Abraham Merritt

THE SHIP OF ISHTAR: Sci-Fi Classic


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lips clung to his, supplicating; the perfumed tent of her hair covered him. She held him, her lithe body pressed tight, imperatively desperate. Against his racing heart he felt the frightened pulse of hers. And ever between her kisses she whispered: “Am I not a woman — and alive? Tell me — am I not alive?”

      Desire filled him; he gave her kiss for kiss; tempering the flame of his desire was clear recognition that neither swift love for him nor passion had swept her into his arms.

      It was terror that lay behind her caresses. She was afraid — appalled by that six-thousand-year-wide abyss between the life she had known and his. Clinging to him she fought for assurance. She had been driven back to woman’s last intrenchment — the primal assertion of the woman-self — the certainty of her womanhood and its unconquerable lure.

      No, it was not to convince him that her kisses burned his lips — it was to convince herself.

      He did not care. She was in his arms. He gave her kiss for kiss.

      She thrust him from her; sprang to her feet.

      “I am a woman, then?” she cried triumphantly. “A woman — and alive?”

      “A woman!” he answered thickly, his whole body quivering toward her. “Alive! God — yes!”

      She closed her eyes; a great sigh shook her.

      “And that is truth,” she cried, “and it is the one truth you have spoken. Nay — be silent!” she checked him. “If I am a woman and alive, it follows that all else you have told me are lies — since I could be neither were Babylon dust and it six thousand years since first I saw the ship. You lying dog!” she shrilled, and with one ringed hand struck Kenton across the lips.

      The rings cut deep. As he fell back, dazed both by blow and sudden shift of fortune, she threw open the inner door.

      “Luarda! Athnal! All!” wrathfully she summoned. “Quick! Bind me this dog! Bind him — but slay him not!”

      Streamed from the cabin seven warrior maids, short kirtled, bare to their waists, in their hands light javelins. They flung themselves upon him. And as they wound about him Sharane darted in and tore the sword of Nabu from his hand.

      And now young, fragrant bodies crushed him in rings of woman flesh, soft, yet inexorable as steel. The blue cloak was thrown over his head, twisted around his neck. Kenton awoke from his stupor — awoke roaring with rage. He tore himself loose, hurled the cloak from him, leaped toward Sharane. Quicker than he, the lithe bodies of the maids screened her from his rush. They thrust him with their javelins, pricking him as do the matadors to turn a charging bull. Back and back they drove him, ripping his clothing, bringing blood now here, now there.

      Through his torment he heard her laughter.

      “Liar!” she mocked. “Liar, coward and fool! Tool of Nergal, sent to me with a lying tale to sap my courage! Back to Nergal you go with another tale!”

      The warrior maids dropped their javelins, surged forward as one. They clung to him; twined legs and arms around him, dragged him down. Cursing, flailing with his fists, kicking — caring no longer that they were women — Kenton fought them. Berserk, he staggered to his feet. His foot struck the lintel of the rosy cabin’s door. Down he plunged, dragging his wildcat burden with him. Falling they drove against the door. Open it flew, and out through it they rolled, battling down the ivoried deck.

      There was a shouting close behind him, a shrill cry of warning from Sharane — some urgent command, for grip of arms and legs relaxed; clutching hands were withdrawn.

      Sobbing with rage, Kenton swung to his feet. He saw that he was almost astride the line between ivoried deck and black. It came to him that this was why Sharane had whistled her furies from him; that he had dragged them too close to its mysterious menace.

      Again her laughter lashed him. She stood upon the gallery of little blossoming trees, her doves winging about her. The sword of Nabu was in her hand; derisively she lifted it.

      “Ho, lying messenger!” mocked Sharane. “Ho, dog beaten by women! Come, get your sword!”

      “I’ll come, damn you!” he shouted, and leaped forward.

      The ship pitched. Thrown off his balance, Kenton staggered back, reeled to the line where black and ivory decks met.

      Reeled over it — unhurt!

      Something deeper than his consciousness registered that fact; registered it as of paramount importance. Whatever the power of the barrier, to it Kenton was immune. He poised himself to leap back to the ivory deck.

      “Stop him!” came the voice of Klaneth.

      In mid-spring long, sinewy fingers gripped his shoulder, swung him round. He looked into the face of the beater of the serpent drum. The drummer’s talons lifted him and cast Kenton like a puppy behind him.

      And panting like some outraged puppy, Kenton swayed up on his feet. A ring of black-robed men was closing in upon him, black-robed men whose faces were dead white, impassive; black-robed men closing in upon him with clutching hands. Beyond the ring stood the mailed warrior with the red beard and the pale agate eyes; and beside him the Black Priest.

      Naught cared Kenton for any or all of them. He rushed. The black robes curled over him, overwhelming him, pinned him down.

      Again the ship lurched, this time more violently. Kenton, swept off his feet, slid sidewise. A wave swished over him. The hands that clutched him were washed away. Another wave lifted him, flung him up and out. Deep he sank; fought his way upward; dashed the water from his eyes and looked for the ship.

      A roaring wind had risen. Under it the ship was scudding — a hundred yards away. He shouted; swam toward her. Down went the sail, down dipped the oars, straining to keep her before the wind. Faster, faster flew the ship before the blast.

      She was lost in the silvery mists.

      Kenton ceased his efforts; floated, abandoned in an unknown world.

      A wave smote him; he came up behind it, choking. The spindrift whipped him. He heard the booming surf, the hiss of combers thrown back by ramparts of rock. Another wave caught him. Struggling on its crest he saw just ahead of him a pinnacle of yellow stone rising from a nest of immense boulders upon which the billows broke in fountains of spume.

      He was lifted by a gigantic comber; dashed straight against the yellow pillar.

      The shock of his impact was no greater than that of breaking through thick cobweb. For infinite distances it seemed to him he rushed on and on through a soft thick darkness. With him went the shrieking clamor of vast tempests. Abruptly his motion ended, the noise of the tempests ceased.

      He lay prone; his fingers clenched some coarse fabric that crumpled stubbornly in his grip. He rolled over, hands thrust out; one of them gripped cool, polished wood. He sat up —

      He was back in his own room!

      Kenton dragged himself to his feet, stood swaying, dazed.

      What was that darkening the rug at his feet? It was water — water that was dripping from him, strangely colored water — crimsoned water.

      He realized that he was wet to the skin, drenched. He licked his lips — there was salt upon them. His clothing was ripped and torn, the salt water dripped from it.

      And from a score of wounds his blood mingled with the water!

      He stumbled over to the jewelled ship. On the black deck was a little group of manikins, leaning and looking over the rail.

      Upon the gallery of the rosy cabin one tiny figure stood —

      Sharane!

      He touched her — jewel hard, jewel cold, a toy!

      And yet — Sharane!

      Like returning wave his berserk rage swept him. Echoes of her laughter in his ears, Kenton, cursing, sought for something to shatter the shining ship. Never again should Sharane