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A Princess of Mars

Page 71

"Tears are a strange sight upon Barsoom," she continued, "and so it is

difficult for me to interpret them. I have seen but two people weep in

all my life, other than Dejah Thoris; one wept from sorrow, the other

from baffled rage. The first was my mother, years ago before they

killed her; the other was Sarkoja, when they dragged her from me today."

"Your mother!" I exclaimed, "but, Sola, you could not have known your

mother, child."

"But I did. And my father also," she added. "If you would like to

hear the strange and un-Barsoomian story come to the chariot tonight,

John Carter, and I will tell you that of which I have never spoken in

all my life before. And now the signal has been given to resume the

march, you must go."

"I will come tonight, Sola," I promised. "Be sure to tell Dejah Thoris

I am alive and well. I shall not force myself upon her, and be sure

that you do not let her know I saw her tears. If she would speak with

me I but await her command."

Sola mounted the chariot, which was swinging into its place in line,

and I hastened to my waiting thoat and galloped to my station beside

Tars Tarkas at the rear of the column.

We made a most imposing and awe-inspiring spectacle as we strung out

across the yellow landscape; the two hundred and fifty ornate and

brightly colored chariots, preceded by an advance guard of some two

hundred mounted warriors and chieftains riding five abreast and one

hundred yards apart, and followed by a like number in the same

formation, with a score or more of flankers on either side; the fifty

extra mastodons, or heavy draught animals, known as zitidars, and the

five or six hundred extra thoats of the warriors running loose within

the hollow square formed by the surrounding warriors. The gleaming

metal and jewels of the gorgeous ornaments of the men and women,

duplicated in the trappings of the zitidars and thoats, and

interspersed with the flashing colors of magnificent silks and furs and

feathers, lent a barbaric splendor to the caravan which would have

turned an East Indian potentate green with envy.

The enormous broad tires of the chariots and the padded feet of the

animals brought forth no sound from the moss-covered sea bottom; and so

we moved in utter silence, like some huge phantasmagoria, except when

the stillness was broken by the guttural growling of a goaded zitidar,

or the squealing of fighting thoats. The green Martians converse but

little, and then usually in monosyllables, low and like the faint

rumbling of distant thunder.

We traversed a trackless waste of moss which, bending to the pressure

of broad tire or padded foot, rose up again behind us, leaving no sign

that we had passed. We might indeed have been the wraiths of the

departed dead upon the dead sea of that dying planet for all the sound

or sign we made in passing. It was the first march of a large body of

men and animals I had ever witnessed which raised no dust and left no

spoor; for there is no dust upon Mars except in the cultivated

districts during the winter months, and even then the absence of high

winds renders it almost unnoticeable.

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