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Authors: Mike Resnick,Robert T. Garcia

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BOOK: Worlds of Edgar Rice Burroughs
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“Kind of you to say,” I told him cautiously. I rose up then, studying Stubs carefully. “And you found out all about my boy and came here . . . out of coincidence?”

“Not coincidence,” said Stubs proudly. “Destiny.”

“I see,” I said to him.

There were so many other things I could have said as well, but instead I restrained them. I rose to my feet and said with studied indifference, “Son, I believe these are matters better left to you. I leave you to discuss them.”

“Mother?” Julian was surprised to hear me speak so. In the past, others had attempted to intercede themselves in our affairs. This time, however, this day, I was inclined to let matters run their course.

So instead I simply reached out, took one of his hands in the two of mine, and squeezed it tight. “Do what you must,” I said and then headed out of the house.

Once I had emerged, I immediately sought hiding under the darkening shadows. Even if someone had been watching me upon my first exit from the building, they would not have been able to maintain their sight of me. I circled around, keeping low and tight.

I was moving so quietly that none could have heard me. Minutes later, though, I heard them. A single, gentle snapping of a twig in the still of the night was all that was required.

I froze exactly where I was and waited.

A long pause and then another movement.

There she was: Kel-ee-kni. Older than when I’d last seen her, certainly, and better armed. She had a blaster tucked beneath her arm and she was trying as best she could to see the cabin. She was attempting to target the young man who had arrived at our house.

Except I knew that was not the case.

I had my gun up and leveled at her before she knew what was happening. “Don’t move,” came my soft voice purring in the darkness.

She moved, swinging her blaster toward me.

I only had to fire once to shoot the gun out of her hand. She cried out as it went flying, and she clutched at her hand, shoving it under her arm to help assuage her pain. A fairly steady stream of profanity emerged from her lips until I ordered her to be silent. She did so immediately. From nearby I could hear the river continuing to run steadily. Anyone falling into it would be pulled toward a fairly large waterfall that would provide a one-way exit from the area.

Slowly I advanced upon her. She saw me emerging from the darkness for the first time and instead of moaning actually grinned. “So it comes to this,” she said.

I nodded ever so slightly. “It certainly took you enough years. That,” and I gestured with my head toward the cabin, “is young Orthis, I take it?”

“You knew?”

“I suspected. Now I know.”

She sneered at me. “My Orthis is going to kill your Julian.”

“Perhaps,” I said. “Or else it may well be the other way around. Or perhaps the both of them will get loose this time and the final resolution will occur at some point in the future, when neither of us is there.”

“That will not happen,” said Kel-ee-kni. “We did not spend so many years tracking you down so that matters conclude on an uncertain note. One way or the other, it ends tonight.”

“Then you’d best hope it ends well for your man,” and I leveled the gun at her. “Because for you, this is the last ni—”

An explosion hit my shoulder. I never even saw it coming. One moment I was there, on my feet, my gun leveled, and then the next something had exploded against me.

The gun went flying out of my hand as I stumbled backwards, slamming into a tree. Even as I tried to pull myself together, Kel-ee-kni advanced upon me. She had pulled a second gun out of nowhere, and she was drawing closer, firing again and again. Desperate, I threw myself behind a tree that provided me minimal blocking. Pieces of bark were blown away, and the tree remained solid, but not for long.

“Never again!” shouted Kel-ee-kni as she advanced upon my position.

The door of the small cabin banged open and I heard my son’s voice call out to me, demanding to know what the hell had just happened. Suddenly he seemed to realize that all was not as he was supposed to believe, and he threw himself to one side just as a blast erupted past his head.

Kel-ee-kni spun and saw him and shouted an angry imprecation at her son. “Can you not do anything right!” she bellowed and swung her gun around to take aim at Julian.

Grabbing the only opportunity I could, I scooped up a rock and flung it at her.

The small missile sailed straight and true and ricocheted off her head. Down she went and immediately I sprinted across the divide between us. The water was continuing to rush past us as I came at her, trying to dodge right and left in order to make myself harder to hit.

Not hard enough.

Two feet away from her, and that was when she turned and shot me.

No screech. No screech for her. I provided her nothing save for a gasp as the blast ripped through my upper chest. By all means, I should have been dead right then. As it was, I staggered and then fell straight forward onto her. She was half standing when I struck her, and she laughed as my body crashed into her. It was all I could do not to lapse into unconsciousness that would take me to my final rest.

She tried to angle the gun around to get another shot off, looking surprised that I was still alive. Her surprise grew when she realized that she couldn’t aim the gun at me. As if my mind had mentally disconnected, I kept the gun faced away from me. My legs went out from under me as I fell backwards, and still my hands kept locked around her wrists as if in a death grip.

She went down under me and we rolled along the sloped hill, banging, jostling against each other. Not once did Kel-ee-kni give up trying to shoot me. Instead she wrestled desperately, her frustration growing as she proved unable to dislodge the gun from my iron grasp.


You can’t win this
!” she shrieked.

“I don’t care about winning,” and it was only then that I realized how little energy I had left. “I just have to make sure you lose.”

At that moment she ripped the gun from my hand as we tumbled down the hill, and for half a moment there was a look of triumph on her face. But the joyous expression instantly morphed into horror as abruptly the ground went out from under her and we hit the water.

And I landed on top of her.

With the last amount of strength I had within me, I kept her under the water. As we plowed down the river, moving faster and faster, I felt her struggling. Her hands were trying to pummel me aside, to shove me off to one side or other of the bank so that she could manage to keep herself in the fray.

“No chance,” I whispered. “No chance.”

She fought and fought and came that close, so very, very close, to pushing me aside. She might very well have made it if she hadn’t run out of water.

We sailed over the edge, and there was nothing but a vast drop beneath us. For half a second she emerged and then looked down and screamed.

I found that satisfying.

And then I fell . . .

And a hand touches my shoulder.

I look around and find myself in the Blue Room again. It is much as I remembered it before.

Why am I here?

Then there is a gentle touch upon my shoulder. I turn around and there is Julian 5th. He is smiling down at me, and he touches my chin, causing my head to look up at him.

“Do you remember now?” he asks.

I do. Suddenly I do. It all flashes back to me: the things I did do, haven’t done, am going to do yet. “We haven’t met yet,” I say to him. “You’re Julian 3rd.”

“I am. And you are someone else, and we will be together and separate and lose each other and find each other. And so it will go.”

I let out a breath. “It sounds exhausting. What of Julian 6th?”

“Our son? He will have his own adventures, find another you . . . it will all be okay, because it always is.”

“Are you sure?”

“I am always sure.”

He puts out his hands to me, and I slide into his arms. I have never felt so free. “Am I always going to remember this?”

“Who knows about ‘always?’ Be happy for what it is.”

In the back of my mind, I see Kel-ee-kni is floating away, facedown, no sign of life within her. From somewhere above, I can see myself drifted up against the edges of the water. There is a faint smile upon my face.

“Yes,” I say. “I will always be happy for what it is.” I embrace him tightly, and we dance away into our eternal night.

Everyone knows that Edgar Rice Burroughs invented Barsoom (Mars), just as he invented Tarzan. He never put the two together, and though there was an attempt by a second-rate science fiction magazine to publish
Tarzan on Mars
by an anonymous writer back in the early 1950s, nothing ever came of it.

But bestseller Kevin J. Anderson and prolific author and anthologist Sarah J. Hoyt have taken a totally different tack here. Yes, Tarzan meets Martians—but they are not from ERB’s Barsoom, but from a Mars of Anderson’s and Hoyt’s devising.
Vive la difference!

—Mike

Tarzan and the
Martian Invaders

By Kevin J. Anderson and Sarah A. Hoyt

John Clayton, viscount of Greystoke, sat in a red leather chair in the study that had belonged to his ancestor. The setting would have seemed perfect to any civilized man, yet Lord Greystoke was uneasy.

In informal attire of shirt, trousers, and waistcoat, he was more deeply tanned than one might expect, and his powerful shoulders seemed ill-confined by stylish garments. As he turned the page of the book resting casually on his knee, his movements gave an impression of grace and power not normally seen in his class. The Greystokes had always been exceptionally well built and powerful, however; the portrait gallery above gave ample evidence of a long line of strong-featured, muscular, gray-eyed men.

Yet in this comfortable, relaxing setting, the man flung himself from the chair, closed the book he’d been trying to read, and slapped it on the polished mahogany desk before pacing from heavy-curtained window to blazing fireplace. His steps were those of a beast uneasily confined in a human space and bound by human conventions.

As Lord Greystoke twitched the curtain aside and looked at the English night washed in a cold late-autumn rain, in his mind’s eye he saw quite another landscape: the lush and untamed jungle of equatorial Africa.

Though he tried his best to look after his estates, speak to acquaintances at his club, or weigh in on issues in the House of Lords, he always felt apart from other humans. After his parents, Lord and Lady Clayton, had met untimely deaths in Africa, the infant John Clayton had been raised by Kala, from a tribe of anthropoid apes. The young boy’s ape-mother had called him Tarzan, meaning “white-skin” in ape language. He hadn’t seen another human until the age of fifteen and not seen a white man until he was twenty, the age at which he had first worn human clothing . . . and then everything had changed.

How odd it was to wear shirt and trousers, waistcoat and coat. How odd it felt to have a valet cater to his needs now.
Were it not for Jane
—Lord Greystoke thought, not for the first time, as he paced from the window to the fireplace. He paused to glare at the fire, that thing he’d once thought a living creature, the spawn of storm and lightning. The flames now sat confined in a stone-cased fireplace, just as Tarzan himself was held within this stone house, within his tailored suit, within the straining bonds of civilization and manners. Flaring his nostrils, he closed his eyes and imagined himself in his jungle again, swinging free from branch to branch, spending time with his friend the elephant Tantor, or Sheeta the panther, or even hunting with the Waziri warriors of whom he had become king. Now, in the stuffy, clammy manor house, his skin longed to feel the warm breezes of Africa, and his feet wanted to be freed from the confinement of shoes. He could stand it no longer!

Overcoming his feigned Greystoke dignity, Tarzan had succeeded in divesting himself of shoes and socks and dug his calloused toes into the soft pile of the oriental carpet, when a soft knock sounded upon the door.

Tarzan looked up guiltily. “Yes?” He half expected the opening door would reveal his stern, uncomprehending valet, but instead, he saw the delicate features of his wife, Jane Clayton, Lady Greystoke—the daughter of an American scientist who had come to Africa and there found Tarzan in his solitude. Had it not been for Jane . . . Jane’s face . . . Jane’s sweetness . . . and the hold she had over his heart, Tarzan would never have come to England. He would rather have let the lands, fortune, and accolades fall to some relative, while he claimed his true jungle kingdom and the mastery of his anthropoid apes.

Jane’s face creased in a smile, and a gleam of amusement danced in her eyes. “May I come in? Would I be quite safe entering the domain of the king of the jungle?”

Although normal expressions still did not come naturally to him, Tarzan gave her the best smile he could command. He extended his arm to her. “You are quite safe with me, Jane. Human or ape, I am always your husband.”

She came swiftly to be enfolded in his embrace. “Don’t I know that? Have I not seen you when you still didn’t know how to form human words? And yet . . .” Her hand caressed his powerful arm, feeling the muscles beneath the shirt. “You’ve always been human to me, the best of men.”

His smile was now genuine. At that moment, he considered the freedom of his jungle well-lost for the sake of this.

Jane knew him all too well, however. “But you were dreaming of the jungle, weren’t you?”

“Only a little,” he admitted, and his hand gesture dismissed the surrounding countryside, tamed by sheep, covered in sheared grass, washed by rain. “I never liked the rain and cold, even when I was a little ap—
boy
, watched over by my faithful Kala.” He kissed her forehead reassuringly. “Go to bed, and I’ll be there presently. I’m only blue deviled by the rain. I shall find a book to read, and I’ll use it to lull myself to sleep.”

She wished him good night and left the study, closing the door softly behind her. As Jane was well aware, Tarzan was often unable to sleep inside the house upon the too-soft bed, so he spent many nights beneath the boughs of a tree on his estate. For her sake, he always made sure to return to the house, dress in his night clothes, and be by his wife’s side come morning.

Left alone in his study, Tarzan resumed his pacing, resisting the urge to head out into the rain-washed night. It was true he’d never liked rain, but sometimes he liked the inside of houses even less. His restless hands fidgeted with the numerous books on the shelves, and behind a row of dusty tomes, in a space he’d never before explored, he found a thin book. Out of curiosity, and remembering the many years he’d spent reading every book his late parents had left behind in the treetop jungle cabin, Tarzan brought out the small volume. It was a diary, much like the diary his father had kept. This volume purported to be the diary of . . . John Clayton, Viscount Greystoke. Another John Clayton? He carried the volume with him back to the red leather chair.

A quick perusal revealed that the diary belonged to a long-forgotten ancestor from the days of Queen Elizabeth I. After studying the unfamiliar spelling and wording, Tarzan realized that his forgotten ancestor, that other John Clayton, had been a privateer in the Drake mold who sailed all over the world, even to Tarzan’s beloved Africa.

Reliving his ancestor’s adventures, Tarzan forgot that Jane was waiting for him to come to bed; he even forgot the walls around him, and the sound of beating rain outside. Instead, he revisited the lush jungles, survived onboard mutinies, and imagined the bright pattern of the Southern Cross above.

Suddenly, however, his mood changed. His eyes narrowed as he read an ordeal his ancestor had endured, one that was more peculiar than even the many perils Tarzan himself had faced. With a furrowed brow, he read through the book. His toes unconsciously clenched the thick pile of the carpet. He turned the page to find a series of drawings, and stopped.

He took the small telescope from the mantel, but though he looked out the window, the overcast sky revealed no stars. Then Tarzan recalled his father’s mechanical celestial sphere, a wedding gift to the elder John Clayton on the occasion of his union with the ill-fated Lady Alice. He displayed the precious artifact on its special table in the study, and servants kept it scrupulously clean and oiled, even without being instructed to do so.

Tarzan went to the celestial sphere and referred to the crude drawing in his ancestor’s diary, comparing the notations. He felt a chill, and the deep tan of his skin became visibly paler.

His hand clenched into a closed fist. “It will not be allowed!” His tone would have frightened anyone who listened, but in the silent chamber there was only the sound of the rain against the window glass.

The butler was astonished at his enigmatic master’s request so late at night. “Milord? But—”

“See the car brought around, Jones. I must go to London. At once.”

“In a night like this, Milord? You’ll not have enough light to see by, and you—” The man was more worried than rebellious, but Tarzan couldn’t afford any delay. His eyes had first learned to see with no artificial illumination, and he had found his way through the jungle so thick that no glimmer of light penetrated to the lower levels. He would not be deterred by a rainy night in the English countryside. Pulling on his driving gloves and hat, he said, “Don’t worry, Jones. I shall be well.” He suspected the only peril ahead of him was a very boring drive at the end of which, with luck, he would secure passage to Africa.

As he got behind the wheel of his latest-model automobile, a single doubt assailed him. He ought, perhaps, to have told Jane where he was going. She would worry.

But if he revealed his plans, she might insist on joining him, and he could not put her at risk against such unearthly dangers. Tarzan, ape-man, Lord of the Jungle, would have to face this threat for all mankind. And win. He would not let Jane or their son, Jack, become victims of such a terrible menace.

Next morning, Jane realized that Tarzan must have spent the night sleeping out in the rain, for he had never come to bed.

She was aware that in forcing civilization upon her wild husband, she had in some unknown way injured him. Other people thought that she’d redeemed a poor savage and bestowed the great boon of culture upon him. But Jane wasn’t so sure. She remembered the sparkle in his eyes when he was in the jungle, and she wasn’t sure that bringing him to refined, and confined, England was a good thing.

At the back of her mind she held the idea that once Jack grew a little older, they’d acquire a plantation in Africa and Tarzan would be able to disappear into the jungles he loved, now and then, while she would still enjoy the comforts of civilization. Someday.

But for now Lady Greystoke had to go through the morning rituals without letting on to the household that anything might be wrong between them, or that she was worried that her very peculiar beloved hadn’t managed to slip quietly back inside before dawn, as he always did.

She allowed herself to be helped into her clothes, and she approved the menus for the day with barely more than a glance. She visited Jack in the nursery and discussed with nurse how to break the young master’s bad habit of sucking his thumb. She preoccupied herself, but Tarzan’s continued absence was very odd. It wasn’t like him to remain away from her for so long.

A few discreet questions revealed that no one had seen Lord Greystoke that day. Wondering if some accident could have befallen him in the seemingly safe environs of the manor, she hastened to his study to find a letter propped against the ornate celestial sphere. In her husband’s handwriting, the envelope said only “Jane.” She tore it open and found a single sheet of paper embossed with the Greystoke seal.

My very dear Jane
,
believe that I would not leave you like this if I had any other alternative. In an old diary I’ve found credible evidence that our world will shortly be invaded by a species more ruthless and determined than even our own—and I recognize all too well the place where they are supposed to land. My only chance is to go back to Africa and fight them there, before they reach the world of civilized men.

Doubt not that I will win this battle, my dear Jane—for I am Tarzan, Lord of Apes
and Lord of the Jungle. I shall defeat these monsters who would use the creatures of Earth as fodder and slaves. And then I will come back to you.

Yours ever, Tarzan.

Beneath it, as an afterthought, he’d scribbled,
John C., Lord Greystoke.

Jane stared in disbelief at the letter in her hands. What did he mean by the whole world being invaded? Countries got invaded, not worlds. She looked towards the mechanical celestial sphere, thinking of all those other worlds out there, and a doubtful frown formed on her delicate face. What if something came from those other globes to Earth? She shivered.

She noticed that Tarzan had left the paper askew on the desk, and his pen lying beside it, uncapped. Mechanically, she capped it.

Tarzan would have a head start of a night and a day, but it was clear where he was headed, one of the places familiar to him from his childhood. Which meant she knew where to find him. And she would. It was no part of Lady Greystoke’s intentions to let her husband face a cruel invader alone.

“Jones,” she called. “Bring our other car around.”

Days later, Tarzan was let out of a small rowboat on the coast of Africa, and he climbed onto the familiar shore, setting foot again on the land of his birth. Just breathing the air exhilarated him! He waved good-bye as the sailors rowed back to the steamer that had carried him here. He marveled that for once he had not met with mutiny or assassination attempts or other villains intent on eliminating him. Perhaps the very fact that he was here to save humanity from a terrible fate meant there was some protection from God or Fate.

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