Lord of the Lions, by Henry Kuttner


Under the menace of the gun Drake entered

THERE was a curious odor in the little grocery, acrid and unpleasant. It seemed to Kenneth Drake, leaning on the fly-specked counter, that the wizened, snaggle-toother oldster facing him was actually afraid of the strange smell. The grocer held a dirty handkerchief to his nose, and his rheumy eyes were furtive.

“A man telephoned from here just an hour ago—at about one-thirty,” Drake repeated. “You must have seen him, if you were here then.”

“Man? I dunno. Mebbe I was asleep.” Yellowed eyes watched, fear in their depths.

“Did anyone telephone from here today?” Drake asked.

“Eh? Well, now—” The oldster scratched his head. “My memory ain’t so good, mister. I don’t rightly recollect anybody phoning today. Mebbe when I was out, or asleep?”

Drake cupped a silver dollar in his palm, and let the grocer glimpse the dull metal. He slid the coin back into his pocket.

“It’ll pay you to tell the truth,” he snapped. “The boys can sweat the truth out of you down at Headquarters, if necessary. Now let’s have it. What happened to the man who phoned from here at one-thirty?”

The grocer’s lips were trembling beneath the tobacco-stained mustache. He licked them furtively.

“Ye—ye’re from the police!”

Drake didn’t answer. His cold grey eyes bored into the other.

The grocer whispered, “They come an’ got him! The little—”

Cutting sharply into his words came a startling sound—harsh, angry, menacing. The roar of a lion!

The oldster’s jaw dropped. For a moment he stared at Drake, a look of stark fear on his face. Then he drew back swiftly. His eyes dropped.

“I ain’t seen—or heard—nothin’!” he growled. “Git out! Pryin’, snoopin’—”

Drake eyed the man, and then, shrugging, turned on his heel. He knew fear when he saw it—and the grocer was thoroughly intimidated by a terror that would not let him speak. What had caused it? A lion’s roar?

Outside the little store Drake hesitated, staring around. This was a well-paved highway, but a little-traveled one. The wayside grocery was the only building in sight, save for a high-walled enclosure some distance away. A dirt road led to it, and a faded sign proclaimed:


CARSE’S LION FARM

Twenty-five giant jungle cats, including Nero, man-killing outlaw. See the lions fed! View the lion cubs! Admission 50c, children 25c.


A horn blew impatiently. Drake went to the roadster that was parked nearby.

“No luck, Joan,” he said to the girl at the wheel. “Petrie called up from that store, though. The operator traced the call, all right.”

“I wish I could have understood more of what he said,” Joan frowned. “But his voice was—funny, somehow. All I could understand was: `Help! Joan, that little devil has—`” Then the line went dead.”

“If Petrie weren’t so old, I’d feel jealous,” Drake said, smiling wryly. His eyes were brooding on the sign that advertised the lion farm.

Joan put her hand on his arm “Ken, John Petrie gave me my first job when he almost had to starve himself to pay me.” Her eyes were misty. “He’s been gone three weeks now—without any explanation.”

“And the formula with him,” Drake grunted. That was the crux of the matter. The formula for making flexible glass—and making it cheaply—by a process Petrie had discovered after years of experiment.

He had never entrusted the secret to paper, despite the urging of the other members of the company that had been formed to exploit the new glass.

“You take care of the business end of the thing,” Petrie had told his backers. “I know the formula, and it’s safe in my head. Not that I don’t trust my colleagues—”


THE big, ruddy-faced scientist had grinned sardonically. “But it isn’t necessary for anybody else to know the process. I’ll personally supervise the making of the glass.”

Nor could he be moved from this stand. And now he had disappeared without trace. The police had searched vainly; there was absolutely no clue. Not until the telephone call that had brought Joan, and Drake, her fiance racing to this lonely road.

“I’m afraid they may be torturing him,” Joan said somberly. “And he’s sick, you know.”

“Sick?” Drake stared. “He never looked it.”

“He was under a doctor’s care. I had to remind him every day about his medicine. He may be dying, Ken—or dead.”

Talk isn’t going to help, then. I’ve a hunch I may be able to find out something in that lion farm. Listen, Joan —you stay here. If I don’t come back in half an hour, go for help. Get the police.”

“Why not get the police now?”

“Remember what you said—Petrie may be under torture. If he’s as sick as you say, he can’t stand much of that. Besides, time’s an important element. After we came back with the police, we’d probably find the bird flown—if there is a bird. It won’t do any harm to snoop around a little, anyway.”

Drake leaned over the door and kissed Joan perfunctorily. Then, with a jaunty wave of his hand, he hurried away, conscious of the girl’s anxious eyes following him.

Heat shimmered from the baked ground. He was perspiring when at last he reached the faded wooden gate of the lion farm. A sign proclaimed that the place was “Closed for Repairs.”

Drake pressed a button set in the wall, and heard a bell jangling far away. After a time a wicket slid open, and two black eyes regarded him intently.

“Well, what do you want?” asked a high-pitched voice.

“I didn’t know you were closed,” Drake said. “I’ve driven out here a long way just to see the farm. I wonder if—”

“Everybody’s on his vacation,” said the other. “Except a skeleton staff. Sorry.”

The wicket slammed shut. Drake knocked on it peremptorily.

“I’ll be willing to pay,” he said, pushing a bill through the bars. “I just want to say I’ve been here. I won’t take up much of your time. Can’t you make an exception?”

“Well, if you’re that anxious,” the voice murmured. “We’ll see.” The eyes disappeared, and presently the gate opened. Drake stepped into a ramshackle office, from which several doors led into unknown regions.

Facing him was a midget. A little man, scarcely reaching to Drake’s waist, about three feet high. His bland, pink-cheeked face was curiously doll-like, but the wise eyes were betraying. At the midget’s side hung an incongruously large pistol. Drake tried not to stare.

“I’m Carse,” the midget murmured. “Captain Carse, formerly of Pinnacle Shows. You may have seen me?”

“I’m afraid not,” Drake said. “Sorry “

“You needn’t be. Too many people saw me. That’s why I retired to this —farm. It isn’t pleasant to have everyone stare at you—and laugh.” The midget’s voice was silky. He glanced down at the bill in his hand.

“The lions, then. Come along.” He led the way through an inner door that opened upon a great high-walled yard.

“First, though, your coat.”

“Eh?” Drake stared, puzzled.

Quietly the midget extended a grey smock. “It’s necessary, for the farm is—well, rather dirty.” He took Drake’s coat and hung it on a clothes-tree. Drake, donning the smock, followed the midget outside the office.


THE lion farm was an unimpressive place. It reminded Drake of a zoo, with the half dozen great cages scattered about the walled enclosure. Within these lay or paced tawny forms, and occasionally a grumbling roar would be heard. The air was strong with acrid lion stench.

Carse led the way. At one of the cages a man was busy with a hose, sluicing it out. The lion crouched in a corner, a huge black-maned beast that lifted its feet and shook them with curiously catlike daintiness. The man turned as the two approached.

“That’ll do, Pete,” Carse ordered. “Let the feeding wait awhile, will you?”

Pete looked up swiftly. He was a gaunt, sallow creature who looked like a skeleton, with jaundiced skin hung loosely on his bones. His sunken eyes were dull.

“But—they won’t—”

“You heard what I said, Pete.” Carse’s voice was very gentle. The other nodded and turned away.

Drake was examining the lion. “Is this Nero?” he asked.

“The killer? No, he’s over there.” Carse gestured and led the way. As Drake followed his eyes were busy searching the enclosure. There was little to be seen, and few places where a man—or a body—might be hidden.

A horrible thought came to Drake as he saw Nero, the giant man-killer, toying with a gnawed white bone, to which bits of gristle still clung. But a second glance reassured him.

“We feed the lions on horse meat,” Carse said dryly, following Drake’s gaze. “The cubs have milk, until they’re old enough for meat”

Drake was examining Nero’s cage. Unlike the others, it was divided into two parts by a partition of iron bars. In one paced the great lion, a growl rumbling in his throat as he glared at the two men. The other was empty.

Carse touched Drake’s arm. “Come along. I’ll show you the cubs.”

The midget seemed fearless. Ignoring the mewling, clawing menace of a lion cub, he picked it up and held a nursing bottle to its mouth. After a moment the cub quieted and sucked greedily, white drops splattering its muzzle.

Carse seemed, on the surface, bland enough to disarm suspicion, and Drake found himself growing more and more at a loss. If Petrie were indeed hidden on the lion farm, he was hidden well. Drake had not made up his mind what to do by the time the tour was over, and Carse was ushering his guest into the office.

The midget lifted Drake’s coat from its hanger. Abruptly his tiny hand went exploringly into the pockets. It came out with a slip of white paper.

Before Drake could move Carse had unfolded the paper and scanned it swiftly.

Drake snapped, “What the devil’s the idea?” He stepped forward, his hand extended—and stopped dead. The midget’s hand flew down to his belt, swung up with the deadly pistol aimed unwaveringly at Drake’s stomach.

“Now, now!” Carse’s voice was gently admonitory. “You know, I’ve often heard that a man can face a gun aimed at his eyes, but can’t stand one aimed at his stomach. Curious, isn’t it?”

“Listen!” Drake growled. “You can’t expect to get away with this. What`s in that note?” But already he had guessed. A message — from Petrie!

Carse chuckled. “Merely a love letter from one of the lions. They’re always trying to smuggle out notes. Turn around and go back into the yard, please. Or I’ll blow a hole in your belly.”


A LITTLE finger of horror traced a path down Drake’s spine. For all the softly spoken words of the little midget, he sensed deadly menace. The man’s black eyes were blood-hungry, betraying the pink-cheeked innocence of his face.

Without a word Drake turned and retraced his steps. At Nero’s cage, Carse halted him. He fumbled with a lock.

“Good God, man!” Drake gasped. “Are you going to—”

“Feed you to the lion? Not at the moment. I have a more—well, shall I say amusing?—plan. Get in.”

Carse opened the barred door. Under the menace of the gun Drake entered. He might not have done so if he had not noticed that while Nero paced restlessly on his half of the cage, the barred partition held him at a safe distance.

Straw crunched under Drake’s feet. Carse locked the door and stepped back.

“No, I’ll not feed you to Nero — right now. However, you’ll note that the bars which separate you from Nero are movable. They slide down into the floor.

“There’s a clock-work arrangement which took me some time to prepare —it releases the bars, and removes any hindrances from Nero’s hunger. He hasn’t been fed for some time.”

Beyond the bars the lion paced, sniffling noisily at the straw. Drake’s back felt sweaty.

“I’ll not tell you just when the bars will be released,” the midget went on, smiling. “That would be too easy. You’ll simply wait, not knowing when you’ll die—and I don’t think you’ll find the period of waiting enjoyable.

“It’s a curious thing,” he said very seriously. “Men condemned to death —hardened, courageous thugs—often become hysterical if for some reason their execution is postponed. I remember one case—a man was waiting to be hanged, and was actually on the scaffold when somehow the trap couldn’t be sprung.

“The noose was already around the condemned man’s neck. For months he’d stubbornly refused to talk to anyone, except to curse the priest who attended him.

“He went to pieces because the trap couldn’t be sprung immediately. Hysterically he begged to be killed. He could wait — courageously — for certain death. But he couldn’t bear to wait in ignorance of just when he’d die.

“I’m a student of human nature— an amateur psychologist, as you may have noticed. And I’ve often wished to experiment with the reactions of a condemned man who doesn’t know when he’ll die.”

Drake didn’t answer. He was remembering Joan. He still had an ace in the hole. She would go for help if he did not return within half an hour. Automatically he glanced at his wristwatch.

The midget chuckled. “Anxious already, eh? Well, it’ll do you no good to know what time it is, as long as you don’t know when Nero will be loosed. He seems hungry. Poor beast.”

The great lion reared upright against the bars, shaking them with his talons. The acrid stench was overpowering.

Carse went away.

Drake looked at his watch again. Then he glanced at the lion, who was watching him unwinkingly out of amber eyes. The beast yawned, and stretched luxuriously.

It relaxed on the straw and waited, panting a little. Drake wondered whether this trap had ever been used before. Certainly Nero seemed to know what to expect.

But the diabolical little midget would get no satisfaction from him, Drake resolved. Still, it wasn’t likely that the bars would fall very soon. Carse would wish to prolong his victim’s agony.

If only Joan could summon help in time—

“Hello,” said a low voice.


DRAKE turned. A girl was standing outside the cage. She wore a scanty garment of lion skin that left one softly rounded shoulder bare. Her eyes were yellow—tawny, like a cat’s. Her long hair was the same color.

Drake stared. The girl said, “I am Leeta. Carse plans to kill you, eh?”

“Yes,” Drake said. “Can—will you let me out of here?”

“I can’t. But—” The girl’s tawny eyes lightened. “You can squeeze into Nero’s cage, eh?”

That was true. The bars in the partition were set further apart than the others. Drake might conceivably squeeze through — but what good would that do? He told the girl as much.

“Oh, yes. You are afraid of Nero.” She pondered. “I know! Wait.”

Quickly she raced around the cage, slim legs flashing. For a moment she fumbled with the door to Nero’s cage, then swung it wide. A startled cry rose in Drake’s throat.

The girl was walking into the carnivore’s cage—fearlessly! Nor was the lion harming her! He looked up, a low growl rumbling in his throat. The girl — Leeta — swung herself astride his back. Her slim fingers entwined in his mane.

“Up, Nero!” she commanded. “Up!”

The beast arose. At the girl’s urging he moved out of the cage. Leeta leaped from his back, swung the door shut.

“Now come!” she cried. “Quickly!”

Stark amazement had held Drake motionless. But swiftly he rallied his wits. Probably the lion was tamed, harmless. Hastily he squeezed through the bars into Nero’s cage.

The lion burst from the girl’s grasp. Roaring, he hurled himself at the door. It shook under the impact. A snarling devil-mask glared into Drake’s face; a hot breath was nauseating in his nostrils. This was no tamed, harmless beast!

He drew back, hoping the door would hold. Leeta pulled the lion’s mane. He made a tentative cuff at her, but she slapped his muzzle mercilessly. After a moment the great head dropped.

“Nero knows me,” the girl said. “You, he does not know. I’d better get him away, so that you can come out.”

“Wait a minute,” Drake requested. “How is it that he doesn’t attack you?”

Leeta seemed surprised. “But I have grown up with them. My Father let me play with the cubs when I was a child. They all know me. They know the smell of this.” She indicated her lion skin garment.

Drake shot a swift glance around. The midget was nowhere in sight. Leeta said:

“I’ll lead Nero away. Then you can get out.”

Something made Drake ask, “But your father? Won’t he—”

“Carse?” The girl’s eyes flamed with golden fires. “He is not my Father! My Father is dead—long ago. Killed by the lions. He worked with Carse in the circus, and—and—”

She hesitated, went on swiftly. “Hurry, now. Before he gets back.”

Drake watched the girl urge the lion away. The beast could have killed her with one blow of a steel-taloned paw; yet the blow was not dealt. At last the two paused beside an empty cage, and into it Leeta coaxed the lion. She came hurrying back, and Drake went to meet her.

“There was no lock on it,” she said, shrugging. “But I think the bar will hold.”

Drake looked at her in silence. She met his gaze calmly. “You’d better go. At once.”

“All right,” Drake acquiesced. “But you’re not safe here—you can’t be. Not with Carse.”

“I don’t fear him,” Leeta said quietly. “He fears me. Go now.”

Drake turned, scanning the yard. The walls were high and bare, broken only at one point by the office door. He moved in that direction.


THE girl halted him. “Let me go first. I’ll see if Carse—” She tested the knob, swung the door open slowly.

“Come in,” a silky voice said. “Come in, Leeta. Bring your friend.”

The midget was standing near the doorway. He gestured with the automatic in his hand. Leeta shrank back, hesitating. Drake thrust himself between her and the gun’s menace. Then he saw who was in the office.

Joan Kirby! She sat rigidly in a chair, eyes wide and frightened. The midget said peremptorily:

“Come in! This girl came to inquire about your health. I had occasion to tell her you had suffered a slight accident.”

Drake moved forward, Leeta at his heels. So Joan, too, had been trapped by the midget! Carse’s lips quirked in a one-sided smile.

“Wait a minute,” he commanded. “Go back. Into the yard. You, too, Miss—eh? We can talk more freely there—safe from interruption.”

Carse herded the three of them back through the door. His doll-like face was flushed, the black eyes unnaturally bright.

“Pete!” he called sharply.

There was a little hut within the compound about twenty feet away, and from it emerged the bony, sallow man Drake had seen before. He shambled forward, dully eying the group. A lion roared.

“Pete,” the midget smiled. “You won’t need the horse meat today. We have other food for the lions.”

“You wouldn’t dare!” Drake said hoarsely. “The police—”

“The police? What of the police? They do not come here. Why should they? The—er—bones will be burned, but I scarcely think they’ll be recognizable after the lions—” He paused.

“Perhaps I am too forthright.” His tone was mocking. “The girl seems somewhat ill.”

Joan was swaying, her face paperwhite. Drake drew her close.

“It’s all right, dear,” he whispered, his mouth close to her ear. “Buck up. We’re not—not dead yet.”

“An excellent philosophy,” said the midget approvingly. “No doubt it will comfort you while being eaten.”

Leeta cried out sharply. “Carse! You can’t do that!”

“No? But you needn’t worry, my dear. I shall not hurt you, of course. Merely our two uninvited guests.”

A half-muffled oath came from Pete. Carse glanced at the man, and Pete shrank back, his wrinkled face fearful. Drake’s muscles tensed, but before he could move the midget’s eyes had flashed back to him.

“Careful! Keep—”

Then Pete leaped. It was hopeless, of course. He was nearly a dozen feet away, and before he reached Carse the midget crouched and whirled, his gun roaring. Flame belched from the muzzle.

Pete stumbled, fell. He lay face down on the ground, writhing with a horribly serpentine movement. The midget snarled:

“No more of this! I’ll put a slug in both of you right now, and waste no more—”

Ominously a lion growled. Then another took it up. The smell of blood was in the air, and the great beasts lifted their heads and sniffed—and roared. A crashing impact came from near by, and Drake, glancing around quickly, saw a great, tawny bulk rear against a barred door.

It was Nero—the man-killer. His deep roar sounded again, and once more he hurled himself against the bars. The door shook, but held. Abruptly Drake remembered Leeta’s words:

“There was no lock on it—but I think the bar will hold.”

Would it hold?

The midget’s eyes were glassy as he stared at Drake. His cheeks were a bright scarlet. Drake lifted himself on the balls of his feet, ready for the death-signal he knew he would read in the killer’s eyes.

Two things happened simultaneously: the bark of the shot, and Leeta’s cry as she flung herself forward. Her hand was extended to grip the gun, but failed to touch it.

She cried out, a soft, agonized moan, and smashed into the midget.

He was borne down under her dead weight. Horribly the back of the girl’s head had vanished in a ghastly explosion, and she was a corpse before the sound of the explosion had died away.

Drake went suddenly sick.


IN a split second he knew that there was but one chance. Carse was too far away for Drake to reach before the midget should recover the gun, jarred from his hand by the fall. Already the tiny fingers were closing over the weapon. But if they could reach the office—

The roaring of the caged beasts, frantic with blood-stench, was deafening. As Drake raced toward the door, half carrying, half dragging Joan, he heard a roar louder than the rest— heard something crash and splinter under a fearful impact.

Then he was clawing at the handle, swinging the door open, thrusting Joan to safety, expecting every moment to feel the shock of a bullet between his shoulder blades.

He caught one flashing glimpse as he went through the door. The midget had fought free of Leeta’s body, was on his feet—but he was not facing Drake. Something came charging across the yard, something that moved with express-train speed, roaring as it came.

Nero was free!

Carse fired point-blank. He could not stop that terrible charge. The lion sprang. Simultaneously Drake saw a movement near him. A man was staggering toward the door, clutching a bleeding wound in his side. It was Pete.

The midget was down now, but his gun still thundered. The lion’s roaring was edged with pain. The beast put one great paw on Carse’s back, holding him down, and threw back the great, shaggy head. Drake saw blood gushing from the thick mane.

Carse’s gun was empty, but he still squeezed the trigger. He cursed the lion in a shrill, insane monotone. As Drake pulled Pete through the door and slammed it shut, he saw the most ghastly sight of all—something that he knew would be imprinted on his memory for all time.

Nero’s head dropped, very slowly. The midget began to scream as the great jaws opened, and closed very gently upon the man’s head.

The shrieking grew to a crescendo. It shrilled out in frightful, ear-piercing agony. And—it stopped!

There came a brittle crunching sound that turned Drake sick and giddy. Blood spurted suddenly, splashing the lion’s muzzle. The great beast lifted its head, something dangling from blood-smeared jaws— something that dangled grotesquely, like a broken doll.

The lion’s head dropped. He gave a bubbling cough, and quieted. Abruptly he fell over on his side, his legs contracting in a spasm of agony. Then he lay without movement.

Drake shut the door and barred it. Then he turned and leaned against the wall, breathing heavily. Joan faced him, her eyes wide. Slumped in a chair lay Pete, his hand pressed to his wounded side.

“Carse is dead,” Drake said tonelessly. Pete nodded.

“Yes,” he whispered. “He got me first, though. I—I—”

“Forget it, Petrie,” Drake said. With a stride he reached the wounded man, and was busy staunching the blood. “You’ll live to be eighty.”

“No—no—”

Joan Kirby was staring in amazement, her lips parted. “Petrie—but Ken! That isn’t John Petrie!”

Pete shook his head wearily. “Yes, I am, my dear. Drake—you are Drake, aren’t you?—guessed the truth. How—”

“Don’t talk,” Drake said, his fingers working swiftly. “Just take it easy. When Joan told me about your medicines—how you insisted on taking them so regularly—I had a clue.

“Then, when you tried to save our lives—well, I guessed who you were. Hypothyroidism, isn’t it?’

The other nodded. “Yes. Nobody knew—but my doctor. Since I was a child—”

“I know. It’s a glandular disorder,” Drake said over his shoulder to Joan. “The thyroid gland doesn’t work right, doesn’t secrete as it should. Unless Petrie get his thyroxin regularly, he suffers the natural results of hypothyroidism. He loses flesh. His eyes get dull, his skin gets wrinkled and sallow, his hair gets dry and brittle. A perfect disguise, eh? ’

“Then you’ve guessed that, too, eh?” Petrie whispered.


DRAKE nodded. “I think so. You knew the formula for making flexible glass, but you didn’t have much stock in the company, did you? So you simply decided to disappear— the only one who knew how to make flexible glass. When the news leaked out, the stock dropped. It’s way down today. When it hit bottom—”

Drake hesitated. “When it did, you were going to buy up enough shares to get a controlling interest—and then reappear. Is that it?”

Joan gasped. “Mr. Petrie! You didn’t—”

“But I did,” Petrie said, his lips twisted wryly. “I got a just reward, too. I used to know Carse, a long time ago. He offered to let me hide out here, and I did. I didn’t want to be recognized by any chance visitors, so I stopped using the thyroxin.”

“Carse doublecrossed me. He kept me prisoner, and tried to make me tell him the formula. I managed to escape this morning, and telephoned from the grocery—but Carse caught me before I could say more than a few words. He threatened the grocer to keep him silent.

“I—I’d have spoken before, but I knew Carse would kill you if he thought you’d guessed the truth.” Petrie reached for a pencil and pad that lay on a table beside him. He scribbled something hastily.

“There’s the formula. It’s for you, Joan—and you, Drake. It will make both of you rich. As for me—I’ll be dead very soon.”

“No!” Joan gripped Petrie’s wrinkled hand in her own. “You’re not going to die. Don’t—”

She stopped as she saw Drake’s face.

“It’s all right,” Petrie whispered. “The bullet—went too far in. Carse deserved to die—but not Leeta. I’m paying—for—that—”

Joan caught her breath, and Drake’s arm went around her, drawing her close. Petrie’s jaw dropped; a glaze suddenly filmed his staring eyes.

Within the yard a lion roared, as though in requiem.



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