Master Mind of Mars

The Master Mind of Mars
Edgar Rice Burroughs
Published: 1927
Categorie(s): Fiction, Science Fiction
Source: http://BookishMall.com.net.au
About Burroughs:
Edgar Rice Burroughs (September 1, 1875 – March 19, 1950) was an
American author, best known for his creation of the jungle hero
Tarzan, although he also produced works in many genres. Source:
Wikipedia
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Burroughs:
Tarzan of the
Apes (1912)
A
Princess of Mars (1912)
The
Gods of Mars (1918)
A
Fighting Man of Mars (1930)
John Carter and
the Giant of Mars (1940)
The
Warlord of Mars (1918)
The
Chessmen of Mars (1922)
Thuvia Maid of
Mars (1920)
Swords of
Mars (1934)
Synthetic Men of
Mars (1939)
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Chapter 1 A
LETTER
HELIUM, June 8th, 1925
MY DEAR MR. BURROUGHS:
It was in the Fall of nineteen seventeen at an officers'
training camp that I first became acquainted with John Carter, War
Lord of Barsoom, through the pages of your novel "A Princess of
Mars." The story made a profound impression upon me and while my
better judgment assured me that it was but a highly imaginative
piece of fiction, a suggestion of the verity of it pervaded my
inner consciousness to such an extent that I found myself dreaming
of Mars and John Carter, of Dejah Thoris, of Tars Tarkas and of
Woola as if they had been entities of my own experience rather than
the figments of your imagination.
It is true that in those days of strenuous preparation there was
little time for dreaming, yet there were brief moments before sleep
claimed me at night and these were my dreams. Such dreams! Always
of Mars, and during my waking hours at night my eyes always sought
out the Red Planet when he was above the horizon and clung there
seeking a solution of the seemingly unfathomable riddle he has
presented to the Earthman for ages.
Perhaps the thing became an obsession. I know it clung to me all
during my training camp days, and at night, on the deck of the
transport, I would he on my back gazing up into the red eye of the
god of battle— my god—and wishing that, like John Carter, I might
be drawn across the great void to the haven of my desire.
And then came the hideous days and nights in the trenches—the
rats, the vermin, the mud—with an occasional glorious break in the
monotony when we were ordered over the top. I loved it then and I
loved the bursting shells, the mad, wild chaos of the thundering
guns, but the rats and the vermin and the mud—God! how I hated
them. It sounds like boasting, I know, and I am sorry; but I wanted
to write you just the truth about myself. I think you will
understand.
And it may account for much that happened afterwards.
There came at last to me what had come to so many others upon
those bloody fields. It came within the week that I had received my
first promotion and my captaincy, of which I was greatly proud,
though humbly so; realizing as I did my youth, the great
responsibility that it placed upon me as well as the opportunities
it offered, not only in service to my country but, in a personal
way, to the men of my command. We had advanced a matter of two
kilometers and with a small detachment I was holding a very
advanced position when I received orders to fall back to the new
line. That is the last that I remember until I regained
consciousness after dark. A shell must have burst among us. What
became of my men I never knew. It was cold and very dark when I
awoke and at first, for an instant, I was quite comfortable—before
I was fully conscious, I imagine—and then I commenced to feel pain.
It grew until it seemed unbearable. It was in my legs. I reached
down to feel them, but my hand recoiled from what it found, and
when I tried to move my legs I discovered that I was dead from the
waist down. Then the moon came out from behind a cloud and I saw
that I lay within a shell hole and that I was not alone—the dead
were all about me.
It was a long time before I found the moral courage and the
physical strength to draw myself up upon one elbow that I might
view the havoc that had been done me.
One look was enough, I sank back in an agony of mental and
physical anguish—my legs had been blown away from midway between
the hips and knees. For some reason I was not bleeding excessively,
yet I know that I had lost a great deal of blood and that I was
gradually losing enough to put me out of my misery in a short time
if I were not soon found; and as I lay there on my back, tortured
with pain, I prayed that they would not come in time, for I shrank
more from the thought of going maimed through life than I shrank
from the thought of death.
Then my eyes suddenly focussed upon the bright red eye of Mars
and there surged through me a sudden wave of hope. I stretched out
my arms towards Mars, I did not seem to question or to doubt for an
instant as I prayed to the god of my vocation to reach forth and
succour me. I knew that he would do it, my faith was complete, and
yet so great was the mental effort that I made to throw off the
hideous bonds of my mutilated flesh that I felt a momentary qualm
of nausea and then a sharp click as of the snapping of a steel
wire, and suddenly I stood naked upon two good legs looking down
upon the bloody, distorted thing that had been I. Just for an
instant did I stand thus before I turned my eyes aloft again to my
star of destiny and with outstretched arms stand there in the cold
of that French night—waiting.
Suddenly I felt myself drawn with the speed of thought through
the trackless wastes of interplanetary space. There was an instant
of extreme cold and utter darkness, then—But the rest is in the
manuscript that, with the aid of one greater than either of us, I
have found the means to transmit to you with this letter. You and a
few others of the chosen will believe in it—for the rest it matters
not as yet.
The time will come—but why tell you what you already know?
My salutations and my congratulations—the latter on your good
fortune in having been chosen as the medium through which Earthmen
shall become better acquainted with the manners and customs of
Barsoom, against the time that they shall pass through space as
easily as John Carter, and visit the scenes that he has described
to them through you, as have I.
Your sincere friend, ULYSSES PAXTON, Late Captain,—th Inf., U.S.
Army.
Chapter 2
THE HOUSE OF THE DEAD
I must have closed my eyes involuntarily during the transition
for when I opened them I was lying flat on my back gazing up into a
brilliant, sun-lit sky, while standing a few feet from me and
looking down upon me with the most mystified expression was as
strange a looking individual as my eyes ever had rested upon.
He appeared to be quite an old man, for he was wrinkled and
withered beyond description. His limbs were emaciated; his ribs
showed distinctly beneath his shrunken hide; his cranium was large
and well developed, which, in conjunction with his wasted limbs and
torso, lent him the appearance of top heaviness, as though he had a
head beyond all proportion to his body, which was, I am sure,
really not the case.
As he stared down upon me through enormous, many lensed
spectacles I found the opportunity to examine him as minutely in
return. He was, perhaps, five feet five in height, though doubtless
he had been taller in youth, since he was somewhat bent; he was
naked except for some rather plain and well-worn leather harness
which supported his weapons and pocket pouches, and one great
ornament a collar, jewel studded, that he wore around his scraggy
neck—such a collar as a dowager empress of pork or real estate
might barter her soul for, if she had one. His skin was red, his
scant locks grey. As he looked at me his puzzled expression
increased in intensity, he grasped his chin between the thumb and
fingers of his left hand and slowly raising his right hand he
scratched his head most deliberately. Then he spoke to me, but in a
language I did not understand.
At his first words I sat up and shook my head. Then I looked
about me. I was seated upon a crimson sward within a high walled
enclosure, at least two, and possibly three, sides of which were
formed by the outer walls of a structure that in some respects
resembled more closely a feudal castle of Europe than any familiar
form of architecture that comes to my mind.
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