opportunity to get the things necessary to outfit me.'
'But how about my hair?' demanded Zor.
'Can't you find us a knife, Kleeto?' I asked.
'Yes. We have a number of knives with which we prepare the food. I'll get you a couple of them right away.'
After Kleeto got the knives, she left us to see if she could find the garments for Zor; and I set about cutting his hair, which had grown quite long. It was quite a job; but at last it was completed.
'Open your eyes wide and let your chin drop,' I told him, laughingly, 'and you might pass for a Jukan.'
Zor made a wry face. 'Come on,' he said, 'and I'll make an imbecile out of you now.'
He had just about completed hacking off my hair, when Kleeto returned with a Jukan outfit.
'You'd better go into your sleeping quarters and change,' she said. 'Someone might come in here.'
After Zor left the room, Kleeto returned to her work in the kitchen; and I was left alone. As usual, when I was alone, and my mind not occupied with futile plans to escape, my thoughts went back to Sari and to my mate, Dian the Beautiful. Doubtless she had given me up for lost; and if I never returned, my fate would remain a mystery to her and to my fellow Sarians.
Sari seemed a long way off; and in truth it was; and almost hopeless any thought that I might ever return; for even should I escape from the Jukans, how might I ever hope to find Sari, I who was not endowed with the homing instinct of the Pellucidarians?
Of course Zor could point the general direction of Sari; but without him, or another Pellucidarian at my side, I might wander for a lifetime in a great circle; or even if I travelled in what I felt to be a straight line, the chances were very remote that I would ever hit upon the relatively tiny spot that is Sari. However, no doubts would deter me from making the attempt to escape should the opportunity ever be presented; nor should I ever cease to try to return to my Dian as long as life remained to me.
Thus was my mind occupied when the hangings of the doorway were thrust aside and a man strode into the apartment. He was a well muscled fellow; but his face was neither that of a man nor a beast. Stiff, upstanding hair grew almost to his eyes, so that he had no forehead whatsoever, or at least only a narrow strip above his brows about an inch wide. His eyes were so close-set as to seem almost one; and his ears were pointed like a beast's. His nose was not bad; but his lips were thin and cruel. He stood there looking at me in silence for a few moments, a sneer curling his lips.
'So,' he said at last, 'you are going to escape, are you?'
'Who are you?' I demanded.
'I am Noak, the major-domo of the palace of Meeza ,' he replied.
'So what?' I demanded. Everything about the fellow antagonized me; and I could tell from his attitude that he had come looking for trouble; so I made no effort to appease him. Whatever he intended doing, he was going to do no matter what I said or did; and I wanted to get it over with.
'You have even cut your hair so that you will look more like a Jukan. All you need now is a loin-cloth and ornaments of a Jukan, I suppose.'
'That is all,' I said, looking at his loin-cloth.
Suddenly his eyes blazed in maniacal fury. 'So you thought you could escape from Noak, did you? Well, I'll fix you. You'll never escape from anybody, when I get through with you.' And with that, he drew his stone knife and came for me.
Now, I had kept one of the knives that Kleeto had obtained for us; and Zor had retained the other; so I was not without some means of defense, and I was ready for him when he came.
I hope that you never have to fight with a madman. It is one of the most frightful experiences that I have ever passed through. Noak was not only mad, but he was a powerful man as well; but really the most harrowing part of the encounter was the horror of that bestial face, the mad light in those terrible eyes, the froth of rage upon those cruel lips, the bared, yellow fangs.
I parried his first blow and struck at his chest with my own weapon; but he partially avoided me, and I succeeded only in inflicting a slight flesh wound. Even this, however, goaded him into an increased fury of rage; and now he struck at me again at close quarters, at the same time clutching for my throat with his free hand. Once more I eluded him; and then, with a scream, he sprang into the air and lit full on top of me. I lost my balance then and toppled backward to the floor, with the maniac on top of me. He raised his knife to finish me; but I clutched his wrist and somehow succeeded in tearing the weapon from his grasp. Then he bared those yellow fangs and bit at me, seeking to fasten them upon my jugular.
I was forced to release his wrist then, to push him away from me; and I succeeded in getting my fingers at his throat. I still clung to my knife; and now as we strained and struggled in each other's grasp I got the point of it beneath his heart; and with all my strength I drove it home.
He screamed and struggled spasmodically for a few seconds; then he relaxed in death.
I pushed his body from me and staggered to my feet, half nauseated by the horror of the encounter and the nearness of that repulsive face to mine.
As I stood there panting for breath, I heard a sound at the doorway behind me. I wheeled about, ready for another enemy; but it was only Kleeto. She stood there, wide-eyed, looking at the corpse upon the floor.
'You have killed Noak,' she said, in a half whisper.
'And I have the outfit of a Jukan,' I replied.
Chapter IX
BEFORE I came to Pellucidar, I had never killed a man. In fact, I had never seen anyone who had met a violent death; but since then I have killed many men, always, however, in self-defense or in defense of others. It must always have been thus, and must always be, in a society where there is no regularly constituted force of guardians of the peace and safety of man. Here, in Pellucidar, each man must be, to a great extent, his own police force, his own judge and jury. This does not mean that right always prevails; more often it is might; but where an individual has both right and might on his side, he feels a far greater personal satisfaction in his conquests than he possibly could by calling in a policeman and turning a malefactor over to the slow processes of the courts, where even right may not always prevail.
I presume that Kleeto had witnessed such deaths many times; and so it was not the killing of Noak that affected her, but rather the fear of what must happen to me if my crime were discovered.
'Now you are in for it,' she said.
'There wasn't much of anything else I could do about it, was there?' I inquired; 'unless I was content to let him kill me.'
'I would never have thought that you could kill him. He was very powerful.'
'Well, it's done now, and can't be undone; and the next problem is how to remove the evidence.'
'We might bury it,' she said. 'There is no other way of hiding it.'
'But where?' I asked.
'Your sleeping quarters,' she said. 'That would be the safest place.'
A newly dead body is a difficult thing to handle before rigor mortis sets in, and for some reason it seems about twice as heavy and four times as awkward as in life; but I managed to get Noak's body across one of my shoulders and carry it into the sleeping quarters occupied by Zor, and myself. Zor, dressed like a Jukan, was just coming out as I approached with my burden.
'Now what!' he exclaimed.
'Noak tried to kill me,' I said.
'That is Noak?' His tone was incredulous.
'It was,' I replied.
'David had to kill him,' said Kleeto; 'and I think it is just as well for all of us that Noak is dead.'
'Why are you bringing him here?' asked Zor.
'I'm going to bury him in our sleeping quarters.'
Zor scratched his head. 'From the looks of him, he'll be better company dead than alive. Come on, bring him