The Lord of Death and the Queen of
Life
by Homer Eon Flint
PART I
THE DISCOVERY
I
THE SKY CUBE
The doctor, who was easily the most musical of the four men, sang in
a
cheerful baritone:
"The owl and the pussy-cat went to sea In a beautiful, pea-green boat."
The geologist, who had held down the lower end of a quartet in
his
university days, growled an accompaniment under his breath as
he
blithely peeled the potatoes. Occasionally a high-pitched note or
two
came from the direction of the engineer; he could not spare much
wind
while clambering about the machinery, oil-can in hand. The
architect,
alone, ignored the famous tune.
"What I can't understand, Smith," he insisted, "is how you draw
the
electricity from the ether into this car without blasting us all
to
cinders."
The engineer squinted through an opal glass shutter into one of
the
tunnels, through which the anti-gravitation current was pouring. "If
you
didn't know any more about buildings than you do about
machinery,
Jackson," he grunted, because of his squatting position, "I'd hate
to
live in one of your houses!"
The architect smiled grimly. "You're living in one of 'em right
now,
Smith," said he; "that is, if you call this car a house."
Smith straightened up. He was an unimportant-looking man, of medium
height
and build, and bearing a mild, good-humored expression. Nobody
would ever
look at him twice, would ever guess that his skull concealed
an unusually
complete knowledge of electricity, mechanisms, and such
practical
matters.
"I told you yesterday, Jackson," he said, "that the air surrounding
the
earth is chock full of electricity. And--"
"And that the higher we go, the more juice," added the other,
remembering.
"As much as to say that it is the atmosphere, then, that
protects the earth
from the surrounding voltage."
The engineer nodded. "Occasionally it breaks through, anyhow, in the
form
of lightning. Now, in order to control that current, and prevent it
from
turning this machine, and us, into ashes, all we do is to pass the
juice
through a cylinder of highly compressed air, fixed in this wall.
By varying
the pressure and dampness within the cylinder, we can
regulate the flow."
The builder nodded rapidly. "All right. But why doesn't the
electricity
affect the walls themselves? I thought they were made of
steel."
The engineer glanced through the dead-light at the reddish disk of
the
Earth, hazy and indistinct at a distance of forty million miles.
"It
isn't steel; it's a non-magnetic alloy. Besides, there's a layer
of
crystalline sulphur between the alloy and the vacuum space."
"The vacuum is what keeps out the cold, isn't it?" Jackson knew, but
he
asked in order to learn more.
"Keeps out the sun's heat, too. The outer shell is pretty blamed hot
on
that side, just as hot as it is cold on the shady side." Smith
seated
himself beside a huge electrical machine, a rotary converter which
he
next indicated with a jerk of his thumb. "But you don't want to
forget
that the juice outside is no use to us, the way it is. We have to
change
it.
"It's neither positive nor negative; it's just neutral. So we separate
it
into two parts; and all we have to do, when we want to get away from
the
earth or any other magnetic-sphere, is to aim a bunch of positive
current at
the corresponding pole of the planet, or negative current at
the other pole.
Like poles repel, you know."
"Listens easy," commented Jackson. "Too easy."
"Well, it isn't exactly as simple as all that. Takes a lot of
apparatus,
all told," and the engineer looked about the room, his glance
resting
fondly on his beloved machinery.
The big room, fifty feet square, was almost filled with machines;
some
reached nearly to the ceiling, the same distance above. In fact,
the
interior of the "cube," as that form of sky-car was known, had
very
little waste space. The living quarters of the four men who occupied
it
had to be fitted in wherever there happened to be room. The
architect's
own berth was sandwiched in between two huge dynamos.
He was thinking hard. "I see now why you have such a lot of
adjustments
for those tunnels," meaning the six square tubes which opened
into the
ether through the six walls of the room. "You've got to point the
juice
pretty accurately."
"I should say so." Smith led the way to a window, and the two shaded
their
eyes from the lights within while they gazed at the ashy glow of
Mercury,
toward which they were traveling. "I've got to adjust the
current so as to
point exactly toward his northern half." Smith might
have added that a
continual stream of repelling current was still
directed toward the earth,
and another toward the sun, away over to
their right; both to prevent being
drawn off their course.
"And how fast are we going?"
"Four or five times as fast as mother earth: between eighty and
ninety
miles per second. It's easy to get up speed out here, of course,
where
there's no air resistance."
Another voice broke in. The geologist had finished his potatoes, and
a
savory smell was already issuing from the frying pan. Years spent in
the
wilderness had made the geologist a good cook, and doubly welcome as
a
member of the expedition.
"We ought to get there tomorrow, then," he said eagerly. Indoor life
did
not appeal to him, even under such exciting circumstances. He peered
at
Mercury through his binoculars. "Beginning to show up fine now."
The builder improved upon Van Emmon's example by setting up the
car's
biggest telescope, a four-inch tube of unusual excellence. All
three
pronounced the planet, which was three-fourths "full" as they viewed
it,
as having pretty much the appearance of the moon.
"Wonder why there's always been so much mystery about Mercury?"
pondered
the architect invitingly. "Looks as though the big five-foot
telescope
on Mt. Wilson would have shown everything."
"Ask doc," suggested Smith, diplomatically. Jackson turned and hailed
the
little man on the other side of the car. He looked up absently from
the
scientific apparatus with which he had been making a test of the
room's
chemically purified air, then he stepped to the oxygen tanks and
closed the
flow a trifle, referring to his figures in the severely exact
manner of his
craft. He crossed to the group.
"Mercury is so close to the sun," he answered the architect's
question,
"he's always been hard to observe. For a long time the
astronomers
couldn't even agree that he always keeps the same face toward the
sun,
like the moon toward the earth."
"Then his day is as long as his year?"
"Eighty-eight of our days; yes."
"Continual sunlight! He can't be inhabited, then?" The architect knew
very
little about the planets. He had been included in the party
because, along
with his professional knowledge, he possessed remarkable
ability as an
amateur antiquarian. He knew as much about the doings of
the ancients as the
average man knows of baseball.
Dr. Kinney shook his head. "Not at present, certainly."
Instantly Jackson was alert. "Then perhaps there were people there at
one
time!"
"Why not?" the doctor put it lightly. "There's little or no
atmosphere
there now, of course, but that's not saying there never has been.
Even
if he is such a little planet--less than three thousand, smaller
than
the moon--he must have had plenty of air and water at one time, the
same
as the Earth."
"What's become of the air?" Van Emmon wanted to know. Kinney eyed him
in
reproach. He said:
"You ought to know. Mercury has only two-fifths as much gravitation as
the
earth; a man weighing a hundred and fifty back home would be only
a
sixty-pounder there. And you can't expect stuff as light as air to
stay
forever on a planet with no more pull than that, when the sun is on
the
job only thirty-six millions miles away."
"About a third as far as from the Earth to the sun," commented
the
engineer. "By George, it must be hot!"
"On the sunlit side, yes," said Kinney. "On the dark side it is as cold
as
space itself--four hundred and sixty below, Fahrenheit."
They considered this in silence for some minutes. The builder went
to
another window and looked at Venus, at that time about sixty
million
miles distant, on the far side of the sun. They were intending to
visit
"Earth's twin sister" on their return. After a while he came back to
the
group, ready with another question:
"If Mercury ever was inhabited, then his day wasn't as long as it is
now,
was it?"
"No," said the doctor. "In all probability he once had a day the
same
length as ours. Mercury is a comparatively old planet, you know;
being
smaller, he cooled off earlier than the earth, and has been
more
affected by the pull of the sun. But it's been a mighty long time
since
he had a day like ours; before the earth was cool enough to live
on,
probably."
"But since Mercury was made out of the same batch of material--"
prompted
the geologist.
"No reason, then, why life shouldn't have existed there in the
past!"
exclaimed the architect, his eyes sparkling with the instinct of
the
born antiquarian. He glanced up eagerly as the doctor
coughed
apologetically and said:
"Don't forget that, even if Mercury is part baked and part frozen,
there
must be a region in between which is neither." He picked up a
small
globe from the table and ran a finger completely around it from pole
to
pole. "So. There must be a narrow band of country where the sun is
only
partly above the horizon, and where the climate is temperate."
"Then--" the architect almost shouted in his excitement, an
excitement
only slightly greater than that of the other two--"then, if there
were
people on Mercury at one time--"
The doctor nodded gravely. "There may be some there now!"
II
A DEAD CITY
From a height of a few thousand miles Mercury, at first glance,
strongly
reminded them of the moon. The general effect was the same--leaden
disk,
with slight prominences here and there on the circumference, and
large,
irregular splotches of a darkish shade relieved by a great
many
brilliantly lighted areas, lines, and spots.
A second glance, however, found a marked difference. Instead of
the
craters, which always distinguished the moon, Mercury showed ranges
of
bona fide mountains.
The doctor gave a sigh of regret, mixed with a generous amount
of
excitement. "Too bad those mountains weren't distinguishable from
the
earth," he complained. "We wouldn't have been so quick to brand
Mercury
a dead world."
The others were too engrossed to comment. The sky-car was rapidly
sinking
nearer and nearer the planet; already Smith had stopped the
current with
which he had attracted the cube toward the little world's
northern
hemisphere, and was now using negative voltage. This, in order
to act as a
brake, and prevent them from falling to destruction.
Suddenly Van Emmon, the geologist, whose eyes had been glued to
his
binoculars, gave an exclamation of wonder. "Look at those faults!"
He
pointed toward a region south of that for which they were bound;
what
might be called the planet's torrid zone.
At first it was hard to see; then, little by little, there unfolded
before
their eyes a giant, spiderlike system of chasms in the strange
surface
beneath them. From a point almost directly opposite the sun,
these cracks
radiated in a half-dozen different directions; vast,
irregular clefts, they
ran through mountain and plain alike. In places
they must have been hundreds
of miles wide, while there was no guessing
as to their depth. For all that
the four in the cube could see, they
were bottomless.
"Small likelihood of anybody being alive there now," commented
the
geologist skeptically. "If the sun has dried it out enough to
produce
faults like that, how could animal life exist?"
"Notice, however," prompted the doctor, "that the cracks do not extend
all
the way to the edge of the disk." This was true; all the great
chasms ended
far short of the "twilight band" which the doctor had
declared might still
contain life.
But as the sky-car rushed downward their attention became fixed upon
the
surface directly beneath them, a point whose latitude
corresponded
roughly with that of New York on the Earth. It was a region of
low-lying
mountains, decidedly different from various precipitous ranges to
be
seen to the north and east. On the west, or left-hand side of
this
district, a comparatively level stretch, with an occasional peak or
two
projecting, suggested the ancient bed of an ocean.
By this time they were within a thousand miles. Smith threw on a
little
more current; their speed diminished to a safer point, and they
scanned
the approaching surface with the greatest of care. The architect,
who
was a New Yorker, was strongly reminded of the fall aspect of
the
Appalachians; but Van Emmon, who was born and raised on the
Pacific
coast, declared that the spot was almost exactly like the region
north
of San Francisco. "If I didn't know where I was," he declared, "I'd
be
trying to locate Eureka right now."
The engineer smiled tolerantly. He had spent several years in
Scotland,
and he felt sure, he obligingly told the others, that this new
locality
was far more like the Ben Lomond country than any other spot on
earth.
He was so positive, he made the doctor, a New Zealander, smile
quite
broadly.
"It is just like the hills near my home," he stated, with an air
of
finality which made further discussion useless.
"There's a river!" the architect suddenly exclaimed, pointing; then
added,
before the others could comment, "I mean, what was once a river."
They saw
that he was right; an irregular but well-defined streak of
sandy hue trickled
down the middle of their chosen destination--a long,
L-shaped valley,
surrounded by low hills.
"That's the most likely place, outside of the twilight zone, for life
to
be found," remarked the doctor. "Neither mountainous nor dead level."
He added: "The spectroscope has plainly shown that there's water vapor
in
what little air there is. Must be precious little. If the air was as
humid as
the earth's, we couldn't see the surface at all from this
height."
The inviting-looking valley was now less than a hundred miles
below.
Inviting, however, only in outline; in color it was a grayish
buff,
scorched and forbidding. The hills were yellower, and an alkali white
on
their summits.
"Do either of you fellows see anything GREEN?" demanded the engineer,
a
little later. They were silent; each had noticed long before, that
not
even near the poles was there the slightest sign of vegetation.
"No chance unless there's foliage," muttered the doctor, half to
himself.
The builder asked what he meant. He explained: "So far as we
know, all animal
life depends upon vegetation for its oxygen. Not only
the oxygen in the air,
but that stored in the plants which animals eat.
Unless there's
greenery--"
He paused at a low exclamation from Smith. The engineer's eyes were
fixed,
in wonder and excitement, upon that part of the valley which lay
at the joint
of the "L" below them. It was perhaps six miles across; and
all over the
comparatively smooth surface jutted dark projections.
Viewed through the
glasses, they had a regular, uniform appearance.
"By Jove!" ejaculated the doctor, almost in awe. He leaned forward
and
scrubbed the dead-light for the tenth time. All four men strained
their
eyes to see.
It was the architect who broke the silence which followed. The other
three
were content to let the thrill of the thing have its way with
them. Such a
feeling had little weight with the expert in archeology.
"Well," he declared jubilantly in his boyish voice, "either I eat my
hat
or that's a genuine, bona fide city!"
As swiftly as an elevator drops, and as safely, the cube shot
straight
downward. Every second the landscape narrowed and shrunk, leaving
the
remaining details larger, clearer, sharper. Bit by bit the amazing
thing
below them resolved itself into a real metropolis.
Within five minutes they were less than a mile above it. Smith threw
on
more current, so that the descent stopped; and the cube hung
motionless
in space.
For another five minutes the four men studied the scene in
nervous
silence. Each knew that the others were looking for the same
thing--some
sign of life. A little spot of green, or possibly something in
motion--a
single whiff of smoke would have been enough to cause a whoop of
joy.
But nobody shouted. There was nothing to shout about. Nowhere in all
that
locality apparently was there the slightest indication that any
save
themselves were alive.
Instead, the most extraordinary city that man had ever laid eyes upon
was
stretched directly beneath. It was grouped about what seemed to be
the
meeting-point of three great roads, which led to this spot from as
many
passes through the surrounding hills. And the city seemed thus
naturally
divided into three segments, of equal size and shape, and each
with its own
street system.
For they undoubtedly were streets. No metropolis on earth ever had
its
blocks laid out with such unvarying exactness. This Mercurian
city
contained none but perfect equilateral triangles, and the
streets
themselves were of absolutely uniform width.
The buildings, however, showed no such uniformity. On the outskirts
of
this brilliantly tan mystery the blocks seemed to contain nothing
save
odd heaps of dingy, sun-baked mud. On the extreme north, however,
lay
five blocks grouped together, whose buildings, like those in the
middle
of the city, were rather tall, square-cut and of the same dusty,
cream-
white hue.
"Down-town" were several structures especially prominent for their
height.
They towered to such an extent, in fact, that their upper
windows were easily
made out. Apparently they were hundreds of stories
high!
Here and there on the streets could be seen small spots, colored a
darker
buff than the rest of that dazzling landscape. But not one of the
spots was
moving.
"We'll go down further," said the engineer tentatively, in a low
tone.
There was no comment. He gradually reduced the repelling current,
so
that the sky-car resumed its descent.
They sank down until they were on a level with the top of one of
those
extraordinary sky-scrapers. The roof seemed perfectly flat, except for
a
large, round, black opening in its center. No one was in sight.
When opposite the upper row of windows, at a distance of perhaps
twenty
feet, Smith brought the car to a halt, and they peered in. There were
no
panes; the windows opened directly into a vast room; but nothing
was
clearly visible in the blackness save the outlines of the opening in
the
opposite walls.
They went down further, keeping well to the middle of the space above
the
street. At every other yard they kept a sharp lookout for the
inhabitants;
but so far as they could see, their approach was entirely
unobserved.
When within fifty yards of the surface, all four men made a search
for
cross-wires below. They saw none; there were no poles, even. Neither,
to
their astonishment, was there such a thing as a sidewalk. The
street
stretched, unbroken by curbing, from wall to wall and from corner
to
corner.
As the cube settled slowly to the ground, the adventurers left
the
deadlight to use the windows. For a moment the view was obscured by
a
swirl of dust, raised by the spurt of the current; then this
cloud
vanished, settling to the ground with astounding suddenness, as
though
jerked down by some invisible hand.
Directly ahead of them, distant perhaps a hundred yards, lay
a
yellowish-brown mass of unusual octagonal shape. One end contained
a
small oval opening, but the men from the Earth looked in vain for
any
creature to emerge from it.
The doctor silently set to work with his apparatus. From an
air-tight
double-doored compartment he obtained a sample of the ether outside
the
car; and with the aid of previously arranged chemicals, quickly
learned
the truth.
There was no air. Not only was there no oxygen, the element upon which
all
known life depends, but there was no nitrogen, no carbon dioxide;
not the
slightest trace of water vapor or of the other less known
elements which can
be found in small amounts in our own atmosphere.
Clearly, as the doctor said,
whatever air the astronomers had observed
must exist on the circumference of
the planet only, and not in this sun-
blasted, north-central spot.
On the outer walls of the cube, so arranged as to be visible through
the
windows, were various instruments. The barometer showed no pressure.
The
thermometer, a specially devised one which used gas instead of
mercury,
showed a temperature of six hundred degrees, Fahrenheit.
No air, no water, and a baking heat; as the geologist remarked, how
could
life exist there? But the architect suggested that possibly there
was some
form of life, of which men knew nothing, which could exist
under such
circumstances.
They got out three of the suits. These were a good deal like those worn
by
divers, except that the outer layer was made of non-conducting
aluminum
cloth, flexible, air-tight, and strong. Between it and the
inner lining was a
layer of cells, into which the men now pumped several
pints of liquid oxygen.
The terrific cold of this chemical made the
heavy flannel of the inner lining
very welcome; while the oxygen itself,
as fast as it evaporated, revitalized
the air within the big, glass-
faced helmet.
Once safely locked within the clumsy suits, Jackson, Van Emmon, and
Smith
took their places within the vestibule; while the doctor, who had
volunteered
to stay behind, watched them open the outer door. With a
hiss all the air in
the vestibule rushed out; and the doctor earnestly
thanked his stars that the
inner door had been built very strongly.
The men stepped out on to the ground. At first they moved with great
care,
being uncertain that their feet were weighted heavily enough to
counteract
the reduced gravitation of the tiny planet. But they had been
living in a
very peculiar condition, gravitationally speaking, for the
past three days;
and they quickly adapted themselves. After a little
shifting about, the three
artificial monsters gave their telephone wires
another scrutiny; then,
keeping always within ten feet of each other, so
as not to throw any strain
on the connections, they strode in a matter-
of-fact way toward the nearest
doorway.
For a moment or two they stood outside the queer, peaked archway,
their
glimmering suits standing out oddly in the blinding sunlight. Then
they
advanced boldly into the opening; in a flash they vanished from
the
doctor's sight, and the inklike blackness of the opening again stared
at
him from that dazzling wall.
III
THE HOUSE OF DUST
The geologist, strong man that he was, and by profession an
investigator
of the unknown--Van Emmon--took the lead. He stalked straight
ahead into
a vast space which, without any preliminary hallway, filled the
entire
triangular block.
Before their eyes were accustomed to the shadow--"Pretty cold,"
murmured
the architect into the phone transmitter; it was fastened to the
inside
of the helmet, directly in front of his mouth, while the receiver
was
placed beside his ear. All three stopped short to adjust each
other's
electrical heating apparatus. To do this, they did not use their
fingers
directly; they manipulated ingenious non-magnetic pliers attached to
the
ends of fingerless, insulated mittens.
Before they had finished, the builder, who had been puzzling over
the
extraordinary suddenness with which that cloud of dust had
settled,
received an inspiration. He was carrying note-book and camera. With
his
pliers he tore out a sheet from the former, and holding book in one
hand
and the leaf in the other, he allowed them to drop at the same
instant.
They reached the ground together.
"See?" The architect repeated the experiment. "Back home, where
there's
air, the paper would have floated down; it would have taken three
times
as long for it to fall as the book."
Smith nodded, but he had been thinking of something else. He said
gravely:
"Remember what I told you--it's air that insulates the earth
from the ether.
If there's no air here--" he glanced out into the
pitiless sunlight--"then I
hope there's no flaw in our insulation. We're
walking in an electrical
bath."
They looked around. Objects were pretty distinct now. They could
easily
see that the floor was covered with what appeared to be machines,
laid
out in orderly fashion. Here, however, as outside, everything was
coated
with that fine, cream-colored dust. It filled every nook and cranny;
it
stirred about their feet with every step.
The geologist led the way down a broad aisle, on either side of
which
towered immense machinery. Smith was for stopping to examine them one
by
one; but the others vetoed the engineer's passion, and strode on
toward
the end of the triangle. More than anything else, they looked for
the
absent population to show itself.
Suddenly Van Emmon stopped short. "Is it possible that they're
all
asleep?" He added that, even though the sun shone steadily the
year
around, the people must take time for rest.
But Smith stirred the dust with his foot and shook his head. "I've seen
no
tracks. This dust has been lying here for weeks, perhaps months. If
the folks
are away, then they must be taking a community vacation."
At the end of the aisle they reached a small, railed-in space,
strongly
resembling what might be seen in any office on the earth. In the
middle
of it stood a low, flat-topped desk, for all the world like that of
a
prosperous real-estate agent, except that it was about half a
foot
lower. There was no chair. For lack of a visible gate in the
railing,
the explorers stepped over, being careful not to touch it.
There was nothing on top of the desk save the usual coat of dust. Below,
a
very wide space had been left for the legs of whoever had used it;
and
flanking this space were two pedestals, containing what looked to be
a
multitude of exceedingly small drawers. Smith bent and examined
them;
apparently they had no locks; and he unhesitatingly reached out,
gripped
the knob of one and pulled.
Noiselessly, instantaneously, the whole desk crumbled to powder.
Startled,
Smith stumbled backwards, knocking against the railing. Next
instant it lay
on the floor, its fragments scarcely distinguishable from
what had already
covered the surface. Only a tiny cloud of dust arose,
and in half a second
this had settled.
The three looked at each other significantly. Clearly, the thing that
had
just happened argued a great lapse of time since the user of that
desk
officiated in that enclosure. It looked as though Smith's guess of
"weeks,
perhaps months," would have to be changed to years, perhaps
centuries.
"Feel all right?" asked the geologist. Jackson and Smith made
affirmative
noises; and again they stepped out, this time walking in the
aisle along the
outer wall. They could see their sky-car plainly through
the ovals.
Here the machinery could be examined more closely. They
resembled
automatic testing scales, said Smith; such as is used in
weighing
complicated metal products after finishing and assembling.
Moreover,
they seemed to be connected, the one to the other, with a series
of
endless belts, which Smith thought indicated automatic production.
To
all appearances, the dust-covered apparatus stood just as it had
been
left when operations ceased, an unguessable length of time before.
Smith showed no desire to touch the things now. Seeing this, the
geologist
deliberately reached out and scraped the dust from the nearest
machine; and
to the vast relief of all three, no damage was done. The
dust fell straight
to the floor, exposing a brilliantly polished streak
of greenish-white
metal.
Van Emmon made another tentative brush or so at other points, with
the
same result. Clean, untarnished metal lay beneath all that dust.
Clearly
it was some non-conducting alloy; whatever it was, it had
successfully
resisted the action of the elements all the while that such
presumably
wooden articles as the desk and railing had been steadily
rotting.
Emboldened, Smith clambered up on the frame of one of the machines.
He
examined it closely as to its cams, clutches, gearing, and other
details
significant enough to his mechanical training. He noted
their
adjustments, scrutinized the conveying apparatus, and came back
carrying
a cylindrical object which he had removed from an automatic
chuck.
"This is what they were making," he remarked, trying to conceal
his
excitement. The others brushed the dust from the thing, a huge piece
of
metal which would have been too much for their strength on the
earth.
Instantly they identified it.
It was a cannon shell.
Again Van Emmon led the way. They took a reassuring glance out the
window
at the familiar cube, then passed along the aisle toward the
farther corner.
As they neared it they saw that it contained a small
enclosure of heavy metal
scrollwork, within which stood a triangular
elevator.
The men examined it as closely as possible, noting especially
the
extremely low stool which stood upon its platform. The same
unerodable
metal seemed to have been used throughout the whole affair.
After a careful scrutiny of the two levers which appeared to control
the
thing--"I'm going to try it out," announced Smith, well knowing that
the
others would have to go with him if they kept the telephones
intact.
They protested that the thing was not safe; Smith replied that they
had
seen no stairway, or anything corresponding to one. "If this lift
is
made of that alloy," admiringly, "then it's safe." But Jackson
managed
to talk him out of it.
When they returned to the heap of powdered wood which had been the
desk,
Smith spied a long work-bench under a nearby window. There they found
a
very ordinary vise, in which was clamped a piece of metal; but for
the
dust, it might have been placed there ten minutes before. On the
bench
lay several tools, some familiar to the engineer and some
entirely
strange. A set of screw-drivers of various sizes caught his eye.
He
picked them up, and again experienced the sensation of having wood
turn
to dust at his touch. The blades were whole.
Still searching, the engineer found a square metal chest of drawers,
each
of which he promptly opened. The contents were laden with dust, but
he
brushed this off and disclosed a quantity of exceedingly
delicate
instruments. They were more like dentists' tools than machinists',
yet
plainly were intended for mechanical use.
One drawer held what appeared to be a roll of drawings. Smith did not
want
to touch them; with infinite care he blew off the dust with the aid
of his
oxygen pipe. After a moment or two the surface was clear, but it
offered no
encouragement; it was the blank side of the paper.
There was no help for it. Smith grasped the roll firmly with his
pliers
--and next second gazed upon dust.
In the bottom drawer lay something that aroused the curiosity of
all
three. These were small reels, about two inches in diameter and
a
quarter of an inch thick, each incased in a tight-fitting box.
They
resembled measuring tapes to some extent, except that the ribbons
were
made of marvelously thin material. Van Emmon guessed that there were
a
hundred yards in a roll. Smith estimated it at three hundred.
They
seemed to be made of a metal similar to that composing the
machines.
Smith pocketed them all.
It was the builder who thought to look under the bench, but it was
Smith
who had brought a light. By its aid they discovered a very
small
machine, decidedly like a stock ticker, except that it had no
glass
dome, but possessed at one end a curious metal disk about a foot
in
diameter. Apparently it had been undergoing repairs; it was
impossible
to guess its purpose. Smith's pride was instantly aroused; he
tucked it
under his arm, and was impatient to get back to the cube, where he
might
more carefully examine his find with the tips of his fingers.
It was when they were about to leave the building that they thought
to
inspect walls and ceiling. Not that anything worth while was to be
seen;
the surfaces seemed perfectly plain and bare, except for the
inevitable
dust. Even the uppermost corners, ten feet above their heads,
showed
dust to the light of Smith's electric torch.
Van Emmon stopped and stared at the spot as though fascinated. The
others
were ready to go; they turned and looked at him curiously. For a
moment or
two he seemed struggling for breath.
"Good Heavens!" he gasped, almost in a whisper. His face was white;
the
other two leaped toward him, fearful that he was suffocating. But
he
pushed them away roughly.
"We're fools! Blind, blithering idiots--that's what we are!" He
pointed
toward the ceiling with a hand that trembled plainly, and went on in
a
voice which he tried to make fierce despite the awe which shook it.
"Look at that dust again! How'd it get there?" He paused while the
others,
the thought finally getting to them, felt a queer chill striking
at the backs
of their necks. "Men--there's only one way for the dust to
settle on a wall!
It's got to have air to carry it! It couldn't possibly
get there without
air!
"That dust settled long before life appeared on the Earth, even! It's
been
there ever since the air disappeared from Mercury!"
IV
THE LIBRARY
"I thought you'd never get back," complained the doctor crossly,
when
the three entered. They had been gone just half an hour.
Next moment he was studying their faces, and at once he demanded the
most
important fact. They told him, and before they had finished he was
half-way
into another suit. He was all eagerness; but somehow the three
were very glad
to be inside the cube again, and firmly insisted upon
moving to another spot
before making further explorations.
Within a minute or two the cube was hovering opposite the upper floor
of
the building the three had entered; and with only a foot of
space
separating the window of the sky-car and the dust-covered wall, the
men
from the earth inspected the interior at considerable length.
They
flashed a search-light all about the place, and concluded that it
was
the receiving-room, where the raw iron billets were brought via
the
elevator, and from there slid to the floor below. At one end, in
exactly
the same location as the desk Smith had destroyed, stood another,
with a
low and remarkably broad chair beside it.
So far as could be seen, there were neither doors, window-panes,
nor
shutters through the structure. "To get all the light and air
they
could," guessed the doctor. "Perhaps that's why the buildings are
all
triangular; most wall surface in proportion to floor area, that way."
A few hundred feet higher they began to look for prominent buildings.
Only
in forgetful moments did either of them scan the landscape for
signs of life;
they knew now that there could be none.
"We ought to learn something there," the doctor said after a
while,
pointing out a particularly large, squat, irregularly built affair
on
the edge of the "business district." The architect, however, was
in
favor of an exceptionally large, high building in the isolated
group
previously noted in the "suburbs." But because it was nearer,
they
maneuvered first in the direction of the doctor's choice.
The sky-car came to rest in a large plaza opposite what appeared to be
the
structure's main entrance. From their window the explorers saw that
the squat
effect was due only to the space the edifice covered; for it
was an edifice,
a full five stories high.
The doctor was impatient to go. Smith was willing enough to stay
behind;
he was already joyously examining the strange machine he had found.
Two
minutes later Kinney, Van Emmon, and Jackson were standing before
the
portals of the great building.
There they halted, and no wonder. The entire face of the building
could
now be seen to be covered with a mass of carvings; for the most
part
they were statues in bas relief. All were fantastic in the extreme,
but
whether purposely so or not, there was no way to tell. Certainly
any
such work on the part of an earthly artist would have branded him
either
as insane or as an incomprehensible genius.
Directly above the entrance was a group which might have been
labeled,
"The Triumph of the Brute." An enormously powerful man, nearly as
broad
as he was tall, stood exulting over his victim, a less robust
figure,
prostrate under his feet. Both were clad in armor. The victor's face
was
distorted into a savage snarl, startlingly hideous by reason of
the
prodigious size of his head, planted as it was directly upon
his
shoulders; for he had no neck. His eyes were set so close together
that
at first glance they seemed to be but one. His nose was flat and
African
in type, while his mouth, devoid of curves, was simply revolting in
its
huge, thick-lipped lack of proportion. His chin was square
and
aggressive; his forehead, strangely enough, extremely high and
narrow,
rather than low and broad.
His victim lay in an attitude that indicated the most agonizing
torture;
his head was bent completely back, and around behind his shoulders.
On
the ground lay two battle-axes, huge affairs almost as heavy as
the
massively muscled men who had used them.
But the eyes of the explorers kept coming back to the fearsome face of
the
conqueror. From the brows down, he was simply a huge, brutal giant;
above his
eyes, he was an intellectual. The combination was absolutely
frightful; the
beast looked capable of anything, of overcoming any
obstacle, mental or
physical, internal or external, in order to assert
his apparently enormous
will. He could control himself or dominate
others with equal ease and
assurance.
"It can't be that he was drawn from life," said the doctor, with
an
effort. It wasn't easy to criticize that figure, lifeless though it
was.
"On a planet like this, with such slight gravitation, there is no
need
for such huge strength. The typical Mercurian should be tall and
flimsy
in build, rather than short and compact."
But the geologist differed. "We want to remember that the earth has
no
standard type. Think what a difference there is between the mosquito
and
the elephant, the snake and the spider! One would suppose that they
had
been developed under totally different planetary conditions, instead
of
all right on the same globe.
"No; I think this monster may have been genuine." And with that
the
geologist turned to examine the other statuary.
Without exception, it resembled the central group; all the figures
were
neckless, and all much more heavily built than any people on
earth.
There were several female figures; they had the same general build,
and
in every case were so placed as to enhance the glory of the males.
In
one group the woman was offering up food and drink to a resting
worker;
in another she was being carried off, struggling, in the arms of
a
fairly good-looking warrior.
Dr. Kinney led the way into the building. As in the other structure,
there
was no door. The space seemed to be but one story in height,
although that
had the effect of a cathedral. The whole of the ceiling,
irregularly arched
in a curious, pointed manner, was ornamented with
grotesque figures; while
the walls were also partially formed of squat,
semi-human statues, set upon
huge, triangular shafts. In the spaces
between these outlandish pilasters
there had once been some sort of
decorations, A great many photos were taken
here.
As for the floor, it was divided in all directions by low walls.
About
five and a half feet in height, these walls separated the great
room
into perhaps a hundred triangular compartments, each about the size
of
an ordinary living room. Broad openings, about five feet
square,
provided free access from one compartment to any other. The men from
the
earth, by standing on tiptoes, could see over and beyond this system.
"Wonder if these walls were supposed to cut off the view?" speculated
the
doctor. "I mean, do you suppose that the Mercurians were such short
people as
that?" His question had to go unanswered.
They stepped into the nearest compartment, and were on the point
of
pronouncing it bare, when Jackson, with an exclamation,
excitedly
brushed away some of the dust and showed that the presumably solid
walls
were really chests of drawers. Shallow things of that peculiar
metal,
these drawers numbered several hundred to the compartment. In the
whole
building there must have been millions.
Once more the dust was carefully removed, revealing a layer of
those
curious rolls or reels, exactly similar to what had been found in
the
tool chest in the shell works. A careful examination of the
metallic
tape showed nothing whatever to the naked eye, although the
doctor
fancied that he made out some strange characters on the little
boxes
themselves.
His view was shortly proved. Finding drawer after drawer to contain
a
similar display, varying from one to a dozen of the diminutive
ribbons,
Van Emmon adopted the plan of gently blowing away the dust from
the
faces of the drawers before opening them. This revealed the fact
that
each of the shallow things was neatly labeled!
Instantly the three were intent upon this fresh clue. The markings
were
very faint and delicate, the slightest touch being enough to
destroy
them. To the untrained eye, they resembled ancient
Egyptian
hieroglyphics; to the archeologist, they meant that a brand-new
system
of ideographs had been found.
Suddenly Jackson straightened up and looked about with a new interest.
He
went to one of the square doorways and very carefully removed the
dust from a
small plate on the lintel. He need not have been so careful;
engraved in the
solid metal was a single character, plainly in the same
language as the other
ideographs.
The architect smiled triumphantly into the inquiring eyes of his
friends.
"I won't have to eat my hat," said he. "This is a sure-enough
city, all
right, and this is its library!"
Smith was still busy on the little machine when they returned to the
cube.
He said that one part of it had disappeared, and was busily
engaged in filing
a bit of steel to take its place. As soon as it was
ready, he thought, they
could see what the apparatus meant.
The three had brought a large number of the reels. They were
confident
that a microscopic search of the ribbons would disclose something
to
bear out Jackson's theory that the great structure was really
a
repository for books, or whatever corresponded with books on Mercury.
"But the main thing," said the doctor, enthusiastically, "is to get
over
to the 'twilight band.' I'm beginning to have all sorts of wild
hopes."
Jackson urged that they first visit the big "mansion" on the outskirts
of
this place; he said he felt sure, somehow, that it would be worth
while. But
Van Emmon backed up the doctor, and the architect had to be
content with an
agreement to return in case their trip was futile.
Inside of a few minutes the cube was being drawn steadily over toward
the
left or western edge of the planet's sunlit face. As it moved, all
except
Smith kept close watch on the ground below. They made out town
after town, as
well as separate buildings; and on the roads were to be
seen a great many of
those octagonal structures, all motionless.
After several hundred miles of this, the surface abruptly sloped
toward
what had clearly been the bed of an ocean. No sign of habitations
here,
however; so apparently the water had disappeared AFTER the humans
had
gone.
This ancient sea ended a short distance from the district they
were
seeking. A little more travel brought them to a point where the sun
cast
as much shadow as light on the surface. It was here they
descended,
coming to rest on a sunlit knoll which overlooked a small,
building-
filled valley.
According to Kinney's apparatus, there was about one-fortieth the
amount
of air that exists on the earth. Of water vapor there was a trace;
but
all their search revealed no human life. Not only that, but there was
no
trace of lower animals; there was not even a lizard, much less a
bird.
And even the most ancient-looking of the sculptures showed no
creatures
of the air; only huge, antediluvian monsters were ever
depicted.
They took a great many photos as a matter of course. Also,
they
investigated some of the big, octagonal machines in the streets,
finding
them to be similar to the great "tanks" that were used in the
war,
except that they did not have the characteristic caterpillar
tread;
their eight faces were so linked together that the entire affair
could
roll, after a jolting, slab-sided, flopping fashion. Inside were
curious
engines, and sturdy machines designed to throw the cannon-shells
they
had seen; no explosive was employed, apparently, but centrifugal
force
generated in whirling wheels. Apparently these cars, or chariots,
were
universally used.
The explorers returned to the cube, where they found that Smith,
happening
to look out a window, had spied a pond not far off. The three
visited it and
found, on its banks, the first green stuff they had seen;
a tiny, flowerless
salt grass, very scarce. It bordered a slimy, bluish
pool of absolutely still
fluid. Nobody would call it water. They took a
few samples of it and went
back.
And within a few minutes the doctor slid a small glass slide into
his
microscope, and examined the object with much satisfaction. What he
saw
was a tiny, gelatinlike globule; among scientists it is known as
the
amoeba. It is the simplest known form of life--the so-called
"single
cell." It had been the first thing to live on that planet,
and
apparently it was also the last.
V
THE CLOSED DOOR
As they neared Jackson's pet "mansion" each man paid close attention
to
the intervening blocks. For the most part these were simply
shapeless
ruins; heaps of what had once been, perhaps, brick or stone. Once
they
allowed the cube to rest on the top of one of these mounds; but the
sky-
car's great weight merely sank it into the mass. There was nothing
under
it save that same sandy dust.
Apparently the locality they were approaching had been set aside as a
very
exclusive residence district for the elite of the country. Possibly
it
contained the homes of the royalty, assuming that there had been a
royalty.
At any rate the conspicuous structure Jackson had selected was
certainly the
home of the most important member of that colony.
When the three, once more in their helmets and suits, stood before
the
low, broad portico which protected the entrance to that edifice,
the
first thing they made out was an ornamental frieze running across
the
face. In the same bold, realistic style as the other sculpture,
there
was depicted a hand-to-hand battle between two groups of those
half
savage, half cultured monstrosities. And in the background was shown
a
glowing orb, obviously the sun.
"See that?" exclaimed the doctor. "The size of that sun, I mean!
Compare
it with the way old Sol looks now!"
They took a single glance at the great ball of fire over their heads;
nine
times the size it always seemed at home, it contrasted sharply with
the
rather small ball shown in the carvings.
"Understand?" the doctor went on. "When that sculpture was made,
Mercury
was little nearer the sun than the earth is now!"
The builder was hugely impressed. He asked, eagerly: "Then probably
the
people became as highly developed as we?"
Van Emmon nodded approvingly, but the doctor opposed. "No; I think
not,
Jackson. Mercury never did have as much air as the earth,
and
consequently had much less oxygen. And the struggle for existence,"
he
went on, watching to see if the geologist approved each point as he
made
it, "the struggle for life is, in the last analysis, a struggle
for
oxygen.
"So I would say that life was a pretty strenuous proposition here,
while
it lasted. Perhaps they were--" He stopped, then added: "What I
can't
understand is, how did it happen that their affairs came to such
an
abrupt end? And why don't we see any--er--indications?"
"Skeletons?" The architect shuddered. Next second, though, his face lit
up
with a thought. "I remember reading that electricity will decompose
bone, in
time." And then he shuddered again as his foot stirred that
lifeless,
impalpable dust. Was it possible?
As they passed into the great house the first thing they noted was
the
floor, undivided, dust-covered, and bare, except for what had
perhaps
been rugs. The shape was the inevitable equilateral triangle; and
here,
with a certain magnificent disregard for precedent, the builders
had
done away with a ceiling entirely, and instead had sloped the
three
walls up till they met in a single point, a hundred feet overhead.
The
effect was massively simple.
In one corner a section of the floor was elevated perhaps three feet
above
the rest, and directly back of this was a broad doorway, set in a
short wall.
The three advanced at once toward it.
Here the electric torch came in very handy. It disclosed a poorly
lighted
stairway, very broad, unrailed, and preposterously steep. The
steps were each
over three feet high.
"Difference in gravitation," said the doctor, in response to
Jackson's
questioning look. "Easy enough for the old-timers, perhaps."
They
struggled up the flight as best they could, reaching the top after
over
five minutes of climbing.
Perhaps it was the reaction from this exertion; at all events each felt
a
distinct loss of confidence as, after regaining their wind, they again
began
to explore. Neither said anything about it to the others; but each
noted a
queer sense of foreboding, far more disquieting than either of
them had felt
when investigating anything else. It may have been due to
the fact that, in
their hurry, they had not stopped to eat.
The floor they were on was fairly well lighted with the usual
oval
windows. The space was open, except that it contained the same kind
of
dividing walls they had found in the library. Here, however,
each
compartment contained but one opening, and that not uniformly placed.
In
fact, as the three noted with a growing uneasiness, it was necessary
to
pass through every one of them in order to reach the corner
farthest,
from the ladderlike stairs. Why it should make them uneasy,
neither
could have said.
When they were almost through the labyrinth, Van Emmon, after standing
on
tiptoes for the tenth time, in order to locate himself, noted
something that
had escaped their attention before. "These compartments
used to be covered
over," he said, for some reason lowering his voice.
He pointed out niches in
the walls, such as undoubtedly once held the
ends of heavy timbers. "What was
this place, anyhow? A trap?"
Unconsciously they lightened their steps as they neared the
last
compartment. They found, as expected, that it was another stairwell.
Van
Emmon turned the light upon every corner of the place before going
any
further; but except for a formless heap of rubbish in one corner,
which
they did not investigate, the place was as bare as the rest of
the
floor.
Again they climbed, this time for a much shorter distance; but
Jackson,
slightly built chap that he was, needed a little help on the
steep
stairs. They were not sorry that they had reached the uppermost floor
of
the mansion. It was somewhat better lighted than the floor below,
and
they were relieved to find that the triangular compartments did not
have
the significant niches in their walls. Their spirits rose
perceptibly.
At the corner farthest from the stairs one of the walls rose straight
to
the ceiling, completely cutting off a rather large triangle. The
three
paid no attention to the other compartments, but went straight to
what
they felt sure was the most vital spot in the place. And their
feelings
were justified with a vengeance when they saw that the usual doorway
in
this wall was protected by something that had, so far, been
entirely
missing everywhere else.
It was barred by a heavy door.
For several minutes the doctor, the geologist, and the architect
stood
before it. Neither would have liked to admit that he would just as
soon
leave that door unopened. All the former uneasiness came back. It
was
all the more inexplicable, with the brilliant sunlight only a few
feet
away, that each should have felt chilled by the place.
"Wonder if it's locked?" remarked Van Emmon. He pressed against
the
dust-covered barrier, half expecting it to turn to dust; but
evidently
it had been made of the time-defying alloy. It stood firm. And to
all
appearances it was nearly air-tight.
"Well!" said the doctor suddenly, so that the other two started
nervously.
"The door's got to come down; that's all!" They looked
around; there was no
furniture, no loose piece of material of any kind.
Van Emmon straightway
backed away from the door about six feet, and the
others followed his
example.
"All together!" grunted the geologist; and the three
aluminum-armored
monsters charged the door. It shook under the impact; a
shower of dust
fell down; and they saw that they had loosened the thing.
"Once more!" This time a wide crack showed all around the edge of
the
door, and the third attempt finished the job. Noiselessly--for there
was
no air to carry the sound--but with a heavy jar which all three
felt
through their feet, the barrier went flat on the floor beyond.
At the same instant a curious, invisible wave, like a tiny puff of
wind,
floated out of the darkness and passed by the three men from the
earth.
Each noticed it, but neither mentioned it at the time. Van Emmon
was
already searching the darkness with the torch.
Apparently it was only an anteroom. A few feet beyond was another
wall,
and in it stood another door, larger and heavier than the first.
The
three did not stop; they immediately tried their strength on this
one
also.
After a half dozen attempts without so much as shaking the
massive
affair--"It's no use," panted the geologist, wishing that he could
get a
handkerchief to his forehead. "We can't loosen it without tools."
Jackson was for trying again, but the doctor agreed with Van Emmon.
They
reflected that they had been away from Smith long enough, anyhow.
The
cube was out of sight from where they were.
Van Emmon turned the light on the walls of the anteroom, and found, on
a
shelf at one end, a neat pile of those little reels, eleven in all.
He
pocketed the lot. There was nothing else.
Jackson and Kinney started to go. They retreated as far into the main
room
as their telephone wires would allow. Still the geologist held
back.
"Come on," said the doctor uneasily. "It's getting cold."
Next second they stopped short, nerves on edge, at a strange
exclamation
from Van Emmon. They looked around to see him pointing his
light
directly at the floor. Even in that unnatural suit of mail, his
attitude
was one of horror.
"Look here," he said in a low, strained voice. They went to his side,
and
instinctively glanced behind them before looking at what lay in the
dust.
It was the imprint of an enormous human foot.
The first thing that greeted the ears of the explorers upon taking
off
their suits in the sky-car, was the exultant voice of Smith. He was
too
excited to notice anything out of the way in their manner; he was
almost
dancing in front of his bench, where the unknown machine,
now
reconstructed, stood belted to a small electric-motor.
"It runs!" he was shouting. "You got here just in time!" He began
to
fumble with a switch.
"What of it?" remarked the doctor in the bland tone which he kept
for
occasions when Smith needed calming. "What will it do if it does
run?"
The engineer looked blank. "Why--" Then he remembered, and picked up
one
of the reels at random. "There's a clamp here just the right size
to
hold one of these," he explained, fitting the ribbon into place
and
threading its free end into a loop on a spool which looked as
though
made for it. But his excitement had passed; he now cautiously set
a
small anvil between himself and the apparatus, and then, with the aid
of
a long stick, he threw on the current.
For a moment nothing happened, save the hum of the motor. Then a
strange,
leafy rustling sounded from the mechanism, and next, without
any warning, a
high-pitched voice, nasal and plaintive but distinctly
human, spoke from the
big metal disk.
The words were unintelligible. The language was totally unlike
anything
ever heard on the earth. And yet, deliberately if somewhat
cringingly,
the voice proceeded with what was apparently a recitation. There
were
modulations, pauses, sentences; but seemingly the paragraphs were
all
short and to the point.
As the thing went on the four men came closer and watched the operation
of
the machine. The ribbon unrolled slowly; it was plain that, if the
one topic
occupied the whole reel, then it must have the length of an
ordinary chapter.
And as the voice continued, certain dramatic qualities
came out and governed
the words, utterly incomprehensible though they
were. There was a real thrill
to it.
After a while they stopped the thing. "No use listening to this now,"
as
the doctor said. "We've got to learn a good deal more about these
people
before we can guess what it all means."
And yet, although all were very hungry, on Jackson's suggestion they
tried
out one of the "records" that was brought from that baffling
anteroom. Smith
was very much interested in that unopened door, and Van
Emmon was in the
midst of it when Jackson started the motor.
The geologist's words stuck in his throat. The disk was actually
shaking
with the vibrations of a most terrific voice. Prodigiously loud
and
powerful, its booming, resonant bass smote the ears like the roll
of
thunder. It was irresistible in its force, compelling in its
assurance,
masterful and strong to an overpowering degree. Involuntarily the
men
from the earth stepped back.
On it roared and rumbled, speaking the same language as that of the
other
record; but whereas the first speaker merely USED the words, the
last speaker
demolished them. One felt that he had extracted every ounce
of power in the
language, leaving it weak and flabby, unfit for further
use. He threw out his
sentences as though done with them; not boldly,
not defiantly, least of all,
tentatively, he spoke with a certainty and
force that came from a knowledge
that he could compel, rather than
induce his hearers to believe.
It took a little nerve to shut him off; Van Emmon was the one who did
it.
Somehow they all felt immensely relieved when the gigantic voice
was
silenced; and at once began discussing the thing with great
earnestness.
Jackson was for assuming that the first record was worn and old,
the
last one, fresh and new; but after examining both tapes under a
glass,
and seeing how equally clear cut and sharp the impressions all
were,
they agreed that the extraordinary voice they had heard was
practically
true to life.
They tried out the rest of the records in that batch, finding that
they
were all by the same speaker. Nowhere among the ribbons brought from
the
library was another of his making, although a great number of
different
voices was included; neither was there another talker with a fifth
the
volume, the resonance, the absolute power of conviction that
this
unknown colossus possessed.
Of course this is no place to describe the laborious process
of
interpreting these documents, records of a past which was gone
before
earth's mankind had even begun. The work involved the study of
countless
photos, covering everything from inscriptions to parts of
machinery, and
other details which furnished clue after clue to that
superancient
language. It was not deciphered, in fact, until several years
after the
explorers had submitted their finds to the world's
foremost
lexicographers, antiquarians and paleontologists. Even today some of
it
is disputed.
But right here is, most emphatically, the place to insert the tale told
by
that unparalleled voice. And incredible though it may seem, as judged
by the
standards of the peoples of this earth, the account is fairly
proved by the
facts uncovered by the expedition. It would be but begging
the question to
doubt the genuineness of the thing; and if,
understanding the language, one
were to hear the original as it fell,
word for word from the iron mouth of
Strokor [Footnote: Translator's
note--In the Mercurian language, stroke means
iron, or heart.] the
Great-hearing, one would believe; none could doubt, nor
would.
And so it does not do him justice to set it down in ordinary print.
One
must imagine the story being related by Stentor himself; must
conceive
of each word falling like the blow of a mammoth sledge. The tale was
not
told--it was BELLOWED; and this is how it ran:
PART II
THE STORY
I
THE MAN
I am Strokor, son of Strok, the armorer. I am Strokor, a maker of
tools
of war; Strokor, the mightiest man in the world; Strokor, whose
wisdom
outwitted the hordes of Klow; Strokor, who has never feared, and
never
failed. Let him who dares, dispute it. I--I am Strokor!
In my youth I was, as now, the marvel of all who saw. I was ever
robust
and daring, and naught but much older, bigger lads could outdo me.
I
balked at nothing, be it a game or a battle; it was, and forever
shall
be, my chief delight to best all others.
'Twas from my mother that I gained my huge frame and sound heart.
In
truth, I am very like her, now that I think upon it. She, too,
was
indomitable in battle, and famed for her liking for strife. No
doubt
'twas her stalwart figure that caught my father's fancy.
Aye, my mother was a very likely woman, but she boasted no brains. "I
need
no cunning," I remember she said; and he who was so unlucky in
battle as to
fall into her hands could vouch for the truth of it--as
long as he lived,
which would not be long. She was a grand woman, slow
to anger and a match for
many a good pair of men. Often, as a lad, have
I carried the marks of her
punishment for the most of a year.
And thus it seems that I owe my head to my father. He was a
marvelously
clever man, dexterous with hand and brain alike. Moreover, he was
no
weakling; perchance I should credit him with some of my agility, for
he
was famed as a gymnast, though not a powerful one. 'Twas he who
taught
me how to disable my enemy with a mere clutch of the neck at a
certain
spot.
But Strok, the armorer, was feared most because of his brain, and
his
knack of using his mind to the undoing of others. And he taught me
all
that he knew; taught me all that he had learned in a lifetime
of
fighting for the emperor, of mending the complicated machines in
the
armory, of contact with the chemists who wrought the secret alloy,
and
the chiefs who led the army.
Some of this he taught me when I was not yet a man. Why he should
have
done so, I know not, save that he seemed to value my affection,
and
liked not my mother's demands that I heed her call, not his. At
all
events, I oft found his shop a place of refuge from her wrath; and
I
early came to value his teachings.
When I became a man he abruptly ended the practice. I think he saw that
I
was become as dexterous as he with the tools of the craft, and he
feared lest
I know more than he. Well he might; the day I realized this
I laughed long
and loud. And from that time forth he taught me, not
because he chose to, but
because I bent a chisel in my bare hands,
before his eyes, and told him his
place.
Many times he strove to trick me, and more than once he all but caught
me
in some trap. He was a crafty man, and relied not upon brawn, but
upon wits.
Yet I was ever on the watch, and I but learned the more from
him.
"Ye are very kind," I mocked him one morning. When I had taken my seat
a
huge weight had dropped from above and crushed my stool to
splinters,
much as it would have crushed my skull had I not leaped instantly
aside.
"Ye are kinder than most fathers, who teach their sons nothing at
all."
He foamed at his mouth in his rage and discomfiture. "Insolent whelp!"
he
snarled. "Thou art quick as a cat on thy feet!"
But I was not to be appeased by words. I smote him on the chest with
my
bare hand, so that he fell on the far side of the room. "Let that be
a
warning," I told him, when he had recovered, some time later. "If
ye
have any more tricks, try them for, not on, me." Which I claim to be
a
neat twist of words.
It was not long after that when I saw a change in my father. He no
longer
tried to snare me; instead, he began, of his own free will, to
train my mind
to other than warlike things. At first, I was suspicious
enough. I looked for
new traps, and watched all the closer. I told him
that his next try would
surely be his last, and I meant it.
But the time came when I saw that my father was reconciled to his
master.
I saw that he genuinely admitted my prowess; and where he
formerly envied me,
he now took great pride in all I accomplished, and
claimed that it was but
his own brains acting through my body.
I let him indulge in the conceit. I grudged it not to him, so long as
he
taught me. In truth, he was so eager to add to my store of facts,
so
intent upon filling my head with what filled his, that at times I
was
fairly compelled to stop him, lest I tire.
My mother opposed all this. "The lad needs none of thy wiles," she
gibed.
"He is no stripling; he is a man's man, and a fit son of his
mother."
"Aye," quoth my father slyly. "He has thy muscle and thy courage.
Thank
Jon, he hath not thy empty head!"
Whereat she flew at him. Had she caught him, she would have destroyed
him,
such was her rage; and afterwards she would have mourned her folly
and mayhap
have injured herself; for she loved him greatly. But he
stepped aside just in
the nick of time, and she crashed into the wall
behind him with such force
that she was senseless for a time. I remember
it well.
And yet, to give credit where credit is due, I must admit that I owe
a
great deal to that gray-beard, Maka, the star-gazer. But for
him,
perchance, the name of Strokor would mean but little, for 'twas he
who
gave me ambition.
Truly it was an uncommon affair, my first meeting with him. Now that
I
shake my memory for it, it seems that something else of like
consequence
came to pass on the same occasion. Curious; but I have not
thought on it
for many days.
Yes, it is true; I met Maka on the very morn that I first laid eyes on
the
girl Ave.
I was returning from the northland at the time. A rumor had come down
to
Vlama that one of the people in the snow country had seen a
lone
specimen of the mulikka. Now these were but a myth. No man
living
remembers when the carvings on the House of Learning were made, and
all
the wise men say that it hath been ages since any being other than
man
roamed the world. Yet, I was young. I determined to search for the
thing
anyhow; and 'twas only after wasting many days in the snow that I
cursed
my luck, and turned back.
I was afoot, for the going was too rough for my chariot. I had not
yet
quit the wilderness before, from a height, I spied a group of
people
ascending from the valley. Knowing not whether they be friends or
foes,
I hid beside the path up which they must come; for I was weary
and
wanting no strife.
Yet I became alert enough when the three--they were two ditch-tenders,
one
old, one young, and a girl--came within earshot. For they were
quarreling. It
seemed that the young man, who was plainly eager to gain
the girl, had fouled
in a try to force her favor. The older man chided
him hotly.
And just when they came opposite my rock, the younger man, whose
passion
had got the better of him, suddenly tripped the older, so that he
fell
upon the ledge and would have fallen to his death on the rocks below
had
not the girl, crying out in her terror, leaped forward and caught
his
hand.
At once the ditch-tender took the lass about the waist, and strove to
pull
her away. For a moment she held fast, and in that moment I,
Strokor, stood
forth from behind the rock.
Now, be it known that I am no champion of weaklings. I have no liking
for
the troubles of others; enough of my own, say I. I was but angered
that the
ditch-tender should have done the trick so clumsily, and upon
an old man, at
that. I cared not for the gray beard, nor what became of
the chit. I clapped
the trickster upon the shoulder and spun him about.
"Ye clumsy coward!" I jeered. "Have ye had no practice that ye should
trip
the old one no better than that?"
"Who are ye?" he stuttered, like the coward he was. I laughed and
helped
the chit drag Maka--for it was he--up to safety.
"I am a far better man than ye," I said, not caring to give my name.
"And
I can show ye how the thing should be done. Come; at me, if ye are
a
man!"
At that he dashed upon me; and such was his fear of ridicule--for the
girl
was laughing him to scorn now--he put up a fair, stiff fight. But I
forgot my
weariness when he foully clotted me on the head with a stone.
I drove at him
with all the speed and suddenness my father had taught
me, caught the fellow
by the ankle, and brought him down atop me.
The rest was easy. I bent my knee under his middle, and tossed him
high.
In a flash I was upon my feet, and caught him from behind. And
in
another second I had rushed him to the cliff; and when he turned to
save
himself, I tripped him as neatly as father himself could have done
it,
so that the fellow will guard the ditch no more, save in the caverns
of
Hofe.
I laughed and picked up my pack. My head hurt a bit from the
fellow's
blow, but a little water would do for that. I started to go.
"Ye are a brave man!" cried the girl. I turned carelessly, and then,
quite
for the first time, I had a real look at her.
She was in no way like any woman I had seen. All of them had been
much
like the men: brawny and close-knit, as well fitted for their work
as
are men for war. But this chit was all but slender; not skinny,
but
prettily rounded out, and soft like. I cannot say that I admired her
at
first glance; she seemed fit only to look at, not to live. I was
minded
of some of the ancient carvings, which show delicate, lightly
built
animals that have long since been killed off; graceful trifles
that
rested the eye.
As for the old man: "Aye, thou art brave, and wondrous strong, my
lad,"
said he, still a bit shaky from his close call. I was pleased with
the
acknowledgment, and turned back.
"It was nothing," I told them; and I recounted some of my
exploits,
notably one in which I routed a raiding party of men from Klow, six
in
all, carrying in two alive on my shoulders. "I am the son of Strok,
the
armorer."
"Ye are Strokor!" marveled the girl, staring at me as though I were a
god.
Then she threw back her head and stepped close.
"I am Ave. This is Maka; he is my uncle, but best known as a
star-gazer.
My father was Durok, the engine-maker." She watched my face.
"Durok?" I knew him well. My father had said that he was quite as
brainy
as himself. "He were a fine man, Ave."
"Aye," said she proudly. She stepped closer; I could not but see how
like
him she was, though a woman. And next second she laid a hand on my
arm.
"I am yet a free woman, Strokor. Hast thou picked thy mate?" And
her
cheeks flamed.
Now, 'twas not my first experience of the kind. Many women had looked
like
that at me before. But I had always been a man's man, and had ever
heeded my
father's warning to have naught whatever to do with women.
"They are the
worst trick of all," he told me; and I had never forgot.
Belike I owe much of
my power to just this.
But Ave had acted too quickly for me to get away. I laughed again,
and
shook her off.
"I will have naught to do with ye," I told her, civilly enough. "When I
am
ready to take a woman, I shall take her; not before."
At that the blood left her face; she stood very straight, and her
eyes
flashed dangerously. Were she a man I should have stood on my guard.
But
she made no move; only the softness in her eyes gave way to such
a
savage look that I was filled with amaze. And thus I left them; the
old
man calling down the blessing of Jon upon me for having saved his
life,
and the chit glaring after me as though no curses would suffice.
A right queer matter, I thought at the time. I guessed not what would
come
of it; not then.
II
THE VISION
'Twas a fortnight later, more or less, when next I saw Maka. I
was
lumbering along in my chariot, feeling most uncomfortable under the
eyes
of my friends; for one foot of my machine had a loose link, and
'twas
flapping absurdly. And I liked it none too well when Maka stopped
his
own rattletrap in front of mine, and came running to my window.
Next
moment I forgot his impertinence.
"Strokor," he whispered, his face alive with excitement, "thou art a
brave
lad, and didst save my life. Now, know you that a party of the men
of Klow
have secreted themselves under the stairway behind the emperor's
throne. They
have killed the guards, and will of a certainty kill the
emperor, too!"
"'Twould serve the dolt right," I replied, for I really cared but
little.
"But why have ye come to me, old man? I am but a lieutenant in
the armory; I
am not the captain of the palace guard."
"Because," he answered, gazing at me very pleasingly, "thou
couldst
dispose of the whole party single handed--there are but four--and
gain
much glory for thyself."
"By Jon!" I swore, vastly delighted; and without stopping to ask
Maka
whence he had got his knowledge, I went at once to the spot.
However,
when I got back, I sought the star-gazer--I ought to mention that I
had
no trouble with the louts, and that the emperor himself saw me
finishing
off the last of them--I sought the star-gazer and demanded how he
had
known.
"Hast ever heard of Edam?" he inquired in return.
"Edam?" I had not; the name was strange to me. "Who is he?"
"A man as young as thyself, but a mere stripling," quoth Maka. "He was
a
pupil of mine when I taught in the House of Learning. Of late he
has
turned to prophecy; and it is fair remarkable how well the lad
doth
guess. At all events, 'twas he, Strokor, who told me of the plot. He
saw
it in a dream."
"Then Edam must yet be in Vlama," said I, "if he were able to tell
ye.
Canst bring him to me? I would know him."
And so it came about that, on the eve of that same day, Maka brought
Edam
to my house. I remember it well; for 'twas the same day that the
emperor, in
gratitude of my little service in the anteroom, had relieved
me from my post
in the armory and made me captain of the palace guard. I
was thus become the
youngest captain, also the biggest and strongest;
and, as will soon appear,
by far the longest-headed.
I was in high good humor, and had decided to celebrate with a feast.
So
when my two callers arrived, I sat them down before a meal such as
cost
a tenth [Footnote: Since Mercury had no moon, its people never coined
a
word to correspond with our "month," and for the same reason they
never
had a week. Their time was reckoned only in days, years, and
fractions
of the two.] of my year's salary.
I served not only the usual products of the field, variously prepared,
but
as a special gift from the emperor's own stock, a piece of mulikka
meat,
frozen, which had been found in the northland by some geologists a
few years
aback. It had been kept in the palace icing-room all this
time, and was in
prime condition. Maka and I enjoyed it overmuch, but
Edam would touch it
not.
He was a slightly built lad, not at all the sturdy man that I am, but
of
less than half the weight. His head, too, was unlike mine; his
forehead
was wide as well as tall, and his eyes were mild as a slave's.
"Ye are very young to be a prophet," I said to him, after we were
filled,
and the slaves had cleared away our litter. "Tell me: hast
foretold anything
else that has come to pass?"
"Aye," he replied, not at all boldly, but what some call modestly.
"I
prophesied the armistice which now stands between our empire
and
Klow's."
"Is this true?" I demanded of Maka. The old man bowed his head gravely
and
looked upon the young man with far more respect than I felt. He
added:
"Tell Strokor the dream thou hadst two nights ago, Edam. It were a
right
strange thing, whether true or no."
The stripling shifted his weight on his stool, and moved the bowl
closer.
Then he thrust his pipe deep into it, and let the liquid flow
slowly out his
nostrils. [Footnote: A curious custom among the
Mercurians, who had no
tobacco. There is no other way to explain some of
the carvings. Doubtless the
liquid was sweet-smelling, and perhaps
slightly narcotic.]
"I saw this," he began, "immediately before rising, and after a very
light
supper; so I know that it was a vision from Jon, and not of my
own
making.
"I was standing upon the summit of a mountain, and gazing down upon a
very
large, fertile valley. It was heavily wooded, dark green and
inviting. But
what first drew my attention was a great number of animals
moving about IN
THE AIR. They were passing strange affairs, some large,
some small, variously
colored, and all covered with the same sort of
fur, quite unlike any hair I
have ever seen."
"In the air?" I echoed, recovering from my astonishment. Then I
laughed
mightily. "Man, ye must be crazy! There is no animal can live in
the
air! Ye must mean in the water or on land."
"Nay," interposed the star-gazer. "Thou hast never studied the
stars,
Strokor, or thou wouldst know that there be a number of them
which,
through the enlarging tube, show themselves to be round worlds,
like
unto our own.
"And it doth further appear that these other worlds also have air
like
this we breathe, and that some have less, while others have even
more.
From what Edam has told me," finished the old man, "I judge that
his
vision took place on Jeos, [Footnote: The Mercurian word for earth.]
a
world much larger than ours according to my calculations, and
doubtless
having enough air to permit very light creatures to move about in
it."
"Go on," said I to Edam, good-humoredly. "I be ever willing to
believe
anything strange when my stomach is full."
The dreamer had taken no offense. "Then I bent my gaze closer, as I
am
always able, in visions. And I saw that the greenery was most
remarkably
dense, tangled and luxuriant to a degree not ever seen here. And
moving
about in it was the most extraordinary collection of beings that I
have
ever laid these eyes upon.
"There were some huge creatures, quite as tall as thy house, Strokor,
with
legs as big around as that huge chest of thine. They had tails, as
had our
ancient mulikka, save that these were terrific things, as long
and as big as
the trunk of a large tree. I know not their names.
[Footnote: Probably the
dinosaur.]
"And then, at the other extreme, was a tiny creature of the air,
which
moved with a musical hum. It could have hid under thy
finger-nail,
Strokor, yet it had a tiny sharp-pointed bill, with which it
stung most
aggravatingly. And between these two there were any number of
creatures
of varying size and shape.
"But nowhere was there a sign of a man. True, there was one
hairy,
grotesque creature which hung by its hands and feet from the
tree-tops,
very like thee in some way, Strokor; but its face and head were
those of
a brainless beast, not of a man. Nowhere was a creature like me or
thee.
"And the most curious thing was this: Although there were ten times
as
many of these creatures, big and little, to the same space as on
our
world, yet there was no great amount of strife. In truth, there is
far
more combat and destruction among we men than among the beasts.
"And," he spoke most earnestly, as though he would not care to
be
disbelieved, "I saw fathers fight to protect their young!"
I near fell from my stool in my amaze. Never in all my life had I heard
a
thing so far from the fact. "What!" I shouted. "Ye sit there like a
sane man,
and tell me ye saw fathers fight for their young?"
He nodded his head, still very gravely. I fell silent for want of
words,
but Maka put in a thought. "It would appear, Strokor, that it be not
so
much of an effort for beings to live, there on Jeos, as here.
Perchance
'tis the greater amount of vegetation; at all accounts, the animals
need
not prey upon one another so generally; and that, then, would
explain
why some have energy enough to waste in the care of their young."
"I can understand," I said, very slowly. "I can understand why a
mother
will fight for her babes; 'tis reasonable enough, no doubt. But as
for
fathers doing the same--Edam, dost mean to say that ALL creatures
on
Jeos do this?"
"Nay; only some. It may be that fewer than half of the varieties have
the
custom. Howbeit, 'tis a beautiful one. When the vision ended I was
right
loath to go."
"Faugh!" I spat upon the ground. "Such softness makes me ill! I be glad
I
were born in a man's world, where I can take a man's chances. I want
no
favoring. If I am strong enough to live, I live; if not, I die. What
more can
I ask?"
"Aye, my lad!" said Maka approvingly. "This be a world for the
strong.
There is no room here for others; there is scarce enough food for
those
who, thanks to their strength, do survive." He slipped the gold
band
from off his wrist, and held it up for Jon to see. "Here, Strokor,
a
pledge! A pledge to--the survival of the fittest!"
"A neat, neat wording!" I roared, as I took the pledge with him. Then
we
both stopped short. Edam had not joined us. "Edam, my lad," spake
the
old man, "ye will take the pledge with us?"
The stripling's eyes were troubled. Well he knew that, once he
refused
such an act, he were no longer welcome in my house, nor in Maka's.
But
when he looked around it were bravely enough.
"Men, I have neither the strength of the one nor the brains of the
other
of ye. I am but a watchmaker; I live because of my skill with the
little
wheels.
"I have no quarrel with either of ye." He got to his feet, and started
to
the door. "But I cannot take the pledge with ye.
"I have seen a wondrous thing, and I love it. And, though I know
not
why--I feel that Jon has willed it for Jeos to see a new race of men,
a
race even better than ours."
I leaped to my feet. "Better than ours! Mean ye to say, stripling,
that
there can be a better man than Strokor?"
I full expected him to shrink from me in fear; I was able to crush
him
with one blow. But he stood his ground; nay, stepped forward and laid
a
hand easily upon my shoulder.
"Strokor--ye are more than a man; ye are two men in one. There is
no
finer--I say it fair. And yet, I doubt not that there can be, and
will
be, a better!"
And with that such a curious expression came into his face, such a glow
of
some strange land of warmth, that I let my hand drop and suffered him
to
depart in peace--such was my wonder.
Besides, any miserable lout could have destroyed the lad.
Maka sat deep in thought for a time, and when he did speak he made
no
mention of the lad who had just quit us. Instead, he looked me
over,
long and earnestly, and at the end he shook his head sorrowfully
and
sighed:
"Thou art the sort of a son I would have had, Strokor, given the wits
of
thy father to hold a woman like thy mother. And thou didst save
my
life."
He mused a little longer, then roused himself and spake sharply: "Thou
art
a vain man, Strokor!"
"Aye," I agreed, willingly enough. "And none has better cause than I!"
He would not acknowledge the quip. "Thou hast everything needful to
tickle
thy vanity. Thou hast the envy of those who note thy strength,
the praise of
them who love thy courage, and the respect of they who
value thy brains. All
these thou hast--and yet ye have not that which is
best!"
I thought swiftly and turned on him with a frown: "Mean ye that I am
not
handsome enough?"
"Nay, Strokor," quoth the star-gazer. "There be none handsomer in
this
world, no matter what the standard of any other, such as Edam's
Jeos.
"It is not that. It is, that thou hast no ambition."
I considered this deeply. At first thought it was not true; had I
not
always made it a point to best my opponent? From my youth it had
been
ever my custom to succeed where bigger bodies and older minds
had
failed. Was not this ambition?
But before I disputed the point with Maka, I saw what he meant. I had
no
FINAL ambition, no ultimate goal for which to strive. I had been
content
from year to year to outdo each rival as he came before me; and
now,
with mind and body alike in the pink of condition, I was come to
the
place where none durst stand before me.
"Ye are right, Maka," I admitted, not because I cared to gratify
his
conceit, but because it were always for my own good to own up
when
wrong, that I might learn the better. "Ye are right; I need to
decide
upon a life-purpose. What have ye thought?"
The old man was greatly pleased. "Our talk with Edam brought it all
before
me. Know you, Strokor, that the survival of the fittest is a rule
which
governs man as well as men. It applies to the entire population,
Strokor,
just as truly as to me or thee.
"In fine, we men who are now the sole inhabitants of this world,
are
descended from a race of people who survived solely because they
were
fitter than the mulikka, fitter than the reptiles, the fittest, by
far,
of all the creatures.
"That being the case, it is plain that in time either our empire, or
that
of Klow's, must triumph over the other. And that which remains
shall be the
fittest!"
"Hold!" I cried. "Why cannot matters remain just as they now
are--and
forever?"
"That" he said rapidly, "is because thou knowest so little about
the
future of this world. But I am famed as a student of the heavens; and
I
tell thee it is possible, by means of certain delicate
measuring
instruments, together with the highest mathematics, to keep a very
close
watch upon the course of our world. And we now know that our year
is
much shorter than it was in the days of the mulikka."
I nodded my head. "Rightly enough, since our days are become
steadily
longer, for some mysterious reason."
"A reason no longer a mystery," quoth Maka. "It is now known that the
sun
is a very powerful magnet, and that it is constantly pulling upon
our world
and bringing it nearer and nearer to himself. That is why it
hath become
slightly warmer during the past hundred years; the records
show it plain. And
the same influence has caused the lengthening of our
day."
He stopped and let me think. Soon I saw it clearly enough; a time
must
come when the increasing warmth of the sun would stifle all forms
of
vegetable life, and that would mean the choking of mankind. It
might
take untold centuries; yet, plainly enough, the world must some
day
become too small for even those who now remained upon it.
Suddenly I leaped to my feet and strode the room in my excitement. "Ye
are
right, Maka!" I shouted, thoroughly aroused. "There cannot always be
the two
empires. In time one or the other must prevail; Jon has willed
it. And--" I
stopped short and stared at him--"I need not tell ye which
it shall be!"
"I knew thou wouldst see the light, Strokor! Thou hast thy
father's
brains."
I sat me down, but instantly leaped up again, such was my
enthusiasm.
"Maka," I cried, "our emperor is not the man for the place! It is
true
that he were a brave warrior in his youth; he won the throne fairly.
And
we have suffered him to keep it because he is a wise man, and because
we
have had little trouble with the men of Klow since their defeat
two
generations agone.
"But he, today, is content to sit at his ease and quote platitudes
about
live and let live. Faugh! I am ashamed that I should even have given
ear
to him!"
I stopped short and glared at the old man. "Maka--hark ye well! If it
be
the will of Jon to decide between the men of Klow and the men
of
Vlamaland, then it is my intent to take a hand in this decision!"
"Aye, my lad," he said tranquilly; and then added, quite as though he
knew
what my answer must be: "How do ye intend to go about it?"
"Like a man! I, Strokor, shall become the emperor!"
III
THE THRONE
A small storm had come up while Maka and I were talking. Now, as he
was
about to quit me, the clouds were clearing away and an occasional
stroke
of lightning came down. One of these, however, hit the ground such
a
short distance away that both of us could smell the smoke.
My mind was more alive than it had ever been before. "Now, what
caused
that, Maka? The lightning, I mean; we have it nearly every day, yet
I
have never thought to question it before."
"It is no mystery, my lad," quoth Maka, dodging into his chariot, so
that
he was not wet. "I myself have watched the thing from the top of
high
mountains, where the air is so light that a man can scarce get
enough to fill
his lungs; and I say unto you that, were it not for what
air we have, we
should have naught save the lightning. The space about
the air is full of
it."
He started his engine, then leaned out into the rain and said
softly:
"Hold fast to what thy father has taught thee, Strokor. Have nothing
to
do with the women. 'Tis a man's job ahead of thee, and the future of
the
empire is in thy hands.
"And," as he clattered off, "fill not thy head with wonderings about
the
lightning."
"Aye," said I right earnestly, and immediately turned my thoughts to
my
new ambition. And yet the thing Maka had just told me kept coming
back
to my mind, and so it does to this very day. I know not why I
should
mention it at all save that each time I think upon Maka, I also
think
upon the lightning, whether I will or no.
I slept not at all that night, but sat [Footnote: It seems to have
been
the custom among the soldiers never to lie down, but to take their
sleep
sitting or standing; a habit not hard to form where the gravitation
was
so slight. No doubt this also explains their stunted legs.] till
the
dawn came, thinking out a plan of action. By that time I was
fair
convinced that there was naught to be gained by waiting; waiting
makes
me impatient as well. I determined to act at once; and since one day
is
quite as good as the next, I decided that this day was to see the
thing
begun.
I came before the emperor at noon and received my decorations. Within
the
hour I had made myself known to the four and ninety men who were to
be my
command; a picked company, all of a height and weight, with bodies
that
lacked little of my own perfection. Never was there a finer guard
about the
palace.
My first care was to pick a quarrel with the outgoing commander.
Twere
easy enough; he was green with envy, anyhow. And so it came about
that
we met about mid afternoon, with seconds, in a well-frequented field
in
the outskirts.
Before supper was eaten my entire troop knew that their new captain
had
tossed his ball-slinger away without using it, had taken twenty
balls
from their former commander's weapon, and while thus wounded had
charged
the man and despatched him with bare hands! Needless to say,
this
exploit quite won their hearts; none but a blind man could have
missed
the respect they showed me when, all bandaged and sore, I lined them
up
next morning. Afterward I learned that they had all taken a pledge
to
"follow Strokor through the gates of Hofe itself!"
'Twere but a week later that, fully recovered and in perfect fettle,
I
called my men together one morn as the sun rose. By that time I
had
given them a sample of my brains through ordering a rearrangement
of
their quarters such as made the same much more comfortable. Also, I
had
dealt with one slight infraction of the rules in such a drastic
fashion
that they knew I would brook no trifling. All told, 'tis hard to
say
whether they thought the most of me or of Jon.
"Men," said I, as bluntly as I knew, "the emperor is an old man. And,
as
ye know, he is disposed to be lenient toward the men of Klow;
whereas,
ye and I well know that the louts are blackguards.
"Now, I will tell ye more. It has come to me lately that Klow is
plotting
to attack us with strange weapons." I thought best, considering
their
ignorance, not to give them my own reasons. "Of course I have told
the
emperor of it; yet he will not act. He says to wait till we
are
attacked."
I stopped and watched their faces. Sure enough; the idea fair made
them
ache. Each and every one of these men was spoiling for a fight.
"Now, tell me; how would ye like to become the emperor's body-guard?"
I
did not have to wait long; the light that flared in their faces told
me
plainly. "And--how would ye like to have me for your emperor?"
At that their tongues were loosed, and I hindered them not. They
yelled
for pure joy, and pressed about me like a pack of children. I saw
that
the time was ripe for action.
"Up, then!" I roared, and, of course, led the way. We met the
emperor's
guard on the lower stairs; and from that point on we fair hacked
our way
through.
Well, no need to describe the fight. For a time I thought we were
gone;
the guards had a cunningly devised labyrinth on the second floor,
and
attacked us from holes in a false ceiling, so that we suffered
heavily
at first. But I saw what was amiss, and shouted to my men to clear
away
the timbers; and after that it was clear work. I lost forty men
before
the guard was disposed of. The emperor I finished myself; he
dodged
right spryly for a time, but at last I caught him and tossed him to
the
foot of the upper stairs. And there he still lies for none of my
men
would touch him, nor would I. We covered him with quicklime and
some
earth.
As soon as we had taken care of those who were not too far gone, I
called
the men together and caused a round of spirits to be served. Then
we all
feasted on the emperor's store, and soon were feeling like
ourselves.
"Men," I said impressively, "I am proud of ye. Never did an emperor
have
such a dangerous gang of bullies!"
At that they all grinned happily, and I added: "And 'tis a fine staff
of
generals that ye'll make!"
Need I say more? Those men would have overturned the palace for me had
I
said the word. As it was, they obeyed my next orders in such a
spirit
that success was assured from the first.
First, using the dead emperor's name, I caused the various chiefs to
be
brought together at once to the court chamber. At the same time
I
contrived, by means I need not go into here, to prevent any word of
our
action from getting abroad. So, when the former staff faced me the
next
morning, they learned that they were to be executed. I could trust
not
one; they were all friends of the old man.
With the chiefs out of the way, and my own men taking their commands,
the
whole army fell into my hands. True, there were some insurrections
here and
there; but my men handled them with such speed and harshness
that any further
stubbornness turned to admiration. By this time the
fame of Strokor was
spread throughout the empire.
And thus it came about that, within a week of the night that old
Maka
first put the idea into my head, Strokor, son of Strok,
reigned
throughout Vlamaland. And, to make it complete, the army celebrated
my
accession by taking a pledge before Jon:
"To Strokor, the fittest of the fit!"
IV
THE ASSAULT
Now, out of a total population of perhaps three million, I had about
a
quarter-million first-class fighters in my half of the world. Klow,
by
comparison, had but two-thirds the number; his land was not a rich
one.
But he had the advantage of knowing, some while in advance, of the
new
ruler in Vlama; and shortly my spies reported that his armories
were
devising a new type of weapon. 'Twas a strange verification of my
own
fiction to my men. I could learn nothing, however, about it.
Meanwhile I caused a vast number of flat-boats to be built, all in
secret.
Each of them was intended for a single fighter and his supplies;
and each was
so arranged, with side paddle wheels, that it would be
driven by the motor in
the soldier's chariot, and thus give each his own
boat.
Again discarding all precedent, I packed not all my forces together,
as
had been done in the past, but scattered them up and adown the
coast
fronting the land of Klow; and at a prearranged time my
quarter-million
men set out, a company in each tiny fleet. Some were slightly
in advance
of the rest, who had the shorter distance to travel. And, just as
I had
planned, we all arrived at a certain spot on Klow's coast at
practically
the same hour, although two nights later.
'Twas a brilliant stroke. The enemy looked not for a fleet of water-
ants,
ready to step right out of the sea into battle. Their fleet was
looking for
us, true, but not in that shape. And we were all safely
ashore before they
had ceased to scour the seas for us.
I immediately placed my heavy machines, and just as all former
expeditions
had done, opened the assault at once with a shower of the
poison shells. I
relied, it will be seen, upon the surprise of my attack
to strike terror into
the hearts of the louts.
But apparently they were prepared for anything, no matter how rapid
the
attack. My bombardment had not proceeded many moments before, to
my
dismay, some of their own shells began to fall among us. Soon they
were
giving as good as we.
"Now, how knew they that we should come to this spot?" I demanded of
Maka.
I had placed him in my cabinet as soon as I had reached the
throne.
The old man stroked his beard gravely. "Perchance it had been wrong
to
come to the old landing. They simply began shelling it as a matter
of
course."
"Ye are right again," I told him; and forthwith moved my pieces over
into
another triangle. (Previously, of course, all my charioteers had
gone on
toward the capital). However, I took care to move my machines,
one at a time,
so that there was no let-up in my bombardment.
But scarce had we taken up the new position before the enemy's
shells
likewise shifted, and began to strike once more in our midst. I swore
a
great oath and whirled upon Maka in wrath.
"Think ye that there be a spy among us?" I demanded. "How else can
ye
explain this thing? My men have combed the land about us; there are
none
of the louts secreted here; and, even so, they could not have
notified
Klow so soon. Besides, 'tis pitch dark." I were sorely
mystified.
All we could do was to fling our shells as fast as our machines would
work
and dodge the enemy's hail as best we could. Thus the time passed,
and it
were near dawn when the first messengers [Footnote: Messengers;
no telegraph
or telephone, much less wireless. In a civilization as
strenuous as that of
Mercury, there was never enough consideration for
others to lead to such
socially beneficial things as these, no more than
railroads or printing
presses. Civilization appears to be in exact
proportion to the ease of
getting a living, other conditions being
equal.] returned.
"They have stopped us just outside the walls of the city," was the
report.
It pleased me that they should have pushed so far at first; I
climbed at once
into my chariot.
"Now is the time for Strokor to strike!" I gave orders for the staff
to
remain where it was. "I will send ye word when the city is mine."
But before I started my engine I glanced up at the sky, to see if the
dawn
were yet come; and as I gazed I thought I saw something come
between me and a
star. I brushed the hair away from my eyes, and looked
again. To my boundless
surprise I made out, not one, but three strange
objects moving about swiftly
in the air!
"Look!" I cried, and my whole staff craned their necks. In a moment
all
had seen, and great was their wonder. I blamed them not for their
fears.
'Twas Maka who spoke first. "They are much too large to be creatures
of
Jon," he muttered. "They must be some trick of the enemy.
"Dost recall Edam's vision of the creatures in the air of Jeos?" he
went
on, knowing that I would not hinder him. "Now, as I remember it, he
said
they flew with great speed. Were it not possible, Strokor, for
suitable
engines to propel very light structures at such high speed as to
remain
suspended in the air, after the manner of leaves in a storm? I
note
these strangers move quite fast."
It was even so; and at that same instant one of them swung directly
above
our heads, so close that I could hear the hum of a powerful
engine. So it was
only a trick! I shook myself together.
"Attention!" My staff drew up at the word. "They are but few; fear
them
not! We waste no more time here! Pack up the machines, and follow!"
And thus we charged upon Klow.
I found that my men had entirely surrounded the city. Klow's men
were
putting up a plucky fight, and showing no signs of fearing us.
Seeing
this, I blew a blast on my engine's whistle, so that my bullies
might
know that I had come.
Immediately the word ran up and down the line, so that within a
few
minutes Klow was facing a roaring crowd of half-mad terrors. I
myself
set the example by charging the nearest group of the enemy, all of
whom
were mounted within the rather small and perfectly circular
chariots
which they preferred. They were quick, but slippery. Also, they
could
not stand before a determined rush, as several of them learned
after
vainly trying to slip some balls through my windows and, failing
in
that, striving to get away from me.
But I ran them down, and toppled them over, and dropped suffocation
bombs
into their little cages with such vigor and disregard of their
volleys that
my men could not resist the example. We charged all along
that vast circular
line, and we cheered mightily when the whole front
broke, turned tail, and
ran before us.
But scarce had they got away before a queer thing happened. A flock
of
those great air-creatures, some eight altogether, rose up from
the
middle of the city. It was now fairly light, and we could see well.
One
of them had some sort of engine trouble, so that it had to return
at
once; but the other seven came out to the battle-line and began
to
circle the city.
As they did so they dropped odd, misshapen parcels, totally
unlike
materials of war; but when they struck they gave off prodigious puffs
of
a greenish smoke, of so terribly pungent a nature that my men
dropped
before it like apples from a shaken tree. 'Twas a fearful sight;
lucky
for us that the louts had had no practice, else few of us should
be
alive to tell the tale.
And so they swept around the great circle, many triangles in area;
and
everywhere the unthinkable things smote the hearts of my men with a
fear
they had never known. Only one of the devices suffered; it was
brought
down by a chance fling of a poison shell. The rest, after loosing
their
burdens, returned to the city for more.
I am no fool. I saw that we could do nothing against such weapons,
but
must use all our wits if we escaped even.
"Return!" I commanded, and instantly my staff whistled the code. The
men
obeyed with alacrity, making off at top speed with the men of Klow
in
hot pursuit, although able to do little damage.
Aye, it were a sorrowful thing, that retreat. The best I could do was
to
remain till the very last, having to deal with a number of
persistent
louts who all but suffocated me, at that. But I managed to empty
my
slinger into some of them and to topple the rest. I was mainly
angry
that Klow had not showed himself.
By the time I had reached the seashore, most of my men were in
their
boats. Again I stayed till the last, although I could see the
enemy's
fleet bearing down hard upon us from the north. In truth we would
have
all been lost, had we come in the manner of former campaigns,
all
together in big transports. But because we could scatter every
which
way, the fleet harmed us little; and four-fifths of us got safely
back.
Happily, none of the air-machines had range enough to reach Vlamaland.
As
soon as I could get my staff together, I gave orders such as would
insure
discipline. Then, reminding my hearties that Klow, knowing our
helplessness,
would surely attack as soon as fully equipped, I made this
offer:
"To the man who shall suggest the best way of meeting their attack,
I
shall give the third of my empire!"
So they knew that the case was desperate. As for myself, I slept not
a
bit, but paced my sleep-chamber and thought deeply.
Now, a bit of a shell, from an enemy slinger, had penetrated my arm.
Till
now, I had paid no attention to it. But it began to bother me, so I
pulled
the metal from my arm with my teeth. And quite by chance I placed
the billet
on the table within a few inches of the compass I had carried
on my boat.
To my intense surprise the needle of the compass swung violently about,
so
that one end pointed directly at the fragment of metal. I moved them
closer
together; there was no doubt that they were strongly attracted.
The enemy's
shells were made of mere iron!
The moment I fully realized this, I saw clearly how we might baffle
the
men of Klow. I instantly summoned some men gave the orders much
as
though I had known for years what was to be done, and in a few
moments
had the satisfaction of seeing my messengers hurrying north and
south.
And so it came about that, within three days of our shameful retreat,
a
tenth of my men were at work on the new project. As yet there was
no
word from my spies across the sea; but we worked with all
possible
haste. And this, very briefly, is what we did:
We laid a gigantic line of iron clear across the empire. From north
to
south, from snow to snow; one end was bedded in the island of
Pathna,
where the north magnetic-pole is found, while the other stopped on
the
opposite side of the world, in a hole dug through the ice into the
solid
earth of the South Polar Plain. And every foot of that enormous
rod--
'twas as big around as my leg--was insulated from the ground with
pieces
of our secret non-magnetic alloy!
Not for nothing had our chemists sought the metal which would resist
the
lightning. And not for nothing did my bullies piece the rod
together,
all working at the same time, so that the whole thing were complete
in
seven days. That is, complete save for the final connecting link;
and
that lay, a loglike roll of iron, at the door of my palace, ready to
be
rolled into place when I were but ready.
And on the morrow the Klow reached our shores.
V
THE VICTORY
My first intent was to let them advance unhampered; but Maka pointed
out
that such a policy might give them suspicions, and so we disputed
their
course all the way. I gave orders to show no great amount of
resistance;
and thus, the louts reached Vlama in high feather, confident that
the
game was theirs.
I stood at the door of the palace as Klow himself rolled up to the edge
of
the parade-ground. My men, obeying orders, had given way to him; his
crews
swarmed the space behind and on all sides of him, while my own
bullies were
all about and behind the palace. Never did two such giant
armies face one
another in peace; for I had caused my banner to be
floated wrong end to, in
token of surrender.
First, a small body of subordinates waited upon me, demanding that I
give
up the throne. I answered that I would treat with none save Klow
himself; and
shortly the knave, surrounded by perhaps fifty underlings,
stepped up before
me.
"Hail, Stroker!" he growled, his voice shaking a bit with excitement;
not
with fear, for he were a brave man. "Hail to thee and to thine, and
a
pleasant stay in Hofe for ye all!"
"Hail, Klow!" replied I, glancing up meaningly at the air
monsters
wheeling there. "I take it that ye purpose to execute us."
"Aye," he growled savagely. "Thou didst attack without provocation.
Thy
life is forfeit, and as many more as may be found needful to
guarantee
peace."
"Then," I quoth, my manner changing, "then ye have saved me the trouble
of
deciding what shall be thy fate. Execution, say you? So be it!"
And I strode down to the great log of iron which lay ready to fill
the
gap. Klow looked at me with a peculiar expression, as though he
thought
me mad. True, it looked it; how could I do him harm without
myself
suffering?
But I kicked the props which held the iron, and gave it a start with
my
foot. The ends of the pole-to-pole rod lay concealed by brush,
perchance
fifty yards away. In ten seconds that last section had rolled
completely
between them; and only a fool would have missed seeing that, the
last
ten feet, the iron was fair jerked through the air.
As this happened we all heard a tremendous crackling, like that of
nearby
lightning, while enormous clouds of dust arose from the two
concealed ends,
which were now become connections. And at the same time
a loud, steely click,
just one and no more, sounded from the intruding
host.
For a moment Klow was vastly puzzled. Then he snarled angrily: "What
means
this foolery, Strokor? Advance, and give up thy ax!"
For answer I turned me about, so as to face my men, and held up my hand
in
signal. Instantly the whistles sounded, and my hearties came bounding
into
the field.
"Treachery!" shouted Klow; and his officers ran here and there,
shouting:
"To arms! Charge and destroy! No quarter!"
But I paid little attention to the hubbub. I were gazing up at
those
infernal creatures of the air; and my heart sang within me as I
saw
them, circling erratically but very surely down to the earth. And
as
they came nearer, my satisfaction was entire; for their engines
were
silent!
At the same time consternation was reigning among our visitors. Not a
man
of all Klow's thousands was able to move his car or lift a weapon.
Every
slinger was jammed, as though frozen by invisible ice; all their
balls and
shells were stuck together, like the work of a transparent
glue. Even their
side arms were locked in their scabbards; and all their
tugging could budge
them not!
But none of my men were so handicapped. Each man's chariot was running
as
though naught had happened; they thundered forward, discharging their
balls
and shells as freely as they had across the sea. Their charge was
a murderous
one; not a man of Klow's was able to resist, save with what
force he could
put into his bare hands.
Klow saw all this from the middle of his group of officers. None were
able
to more than place his body 'twixt us and their chief. In a very
few moments
they saw that the unknown magic had made them as children in
our hands; they
were utterly lost; and Klow turned away from the sight
with a black face.
Again he faced me.
"What means this, ye huge bundle of lies? What mean ye by tricking us
with
yon badge of surrender, only to tie our hands with thy magic of
Hofe? Is this
the way to fight like a man?"
I had stood at ease in my door since rolling the iron. Now, I looked
about
me still more easily; my men were running down the louts, who had
jumped from
their useless chariots and taken to their heels. 'Twere but
a matter of time
before the army of Klow would be no more, at that rate.
"Klow," I answered him mildly; "ye are right; this is not the way to
fight
like a man. Neither," I pointed out one of the fallen air-cars;
"neither is
that the way, flitting over our heads like shadows, and
destroying us with
filthy smoke! Shame on ye, Klow, for stooping to
such! And upon thy own head
be the blame for the trick I have played
upon ye!"
"You attacked us without provocation," he muttered, sourly.
"Aye, and for a very good reason," I replied. "Yet I see thy
viewpoint,
and shalt give thee the benefit of the doubt." I turned to my
whistlers
and gave an order; so that presently the great slaughter had
stopped. My
men and Klow's alike struggled back to see what were amiss.
I handed Klow an ax. "Throw away thine own, scabbard and all," I told
him.
"It is useless, for 'tis made of iron. Ours, and all our tools of
war, are
formed of an alloy which is immune from the magic."
He took the ax in wonderment. "What means it, Strokor?" asked he
again,
meanwhile stripping himself in a businesslike fashion that it were
good
to see.
"It means," said I, throwing off my robe, "that I have unchained
the
magnetism of this world. Know you, Klow, that all of the children of
the
sun are full of his power; it is like unto that of the tiny magnet
which
ye give children for to play; but it is mighty, even as our world
is
mighty."
"Good Jon!" he gasped; for his was not a daring mind. "What have ye
done,
ye trifler?"
"I have transformed this empire into one vast magnet," I answered
coolly.
Then I showed him a boulder on the summit of a distant hill;
through the
tube, Klow could see some of my men standing beside it.
"Place one of thy own men on the roof of the palace," I told Klow,
"and
give him orders to lower my banner should ye give him the word.
"For upon the outcome of this fight 'twixt me and thee, Klow, hinges
the
whole affair! If thou dost survive, down comes my banner; and my men
on
the hill shall topple the boulder which shall rush down the slope
and
burst the iron rod and break the spell. Stand, then, and
defend
thyself!"
And it did me good to see the spirit fly into his eyes. He saw that
his
empire lived or died as he lived or died, and he fought as he had
never
fought before. Small man that he was beside myself, he were
wondrous
quick and sure in his motions; before I knew it, he had bit his ax
deep
into my side.
And in another moment or two it was over. For, as soon as I felt the
pain
of that gash, I flung my own blade away; and with a roar such as
would have
shaken a stouter heart than his, I charged the man, took a
second fearful
blow full on my chest and heeding it not at all I
snatched the ax from his
hands. Then, as he turned to run, I dropped
that tool also.
And I ran him down, and felled him, and broke his head with my hands.
VI
THE FITTEST
[Footnote: This chapter was originally as long as the others, but
an
unfortunate accident of Mr. Smith's, before he was thoroughly
familiar
with the machine, mutilated a large portion of the tape so badly
that it
was made worthless. This explains why something appears to be
missing
from the account, and also why this chapter begins in the middle of
a
sentence.]
slaves; but the most were slain. Neither could we bother with their
women
and others left behind.
Now, by this time the empire was as one man in its worship of me. I
had
been emperor but a year, and already I had made it certain that only
the
men of Vlamaland, and no others, should live in the sight of Jon.
So
well thought they of me, I might fair have sat upon my reputation,
and
have spent my last days in feasting like the man before me.
But I was still too young and full of energy to take my ease. I
found
myself more and more restless; I had naught to do; it had all been
done.
At last I sent for old Maka.
"Ye put me up to this, ye old fraud," I told him, pretending to
be
wrathful. "Now set me another task, or I'll have thy head!"
He knew me too well to be affrighted. He said that he had been
considering
my case of late.
"Strokor, thy father was right when he told thee to have naught to do
with
women. That is to say, he were right at the time. Were he alive
today"--I
forgot to say that my father was killed in the battle across
the sea--"he
would of a certainty say that it were high time for thee to
pick thy
mate.
"Remember, Strokor; great though thou art, yet when death taketh thee
thy
greatness is become a memory. Methinks ye should leave something
more
substantial behind."
It took but little thought to convince me that Maka were right once
more.
Fact; as soon as I thought upon it, it were a woman that I was
restless for.
The mere notion instantly gave me something worth while to
look forward
to.
"Jon bless thee!" I told the old man. "Ye have named both the trouble
and
the remedy. I will attend to it at once."
He sat thinking for some time longer. "Has thought of any woman
in
special, Strokor?" said he.
I had not. The idea was too new to me. "The best in the world shall
be
mine, of course," I told him. "But as for which one--hast any
notion
thyself?"
"Aye," he quoth. "'Tis my own niece I have in mind. Perchance ye
remember
her; a pretty child, who was with me when thou didst save my
life up there on
the mountainside."
I recalled the chit fairly well. "But she were not a vigorous woman,
Maka.
Think you she is fit for me?"
"Aye, if any be," he replied earnestly. "Ave is not robust, true, but
her
muscles are as wires. It is because of what lies in her head,
however, that I
commend her. I have taught her all I know."
"So!" I exclaimed, much pleased. "Then she is indeed fit to be
the
empress. And as I recall her, she were exceedingly good to look at."
"Say no more. Ave shall be the wife of Strokor!" And so it was arranged.
Well, and there ye have the story of Strokor, the mightiest man in
the
world, and the wisest. More than this I shall not tell with my own
lips;
I shall have singers recite my deeds until half the compartments in
the
House of Words is filled with the records thereof. But it were well
that
I should tell this much in mine own way.
My ambition is fulfilled. Let the hand of Jon descend upon our world,
if
it may; I care not if presently the sun come nearer, and the water
dry
up, and the days grow longer and longer, till the day and the
year
become of the same length. I care not; my people, such as be left
of
them, shall own what there is, and shall live as long as life
is
possible.
I shall leave behind no race of weaklings. Every man shall be fit to
live,
and the fittest of them all shall live the longer. And he, no
matter how many
cycles hence, shall look back to Strokor, and to Ave,
his wife, and shall
say:
"I am what I am, the last man on the world, because Strokor was
the
fittest man of his time!"
Aye; my fame shall live as long as there be life. Tonight, as I
speak
these things into the word machine, my heart is singing with the joy
of
it all. Thank Jon, I were born a man, not a woman!
Tomorrow I go to fetch Ave. I shall not send for her; I cannot trust
her
beauty to the hands of my crew. The more I think of her, the more I
see
that mine whole life hath been devised for this one moment. I see
that,
insignificant though she be, Ave is a needed link in the chain. I
have
come to want her more than food; I am become a lovesick fool!
Aye! I can afford to poke fun at myself. I can afford anything in
this
world; for I be its greatest man.
Its greatest man! Here is the place to stop. There is no more I can
say,
the story is done; the story of Strokor, the greatest man in the
whole
world!
VII
THE GOING
'Tis several years since last I faced this machine, many and many a
day
since I said that my story was done, and placed the record on the
shelf
of my anteroom, my heart full of satisfaction. And today I must
needs
add another record, perhaps two, to the pile.
When I set out for the highlands on the morn following what I last
related
I took with me but two or three men; not that I had any need for
guards, but
because it looketh not well for the emperor to travel
without retainers,
however few. Practically, I was alone.
I reached the locality as the sun went down. The sky was a
brilliant
color; I remember it well. Darkness would come soon, though not
as
quickly as farther south. Commonly, I think not upon such trifles; but
I
were nearing my love, and tender things came easily to my mind.
My chariot kept to the road which lay alongside the irrigating flume,
a
stone trough which runs from the snow-covered hills to the dry
country
below. I had already noted this flume where it emptied into the basin
in
the valley below; for it had had a new kind of a spillway affixed to
it,
a broad, smooth platform with a slightly upward curve, over which
the
water was shooting. I saw no sense in the arrangement, and made up
my
mind to ask Maka about it; for the empire prized this trough
most
highly. It ran straight and true, over expensive bridges where
needed,
with scarce a bend to hold back the flow.
When I stopped my car outside the house I was surprised that none
should
come out to greet me. Maka had sent word of my coming; all should
have
been in readiness. But I was forced to use my whistle. There was
no
stir. I became angry; I told my bullies to stay where they were,
and
myself burst in the door.
The house was a sturdy stone affair of one floor, set against the side
of
the mountain, a short distance above the flume. I looked about the
interior
in surprise; for not a soul was in sight in any of the
compartments. There
were signs that people had been there but a few
moments before. I called it
strange, for I had seen no one leave the
house as I approached.
At last, as I was inspecting the eating place, I noted a small door
let
into the outer wall. It was open; and by squeezing I managed to
get
through. I found that it let into a long, dark passage.
I followed this, going steadily down a flight of stairs, and all of
a
sudden bumped into an iron grating. At the same moment I saw that
the
passageway made a turn just beyond; and by craning my neck and
straining
my eyes I could see a faintly lighted chamber just a few feet
away.
And before my eyes could scarce make out the figures of some people in
the
middle of the place, a voice came to my ear.
"Hail, Strokor!" it said; and great was my astonishment as I
recognized
the tones of Edam, the young dreamer whom Maka had brought to my
house.
"Edam!" I cried. "What do ye here? Come and open these bars!"
He made no reply, save to laugh in a way I did not like. I shook
the
grating savagely, so that I felt it give. "Edam!" I roared. "Open
this
grating at once; and tell me, where is Ave?"
"I am here," came another voice; and I stopped in sheer surprise, to
peer
closer and to see, for the first time, that it were really the
dreamer and
the chit, these two and no more, who sat there in the
underground chamber.
They seemed to be sitting in some sort of a box,
with glass windows.
"Ave--come here!" I spoke much more gently than to Edam; for my heart
was
soft with thoughts of her. "It is thy lord, Strokor, the emperor,
who calls
thee. Come!"
"I stay here," said she in the same clear voice, entirely unshaken by
my
presence. "Edam hath claimed me, and I shall cleave to him. I want
none
of ye, ye giant!"
For a moment I was minded to throw my weight against the barrier, such
was
my rage. Then I thought better on it, and closely examined the bars.
Two were
loose.
"Ave," said I, contriving to keep my voice even, although my hands
were
busy with the bars as I spake. "Ave--ye do wrong to spite me thus.
Know
ye not that I am the emperor, and that these bars cannot stand
before
me? I warn ye, if I must call my men to help me, and to witness
my
shame, it will go hard with ye! Better that ye should come willingly.
Ye
are not for such as Edam."
"No?" quoth the young man, speaking up for the chit. "Ye are
wrong,
Strokor. We defy thee to do thy worst; we are prepared to flee from
ye
at all costs!"
I had twisted one of the bars out of my way without their seeing it.
I
strove at the next as I answered, still controlling my voice: "'Twill
do
ye no good to flee, Edam; ye know that. And as for Ave--she shall
wish
she had never been born!"
"So I should," she replied with spirit, "if I were to become thy
woman.
But know you, Strokor, that Ave, the daughter of Durok, would rather
die
than take the name of one who had spurned her, as ye did me!"
So I had; it had slipped my mind. "But I want thee now, Ave," said
I
softly, preparing to slip through the opening I had made. "Surely
ye
would not take thine own life?"
"Nay," she answered, with a laugh in her voice. "Rather I would go
with
Edam here. I would go," she finished, her voice rising in
her
excitement, "away from this horrible man's world; away from it
all,
Strokor, and to Jeos! Hear ye? To Jeos! And--"
But at that instant I burst through the grating. Without a sound I
charged
straight for the pair of them. And without a sound they slipped
away from
before my grasp. Next second I was gazing stupidly at the
rushing, swirling
water of the flume.
And I saw that they had been sitting in the cabin of a tiny boat, and
that
they had got away!
There was an opening into the outer air; I rushed through, and stared
in
the growing twilight down the black furrow of the flume. Far in
the
distance, and going like a streak, I spied the glittering glass
windows
of the little craft. Once I made out the flutter of a saucy hand.
"We shall get them when they reach the valley!" I shouted to the men.
Then
I reached for my tube, and sighted it on the lower end of the
flume, far, far
below, almost too far away to be clear to the naked eye.
In an incredibly short time the craft reached the end. It traveled at
an
extraordinary rate; perchance 'twas weighted; I marveled that
its
windows could stand the force of the air. And I scarce had time to
fear
that the twain should be destroyed on that upturned spillway before
it
was there.
And then an awesome thing happened. As the boat struck the incline it
shot
upward into the air at a steep slant. Up, up it went; my heart
jumped into my
mouth; for surely they must be crushed when they came
down.
But the craft did not come down. It went on and on, up and up; its
speed
scarcely slackened; 'twas like that of a shooting star. And in far
less
time than it takes to tell it, the little boat was high up among
the
stars, going higher every instant, and farther away from me.
And
suddenly the sweat broke cold on my forehead; for dead ahead,
directly
in line with their travel, lay the bluish white gleam of Jeos.
So great was my rage over the escape of the dreamer with my woman,
at
first I felt no sorrow. Later, after days and days of search in
and
about the basin, I came to grieve most terribly over my loss. When
I
came home to the palace, I was well-nigh ill.
In vain did I make the most generous of rewards. The whole empire
turned
out to search for the missing ones, but nothing came of it all. Yet
I
never ceased to hope, especially after my talk with Maka.
"Aye," he said, when I questioned him, "it were barely possible that
they
have left this world for all time. I have calculated the speed
which their
craft might have attained, had it the right proportions,
and, in truth, it
might have left the spillway at such a speed that it
entirely overcame the
draw of the ground.
"But I think it were a slim chance. It is more than likely, Strokor,
that
Ave shall return to thee."
Was I not the fitter man? Surely Edam's purpose could not succeed;
Jon
would not have it so. The woman was mine, because I had chosen her;
and
she must come back to me, and in safety, or I should tear Edam
into
bits.
But as time went on and naught transpired, I became more and
more
melancholy. Life became an empty thing; it had been empty enough
before
I had craved the girl, but now it was empty with hopelessness.
After a while I got to thinking of some of the things Maka had told
me.
The more I thought of the future, the blacker it seemed. True,
there
were many other women; but there had been only one Ave. No such
beauty
had ever graced this world before. And I knew I could be happy with
no
other.
Now I saw that all my fame had been in vain. I had lost the only
woman
that was fit for me, and when I died there would be naught left but
my
name. Even that the next emperor might blot out, if he chose. It had
all
been in vain!
"It shall not be!" I roared to myself, as I strode about my
compartment,
gnawing at my hands in my misery. And in just such a fit of
helpless
anger the great idea came to me.
No sooner conceived than put into practice. I will not go closely
into
details; I will relate just the outstanding facts. What I did was
to
select a very tall mountain, located almost on the equator,
and
proclaimed my intention to erect a monument to Jon upon its summit.
I
caused vast quanities of materials to be brought to the place; and for
a
year a hundred thousand men labored to put the pieces together.
When they had finished, they had made a mammoth tower partly of wood
and
partly of alloy. It was made in sections so that it might be
placed,
piece upon piece, one above another high into the sky.
It was an enormous task. When it was complete, I had a tower as high
as
the mountain itself erected upon its summit.
And next I caused section after section of the long, iron,
pole-to-pole
rod, which had tricked Klow, to be hauled up into the tower. I
was only
careful to begin the process from the top and work downward. I gave
word
that the last three sections be inserted at midday at a given day.
And at that hour I was safe inside a non-magnetic room.
I know right well when the deed was done. There was a most
terrific
earthquake. All about me, though I could see nothing at all, I
could
hear buildings falling. The din was appalling.
At the same time the air was fairly shattered with the rattle of
the
lightning. Never have I heard the like before. The rod had loosed
the
wrath of the forces above our air!
And as suddenly the whole deafening storm ended. Perchance the rod
was
destroyed by the lightning; I never went to see. For I know,
the
electricity split the very ground apart. But I gazed out of a window
in
the top of my palace, and saw that I had succeeded.
Not a soul but myself remained alive.
None but buildings made of the alloy were standing. Not only man, but
most
of his works had perished in that awful blast. I, alone, remained!
I, Strokor, am the survivor! I, the greatest man; it were but fit that
I
should be the last! No man shall come after me, to honor me or not as
he
chooses. I, and no other, shall be, the last man!
And when Ave returns--as she must, though it be ages hence--when
she
comes, she shall find me waiting. I, Strokor, the mighty and wise,
shall
be here when she returns. I shall wait for her forever; here I
shall
always stay. The stars may move from their places, but I shall not
go!
For it is my intention to make use of another secret Maka taught me.
In
brief--[Footnote: The record ends here. It may be that Strokor left
the
machine for some trivial reason, and forgot to finish his story. At
all
events, it is necessary to refer to the further discoveries of
the
expedition in order to learn the outcome of it all.]
PART III
THE SURVIVOR
Provided with a sledge-hammer, a crowbar, and a hydraulic jack, and
even
with drills and explosives as a last resort, Jackson, Kinney, and
Van
Emmon returned the same day to the walled-in room in the top of
that
mystifying mansion. The materials they carried would have
made
considerable of a load had not Smith removed enough of the weights
from
their suits to offset their burden. They reached the unopened
door
without special exertion, and with no mishap.
They looked in vain for a crack big enough to hold the point of
the
crowbar; neither could the most vigorous jabbing loosen any of
the
material. They dropped that tool and tried the sledge. It got
no
results; even in the hands of the husky geologist, the most
vigorous
blows failed to budge the door. They did not even dent it.
So they propped the powerful hydraulic jack, a tool sturdy enough to
lift
a house, at an angle against the door. Then, using the crowbar as a
lever,
the architect steadily turned up the screw, the mechanism
multiplying his
very ordinary strength a hundredfold. In a moment it
could be seen that he
was getting results; the door began to stir. Van
Emmon struck one edge with
the sledge-hammer, and it gave slightly.
In another minute the whole door, weighing over a ton, had been
pushed
almost out of its opening. The jack overbalanced, toppled over; they
did
not readjust it, but threw their combined weight upon the barrier.
There was no need to try again. With a shiver the huge slab of metal
slid,
upright, into the space beyond, stood straight on end for a second
or so,
then toppled to the floor.
AND THIS TIME THEY HEARD THE CRASH.
For, as the door fell, a great gust of wind rushed out with a
hissing
shriek, almost overbalancing the men from the earth. They stood
still
for a while, breathing hard from their exertion, trying in vain to
peer
into the blackness before them. Under no circumstances would either
of
them have admitted that he was gathering courage.
In a minute the architect, his eyes sparkling with his enthusiasm for
the
antique, picked up the electric torch and turned it into the
compartment. As
he did so the other two stepped to his side, so that the
three of them faced
the unknown together. It was just as well. Outlined
in that circle of light,
and not six feet in front of them, stood a
great chair upon a wide platform;
and seated in it, erect and alert, his
wide open eyes staring straight into
those of the three, was the
frightful mountainous form of Strokor, the giant,
himself.
For an indeterminable length of time the men from the earth stood
there,
speechless, unbreathing, staring at that awful monster as though at
a
nightmare. He did not move; he was entirely at ease, and yet plainly
on
guard, glaring at them with an air of conscious superiority which
held
them powerless. Instinctively they knew that the all-dominating voice
in
the records had belonged to this Hercules. But their instinct could
not
tell them whether the man still lived.
It was the doctor's brain that worked first. Automatically, from
a
lifelong habit of diagnosis, he inspected that dreadful figure quite
as
though it were that of a patient. Bit by bit his subconscious
mind
pieced together the evidence; the man in the chair showed no signs
of
life. And after a while the doctor's conscious mind also knew.
"He is dead," he said positively, in his natural voice; and such was
the
vast relief of the other two that they were in no way startled by
the
sound. Instantly all three drew long breaths; the tension was
relaxed;
and Van Emmon's curiosity found a harsh and unsteady voice.
"How under heaven has he been preserved all this time? Especially,"
he
added, remembering, "considering the air that we found in the room?"
The doctor answered after a moment, his reply taking the form of
advancing
a step or two and holding out a hand. It touched glass.
For the first time since the discovery, the builder shifted the light.
He
had held it as still as death for a full minute. Now he flashed it
all about
the place, and they saw that the huge figure was entirely
encased in glass.
The cabinet measured about six feet on each of its
sides, and about five feet
in height; but such were the squat
proportions of the occupant that he filled
the whole space.
A slight examination showed that the case was not fixed to the
platform,
but had a separate bottom, upon which the stumplike chair was set.
Also,
they found that, thanks to the reduced pull of the planet, it was
not
hard for the three of them to lift the cabinet bodily, despite
its
weight of almost a thousand pounds. They left the tools lie
there,
discarded as much weight as they could, and proceeded to carry
that
ages-old superman out into the light.
Here they could see that the great man was all but a negro in color.
It
was equally clear, however, from an examination of his mammoth
cranium
and extraordinary expression, that he was as highly developed along
most
mental lines as the greatest men on earth. It was the back of his
head,
however, so flat that it was only a continuation of his neck,
or,
rather, shoulders, that told where the flaw lay. That, together with
the
hardness of his eye, the cruelty of his mouth, and the absolute lack
of
softness anywhere in the ironlike face or frame--all this condemned
the
monster for what he was; inhuman.
It was not easy to get him down the two flights of stairs. More than
once
they had to prop the case on a step while they rested; and at one
time, just
before they reached that curious heap of rubbish at the foot
of the upper
stairs, Jackson's strength gave way and it looked as though
the whole thing
would get away from them. Van Emmon saved it at the cost
of a bruised
shoulder.
Once at the bottom of the lower flight, the rest was easy. Within a
very
few minutes the astonished face of the engineer was peering into
the
vestibule; he could hardly wait until the air-tight door was
locked
before opening the inner valves. He stared at the mammoth figure in
the
case long and hard, and from then on showed a great deal of respect
for
his three friends.
Of course, at that time the members of the expedition did not
understand
the conditions of Mercury as they are now known. They had to
depend upon
the general impression they got from their first-hand
investigations;
and it is remarkable that the doctor should have guessed so
close to the
truth.
"He must have made up his mind to outlast everybody else," was the way
he
put it as he kicked off his suit. He stepped up to the cabinet and
felt of
the glass. "I wish it were possible, without breaking the case,
to see how he
was embalmed."
His fingers still rested on the glass. Suddenly his eyes narrowed; he
ran
his fingers over the entire surface of the pane, and then whirled to
stare at
a thermometer.
"That's mighty curious!" he ejaculated. "This thing was bitter cold
when
we brought it in! Now it's already as warm as this car!"
Smith's eyes lit up. "It may be," he offered, "that the case
doesn't
contain a vacuum, but some gas which has an electrical affinity for
our
atmosphere."
"Or," exclaimed the geologist suddenly, "the glass itself may be
totally
different from ours. It may be made of--"
"GOD!" shouted the doctor, jerking his hand from the cabinet and
leaping
straight backward. At the same instant, with a grinding crash, all
three
sides of the case collapsed and fell in splinters to the floor.
"Look out!" shrieked Jackson. He was staring straight into the
now
unhooded eyes of the giant. He backed away, stumbled against a
stool,
and fell to the floor in a dead faint. Smith fumbled impotently with
a
hammer. The doctor was shaking like a leaf.
But Van Emmon stood still in his tracks, his eyes fixed on the
Goliath;
his fingernails gashed the palms of his hands but he would not
budge.
And as he stared he saw, from first to last, the whole ghastly
change
that came, after billions of years of waiting, to the sole survivor
of
Mercury.
A glaze swept over the huge figure. Next instant every line in
that
adamant frame lost its strength; the hardness left the eyes and
mouth.
The head seemed to sink lower into the massive shoulders, and
the
irresistible hands relaxed. In another second the thing that had
once
been as iron had become as rubber.
But only for an instant. Second by second that huge mountain of
muscle
slipped and jellied and actually melted before the eyes of the
humans.
At the same time a curious acrid odor arose; Smith fell to coughing.
The
doctor turned on more oxygen.
In less than half a minute the man who had once conquered a planet
was
reduced to a steaming mound of brownish paste. As it sank to the
floor
of the case, it touched a layer of coarse yellow powder sprinkled
there;
and it was this that caused the vapor. In a moment the room was
filled
with the haze of it; luckily, the doctor's apparatus worked well.
And thus it came about that, within five minutes from being exposed to
the
air of the sky-car, that whole immense bulk, chair and all, had
vanished. The
powder had turned it to vapor, and the purifying chemicals
had sucked it up.
Nothing was left save a heap of smoking, grayish ashes
in the center of the
broken glass.
Van Emmon's fingers relaxed their grip. He stirred to action, and
turned
briskly to Smith.
"Here! Help me with this thing!"
Between them they got the remains of the cabinet, with its gruesome
load,
into the vestibule. As for the doctor, he was bending over
Jackson's still
unconscious form. When he saw what the others were
doing, he gave a great
sigh of relief.
"Good!" He helped them close the door. "Let's get away from this
damned
place!"
The outer door was opened. At the same time Smith started the
machinery;
and as the sky-car shot away from the ground he tilted it
slightly, so
that the contents of the vestibule was slid into space. Down it
fell
like so much lead.
The doctor glanced through a nearby window, and his face brightened as
he
made out the distant gleam of another planet. He watched the receding
surface
of Mercury with positive delight.
"Nice place to get away from," he commented. "And now, my friends,
for
Venus, and then--home!"
But the other's eyes were fixed upon a tiny sparkle in the dust
outside
the palace, where the vestibule had dropped its load. It was the
sun
shining upon some broken bits of glass; the glass which, for
untold
ages, had enclosed the throne of the Death-lord.
Part IV
THE QUEEN OF LIFE
I
NEXT STOP, VENUS!
When he first got the idea of the sky-car, the doctor never stopped
to
consider whether he was the right man for such an excursion.
Personally,
he hated travel. He was merely a general practitioner, with a
great
fondness for astronomy; and the sole reason why he wanted to visit
the
planets was that he couldn't see them well enough with his telescope.
So
he dabbled a little in magnetism and so forth, and stumbled upon
the
principle of the cube.
But he had no mechanical ability, and was on the point of giving up
the
scheme when he met Smith. He was instantly impressed by the
engineer's
highly commonplace face; he had had considerable experience with
human
contrariness, and felt sure that Smith must be an absolute wonder,
since
he looked so very ordinary.
Kinney's diagnosis proved correct. Smith knew his business; the
machinery
was finished in a hurry and done right. However, when it came
to fitting the
outfit into a suitable sky-car, Kinney was obliged to
call in an architect.
That accounts for E. Williams Jackson. At the same
time, it occurred to the
doctor that they would need a cook. Mrs. Kinney
had refused to have anything
whatever to do with the trip, and so Kinney
put an ad in the paper. As luck
would have it, Van Emmon, the geologist,
who had learned how to cook when he
first became a mountaineer, saw the
ad and answered it in hope of
adventure.
The doctor himself, besides his training in the mental and
bodily
frailities of human beings, had also an unusual command of the
related
sciences, such as biology. Smith's specialties have already been
named;
he could drive an airplane or a nail with equal ease. Van Emmon, as
a
part of his profession, was a skilled "fossilologist," and was well
up
in natural history.
As for E. Williams Jackson--the architect was also the sociologist of
the
four. Moreover, he had quite a reputation as an amateur
antiquarian.
Nevertheless, the most important thing about E. Williams Jackson
was not
learned until after the visit to Mercury, after the terrible end of
that
exploration, after the architect, falling in a faint, had been
revived
under the doctor's care.
"Gentlemen," said Kinney, coming from the secluded nook among the
dynamos
which had been the architect's bunk; "gentlemen, I must inform
you that
Jackson is not what we thought.
"He--I mean, she--is a woman!"
Which put an entirely new face upon matters. The three men, discussing
it,
marveled that the architect had been able to keep her sex a secret
all the
time they were exploring at Mercury. They did not know that none
of E.
Williams Jackson's fellow architects had ever guessed the truth.
Ambitious
and ingenious, with a natural liking for house-planning, she
had resolved
that her sex should not stand in the way of success.
And when she finally came to herself, there in her bunk, and
suspected
that her secret was out--instead of shame or embarrassment she felt
only
chagrin. She walked, rather unsteadily, across the floor of the
great
cube-shaped car to the window where the three were standing; and as
they
quietly made a place for her, she took it entirely as a matter
of
course, and without a word.
The doctor had been speaking of the peculiar fitness of the four for
what
they were doing. "And if I'm not mistaken," he went on, "we're
going to need
all the brains we can pool, when we get to Venus.
"I never would have claimed, when we started out, that Mercury had
ever
been inhabited. But now that we've seen what we've seen, I feel
dead
sure that Venus once was peopled."
The four looked out the triple-glazed vacuum-insulated window at
the
steadily growing globe of "Earth's twin sister." Half in sunlight
and
half in shadow, this planet, for ages the synonym for beauty, was
now
but a million miles away. She looked as large as the moon; but
instead
of a silvery gleam, she showed a creamy radiance fully three times
as
bright.
"Let's see," reflected the geologist aloud. "As I recall it,
the
brightness of a planet depends upon the amount of its air. That
would
indicate, then, that Venus has about as much as the earth, wouldn't
it?"
remembering how the home planet had looked when they left it.
The doctor nodded. "There are other factors; but undoubtedly we
are
approaching a world which is a great deal like our own. Venus is
nearly
as large as the earth, has about nine-tenths the surface, and a
gravity
almost as strong. The main difference is that she's only two-thirds
as
far from the sun as we are."
"How long is her day?" Smith wanted to know.
"Can't say. Some observers claim to have seen her clearly enough
to
announce a day of the same length as ours. Others calculate that
she's
like Mercury; always the same face toward the sun. If so, her day
is
also her year--two hundred and twenty-five of our days."
Van Emmon looked disappointed. "In that case she would be blistering
hot
on one side and freezing cold on the other; except,"
remembering
Mercury, "except for the 'twilight zone,' where the climate would
be
neither one nor the other, but temperate." He pointed to the line
down
the middle of the disk before them, the line which divided the
lighted
from the unlighted, the day from the night.
The four looked more intently. It should be remembered that the
very
brilliance of Venus has always hindered the astronomers; the planet as
a
whole is always very conspicuous but its very glare makes it
impossible
to see any details. The surface has always seemed to be covered by
a
veil of hazy, faintly streaked vapor.
Smith gave a queer exclamation. For a moment or two he stared hard at
the
planet; then looked up with an apologetic grin.
"I had a foolish idea. I thought--" He checked himself. "Say,
doesn't
Venus remind you of something?"
The doctor slowly shook his head. "Can't say that it does, Smith. I
have
always considered Venus as having an appearance peculiarly her
own.
Why?"
The engineer started to answer, stopped, thought better of it, and
instead
pointed out the half that was in shadow. "Why is it that we can
make out the
black portion so easily?"
Kinney could answer this. "The fact is, it isn't really black at all,
but
faintly lighted. Presumably it is star-shine."
"Star-shine!" echoed the architect, interested.
"Just that. You see," finished the doctor, "if that side is never
turned
toward the sun, then it must be covered with ice, which would
reflect
the star--"
"Ah!" exclaimed Smith with satisfaction. "I wasn't so crazy after all!
My
notion was that the whole blamed thing is covered with ice!"
It looked reasonable. Certainly the entire sphere had a somewhat
watery
appearance. It prompted the geologist to say:
"Kinney--if that reflection is really due to ice, then there must
be
plenty of water vapor in the air. And if that's the case--"
"Not only is life entirely possible," stated the doctor quietly, "but
I'll
bet you this sky-car against an abandoned soap-stone mine that we
find
humans, or near-human beings there when we land tomorrow!"
II
SPEAKING OF VENUS
The architect was still dressed in the fashionably cut suit of
men's
clothes she had worn while in the car. Van Emmon thought of this when
he
said, somewhat awkwardly:
"Well, I'm going to fix something to eat. It'll be ready in half an
hour,
Miss--er--Jackson."
She looked at him, slightly puzzled; then understood. "You mean to give
me
time to change my clothes? Thanks; but I'm used to these. And
besides," with
spirit, "I never could see why women couldn't wear what
they choose, so long
as it is decent."
There was no denying that hers were both becoming and "decent."
Modeled
after the usual riding costume, both coat and breeches were
youthfully,
rather than mannishly, tailored; and the narrow, vertical stripe
of the
dark gray material served to make her slenderness almost girlish.
In
short, what with her poet-style hair, her independent manner and
direct
speech, she was far more like a boy of twenty than a woman
nearing
thirty.
She walked with Van Emmon, dodging machinery all the way, across the
big
car to the little kitchenette over which he had presided. There, to
his
dismay, the girl took off her coat, rolled up her sleeves, and
announced
her intention of helping.
"You're a good cook, Van--I mean, Mr.--"
"Let it go at Van, please," said he hastily. "My first name is
Gustave,
but nobody has ever used it since I was christened."
"Same with my 'Edna,' she declared. "Mother's name was Williams, and I
was
nicknamed 'Billie' before I can remember. So that's settled," with
great
firmness. The point is--Van--you're a good cook, but everything
tastes of
bacon. I wish you'd let me boss this meal."
He looked rebellious for an instant, then gave a sigh of relief.
"I'm
really tickled to death."
A little later the doctor and Smith, looking across, saw Van Emmon
being
initiated into the system which constructs scalloped potatoes. Next,
he
was discovering that there is more than one way to prepare dried beef.
"For once, we won't cream it," said E. Billie Jackson, dryly, as Van
Emmon
laid down the can-opener. "We'll make an omelet out of it, and see
if
anything happens."
She was already beating the eggs. He cut up the meat into small
pieces,
and when he was finished, took the egg-beater away from her. He
turned
it so energetically that a speck of foam flew into his face.
"Go slow," she advised, nonchalantly reaching up with a dish-towel
and
wiping the fleck away. Whereupon he worked the machine more
furiously
than ever.
Soon he was wondering how on earth he had come to assume, all along,
that
she was not a woman. He now saw that what he had previously
considered
boyishness in her was, in fact, simply the vigor and
freshness of an earnest,
healthy, energetic girl. It dawned upon him
that her keen, gray eyes were not
sharp, but alert; her mouth, not hard,
but resolute; her whole expression,
instead of mannish, just as womanly
as that of any girl who has been thrown
upon her own resources, and made
good. He soon found that his eyesight did
not suffer in any way because
he looked at her.
"Now," she remarked, in her businesslike way, as she placed the
brimming
pan into the oven, "I suppose that I'll hear various hints to the
effect
that a woman has no business trying to do men's stunts. And I warn
you
right now that I'm prepared to put up a warm argument!"
"Of course," said the geologist, with such gravity that the girl knew
he
didn't mean it; "of course a woman's place is in the home. Surrounded
by
seventeen or eighteen children, and cooking for that many more hired
men
besides, she is simply ideal. We realize that."
"Then, admitting that much, why shouldn't a woman be as independent as
she
likes? Think what women did during the war; remember what a lot of
women are
doctors and lawyers! Is there any good reason why I couldn't
design a library
as well as a man could?"
"None at all," agreed Van Emmon, handing over the dish of chopped
meat.
The girl carefully folded the contents into the now spongelike omelet
as
he went on: "By the way, a neighbor of mine told me, just before I
left,
that he was having trouble with a broken sewer. How'd you like
to--"
"About as well as you'd like to darn socks!" she came back,
evidently
being primed for such comments. She took a look at the potatoes,
and
then permitted the geologist to open their sixth can of peaches. "I
must
say they're good," she admitted, as she noted the eagerness with
which
he obeyed.
Bread and butter, olives, coffee and cake completed that meal. The
table
was set with more care than usual, a clean cloth and napkins
being
unearthed for the occasion. When Smith and Kinney were called,
both
declared that they weren't hungry enough to do justice to it all.
"It's just as well you weren't very hungry," commented Billie, as
she
finished giving each of them a second helping of the potatoes.
"There's
barely enough left for me," and she took it.
"Say, I never thought of it before, Miss--er--Miss Billie," said
Smith
coloring; "but you eat just as much as a man!"
"Ye gods, how shocking!" she jeered. "Come to think of it, Smith, you
eat
MORE than a woman!"
The doctor's face grew red with some suppressed emotion. After a while
he
said soberly: "I'll tell you what's worrying Smith. He's afraid that
women,
having suddenly become very progressive, will forge entirely
ahead of men.
You understand--having started, they can't stop. And I
must admit that I've
thought seriously of it at times myself."
"Me too," added Van Emmon earnestly. "I have the same feeling about
it
that an elderly man must have when he sees a young one get on the
job.
Instead of being glad that the women are making good, I sort of
resent
it."
"I knew it!" exclaimed the girl delightedly. "But I never heard a
man
admit it before!"
"Perhaps it isn't as serious as we think," said the practical
Smith,
scraping the bottom of the potato pan. "I believe that the progress
of
women may have a fine effect upon men, making us less
self-satisfied,
and more alert. For one thing," glancing about the cube,
"we've got to
clean up a bit, now that we know you're a woman!"
The architect's eyes flashed. "Because you know mighty well I'll light
in
and do it myself, if you don't; that's what you mean! Please take
notice that
I'm to be respected, not because of what I AM, but because
of what I can
DO!"
"In behalf of myself and companions, I surrender!" said the
doctor
gallantly. Then he instantly added: "And yet, even when we are
actually
chivalrous, we are disregarding your desire to be appreciated for
what
you are worth. Pardon me, Miss Billie; I'll not forget again.
"At the same time, my dear," remembering that he had a daughter of
his
own, nearly the builder's age, "we men have come to think of
women
primarily as potential mothers, and secondarily as people of
affairs.
And considering that motherhood is something that is denied to us
lords
of the earth--"
"For which we can thank a merciful Providence," interjected the
girl
solemnly.
"Considering this--excuse my seriousness--really amazing fact, you
can't
blame us for expecting women to fulfil this vital function before
taking
up other matters."
"Yes?" remarked the girl, watching the peaches with anxious eye as
Van
Emmon helped himself. "Funny; but I always understood that the
first
function of man was to father the race; yet, invariably the
young
fellows try to make names for themselves before, not after, they
marry!"
"Scalped!" chuckled Van Emmon, as the doctor hid his discomfiture behind
a
large piece of cake. "You may know a lot about Venus, doc, but you
don't know
much about women!"
"Speaking about Venus," Smith was reminded, "we may learn
something
bearing upon the very point we have been discussing if Kinney's
right
about the inhabitants."
The doctor nodded eagerly. "You see, if there's people still alive on
the
planet, they're probably further advanced than we on the earth.
Other things
being equal, of course. Being a smaller planet than ours,
she cooled off
sooner, and thus became fit for life earlier. And having
been made from the
same 'batch,' to use Van's expression, that Mercury
and all the rest were,
why, in all likelihood evolution has taken place
there much the same as with
us, only sooner.
"I should expect," he elaborated largely, "that we shall find
the
inhabitants much the same as we humans, only extremely civilized. It
may
be that they are as far above us as we are above monkeys."
Smith broke in by quoting an astronomer who contended that Venus kept
only
one face toward the sun. "Maybe she always did, Kinney."
The doctor shook his head. "See how perfectly round she is? No
oblateness
whatever. It proves that she once revolved, otherwise she'd
be pear-shaped,
from the sun's pull."
There was a short silence, during which Billie concluded that the
only
scraps left would be the coffee-grounds. Then Van Emmon pushed away
from
the table, got to his feet, stretched a little to relieve his
nerves,
and said:
"Well, whatever we find on Venus, I hope the women do the cooking!"
III
THE FIRST VENUSIAN
When the sky-car was within a thousand miles of the surface,
Smith
adjusted the currents so that the floor was directed downward. The
four
changed from the window to the deadlight, and watched the
approaching
disk with every bit of the excitement and interest they had felt
when
nearing Mercury.
The doctor had warned them that the heavy atmosphere which Venus was
known
to possess would prevent seeing as clearly as in the case of the
smaller
planet. All were much disappointed, however, to find that they
were still
unable to make out a single definite detail. The great half-
shining,
half-black world showed nothing but that vaguely streaked, ice-
like
haze.
There was something very queer about it all. "Strange that we should
see
no movement in those clouds," mused the doctor aloud. "That is, if
they
really are clouds."
Van Emmon already doubted it. "Just what I was thinking. There ought to
be
terrific winds; yet, so far as I have seen, there's been nothing
doing
anywhere on the surface since we first began to observe it."
After a while the doctor put away his binoculars and rubbed his eyes.
"We
might as well descend faster, Smith. Can't see a thing from here."
Unhindered by air to impede its progress the sky-car had been
hurtling
through space at cometary speed. Now, however, Smith added the power
of
the apparatus to the pull of the planet, so that the disk began to
rush
toward them at a truly alarming rate. After a few seconds of it
Billie
found herself unconsciously moving to the side of the geologist.
He looked down at her, understood, and flushed with pleasure. "There's
no
danger," he confidently assured her, with the result that, her
courage
fortified, the girl moved back to her place again. Van Emmon
inwardly kicked
himself.
So deceptive was that peculiar fogginess Smith throttled their descent
as
soon as they had reached the point where the planet's appearance
changed from
round to flat. They were headed for the line which marked
the boundary of the
shadow. This gray "twilight zone" was three or four
hundred miles in width;
on the right of it--to the east--the dazzling
surface of that sunlit vapor
contrasted sharply with the all but black
mistiness of the starward side.
Clearly the zone ought to be temperate
enough.
Down they sank. As they came nearer a curious pinkish tint began to
show
beneath them. Shortly it became more noticeable; the doctor gave
a
sudden grunt of satisfaction, and Smith stopped the car.
A minute later the doctor had taken a sample of the surrounding
ether
through his laboratory test-vestibule; and shortly announced that
they
were now floating in air instead of space.
"Good deal like ours back home, too"--exultingly. "Pretty thin,
of
course." He made a short calculation, referring to the aneroid
barometer
which was mounted on the outer frame of a window, and said he
judged
that their altitude was about five miles.
The descent continued, Smith using the utmost caution. The other
three
kept their eyes glued to the deadlight; and their mystification was
only
equaled by their uneasiness as that motionless, bleary glaze
failed
absolutely to show anything they had not seen a thousand miles
higher.
Not a single detail!
"It reminds me," said the girl in a low voice, "of something I once
saw
from the top of a hill. It was the reflection of the sun from
the
surface of a pond; not clear water, but covered with--"
"Good Heavens!" interrupted Van Emmon, struck with the thought. "Can it
be
that the whole planet is under water?"
Beyond a doubt his guess was justified. There was an oily smoothness
about
that dazzling haze which made it remarkably like a lake of still
and rather
dirty water under a bright sun.
But the doctor said no. "Any water I ever heard of would make
clouds,"
said he; "and we know there's air enough to guarantee plenty of
wind.
Yet nothing seems to be in motion." He was frowning continually
now.
It was Billie who first declared that she saw the surface. "Stop,"
she
said to Smith evenly, and he instantly obeyed. All four gathered
around
the deadlight, and soon agreed that the peculiarly elusive skin of
the
planet was actually within sight. However, it was like deciding upon
the
distance of the moon--as easy to say that it were within arm's reach
as
a long ways off.
The doctor went to a window. There he could look out upon the sun,
a
painfully bright object much larger than it looks from the Earth. It
was
just "ascending," and half of it was below the horizon. A
blinding
streak of light was reflected from a point on the surface not far
from
the cube. Shading his eyes with his hand the doctor could see that
the
mysterious crust was absolutely smooth.
On the opposite side of the car the horizon ended in a sunrise glow of
a
slightly greenish radiance. From that side the pinkish tint of
the
surface was quite pronounced.
Before going any lower the doctor, struck with an idea, declared:
"We
always want to remember that this car is perfectly soundproof.
Suppose
we open the outer door of the vestibule. I imagine we'll learn
something
peculiar."
It was possible to open this door without touching the inner valves,
using
mechanism concealed within the walls. The moment it was done--the
door faced
the "north"--pandemonium itself broke loose. A most terrific
shrieking and
howling came from the outside; it was wind, passing at a
rate such as would
make a hurricane seem a mere zephyr. The doctor
closed the door so that they
could think.
"It's the draft," he concluded; "the draft from the sun-warmed side to
the
cold side."
As for Van Emmon, he was getting out a rope and a heavy leaden weight.
On
the rope he formed knots every five feet, about twenty of them; and
after
getting into one of the insulated, aluminum-armored and oxygen-
helmeted
suits with which they had explored Mercury, he locked himself
on the other
side of the inner vestibule door and proceeded to "sound."
To the amazement of all except Billie "bottom" was reached in less
than
twenty feet. "I thought so," she said with satisfaction; but she was
not
at ease until Van Emmon had returned in safety from that
booming,
whistling turmoil.
His first remark upon removing his helmet almost took them off their
feet.
"The point is," said he, throttling his excitement--"the point is,
the rope
was nearly jerked out of my hands!
"Understand what I mean? The surface is REVOLVING!"
This upset every idea they had had; it never occurred to any of them
that
the planet could revolve at such speed that it would appear
stationary. Smith
went at once to the eastern window and watched
closely, for fear some
irregularity in that apparently perfect sphere
might catch them unawares.
They did not learn till later that Venus's
day is a little less than
twenty-five hours, and therefore, since they
had approached her near the
equator, the wind they had encountered was
moving at nearly nine hundred
miles per hour!
Bit by bit, though, the cube answered to the wind-pressure. Soon
they
noted the sun rising slowly; and by the time it was two hours high
the
surface, which had been whizzing under them like some highly
polished
top, became entirely motionless: The cube had "stopped."
One minute later the car touched the level. Smith very slowly reduced
the
repelling current so that the immense weight of the cube was but
gradually
shifted to the unknown surface beneath. Ton after ton was
added until--
"Stop!" came from the doctor. He had noted through the window a
slight
curvature in the material.
So the machinery was left in action. "At any rate," said Smith, "we
know
that the confounded stuff isn't antimagnetic, whatever it is." Of
course
this was true--even though the gelatinlike shell could not support
the
cube's weight, yet it did not insulate the planet from the
repelling
current.
The thermometer registered three hundred and thirty-five
degrees
Fahrenheit. "Two hundred and eighty degrees higher than it would be
at
home in the same latitude," remarked the doctor. "We'll have to use
the
suits." He took it for granted that exploration should begin at once.
No one stayed behind. The machines could be relied upon, as they knew
from
nearly two weeks of use, and certainly there was nothing in sight
which could
possibly interfere with the cube. Nevertheless, the matter-
of-fact engineer
took care to remove part of the door-operating
apparatus when he left the
vestibule, and nobody commented upon it. It
seemed the sensible thing to do;
that was all.
There was just about enough additional weight in their suits to
balance
the slightly reduced gravitation, so they moved about, four
misshapen,
metallic hulks, with as much freedom as though back home. Always
they
kept within a few feet of each other so as to throw no strain on
their
interconnecting telephone wires. The big, glass-faced helmets gave
a
remarkable sense of security.
They made a complete circuit of the cube, and at the end of it looked
at
each other in perplexity. Never, save in the middle of an ocean, in
the
doldrums, did any man ever see such a totally barren spot. Not a
tree,
much less a sign of human occupation; there was not even the
slightest
mound. The planet was, in actual fact, as smooth and as bare as
a
billiard ball!
Moreover, the surface itself remained as mysterious as before. Of
course
they did not touch it with bare hands--all wore insulated
mittens--but
the dazzling stuff was certainly as hard as steel and as
highly
polished. It was neither transparent nor opaque, but translucent,
"like
pink mother-of-pearl," as Billie suggested.
She was the first to propose that they move to another spot. "We ought
to
try a place where it's not yet dawn," said she, shielding her eyes
from the
glare. (It will be remembered that the suits protected them
from the heat
itself.) "Can't see anything."
"Hush!" hissed the doctor. They turned and followed his gaze to a spot
not
thirty feet from where they stood.
At the same instant they felt a faint jar in the material under
their
feet. And next second they saw that a large section of the
supposedly
solid surface was in motion.
A portion about ten feet square was being lifted bodily in front of
their
eyes, and before another word was said this block of the unknown
substance
was raised until they could see that it was all of a yard
thick. Up it went
at the same deliberate rate; and the four
involuntarily moved closer together
as they saw that there was something
underneath.
It was a cage, for all the world like that of an elevator except that
it
was made of clear glass. Another second and it had stopped, with
its
floor level with the surface; and the people from the earth saw that
it
contained a man.
He was quite tall, slenderly built, and dressed in a queer satiny
material
which fitted him like an acrobat's suit. He was extremely thin
as to legs,
narrow as to shoulders, deep in the chest and short in the
waist. All this,
however, they saw after their inspection of his head.
It was human! Marvelously refined in every detail, yet it was set upon
a
graceful neck, and modeled upon much the same lines as that of any
man.
It was not that of a brute, nor yet that of a bird; it was--human!
He stood at ease, resting slightly on one foot, and dispelled any
notion
that he might be unreal by shifting his weight occasionally.
Meanwhile
he watched the four with a grave, interested smile; and they, in
turn,
came closer.
His chin was small, even retreating; but his mouth was wide and
curved
into an exaggerated Cupid's bow. Even as he continued to smile
the
curves did not leave his lips; they, however, were thin rather
than
thick. His nose was quite small, with a decidedly Irish cast; but
his
eyes, set far apart above quite shallow cheekbones, were
exceedingly
large and of a brilliant blue. In fact, it was mainly his eyes
that gave
character to his face; although none could overlook his breadth
of
forehead, running back to a cranium that fairly bulged over the
ears,
and seemed ready to rise like a tightly inflated balloon. His skin
was
pure white.
And so they stood for uncounted minutes. At last the doctor noted that
the
stranger was eying them with far less interest than they showed in
him; he
stood as though he felt on display; and the doctor gave an
exclamation of
perplexity that broke the spell. The four impulsively
drew up to the glass;
Van Emmon touched it with his mitten; and that is
how the four explorers came
to receive the vibrations that came next.
For the man in the cage, in turn, put out his hand and touched the
glass
opposite Van Emmon. Then he opened his mouth.
"I am very glad to see you," said he in a soft, pulsating voice--and
in
the best of English.
IV
A PUZZLED WORLD
For a moment blank amazement gripped the four. Then amazement gave way
to
genuine apprehension. Were they insane to imagine that this man of
another
world had spoken to them in their own language? Each looked at
the other, and
was astounded to see that all had heard the same thing.
Presently the stranger spoke again; if anything, the kindly smile on
his
face became even broader. "Suppose we postpone explaining how I am
able
to use your tongue. It will be easier for you to understand after
you
have been with us a while." He spoke slowly and carefully, yet with
a
faint lisp, much as some infant prodigy might speak.
But there was no doubt that he had really done it. The doctor managed
to
clear his throat.
"You are right," said he, with vastly less assurance than the
amazing
stranger. "We will try to understand things in the order you think
best
to present them. You--should know best."
Kinney introduced himself by name and profession, also the other
three.
The stranger nodded affably to each. "You may call me Estra," said
he,
pronouncing it "Ethtra." "There is no occupation on the
Earth
corresponding with mine, but in my spare moments I am an astronomer
like
yourself."
The doctor silently marveled. He had not told the stranger about
his
hobby. Meanwhile the architect attempted to break the ice even finer.
"We take it for granted," said she rather nervously, "that your people
are
somewhat further advanced than us on the earth. However, we expect
to be
given credit for having visited your planet before you visited
ours!" She
said this with an engaging smile which won an instant
response; the
Venusian's lips almost lost their curves in his generous
effort.
"You will find that we greatly respect all that you have accomplished,"
he
declared earnestly. "As for your apparatus"--glancing at the cube--
"you have
the advantage on the earth of certain chemical elements which
are entirely
lacking here, otherwise we should have called upon you long
ago."
He slipped a panel of glass to one side. "Step in quickly!" he
exclaimed,
gasping; and the four obeyed him without thought. It was only
when the panel
was replaced that they noticed the floor of the cage; it
was of clear glass,
like the sides, and looked totally incapable of
bearing their combined
weight.
The Venusian smiled at Smith's worried look. "The material is amply
strong
enough," said he. "I am only concerned about your machine there.
Is it safe
to be left alone?"
"So far as we know, yes," answered Van Emmon, who did not feel quite
as
much confidence in the stranger as the rest.
"Then we can go down at once." With these words the man in satin turned
to
a small black box in one wall of the elevator and touched a
button.
[Footnote: For details of this and other matters of an electrical
and
mechanical nature, the technical reader is referred to Mr.
Smith's
reports to the A. S. M. E.]
Instantly the car began to descend, at first slowly and then with
swiftly
increasing velocity. By the time the explorers had accustomed
their eyes to
the sudden semi-darkness, the cage was dropping at such a
speed that the air
fairly sang past its sides.
Far overhead was a square, black shadow in the waxlike crust which
they
had left; it was the shadow of the cube. All about them was a dimly
lit
network of braces, arches and semitransparent columns; to
all
appearances the system seemed to support the crust. Billie whirled
upon
the Venusian:
"I've got it now! The whole globe is covered with glass!"
Estra smiled his approval. "For thousands upon thousands of centuries,
my
friend. The thing was done when our ancestors first suspected that
our planet
was doomed to come so near the sun. It was the only way we
could protect
ourselves from the heat."
"Great!" exploded the doctor, admiration overcoming regret that he had
not
thought of it himself. But Smith had other thoughts:
"How long did it take to finish the job? And what did it cost?"
"Two centuries; and about twice the cost of your last war. I need
only
suggest to you that we colored the material so as to reflect most of
the
heat. That is why the material looks blue from below, although pink
from
above."
"Say"--from Billie--"how long are we to keep on dropping like this?"
"We will arrive in a moment or two," answered the smiling one. "The
roof
is raised several miles above the sea-level in order to cover all
the
mountains."
By this time the four were able to make out things pretty well. They
saw
that the dimness was only relative; the Venusian world was actually
as
well lighted as any part of the earth on a cloudy day. And they saw
that
they were descending in a locality of astonishing beauty.
The stranger halted the car so that they could inspect the scene as
though
from an airplane. In no way did the landscape resemble that of
the earth. To
begin with, pillars of huge dimensions were placed every
quarter-mile or so;
it was these that supported the intricate archwork
above. They were made of
the same translucent stuff as the crust, but
had a light topaz tint. The
Venusian said:
"You will not need to be told that the science of metallurgy has
advanced
quite far with us. All our metals can be made transparent, if
we like; those
pillars are colored variously in different regions so as
to be clearly
distinguishable and prevent collisions of flying
apparatus."
But Van Emmon and Billie were both more interested in what lay between
the
columns. They scarcely noticed that there were no people in sight at
the
time. The ground was covered with an indescribable wealth of color;
and it
was only by a close examination that the buildings could be
distinguished as
such.
For they were all made of that semi-transparent stuff. Of
every
conceivable tint and shade, the structure showed an utter lack
of
uniformity in size, shape or arrangement. Moreover, the ground
was
absolutely packed with them; they spread as far as the eye could
reach.
But if there was profusion, there also was confusion--apparently.
Streets
ran anywhere and everywhere; there was no visible system to
anything. And
where there was no space for a building, invariably there
was a shrub, a bush
or a small tree of some kind, all in full flower.
The only sign of regularity
to be seen was in the roofs--practically all
of them were flat. Whether the
building was some rambling, loosely
gathered agglomeration of vari-colored
wings, or a single, towering
skyscraper of one tint, almost inevitably it was
crowned with a
perfectly level surface.
"I see," said Van Emmon, thoughtfully. "You have no rain."
"Precisely"--from Estra. "We have the air completely under our control.
We
give our vegetation artificial showers when we think it should have
it, not
when nature wills; and similarly we use electricity instead of
sunlight that
we may stimulate its growth."
"In short"--Van Emmon put it as the car slid slowly down the
remaining
distance--"in short, you have abolished the weather."
The Venusian nodded. "And I'll save you the trouble of suggesting,"
he
added, "that we are nothing more nor less than hothouse people!"
V
THE HUMAN CONSERVATORY
"But there is this difference," he cautioned as they stepped out of
the
elevator into a sort of a plaza, "that, whereas you people on the
earth
have only begun to use the hothouse principle, we here have
perfected
it.
"I suggest that you waste no time looking for faults."
Van Emmon stared at the doctor. "How does this idea fit your
theory,
Kinney--that Venus is simply the earth plus several thousand
extra
generations of civilization?"
"Fit?" echoed the doctor. "Fits like a glove. We humans are fast
becoming
a race of indoor-people despite all the various "back-to-
nature" movements.
Look at the popularity of inclosed automobiles, for
example.
"The only thing that surprises me"--turning to their guide--"is that
you
use your legs for their original purpose."
Estra smiled, and pointed out something standing a few feet away. It was
a
small, shuttle-shaped air-craft, with clear glass sides which had
actually
made them overlook it at first. Peering closer they saw that
the plaza and
surrounding streets were nearly filled with these all but
invisible cars.
The Venusian explained. "You marvel that I use my legs and walk the
same
as you do. I am glad you have brought up this point, because it is
a
fact that our people use mechanisms instead of bodily energy,
almost
altogether. These cars you see are universally used for
transportation.
I am one of the very few who appreciate the value of natural
exercise."
"Do you mean to say," demanded Van Emmon, "that the average Venusian
does
no walking?"
"Not a mile a year," said Estra gravely.
"Just what he is obliged to do indoors from room to room." And
he
involuntarily glanced down at his own extremely thin legs.
The architect's eyes widened with a growing understanding. "I see
now,"
she murmured. "That's why there was no one else to greet us."
The Venusian smiled gratefully. "We thought it best. You'd have
been
shocked outright, I am sure, had you been introduced to a
representative
Venusian without any explanation."
They fell silent. Still, without moving from the point where they had
left
the elevator, the four from the earth examined the surrounding
buildings in a
renewed effort to see some system in their arrangement.
Directly in front of
them was a particularly large structure. Like all
the rest, it was of
hopelessly irregular design, yet it had a large
domed central portion which
gave it the appearance of an auditorium; and
the effect was further borne out
by a subdued humming sound which seemed
to come from it.
Smith asked Estra if it were a hall.
"Yes and no," was the answer. "It fills the purpose of a hall, but is
not
built on the hall plan." And Smith tried to stare through the
translucent
walls of the thing.
The other buildings within immediate reach were of every
possible
appearance. Some would have passed for cottages, others for
stores,
still others for the most fanciful of studios. And nowhere was
there
such a thing as a sign, even at the street corners, much less on
a
building.
"Not that we would be able to read your signs, if you had them,"
commented
the doctor, "but I'd like to know how your people find their
way without
something of that kind to guide them."
Estra's smile did not change. "That is something you will
understand
better before long," said he, "provided you feel ready to explore
a
little further."
The four looked at each other in question, and suddenly it struck them
all
that they were a rather pugnacious-looking crew in their cumbersome
suits of
armor and formidable helmets. The doctor turned to Estra.
"You ought to know"--he appealed--"whether we can take off these
suits
now."
"It would be best," was the reply. "You will find the air and
temperature
decidedly more warm and moist than what you have been used
to, but otherwise
practically the same. There is a slightly larger
proportion of oxygen; that
is all. Just imagine you are in a hothouse."
Smith and the doctor were already discarding their suits. Van Emmon
and
Billie followed more slowly; the one, because he did not share
the
doctor's confidence in their guide; the other, because of a
sudden
shyness in his presence. The Venusian noted this.
"You need not feel any embarrassment," said he to Billie's
vast
astonishment. "There is no distinction here between the dress of the
two
sexes." And again all four marveled that he should know so much
about
them.
Once out of the armor the visitors felt much more at ease. The
slightly
reduced gravitation gave them a sense of lightness and freedom
which
more than balanced the junglelike oppressiveness of the air. They
found
themselves guarding against a certain exuberance; perhaps it was
the
extra oxygen, too.
They strode toward the large structure directly ahead. At its entrance--
a
wide, square portal which opened into a fan-shaped lobby--Estra paused
and
smiled apologetically--as he mopped his forehead and upper lip with
a paper
handkerchief, which he immediately dropped into a small, trap-
covered
opening in the wall at his side.
These little doors, by the way, were to be seen at frequent
intervals
wherever they went. Incidentally not a scrap of paper or other
refuse
was to be noted anywhere--streets and all were spotless.
As for Estra--"I am not accustomed to moving at such speed," he
explained
his discomfort. "If you do not mind, please walk a little
more
leisurely."
They took their time about passing through this lobby. For one
thing,
Estra said there would have to be a small delay; and for another,
the
walls and ceilings of the space were most remarkably ornamented.
They
were fairly covered with what appeared, at first glance, to
be
absolutely lifelike paintings and sculptures. They were so arranged
as
to strengthen the structural lines of the place, and, of course,
they
were of more interest to Billie than to the others. [Footnote:
The
specialist in architecture and related subjects is referred to
E.
Williams Jackson's report to the A.I.A., for details of these
basrelief
photographs.]
Desiring to examine some of the work far overhead, Billie clambered up
on
a convenient pedestal in order to look more closely. She took the
strength of
things for granted, and put her weight too heavily on a
molding on the edge
of the pedestal; with the result that there was a
sharp crack; and the girl
struck the floor in a heap. She got to her
feet before Van Emmon could reach
her side, but her face was white with
pain.
"Sprained--ankle," said she between set lips, and proceeded to stump
up
and down the lobby, "to limber up," as she said, although her
three
companions offered to do anything that might relieve her.
To the surprise of all, Estra leaned against a pillar and watched
the
whole affair with perfect composure. He made no offer of help,
said
nothing whatever in sympathy. In a moment he noticed the looks they
gave
him--their stares.
"I must beg your pardon," he said, still smiling. "I am sorry
this
happened; it will not be easy to explain.
"But you will find all Venusians very unsympathetic. Not that we are
hard
hearted, but because we simply lost the power of sympathy.
"We do not know what pity is. We have eliminated everything that
is
disagreeable, all that is painful, from our lives to such an extent
that
there is never any cause for pity."
The three young people could say nothing in answer. The doctor,
however,
spoke thoughtfully:
"Perhaps it is superfluous; but--tell me--have you done away
with
injustice, Estra?"
"That is just the point," agreed the Venusian. "Justice took the place
of
pity and mercy; it was so long ago I am barely able to appreciate
your own
views on the subject."
Billie, her ankle somewhat better, turned to examine other work; but
at
the moment another Venusian approached from the upper end of the
lobby.
Walking slowly, he carried four small parcels with a great deal
of
effort, and the explorers had time to scrutinize him closely.
He was built much like Estra, but shorter, and with a little more
flesh
about the torso. His forehead bulged directly over his eyes, instead
of
above his ears, as did Estra's; also his eyes were smaller and not
as
far apart. His whole expression was equally kind and affable, despite
a
curiously shriveled appearance of his lips; they made the front of
his
mouth quite flat, and served to take attention away from his
pitifully
thin legs.
Estra greeted him with a cheery phrase, in a language decidedly
different
from any the explorers were familiar with. In a way, it was
Spanish, or,
rather, the pure Castilian tongue; but it seemed to be
devoid of dental
consonants. It was very agreeable to listen to.
Estra, however, had taken the four parcels from his comrade, and
now
presented him to the four, saying that his name was Kalara, and that
he
was a machinist. "He cannot use your tongue," said the Venusian. "Few
of
us have mastered it. There are difficulties.
"As for these machines"--unwrapping the parcels--"I must apologize
in
advance for certain defects in their design. I invented them
under
pressure, so to speak, having to perfect the whole idea in the
rather
short time that has elapsed since you, doctor, began the sky-car."
"And what is the purpose of the machines?" from Billie, as she was
about
to accept the first of the devices from the Venusian.
For some reason he appeared to be especially interested in the girl,
and
addressed half of his remarks to her; and it was while his smiling
gaze
was fixed upon her eyes that he gave the answer:
"They are to serve"--very carefully--"partly as lexicons and partly
as
grammars. In short, they are mechanical interpreters."
VI
THE TRANSLATING MACHINES
"First, let me remind you," said the Venusian, "of our lack of
certain
elements that you are familiar with on the Earth. We have never
been
able to improve on the common telephone. That is why we must
still
assemble in person whenever we have any collective activity; while
on
the Earth the time will come when your wireless principle will
be
developed to the point of transmitting both light and sound; and
after
that there will be little need of gatherings of any sort."
Then he explained the apparatus. It consisted of a miniature
head-
telephone, connected to a small, metallic case the size of a
cigar-box,
the cover of which was a transparent diaphragm. Estra did not open
the
case, but showed the mechanism through the cover.
"Essentially, this is a 'word-for-word' device," said he, pointing to
a
swiftly revolving dial within the box. "On one face of that dial
are
some ten thousand word-images, made by vibration, after the
phonograph
method. Directly opposite, on the other face, are the
corresponding
words in the other language. The disk is rotating at such an
enormous
speed that, for all practical purposes, any word which may chance to
be
spoken will be translated almost instantaneously."
He indicated two delicate, many-tentacled "feelers," as he called
them,
one on each face of the disk. One of these "felt" the proper
word-image
as it whirled beneath, while the other established an electrical
contact
with the corresponding waves beneath, at the same time exciting
a
complicated-looking talking machine.
"That," commented Estra, "is not so easy to explain. It transforms
this
literal translation into an idiomatic one. Perhaps you will
understand
its workings a little later when you learn how and why I am able
to use
your own language."
By this time the four had reached the point where nothing could
surprise
them. They were becoming accustomed to the unaccustomed. Had they
been
told that the Venusians had abolished speech altogether, they would
have
felt disappointed, but not incredulous. However, the doctor thought
of
something.
"Have you any extra 'records,' to be used in case we visit some
other
nations while we are here?"
For just a second the Venusian was puzzled; then his smile broadened.
"The
one record will do," said he, "wherever you go."
"A universal language!" Billie's eyes sparkled with interest.
"Long, long ago," Estra said. "It was established soon after our league
of
nations was formed."
"Does the league actually prevent war and promote peace?" demanded
Van
Emmon. This had been a disputed question when the four left the
earth.
"We no longer have a league of nations," said their guide slowly.
And
instantly the four were eying him eagerly. This was really
refreshing,
to find that the Venusians were actually lacking in
something.
"So it didn't work?" commented the doctor, disappointed.
But the Venusian's smile was still there. "It worked itself out," said
he.
"We have no further use for a league. We have no more nations. We
are
now--one."
And he helped them adjust the machines.
The cases were slung over their shoulders and the telephones clamped
to
their ears. When all ready, Estra began to talk, and his voice
came
nearly as sharp and clear through the apparatus as before. It
was
modified by a metallic flatness, together with a certain amount
of
mechanical noise in which a peculiar hissing was the most
noticeable.
Otherwise he said:
"I am now using my own language. If I make any mistakes, you must
not
blame the machine. It is as nearly perfect as I was able to make it."
He then asked them what blunders they noted. Billie, who was the
most
enthusiastic about the thing, declared that they would have no
trouble
in understanding; whereupon Estra quietly asked:
"Do you feel like going now to try them out?"
Once more an exchange of glances between the four from the earth.
Clearly
the Venusians were extremely considerate people, to leave their
visitors in
the care of the one man, apparently, who was able to make
them feel at home.
There seemed to be no reason for uneasiness.
But Van Emmon still had his old misgivings about Estra. There
was
something about the effeminate Venusian which irritated the
big
geologist; it always does make a strong man suspicious to see a
weaker
one show such self-confidence. Van Emmon drew the doctor and
Billie
aside, while Smith and Estra went on with the test. Said Van
Emmon:
"It just occurred to me that the cube might look pretty good to
these
people. You remember what this chap said about their lack of some of
our
chemicals. What do you think--is it really safe to put
ourselves
entirely in their power?"
"You mean," said the doctor slowly, "that they might try to keep us
here
rather than lose the cube?"
Van Emmon nodded gravely, but Billie had strong objections. "Estra
doesn't
look like that sort," she declared vehemently.
"He's too good natured to be a crook; he needs a guardian rather than
a
warden."
It flashed into the doctor's mind that many a woman had fallen in
love
with a man merely because he seemed to be in need of some one to
take
care of him.
That is, the self-reliant kind of woman; and Billie certainly was
self-
reliant. Something of the same notion came vaguely to the geologist
at
the same time; and with a vigor that was quite uncalled for, he urged:
"I say, 'safety first.' We shouldn't have left the cube unguarded.
I
propose that one of us, at least, return to the surface while the
others
attend this meeting--or trap, for all we know."
"All right," said Billie promptly. "Get Estra to show you how to use
the
elevator, and wait for us in the vestibule."
Van Emmon's face flamed. "That isn't what I meant!" hotly. "If
anybody
goes to the cube, it should be you, Billie!"
If Billie did not notice the use of her nickname, at least the doctor
did.
The girl simply snorted.
"If you think for one second that I'm going to back out just because I'm
a
woman, let me tell you that you're very badly mistaken!"
Van Emmon turned to the doctor appealingly, but the doctor took the
action
personally. He shook his head. "I wouldn't miss this for
anything, Van. Estra
looks safe to me. Go and ask Smith; maybe he is
willing to be the goat."
The geologist took one good look at the engineer's absorbed,
unquestioning
manner as he listened to the Venusian, and gave up the
idea with a sigh. For
a moment he was sour; then he smiled shyly.
"I'm more than anxious to meet the bunch myself," he admitted; and led
the
way back to Estra. The Venusian looked at him with no change of
expression,
although there was something very disconcerting in the
precocious wisdom of
his eyes. Their very kindliness and serenity gave
him an appearance of
superiority, such as only aggravated the
geologist's suspicions.
But there was nothing to do but to trust him. They followed him
through
two sets of doors, which slid noiselessly open before them in
response
to some mechanism operated by the Venusian's steps. This brought
them to
another of the glass elevators, in which they descended perhaps
ten
feet, stepping out of it onto a moving platform; this, in turn,
extended
the length of a low dimly lighted passageway about a hundred yards
long.
When they got off, they were standing in a small anteroom.
The Venusian paused and smiled at the four again. "Do you feel like
going
on display now?" he asked; then added: "I should have said: 'Do
you feel like
seeing Venus on display, for we all know more or less
about you
already.'"
But the visitors were braced for the experience. Estra looked at
each
approvingly, and then did something which made them wonder. He
stood
stock still for perhaps a second, his eyes closed as though
listening;
and then, without explanation, he led the way through an
opal-glass door
into a brilliantly lighted space.
Next moment the explorers were standing in the midst of the people
of
Venus.
VII
THE ULTIMATE RACE
The four were at the bottom of a huge, conelike pit, such as
instantly
reminded the doctor of a medical clinic. The space where they stood
was,
perhaps, twenty feet in diameter, while the walls enclosing the
whole
hall were many hundreds of feet apart. And sloping up from the
center,
on all sides, was tier upon tier of the most extraordinary seats in
all
creation.
For each and every one of those thousands of Venusians was
separately
enclosed in glass. Nowhere was there a figure to be seen who was
not
installed in one of those small, transparent boxes, just large
enough
for a single person. Moreover--and it came somewhat as a shock to
the
four when they noted it--the central platform itself was both
covered
and surrounded with the same material.
"Make yourselves at home," Estra was saying. He pointed to
several
microphones within easy reach. "These are provided with my
translators,
so when you are ready to open up conversation, go right ahead as
though
you were among your own people." And he made himself comfortable in
a
saddlelike chair, as much as to say that there was no hurry.
For a long time the explorers stood taking it in. The Venusians,
without
exception, stared back at them with nearly equal curiosity. And
despite
the extraordinary nature of the proceeding, this mutual scrutiny
took
place in comparative silence; for while the glass gave a certain
sense
of security to the newcomers, it also cut off all sound except that
low
humming.
The nearest row of the people got their closest attention.
Without
exception, they had the same general build as Estra; slim, delicate,
and
anemic, they resembled a "ward full of convalescent consumptives,"
as
the doctor commented under his breath. Not one of them would ever give
a
joke-smith material for a fat-man anecdote; at the same time there
was
nothing feverish, nervous, or broken down in their appearance. "A
pretty
lot of invalids," as Billie added to the doctor's remark.
Many observers would have been struck, first, by the extreme diversity
in
the matter of dress. All wore skin-tight clothing, and much of it was
silky,
like Estra's. But there was a bewildering assortment of colors,
and the most
extraordinary decorations, or, rather, ornaments. So far as
dress went, there
was no telling anything whatever about sex.
"Are they all men?" asked Billie, wondering, of Estra. The Venusian
shook
his head with his invariable smile. "Nor all women either," said
he
enigmatically.
But in many respects they were astonishingly alike. Almost to a soul
their
upper lips were withered and flat. One and all had short,
emaciated-looking
legs. Each and every one had a crop of really
luxuriant hair; the shades
varied between the usual blonde and brunette,
with little of the reddishness
so common on the earth; but there were no
bald people at all. On the other
hand, there were no beards or mustaches
in the whole crowd; every face was
bare!
"Like a lot of Chinamen," said Van Emmon in an undertone; "can't tell
one
from another." But Billie pointed out that this was not strictly
true; a
close inspection of the faces showed an extremely wide range of
distinction.
No two chins in the crowd were exactly alike, although not
one of them showed
any of the resolute firmness which is admired on the
Earth. All were weak,
yet different.
Neither were there any prominent noses, although there were none
that
could have been called insignificant. And while every pair of eyes
in
the place was large, as large as Estra's, yet there was every
desirable
color and expression.
To sum it all up, and to use the doctor's words: "They've developed
a
standard type, all right, just as the characteristic American face
is
the standard Earth type; but--did you ever see such variations?"
Nevertheless, the most striking thing about these people to the eyes
of
the visitors was their mutual resemblance. For one thing, there
seemed
to be no nervous people present. There were many children in the
crowd,
too; yet all sat very still, and only an occasional movement of
the
hands served to indicate consciousness. In this sense, they were
all
remarkably well bred.
In another, they were remarkably rude. At any given moment a good half
of
the people were eating, or, rather, sipping liquids of various sorts
from
small tumblers. Probably every person in the house, before the
affair was
over, had imbibed two or three ounces of fluid; but not once
was the matter
apologized for, nor the four invited to partake.
"So this may be the outcome of our outrageous habit of eating
sweetmeats
at theaters," muttered the doctor. And again noting the hairless
faces:
"Just what I said when men first began using those depilatories
instead
of shaving--no more beards!"
But it was Billie who explained the invariable crop of hair. "No use
to
look for baldness; they don't wear hats! Why should they, since
there's
neither sun nor rain to protect their heads from?"
Mainly, however, the architect was interested in the building itself.
To
her, the most striking feature was not the tremendously arched dome,
nor
yet the remarkable system of bracing which dispensed with any columns
in
all that vast space. It was something simpler--there were no aisles.
"Now, what do you make of that?" the girl asked Van Emmon. "How do
they
ever get to their places?" But he could not suggest anything more
than
to recall an individual elevator scheme once proposed.
To Smith, one object of interest was the telephone system. Remarkably
like
those used on the Earth, one was located in each of the tiny glass
cages. He
was likewise puzzled to account for the ventilation system;
each cage was
apparently air-tight, yet no Venusian showed any
discomfort.
But the geologist, for want of anything strictly within his
professional
range, interested himself in trying to fathom the moral attitude
of
these people. He was still suspicious of them, notwithstanding a
growing
tendency to like every one of their pleasant, really agreeable
faces.
There was neither solemnity, sourness, nor bitterness to be
seen
anywhere; at the same time, there was no sign of levity. In
every
countenance was the same inexplicable mixture of wisdom and
benevolence
that distinguished Estra. Nowhere was there hostility, and
nowhere was
there crudity. Somehow, the big geologist would have felt more at
home
had he seen something antagonistic. Essentially, Van Emmon was
a
fighter.
At last the four felt their attention lagging. Novelties always
pall
quickly, no matter how striking. Estra sensed the feeling and
inquired:
"Which of you will do the honors?"
Instinctively the three younger folk turned to the doctor. He made
no
protest, but stepped at once to one of the microphones, put on his
most
impressive professional face, and began:
"My friends"--and Van Emmon noted a pleased look come into every
face
about them--"my friends, I do not need to state how significant
this
meeting is to us all. From what Estra has said, I gather that you
have
informed yourselves regarding us, in some manner which he has
promised
to make clear. At all events, I am exceedingly anxious to see
your
astronomical apparatus."
At this a broad smile came to many of the faces before him; but he
went
on, unnoticing: "Certainly there is not much I could tell you which
you
do not already know; Estra's use of our language proves this. I
only
need to assure you that we will be glad to answer any questions that
may
occur to you. It goes without saying that we, of course, are filled
with
delight to find your planet so wondrously and happily
populated,
especially after our experience on Mercury, of which, I presume,
you are
informed."
Apparently they were. The doctor went on: "You may be sure that we
are
fairly bursting with questions. However, we are content to
become
informed as Estra sees fit to guide us.
"There is just one thing, more than any other, which I would like to
know
at this time. Why is it that, although you all show a great lack of
exercise,
and are continually eating, you never appear to be healthy?"
Instantly a Venusian in the fifth row, to the doctor's right, touched
his
phone and replied: "It is a matter of diet. We have nothing but
'absolute'
foods; if you understand what that means."
And from that time on, despite the fact that the explorers asked
questions
which, at home, would have found hundreds ready and able to
answer, on Venus
only one person answered any given question, and always
without any apparent
prearrangement. For a long time they could not
account for this.
The doctor motioned for Smith to take his place. The engineer looked
a
little embarrassed, but cleared his throat noisily and said:
"I am especially struck with the fact that each of you sits in a
separate
glass pew, or case. Why is this?"
The reply came from one of the few people present who showed any signs
of
age. He was, perhaps, sixty, and his hair was fast whitening. He
said:
"For reasons of sanitation. It is not wise to breathe the breath
of
another."
"Also," supplemented someone from the other side of that vast pit--
"also,
each is thereby enabled to surround himself with the electrical
influences
which suit him best."
Smith stepped back, pondering. The doctor looked to the geologist to
take
his place, but Van Emmon made way for Billie. At any other time she
would
have resented his "woman-first" attitude; now she quickly found
voice.
"How are you able to get along without aisles? It may seem a
foolish
question, to you; but on earth we would consider a hall without
aisles
about as convenient as a room without a door."
Immediately a Venusian directly in front of her, and on a level with
her
eyes, called out: "Watch me, madam." And quite without an effort
beyond
touching a button or two, the fellow rose straight into the air,
glass
and all, and then floated gently over toward the middle of the
hall.
"It probably appears complicated to you," explained the Venusian
whose
side he had just left. "We make use of elements not found on
your
earth."
Billie's sang froid was not shaken. Instantly she came back
energetically:
"Apparently your method overcomes gravitation. Why
haven't you tried to
travel away from your planet?"
And she looked around with the air of one who has uttered a poser, only
to
have another of the satin-clad people reply, from a point which she
was not
able to locate:
"Because enough such power cannot be safely concentrated."
As Billie retired, Van Emmon noted with growing irritation that
the
continuously affable aspect of the Venusians had not altered in any
way,
unless it was to become even more genial and sure. The big man
strode
energetically to the microphone, and the other three noted a
general
movement of interest and admiration as the people inspected him.
"Why," demanded he, "do we see no signs of contention? If you are
familiar
with conditions on the earth, you surely know that rivalry, in
one form or
another, is the accepted basis of life. But all of you,
here, appear to be
perfectly happy, and at the same time entirely sure
of yourselves.
"We have just come from a planet where we have seen the principle
of
combat, of competition, carried so far that it seems to have wrecked
the
race; so you will pardon my curiosity, I am sure. From your faces,
one
would conclude that you had abolished self-interest altogether. Just
why
are you so--well, extraordinarily self-complacent?" And he thrust
out
his aggressive jaw as though to make up for the lack of chins about
him.
"Because there is nothing for us to combat, save within ourselves."
This
from a wide-faced chap in a bluish-white suit.
"But surely you have rivalry of some sort?"
"No." Another voice added: "Rivalry is the outgrowth of getting
a
livelihood; on earth it is inevitable, because men do the work.
Here,
everything is done by machines." Still another put in: "Discontent
is
the mother of ambition, but we are all content, because each
possesses
all he desires."
But the geologist was far from satisfied. "Then," said he vigorously,
"if
you have eliminated all contention, you have nullified the great law
of
contrasts. You say you are all rich. How do you know, if you have no
poverty
to contrast it with?
"On earth, we appreciate warmth because we have experienced
cold;
pleasure, because we know pain; happiness, because we have always
had
misery with us. If we have not had the one, we cannot value the
other.
"If you have never been discontented, how do you know that you
are
content?"
VIII
THE KEY-NOTE
For a minute or two it looked as though Van Emmon had raised
an
unanswerable question. There was no immediate reply. Even Estra
looked
around, as though in wonder at the silence, and seemed on the point
of
answering of his own accord when a voice came from a man far up on
the
left. He said:
"A little explanation may be wise. To begin with, you will agree
that
black is black because white is white; but it doesn't follow that
blue
is blue because green is green, or red is red. Blue is blue because
it
is neither green nor red nor any other color. It is blue, not because
it
contrasts with these other colors, but because it merely differs
from
them.
"Now, we on Venus do not need poverty, in order to appreciate
wealth.
Instead, each of us is blessed with his own particular choice of
wealth.
Each is blessed in a different way; some with children, some
with
intellect, some with other matters; and the question of mere
quantity
never enters."
"We do not need pain or misery," spoke up someone else, "any more than
you
people on the earth require an additional color, in order to
appreciate the
variety you already have." And then, from a Venusian with
an especially
strong voice:
"That we are really content, we know absolutely. For each of us, in
his
own distinctive way, is wholly and peculiarly satisfied."
And it only added to the geologist's irritation to have these
striking
statements made in a good-humored, impersonal fashion which
totally
disarmed all opposition. That the Venusians were perfectly sure of
their
ground, was undeniable; but they had such a cheerful way of looking
at
it, as though they didn't care a rap whether Van Emmon agreed or
not,
that--If they'd only have shown some spirit! Van Emmon would have
liked
it infinitely better if one of them had only become hot about it.
At this point Estra rose in his chair. "I think you had best approach
us
from a fresh viewpoint," said he in his unfailingly agreeable
manner.
The doctor nodded vigorously, and again Estra closed his eyes in
that
odd, hesitating way. Immediately every one in the place, with
the
exception of a single person in the lowest row, took flight in his
or
her little glass pew. In a moment the great vault overhead was
fairly
swarming with people; and in less than a minute the last of them
had
floated out through one of the arches in the walls.
Estra opened a panel in the central cage, and admitted the Venusian
who
had stayed behind. She--for it appeared to be a young woman--walked
with
about the same facility as Estra; but as soon as she had entered
the
space, took the seat Estra had vacated, and waited.
The action rather disappointed the doctor. He removed the
interpreting
telephone from his head, and asked:
"I rather thought we were going to meet one of your officials, Estra.
We'd
hate to go back home without having met your president, or whatever
you call
your chief executive."
The two Venusians exchanged smiles, and to the surprise of the
explorers
the woman gave the reply, in language as good as Estra's, but an
even
sweeter expression: "There is no such thing as a chief executive
on
Venus, friends."
"I meant," explained the doctor, rattled, "the chairman of your
cabinet,
or council, or whatever it is that regulates your affairs.
Perhaps,"
with an inspiration, "I should have said, the speaker of your
congress."
The Venusian shook her head, still smiling. She hesitated while
selecting
the best words; and the four noted that, while her features
were quite as
delicate as Estra's, her face was proportionately larger,
and her whole
figure better filled out. No one would have said that she
was pretty, much
less beautiful; but none would deny that she was very
good-looking, in a
wholesome, intelligent, capable sort of a way. Her
name, Estra told them
later, was Myrin; and he explained that he and she
were associated solely
because of their mutual interest in the same
planet--the Earth.
Said Myrin: "You are accustomed to the idea of government. We,
however,
have outgrown it.
"If you stop to think, you will agree that the purpose of government is
to
maintain peace, on the one hand, and to wage war, on the other. Now,
as to
war--we haven't even separate nations, any more. So we have no
wars. And as
for internal conflict--why should we ever quarrel, when
each of us is assured
all that he can possibly want?"
"So you have abolished government?"
"A very long time ago. You on the earth will do the same, as soon as
your
people have been educated up to the point of trusting each other."
"You haven't even a congress, then?"
Myrin shook her head. "All questions such as a congress would deal
with,
were settled ages ago. You must remember that the material features
of
our civilization have not changed for thousands of generations. The
only
questions that come up now are purely personal ones, which each
must
settle for himself."
Van Emmon, as before, was not at all satisfied. "You say that
machinery
does your work for you. I presume you do not mean that literally;
there
must be some duties which cannot be performed without human
direction,
at least. How do you get these duties accomplished, if you have
no
government to compel your people to do them?"
Myrin looked at a loss, either for the answer itself or for the
most
suitable words. Estra gave the reply: "Every device we possess
is
absolutely automatic. There is not one item in the materials we use
but
that was constructed, exactly as you see it now, many thousands of
years
ago."
Smith was incredulous. "Do you mean to say that those little glass
pews
have been in use all that time?"
Estra nodded, smiling gently at the engineer's amazement. "Like
everything
else, they were built to last. You must remember that we do
not have anything
like an 'investment,' here; we do not have to consider
the question of
'getting our capital back.' So, if any further
improvements were to be made,
they also would be done in a permanent
fashion."
Billie gave an exclamation of bewilderment. "I don't understand! You
say
that nothing new has been built, or even replaced, for centuries. How
do
you take care of your increase in population?" thinking of the
great
crowd that had just left.
Myrin was the one who answered this. As she did so, she got slowly to
her
feet; and speaking with the utmost care, watched to be sure that the
four
understood her:
"Ever since the roof was put on, our increase of population has
been
exactly balanced by our death rate!"
The four followed their guides in silence as they led the way into
the
plaza. Now, the space was alive with Venusians. The little cages
were
everywhere floating about in the air; some of the people
were
laboriously shifting themselves into their aircraft; others were
guiding
their "pews" direct to nearby houses. The visitors got plenty of
curious
stares from these quiet miracle-workers, who seemed vastly more at
home
in the air than on the ground. "As thick as flies," Van Emmon
commented.
Estra and Myrin, walking very slowly, took them to a side street,
where
two of the cigar-shaped cars were standing. Billie and Smith got in
with
Estra, while Van Emmon and the doctor were given seats beside
the
Venusian woman. The two cars were connected by telephone, so that
in
effect the two parties were one.
By this time, the visitors had become so accustomed to the
transparent
material that they felt no uneasiness as the ground receded below
them.
Smith, especially, was tremendously impressed with Estra's
declaration
that the glass was, except for appearance, nothing more nor less
than an
extremely strong, steel alloy.
Propelled by the unexplained forces which the two drivers controlled
by
means of buttons in black cases, the two cars began to thread their
way
through the great roof-columns; and as they proceeded, the four
grew
more and more amazed at the great extent of the city. For miles
upon
miles that heterogeneous collection of buildings stretched, unbroken
and
without system, until the eye tired of trying to make out the limits
of
it.
"What is the name of this city?" asked Billie, secretly hoping that
it
might bear some resemblance to "New York." It struck her fancy to
assume
that this supermetropolis represented what Gotham, in time,
might
become.
Estra did not take his attention from what he was doing, but answered
as
readily as ever. "I do not blame you for mistaking this for a city.
The
fact is, however, that we have no such thing."
Billie stared at him helplessly. "You've abolished cities, too?"
"Not exactly. In the same sense that we have abolished nations,
yes.
Likewise we have abolished states, also counties. Neither have we such
a
thing as 'the country,' now.
"My friends, Venus is simply one immense city."
IX
THE SURVIVAL OF ALL
Somehow all four were unwilling to press this question. It did not
seem
possible that Estra was right, or, if he was, that they could
possibly
understand his explanation, should he give it. The cars flew side
by
side for perhaps a hundred miles, while the visitors put in the time
in
examining the landscape with the never-ending interest of all
aeronauts.
Here and there, in that closely-packed surface, a particularly
large
building was to be noted every half mile or so. "Factories?"
asked
Billie of Estra, but he shook his head.
"I'll show you factories later on," said he. "What you see are
schools."
But most observers would have considered the structures severely
plain
for their purpose.
After a long silence: "I'm still looking for streams," said Van Emmon
to
Myrin. "Are your rivers as large as ours?"
"We have no rivers," was the calm reply. "Rivers are entirely too
wasteful
of water. All our drainage is carried off through underground
canals."
"You haven't done away with your oceans, too, have you?" the
geologist
asked, rather sarcastically. But he was scarcely prepared for the
reply
he got.
"No; we couldn't get along without them, I am afraid. However, we did
the
best we could in their case." And without signaling to Estra she
dove the
machine towards the ground. Smith looked for the telephone
wires to snap, but
Estra seemed to know, and instantly followed Myrin's
lead. The doctor
noticed, and wondered all the more.
And then came another surprise. As the machines neared the surface,
a
familiar odor floated in through the open windows of the air-craft;
and
the four found themselves looking at each other for signs
of
irrationality. A moment, and they saw that they were not mistaken.
For, although that kaleidoscopic expanse of buildings showed not
the
slightest break, yet they were now located on the sea. The houses
were
packed as closely together as anywhere; apparently all were
floating,
yet not ten square yards of open sea could be seen in any one
spot.
Van Emmon almost forgot his resentment in his growing wonder. "That
gets
me, Myrin! Those houses seem to be merely floating, yet I see no
motion
whatever! Why are there no waves?"
The doctor snorted. "Shame on you, Van! Don't let our friends think
that
you're an absolute ignoramus." He added: "Venus has no moon, and
no
wind, at least under the roof. Therefore, no waves."
Smith put in: "That being the case, there is no chance to start a
wave-
motor industry here. Neither," as he thought further, "neither
for
water-power. Having no rain in your mountains, Estra, where do you
get
your power?"
But it was Myrin who answered. "I suppose you are all familiar
with
radium? It is nothing more or less than condensed sunlight, which
in
turn is simply electromagnetic waves; although it may take
your
scientists a good many centuries to reach that conclusion.
"Well, every particle of the material which composes this planet,
contains
radioactivity of some sort; and we long ago discovered a way to
release it
and use it. One pound of solid granite yields enough energy
to--well, a great
deal of power."
They had now been flying for two hours, and still no end to
that
thickly-housed, ever different appearance of the ground. Also,
although
they saw a great many birds, they noted no animals. Finally,
Billie
could hold in no longer.
"Are we to understand," she demanded of Estra, "that the whole of
this
planet is as densely populated as we see it?"
"Just that," replied the Venusian. "Why not? The roof makes our
climate
uniform from pole to pole, while our buildings are such that, whether
on
land or on sea, they are equally livable."
"But--Estra!" expostulated the girl. "Venus is nearly as big as the
earth.
And it looks to be as thickly populated as--as Rhode Island! Why,
you must
have a colossal population; let me see." And she scribbled away
in her
memorandum book.
But both Smith and the doctor had already worked it out. They looked
up,
blinking dazedly.
"Over three hundred billion," murmured the doctor, as though dizzy.
The Venusian checked Smith's correction with, "You dropped one
cipher,
doctor. There are three and a half trillion of us!"
"Good lord!" whispered Van Emmon, all his antagonism gone for the
moment.
And again the explorers were silent for a long time.
By and by, however--"We have just seen what it meant, there on
Mercury,"
said the doctor, in a low voice, "for the principle of 'the
survival of
the fit' to be carried to its logical end; for who is to decide
what is
fitness, save the fittest? One man, apparently, outlived every one
else
on the planet, and then he also died.
"But here you have gone the limit in the other direction. Of course,
we
might have known that you long ago abolished poverty, unearned
wealth,
pestilence, drunkenness and the other causes of premature death; but
as
for three and a half trillion!"
"Nevertheless," remarked Myrin, "every last one of us, once born, lives
to
die of old age; and in most cases this means several hundred of
your
years."
Smith involuntarily rubbed his eyes; and they all laughed, a nervous
sort
of a laugh which left the visitors still in doubt as to their
senses, and
their guides' sanity. Van Emmon's suspicions came back with
a rush, and he
burst out:
"Say--you'll excuse me, but I can't swallow this! Here you've shown
us
houses as thick as leaves; not a sign of a farm, much less an
orchard!
No vegetation at all, except for a few flowers!
"Three and a half trillion! All right; let it go at that!" Out came
his
chin, and he brought one fist down upon the other as though he
were
cracking rocks with a hammer, and with every blow he uttered a word:
"How--do--you--feed--them--all?"
X
LOAVES AND FISHES
Without a word Myrin drove her machine toward the ground, and,
as
before, Estra followed despite the lack of any visible signal. Within
a
minute the two machines had come to rest, softly and
without
disturbance, on the roof of a handsome building, much like an
apartment
house. There was the usual transparent elevator, and a minute later
the
four were being introduced to the occupants of a typical Venusian
house.
These two people, apparently man and wife, did not need to be told why
the
explorers had been brought there. They led the way from the dimly
lighted
hallway in which the elevator had stopped, into a group of
brightly decorated
rooms. Here the four were given seats in the usual
saddellike chairs, and
then Myrin answered Van Emmon's question:
"I knew that this point would arise soon, and you will pardon me if
I
handle it in a prearranged fashion. I will admit that it is not an
easy
question Mr. Van Emmon has put; not because the answer is at
all
complicated but, on the contrary, extremely simple."
The four were listening unanimously. Despite himself, Van Emmon was
highly
impressed by the Venusian woman's serious manner. Perhaps it was
because, in
her earnestness, she was not quite so affable as before. She
went on:
"From where you are sitting, you can see all the rooms in this house.
You
will look in vain for anything even remotely resembling a kitchen.
There is
not even a dining-room.
"And yet you must not jump to the conclusion that we all use
restaurants.
We have no such thing as a public eating place. Or rather,"
and here she
spoke very carefully, "rather, every place is an eating
place."
The doctor looked Myrin over as though she were a patient with a new
kind
of disease. "You do not mean that literally, of course," said he
kindly.
But she nodded gravely. "You must not misunderstand. Remember, even
on
your own planet, the distribution of food is becoming more and
more
extensive, until you can now buy something to eat at every
crossroads.
We have merely carried the idea to its logical end, so that
all
Venusians can obtain food at any time, and at any spot."
She turned in her chair--all the chairs on Venus were pivoted,
Estra
said--and touched a button in the wall at her hand. A panel
slid
noiselessly aside, and revealed a tiny buffet. At least, Billie
labeled
it a buffet, for want of a more accurate term.
For it consisted of a silver bibb, something like the nozzle of a
soda-
water fountain above which was a board containing a large number
of
tiny, numbered push buttons. Below the bibb was a space in which a
cup
might be set, and projecting from a tube at one side was a solid
block
of telescoping, transparent cups.
"This," said Myrin, "is the Venusian Nutrition System. There is a
station
like this in every room on the planet." And she proceeded to
take a cup from
the tube, filling each from the silver faucet while she
pressed a variety of
the buttons.
The four watched in silence, and eagerly took what was given to them.
It
comprised liquids entirely; liquids of every degree of fluidity,
from
some as thin as water to others as thick as gruel. They varied even
more
as to color, ranging from actual transparency to a deep chocolate.
"Now, I warn you not to be shocked," said Myrin, "although I fully
expect
that you will be. The fact is that we have no other kind of food
than what
you see; there are thousands upon thousands of different kinds
and flavors,
but they are all fluids. We have nothing whatever in solid
form.
"You see," she explained, "we have no teeth."
All they could do was to stare at her as, with a return of her smile,
she
made a sudden gesture across the front of her mouth. Next instant a
set of
false teeth lay in her hand!
Estra spoke up. "We are both obliged to wear them in order that we
might
use your language." He removed his own, to show a mouth as free of
teeth
as a newborn baby's. Both Venusians replaced their sets, and
smiled
afresh at the explorers' astonishment.
"Teeth will soon be a thing of the past with you on the Earth,
too,"
commented Myrin. "Dr. Kinney will surely testify to that. Your use
of
soft, cooked foods, instead of the coarse, hard articles provided
by
nature, is bound to have this effect in time. With us, it resulted
in
having teeth reduced to the standing of your appendix; and, like you,
we
resort to an operation rather than take chances on trouble. I
may
mention that the appendix is totally absent from all Venusians, while
we
are beginning to lose all traces of either the first or second
molars;
just as you are beginning to lose your wisdom teeth.
"However, suppose you try our diet while I explain."
The four once more looked at each other. The doctor was the first to
take
a sip of one of the cups handed to him, and Van Emmon was the last;
the
geologist waited to see the effects upon the others before gingerly
tasting
of the thickest, darkest liquid of them all. Another taste, and
he discovered
that it was very good, and that he was exceedingly hungry.
"Very delicately flavored," commented Billie, after emptying her
fourth
glass, a golden fluid with a slightly oily appearance.
"Delicately is right," said the doctor. "This stuff is barely flavored
at
all, Estra."
The Venusian was also "eating." "We much prefer them all that way,"
said
he. "I suppose you would consider our tastes very finicky, on Earth;
but
the fact is we are able to distinguish between minute variations
in
flavoring such as would escape all on earth except a humming-bird."
"I suppose," remarked the doctor, smacking his lips over a
reddish
solution with a winelike flavor, "I suppose we can expect something
of
that sort on the Earth, too, in time. Originally mankind was only
able
to distinguish fresh from stale, and animal from vegetable flavors."
After a while Myrin went on: "You know, the processes of nutrition,
as
they take place among your people, are extremely wasteful. You
have
probably heard it said that 'the average human is only fifty per
cent
efficient.' That simply means that digestion, assimilation and
excretion
require half the energy which they secure from the food.
"Now, the articles you have just swallowed require very little work on
the
part of your digestive apparatus, and none at all upon your
eliminating
tract. The food is almost instantly transformed into fresh
blood; if I am not
mistaken, you already feel much refreshed."
This was decidedly true. All four felt actually stimulated; Van
Emmon
instantly suspected the food of being alcoholic. As he continued
to
watch its effect, however, he saw that there was no harmful reaction
as
in the case of the notorious drug.
"I think I can now tell you how we produce enough food for the three and
a
half trillion of us, despite our lack of farms and orchards," said
Myrin
rising.
Returning to the air-craft, the four were taken a short distance in a
new
direction, and again descended, this time transferring to an
elevator which
dropped far below the surface. They came to a stop about
ten floors down.
"Naturally," said Myrin, "we reserve all the surface for
residence
purposes; although, it is possible to live down here in
comparative
comfort, since we have plenty of electrical energy to spare." And
she
operated a switch, flooding the place with a brilliant glow. Thrown
from
concealed sources, this light was quite as strong as the
subdued
daylight which they had just left. "But unless we were free to fly
about
as much as we do, we should feel that life was a bore. Nobody
stays
below any longer than is necessary.
"Now, this is where our food comes from." Whereupon she showed them
a
series of automatic machines, all working away there in the solid
rock
of the planet; and of such an extraordinary nature that Smith,
the
engineer, moved about in an atmosphere of supreme bliss.
"You will understand," said Myrin, "that the usual processes of
nutrition,
on the Earth, depend entirely upon plant life. We, however,
cannot spare room
enough for any such system; so we had to devise
substitutes for plants.
"In effect, that is what these machines are. They convert bed-rock
into
loam, take the nitrates and other chemicals [Footnote: The geology
of
Venus is thoroughly described in Mr. Van Emmon's reports to the A. M.
E.
A.] directly from this artificial soil, and by a pseudo-osmotic
process
secure results similar to those produced by roots.
"Likewise we have developed artificial leaves," pointing out a
huge
apparatus which none but a highly trained expert in both botany
and
mechanics could half understood. "This machine first
manufactures
chlorophyl--yes, it does," as the doctor snorted incredulously;
"not an
imitation, but real chlorophyl--and then transforms the various
elements
into starch, sugar, and proteids through the agency of the
sunlight
recovered from the granite.
"In short, to answer your question, Mr. Van Emmon, as to how we are
all
fed--we do not grow our food at all; we go straight to the
practically
unlimited supply of raw materials under our feet, and manufacture
our
food, outright!"
XI
THE SUPER-AMBITION
Billie was very quiet during their return to the surface. She
said
nothing until they had reached the two cars; and then pausing as she
was
about to step in, she said:
"Well, I never saw our old friend, the high cost of living, handled
quite
so easily!
"If that's the way you do things here, Estra," and the girl did not
flinch
at the gazes the others turned upon her, "if that's your way,
it's good
enough for me! I'm going to stay!"
For the first time, Estra looked astonished. He and Myrin
exchanged
lightninglike glances; then the Venusian's face warmed with the
smile he
gave the architect.
"It is very good of you to say that," he said impressively. "I was
afraid
some of our--peculiarities--might arouse very different
feelings."
They stared at one another for a second or two, long enough for the
doctor
to notice, and to see how Van Emmon took it. The geologist,
however, was
smiling upon the girl in a big-brotherly fashion, which
indicated that he
thought she didn't mean what she had said. Had he been
looking up at her,
however, instead of down upon her, he would have seen
that her chin was most
resolute.
Just as they were about to start again, both Estra and Myrin stopped
short
in their tracks, with that odd hesitation that had mystified the
four all
along; and after perhaps five seconds of silence turned to one
another with
grave faces. It was Estra who explained.
"It is curious how things do pile up," said he, a little conscious
of
having employed an idiom. "Our planet has gone along for hundreds
of
generations without anything especially remarkable happening, so
that
recently many prophets have foretold a number of startling events
to
take place on a single day. And this seems to have come true.
"You have been with us scarcely ten hours," and the visitors stared
at
each other in amazement that so much time had passed; "scarcely
ten
hours, and here comes an announcement which, for over a hundred
years,
has been looked forward to with--"
He stopped abruptly. The doctor gently took him up: "'Looked forward
to
with'--what, Estra?"
Estra and Myrin considered this for perhaps three seconds. It was
the
woman who replied: "The fact is, your approach to the planet
has
stimulated all sorts of research immensely. Matters that had
been
hanging fire indefinitely were revived; this is one of them. In
that
sense, you are to blame." But she smiled as reassuringly as she
could,
allowing for a certain anxiety which had now come to her face.
"Don't you think you could make it clear to us?" asked
Billie
encouragingly. At the same time all four noted that the air,
which
before had fairly thronged with machines, was now simply alive
with
them. People were flitting here and there like swarms of insects,
and
with as little apparent aim. Both Estra and Myrin were extra
watchful;
also, they displayed a certain eagerness to get away, setting
their
course in still another direction. In a minute or two the
congestion
seemed relieved, and Myrin began to talk slowly:
"You have doubtless guessed, by this time, that we Venusians have
crossed
what some call 'the animal divide.' We are predominatly
intellectual, while
you on the earth are, as a race, still predominantly
animal. Excuse me for
putting it so bluntly."
"It's all right," said the doctor, with an effort. "What you say
is
true--of most of us." He added: "Most thinking people realize that
when
our civilization reaches the point where the getting of a living
becomes
secondary, instead of primary as at present, a great change is bound
to
come to the race."
The Venusian nodded. "Under the conditions which now surround us, you
can
see, we have vastly more time for what you would call spiritual
matters.
Only, we label them psychological experiences.
"In fact, the 'supernatural' is the Venusian's daily business!"
There was another pause, during which both Venusians, driving at
high
speed though they were, once more closed their eyes for a second or
so.
Estra evidently thought it time to explain.
"For instance, 'telepathy.' With us it takes the place of wireless; for
we
have developed the power to such a point that any Venusian can 'call
up' any
other, no matter where either may be. That is why we need no
signs or
addresses. There are certain restrictions; for instance, no one
can read
another's thoughts without his permission. Of course, we still
have speech;
speech and language are the ABC's of the Venusian; and we
still keep the
telephone, for the sake of checking up now and then. Just
now, we are driving
for my own house, where there is apparatus which
will enable you to both hear
and understand an announcement which is
shortly to be made."
There was something decidedly satisfying, especially to Van Emmon,
in
being taken into the Venusian confidence to this extent. When he put
his
question, it was with his former aggressiveness much modified. He
said:
"I should think that your people have pretty well exhausted
the
possibilities of the supernatural, by this time. Progress having come
to
an end, I don't see what you find to interest you, Myrin."
"The fact is," Billie put in, "we feel somewhat disappointed that
your
people have shown so little interest in us." And she gave a
sidelong
glance at Estra, who returned the look with a direct, smiling gaze
which
sent a flood of color into the architect's face.
"Look out!" sharply, from Van Emmon; and with barely an inch to
spare,
Estra steered his car past another which he had nearly overlooked.
For
another minute or two there was silence; then Myrin said:
"You wonder what there is to interest us. And yet, every time you look
up
at the stars, the answer is before your eyes.
"You see, although we cannot read your thoughts without your
permission,
yet you on the earth cannot prevent us from 'overhearing'
anything that
may be said. Under proper conditions, our psychic senses are
delicate
enough to feel the slightest whisper on the earth.
"That is why Estra and I are able to use your language; we have learned
it
together with an understanding of your lives and customs, by
simply
'listening in.' I may add that we are also able to use your eyes;
we
knew, directly, what you people looked like before you arrived.
"Well, it is our ambition to visit, in spirit, every planet in
the
universe!
"There are hundreds of millions of stars; every one is a sun; and each
has
planets. One in a hundred contains life; some very elementary,
others much
more advanced than we are.
"So far, we have been able to study nearly two thousand worlds
besides
those in this solar system. Do you still think, friend, we have
nothing
to interest us?"
She raised a hand in a gesture of emphasis; and it was then that
Billie,
her eyes on Myrin's fingers, saw another sign of the great
advancement
these people had made--direct proof, in fact, of what Myrin had
just
claimed.
For there must have been a tremendous gain in the intellect to have
caused
such a drain upon the body as Billie saw. In no other way could
it be
explained; the minds of the Venusians had grown at a fearful cost
to flesh
and blood.
Not only were the fingernails entirely lacking from Myrin's hand, but
the
lower joints of her four fingers, from the palm to the knuckles were
grown
smoothly together.
XII
THE MENTAL LIMIT
"Make yourselves at home," said Estra, as they stepped into
his
apartment. The cars just filled his balcony. "This is my 'workshop';
see
if you can guess my occupation, from what you see. As for Myrin
and
myself, we must make certain preparations before the announcement
is
made."
They disappeared, and the four inspected the place. As in the other
house
they had entered, the room was provided with a double row of small
windows;
some being down near the floor and the others level with the
eyes. These, in
addition to two doors, all of which were of translucent
material.
On low benches about the room were a number of instruments, some of
which
looked familiar to the doctor. He said he had seen something much
like them
in psychology class, during his college days. For the most
part, their
appearance defied ordinary description. [Footnote:
Physicians, biologists,
and others interested in matters of this nature
will find the above fully
treated in Dr. Kinney's reports to the A. M.
A.]
But one piece of apparatus was given such prominence that it is
worth
detailing. It consisted of a hollow, cube-shaped metal framework;
about
a foot in either direction, upon which was mounted about forty
long
thumb-screws, all pointing toward the inside of the frame. The
inner
ends of the screws were provided with small silver pads; while the
outer
ends were so connected, each with a tiny dial, as to register the
amount
of motion of the screw. Smith turned one of them in and out, and said
it
reminded him of a micrometer gage.
Then Billie noted that the entire device was so placed upon the bench
as
to set directly over a hole, about ten inches in diameter. And under
the
bench was one of the saddlelike chairs. The architect's antiquarian
lore
came back to her with a rush, and she remembered something she had
seen
in a museum--a relic of the inquisition.
"Good Heavens!" she whispered. "What is this--an instrument of torture?"
It certainly looked mightily like one of the head-crushing devices
Billie
had seen. Thumb-screws and all, this appeared to be only a very
elaborate
"persuader," for use upon those who must be made to talk.
But the doctor was thinking hard. A big light flashed into his
eyes.
"This," he declared, positively, "is something that will become a
matter
of course in our own educational system, as soon as the science
of
phrenology is better understood." And next second he had ducked
under
the bench, and thrust his head through the round hole, so that his
skull
was brought into contact with some of those padded thumb-screws.
"Get the idea?" he finished. "It's a cranium-meter!"
It did not take Smith long to reach the next conclusion. "Then," said
he,
"our friend Estra is connected with their school system. Can't say
what he
would be called, but I should say his function is to measure the
capacity of
students for various kinds of knowledge, in order that their
education may be
adapted accordingly.
"Might call him a brain-surveyor," he concluded.
"Or a noodle-smith," added the geologist, deprecatingly.
"Rather, a career-appraiser!" indignantly, from Billie. "People look
to
him to suggest what they should take up, and what they should
leave
alone. Why, he's one of the most important men on this whole
planet!"
And again the doctor was a witness to a clash of eyes between the girl
and
the geologist. Van Emmon said nothing further, however, but turned
to examine
an immense book-case on the other side of the room.
This case had shelves scarcely two inches apart, and about half as
deep,
and held perhaps half a million extremely small books. Each
comprised
many hundreds of pages, made of a perfectly opaque,
bluish-white
material of such incredible thinness that ordinary India-paper
resembled
cardboard by comparison.
They were printed much the same as any other book, except that
the
characters were of microscopic size, and the lines extremely
close
together. Also, in some of the books these lines were black and
red,
alternating.
Billie eagerly examined one of the diminutive volumes under a
strong
glass, and pronounced the black-printed characters not unlike
ancient
Gothic type. She guessed that the language was synthetic, like Roman
or
Esperanto, and that the alphabet numbered sixty or seventy.
"The red lines," she added, not so confidently, "are in a
different
language. Looks wonderfully like Persian." By this time the others
were
doing the same as she, and marveling to note that, wherever the red
and
black lines were employed, invariably the black were in the
same
language; while the red characters were totally different in each
book.
Suddenly Smith gave a start, so vigorously that the other turned in
alarm.
He was holding one of the books as though it were white hot.
"Look!" he
stuttered excitedly. "Just look at it!"
And no wonder. In the book he had chanced to pick up, the red lines
were
printed in ENGLISH.
"Talk about your finds!" exclaimed Billie, in an awe-struck tone.
"Why,
this library is a literal translation of the languages of--" she
fairly
gasped as she recalled Myrin's words--"thousands of planets!"
After that she fell silent. Plainly the discovery had profoundly
affected
and strengthened her notion of remaining on the planet. Van
Emmon, watching
her narrowly, saw her give the room an appraising glance
which meant, plain
as day, "I'd like to keep this place in spick and
span condition!" And
another, not so easy to interpret: "I'd like to
show these people a thing or
two about designing houses!" And the
geologist's heart sank for an
instant.
He turned resolutely to the bookcase, and shortly found something which
he
showed to the doctor. It was a book printed all in "Venusian." They
carefully
translated the title-page, using one of the interlinear
English books as a
guide; and saw that it was a complete text-book on
astral development.
"With these instructions," the doctor declared, "any one could do as
the
Venusians do--visit other worlds in spirit!"
Just then Estra and Myrin returned. They were moving at what was,
for
them, a rapid pace; and to all appearances they were rather excited.
"We were not able to make these records as perfect as we would like,"
said
Estra, holding up four disks similar to the ones which still lay in
the
explorers' translating machines. He proceeded to open the little
black cases
and make the exchange. "There will be words used which I did
not see fit to
incorporate in the original vocabulary, but which you
will have to understand
perfectly if this announcement is to mean
anything to you."
"Thank you," said the doctor quietly. "And now, don't you think we
had
best know in advance, just what is to be the subject of--"
"Hush!" whispered Estra; and next second they were listening to
the
telephone in amazement.
XIII
THE WAR OF THE SEXES
"In accordance with my promise," stated a high-pitched effeminate
voice,
"I am going to demonstrate a juvenation method upon which I have
worked
for the past one hundred and twenty-two years."
There was a brief pause, during which Estra hurriedly explained that
the
man who was making the speech was located far on the other side of
the
planet, in a hall like the one the four had first visited; and that
he
was making the demonstration before a great gathering of
scientists.
"Too bad you cannot see as we do," commented the Venusian.
"However,
Savarona may go into the details of--"
"If the committeemen are entirely finished with their
measurements,"
stated the unseen experimenter, "I would like to have the
results
compared with the recorded figures of Pario Camenol, who was born on
the
two hundred and fifteenth day of the year twenty-one thousand
seven
hundred and four."
Another rest, and Estra said: "They are examining a boy who appears to
be
about twelve years of age."
Then came other voices: "As we all know, the craniums of us all
are
absolutely distinct; as much so as our finger-prints." "The
measurements
correspond identically with those of Pario Camenol, beyond a
doubt."
"This boy can be none other than Pario."
"Then," the high-pitched voice went on, "then notice the formula I
have
written on this blackboard. Using this solution, I have
supplied
nourishment to this lad from the hour of his birth. Until a few
days
ago, I was not satisfied with the results; the patient showed a
tiny
variation from the allowable subconscious maximum, together with
only
nine-tenths the required motor reaction.
"But I have corrected this. Briefly, I have incorporated in
Pario
Camenol's standard diet certain elements which have hitherto been
unsafe
to combine. These elements are derivatives of the potash group, for
the
most part, together with phosphates which need a new
classification.
Their effect," impressively, "has been to postpone age
indefinitely!"
There must have been a tremendous sensation in that hall. The
speaker's
voice shook with excitement as he went on:
"We have sought in vain, friends, for a way to cheat death of his due.
We
have succeeded in postponing his advent until our average longevity
is
several times greater than on our neighboring planet. But so far, it
has been
a mere reprieve.
"What I have done is to prevent age itself. This lad is a hundred
and
twenty-two years old, mentally, and still only twelve years old, as
to
body!
"In short, I offer you the fountain of youth itself!"
The speaker paused. There was no comment. Evidently all had been
as
greatly impressed as the explorers. Then the voice of the man
Savarona
finished, very deliberately:
"I regret to say that my treatment, despite all that I have been able
to
do, cannot be adapted to the female constitution. It would be fatal
to
any but males. I repeat--I can offer eternal youth, absolutely, but
only
to new-born males!"
This time there was a definite response. From the telephone came
a
confused murmuring, at which Van Emmon's face lighted up with
delight.
The murmuring had an angry sound!
"This is outrageous!" a loud contralto voice was raised above the
rest.
"You are unethical, Savarona, to announce such a thing before
adapting
it to both sexes!"
The high-pitched voice replied shortly, and with more than a hint
of
malice: "If a woman had discovered this, instead of me, I dare say
you
would have no objections!"
The murmuring grew louder, angrier, more confused. The four from the
earth
looked at each other in some slight uneasiness. At the same time
they noted
that Estra, his eyes tightly closed and his fists clenched in
the intensity
of his concentration, suddenly gave a sigh of relief. Next
second he began to
speak into the telephone, in a voice so loud as to
silence all the
clamor.
"Savarona, and the people of Venus! Listen!
"The prophets were right when they said today would witness many
great
things! I have just learned of another experiment which transcends
even
that of Savarona!"
An instant's pause; then: "First let me remind you that we have been
doing
all we could to elevate our spiritual selves. We are daily trying
to
eliminate all that is animal, all that is gross and bemeaning in us,
even to
the extent of reducing the flavors of our foods to the lowest
tolerable
point. And despite all this, we have not been able to get rid
of sex
jealousy!
"We still have the beast within us! No matter how pure our love may be,
it
is always tainted with rivalry! Always the husband and wife are held
down by
this mutual envy, forever dragging at their heels, constantly
holding them
back from the lofty heights of spiritual power to which
they aspire!"
He paused, and Savarona's voice broke in, triumphantly: "You are
right,
Estra! You are right, except you did not mention that this
jealousy
becomes less and less as one grows older!
"Now, my discovery will put an end to your beast, Estra! My
experiments
took this lad before he had become a man, and allowed his brain
to
develop, while his body stopped growing! He is a man in mentality,
and
an innocent boy in body!
"Estra, I have done the thing you wish! This boy will never know
jealousy,
because he will never know love!"
The man in the room with the four answered in a flash: "So you
have,
Savarona, but only for MEN! No female can benefit by what you
have
done!"
"But I tell you that, within the past few minutes, a child has been
born
under circumstances which can be repeated at any time, and for any
sex!"
"In this case," the Venusian's voice changed curiously; "in this
case,
however, it was a girl; for the mother controlled the sex in
the
customary manner." At this, the doctor's interest became acute. At
the
same time, the other three felt a tremendous, inexplicable thrill.
"Friends"--and Extra's face shone in his enthusiasm--"friends, for
the
first time in creation the human male germ has been dispensed with!
The
intellect has done what the laboratory could not do!
"I have the honor to announce that my sister, Amra, has just
given
birth"--his voice fairly rang--"has just given birth to a girl
baby,
whose only father was her mother's brain!"
XIV
ESTRA
This time there was no drowning the confusion. The telephone
fairly
shook with innumerable cries, shouts, imprecations. The four gave
up
trying to hear, and watched the two Venusians.
Myrin was facing Estra now. Her expression had lost a great deal of
its
good humor, and there was a certain sharpness in her voice as
she
exclaimed:
"Estra--if your sister has done this, and I see no reason to doubt
it,
then she has made man superfluous! If women can produce
children
mechanically, and govern the sex at will, the coming race need
be
nothing but females!"
Estra nodded gravely. "That is what it amounts to, Myrin!"
For a moment the two stared at one another challengingly. On the
earth,
their attitude would have indicated some unimportant tiff. None
would
have dreamed that the most momentous question in their lives had
come
up, and had found them at outs.
Next instant Myrin turned, and without another word walked from the
room.
Estra followed slowly to the door, where he stood looking after
her with an
expression of the keenest concern on his sensitive, high-
strung features.
The three men from the earth, after a glance,
studiously avoided looking at
him; but Billie walked up and laid a hand
on his arm.
"Are you really in favor of this--scheme?" she inquired, in a
curiously
tender voice. At the same time she gazed intently into Estra's
eyes.
He turned, and the smile came back to his face. He took Billie's hand
and
laid it between both his own. His voice was even gentler than
before.
"Most certainly I do favor my sister's method, Billie. It will be
the
greatest boon the race has ever known. We can look forward,
now"--and
his face shone again--"can look forward to generation upon
generation of
people whose spirituality will be absolute!"
The girl moved closer to him. She spoke with feverish earnestness.
"There may be some hitch in the idea, Estra. If God meant for man
to
become--to become obsolete, He would not have hidden the method all
this
time. Suppose some flaw should develop--later on?"
In the cube, Billie Jackson would not have stumbled over such a
speech.
She would have ignored the fact that Estra was holding her hand all
this
time, and gazing deep into her eyes; she would have been filled
with
what she was saying and not with what she was seeing. On the other
side
of the room, Van Emmon watched and glowered; he could not hear.
The Venusian lifted his head suddenly. The voices from the telephone
had
subsided; only an occasional outburst came from the instrument.
Estra
closed his eyes again for a second, and when he opened them again,
his
manner was astonishingly alert, and his speech swift and to the
point.
"So far as we know, Billie, the method has no flaws. It gives us
the
chance to throw off our lower selves; and if by so doing, we reduce
the
race to a single sex, only--"
He stopped short, as though at a sound; and with a word of apology
stepped
from the room. He opened another door, far down the corridor;
and as he
passed through, the wail of a new-born infant came faintly to
the four.
"Wonder what's up?" said Smith. Van Emmon, who had gone to the
window,
whirled upon the engineer and motioned him to his side.
"Look at the people!"
Smith saw that the nearby houses were almost concealed by a throng
which
had gathered, silently and without confusion, during the past
few
minutes. Their numbers were increasing swiftly, fresh arrivals
packing
the background. People filled the streets; the space below
Estra's
balcony was already crowded as closely as it could be. Except for a
low-
voiced buzzing, there was no disturbance.
Billie came up. She seemed to divine the temper of the mob. She caught
her
breath sharply, and then said, very simply:
"It reminds me of--Bethlehem."
But the words had scarcely left her mouth before an uproar sounded
from
one end of the street below. A crowd of excited Venusians was
pushing
its way determinedly toward the house, their passage obstructed
by
shouting, protesting individuals. Van Emmon's breast began to heave;
he
fancied he saw blows struck.
"By George!" he exclaimed, next second. "They're fighting!"
It was true; a hand-to-hand battle was going on less than a block
away.
The people below the window surged in the direction of the fight;
all
were shouting, now; the clamor was deafening.
"Live and let live!" came one of the shouts. It was taken up by the
group
that was doing the attacking, and made into a cheer. Then came
other cries
from them. Smith made out something like "Down with sex
monopoly!"
"Don't you see?" shouted Smith, above the din. "These people below
are
Estra's friends; those newcomers are backing Savarona! Get the idea?"
he
repeated. "If Estra wins out, the old boy with the fountain of
youth
will never get another boy baby to experiment on!"
"What!" The doctor leaped to their sides. He took it in at a glance;
then
whirled to the door. "We ought to warn Estra!"
"He knows it already!" reminded Billie swiftly. A great shout came
from
below; the attackers had forced their way through the crowd of
Estra's
friends.
"Well!" Van Emmon stood squarely in the middle of the room. "So far as
I'm
concerned, Estra and his sister can face that crowd alone! I don't
approve of
the scheme!"
The doctor eyed him thoughtfully. "I'm not so sure, Van. This is
a
tremendous thing; we ought to--"
"Van is--right!" exploded Billie. Her voice rose to a shriek as a
crash
shook the house.
Next instant Myrin, for once in a hurry, broke into the room. She
glanced
about, missed Estra, looked slightly puzzled, and then frowned
angrily as the
Venusian himself stepped in: "You fooled me!" she shot at
him. But he smiled
apologetically. He was carrying a large package of
leaflets, closely printed
in Venusian; there seemed to be several
thousand in the lot. He said, by way
of explanation:
"I had to get ready. Savarona's people will be here any moment; they
have
destroyed the elevator, and--"
A wave of clamor burst from below. "They've broken the barrier,"
remarked
Estra calmly; he turned to the door, then whirled at a crash
which sounded
from above. "Through the roof," he added. He did not even
glance at the
balcony, where the two cars barred the way against any
attack from that
direction.
Next second he again quit the room. Myrin hesitated a moment,
irresolute,
and then followed him thoughtfully. They never saw her
again. As for Estra,
he came back in a moment carrying a small, white
bundle, which stirred in his
arms. He unhesitatingly handed the child to
Billie. His mouth moved
soundlessly as a muffled shriek arose from the
other end of the corridor;
there was a thud, a metallic crash, and a
great roar of voices. The mob had
broken in, and up, through the back of
the house. The first of the attackers
thrust his head and shoulders into
sight not ten feet away.
Estra touched something with his foot, and a door shot across
the
corridor. There was an instant's silence; then, the thunder of the
mob,
hurling itself against the door. The people were fairly snarling
now.
Estra closed the inner door.
"Estra!" shrilly, from Billie. She laid the baby down, and strode to
the
Venusian. "Let's get out of here! The car's on the balcony; nobody's
in
the way to interfere! Why not--"
A grinding, ripping jar from above, and Estra shook his head. The
smile
was gone, and his mouth was set and grim. "They'd catch us before
we
went a mile," he said, glancing at the infant, who had begun to cry,
in
a stifled, gasping way that tore at the nerves.
"Estra!" Billie pleaded; but he turned away. The doctor strode up to
him
and gripped his shoulder.
"What's the good, Estra? What can you accomplish even if you--"
The Venusian tapped his forehead. "I can TELL!" he exclaimed, with
a
return of that exalted flush. "Just give me a chance to offer
my
sister's discovery to the world, and I shall be satisfied!" He
touched
the package of leaflets. "These are not written as clearly as
they
should be; but if I cannot hold them back, then these"--fingering
the
papers--"these go to the friends down below!" He moved closer to
the
window, but his eyes were on the door.
A rending crash told that the corridor was now open to the mob. There
was
a rush, and then the storm of the people battering the last door.
"Van! Doc! Billie!" Smith had the window open, and was stepping into
one
of the cars. Kinney and the geologist were at his side in an
instant.
The girl held back.
"Estra!" she begged. She picked up the baby, and with her free hand
tugged
at the Venusian's arm. "Come on! Don't sacrifice yourself!"
The door bulged under the attack. The noise was
ear-splitting.
Nevertheless Estra heard, and shook his head without looking
at the
woman from the Earth. She dashed to the window, then came back.
"Hurry!
There's a chance!" He stood unmoved, watchful and ready. "Estra! I
want
you to come!" Her face flamed. "Can't you see? Can't you see that
I--I
want you?" She gasped as the door shrieked under the strain.
"Come--if
you're a man!"
The Venusian's face changed. He turned, and stared at the girl with
eyes
that held nothing but blank amazement. The grimness left his mouth,
his
lips partly opened. He took a step forward and threw an arm about
her
shoulders.
"Billie--I'm sorry! I never thought!" A crack showed at the edge of
the
door, and a roar smote their ears. Estra backed to the window. "Go!"
he
shouted. "Go quickly, while you can!"
Billie stood stock still, gazing at him. "I'm going to stay!"
she
screamed. "I'll take my chances with--"
He thrust her through the window. "You don't understand!" he shouted,
and
took the baby away from her, despite all her strength. Then a
wonderfully
tender light came into his eyes. He gripped Billie's hands,
and spoke
sorrowfully:
"Billie--I'm not what you thought! I'm not a man--I'm a woman!"
XV
BACK!
By the time Smith had driven the strange craft fifty yards, he had
it
under control. Billie glanced back; Estra was out on the balcony,
now,
and the mob was surging against the windows she had locked against
them.
She shifted the baby to the hollow of one arm while with the other
she
broke the cord of the packet.
At the sight, the crowd in the street gave voice. "Let us have it!"
they
were crying; they drowned out the uproar within the house. Estra did
not
even look at the other car.
Then the windows gave way. Like the breaking of a dam, a flood
of
Venusians poured and tumbled at Estra's feet. She raised her hand,
and
shouted something Billie could not hear; then, scarcely without
pause,
the crowd bore down upon her.
And even as she was crushed against the railing, with one hand she
dropped
the baby to eager, upstretched arms below; and with the other
she tossed the
package high in the air. There it broke apart, the air
caught it, and the
thousands of leaflets fluttered down upon that street
full of
sympathizers.
Leaflets, each of which described a discovery which was to give to
women
the power of abolishing the opposite sex, of making Venus a world
not
only one in country, one in industry and one in thought, but--one
in
sex!
The thunderous meaning of Estra's last action almost made Billie
forget
that it was, in truth, the woman's last act. For next moment
her
lifeless form was being crushed beneath the feet of that
supremely
cultured, marvelously civilized mob; for it was only a mob, despite
its
astounding advancement; a mob which had retained all the
brute's
fanaticism, and all the male jealousy of the female.
For they were all men.
The four had been on Venus almost twenty-four hours when Smith,
knowing
the condition of the machinery in the cube, warned the others that
they
must return. Secretly, he was tired of the Venusians' continual
smiling;
for they had fairly outdone each other to show the visitors all
that
could be shown. But it was Van Emmon who thought to ask for
Estra's
wonderful library.
"These chemicals and metals you are giving us," he said, making a
regular
speech of it, "are extremely welcome; they will enable us to
perform
experiments otherwise out of our reach.
"But Estra's books will mean still more to the people of the earth.
If
there is no one else with more need for them, who is going to put in
a
claim, then why not let us have them?"
Apparently the Venusians did not like the idea very well. "They must
have
thought it was like letting a monkey play with a rifle," the doctor
afterward
put it. But, for lack of a leader with any motive for
objecting, and because
Estra had no living relatives to claim the
library, somehow that incredible
collection of intellectual gems got
into the possession of the four. Nothing
was said about it during the
quiet leave-taking, and when the cube finally
rose away from the roof,
Van Emmon's face beamed with happiness and a great
sigh of satisfaction
escaped him.
"Well"--looking at the books--"they kind of make up for the fact that
the
folks didn't ask us to call again!"
And he turned and went straight to the kitchenette, where he
proceeded
with great speed and efficiency to set out the following:
Canned Soup. Canned baked beans. Fried bacon and egg. Coffee. Peaches.
"Come and get it!" he shouted. The doctor tore himself away from
the
books; Smith crawled out from the beloved machines; Billie came
out
shortly from her cubby-hole, and slipped into her seat in a
highly
excited manner. There was a brightness in her cheeks, and a
noticeable
change in her usually assured manner. This timidity, so utterly
new to
the girl, seemed most pronounced whenever Van Emmon chanced to look
at
her; which was quite often.
All four were ravenous. They had been away from the cube a day and
a
night, and "all we had to eat was something to drink," as
Smith
complained. Nothing whatever was said except "Please pass that"
and
"Thanks," for fully fifteen minutes.
At last they were satisfied. The doctor went back to the books;
Smith
returned to his oil-can and wrench. But Billie stood by the table,
and
began helping Van Emmon to clear up. In a moment they were face to
face.
"Van," she said softly, and looked up at him wistfully. "Van--do you
like
me better this way?" Her eyes were almost piteous.
Into the man's face there came a look of amazement followed by one
of
admiration, and another of genuine delight He gave a little laugh,
and
unconsciously threw out his hands.
"Much better, Billie." Neither of them cared a particle whether Smith
or
the doctor saw that Billie, very simply and naturally, walked right
into
Van Emmon's arms. "Much better. Besides, you're really too graceful
to
wear anything else."