sunâs weak orb just vanishing over the horizon. The light was fading now, sand shifting from red to brown. A Thark sentry patrolled in the distance, his spidery green form dwarfed by the huge thoat beneath him.
I want to go home , Carter realized. Suddenly nothing was more importantâ¦not even this alluring, frustrating woman whoâd fallen out of the sky.
âThere are no seas on this planet,â Dejah called to him. âNot anymore. Only a madman would rave about the Time of Oceans.â
He turned to look back. âThat your expert view? Iâm mad?â
âOr a liar.â
Sola gave a tiny Thark smirk. âShe is well matched to you, Dotar Sojat.â
âDonât call me thatââ He stopped, snapped his head to face Dejah. âYou said âplanet.ââ
Dejah stared at him, a strange look in her eyes. Walking to the end of her leash, she knelt down, picked up a stick, and drew a single circle in the sand.
âSun,â she said.
Then she drew a ring around it, and another. Nine circles in all, surrounding the âsun.â As Carter watched, Dejah marked a dot along each circle, beginning with the innermost.
âRasoom,â she counted off.
âMercury,â Carter said softly.
âCosoom.â
âVenus. Then Earthâthatâs us.â
She looked up at him, a strange light of discovery in her eyes. âThat is Jasoom.â Then she placed a dot in the fourth ring out from the sun.
âYou are on Barsoom , John Carter.â
He turned away, shaking his head. The sun had set; darkness was falling swiftly. Carter cast his eyes upwardâ¦and saw not one but two bright moons shining in the night sky.
âCluros and Thuria,â Dejah said. âThe Heavenly Lovers. Paired, like the bands you wear on your finger.â
Carter fingered his wedding rings. Suddenly he felt a deep sorrow, as vast as the distance between here andâ¦and Jasoom .
âIâm on Mars,â he whispered.
âSo your home is Jasoomâsorry, âEarth.ââ Dejahâs tone was skeptical. âDid you come here in one of your sailing ships? Across millions of karads of empty space?â
Carter was too shell-shocked even to rise to her taunting. âNo,â he said. âA medallion brought me here. The same one that now hangs around Tars Tarkasâs neck.â
âA medallionâ¦â Dejah straightened. âAh! Well, that explains everything.â
âIt does?â
âYes. Youâre a Thernâ¦and you wish to return to your rightful home. Is that it?â
âI donât know what a Thern is.â
âWe can sort this out right now. Come on.â
Grabbing hold of her leash, Dejah started off away from the wreckage, toward the Thark settlement. Sola frowned, looked to Carter. He shrugged, and together they followed.
âI donât like her tone,â Sola said.
Carter had to admit: he didnât either.
âYou cannot enter here,â Sola protested. âIt is forbidden!â But Dejah Thoris paid her no heed. The Helium woman ran into the ruined temple, waving a torch to illuminate toppled pillars and walls made of jumbled stone.
Carter and Sola followed her into a huge, echoing chamber. An ancient statue of a goddess loomed above them, several stories high.
â You insisted I unleash her,â Sola said. Carter nodded, grimacing.
Dejah lifted her torch, lighting up a window made of dusty, rose-colored glass. In its intricate stone mullions shone a nine-legged pattern identical to the one on the medallion.
âLook familiar?â she asked.
Sola knelt. She raised two hands to cover her head, two to her heart.
âSure,â Dejah sneered, âkneel before the Holy Thern.â She turned angrily to Carter. âYou can cloak yourself in religion to fool savage Tharks, but not me. I see what youâre doing.â
Carter shrugged, baffled.
âYou
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