I will tell you of Niord and the Worm. You have
heard the tale before in many guises wherein the hero was named Tyr, or
Perseus, or Siegfried, or Beowulf, or Saint George. But it was Niord who met theloathly
demoniac thing that crawled hideously up from hell, and from which meeting
sprang the cycle of hero-tales that revolves down the ages until the very
substance of the truth is lost and passes into the limbo at all forgotten
legends. I know whereof I speak, for I was Niord.
As I lie here
awaiting death, which creeps slowly upon me like a blind slug, my dreams are
filled with glittering visions and the pageantry of glory. It is not of the
drab, disease-racked life of James Allison I dream, but all the gleaming
figures of the mighty pageantry that have passed before, and shall come after;
for I have faintly glimpsed, not merely the shapes that trail out behind, but
shapes that come after, as a man in a long parade glimpses, far ahead, the line
of figures that precede him winding over a distant hill, etched shadow like
against the sky. I am one and all the pageantry of shapes and guises and masks
which have been, are, and shall be the visible manifestations of that illusive,
intangible, but vitally existent spirit now promenading under the brief and
temporary name of James Allison.
Each man on
earth, each woman, is part and all of a similar caravan of shapes and beings.
But they can not remember-their minds can not bridge the brief, awful gulfs of
blackness which lie between those unstable shapes, and which the spirit, soul
or ego, in spanning, shakes off its fleshy masks. I remember. Why I can
remember is the strangest tale of all; but as I lie here with death's black
wings slowly unfolding over me, all the dim folds of my previous lives are shaken
out before my eyes, and I see myself in many forms and guises - braggart,
swaggering, fearful, loving, foolish, all that men - have been or will be.
I have been Man
in many lands and many conditions; vet-and here is another strange thing-my
line of reincarnation runs straight down one unerring channel. I have never
been any but a man of that restless race men once called Nordheimr and later
Aryans, and today name by many names and designations. Their history is my
history, from the first mewling wail of a hairless white age cub in the wastes
of the arctic, to the death-cry. of the last degenerate product of ultimate civilization,
in some dim and unguessed future age.
My name has been
Hialmar, Tyr, Bragi, Bran, Horsa, Eric, and John: I strode red-handed through
the deserted streets of Rome behind the yellow-maned Brennus; I wandered
through the violated plantations with Alaric and his Goths when the flame of
burning villas lit the land like day and an empire was gasping its last under
our sandalled feet; I waded sword in hand through the foaming surf from
Hengist's galley to lay the foundations of England in blood and pillage; when
Leif the Lucky sighted the broad white beaches of an unguessed world, I stood beside
him in the bows of the dragonship, my golden beard blowing in the wind; and
when Godfrey of Bouillon led his Crusaders over the walls of Jerusalem, I was
among them in steel cap and brigandine.
But it is of none
of these things I would speak: I would take you back with me into an age beside
which that of Brennus and Rome is as yesterday. I would take you back through,
not merely centuries and millenniums, but epochs and dim ages unguessed by the
wildest philosopher. Oh far, far and far will you fare into the nighted Past before
you win beyond the boundaries of my race, blue-eyed, yellow-haired, wanderers,
slayers, lovers, mighty in rapine and wayfaring.
It is the
adventure of Niord Worm's-bane of which I speak--the root-stem of a whole cycle
of hero-tales which has not yet reached its end, the grisly underlying reality
that lurks behind time-distorted myths of dragons, fiends and monsters.
Yet it is not
alone with the mouth of Niord that I will speak. I am James Allison no less
than I was Niord, and as I unfold the tale, I will interpret some of his
thoughts and dreams and deeds from the mouth of the modern I, so that the saga
of Niord shall not be a meaningless chaos to you. His blood is your blood, who
are sons of Aryan; but wide misty gulfs of eons lie horrifically between, and
the deeds and dreams of Niord seem as alien to your deeds and dreams as the
primordial and lion-haunted forest seems alien to the white-walled city street.
It was a strange
world in which Niord lived and loved and fought, so long ago that even my
eon-spanning memory can not recognize landmarks. Since then the surface of the
earth has changed, not once but a score of times; continents have risen and
sunk, seas have changed their beds and rivers their courses, glaciers have
waxed and waned, and the very stars and constellations have altered and
shifted.
It was so long
ago that the cradle-land of my race was still in Nordheim. But the epic drifts
of my people had already begun, and blue-eyed, vellow-maned tribes flowed
eastward and southward and westward, on century-long treks that carried them
around the world and left their bones and their traces in strange lands and
wild waste places. On one of these drifts I grew from infancy to manhood. My knowledge
of that northern homeland was dim memories, like half-remembered dreams, of
blinding white snow plains and ice fields, of great fires roaring in the circle
of hide tents, of yellow manes flying in great winds, and a sun setting in a
lurid wallow of crimson clouds, blazing on trampled snow where still dark forms
lay in pools that were redder than the sunset.
That last memory
stands out clearer than the others. It was the field of Jotunheim, I was told
in later years, whereon had just been fought that terrible battle which was the
Armageddon of the Esirfolk, the subject of a cycle of hero-songs for long ages,
and which still lives today in dim dreams of Ragnarok and Goetterdaemmerung. I
looked on that battle as a mewling infant; so I must have lived about-but I
will not name the age, for I would be called a madman, and historians and geologists
alike would rise to refute me.
But my memories
of Nordheim were few and dim, paled by memories of that long, long trek upon
which I had spent my life. We had not kept to a straight course, but our trend
had been for ever southward. Sometimes we had bided for a while in fertile
upland valleys or rich river-traversed plains, but always we took up the trail
again, and not always because of drouth or famine. Often we left countries
teeming with game and wild grain to push into wastelands. On our trail we moved
endlessly, driven only by our restless whim, yet blindly following a cosmic
law, the workings of which we never guessed, any more than the wild geese guess
in their flights around the world. So at last we came into the Country of the
Worm.
I will take up
the tale at the time when we came into jungle-clad hills reeking with rot and
teeming with spawning life, where the tom-toms of a savage people pulsed
incessantly through the hot breathless night. These people came forth to
dispute our way--short, strongly built men, black-haired, painted, ferocious,
but indisputably white men. We knew their breed of old. They were Picts, and of
all alien races the fiercest. We had met their kind before in thick forests,
and in upland valleys beside mountain lakes. But many moons had passed since
those meetings.
I believe this
particular tribe represented the easternmost drift of the race. They were the
most primitive and ferocious of any I ever met. Already they were exhibiting
hints of characteristics I have noted among black savages in jungle countries,
though they had dwelt in these environs only a few generations. The abysmal
jungle was engulfing them, was obliterating their pristine characteristics and shaping
them in its own horrific mold. They were drifting into head-hunting, and
cannibalism was but a step which I believe they must have taken before they
became extinct. These things are natural adjuncts to the jungle; the Picts did
not learn them from the black people, for then there were no blacks among those
hills. In later years they came up from the south, and the Picts first enslaved
and then were absorbed by them. But with that my saga of Niord is not
concerned.
We came into that
brutish hill country, with its squalling abysms of savagery and black
primitiveness. We were--a whole tribe marching on foot, old men, wolfish with
their long beards and gaunt limbs, giant warriors in their prime, naked
children running along the line of march, women with tousled yellow locks
carrying babies which never cried-unless it were to scream from pure rage. I do
not remember our numbers, except, that there were some five hundred
fighting-men—and by fighting-men I mean all males, from the child just strong
enough to lift a bow, to the oldest of the old men. In that madly ferocious age
all were fighters. Our women fought, when brought to bay, like tigresses, and I
have seen a babe, not yet old enough to stammer articulate words, twist its
head and sink its tiny teeth in the foot that stamped out its life.
Oh, we were
fighters! Let me speak of Niord. I am proud of him, the more when I consider
the paltry crippled body of James Allison, the unstable mask I now wear. Niord
was tall, with great shoulders, lean hips and mighty limbs. His muscles were
long and swelling, denoting endurance and speed as well as strength. He could
run all day without tiring, and he possessed a co-ordination that made his
movements a blur of blinding speed. If I told you his full strength, you would brand
me a liar. But there is no man on earth today strong enough to bend the bow
Niord handled with ease. The longest arrow-flight on record is that of a
Turkish archer who sent a shaft 482 yards. There was not a stripling in my
tribe who could not have bettered that flight.
As we entered the
jungle country we heard the tomtoms booming across the mysterious valleys that
slumbered between the brutish hills, and in a broad, open plateau we met our
enemies. I do not believe these Picts knew us, even by legends, or they had
never rushed so openly to the onset, though they outnumbered us. But there was
no attempt at ambush. They swarmed out of the trees, dancing and singing their
war-songs, yelling their barbarous threats. Our heads should hang in their idol-hut
and our yellow-haired women should bear their sons. Ho! ho! ho! By Ymir, it was
Niord who laughed then, not James Allison. Just so we of the Aesir laughed to
hear their threats--deep thunderous laughter from broad and mighty chests: Our
trail was laid in blood and embers through many lands. We were the slayers and
ravishers, striding sword in hand across the world, and that these folk
threatened us woke our rugged humor. We went to meet them, naked but for our
wolfhides, swinging our bronze swords, and our singing was like rolling thunder
in the hills. They sent their arrows among us, and we gave hack their fire.
They could not match us in archery. Our arrows hissed in blinding clouds among
them, dropping them like autumn leaves, until they howled and frothed like mad
dogs and charged to hand-grips. And we, mad with the fighting joy, dropped our
bows and ran to meet them, as a lover runs to his love.
By Ymir, it was a
battle to madden and make drunken with the slaughter and the fury. The Picts
were as ferocious as we, but ours was the superior physique, the keener wit,
the more highly developed fighting-brain. We won because we were a superior
race, but it was no easy victory. Corpses littered the blood-soaked earth; but
at last they broke, and we cut them down as they ran, to the very edge of the trees.
I tell of that fight in a few bald words. I can not paint the madness, the reek
of sweat and blood, the panting, muscle-straining effort, the splintering of
bones under mighty blows, the rending and hewing of quivering sentient flesh;
above all the merciless abysmal savagery of the whole affair, in which there
was neither rule nor order, each man fighting as he would or could. If I might
do so, you would recoil in horror; even the modern I, cognizant of my close kinship
with those times, stand aghast as I review that butchery. Mercy was yet unborn,
save as some individual's whim, and rules of warfare were as yet undreamed of.
It was an age in which each tribe and each human fought tooth and fang from
birth to death, and neither gave nor expected mercy.
So we cut down
the fleeing Picts, and our women came out on the field to brain the wounded
enemies with stones, or cut their throats with copper knives. We did not
torture. We were no more cruel than life demanded.
The rule of life
was ruthlessness, but there is more wanton cruelty today than ever we dreamed
of. It was not wanton bloodthirstiness that made us butcher wounded and captive
foes. It was because we knew our chances of survival increased with each enemy
slain.
Yet there was
occasionally a touch of individual mercy, and so it was in this fight. I had
been occupied with a duel with an especially valiant enemy. His tousled thatch
of black hair scarcely came above my chin, but he was a solid knot of steel-spring
muscles, than which lightning scarcely moved faster. He had an iron sword and a
hidecovered buckler. I had a knotty-headed bludgeon. That fight was one that
glutted even my battle-lusting soul. I was bleeding from a score of flesh
wounds before one of my terrible, lashing strokes smashed his shield like
cardboard, and an instant later my bludgeon glanced from his unprotected head.
Ymir! Even now I stop to laugh and marvel at the hardness of that Pict's skull.
Men of that age were assuredly built on a rugged plan! That blow should have
spattered his brains like water. It did lay his scalp open horribly, dashing
him senseless to the earth, where I let him lie, supposing him to be dead, as I
joined in the slaughter of the fleeing warriors.
When I returned
reeking with sweat and blood, my club horridly clotted with blood and brains, I
noticed that my antagonist was regaining consciousness, and that a naked
tousle-headed girl was preparing to give him the finishing touch with a stone
she could scarcely lift: A vagrant whim caused me to check the blow. I had
enjoved the fight, and I admired the adamantine quality of his skull.
We made camp a
short distance away, burned our dead on a great pyre, and after looting the
corpses of the enemy, we dragged them across the plateau and cast them down in
a valley to make a feast for the hyenas, jackals and vultures which were
already gathering. We kept close watch that night, but we were not attacked,
though far away through the jungle we could make out the red gleam of fires,
and could faintly hear, when the wind veered, the throb of tom-toms and
demoniac screams: and yells--keenings for the slain or mere animal squallings of
fury.
Nor did they
attack us in the days that followed. We bandaged our captive's wounds and
quickly learned his primitive tongue, which, however, was so different from
ours that I can not conceive of the two languages having ever had a common
source.
His name was
Grom, and he was a great hunter and fighter, he boasted. He talked freely and
held no grudge, grinning broadly and showing tusk-like teeth, his beady eyes
glittering from under the tangled black mane that fell over his low forehead.
His limbs were almost apelike in their thickness.
He was vastly interested in his
captors, though he could never understand why he had been spared; to the end it
remained an inexplicable mystery to him. The Picts obeyed the law of survival
even more rigidly than did the IIJsir. They were the more practical, as shown
by their more settled habits. They never roamed as far or as blindly as we. Yet
in every line we were the superior race.
Grom, impressed
by our intelligence and fighting qualities, volunteered to go into the hills
and make peace for us with his people. It was immaterial to us, but we let him
go. Slavery had not yet been dreamed of.
So Grom went back
to his people, and we forgot about him, except that I went a trifle more
cautiously about my hunting, expecting him to be lying in wait to put an arrow
through my back. Then one day we heard a rattle of tom-toms, and Grom appeared
at the edge of the jungle, his face split in his gorilla-grin, with the
painted, skinclad, feather-bedecked chiefs of the clans. Our ferocity had awed
them, and our sparing of Grom further impressed them. They could not understand
leniency; evidently-we valued them too cheaply to bother about killing one when
he was in our power.
So peace was made
with much pow-wow, and sworn to with many strange oaths and ritualswe swore
only by Y'mir, and an Aesir never broke that vow. But they swore by the
elements, by the idol which sat in the fetish-hut where fires burned for ever
and a withered crone slapped a leather-covered drum all night long, and by
another being too terrible to be named.
Then we all sat
around the fires and gnawed meatbones, and drank a fiery concoction they brewed
from wild grain, and the wonder is that the feast did not end in a general
massacre; for that liquor had devils in it and made maggots writhe in our
brains. But no harm came of our vast drunkenness, and thereafter we dwelt at
peace with our barbarous neighbors. They taught us many things, and learned
many more from us. But they taught us iron-workings; into which they had been forced
by the lack of copper in those hills, and we quickly excelled them.
We went freely
among their villages-mud-walled clusters of huts in hilltop clearings,
overshadowed by giant trees-and we allowed them to come at will among our
camps-straggling lines of hide tents on the plateau where the battle had been
fought. Our young men cared not for their squat beady-eyed women, and our rangy
dean-limbed girls with their tousled yellow heads were not drawn to the
hairy-breasted savages. Familiarity over a period of years would have reduced
the repulsion on either side, until the two races would have flowed together to
form one hybrid people, but long before that time the Aesir-rose and departed,
vanishing into the mysterious hazes of the haunted south. But before that
exodus there came to pass the horror of the Worm.
I hunted with
Grom and he led me into brooding, uninhabited valleys and up into
silence-haunted hills where no men had set foot before us. But there was one
valley, off in the mazes of the southwest, into which he would not go. Stumps
of shattered columns, relics of a forgotten civilization, stood among the trees
on the valley floor. Grom showed them to me, as we stood on the cliffs that
flanked the mysterious vale, but he would not go down into it, and he dissuaded
me when I would have gone alone. He would not speak plainly of the danger that
lurked there, but it was greater than that of serpent or tiger, or the
trumpeting elephants which occasionally wandered up in devastating droves from
the south.
Of all beasts,
Grom told me in the gutturals of his tongue, the Picts feared only Satha, the
great snake, and they shunned the jungle where he lived. But there was another
thing they feared, and it was connected in some manner with the Valley of
Broken Stones, as the Picts called the crumbling pillars. Long ago, when his
ancestors had first come into the country, they had dared that grim vale, and a
whole clan of them had perished, suddenly, horribly, and unexplainably. At
least Grom did not explain. The horror had come up out of the earth, somehow,
and it was not good to talk of it, since it was believed that It might be
summoned by speaking of It-whatever It was.
But Grom was
ready to hunt with me anywhere else; for he was the greatest hunter among the
Picts, and many and fearful were our adventures. Once I killed, with the iron
sword I had forged with my own hands, that most terrible of all beasts-old
saber-tooth, which men today call a tiger because he was more like a tiger than
anything else. In reality he was almost as much like a bear in build, save for his
unmistakably feline head. Saber-tooth was massive-limbed, with a low-hung,
great, heavy body, and he vanished from the earth because he was too terrible a
fighter, even for that grim age. As his muscles and ferocity grew, his brain
dwindled until at last even the instinct of self-preservation vanished. Nature,
who maintains her balance in such things, destroyed him because, had his
super-fighting powers been allied with an intelligent brain, he would have
destroyed all other forms of life on earth. He was a freak on the road of
evolution-organic development gone mad and run to fangs and talons, to
slaughter and destruction.
I killed
saber-tooth in a battle that would make a saga in itself, and for months
afterward I lay semi-delirious with ghastly wounds that made the toughest
warriors shake their heads. The Picts said that never before had a man killed a
saber-tooth single-handed. Yet I recovered, to the wonder of all.
While I lay at
the doors of death there was a secession from the tribe. It was a peaceful
secession, such as continually occurred and contributed greatly to the peopling
of the world by yellow-haired tribes. Forty-five of the young men took
themselves mates simultaneously and wandered off to found a clan of their own.
There was no revolt; it was a racial custom which bore fruits in all the later
ages, when tribes sprung from the same roots met, after centuries of
separation, and cut one another's throats with joyous abandon. The tendency of
the Aryan and the pre-Aryan was always toward disunity, clans splitting off the
main stem, and scattering.
So these young
men, led by one Bragi, my brother-in-arms, took their girls and venturing to
the southwest, took up their abode in the Valley of Broken Stones. The Picts
expostulated, hinting vaguely of a monstrous doom that haunted the vale, but
the Aesir laughed. We had left our own demons and weirds in the icy wastes of
the far blue north, and the devils of other races did not much impress us:
When my full strength was returned, and the grislv
wounds were only scars, I girt on my weapons and strode over the plateau to
visit Bragi's clan. Grom did not accompany me. He had not been in the Aesir camp
for several days. But I knew the way. I remembered well the valley, from the
cliffs of which I had looked down and seen the lake at the upper end, the trees
thickening into forest at the lower extremity. The sides of the valley were
high sheer cliffs, and a steep broad ridge at either end, cut it off from the
surrounding country. It was toward the lower or southwestern end that the
valley-floor was dotted thickly with ruined columns, some towering high among
the trees, some fallen into heaps of lichenclad stones. What race reared them
none knew. But Grom had hinted fearsomely of a hairy, apish monstrosity dancing
loathsomely under the moon to a demoniac piping that induced horror and
madness.
I crossed the
plateau whereon our camp was pitched, descended the slope, traversed a shallow
vegetation-choked valley, climbed another slope, and plunged into the hills. A
half-day's leisurely travel brought me to the ridge on, the other side of which
lay the valley of the pillars. For many miles I had seen no sign of human life.
The settlements of the Picts all lay many miles to the east. I topped the ridge
and looked down into the dreaming valley with its still blue lake, its brooding
cliffs and its broken columns jutting among the trees. I looked for smoke. I
saw none, but I saw vultures wheeling in the sky over a cluster of tents on the
lake shore.
I came down the
ridge warily and approached the silent camp. In it I halted, frozen with
horror. I was not easily moved. I had seen death in many forms, and had fled
from or taken part in red massacres that spilled blood like water and heaped
the earth with corpses. But here I was confronted with an organic devastation
that staggered and appalled me: Of Bragi's embryonic clan, not one remained
alive, and not one corpse was whole. Some of the hide tents still stood erect.
Others were mashed down and flattened out, as if crushed by some monstrous weight,
so that at first I wondered if a drove of elephants had stampeded across
the-camp. But no elephants ever wrought such destruction as I saw strewn on the
bloody ground. The camp was a shambles, littered with bits of flesh and
fragments of bodies-hands, feet, heads, pieces of human debris. Weapons lay
about, some of them stained with a greenish slime like that which spurts from a
crushed caterpillar.
No human foe
could have committed this ghastly atrocity. I looked at the lake, wondering if
nameless amphibian monsters had crawled from the calm waters whose deep blue
told of unfathomed depths. Then I saw a print left by the destroyer. It was a
track such as a titanic worm might leave, yards broad, winding back down the
valley. The grass lay flat where it ran, and bushes and small trees had been
crushed down into the earth, all horribly smeared with blood and greenish
slime.
With berserk fury
in my soul I drew my sword and started to follow it, when a call attracted me.
I wheeled, to see a stocky form approaching me from the ridge. It was Grom the
Pict, and when I think of the courage it must have taken for him to have
overcome all the instincts planted in him by traditional teachings and personal
experience, I realize the full depths of his friendship for me. Squatting on the
lake shore, spear in his hands, his black eyes ever roving fearfully down the
brooding treewaving reaches of the valley, Grom told me of the horror that had
come upon Bragi's clan under the moon. But first he told me of it, as his sires
had told the tale to him: Long ago the Picts had drifted down from the
northwest on a long, long trek, finally reaching these junglecovered hills,
where, because they were weary, and because the game and fruit were plentiful
and there were no hostile tribes, they halted and built their mud-walled villages.
Some of them, a
whole clan of that numerous tribe, took up their abode in the Valley of the
Broken Stones. They found the columns and a great ruined temple back in the
trees, and in that temple there was no shrine or altar, but the mouth of a
shaft that vanished deep into the black earth, and in which there were no steps
such as a human being would make and use. They built their village in the
valley, and in the night, under the moon, horror came upon them and left only
broken walls and bits of slime-smeared flesh.
In those days the
Picts feared nothing. The warriors of the other clans gathered and sang their
war-songs and danced their war-dances, and followed a broad track of blood and
slime to the shaft-mouth in the temple. They howled defiance and hurled down
boulders which werenever heard to strike bottom. Then began a thin demoniac
piping, and up from the well pranced a hideous anthropomorphic figure dancing to
the weird strains of a pipe it held in its monstrous hands. The horror of its
aspect froze the fierce Picts with amazement, and close behind it a vast white
bulk heaved up from the subterranean darkness. Out of the shaft came a
slavering mad nightmare which arrows pierced but could not check, which swords
carved but could not slay. It fell slobbering upon the warriors, crushing them
to crimson pulp, tearing them to bits as an octopus might tear small fishes,
sucking their blood from their mangled limbs and devouring them even as they screamed
and struggled. The survivors fled, pursued to the very ridge, up which,
apparently, the monster could not propel its quaking mountainous bulk. After
that they did not dare the silent valley. But the dead came to their shamans
and old men in dreams and told them strange and terrible secrets. They spoke of
an ancient, ancient race of semihuman beings which once inhabited that valley
and reared those columns for their own weird inexplicable purposes. The white
monster in the pits was their god, summoned up from the nighted abysses of mid-earth
uncounted fathoms below the black mold, by sorcery unknown to the sons of men.
The hairy anthropomorphic being was its servant, created to serve the god, a
formless elemental spirit drawn up from below and cased in flesh, organic but
beyond the understanding of humanity. The Old Ones had long vanished into the
limbo from whence they crawled in the black dawn of the universe; but their
bestial god and his inhuman slave lived on. Yet both were organic after a
fashion, and could be wounded, though no human weapon had been found potent enough
to slay them.
Bragi and his clan had dwelt for weeks in the
valley before the horror struck. Only the night before, Grom, hunting above the
cliffs, and by that token daring greatly, had been paralyzed by a high-pitched
demon piping, and then by a mad clamor of human screaming. Stretched face down
in the dirt, hiding his head in a tangle of grass, he had not dared to move,
even when the shrieks died away in the slobbering, repulsive sounds of a
hideous feast. When dawn broke he had crept shuddering to the cliffs to look
down into the valley, and the sight of the devastation, even when seen from
afar, had driven him in yammering flight far into the hills. But it had
occurred to him, finally, that he should warn the rest of the tribe, and
returning, on his way to the camp on the plateau, he had seen me entering the valley.
So spoke Grom,
while I sat and brooded darkly, my chin on my mighty fist. I can not frame in
modern words the clan-feeling that in those days was a living vital part of
every man and woman. In a world where talon and fang were lifted on every hand,
and the hands of all men raised against an individual, except those of his own
clan, tribal instinct was more than the phrase it is today. It was as much a
part of a man as was his heart or his right hand. This was necessary, for only
thus banded together in unbreakable groups could mankind have survived in the
terrible environments of the primitive world. So now the personal grief I felt
for Bragi and the clean-limbed young men and laughing white-skinned girls was
drowned in a deeper sea of grief and fury that was cosmic in its depth and
intensity. I sat grimly, while the Pict squatted anxiously beside me, his gaze
roving from me to the menacing deeps of the valley where the accursed columns
loomed like broken teeth of cackling hags among the waving leafy reaches.
I, Niord, was not
one to use my brain over-much. I lived in a physical world, and there were the
old men of the tribe to do my thinking. But I was one of a race destined to
become dominant mentally as well as physically, and I was no mere muscular
animal. So as I sat there there came dimly and then clearly a thought to me
that brought a short fierce laugh from my lips.
Rising, I bade
Grom aid me, and we built a pyre on the lake shore of dried wood, the
ridge-poles of the tents, and the broken shafts of spears. Then we collected
the grisly fragments that had been parts of Bragi's band, and we laid them on
the pile, and struck flint and steel to it.
The thick sad
smoke crawled serpent-like into the sky, and turning to Grom, I made him guide
me to the jungle where lurked that scaly horror, Satha, the great serpent. Grom
gaped at me; not the greatest hunters among the Picts sought out the mighty
crawling one. But my will was like a wind that swept him along my course, and
at last he led the way. We left the valley by the upper end, crossing the
ridge, skirting the tall cliffs, and plunged into the fastnesses of the south,
which was peopled only by the grim denizens of the jungle. Deep into the jungle
we went, until we came to a low-lying expanse, dank and dark beneath the great
creeper-festooned trees, where our feet sank deep into the spongy silt,
carpeted by rotting vegetation, and slimy moisture oozed up beneath their
pressure. This, Grom told me, was the realm haunted by Satha, the great
serpent.
Let me speak of
Satha. There is nothing like him on earth today, nor has there been for
countless ages: Like the meat-eating dinosaur, like old saber-tooth, he was too
terrible to exist. Even then he was a survival of a grimmer age when life and
its forms were cruder and more hideous. There were not many of his kind then,
though they may have existed in great numbers in the reeking ooze of the vast
jungle-tangled swamps still farther south. He was larger than any python of modern
ages, and his fangs dripped with poison a thousand times more deadly than that
of a king cobra.
He was never
worshipped by the pure-blood Picts, though the blacks that came later deified
him, and that adoration persisted in the hybrid race that sprang from the
Negroes and their white conquerors. But to other peoples he was the nadir of
evil horror, and tales of him became twisted into demonology; so in later ages
Satha became the veritable devil of the white races, and the Stygians first
worshipped, and then, when they became Egyptians, abhorred him under the name
of Set, the Old Serpent, while to the Semites he became Leviathan and Satan. He
was terrible enough to be a god, for he was a crawling death. I had seen a bull
elephant fall dead in his tracks from Satha's bite. I had seen him, had
glimpsed him writhing his horrific way through the dense jungle, had seen him
take his prey, but I had never hunted him. He was too grim, even for the slayer
of old saber-tooth.
But now I hunted
him, plunging farther and farther into the hot, breathless reek of his jungle,
even when friendship for me could not drive Grom farther: He urged me to paint
my body and sing my death-song before I advanced farther, but I pushed on
unheeding.
In a natural
runway that wound between the shouldering trees, I set a trap. I found a large
tree, soft and spongy of fiber, but thick-boled and heavy, and I hacked through
its base close to the ground with my great sword, directing its fall so that,
when it toppled, its top crashed into the branches of a smaller tree, leaving
it leaning across the runway, one end resting on the earth, the other caught in
the small tree. Then I cut away the branches on the under side, and cutting a
slim tough sapling I trimmed it and stuck it upright like a proppole under the
leaning tree. Then, cutting a way the tree which supported it, I left the great
trunk poised precariously on the prop-pole, to which I fastened a long vine, as
thick as my wrist.
Then I went alone
through that primordial twilight jungle until an overpowering fetid odor
assailed my nostrils, and from the rank vegetation in front of me, Satha reared
up his hideous head, swaying lethally from side to side, while his forked
tongue jetted in and out, and his great yellow terrible eyes burned icily on me
with all the evil wisdom of the black elder world that was when man was not. I backed
away, feeling no fear, only an icy sensation along my spine, and Satha came
sinuously after me, his shining eighty-foot barrel rippling over the rotting
vegetation in mesmeric silence. His wedge-shaped head was bigger than the head
of the hugest stallion, his trunk was thicker than a man's body, and his scales
shimmered with a thousand changing scintillations. I was to Satha as a mouse is
to a king cobra, but I was fanged as no mouse ever was. Quick as I was, I knew
I could not avoid the lightning stroke of that great triangular head; so I
dared not let him come too close. Subtly I fled down the runway; and behind me
the rush of the great supple body was like the sweep of wind through the grass.
He was not far
behind me when I raced beneath the deadfall, and as the great shining length
glided under the trap, I gripped the vine with both hands and jerked
desperately. With a crash the great trunk fell across Satha's scaly back, some
six feet back of his wedgeshaped head.
I had hoped to
break his spine but I do not think it did, for the great body coiled and
knotted, the mighty tail lashed and thrashed, mowing down the bushes as if with
a giant flail. At the instant of the fall, the huge head had whipped about and
struck the tree with a terrific impact, the mighty fangs shearing through bark
and wood like scimitars. Now, as if aware he fought an inanimate foe, Satha
turned on me, standing out of his reach. The scaly neck writhed and arched, the
mighty jaws gaped, disclosing fangs a foot in length, from which dripped venom
that might have burned through solid stone.
I believe, what
of his stupendous strength, that Satha would have writhed from under the trunk,
but for a broken branch that had been driven deep into his side, holding him
like a barb. The sound of his hissing filled the jungle and his eyes glared at
me with such concentrated evil that I shook despite myself. Oh, he knew it was
I who had trapped him! Now I came as close as I dared, and with a sudden powerful
cast of my spear, transfixed his neck just below the gaping jaws, nailing him
to the tree-trunk Then I dared greatly, for he was far from dead, and I knew he
would in an instant tear the spear from the wood and be free to strike. But in
that instant I ran in, and swinging my sword with all my great power, I hewed
off his terrible head.
The heavings and
contortions of Satha's prisoned form in life were naught to the convulsions of
his headless length in death. I retreated, dragging the gigantic head after me
with a crooked pole, and at a safe distance from the lashing, flying tail, I
set to work. I worked with naked death then, and no man ever toiled more
gingerly than did I. For I cut out the poison sacs at the base of the great fangs,
and in the terrible venom I soaked the heads of eleven arrows, being careful
that only the bronze points were in the liquid, which else had corroded away
the wood of the tough shafts. While I was doing this, Grom, driven by
comradeship and curiosity, came stealing nervously through the jungle, and his
mouth gaped as he looked on the head of Satha.
For hours I
steeped the arrowheads in the poison, until they were caked with a horrible
green scum, and showed tiny flecks of corrosion where
the venom had eaten into the solid bronze. He wrapped them carefully in broad,
thick, rubber-like leaves, and then, though night had fallen and the hunting
beasts were roaring on every hand, I went back through the jungled hills, Grom
with me, until at dawn we came again to the high cliffs that loomed above the
Valley of Broken Stones.
At the mouth of
the valley I broke my spear, and I took all the unpoisoned shafts from my
quiver, and snapped them. I painted my face and limbs as the Aesir painted
themselves only when they went forth to certain doom, and I sang my death-song
to the sun as it rose over the cliffs, my yellow mane blowing in the morning
wind. Then I went down into the valley, bow in hand.
Grom could not
drive himself to follow me. He lay on his belly in the dust and howled like a
dying dog.
I passed the lake
and the silent camp where the pyre-ashes still smoldered, and came under the
thickening trees beyond. About me the columns loomed, mere shapeless heaps from
the ravages of staggering eons. The trees grew more dense, and under their vast
leafy branches the very light was dusky and evil. As in twilight shadow I saw
the ruined temple, cyclopean wails staggering up from masses of decaying masonry
and fallen blocks of stone. About six hundred yards in front of it a great
column reared up in an open glade, eighty or ninety feet in height. It was so
worn and pitted by weather and time that any child of my tribe could have
climbed it, and I marked it and changed my plan.
I came to the
ruins and saw huge crumbling walls upholding a domed oof from which many stones
had fallen, so that it seemed like the lichen-grown ribs of some mythical
monster's skeleton arching above me. Titanic columns flanked the open doorway
through which ten elephants could have stalked abreast. Once there might have
been inscriptions and hieroglyphics on the pillars and walls, but they were long
worn away. Around the great room, on the inner side, ran columns in better
state of preservation. On each of these columns was a flat pedestal, and some
dim instinctive memory vaguely resurrected a shadowy scene wherein black drums
roared madly, and on these pedestals monstrous beings squatted loathsomely in
inexplicable rituals rooted in the black dawn of the universe.
There was no
altar-only the mouth of a great welllike shaft in the stone floor, with strange
obscene carvings all about the rim. I tore great pieces of stone from the
rotting floor and cast them down the shaft which slanted down into utter
darkness. I heard them bound along the side, but I did not hear them strike
bottom. I cast down stone after atone, each with a searing curse, and at last I
heard a sound that was not the dwindling rumble of the falling stones. Up from
the well floated a weird demon-piping that was a symphony of madness. Far down
in the darkness I glimpsed the faint fearful glimmering of a vast white bulk.
I retreated
slowly as the piping grew louder, falling back through the broad doorway. I
heard a scratching, scrambling noise, and up from the shaft and out of the
doorway between the colossal solumns came a prancing incredible figure. It went
erect like a man, but it was covered with fur, that was shaggiest where its
face should have been. If it had ears, nose and a mouth I did not discover
them. Only a pair of staring red eyes leered from the furry mask. Its misshapen
hands held a strange set of pipes, on which it blew weirdly as it pranced toward
me with many a grotesque caper and leap.
Behind it I heard
a repulsive obscene noise as of a quaking unstable mass heaving up out of a
well. Then I nocked an arrow, drew the cord and sent the shaft singing through
the furry breast of the dancing monstrosity. It went down as though struck by a
thunderbolt, but to my horror the piping continued, though the pipes had fallen
from the malformed hands. Then I turned and ran fleetly to the column, up which
I swarmed before I looked back. When I reached the pinnacle I looked, and
because of the shock and surprise of what I saw, I almost fell from my dizzy
perch.
Out of the temple
the monstrous dweller in the darkness had come, and I, who had expected a
horror yet cast in some terrestrial mold, looked on the spawn of-nightmare.
From what subterranean hell it crawled in the long ago I know not, nor what
black age it represented. But it was
not a beast, as humanity knows beasts. I call it a worm for lack of a better
term. There is no earthly language which has a name for it. I can only say that
it looked somewhat more like a worm than it did an octopus, a serpent or a
dinosaur.
It was white and
pulpy, and drew its quaking bulk along the ground, worm-fashion. But it had
wide flat tentacles, and fleshly feelers, and other adjuncts the use of which I
am unable to explain. And it had a long proboscis which it curled and uncurled
like an elephant's trunk. Its forty eyes, set in a horrific circle, were
composed of thousands of facets of as many scintillant colors which changed and
altered in never-ending transmutation. But through all interplay of hue and glint,
they retained their evil intelligence-intelligence there was behind those
flickering facets, not human nor yet bestial, but a nightborn demoniac intelligence
such as men in dreams vaguely sense throbbing titanically in the black gulfs
outside our material universe. In size the monster was mountainous; its bulk
would have dwarfed a mastodon.
But even as I
shook with the cosmic horror of the thing, I drew a feathered shaft to my ear
and arched it singing on its way. Grass and bushes were crushed flat as the
monster came toward me like a moving mountain and shaft after shaft I sent with
terrific force and deadly precision. I could not miss so huge a target. The
arrows sank to the feathers or clear out of sight in the unstable bulk, each
bearing enough poison to have stricken dead a bull elephant. Yet on it came; swiftly,
appallingly, apparently heedless of both the shafts and the venom in which they
were steeped. And all the time the hideous music played a maddening
accompaniment, whining thinly from the pipes that lay untouched on the ground.
My confidence
faded; even the poison of Satha was futile against this uncanny being. I drove
my last shaft almost straight downward into the quaking white mountain, so
close was the monster under my perch; Then suddenly its color altered. A wave
of ghastly blue surged over it, and the vast hulk heaved in earthquake-like
convulsions. With a terrible plunge it struck the lower part of the column,
which crashed to falling shards of stone. But even with the impact, I leaped
far out and fell through the empty air full upon the monster's back.
The spongy skin
yielded and gave beneath my feet, and I drove my sword hilt-deep, dragging it
through the pulpy flesh, ripping a horrible yard-long wound, from which oozed a
green slime. Then a flip of a cable-like tentacle flicked me from the titan's
back and spun me three hundred feet through the air to crash among a cluster of
giant trees.
The impact must
have splintered half the bones in my frame, for when I sought to grasp my sword
again and crawl anew to the combat, I could not move hand or foot, could only
writhe helplessly with my broken back. But I could see the monster and I knew
that I had won, even in defeat. The mountainous bulk was heaving and billowing,
the tentacles were lashing madly, the antennae writhing and knotting, and the nauseous
whiteness had changed to a pale and grisly green. It turned ponderously and
lurched back toward the temple, rolling like a crippled ship in a heavy swell.
Trees crashed and splintered as it lumbered against them.
I wept with pure
fury because I could not catch up my sword and rush in to die glutting my
berserk madness in mighty strokes. But the worm-god was deathstricken and
needed not my futile sword. The demon pipes on the ground kept up their
infernal tune, and it was like the fiend's death-dirge. Then as the monster
veered and floundered, I saw it catch up the corpse of its hairy slave. For an
instant the apish form dangled in midair, gripped round by the trunk-like
proboscis, then was dashed against the temple wall with a force that reduced
the hairy body to a mere shapeless pulp. At that the pipes screamed out horribly,
and fell silent for ever.
The titan
staggered on the brink of the shaft; then another change came over it-a
frightful transfiguration the nature of which I can not yet describe. Even now
when I try to think of it clearly, I am only chaotically conscious of a blasphemous,
unnatural transmutation of form and substance, shocking and indescribable. Then
the strangely altered bulk tumbled into the shaft to roll down into the
ultimate darkness from whence it came, and I knew that it was dead. And as it vanished
into the well, with a rending, grinding groan the ruined walls quivered from
dome to base. They bent inward and buckled with deafening reverberation, the
columns splintered, and with a cataclysmic crash the dome itself came
thundering down. For an instant the air seemed veiled with flying debris and
stone-dust, through which the treetops lashed madly as in a storm or an
earthquake convulsion. Then all was clear again and I stared, shaking the blood
from my eyes. Where the temple had stood there lay only a colossal pile of
shattered masonry and broken stones, and every column in the valley had fallen,
to lie in crumbling shards.
In the silence
that followed I heard Grom wailing a dirge over me. I bade him lay my sword in
my hand, and he did so, and bent close to hear what I had to say, for I was
passing swiftly.
"Let my
tribe remember," I said, speaking slowly. "Let the tale be told from
village to village, from camp to camp, from tribe to tribe, so that men may
know that not man nor beast nor devil may prey in safety on the golden-haired
people of Asgard. Let them build me a cairn where I lie and lay me therein with
my bow and sword at hand, to guard this valley for ever; so if the ghost of the
god I slew comes up from below, my ghost will ever be ready to give it battle."
And while Grom
howled and beat his hairy breast, death came to me in the Valley of the Worm.
THE END
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