
from sure shelter and vigil. It was raining harder. The great roof of vegetation only partially
broke that downpour. It slewled away the coating of mud from planter, and soaked his stout
garments through. He felt miserable in the dampness, but his girl guide throve, if anything,
in the drops that struck and rolled down her bare arms and shoulders.
He saw, too, that she followed something of a trail among the stalks and stems.
It was barely wider than his own stalwart shoulders could pass,
and wound crazily here and there, but one must stick to it,
for to right and left the jungle grew thicker than a basket.
He called out again.
"'Miss, young lady?'
She turned, as before.
"'What now?'
This path, what is it?
Did you make it?
Tell me things.
He made a gesture of appeal, for she was putting on that look of contempt once more.
You see, I'm no more than an hour old on this planet.
Odd so.
Your brain is younger than that.
Leave me.
I have no time for idiots.
Abruptly she stiffened, widened her eyes, lifted a finger to her red lips for silence.
The two of them stood close together in the misty rain,
their ears sharpened.
Planter heard which she had heard,
a rustling, crunching approach
along some other angle of the jungle path.
The girl wrenched apart two
sappy lengths of vine,
and with a jerk of her head
bade Planter slip through into the great thicket.
He did so, and she followed.
Turning, her lithe body close against his,
she brought her crossbow to the ready.
Danger?
whispered Planter, and she nodded bleakly.
The approach was coming near.
Planter judged that whatever threatened them was two-legged, weighty and great-lunged,
many yards off it wheezed like a faulty engine.
His companion's ears were better than his, or more experienced.
She gauged the nearness of the stranger, and the crossbow went to her shoulder like a rifle.
Planter saw that it operated on a spring trigger that would trip a latch and release the string.
The bow, violently recovering from its bending, would force the missile along a groove in the top of the stock.
All parts, stock, bow, and string, or of some massive dark metal, apparently treated with grease to save it from the constant dampness.
The missile itself was not an arrow, but seemed to size and shape of a silvery fountain.
mountain-pin.
Planter burned to ask questions about it, but the enemy was in sight by now.
Something of mottled green and black that shouldered upright along the way between the thickets.
Planter felt his companion's body grow tense against his shoulder.
Her finger touched the trigger lightly.
The metal string twanged, and with a waspy hum the missile leaped toward its target.
At the same time, a little burst of the ground.
the flame showed from it bright yellow.
Chuck!
The shot went home, as that other shot against the thing called a muckworm.
Down floundered the green-spotted form.
At once the girl was out of hiding and stooping above her quarry.
Planter, following, peered with wonder and caution.
He saw a body larger than himself and grotesquely of the same build.
A dumpy torso on massive back-bent legs like a crickets, wide flapper feet, a round low head with a monstrous slash of mouth, big eyes, now filming with death, no nose at all.
The creature was very like a nightmare frog.
But this frog wore garments of linked and plated metal wire and rubber-looking fabric.
It had a silver belt with pouches and holsters.
These pouchers and holsters the girl was now plundering.
Quick, she snapped at Planter over her rosy shoulder.
Take the spoil.
He will have friends and they must not find us.
Her tone was still reminiscent of Dispro speaking to Max.
Planter's ravenous curiosity was at last completely overwritten.
Young lady, he said flatly, I'm not prepared to endure any more.
She suddenly screamed, not like a warrior, but like a girl who is mortally frightened.
Planter had the time to realize that she saw something just beyond him.
He pivoted and set himself as another of the froggy beings charged.
More Skigors! he heard a cry behind him, and he knew that it was Skygars he faced.
Planter was a boxer of sorts, strong, if not brilliant,
and his unthinking reflex was to plant his feet, bend his knees, and crouch for attack or defense.
That reflex shortened his height by several inches, and saved his life.
The skygores that rushed him had pointed a pistol-form weapon,
from which came yellow flame as from the crossbow.
A silvery object meant to shatter his brains only sang above his head with millimeters to spare.
Before the pistol-like weapon could aim and spit again,
Planter had charged in.
It was all he could do, but it was enough.
He jabbed viciously with his left fist,
followed with his right to the abdomen.
The left knuckles slashed soft flesh about the wide mouth.
His right hand almost broke on a hard belt buckle.
Both blows were staggering to the wheezing adversary,
who dropped its pistol and yelled with a voice,
like a steam whistle.
It made words, each of them almost deafening to Planter.
To silence it, more than anything else,
Planter drove in closer still and lifted an uppercut as though it were a shovel full of
gravel.
It found the point where a terrestrial man would have a chin.
Down floundered the clumsy body, and Planter, with no thought of referees or rules,
set his heavy boot on the face and bashed it in.
He stepped across the subsiding form in time to encounter another.
This one got great flappy hands upon him.
Their grip was knowing, powerful, wicked.
The Skygore plucked him close, its mouth grinned into a gape.
It had teeth.
It was going to bite.
He was held by the shoulders and doubted if he could break away.
Instead of trying, he put his own hands to the things.
elbows, drew his right knee tight to his chest, and planted a toe in a metal-clad midriff.
Then, even as the open paw sought to seize his face, he threw himself backward.
Landing flat on his shoulder-blades he drew down with his hands and hoisted with his feet.
His opponent somersaulted in air, and fell with a heavy, squashing thump upon the root-tangled
floor of the trail.
In a flash, planter was up.
He jumped with both feet.
Bones broke under the impact.
A second Skigora was down, dead or dying.
Aside, the girl was calling, and he obeyed, flattening against a cross-weaving of
vine-stems.
She was risen upon one knee, crossbow to shoulder.
It twanged, flashed, and once again its successful charge sounded its chuck.
Planter glanced down the trail in time to see a fourth and last Skygore drop down.
He found that he was gasping for air and trembling as though the danger was still to come instead of past.
The girl rose came to him and touched his arm.
She smiled.
Her eyes shone.
Gone was the contempt, the superiority.
She only admired completely and frankly.
"'Sink me, you're a fighter,' she said.
"'A cod! I saw only the flight of fists, and a sky-gore went down, and another.
You saved my life, and we have four skigores to strip, with none to boom about where we went from here.
Your name, friend?'
"'Planter,' he said.
David Planter,' she repeated.
Her A was very broad so that she made the name almost D.
divid."
Again she smiled.
"'A king's name ist not.
I am called Mara.
Come help me take what is valuable from this carrion.'
Planter's heart warm to her.
"'Thanks for your kind words,' he smiled back.
"'But I did what any man would do.'
"'All men are slaves,' she surprised him by saying,
"'you will amaze the other girl warriors when I bring you to the nest.'
Dispro, standing on the glass port pane that was now floor of the control room, labored and cursed at his keyboard.
He pressed one, two, an octave.
The nosed over ship stirred but did not rise.
Max, bawled Dispro to the upper hatch.
Pressure!
Giving you all there is! Max informed him timidly.
Dispro turned from his controls, shrugging in disgust.
"'Those bow-tubes are jammed and displaced,' he cursed.
"'We can't clear off until we get her up and clean them.
"'And we can't get her up and clean them until they work.
"'Huh!'
Max's big, diffident face framed itself in the hatchway,
registering a small hope.
"'We're floating,' he volunteered.
"'Close to those trees and things.'
Dispro showed interest.
Then we'll get our feet on solid ground, or nearly solid.
That tentacle thing won't be sloshing around.
He beckoned.
Come down.
Max obeyed.
From a locker Dispro took a pressure squirt of waterproofing liquid.
He sprayed Max's clothes, then his own.
That'll shed rain, he said.
Buckle on a pistol, if you're smart enough to use one, and give me two.
Once more the hammocks in the lower chamber and the levers in the higher gave them a lot of way up.
Dispro, emerging first into the damp, warm mist, saw it once that they had visitors.
The ship, as Max said, floated close to the mat of growth that fringed the muddy pool.
Here the jungle consisted of meaty stems, straight, thick, and close-set, with tangled, firiform foliage.
A little above mud level, gnarled roots wove into a firm footing, and upon it, pressing from the thickets toward the ship, were huge biped creatures in gleaming metal harness.
They had chopped down spongy trunks and branches on which to venture over the mud surface as on rafts.
Coming near the ship, they had passed cables of grease-clotted metal wire around it, mooring it fast to thicker trunks.
As Dispro stared down, several of them began to converse in tones that rang and boomed like great gongs.
Half-deffined, Dispros still could perceive that their voices had inflection and sense.
Harness, concerted action, tools, a language.
Here was a master race comparable to terrestrial humanity.
One of them turned a bulging black eye upward and saw Dispro.
Its flat face split across, and a mouth like an open gladstone bag shouted its discovery.
One green paw, webbed but prehensile, snatched a weapon from a metal-length waist belt, and aimed it at the terrestrial.
But Dispro, too, was quicker on the draw.
His gang rule on Earth had necessitated shooting skill as well as leadership.
His own automatic sprang into his hand.
"'No, you don't,' he snapped,
and shot the weapon out of the Venusian's flipper.
It screamed in a voice that vibrated the steamy air,
and its companion started and shrank back in startled wonder.
Disparo drew a second pistol, leveling it at them.
I'll shoot the first one that moves, he promised,
as if they could understand and understand they did.
Up went shaky, flipper hands.
No, no, they boomed in thunderous humility.
Don't, don't.
He had not the time to wonder that they spoke words he knew.
He swung his weapons in swift arcs covering them all.
Max, behind, had sense enough to level the long barrel of a repeating rifle.
Please, roared a Venusian who seemed to be able.
leader. We do not to you. Better not, cautioned Disparo loftily. We're more profitable as
friends, that is enemies. Friends, agreed the leader. Friends. If you try any funny business,
went on Disparo. Well, watch. He snapped his right-hand gun up and fired. The bullet snipped away a leaf
the size of an opened umbrella.
As the great green blob
drifted down, Dispro fired
again and again,
until, ripped two rags,
the leaf fell limply among the Venusians.
They moaned like awe-struck foghorns.
"'Understand?' taunted Dispro.
Savvy, I could kill you all as easy as look at you.
"'Friends,' promised the leader again.
"'Max,' muttered Dispro,
"'these birds quit very easily without a fight,
"'but keep me covered from up here.'
"'Planter's rope still dangled along the hull.
"'Dispro slid down, coming to his feet on the raft heap below.
"'The Venusians gave back in wary confusion.
"'Dispro allowed himself to smile upward.
"'See what an ape you are, Max?' he chuckled.
"'You've got a look at it.
one of these and thought it was a girl.
You're not much of a picker, Max.
To the Venusian chief, he said,
I think I'll muscle in on your territory.
Mara, the crossbow girl,
brought planters to the place she called the nest.
It was hollowed out in the thickest part of the towering jungle,
as a rabbit's form is hollowed among tall grasses.
The floor was of plaited and pressed wies,
supported on stumps and roots of many tall growth.
Rounding upward and outward from this were walls,
also of wooden poles and twigs,
woven into the growing tangle.
The roof was similarly made,
but strengthened and waterproofed with earth,
dried and baked by some sort of intense heat.
The space thus blocked off was shaped like the rough inside of a hollow pumpkin,
and its size was comparable.
to the auditorium of a large theater.
Within it were set up smaller hut and bowers.
There were common cooking fires in ovens of stone and mud-brick,
and a great common light suspended from the ceiling by a long heavy chain.
This was a metal lamp fed by oily sap from some sort of tree.
Finding the nest was difficult.
Mara had picked a careful way through mazes of thick vegetation.
Paying special attention to the rearranging of leaves and branches behind them,
sagely she explained that the skigars, when hunting her kind, were thus completely lost.
Even at the very doorstep of the nest, the tangled vines, branches, and leaf sprays
obscured any hint of such a place at hand.
The dwellers in the nest were all women.
They came cautiously forward, twenty or so as Mara ushered
planter inside. They were active specimens, dress scantily and attractively like Mara. Most
of them were young, several comely. All were fair of skin and hair, a logical condition in
the cloudy air of Venus. They wore daggers, hatchets, ammunition pouches. Even at home, they
all carry crossbows.
"'What does this man here?' demanded a lean, harsh-faced woman of middle age.
"'Is he not content with servitude?'
Mara shook her head.
"'He's like none we know. He fights more fiercely than we.
"'Ecott shouldst have seen him.
"'Bare-handed he or came to Skigars.
"'I slew two more. Look at our trove.'
She opened a parcel of great leaves and showed dozens of the silver pins that were ammunition
for both the Skygore pistols and the human crossbows.
Planter also showed what he had brought from the battlefield, several belts, numerous harness
fastenings, and two of the guns.
These latter made the crossbow girls nervous.
"'We stand by these,' Mara said, tapping her crossbow.
Planter fiddled with a pistol.
Its mechanism was strange but understandable,
and he flattered himself that he could learn to use it.
As for the pinned missiles,
they seemed to contain a charge that burned violently on exposure to air.
The trigger mechanism, whether pistol or crossbow,
punctured it, set it of fire,
and the vehemence of combustion not only propelled it
but destroyed the target completely.
The older woman, whose name was Montha, nodded her head over a decision.
"'Let the man have the dag,' she granted with an air of authority.
"'If he fights as Mara says, he may be of aid.
Yet he is unlike those we know in hue and aspect.
True enough, Planter was dark of complexion with black curls and ruddy tan jaws.
He spoke to Montha respectfully, for the others called her mother and treated her as a commander.
"'I'm not of your people,' he said.
"'I come from another planet—Earth.'
"'Earth,' she repeated.
"'You come from there?
Why, so do we all.'
Down a trail went a patrol of Skygars.
Among them not much under them in size, tramped Max.
His broad shoulders bore a great burden of supplies from the ship.
At the head of the procession, next to the chief, walked Dispro.
As someone else was saying to Planter at almost the same moment, the Chief Skigar boomed to Dispro.
You are not like men we know.
Naturally not, agreed Dispro.
Your race is more like a bunch of freak reptiles.
Not my race, demure the Chief Skigour.
Men, slaves.
Dispro understood only part and took exception to that.
I'm no slave of yours, he warned.
No, equal.
We have long needed equal men to kill off the wild girls.
You see, Mr. Disbro chimed in Max from behind.
Dave Planter was embarrassed.
Inside the nest he sat on a little.
a crew chair opposite Montha, the mother, the overhead light burned dim, and damp banishing
fires in the ovens mingled red glows.
Planter asked questions, but was distracted by the crossbow girls, who watched him with
round eyes, whispering and giggling.
Mara nearby scowled at the noise-makers.
This Venus world has much that's unknown, Montha said.
Here in the north can we dwell.
Not many days off the steam is thick, the heat horrid, the jungle dreadful.
None go there and return.
Mother, if you are called that, enlighten me, begged Planter.
You say you come from Earth?
Our fathers came, lifetimes are gone.
his good-looking face showed his amazement.
Inter-world flight was new, he had thought.
But some unknown expedition might have tried it, succeeded,
and then never returned to report.
"'Twas for fear of black Cromwell,' Montha enlarged.
"'Romwell?' echoed Planter.
"'The Puritan leader who fought and wiped out the English Cavaliers.'
Monta ceased on one word.
"'Cavaliers, yes, our love.
Lives were forfeit.
We flew hither.
It explained everything.
Human beings in a world never meant for anything but amphibians.
Their fair complexions, their quaint but understandable speech,
the crossbows that would be familiar weapons to Shakespeare, Drake, or Captain John Smith.
Yes, it explained everything.
Except how pre-machine age Britishers could succeed on a voyage where eight-spacialed
ships before planters had failed.
How did you fly?
demanded Planter, amazed.
Monta shook her graying locks.
Nay, I know not.
It was long ago, and all records are held in the Skygore fastness.
They stole from you?
After our fathers made landfall there was war,
Monttha said, her voice bitter.
The Skygores were many, and would have slain
all but thought to hold slaves, and as slaves our fathers dwelt and died and their children
after them.
But you aren't slaves, protested Planter.
Tis Skygore fashion to keep all men, and such women as are Hale and Ow for toil.
Others who seem weak they cast forth to die, like us.
Who did not die? chimed in Mara, plucking her bowstring.
We found fruits meat sheltered.
and joined.
Now we slay Skygars for their medals and shot.
Lately they slay weaklings lest they join us.
Planter whistled.
This was a harsh proof of human tenacity.
The Skygores discarding unprofitable servants and finding them a menace.
None of you were weaklings, he said.
Freedom brings health, replied Monta, stententially.
yet they are many more than we well fortified, and have a strange spell to whelm those who attack.
She grimaced and distaste.
We but lurk and linger, fighting when we must and fleeing when we may.
As the last of us dies, things began to happen.
A tall, robust girl, very handsome, had been hitching her woven chair close to plant her.
With a pert boldness she touched his hand.
"'I've seen no man since I was driven forth, a child,' she informed him.
"'I like you. I am Sala.'
Mara rose from her own seat, swore a rather Elisa Beathan oath, and slapped Salah's face resoundingly.
Sala too sprang up.
Larger than Mara she clutched her assailant shoulders and tripped her over a neatly extended foot.
Mara spun sideways and falling, broke Salah's hold, came to her feet with a drawn dagger.
This happened silently and swiftly, with none of the screaming and fumbling that marks the rare battles between terrestrial women.
Planter stared, half aghast and half admiring.
Another girl whispered behind him,
Let them fight, send them ill days.
Look at me!
I am not ugly.
Perhaps to flee this new admirer, Planter threw himself between the two fighters.
As Mara attempted to stab Sala, Planter caught her weapon wrist and wrenched the knife from her.
Meanwhile, Sala snatched up a crossbow.
Leaving Mara, Planta struck the thing out of aiming line just in time.
The pin missile tore through the basketry wall of the nest,
and Planter gained possession of the crossbow not without trouble.
"'Are you girls fighting over me?' he demanded.
"'A gad, what else?' challenged Montha, who had also sprung forward.
"'Or to a man of height and presence. For any man these my manless girls would contend.'
"'Aye, would we?' agreed one of the bevy with frightening candor.
"'He's mine,' snapped Mara, holding her own crossbow with a revie.
Step forth who will and I speak true.
I'm nobody's exploded, Planter.
Anyway, I'm going.
I have two friends near here that I've got to find and soon.
More men, ejaculated Sala, forgetting her anger.
Fighters with weapons, said Planter, ignoring her.
They'll help you smoke out these Skygores and set free your kinsmen.
Happy cries greeted his words.
I'll guide you home.
home, David Planter, offered Mawa, and Monsa gestured approval.
Mara and Planter left the nest on a new jungle trail.
Mara explained that these tunnels were made by great floundering beasts
and served as runways for smaller landlife.
The girl trod the green fog-filled labyrinths with assurance.
Within minutes they reached the pool where Dispro had landed the ship.
At the edge, floated the limp.
dead thing that Mara had killed to save Planter.
Small flutterers like gross-winged flies but as large as gulls swarmed to dig out morsels.
Mara called the creature a kra-u, the flying scavengers groals.
Sigur words for ugly beasts, she commented.
Neither is good for food.
Planter picked his way from route to root toward the ship.
Disbro, he called.
Max!
There was no answer.
He scrambled up and inside, then out again.
Something's happened, he said gravely.
Mara studied the mast logs that made a rough raft.
Skygore work, and eek the rope of wires about your ship.
They've been captured by Skygores?
For slaves?
Planter had climbed down again.
His hand sought the Skygore pistol,
his belt. His face was tense and pale. I'll get them back. Where's this swamp city you
mention?' She pointed, "'Not far, but the way is perilous. The trails throng with Skygores
and there is the spell.'
"'That sounds like some old superstition,' snorted Planter.
I'm not afraid of Skygores. I kill two today.'
"'Hi!' she smiled.
They are not great fighters in these parts, but there are more than two at the city.
Come along.
You can go back to the nest.
She smiled more broadly.
How else will you find the way, my David, for you are, my David.
Don't start that again, he bade her more roughly than he felt.
Leave the way.
Mara took a nearby jungle trail.
After some time she paused and studied the matted footing.
Tracks, she pronounced, certain skygores and two pairs of feet shot like yours.
Planter looked at the muddied marks thus diagnosed by the skilled trail-eye of Mara.
My friends and their captors?
Aye, that.
They went this way. Come.
She slipped aside through the close-set stems.
Planter did likewise.
Mara slung her crossbow behind her and climbed a trunk as a-trunk.
a beetle scales a flower-stalk.
To safer from Skygore's up here, she told him over her shoulder.
Follow me carefully.
Planter did so with difficulty.
He was a vigorous climber, and the lesser gravity of Venus made him more agile,
but Mara, some forty feet overhead, swung through the criss-cross of limbs and vines like a squirrel.
Wait, he called, striving to catch up.
She paused, finger-to-lips.
As he came near, she said softly,
"'Not so loud, we come close.
Feel you the spell?'
Hanging quietly, planter did feel it.
Uneasiness came, chilling his back despite the steamy warmth.
His hair stirred on his head, his teeth gritted,
and he could not reason himself out of the mood.
Mara moved ahead, and he followed.
Growing accustomed to the climbing he made progress, but the uncomfortable sense of peril grew
rather than diminished.
Once in their strange journey Mara paused, and from a belt-pouch produced food.
It consisted of fire-dried fruits, strange to planter, but tasty and substantial, also two
meat-dumplings made by wrapping a nut-flavored dough around morsels of flesh.
For drink she plucked long spear-like leaves from a vine, and planted her found them full of punching juice.
While they munched, he heard booming in the distance, which Mara identified as Skygore's speech.
"'We are almost there,' she whispered.
"'Look well!'
She rose, and again they took up the journey.
After a time she paused again and pointed.
"'Just beyond them the branches.
thinned out over a great open space in the jungle.
Under a far-flung canopy of white vapors lay the swamp city of the Skigars.
Planter, gazing in wonder at the strange city, thought of old Venice or of a beaver colony
in a dyke pond.
Before and beneath him was a quiet, greeny, clear body of water.
Around its rim grew shrubs, bushes, and huge reeds, their roots clasping the great-faced,
of white rock which apparently paved the banks in bottom of the pool.
In the water itself, poking above the surface in little pointed clusters, and plainly visible
where they extended beneath were the houses of the Skigors.
They were of some kind of soil or clay that had been processed to a concrete hardness,
and were tinted in various colors.
Some of the smaller dwellings were roughly spherical, and crowned with cone-shaped,
roofs. Others, larger, protruded well above the water in cylindrical form. Here and there
travelways connected the clustered groups. But it was beneath the surface that the town was
complex and great. It seemed to lie tier above tier, closely built and grouped, with here and
there protruding arms or wings of building, like coral budded from the same mass. In those depths swang
myriads of skigors, plainly at home under water. More of them, at the window-holes of the upper
towers are paddling on the surface, boomed and roared at each other in their deafening language.
From on high, Planter saw them as smaller and less to be dreaded. They might have been
slight fantasy things, water-elves, or super-intelligent frogs.
"'Look you, David Planter,' prompted Mara at his elbow.
From a tunnel-like hole in the jungle, a group of sky-goers emerged.
Among them were two human figures, clad like Planter and loose overalls and helmets.
"'Your friends?' Mara questioned.
"'Right,' snapped Planter grimly.
He drew the pistol weapon and glared.
Dispro and Max, the latter stooping under a great bale of goods from the ship,
had paused on the brink of the water.
A skygore was thundering to them, in words of English, which Planter across the water,
found hard to catch.
Other Skygores motioned at the pool, and one or two jumped in and struck out for nearby
buildings.
They want your friends to dive, Mara informed him.
See!
The slim one shakes his head.
Planter rested the pistol on his forearm and sighted on the Skygore who harangued Dispro.
Meanwhile, other Skygores were bringing up what appeared to be.
a small, inflated boat that operated with a paddle-wheel arrangement behind.
Mara saw what Planta was doing.
No, she gasped.
Don't, David.
I'm going to, he told her.
We'll be next.
Nonsense.
Those flapper-footed devils can't climb.
They're too heavy, too clumsy.
She caught at his weapon wrist, but he had fired.
The Sky-Gore weapon was a wondrous one. Even an indifferent shot-like Planter could not miss with it.
The Sky-Gore beside Disparo seemed to burst into flames around his flat, bushel-mouthed face,
and then he collapsed and lay still. His companions swarmed to his side, rending the air with their horrid yells.
Planter chuckled, and Mara moaned. The man moved forward,
among the branches to a place where he could be seen.
"'Hi, Desbro!' he trumpeted, as loudly as any Skigor.
"'Max, it's David Planter.
Run while you have the chance.
I'll pick those toads off.'
But neither of his friends offered to escape.
They only stood engaged at him.
"'You idiots!' blazed Planter.
And then saw that two of the Skygores,
on the inflated boat were aiming weapons at him.
He sent a silver pin at their craft, and it melted abruptly as its air escaped from the puncture.
A third shot took one of the skigore splashing in the water.
Run, you too!
Planter bade his companions once more.
He felt a grip on his ankle and glanced down.
Mara had crouched low, was trying to pull him back from view.
As soon as she had his eye, she let him go and thrust both fingers into her ears in some sort of a sign he did not comprehend.
Understanding dawned suddenly, and too late.
The mist trembled and swirled at a sudden outburst of sound louder than even a sky-gore chorus.
Planter dropped his weapon, began to lift his hands to his ears in imitation of Mara,
but he could not.
The noise possessed him as a rush of electric current might course through a body,
paralyzing and agonizing it.
He swayed and floundered among the branches.
His hair bristled, his ears rang, his blood coursed,
every fiber of him vibrated.
Yet something about it was vaguely familiar as though it was something he had experienced
or a magnification of such a something.
Yes, of course.
The uneasiness that Mara called the spell.
Some device made a noise vibration, normally sub-audible,
but unpleasant enough to warn aliens away.
In a time like this when attack came,
it could be intensified to the point of striking the enemy stupid.
Meanwhile, he was falling through,
branches and leafage to splash clumsily into the water of the pool.
Abruptly the noise ceased.
The skygores were around him, their flipper hands fastening upon him,
and he was too wrung out, too grateful for silence to resist.
End of Part 2.
Part 3 of Venus Enslaved by Manly Wade Wellman.
This Libre Vox recording.
is in the public domain.
Part 3.
He may have fainted.
Later on he could not be sure.
But his next clear memory was of lying in one of the inflated paddleboats,
in which sat Skygores with weapons.
There also sat Dispro, watching him intently.
Dispro!
muttered Planter.
They got you, too!
No, they didn't get me, too.
Mimicked Dispro.
I'm in the racket with them, understand?
Planter sat up, and two Skygores have drew their weapons to warn him.
I thought you were captured, he mumbled.
Not me.
I do things neatly.
Showed I could be an enemy, but would rather be a friend.
You butted in, killing two of them.
Someone says you got two others earlier today.
They're holding you a prisoner, and probably,
Probably you'll be killed."
Planter studied Dispro.
Easy does it, he said softly.
Better not act as if you know me.
You might get mixed up in—
No chance, snarled Dispro.
I told him you were an enemy of mine.
I'm not mixed up in anything.
Planter subsided.
Plainly Dispro was able to take care of himself.
Plainly Planter must do the same with no help from anyone.
He wondered about to be able to take care of himself.
Mara, with a sudden, chilled pang. The brave girl had guided him here, despite her knowledge
that Sky-Gore Country was dangerous. She had done it to please him because she liked him. He wondered
what had happened to her. He lounged under the Sky-Gore guns, thinking of Mara. In his mind,
he saw the light of her steady blue eyes, felt the touch of her slim, strong hand. His heart quickened.
Hang it, he told himself, you aren't in love with her.
She's a savage.
And you only met her a few hours ago.
You're only worried because you feel responsibility.
But he knew he lied.
The boat brought them to an entrance hold at water level in a large cylindrical structure.
Disprose swaggered inside with his new friends.
A guard prodded Planter with his pistol barrel to follow.
As Planter obeyed, he saw behind him another band.
boat, in which rode Max with all the baggage he had been carrying.
Skygores sat with Max, plainly on good terms.
Max saw Planter, too, and his face twitched and scowled as in an effort to rationalize.
Inside, he found himself in a large bare room with dry, rough-cast walls.
Dispro waited there, with a Sky-Gore whose elaborate chain mail suggested that he was an officer.
Dispro!
boomed this individual cordially.
"'You say this is your enemy.
What shall be done to him?'
"'I'll leave that to you, Fra,' answered Dispro was a grand manner of bestowing gifts.
"'You have your own ways of handling such problems.
I am content.'
Another Sky-Gore approached, and the officer discussed the case in deafening Sky-Gore language.
Then, facing Planter, he resumed English.
Your life is forfeit, but you look strong.
Perhaps you can prove yourself worth keeping.
Join the slaves.
He struck his webbed hands together.
A human man ran in.
Like Mara and the other crossbow girls, this man was blonde, but the resemblance ended
there.
He wore loose, brief garments of elastic fabric, no weapons, and his face was mild and servile.
Fra pointed at Planter.
Below with him put him in the spring mill.
The slave beckoned and led Planter away, studying him curiously.
Planter spoke at once.
You have many friends here in slavery?
Perhaps I can get you out of this.
Out of this?
The echo was horrified.
To starve in the jungle?
Mary, sir, or to mad or sick to say such a thing?
"'Come, down these stairs!'
Planter obeyed his new companion.
They went down a dim stone stairway,
lighted with green bulbs.
From below came sounds of mechanical action.
"'What's your name?' Planter asked the slave.
"'Glonfield and you?'
"'David Planter.
How many slaves are here?
Human slaves.'
"'Two hundred, be like.
Half as many as the Skigors.'
That was the new thought to planter.
On Earth, races numbered in the millions, here by the scores.
Of course, this might not be the only Skygaur city.
Mara had mentioned the difficulty of exploring any distance from this habitable pole.
For a moment he felt the thirst for knowledge.
Wasn't this world as large as his own planet?
Might it not have continents, oceans, mountain ranges,
whole genera of strange species, perhaps other civilizations and climates.
Then he remembered.
He was a slave, and a booming voice drove the memory home.
Below men, thundered a sky-gorgard.
You are not fed and lodged to be idle.
Pardon, mumbled Glanfill, and quickened his descent.
Planter followed, beating down a rage of battle at the rough shouting of the guard.
The underwater levels were not flooded, though the walls were gloomily damp.
Planter found himself in a great rambling chamber, bordered and cumbered with machines at which
men toiled.
Glanfield was presenting him to a skygore who made notes with a crayon-like instrument on a board.
No?
He questioned in his earth-dulling roar.
"'Wence came he!
Never stopped to answer.
Show him how to work your machine."
Glonfield led him to a cylindrical appliance against a wall.
It had a multitude of levers and push buttons, and light shone in its glassed forefront.
Most of these were green, but one turned red as they approached.
Glonfill pushed a button and turned a lever.
The light switched to green again.
The red means a faulty rhythm somewhere in the light system, explained Glonville.
Fix it by manipulative.
the buttons and levers near the red lights.
Yes, so.
It takes not skill, but wary watching.
Planter took over.
He found time to observe the rest of the slave-teamed basement.
Some operated a treadmill, others wound at keys or turn-cranks.
The machines were strange but not mysterious.
He judged that they pumped, elevated, and modeled.
Glonville answered his questions.
"'Tis the Sky-Gore method. We supply power by our labors, springs, levers, such things are worked.'
"'Springs and levers?' repeated planter. "'Is this a clockwork town? Why not fuel? Steam?'
Glanfield shook his head. "'We men make small fires, but the Sky-gore's not. Their nature is moist. They want such things not. As you say, clockwork is the use of this place.'
if you refuse to do this slave-work what then glonfield shrugged and shuddered oh if the sin is not too great you go to a level below this men drag upon a capstan to wind the mightiest of springs for town works
like rowing in a galley planter summed up wrathfully but if the sin is pretty sinful a sky-gore overseer came close saw that planter had learned the simple machine and called
lawn-filled to some other task. Planter worked until such time as a raucous voice bade another
shift takeover. Marshaled with twenty or more slaves, he was led away to a musty vault,
one side of which was lined with cell-like sleeping quarters. Here was the brick oven, perhaps those
in the nest were designed from it, over which two sturdy women toiled at cookery. As the
slaves entered, these women quickly passed out stone plates and
metal spoons, into these were poured generous portions of hot appetizing stew.
"'They feed you well, these Skagor's,' commented Planter to Glonfield, as he finished his
plateful. Tis their fashion. They seek to make us happy. Planter went to the
kettles for another helping of stew and ate more slowly. "'I'd rather eat in freedom,' he commented,
have to himself.
Freedom?
Echoed Glanfield, as if scornful.
We hear of what freedom can be.
Scant commons, rough beds, danger and damp.
Better to toil honestly and farewell.
I, said a bigger slave with a spade beard of reddish tinge.
Did not the sky-gores help our first father's stranger, as now they help you?
I've heard otherwise, Planter rejoined.
It seemed there was a fight.
The men were licked.
The survivor is made captive and put to work.
That's what happened to me.
Best be silent, murmured Glanfield, bending close.
That talk makes few friends.
Planter changed the subject, asking various questions about Venus.
His companions eyed him strangely as he displayed his ignorance, but made cheerful answer.
The noise that had overwhelmed him was a vibrate.
metal instrument, they said. Their description made it sound like an organ of sorts. As he had
surmised, it was always in some sort of operation, and could be turned on full force if need be.
The Skigars, with senses meant to endure great noises, were not hurt by such a den, but
human ears would be tortured if not quickly closed. Our labors give the instrument power, informed
Glonville, rather proudly.
Planter thought over his experiences of the day.
"'These Skygores have many human devices,' he ventured.
"'I, that,' agreed the big-bearded one.
"'In the first days our fathers brought many articles which the Sky-Gar's developed and used.
"'That's what I'm driving at,' Planter broke in, forgetting Glanfield's counsel to be cautious.
They not only enslaved you, they took your ideas and improved themselves.
I'll wager they were savages to begin with, and you're actually grateful for the chance to crawl
at their big webbed feet.
"'This world belongs to the Skigars,' spoke up one of the women as she washed dishes.
Without them we would be shelterless and foodless like the weaklings they drove forth.
Planter refrained to tell what he knew of the crossbow girls.
Plainly he was up against an attitude of content from which it would be hard to
to free his new companions, harder than to free them from guards and prison walls.
He slept that night in a hammock-like bed, and next day worked at the machine.
His toil was long but not sapping, and food was good.
Once a skigore came to take his clothing, shoes, and possessions, giving him a sleeveless
shirt and shorts instead.
Otherwise he was not bothered by the masters of the city.
For days, perhaps ten, he followed this routine, masking his feeling of revolt.
Then came a Skygor messenger to lead him away along underwater corridors to someone who
had sent.
At the end of the journey he entered in office.
There sat the person he least expected to see.
Dispro.
You rat!
Planter began, but Dispro waved the insult aside.
"'Don't be a bigger ape than usual,' he sniffed.
"'I've been able to do you a favor.'
"'You didn't do me much of one when I was captured,' reminded Planter.
"'How could I?' argued Disparo, in the charming fashion he could sometimes achieve.
I was only on probation.
If I tried to help you then we'd both be dead, instead of both on top of this Turkish-bath world.
Sit down.
They took stools on opposite sides of a heavy wooden table.
Planter, how would you like to help me run Venus?
You're going to get away from these skigors?
Again, Dispro waved the words away.
Why should I?
I'll run them too.
Look, we landed safely, didn't we?
Observations on Earth will show that, won't they?
Right, agreed Planter, mystified.
There'll be more ships coming to look for us and maybe set up a colony.
That's it. We'll ambush those ships.
Ambush, repeated planter sharply.
Losing your mind at Dispro?
No, I'm only thinking for all of us.
Ships will come, I say, loaded with supplies, valuables, all sorts of things.
We can overwhelm them as they land.
Some of their crews will join us.
The others can be rubbed out.
and the law can't touch us, Planter, not for a minute.
What are you driving at? Planter demanded.
I'm the law, said Dispro, tapping his chest.
Just now I string with the Skygores.
Later I may knock him off.
But anyway, I'm the commander of the first expedition to land on Venus.
I have a right to take possession in my own name.
He got up, his voice rising clear and proud.
possession like columbus not of a continent of a whole world planter leaning forward on his stool clutched the edge of the table so strongly that his knuckles whitened
and what he asked slowly and quietly do you want me to do i'm coming to that said dispro smiling with superior craftiness you're going to hear you're going to
help me solidify these loud-mouthed skigors.
They hold me for a slave, reminded Planter harshly, for he did not like the life as well as
Glonphill and the others who tarled along the clockwork. But Disparo brushed the complaint
aside. That's because they don't know what I know. You're lady friends, I mean.
Planter glanced up sharply. Disparo chuckled.
Ha, ha, ha. I talk a lot with these skigors.
Not bad fellows if you muffle your ears.
Anyway, they tell me about a herd of wild girls that bushwax them constantly,
and which they hope I'll find and destroy.
Lately, some of the girls have been scouting around yelling for something.
The Skygores have the best English, and don't know what the words mean.
But I do.
Those girls are calling your name, David Planter.
had come back for him then.
She braved the terrors of the Sky-Gore Fortress, trying to get him back.
Planter felt warmth around his heart.
He faced Dispro and shook his head.
"'I don't know what you're talking about,' he said.
You must be getting drunk with your Sky-Gore friends.
They don't have any kind of liquor, only some sort of sniff-powder I wouldn't touch.
And you're a cheerful liar, Planter.
You know all about those girls, and you're probably good friends with them.
Don't be a fool.
I'm offering you a slice of my empire.
Empire, echoed Planter, honestly scornful.
You really think you'll go through with this idea of grabbing Venus for yourself?
I know all the angles.
Back on Earth I was boss of quite an organization.
and ended up in jail buying your way out by gambling your life on this voyage,
plant to rush those words into speech, but made them clear, biting, and passionate.
You're a case for brain doctors, not jail wardens.
I don't know why I'll listen to you.
I know why, hurled back Dispro.
Because I'm already quite a pet among these guy-gores.
I could kill you or save you.
Meanwhile, we're changing the subject.
I want you to lead me to these wild girls, and after we're solid with them, a bunch of sky-gores will come.
Nothing doing.
In other words, you now admit that there is such a group, and you'll take Orters, Planters.
I'm still chief of the expedition.
Planter shook his head.
I can give you arguments on that.
You've betrayed the trust.
to the foundation back home.
That lets you out.
You don't have authority over me.
He rose abruptly.
Send me back to the basement, Dispro.
Dispro too jumped up.
He held something in his hand.
It was a gun, not a sky gore curiosity,
but a terrestrial made automatic.
You don't get off that easy, planter.
I need you badly, and you need your insides badly.
"'Nuckled down before I blow them out.'
Planter smiled broadly and rather suddenly.
Suddenly he lifted a toe.
He kicked over the table against and upon Dispro.
Down went the elegant lean figure,
and a bullet sang over Planter's head
as he dived in to grapple and fight.
Dispro, the lighter of the two, was wondrously agile.
Almost before he struck the concrete floor,
he was wriggling clear of the table.
Planter's weight threw him flat again, but he struck savage, choppy blows with the pistol he still held.
Half-dazed, Planter could not get a tight grip, and Disbro got away and up.
Planter, shaking the mist from his battered head, staggered after him, caught the weapon wrist, and wrunged the gun away.
It clanged down at their feet.
"'All right, Planter, if you want it that way,' muttered Disparo savagely.
and took a long stride backward.
He got time to fall on guard like the accomplished boxer he was.
Planter sprang after him.
Dispero met him with a neat left jab,
followed it with a hook that bobbed Planter's head back,
and easily slid away from a powerful but clumsy return.
When Planter faced him again,
he stood out of danger, smiling, and lifting a little on his toes.
"'How do you like it?' he laughed.
Didn't know I was a fancy Dan, eh?
Planter charged again.
Disbro slipped right and left,
Tries at his jaw,
returned a smart peg to Planter's belly,
and then let the bigger man blunder past,
and fetch up against a wall.
Planter was forced to lean there a nauseous moment,
and Dispro hooked him hard under the ear.
A moment later,
Planta was crouching and backing away,
sheltering his bruised head with crossed arms.
He heard Dispero laugh again.
"'This is fun,' pronounced Disparo.
"'I've been taught by professionals, Planter.
Good ones.
Not washouts like poor Max.'
Planter clenched at last, but Dispros' wiry body spun loose.
The two faced each other, and Planter felt some of his strength and wit come back.
He realized that he was being beaten.
He must change tactics.
He remembered what he could of fist science and abruptly crouched.
Again he advanced, but not in a rush.
Inch by inch he shuffled in, heads sunk between his shoulders, hands lifted to strike or defend.
You look like a turtle, mocked Dispro, and tried a left.
It glanced off Planter's forehead, and Plantor sidled to his left, away from Disprose's more dangerous right.
bobbing and weaving lower still, he baffled more efforts to sting him.
A moment later, Dispro was backing, and Planter had him in a corner, close in.
He struck, not for Disprose's adroit head, but for his body.
His left found the pit of the stomach just within the apex of the shallow inverted V,
where ribs slope down from breastbone.
Dispro grunted in pain, and Planter put all his shoulders.
shoulders behind a short, heavy peg under the heart. Again in the belly, twice, thrice, he felt
Disprose sag. A hook glanced from Planter's jowl, but it was weak and shaky. Dispro
managed to slip out of the corner, but Planter was now the stronger and sure. Across the room
he followed his enemy, playing ever for the body. Kidneys, abdomen, heart. Dispro was hanging on. His breath came in
Choking grunts.
Planter struggled loose and sank one clean, hard right uppercut.
Dispro spun off his feet, fell across the overturn table, and lay moaning and gasping.
Had enough, Planter challenged.
Dispro was crawling on the floor trying to grab the pistol.
Planter sprang in, stamped on Disprow's knuckles.
Dispro had only the strength and breath for one scream and collapsed.
Abruptly Skygores entered, Skygars with hard eyes and leveled weapons.
What?
demanded one.
Is this?
Disparo helped to his shaky feet, pointed at Planter.
He refused.
He managed to wheeze out.
Disparo nodded, and Planter felt a sudden rush of joy.
They would drive him forth as they used to drive forth
unprofitable female slaves, and he would find the nest again, and Mara.
He was being herded along a passage upstairs.
The Skygores who guarded him kept their weapons close against his ribs.
No escape, they promised him balefully.
He wondered at that, but only a little.
Now they had brought him out upon an open, railed bridge between two buildings.
Below was water, above the...
the thick Venusian mist.
Jomp!
A skygore bade him.
I need no second chance, Planter replied breezily and dived in.
He still wore the scanty costume of a slave, and it allowed him to strike out easily for the edge
of the pool.
Behind him, the skigors were discussing him, but in their own guttural tongue which he could
not understand.
As he swam he studied the city beneath the water.
He meant to come back in assail that city sometime, and there must be worthwhile secrets to note.
For instance, he was now aware that this pool was artificial.
He made out the sluces and gates of a large dam.
To one side was a spacious submarine chamber that must be the clockwork jammed cellar
where his erstwhile companions the slaves worked.
But something else was under the water.
something that moved darkly but had arms and legs, though it was as vast as an elephant.
It was approaching him swiftly, knowingly.
Now he knew why he had been told, with such a voice of doom, to jump into the water.
End of Part 3.
Part 4 of Venus enslaved by Manly Wade Wellman.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain.
Part 4
Planter's blood was still up because of that brisk battle with Dispro.
He was young, strong, in guilt-edge condition.
His new impulse was to keep on fighting against the thing which had the size, the intention,
and apparently the appetite to engulf him.
The huge swimmer was a skygore of tremendous size.
Logic in the back of Planter's head bade him not to be amazed,
on this damp vacant world monsters of such sort were not too unthinkable as it broke surface he heard a hubbub like many steam sirens
the smaller skigors on housetops and bridges were all chanting some sort of ear-bursting litany waving their flippers in unison plainly they worshipped this giant of their race he planter was a gift a sacrifice
He swam speedily, but his pursuer was speedier still.
With ponderous overhand strokes it overhauled him.
An arm as long as his body with a flipper hand like a tremendous scoop shovel extended to clutch
at him.
A mouth like an open trunk gaped large enough to gulp him bodily.
Only one thing to do.
He did it.
Dived at once, turning under water and darting below and in an opposite.
the direction from the great swimmer. By pure happy chance, his kicking feet struck the soft
cushion of its mighty belly, and he heard the thrumming gasp of the wind he knocked out of it.
Coming up beyond, he swam desperately toward a nearby building. If he could climb up away from
this huge hungry being.
No, not here. That was a sky-gore, poking its ugly smirking face from a window-hole. He tried to
seized the sill to draw himself out of the water, and it lifted a dagger to slash at his knuckles.
But then it gasped, wriggled. The paw opened. The knife fell.
Planter managed to catch it as it struck the water.
A moment later he saw what had happened.
Big human hands were fastened on the slimy throat from behind.
The Skigor struggling was pulled back out of sight.
In its place showed the flat, simple features of mass.
Oh, gurgled Max.
You in trouble, Mr. Planter.
He put out a hand to help.
At the same moment a monstrous flipper struck at Planter, driving him deep underwater.
He filled his lungs with air at the last moment, spun and tried to kick away.
His enemy had its hooked claws in his clothing and was drawing him toward the dark cavern
of its mouth.
struck with the knife he had snatched, and buried the blade in the slimy green lower lip
of the creature. It let go, and a cloud of blood, red as the blood of earth's creatures,
suddenly obscured the water, so that planter could attempt another escape. He reached the top
once again. The giant held itself half out of the water, big and grotesque as some barbaric
sculpture. One webbed hand held against its wounded mouth. As plant was a little bit of the water, as plant
Entercame into view, its big, bitter eyes caught sight of him.
Dropping its hand, it howled at him.
All the sky gores at their watchpost echoed that howl,
and began to repeat their uncouth litany once again.
The monster pursued as before.
But from his watchtower, Max threw his burly pugilist's body.
Horsely built Max might have been.
Stupid, he undoubtedly was.
Cowardly and clumsy, he was not.
As he flung himself into space, he shifted so that his feet were down.
He drove them hard between the shoulders of the huge Sky-Gore demon,
and the impact of his flying weight drove it underwater.
"'Get out of here!' yelled Max at Planter.
"'Get out!'
He had time for no more, for he too submerged.
Planter clasped his knife in his teeth and turned in the water.
He could not desert that plucky rescuer.
Writing itself the big Skygore grimaced under the troubled, gory surface.
It was having trouble, more trouble than ever before,
and its freakish, idle overstuffed life as deity and champion of the community.
Two alien dwarves, of a species it had looked on hitherto as only enticing meat,
were viciously attacking and wounding it.
Hunger was overlaid by a stern lust for vengeance.
It spied one of the enemy very close, swimming away.
Max was not as much home in the water as planter,
and he could not dodge its grasping tellons.
Treading water, the thing hoisted him clear,
as a child might lift a kitten.
Its other paw struck him with open-webbed palm,
hard as a mule's kick.
Max went limp.
Once again that awful mouth opened to its full extent.
No, you don't, cried Planter, battling his way close.
For a second time he drove with the knife,
sheathing it to the hilt in a slate-colored chest close to an armpit.
A fountain of blood sprang forth, drenching his face and weapon-hand.
He dragged strongly downward, felt his weapon point grating on bone, then coming free.
That was a terrible wound, but not a disabling one.
In a frenzy of pain and rage, the Skygore giant threw Max far into the water and whirled
to look at its other tormentor.
But Planter had dived yet again.
The fresh blood obscured his passage as before.
He came up, panted.
for air, and seized the limp wrist of Max.
As he kicked away for shore he heard the whine and splat of a missile.
The Skygores were shooting at him.
He bobbed under, bringing Max with him.
As he fought through the water he felt his friend quiver and beat with his hands.
He felt fierce joy.
Max was alive.
He too would escape.
He had to come up.
Duck down, Planter, Max told him at once.
They're going to give us another volley.
His voice was suddenly intelligent.
His words sensible and articulate.
Planter took the advice, swam forward again.
Sure is that way, said Max when they came up.
Can you make it?
Give me your hand.
The ex-pugilist was climbing over a tangle of roots to solid ground at last.
Planter made shift to follow him.
What happened?
Planter barely whispered.
Max laughed very cheerfully.
"'What a wallop that sea elephant has.
I guess it knocked my senses back into me.
Another belt dizzied me back on earth, so it's logical that—
Yes, logical.
Max was no longer a dim stupid child in a big man's body.
Planter felt himself weakening.
He had fought himself out.
Even as he turned toward the jungle he stumbled and fell, rolled over on his back.
He could see the whole surface of the water city.
Skygars were coming in throngs to recapture him, crowded aboard their inflated boats or swimming.
Far ahead of them, something like an awful goblin was scrambling out.
The mighty freak he and Max had dodged up to now.
It stood erect on powerful, awkward legs, its eyes probing here and they,
there to pick up the trail of its prey.
Planter tried to tell Max to run, but his strength and breath were spent.
He could only lie and watch.
Max had torn up a kind of sapling, whirled it aloft like a club.
The tottering colossus approached them, heavily and grimly.
It grinned relentlessly.
Its bloody muzzle opened and slavoured.
of the jungle moved another figure. A smaller Skygore? No. Mara! She sprang across the prostrate
form of planter. He managed to rise to an elbow, just as she planted herself in the way of the
oncoming destruction. It loomed high above her, paws lifted to seize and crush her,
but she had lifted her crossbow. Pale fire flashed, the string hummed. At a scant five feet
of distance, she slammed a pin-missile full into the thing's immense chest.
It staggered back from her, its face gone into a terrible oversized mask of awful pain.
Those great legs like dark gnarled stumps bowed and bent.
It fell uncouthly, supported itself unspread hands.
Planter could see the hole Mara had burned in it, a great red raw pit.
the size of a bushel basket.
Then it was down, motionless, dead.
Max had helped Planter up.
Can you run?
He was demanding.
No, no, Mara interposed, hurrying back to them.
Not run, fight.
Fight?
Planter echoed rather idiotically.
Fight the Skigors.
See, your friends have come.
Through the jungle to the water's edge
pressed other human figures in terrestrial over.
overalls and helmets.
A slim, square-faced man in the neatest of overall costumes had grabbed Planter's elbow.
It was beginning to rain again.
Thunder-sounded, like Skigor's grumbling high in the mist.
Quick, said the square-faced man.
Your Planter, aren't you?
And that other man, but where's Dispro?
Planter pointed toward the Water City.
Who were you? he demanded, as if they had all day.
Dr. Hammerson, commanding this new expedition.
Ten of us in the big new ship started when they reported you landed safely.
We cracked up.
Not far from where your ship bogged down.
This girl found us, said whatever she said was true, cut-in planter.
Quick, defend yourself against those skigores.
They'll defend themselves against us, rejoined Dr. Homerson bleakly,
if they're smart and if they're lucky.
His companions had formed a sort of skirmish line among the thickest stems at the water's edge.
With a variety of weapons, force rifles, machine guns, one or two portable grenade-throwers,
they had opened up on the skigors.
The amphibian dwellers in the water city had started to chase planter and max,
but the destruction of their giant kinsmen had daunted and immobilized them.
Now they had something else to shake their courage.
which was never too great. Well-aimed shots were picking them off, in the boats, in the water,
on the housetops and bridges.
Don't show yourselves more than is necessary,' Dr. Hummersone was barking.
If they know there's only a handful of us, they might.
He unlimbered a patent pistol, one with a long barrel, a magazine of fourteen rounds in
the stock, and a wooden holster that could fit into a slot and form a makeshift butt like that of a
rifle, lifting this to his shoulder.
He began to shoot at such of the Skygores as still showed themselves.
Mara had rushed to plantar side.
They're retreating, she cried.
The spell! Remember the spell!
True enough, he'd forgotten.
That wild, unmanning storm of noise that defended Skygore country
that had knocked him into their webbed fingers as a captive enslave
might begin at any moment.
Even now the sky gores were retiring inside their buildings, but with a certain purposeful
orderliness.
As Planter watched, Max ran up to his other side.
She's telling the truth.
I know all about the thing they sound off, he said breathlessly in his new, knowing voice.
When I was with Dispro, working for him, I had a look at it.
Stop your ears!
Mara was bidding.
Quick, a rag from your garment will do.
She ripped away part of Planter's shirt, tore the piece into, and thrust wads into his ears with her forefinger.
Max was plugging his own ears.
Then the sound began.
When it began, nobody could say.
Suddenly it was there, filling space with itself as though it were a crushing solid thing.
Planter, even with his ears partially muffled, almost collapsed.
His body vibrated as before in every fiber, only not unendurably.
He saw Max reel, but stay on his feet.
Dr. Hummersons men, a moment ago almost in the victor's position, were down, floundering, and half-crazy agony.
Planter understood, in that rear compartment of his mind that was always diagnosing strange things, even in the moment of worst danger.
the skigors were ill-cultured poor of spirit prospered chiefly by ideas stolen from the human beings they enslaved but they understood sound waves could use them roughly as an electrician might use electric vibrations
they were all the tales he had heard of a cord on the organ that shattered window-panes of certain orators who could employ voice frequencies to spellbine and impassioned their audiences
This was something like that only more so.
Then he saw that Mara, who had thought of saving his ears, was down at his feet.
Mara, he cried, though nobody could have heard him.
He knelt, ripping away more rags of his shirt.
He crammed them furiously into her ears.
She stirred, got to her knees.
She too could endure it now, and she smiled at him, drawnly.
I knew you would come back.
Her lips formed the words,
"'David Planter, my David Planter!'
Then she was up, crossbow at the ready,
because back came the Skygars, a wave of them in boats and as swimmers.
Sure of their victory through sound, they were going to mop up the attackers.
Max had a rifle.
He lifted it, but on inspiration Planter leaped at him and gestured for him to hold fire.
From beside one of the fallen terrestrials he caught a grenade-thrower.
It was a simple amplification of an ordinary rifle.
Upon the muzzle fitted a metal device like a bottomless bottle, the neck clamping tight to the barrel.
Into the spread body of the bottle could be slid a cylindrical grenade, the size and shape
of a condensed milk-tin.
The grenade was pierced with a hole, and the gun, if fired, would send its bullet through
that hole, while the gases of the exploding power operated to hurl the grenade far and
forcibly and accurately. Planter had never used one, but he had seen them used. A quick check
showed him that the rifle's magazine was full. From the belt of the fallen man he twitched a grenade,
slipped it into place. He knelt, placed the rifle but on the soggy mass of rotting vegetation
that made up the shore-side jungle floor. By guess.
He slanted his weapon about forty-five degrees forward.
The foremost press of Skigor's approached.
Bang!
At planter's trigger touch, the grenade rose upward.
For a moment the three conscious watchers could see it,
outlined against the upper mists at the hesitating apex of its flight.
Then it fell, too far to demoralize the first ranks of Skygores,
but smashing two inflated boats in its expletive,
and tossing several slimy green forms like chips through the air.
Planter slid in another grenade, worked the rifle boat, and raised the weapon to his shoulder.
It spoke again.
Louder even than the din of the noisemaker Mara called the spell.
This time it struck water among the leading skygars and exploded on contact.
Three or four sank abruptly.
Several more thrashed the water into pinky-red foam in the pain of the bowers.
bad wounds, the rest wavered.
Now Max opened fire with his rifle and marl with her crossbow.
Both scored hits, and the Skigors gave back.
Something was going wrong, they were realizing.
The destroying sound was not paralyzing their enemy.
Meanwhile, it was best to take cover.
Some ducked under the waters, others fell back toward the buildings.
Dynamitum! cried Planter.
forgetting that he could not be heard.
Stooping, he stripped away the whole beltful of grenades from its helpless owner.
He whirled it around his head as though he were throwing a hammer on an athletic field
and sent it flying out over the water.
The shock of its fall into the depths set it off, all grenades at once.
Skygores came bounding to the top, twitching feebly.
The explosion had destroyed them as fish are destroyed,
by the shock of detonating dynamite in nearby waters.
Then the paralyzing noise stopped.
Homerson was the first man up.
He was dazed and groggy, but fight was the first impulse that woke in him.
Marum, Max, and Planter dragged others to their feet, shook and shouted their senses back into
them.
"'They're retreating!' Planter yelled.
"'Let's counterattack!'
"'Close into the shore drifted one of the abandoned boats.
Max had run into the water, dragging it closer.
The terrestrials tumbled aboard, and one of them got the paddle-wheel running.
Plant her at the bow, directing fire at any sky-goers who showed their heads,
saw that Mara had not come along.
He worried a moment, then worried no more.
She was shouting in the jungle, and other voices, feminine voices, answered her.
More of the crossbow girls were coming to help.
The boat made a landing at the building where Planter had first been dragged to slavery.
It was not made for defense, and the invaders split into small parties, ranging the corridors
and outer bridges.
Planter, hurrying downstairs, heard the splat of the Skygorp pin missiles with a replying
crackle of gunfire.
After a while, Mara and other girls began to shout and chatter.
They had also found a boat and had come over.
On the floor above the basement where the slaves worked, he came face to face with a sky-gore
who lifted his arms appealingly in the surrendered gesture that must be universal among all creatures who have arms.
"'I want no fight,' begged this one.
"'You are master.'
"'Then come downstairs,' snapped Planter.
He clattered down among the slaves.
"'Stop work,' he bawled almost as loudly as the Sky-Gore,
and the men, bred to obey big voices, did so.
"'Outside,' was Planter's next command.
One or two moved to obey. Others hung back.
"'Outside!' the surrendered Sky-Gore echoed Planter, and they came obediently.
Planter hurried them to their quarters, then slammed the door to the big workshop.
"'That closes down your power plants,' he commented to the
Skygore. Now quick, which way to the controls of the dam?"
Damn? The Skygore repeated, stupidly.
Planter caught the green shoulders and shook the creature roughly.
It was larger than he, but coward.
I will show. It yielded and let him away.
In a nearby corridor were huge handles, three of them like pivoted clinker bars.
Planter seized one, pulled it down.
He heard waters roaring.
pulled another.
"'You will drain the pool,' protested the Skigor.
"'I want to drain the pool,' Planter said.
Then the Skigor caught the third lever and pulled it down.
Planter hurried upstairs again.
His prisoner kept at his heels.
"'Why did you help me?' he asked it.
"'Because you conquer,' was the booming reply.
"'The conquered must obey.'
"'I think you believe that stuff like this.
the slaves, Planter sniffed.
Of course, I believe, responded the Skygore.
From the upper levels came Homerson's voice.
Planter, these frog folks are giving up.
They haven't any fight left in them.
But Planter paused on a landing.
He looked into a small office where two human figures stood close together.
One was Max, the other was Dispro.
Max had Dispro by the throat, not shaking or wrestling him,
only squeezing.
Max, called Planter.
Why?
Why not?
Countered Max plausibly.
Planter, I think maybe you were the thick-headed one.
You always tried to get along with Dispro as if he was honest.
I was a crazy house case, but from the first I knew he was wrong.
It took the return of sense to understand that the only thing to do was this.
He let go and Dispro fell on the first.
the floor like an empty suit of clothes.
Max brushed his hands together as if to clear them of dust.
I wonder how long I wanted to do that, he said.
Let's go and watch the final mop-up.
Out of the mud pool, where once a snake-armed Karu had pursued planter, the combined strength
of many arms was hoisting the bogged ship.
Cables had been woven through pulley blocks at the tops of the biggest and strongest
pool side stems. Free men of Venus, once slaves, hauled on these cables in brief concerted
rhythms. Here and there in the rope gangs toiled a skygore, accepting defeat and companionship
with the same mild grace. Women, free women, laughed and encouraged, and now and then threw themselves
into the tugging labor that was a game. Max oversaw everything. Nearby, Machete had hewn
a little clearing.
Here a waterproof tent over a beehive framework sheltered planter and Dr. Homerson.
They watched as a ship, its bow-rockets toiling to help the tugging cables finally stirred
out of its bed.
Homerson smiled.
Time to hold a sort of recapitulation, isn't it?
As an old-fashioned mystery yarns, when the case is solved and the danger done away with,
of course it all happens suddenly, but we can say this much.
The Skygore mistake was that of every softened master setup.
They had a half-rigged defense against mild dangers and never looked for real trouble.
They beat that 17th century space expedition simply because terrestrials of that day
hadn't the proper weapons.
Otherwise, man might have been ruling here for 400 years and more.
The Skygores did have one tremendous device, observed Planter.
That super siren that deadens you by sound waves.
Hammerson laughed.
And which providentially did what all clockwork mechanisms are apt to do,
ran down.
It's dismantled now, anyway.
We're a fuel-engine civilization,
and the sky-goers will have to wonder and admire a while
before they steal our new tricks.
Planter fingered another trophy of the battle,
a great brass-bound logbook, old and yellowed.
but still readable.
This answers more riddles, he put in,
the record of those ancient fugitives from Cromwell.
Who'd have thought that their times
could produce a successful flight from planet to planet?
It was a great century, reminded Homerison.
Don't forget that they also invented the microscope,
the balloon, the principle of maneuverable armies.
Their century began with Francis Bacon
and ended with Sir Isaac Newton.
That rocket fuel, which the Skygore's only half understood and used for ammunition,
Dr. Brokenplanter, do you remember the old Puritan tales of witches
flying on what seemed like broomsticks?
And Cyrano de Bergerac, in France about 1640, riding a tale of a rocket to the moon?
We simply forgot that they had something then.
The real complete knowledge flew here to Venus, and waited for our age to develop
it again from the beginning.
It was so.
Planter pondered a while, and while he pondered, one of the expedition came in to make a report.
We can send back three in this ship when it's set, he set to Humberson.
Who are you taking, sir?
These two who survived the earlier flight, Planter and his big tough friend, the rest of you
can wait and develop a landy field.
Planter spoke.
Did you see the girl called Mara out there?
She was watching us, said the man.
Finally she went into the jungle.
With no message for me?
No message for anybody.
Dr. Hummerson, said Planter,
pick someone else instead of me.
Here I stay.
Humerson looked up sharply.
Until the next ship comes.
Here I stay, repeated Planter, from now on.
He sought a certain jungle trail when he had traversed before.
Mara, he called to down it.
She was not hard to catch up with, for she was not walking fast.
As he came alongside, she looked at him with eyes too bright to be dry.
You came to bid goodbye, she suggested.
He shook his head.
The mist seemed less than ever before on Venus.
No, never goodbye.
Isn't the ship leaving?
Leaving all right, but not with me in it.
This is home now.
She looked down at her sandal feet, and one hand played with the dagger in her belt.
Me thought you would be glad to regain Earth.
Earth?
Other people gained it long ago.
He pulled her hand away from the dagger-hilt.
Stop fiddling with that stabbing-arm.
There's no fighting to be done just now.
"'You said I was yours,' he told her furiously.
"'You said it just as if you'd won me in a game of some sort.
"'And you brushed it aside without answering me.
"'You had none of it.'
"'Hang it, Mara. A man decides those things.
"'And I've been deciding them.
"'You're the bravest creature I ever knew.
"'The most graceful, the most honest.
"'You did love me once. Have you stopped?'
"'I have not stopped.
She said.
But why have you waited to say these words?
I haven't had time, and I'm going to have little time for a while.
What with organization and building and food hunting and colonizing?
But her mouth close at hand was too delectable.
He kissed her fiercely.
She jumped away, startled.
Then uttered a little breathless laugh.
That likes me well, she told him.
let us do it again. End of Part 4. End of Venus enslaved by Manly Wade Wellman.
