
- 193 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
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eBook - ePub
The Swordsman of Mars
About this book
In Swordsman of Mars, Harry Thorne, outcast scion of a wealthy East Coast family, seeks the greatest adventure of his life. He exchanges bodies with his look-alike, Martian Sheb Takkor, and is transported millions of years into the past to a Mars peopled with mighty warriors, beautiful women, and fearsome beasts. Sheb Takkor, a great swordsman in his own right, must fight his way across the deserts and jungles of ancient Mars to save the lovely Princess Thane and to defeat his arch-enemy Sel Han -- or die trying! Edgar Rice Burroughs was the first great writer of planetary adventures.
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Science FictionIndex
LiteratureCHAPTER I
..................
āYOU HAVE HEARD OF TELEPATHY, of courseāin fact, Mr. Thorne, you experimented with it at one time.ā
āHow did you know that, doctor?ā
āYou wrote a letter about your experiments to the editor of a popular magazine. It was published under your own name two months ago.ā
Thorne rubbed his brow. āThatās right, I didābeen so busy I forgot all about it. But my results were negative.ā
Dr. Morgan nodded. āSo were mine, for nearly twenty years. It was a hobby when I was in practice, but since my retirement, Iāve devoted my full time to it. Let me brief you on the basics.
āTelepathy, the communication of thoughts or ideas from one mind to another without the use of any physical medium whatever, is not influenced or hampered by either time or space. That is fundamental, but I had to amend it. I failed to achieve anything until I succeeded in building a device which would pick up and amplify thought waves. And even then I would have failed had this machine not caught the waves projected by another machine which another man had built to amplify and project them.ā
āYou mean you can read minds by radio, as it were?ā Thorne asked.
āTo a very limited extent. If you had a projector in this room, and I had my receiver here, I could pick up any thoughts you sent me, but only those you consciously projected. I could not read your mind in the sense of picking up anything you did not want me to know.ā
Thorne took a cigarette from the box on the table to his right and lit it. āInteresting,ā he admitted, ābut what has this to do with Mars?ā
āI made only one amendment to that basic theory, Mr. Thorne. The rest of it holds true: the communication of thoughts or-ideas from one mind to another is not influenced or hampered by time or space. The man who built the thought- projector is on Mars.ā
āMen on Mars - you mean Martians, or human beings like us? Excuse me, doctor, but that is spreading it a bit thick. Iām well enough up on present-day studies of the planetsā¦ā
ā⦠to know that the existence of a human civilization on Mars today is hardly credible,ā Morgan broke in. āYou are quite right. None such exists.ā
āThen howā¦?ā
āSpace or time. I was incredulous, too, when I got in touch with someone who identified himself as a human being, one Lal Vak, a Martian scientist and psychologist. And I might add that Lal Vak found the idea of a human civilization on Earth a bit thick, too. But the explanation, fantastic as it may seem, is quite simple: Lal Vak is speaking to me from the Mars of some millions of years ago, when a human civilization did exist there.ā
Morgan raised his hand. āDonāt interrupt now - hear me out. From that simple exchange of visual and auditory impressions which marked our first communications, we progressed until each one had learned the language of the other to a degree that enabled us to exchange abstract as well as concrete ideas.
āIt was Lal Vak who suggested that if we could find a man on Earth and one on Mars whose bodies were similar enough to be doubles, their brain patterns might also be similar enough so that consciousness could be transferred between them. Thus, Earth of the 20th Century could be viewed through Martian eyes, while the (to us) ancient Mars culture - we cannot yet place it in time relative to Earth - could be seen at first hand by a man from Earth. First Lal Vak projected to me many thought images of Martians willing to make this exchange - so clearly that I was able to draw detailed pictures of them. But that was not enough. I could spend the rest of my life without finding any counterparts of these Martians here. The second thing Lal Vak did was to tell me how to make what we call a mind-compass, and gave me the brain- patterns of his volunteers. I followed his directions and fed the first brain- pattern into the mind- compass.ā
Thorne leaned forward intently. āWhat happened?ā
āNothing. The needle rotated aimlessly. This meant that either there was no physical counterpart of this Martian now alive on earth, or any such double did not have a similar brain-pattern. I fed in the second and third patterns with the same result. But with the fourth pattern, the needle swung directly to a given point and remained there.ā Morgan opened a drawer in the little table and took out some pencil sketches. āRecognize this man?ā he asked, handing a sketch to Thorne.
āYour assistant - Boyd, you called him?ā
āCorrect. Under the influence of Lal Vakās thoughts, I drew a picture of Frank Boyd. To shorten the story, I found him in an Alaskan mining camp. He was interested in the venture I proposed - he is now on Mars.ā
āBut - I just saw him..
āYou saw the body of Frank Boyd, which is now inhabited by Sel Han, a Martian. On Mars, Sel Hanās body is occupied by Frank Boyd, an Earthman. But I made one terrible mistake.ā
āWhat was that?ā
āIn my eagerness to find a volunteer, I did not investigate Frank Boyd. Sel Han has cooperated with Lal Vak and me, but once on Mars, Frank Boyd broke contact - and without his cooperation, it could not be maintained. I have learned through Lal Vak that Boyd has allied himself with a group of Martians who are out to seize power and set up an empire over the entire planet. Mars is presently in a state roughly analogous to our middle ages, socially, though in some branches of science they are in advance of us. But theirs is not a machine civilization, and an adventurer who is also a fighting man - or adept at intrigue - can go far there.ā
Harry Thorne grinned. āLet me see if I can guess the rest of the story. Youāve loosed an unsavory character on Mars and feel youāve wronged your friend, Lal Vak, so you want to undo the damage if you can. You fed more brain- patterns into the object compass, and eventually the brain-pattern ofā¦ā
āā¦This man,ā Morgan agreed, passing him another sketch. Thorne took it and saw a drawing of himself in minute detail.
āBut that was not enough,ā he said. āYou didnāt want to repeat your error, so you spent some time investigating me first.ā
Dr. Morgan smiled. āAnd the results were most satisfactory - to me. You had a good war record in Korea, youāve been on hunting expeditions to Africa, and youāve been in business. Your recent difficulties, which resulted in the loss of your fiancĆ©e and your business - left you a pauper, in fact - came out of your refusal to go along with your partnerās dubious (though legal) manipulations. He wiped you out and took your girl, too⦠In short, you are a man who might well do what Lal Vak and I feared impossible.ā
Harry Thorne nodded. āAssuming that you can send me on this strange mission, what would you want me to do?ā
āOnly two things. Remain in touch with me, through Lal Vak, as much as possible, and, if you can, kill Frank Boyd - the Martian Sel Han. Otherwise, your life on Mars will be your own, to live as you choose, or as the Martians choose to let you live. If you are able to rise above your environment - as I think you will be - you will find opportunities there you could never hope for here. You will find a world of romance and adventure undreamed of outside of fiction. And if you are not equally quick with sword and wits, you will find death. Knowing you to be an expert fencer - yes, I found out that you had tried to get a job with a fencing instructor and was turned down because you beat him, too easily - I donāt think I need worry about you on the first count.ā
āThe prospect appeals to me,ā Thorne admitted. āBut I refuse to murder a man I have never seen.ā
āIf you oppose Sel Hanās designs, I assure you that you will have to kill him or be killed. Thereās no question of murder - it will be simple and justifiable self-defense⦠Thenāyouāll go?ā
āIāll at least make the attempt, with your assistance. How does this personality-transfer take place?ā
āI can only describe it as a sort of phasing of similar vibrations, represented by your brain-pattern and that of the Martian volunteer. But first I must put you under hypnosis. Then I will contact Lal Vak, and we will work together. He will be on hand to meet you when you awake in the body of a Martian. Now come over here and lie on the sofa.ā
Thorne did as Dr. Morgan directed, and found that he was looking into a mirror painted with alternate circles of red and black. The doctor touched a button and the mirror began to rotate slowly. Morganās voice came to him, āNow think of that distant world, far off in time and space. Think of it beckoning you.ā
Thorne obeyed, his eyes fixed on the mirror. He began to feel drowsy, a pleasant lassitude stealing over him. The doctorās voice fadedā¦
CHAPTER II
..................
THORNE OPENED HIS EYES AND looked up into a cloudless blue-gray sky that was like a vault of burnished steel. A diminutive sun blazed down upon him but oddly enough, with its heat and light seemingly unimpaired.
The heat, in fact, was so great that it made him draw back into the relatively cold shade of the scaly-trunked conifer that towered above him, its crown of needle-like foliage gathered into a bellshaped tuft. Then conviction came to him. He was really on Mars! Wide awake, now, he sat bolt upright and looked about him. The tree that sheltered him stood alone in a small depression, surrounded by a billowing sea of ochre-yellow sand.
He scrambled to his feet, and as he did so, something clanked at his side. Two straight-bladed weapons hung there, both sheathed in a gray metal that resembled aluminum. One, he judged, was a Martian dagger, and the other a sword. The hilt of the larger weapon was fashioned of a metal of the color of brass, the pommel representing a serpentās head, the grip, its body, and the guard, the continuation of the body and tail coiled in the form of a figure eight. The hilt of the dagger was like that of the sword, but smaller.
Thorne drew the sword from its sheath. The steel blade was slender and two-edged, and tapered to a needlelike point. Both edges were armed with tiny razor-sharp teeth which he instantly saw would add greatly to its effectiveness as a cutting weapon. He tested its balance and found he could wield it as easily as any duelling sword he had ever had in his hand.
Replacing the sword in the sheath, he examined the dagger, and found it also edged with tiny teeth. The blade of this weapon was about ten inches in length.
Depending from the belt on the other side, and heavy enough to balance the weight of the sword and dagger, was a mace with a short brazen handle and a disk-shaped head of steel which was fastened fanwise on the haft, thick at the middle and tapering out at the edges to sawlike teeth, much coarser and longer than those on sword or dagger.
Thorne turned his attention to his apparel. He was wearing a breechclout of soft leather. Beneath this, and down to the center of his shins, his limbs were bare and considerably sunburned. Below this point were the rolled tops of a pair of long boots, made from fur and fitted with clasps which were obviously for the purpose of attaching them to the bottom of the breechclout when they were drawn up.
Above the waist his sun-tanned body was bare of clothing, but he wore a pair of broad metal armlets, a pair of bracelets with long bars attached, evidently to protect the forearm from sword cuts, and a jewelled medallion, suspended on his chest from a chain around his neck and inscribed with strange characters.
On his head was a bundle of silky material with a short, soft nap, rolled much like a turban and held in place by one brass-studded strap that passed around his forehead, and another that went beneath his chin.
Beyond a large sand dune, and not more than a quarter of a mile distant, he saw the waving bellshaped crowns of a small grove of trees similar to the one that sheltered him. He started toward the clump of conifers.
As soon as he stepped out into the blaze of the midday sun, Thorne began to feel uncomfortably warm. Soon he noted other signs of Martian life. Immense, gaudily tinted butterflies, some with wing spreads of more than six feet, flew up from the flower patches at his approach. A huge dragon fly zoomed past, looking much like a miniature airplane.
Suddenly he heard an angry hum beside him, and felt a searing pain in his left side. Seemingly out of nowhere a fly, yellow and red in color and about two feet in length, had darted down upon him and plunged its many-pointed proboscis into his flesh. Seizing the sharp bill of his assailant, he wrenched it from his side.
The insect buzzed violently but Thorne, still clinging to its bill, reached for his dagger w...
Table of contents
- PROLOGUE
- CHAPTER I
- CHAPTER II
- CHAPTER III
- CHAPTER IV
- CHAPTER V
- CHAPTER VI
- CHAPTER VII
- CHAPTER VIII
- CHAPTER IX
- CHAPTER X
- CHAPTER XI
- CHAPTER XII
- CHAPTER XIII
- CHAPTER XIV
- CHAPTER XV
- CHAPTER XVI
- CHAPTER XVII
- CHAPTER XVIII
- CHAPTER XIX
- CHAPTER XX
- CHAPTER XXI
- CHAPTER XXII
- CHAPTER XXIII
- CHAPTER XXIV
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Yes, you can access The Swordsman of Mars by Otis Adelbert Kline in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Science Fiction. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.