Beyond
The Great Oblivion
George
Allan England
I. Beginnings
II. Settling Down
III. The Maskalonge
IV. The Golden Age
V. Deadly Peril
VI. Trapped!
VII. A Night of Toil
VIII. The Rebirth of Civilization
IX. Planning the Great Migration
X. Toward the Great Cataract
XI. The Plunge!
XII. Trapped on the Ledge
XIII. On the Crest of the Maelstrom
XIV. A Fresh Start
XV. Labor and Comradeship
XVI. Finding the Biplane
XVII. All Aboard for Boston!
XVIII. The Hurricane
XIX. Westward Ho!
XX. On the Lip of the Chasm
XXI. Lost in the Great Abyss
XXII. Lights!
XXIII. The White Barbarians
XXIV. The Land of the Merucaans
XXV. The Dungeon of the Skeletons
XXVI. "You Speak English!"
XXVII. Doomed!
XXVIII. The Battle in the Dark
XXIX. Shadows of War
XXX. Exploration
XXXI. Escape?
XXXII. Preparations
XXXIII. The Patriarch's Tale
XXXIV. The Coming of Kamrou
XXXV. Face to Face with Death
XXXVI. Gage of Battle
XXXVII. The Final Struggle
XXXVIII. The Sun of Spring
CHAPTER I
BEGINNINGS
A thousand years of darkness and decay! A thousand
years of blight, brutality, and atavism; of Nature overwhelming all man's work,
of crumbling cities and of forgotten civilization, of stupefaction, of death! A
thousand years of night!
Two human beings, all alone in that vast wilderness--a
woman and a man.
The past, irrevocable; the present, fraught with
problems, perils, and alarms; the future--what?
A thousand years!
Yet, though this thousand years had seemingly smeared
away all semblance of the world of men from the cosmic canvas, Allan Stern and
Beatrice Kendrick thrilled with as vital a passion as though that vast,
oblivious age lay not between them and the time that was.
And their long kiss, there in sight of their new
home-to-be--alone there in that desolated world--was as natural as the summer
breeze, the liquid melody of the red-breast on the blossomy apple-bough above
their heads, the white and purple spikes of odorous lilacs along the vine-grown
stone wall, the gold and purple dawn now breaking over the distant reaches of
the river.
Thus were these two betrothed, this sole surviving
pair of human beings.
Thus, as the new day burned to living flame up the
inverted bowl of sky, this woman and this man pledged each other their love and
loyalty and trust.
Thus they stood together, his left arm about her warm,
lithe body, clad as she was only in her tiger-skin. Their eyes met and held
true, there in the golden glory of the dawn. Unafraid, she read the message in
the depths of his, the invitation, the command; and they both foreknew the
future.
Beatrice spoke first, flushing a little as she drew
toward him.
"Allan," she said with infinite tenderness,
even as a mother might speak to a well-loved son, "Allan, come now and let
me dress your wound. That's the first thing to do. Come, let me see your
arm."
He smiled a little, and with his broad, brown hand
stroked back the spun silk of her hair, its mass transfixed by the raw gold
pins he had found for her among the ruins of New York.
"No, no!" he objected. "It's
nothing--it's not worth bothering about. I'll be all right in a day or two. My
flesh heals almost at once, without any care. You don't realize how healthy I
am."
"I know, dear, but it must hurt you
terribly!"
"Hurt? How could I feel any pain with your kiss
on my mouth?"
"Come!" she again repeated with insistence,
and pointed toward the beach where their banca lay on the sand.
"Come, I'll dress your wound first. And after I
find out just how badly you're injured--"
He tried to stop her mouth with kisses, but she evaded
him.
"No, no!" she cried. "Not now--not
now!"
Allan had to cede. And now presently there he knelt on
the fine white sand, his bearskin robe opened and flung back, his well-knit
shoulder and sinewed arm bare and brown.
"Well, is it fatal?" he jested. "How
long do you give me to survive it?" as with her hand and the cold limpid
water of the Hudson she started to lave the caked blood away from his gashed
triceps.
At sight of the wound she looked grave, but made no
comment. She had no bandages; but with the woodland skill she had developed in
the past weeks of life in close touch with nature, she bound the cleansed wound
with cooling leaves and fastened them securely in place with lashings of
leather thongs from the banca.
Presently the task was done. Stern slipped his
bearskin back in place. Beatrice, still solicitous, tried to clasp the silver
buckle that held it; but he, unable to restrain himself, caught her hand in
both of his and crushed it to his lips.
Then he took her perfect face between his palms, and
for a long moment studied it. He looked at her waving hair, luxuriant and
glinting rich brown gleams in the sunlight; her thick, arched brows and hazel
eyes, liquid and full of mystery as woodland pools; her skin, sun-browned and
satiny, with abundant tides of life-blood coursing vigorously in its warm
flush; her ripe lips. He studied her, and loved and yearned toward her; and in
him the passion leaped up like living flames.
His mouth met hers again.
"My beloved!" breathed he.
Her rounded arm, bare to the shoulder, circled his
neck; she hid her face in his breast.
"Not yet--not yet!" she whispered.
On the white and pink flowered bough above, the robin,
unafraid, gushed into a very madness of golden song. And now the sun, higher risen,
had struck the river into a broad sheet of spun metal, over which the
swallows--even as in the olden days--darted and spiraled, with now and then a
flick and dash of spray.
Far off, wool-white winding-sheets of mist were
lifting, lagging along the purple hills, clothed with inviolate forest.
Again the man tried to raise her head, to burn his
kisses on her mouth. But she, instilled with the eternal spirit of woman,
denied him.
"No, not now--not yet!" she said; and in her
eyes he read her meaning. "You must let me go now, Allan. There's so much
to do; we've got to be practical, you know."
"Practical! When I--I love--"
"Yes, I know, dear. But there's so much to be
done first." Her womanly homemaking instinct would not be gainsaid.
"There's so much work! We've got the place to explore, and the house to
put in order, and--oh, thousands of things! And we must be very sensible and
very wise, you and I, boy. We're not children, you know. Now that we've lost
our home in the Metropolitan Tower, everything's got to be done over
again."
"Except to learn to love you!" answered
Stern, letting her go with reluctance.
She laughed back at him over her fur-clad shoulder as
her sandaled feet followed the dim remnants of what must once have been a broad
driveway from the river road along the beach, leading up to the bungalow.
Through the encroaching forest and the tangle of the
degenerate apple-trees they could see the concrete walls, with here or there a
bit of white still gleaming through the enlacements of ancient vines that had
enveloped the whole structure--woodbine, ivy, wisterias, and the maddest jungle
of climbing roses, red and yellow, that ever made a nest for love.
"Wait, I'll go first and clear the way for
you," he said cheerily. His big bulk crashed down the undergrowth. His
hands held back the thorns and briers and the whipping hardbacks. Together they
slowly made way toward the house.
The orchard had lost all semblance of regularity, for
in the thousand years since the hand of man had pruned or cared for it Mother
Nature had planted and replanted it times beyond counting. Small and gnarled
and crooked the trees were, as the spine-tree souls in Dante's dolorosa selva.
Here or there a pine had rooted and grown tall,
killing the lesser tribe of green things underneath.
Warm lay the sun there. A pleasant carpet of last
year's leaves and pine-spills covered the earth.
"It's all ready and waiting for us, all embowered
and carpeted for love," said Allan musingly. "I wonder what old Van
Amburg would think of his estate if he could see it now? And what would he say
to our having it? You know, Van was pretty ugly to me at one time about my
political opinion--but that's all past and forgotten now. Only this is
certainly an odd turn of fate."
He helped the girl over a fallen log, rotted with moss
and lichens. "It's one awful mess, sure as you're born. But as quick as my
arm gets back into shape, we'll have order out of chaos before you know it.
Some fine day you and I will drive our sixty horse-power car up an asphalt road
here, and--"
"A car? Why, what do you mean? There's not such a
thing left in the whole world as a car!"
The engineer tapped his forehead with his finger.
"Oh, yes, there is. I've got several models right
here. You just wait till you see the workshop I'm going to install on the bank
of the river with current-power, and with an electric light plant for the whole
place, and with--"
Beatrice laughed.
"You dear, big, dreaming boy!" she
interrupted. Then with a kiss she took his hand.
"Come," said she. "We're home now. And
there's work to do."
CHAPTER II
SETTLING DOWN
Together, in the comradeship of love and trust and
mutual understanding, they reached the somewhat open space before the bungalow,
where once the road had ended in a stone-paved drive. Allan's wounded arm, had
he but sensed it, was beginning to pain more than a little. But he was
oblivious. His love, the fire of spring that burned in his blood, the lure of
this great adventuring, banished all consciousness of ill.
Parting a thicket, they reached the steps. And for a
while they stood there, hand in hand, silent and thrilled with vast, strange
thoughts, dreaming of what must be. In their eyes lay mirrored the future of
the human race. The light that glowed in them evoked the glories of the dawn of
life again, after ten centuries of black oblivion.
"Our home now!" he told her, very gently,
and again he kissed her, but this time on the forehead. "Ours when we
shall have reclaimed it and made it ours. See the yellow roses, dear? They
symbolize our golden future. The red, red roses? Our passion and our pain!"
The girl made no answer, but tears gathered in her
eyes--tears from the deepest wells of the soul. She brought his hand to her
lips.
"Ours!" she whispered tremblingly.
They stood there together for a little space, silent
and glad. From an oak that shaded the porch a squirrel chippered at them. A
sparrow--larger now than the sparrows they remembered in the time that
was--peered out at them, wondering but unafraid, from its nest under the eaves;
at them, the first humans it had ever seen.
"We've got a tenant already, haven't we?"
smiled Allan. "Well, I guess we sha'n't have to disturb her, unless
perhaps for a while, when I cut away this poison ivy here." He pointed at
the glossy triple leaf. "No poisonous thing, whether plant, snake, spider,
or insect, is going to stay in this Eden!" he concluded, with a laugh.
Together, with a strange sense of violating the spirit
of the past, they went up the concrete steps, untrodden now by human feet for
ten centuries.
The massive blocks were still intact for the most
part, for old Van Amburg had builded with endless care and with no remotest
regard for cost. Here a vine, there a sapling had managed to insinuate a
tap-root in some crack made by the frost, but the damage was trifling. Except
for the falling of a part of a cornice, the building was complete. But it was
hidden in vines and mold. Moss, lichens and weeds grew on the steps,
flourishing in the detritus that had accumulated.
Allan dug the toe of his sandal into the loose drift
of dead leaves and pine-spills that littered the broad piazza.
"It'll need more than a vacuum cleaner to put
this in shape!" said he. "Well, the sooner we get at it, the better.
We'd do well to take a look at the inside."
The front door, one-time built of oaken planks studded
with hand-worked nails and banded with huge wrought-iron hinges, now hung there
a mere shell of itself, worm-eaten, crumbling, disintegrated.
With no tools but his naked hands Stern tore and
battered it away. A thick, pungent haze of dust arose, yellow in the morning
sunlight that presently, for the first time in a thousand years, fell warm and
bright across the cob-webbed front hallway, through the aperture.
Room by room Allan and Beatrice explored. The bungalow
was practically stripped bare by time.
"Only moth and rust," sighed the girl.
"The same story everywhere we go. But--well, never mind. We'll soon have
it looking homelike. Make me a broom, dear, and I'll sweep out the worst of it
at once."
Talking now in terms of practical detail, with romance
for the hour displaced by harsh reality, they examined the entire house.
Of the once magnificent furnishings, only dust-piles,
splinters and punky rubbish remained. Through the rotted plank shutters, that
hung drunkenly awry from rust-eaten hinges, long spears of sunlight wanly illuminated
the wreck of all that had once been the lavish home of a billionaire.
Rugs, paintings, furniture, bibelots, treasures of all
kinds now lay commingled in mournful decay. In what had evidently been the
music room, overlooking the grounds to southward, the grand piano now was only
a mass of rusted frame, twisted and broken fragments of wire and a considerable
heap of wood-detritus, with a couple of corroded pedals buried in the pile.
"And this was the famous hundred-thousand-dollar
harp of Sara, his daughter, that the papers used to talk so much about, you
remember?" asked the girl, stirring with her foot a few mournful bits of
rubbish that lay near the piano.
"Sic transit gloria mundi!" growled Stern,
shaking his head. "You and she were the same age, almost. And now--"
Silent and full of strange thoughts they went on into
what had been the kitchen. The stove, though heavily bedded in rust, retained
its form, for the solid steel had resisted even the fearful lapse of vanished
time.
"After I scour that with sand and water,"
said Stern, "and polish up these aluminum utensils and reset that broken
pane with a piece of glass from up-stairs where it isn't needed, you won't know
this place. Yes, and I'll have running water in here, too--and electricity from
the power-plant, and--"
"Oh, Allan," interrupted the girl,
delightedly, "this must have been the dining room." She beckoned from
a doorway. "No end of dishes left for us! Isn't it jolly? This is luxury
compared to the way we had to start in the tower!"
In the dining-room a good number of the more solid
cut-glass and china pieces had resisted the shock of having fallen, centuries
ago, to the floor, when the shelves and cupboards of teak and mahogany had
rotted and gone to pieces. Corroded silverware lay scattered all about; and
there was gold plate, too, intact save for the patina of extreme age--platters,
dishes, beakers. But of the table and the chairs, nothing remained save dust.
Like curious children they poked and pried.
"Dishes enough!" exclaimed she. "Gold,
till you can't rest. But how about something to put on the dishes? We haven't
had a bite since yesterday noon, and I'm about starved. Now that the fighting's
all over, I begin to remember my healthy appetite!"
Stern smiled.
"You'll have some breakfast, girlie,"
promised he. "There'll be the wherewithal to garnish our 18-k, never fear.
Just let's have a look up-stairs, and then I'll go after something for the
larder."
They left the down-stairs rooms, silent save for a fly
buzzing in a spider's web, and together ascended the dusty stairs. The railing
was entirely gone; but the concrete steps remained.
Stern helped the girl, in spite of the twinge of pain
it caused his wounded arm. His heart beat faster--so, too, did hers--as they
gained the upper story. The touch of her was, to him, like a lighted match
flung into a powder magazine; but he bit his lip, and though his face paled,
then flushed, he held his voice steady as he said:
"So then, bats up here? Well, how the deuce do
they get in and out? Ah! That broken window, where the elm-branch has knocked
out the glass--I see! That's got to be fixed at once!"
He brushed webs and dust from the remaining panes, and
together they peered out over the orchard, out across the river, now a broad
sheet of molten gold. His arm went about her; he drew her head against his
heart, fast-beating; and silence fell.
"Come, Allan," said the girl at length,
calmer than he. "Let's see what we've got here to do with. Oh, I tell you
to begin with," and she smiled up frankly at him, "I'm a tremendously
practical sort of woman. You may be an engineer, and know how to build wireless
telegraphs and bridges and--and things; but when it comes to
home--building--"
"I admit it. Well, lead on," he answered;
and together they explored the upper rooms. The sense of intimacy now lay
strong upon them, of unity and of indissoluble love and comradeship. This was
quite another venture than the exploration of the tower, for now they were
choosing a home, their home, and in them the mating instinct had begun to
thrill, to burn.
Each room, despite its ruin and decay, took on a
special charm, a dignity, the foreshadowing of what must be. Yet intrinsically
the place was mournful, even after Stern had let the sunshine in.
For all was dark desolation. The rosewood and mahogany
furniture, pictures, rugs, brass beds, all alike lay reduced to dust and ashes.
A gold clock, the porcelain fittings of the bath-room, and some fine clay and
meerschaum pipes in what had evidently been Van Amburg's den--these constituted
all that had escaped the tooth of time.
In a front room that probably had been Sara's, a
mud-swallow had built its nest in the far corner. It flew out, frightened, when
Stern thrust his hand into the aperture to see if the nest were tenanted,
fluttered about with scared cries, then vanished up the broad fireplace.
"Eggs--warm!" announced Stern. "Well,
this room will have to be shut up and left. We've got more than enough, anyhow.
Less work for you, dear," he added, with a smile. "We might use only
the lower floor, if you like. I don't want you killing yourself with housework,
you understand."
She laughed cheerily.
"You make me a broom and get all the dishes and
things together," she answered, "and then leave the rest to me. In a week
from now you won't know this place. Once we clear out a little foothold here we
can go back to the tower and fetch up a few loads of tools and supplies--"
"Come on, come on!" he interrupted, taking
her by the hand and leading her away. "All such planning will do after
breakfast, but I'm starving! How about a five-pound bass on the coals, eh? Come
on, let's go fishing."
CHAPTER III
THE MASKALONGE
With characteristic resourcefulness Stein soon
manufactured adequate tackle with a well-trimmed alder pole, a line of leather
thongs and a hook of stout piano wire, properly bent to make a barb and rubbed
to a fine point on a stone. He caught a dozen young frogs among the sedges in
the marshy stretch at the north end of the landing-beach, and confined them in the
only available receptacle, the holster of his automatic.
All this hurt his arm severely, but he paid no heed.
"Now," he announced, "we're quite ready
for business. Come along!"
Together they pushed the boat off; it glided smoothly
out onto the breast of the great current.
"I'll paddle," she volunteered. "You
mustn't, with your arm in the condition it is. Which way?"
"Up--over there into that cove beyond the
point," he answered, baiting up his hook with a frog that kicked as
naturally as though a full thousand years hadn't passed since any of its
progenitors had been handled thus. "This certainly is far from being the
kind of tackle that Bob Davis or any of that gang used to swear by, but it's
the best we can do for now. When I get to making lines and hooks and things in
earnest, there'll be some sport in this vicinity. Imagine water untouched by
the angler for ten hundred years or more!"
He swung his clumsy line as he spoke, and cast. Far
across the shining water the circles spread, silver in the morning light; then
the trailing line cut a long series of V's as the girl paddled slowly toward
the cove. Behind the banca a rippling wake flashed metallic; the cold, clear
water caressed the primitive hull, murmuring with soft cadences, in the old,
familiar music of the time when there were men on earth. The witchery of it
stirred Beatrice; she smiled, looked up with joy and wonder at the beauty of
that perfect morning, and in her clear voice began to sing, very low, very
softly, to herself, a song whereof--save in her brain--no memory now remained
in the whole world--
"Stark wie der Fels, Tief wie das Meer, Muss
deine Liebe, muss deine Liebe sein--"
"Ah!" cried the man, interrupting her.
The alder pole was jerking, quivering in his hands;
the leather line was taut.
"A strike, so help me! A big one!"
He sprang to his feet, and, unmindful of the swaying
of the banca, began to play the fish.
Beatrice, her eyes a-sparkle, turned to watch; the paddle
lay forgotten in her hands.
"Here he comes! Oh, damn!" shouted Stern.
"If I only had a reel now--"
"Pull him right in, can't you?" the girl
suggested.
He groaned, between clenched teeth--for the strain on
his arm was torture.
"Yes, and have him break the line!" he
cried. "There he goes, under the boat, now! Paddle! Go
ahead--paddle!"
She seized the oar, and while Stern fought the monster
she set the banca in motion again. Now the fish was leaping wildly from side to
side, zig-zagging, shaking at the hook as a bull-dog shakes an old boot. The
leather cord hummed through the water, ripping and vibrating, taut as a
fiddle-string. A long, silvery line of bubbles followed the vibrant cord.
Flash!
High in air, lithe and graceful and very swift, a
spurt of green and white--a long, slim curve of glistening power--a splash; and
again the cord drew hard.
"Maskalonge!" Stern cried. "Oh, we've
got to land him--got to! Fifteen pounds if he's an ounce!"
Beatrice, flushed and eager, watched the fight with
fascination.
"If I can bring him close, you strike--hit
hard!" the man directed. "Give it to him! He's our breakfast!"
Even in the excitement of the battle Stern realized
how very beautiful this woman was. Her color was adorable--rose-leaves and
cream. Her eyes were shot full of light and life and the joy of living; her
loosened hair, wavy and rich and brown, half hid the graceful curve of her neck
as she leaned to watch, to help him.
And strong determination seized him to master this
great fish, to land it, to fling it at the woman's feet as his tribute and his
trophy.
He had, in the days of long ago, fished in the
Adirondack wildernesses. He had fished for tarpon in the Gulf; he had cast the
fly along the brooks of Maine and lured the small-mouthed bass with floating
bait on many a lake and stream. He had even fished in a Rocky Mountain torrent,
and out on the far Columbia, when failure to succeed meant hunger.
But this experience was unique. Never had he fished
all alone in the world with a loved woman who depended on his skill for her
food, her life, her everything.
Forgotten now the wounded arm, the crude and absurd
implements; forgotten everything but just that sole, indomitable thought:
"I've got to win!"
Came now a lull in the struggles of the monster. Stern
hauled in. Another rush, met by a paying-out, a gradual tautening of the line,
a strong and steady pull.
"He's tiring," exulted Stern. "Be ready
when I bring him close!"
Again the fish broke cover; again it dived; but now
its strength was lessening fast.
Allan hauled in.
Now, far down in the clear depths, they could both see
the darting, flickering shaft of white and green.
"Up he comes now! Give it to him, hard!"
As Stern brought him to the surface, Beatrice struck
with the paddle--once, twice, with magnificent strength and judgment.
Over the gunwale of the banca, in a sparkle of flying
spray, silvery in the morning sun, the maskalonge gleamed.
Excited and happy as a child, Beatrice clapped her
hands. Stern seized the paddle as she let it fall. A moment later the huge
fish, stunned and dying, lay in the bottom of the boat, its gills rising,
falling in convulsive gasps, its body quivering, scales shining in the
sunlight--a thing of wondrous beauty, a promise of the feast for two strong,
healthy humans.
Stern dried his brow on the back of his hand and drew
a deep breath, for the morning was already warm and the labor had been hard.
"Now," said he, and smiled, "now a nice
little pile of dead wood on the beach, a curl of birch-bark and a handful of
pine punk and grass--a touch of the flint and steel! Then this," and he
pointed at the maskalonge, "broiled on a pointed stick, with a handful of
checkerberries for dessert, and I think you and I will be about ready to begin
work in earnest!"
He knelt and kissed her--a kiss that she returned--and
then, slowly, happily, and filled with the joy of comradeship, they drove their
banca once more to the white and gleaming beach.
CHAPTER IV
THE GOLDEN AGE
Stern's plans of hard work for the immediate present
had to be deferred a little, for in spite of his perfect health, the
spear-thrust in his arm--lacking the proper treatment, and irritated by his
labor in catching the big fish--developed swelling and soreness. A little fever
even set in the second day. And though he was eager to go out fishing again,
Beatrice appointed herself his nurse and guardian, and withheld permission.
They lived for some days on the excellent flesh of the
maskalonge, on clams from the beach--enormous clams of delicious flavor--on a
new fruit with a pinkish meat, which grew abundantly in the thickets and
somewhat resembled breadfruit; on wild asparagus-sprouts, and on the few
squirrels that Stern was able to "pot" with his revolver from the
shelter of the leafy little camping-place they had arranged near the river.
Though Beatrice worked many hours all alone in the
bungalow, sweeping it with a broom made of twigs lashed to a pole, and trying to
bring the place into order, it was still no fit habitation.
She would not even let the man try to help her, but
insisted on his keeping quiet in their camp. This lay under the shelter of a
thick-foliaged oak at the southern end of the beach. The perfect weather and
the presence of a three-quarters moon at night invited them to sleep out under
the sky.
"There'll be plenty of time for the
bungalow," she said, "when it rains. As long as we have fair June
weather like this no roof shall cover me!"
Singularly enough, there were no mosquitoes. In the
thousand years that had elapsed, they might either have shifted their habitat
from eastern America, or else some obscure evolutionary process might have
wiped them out entirely. At any rate, none existed, for which the two
adventurers gave thanks.
Wild beasts they feared not. Though now and then they
heard the yell of a wildcat far back in the woods, or the tramping of an
occasional bulk through the forest, and though once a cinnamon bear poked his
muzzle out into the clearing, sniffed and departed with a grunt of disapproval,
they could not bring themselves to any realization of animals as a real peril.
Their camp-fire burned high all night, heaped with driftwood and windfalls; and
beyond this protection, Stern had his automatic and a belt nearly full of
cartridges. They discussed the question of a possible attack by some remnants
of the Horde; but common sense assured them that these creatures would--such as
survived--give them a wide berth.
"And in any event," Stern summed it up,
"if anything happens, we have the bungalow to retreat into. Though in its
present state, without any doors or shutters, I think we're safer out among the
trees, where, on a pinch, we could go aloft."
Thus his convalescence progressed in the open air,
under the clouds and sun and stars and lustrous moon of that deserted world.
Beatrice showed both skill and ingenuity in her
treatment. With a clam-shell she scraped and saved the rich fat from under the
skins of the squirrels, and this she "tried out" in a golden dish,
over the fire. The oil thus got she used to anoint his healing wound. She used
a dressing of clay and leaves; and when the fever flushed him she made him
comfortable on his bed of spruce-tips, bathed his forehead and cheeks, and gave
him cold water from a spring that trickled down over the moss some fifty feet
to westward of the camp.
Many a long talk they had, too--he prone on the
spruce, she sitting beside him, tending the fire, holding his hand or letting
his head lie in her lap, the while she stroked his hair. Ferns, flowers in
profusion--lilacs and clover and climbing roses and some new, strange scarlet
blossoms--bowered their nest. And through the pain and fever, the delay and
disappointment, they both were glad and cheerful. No word of impatience or
haste or repining escaped them. For they had life; they had each other; they
had love. And those days, as later they looked back upon them, were among the
happiest, the most purely beautiful, the sweetest of their whole wondrous, strange
experience.
He and she, perfect friends, comrades and lovers, were
inseparable. Each was always conscious of the other's presence. The continuity
of love, care and sympathy was never broken. Even when, at daybreak, she went
away around the wooded point for her bath in the river, he could hear her
splashing and singing and laughing happily in the cold water.
It was the Golden Age come back to earth again--the
age of natural and pure simplicity, truth, trust, honor, faith and joy,
unspoiled by malice or deceit, by lies, conventions, sordid ambitions, or the
lust of wealth or power. Arcady, at last--in truth!
Their conversation was of many things. They talked of
their awakening in the tower and their adventures there; of the possible cause
of the world-catastrophe that had wiped out the human race, save for their own
survival; the Horde and the great battle; their escape, their present
condition, and their probable future; the possibility of their ever finding any
other isolated human beings, and of reconstituting the fragments of the world
or of renewing the human race.
And as they spoke of this, sometimes the girl would
grow strangely silent, and a look almost of inspiration--the universal
mother--look of the race--would fill her wondrous eye's. Her hand would tremble
in his; but he would hold it tight, for he, too, understood.
"Afraid, little girl?" he asked her once.
"No, not afraid," she answered; and their
eyes met. "Only--so much depends on us--on you, on me! What strength we
two must have, what courage, what endurance! The future of the human race lies
in our hands!"
He made no answer; he, too, grew silent. And for a
long while they sat and watched the embers of the fire; and the day waned.
Slowly the sun set in its glory over the virgin hills; the far eastern spaces
of the sky grew bathed in tender lavenders and purples. Haze drew its veils
across the world, and the air grew brown with evenfall.
Presently the girl arose, to throw more wood on the
fire. Clad only in her loose tiger-skin, clasped with gold, she moved like a
primeval goddess. Stern marked the supple play of her muscles, the unspoiled
grace and strength of that young body, the swelling warmth of her bosom. And as
he looked he loved; he pressed a hand to his eyes; for a while he thought--it
was as though he prayed.
Evening came on--the warm, dark, mysterious night. Off
there in the shallows gradually arose the million-voiced chorus of frogs,
shrill and monotonous, plaintive, appealing--the cry of new life to the
overarching, implacable mystery of the universe. The first faint silvery powder
of the stars came spangling out along the horizon. Unsteady bats began to reel
across the sky. The solemn beauty of the scene awed the woman and the man to
silence. But Stern, leaning his back against the bole of the great oak, encircled
Beatrice with his arm.
Her beautiful dear head rested in the hollow of his
throat; her warm, fragrant hair caressed his cheek; he felt the wholesome
strength and sweetness of this woman whom he loved; and in his eyes--unseen by
her--tears welled and gleamed in the firelight.
Beatrice watched, like a contented child, the dancing
showers of sparks that rose, wavering and whirling in complex sarabands--sparks
red as passion, golden as the unknown future of their dreams. From the river
they heard the gentle lap-lap-lapping of the waves along the shore. All was
rest and peace and beauty; this was Eden once again--and there was no serpent
to enter in.
Presently Stern spoke.
"Dear," said he, "do you know, I'm a
bit puzzled in some ways, about--well, about night and day, and temperature,
and gravitation, and a number of little things like that. Puzzled. We're facing
problems here that we don't realize fully as yet."
"Problems? What problems, except to make our
home, and--and live?"
"No, there's more to be considered than just
that. In the first place, although I have no timepiece, I'm moderately certain
the day and night are shorter now than they used to be before the smash-up.
There must be a difference of at least half an hour. Just as soon as I can get
around to it, I'll build a clock, and see. Though if the force of gravity has
changed, too, that, of course, will change the time of vibration of any
pendulum, and so of course will invalidate my results. It's a hard problem,
right enough."
"You think gravitation has changed?"
"Don't you notice, yourself, that things seem a
trifle lighter--things that used to be heavy to lift are now comparatively
easy?"
"M-m-m-m-m--I don't know. I thought maybe it was
because I was feeling so much stronger, with this new kind of outdoor
life."
"Of course, that's worth considering,"
answered Stern, "but there's more in it than that. The world is certainly
smaller than it was, though how, or why, I can't say. Things are lighter, and
the time of rotation is shorter. Another thing, the pole-star is certainly five
degrees out of place. The axis of the earth has been given an astonishing
twist, some way or other.
"And don't you notice a distinct change in the
climate? In the old days there were none of these huge, palm-like ferns growing
in this part of the world. We had no such gorgeous butterflies. And look at the
new varieties of flowers--and the breadfruit, or whatever it is, growing on the
banks of the Hudson in the early part of June!
"Something, I tell you, has happened to the earth,
in all these centuries; something big! Maybe the cause of it all was the
original catastrophe; who knows? It's up to us to find out. We've got more to
do than make our home, and live, and hunt for other people--if any are still
alive. We've got to solve these world--problems; we've got work to do, little
girl. Work--big work!"
"Well, you've got to rest now, anyhow," she
dictated. "Now, stop thinking and planning, and just rest! Till your wound
is healed, you're going to keep good and quiet."
Silence fell again between them. Then, as the east
brightened with the approach of the moon, she sang the song he loved
best--"Ave Maria, Gratia Plena"--in her soft, sweet voice, untrained,
unspoiled by false conventions. And Stern, listening, forgot his problems and
his plans; peace came to his soul, and rest and joy.
The song ended. And now the moon, with a silent
majesty that shamed human speech, slid her bright silver plate up behind the
fret of trees on the far hills. Across the river a shimmering path of light grew,
broadening; and the world beamed in holy beauty, as on the primal night.
And their souls drank that beauty. They were glad, as
never yet. At last Stern spoke.
"It's more like a dream than a reality, isn't
it?" said he. "Too wonderful to be true. Makes me think of Alfred de
Musset's 'Lucie.' You remember the poem?
"'Un soir, nous etions seuls, J'etais assis pres
d'elle . ..'"
Beatrice nodded.
"Yes, I know!" she whispered. "How
could I forget it? And to think that for a thousand years the moon's been shining
just the same, and nobody--"
"Yes, but is it the same?" interrupted Stern
suddenly, his practical turn of mind always reasserting itself. "Don't you
see a difference? You remember the old-time face in the moon, of course. Where
is it now? The moon always presented only one side, the same side, to us in the
old days. How about it now? If I'm not mistaken, things have shifted up there.
We're looking now at some other face of it. And if that's so it means a far
bigger disarrangement of the solar system and the earth's orbit and lots of
things than you or I suspect!
"Wait till we get back to New York for half a
day, and visit the tower and gather up our things. Wait till I get hold of my
binoculars again! Perhaps some of these questions may be resolved. We can't go
on this way, surrounded by perpetual puzzles, problems, mysteries! We
must--"
"Do nothing but rest now!" she dictated with
mock severity.
Stern laughed.
"Well, you're the boss," he answered, and
leaned back against the oak. "Only, may I propound one more
question?"
"Well, what is it?"
"Do you see that dark patch in the sky? Sort of a
roughly circular hole in the blue, as it were--right there?" He pointed.
"Where there aren't any stars?"
"Why--yes. What about it?"
"It's moving, that's all. Every night that black
patch moves among the stars, and cuts their light off; and one night it grazed
the moon--passed before the eastern limb of it, you understand. Made a partial
eclipse. You were asleep; I didn't bother you about it. But if there's a new
body in the sky, it's up to us to know why, and what about it, and all. So the
quicker--"
"The quicker you get well, the better all
around!"
She drew his head down and kissed him tenderly on the
forehead with that strange, innate maternal instinct which makes women love to
"mother" men even ten years older than themselves.
"Don't you worry your brains about all these
problems and vexations to-night, Allan. Your getting well is the main thing.
The whole world's future hangs on just that! Do you realize what it means? Do
you?"
"Yes, as far as the human brain can realize so
big a concept. Languages, arts, science, all must be handed down to the race by
us. The world can't begin again on any higher plane than just the level of our
collective intelligence. All that the world knows to-day is stored in your
brain-cells and mine! And our speech, our methods, our ideals, will shape the
whole destiny of the earth. Our ideals! We must keep them very pure!"
"Pure and unspotted," she answered simply.
Then with an adorable and feminine anticlimax:
"Dear, does your shoulder pain you now? I'm
awfully heavy to be leaning on you like this!"
"You're not hurting me a bit. On the contrary,
your touch, your presence, are life to me!"
"Quite sure you're comfy, boy?"
"Positive."
"And happy?"
"To the limit."
"I'm so glad. Because I am, too. I'm awfully
sleepy, Allan. Do you mind if I take just a little, tiny nap?"
For all answer he patted her, and smoothed her hair,
her cheek, her full, warm throat.
Presently by her slow, gentle breathing he knew she
was asleep.
For a long time he half-lay there against the oak,
softly swathed in his bear-skin, on the odorous bed of fir, holding her in his
arms, looking into the dancing firelight.
And night wore on, calm, perfumed, gentle; and the
thoughts of the man were long, long thoughts--thoughts "that do often lie
too deep for tears."
CHAPTER V
DEADLY PERIL
Pages on pages would not tell the full details of the
following week--the talks they had, the snaring and shooting of small game, the
fishing, the cleaning out of the bungalow, and the beginnings of some order in
the estate, the rapid healing of Stern's arm, and all the multifarious little
events of their new beginnings of life there by the river-bank.
But there are other matters of more import than such
homely things; so now we come to the time when Stern felt the pressing
imperative of a return to the tower. For he lacked tools in every way; he
needed them to build furniture, doors, shutters; to clear away the brush and
make the place orderly, rational and beautiful; to start work on his projected
laboratory and power-plant; for a thousand purposes.
He wanted his binoculars, his shotgun and rifles, and
much ammunition, as well as a boat-load of canned supplies and other goods.
Instruments, above all, he had to have.
So, though Beatrice still, with womanly conservatism,
preferred to let well enough alone for the present, and stay away from the
scene of such ghastly deeds as had taken place on the last day of the invasion
by the Horde, Stern eventually convinced and overargued her; and on what he
calculated to be the 16th day of June, 2912--the tenth day since the
fight--they set sail for Manhattan. A favoring northerly breeze, joined with a
clear sky and sunshine of unusual brilliancy, made the excursion a gala time
for both. As they put their supplies of fish, squirrel-meat and breadfruit
aboard the banca and shoved the rude craft off the sand, both she and he felt
like children on an outing.
Allan's arm was now so well that he permitted himself
the luxury of a morning plunge. The invigoration of this was still upon him as,
with a song, he raised the clumsy skin sail upon the rough-hewn mast. Beatrice
curled down in her tiger-skin at the stern, took one of the paddles, and made
ready to steer. He settled himself beside her, the thongs of his sail in his
hand. Thus happy in comradeship, they sailed away to southward, down the blue
wonder of the river, flanked by headlands, wooded heights, crags, cliffs and
Palisades, now all alike deserted.
Noon found them opposite the fluted columns of gray
granite that once had borne aloft the suburbs of Englewood. Stern recognized
the conformation of the place; but though he looked hard, could find no trace
of the Interstate Park road that once had led from top to bottom of the
Palisades, nor any remnant of the millionaires' palaces along the heights
there.
"Stone and brick have long since vanished as
structures," he commented. "Only steel and concrete have stood the
gaff of uncounted years! Where all that fashion, wealth and beauty once would
have scorned to notice us, girl, now what's left? Hear the cry of that gull?
The barking of that fox? See that green flicker over the pinnacle? Some new,
bright bird, never dreamed of in this country! And even with the naked eye I
can make out the palms and the lianas tangled over the verge of what must once
have been magnificent gardens!"
He pointed at the heights.
"Once," said he, "I was consulted by a
sausage-king named Breitkopf, who wanted to sink an elevator-shaft from the top
to the bottom of this very cliff, so he could reach his hundred-thousand-dollar
launch in ease. Breitkopf didn't like my price; he insulted me in several
rather unpleasant ways. The cliff is still here, I see. So am I. But Breitkopf
is--elsewhere."
He laughed, and swept the river with a glance.
"Steer over to the eastward, will you?" he
asked. "We'll go in through Spuyten Duyvil and the Harlem. That'll bring
us much nearer the tower than by landing on the west shore of Manhattan."
Two hours later they had run past the broken arches of
Fordham, Washington, and High Bridges, and following the river--on both banks
of which a few scattered ruins showed through the massed foliage--were drawing
toward Randall's and Ward's islands and Hell Gate.
Wind and tide still favored them. In safety they
passed the ugly shoals and ledges. Here Stern took the paddle, while Beatrice
went to the bow and left all to his directing hand.
By three o'clock in the afternoon they were drawing
past Blackwell's Island. The Queensboro Bridge still stood, as did the railway
bridges behind them; but much wreckage had fallen into the river, and in one
place formed an ugly whirlpool, which Stern had to avoid by some hard work with
the paddle.
The whole structure was sagging badly to southward, as
though the foundations had given way. Long, rusted masses of steel hung from
the spans, which drooped as though to break at any moment. Though all the
flooring had vanished centuries before, Stern judged an active man could still
make his way across the bridge.
"That's their engineering," gibed he, as the
little boat sailed under and they looked up like dwarfs at the legs of a
Colossus. "The old Roman bridges are good for practically eternity, but
these jerry steel things, run up for profits, go to pieces in a mere thousand
years! Well, the steel magnates are gone now, and their profits with them. But
this junk remains as a lesson and a warning, Beta; the race to come must build
better than this, and sounder, every way!"
On, on they sailed, marveling at the terrific
destruction on either hand--the dense forests now grown over Brooklyn and New
York alike.
"We'll be there before long now," said
Allan. "And if we have any luck at all, and nothing happens, we ought to
be started for home by nightfall. You don't mind a moonlight sail up the
Hudson, do you?"
It was past four by the time the banca nosed her way
slowly in among the rotten docks and ruined hulks of steamships, and with a
gentle rustling came to rest among the reeds and rushes now growing rank at the
foot of what had once been Twenty-Third Street.
A huge sea-tortoise, disturbed, slid off the sand-bank
where he had been sunning himself and paddled sulkily away. A blue heron
flapped up from the thicket, and with a frog in its bill awkwardly took flight,
its long neck crooked, legs dangling absurdly.
"Some mighty big changes, all right,"
commented Stern. "Yes, there's got to be a deal of work done here before
things are right again. But there's time enough, time enough--there's all the
time we need, we and the people who shall come after us!"
They made the banca fast, noting that the tide was
high and that the leather cord was securely tied to a gnarled willow that grew
at the water's edge. Half an hour later they had made their way across town to
Madison Avenue.
It was with strange feelings they once more approached
the scene of their battle against such frightful odds with the Horde. Stern was
especially curious to note the effect of his Pulverite, not only on the
building itself but on the square.
This effect exceeded his expectations. Less than two
hundred feet of the tower now stood and the whole western facade was but a mass
of cracked and gaping ruin.
Out on the Square the huge elms and pines had been
uprooted and flung in titanic confusion, like a game of giants' jack-straws.
And vast conical excavations showed, here and there, where vials of the
explosive had struck the earth. Gravel and rocks had even been thrown over the
Metropolitan Building itself into the woodland glades of Madison Avenue. And,
worse, bits of bone--a leg-bone, a shoulder-blade, a broken skull with flesh
still adhering--here or there met the eye.
"Mighty good thing the vultures have been busy
here," commented Stern. "If they hadn't, the place wouldn't be even
approachable. Gad! I thank my stars what we've got to do won't take more than
an hour. If we had to stay here after dark I'd surely have the creeps, in spite
of all my scientific materialism! Well, no use being retrospective. We're
living in the present and future now; not the past. Got the plaited cords
Beatrice? We'll need them before long to make up our bundle with."
Thus talking, Stern kept the girl from seeing too much
or brooding over what she saw. He engaged her actively on the work in hand.
Until he had assured himself there was no danger from falling fragments in the
shattered halls and stairways that led up to the gaping ruin at the truncated
top of the tower he would not let her enter the building, but set her to
fashioning a kind of puckered bag with a huge skin taken from the furrier's
shop in the Arcade, while he explored.
He returned after a while, and together they climbed
over the debris and ruins to the upper rooms which had been their home during
the first few days after the awakening.
The silence of death that lay over the place was
appalling--that and the relics of the frightful battle. But they had their work
to do; they had to face the facts.
"We're not children, Beta," said the man.
"Here we are for a purpose. The quicker we get our work done the better.
Come on, let's get busy!"
Stifling the homesick feeling that tried to win upon
them they set to work. All the valuables they could recover they
collected--canned supplies, tools, instruments, weapons, ammunition and a
hundred and one miscellaneous articles they had formerly used.
This flotsam of a former civilization they carried
down and piled in the skin bag at the broken doorway. And darkness began to
fall ere the task was done.
Still trickled the waters of the fountain in Madison
Forest through the dim evening aisles of the shattered forest. A solemn hush
fell over the dead world; night was at hand.
"Come, let's be going," spoke the man, his
voice lowered in spite of himself, the awe of the Infinite Unknown upon him.
"We can eat in the banca on the way. With the tide behind us, as it will
be, we ought to get home by morning. And I'll be mighty glad never to see this
place again!"
He slung a sack of cartridges over his shoulder and
picked up one of the cord loops of the bag wherein lay their treasure-trove.
Beatrice took the other.
"I'm ready," said she. Thus they started.
All at once she stopped short.
"Hark! What's that?" she exclaimed under her
breath.
Far off to northward, plaintive, long-drawn and
inexpressibly mournful, a wailing cry reechoed in the wilderness--fell, rose,
died away, and left the stillness even more ghastly than before.
Stern stood rooted. In spite of all his aplomb and
matter-of-fact practicality, he felt a strange thrill curdle through his blood,
while on the back of his neck the hair drew taut and stiff.
"What is it?" asked Beatrice again.
"That? Oh, some bird or other, I guess. It's
nothing. Come on!"
Again he started forward, trying to make light of the
cry; but in his heart he knew it well.
A thousand years before, far in the wilds near Ungava
Bay, in Labrador, he had heard the same plaintive, starving call--and he
remembered still the deadly peril, the long fight, the horror that had followed.
He knew the cry; and his soul quivered with the fear
of it; fear not for himself, but for the life of this girl whose keeping lay
within the hollow of his hand.
For the long wail that had trembled across the vague
spaces of the forest, affronting the majesty and dignity of night and the
coming stars with its blood-lusting plaint of famine, had been none other than
the summons to the hunt, the news of quarry, the signal of a gathering
wolf-pack on their trail.
CHAPTER VI
TRAPPED!
"That's not the truth you're telling me,
Allan," said Beatrice very gravely. "And if we don't tell each other
the whole truth always, how can we love each other perfectly and do the work we
have to do? I don't want you to spare me anything, even the most terrible things.
That's not the cry of a bird--it's wolves!"
"Yes, that's what it is," the man admitted.
"I was in the wrong. But, you see--it startled me at first. Don't be
alarmed, little girl! We're well armed you see, and--"
"Are we going to stay here in the tower if they attack?"
"No. They might hold us prisoners for a week.
There's no telling how many there may be. Hundreds, perhaps thousands. Once
they get the scent of game, they'll gather for miles and miles around; from all
over the island. So you see--"
"Our best plan, then, will be to make for the
banca?"
"Assuredly! It's only a matter of comparatively
few minutes to reach it, and once we're aboard, we're safe. We can laugh at
them and be on our homeward way at the same time. The quicker we start the
better. Come on!"
"Come!" she repeated. And they made their
second start after Stern had assured himself his automatic hung easily in reach
and that the guns were loaded.
Together they took their way along the shadowy depths
of the forest where once Twenty-Third Street had lain. Bravely and strongly the
girl bore her half of the load as they broke through the undergrowth, clambered
over fallen and rotten logs, or sank ankle-deep in mossy swales.
Even though they felt the danger, perhaps at that very
moment slinking, sneaking, crawling nearer off there in the vague, darkling
depths of the forest, they still sensed the splendid comradeship of the
adventure. No longer as a toy, a chattel, an instrument of pleasure or
amusement did the idea of woman now exist in the world. It had altered, grown
higher, nobler, purer--it had become that of mate and equal, comrade, friend,
the indissoluble other half of man.
Beatrice spoke.
"You mustn't take more of the weight than I do,
Allan," she insisted, as they struggled onward with their burden.
"Your wounded arm isn't strong enough yet to--"
"S-h-h-h!" he cautioned. "We've got to
keep as quiet as possible. Come on--the quicker we get these things aboard and
push off the better! Everything depends on speed!"
But speed was hard to make. The way seemed terribly
long, now that evening had closed in and they could no longer be exactly sure
of their path. The cumbersome burden impeded them at every step. In the gloom
they stumbled, tripped over vines and creepers, and became involved among the
close-crowding boles.
Suddenly, once again the wolf-cry burst out, this time
reechoed from another and another savage throat, wailing and plaintive and full
of frightful portent.
So much nearer now it seemed that Beatrice and Allan
both stopped short. Panting with their labors, they stood still, fear-smitten.
"They can't be much farther off now than
Thirty-Fifth Street," the man exclaimed under his breath. "And we're
hardly past Second Avenue yet--and look at the infernal thickets and brush
we've got to beat through to reach the river! Here, I'd better get my revolver
ready and hold it in my free hand. Will you change over? I can take the bag in
my left. I've got to have the right to shoot with!"
"Why not drop everything and run for the
banca?"
"And desert the job? Leave all we came for? And
maybe not be able to get any of the things for Heaven knows how long? I guess
not!"
"But, Allan--"
"No, no! What? Abandon all our plans because of a
few wolves? Let 'em come! We'll show 'em a thing or two!"
"Give me the revolver, then--you can have the
rifle!"
"That's right--here!"
Each now with a firearm in the free hand, they started
forward again. On and on they lunged, they wallowed through the forest, half
carrying, half dragging the sack which now seemed to have grown ten times
heavier and which at every moment caught on bushes, on limbs and among the
dense undergrowth.
"Oh, look--look there!" cried Beatrice. She
stopped short again, pointing the revolver, her finger on the trigger.
Allan saw a lean, gray form, furtive and sneaking,
slide across a dim open space off toward the left, a space where once First
Avenue had cut through the city from south to north.
"There's another!" he whispered, a strange,
choked feeling all around his heart. "And look--three more! They're
working in ahead of us. Here, I'll have a shot at 'em, for luck!"
A howl followed the second spurt of flame in the dusk.
One of the gray, gaunt portents of death licked, yapping, at his flank.
"Got you, all right!" gibed Stern. "The
kind o' game you're after isn't as easy as you think, you devils!"
But now from the other side, and from behind them, the
slinking creatures gathered. Their eyes glowed, gleamed, burned softly yellow
through the dusk of the great wilderness that once had been the city's heart.
The two last humans in the world could even catch the flick of ivory fangs, the
lolling wet redness of tongues--could hear the soughing breath through those
infernal jaws.
Stern raised the rifle again, then lowered it.
"No use," said he quite calmly. "God
knows how many there are. I might use up all our ammunition and still leave
enough of 'em to pick our bones. They'll be all around us in a minute; they'll
be worrying at us, dragging us down! Come on--come on, the boat!"
"Light a torch, Allan. They're afraid of
fire."
"Grand idea, little girl!"
Even as he answered he was scrabbling up dry-kye. Came
the rasp of his flint.
"Give 'em a few with the automatic, while I get
this going!" he commanded.
The gun spat twice, thrice. Then rose a snapping,
snarling wrangle. Off there in the gloom a hideous turmoil grew.
It ended in screams of pain and rage, suddenly
throttled, choked, and torn to nothing. A worrying, rending, gnashing told the
story of the wounded wolf's last moment.
Stern sprang up, a dry flaming branch of resinous fir
in his hand. The rifle he thrust back into the bag.
"Ate him, still warm, eh?" he cried.
"Fine! And five shots left in the gun. You won't miss, Beta! You
can't!"
Forward they struggled once more.
"Gad, we'll hang to this bag now, whatever
happens!" panted Stern, jerking it savagely off a jagged stub. "Five minutes
more and we'll--arrh! would you?"
The flaring torch he dashed full at a grisly muzzle
that snapped and slavered at his legs. To their nostrils the singe of burned
hair wafted. Yelping, the beast swerved back.
But others ran in and in at them; and now the torch
was failing. Both of them shouted and struck; and the revolver stabbed the
night with fire.
Pandemonium rose in the forest. Cries, howls, long
wails and snuffing barks blent with the clicking of ivories, the pad-pad-pad of
feet, the crackling of the underbrush.
All around, wolves. On either side, behind, in front,
the sliding, bristling, sneaking, suddenly bold horrors of the wild.
And the ring was tightening; the attack was coming,
now, more and more concertedly. The swinging torch could not now drive them
back so fast, so far.
Strange gleams shot against the tree-trunks, wavered
through the dusk, lighted the harsh, rage-contracted face of the man, fell on
the laboring, skin-clad figure of the woman as they still fought on and on with
their precious burden, hoping for a glimpse of water, for the river, and
salvation.
"Take--a tree?" gasped Beatrice.
"And maybe stay there a week? And use up--all our
ammunition? Not yet--no--no! The boat!"
On, ever on, they struggled.
A strange, unnatural exhilaration filled the girl,
banishing thoughts of peril, sending the blood aglow through every vein and
fiber of her wonderful young body.
Stern realized the peril more keenly. At any moment
now he understood that one of the devils in gray might hurl itself at the full
throat of Beatrice or at his own.
And once the taste of blood lay on those crimson
tongues--good-by!
"The boat--the boat!" he shouted, striking
right and left like mad with the smoky, half-extinguished flare.
"There--the river!" suddenly cried Beatrice.
Through the columns of the forest she had seen at last
the welcome gleam of water, starlit, beautiful and calm. Stern saw it, too. A
demon now, he charged the snarling ring. Back he drove them; he turned, seized
the bag, and again plunged desperately ahead.
Together he and Beatrice crashed out among the willows
and the alders on the sedgy shore, with the vague, shifting, bristling horror
of the wolf-pack at their heels.
"Here, beat 'em off while I cut the cord--while I
get the bag in--and shove off!" panted Stern.
She seized the torch from his hand. Up he snatched the
rifle again, and with a pointblank volley flung three of the grays writhing and
yelling all in the mud and weeds and trampled cattails on the river verge.
Down he threw the gun. He turned and swept the dark
shore, there between the ruins of the wharves, with a keen reconnoitering
glance.
What? What was this?
There stood the aged willow to which the banca had
been tied. But the boat--where was it?
With a cry Stern leaped to the tree. His clutching
hands fumbled at the trunk.
"My God! Here's--here's the cord!" he
stammered. "But it's--been cut! The boat--the boat's gone!"
CHAPTER VII
A NIGHT OF TOIL
An hour later, from the gnarled branches of the
willow--up into which Stern had fairly flung her, and where he had himself
clambered with the beasts ravening at his legs--the two sole survivors of the
human race watched the glowering eyes that dotted the velvet gloom.
"I estimate a couple of hundred, all told,"
judged Allan. "Odd we never ran across any of them before to-night. Must
be some kind of a migration under way--maybe some big shift of game, of deer,
or buffalo, or what-not. But then, in that case, they wouldn't be so starved,
so dead-set on white meat as they seem to be."
Beta shifted her place on a horizontal limb.
"It's awfully hard for a soft wood," she
remarked. "Do you think we'll have to stay here long, dear?"
"That depends. I don't see that the fifteen we've
killed since roosting here have served as any terrible examples to the others.
And we're about twenty cartridges to the bad. They're not worth it, these
devils. We've got to save our ammunition for something edible till I can get my
shop to running and begin making my own powder. No; must be there's some other
and better way."
"But what?" asked the girl. "We're safe
enough here, but we're not getting any nearer home--and I'm so hungry!"
"Same here," Stern coincided. "And the
lunch was all in the boat; worse luck! Who the deuce could have cut her loose?
I thought we'd pretty effectually cleared out those Hinkmatinks, or whatever
the Horde consisted of. But evidently something, or somebody, is still left
alive with a terrific grudge against us, or an awful longing for
navigation."
"Was the cord broken or cut?"
"I'll see."
Stern clambered to a lower branch. With the
trigger-guard of his rifle he was able to catch the cord. All about the trunk,
meanwhile, the wolves leaped snarling. The fetid animal smell of them was
strong upon the air--that, and the scent of blood and raw meat, where they had
feasted on the slain.
With the severed cord, Allan climbed back to where
Beatrice sat.
"Hold the rifle, will you?" asked he. A
moment, and by the quick showers of sparks that issued from his flint and
steel, he was examining the leather thong.
"Cut!"
"Cut? But then, then--"
"No tide or wind to blame. Some intelligence,
even though rudimentary, has been at work here--is at work--opposed to
us."
"But what?"
"No telling. There may be more things in this
world yet than either of us dream. Perhaps we committed a very grave error to
leave the apparently peaceful little nook we've got, up there on the Hudson,
and tackle this place again. But who could ever have thought of anything like
this after that terrible slaughter?"
They kept silence a few minutes. The wolves now had
sunk to a plane of comparative insignificance. At the very worst Stern could
annihilate them, one by one, with a lavish expenditure of his ammunition.
Unnoticed now, they yelped, and scratched and howled about the tree, sat on
their haunches, waiting in the gloom, or sneaked--vague shadows--among the
deeper dusks of the forest.
And once again the east began to glow, even as when he
and she had watched the moon rise over the hills beyond the Hudson; and their
hearts beat with joy for even that relief from the dark mystery of solitude and
night.
After a while the man spoke.
"It's this way," said he. "Whoever cut
that cord and either let the banca float away or else stole it, evidently
doesn't want to come to close quarters for the present, so long as these wolves
are making themselves friendly.
"Perhaps, in a way, the wolves are a factor in
our favor; perhaps, without them, we might have had a poisoned arrow sticking
into us, or a spear or two, before now. My guess is that we'll get a wide berth
so long as the wolves stay in the neighborhood. I think the anthropoids, or
whoever they were, must have been calculating on ambushing us as we came back,
and expected to 'get' us while we were hunting for the boat.
"They didn't reckon on this little diversion.
When they heard it they probably departed for other regions. They won't be
coming around just yet, that's a safe wager. Mighty lucky, eh? Think what Ar targets
we'd make, up here in this willow, by moonlight!"
"You're right, Allan. But when it comes daylight
we'll make better ones. And I don't know that I enjoy sitting up here and
starving to death, with a body-guard of wolves to keep away the Horde, very much
more than I would taking a chance with the arrows. It's two sixes, either way,
and not a bit nice, is it?"
"Hang the whole business! There must be some
other way--some way out of this infernal pickle! Hold on--wait--I--I almost see
it now!"
"What's your plan, dear?"
"Wait! Let me think, a minute!"
She kept silence. Together they sat among the
spreading branches in the growing moonlight. A bat reeled overhead, chippering
weakly. Far away a whippoorwill began its fluty, insistent strain. A distant
cry of some hunting beast echoed, unspeakably weird, among the dead, deserted
streets buried in oblivion. The brush crackled and snapped with the movements
of the wolf-pack; the continued snarling, whining, yapping, stilled the chorus
of the frogs along the sedgy banks.
"If I could only snare a good, lively one!"
suddenly broke out Stern.
"What for?"
"Why, don't you see?" And with sudden
inspiration he expounded. Together, eager as children, they planned. Beatrice
clapped her hands with sheer delight.
"But," she added pensively, "it'll be a
little hard on the wolf, won't it?"
Stern had to laugh.
"Yes," he assented; "but think how much
he'll learn about the new kind of game he tried to hunt!"
Half an hour later a grim old warrior of the pack,
deftly and securely caught by one hind leg with the slip-noosed leather cord,
dangled inverted from a limb, high out of reach of the others.
Slowly he swung, jerking, writhing, frothing as he
fought in vain to snap his jaws upon the cord he could not touch. And night grew
horrible with the stridor of his yells.
"Now then," remarked Stern calmly, "to
work. The moonlight's good enough to shoot by. No reason I should miss a single
target."
Followed a time of frightful tumult as the living ate
the dying and the dead, worrying the flesh from bones that had as yet scarcely
ceased to move. Beatrice, pale and silent, yet very calm, watched the
slaughter. Stern, as quietly methodical as though working out a reaction,
sighted, fired, sighted, fired. And the work went on apace. The bag of
cartridges grew steadily lighter. The work was done long before all the wolves
had died. For the survivors, gorged to repletion, some wounded, others whole,
slunk gradually away and disappeared in the dim glades, there to sleep off
their cannibal debauch.
At last Stern judged the time was come to descend.
"Bark away, old boy!" he exclaimed.
"The louder the better. You're our danger-signal now. As long as those
poor, dull anthropoid brains keep sensing you I guess we're safe!"
To Beatrice he added:
"Come now, dear. I'll help you down. The quicker
we tackle that raft and away, the sooner we'll be home!"
"Home!" she repeated. "Oh, how glad
I'll be to see our bungalow again! How I hate the ruins of the city now! Look
out, Allan--you'll have to let me take a minute or two to straighten out in.
You don't know how awfully cramped I am!"
"Just slide into my arms--there, that's
right!" he answered, and swung her down as easily as though she had been a
child. Her arms went round his neck; their lips met and thrilled in a long
kiss.
But not even the night-breeze and the moon could now
beguile them to another. For there was hard, desperate work to do, and time was
short.
A moment they stood there together, under the old tree
wherein the wolf was dangling in loud-mouthed rage.
"Well, here's where I go at it!" exclaimed
the man.
He opened the big sack. Fumbling among the tools, he
quickly found the ax.
"You, Beta," he directed, "get together
all the plaited rope you can take off the bag, and cut me some strips of hide.
Cut a lot of them. I'll need all you can make. We've got to work fast--got to
clear out of here before sunrise or there may be the devil to pay!"
It was a labor of extraordinary difficulty, there in
those dense and dim-lit thickets, felling a tall spruce, limbing it out and
cutting it into three sections. But Stern attacked it like a demon. Now and
again he stopped to listen or to jab tile suspended wolf with the ax-handle.
"Go on there, you alarm-signal!" he
commanded. "Let's have plenty of music, good and loud, too. Maybe if you
deliver the goods and hold out--well, you'll get away with your life.
Otherwise, not!"
Robinson Crusoe's raft had been a mere nothing to
build compared with this one that the engineer had to construct there at the
water's edge, among the sedges and the reeds For Crusoe had planks and beams
and nails to help him; while Stern had naught but his ax, the forest, and some
rough cordage.
He had to labor in the gloom, as well, listening
betimes for sounds of peril or stopping to stimulate the wolf. The dull and
rusty ax retarded him; blisters rose upon his palms, and broke, and formed
again. But still he toiled.
The three longitudinal spruce timbers he lashed
together with poles and with the cords that Beatrice prepared for him. On
these, again, he laid and lashed still other poles, rough-hewn.
In half an hour's hard work, while the moon began to
sink to the westward, he had stepped a crude mast and hewed a couple of
punt-poles.
"No use our trying to row this monstrosity,"
he said to Beatrice, stopping a moment to dash the sweat off his forehead with
a shaking hand. "We either rig the skin sack in some way as a sail, or we
drift up with the tide, tie at the ebb, and so on--and if we make the bungalow
in three days we're lucky!
"Come on now, Beatrice. Lend a hand here and
we'll launch her! Good thing the tide's coming up--she almost floats already.
Now, one, two, three!"
The absurd raft yielded, moved, slid out upon the
marshy water and was afloat!
"Get aboard!" commanded Allan. "Go
forward to the salon de luxe. I'll stow the bag aft, so."
He lifted her in his arms and set her on the raft. The
bag he carefully deposited at what passed for the stern. The raft sank a bit
and wallowed, but bore up.
"Now then, all aboard!" cried Stern.
"The wolf, Allan, the wolf! How about him?"
"That's right, I almost plumb forgot! I guess
he's earned his life, all right enough."
Quickly he slashed the cord. The wolf dropped limp,
tried to crawl, but could not, and lay panting on its side, tongue lolling,
eyes glazed and dim.
"He'll be a horrible example all his life of what
it means to monkey with the new kind of meat," remarked Allan, clambering
aboard. "If wolves or anthropoids can learn, they ought to learn from
him!"
Strongly, steadily, they poled the raft out through
the marshy slip, on, on, past the crumbling wreckage of the pier-head.
"Now the tide's got us," exclaimed Allan
with satisfaction, as the moonlit current, all silver and rippling with calm
beauty, swung them up-stream.
Beatrice, still strong, and full of vigorous, pulsing
life, in spite of the long vigil in the tree and the hard night of work, curled
up at the foot of the rough mast, on the mass of fir-tips Stern had piled
there.
"You steer, boy," said she, "and I'll
go to work on making some kind of sail out of the big skin. By morning we ought
to have our little craft under full control."
"It's one beautiful boat, isn't it?" mocked
Stern, poling off from a gaunt hulk that barred the way.
"It mayn't be very beautiful," she answered
softly, "but it carries the greatest, purest, noblest love that ever was
since the world began--it carries the hope of the whole world, of all the
ages--and it's taking us home!"
CHAPTER VIII
THE REBIRTH OF CIVILIZATION
A month had hardly gone, before order and peace and
the promise of bountiful harvests dwelt in and all about Hope Lodge, as they
had named the bungalow.
From the kitchen, where the stove and the aluminum
utensils now shone bright and free from rust, to the bedrooms where fir-tips
and soft skin rugs made wondrous sleeping places, the house was clean and sweet
and beautiful again. Rough-hewn chairs and tables, strong, serviceable and
eloquent of nature--through which this rebirth of the race all had to
come--adorned the rooms. Fur rugs covered the floors.
In lieu of pictures, masses of flowers and great
sprays of foliage stood in clay pots of Stern's own manufacture and firing. And
on a rustic book-case in their living room, where the big fireplace was, and
where the southern sun beat warmest in, stood their chief treasure--a set of
encyclopedias.
Stern had made leather bindings for these, with the
deft help of Beatrice. The original bindings had vanished before the attacks of
time and insects centuries before. But the leaves were still intact. For these
were thin sheets of nickel, printed by the electrolysis process.
"Just a sheer streak of luck," Stern
remarked, as he stood looking at this huge piece of fortune with the girl.
"Just a kindly freak of fate, that Van Amburg should have bought one of
Edison's first sets of nickel-sheet books.
"Except for the few sets of these in existence,
here and there, not a book remains on the surface of this entire earth. The
finest hand-made linen paper has disintegrated ages ago. And parchment has
probably crinkled and molded past all recognition. Besides, up-to-date
scientific books, such as we need, weren't done on parchment. We're playing
into gorgeous luck with these cyclopedias, for everything I need and can't
remember is in them. But it certainly was one job to sort those scattered
sheets out of the rubbish-pile in the library and rearrange them."
"Yes, that was hard work, but it's done now. Come
on out into the garden, Allan, and see if our crops have grown any during the
night!"
The grounds about the bungalow were a delight to them.
Like two children they worked, day by day, to enlarge and beautify their
holdings, their lands won back from nature's greed.
Though wild fruits--some new, others familiar--and
fish and the plentiful game all about them offered abundant food, to be had for
the mere seeking, they both agreed on the necessity of reestablishing
agriculture. For they disliked the thought of being driven southward, with the
return of each successive winter. They wanted, if advisable, to be able to
winter in the bungalow. And this meant some provision for the unproductive
season.
"It won't always be summer here, you know,"
Stern told her. "This Eden will sometime lie wet and dreary under the
winter rains that I expect now take the place of snow. And the eternal curse of
Adam--toil--is not yet lifted even from us two survivors of the fifteen hundred
million that once ruled the earth. We, and those who shall come after, must
have the old-time foods again. And that means work!"
They had cleared a patch of black, virgin soil, in a
sunny hollow. Here Stern had transplanted all the wild descendants of the
vegetables and grains of other time which in his still limited explorations he
had come across.
The work of clearing away the thorns and bushes, the
tangled lianas and tall trees, was severe; but it strengthened him and hardened
his whip-cord muscles till they ridged his skin like iron. He burned and pulled
the stumps, spaded and harrowed and hoed all by hand, and made ready the earth
for the reception of its first crop in a thousand years.
He recalled enough of his anthropology and botany from
university days to recognize the reverted, twisted and stringy little
degenerate wild-potato root which had once served the Aztecs and Pueblo Indians
for food, and could again, with proper cultivation, be brought back to full
perfection. Likewise with the maize, the squash, the wild turnip, and many
other vegetable forms.
"Three years of cultivation," he declared,
"and I can win them back to edibility. Five, and they'll be almost where
they were before the great catastrophe. As for the fruits, the apple, cherry,
and pear, all they need is care and scientific grafting.
"I predict that ten years from to-day, orchards
and cornfields and gardens shall surround this bungalow, and the heritage of
man shall be brought back to this old world!"
"Always giving due credit to the
encyclopedia," added Beatrice.
"And to you!" he laughed happily. "This
is all on your account, anyhow. If I were alone in the world, you bet there'd
be no gardens made!"
"No, I don't believe there would," she
agreed, a serious look on her face. "But, then," she concluded,
smiling again, "you aren't alone, Allan. You've got me!"
He tried to catch her in his arms, but she evaded him
and ran back toward the bungalow.
"No, no, you've got to work," she called to
him from the porch. "And so have I. Good-by!" And with a wave of the
hand, a strong, brown hand now, slim and very beautiful, she vanished.
Stern stood in thought a moment, then shook his head,
and, with a singular expression, picked up his hoe, and once more fell to
cultivating his precious little garden-patch, on which so infinitely much
depended. But something lay upon his mind; he paused, reflecting; then picked
up a stone and weighed it in his hand, tried another, and a third.
"I'm damned," he remarked, "if these
feel right to met I've been wondering about it for a week now--there's got to
be some answer to it. A stone of this size in the old days would certainly have
weighed more. And that big boulder I rooted out from the middle of the
field--in the other days I couldn't have more than stirred it.
"Am I so very much stronger? So much as all that?
Or have things grown lighter? Is that why I can leap farther, walk better, run
faster? What's it all about, anyhow?"
He could not work, but sat down on a rock to ponder.
Numerous phenomena occurred to him, as they had while he had lain wounded under
the tree by the river during their first few days at the bungalow.
"My observations certainly show a day only
twenty-two hours and fifty-seven minutes long; that's certain," he mused.
"So the earth is undoubtedly smaller. But what's that got to do with the
mass of the earth? With weight? Hanged if I can make it out at all!
"Even though the earth has shrunk, it ought to
have the same power of gravitation. If all the molecules and atoms really were
pressed together, with no space between, probably the earth wouldn't be much
bigger than a football, but it would weigh just that much, and a body would
fall toward it from space just as fast as now. Quite a hefty football, eh? For
the life of me I can't see why the earth's having shrunk has affected the
weight of everything!"
Perplexed, he went back to his work again. And though
he tried to banish the puzzle from his mind it still continued to haunt and to
annoy him.
Each day brought new and interesting activities. Now
they made an expedition to gather a certain kind of reeds which Beatrice could
plat into cordage and basketry; now they peeled quantities of birch-bark, which
on rainy days they occupied themselves in splitting into thin sheets for paper.
Stern manufactured a very excellent ink in his improvised laboratory on the
second floor, and the split and pointed quills of a wild goose served them for
pens in taking notes and recording their experiences.
"Paper will come later, when we've got things a
little more settled," he told her. "But for now this will have to
do."
"I guess if you can get along with skin clothing
for a while, I can do with birch-bark for my correspondence," she replied
laughing. "Why not catch some of those wild sheep that seem so plentiful
on the hills to westward? If we could domesticate them, that would mean wool
and yarn and cloth--and milk, too, wouldn't it? And if milk, why not
butter?"
"Not so fast!" he interposed. "Just
wait a while--we'll have cattle, goats, and sheep, and the whole business in
due time; but how much can one pair of human beings undertake? For the present
we'll have to be content with what mutton-chops and steaks and hams I can get
with a gun--and we're mighty lucky to have those!"
Singularly enough, and contrary to all beliefs, they
felt no need of salt. Evidently the natural salts in their meat and in the
fruits they ate supplied their wants. And this was fortunate, because the quest
of salt might have been difficult; they might even had had to boil sea-water to
obtain it.
They felt no craving for sweets, either; but when one
day they came upon a bee-tree about three-quarters of a mile back in the woods
to westward of the river, and when Stern smoked out the bees and gathered five
pounds of honey in the closely platted rush basket lined with leaves, which
they always carried for miscellaneous treasure-trove, they found the flavor
delicious. They decided to add honey to their menu, and thereafter always kept
it in a big pottery jar in their kitchen.
Stern's hunting, fishing and gardening did not occupy
his whole time. Every day he made it a rule to work at least an hour, two if
possible, on the thirty-foot yawl that had already begun to take satisfactory
shape on the timber ways which now stood on the river bank.
All through July and part of August he labored on this
boat, building it stanch and true, calking it thoroughly, fitting a cabin,
stepping a fir mast, and making all ready for the great migration which he felt
must inevitably be forced upon them by the arrival of cool weather.
He doubted very much, in view of the semitropic
character of some of the foliage, whether even in January the temperature would
now go below freezing; but in any event he foresaw that there would be no
fruits available, and he objected to a winter on flesh foods. In preparation
for the trip he had built a little "smoke-house" near the beach, and
here he smoked considerable quantities of meat--deer-meat, beef from a wild
steer which he was so fortunate as to shoot during the third week of their stay
at the bungalow, and a good score of hams from the wild pigs which rooted now
and then among the beech growth half a mile downstream.
Often the girl and he discussed this coming trip, of
an evening, sitting together by the river to watch the stars and moon and that
strange black wandering blotch that now and then obscured a portion of the
night sky--or perchance leaning back in their huge, rustic easy chairs lined
with furs on the broad piazza; or again, if the night were cool or rainy, in
front of their blazing fire of pine knots and driftwood, which burned with
gorgeous blues and greens and crimsons in the vast throat of Hope Lodge
fireplace.
Other matters, too, they talked of--strange
speculations, impossible to solve, yet filling them with vague uneasiness, with
wonder and a kind of mighty awe in face of the vast, unknowable mysteries
surrounding them; the forces and phenomena which might, though friendly in
their outward aspect, at any time precipitate catastrophe, ruin and death upon
them and extinguish in their persons all hopes of a world reborn.
The haunting thought was never very far away:
"Should either one of us be killed--what then?"
One day Stern voiced his fear.
"Beatrice," he said, "if anything
should ever happen to me, and you be left alone in a world which, without me,
would become instantly hostile and impossible, remember that the most
scientific way out is a bullet. That's my way if anything happens to you!
Understand?"
She nodded, and for a long time that day the silence
of a great pact weighed upon their souls.
CHAPTER IX
PLANNING THE GREAT MIGRATION
Stern rigged a tripod for the powerful field-glasses
he had rescued from the Metropolitan Building, and by an ingenious addition of
a wooden tube and another lens carefully ground out of rock crystal, succeeded
in producing (on the right-hand barrel of the binoculars) a telescope of
reasonably high power. With this, of an evening, he often made long
observations, after which he would spend hours figuring all over many sheets of
the birch bark, which he then carefully saved and bound up with leather strings
for future reference.
In Van's set of encyclopedias he found a fairly large
celestial map and thorough astronomic data. The results of his computations
were of vital interest to him.
He said to Beatrice one evening:
"Do you know, that wandering black patch in the
sky moves in a regular orbit of its own? It's a solid body, dark, irregular in
outline, and certainly not over five hundred miles above the surface of the earth."
"What can it be, dear?"
"I don't know yet. It puzzles me tremendously.
Now, if it would only appear in the daytime once in a while, we might be able
to get some information or knowledge about it; but, coming only at night, all
it records itself as is just a black, moving thing. I'm working on the size of
it now, making some careful studies. In a while I shall probably know its area
and mass and density. But what it is I cannot say--not yet."
They both pondered a while, absorbed in wonder. At
last the engineer spoke again.
"Beta," said he, "there's another
curious fact to note. The axis of the earth itself has shifted more than six
degrees, thirty minutes!"
"It has? Well--what about it?" And she went
on with her platting of reed cordage.
"You don't seem much concerned about it!"
"I'm not. Not in the least. It can shift all it
wants to, for all of me. What hurt does it do? Doesn't it run just as well that
way?"
Stern looked at her a moment, then laughed.
"Oh, yes; it runs all right," he answered.
"Only I thought the announcement that the pole-star had thrown up its job
might startle you a bit. But I see it doesn't. So far as practical results go,
it accounts for the warmer climate and the decreased inclination to the plane
of the ecliptic; or, rather, the decreased--"
"Please, please, don't!" she begged.
"There's nothing really wrong, is there?"
"Well, that depends on how you define it.
Probably an astronomer might think there was something very much wrong. I make
it that the orbit of the earth has altered its relative length and width
by--"
"No figures, Allan, there's a dear. You know I'm
awfully bad at arithmetic. Tell me what it means, won't you?"
"Well, it means, for one thing, that we've maybe
spent a far longer time on this earth since the cataclysm than we even dare
suspect. It may be that what we've been calculating as about a thousand years,
is twice that, or even five times that--no telling. For another thing, I'm
convinced by all these changes, and by the diminution of gravity and by the
accelerated rate of revolution of the earth--"
"Allan dear, please hand me those scissors, won't
you?"
Stern laughed again.
"Here!" said he. "I guess I'm not much
good as a lecturer. But I tell you one thing I'm going to do, and that's a one
best bet. I'm going to have a try at some really big telescope before a year's
out, and know the truth of this thing!"
"A big telescope! Build one, you mean?"
"Not necessarily. All I need is a chance to make
some accurate observations, and I can find out all I need to know. Even though
I have been out of college for--let's see--"
"Fifteen hundred years, at a guess," she suggested.
"Yes, all of that. Even so, I remember a good bit
of astronomy. And I've got my mind set on peeking through a first-class tube.
If the earth has broken in two, or anything like that, and our part is
skyhooting away toward the unknown regions of outer space beyond the great ring
of the Milky Way and is getting into an unchartered place in the universe--as
it seems to be--why, we ought to have a good look at things. We ought to know
what's what, eh?
"Then there's the moon I want to investigate, too.
No living man except myself has even seen the side that's now turned toward the
earth. No telling what a good glass mightn't show."
"That's so, dear," she answered. "But
where can you find the sort of telescope you need?"
"In Boston--in Cambridge, rather. The Harvard
observatory has the biggest one within striking distance. What do you say to
our making our trial trip in the boat, up the Sound and around Cape Cod, to
Boston? We can spend a week there, then slant away for wherever we may decide
to pass the winter. How does that suit you, Beta?"
She put away her work, and for a moment sat looking in
at the flames that went leaping up the huge boulder chimney. The room glowed
with warmth and light that drove away the cheerlessness of a foggy, late August
drizzle.
"Do you really think we're wise to--to leave our
home, with winter coming on?" she asked at length, pensively, the
firelight casting its glow across her cheek and glinting in her eyes.
"Wise? Yes. We can't stay here, that's certain.
And what is there to fear out in the world? With our firearms and our knowledge
of fire itself, our science and our human intelligence, we're far more than a
match for all enemies, whether of the beast-world or of that race of the Horde.
I hate, in a way, to revisit the ruins of New York, for more ammunition and
canned stuffs. The place is to o ghastly, too hideous, now, after the big
fight.
"Boston will be a clean ground for us, with
infinite resources. And as I said before, there's the Cambridge observatory.
It's only two or three miles back in the forest, from the coast; maybe not more
than half a mile from some part of the Charles River. We can sail up, camp on
Soldiers' Field, and visit it easily. Why not?"
He sat down on the tiger-rug before the fire, near the
girl. She drew his head down into her lap; then, when he was lying comfortably,
began playing with his thick hair, as he loved so well to have her do.
"If you think it's all right, Allan," said
she, "we'll go. I want what you want."
"That's my good girl!" exclaimed the
engineer. "We'll be ready to start in a few days now. The boat's next
thing to finished. What with the breadfruit, smoked steer and buffalo meat,
hams and canned goods now on our shelves, we've certainly got enough supplies
to stock her a two months' trip.
"Even with less, we'd be safe in starting. You
see, the world's lain untouched by mankind for so many centuries that all the
blighting effect of man's folly and greed and general piracy has vanished.
"The soil's got back to its natural state, animal
life abounds, and so long as I still have a good supply of cartridges, we can
live almost anywhere. Anthropoids? I don't think there's much danger. Oh, yes,
I remember the line of blue smoke we saw yesterday over the hills to westward;
but what does that prove? Lightning may have started a fire--there's no
telling. And we can't always stay here, Beta, just because there may be dangers
out yonder!"
He flung one arm toward the vast night, beyond the
panes where the mist and storm were beating cheerlessly.
"No, we can't camp down here indefinitely. Now's
the time to start. As I say, we've got all of sixty days' of downright
civilized food on hand, for a good cruise in the Adventure. The chance of
finding other people somewhere is too precious not to make any risk worth
while."
Silence fell between them for a few minutes. Each saw
visions in the flames. The man's thoughts dwelt, in particular, on this main
factor of a possible rediscovery of other human beings somewhere.
More than the girl, he realized the prime importance
of this possibility. Though he and she loved each other very dearly, though
they were all in all each to the other, yet he comprehended the loneliness she
felt rather than analyzed--the infinite need of man for man, of woman for
woman--the old social, group-instinct of the race beginning to reassert itself
even in their Eden.
Each of them longed, with a longing they hardly
realized as yet, to hear some other human voice, to see another face, clasp
another hand and again feel the comradeship of man.
During the past week or so, Stern had more than once
caught himself listening for some other sound of human life and activity. Once
he had found the girl standing on a wooded point among the pines, shading her
eyes with her hand and watching down-stream with an attitude of hope which
spoke more fluently than words. He had stolen quietly away, saying nothing,
careful not to break her mood. For he had understood it; it had been his very
own.
The mood expressed itself, at times, in long talks
together of the seeming dream-age when there had been so many millions of men
and women in the world. Beatrice and Stern found themselves dwelling with a
peculiar pleasure on memories and descriptions of throngs.
They would read the population statistics in Van's
encyclopedia, and wonder greatly at them, for now these figures seemed the
unreal chimeras of wild imaginings.
They would talk of the crowded streets, the
"L" crushes and the jams at the Bridge entrance; of packed cars and
trains and overflowing theaters; of great concourses they had seen; of every
kind and condition of affairs where thousands of their kind had once rubbed
elbows, all strangers to each other, yet all one vast kin and family ready in
case of need to succor one another, to use the collective intelligence for the
benefit of each.
Sometimes they indulged in fanciful comparisons,
trying to make their present state seem wholly blest.
"This is a pretty fine way to live, after
all," Stern said one day, "even if it is a bit lonesome at times.
There's no getting up in the morning and rushing to an office. It's a perpetual
vacation! There are no appointments to keeps no angry clients kicking because I
can't make water run up-hill or make cast-iron do the work of tool-steel. No
saloons or free-lunches, no subways to stifle the breath out of us, no bills to
pay and no bill collectors to dodge; no laws except the laws of nature, and
such as we make ourselves; no bores and no bad shows; no politics, no yellow
journals, no styles--"
"Oh, dear, how I'd like to see a milliner's
window again!" cried Beatrice, rudely shattering his thin-spun tissue of
optimism. "These skin-clothes, all the time, and no hats, and no chiffons
and no--no nothing, at all--! Oh, I never half appreciated things till they
were all taken away!"
Stern, feeling that he had tapped the wrong vein,
discreetly withdrew; and the sound of his calking-hammer from the beach, told
that he was expending a certain irritation on the hull of the Adventure.
One day he found a relic that seemed to stab him to
the heart with a sudden realization of the tremendous gap between his own life
and that which he had left.
Hunting in the forest, to westward of the bungalow, he
came upon what at first glance seemed a very long, straight, level Indian mound
or earthwork; but in a moment his trained eye told him it was a railway
embankment.
With an almost childish eagerness he hunted for some
trace of the track; and when, buried under earth-mold and rubbish, he found
some rotten splinters of metal, they filled him with mingled pleasure and
depression.
"My God!" he exclaimed, "is it possible
that here, right where I stand, countless thousands of human beings once passed
at tremendous velocity, bent on business and on pleasure, now ages long
vanished and meaningless and void? That mighty engines whirled along this bank,
where now the forest has been crowding for centuries? That all, all has
perished--forever?
"It shall not be!" he cried hotly, and flung
his hands out in passionate denial. "All shall be thus again! All shall
return--only far better! The world's death shall not, cannot be!"
Experiences such as these, leaving both of them
increasingly irritated and depressed as time went on, convinced Stern of the
imperative necessity for exploration. If human beings still existed anywhere in
the world, he and she must find them, even at the risk of losing life itself.
Years of migration, he felt, would not be too high a price to pay for the
reward of coming once again in contact with his own species. The innate
gregariousness of man was torturing them both.
Now that the hour of departure was drawing nigh, a
strange exultation filled them both--the spirit of conquest and of victory.
Together they planned the last details of the trip.
"Is the sail coming along all right, Beta?"
asked Stern, the night when they decided to visit Cambridge. "You expect
to have it done in a day or two?"
"I can finish it to-morrow. It's all woven now.
Just as soon as I finish binding one edge with leather strips, it'll be ready
for you."
"All right; then we can get a good, early start,
on Monday morning. Now for the details of the freight."
They worked out everything to its last minutiae.
Nothing was forgotten, from ammunition to the soap which Stern had made out of
moose-fat and wood-ashes and had pressed into cakes; from fishing-tackle and
canned goods to toothbrushes made of stiff vegetable fibers set in bone; from
provisions even to a plentiful supply of birch-bark leaves for taking notes.
"Monday morning we're off," Stern concluded,
"and it will be the grandest lark two people ever had since time began!
Built and stocked as the Adventure is, she's safe enough for anything from here
to Europe.
"Name the place you want to see, and it's yours.
Florida? Bermuda? Mediterranean? With the compass I've made and adjusted to the
new magnetic variations, and with the maps out of Van's set of books, I reckon
we're good for anything, including a trip around the world.
"The survivors will be surprised to see a fully
stocked yawl putting in to rescue them from savagery, eh? Imagine doing the
Captain Cook stunt, with white people for subjects!"
"Yes, but I'm not counting on their treating us
the way Captain Cook was; are you? And what if we shouldn't find anybody, dear?
What then?"
"How can we help finding people? Could a billion
and a half human beings die, all at once, without leaving a single isolated
group somewhere or other?"
"But you never succeeded in reaching them with
the wireless from the Metropolitan, Allan."
"Never mind--they weren't in a condition to pick
up my messages; that's all. We surely must find somebody in all the big cities
we can reach by water, either along He coast or by running up the Mississippi
or along the St. Lawrence and through the lakes. There's Boston, of course, and
Philadelphia, New Orleans, San Francisco, St. Louis, Chicago--dozens of
others--no end of places!"
"Oh, if they're only not all like New York!"
"That remains to be seen. There's all of Europe,
too, and Africa and Asia--why, the whole wide world is ours! We're so rich,
girl, that it staggers the imagination--we're the richest people that have ever
lived, you and I. The 'pluses' in the old days owned their millions; but we
own--we own the whole earth!"
"Not if there's anybody else alive, dear."
"That's so. Well, I'll be glad to share it with
'em, for the sake of a handshake and a 'howdy,' and a chance to start things
going again. Do you know, I rather count on finding a few scattered remnants of
folk in London, or Paris, or Berlin?
"Just the same as in our day, a handful of ragged
shepherds descended from the Mesopotamian peoples extinct save for them--were
tending their sheep at Kunyunjik, on those Babylonian ruins where once a mighty
metropolis stood, and where five million people lived and moved, trafficked,
loved, hated, fought, conquered, died--so now to-day, perhaps, we may run
across a handful of white savages crouching in caves or rude huts among the
debris of the Place de l'Opera, or Unter den Linden, or--"
"And civilize them, Allan? And bring them back
and start a colony and make the world again? Oh, Allan, do you think we
could?" she exclaimed, her eyes sparkling with excitement.
"My plans include nothing less," he
answered. "It's mighty well worth trying for, at any rate. Monday morning
we start, then, little girl."
"Sunday, if you say so."
"Impatient, now?" he laughed. "No,
Monday will be time enough. Lots of things yet to put in shape before we leave.
And we'll have to trust our precious crops to luck, at that. Here's hoping the
winter will bring nothing worse than rain. There's no help for it, whatever
happens. The larger venture calls us."
They sat there discussing many many other factors of
the case, for a long time. The fire burned low, fell together and dwindled to
glowing embers on the hearth.
In the red gloom Allan felt her vague, warm, beautiful
presence. Strong was she; vigorous, rosy as an Amazon, with the spirit and the
beauty of the great outdoors; the life lived as a part of nature's own self. He
realized that never had a woman lived like her.
Dimly he saw her face, so sweet, so gentle in its
wistful strength, shadowed with the hope and dreams of a whole race--the type,
the symbol, of the eternal motherhood.
And from his hair he drew her hand down to his mouth
and kissed it; and with a thrill of sudden tenderness blent with passion he
knew all that she meant to him--this perfect woman, his love, who sometime soon
was now to be his bride.
CHAPTER X
TOWARD THE GREAT CATARACT
Pleasant and warm shone the sun that Monday morning,
the 2d of September, warm through the greenery of oak and pine and fern-tree.
Golden it lay upon the brakes and mosses by the river-bank; silver upon the
sands.
Save for the chippering of the busy squirrels, a hush
brooded over nature. The birds were silent. A far blue haze veiled the distant
reaches of the stream. Over the world a vague, premonitory something had
fallen; it was summer still, but the first touch of dissolution, of decay, had
laid the shadow of a pall upon it.
And the two lovers felt their hearts gladden at
thought of the long migration out into the unknown, the migration that might
lead them to southern shores and to perpetual plenty, perhaps to the great boon
of contact once again with humankind.
From room to room they went, making all tight and fast
for the long absence, taking farewell of all the treasures that during their
long weeks of occupancy had accumulated there about them.
Though Stern was no sentimentalist, yet he, too, felt
the tears well in his eyes, even as Beta did, when they locked the door and
slowly went down the broad steps to the walk he had cleared to the river.
"Good-by," said the girl simply, and kissed
her hand to the bungalow. Then he drew his arm about her and together they went
on down the path. Very sweet the thickets of bright blossoms were; very warm
and safe the little garden looked, cut out there from the forest that stood
guard about it on all sides.
They lingered one last moment by the sun-dial he had
carved on a flat boulder, set in a little grassy lawn. The shadow of the gnomon
fell athwart the IX and touched the inscription he had graved about the edge:
I MARK NO HOURS BUT BRIGHT ONES.
Beatrice pondered.
"We've never had any other kind, together--not
one," said she, looking up quickly at the man as though with a new sort of
self-realization. "Do you know that, dear? In all this time, never one
hour, never one single moment of unhappiness or disagreement. Never a harsh
word, an unkind look or thought. 'No hours but bright ones!' Why, Allan, that's
the motto of our lives!"
"Yes, of our lives," he repeated gravely.
"Our lives, forever, as long as we live. But come, come--time's slipping
on. See, the shadow's moving ahead already. Come, say good-by to everything,
dear, until next spring. Now let's be off and away!"
They went aboard the yawl, which, fully laden, now lay
at a little stone wharf by the edge of the sweet wild wood, its mast overhung
by arching branches of a Gothic elm.
Allan cast off the painter of braided leather, and
with his boat-hook pushed away. He poled out into the current, then raised the
sail of woven rushes like that of a Chinese junk.
The brisk north wind caught it, the sail crackled,
filled and bellied hugely. He hauled it tight. A pleasant ripple began to
murmur at the stern as the yawl gathered speed.
"Boston and way-stations!" cried he. But
through his jest a certain sadness seemed to vibrate. As the wooded point
swallowed up their bungalow and blotted out all sight of their garden in the
wilderness, then as the little wharf vanished, and nothing now remained but
memories, he, too, felt the solemnity of a leave-taking which might well be
eternal.
Beatrice pressed a spray of golden-rod to her lips.
"From our garden," said she. "I'm going
to keep it, wherever we go."
"I understand," he answered. "But this
is no time, now, for retrospection. Everything's sunshine, life, hope--we've
got a world to win!"
Then as the yawl heeled to the breeze and foamed away
down stream with a speed and ease that bore witness to the correctness of her
lines, he struck up a song, and Beatrice joined in, and so their sadness
vanished and a great, strong, confident joy thrilled both of them at prospect
of what was yet to be.
By mid-afternoon they had safely navigated Harlem
River and the upper reaches of East River, and were well up toward Willett's
Point, with Long Island Sound opening out before them broadly.
Of the towns and villages, the estates and magnificent
palaces that once had adorned the shores of the Sound, no trace remained.
Nothing was visible but unbroken lines of tall, blue forest in the distance;
the Sound appeared to have grown far wider, and what seemed like a strong
current set eastward in a manner certainly not produced by the tide, all of
which puzzled Stern as he held the little yawl to her course, sole alone in
that vast blue where once uncounted thousands of keels had vexed the brine.
Nightfall found them abreast the ruins of Stamford,
still holding a fair course about five or six miles off shore.
Save for the gulls and one or two quick-scurrying
flights of Mother Carey's chickens (now larger and swifter than in the old
days), and a single "V" of noisy geese, no life had appeared all that
afternoon. Stern wondered at this. A kind of desolation seemed to lie over the
region.
"Ten times more living things in our vicinity
back home on the Hudson," he remarked to Beatrice, who now lay 'midships,
under the shelter of the cabin, warmly wrapped in furs against the keen cutting
of the night wind. "It seems as though something had happened around here,
doesn't it? I should have thought the Sound would be alive with birds and fish.
What can the matter be?"
She had no hypothesis, and though they talked it over,
they reached no conclusion. By eight o'clock she fell asleep in her warm nest,
and Stern steered on alone, by the stars, under promise to put into harbor
where New Haven once had stood, and there himself get some much-needed sleep.
Swiftly the yawl split the waters of the Sound, for
though her sail was crude, her body was as fine and speedy as his long
experience with boats could make it. Something of the vast mystery of night and
sea penetrated his soul as he held the boat on her way.
The night was moonless; only the great untroubled
stars wondered down at this daring venture into the unknown.
Stern hummed a tune to keep his spirits up. Running
easily over the monotonous dark swells with a fair following breeze, he passed
an hour or two. He sat down, braced the tiller, and resigned himself to
contemplation of the mysteries that had been and that still must be. And very
sweet to him was the sense of protection, of guardianship, wherein he held the
sleeping girl, in the shelter of the little cabin.
He must have dozed, sitting there inactive and alone.
How long? He could not tell. All that he knew was, suddenly, that he had
wakened to full consciousness, and that a sense of uneasiness, of fear, of
peril, hung about him.
Up he started, with an exclamation which he suppressed
just in time to avoid waking Beatrice. Through all, over all, a vast, dull roar
was making itself heard--a sound as though of mighty waters rushing, leaping,
echoing to the sky that droned the echo back again.
Whence came it? Stern could not tell. From nowhere,
from everywhere; the hum and vibrant blur of that tremendous sound seemed
universal.
"My God, what's that?" Allan exclaimed,
peering ahead with eyes widened by a sudden stabbing fear. "I've got
Beatrice aboard, here; I can't let anything happen to her!"
The gibbous moon, red and sullen, was just beginning
to thrust its strangely mottled face above the uneasy moving plain of waters.
Far off to southward a dim headland showed; even as Stern looked it drifted
backward and away.
Suddenly he got a terrifying sense of speed. The
headland must have lain five miles to south of him; yet in a few moments, even
as he watched, it had gone into the vague obliteration of a vastly greater
distance.
"What's happening?" thought Stern. The wind
had died; it seemed as though the waters were moving with the wind, as fast as
the wind; the yawl was keeping pace with it, even as a floating balloon drifts
in a storm, unfeeling it.
Deep, dull, booming, ominous, the roar continued. The
sail flapped idle on the mast. Stern could distinguish a long line of foam that
slid away, past the boat, as only foam slides on a swift current.
He peered, in the gloom, to port; and all at once, far
on the horizon, saw a thing that stopped his heart a moment, then thrashed it
into furious activity.
Off there in a direction he judged as almost due
northeast, a tenuous, rising veil of vapor blotted out the lesser stars and
dimmed the brighter ones.
Even in that imperfect light he could see something of
the sinuous drift of that strange cloud.
Quickly he lashed the tiller, crept forward and
climbed the mast, his night-glasses slung over his shoulder.
Holding by one hand, he tried to concentrate his
vision through the glasses, but they failed to show him even as much as the
naked eye could discern.
The sight was paralyzing in its omen of destruction.
Only too well Stern realized the meaning of the swift, strong current, the
roar--now ever increasing, ever deepening in volume--the high and shifting
vapor veil that climbed toward the dim zenith.
"Merciful Heaven!" gulped he. "There's
a cataract over there--a terrible chasm--a plunge--to what? And we're drifting
toward it at express-train speed!"
CHAPTER XI
THE PLUNGE!
Dazed though Stern was at his first realization of the
impending horror, yet through his fear for Beatrice, still asleep among her
furs, struggled a vast wonder at the meaning, the possibility of such a
phenomenon.
How could a current like that rush up along the Sound?
How could there be a cataract, sucking down the waters of the sea itself--whither
could it fall? Even at that crisis the man's scientific curiosity was aroused;
he felt, subconsciously, the interest of the trained observer there in the
midst of deadly peril.
But the moment demanded action.
Quickly Stern dropped to the deck, and, noiseless as a
cat in his doe-skin sandals, ran aft.
But even before he had executed the instinctive tactic
of shifting the helm, paying off, and trying to beat up into the faint breeze
that now drifted over the swirling current, he realized its futility and
abandoned it.
"No use," thought he. "About as
effective as trying to dip up the ocean with a spoon. Any use to try the
sweeps? Maybe she and I together could swing away out of the current--make the
shore--nothing else to do--I'll try it, anyhow."
Beside the girl he knelt.
"Beta! Beta!" he whispered in her ear. He
shook her gently by the arm. "Come, wake up, girlie--there's work to do
here!"
She, submerged in healthy sleep, sighed deeply and
murmured some unintelligible thing; but Stern persisted. And in a minute or so
there she was, sitting up in the bottom of the yawl among the furs.
In the dim moonlight her face seemed a vague sweet
flower shadowed by the dark, wind-blown masses of her hair. Stern felt the
warmth, scented the perfume of her firm, full-blooded flesh. She put a hand to
her hair; her tiger-skin robe, falling back to the shoulder, revealed her white
and beautiful arm.
All at once she drew that arm about the man and
brought him close to her breast.
"Oh, Allan!" she breathed. "My boy! Where
are we? What is it? Oh, I was sleeping so soundly! Have we reached harbor yet?
What's that noise--that roaring sound? Surf?"
For a moment he could not answer. She, sensing some
trouble, peered closely at him.
"What is it, Allan?" cried she, her woman's intuition
telling her of trouble. "Tell me--is anything wrong?"
"Listen, dearest!"
"Yes, what?"
"We're in some kind of--of--"
"What? Danger?"
"Well, it may be. I don't know yet. But there's
something wrong. You see--"
"Oh, Allan!" she exclaimed, and started up.
"Why didn't you waken me before? What is it? What can I do to help?"
"I think there's rough water ahead, dear,"
the engineer answered, trying to steady his voice, which shook a trifle in
spite of him. "At any rate, it sounds like a waterfall of some kind or
other; and see, there's a line, a drift of vapor rising over there. We're being
carried toward it on a strong current."
Anxiously she peered, now full awake. Then she turned
to Allan.
"Can't we sail away?"
"Not enough wind. We might possibly row out of
the current, and--and perhaps--"
"Give me one of the sweeps quick, quick!"
He put the sweeps out. No sooner had he braced himself
against a rib of the yawl and thrown his muscles against the heavy bar than
she, too, was pulling hard.
"Not too strong at first, dear," he
cautioned. "Don't use up all your strength in the first few minutes. We
may have a long fight for it!"
"I'm in it with you--till the end--whichever way
it ends," she answered; and in the moonlight he saw the untrammeled swing
and play of her magnificent body.
The yawl came round slowly till it was crosswise to the
current, headed toward the mainland shore. Now it began to make a little
headway. But the breeze slightly impeded it.
Stern whipped out his knife and slashed the sheets of
platted rush. The sail crumpled, crackled and slid down; and now under a bare
pole the boat cradled slowly ahead transversely across the foam-streaked
current that ran swiftly soughing toward the dim vapor-swirls away to the
northeast.
No word was spoken now. Both Beatrice and Stern lay to
the sweeps; both braced themselves and put the full force of back and arms into
each long, powerful stroke. Yet Stern could see that, at the rate of progress
they were making over that black and oily swirl, they could not gain ten feet
while the current was carrying them a thousand.
In his heart he knew the futility of the fight, yet
still he fought. Still Beatrice fought for life, too, there by his side. Human
instinct, the will to live, drove them on, on, where both understood there was
no hope.
For now already the current had quickened still more. The
breeze had sprung up from the opposite direction; Stern knew the boiling rush
of waters had already reached a speed greater than that of the wind itself. No
longer the stars trembled, reflected, in the waters. All ugly, frothing,
broken, the swift current foamed and leaped, in long, horrible gulfs and crests
of sickening velocity.
And whirlpools now began to form. The yawl was twisted
like a straw, wrenched, hurled, flung about with sickening violence.
"Row! Row!" Stern cried none the less. And
his muscles bunched and hardened with the labor; his veins stood out, and sweat
dropped from his brow, ran into his eyes, and all but blinded him.
The girl, too, was laboring with all her might. Stern
heard her breath, gasping and quick, above the roar and swash of the mad
waters. And all at once revulsion seized him--rage, and a kind of mad
exultation, a defiance of it all.
He dropped the sweep and sprang to her.
"Beta!" he shouted, louder than the droning
tumult. "No use! No use at all! Here--come to me!"
He drew the sweep inboard and flung it in the bottom
of the yawl.
Already the vapors of the cataract ahead were drifting
over them and driving in their faces. A vibrant booming shuddered through the
dark air, where now even the moon's faint light was all extinguished by the
whirling mists.
Heaven and sea shook with the terrible concussion of
falling waters. Though Stern had shouted, yet the girl could not have heard him
now.
In the gloom he peered at her; he took her in his
arms. Her face was pale, but very calm. She showed no more fear than the man;
each seemed inspired with some strange exultant thought of death, there with
the other.
He drew her to his breast and covered her face; he
knelt with her among the heaped-up furs, and then, as the yawl plunged more violently
still, they sank down in the poor shelter of the cabin and waited.
His arms were about her; her face was buried on his
breast. He smoothed her hair; his lips pressed her forehead.
"Good-by!" he whispered, though she could
not hear.
They seemed now to hover on the very brink.
A long, racing sluicelike incline of black waters,
streaked with swirls of white, appeared before them. The boat plunged and
whirled, dipped, righted, and sped on.
Behind, a huge, rushing, wall-like mass of lathering,
leaping surges. In front, a vast nothingness, a black, unfathomable void, up
through which gushed in clouds the mighty jets of vapor.
Came a lurch, a swift plunge.
The boat hung suspended a moment.
Stern saw what seemed a long, clear, greenish slant of
water. Deafened and dazed by the infernal pandemonium of noise, he bowed his
head on hers, and his arms tightened.
Suddenly everything dropped away. The universe crashed
and bellowed.
Stern felt a heavy dash of brine--cold, strangling,
irresistible.
All grew black.
"Death!" thought he, and knew no more.
CHAPTER XII
TRAPPED ON THE LEDGE
Consciousness won back to Allan Stern--how long
afterward he could not tell--under the guise of a vast roaring tumult, a
deafening thunder that rose, fell, leaped aloft again in huge, titanic cadences
of sound.
And coupled with this glimmering sense-impression, he
felt the drive of water over him; he saw, vaguely as in the memory of a dream,
a dim gray light that weakly filtered through the gloom.
Weak, sick, dazed, the man realized that he still
lived; and to his mind the thought "Beatrice!" flashed back again.
With a tremendous effort, gasping and shaken, weak,
unnerved and wounded, he managed to raise himself upon one elbow and to peer
about him with wild eyes.
A strange scene that. Even in the half light, with all
his senses distorted by confusion and by pain, he made shift to comprehend a
little of what he saw.
He understood that, by some fluke of fate, life still
remained in him; that, in some way he never could discover, he had been cast
upon a ledge of rock there in the cataract--a ledge over which spray and foam
hurled, seething, yet a ledge which, parting the gigantic flood, offered a
chance of temporary safety.
Above him, sweeping in a vast smooth torrent of clear
green, he saw the steady downpour of the falls. Out at either side, as he lay
there still unable to rise, he caught glimpses through the spume-drive,
glimpses of swift white water, that broke and creamed as it whirled past; that
jetted high; that, hissing, swept away, away, to unknown depths below that
narrow, slippery ledge.
Realization of all this had hardly forced itself upon
his dazed perceptions when a stronger recrudescence of his thought about the girl
surged back upon him.
"Beatrice! Beatrice!" he gasped, and
struggled up.
On hands and knees, groping, half-blinded, deafened,
he began to crawl; and as he crawled, he shouted the girl's name, but the
thundering of the vast tourbillions and eddies that swirled about the rock,
white and ravening, drowned his voice. Vague yet terrible, in the light of the
dim moon that filtered through the mists, the racing flood howled past. And in
Stern's heart, as he now came to more and better understanding, a vast despair
took shape, a sickening fear surged up.
Again he shouted, chokingly, creeping along the
slippery ledge. Through the driving mists he peered with agonized eyes. Where
was the yawl now? Where the girl? Down there in that insane welter of the mad
torrent--swept away long since to annihilation? The thought maddened him.
Clutching a projection of the rock, he hauled himself
up to his feet, and for a moment stood there, swaying, a strange, tattered,
dripping figure in the dim moonlight, wounded, breathless and disheveled, with
bloodshot eyes that sought to pierce the hissing spray.
All at once he gulped some unintelligible thing and
staggered forward.
There, wedged in a crevice, he had caught sight of
something--what it was he could not tell, but toward it now he stumbled.
He reached the thing. Sobbing with realization of his
incalculable loss and of the wreckage of all their hopes and plans and all that
life had meant, he fell upon his knees beside the object.
He groped about it as though blind; he felt that
formless mass of debris, a few shattered planks and part of the woven sail, now
jammed into the fissure in the ledge. And at touch of all that remained to him,
he crouched there, ghastly pale and racked with unspeakable anguish.
But hope and the indomitable spirit of the human heart
still urged him on. The further end of the ledge, overdashed with wild jets of
spray and stinging drives of brine, still remained unexplored. And toward this
now he crept, bit by bit, fighting his way along, now clinging as some more
savage surge leaped over, now battling forward on hands and knees along the
perilous strip of stone.
One false move, he knew, one slip and all was over.
He, too, like the yawl itself, and perhaps like Beatrice, would whirl and fling
away down, down, into the nameless nothingness of that abyss.
Better thus, he dimly realized, better, after all,
than to cling to the ledge in case he could not find her. For it must be only a
matter of time, and no very long time at that, when exhaustion and starvation
would weaken him and when he must inevitably be swept away.
And in his mind he knew the future, which voiced
itself in a half-spoken groan:
"If she's not there, or if she's there, but
dead--good-by!"
Even as he sensed the truth he found her. Sheltered
behind a jutting spur of granite, Beatrice was lying, where the shock of the
impact had thrown her when the yawl had struck the ledge.
Drenched and draggled in her water-soaked tiger-skin,
her long hair tangled and disheveled over the rock, she lay as though asleep.
"Dead!" gasped Allan, and caught her in his
arms, all limp and cold. Back from her brow he flung the brine-soaked hair; he
kissed her forehead and her lips, and with trembling hands began to chafe her
face, her throat, her arms.
To her breast he laid his ear, listening for some
flicker of life, some promise of vitality again.
And as he sensed a slight yet rhythmic pulsing
there--as he detected a faint breath, so vast a gratitude and love engulfed him
that for a moment all grew dazed and shaken and unreal.
He had to brace himself, to struggle for self-mastery.
"Beta! Beta!" he cried. "Oh, my God!
You live--you live!"
Dripping water, unconscious, lithe, she lay within his
clasp, now strong again. Forgotten his weakness and his pain, his bruises, his
wounds, his fears All had vanished from his consciousness with the one supreme
realization--"She lives!"
Back along the ledge he bore her, not slipping now,
not crouching, but erect and bold and powerful, nerved to that effort and that
daring by the urge of the great love that flamed through all his veins.
Back he bore her to the comparative safety of the
other end, where only an occasional breaker creamed across the rock and where,
behind a narrow shelf that projected diagonally upward and outward, he laid his
precious burden down.
And now again he called her name; he rubbed and chafed
her.
Only joy filled his soul. Nothing else mattered now.
The total loss of their yawl and all its precious contents, the wreck of their
expedition almost at its very start, the fact that Beatrice and he were now
alone upon a narrow ledge of granite in the midst of a stupendous cataract that
drained the ocean down to unknown, unthinkable depths, the knowledge that she
and he now were without arms, ammunition, food, shelter, fire, anything at all,
defenseless in a wilderness such as no humans ever yet had faced--all this
meant nothing to Allan Stern.
For he had her; and as at last her lids twitched, then
opened, and her dazed eyes looked at him; as she tried to struggle up while he
restrained her; as she chokingly called his name and stretched a tremulous hand
to him, there in the thunderous half light of the falls, he knew he could not
ask for greater joy, though all of civilization and of power might be his,
without her.
In his own soul he knew he would choose this
abandonment and all this desperate peril with Beatrice, rather than safety,
comfort, luxury, and the whole world as it once had been apart from her.
Yet, as sometimes happens in the supreme crises of
life, his first spoken word was commonplace enough.
"There, there, lie still!" he commanded,
drawing her close to his breast. "You're all right, now--just keep quiet,
Beatrice!"
"What--what's happened--" she gasped.
"Where--"
"Just a little accident, that's all," he
soothed the frightened girl. Dazed by the roaring cadence of the torrent, she
shuddered and hid her face against him; and his arms protected her as he
crouched there beside her in the scant shelter of the rocky shelf.
"We got carried over a waterfall, or something of
that sort," he added. "We're on a ledge in the river, or whatever it
is, and--"
"You're hurt, Allan?"
"No, no--are you?"
"It's nothing, boy!" She looked up again,
and even in the dim light he saw her try to smile. "Nothing matters so
long as we have each other!"
Silence between them for a moment, while he drew her
close and kissed her. He questioned her again, but found that save for bruises
and a cruel blow on the temple, she had taken no hurt in the plunge that had
stunned her. Both, they must have been flung from the yawl when it had gone to
pieces. How long they had lain upon the rock they knew not. All they could know
was that the light woodwork of the boat had been dashed away with their
supplies and that now they again faced the world empty-handed--provided even
that escape were possible from the midst of that mad torrent.
An hour or so they huddled in the shelter of the rocky
shelf till strength and some degree of calm returned and till the growing light
far off to eastward through the haze and mist told them that day was dawning
again.
Then Allan set to work exploring once more carefully
their little islet in the swirling flood.
"You stay here, Beta," said he. "So
long as you keep back of this projection you're safe. I'm going to see just
what the prospect is."
"Oh, be careful, Allan!" she entreated.
"Be so very, very careful, won't you?"
He promised and left her. Then, cautiously, step by
step, he made his way along the ledge in the other direction from that where he
had found the senseless girl.
To the very end of the ledge he penetrated, but found
no hope. Nothing was to be seen through the mists save the mad foam-rush of the
waters that leaped and bounded like white-maned horses in a race of death. Bold
as the man was, he dared not look for long. Dizziness threatened to overwhelm
him with sickening lure, its invitation to the plunge. So, realizing that
nothing was to be gained by staying there, he drew back and once more sought
Beatrice.
"Any way out?" she asked him, anxiously, her
voice sounding clear and pure through the tumult of the rushing waters.
He shook his head, despairingly. And silence fell
again, and each sat thinking long, long thoughts, and dawn came creeping grayly
through the spume-drive of the giant falls.
More than an hour must have passed before Stern noted
a strange phenomenon--an hour in which they had said few words--an hour in
which both had abandoned hopes of life--and in which, she in her own way, he in
his, they had reconciled themselves to the inevitable.
But at last, "What's that?" exclaimed the
man; for now a different tone resounded in the cataract, a louder, angrier
note, as though the plunge of waters at the bottom had in some strange,
mysterious way drawn nearer. "What's that?" he asked again.
Below there somewhere by the tenebrous light of
morning he could see--or thought that he could see--a green, dim, vaguely
tossing drive of waters that now vanished in the whirling mists, now showed
again and now again grew hidden.
Out to the edge of the rocky shelf he crept once more.
Yes, for a certainty, now he could make out the seething plunge of the waters
as they roared into the foam-lashed flood below.
But how could this be? Stern's wonder sought to grasp
analysis of the strange phenomenon.
"If it's true that the water at the bottom's
rising," thought he, "then there must either be some kind of tide in
that body of water or else the cavity itself must be filling up. In either
case, what if the process continues?"
And instantly a new fear smote him--a fear wherein lay
buried like a fly in amber a hope for life, the only hope that had yet come to
him since his awakening there in that trap sealed round by sluicing maelstroms.
He watched a few moments longer, then with a fresh
resolve, desperate yet joyful in its strength, once more sought the girl.
"Beta," said he, "how brave are
you?"
"How brave? Why, dear?"
He paused a moment, then replied: "Because, if
what I believe is true, in a few minutes you and I have got to make a fight for
life--a harder fight than any we've made yet--a fight that may last for hours
and may, after all, end only in death. A battle royal! Are you strong for it?
Are you brave?"
"Try me!" she answered, and their eyes met,
and he knew the truth, that come what might of life or death, of loss or gain,
defeat or victory, this woman was to be his mate and equal to the end.
"Listen, then!" he commanded. "This is
our last, our only chance. And if it fails--"
CHAPTER XIII
ON THE CREST OF THE MAELSTROM
Stern's observation of the rising flood proved
correct. By whatever theory it might or might not be explained, the fact was
positive that now the water there below them was rising fast, and that inside
of half an hour at the outside the torrent would engulf their ledge.
It seemed as though there must be some vast, rhythmic
ebb and flux in the unsounded abysses that yawned beneath them, some incalculable
regurgitation of the sea, which periodically spewed forth a part, at least, of
the enormous torrent that for hours poured into that titanic gulf.
And it was upon this flux, stormy and wild and full of
seething whirlpools, that Allan Stern and the girl now built their only
possible hope of salvation and of life.
"Come, we must be at work!" he told her, as
together they peered over the edge and now beheld the weltering flood creeping
up, up along the thunderous plunge of the waterfall till it was within no more
than a hundred feet of their shelter.
As the depth of the fall decreased the spray-drive
lessened, and now, with the full coming of day, some reflection of the golden
morning sky crept through the spray. Yet neither to right nor left could they
see shore or anything save that long, swift, sliding wall of brine, foam-tossed
and terrible.
"To work!" said he again. "If we're
going to save ourselves out of this inferno we've got to make some kind of
preparation. We can't just swim and trust to luck. We shall have to malice
float of some sort or other, I think."
"Yes, but what with?" asked she.
"With what remains of the yawl!"
And even as he spoke he led the way to the crevice
where the splintered boards and the torn sail had been wedged fast.
"A slim hope, I know," he admitted,
"but it's all we've got now."
Driven home as the wreckage was by the terrific impact
of the blow, Stern had a man's work cut out for him to get it clear; but his
was as the strength of ten, and before half an hour had passed he had, with the
girl's help, freed all the planks and laid them out along the rock-shelf, the
most sheltered spot of the ledge.
Another hour later the planks had been lashed into a
rough sort of float with what cordage remained and with platted strips of the
mat sail.
"It's not half big enough to hold us up
altogether," judged the man, "but if we merely use it to keep our
heads out of water it will serve, and it's got the merit of being unsinkable,
anyhow. God knows how long we may have to be in the water, little girl. But
whatever comes we've got to face it. There's no other chance at all!"
They waited now calmly, with the resignation of those
who have no alternative to hardship. And steadily the flood mounted up, up,
toward the ledge, and now the seethe was very near. Now already the leaping
froth of the plunge was dashing up against their rock. In a few moments the
shelter would be submerged.
He put his lips close to her ear, for now his voice
could not carry.
"Let's jump for it!" he cried. "If we
wait till the flood reaches us here we'll be crushed against the rock. Come on,
Beatrice, we've got to plunge!"
She answered with her eyes; he knew the girl was ready.
To him he drew her and their kiss was one that spoke eternal farewell. But of
this thought no word passed their lips.
"Come!" bade the man once more.
How they leaped into that vortex of mad waters, how
they vanished in that thunderous welter, rose, sank, fought, strangled, rose
again and caught the air, and once more were whirled down and buried in that
crushing avalanche; how they clung to the lashed planks and with these spiraled
in mad sarabands among the whirlpools and green eddies; how they were flung out
into smoother water, blinded and deafened, yet with still the spark of life and
consciousness within them, and how they let the frail raft bear them, fainting
and dazed, all their senses concentrated just on gripping this support--all
this they never could have told.
Stern knew at last, with something of clarity, that he
was floating easily along an oily current which ran, undulating, beneath a
slate-gray mist; he realized that with one hand he was grasping the planks,
with the other arm upbearing the girl.
Pale and with closed eyes, she lay there in the hollow
of his arm, her face free from water, her long hair floating out upon the tide.
He saw her lids twitch and knew she lived. Yet even as
he thanked God and took a firmer hold on her, consciousness lapsed again, and
with it all realization of time or of events.
Yet though the moments--or were they hours?--which
followed left no impress on his brain, some intelligence must have directed
Stern. For when once more he knew, he found the mist and fog all gone; he saw a
golden sun that weltered all across the heaving flood in a brave splendor; and,
off to northward, a wooded line of hills, blue in the distance, yet beautiful
with their promise of salvation.
Stern understood, then, what must have happened. He
saw that the upfilling of the abyss, whatever might have caused it, had flung
them forth; he perceived that the temporary flood which had taken place before
once more another terrific down-draft should pour into the gaping chasm, had
cast them out, floated by their raft of planks, even as match-straws might be
flung and floated on the outburst of a geyser.
He understood; he knew that, fortune favoring, life
still beckoned there ahead.
And in his heart resolve leaped up.
"Life! Life!" he cried. "Oh, Beatrice,
look! See! There's land ahead, there--land!"
But the girl, still circled by his arm, lay senseless.
Allan knew he could make no progress in that manner. So by dint of great labor,
he managed to draw her somewhat onto the float and there to lash her with a
loose end of cordage in such wise that she could breathe with no danger of
drowning.
Himself he summoned all his forces, and now began to
swim through the smooth tides, which, warm with some grateful heat, vastly
unlike the usual ocean chill, stretched lazily rolling away and away to that
far off shore.
That day was long and bitter, an agony of toil, hope,
despair, labor and struggle, and the girl, reviving, shared it toward the end.
Only their frail raft fenced death away, but so long as the buoyant planks held
together they could not drown.
Thirst and exhaustion tortured them, but there was no
hope of appeal to any help. In this manless world there could be no rescue.
Here, there, a few gulls wheeled and screamed above the flood; and once a
school of porpoises, glistening as they curved their shining backs in long
leaps through the brine, played past. Allan and the girl envied the creatures,
and renewed their fight for life.
The south wind favored, and what seemed a landward
current drew them on. Their own strength, too, in spite of the long fast and
the incredible hardships, held out well. For now that civilization was a thing
of the oblivious past, they shared the vital forces and the very powers of
Mother Nature herself. And, like two favored children of that all-mother, they
slowly made their way to land.
Night found them utterly exhausted and soaked to the
marrow, yet alive, stretched out at full length, inert, upon the warm sands of
a virgin beach. There they lay, supine, above high tide, whither they had
dragged themselves with terrible exertion. And the stars wheeled overhead; and
down upon them the strange-featured moon wondered with her pallid gleam.
Fireless, foodless and without shelter, unprotected in
every way, possessing nothing now save just their own bodies and the draggled
garments that they wore, they lay and slept. In their supreme exhaustion they
risked attack from wild beasts and from anthropoids. Sleep to them was now the
one vital, inevitable necessity.
Thus the long night hours passed and strength revived
in them, up-welling like fresh tides of life; and once more a new day grayed
the east, then transmuted to bright gold and blazoned its insignia all up the
eastern sky.
Stern woke first, dazed with the long sleep, toward
mid-morning. A little while he lay as though adream, trying to realize what had
happened; but soon remembrance knitted up the fabric of the peril and the close
escape. And, arising stiffly from the sand, he stretched his splendid muscles,
rubbed his eyes, and stared about him.
A burning thirst was tormenting him. His tongue clave
to the roof of his mouth; he found, by trial, that he could scarcely swallow.
"Water!" gasped he, and peered at the deep
green woods, which promised abundant brooks and streams.
But before he started on that quest he looked to see
that Beatrice was safe and sound. The girl still slept. Bending above her he
made sure that she was resting easily and that she had taken no harm. But the
sun, he saw, was shining in her face.
"That won't do at all!" he thought; and now
with a double motive he strode off up the beach, toward the dense forest that
grew down to the line of shifting sands.
Ten minutes and he had discovered a spring that
bubbled out beneath a moss-hung rock, a spring whereof he drank till renewed
life ran through his vigorous body. And after that he sought and found with no
great labor a tree of the same species of breadfruit that grew all about their
bungalow on the Hudson.
Then, bearing branches of fruit, and a huge, fronded
tuft of the giant fern-trees that abounded there, he came back down the beach
to the sleeping girl, who still lay unconscious in her tiger-skin, her heavy
hair spread drying on the sands, her face buried in the warm, soft hollow of
her arm.
He thrust the stalk of the fern-tree branch far down
into the sand, bending it so that the thick leaves shaded her. He ate
plentifully of the fruit and left much for her. Then he knelt and kissed her
forehead lightly, and with a smile upon his lips set off along the beach.
A rocky point that rose boldly against the morning, a
quarter-mile to southward, was his objective.
"Whatever's to be seen round here can be seen
from there," said he. "I've got my job cut out for me, all
right--here we are, stranded, without a thing to serve us, no tools, weapons or
implements or supplies of any kind--nothing but our bare hands to work with,
and hundreds of miles between us and the place we call home. No boat, no
conveyance at all. Unknown country, full of God knows what perils!"
Thinking, he strode along the fine, smooth, even
sands, where never yet a human foot had trodden. For the first time he seemed
to realize just what this world now meant--a world devoid of others of his
kind. While the girl and he had been among the ruins of Manhattan, or even on
the Hudson, they had felt some contact with the past; but here, Stern's eye
looked out over a world as virgin as on the primal morn. And a vast loneliness
assailed him, a yearning almost insupportable. that made him clench his fists
and raise them to the impassive, empty sky that mocked him with its deep and
azure calm.
But from the rocky point, when he had scaled its
height, he saw far off to westward a rising column of vapor which for a while
diverted his thoughts. He recognized the column, even though he could not hear
the distant roaring of the cataract he knew lay under it. And, standing erect
and tall on the topmost pinnacle, eyes shaded under his level hand, he studied
the strange sight.
"Yes, the flood's rushing in again, down that
vast chasm," he exclaimed. "The chasm that nearly proved a grave to
us! And every day the same thing happens--but how and why? By Jove, here's a
problem worthy a bigger brain than mine!
"Well, I can't solve it now. And there's enough
to do, without bothering about the maelstrom--except to avoid it!"
He swept the sea with his gaze. Far off to southward
lay a dim, dark line, which at one time must have been Long Island; but it was
irregular now and faint, and showed that the island had been practically
submerged or swept away by the vast geodetic changes of the age since the
catastrophe.
A broken shore-line, heavily wooded, stretched to east
and west. Stern sought in vain for any landmark which might give him position
on a shore once so familiar to him. Whether he now stood near the former site
of New Haven, whether he was in the vicinity of the one-time mouth of the
Connecticut River, or whether the shore where he now stood had once been Rhode
Island, there was no means of telling. Even the far line of land on the horizon
could not guide him.
"If that is some remnant of Long Island," he
mused, "it would indicate that we're no further east than the Connecticut;
but there's no way to be sure. Other islands may have been heaved up from the
ocean floor. There's nothing definite or certain about anything now, except that
we're both alive, without a thing to help us but our wits and that I'm starving
for something more substantial than that breadfruit!"
Wherewith he went back to Beatrice.
He found her, awake at last, sitting on the beach
under the shadow of the fern-tree branch, shaking out her hair and braiding it
in two thick plaits. He brought her water in a cup deftly fashioned from a huge
leaf; and when she had drunk and eaten some of the fruit they sat and talked a
while in the grateful warmth of the sun.
She seemed depressed and disheartened, at last, as
they discussed what had happened and spoke of the future.
"This last misfortune, Allan," said she,
"is too much. There's nothing now except life--"
"Which is everything!" he interrupted,
laughing. "If we can weather a time like that, nothing in store for us can
have any terrors!" His own spirits rose fast while he cheered the girl.
He drew his arm about her as they sat together on the
beach.
"Just be patient, that's all," bade he.
"Just give me a day or so to find out our location, and I'll get things
going again, never fear. A week from now we may be sailing into Boston
Harbor--who knows?"
And, shipwrecked and destitute though they were, alone
in the vast emptiness of that deserted world, yet with his optimism and his
faith he coaxed her back to cheerfulness and smiles again.
"The whole earth is ours, and the fulness
thereof!" he cried, and flung his arms defiantly outward. "This is no
time for hesitance or fear. Victory lies all before us yet. To work! To
work!"
CHAPTER XIV
A FRESH START
Indomitably the human spirit, temporarily beaten down
and crushed by misfortunes beyond all calculation, once more rose in renewed
strength to the tremendous task ahead. And, first of all, Stern and the girl
made a camping place in the edge of the forest, close by the spring under the
big rock.
"We've got to have a base of supplies, or
something of that sort," the man declared. "We can't start trekking
away into the wilderness at once, without consideration and at least some
definite place where we can store a few necessaries and to which we can
retreat, in case of need. A camp, and--if possible--a fire, these are our first
requisites."
Their camp they built (regardless of the protests of
birds and squirrels and many little woodland folk) roughly, yet strongly enough
to offer protection from the rain, under a thick-leaved oak, which in itself
gave shelter. This oak, through whose branches darted many a gay-plumaged bird
of species unknown to Stern, grew up along the overhanging face of Spring Rock,
as they christened it.
By filling in the space between the rock and the bole
of the oak with moss and stones, and then by building a heavy lean-to roof of
leafy branches, thatched with lashed bundles of marsh-grass, they constructed
in two days a fairly comfortable shack, hard by an abundant, never-failing
supply of the finest water ever a human set lip to.
Here Stern piled fragrant grasses in great quantity
for the girl's bed. He himself volunteered to sleep at the doorway, on guard
with his only weapon--a jagged boulder lashed with leather thongs to a
four-foot heft, even in the; very fashion of the neolithic ancestors of man.
Their food supply reverted to such berries and fruits
as they could gather in the fringes of the forest, for as yet they dared not
penetrate far from the shore. To these they added a plentiful supply of clams,
which they dug with sharp sticks, at low tide, far out across the
sand-flats--toiling for all the world like two of the identical savages who in
the long ago, a thousand or five thousand years before the white man came to
America, had left shell-heap middens along the north Atlantic coast.
This shell-fish gathering brought the action of the tides
to their careful attention. The tide, they found, behaved ire an erratic
manner. Instead of two regular flows a day there was but one. And at the ebb
more than two miles of beach and sea-bottom lay exposed below the spot where
they had landed at the flood. Stern analyzed the probable cause of this
phenomenon.
"There must be two regular tides," he said,
"only they're lost in the far larger flux and reflux caused by the vortex
we escaped from. Any marine geyser like that, able to, suck down water enough
from the sea to lay bare two miles of beach every day and capable of throwing a
column of mist and spray like that across the sky, is worth investing gating.
Some day you and I are going to know more about it--a lot more!"
And that was truth; but little the engineer suspected
how soon, or under what surpassingly strange circus stances, the girl and he
were destined to behold once more the workings of that terrible and mighty
force.
On the third day Stern set himself to work on the
problem of making fire. He had not even flint-and-steel now; nor any firearm.
Had he possessed a pistol he could have collected a little birch-bark, sought
out a rotten pine-stump, and discharged his weapon into the "punk,"
then blown the glow to a flame, and almost certainly have got a blaze. But he
lacked everything, and so was forced back to primitive man's one simplest
resource--friction.
As an assistant instructor in anthropology at Harvard
University, he had now and then produced fire for his class of expectant
students by using the Peruvian fire-drill; but even this simple expedient
required a head-strap and a jade bearing, a well-formed spindle and a bow.
Stern had none of these things, neither could he fashion them without tools. He
had, therefore, to resort to the still more primitive method of
"fire-sawing," such as long, long ago the Australian bushmen had been
wont to practice.
He was a strong man, determined and persistent; but
two days more had passed, and many blisters covered his palms ere--after
innumerable experiments with different kinds of woods and varying strokes--the
first tiny glow fell into the carefully scraped sawdust. And it was with a
fast-beating heart and tremulous breath that he blew his spark to a larger one,
then laid on his shredded strips of bark and blew again, and so at last, with a
great up-welling triumph in his soul, beheld the flicker of a flame once more.
Exhausted, he carefully fed that precious fire, while
the girl clapped her hands with joy. In a few moments more the evening air in
the dim forest aisles was gladdened by the ruddy blaze of a camp-fire at the
door of the lean-to, and for the first time smoke went wafting up among the
branches of that primeval wood.
"Now for some real meat!" cried Stern with
exultation. "To-morrow I go hunting!"
That evening they sat for hours feeding their fire
with deadfalls, listening to the trickle of the little spring and to the night
sounds of the forest, watching the bats flicker among the dusky spaces, and
gazing at the slow and solemn march of the stars beyond the leafy fretwork
overhead. Stern slept but little that night, in his anxiety to keep the fire
fed; and morning found him eager to be at his work with throwing-sticks among
the vistas of the wilderness.
Together they hunted that day. She carried what his
skilful aim brought down from the tangled greenery above. Birds, squirrels,
chipmunks, all were welcome. Noon found them in possession of more than thirty
pieces of small game, including two hedgehogs. And for the first time in almost
a week they tasted flesh again, roasted on a sharp stick over the glowing
coals.
Stern hunted all that day and the next. He dressed the
game with an extraordinarily large and sharp clamshell, which he whetted from
time to time on a rock beside the spring. And soon the fire was overhung with
much meat, being smoked with a pine-cone smudge in preparation for the journey
into the unknown.
"Inside of a week, at this rate," he judged,
"we'll be able to start again. You must set to work platting a couple of
sacks. The grass along the brook is tough and long. We can carry fifty or
seventy-five pounds of meat, for emergencies. Fruits we can gather on the
way."
"And fire? Can we carry that?"
"We can take a supply of properly dried-out woods
with punk. I've already had practice enough, so I ought to be able to get fire
at any time inside of half an hour."
"Weapons?"
"I'll make you a battle-ax like my own, only
lighter. That's the best we can do for the present, till we strike some ruin or
other where a city used to be."
"And you're still bent on reaching Boston?"
"Yes. I reckon we're more than half-way there by
now. It's the nearest big ruin, the nearest place where we can refit and recoup
the damage done, get supplies and arms and tools, build another boat, and in
general take a fresh start. If we can make ten miles a day, we can reach it in;
ten days or less. I think, all things considered, the Boston plan's the wisest
possible one."
She gazed into the fire a moment before replying.
Then, stirring the coals with a stick, said she:
"All right, boy; but I've got a suggestion to
make."
"What is it?"
"We'll do better to follow the shore all the way
round."
"And double the distance?"
"Yes, even so. You know, this shore is--or used
to be--flat and sandy most of the way. We can make better progress along
beaches and levels than we can through the forest. And there's the matter of
shell-fish to consider; and most important of all--"
"Well, what?"
"The sea will guide us. We can't get lost, you
understand. With the exception of cutting across the shank of Cape Cod, if the
cape still exists, we needn't ever get out of sight of salt water. And it will
bring us surely to the Hub."
"By Jove, you're right!" he cried
enthusiastically. "The shore-line has it! And to-morrow morning at sunup we
begin preparations in earnest. You'll weave the knapsacks while I go after
still more meat. Gad! Now that everything's decided, the quicker we're on our
way the better. I'm keen to see old Tremont Hill again, and get my hands on a
good stock of arms and ammunition once more!"
That night, long after Beatrice was sleeping soundly
on her bed of odorous grasses, Allan lay musing by the lean-to door, in the red
glow of the fire. He was thinking of the long and painful history of man, of
the great catastrophe and of the terrible responsibility that now lay on his
own shoulders.
As in a panorama, he saw the emergence of humanity
from the animal stage, the primitive savagery of his kind; then the beginnings
of the family, the nomadic epoch, the stone age, and the bronze age, and the
age of iron; the struggle up to agriculturalism, and communism, and the
beginnings of the village groups, with all their petty tribal wars.
He saw the slow formation of small states, the era of
slavery, then feudalism and serfdom, and at last the birth of modern nations,
the development of machinery, and the vast nexus of exploitation known as
capitalism--the stage which at one blow had been utterly destroyed just as it
had been transmuting into collectivism.
And at thought of this Stern felt a pang of infinite
regret.
"The whole evolutionary process wiped out,"
mused he, "just as it was about to pass into its perfect form, toward
which the history of all the ages had conspired, for which oceans of blood had
been spilled and millions of men and women--billions!--lived and toiled and
died!
"All gone, all vanished--it's all been in vain,
the woe and travail of the world since time began, unless she and I, just we
two, preserve the memory and the knowledge of the world's long, bitter fight, and
hand them down to strong descendants.
"Our problem is to bridge this gap, to keep the
fires of science and of truth alive, and, if that be possible, to start the
world again on a higher plane, where all the harsh and terrible phases will no
longer have to be lived through again. Our problem and our task! Were ever two
beings weighed by such a one?"
And as he pondered, in the firelight, his thoughts and
dreams and hopes all centered in the sleeping girl, there in the lean-to
sheltered by his watchful care. But what those dreams were, what his visions of
the future--who shall set forth or fully understand?
CHAPTER XV
LABOR AND COMRADESHIP
Four days later, having hastened all their
preparations and worked with untiring energy, they broke camp for the long,
perilous trek in quest of the ruins of a dead and buried city.
It was at daylight that they started from the little
shack in the edge of the forest. Both were refreshed by a long sleep and by a
plunge in the curling breakers that now, at high tide, were driven up the beach
by a stiff sea-breeze.
The morning, which must have been toward the end of
September--Stern had lost accurate count but reckoned the day at about the
twenty-fifth--dawned clear and bracing, with just a tang of winelike
exhilaration in the air. Before them the beach spread away and away to
eastward, beyond the line of vision, a broad and yellow road to bid them travel
on.
"Come, girl, en marche!" cried the man
cheerily, as he adjusted Beta's knapsack so that the platted cord should not
chafe her shoulders, then swung his own across his back. And with a buoyant
sense of conquest, yet a regret at leaving the little camp which, though crude
and rough, had yet been a home to them for a week, they turned their faces to
the rising sun and set out on the journey into the unexplored.
Much altered were they now from those days at Hope
Villa, when they had been able to restore most of the necessities and even some
of the refinements of civilization. Now the girl's hair hung in two thick
braids down over her worn tiger-skin, each braid as big as a strong man's
wrist, for she lacked any means to do it up; she had not so much as a comb, nor
could Stern, without a knife, fashion one for her. Their sandals hung in
tatters. Stern had tried to repair them with strips of squirrel-skin clumsily
hacked out with the sharp clam-shell, but the result was crude.
Long were his hair and beard, untrimmed now, unkempt
and red. Clad in his ragged fur garment, bare legged and bare armed, with the
grass-cloth sack slung over his sinewy shoulder and the heavy stone-ax in his
hand, he looked the very image of prehistoric man--as she, too, seemed the
woman of that distant age.
But though their outward guise was that of savages far
cruder than the North American Indian was when Columbus first beheld him, yet
in their brains lay all the splendid inheritance of a world-civilization. And
as the fire-materials in Stern's sack contained, in germ, all the mechanic
arts, so their joint intelligence presaged everything that yet might be.
They traveled at an easy pace, like voyagers who
foresee many hard days of journeying and who are cautious not at first to drain
their strength. Five hours they walked, with now and then a pause. Stern
calculated they had made twelve miles or more before they camped beside a
stream that flowing thinly from the wood, sank into the sand and was lost
before it reached the sea.
Here they ate and rested till the sun began to pass
its meridian, when once more they started on their pilgrimage. That night,
after a day wherein they had met no other sign of life than gulls and crows
ravaging the mussel-beds, they slept on piles of sun-dried kelp which they
heaped into some crevices under an overhanging brow of low cliffs on a rocky
point. And dawn found them again, traveling steadily eastward, battle-axes
swinging, hopes high, in perfect comradeship and faith.
Toward what must have been about ten o'clock of that
morning they reached the mouth of a river, something like half a mile wide
where it joined the sea. By following this up a mile or so they reached a
narrow point; but even here, burdened as they were, swimming was out of the
question.
"The only thing to do," said Stern,
"will be to wait till the tide backs up and gives us quiet water, then
make our way across on a log or two"--a plan they put into effect with
good success. Mid-afternoon, and they were on their way again, east-bound.
"Was that the Connecticut?" asked Beatrice.
"Car do you think we've passed that already?"
"More likely to be the Thames," he answered.
"I figure that what used be New London is less than five miles from
here."
"Why not visit the ruins? There might be
something there."
"Not enough to bother with. We mustn't be
diverted from the main issue, Boston! Forward, march!"
Next day Stern descried a point jutting far out to
sea, which he declared was none other than Watch Hill Point, on the Rhode
Island boundary. And on the afternoon of the following day they reached what
was indisputably Point Judith and Narragansett Bay.
Here they were forced to turn northward; and when
camping time came, after they had dug their due allowance of clams and gathered
their breadfruit and made their fire in the edge of the woods, they held
conclave about their future course.
The bay was, indeed, a factor neither Stern nor she
had reckoned on. To follow its detours all the way around would add seventy to
a hundred miles to their journey, according as they hugged the shore or made
straight cuts across some of the wooded promontories.
"And from Providence, at the head of the bay, to
Boston, is only forty miles in a direct line northwest-by-north," said he,
poking the fire contemplatively.
"But if we miss our way?"
"How can we, if we follow the remains of the
railroad? The cuts and embankments will guide us all the way."
"I know; but the forest is so thick!"
"Not so thick but we can make at least five miles
a day. That is, inside of eight days we can reach the Hub. And we shall have
the help of tools and guns, remember. In a place the size of Providence there
must be a few ruins still containing something of value. Yes, by all means the
overland route is best, from now on. It means forty miles instead of probably
two hundred."
Thus they agreed upon it; and, having settled matters,
gave them no more thought, but prepared for rest. And sunset came down once
more; it faded, smoldering along the forest-line to westward; it burned to dull
timbers and vague purples, then went out. And "the wind that runs after
the sun awoke and sang softly among the tree-tops, a while, like the intoning
of a choir invisible, and was silent again."
There by the firelight he half saw, half sensed her
presence, vague and beautiful despite the travel-worn, tattered skin that
clothed her. He felt her warm, vital nearness; his hand sought hers and pressed
it, and the pressure was returned. And with a thrill of overwhelming tenderness
he realized what this girl was to him and what his love meant and what it all
portended.
Until long after dark they sat and talked of the
future, and of life and death, and of the soul and of the great mystery that
had swept the earth clean of all of their kind and had left them, alone, of all
those fifteen hundred million human creatures.
And overhead, blotting out a patch of sky and stars,
moved slowly the dark object which had so puzzled Stern since the first time he
had observed it--the thing he meant to know about and solve, once he could
reach the Cambridge Observatory. And of this, too, they talked; but neither he
nor she could solve the riddle of its nature.
Their talk together, that night, was typical of the
relationship that had grown up between them in the long weeks since their
awakening in the Tower. Almost all, if not quite all, the old-time idea of sex
had faded--the old, false assumption on the part of the man that he was by his
very nature the superior of woman.
Stern and Beatrice now stood on a different footing;
their friendship, comradeship and love were based on the tacit recognition of
absolute equality, save for Stern's accidental physical superiority. It was as
though they had been two men, one a little stronger and larger than the other,
so far as the notion of equality went; though this by no means destroyed that
magnetic sex-emotion which, in other aspects, thrilled and attracted and
infused them both.
Their love never for a moment obscured Stern's
recognition of the girl as primarily a human being, his associate on even terms
in this great game that they were playing together, this tremendous problem
they were laboring to solve--the vastest and most vital problem that ever yet
had confronted the human race, now represented in its totality by these two
living creatures.
And as Beatrice recalled the world of other times, with
all its false conventions, limitations and pettily stupid gallantries, she
shuddered with repulsion. In her heart she knew that, had the choice been hers,
she would not have gone back to that former state of half-chattel patronage,
half-hypocritical homage and total misconception.
Contrasting her present state with her past one, and
comparing this man--all ragged, unshaven and long-haired as he was, yet a true
man in every inch of his lithe, virile body--with others she remembered, she
found up-welling in her a love so deep and powerful, grounded on such broad
bases of respect and gratitude, mutual interest and latent passion, that she
herself could not yet understand it in all its phases and its moods.
The relation which had grown up between them, comrades
and partners in all things, partook of a fine tolerance, an exquisite and
never-failing tenderness, a wealth of all intimate, yet respectful adoration.
It held elements of brotherhood and parenthood; it was the love of coworkers
striving toward a common goal, of companions in life and in learning, in
striving, doing, accomplishing, even failing. Failure mattered nothing; for
still the comradeship was there.
And on this soil was growing daily and hourly a love
such as never since the world began had been equaled in purity and power,
faith, hope, integrity. It purified all things, made easy all things, braved
all things, pardoned all things; it was long-suffering and very kind.
They had no need to speak of it; it showed in every
word and look and act, even in the humblest and most commonplace of services
each for each. Their love was lived, not talked about.
All their trials and tremendous hardships, their
narrow passes with death, and their hard-won escapes, the vicissitudes of a
savage life in the open, with every imaginable difficulty and hard expedient,
could not destroy their illusions or do aught than bind them in closer bonds of
unity.
And each realized when the time should ripen for
another and a more vital love, that, too, would circle them with deeper
tenderness, binding them in still more intense and poignant bonds of joy.
CHAPTER XVI
FINDING THE BIPLANE
The way up the shores of Narragansett Bay was full of
experiences for them both. Animal life revealed itself far more abundantly here
than along the open sea.
"Some strange blight or other must lie in the
proximity of that terrific maelstrom," judged Stern, "something that
repels all the larger animals. But skirting this bay, there's life and to
spare. How many deer have we seen to-day? Three? And one bull-buffalo! With any
kind of a gun, or even a revolver, I could have had them all. And that
big-muzzled, shaggy old moose we saw drinking at the pool, back there, would
have been meat for us if we had had a rifle. No danger of starving here, Beatrice,
once we get our hands on something that'll shoot again!"
The night they camped on the way, Stern kept constant
guard by the fire, in case of possible attack by wolves or other beasts. He
slept only an hour, when the girl insisted on taking his place; but when the
sun arose, red and huge through the mists upon the bay, he started out again on
the difficult trail as strong and confident as though he had not kept nine
hours of vigil.
Everywhere was change and desolation. As the travelers
came into a region which had at one time been more densely populated, they
began to find here and there mournful relics of the life that once had
been--traces of man, dim and all but obliterated, but now and then puissant in
their revocation of the distant past.
Twice they found the ruins of villages--a few vague
hollows in the earth, where cellars had been, hollows in which huge trees were
rooted, and where, perhaps, a grass-grown crumble of disintegrated brick
indicated the one-time presence of a chimney. They discovered several farms,
with a few stunted apple-trees, the distant descendants of orchard growths,
struggling against the larger forest strength, and with perhaps a dismantled
well-curb, a moss-covered fireplace or a few bits of iron that had possibly
been a stove, for all relics of the other age. Mournful were the long stone
walls, crumbling down yet still discernible in places--walls that had cost the
labor of generations of farmers and yet now lay useless and forgotten in the
universal ruin of the world.
On the afternoon of the fifth day since having left
their lean-to by the shore of Long Island Sound, they came upon a canyon which
split the hills north of the site of Greenwich, a gigantic "fault" in
the rocks, richly striated and stratified with rose and red and umber, a great
cleft on the other side of which the forest lay somber and repellent in the
slanting rays of the September sun.
"By Jove, whatever it was that struck the
earth," said Stern, "must have been good and plenty. The whole planet
seems to be ripped up and broken and shattered. No wonder it knocked down New
York and killed everybody and put an end to civilization. Why, there's ten
cubic miles of material gouged out right here in sight; here's a regular Panama
Canal, or bigger, all scooped out in one piece! What the devil could have
happened?"
There was no answer to the question. After an hour
spent in studying the formations along the lip of the cleft they made a detour
eastward to the shore, crossed the fjord that ran into the canyon, and again
kept to the north. Soon after this they struck a railroad embankment, and this
they followed now, both because it afforded easier travel than the shore, which
now had grown rocky and broken, and also because it promised to guide them
surely to the place they sought.
It was on the sixth day of their exploration that they
at last penetrated the ruins of Providence. Here, as in New York, pavements and
streets and squares were all grassed over and covered with pines and elms and
oaks, rooting among the stones and shattered brickwork that lay prone upon the
earth. Only here or there a steel or concrete building still defied the ravages
of time.
"The wreckage is even more complete here than on
Manhattan Island," Stern judged as he and the girl stood in front of the
ruins of the post-office surveying the debris. "The smaller area, of
course, would naturally be covered sooner with the inroads of the forest. I
doubt whether there's enough left in the whole place to be of any real service
to us."
"To-morrow will be time enough to see,"
answered the girl. "It's too late now for any more work to-day."
They camped that night in an upper story of the Pequot
National Bank Building on Hampstead Street. Here, having cleared out the bats
and spiders, they made themselves an eerie secure from attack, and slept long
and soundly. Dawn found them at work among the overgrown ruins, much as--three
months before--they had labored in the Metropolitan Tower and about it. Less,
however, remained to salvage here. For the smaller and lighter types of
buildings had preserved far less of the relics of civilization than had been
left in the vast and solid structures of New York.
In a few places, none the less, they still came upon
the little piles of the gray ash that marked where men and women had fallen and
died; but these occurred only in the most sheltered spots. Stern paid no
attention to them. His energies and his attention were now fixed on the one
task of getting skins, arms, ammunition and supplies. And before nightfall, by
a systematic looting of such shops as remained--perhaps not above a score in
all could even be entered--the girl and he had gathered more than enough to
last them on their way to Boston. One find which pleased him immensely was a
dozen sealed glass jars of tobacco.
"As for a pipe," said he, "I can make
that easily enough. What's more I will!" More still, he did, that very
evening, and the gloom was redolent again of good smoke. Thereafter he slept as
not for a long, long time.
They spent the next day in fashioning new garments and
sandals; in putting to rights the two rifles Stern had chosen from the basement
of the State armory, and in making bandoliers to carry their supply of
cartridges. The possession of a knife once more, and of steel wherewith readily
to strike fire, delighted the man enormously. The scissors they found in a
hardware-shop, though rusty, enabled him to trim his beard and hair. Beatrice
hailed a warped hard-rubber comb with joy.
But the great discovery still awaited them, the one
supreme find which in a moment changed every plan of travel, opened the world
to them, and at a single stroke increased their hopes ten thousandfold--the
discovery of the old Pauillac monoplane!
They came upon this machine, pregnant with such vast
possibilities, in a concrete hangar back of the Federal courthouse on Anderson
Street. The building attracted Stern's attention by its unusual state of
preservation. He burst in one of the rusted iron shutters and climbed through
the window to see what might be inside.
A moment later Beatrice heard a cry of astonishment
and joy.
"Great Heavens!" the man exclaimed,
appearing at the window. "Come in! Come in--see what I've found!"
And he stretched out his hands to help her up and
through the aperture.
"What is it, boy? More arms? More--"
"An aeroplane! Good God, think o' that, will
you?"
"An aeroplane? But it's all to pieces, of course,
and--"
"Come on in and look at it, I say!"
Excitedly he lifted her through the window. "See there, will you? Isn't
that the eternal limit? And to think I never even thought of trying to find one
in New York!"
He gestured at the dust-laden old machine that,
forlorn and in sovereign disrepair, stood at the other end of the hangar.
Together they approached it.
"If it will work," the man exclaimed
thickly; "if it will only work--"
"But will it?" the girl exclaimed, her eyes
lighting with the excitement of the find, heart beating fast at thought of what
it might portend. "Can you put it in shape, boy? Or--"
"I don't know. Let me look! Who knows?
Maybe--"
And already he was kneeling, peering at the mechanism,
feeling the frame, the gear, the stays, with hands that trembled more than ever
they had trembled since their great adventure had begun.
As he examined the machine, while Beatrice stood by,
he talked to himself.
"Good thing the framework is aluminum," said
he, "or it wouldn't be worth a tinker's dam after all this time. But as it
is, it's taken no harm that I can see. Wire braces all gone, rusted out and
disappeared. Have to be rewired throughout, if I can find steel wire; if not,
I'll use braided leather thongs. Petrol tank and feed pipe O. K. Girder boom
needs a little attention. Steering and control column intact--they'll do!"
Part by part he handled the machine, his skilled eye
leaping from detail to detail.
"Canvas planes all gone, of course. Not a rag
left; only the frame. But, no matter, we can remedy that. Wooden levers, skids,
and so on, gone. Easily replaced. Main thing is the engine. Looks as though it
had been carefully covered, but, of course, the covering has rotted away. No
matter, we'll soon see. Now, this carbureter--"
His inspection lasted half an hour, while the girl,
lost among so many technicalities, sat down on the dusty concrete floor beside
the machine and listened in a kind of dazed admiration.
He gave her, finally, his opinion.
"This machine will go if properly handled,"
said he, rising triumphantly and slapping the dust off his palms. "The
chassis needs truing up, the equilibrator has sagged out of plumb, and the
ailerons have got to be readjusted, but it's only a matter of a few days at the
outside before she'll be in shape.
"The main thing is the engine, and so far as I
can judge, that's pretty nearly O. K. The magneto may have to be gone over, but
that's a mere trifle. Odd, I never thought of either finding one of these
machines in New York, or building one! When I think of all the weary miles
we've tramped it makes me sick!"
"I know," she answered; "but how about
fuel? And another thing--have you ever operated one? Could you--"
"Run one?" He laughed aloud. "I'm the
man who first taught Carlton Holmes to fly--you know Holmes, who won the
Gordon-Craig cup for altitude record in 1916. I built the first--"
"I know, dear; but Holmes was killed at
Schenectady, you remember, and this machine is different from anything you're
used to, isn't it?" Beatrice asked.
"It won't be when I'm through with it! I tell
you, Beatrice, we're going to fly. No more hiking through the woods or along
beaches for us. From now on we travel in the air--and the world opens out to us
as though by magic.
"Distance ceases to mean anything. The whole
continent is ours. If there's another human creature on it we find him! And if
there isn't then, perhaps we may find some in Asia or in Europe, who
knows?"
"You mean you'd dare to attack the Atlantic with
a patched-up machine more than a thousand years old?"
"I mean that eventually I can and will build one
that'll take us to Alaska, and so across the fifty-mile gap from Cape Prince of
Wales to East Cape. The whole world lies at our feet, girl, with this new idea,
this new possibility in mind!"
She smiled at his enthusiasm.
"But fuel?" asked she, practical even in her
joy. "I don't imagine there's any gasoline left now, do you? A stuff as
volatile as that, after all these centuries? What metal could contain it for a
thousand years?"
"There's alcohol," he answered. "A raid
on the ruins of a few saloons and drug-stores will give me all I need to carry
me to Boston, where there's plenty, never fear. A few slight adjustments of the
engine will fit it for burning alcohol. And as for the planes, good stout
buckskin, well sewn together and stretched on the frames, will do the trick as
well as canvas--better, maybe."
"But--"
"Oh, what a little pessimist it is to-day!"
he interrupted. "Always coming at me with objections, eh?" He took
her in his arms and kissed her. "I tell you Beta, this is no pipe-dream at
all, or anything like it; the thing's reality--we're going to fly! But it'll
mean the most tremendous lot of sewing and stitching for you!"
"You're a dear!" she answered
inconsequentially. "I do believe if the whole world fell apart you could
put it together again."
"With your help, yes," said he. "What's
more, I'm going to--and a better world at that than ever yet was dreamed of.
Wait and see!"
Laughing, he released her.
"Well, now, we'll go to work," he concluded.
"Nothing's accomplished by mere words. Just lay hold of that lateral
there, will you? And we'll haul this old machine out where we can have a real
good look at her, what do yore say? Now, then, one, two, three--"
CHAPTER XVII
ALL ABOARD FOR BOSTON!
Nineteen days from the discovery of the biplane, a
singular happening for a desolate world took place on the broad beach that now
edged the city where once the sluggish Providence River had flowed seaward.
For here, clad in a double suit of leather that
Beatrice had made for him, Allan Stern was preparing to give the rehabilitated
Pauillac a try-out.
Day by day, working incessantly when not occupied in
hunting or fishing, the man had rebuilt and overhauled the entire mechanism.
Tools he had found a-plenty in the ruins, tools which he had ground and
readjusted with consummate care and skill. Alcohol he had gathered together
from a score of sources. All the wooden parts, such as skids and levers and
propellers, long since vanished and gone, he had cleverly rebuilt.
And now the machine, its planes and rudders covered
with strongly sewn buckskin, stretched as tight as drum heads, its polished
screw of the Chauviere type gleaming in the morning sun, stood waiting on the
sands, while Stern gave it a painstaking inspection.
"I think," he judged, as he tested the last
stay and gave the engine its final adjustment. "I think, upon my word,
this machine's better to-day than when she was first built. If I'm not
mistaken, buckskin's a better material for planes than ever canvas was--it's far
stronger and less porous, for one thing--and as for the stays, I prefer the
braided hide. Wire's so liable to snap.
"This compass I've rigged on gimbals here, beats
anything Pauillac himself ever had. What's the matter with my home-made
gyrostat and anemometer? And hasn't this aneroid barometer got cards and spades
over the old-style models?"
Enthusiastic as a boy, Stern shook his head and smiled
delightedly at Beatrice as he expounded the merits of the biplane and its
fittings. She, half glad, half anxious at the possible outcome of the venture,
stood by and listened and nodded as though she understood all the minutiae he
explained.
"So then, you're ready to go up this
morning?" she asked, with just a quiver of nervousness in her voice.
"You're quite certain everything's all right--no chance of accident? For
if anything happened--"
"There, there, nothing can happen, nothing
will!" he reassured her. "This motor's been run three hours in
succession already without skipping an explosion. Everything's in absolute order,
I tell you. And as for the human, personal equation, I can vouch for that
myself!"
Stern walked around to the back of the machine, picked
up a long, stout stake he had prepared, took his ax, and at a distance of about
twelve feet behind the biplane drove the stake very deep into the hard sand.
He knotted a strong leather cord to the stake, brought
it forward and secured it to the frame of the machine.
"Now, Beatrice," he directed, "when I'm
ready you cut the cord. I haven't any corps of assistants to hold me back till
the right moment and then give me a shove, so the best I can do is this. Give a
quick slash right here when I shout. And whatever happens don't be alarmed.
I'll come back to you safe and sound, never fear. And this afternoon it's 'All
Aboard for Boston!'"
Smiling and confident, he cranked the motor. It
caught, and now a chattering tumult filled the air, rising, falling, as Stern
manipulated throttle and spark to test them once again.
Into the driver's seat he climbed, strapped himself in
and turned to smile at Beatrice.
Then with a practiced hand he threw the lever
operating the friction-clutch on the propeller-shaft. And now the great blades
began to twirl, faster, faster, till they twinkled and buzzed in the sunlight
with a hum like that of a gigantic electric fan.
The machine, yielding to the urge, tugged forward,
straining at its bonds like a whippet eager for a race. Beatrice, her face
flushed with excitement, stood ready with the knife.
Louder, faster whirled the blades, making a shiny
blur; a breeze sprang out behind them; it became a wind, blowing the girl's
hair back from her beautiful face.
Stern settled himself more firmly into the seat and
gripped the wheel.
The engine was roaring like a battery of Northrup
looms. Stern felt the pull, the power, the life of the machine. And his heart
leaped within him at his victory over the dead past, his triumph still to be!
"All right!" he cried. "Let go--let
go!"
The knife fell. The parted rope jerked back, writhing,
like a wounded serpent.
Gently at first, then with greater and greater speed,
shaking and bouncing a little on the broad, flat wheels that Stern had fitted
to the alighting gear, the plane rolled off along the firm-beaten sands.
Stern advanced the spark and now the screw sang a
louder, higher threnody. With ever-accelerating velocity the machine tooled
forward down the long stretch, while Beatrice stood gazing after it in rapt
attention.
Then all at once, when it had sped some three hundred
feet, Stern rotated the rising plane; and suddenly the machine lifted. In a
long smooth curve, she slid away up the air as though it had been a solid
hill--up, up, up--swifter and swifter now, till a suddenly accelerated rush
cleared the altitude of the tallest pines in the forest edging the beach, and
Stern knew his dream was true!
With a great shout of joy, he leaped the plane aloft!
Its rise had all the exhilarating suddenness of a seagull flinging up from the
foam-streaked surface of the breakers. And in that moment Stern felt the bliss
of conquest.
Behind him, the spruce propellers were making a misty
haze of humming energy. In front, the engine spat and clattered. The vast
spread of the leather wings, sewn, stretched and tested, crackled and boomed as
the wind got under them and heaved them skyward.
Stern shouted again. The machine, he felt, was a thing
of life, friendly and true. Not since that time in the tower, months ago, when
he had repaired the big steamengine and actually made it run, had he enjoyed so
real a sense of mastery over the world as now; had he sensed so definite a
connection with the mechanical powers of the world that was, the world that
still should be.
No longer now was he fighting the forces of nature,
all barehanded and alone. Now back of him lay the energy of a machine, a metal
heart, throbbing and inexhaustible and full of life! Now he had tapped the vein
of Power! And in his ears the ripping volley of the exhaust sounded as sweetly
as might the voice of a long-absent and beloved girl returning to her
sweetheart.
For a moment he felt a choking in his throat, a mist
before his eyes. This triumph stirred him emotionally, practical and cool and
keen though he was. His hand trembled a second; his heart leaped, throbbing
like the motor itself.
But almost immediately he was himself once more. The
weakness passed. And with a sweep of his clear eyes, he saw the speeding
landscape, woods, hills, streams, that now were running there beneath him like
a fluid map.
"My God, it's grand, though!" he exclaimed,
swerving the plane in a long, ascending spiral. All the art, the knack of
flight came back to him, at the touch of the wheel, as readily as swimming to
an expert in the water. Fear? The thought no more occurred to him than to you,
reading these words.
Higher he mounted, higher still, his hair whipping out
behind in the wild wind, till he could see the sparkle of Narragansett Bay,
there in the distance where the river broadened into it. At him the wind tore,
louder even than the spitting crackle of the motor. He only laughed, and soared
again.
But now he thought of Beatrice; and, as he banked and
came about, he peered far down for sight of her.
Yes, there she stood, a tiny dot upon the distant
sand. And though he knew she could not hear, in sheer animal spirits and
overwhelming joy he shouted once again, a wild, mad triumphant hurrah that lost
itself in empty space.
The test he gave the Pauillac convinced him she would
carry all the load they would need put upon her, and more. He climbed, swooped,
spiraled, volplaned, and rose again, executing a series of evolutions that
would have won him fame at any aero meet. And when, after half an hour's
exhaustive trial, he swooped down toward the beach again, he found the plane
alighted as easily as she had risen.
Like a sea-bird sinking with flat, outstretched wings,
coming to rest with perfect ease and beauty on the surface of the deep, the
Pauillac slid down the long hill of air. Stern cut off power. The machine took
the sand with no more than vigorous bound, and, running forward perhaps fifty
yards, came to a stand.
Stern had no sooner leaped from the seat than Beatrice
was with him.
"Oh, glorious!" she cried, her face alight
with joy and fine enthusiasm. All her spontaneity, her love and admiration were
aroused. And she kissed him with so frank and glad a love that Stern felt his
heart jump wildly. He thought she never yet had been so beautiful.
But all he said was:
"Couldn't run finer, little girl! Barring a
little stiffness here and there, she's perfect. So, then, when do we start, eh?
To-morrow morning, early?"
"Why not this afternoon? I'm sure we can get
ready by then."
"Afternoon it is, if you say so! But we've got to
work, to do it!"
By noon they had gathered together all the freight
they meant to carry, and--though the sun had dimmed behind dull clouds of a
peculiar slaty gray, that drifted in from eastward--had prepared for the flight
to Boston. After a plentiful dinner of venison, berries and breadfruit, they
loaded the machine.
Stern calculated that, with Beatrice as a passenger,
he could carry seventy-five or eighty pounds of freight. The two rifles,
ammunition, knives, ax, tools and provisions they packed into the skin sack
Beatrice had prepared, weighed no more than sixty. Thus Stern reckoned there
would be a fair "coefficient of safety" and more than enough power to
carry them with safety and speed.
It was at 1:15 that the girl took her place in the
passenger's seat and let Stern strap her in.
"Your first flight, little girl?" he asked
smiling, yet a trifle grave. The barking motor almost drowned his voice.
She nodded but did not speak. He noted the pulse in
her throat, a little quick, yet firm.
"You're positive you're not going to be
afraid?"
"How could I, with you?"
He made all secure, climbed up beside her, and
strapped himself in his seat.
Then he threw in the clutch and released the brake.
"Hold fast!" cried he. "All aboard for
Boston! Hold fast!"
CHAPTER XVIII
THE HURRICANE
Soaring strongly even under the additional weight,
humming with the rush of air, the plane made the last turn of her spiral and
straightened out at the height of twelve hundred feet for her long northward
run across the unbroken wilderness.
Stern preferred to fly a bit high, believing the
air-currents more dependable there. Even as he rose above the forest-level, his
experienced eye saw possible trouble in the wind-clouds banked to eastward and
in the fall of the barometer. But with the thought, "At this rate we'll
make Boston in three-quarters of an hour at the outside, and the storm can't
strike so soon," he pushed the motor to still greater speed and settled to
the urgent business of steering a straight course for Massachusetts Bay.
Only once did he dare turn aside his eyes even so much
as to glance at Beatrice. She, magnificently unafraid on the quivering back of
this huge airdragon, showed the splendid excitement of the moment by the
sparkle of her glance, the rush of eloquent blood to her cheeks.
Stern's achievement, typical of the invincible
conquest of the human soul over matter, time and space, thrilled her with
unspeakable pride. And as she breathed for the first time the pure, thin air of
those upper regions, her strong heart leaped within her breast, and she knew
that this man was worthy of her most profound, indissoluble love.
Far down beneath them now the forest sped away to
southward. The gleam of the river, dulled by the sunless sky, showed here and
there through the woods, which spread their unbroken carpet to the horizon,
impenetrable and filled with nameless perils. At thought of how he was cheating
them all, Stern smiled to himself with grim satisfaction.
"Good old engine!" he was thinking, as he
let her out another notch. "Some day I'll put you in a boat, and we'll go
cruising. With you, there's no limit to the possibilities. The world is really
ours now, with your help!"
Behind them now lay the debris of Pawtucket. Stern
caught a glimpse of a ruined building, a crumpled-in gas-tank with an elm
growing up through the stark ribs of it, a jumble of wreckage, all small and
toylike, there below; then the plane swooped onward, and all lay deep buried in
the wilderness again.
"A few minutes now," he said to himself,
"and we'll be across what used to be the line, and be spinning over
Massachusetts. This certainly beats walking all hollow! Whew!" as the
machine lurched forward and took an ugly drop. He jerked the rising-plane lever
savagely. "Still the same kind of unreliable air, I see, that we used to
have a thousand years ago!"
For a few minutes the biplane hummed on and on in long
rising and falling slants, like a swallow skimming the surface of a lake. The
even staccato of the exhaust, echoless in that height and vacancy, rippled with
cadences like a monster mowing-machine. And Stern was beginning to consider
himself as good as in Boston already--was beginning to wonder where the best
place might be to land, whether along the shore or on the Common, where,
perhaps, some open space still remained--when another formidable air-pocket
dropped him with sickening speed.
He righted the plane with a wrench that made her creak
and tremble.
"I've got to take a higher level, or a
lower," he thought. "Something's wrong here, that's certain!"
But as he shot the biplane sharply upward, hoping to
find a calmer lane, a glance at the sky showed trouble impending.
Over the gray background of wind-clouds, a
fine-shredded drive was beginning to scud. The whole east had grown black. Only
far off to westward did a little patch of dull blue show; and even this was
closing up with singular rapidity. And, though the motion of the machine made
this hard to estimate, Stern thought to see by the lateral drift of the country
below, that they were being carried westward by what--to judge from the
agitation of the tree-tops far below--must already be a considerable gale.
For a moment the engineer cursed his foolhardiness in
having started in face of such a storm as now every moment threatened to break
upon them.
"I should have known," he told himself,
"that it was suicidal to attempt a flight when every indication showed a
high wind coming. My infernal impatience, as usual! We should have stayed safe
in Providence and let this blow itself out, before starting. But now--well,
it's too late."
But was it? Had he not time enough left to make a wide
sweep and circle back whence he had come? He glanced at the girl. If she showed
fear he would return. But on her face he saw no signs of aught but confidence
and joy and courage. And at sight of her, his own resolution strengthened once
again.
"Why retreat?" he pondered, holding the
machine to her long soaring rise. "We must have made a good third of the
distance already--perhaps a half. In ten or fifteen minutes more we ought to
sight the blue of the big bay. No use in turning back now. And as for alighting
and letting the storm blow over, that's impossible. Among these forests it
would mean only total wreckage. Even if we could land, we never could start
again. No; the only thing to do is to hold her to it and plow through, storm or
no storm. I guess the good old Pauillac can stand the racket, right
enough!"
Thus for a few moments longer he held the plane with
her nose to the northeast-by-north, his compass giving him direction, while
far, far below, the world slid back and away in a vast green carpet of swaying
trees that stretched to the dim, dun horizon.
Stern could never afterward recall exactly how or when
the hurricane struck them. So stunning was the blow that hurled itself,
shrieking, in a tumult of mad cross-currents, air maelstroms and frenzied
whirls, all across the sky; so overpowering the chill tempest that burst from
those inky clouds; so sudden the darkness that fell, the slinging hail volleys
that lashed and pelted them, that any clear perception of their plight became
impossible.
All the man knew was that direction and control had
been knocked clean from his hands; that the world had suddenly vanished in a
black drive of cloud and hail and wild-whipping vapor; that he no longer knew
north from south, or east from west; but that--struggling now even to breathe,
filled with sick fears for the safety of the girl beside him--he was fighting,
wrenching, wrestling with the motor and the planes and rudders, to keep the machine
from up-ending, from turning turtle in mid-air, from sticking her nose under an
air-layer and swooping, hurtling over and over, down, down, like a shattered
rocket, to dash herself to pieces on the waiting earth below.
The first furious onset showed the engineer he could
not hope to head up into that cyclone and live. He swung with it, therefore;
and now, driving across the sky like a filament of cloud-wrack, rode on the
crest of the great storm, his motor screaming its defiance at the shrieking wind.
Did Beatrice shout out to him? Did she try to make him
hear? He could not tell. No human voice could have been audible in such a
turmoil. Stern had no time to think even of her at such a moment of deadly
peril.
As a driver with a runaway stallion jerks and saws and
strains upon the leather to regain control, so now the man wrestled with his
storm-buffeted machine. A less expert aeronaut must have gone down to death in
that mad nexus of conflicting currents; but Stern was cool and full of craft
and science. Against the blows of the huge tempest he pitted his own skill, the
strength of the stout mechanism, the trained instincts of the born mechanician.
And, storm-driven, the biplane hurtled westward, ever
westward, through the gloom. Nor could its two passengers by any sight or sound
determine what speed they traveled at, whither they went, what lay behind, or
what ahead.
Concepts of time, too, vanished. Did it last one hour
or three? Five hours, or even more? Who could tell? Lacking any point of
contact with reality, merged and whelmed in that stupendous chill nightmare,
all wrought of savage gale, rain, hail-blasts, cloud and scudding vapor, they
sensed nothing but the fight for life itself, the struggle to keep aloft till
the cyclone should have blown itself out, and they could seek the shelter of
the earth once more.
Reality came back with a reft in the jetty sky, the
faint shine of a little pale blue there, and--a while later--a glimpse of
water, or what seemed to be such, very far below.
More steady now the currents grew. Stern volplaned
again; and as the machine slid down toward earth, came into a calmer and more
peaceful stratum.
Down, down through clouds that shifted, shredded and
reassembled, he let the plane coast, now under control once more; and all at
once there below him, less than three thousand feet beneath, he saw, dim and
vague as though in the light of evening, a vast sheet of water that stretched
away, away, till the sight lost it in a bank of low-hung vapors on the horizon.
"The sea?" thought Stern, with sudden
terror. Who could tell? Perhaps the storm, westbound, had veered; perhaps it
might have carried them off the Atlantic coast! This might be the ocean, a
hundred or two hundred miles from land. And if so, then good-by!
Checking the descent, he drove forward on level wings,
peering below with wide eyes, while far above him the remnants of the storm
fled, routed, and let a shaft of pallid sunlight through.
Stern's eye caught the light of that setting beam,
which still reached that height, though all below, on earth, was dusk; and now
he knew the west again and found his sense of direction.
The wind, he perceived, still blew to westward; and
with a thrill of relief he felt, as though by intuition, that its course had
not varied enough to drive him out to sea.
Though he knew the ripping clatter of the engine
drowned his voice, he shouted to the girl:
"Don't be alarmed! Only a lake down there!"
and with fresh courage gave the motor all that she would stand.
A lake! But what lake? What sheet of water, of this
size, lay in New England? And if not in New England, then where were they?
A lake? One of the Great Lakes? Could that be? Could
they have been driven clear across Massachusetts, its whole length, and over
New York State, four hundred miles or more from the sea, and now be speeding
over Erie or Ontario?
Stern shuddered at the thought. Almost as well be lost
over the sea as over any one of these tremendous bodies! Were not the land
near, nothing but death now faced them; for already the fuel-gage showed but a
scant two gallons, and who could say how long the way might be to shore?
For a moment the engineer lost heart, but only for a
moment.
His eye, sweeping the distance, caught sight of a
long, dull, dark line on the horizon.
A cloud-bank, was it? Land, was it? He could not tell.
"I'll chance it, anyhow," thought he,
"for it's our only hope now. When I don't know where I am, one direction's
as good as any other. We've got no other chance but that! Here goes!"
Skilfully banking, he hauled the plane about, and
settled on a long, swift slant toward the dark line.
"If only the alcohol holds out, and nothing
breaks!" his thought was. "If only that's the shore, and we can reach
it in time!"
CHAPTER XIX
WESTWARD HO!
Fate meant that they should live, those two lone
wanderers on the face of the great desolation; and, though night had gathered
now and all was cloaked in gloom, they landed with no worse than a hard
shake-up on a level strip of beach that edged the confines of the unknown lake.
Exhausted by the strain and the long fight with death,
chilled by that sojourn in the upper air, drenched and stiffened and half dead,
they had no strength to make a camp.
The most that they could do was drag themselves down
to the water's edge and--finding the water fresh, not salt--drink deeply from
hollowed palms. Then, too worn-out even to eat, they crawled under the shelter
of the biplane's ample wings, and dropped instantly into the long and dreamless
sleep of utter weariness.
Mid-morning found them, still lame and stiff but
rested, cooking breakfast over a cheery fire on the beach near the machine.
Save for here and there a tree that had blown down in the forest, some dead
branches scattered on the sands, and a few washed-out places where the torrent
of yesterday's rain had gullied the earth, nature once more seemed fair and
calm.
The full force of the terrific wind-storm had probably
passed to northward; this land where they now found themselves--whatever it
might be--had doubtless borne only a small part of the attack. But even so, and
even through the sky gleamed clear and blue and sunlit once again, Stern and
the girl knew the hurricane had been no ordinary tempest.
"It must have been a cyclone, nothing less,"
judged the engineer, as he finished his meal and reached for his comforting
pipe. "And God knows where it's driven us to! So far as judging distances
goes, in a hurricane like that it's impossible. This may be any one of the
Great Lakes; and, again, it may not. For all we know, we may be up in the
Hudson Bay region somewhere. This may be Winnipeg, Athabasca, or Great Slave.
With the kind of storms that happen nowadays, anything's possible."
"Nothing matters, after all," the girl
assured him, "except that we're alive and unhurt; and the machine can
still travel, for--"
"Travel!" cried Stern. "With about a
quart of fuel or less! How far, I'd like to know?"
"That's so; I never thought of that!" the
girl replied, dismayed. "Oh, dear, what shall we do now?"
Stern laughed.
"Hunt for a town, of course," he reassured
her. "There, there, don't worry! If we find alcohol, we're all right,
anyhow. If not, we're better off than we were after the maelstrom almost got
us, at any rate. Then we had no arms, ammunition, tools, or means to make fire,
while now we've got them all. Forgive my speaking as I did, little girl. Don't
worry--everything will come right in the end."
Reassured, she sat before the fire, and for an hour or
more they drew maps and diagrams in the sand, made plans, and laid out their
next step in this long campaign against the savage power of a deserted world.
At last, their minds made up, they wheeled the plane
back to the forest, where Stern cut out among the trees a space for its
protection. And, leaving it here, covered with branches of the thick-topped
fern-tree, they took provisions and once more set out on their exploration.
But this time they had an ax and their two rifles, and
as they strode northward along the shore they felt a match for any peril.
An hour's walk brought them to the ruins of a steel
recreation-pier, with numerous traces of a town along the lake behind it.
"That settles the Hudson Bay theory," Stern
rejoiced, as they wandered among the debris. "This is certainly one of the
Great Lakes, though which one, of course, we can't tell as yet. And now if we
can round up some alcohol we'll be on our way before very long."
They found no alcohol, for the only ruin where drugs
or liquors had evidently been sold had caved in, a mass of shattered brickwork,
smashing every bottle in the place. Stern found many splintered shards of
glass; but that was all, so far as fuel was concerned. He discovered something
else, however, that proved of tremendous value--the wreck of a printing-office.
Presses and iron of all kind had gone to pieces, but
some of the larger lead types and quads still were recognizable. And, the
crucial thing, he turned up a jagged bit of stereotype-sheet from under the
protection of a concrete plinth that had fallen into the cellar.
All corroded and discolored though it was, he still
could make out a few letters.
"A newspaper head, so help me!" he
exclaimed, as with a trembling finger he pointed the letters out to Beatrice:
"Here's an 'H'--here's 'mbur'--here's 'aily,' and 'ronicl'! Eh, what?
'Chronicle,' it must have been! By Jove, you're right! And the whole thing used
to spell 'Hamburg Daily Chronicle,' or I'm a liar!"
He thought a moment--thought hard--then burst out:
"Hamburg, eh? Hamburg, by a big lake? Well, the
only Hamburg by a lake that I know of used to be Hamburg, New York. I ought to
remember. I drew the plans for the New York Central bridge, just north of here,
over the Spring Creek ravine.
"Yes, sir, this certainly is Hamburg, New York.
And this lake must be Erie. Now, if I'm correct, just back up there on that
hill we'll find the remains of the railway cut, and less than ten miles north
of here lies all that's left of Buffalo. Some luck, eh? Cast away, only fifteen
miles or so from a place like that. And we might have gone to Great Bear Lake,
or to--h-m!--to any other place, for all the cyclone cared.
"Well, come on now, let's see if the railway cut
is still there, and my old bridge; and if so, it's Buffalo for ours!"
It was all as he had said. The right-of-way of the
railroad still showed distinctly, in spite of the fact that ties and rails had
long since vanished. Of the bridge nothing was left but some rusted steel
stringers lying entangled about the disintegrated concrete piers. But Stern
viewed them with a melancholy pride and interest--his own handiwork in the very
long ago.
They had no time, however, for retrospection; but,
once more taking the shore, kept steadily northward. And before noon they
reached the debris of Buffalo, stark and deserted by the lake where once its
busy commerce and its noisy life had thronged. By four o'clock that afternoon
they had collected fuel enough for the plane to do that distance on, and more.
Late that night they were again back at the spot where they had landed the
night before.
And here, in high spirits and with every hope of
better fortune now to follow evil, they cooked their meal and spent an hour in
planning their next move, then slept the sleep of well-earned rest.
They had now decided to abandon the idea of visiting
Boston. This seeming change of front was not without its good reasons.
"We're half-way to Chicago as it is," Stern
summed up next morning. "Conditions are probably similar all along the
Atlantic coast; there's no life to be found there: On the other hand, if we
strike for the West there's at least a chance of running across survivors. If
we don't find them there, then we probably sha'n't find them anywhere. In
Chicago we can live and restock for further explorations, and as for locating a
telescope, the University of Chicago ruins are as promising as those of
Harvard. Chicago, by all means!"
They set out at nine o'clock, and, having made a good
start, reached Buffalo by twenty minutes past, flying easily along the shore at
not more than five hundred feet elevation.
Gaily the lake sparkled and wimpled in the morning
sun, unvexed now by any steamer's prow, unshaded by any smoke from cities or
roaring mills along its banks.
Despite the lateness of the season, the morning was
warm; a mild breeze swayed the treetops and set the little whitecaps foaming
here and there over the broad expanse of blue. Beatrice and Stern felt the joy
of life reborn in them at that sight.
"Magnificent!" cried the engineer. "Now
for a swing up past Niagara, and we're off!"
The river, they found as the plane swept onward, had
dwindled to a brook that they could almost leap across. The rapids now were but
a dreary waste of blackened rocks, and the Falls themselves, dry save for a
desolate trickle down past Goat Island, presented a spectacle of death--the
death of the world as Beatrice and Stern had known it, which depressed them
both.
That this tremendous cataract could vanish thus; that
the gorge and the great Falls which for uncounted centuries had thundered to
the rush and tumult of the mighty waters could now lie mute and dry and
lifeless, saddened them both beyond measure.
And they were glad when, with a wide sweep of her
wings, the Pauillac veered to westward again along the north shore of Lake Erie
and settled into the long run of close on two hundred and fifty miles to
Detroit, where Stern counted on making his first stop.
Without mishap, yet without sighting a single
indication of the presence of man, they coasted down the shore and ate their
dinner on the banks of Lake Saint Clair, near the ruins of Windsor, with those
of Detroit on the opposite side. For some reason or other, impossible to solve,
the current now ran northward toward Huron, instead of south to Erie. But this
phenomenon they could do little more than merely note, for time lacked to give
it any serious study.
Mid-afternoon found them getting under way again
westbound.
"Chicago next," said Stern, making some
slight but necessary adjustment of the air-feed in the carburetor. "And
here's hoping there'll be some natives to greet us!"
"Amen to that!" answered the girl. "If
any life has survived at all, it ought to be on the great central plain of the
country, say from Indiana out through Nebraska. But do you know, Allan, if it
should come right down to meeting any of our own kind of people--savages, of
course, I mean, but white--I really believe I'd be awfully afraid of them.
Imagine white savages dressed in skins--"
"Like us!" interrupted Stern, laughing.
"And painted with woad, whatever woad is; I
remember reading about it in the histories of England; all the early Britons
used it. And carrying nice, knobby stone creeks to stave in our heads! It would
be nice to meet a hundred or a thousand of them, eh? Rather a different matter
from dealing with a horde of those anthropoid creatures, I imagine."
Stern only smiled, then answered:
"Well, I'll take my chances with 'em. Better a
fight, say I, with my own kind, than solitude like this--you and I all alone,
girl, getting old some time and dying with never a hand-clasp save perhaps such
as it may please fate to give us from whatever children are to be. But come,
come, girl. No time for gloomy speculations of trouble. In you get now, and off
we go--westward bound again."
Only half an hour out of Detroit it was that they
first became aware of some strange disturbance of the horizon, some
inexplicable appearance such as neither of them had ever seen, a phenomenon so
peculiar that, though both observed it at about the same time, neither Stern
could believe his own senses nor Beatrice hers.
For all at once it seemed to them the sky-line was
drawing suddenly nearer; it seemed that the horizon was approaching at high
speed.
The dark, untrodden forest mass still stretched away,
away, until it vanished against the dim blue of the sky; but now, instead of
that meeting-line being forty miles off, it seemed no farther than twenty, and
minute by minute it indubitably was rushing toward them with a speed equal to
their own.
Stern, puzzled and alarmed at this unusual sight, felt
an impulse to slow, to swerve, to test the apparition in some way; but second
thought convinced him it must be deception of some sort.
"Some peculiar state of the atmosphere,"
thought he, "or perhaps we're approaching a high ridge, on the other side
of which lie clouds that cut away the farther view. Or else--no, hang it! the
world seems to end right there, with no clouds to veil it--nothing,
only--what?"
He saw the girl pointing in alarm. She, too, was
clearly stirred by the appearance.
What to do? Stern felt indecision for the first time
since he had started on this long, adventurous journey. Shut off and descend?
Impossible among those forests. Swing about and return? Not to be thought of.
Keep on and meet perils perhaps undreamed of? Yes--at all hazards he would keep
on.
And with a tightening of the jaw he drove the Pauillac
onward, ever onward--toward the empty space that yawned ahead.
"End o' the world?" thought he. "All
right, the old machine is good for it, and so are we. Here goes!"
CHAPTER XX
ON THE LIP OF THE CHASM
Very near, now, was the strange apparition. On, on,
swift as a falcon, the plane hurtled. Stern glanced at Beatrice. Never had he
seen her more beautiful. About her face, rosy and full of life, the luxuriant
loose hair was whipping. Her eyes sparkled with this new excitement, and on her
full red lips a smile betrayed her keen enjoyment. No trace of fear was
there--nothing but confidence and strength and joy in the adventure.
The phenomenon of the world's end--for nothing else
describes it adequately--now appeared distinctly as a jagged line, beyond which
nothing showed. It differed from the horizon line, inasmuch as it was close at
hand. Already the adventurers could peer down upon it at an acute angle.
Plainly could they see the outlines of trees growing
along the verge. But beyond them, nothing.
It differed essentially from a canyon, because there
was no other side at all. Strain his eye as he might, Stern could detect no
opposite wall. And now, realizing something of the possibilities of such a
chasm, he swung the Pauillac southward. Flying parallel to the edge of this
tremendous barrier, he sought to solve the mystery of its true nature.
"If I go higher, perhaps I may be able to get
some notion of it," thought he, and swinging up-wind, he spiraled till the
barometer showed he had gained another thousand feet.
But even this additional view profited him nothing.
Half a mile to westward the ragged tree-line still showed as before, with
vacancy behind it, and as far as Stern could see to north, to south, it
stretched away till the dim blue of distance swallowed it. Yet, straight across
the gulf, no land appeared. Only the sky itself was visible there, as calm and
as unbroken as in the zenith, yet extending far below where the horizon-line
should have been--down, in fact, to where the tree-line cut it off from Stern's
vision.
The effect was precisely that of coming to the edge of
a vast plain, beyond which nothing lay, save space, and peering over.
"The end of the world, indeed!" thought the
engineer, despite himself. "But what can it mean? What can have happened
to the sphere to have changed it like this? Good Heavens, what a marvel--what a
catastrophe!"
Determined at all hazards to know more of this titanic
break or "fault," or whatsoever it might be, he banked again, and
now, on a descending slant, veered down toward the lip of the chasm.
"Going out over it?" cried Beatrice.
He nodded.
"It may be miles deep!"
"You can't get killed any deader falling a
hundred miles than you can a hundred feet!" he shouted back, above the
droning racket of the motor.
And with a fresh grip on the wheel, head well forward,
every sense alert and keen to meet whatever conditions might arise, to battle
with cross-currents, "air-holes," or any other vortices swirling up
out of those unknown depths, he skimmed the Pauillac fair toward the lip of the
monstrous vacancy.
Now as they rushed almost above the verge he could see
conclusively they were not dealing here with a canyon like the Yosemite or like
any other he had ever seen or heard of in the old days.
There was positively no bottom to the terrific thing!
Just a sheer edge and beyond that--nothing.
Nowhere any sign of an opposite bank; nowhere the
faintest trace of land. Far, far below, even a few faint clouds showed floating
there as if in mid-heaven.
The effect was ghastly, unnerving and altogether
terrible. Not that Stern feared height. No, it was the unreality of the
experience, the inexplicable character of this yawning edge of the world that
almost overcame him.
Only by a strong exercise of will-power could he hold
the biplane to her course. His every instinct was to veer, to retreat back to
solid earth, and land somewhere, and once more, at all hazards, get the contact
of reality.
But Stern resisted all these impulses, and now already
had driven the Pauillac right to the lip of the vast nothingness.
Now they were over!
"My God!" he cried, stunned by the
realization of this thing. "Sheer space! No bottom anywhere!"
For all at once they had shot, as it were, out into a
void which seemed to hold no connection at all with the earth they now were
quitting.
Stern caught a glimpse of the tall forest growing up
to within a hundred yards of the edge, then of smaller trees, dwindling to
bushes and grasses, and strange red sand that bordered the gap--sand and rocks,
barren as though some up-draft from the void had killed off vegetable growth
along the very brink.
Then all slid back and away. The red-ribbed wall of
the great chasm, shattered and broken as by some inconceivable disaster, some
cosmic cataclysm, fell away and away, downward, dimmer and more dim, until it
faded gradually into a blue haze, then vanished utterly.
And there below lay nothingness--and nothingness
stretched out in front to where the sight lost itself in pearly vapors that
overdimmed the sky.
Beatrice glanced at Stern as the Pauillac sped true as
an arrow in its flight, out into this strange and incomprehensible vacuity.
Just a shade paler now he seemed. Despite the keen
wind, a glister of sweat-drops studded his forehead. His jaw was set, set hard;
she could see the powerful maxillary muscles knotted there where the
throat-cords met the angle of the bone. And she understood that, for the first
time since their tremendous adventure had begun, the man felt shaken by this
latest and greatest of all the mysteries they had been called upon to face.
Already the verge lay far behind; and now the sense of
empty space above and on all sides and there below was overpowering.
Stern gasped with a peculiar choking sound. Then all
at once, throwing the front steering plane at an angle, he brought the machine
about and headed for the distant land.
He spoke no word, nor did she; but they both swept the
edge of the chasm with anxious eyes, seeking a place to light.
It was with tremendous relief that they both saw the
solid earth once more below them. And when, five minutes later, having chosen a
clear and sand-barren on the verge, some two miles southward along the abyss,
Stern brought the machine to earth, they felt a gratitude and a relief not to
be voiced in words.
"By Jove!" exclaimed the man, lifting Beatrice
from the seat, "if that isn't enough to shake a man's nerve and upset all
his ideas, geological or otherwise, I'd like to know what is!"
"Going to try to cross it?" she asked
anxiously; "that is, if there is any other side? I know, of course, that
if there is you'll find out, some way or other!"
"You overestimate me," he replied. "All
I can do, for now, is to camp down here and try to figure the problem out--with
your help. Whatever this thing is, it's evident it stands between us and our
plan. Either Chicago lies on the other side--(provided, of course, as you say,
that there is one)--or else it's been swallowed up, ages ago, by whatever
catastrophe produced this yawning gulf.
"In either event we've got to try to discover the
truth, and act accordingly. But for now, there's nothing we can do. It's
getting late already. We've had enough for one day, little girl. Come on, let's
make the machine ready for the night, and camp down here and have a bite to
eat. Perhaps by to-morrow we may know just what we're up against!"
The moon had risen, flooding the world with spectral
light, before the two adventurers had finished their meal. All during it they
had kept an unusual silence. The presence of that terrible gulf, there not two
hundred feet away to westward of them, imposed its awe upon their thoughts.
And after the meal was done, by tacit understanding
they refrained from trying to approach it or to peer over. Too great the risks
by night. They spoke but little, and presently exhausted by the trying events
of the day--sought sleep under the vanes of the Pauillac.
But for an hour, tired as he was, the engineer lay
thinking of the chasm, trying in vain to solve its problem or to understand how
they were to follow any further the search for the ruins of Chicago, where fuel
was to be had, or carry on the work of trying to find some living members of
the human race.
Morning found them revived and strengthened. Even
before they made their fire or prepared their breakfast they were exploring
along the edge of the gigantic cleft.
Going first to make sure no rock should crumble under
the girl's tread, no danger threaten, Stern tested every foot of the way to the
very edge of the sheer chasm.
"Slowly, now!" he cautioned, taking her
hand. "We've got to be careful here. My God, what a drop!"
Awed, despite themselves, they stood there on a flat
slab of schist that projected boldly over the void. Seen from this point, the
immense nothingness opened out below them even more terrible than it had seemed
from the biplane.
The fact is common knowledge that a height, viewed
from a balloon or aeroplane, is always far less dizzying than from a lofty
building or a monument. Giddiness vanishes when no solid support lies under the
feet. This fact Stern and the girl appreciated to the full as they peered over
the edge. Ten times more ominous and frightful the vast blue mystery beneath
them now appeared than it had seemed before.
"Let's look sheer down," said the girl.
"By lying flat and peering over, there can't be any danger."
"All right, but only on condition that I keep
tight hold of you!"
Cautiously they lay down and worked their way to the
edge. The engineer circled Beta's supple waist with his arm.
"Steady, now!" he warned. "When you
feel giddy, let me know, and we'll go back."
The effect of the chasm, from the very edge of the
rock, was terrifying. It was like nothing ever seen by human eyes. Peering down
into the Grand Canyon of the Colorado would have been child's play beside it.
For this was no question of looking down a half-mile, a mile, or even five, to
some solid bottom.
Bottom there was none--nothing save dull purple haze,
shifting vapors, and an unearthly dim light which seemed to radiate upward as
though the sun's rays, reflected, were striving to beat up again.
"There must be miles and miles of air below
us," said Stern, "to account for this curious light-effect. Air, of
course, will eventually cut off the vision. Given a sufficiently thick layer,
say a few hundred miles, it couldn't be seen through. So if there is a bottom
to this place, be it one hundred or even five hundred miles down, of course we
couldn't see it. All we could see would be the air, which would give this sort
of blue effect."
"Yes; but in that case how can we see the sun, or
the moon, or stars?"
"Light from above only has to pierce forty or
fifty miles of really dense air. Above that height it's excessively rarified.
While down below earth-level, of course, it would get more and more dense all
the time, till at the bottom of a five-hundred-mile drop the density and
pressure would be tremendous."
Beatrice made no answer. The spectacle she was gazing
at filled her with solemn thoughts. Jagged, rent and riven, the rock extended
downward. Here vast and broken ledges ran along its flanks--red, yellow, black,
all seared and burned and vitrified as by the fire of Hell; there huge masses,
up-piled, seemed about to fall into the abyss.
A quarter-mile to southward, a rivulet had found its
way over a projecting ledge. Spraying and silvery it fell, till, dissipated by
the up-draft from the abyss, it dissolved in mist.
The ledge on which they were lying extended downward
perhaps three hundred yards, then sloped backward, leaving sheer empty space
beneath them. They seemed to be poised in mid-heaven. It was totally unlike the
sensation on a mountain-top, or even floating among the clouds; for a moment it
seemed to Stern that he was looking up toward an unfathomable, infinite dome
above him.
He shuddered, despite his cool and scientific spirit
of observation.
"Some chemical action going on somewhere down
there," said he, half to divert his own attention from his thoughts.
"Smell that sulphur? If this place wasn't once the scene of volcanic
activities, I'm no judge!"
A moderate yet very steady wind blew upward from the
chasm, freighted with a scent of sulphur and some other substance new to Stern.
Beatrice, all at once overcome by sudden giddiness,
drew back and hid her face in both hands.
"No bottom to it--no end!" she said in a
scared tone. "Here's the end of the world, right here, and beyond this
very rock--nothing!"
Stern, puzzled, shook his head.
"That's really impossible, absurd and ridiculous,
of course," he answered. "There must be something beyond. The way
this stone falls proves that."
He pitched a two-pound lump of granite far out into
the air. It fell vertically, whirling, and vanished with the speed of a meteor.
"If a whole side of the earth had split off, and
what we see down below there were really sky, of course the earth's center of
gravity would have shifted," he explained, "and that rock would have
fallen in toward the cliff below us, not straight down."
"How can you be sure it doesn't fall that way
after the impulse you gave it has been lost?"
"I shall have to make some close scientific tests
here, lasting a day or two, before I'm positive; but my impression is that
this, after all, is only a canyon--a split in the surface--rather than an
actual end of the crust."
"But if it were a canyon, why should blue sky
show down there at an angle of forty-five degrees?"
"I'll have to think that out, later," he
replied. "Directly under us, you see all seems deep purple. That's another
fact to consider. I tell you, Beatrice, there's more to be figured out here
than can be done in half an hour.
"As I see it, some vast catastrophe must have
rent the earth, a thousand or fifteen hundred years ago, as a result of which
everybody was killed except you and me. We're standing now on the edge of the
scar left by that explosion, or whatever it was. How deep or how wide that scar
is, I don't know. Everything depends on our finding out, or at least on our
guessing it with some degree of accuracy."
"How so?"
"Because, don't you see, this chasm stands
between us and Chicago and the West, and all our hopes of finding human life
there. And--"
"Why not coast south along the edge here, and see
if we can't run across some ruined city or other where we can refill the
tanks?"
"I'll think it over," the engineer answered.
"In the meantime we can camp down here a couple of days or so, and rest; and
I can make some calculations with a pendulum and so on."
"And if you decide there's probably another side
to this gulf, what then?"
"We cross," he said; then for a while stood
silent, musing as he peered down into the bottomless abyss that stretched there
hungrily beneath their narrow observation-rock.
"We cross, that's all!"
CHAPTER XXI
LOST IN THE GREAT ABYSS
For two days they camped beside the chasm, resting,
planning, discussing, while Stern, with improvised transits, pendulums and
other apparatus, made tests and observations to determine, if possible, the
properties of the great gap.
During this time they developed some theories regarding
the catastrophe which had swept the world a thousand years ago.
"It seems highly and increasingly probable to
me," the engineer said, after long thought, "that we have here the
actual cause of the vast blight of death that left us two alone in the world. I
rather think that at the time of the great explosion which produced this rent,
certain highly poisonous gases were thrown off, to impregnate the entire
atmosphere of the world. Everybody must have been killed at once. The poison
must have swept the earth clean of human life."
"But how did we escape?" asked the girl.
"That's hard telling. I figure it this way: The
mephitic gas probably was heavy and dense, thus keeping to the lower
air-strata, following them, over plain and hill and mountain, like a blanket of
death.
"Just what happened to us, who can tell?
Probably, tightly housed up there in the tower, the very highest inhabited spot
in the world, only a very slight infiltration of the gas reached us. If my
theory won't work, can you suggest a better one? Frankly, I can't; and until we
have more facts, we've got to take what we have. No matter, the condition
remains--we're alive and all the rest are dead; and I'm positive this cleft
here is the cause of it."
"But if everybody's dead, as you say, why hunt
for men?"
"Perhaps a handful may have survived among the
highlands of the Rockies. I imagine that after the first great explosion there
followed a series of terrible storms, tornadoes, volcanic eruptions, tidal
waves and so on. You remember how I found the bones of a whale in lower
Broadway; and many of the ruins in New York show the action of the sea--they're
laid flat in such a manner as to indicate that the island was washed on one or
two occasions by monster waves.
"Well, all these disturbances probably finished
up what few survivors escaped, except possibly among the mountains of the West.
A few scattered colonies may have survived a while--mining camps, for instance,
or isolated prospectors, or what-not. They may all have died out, or again, they
may have come together and reestablished some primitive form of barbarous or
even savage life by this time. There's no telling. Our imperative problem is to
reach that section and explore it thoroughly. For there, if anywhere, we'll
find survivors of our race."
"How about that great maelstrom that nearly got
us?" asked the girl." Can you connect that with the
catastrophe?"
"I think so. My idea is that, in some way or
other, the sea is being sucked down into the interior of the earth and then
hurled out again; maybe there's a gradual residue being left; maybe a great
central lake or sea has formed. Who knows? At any rate all the drainage system
of the country seems to have been changed and reversed in the most curious and
unaccountable manner. I think we should find, if we could investigate
everything thoroughly, that this vast chasm here is intimately connected with
the whole thing."
These and many other questions perplexed the
travelers, but most of all they sought to know the breadth of the vast gap and to
determine if it had, as they hoped, another side, or if it were indeed the edge
of an enormous mass split bodily off the earth.
Stern believed he had an answer to this problem on the
afternoon of the second day. For many hours he had hung his pendulums over the
cliff, noted deflections, taken triangulations, and covered the surface of the
smooth stone with X's, Y's, Z's, sines and cosines and abstruse formulae--all
scrawled with charcoal, his only means of writing.
At last he finished the final equation, and, with a
smile of triumph and relief, got to his feet again.
Back to the girl, who was cooking over an odorous fire
of cedar, he made his way, rejoicing.
"I've got it!" he shouted gladly.
"Making reasonable allowances for depth, I've got it!"
"Got what?"
"The probable width!"
"Oh!" And she stood gazing at him in
admiration, beautiful and strong and graceful. "You mean to say--"
"I'm giving the chasm a hundred miles' depth.
That's more than anybody could believe possible--twice as much. On that
assumption, my tests show the distance to the other side--and there is another
side, by the way!--can't be over--"
"Five hundred miles?"
"Nonsense! Not over one hundred to one-fifty. I'm
going on a liberal allowance for error, too. It may not be over seventy-five.
The--"
"But if that's as far as it is, why can't we see
the other side?"
"With all that chemicalized vapor rising
constantly? Who knows what elements may be in it? Or what polarization may be taking
place?"
"Polarization?"
"I mean, what deflection and alteration of light?
No wonder we can't see! But we can fly! And we're going to, what's more!"
"Going to make a try for Chicago, then?" she
asked, her eyes lighting up joyfully at thought of the adventure.
"To-morrow morning, sure!"
"But the alcohol?"
"We've still got what we started with from
Detroit, minus only what we've burned reaching this place. And we reckoned when
we set out that it would far more than be enough. Oh, that part of it's all right!"
"Well, you know best," she answered. "I
trust you in all things, Allan. But now just look at this roast partridge;
come, dear, let to-morrow take care of itself. It's supper-time now!"
After the meal they went to the flat rock and sat for
an hour while the sun went down beyond the void. Its disappearance seemed to
substantiate the polarization theory. There was no sudden obliteration of the
disk by a horizon. Rather the sun faded away, redder and duller; then slowly
losing form and so becoming a mere blur of crimson, which in turn grew purple
and so gradually died away to nothing.
For a long time they sat in the deepening gloom, their
rifles close at hand, saying little, but thinking much. The coming of night had
sobered them to a sense of what now inevitably lay ahead. The solemn purple
pall that adumbrated the world and the huge nothingness before them, so silent,
so immutable and pregnant with terrible mysteries, brought them close together.
The vague, untrodden forest behind them, where the
night-sounds of the wild dimly reechoed now and then, filled them with
indefinable emotions. And that night sleep was slow in coming.
Each realized that, despite all calculations and all
skill, the morrow might be their last day of life. But the morning light, golden
and clear above the eastern sky-line of tall conifers, dispelled all brooding
fears. They were both up early and astir, in preparation for the crucial
flight. Stern went over the edge of the chasm, while Beatrice prepared
breakfast, and made some final observations of wind, air currents and
atmosphere density.
An eagle which he saw soaring over the abyss, more
than half a mile from its edge, convinced him a strong upward current existed
to-day, as on the day when they had made their short flight over the void. The
bird soared and circled and finally shot away to northward, without a
wing-flap, almost in the manner of a vulture. Stern knew an eagle could not
imitate the feat without some aid in the way of an up-draft.
"And if that draft is steady and constant all the
way across," thought he, "it will result in a big saving of fuel.
Given a sufficient rising current, we could volplane all the way across with a
very slight expenditure of alcohol. It looks now as though everything were
coming on first-rate. Couldn't be better. And what a day for an
excursion!"
By nine o'clock all was ready. Along the land a mild
south wind was blowing. Though the day was probably the 5th of October or
thereabout, no signs of autumn yet were blazoned in the forest. The morning was
perfect, and the travelers' spirits rose in unison with the abounding beauty of
the day.
Stern had given the Pauillac another final going over,
tightening the stays and laterals, screwing up here a loosened nut, there a
bolt, making certain all was in perfect order.
At nine-fifteen, after he had had a comforting pipe,
they made a clean getaway, rising along the edge of the chasm, then soaring in
huge spirals.
"I want all the altitude I can get," Stern
shouted at the girl as they climbed steadily higher. "We may need it to
coast on. And from a mile or two up maybe we can get a glimpse of the other
side."
But though they ascended till the aneroid showed eight
thousand five hundred feet, nothing met their gaze but the same pearly blue
vapor which veiled the mystery before them. And Stern, satisfied now that
nothing could be gained by any further ascent, turned the machine due west, and
sent her skimming like a swallow out over the tremendous nothingness below.
As the earth faded behind them they began to feel
distinctly a warm and pungent wind that rose beneath--a steady current, as from
some huge chimney that lazily was pouring out its monstrous volume of hot
vapors.
Away and away behind them slid the lip of this
gigantic gash across the world; and now already with the swift rush of the
plane the solid earth had begun to fade and to grow dim.
Stern only cast a glance at the sun and at his
compass, hung there in gimbals before him, and with firm hand steadied the
machine for the long problematical flight to westward. Behind them the sun kept
even with their swift pace; and very far below and ahead, at times they thought
to see the fleeing shadow of the biplane cast now and then on masses of
formless vapor that rose from the unsounded deeps.
Definitely committed now to this tremendous venture,
both Stern and the girl settled themselves more firmly in their seats. No time
to feel alarm, no time for introspection, or for thoughts of what might lie
below, what fate theirs must be if the old Pauillac failed them now!
No time save for confidence in the stout mechanism and
in the skill of hand and brain that was driving the great planes, with a
roaring rush like a gigantic gull, a swooping rise and fall in long arcs over
the hills of air, across the vast enigma of that space!
Stern's whole attention was fixed on driving, just on
the manipulation of the swift machine. Exhaust and interplay, the rhythm of
each whirling cam and shaft, the chatter of the cylinders, the droning diapason
of the blades, all blent into one intricate yet perfect harmony of mechanism;
and as a leader knows each instrument in the great orchestra and follows each,
even as his eye reads the score, so Stern's keen ear analyzed each sound and
action and reaction and knew all were in perfect tune and resonance.
The machine--no early and experimental model, such as
were used in the first days of flying, from 1900 to 1915, but one of the
perfected and self-balancing types developed about 1920, the year when the
Great Death had struck the world--responded nobly to his skill and care. From
her landing-skids to the farthest tip of her ailerons she seemed alive,
instinct with conscious and eager intelligence.
Stern blessed her mentally with special pride and
confidence in her mercury equalizing balances. Proud of his machine and of his
skill, superb like Phaeton whirling the sun-chariot across the heavens, he gave
her more and still more speed.
Below nothing, nothing save vapors, with here and
there an open space where showed the strange dull purple of the abyss. Above, to
right, to left, nothing--absolute vacant space.
Gone now was all sight of the land that they had left.
Unlike balloonists who always see dense clouds or else the earth, they now saw
nothing. All alone with the sun that rushed behind them in their skimming
flight, they fled like wraiths across the emptiness of the great void.
Stern glanced at the barometer, and grunted with
surprise.
"H'm! Twelve thousand four hundred and fifty
feet--and I've been jockeying to come down at least five hundred feet already!"
thought he. "How the devil can that be?"
The explanation came to him. But it surprised him
almost as much as the noted fact.
"Must be one devil of a wind blowing up out of
that place," he pondered, "to carry us up nearly four thousand feet,
when I've been trying to descend. Well, it's all right, anyhow--it all
helps."
He looked at the spinning anemometer. It registered a
speed of ninety-seven miles an hour. Yet now that they were out of sight of any
land, only the rush of the wind and the enormous vibration of the plane
conveyed an idea of motion. They might as well have been hung in mid-space,
like Mohammed's tomb, as have been rushing forward; there was no visible means
of judging what their motion really might be.
"Unique experience in the history of mankind!"
shouted Stern to the girl. "The world's invisible to us."
She nodded and smiled back at him, her white teeth
gleaming in the strange, bluish light that now enveloped them.
Stern, keenly attentive to the engine, advanced the
spark another notch, and now the needle crept to 102 1/2.
"We'll be across before we know it," thought
he. "At this rate, I shouldn't be surprised to sight land any minute
now."
A quarter-hour more the Pauillac swooped along,
cradling in her swift flight to westward.
But all at once the man started violently. Forward he
bent, staring with widened eyes at the tube of the fuel-gage.
He blinked, as though to convince himself he had not
seen aright, then stared again; and as he looked a sudden grayness overspread
his face.
"What?" he exclaimed, then raised his head
and for a moment sniffed, as though to catch some odor, elusive yet ominous,
which he had for some time half sensed yet paid no heed to.
Then suddenly he knew the truth; and with a cry of
fear bent, peering at the fuel-tank.
There, quivering suspended from the metal edge of the
aluminum tank, hung a single clear white drop--alcohol!
Even as Stern looked it fell, and at once another took
its place, and was shaken off only to be succeeded by a third, a fourth, a
fifth!
The man understood. The ancient metal, corroded almost
through from the inside, had been eaten away. That very morning a hole had
formed in the tank. And now a leak--existing since what moment he could not
tell--was draining the very life-blood of the machine.
"The alcohol!" cried Stern in a hoarse,
terrible voice, his wide eyes denoting his agitation. With a quivering hand he
pointed.
"My God! It's all leaked out--there's not a quart
left in the tank! We're lost--lost in the bottomless abyss!"
CHAPTER XXII
LIGHTS!
At realization of the ghastly situation that
confronted them, Stern's heart stopped beating for a moment. Despite his
courage, a sick terror gripped his soul; he felt a sudden weakness, and in his
ears the rushing wind seemed shouting mockeries of death.
As in a dream he felt the girl's hand close in fear
upon his arm, he heard her crying something--but what, he knew not.
Then all at once he fought off the deadly horror. He
realized that now, if ever, he needed all his strength, resource, intelligence.
And, with a violent effort, he flung off his weakness. Again he gripped the
wheel. Thought returned. Though the end might be at hand, thank God for even a
minute's respite!
Again he looked at the indicator.
Yes, only too truly it showed the terrible fact! No
hallucination, this. Not much more than a pint of the precious fluid now lay in
the fuel tank. And though the engine still roared, he knew that in a minute or
two it must slacken, stop and die.
What then?
Even as the question flashed to him, the engine barked
its protest. It skipped, coughed, stuttered. Too well he knew the symptoms, the
imperative cry: "More fuel!"
But he had none to give. In vain for him to open wide
the supply valve. Vain to adjust the carburetor. Even as he made a despairing,
instinctive motion to perform these useless acts--while Beatrice, deathly pale
and shaking with terror, clutched at him--the engine spat forth a last,
convulsive bark, and grew silent.
The whirling screws hummed a lower note, then ceased
their song and came to rest.
The machine lurched forward, swooped, spiraled, and
with a sickening rush, a flailing tumult of the stays and planes, plunged into
nothingness!
Had Stern and the girl not been securely strapped to
their seats, they must have been precipitated into space by the violent,
erratic dashes, drops, swerves and rushes of the uncontrolled Pauillac.
For a moment or two, instinctively despite the
knowledge that it could do no good, Stern wrenched at the levers. A thousand
confused, wild, terrible impressions surged upon his consciousness.
Swifter, swifter dropped the plane; and now the wind
that seemed to rise had grown to be a hurricane! Its roaring in their ears was
deafening. They had to fight even for breath itself.
Beatrice was leaning forward now, sheltering her face
in the hollow of her arm. Had she fainted? Stern could not tell. He still was
fighting with the mechanism, striving to bring it into some control. But,
without headway, it defied him. And like a wounded hawk, dying even as it
struggled, the Pauillac staggered wildly down the unplumbed abyss.
How long did the first wild drop last? Stern knew not.
He realized only that, after a certain time, he felt a warm sensation; and,
looking, perceived that they were now plunging through vapors that sped
upward--so it seemed--with vertiginous rapidity.
No sensation now was there of falling. All motion
seemed to lie in the uprushing vapors, dense and warm and pale violet in hue. A
vast and rhythmic spiraling had possessed the Pauillac. As you have seen a
falling leaf turn in air, so the plane circled, boring with terrific speed
down, down, down through the mists, down into the unknown!
Nothing to be seen but vapors. No solid body, no land,
no earth to mark their fall and gauge it. Yet slowly, steadily, darkness was
shrouding them. And Stern, breathing with great difficulty even in the shelter
of his arms, could now hardly more than see as a pale blur the white face of
the girl beside him.
The vast wings of the machine, swirling, swooping,
plunging down, loomed hugely vague in the deepening shadows. Dizzy, sick with
the monstrous caroming through space, deafened by the thunderous roaring of the
up-draft, Stern was still able to retain enough of his scientific curiosity to
peer upward. The sun! Could he still see it?
Vanished utterly was now the glorious orb! There,
seeming to circle round and round in drunken spirals, he beheld a weird,
diffused, angry-looking blotch of light, tinted a hue different from any ever
seen on earth by men. And involuntarily, at sight of this, he shuddered.
Already with the prescience of death full upon him,
with a numb despair clutching his soul, he shrank from that ghastly, hideous
aspect of what he knew must be his last sight of the sun.
Around the girl he drew his right arm; she felt his
muscles tauten as he clasped her to him. Useless now, he knew, any further
struggles with the aeroplane. Its speed, its plummetlike drop checked only by
the huge sweep of its parachute wings, Stern knew now it must fall clear to the
bottom of the abyss--if bottom there were. And if not--what then?
Stern dared not think. All human concepts had been
shattered by this stupendous catastrophe. The sickly and unnatural hue of the
rushing vapors that tore and slatted the planes, confused his senses; and,
added to this, a stifling, numbing gas seemed diffused through the inchoate
void. He tried to speak, but could not. Against the girl's cheek he pressed his
own. Hers was cold!
In vain he struggled to cry out. Even had his parched
tongue been able to voice a sound, the howling tempest they themselves were
creating as they fell, would have whipped the shout away and drowned it in the
gloom.
In Stern's ears roared a droning as of a billion
hornets. He felt a vast, tremendous lassitude. Inside his head it seemed as
though a huge, merciless pressure were grinding at his very brain. His breath
came only slowly and with great difficulty.
"My God!" he panted. "Oh, for a little
fuel! Oh, for a chance--a chance to fight--for life!"
But chance there was none, now. Before his eyes there
seemed to darken, to dazzle, a strange and moving curtain. Through it, piercing
it with a supreme effort of the will, he caught dim sight of the dial of the
chronometer. Subconsciously he noted that it marked 11.25.
How long had they been falling? In vain his wavering
intelligence battered at the problem. Now, as in a delirium, he fancied it had
been only minutes; then it seemed hours. Like an insane man he laughed--he
tried to scream--he raved. And only the stout straps that had held them both
prevented him from leaping free of the hurtling machine.
"Crack!"
A lashing had given way! Part of the left hand plane
had broken loose. Drunkenly, whirling head over like an albatross shot in
mid-air, the Pauillac plunged.
It righted, swerved, shot far ahead, then once again
somersaulted.
Stern had disjointed, crazy thoughts of air-pressure,
condensation and compression, resistance, abstruse formulae. To him it seemed
that some gigantic problem in stress-calculation were being hurled at him, to
solve--it seemed that, blind, deaf, dumb, some sinister and ghoul-like demon were
flailing him until he answered--and that he could not answer!
He had a dim realization of straining madly at his
straps till the veins started big and swollen in his hammering brows. Then
consciousness lapsed.
Lapsed, yet came again--and with it pain. An awful
pain in the ear-drums, that roared and crackled without cease.
Breath! He was fighting for breath!
It was a nightmare--a horrible dream of darkness and a
mighty booming wind--a dream of stifling vapors and an endless void that sucked
them down, down, down, eternally!
Delusions came, and mocking visions of safety. Both
hands flung out as though to clutch the roaring gale, he fought the intangible.
Again he lost all knowledge.
And once again--how long after, how could he know?--he
came to some partial realization of tortured existence.
In one of the mad downward rushes--rushes which ended
in a long spiral slant--his staring, bloodshot eyes that sought to pierce the
murk, seemed to behold a glimmer, a dull gleam of light.
The engineer screamed imprecations, mingled with wild,
demoniac laughter.
"Another hallucination!" was his thought.
"But if it's not--if it's Hell--then welcome, Hell! Welcome even that, for
a chance to stop!"
A sweep of the Pauillac hid the light from view. Even
that faintest ray vanished. But--what? It came again! Much nearer now, and
brighter! And--another gleam! Another still! Three of them--and they were real!
With a tremendous effort, Stern fixed his fevered eyes
upon the lights.
Up, up at a tremendous rate they seemed speeding. Blue
and ghastly through the dense vapors, spinning in giddy gyrations, as the
machine wheeled, catapulted and slid from one long slant to another, their
relative positions still remained fixed.
And, with a final flicker of intelligence, Stern knew
they were no figment of his brain.
"Lights, Beatrice! Lights, lights, real
lights!" he sought to scream.
But even as he fought to shake her from the swoon that
wrapped her senses, his own last fragment of strength deserted him.
He had one final sense impression of a swift
upshooting of the lights, a sudden brightening of those three radiant points.
Then came a sudden gleam as though of waters, black
and still.
A gleam, blue and uncanny, across the inky surface of
some vast, mysterious, hidden sea.
Up rushed the lights at him; up rushed the sea of
jetty black!
Stern shouted some wild, incoherent thing.
Crash!
A shock! A frightful impact, swift, sudden,
annihilating!
Then in a mad and lashing struggle, all knowledge and
all feeling vanished utterly. And the blackness of oblivion received him into
its insensate bosom.
CHAPTER XXIII
THE WHITE BARBARIANS
Warmth, wetness, and a knowledge of great
weakness--these, joined with a singular lassitude, oppression of the lungs and
stifling of the breath, were Allan Stern's sensations when conscious life
returned.
Pain there was as well. His body felt sorely bruised
and shaken. His first thought, his intense yearning wonder for the girl's
welfare and his sickening fear lest she be dead, mingled with some attempt to
analyze his own suffering; to learn, if possible, what damage he had taken in
flesh and bone.
He tried to move, but found he could not. Even lying
inert, as he now found himself, so great was the exertion to breathe that only
by a fight could he keep the breath of life in his shaken frame.
He opened his eyes.
Light! Could it be? Light in that place?
Yes, the light was real, and it was shining directly
in his face.
At first all that his disturbed, half-delirious vision
could make out was a confused bluish glare. But in a moment this resolved
itself into a smoking, blazing cresset. Stern could now distinctly see the
metal bands of the fire-basket in which it lay, as well as a supporting staff,
about five feet long, that seemed to vanish downward in the gloom.
And, understanding nothing, filled with vague,
half-insane hallucinations and wild wonders, he tried to struggle upward with a
babbling cry:
"Beatrice! Oh, Beatrice--where are you?"
To his intense astonishment, a human hand, bluish in
the strange glare, laid itself upon his breast and pushed him down again.
Above him he saw a face, wrinkled, bearded and ghastly
blue. And as he struggled still he perceived by the unearthly light that a
figure was bending over him.
"A man!" he gulped. "Man! Man! Oh, my
God! At last--a man!"
He tried to raise himself upon his elbow, for his
whole soul was flooded with a sudden gratitude and love and joy in presence of
that long-sought goal. But instantly, as soon as his dazed senses could convey
the terrible impression to his brain, his joy was curdled into blank
astonishment and fear and grief.
For to his intense chagrin, strive as he might, he
could move neither hand nor foot!
During his unconsciousness, which had lasted he could
not tell how long, he had been securely bound. And now, awakening slowly, once
more, fighting his way up into consciousness, he found himself a prisoner!
A prisoner! With whom? Among what people--with what
purpose? After the long quest, the frightful hardships and the tremendous fall
into the abyss, a prisoner!
"Merciful God!" groaned Stern, and in his
sudden anguish, strained against the bonds, that drawn tight and fast, were
already cutting painfully into his swollen, water sodden flesh.
In vain did he struggle. Terrible thoughts that
Beatrice, too, might be subjected to this peril and humiliation branded
themselves upon his brain. He shouted wildly, calling her name, with all the
force of his spent lungs; but naught availed. There came no answer but the
shrouding fogs.
The strange man bent above him, peering from beneath
wrinkled brows. Stern heard a few words in a singular, guttural tone--words
rendered dull by the high compression of the air. What the words might be he
could not tell, yet their general sound seemed strangely familiar and their
command was indubitable.
But, still half-delirious, Stern tried again to
stretch up his arms, to greet this singular being, even as a sick man
recovering from etherization raves and half sees the nurses and doctors, yet
dreams wild visions in the midst of pain.
The man, however, only shook his head, and with a
broad, firm hand, again held the engineer from trying to sit up. Stern,
understanding nothing clearly, relapsed to quietude. To him the thought came:
"This is only another delusion after all!" And then a vast and
poignant woe possessed him--a wonder where the girl might be. But under the
compulsion of that powerful hand, he lay quite still.
Half consciously he seemed to realize that he was
lying prone in the bottom of some strange kind of boat, rude and clumsy,
strangely formed of singular materials, yet safe and dry and ample.
To his laboring nostrils penetrated a rank and pungent
odor of fish, with another the like of which he never had known--an odor not
unpleasant, yet keenly penetrant and all-pervading. Wet through, the engineer
lay reeking in heat and steam, wrapped in his suit of heavy furs. Then he heard
a ripple of water and felt the motion of the craft as it was driven forward.
Another voice spoke now and the strange man answered
briefly. Again the engineer half seemed to comprehend the meaning, though no
word was intelligible.
"Where's the girl, you?" he shouted with all
his might. "What have you done with her? If you hurt her, damn you, you'll
be sorry! Where--where is she?"
No answer. It was evident that English speech conveyed
no meaning to his captors. Stern relapsed with a groan of anguish and sheer
pain.
The boat rocked. Another man came creeping forward,
holding to the gunwale to steady himself. Stern saw him vaguely through the
drifting vapor by the blue-green light of the cresset at the bow.
He was clad in a coarse kind of brownish stuff, like
the first, roughly and loosely woven. His long hair, pure white, was twisted up
in a kind of topknot and fastened there by pins of dull gold. Bearded he was,
but not one hair upon his head or chin was other than silvery white--a color
common to all these folk, as Stern was soon to know.
This man, evidently seeing with perfect clarity by a
light which permitted the engineer only partial vision, also examined Stern and
made speech thereto and nodded with satisfaction.
Then he put half a dozen questions to the prisoner
with evident slowness and an attempt to speak each word distinctly, but nothing
came of this. And with a contemptuous grunt he went back to his paddle.
"Hold on, there!" cried Stern. "Can't
you understand? There were two of us, in a--machine, you know! We fell. Fell
from the surface of the earth--fell all the way down into this pit of hell,
whatever it is. Where's the girl? For God's sake, tell me!"
Neither man paid any heed, but the elder suddenly set
hollowed palms to his lips and hailed; and from across the waters dully drifted
another answering cry.
He shouted a sentence or two with a volume of noise at
which the engineer marveled, for so compressed was the air that Stern's best
effort could hardly throw a sound fifty feet. This characteristic of the
atmosphere he well recognized from work he had often done in bridge and tunnel
caissons. And a wonder possessed him, despite his keen anxiety, how any race of
men could live and grow and develop the evident physical force of these people
under conditions so unnatural.
Turning his head and wrenching his neck sidewise, he
was able to catch a glimpse of the water, over the low gunwale--a gunwale made,
like the framework of the boat itself, of thin metallic strips cleverly riveted.
There, approaching through the mists, he got sight of
another boat, also provided with its cresset that flung an uncanny shaft of
blue across the jetty expanse--a boat now drawing near uncles the urge of
half-seen oarsmen. And farther still another torch was visible; and beyond that
a dozen, a score or more, all moving with dim and ghostly slowness, through the
blind abyss of fog and heat and drifting vapors.
Stern gathered strength for another appeal.
"Who are you people?" cried he passionately.
"What are you going to do with us? Where are we--and what kind of a place
are we in? Any way to get out, out to the world again? And the girl--that girl!
Oh, great God! Can't you answer something?"
No reply. Only that same slow, strong paddling, awful
in its purposeful deliberation. Stern questioned in French, Spanish and German,
but got not even the satisfaction of attracting their attention. He flung what
few phrases of Latin and Esperanto he had at them. No result. And a huge
despair filled his soul, a feeling of utter and absolute helplessness.
For the first time in his life--that life which had
covered a thousand years or more--he found himself unable to make himself
intelligible. He had not now even recourse to gestures, to sign language. Bound
hand and foot, trussed like a fowl, ignored by his captors (who, by all rules,
should have been his hosts and shown him every courtesy), he felt a profound
and terrible anger growing in his heart.
A sudden rage, unreasoning and insensate, blazed
within him. His fists clenched; once more he tugged, straining at his stout
bonds. He called down maledictions on those two strange, impassive, wraithlike
forms hardly more than half seen in the darkness and fog.
Then, as delirium won again over his tortured senses
and disjointed thoughts, he shouted the name of Beatrice time after time out
into the echoing dark that brooded over the great waters. All at once he heard
her voice, trembling and faint and weak, but still hers!
From the other boat it came, the boat now drawing very
near. And as the craft loomed up through the vapors that rose incessantly from
that Stygian sea, he made a mighty effort, raised himself a little and suddenly
beheld her--dim, vague, uncertain in the shuddering bluish glare, yet still
alive!
She was crouching midships of the canoe and,
seemingly, was not bound. At his hail she stretched forth a hand and answered
with his name.
"Oh, Allan! Allan!" Her voice was tremulous
and very weak.
"Beatrice! You're safe? Thank God!"
"Hurt? Are you hurt?"
"No--nothing to speak of. These demons haven't
done you any damage, have they? If so--"
"Demons? Why, Allan! They've rescued us, haven't
they?"
"Yes--and now they've got me tied here, hand and
foot! I can't more than just move about two or three inches, blast them! They
haven't tied you, have they?"
"No," she answered. "Not yet! But--what
an outrage! I'll free you, never fear. You and I together--"
"Can't do anything, now, girl. There may be
hundreds of these people. Thousands, perhaps. And we're only two--two captives,
and--well--hang it, Beatrice! I don't mean to be pessimistic or anything like
that, but it certainly looks bad!"
"But who are they, boy? Who can they be? And
where are we?"
"Hanged if I know! This certainly beats any dream
I ever had. For sheer outrageous improbability--"
He broke off short. Beatrice had leaned her head upon
her arms, along the gunwale of the other canoe which now was running parallel
to Stern's, and he knew the girl was weeping.
"There, there!" he cried to her. "Don't
you be afraid, little girl! I've got my automatic yet; I can feel it under me,
as I lie here in this infernal boat. They haven't taken yours away?"
"No!" she answered, raising her head again.
"And before they ever do, I'll use it, that's all!"
"Good girl!" he cheered her, across the
space of water. "That's the way to talk! Whatever happens, shoot straight
if you have to shoot at all--and remember, at worst, the last cartridge is for
yourself!"
CHAPTER XXIV
THE LAND OF THE MERUCAANS
"I'll remember," she answered simply, and
for a little space there came silence between them.
A vast longing possessed the man to take her in his
arms and hold her tight, tight to his fast-throbbing heart. But he lay bound
and helpless. All he could do was call to her again, as the two canoes now drew
on, side by side and as still others, joining them, made a little fleet of
strange, flare-lighted craft.
"Beatrice!"
"Yes--what is it?"
"Don't worry, whatever happens. Maybe there's no
great harm done, after all. We're still alive and sound--that's ninety-nine per
cent of the battle."
"How could we have fallen like that and not been
killed? A miracle!"
"The machine must have struck the surface on one
of its long slants. If it had plunged straight down--well, we shouldn't be
here, that's all. These infernal pirates, whoever they are, must have been
close by, in their boats, and cut us loose from our straps before the machine
sank, and got us into their canoes. But--"
"Without the machine, how are we ever going to
get out of here again?"
"Don't bother about that now! We've got other
more important things to think of. It's all a vast and complex problem, but
we'll meet it, never fear. You and I, together, are going to win! We've got
to--for the sake of the world!"
"Oh, if they'd only take us for gods, as the
Horde did!"
"Gods nothing! They're as white as we
are--whiter, even. People that can make boats like these, out of iron bars
covered with pitched fabric, and weave cloth like this they're wearing, and use
oil-flares in metal baskets, aren't mistaking us for gods. The way they've
handled me proves it. Might be a good thing if they weren't so devilish
intelligent!"
He relapsed into silence, and for a while there came
no sound but the cadenced dipping of many paddles as the boats, now perhaps a
score in number, all slowly moved across the unfathomed black as though toward
some objective common point. Each craft bore at its bow a fire-basket filled
with some spongy substance, which, oil-soaked, blazed smokily with that
peculiar blue-green light so ghostly in its wavering reflections.
Many of the folk sat in these boats, among their brown
fiber nets and long, iron-tipped lances. All alike were pale and
anemic-looking, though well-muscled and of vigorous build. Even the youngest
were white-haired. All wore their hair twisted in a knot upon the crown of the
head; none boasted anything even suggesting a hat or cap.
By contrast with their chalky skins, white eyebrows
and lashes, their pinkish eyes--for all the world like those of an
albino--blinked oddly as they squinted ahead, as though to catch some sign of
land. Every one wore a kind of cassock of the brown coarse material; a few were
girdled with belts of skin, having well-wrought metal buckles. Their paddles
were not of wood. Not one trace of wood, in fact, was anywhere to be seen.
Light metal blades, well-shaped and riveted to iron handles, served for
propulsion.
Stern lay back, still faint and sick with the shock of
the fall and with the pain, humiliation and excitement of the capture. Yet
through it all he rejoiced that the girl and he had escaped with life and were
both still sound of limb and faculty.
Even the loss of the machine could not destroy all his
natural enthusiasm, or kill his satisfaction in this great adventuring, his joy
at having found after all, a remnant of the human race once more.
"Men, by the Almighty!" thought he, peering
keenly at such as he could see through the coiling, spiraling wreaths of mist
that arose from the black water into the dun air. "Men! White men, too!
Given such stock to work with--provided I get the chance--who shall say
anything's impossible? If only there's some way out of this infernal hole, what
may not happen?"
And, as he watched, he thrilled with nascent pride,
with consciousness of a tremendous mission to perform; a sense that here--here
in the actual living flesh--dwelt the potentialities of all his dreams, of all
the many deep and noble plans which he and Beatrice had laid for a regenerated
world!
Men they certainly were, white men, Caucasians, even
like himself. Despite all changes of superficial character, their build and
cast of features bore witness that these incredible folk, dwellers upon that
nameless and buried sea, were the long-distant descendants of Americans!
"Americans, so help me!" he pondered as the
boats drew onward toward what goal he knew not. "Barbarians, yet
Americans, still. And with half a chance at them, God! we'll work miracles yet,
she and I!"
Again he raised his voice, calling to Beatrice:
"Don't be afraid, little girl! They're our own
people, after all--Americans!"
At sound of that word a startled cry broke from the
lips of Stern's elder boatman, a cry which, taken up from boat to boat, drifted
dully through the fog, traversed the whole fleet of strange, slow-moving craft,
and lost itself in the vague gloom.
"Merucaans! Merucaans!" the shout arose,
with other words whereof Stern knew not the meaning; and closer pressed the
outlying boats. The engineer felt a thrill run through the strange, mysterious
folk.
"They knew their name, anyhow! Hurrah!" he
exulted. "God! If we had the Stars and Stripes here, I wager a million
they'd go mad about it! Remember? You bet they'll remember, when I learn their
lingo and tell them a few things! Just wait till I get a chance at 'em, that's
all!"
Forgotten now his bonds and all his pain. Forgotten
even the perilous situation. Stern's great vision of a reborn race had
swallowed minor evils. And with a sudden glow of pride that some of his own race
had still survived the vast world catastrophe, he cheered again, eager as any
schoolboy.
Suddenly he heard the girl's voice calling to him:
"Something ahead, Allan--land, maybe. A big light
through the mist!"
He wrenched his head a trifle up and now perceived
that through the vapors a dim yet steady glow was beginning to shine, and on
each side of it there stretched a line of other, smaller, blue-green lights.
These, haloed by the vapor with the most beautiful prismatic rings, extended in
an irregular row high above water level.
Lower down other lights were moving slowly to and fro,
gathering for the most part at a point toward which the boats were headed.
"A settlement, Beatrice! A town, maybe! At
last--men, men!" he cried.
Forward the boats moved, faster now, as the rowers
bent to their tasks; and all at once, spontaneously, a song rose up. First from
one boat, then another, that weird, strange melody drifted through the dark
air. It blended into a spectral chorus, a vague, tremulous, eerie chant, ghostlike
and awful, as though on the black stream of Acheron the lost souls of a better
world had joined in song.
Nothing could Stern catch of the words; but like some
faint and far re-echoing of a half-heard melody, dream-music perhaps, a vaguely
reminiscent undertone struck to his heart with an irresistible, melancholy,
penetrant appeal.
"That tune! I know it--if I could only
think!" the engineer exclaimed. "Those words! I almost seem to know
them!"
Then, with the suddenness characteristic of all that
drew near in the fog, the shore-lights grew rapidly bigger and more bright.
The rowers lay back on their paddles at a sharp word
of command from one of the oarsmen in Stern's boat.
Came a grating, a sliding of keels on pebbles. The
boat stopped. Others came up to land. From them men began clambering.
The song died. A sound of many voices rose, as the
boatmen mingled with those who, bearing torches, now began gathering about the
two canoes where Stern and Beatrice still were.
"Well, we're here, anyhow, wherever here is!"
exclaimed the engineer. "Hey, you fellows, let me loose, will you? What
kind of a way is this to treat a stranger, I'd like to know?"
Two of the men waded through the water, tepid as new
milk, to where Stern lay fast-bound, lifted him easily and carried him ashore.
Black though the water was, Stern saw that it was clear. As the torch-light
struck down through it, he could distinguish the clean and sandy bottom shining
with metallic luster.
A strange hissing sound pervaded all the air, now
sinking to a dull roar, now rising shrill as a vast jet of escaping steam.
As the tone lowered, darkness seemed to gain, through
the mists; its rising brought a clearer light. But what the phenomenon was,
Stern could not tell. For the source of the faint, diffused illumination that
verberated through the vapor was hidden; it seemed to be a huge and fluctuating
glow, off there somewhere beyond the fog-curtain that veiled whatever land this
strange weird place might be.
Vague, silent, dim, the wraithlike men stood by, peering
with bent brows, just as Dante described the lost souls in Hell peering at
Virgil in the eternal night. A dream-crew they seemed. Even though Stern felt
the vigorous muscles of the pair who now had borne him up to land, he could
scarce realize their living entity.
"Beatrice! Beatrice!" he called. "Are
you all right? Don't mind about me--just look out for yourself! If they hurt
you in any way, shoot!"
"I'm all right, I'm coming!" He heard her
voice, and then he saw the girl herself. Unaided she had clambered from her
boat; and now, breaking through the throng, she sought to reach him. But hands
held her back, and words of hard command rose from a score of lips.
Stern had only time to see that she was as yet
unharmed when with a quick slash of a blade somebody cut the thongs that bound
his feet.
Then he was pushed forward, away from the dim and
ghostly sea up an acclivity of smooth black pebbles all wet with mist.
Limping stiffly, by reason of his cramped muscles, he
stumbled onward, while all about him and behind him--as about the girl, who
followed--came the throng of these strange people.
Their squinting, pinkish eyes and pallid faces showed
ghastly by the torch-glare, as, murmuring among themselves in their
incomprehensible yet strangely familiar tongue, they climbed the slope.
Even then, even there on that unknown beach beside an
uncharted sea at the bottom of the fathomless abyss, Stern thought with joy of
his revolver which still swung on his hip.
"God knows how we're going to talk to these
people," reflected he, "or what sort of trouble they've got ready to
hand out to us. But, once I get my right hand free--I'm ready for whatever
comes!"
CHAPTER XXV
THE DUNGEON OF THE SKELETONS
As the two interlopers from the outer world moved up
the slippery beach toward the great, mist-dimmed flare, escorted by the strange
and spectral throng, Stern had time to analyze some factors of the situation.
It was evident that diplomacy was now--unless in a
sharp crisis--the only role to play. How many of these people there might be he
could not tell. The present gathering he estimated at about a hundred and fifty
or a hundred and seventy-five; and moment by moment more were coming down the
slope, looming through the vapor, each carrying a cresset on a staff or a
swinging light attached to a chain.
"The village or settlement, or whatever it
is," thought he, "may contain hundreds of them, thousands perhaps.
And we are only two! The last thing in the world we want is a fight. But if it
comes to fighting, Beatrice and I with our backs to the wall could certainly
make a mighty good showing against barbarians such as these.
"It's evident from the fact that they haven't
taken our revolvers away they don't know the use of firearms. Ages ago they
must have forgotten even the tradition of such weapons. Their culture status
seems to be a kind of advanced barbarism. Some job, here, to bring them up to
civilization again."
Slow-moving, unemotional, peering dimly through the
hot fog, their wraithlike appearance (as more and more came crowding) depressed
and saddened Stern beyond all telling.
And at thought that these were the remnants of the
race which once had conquered a vast continent, built tall cities and spanned
abysses with steel--the remnants of so many million keen, energetic, scientific
people--he groaned despairingly.
"What does all this mean?" he exclaimed in a
kind of passionate outburst. "Where are we? How did you get here? Can't
you understand me? We're Americans, I tell you--Americans! For God's sake, can't you
understand?"
Once more the word "Merucaans" passed round
from mouth to mouth; but beyond this Stern got no sign of comprehension.
"Village! Houses!" shouted he.
"Shelter! Rest, eat, sleep!"
They merely shoved him forward up the slope, together
with the girl; and now Stern saw a curious kind of causeway, paved with
slippery, wet, black stones that gleamed in the torchlight, a causeway slanting
sharply upward, its further end hidden in the dense vapor behind which the
great and unknown light shone with ever-clearer glowing.
This road wash bordered on either hand by a wall of
carefully cut stone about three and a half feet high; and into the wall, at
equal distances of twenty feet or so, iron rods had been let. Each rod bore a
fire-basket, some only dully flickering, some burning bright and blue.
Numbers of the strange folk were loitering on the
causeway or coming down to join the throng which now ascended; many clambered
lithely up onto the wall, and, holding to the rods or to each other--for the
stones, like everything here, were wet and glairy--watched with those
singular-hued and squinting eyes of theirs the passage of the strangers.
Stern and Beatrice, their breathing now oppressed by
the thickening smoke which everywhere hung heavy, as well as by this fresh
exertion in the densely compressed air, toiled, panting, up the steep incline.
The engineer was already bathed in a heavy sweat. The
intense heat, well above a hundred degrees, added to the humidity, almost
stifled him. His bound arms pained almost beyond endurance. Unable to balance
himself, he slipped and staggered.
"Beatrice!" he called chokingly. "Try
to make them understand I want my hands freed. It's bad enough trying to clamber
up this infernal road, anyhow, without having to go at it all trussed up this
way."
She, needing no second appeal, raised her free arms,
pointed to her wrists and then at his, and made a gesture as of cutting. But
the elder boatman of Stern's canoe--seemingly a person of some authority--only
shook his head and urged the prisoners upward, ever upward toward the great and
growing light.
Now they had reached the top of the ascent.
On either hand, vanishing in shadows and mist, heavy
and high walls extended, all built of black, cut stone surmounted by cressets.
Through a gateway the throng passed, and the prisoners
with them--a gateway built of two massive monoliths of dressed stone, octagonal
and highly polished, with a huge, straight plinth that Stern estimated at a
glance never could have weighed less than ten tons.
"Ironwork, heavy stonework, weaving, fisheries--a
good beginning here to work on," thought the engineer. But there was
little time for analysis. For now already they were passing through a complex
series of inner gateways, passages, detours and labyrinthic defenses which--all
well lighted from above by fire-baskets--spoke only too plainly the character
of the enclosure within.
"A walled town, heavily fortified," Stern
realized as he and Beatrice were thrust forward through the last gate.
"Evidently these people are living here in constant fear of attack by
formidable foes. I'll wager there's been some terrible fighting in these narrow
ways--and there may be some more, too, before we're through with it. God, what
a place! Makes me think of the machicoulis and pasterns at old Carcassonne. So far
as this is concerned, we're back again in the Dark Ages--dark, dark as
Erebus!"
Then, all at once, out they issued into so strange a
scene that, involuntarily, the two captives stopped short, staring about them
with wide eyes.
Stretching away before them till the fog swallowed
it--a fog now glowing with light from some source still mist-hidden--an open
plaza stretched. This plaza was all surrounded, so far as they could see, with
singular huts, built of dressed stone, circular for the most part, and with
conical roofs like monster beehives. Windows there were none, but each hut had
an open door facing the source of the strange, blue-green light.
Stern could now see the inside of the wall, topped
with torches; its crest rose some five feet above the level of the plaza; and,
where he could catch a glimpse of its base between the huts and through the
crowding folk, he noticed that huge quantities of boulders were piled as though
for instant use in case of attack.
A singular dripping of warmish water, here a huge
drop, there another, attracted his attention; but though he looked up to
determine its source, if possible, he could see nothing except the glowing
mist. The whole floor of the enclosure seemed to be wet and shining with this
water; and all the roughly clad folk, now coming from the huts and
concentrating toward the captives, from every direction, were wet as well, as
though with this curious, constant, sparsely scattered rain.
Not a quadruped of any kind was to be seen. Neither
cat nor dog was there, neither goat nor pig nor any other creature such as in
the meanest savage villages of other times might have been found upon the
surface of the earth. But, undisturbed and bold, numbers of a most
extraordinary fowl--a long-legged, red-necked fowl, wattled and huge of
beak--gravely waddled here and there or perched singly and in solemn rows upon
the huts.
"Great Heavens, Beatrice," exclaimed the
engineer, "what are we up against? Of all the incredible places! That
light! That roaring!"
He had difficulty in making himself even heard. For
now the hissing roar which they had perceived from afar off seemed to fill the
place with a tremendous vibrant blur, rising, falling, as the light waxed and
waned.
Terribly confusing all these new sense-impressions
were to Stern and Beatrice in their unnerved and weakened state. And, staring
about them as they went, they slowly moved along with the motion of their
captors toward the great light.
All at once Stern stopped, with a startled cry.
"The infernal devils!" he exclaimed, and
recoiled with an involuntary shudder from the sight that met his eyes.
The girl, too, cried out in fear.
Some air-current, some heated blast of vapor from the
vast flame they now saw shooting upward from the stone flooring of the plaza,
momently dispelled the thick, white vapors.
Stern got a glimpse of a circular row of stone posts,
each about nine feet high--he saw not the complete circle, but enough of it to
judge its diameter as some fifty feet. In the center stood a round and massive
building, and from each post to that building stretched a metal rod perhaps
twenty feet in length.
"Look! Look!" gasped Beatrice, and pointed.
Then, deadly pale, she hid her face in both her hands
and crouched away, as though to blot the sight from her perception.
Each metal bar was sagging with a hideous load--a row
of human skeletons, stark, fleshless, frightful in their ghastliness. All were
headless. All, suspended by the cervical vertebrae, swayed lightly as the
blue-green light glared on them with its weird, unearthly radiance.
Before either Stern or the girl had time even to
struggle or so much as recover from the shock of this fell sight, they were
both pushed roughly between two of the posts into the frightful circle.
Stern saw a door yawn black before them in the massive
hut of stone.
Toward this the Folk of the Abyss were thrusting them.
"No, you don't, damn you!" he howled with
sudden passion. "None o' that for us! Shoot, Beta! Shoot!"
But even as her hand jerked at the butt of the
automatic, in its rawhide holster on her hip, an overmastering force flung them
both forward into the foul dark of the round dungeon. A metal door clanged
shut. Absolute darkness fell.
"My God!" cried Stern. "Beta! Where are
you? Beta! Beta!"
But answer there was none. The girl had fainted.
CHAPTER XXVI
"YOU SPEAK ENGLISH!"
Even in his pain and rage and fear, Stern did not lose
his wits. Too great the peril, he subconsciously realized, for any false step
now. Despite the fact that the stone prison could measure no more than some ten
feet in diameter, he knew that in its floors some pit or fissure might exist,
frightfully deep, for their destruction.
And other dangers, too, might lie hidden in this
fearful place. So, restraining himself with a strong effort, he stood there
motionless a few seconds, listening, trying to think. Severe now the pain from
his lashed wrists had grown, but he no longer felt it. Strange visions seemed
to dance before his eyes, for weakness and fever were at work upon him. In his
ears still sounded, though muffled now, the constant hissing roar of the great
flame, the mysterious and monstrous jet of fire which seemed to form the center
of this unknown, incomprehensible life in the abyss.
"Merciful Heavens!" gasped he. "That
fire--those skeletons--this black cell--what can they mean?" He found no
answer in his bewildered brain. Once more he called, "Beatrice!
Beatrice!" but only the close echo of the prison replied.
He listened, holding his breath in sickening fear. Was
there, in truth, some waiting, yawning chasm in the cell, and had she, thrust
rudely forward, been hurled down it? At the thought he set his jaws with
terrible menace and swore, to the last drop of his blood, vengeance on these
inhuman captors.
But as he listened, standing there with bound hands in
the thick gloom, he seemed to catch a slow and sighing sound, as of troubled
breathing. Again he called. No answer. Then he understood the truth. And,
unable to grope with his hands, he swung one foot slowly, gently, in the
partial circumference of a circle.
At first he found nothing save the smooth and slippery
stone of the floor, but, having shifted his position very cautiously and tried
again, he experienced the great joy of feeling his sandaled foot come in
contact with the girl's prostrate body.
Beside her on the floor he knelt. He could not free
his hands, but he could call to her and kiss her face. And presently, even
while the joy of this discovery was keen upon him, obscuring the hot rage he
felt, she moved, she spoke a few vague words, and reached her hands up to him;
she clasped him in her arms.
And there in the close, fetid dark, imprisoned,
helpless, doomed, they kissed again, and once more--though no word was
spoken--plighted their love and deep fidelity until the end.
"Hurt? Are you hurt?" he panted eagerly, as
she sat up on the hard floor and with her hands smoothed back the hair from his
hot, aching head.
"I feel so weak and dizzy," she answered.
"And I'm afraid--oh, Allan, I'm afraid! But, no, I'm not hurt."
"Thank God for that!" he breathed fervently.
"Can you untie these infernal knots? They're almost cutting my hands
off!"
"Here, let me try!"
And presently the girl set to work; but even though
she labored till her fingers ached, she could not start the tight and
water-soaked ligatures.
"Hold on, wait a minute," directed he.
"Feel in my right-hand pocket. Maybe they forgot to take my knife."
She obeyed.
"They've got it," she announced. "Even
if they don't know the meaning of revolvers, they understand knives all right.
It's gone."
"Pest!" he ejaculated hotly. Then for a
moment he sat thinking, while the girl again tried vainly to loosen the
hard-drawn knots.
"Can you find the iron door they shoved us
through?" asked he at length.
"I'll see!"
He heard her creeping cautiously along the walls of
stone, feeling as she went.
"Look out!" he warned. "Keep testing
the floor as you go. There may be a crevice or pit or something of that
kind."
All at once she cried: "Here it is! I've found
it!"
"Good! Now, then, feel it all over and see if
there's any rough place on it. Any sharp edge of a plate, or anything of that
kind, that I could rub the cords on."
Another silence. Then the girl spoke.
"Nothing of that kind here," she answered
depairingly. "The door's as smooth as if it had been filed and polished.
There's not even a lock of any kind. It must be fastened from the outside in
some way."
"By Heaven, this is certainly a hard
proposition!" exclaimed the engineer, groaning despite himself. "What
the deuce are we going to do now?"
For a moment he remained sunk in a kind of dull and
apathetic respair.
But suddenly he gave a cry of joy.
"I've got it!" he exclaimed. "Your
revolver, quick! Aim at the opposite wall, there, and fire!"
"Shoot, in here?" she queried, astonished.
"Why--what for?"
"Never mind! Shoot!"
Amazed, she did his bidding. The crash of the report
almost deafened them in that narrow room. By the stabbing flare of the
discharge they glimpsed the black and shining walls, a deadly circle all about
them.
"Again?" asked she.
"No. That's enough. Now, find the bullet. It's
somewhere on the floor. There's no pit; it's all solid. The bullet--find the
bullet!"
Questioning no more, yet still not understanding, she
groped on hands and knees in the impenetrable blackness. The search lasted more
than five minutes before her hand fell on the jagged bit of metal.
"Ah!" cried she. "Here it is!"
"Good! Tell me, is the steel jacket burst in any
such way as to make a jagged edge?"
A moment's silence, while her deft fingers examined
the metal. Then said she:
"I think so. It's a terribly small bit to saw
with, but--"
"To work, then! I can't stand this much longer."
With splendid energy the girl attacked the tough and
water-soaked bonds. She worked half an hour before the first one, thread by
thread yielding, gave way. The second followed soon after; and now, with torn
and bleeding fingers, she released the final bond.
"Thank Heaven!" he breathed as she began
chafing his numb wrists and arms to bring the circulation back again; and
presently, when he had regained some use of his own hands, he also rubbed his
arms.
"No great damage done, after all," he
judged, "so far as this is concerned. But, by the Almighty, we're in one
frightful fix every other way! Hark! Hear those demons outside there? God knows
what they're up to now!"
Both prisoners listened.
Even through the massive walls of the circular dungeon
they could hear a dull and gruesome chant that rose, fell, died, and then
resumed, seemingly in unison with the variant roaring of the flame.
Thereto, also, an irregular metallic sound, as of
blows struck on iron, and now and then a shrill, high-pitched cry. The effect
of these strange sounds, rendered vague and unreal by the density of the walls,
and faintly penetrating the dreadful darkness, surpassed all efforts of the
imagination.
Beatrice and Stern, bold as they were, hardened to
rough adventurings, felt their hearts sink with bodings, and for a while they
spoke no word. They sat there together on the floor of polished
stone--perceptibly warm to the touch and greasy with a peculiarly repellent
substance--and thought long thoughts which neither one dared voice.
But at length the engineer, now much recovered from
his pain and from the oppression of the lungs caused by the compressed air,
reached for the girl's hand in the dark.
"Without you where should I be?" he
exclaimed. "My good angel now, as always!"
She made no answer, but returned the pressure of his
hand. And for a while silence fell between them there--silence broken only by
their troubled breathing and the cadenced roaring of the huge gas-well flame
outside the prison wall.
At last Stern spoke.
"Let's get some better idea of this place,"
said he. "Maybe if we know just what we're up against we'll understand
better what to do."
And slowly, cautiously, with every sense alert, he
began exploring the dungeon. Floor and walls he felt of, with minute care,
reaching as high as he could and eagerly seeking some possible crevice, some
promise--no matter how remote--of ultimate escape.
But the examination ended only in discouragement.
Smooth almost as glass the walls were, and the floor as well, perhaps worn down
by countless prisoners.
The iron door, cleverly let into the wall, lay flush
with it, and offered not the slightest irregularity to the touch. So nicely was
it fitted that not even Stern's finger-nail could penetrate the joint.
"Nothing doing in the escape line," he
passed judgment unwillingly. "Barbarians these people certainly are, in
some ways, but they've got the arts of stone and iron working down fine. I, as
an engineer, have to appreciate that, and give the remote descendants of our
race credit for it, even if it works our ruin. Gad, but they're clever,
though!"
Discouraged, in spite of all his attempted optimism,
he sought the girl again, there in the deep and velvet dark. To himself he drew
her; and, his arm about her sinuous, supple body, tried to comfort her with
cheering speech.
"Well, Beatrice, they haven't got us yet! We're
better off, on the whole, than we had any right to hope for, after having
fallen one or two hundred miles--maybe five hundred, who knows? If I can manage
to get a word or two with these confounded barbarians, I'll maybe save our
bacon yet! And, at worst--well, we're in a mighty good little fort here. I pity
anybody that tries to come in that door and get us."
"Oh, Allan--those skeletons, those headless
skeletons!" she whispered; and in his arms he felt her shudder with
unconquerable fear.
"I know; but they aren't going to add us to their
little collection, you mark my words! These men are white; they're our own
kind, even though they have slid back into barbarism. They'll listen to reason,
once I get a chance at them."
Thus, talking of the abyss and of their fall--now of
one phase, now another, of their frightful position--they passed an hour in the
stifling dark.
And, joining their observations and ideas, they were
able to get some general idea of the conditions under which these incredible
folk were dwelling.
From the warmth of the sea and the immense quantities
of vapor that filled the abyss, they concluded that it must be at a tremendous
depth in the earth--perhaps as far down as Stern's extreme guess of five
hundred miles--and also that it must be of very large extent.
Beatrice had noted also that the water was salt. This
led them to the conclusion that in some way or other, perhaps intermittently,
the oceans on the surface were supplying the subterranean sea.
"If I'm not much mistaken," judged the
engineer, "that tremendous maelstrom near the site of New Haven--the
cataract that almost got us, just after we started out--has something very
vital to do with this situation.
"In that case, and if there's a way for water to
come down, why mayn't there be a way for us to climb up? Who knows?"
"But if there were," she answered,
"wouldn't these people have found it, in all these hundreds and hundreds
of years?"
They discussed the question, pro and con, with many
another that bore on the folk--this strange and inexplicable imprisonment, the
huge flame at the center of the community's life, the probable intentions of
their captors, and the terrifying rows of headless skeletons.
"What those mean I don't know," said Stern.
"There may be human sacrifice here, and offerings of blood to some
outlandish god they've invented. Or these relics may be trophies of battle with
other peoples of the abyss.
"To judge from the way this place is fortified, I
rather think there must be other tribes, with more or less constant warfare.
The infernal fools! When the human race is all destroyed, as it is, except a
few handfuls of albino survivors, to make war and kill each other! It's on a
par with the old Maoris of New Zealand, who practically exterminated each
other--fought till most of the tribes were wiped clean out and only a remnant
was left for the British to subdue!"
"I'm more interested in what they're going to do
with us now," she answered, shuddering, "than in how many or how few
survive! What are we going to do, Allan? What on earth can we do now?"
He thought a moment, while the strange chant, dimly
heard, rose and fell outside, always in unison with the gigantic flame. Then
said he:
"Do? Nothing, for the immediate present. Nothing,
except wait, and keep all the nerve and strength we can. No use in our shouting
and making a row. They'd only take that as an admission of fear and weakness,
just as any barbarians would. No use hammering on the iron door with our
revolver-butts, and annoying our white brothers by interrupting their song
services.
"Positively the only thing I can see to do is
just to make sure both automatics are crammed full of cartridges, keep our wits
about us, and plug the first man that comes in through that door with the
notion of making sacrifices of us. I certainly don't hanker after martyrdom of
that sort, and, by God! the savage that lays hands on you, dies inside of one
second by the stop-watch!"
"I know, boy; but against so many, what are two
revolvers?"
"They're everything! My guess is that a little
target practice would put the fear of God into their hearts in a most
extraordinary manner!"
He tried to speak lightly and to cheer the girl, but
in his breast his heart lay heavy as a lump of lead.
"Suppose they don't come in, what then?"
suddenly resumed Beatrice. "What if they leave us here till--"
"There, there, little girl! Don't you go
borrowing any trouble! We've got enough of the real article, without
manufacturing any!"
Silence again, and a long, dark, interminable waiting.
In the black cell the air grew close and frightfully oppressive. Clad as they both
were in fur garments suitable to outdoor life and to aeroplaning at great
altitudes, they were suffering intensely from the heat.
Stern's wrists and arms, moreover, still pained
considerably, for they had been very cruelly bruised with the ropes, which the
barbarians had drawn tight with a force that bespoke both skill and deftness.
His need of some occupation forced him to assure himself, a dozen times over,
that both revolvers were completely filled. Fortunately, the captors had not
known enough to rob either Beatrice or him of the cartridge-belts they wore.
How long a time passed? One hour, two, three?
They could not tell.
But, overcome by the vitiated air and the great heat,
Beatrice slept at last, her head in the man's lap. He, utterly spent, leaned
his back against the wall of black and polished stone, nodding with weariness
and great exhaustion.
He, too, must have dropped off into a troubled sleep,
for he did not hear the unbolting of the massive iron cell-door.
But all at once, with a quick start, he recovered
consciousness. He found himself broad awake, with the girl clutching at his arm
and pointing.
With dazzled eyes he stared--stared at a strange
figure standing framed in a rectangle of blue and foggy light.
Even as he shouted: "Hold on, there! Get back out
o' that, you!" and jerked his ugly pistol at the old man's breast--for
very aged this man seemed, bent and feeble and trembling as he leaned upon an
iron staff--a voice spoke dully through the half-gloom, saying:
"Peace, friends! Peace be unto you!"
Stern started up in wild amaze.
From his nerveless fingers the pistol dropped. And, as
it clattered on the floor, he cried:
"English? You speak English? Who are you?
English! English! Oh, my God!"
CHAPTER XXVII
DOOMED!
The aged man stood for a moment as though tranced at
sound of the engineer's voice. Then, tapping feebly with his staff, he advanced
a pace or two into the dungeon. And Stern and Beatrice--who now had sprung up,
too, and was likewise staring at this singular apparition--heard once again the
words:
"Peace, friends! Peace!"
Stern snatched up the revolver and leveled it.
"Stop there!" he shouted. "Another step
and I--I--"
The old man hesitated, one hand holding the staff, the
other groping out vacantly in front of him, as though to touch the prisoners.
Behind him, the dull blue light cast its vague glow. Stern, seeing his bald and
shaking head, lean, corded hand, and trembling body wrapped in its mantle of
coarse brown stuff, could not finish the threat.
Instead, his pistol-hand dropped. He stood there for a
moment as though paralyzed with utter astonishment. Outside, the chant had
ceased. Through the doorway no living beings were visible--nothing but a thin
and tenuous vapor, radiant in the gas-flare which droned its never-ending roar.
"In the name of Heaven, who--what--are you?"
cried the engineer, at length. "A man who speaks English, here?
Here?"
The aged one nodded slowly, and once again groped out
toward Stern.
Then, in his strangely hollow voice, unreal and
ghostly, and with uncertain hesitation, an accent that rendered the words all
but unintelligible, he made answer:
"A man--yea, a living man. Not a ghost. A man!
and I speak the English. Verily, I am ancient. Blind, I go unto my fathers
soon. But not until I have had speech with you. Oh, this miracle--English
speech with those to whom it still be a living tongue!"
He choked, and for a space could say no more. He
trembled violently. Stern saw his frail body shake, heard sobs, and knew the
ancient one was weeping.
"Well, great Scott! What d'you think of
that?" exclaimed the engineer. "Say, Beatrice--am I dreaming? Do you
see it, too?"
"Of course! He's a survivor, don't you
understand?" she answered, with quicker intuition than his. "He's one
of an elder generation--he remembers more! Perhaps he can help us!" she
added eagerly. And without more ado, running to the old man, she seized his
hand and pressed it to her bosom.
"Oh, father!" cried she. "We are
Americans in terrible distress! You understand us--you, alone, of all these
people here. Save us, if you can!"
The patriarch shook his head, where still some sparse
and feeble hairs clung, snowy-white.
"Alas!" he answered, intelligibly, yet still
with that strange, hesitant accent of his--"alas, what can I do? I am sent
to you, verily, on a different mission. They do not understand, my people. They
have forgotten all. They have fallen back into the night of ignorance. I alone
remember; I only know. They mock me. But they fear me, also.
"Oh, woman!"--and, dropping his staff
a-clatter to the floor, he stretched out a quivering hand--"oh, woman! and
oh, man from above--speak! Speak, that I may hear the English from living
lips!"
Stern, blinking with astonishment there in the
half-gloom, drew near.
"English?" he queried. "Haven't you
ever heard it spoken?"
"Never! Yet, all my life, here in this lost
place, have I studied and dreamed of that ancient tongue. Our race once spoke
it. Now it is lost. That magnificent language, so rich and pure, all lost,
forever lost! And we--"
"But what do you speak down here?" exclaimed
the engineer, with eager interest. "It seemed to me I could almost catch
something of it; but when it came down to the real meaning, I couldn't. If we
could only talk with these people here, your people, they might give us some
kind of a show! Tell me!"
"A--a show?" queried the blind man, shaking
his head and laying his other hand on Stern's shoulder. "Verily, I cannot
comprehend. An entertainment, you mean? Alas, no, friends; they are not
hospitable, my people. I fear me; I fear me greatly that--that--"
He did not finish, but stood there blinking his
sightless eyes, as though with some vast effort of the will he might gain
knowledge of their features. Then, very deftly, he ran his fingers over Stern's
bearded face. Upon the engineer's lips his digits paused a second.
"Living English!" he breathed in an awed
voice. "These lips speak it as a living language! Oh, tell me, friends,
are there now men of your race--once our race--still living, up yonder? Is
there such a place--is there a sky, a sun, moon, stars--verily such things now?
Or is this all, as my people say, deriding me, only the babbling of old wives'
tales?"
A thousand swift, conflicting thoughts seemed
struggling in Stern's mind. Here, there, he seemed to catch a lucid bit; but
for the moment he could analyze nothing of these swarming impressions.
He seemed to see in this strange ancient-of-days some
last and lingering relic of a former generation of the Folk of the Abyss, a
relic to whom perhaps had been handed down, through countless generations, some
vague and wildly distorted traditions of the days before the cataclysm. A relic
who still remembered a little English, archaic, formal, mispronounced, but who,
with the tenacious memory of the very aged, still treasured a few hundred words
of what to him was but a dead and forgotten tongue. A relic, still longing for
knowledge of the outer world--still striving to keep alive in the degenerated
people some spark of memory of all that once had been!
And as this realization, not yet very clear, but
seemingly certain in its general form, dawned on the engineer, a sudden
interest in the problem and the tragedy of it all sprang up in him, so keen, so
poignant in its appeal to his scientific sense, that for a moment it quite
banished his distress and his desire for escape with Beatrice.
"Why, girl," he cried, "here's a case
parallel, in real life, to the wildest imaginings of fiction! It's as though a
couple of ancient Romans had walked in upon some old archeologist who'd given
his life to studying primitive Latin! Only you'd have to imagine he was the
only man in the world who remembered a word of Latin at all! Can you grasp it?
No wonder he's overcome!
"Gad! If we work this right," he added in a
swift aside, "this will be good for a return ticket, all right!"
The old man withdrew his hand from the grasp of
Beatrice and folded both arms across his breast with simple dignity.
"I rejoice that I have lived to this time,"
he stammered slowly, gropingly, as though each word, each distorted and
mispronounced syllable had to be sought with difficulty. "I am glad that I
have lived to touch you and to hear your voices. To know it is no mere
tradition, but that, verily, there was such a race and such a language! The
rest also, must be true--the earth, and the sun, and everything! Oh, this is a
wonder and a miracle! Now I can die in a great peace, and they will know I have
spoken truth to their mocking!"
He kept silence a space, and the two captives looked
fixedly at him, strangely moved. On his withered cheeks they could see, by the
dull bluish glow through the doorway, tears still wet. The long and venerable
beard of spotless white trembled as it fell freely over the coarse mantle.
"What a subject for a painter--if there were any
painters left!" thought Stern.
The old man's lips moved again.
"Now I can go in peace to my appointed place in
the Great Vortex," said he, and bowed his head, and whispered something in
that other speech they had already heard but could not understand.
Stern spoke first.
"What shall we call your name, father?"
asked he.
"Call me J'hungaav," he answered,
pronouncing a name which neither of them could correctly imitate. When they had
tried he asked:
"And yours?"
Stern gave both the girl's and his own. The old man
caught them both readily enough, though with a very different accent.
"Now, see here, father," the engineer
resumed, "you'll pardon us, I know. There's a million things to talk
about. A million we want to ask, and that we can tell you! But we're very
tired. We're hungry. Thirsty. Understand? We've just been through a terrible
experience. You can't grasp it yet; but I'll tell you we've fallen, God knows
how far, in an aeroplane--"
"Fallen? In an--an--"
"No matter. We've fallen from the surface. From
the world where there's a sky, and sun, and stars, and all the rest of it. So far
as we know, this woman and I are the only two people--the original kind of
people, I mean; the people of the time before--er--hang it!--it's mighty hard
to explain!"
"I understand. You are the only two now living of
our former race? And you have come from above? Verily, this is strange!"
"You bet it is! I mean, verily. And now we re
here, your people have thrown us into this prison, or whatever it is. And we
don't like the look of those skeletons on the iron rods outside a little bit!
We--"
"Oh, I pray! I pray!" exclaimed the
patriarch, thrusting out both hands. "Speak not of those! Not yet!"
"All right, father. What we want to ask is for
something to eat and drink, some other kind of clothes than the furs we're
wearing, and a place to sleep--a house, you know--we've got to rest! We mean no
harm to your people. Wouldn't hurt a hair of their heads! Overjoyed to find
'em! Now, I ask you, as man to man, can't you get us out of this, and manage
things so that we shall have a chance to explain?
"I'll give you the whole story, once we've
recuperated. You can translate it to your people. I ask some consideration for
myself, and I demand it for this woman! Well?"
The old man stood in silent thought a moment. Plain to
see, his distress was very keen. His face wrinkled still more, and on his
breast he bowed his majestic head, so eloquent of pain and sorrow and long
disappointment.
Stern, watching him narrowly, played his trump-card.
"Father," said he, "I don't know why
you were sent here to talk with us, or how they knew you could talk with us
even. I don't know what any of this treatment means. But I do know that this
girl and I are from the world of a thousand years ago--the world in which your
ancient forefathers used to dwell!
"She and I know all about that world. We know the
language which to you is only a precious memory, to us a living fact. We can
tell you hundreds, thousands of things! We can teach you everything you want to
know! For a year--if you people have years down here--we can sit and talk to
you, and instruct you, and make you far, far wiser than any of your Folk!
"More, we can teach your Folk the arts of peace
and war--a multitude of wonderful and useful things. We can raise them from
barbarism to civilization again! We can save them--save the world! And I appeal
to you, in the name of all the great and mighty past which to you is still a
memory, if not to them--save us now!"
He ceased. The old man sighed deeply, and for a while
kept silence. His face might have served as the living personification of intense
and hopeless woe.
Stern had an idea.
"Father," he added--"here, take this
weapon in your hand!" He thrust the automatic into the patriarch's
fingers. "This is a revolver. Have you ever heard that word? With this,
and other weapons even stronger, our race, your race, used to fight. It can
kill men at a distance in a twinkling of an eye. It is swift and very powerful!
Let this be the proof that we are what we say, survivors from the time that
was! And in the name of that great day, and in the name of what we still can
bring to pass for you and yours, save us from whatever evil threatens!"
A moment the old man held the revolver. Then,
shuddering as with a sudden chill, he thrust it back at Stern.
"Alas!" cried he. "What am I against a
thousand? A thousand, sunk in ignorance and fear and hate? A thousand who mock
at me? Who believe you, verily, to be only some new and stronger kind of
Lanskaarn, as we call our ancient enemies on the great islands in the sea.
"What can I do? They have let me have speech with
you merely because they think me so old and so childish! Because they say my
brain is soft! Whatever I may tell them, they will only mock. Woe upon me that
I have known this hour! That I have heard this ancient tongue, only now forever
to lose it! That I know the truth! That I know the world of old tradition was
true and is true, only now to have no more, after this moment, any hope ever to
learn about it!"
"The devil you say!" cried Stern, with
sudden anger. "You mean they won't listen to reason? You mean they're
planning to butcher us, and hang us up there along with the rest of the
captured Lanskaarns, or whatever you call them? You mean they're going to take
us--us, the only chance they've got ever to get out of this, and stick us like
a couple of pigs, eh? Well, by God! You tell them--you tell--"
In the doorway appeared another form, armed with an
iron spear. Came a quick word of command.
With a cry of utter hopelessness and heartbreak, a
wail that seemed to pierce the very soul, the patriarch turned and stumbled to
the door.
He paused. He turned, and, stretching out both feeble
arms to them--to them, who meant so infinitely much to him, so absolutely
nothing to his barbarous race--cried:
"Fare you well, O godlike people of that better
time! Fare you well! Before another tide has risen on our accursed black beach,
verily both of you, the last survivors--"
With a harsh word of anger, the spearsman thrust him
back and away.
Stern leaped forward, revolver leveled.
But before he could pull trigger the iron door had
clanged shut.
Once more darkness swallowed them.
Black though it was, it equaled not the blackness of
their absolute despair.
CHAPTER XXVIII
THE BATTLE IN THE DARK
For a time no word passed between them. Stern took the
girl in his arms and comforted her as best he might; but his heart told him
there was now no hope.
The old man had spoken only too truly. There existed
no way of convincing these barbarians that their prisoners were not of some
hated, hostile tribe. Evidently the tradition of the outer world had long since
perished as a belief among them. The patriarch's faith in it had come to be
considered a mere doting second childhood vagary, just as the tradition of the
Golden Age was held to be by the later Greeks.
That Stern and Beatrice could in any way convince
their captors of the truth of this outer world and establish their identity as
real survivors of the other time, lay wholly outside the bounds of the
probable.
And as the old man's prophecy of evil--interrupted, yet
frightfully ominous--recurred to Stern's mind, he knew the end of everything
was very close at hand.
"They won't get us, though, without a stiff
fight, damn them!" thought he. "That's one satisfaction. If they
insist on extermination--if they want war--they'll get it, all right enough!
And it'll be what Sherman said war always was, too--Hell!"
Came now a long, a seemingly interminable wait. The
door remained fast-barred. Oppression, heat, thirst, hunger tortured them, but
relief there was none.
And at length the merciful sleep of stupefaction
overcame them; and all their pain, their anguish and forebodings were numbed
into a welcome oblivion.
They were awakened by a confused noise--the sound of
cries and shouts, dulled by the thick walls, yet evidently many-voiced--harsh
commands, yells, and even some few sharp blows upon the prison stones.
The engineer started up, wide-eyed and all alert now
in the gloom.
Gone were his lassitude, his weakness and his sense of
pain. Every sense acute, he waited, hand clutching the pistol-butt, finger on
trigger.
"Ready there, Beatrice!" cried he.
"Something's started at last! Maybe it's our turn now. Here, get behind
me--but be ready to shoot when I tell you! Steady now, steady for the
attack!"
Tense as coiled springs they waited. And all at once a
bar slid, creaking. Around the edge of the metal door a thin blue line of light
appeared.
"Stand back, you!" yelled Stern. "The
first man through that door's a dead one!"
The line of light remained a moment narrow, then
suddenly it broadened. From without a pandemonium of sound burst in--howls,
shrieks, imprecations, cries of pain.
Even in that perilous moment a quick wonder darted
through Stern's brain, what the meaning of this infernal tumult might be, and
just what ghastly fate was to be theirs--what torments and indignities they
might still have to face before the end.
"Remember, Beatrice," he commanded, "if
I'm killed, use the revolver on yourself before you let them take you!"
"I know!" she cried. And, crouching beside
him in the half light, she, too, awaited what seemed the inevitable.
The door swung open.
There stood the patriarch again, arms extended, face
eager with a passionate hope and longing, a great pride even at that strange
and pregnant moment.
"Peace, friends!" he cried. "I give you
peace! Strike me not down with those terrible weapons of yours! For verily I
bring you hope again!"
"Hope? What d'you mean?" shouted Stern.
Through the opened door he caught vague glimpses in
the luminous fog of many spearmen gathered near--of excited gestures and the
wild waving of arms--of other figures that, half seen, ran swiftly here and
there.
"Speak up, you! What's the matter? What's
wanted?" demanded the engineer, keeping his automatic sighted at the
doorway. "What's all this infernal row? If your people there think they're
going to play horse with us, they're mightily mistaken! You tell them the first
man that steps through that door to get us never'll take another step! Quick!
What's up?"
"Come!" answered the aged man, his voice
high and tremulous above the howling tumult and the roar of the great gas-well.
"Come, now! The Lanskaarn--they attack! Come! I have spoken of your
weapons to my people. Come, fight for us! And verily, if we win--"
"What kind of a trick are you putting up on us,
anyhow?" roared Stern with thrice-heated rage. "None o' that now! If
your people want us, let 'em come in here and get us! But as for being fooled
that way and tricked into coming out--"
"I swear the truth!" supplicated the patriarch,
raising his withered hand on high. "If you come not, you must verily die,
oh, friends! But if you come--"
"Your own life's the first to pay for any
falsehood now."
"I give it gladly! The truth, I swear it! Oh,
listen, while there is still time, and come! Come!"
"What about it, girl?" cried Stern.
"Are you with me? Will you take a chance on it?"
"There's nothing else to do, Allan. They've got
us, anyway. And--and I think the old man's telling the truth. Hear that,
now--"
Off somewhere toward the fortification wall that edged
the beach, sounds of indisputable conflict were arising. The howls, cries,
shrieks, blows were not to be mistaken.
Stern's resolution was instant.
"I'm with you, old man!" he shouted.
"But remember your promise. And if you fail me--it's your finish!
"Come, Beta! Stick close to me! If we fall, we'll
go down together. It's both or neither. Come on--come on!"
Out into the glare of the great flame they issued
warily, out into the strangely glowing mist that covered the incredible village
as with a virescent pall.
Blinking, they stared about them, not knowing for a
moment whither to run or where to shoot.
But the patriarch had Stern by the arm now; and in the
midst of a confused and shouting mass of the Folk--all armed with spears and slings,
knobbed clubs and battle-maces--was pushing him out through the circle of those
ghastly posts whence dangled the headless skeletons.
"Where? Which way?" cried Stern. "Show
me--I'll do the rest!"
"Thither!" the old man directed, pointing
with one hand, while with the other he shoved the engineer forward. Blind
though he was, he knew the right direction. "Thither--to the wall!"
For a second Stern had the thought of leaving Beatrice
in the cell, where she might at least be safe from the keen peril of battle;
but greater dangers threatened her, he knew, in his absence.
At all hazards they must keep together. And with a
cry: "Come! Come--stick close to me!" once more he broke into a run
toward the sea.
Through the mists, which grew darker as he neared the
wall with Beatrice close beside him and the troop that followed them, he could
catch glimpses of the battle.
Every hut seemed to have poured forth its inhabitants
for now the plaza swarmed with life--men, women, event children, running this
way and that, some with weapons rushing towards the wall, others running wildly
hither and yon with unintelligible cries.
A spear pierced the vapors; it fell clashing at
Stern's feet and slid rattling away over the black stones, worn smooth and
greasy by uncounted feet.
Past him as he ran a man staggered; the whole side of
his head was bashed in, as though by a frightful blow from a mace. Up the
wounded man flung both arms, and fell twitching.
The fog covered him with its drifting folds. Stern
shuddered that Beatrice should see such hideous sights; but even now he almost
fell over another prostrate body, hideously wounded in the back, and still
kicking.
"Ready, now!" panted Stern. "Ready with
the pistols!"
Where was the patriarch?
He no longer knew. About him the Folk pressed, but
none molested either him or Beatrice.
In the confusion, the rush of the outskirts of battle,
he could have shot down a score of them, but he was reserving his fire. It
might, perhaps, be true, who could tell--that safety lay in battling now
against the Lanskaarn!
All at once the captives saw vague fire-lights in the
gloom--seemingly blazing comets of blue, that tossed and hurled and
disappeared.
Then came the nearer sound of shouting and the clash
of arms.
Stern, with the atavistic instincts of even the most
civilized man, scented the kill. And with a roar he whirled into the confused
and sweltering mass of men which now, emerging from the darkening mists, had
suddenly become visible by the uncanny light of the cressets on the wall.
Beside him the girl, her face aglow, nostrils dilated,
breath quick, held her revolver ready.
And then, quite suddenly, they found themselves at the
wall.
"Shoot! Shoot!" bellowed Stern, and let
drive, pointblank, at an ugly, grinning face that like a nightmare-vision all
at once projected over the crest. His own revolver-fire was echoed by hers. The
face vanished.
All down there, below him on the beach, he caught a
dim, confused impression of the attacking swarm.
Subconsciously he realized that he--he a man of the
twentieth century--was witnessing again a scene such as made the whole history
of the Middle Ages sanguinary--a siege, by force of human strength and rage!
Even as he vaguely saw the swift and supple men,
white-skinned yet larger than the Folk, which crowded the whole beach as far as
he could pierce the mists with his straining sight, he knew that here was a
battle of huge scope and terrible danger.
Up from the sea the attackers, the Lanskaarn, were
swarming, from their dimly seen canoes. The place was alive with them.
At the base of the wall they were clotted in dense
hordes; and siege-ladders were being raised; and now up the ladders the lithe
men of darkness were running like so many ants.
Automatically as the mechanism of his own gun which he
pumped into that dense mass as fast as he could pull trigger--while beside him
the girl was shooting hard and straight, as well--he seemed to be recording
these wonderful impressions.
Here he caught a glimpse of a siege-ladder hurled
backward by the Folk, backward and down to the beach. Amid frightful yells and
screams it fell; and a score of crushed and mangled men lay writhing there
under the uncanny glare of the cressets.
There he saw fire-bales being hurled down from the
walls--these, the comet-like apparitions he had seen from a distance--hurled,
blazing, right into the brown of the mob.
Beyond, a party had scaled the wall, and there the
fight was hand to hand--with gruntings, thrustings of spears, slashings of long
knives that dripped red and cut again and rose and fell with hideous
regularity!
He jacked his pistol full of shells once more and
thrust it into the girl's hand--for she, excited beyond all control, was
snapping the hammer of her weapon on empty steel.
"Give it to 'em! Shoot! Kill!" he yelled.
"Our only chance now! If they--get in--we're dead!"
He snatched her weapon, reloaded, and again rained the
steel-jacketed bolts of death against the attackers.
In the tumult and wild maelstrom of the fight the
revolvers' crackling seemed to produce little effect. If Stern expected that
this unknown weapon would at once bring panic and quick victory he reckoned
without the berserker madness and the stern mettle of this horde of raging
Lanskaarn.
White men, like himself, they yielded not; but with
strange cries and frightful yells, pressed on and on, up to the walls, and up
the ladders ever; and now came flights of spears, hissing through the dark
air--and now smooth black rocks from the beach, flung with terrible strength
and skill by the slingers below, mowed down the defenders.
Here, there, men of the Folk were falling, pierced by
the iron spears, shattered by the swift and heavy rocks.
The place was becoming a shambles where the blood of
attackers and attacked mingled horribly in the gloom.
One ladder, pushed outward, dragged half a dozen of
the Merucaans with it; and at the bottom of the wall a circling eddy of the
Lanskaarn despatched the fighting Folkmen who had been hauled to their
destruction by the grappling besiegers.
Blows, howls and screams, hurtling fire-bales and
great rocks flung from above--the rocks he had already noted laid along the
inside of the wall--these, and the smell of blood and fire, the horrid, sweaty
contact of struggling bodies, the press and jam of the battle that surged round
them, all gave Stern a kaleidoscopic picture of war--war as it once was, in the
long ago--war, naked and terrible, such as he had never even dreamed!
But, mad with the lust of the kill, he heeded nothing
now.
"Shoot! Shoot!" he kept howling, beside
himself; and, tearing open the bandoliers where lay his cartridges, he crammed
them with feverish fingers into the girl's weapon and his own--weapons now
burning hot with the quick, long-continued firing.
The battle seemed to dance, to waver there before his
eyes, in the haze of mist and smoke and stifling air. The dark scene, blue-lit
by the guttering torches, grew ever more sanguinary, more incredibly hideous.
And still the attackers swarmed along the walls and up them, in front and on both
sides, till the swirling mists hid them and the defenders from view.
He heard Beatrice cry out with pain. He saw her
stagger and fall back.
To her he leaped.
"Wounded?" he gasped.
She answered nothing, but fell limp.
"God of Battles!" he howled.
"Revenge!"
He snatched her automatic from beneath the trampling,
crowding feet; he bore her back, away from the thick press. And in the shelter
of a massive hut he laid her down.
Then, stark-mad, he turned and leaped into the battle-line
that swayed and screamed along the wall.
Critical now the moment. In half a dozen places the
besiegers had got their ladders planted. And, while dense masses of the
Lanskaarn--unminding fire-balls and boulders rained down upon them--held these
ladders firm, up the attackers came with a rush.
Stern saw the swing and crushing impact of the maces
and iron clubs; he saw the stabbing of the spears on both sides.
Slippery and red the parapet became.
Men, killed there, crawled and struggled and fell both
outward and inside, and were trampled in indiscriminate heaps, besieged and
besiegers alike, still clawing, tearing, howling even in their death agony.
Now one of the ladders was down--another fell, with
horrid tumult--a third!
An automatic in each hand, Stern scrambled to the
glairy summit of the fortification.
A mace swung at him. He leaped sidewise, firing as he
sprang. With a scream the ax-man doubled up and fell, and vanished in the gloom
below the wall.
Raking the parapet with a hail of lead, he mowed down
the attackers on top of the fourth ladder. With a mighty shout, those inside
staved it away with iron grapples. It, too, swayed drunkenly, held below,
pushed madly above. It reeled--then fell with a horrible, grinding crash!
"Hurray, boys! One more down! Give 'em
Hell!" he screamed. "One more!"
He turned. Subconsciously he felt that his right hand
was wet, and hot, and dripping, but he felt no pain.
"One more! Now for another!"
And in the opposite direction along the wall he
emptied his other revolver.
Before the stinging swarm of the steel-jacketed wasps
of death the Lanskaarn writhed and melted down with screams such as Dante in
his wildest vision never even dreamed.
Stern heard a great howl of triumph break from the
mass of defenders fighting to overthrow the fifth ladder.
"Hold 'em! Hold 'em!" he bellowed.
"Wait till I load up again--I'll--"
A swift and crashing impact dashed sheaves of radiant
fire through his brain.
Everything leaped and whirled.
He flung up both hands.
Clutching at empty air, then suddenly at the slippery
parapet which seemed to have leaped up and struck him in the face, he fell.
Came a strange numbness, then a stabbing pain.
And darkness quenched all knowledge and all
consciousness.
CHAPTER XXIX
SHADOWS OF WAR
A blue and flickering gleam of light, dim, yet
persistent, seemed to enhalo a woman's face; and as Stern's weary eyes opened
under languid lids, closed, then opened again, the wounded engineer smiled in
his weakness.
"Beatrice!" he whispered, and tried to stretch
a hand to her, as she sat beside his bed of seaweed covered with the coarse
brown fabric. "Oh, Beatrice! Is this--is this
another--hallucination?"
She took the hand and kissed it, then bent above him
and kissed him again, this time fair upon the lips.
"No, boy," she answered. "No
hallucination, but reality! You're all right now--and I'm all right! You've had
a little fever and--and--well, don't ask any questions, that's all. Here, drink
this now and go to sleep!"
She set a massive golden bowl to his mouth, and very
gently raised his head.
Unquestioningly he drank, as though he had been a
child and she his mother. The liquid, warm and somewhat sweet, had just a tang
of some new taste that he had never known. Singularly vitalizing it seemed,
soothing yet full of life. With a sigh of contentment, despite the numb ache in
his right temple, he lay back and once more closed his eyes. Never had he felt
such utter weakness. All his forces seemed drained and spent; even to breathe
was very difficult.
Feebly he raised his hand to his head.
"Bandaged?" he whispered. "What does
that mean?"
"It means you're to go to sleep now!" she
commanded. "That's all--just go to sleep!"
He lay quiet a moment, but sleep would not come. A
score, a hundred thoughts confusedly crowded his brain.
And once more looking up at her in the dim blue gloom
of the hut where they were, he breathed a question:
"Were you badly hurt, dear, in--in the
battle?"
"No, Allan. Just stunned, that's all. Not even
wounded. Be quiet now or I'll scold!"
He raised his arms to her and, weak though he was,
took her to his breast and held her tight, tight.
"Thank God!" he whispered. "Oh, I love
you! I love you so! If you'd been killed--"
She felt his tears hot upon his wasted cheeks, and
unloosened his arms.
"There, there!" she soothed him.
"You'll get into a fever again if you don't lie still and try not to
think! You--"
"When was it? Yesterday?" he interrupted.
"Sh-h-h-h! No more questions now."
"But I want to know! And what happened to me? And
the--the Lanskaarn? What about them? And--"
"Heavens, but you're inquisitive for a man that's
just missed--I mean, that's been as sick as you have!" she exclaimed,
taking his head in both hands and gazing down at him with eyes more deeply
tender than he had ever seen them. "Now do be good, boy, and don't worry
about all these things, but go to sleep--there's a dear. And when you wake up
next time--"
"No, no!" he insisted with passionate
eagerness. "I'm not that kind! I'm not a child, Beta! I've got to know--I
can't go to sleep without knowing. Tell me a little about it, about what
happened, and then--then I'll sleep as long as you say!"
She pondered a moment, weighing matters, then made
answer:
"All right, boy, only remember your
promise!"
"I will."
"Good! Now listen. I'll tell you what the old man
told me, for naturally I don't remember the last part of the fight any better
than you do.
"I was struck by a flying stone, and--well, it
wasn't anything serious. It just stunned me for a while. I came to in a
hut."
"Where I carried you, dearest, just before
I--"
"Yes, I know, just before the battle-ax--"
"Was it an ax that hit me?"
"Yes. But it was only a glancing blow. Your long
hair helped save you, too. But even so--"
"Skull cracked?"
"No, I guess concussion of the brain would be the
right term for it." She took his groping hand in both her own warm, strong
ones and kissed it tenderly. "But before you fell, your raking fire along
the wall there--you understand--"
"Cleaned 'em out, eh?" he queried eagerly.
"That's about it. It turned the tide against the
Lanskaarn. And after that--I guess it was just butchery. I don't know, of
course, and the old man hasn't wanted to tell me much; but anyway, the ladders
all went down, and the Folk here made a sortie from the gate, down the
causeway, and--and--"
"And they've got a lot more of those infernal
skeletons hanging on the poles by the fire?" he concluded in a rasping
whisper.
She nodded, then kept a minute's silence.
"Did any of 'em get away in their canoes?"
"A few. But in all their history the Folk never
won such a victory. Oh, it was glorious, glorious! And all because of
you!"
"And you, dear!"
"And now--now," she went on, "we're not
prisoners any more, but--"
"Everything coming our way? Is that it?"
"That's it. They dragged you out, after the
battle, from under a big heap of bodies under the wall."
"Outside or inside?"
"Outside, on the beach. They brought you in, for
dead, boy. And I guess they had an awful time about you, from what I've found
out--"
"Big powwow, and all that?"
"Yes. If you'd died, they'd have gone on a huge
war expedition out to the islands, wherever those are, and simply wiped out the
rest of the Lanskaarn. But--"
"I'm glad I didn't," he interrupted.
"No more killing from now on! We want all the living humans we can get; we
need 'em in our business!"
Stern was growing excited; the girl had to calm him
once more.
"Be quiet, Allan, or I'll leave you this minute
and you shan't know another thing!" she threatened.
"All right, I'll be good," he promised.
"What next? I'm the Big Chief now, of course? What I say now goes?"
She answered nothing, but a troubled wrinkle drew
between her perfect brows. For a moment there was silence, save for the dull
and distant roaring of the flame.
By the glow of the bluish light in the hut, Stern
looked up at her. Never had she seemed so beautiful. The heavy masses of her
hair, parted in the middle and fastened with gold pins such as the Folk wore,
framed her wonderful face with twilight shadows. He saw she was no longer clad
in fur, but in a loose and flowing mantle of the brown fabric, caught up below
the breast with a gold-clasped girdle.
"Oh, Beatrice," he breathed, "kiss me
again!"
She kissed him; but even in the caress he sensed an
unvoiced anxiety, a hidden fear.
"What's wrong?" asked he anxiously.
"Nothing, dear. Now you must be quiet! You're in
the patriarch's house here. You're safe--for the present, and--"
"For the present? What do you mean?"
"See here." the girl threatened, "if
you don't stop asking questions, and go to sleep again, I'll leave you
alone!"
"In that case I promise!"
And now obedient, he closed his eyes, relaxed, and let
her soothingly caress him. But still another thought obtruded on his mind.
"Beatrice?"
"Yes, dearest."
"How long ago was that fight?"
"Oh, a little while. Never mind now!"
"Yes, but how long? Two days? Four? Five?"
"They don't have days down here," she
evaded.
"I know. But reckoning our way--five days?"
"Nearer ten, Allan."
"What? But then--"
The girl withdrew her hand from him and arose.
"I see it's no use, Allan," she said
decisively. "So long as I stay with you you'll ask questions and excite
yourself. I'm going! Then you'll have to keep still!"
"Beta! Beta!" he implored. "I'll be
good! Don't leave me--you mustn't!"
"All right; but if you ask me another question, a
single one, mind, I'll truly go!"
"Just give me your hand, girlie, that's all! Come
here--sit down beside me again--so!"
He turned on his side, on the rude couch of coarse
brown fabric stuffed with dried seaweed, laid his hollow cheek upon her hand,
and gave a deep sigh.
"Now, I'm off," he murmured. "Only,
don't leave me, Beta!"
For half an hour after his deep, slow breathing told
that the wounded man was sleeping soundly--half an hour as time was measured
where the sun shone, for down in the black depths of the abyss all such
divisions were as naught, Beatrice sat lovingly and tenderly beside the
primitive bed. Her right palm beneath his face, she stroked his long hair and
his wan cheek with her other hand; and now she smiled with pride and
reminiscence, now a grave, troubled look crossed her features.
The light, a fiber wick burning in a stone cup of oil
upon a stone-slab table in the center of the hut, "uttered unsteadily,
casting huge and dancing shadows up the black walls.
"Oh, my beloved!" whispered the girl, and
bent above him till the loosened sheaves of her hair swept his face. "My
love! Only for you, where should I be now? With you, how could I be afraid? And
yet--"
She turned at a sound from a narrow door opposite the
larger one that gave upon the plaza, a door, like the other, closed by a heavy
curtain platted of seaweed.
There, holding the curtain back, stood the blind
patriarch. His hut, larger than most in the strange village, boasted two rooms.
Now from the inner one, where he had been resting, he came to speak with
Beatrice.
"Peace, daughter!" said the old man.
"Peace be unto you. He sleeps?"
"Yes, father. He's much better now, I think. His
constitution is simply marvelous."
"Verily, he is strong. But far stronger are those
terrible and wonderful weapons of yours! If our Folk only had such!"
"You're better off without them. But of course,
if you want to understand them, he can explain them in due time. Those, and
endless other things!"
"I believe that is truth." The patriarch
advanced into the room, and for a minute stood by the bedside with venerable
dignity. "The traditions, I remember, tell of so many strange matters. I
shall know them, every one. All in time, all in time!"
"Your simple medicines, down here, are
wonderful," said the girl admiringly. "What did you put into that
draught I gave him to make him sleep this way?"
"Only the steeped root of our n'gahar plant, my
daughter--a simple weed brought up from the bottom of this sea by our strong
divers. It is nothing, nothing."
Came silence again. The aged man sat down upon a
curved stone bench that followed the contour of the farther wall. Presently he
spoke once more.
"Daughter," said he, "it is now ten
sleeping--times--nights, the English speech calls them, if I remember what my
grandfather taught me--since the battle. And my son, here, still lies weak and
sick. I go soon to get still other plants for him. Stronger plants, to make him
well and powerful again. For there is haste now--haste!"
"You mean--Kamrou?"
"Yea, Kamrou! I know the temper of that evil man
better than any other. He and his boats may return from the great fisheries in
the White Gulf beyond the vortex at any time, and--"
"But, father, after all we've done for the
village here, and especially after what Allan's done? After this wonderful
victory, I can't believe--"
"You do not know that man!" exclaimed the
patriarch. "I know him! Rather would he and his slay every living thing in
this community than yield one smallest atom of power to any other."
He arose wearily and gathered his mantle all about
him, then reached for his staff that leaned beside the outer door.
"Peace!" he exclaimed. "Ah, when shall
we have peace and learning and a better life again? The teaching and the
learning of the English speech and all the arts you know, now lost to us--to
us, the abandoned Folk in the abyss? When? When?"
He raised the curtain to depart; but even then he
paused once more, and turned to her.
"Verily, you have spoken truth," said he,
"when you have said that all, all here are with us, with you and this
wondrous man now lying weak and wounded in my house. But Kamrou--is different.
Alas, you know him not--you know him not!
"Watch well over my son, here! Soon must he grow
strong again. Soon, soon! Soon, against the coming of Kamrou. For if the chief
returns and my son be weak still, then woe to him, to you, to me! Woe to us
all! Woe, Woe!"
The curtain fell. The patriarch was gone. Outside,
Beatrice heard the click-click-click of his iron staff upon the smooth and
flinty rock floor.
And to her ears, mingled with the far roaring of the
flame, drifted the words:
"Woe, woe to him! Woe to us all--woe--woe!"
CHAPTER XXX
EXPLORATION
Under the ministering care of Beatrice and the
patriarch, Stern's convalescence was rapid. The old man, consumed with terror
lest the dreaded chief, Kamrou, return ere the stranger should have wholly
recovered, spent himself in efforts to hasten the cure. And with deft skill he
brewed his potions, made his salves, and concocted revivifying medicines from
minerals which only he--despite his blindness--knew how to compound.
The blow that had so shrewdly clipped Stern's skull
must have inevitably killed, as an ox is dropped in the slaughter-house, a man
less powerfully endowed with splendid energies and full vitality.
Even Stern's wonderful physique had a hard fight to
regain its finely ripened forces. But day by day he gained--we must speak of
days, though there were only sleeping-times and waking-times--until at length,
upon the fifth, he was able for the first time to leave his seaweed bed and sit
a while weakly on the patriarch's bench, with Beatrice beside him.
Hand in hand they sat, while Stern asked many questions,
and the old man, smiling, answered such as he saw fit. But of Kamrou neither he
nor the girl yet breathed one syllable.
Next day and the next, and so on every day, Stern was
able to creep out of the hut, then walk a little, and finally--sometimes alone,
sometimes with one or both his nurses--go all among the wondering and admiring
Folk, eagerly watch their labors of all kinds, try to talk with them in the few
halting words he was able to pick up, and learn many things of use and deepest
interest. A grave and serious Folk they were, almost without games or sports,
seemingly without religious rites of any kind, and lacking festivals such as on
the surface every barbarous people had always had.
Their fisheries, netmaking, weaving, ironwork, sewing
with long iron needles and coarse fiber-thread keenly interested him.
Accustomed now to the roaring of the flame, he seemed no longer to hear this
sound which had at first so sorely disconcerted him.
He found out nothing concerning their gold and copper
supply; but their oil, he discovered, they collected in pits below the southern
wall of the village, where it accumulated from deep fissures in the rock. With
joy he noted the large number of children, for this bespoke a race still
vigorous and with all sorts of possibilities when trained.
Odd little, silent creatures the children were,
white-faced and white-haired, playless and grave, laboring like their elders
even from the age of five or six. They followed him about in little troops,
watching him soberly; but when he turned and tried to talk with them they
scurried off like frightened rabbits and vanished in the always-open huts of
stone.
Thoroughly he explored every nook and corner of the
village. As soon as his strength permitted, he even penetrated parts of the
surrounding region. He thought at times to detect among the Folk who followed
and surrounded him, unless he expressly waved them away, some hard looks here
or there. Instinctively he felt that a few of the people, here one, there one,
still held hate and bitterness against him as an alien and an interloper.
But the mass of them now outwardly seemed so eager to
serve and care for him, so quick to obey, so grateful almost to adoration, that
Stern felt ashamed of his own suspicions and of the revolver that he still
always carried whenever outside the patriarch's hut.
And in his heart he buried his fears as unworthy
delusions, as the imaginings of a brain still hurt. The occasional black looks
of one or another of the people, or perchance some sullen, muttered word, he
set down as the crude manners of a primitive and barbarous race.
How little, despite all his skill and wit, he could
foresee the truth!
To Beatrice he spoke no word of his occasional
uneasiness, nor yet to the old man. Yet one of the very first matters he
attended to was the overhauling of the revolvers, which had been rescued out of
the melee of the battle and been given to the patriarch, who had kept them with
a kind of religious devotion.
Stern put in half a day cleaning and oiling the weapons.
He found there still remained a hundred and six cartridges in his bandolier and
the girl's. These he now looked upon as his most precious treasure. He divided
them equally with Beatrice, and bade her never go out unless she had her weapon
securely belted on.
Their life at home was simple in the extreme. Beatrice
had the inner room of the hut for her own. Stern and the patriarch occupied the
outer one. And there, often far into the hours of the sleeping-time, when
Beatrice was resting within, he and the old man talked of the wonders of the
past, of the outer world, of old traditions, of the abyss, and a thousand
fascinating speculations.
Particularly did the old man seek to understand some
notions of the lost machine on which the strangers had come from the outer
world; but, though Stern tried most patiently to make him grasp the principle
of the mechanism, he failed. This talk, however, set Stern thinking very
seriously about the biplane; and he asked a score of questions relative to the
qualities of the native oil, to currents in the sea, locations, depths, and so
on.
All that he could learn he noted mentally with the
precision of the trained engineer.
With accurate scientific observation he at once began
to pile up information about the people and the village, the sea, the
abyss--everything, in fact, that he could possibly learn. He felt that
everything depended on a sound understanding of the topography and nature of
the incredible community where he and the girl now found themselves--perhaps
for a life stay.
Beatrice and he were clad now like the Folk; wore
their hair twisted in similar fashion and fastened with heavy pins or spikes of
gold, cleverly graven; were shod with sandals like theirs, made of the skin of
a shark-like fish; and carried torches everywhere they went--torches of dried
weed, close-packed in a metal basket and impregnated with oil.
This oil particularly interested Stern. Its peculiar
blue flame struck him as singular in the extreme. It had, moreover, the
property of burning a very long time without being replenished. A wick immersed
in it was never consumed or even charred, though the heat produced was intense.
"If I can't set up some kind of apparatus to
distil that into gas-engine fuel, I'm no engineer, that's all," said Stern
to himself. "All in time, all in time--but first I must take thought how
to raise the old Pauillac from the sea."
Already the newcomers' lungs had become absolutely
accustomed to the condensed air, so that they breathed with entire ease and
comfort. They even found this air unusually stimulating and revivifying,
because of its greater amount of oxygen to the cubic unit; and thus they were
able to endure greater exertions than formerly on the surface of the earth.
The air never grew foul. A steady current set in the
direction that Stern's pocket-compass indicated as north. The heat no longer
oppressed them; they were even getting used to the constant fog and to the
darkness; and already could see far better than a fortnight previously, when
they had arrived.
Stern never could have believed he could learn to do
without sunlight and starlight and the free winds of heaven; but now he found
that even these were not essential to human life.
Certain phenomena excited his scientific interest very
keenly--such as the source of the great gas-flare in the village, the rhythmic
variations in the air-current, the small but well-marked tides on the sea, the
diminished force of gravitation--indicating a very great depth, indeed, toward
the center of the earth--the greater density of the seawater, the heavy
vaporization, certain singular rock-strata of the cliffs near the village, and
many other matters.
All these Stern promised himself he would investigate
as soon as time and strength allowed.
The village itself, he soon determined, was about half
a mile long and perhaps a quarter-mile across, measuring from the fortified
gate directly back to the huge flame near the dungeon and the place of bones.
He found, incidentally, that more than one hundred and
sixty freshly boiled and headless skeletons were now dangling from the iron
rods, but wisely held his peace concerning them. Nor did the patriarch
volunteer any information about the loss of life of the Folk in the battle.
Stern estimated there were now some fifteen hundred people, men, women and
children, still remaining in the community; but since he knew nothing of their
number when he had arrived, he could not form more than a rough idea of the
total slaughter.
He found, however, on one of his excursions outside
the walls--which at a distance of two hundred and fifty yards from the sea
stretched in a vast irregular arc abutting at each end against the cliff--the
graveyard of the Folk.
This awesome and peculiar place consisted of heaps of
smooth black boulders piled upon the dead, each heap surmounted by a stone with
some crude emblem cut upon it, such as a circle, a square, a cluster of dots,
even the rude figure of a bird, a fish, a tortoise, and so on.
Certain of the figures he could make nothing of; but
he concluded rightly they were totem-signs, and that they represented all which
still remained of the art of writing among those barbarous remnants of the once
dominant, powerful and highly cultured race of Americans.
He counted more than two hundred freshly built piles
of stone, but whether any of these contained more than one body of the Folk he
could, of course, not tell. Allowing, however, that only two hundred of the
Folk and one hundred and sixty of the Lanskaarn had fallen, he readily
perceived that the battle had been, for intensity and high percentage of
killing, sanguinary beyond all battles of his own time.
Under the walls, too, the vast numbers of boulders
which had been thrown down, the debris of broken weapons, long and jaggedly
barbed iron spear-points and so on, indicated the military ardor and the
boldness of the fighting men he now had to dominate and master.
And in his soul he knew the problem of taming,
civilizing, saving this rude and terrible people, was certainly the very
greatest ever given into the hands of one man and one woman, since time began!
Along the beach he found a goodly number of empty
revolver-shells. These he picked up, for possible reloading, in case he should
be able at some later time to manufacture powder and some fulminating mixture.
He asked the patriarch to have search made for all
such empty shells. The Folk eagerly and intelligently cooperated.
With interest he watched the weird sight of scores of
men with torches rolling the great stones about, seeking for the precious
cartridges. From the beach they tossed the shells up to him as he walked along
the top of the fortifications so lately the scene of horrible combat; and
despite him his heart swelled with pride in his breast, to be already directing
them in some concerted labor, even so slight as this.
Save for some such interruption, the life of the
community had now settled back into its accustomed routine.
With diminished numbers, but indomitable energy, the
Folk went on with their daily tasks. Stern concluded the great funeral
ceremony, which must have taken place over the fallen defenders, and the
horrible rites attending the decapitation, boiling, and hanging up of the
trophies of war, the Lanskaarn skeletons, certainly must have formed a series
of barbaric pictures more ghastly than any drug-fiend's most diabolical
nightmare. He thanked God that the girl had been spared these frightful scenes.
He could get the old man to tell him nothing
concerning these terrific ceremonies. But he discovered, some thirty yards to
southward of the circle of stone posts, a boiling geyserlike pool in the rock
floor, whence the thick steam continually arose, and which at times burst up in
terrific seething.
Here his keen eye detected traces of the recent rites.
Here, he knew, the enemies' corpses--and perhaps even some living captives--had
been boiled.
And as he stood on the sloping, slippery edge of the
great natural caldron, a pit perhaps forty feet in diameter--its margins all
worn smooth and greasy by innumerable feet--he shuddered in his soul.
"Good God!" thought he. "Imagine being
flung in there!"
What was it, premonition or sheer repulsion, that
caused him, brave as he was, to turn away with a peculiar and intense horror?
Try as he might, he could not banish from his mind the
horrible picture of that boiling vat as it must have looked, crammed to the lip
with the tumbling, crowding bodies of the dead.
He seemed still to hear the groans of the wounded, the
shrieks of the prisoners being dragged thither, being hurled into the spumy,
scalding water.
And in his heart he half despaired of ever bringing
back to civilization a people so wild and warlike, so cruel, so barbarous as
these abandoned People of the Abyss.
Could he have guessed what lay in store for Beatrice
and himself should Kamrou, returning, find them still there, a keener and
deadlier fear would have possessed his soul.
But of Kamrou he knew nothing yet. Even the chief's
name he had not heard. And the patriarch, for reasons of his own, had not yet
told the girl a tenth part of the threatening danger.
Even what he had told, he had forbidden her--for
Allan's own sake--to let him know.
Thus in a false and fancied sense of peace and calm
security, Stern made his observations, laid his plans, and day by day once more
came back toward health and strength again.
And day by day the unknown peril drew upon them both.
CHAPTER XXXI
ESCAPE?
Who could, indeed, suspect aught of this threatening
danger? Outwardly all now was peaceful. Each waking-time the fishers put forth
in their long boats of metal strips covered with fish-skins. Every
sleeping-time they returned laden with the fish that formed the principal
staple of the community.
The weaving of seaweed fiber, the making of mats,
blankets, nets and slings went on as probably for many centuries before.
At forges here and there, where gas-wells blazed, the
smiths of the Folk shaped their iron implements or worked most skillfully in
gold and copper; and the ringing of the hammers, through the dim-lit gloom
around the strange blue fires, formed a chorus fit for Vulcan or the tempering
of Siegfried's master-sword.
Stern took occasion to visit many of the huts. They
were all similar. As yet he could not talk freely with the Folk but he took
keen interest in examining their household arrangements, which were of the
simplest. Stone benches and tables, beds of weed, and coarse blankets, utensils
of metal or bone--these completed the total.
Stern groaned inwardly at thought of all the arts he
still must teach them before they should once more even approximate the
civilization whence they had fallen since the great catastrophe.
Behind the village rose a gigantic black cliff, always
dripping and running with water from the condensation of the fogs. This water
the Folk very sensibly and cleverly drained down into large tanks cut in the
rock floor. The tanks, always full, furnished their entire supply for drinking
and cooking. Flat, warm and tasteless though it was, it seemed reasonably pure.
None of this water was ever used for bathing. What little bathing the Folk ever
indulged in took place at certain points along the shore, where the fine and
jet-black sand made a good bottom.
Along the base of the vast cliff, which, broken and
jagged, rose gleaming in the light of the great flame till it gradually faded
in the luminous mist, they carried on their primitive cooking.
Over cracks in the stone, whence gas escaped steadily
and burned with a blue flicker, hung copper pots fairly well fashioned, though
of bizarre shapes. Here the communal cuisine went steadily forward, tended by
the strange, white-haired, long-cloaked women; and odors of boiling and of
frying, over hot iron plates, rose and mingled with the shifting, swirling
vapors from the sea.
Beatrice tried, a few times, to take some part in this
work. She was eager to teach the women better methods, but at last the
patriarch told her to let them alone, as she was only irritating them. Unlike
the men, who almost worshipped the revolvers, and would have handled them, and
even quickly learned to shoot, if Stern had allowed, the women clung sternly to
their old ways.
The patriarch had a special cooking place made for
Beatrice, and got her a lot of the clumsy utensils. Here she busied herself
preparing food for Allan and herself--and a strange sight that was, the
American girl, dressed in her long, brown robe, her thick hair full of gold
pins, cooking over natural gas in the Abyss, with heavy copper pans and kettles
of incredible forms!
Almost at once, the old man abandoned the native
cookery and grew devoted to hers. Anything that told him of the other and
better times, the days about which he dreamed continually in his blindness, was
very dear to him.
The Merucaans were, truly, barbarously dull about
their ways of preparing food. Day after day they never varied. The menu was
limited in the extreme. Stern felt astonished that a race could maintain itself
in such fine condition and keep so splendidly energetic, so keen and warlike,
on such a miserable diet. The food must, he thought, possess nutritive
qualities far beyond any expectation.
Fish was the basis of all--a score of strange and
unnatural-looking varieties, not one of which he had ever seen in surface
waters. For the most part, they were gray or white; two or three species showed
some rudiments of coloring. All were blind, with at most some faint vestigia of
eye-structure, wholly degenerated and useless.
"Speaking of evolution," said the engineer,
one day, to Beatrice, as they stood on the black boulder-beach and watched the
fishermen toss their weird freight out upon the slippery stones--"these
fish here give a magnificent example of it. You see, where the use for an organ
ceases, the organ itself eventually perishes. But take these creatures and put
them back into the surface-ocean--"
"The eyes would develop again?" she queried.
"Precisely! And so with everything! Take the Folk
themselves, for instance. Now that they've been living here a thousand or
fifteen hundred years, away from the sunlight, all the protecting pigmentation
that used to shield the human race from the actinic sun rays has gradually
faded out. So they've got white hair, colorless skins, and pinkish eyes. Out in
the world again, they'd gradually grow normal again. How I wish some of my
old-time opponents to the evolutionary theory could stand here with me to-day
in the Abyss! I bet a million I could mighty soon upset their nonsense!"
Such of the fish as were not eaten in their natural
state were salted down in vats hollowed in the rock, at the far end of the
village. Still others were dried, strung by the gills on long cords of seaweed
fiber, and hung in rows near the great flame. There were certain days for this
process.
At other times no fish were allowed anywhere near the
fire. Why this was, Stern could not discover. Even the patriarch would not tell
him.
Beside the fish, several seaweeds were cooked and
eaten in the form of leaves, bulbs, and roots, which some of the Folk dived for
or dragged from the bottom with iron grapples. All the weeds tasted alike to
Stern and Beatrice; but the old man assured them there were really great
differences, and that certain of them were rare delicacies.
A kind of huge, misshapen sea-turtle was the chief
prize of all. Three were taken during the strangers' first fortnight in the
Abyss; but the fortunate boat-crews that brought them in devoured them,
refusing to share even a morsel with any other of the people.
Stern and the girl were warned against tasting any
weed, fish, or mussel on their own initiative. The patriarch told them certain
deadly species existed--species used only in preparing venoms in which to dip
the spear and lance-points of the fighting men.
Beyond these foods the only others were the flesh and
eggs of the highly singular birds the strangers had seen on their first entry
into the village. These tasted rankly of fish, and were at first very
disagreeable. But gradually the newcomers were able to tolerate them when
cooked by Beatrice in as near an approximation to modern methods as she could
manage.
The birds made a peculiar feature of this weird,
uncanny life. Long of leg, wattled and web-footed, with ungainly bodies,
sparsely feathered, and bare necks, they were, Stern thought, absolutely the
most hideous and unreal-appearing creatures he had ever seen. In size they
somewhat resembled an albatross. The folk called them kalamakee. They were so
fully domesticated as to make free with all the refuse of the village and even
to waddle into the huts in croaking search of plunder; yet they nested among
the broken rocks along the cliff to northward of the place.
There they built clumsy structures of weed for their
eggs and their incredibly ugly young. Every day at a certain time they took
their flight out into the fog, with hoarse and mournful cries, and stayed the
equivalent of some three hours.
Their number Stern could only estimate, but it must
have mounted well toward five or six thousand. One of the most singular sights
the newcomers had in the Abyss was the homecoming of the flight, the feeding of
the young--by discharging half-digested fish--and the subsequent noisy powwow
of the waddling multitude. All this, heard and seen by torch-light, produced a
picture weirdly fascinating.
Fish, weeds, sea-fowl--these constituted the sum tote
of food sources for the Folk. There existed neither bread, flesh--meat, milk,
fruit, sweets, or any of the abundant vegetables of the surface. Nor yet was
there any plant which might be dried and smoked, like tobacco, nor any whence
alcohol might be distilled. The folk had neither stimulants nor narcotics.
Stern blessed fate for this. If any such had existed,
he knew human nature well enough to feel certain that, there in the eternal
gloom and fog, the race would soon have given itself over to excesses and have
miserably perished.
"To my mind," he said to Beatrice, one time,
"the survival of our race under such conditions is one of the most
marvelous things possibly to be conceived." Out toward the black and
mist-hidden sea that rolled forever in the gloom he gestured from the wall
where they were standing.
"Imagine!" he continued. "No
sunlight--for centuries! Without that, nothing containing chlorophyl can grow;
and science has always maintained that human life must depend, at last
analysis, on chlorophyl, on the green plants containing it. No grains, no soil,
or agriculture, no mammals even! Why, the very Eskimo have to depend on mammals
for their life!
"But these people here, and the Lanskaarn, and
whatever other unknown tribes live in this vast Abyss, have to get their entire
living from this tepid sea. They don't even possess wood to work with! If this
doesn't prove the human race all but godlike in its skill and courage and
adaptability, what does?"
She stood a while in thought, plainly much troubled.
It was evident her mind was far from following his analysis. At last she spoke.
"Allan!" she suddenly exclaimed.
"Well?"
"It's still out there somewhere, isn't it? Out
there, in those black, unsounded depths--the biplane?"
"You mean--"
"Why couldn't we raise it again, and--"
"Of course! You know I mean to try as soon as I
have these people under some control so I can get them to cooperate with
me--get them to understand!"
"Not till then? No escape till then? But, Allan,
it may be too late!" she burst out with passionate eagerness.
Puzzled, he turned and peered at her in the bluish
gloom.
"Escape?" he queried. "Too late? Why,
what do you mean? Escape from what? You mean that we should leave these people,
here, before we've even begun to teach them? Before we've discovered some way
out of the Abyss for them? Leave everything that means the regeneration of the
human race, the world? Why--"
A touch upon his arm interrupted him.
He turned quickly to find the patriarch standing at
his side. Silent and dim through the fog, he had come thither with sandaled
feet, and now stood with a strange, inscrutable smile on his long-bearded lips.
"What keeps my children here," asked he,
"when already it is long past the sleeping-hour? Verily, this should not
be! Come," he commanded. "Come away! To-morrow will be time for
speech."
And, giving them no further opportunity to talk of
this new problem, he spoke of other matters, and so led them back to his
hospitable hut of stone.
But for a long time Allan could not sleep. Weird
thoughts and new suspicions now aroused, he lay and pondered many things.
What if, after all, this seeming friendliness and
homage of the savage Folk were but a mask?
A vision of the boiling geyser-pit rose to his memory.
And the dreams he dreamed that night were filled with strange, confused,
disquieting images.
CHAPTER XXXII
PREPARATIONS
He woke to hear a drumming roar that seemed to fill
the spaces of the Abyss with a wild tumult such as he had never known--a steady
thunder, wonderful and wild.
Starting up, he saw by the dim light that the
patriarch was sitting there upon the stone, thoughtful and calm, apparently
giving no heed to this singular tumult. But Stern, not understanding, put a
hasty question.
"What's all this uproar, father? I never heard
anything like that up in the surface-world!"
"That? Only the rain, my son," the old man
answered. "Had you no rain there? Verily, traditions tell of rain among
the people of that day!"
"Rain? Merciful Heavens!" exclaimed the
engineer. Two minutes later he was at the fortifications, gazing out across the
beach at the sea.
It would be hard to describe accurately the picture
that met his eyes. The heaviest cloudburst that ever devastated a countryside
was but a trickle compared with this monstrous, terrifying deluge.
Some five hundred miles of dense and saturated vapors,
suddenly condensing, were precipitating the water, not in drops but in great
solid masses, thundering, bellowing, crashing as they struck the sea, which,
churned to a deep and raging froth, flung mighty waves even against the massive
walls of the village itself.
The fog was gone now; but in its place the rushing
walls of water blotted out the scene. Yet not a drop was falling in the village
itself. Stern wondered for a moment. But, looking up, he understood.
The vast cliff was now dimly visible in the glare of
the great flame, the steady roar of which was drowned by the tumult of the
rain.
Stern saw that the village was sheltered under a
tremendous overhang of the black rock; he understood why the ancestors of the
Folk, coming to these depths after incredible adventurings and long-forgotten
struggles, had settled here. Any exposed location would have been fatal; no hut
could have withstood the torrent, nor could any man, caught in it, have escaped
drowning outright.
Amazed and full of wonder at this terrific storm, so
different from those on the surface--for there was neither wind nor lightning,
but just that steady, frightful sluicing down of solid tons of rain--Stern made
his way back to the patriarch's house.
There he met Beatrice, just awakened.
"No chance to raise the machine to-day!" she
called to him as he entered. "He says this is apt to last for hours and
hours!" She nodded toward the old man, much distressed.
"Patience!" he murmured. "Patience,
friends--and peace!"
Stern thought a moment.
"Well," said he, at last, making himself
heard only with difficulty, "even so, we can spend the day in making
ready."
And, after the simple meal that served for breakfast,
he sat down to think out definitely some plan of campaign for the recovery of the
lost Pauillac.
Though Stern by no means understood the girl's anxiety
to leave the Abyss, nor yet had any intention of trying to do so until he had
begun the education of the Folk and had perfected some means of trying to
transplant this group--and whatever other tribes he could find--to the surface
again, he realized the all-importance of getting the machine into his
possession once more.
For more than an hour he pondered the question, now
asking a question of the patriarch--who seemed torn between desire to have the
wonder-thing brought up, and fear lest he should lose the strangers--now
designing grapples, now formulating a definite line of procedure.
At last, all things settled in his mind, he bade the
old man get for him ten strong ropes, such as the largest nets were made of.
These ropes which he had already seen coiled in huge masses along the wall at
the northern end of the village, where they were twisted of the tough
weed-fiber, averaged all of two hundred feet in length. When the patriarch had gone
to see about having them brought to the hut, he himself went across the plaza,
with Beatrice, to the communal smithy.
There he appropriated a forge, hammers, and a quantity
of iron bars, and energetically set to work fashioning a huge three-pronged hook.
A couple of hours' hard labor at the anvil--labor
which proved that he was getting back his normal strength once more--completed
the task. Deftly he heated, shaped and reshaped the iron, while vast
Brocken-shadows danced and played along the titanic cliff behind him, cast by
the wavering blue gas-flames of the forge. At length he found himself in
possession of a drag weighing about forty pounds and provided with a stout ring
at the top of the shank six inches in diameter.
"Now," said he to Beatrice, as he surveyed
the finished product, while all about them the inquisitive yet silent Folk
watched them by the unsteady light, "now I guess we're ready to get down
to something practical. Just as soon as this infernal rain lets up a bit, we'll
go angling for the biggest fish that ever came out of this sea!"
But the storm was very far from being at an end. The
patriarch told Stern, when he brought the grapple to the hut--followed by a
silent, all-observant crowd--that sometimes these torrential downpours lasted from
three to ten sleep-times, with lulls between.
"And nobody can venture on the sea," he
added, "till we know--by certain signs we have--that the great rain is
verily at an end. To do that would mean to court death; and we are wise, from
very long experience. So, my son, you must have patience in this as in all
things, and wait!"
Part of that afternoon of forced inactivity Stern
spent in his favorite habit of going about among the Folk, closely mingling
with them and watching all their industrial processes and social life, and
trying, as usual, to pick tip words and phrases of the very far-degenerated
speech that once had been English but was now a grammarless and formless jumble
of strange words.
Only a few of the most common words he found retained
anything like their original forms--such as w'hata, water; fohdu, food; yernuh,
iron; vlaak, black; gomu, come; ghaa, go; fysha, fish; and so on for about
forty others.
Thousands upon thousands of terms, for which no longer
any objects now existed among the Folk, had been of course utterly forgotten;
and some hundreds of new words, relative to new conditions, had been invented.
The entire construction was altered; the language now
bore no more resemblance to English than English had borne to the primitive
Indo-Germanic of the Aryan forefathers. Now that writing had been lost, nothing
retarded changes; and Stern realized that here--were he a trained
philologist--lay a task incomparably interesting and difficult, to learn this
Merucaan speech and trace its development from his own tongue.
But Stern's skill was all in other lines. The most
that he could do was to make some rough vocabularies, learn a few common
phrases, and here or there try to teach a little English. A deeper study and
teaching, he knew, would come later, when more important matters had been
attended to.
His attempts to learn and to talk with these
people--by pointing at objects and listening to their names--were comparable to
those, perhaps, of a prehistoric Goth turned loose in an American village of
the twentieth century. Only the patriarch had retained the mother-tongue, and
that in an archaic, imperfect manner, so that even his explanations often
failed. Stern felt the baffling difficulties in his way; but his determination
only grew.
The rain steadily continued to drum down, now
lessened, now again in terrific deluges of solid black water churned to white
as they struck the sea and flung the froth on high. The two Americans passed an
hour that afternoon in the old man's hut, drawing up a calendar on which to
check as accurately as possible, the passage of time as reckoned in the terms
of life upon the surface.
They scratched this on a slab of slatelike rock, with
a sharp iron awl; and, reckoning the present day as about October first, agreed
that every waking-time they would cross off one square.
"For," said the engineer, "it's most
important that we should keep track of the seasons up above. That may have much
to do with our attempts to transplant this colony. It would never do to take a
people like this, accustomed to heat and vapor, and carry them out into even
the mild winter that now prevails in a present-day December. If we don't get
them to the surface before the last of this month, at latest--"
"We'll have to wait until another spring?"
asked she.
"Looks that way," he assented, putting a few
final touches to the calendar. "So you see it's up to us to hurry--and
certainly nothing more inopportune than this devilish rain could possibly have
happened! Haste, haste! We must make haste!"
"That's so!" exclaimed Beatrice. "Every
day's precious, now. We--"
"My children," hurriedly interrupted the
patriarch, "I never yet have shown you my book--my one and greatest
treasure. The book!
"You have told me many things, of sun and moon
and stars, which are mocked at as idle tales by my unbelieving people; of continents
and seas, mountains, vast cities, great ships, strange engines moved by vapor
and by lightning, tall houses; of words thrown along metal threads or even
through the air itself; of great nations and wars, of a hundred wondrous
matters that verily have passed away even from the remotest memories of us in
the Abyss!
"But of our history I have told you little; nor
have you seen the book! Yet you must see it, for it alone remains to us of that
other, better time. And though my folk mock at it as imposture and myth and
fraud, you shall judge if it be true; you shall see what has kept the English
speech alive in me, kept memories of the upper world alive. Only the book, the
book!"
His voice seemed strangely agitated. As he spoke he
raised his hands toward them, sitting on the stone bench in the hut, while
outside the rain still thundered louder than the droning roar of the great
flame. Stern, his curiosity suddenly aroused, looked at the old man with keen
interest.
"The book?" he queried. "What book?
What's the name of it? What date? What--who wrote it, and--"
"Patience, friends!"
"You mean you've really got an English book here
in this village? A--"
"A book, verily, from the other days! But first,
before I show you, let me tell you the old tradition that was handed down to me
by my father and my father's fathers, down through centuries--I know not how
many."
"You mean the story of this Lost Folk in the
Abyss?"
"Verily! You have told me yours, of your
awakening, of the ruined world and all your struggles and your fall down into
this cursed pit. Listen now to mine!"
CHAPTER XXXIII
THE PATRIARCH'S TALE
"In the beginning," he commanded, slowly and
thoughtfully, "our people were as yours; they were the same. Our tradition
tells that a great breaking of the world took place very many centuries ago.
Out of the earth a huge portion was split, and it became as the moon you tell
of, only dark. It circled about the earth--"
"By Jove!" cried Stern, and started to his
feet. "That dark patch in the sky! That moving mystery we saw nights at
the bungalow on the Hudson!"
"You mean--" the girl exclaimed.
"It's a new planetoid! Another satellite of the
earth! It's the split-off part of the world!"
"Another satellite?"
"Of course! Hang it, yes! See now? The great
explosion that liberated the poisonous gases and killed practically everybody
in the world must have gouged this new planet out of the flank of Mother Earth
in the latter part of 1920. The ejected portions, millions of millions of tons,
hundreds of thousands of cubic miles of solid rock--and with them the ruins of
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Louis, Omaha, and hundreds of smaller cities--are now
all revolving in a fixed, regular orbit, some few thousand miles or so from the
surface!
"Think! Ours are the only living human eyes that
have seen this new world blotting out the stars! This explains everything--the
singular changes in the tides and in the direction of the magnetic pole,
decreased gravitation and all the other strange things we noticed, but couldn't
understand. By Gad! What a discovery!"
The patriarch listened eagerly while Stern and the
girl discussed the strange phenomenon; but when their excitement had subsided
and they were ready again to hear him, he began anew:
"Verily, such was the first result of the great
catastrophe. And, as you know, millions died. But among the canyons of the
Rocky Mountains--so says the tradition; is it right? Were there such
mountains?"
"Yes, yes! Go on!"
"In those canyons a few handfuls of hardy people
still survived. Some perished of famine and exposure; some ventured out into
the lowlands and died of the gas that still hung heavy there. Some were
destroyed in a great fire that the tradition says swept the earth after the
explosion. But a few still lived. At one time the number was only eighteen men,
twelve women and a few children, so the story goes."
"And then?"
"Then," continued the patriarch, his brow
wrinkled in deep thought, "then came the terrible, swift cold. The people,
still keeping their English tongue, now dead save for you two, and still with
some tools and even a few books, retreated into caves and fissures in the
canyons. And so they came to the great descent."
"The what?"
"The huge cleft which the story says once
connected the upper world with this Abyss. And--"
"Is it open now," cried Stern, leaning
sharply forward.
"Alas, no; but you hurry me too much, good
friend. You understand, for a long time they lived the cave-life partly, and
partly the upper life. And they increased a great deal in the hundred years
that followed the explosion. But they never could go into the plains, for still
the gas hung there, rising from a thousand wells--ten thousand, mayhap, all
very deadly. And so they knew not if the rest of the world lived or died."
"And then?" queried the engineer.
"Let's have it all in outline. What happened?"
"This, my son: that a still greater cold came
upon the world, and the life of the open became impossible. There were now ten
or twelve thousand alive; but they were losing their skill, their knowledge,
everything. Only a few men still kept the wisdom of reading or writing, even.
For life was a terrible fight. And they had to seek food now in the cave-lakes;
that was all remaining.
"After that, another fifty or a hundred years,
came the second great explosion. The ways were closed to the outer world.
Nearly all died. What happened even the tradition does not tell. How many years
the handful of people wandered I do not know. Neither do I know how they came
here.
"The story says only eight or ten altogether
reached this sea. It was much smaller then. The islands of the Lanskaarn, as we
call them now, were then joined to the land here. Great changes have taken
place. Verily, all is different! Everything was lost--language and arts, and
even the look of the Folk.
"We became as you see us. The tradition itself
was forgotten save by a few. Sometimes we increased, then came pestilences and
famines, outbreaks of lava and hot mud and gases, and nearly all died. At one
time only seven remained--"
"For all the world like the story of Pitcairn
Island and the mutineers of the 'Bounty'!" interrupted the engineer.
"Yes, yes--go on!"
"There is little more to tell. The tradition says
there was once a place of records, where certain of the wisest men of our Folk
placed all their lore to keep it; but even this place is lost. Only one family
kept any knowledge of the English as a kind of inheritance and the single book
went with that family--"
"But the Lanskaarn and the other peoples of the
Abyss, where did they come from?" asked Stern eagerly.
The patriarch shook his head.
"How can I tell?" he answered. "The
tradition says nothing of them."
"Some other groups, probably," suggested
Beatrice, "that came in at different times and through other ways."
"Possibly," Stern assented. "Anything
more to tell?"
"Nothing more. We became as savages; we lost all
thought of history or learning. We only fought to live! All was forgotten.
"My grandfather taught the English to my father
and he to me, and I had no son. Nobody here would learn from me. Nobody cared
for the book. Even the tradition they laughed at, and they called my brain
softened when I spoke of a place where in the air a light shone half the time
brighter even than the great flame! And in every way they mocked me!
"So I--I"--the old man faltered, his voice
tremulous, while tears glittered in his dim and sightless eyes--"I ceased
to speak of these things. Then I grew blind and could not read the book. No
longer could I refresh my mind with the English. So I said in my heart: 'It is
finished and will soon be wholly forgotten forever. This is the end.'
"Verily, I laid the book to rest as I soon must
be laid to rest! Had you not come from that better place, my thought would have
been true--"
"But it isn't, not by a jugful!" exclaimed
the engineer joyously, and stood up in the dim-lit little room. "No, sir!
She and I, we're going to change the face of things considerably! How? Never
mind just yet. But let's have a look at the old volume, father. Gad! That must
be some relic, eh? Imagine a book carried about for a thousand years and read
by at least thirty generations of men! The book, father! The book!"
Already the patriarch had arisen and now he gestured
at the heavy bench of stone.
"Can you move this, my son?" asked he.
"The place of the book lies beneath."
"Under there, eh? All right!" And, needing
no other invitation, he set his strength against the massive block of gneiss.
It yielded at the second effort and, sliding
ponderously to one side, revealed a cavity in the stone floor some two feet
long by about eighteen inches in breadth.
Over this the old man stooped.
"Help me, son," bade he. "Once I could
lift it with ease, but now the weight passes my strength."
"What? The weight of a book? But--where is it? In
this packet, here?"
He touched a large and close-wrapped bundle lying in
the little crypt, dimly seen by the flicker of the oily wick.
"Yea. Raise it out that I may show you!"
answered the patriarch. His hands trembled with eagerness; in his blind eyes a
sudden fever seemed to burn. For here was his dearest, his most sacred
treasure, all that remained to him of the long-worshipped outer world--the
world of the vague past and of his distant ancestors--the world that Stern and
Beatrice had really known and seen, yet which to him was only "all a
wonder and a wild desire."
"Lay the book upon the bench," he ordered.
"I will unwrap it!"
Complex the knots were, but his warped and palsied
fingers deftly undid them as though long familiar with each turn and twist.
Then off came many a layer of the rough brown seaweed fabric and afterward
certain coverings of tough shark-skin neatly sewn.
"The book!" cried the patriarch. "Now
behold it!"
"That?" exclaimed Beatrice. "I never
saw a book of that shape!"
"Each page is separately preserved, wherefore it
is so very thick," explained the old man. "See here?"
He turned the leaves reverently. Stern, peering
closely by the dim light, saw that they were loosely hung together by loops of
heavy gold wire. Each page was held between two large plates of mica, and these
plates were securely sealed around the edges by some black substance like
varnish or bitumen.
"Only thus," explained the patriarch,
"could we hope to save this precious thing. It was done many hundreds of
years ago, and even then the book was almost lost by age and use."
"I should say so!" ejaculated Stern. Even
sealed in its air-tight covering, he saw that every leaf was yellow, broken,
rotten, till the merest breath would have disintegrated it to powder. A sense
of the infinitudes of time bridged by this volume overwhelmed him; he drew a
deep breath, reached out his hand and touched the wondrous relic of the world
that was.
"Long ago," continued the old man,
"when the book began to crumble, one of my ancestors copied it on gold
plates, word by word, letter by letter, every point and line. And our family
used only that book of gold and put away the other. But in my grandfather's
time the Lanskaarn raided our village and the gold plates went for loot to make
them trinkets, so they were lost.
"My father meant to begin the task again, but was
killed in a raid. I, too, in my fighting youth, had plans for the work; but
blindness struck me before I could find peace to labor in. So now all that
remains of the mother tongue here is my own knowledge and these tattered
scraps. And, if you save us not, soon all, all will be lost forever!"
Much moved, the engineer made no reply, yet thoughts
came crowding to his brain. Here visibly before him he beheld the final link
that tied these lost Folk to the other time, the last and breaking thread. What
history could this book have told? What vast catastrophes, famines,
pestilences, wars, horrors had it passed through? In what unwritten cataclysms,
in what anguish and despair and long degeneration had the human mind still
clung to it and cherished it?
No one could tell; yet Stern felt the essence of its
unknown story. An infinite pathos haloed the ancient volume. And reverently he
touched its pages once again; he bent and by the guttering light tried to make
out a few words here or there upon the crackled, all but perished leaves.
He came upon a crude old woodcut, vague and dim; then
a line of text caught his eye.
"By Gad! 'Pilgrim's Progress'!" he
exclaimed. "Look, Beatrice--'Pilgrim's Progress,' of all books! No wonder
he says 'Verily' and talks archaic stuff and doesn't catch more than half we
say. Well, I'll be--"
"Is this then not the English of your time?"
asked the patriarch.
"Hardly! It was centuries old at the epoch of the
catastrophe. Say, father, the quicker you forget this and take a few lessons in
the up-to-date language of the real world that perished, the better! I see now
why you don't get on to the idea of steamships and railroads, telephones and
wireless and all the rest of it. God! but you've got a lot to learn!"
The old man closed up the precious volume and once
more began wrapping it in its many coverings.
"Not for me, all this, I fear," he answered
with deep melancholy. "It is too late, too late--I cannot
understand."
"Oh, yes, you can, and will!" the engineer
assured him. "Buck up, father! Once I get my biplane to humming again
you'll learn a few things, never fear!"
He stepped to the door of the hut and peered out.
"Rain's letting up a bit," he announced.
"How about it? Do the signs say it's ready to quit for keeps? If so--all
aboard for the dredging expedition!"
CHAPTER XXXIV
THE COMING OF KAMROU
The storm, in fact, was now almost at an end, and when
the engineer awoke next morning he found the rain had wholly ceased. Though the
sea was still giving forth white vapors, yet these had not yet reached their
usual density. From the fortifications he could see, by the reflected lights of
the village and of the great flame, a considerable distance out across the dim,
mysterious sea. He knew the time was come to try for the recovery of the
machine, if ever.
"If I don't make a go of it to-day," said
he, "I might as well quit for good. There'll never be a better
opportunity. And if it's left down there very much longer, Heaven only knows
what kind of shape it'll be in. I make good to-day or it's all off."
Beatrice eagerly seconded his plans. The old man, too,
was impatient as a child to learn more of this wonder of the upper world. And,
translating to the Folk the directions that Stern gave him, he soon had a great
throng on the beach, where lay not only the Folk's canoes, but also many left
by the slaughtered and dispersed Lanskaarn.
Two hours after the crude meal that must be called
breakfast for want of a better name, the expedition was ready to start.
Twenty-five of the largest boats, some holding twelve
men, set out, to the accompaniment of shouting and singing much like that when
the captives had been brought in. Stern, Beatrice and the patriarch all sat in
one canoe with eight paddlers. In the bottom lay Stern's heavy grapple with the
ten long ropes, now twisted into a single cable, securely knotted to its ring.
To Stern it seemed impossible that any means existed
for locating, even approximately, the spot where the machine had fallen. As the
shore faded away and the village lights disappeared in the gloom and mist, all
landmarks vanished. Everywhere about them the dim, oily sea stretched black and
gloomy, with here and there the torches of the little fleet casting strange
blue-green lights that wavered like ghostly will-o'-the-wisps over the water.
The boatman's song wailed high, sank low, trembled and
ceased; and for a while came silence, save for the dipping of the paddles, the
purling of the waters at the bow of the canoe. The engineer, despite his
hard-headed practicality, shuddered a little and drew his mantle closer round
him.
Beatrice, too, felt the eerie mystery of the scene.
Stern put an arm about her; she slid her hand into his, and thus in silence
they sat thinking while the boats drew on and on.
"They really know where they're going,
father?" the engineer asked at length. "It all looks alike to me. How
can they tell?"
"Verily, I cannot explain that to you," the
old man made answer. "We know, that is all."
"But--"
"Had I been always blind you could not expound
sight to me. A deaf man cannot understand sound."
"You mean you've developed some new sense, some
knowledge of direction and location that we haven't got?"
"Yea, it must be so. In all these many centuries
among the dark mists we have to know. And this gloom, this night, are the same
to us as you have told me a lake on the surface would be to you in the
brightness of that sun which none of use have ever yet beheld."
"Is that so? Well, hanged if I get it! However,
no matter about that just so they locate the place. Can they find the exact
spot, father?"
"Perhaps not so. But they will come near to it,
my son. Only have patience; you shall see!"
Stern and the girl relapsed into silence again, and
for perhaps a quarter-hour the boats moved steadily forward through the vapors
in a kind of crescent, the tips of which were hidden by the mist.
Then all at once a sharp cry rang from a boat off to
the right, a cry taken up and echoed all along the line. The paddles ceased to
ply; the canoes now drifted idly forward, their wakes trailing out behind in
long "slicks" of greasy blackness flecked with sparkles from the
reflected light of all those many torches.
Another word of command; the boatmen slowed their
craft.
"Drop the iron here, son, and drag the
bottom," said the patriarch.
"Good!" answered Stern, thrilled with
excitement and wonder.
He pitched the dredge into the jetty sea. It sank
silently as he payed out the cable. At a depth he estimated--from the amount of
cable still left in the boat--as about thirty fathoms, it struck bottom.
He let out another five fathoms.
"All right, father!" he exclaimed sharply.
"Tell our boatmen to give way!"
The old man translated the order: "Ghaa vrouaad,
m'yaun!" (Go forward, men.) The paddles dipped again and Stern's canoe
moved silently over the inky surface.
Every sense alert, the engineer at the gunwale held
the cable. For a few seconds he felt nothing as the slack was taken up; then he
perceived a tug and knew the grapple was dragging.
Now intense silence reigned, broken only by the
sputter of the smoking torches. The canoes, spaced over the foggy sea, seemed
floating in a void of nothingness; each reflected light quivered and danced
with weird and tremulous patterns.
Stern played the cable as though it were a fish-line.
All his senses centered on interpreting the message it conveyed. Now he felt
that it was dragging over sand; now came rocks--and once it caught, held, then
jerked free. His heart leaped wildly. Oh, had it only been the aeroplane!
The tension grew. Out, far out from the drifting line
of boats the canoe went forward; it turned at a word from the patriarch and
dragged along the front of the line. It criss-crossed on its path; Stern had to
admire the skill and thoroughness with which the boatmen covered the area where
their mysterious sixth sense of location told them the machine must lie.
All at once a tug, different from all others,
yielding, yet firm, set his pulses hammering again.
"Got it!" he shouted, for he knew the truth.
"Hold fast, there--she's hooked!"
"You've got it, Allan? Really got it?" cried
the girl, starting up. "Oh--"
"Feel this!" he answered. "Grab hold
and pull!"
She obeyed, trembling with eagerness.
"It's caught through one of the ailerons, or some
yielding part, I think," he said. "Here, help me hold it tight, now;
we mustn't let the hook slip out again!" To the patriarch he added:
"Tell 'em to back up, there--easy--easy!"
The canoe backed, while Stern took up the slack again.
When the pull from below was vertical he ordered the boat stopped.
"Now get nine other boats close in here,"
commanded he.
The old man gave the order. And presently nine canoes
stood in near at hand, while all the rest lay irregularly grouped about them.
Now Stern's plan of the tenfold cable developed
itself. Already he was untwisting the thick rope. One by one he passed the
separate cords to men in the other boats. And in a few minutes he and nine
other men held the ropes, which, all attached to the big iron ring below,
spread upward like the ribs of an inverted umbrella.
The engineer's scheme was working to perfection. Well
he had realized that no one boat could have sufficed to lift the great weight
of the machine. Even the largest canoe would have been capsized and sunk long
before a single portion of the Pauillac and its engine had been so much as
stirred from the sandy bottom.
But with the buoyant power of ten canoes and twenty or
thirty men all applied simultaneously, Stern figured he had a reasonable chance
of raising the sunken aeroplane. The fact that it was submerged, together with
the diminished gravitation of the Abyss, also worked in his favor. And as he
saw the Folk-men grip the cords with muscular hands, awaiting his command, he
thrilled with pride and with the sense of real achievement.
"Come, now, boys!" he cried. "Pull!
Heave-ho, there! Altogether, lift her! Pull!"
He strained at the rope which he and two others held;
the rest--each rope now held by three or four men--bent their back to the
labor. As the ropes drew tense, the canoes crowded and jostled together. Those
men who were not at the ropes, worked with the paddles to keep the boats apart,
so that the ropes should not foul or bind. And in an irregular ring, all round
the active canoes, the others drew. Lighted by so many torches, the misty
waters glittered as broken waves, thrown out by the agitation of the canoes,
radiated in all directions.
"Pull, boys, pull!" shouted the engineer
again. "Up she comes! Now, all together!"
Came a jerk, a long and dragging resistance, then a
terrific straining on the many cords. The score and a half of men breathed
hard; on their naked arms the veins and muscles swelled; the torchlight gleamed
blue on their sweating faces and bodies.
And spontaneously, as at all times of great endeavor
among the Folk, a wailing song arose; it echoed through the gloom; it grew,
taken up by the outlying boats; and in the eternal dark of the Abyss it rose,
uncanny, soul-shaking, weird beyond all telling.
Stern felt the shuddering chills chase each other up
and down his spine, playing a nervous accompaniment to their chant.
"Gad!" he muttered, shivering, "what a
situation for a hard-headed, practical man like me! It's more like a scene from
some weird pipe-dream magazine story of the remote past than solid
reality!"
Again the Folk strained at the ropes, Stern with them;
and now the great weight below was surely rising, inch by inch, up, up, toward
the black and gleaming surface of the abysmal sea.
Stern's heart was pounding wildly. If only--incredible
as it seemed--the Pauillac really were there at the end of the converging
ropes; and if it were still in condition to be repaired again! If only the hook
and the hard-taxed ropes held!
"Up, boys! Heave 'er!" he shouted, pulling
till his muscles hardened like steel, and the canoe--balanced, though it was by
five oarsmen and the patriarch all at the other gunwale--tipped crazily.
"Pull! Pull!"
Beatrice sprang to the rope. Unable to restrain
herself, she, too, laid hold on the taut, dripping cord; and her white hands,
firm, muscular, shapely, gripped with a strength one could never have guessed
lay in them.
And now the ropes were sliding up out of the water,
faster, ever faster; and higher rose the song of all those laboring Folk and
all who watched from the outlying ring of boats.
"Up with it, men! Up!" panted the engineer.
Even as he spoke the waters beneath them began to boil
and bubble strangely, as though with the rising of a monstrous fish; and all at
once, with a heave, a sloshing splatter, a huge, weed-covered, winglike object,
sluicing brine, wallowed sharply out into the torchlight.
A great triumphal howl rose from the waiting Folk--a
howl that drowned Stern's cheer and that of Beatrice, and for a moment all was
confusion. The wing rose, fell, slid back; into the water and again dipped
upward. The canoes canted; some took water; all were thrown against each other
in the central group; and cries, shouts, orders and a wild fencing off with
paddles followed.
Stern yelled in vain orders that the old man could not
even hear to translate; orders which would not, even though heard, have been
obeyed. But after a moment or two comparative order was restored, and the
engineer, veins standing out on his temples, eyes ablaze, bellowed:
"Hold fast, you! No more, nor more--don't pull up
any more, damn you! Hey, stop that--you'll rip the hook clean out and lose it
again!
"You, father--here--tell 'em to let it down a
little, now--about six feet, so. Easy--does it--easy!"
Now the Pauillac, sodden with water, hanging thickly
with the luxuriant weed clusters which even in a fortnight had grown in that
warm sea, was suspended at the end of the ten cords about six or eight feet
below the keels of the canoes.
"Tell 'em to let it stay that way now,"
continued the engineer. "Tell 'em all to hold fast, those that have the
ropes. The others paddle for the shore as fast as they can--and damn the man
that loafs now!"
The patriarch conveyed the essence of these instructions
to the oarsmen, and now, convoyed by the outlying boats, the ten canoes moved
very slowly toward the village.
Retarded by the vast, birdlike bulk that trailed
below, they seemed hardly to make any progress at all. Stern ordered the free
boats to hitch on and help by towing. Lines were passed, and after a while all
twenty-five canoes, driven by the power of two hundred and fifty pairs of
sinewy arms, were dragging the Pauillac shoreward.
Stern's excitement--now that the machine was really
almost in his grasp again--far from diminishing, was every minute growing
keener.
The delay until he could examine it and see its
condition and its chances of repair, seemed interminable. Continually he urged
the patriarch--himself profoundly moved--to force the rowers to still greater
exertion. At a paddle he labored, throwing every ounce of strength into the
toil. Each moment seemed an hour.
"Gad! If it's only possible to make it fly
again!" thought he.
Half an hour passed, and now at length the dim and
clustered lights of the village began to show vaguely through the mist.
"Come on, boys; now for it!" shouted Stern.
"Land her for me and I'll show you wonders you never even dreamed
of!"
They drew near the shore. Already Stern was
formulating his plans for landing the machine without injuring it, when out
from the beach a long and swift canoe put rapidly, driven by twenty men.
At sight of it the rowing in Stern's boats weakened,
then stopped. Confused cries arose, altercations and strange shouts; then a
hush of expectancy, of fear, seemed to possess the boat crews.
And ever nearer, larger, drew the long canoe, a
two-pronged, blazing cresset at its bows.
Across the waters drifted a word.
"Go on, you! Row!" cried Stern. "Land
the machine, I tell you! Say, father, what's the matter now? What are my men on
strike for all of a sudden? Why don't they finish the job?"
The old man, perplexed, listened intently.
Between the group of canoes and the shore the single
boat had stopped. A man was standing upright in it. Now came a clear hail, and
now two or three sentences, peremptory, angry, harsh.
At sound of them consternation seized certain of the
men. A number dropped the ropes, while others reached for the slings and spears
that always lay in the bottoms of the canoes.
"What the devil now?" shouted Stern.
"You all gone crazy, or what?"
He turned appealingly to the old man.
"For Heaven's sake, what's up?" he cried.
"Tell me, can't you, before the idiots drop my machine and ruin the whole
thing? What--"
"Misfortune, O my son!" cried the patriarch
in a strange, trembling voice. "The worst that could befall! In our
absence he has come back--he, Kamrou! And under pain of death he bids all men
abandon every task and haste to homage. Kamrou the Terrible is here!"
CHAPTER XXXV
FACE TO FACE WITH DEATH
For a moment Stern stared, speechless with amazement,
at the old man, as though to determine whether or not he had gone mad. But the
commotion, the mingled fear and anger of the boat crews convinced him the
danger, though unknown, was very real.
And, flaring into sudden rage at this untimely
interruption just in the very moment of success, he jerked his pistol from its
holster, and stood up in the boat.
"I'll have no butting in here!" he cried in
a loud, harsh voice. "Who the devil is Kamrou, I'd like to know? Go on,
on, to shore!"
"My son--"
"You order these men to grab those ropes again
and go ashore or I warn you there's going to be a whole big heap of
trouble!"
Over the waters drifted another hail, and the strange
long boat, under the urge of vigorous arms, now began to move toward Stern's
fleet. At the same time, mingled cries arose on shore. Stern could see lights
moving back and forth; some confusion was under way there, though what, he
could not imagine.
"Well," he cried, "are you going to
order these men to go forward? Or shall I--with this?"
And menacingly he raised the grim and ugly gun.
"Oh my son!" exclaimed the patriarch, his
lips twitching, his hands outstretched--while in the boats a babel of conflicting
voices rose--"O my son, if I have sinned in keeping this from you, now let
me die! I hid it from your knowledge, verily, to save my people--to keep you
with us till this thing should be accomplished! My reckoning was that Kamrou
and his men would stay beyond the Great Vortex, at their labor, until
after--"
"Kamrou?" shouted Stern again. "What
the deuce do I care about him? Who is he, anyhow? A Lanskaarn, or--"
The girl seized Allan's hand.
"Oh, listen, listen!" she implored.
"I--"
"Did you know about this? And never told
me?"
"Allan, he said our work could all be done before
they--"
"So you did know, eh?"
"He said I must not tell you. Otherwise--"
"Oh, hang that! See here, Beatrice, what's the
matter, anyhow? These people have all gone crazy, just in a second, the old man
and all! If you know anything about it, for God's sake tell me! I can't stand
much more!
"I've got to get this machine to land before they
go entirely nutty and drop it, and we lose all our work for nothing. What's up?
Who's this Kamrou they're talking about? For Heaven's sake, tell me!"
"He's their chief. Allan--their chief! He's been
gone a long time, he and his men. And--"
"Well, what do we care for him? We're running
this village now, aren't we?"
"Listen. The old man says--"
"He's a hard nut, eh? And won't stand for us--is
that it?" He turned to the patriarch. "This Kamrou you're talking
about doesn't want us, or our new ideas, or anything? Well, see here. There's
no use beating around the bush, now. This thing's going through, this plan of
ours! And if Kamrou or anybody else gets in the way of it--good-by for
him!"
"You mean war?"
"War! And I know who'll win, at that! And now,
father, you get these men here to work again, or there'll be some sudden deaths
round here!"
"Hearken, O my son! Already the feast of welcome
to Kamrou is beginning, around the flame. See now, the boat of his messenger is
close at hand, bidding all those in this party to hasten in, for homage. Kamrou
will not endure divided power. Trust me now and I can save you yet. For the
present, yield to him, or seem to, and--"
"Yield nothing!" fairly roared the engineer,
angrier than he had ever been in his whole life. "This is my affair now!
Nobody else butts in on it at all! To shore with these boats, you hear? or I
begin shooting again! And if I do--"
"Allan!" cried the girl.
"Not a word! Only get your gun ready, that's all.
We've got to handle this situation sharp, or it's all off! Come, father,"
he delivered his ultimatum to the patriarch; "come, order them ashore!"
The old man, anguished and tremulous, spoke a few
words. Answers arose, here, there. He called something to the standing figure
in the despatch-boat, which slackened stopped, turned and headed for the
distant beach.
With some confusion the oarsmen of the fleet took up
their task again. And now, in a grim silence, more disconcerting even than the
previous uproar, the boats made way toward land.
Ten minutes later--minutes during which the two
Americans kept their revolvers ready for instant action--the aeroplane began to
drag on the bottom. Despite the crowd now gathered on the beach, very near at
hand and ominously silent, Stern would not let the machine lie even here, in
shallow water, where it could easily have been recovered at any time. Like a
bulldog with its jaws set on an object, he clung to his original plan of
landing the Pauillac at once.
And, standing up in the boat with his pistol leveled,
he commanded them, through the mediumship of the patriarch, to shorten the
ropes and paddle in still closer. When the beach was only a few rods distant he
gave orders that all should land, carrying the ropes with them. He himself was
one of the first to wade ashore, with Beatrice.
Ignoring the silent, expectant crowd and the tall
figure of Kamrou's messenger--who now stood, arms crossed, amazed, indignant,
almost at the water's edge--he gave quick commands:
"Now, clear these boats away on both sides! Make
a free space, here--wider--so, that's right. Now, all you men get hold of the
ropes--all of you, here, take hold, you! Ready, now? Give way, then! Out she
comes! Out with her!"
The patriarch, standing in fear and keen anxiety
beside him, transmitted the orders. Truly the old man's plight was hard, torn
as he was between loyalty to the newcomers and terror of the implacable Kamrou.
But Stern had no time to think of aught but the machine and his work.
For now already the great ungainly wings of the
machine were wallowing up, up, out of the jetty waters; and now the body, now
the engine showed, weed-festooned, smeared with mud and slime, a strange and
awesome apparition in that blue and ghastly torch-flare, as the toiling men
hauled it slowly, foot by foot, up the long slope of the beach.
Dense silence held the waiting throng; silence and
awe, in face of this incomprehensible, tremendous thing.
Even the messenger spoke not a word. He had lost
somewhat of his assurance, his pride and overbearing haughtiness. Perhaps he
had already heard some tales of these interlopers' terrible weapons.
Stern saw the man's eyes follow the revolver, as he
gestured with it; the high-lights gleaming along the barrel seemed to fascinate
the tall barbarian. But still he drew no step backward. Still in silence, with
crossed arms, he waited, watched and took counsel only with himself.
"Thank God, it's out at last!" exclaimed the
engineer, and heaved a sigh of genuine, heartfelt relief. "See, Beatrice,
there s our old machine again--and except for that broken rudder, this wing,
here, bent, and the rent where the grapple tore the leather covering of the
starboard plane I can't see that it's taken any damage. Provided the engine's
intact, the rest will be easy. Plenty of chance for metalwork, here,
and--"
"Going to take it right up to the village,
now?" queried she, anxiously glancing at the crowd of white and silent
faces, all eagerly staring--staring like so many wraiths in a strange dream.
He shrugged his shoulders.
"That depends," he answered. He seemed
already to have forgotten Kamrou and the threatening peril in the village, near
the great flame. Even the sound of distant chanting and the thudding of dull
drums stirred him not. Fascinated, he was walking all round the great
mechanical bird, which now lay wounded, weed-covered, sodden and dripping, yet
eloquent of infinite possibilities, there on that black, unearthly beach.
All at once he spoke.
"Up to the village with it!" he commanded,
waving his pistol-hand toward the causeway and the fortified gates. "I
can't risk leaving it here. Come, father, speak to them! It's got to go into
the village right now!"
Then Kamrou's messenger, grasping the sense if not the
words of the command, strode forward--a tall, lithe figure of a man, well-knit
and hard of face. Under the torchlight the dilated pupils of his pinkish eyes
seemed to shine as phosphorescent as a cat's.
Crying out something unintelligible to Stern, he
blocked the way. Stern heard the name "Kamrou! Kamrou!"
"Well, what do you want now?" shouted the
engineer, a huge and sudden anger seizing him. Already super-excited by the
labors of the day and by the nervous strain of having recovered the sunken
biplane, all this talk of Kamrou, all this persistent opposition just at the
most inauspicious moment worked powerfully upon his irritated nerves.
Cool reason would have dictated diplomacy, parley,
and, if possible, truce. But Stern could not believe the Folk, for so long
apparently loyal to him and dominated by his influence, could work against
their vital interest and his own by deserting him now.
And, all his saner judgment failing him, heeding
nothing of the patriarch's entreaties or of the girl's remonstrance as she
caught his arm and tried to hold him back, he faced this cooly insolent
barbarian.
"You, damn you, what d'you want?" he cried
again, his finger itching on the trigger of the automatic. "Think I'm
going to quit for you, or Kamrou, or anybody? Quit, now?"
"Think a civilized white man, sweating his heart
out to save your people here, is going to knuckle under to any savage that
happens to blow in and try to boss this job? If so, you've got another guess
coming! Stand back, you, or you'll get cold lead in just one minute!"
Quick words passed from the old man to the messenger
and back again. The patriarch cried again to him, and for a moment Stern saw
the barbarian's eyes flicker uneasily toward the revolver. But the calm and
cruel face never changed, nor did the savage take one step backward.
"All right, then!" shouted Stern,
"seeing red" in his overpowering rage. "You want it--you'll get
it--take it, so!"
Up he jerked the automatic, fair at the big
barbarian's heart--a splendid target by the torch-light, not ten feet distant;
a sure shot.
But before he could pull trigger the strange
two-pronged torch was tossed on high by somebody behind the messenger, and
through the dull and foggy gloom a wild, fierce, penetrant cry wailed
piercingly.
Came a shooting, numbing pain in Stern's right elbow.
The arm dropped, helpless. The boulder which, flung with accurate aim, had
destroyed his aim, rolled at his feet. The pistol clattered over the wet,
shining stones.
Stern, cursing madly, leaped and snatched for it with
the other hand.
Before he could even reach it a swift foot tripped him
powerfully. Headlong he fell. And in a second one of the very ropes that had
been used to drag the Pauillac from the depths was lashed about his wrists, his
ankles, his struggling, fighting body.
"Beatrice! Shoot! Kill!" he shouted.
"Help here! Help! The machine--they'll wreck it! Everything--lost!
Help!"
His speech died in a choking mumble, stifled by the
wet and sodden gag they forced into his mouth.
About him the mob seethed. Through his brain a quick
anguish thrilled, the thought of Beatrice unaided and alone. Then came a wonder
when the death-stroke would fall--a frightful, sick despair that on the very
eve of triumph, of salvation for this Folk and for the world as well as for
Beatrice and himself, this unforeseen catastrophe should have befallen.
He struggled still to catch some glimpse of Beatrice,
to cry aloud to her, to shield her; but, alone against five hundred, he was
powerless.
Nowhere could he catch even a glimpse of the girl. In
that shoving, pushing, shouting horde, nothing could be made out. He knew not
even whether civil war had blazed or whether all alike had owned the rule of
Kamrou the Terrible.
Like buoys tossing upon the surface of a raging sea,
the flaring torches pitched and danced, rose, fell. And from a multitude of
throats, from beach and causeway, walls and town, strange shouts rang up into
the all-embracing, vague, enshrouding vapor.
Still striving to fight, bound as he was, he felt a
great force driving him along, on, on, up the beach and toward the village.
Mute, desperate, stark mad, he knew the Folk were half
carrying, half dragging him up the causeway.
As in a dark dream, he vaguely saw the great fortified
gate with its huge, torch-lighted monolithic lintel. Even upon this some of the
Folk were crowded now to watch the strange, incredible spectacle of the man who
had once turned the tide of battle against the Lanskaarn and had saved all
their lives, now haled like a criminal back into the community he had rescued
in its hour of sorest need.
His mind leaped to their first entry into the
village--it seemed months ago--also as prisoners. In a flash he recalled all
that had happened since and bitterly he mocked himself for having dared to
dream that their influence had really altered these strange, barbarous souls,
or uplifted them, or taught them anything at all.
"Now, now just as the rescue of these people was
at hand, just as the machine might have carried us and them back into the
world, slowly, one by one--now comes defeat and death!"
An exceeding great bitterness filled his soul once
more at this harsh, cynic turn of fate. But most of all he yearned toward
Beatrice. That he should die mattered nothing; but the thought of this girl
perishing at their hands there in the lost Abyss was dreadful as the pangs of
all the fabled hells.
Again he fought to hold back, to try for some sight,
even a fleeting glimpse of Beatrice; but the Folk with harsh cries drove him
roughly forward.
He could not even see the patriarch. All was
confusion, glare, smoke, noise, as he was thrust through the fortified gate,
out into the thronged plaza.
Everywhere rose cries, shouts, vociferations, among
which he could distinguish only one a thousand times repeated: "Kamrou!
Kamrou!"
And through all his rage and bitter bafflement and
pain, a sudden great desire welled up in him to see this chief of the Folk, at
last--to lay eyes on this formidable, this terrible one--to stand face to face
with him in whose hand now lay everything, Kamrou!
Across the dim, fog-covered expanse of the plaza he
saw the blue-green shimmer of the great flame.
Thither, toward that strange, eternal fire and the
ghastly circle of the headless skeletons the Folk were drifting now. Thither
his captors were dragging him.
And there, he knew, Kamrou awaited Beatrice and him.
There doom was to be dealt out to them. There, and at once!
Thicker the press became. The flame was very near now,
its droning roar almost drowning the great and growing babel of cries.
On, on the Folk bore him. All at once he saw again
that two-pronged torch raised before him, going ahead; and a way cleared
through the press.
Along this way he was carried, no longer struggling,
but eager now to know the end, to meet it bravely and with calm philosophy,
"as fits a man."
And quite at once he found himself in sight of the
many dangling skeletons. Now the quivering jet of the flame grew visible. Now,
suddenly, he was thrust forward into a smooth and open space. Silence fell.
Before him he saw Kamrou, Kamrou the Terrible, at
last.
CHAPTER XXXVI
GAGE OF BATTLE
The chief of the People of the Abyss was seated at his
ease in a large stone chair, over which heavy layers of weed-fabric had been
thrown. He was flanked on either side by spearsmen and by drummers, who still
held their iron sticks poised above their copper drums with shark-skin heads.
Stern saw at a glance that he was a man well over six
feet tall, with whipcord muscles and a keen, eager, domineering air. Unlike any
of the other Folk, his hair (snow-white) was not twisted into a fantastic knot
and fastened with gold pins, but hung loose and was cut square off at about the
level of his shoulders, forming a tremendous, bristly mass that reminded one of
a lion's mane.
Across his left temple, and involving his left eye
with a ghastly mutilation, ran a long, jagged, bright red scar, that stood out
vividly against the milk-white skin. In his hands he held no mace, no symbol of
power; they rested loosely on his powerful knees; and in their half-crooked
fingers, large and long, Stern knew there lay a formidable, an all but
irresistible strength.
At sight of the captives--for Beatrice, too, now
suddenly appeared, thrust forward through another lane among the Folk--Kamrou's
keenly cruel face grew hard. His lips curled with a sneer of scorn and hate.
His pinkish eyes glittered with anticipation. Full on his face the flare of the
great flame fell; Stern could see every line and wrinkle, and he knew that to
beg mercy from this huge barbarian (even though he would have begged), were a
task wholly vain and futile.
He glanced along the circle of expectant faces that ringed
the chief at a distance of some fifteen feet. Surely, thought he, some of the
many Folk that he and the girl had saved from butchery, some to whom they had
taught the rudiments of the world's lost arts, would now show pity on
them--would stand by them now!
But no; not one face of all that multitude--now that
Kamrou had returned--evinced other than eager interest to see the end of
everything. To Stern flashed the thought that here, despite their seeming
half-civilization in the use of metals, fire, dwellings, fabrics and all the
rest, dwelt within them a savagery even below that of the ancient, long-extinct
American Indians.
And well he knew that if both he and Beatrice were not
to die the death this day, only upon themselves they must depend!
Yes, one face showed pity. But only one--the
patriarch's.
Stern suddenly caught sight of him, standing in the
front rank of the circled crowd, about twenty feet away to the left, just
beyond the girl. Tears gleamed in the old man's sightless eyes; his lips
quivered; the engineer saw his hands tremble as he twisted the feeble, impotent
fingers together in anguish.
And though he could catch no sound in that rising,
falling, ever-roaring tumult of the flame, he knew the patriarch, with some
vague and distant remnant of the old-time and vanished religion of the world,
was striving to pray.
Stern's eyes met the girl's. Neither could speak, for
she, too, was gagged with a rough band of fabric which cruelly cut her
beautiful, her tender mouth. At sight of her humiliation and her pain, the
man's heart leaped hotly; he strained against his bonds till the veins swelled,
and with eyes of terrible rage and hate stared at Kamrou.
But the chief's gaze was now fixed insolently upon
Beatrice. She, as she stood there, stripped even of her revolver and
cartridge-belt, hands bound behind her, hair disheveled, had caught his
barbarous fancy. And now in his look Stern saw the kindling of a savage passion
so ardent, so consuming, that the man's heart turned sick within him.
"Ten thousand times better she should die!"
thought he, racked at the thought of what might be. "Oh, God! If I only
had my revolver for a single minute now! One shot for Kamrou--one for
Beatrice--and after that, nothing would matter; nothing!"
Came a disturbance in the Folk. Heads craned; a murmur
of voices rose.
The patriarch, no longer trembling, but with his head
held proudly up, both hands outstretched, had stepped into the circle. And now,
advancing toward Kamrou, he spoke in quick and eager sentences--he gestured at the
engineer, raised his hand on high, bowed and stepped back.
And all at once a wild, harsh, swelling chorus of
cries arose; every face turned toward Stern; the engineer, amazed, knew not
what all this meant, but to the ultimate drop in the arteries he pledged his
fighting-blood to one last, bitter struggle.
Silence again.
Kamrou had not stirred. Still his great hands rested
on his knees; but a thin, venomous smile lengthened his lips. He, too, looked
at the engineer, who gave the stare back with redoubled hate. Tense grew the
expectation of the Folk.
"What the devil now?" thought Stern,
tautening event muscle for the expected attack.
But attack there came none. Instead the patriarch
asked a question of those who stood near him; and hands now guided the old man
toward the place where Stern was standing, bound.
"O friend; O son!" exclaimed the old man
when he had come close. "Now hearken! For, verily, this is the only way!
"It is an ancient custom of the Merucaans that
any man captive or free, can ever challenge our chief, whosoever he be, to the
death-combat. If the chief wins, he remains chief. If he loses, the victor
takes his place. Many hundreds of years, I know not how long, this has been our
way. And many terrible combats have been seen here among our people.
"Kamrou has said that you must die, the girl must
be his prize. Only one way remains to save her and yourself--you must struggle
with Kamrou. I have delivered to him your challenge already. Let fate decide
the issue!"
Everything seemed to whirl before Stern's eyes, and
for a moment all grew black. In his ears sounded a great roaring, louder than
the roar of the huge flame. Quick questions flashed through his mind. Fight
Kamrou? But how? A duel with revolvers? Spears? Maces?
He knew not. Only he knew that in whatever way the
ancient combats must be held he was ready!
"You affirm the challenge I have given in your
behalf?" demanded the patriarch. "If you accept it, nod."
Stern nodded with all the vigor of his terrible rage.
Kamrou's eyes narrowed; his smile grew fixed and hard, but in it Stern
perceived the easy contempt of a bully toward any chance weakling. And through
him thrilled a passion of hate such as he had never dreamed in all his life.
Came a quick word from the patriarch. Somebody was slashing
the engineer's bonds. All at once the ropes gave way. Free and unfettered, he
stepped forward, stretching his arms, opening and closing his cramped, numbed
hands, out into the ring toward Kamrou, the chief.
Off came the gag. Stern could speak at last.
His first word was to the girl.
"Beatrice!" he called to her, "there's
one chance left! I'm to fight this ruffian here. If I beat him we're free--we
own this tribe, body and soul! If not--"
He broke off short. Even the possibility was not to be
considered.
She looked at him and understood his secret thought.
Well the man knew that Beatrice would die by her own hand before Kamrou should
have his way with her.
The patriarch spoke again.
"My son," said he, "there is but one
way for all these combats. It has been so these many centuries. By the smooth
edge of the great boiling pit the fights are held. Man against man it is.
Verily, you two with only your hands must fight! He who loses--"
"Goes into the pit?"
The old man nodded.
"There is no other way," he answered.
"The new, terrible weapons you cannot use. The arrows, slings and spears
are all forbidden by ancient custom. It is the naked grasp of the hands, the
strong muscles of two men against each other! So we decide our chief!
"I, alas, can help you in nothing. I am
powerless, weak, old. Were I to interfere now and try to change this way, my
own body would only go to the pit, and my old bones hang, headless, in the
place of captives and criminals. All lies in your hands, my son!
"All; everything! Our whole future, and the
future of the world! If you lose, the wonderful machine will be destroyed and
all its metal forged into spears and battle axes. Barbarism will conquer;
darkness will continue, and war, and death. All will be forever lost!
"The last ray of hope, of light, from the great
past of the upper world, will vanish forever! Your own death, my son, and the
fate of the girl, will be as nothing beside the terrible catastrophe, if you
are beaten.
"For, verily, it will be the death of the world!
"And now, my son, now go to battle--to battle for
this woman, for yourself, for us, for the future of our race, for everything!
"Kamrou is ready. The pit is boiling.
"Go now! Fight--and--and--"
His voice was lost in a great tumult of cries, yells,
shouts. Spears brandished. Came a sound of shields struck with clubs and axes.
The copper drums again began to throb and clang.
Kamrou had risen from his seat.
Stern knew the supreme moment of his life was at hand.
CHAPTER XXXVII
THE FINAL STRUGGLE
Kamrou flung off his long and heavy cloak. He stood
there in the flamelight, broad-chested, beautifully muscled, lean of hip, the
perfect picture of a fighting man. Naked he was, save for his loin-cloth. And
still he smiled.
Stern likewise stripped away his own cloak. Clad only
like the chief, he faced him.
"Well, now," said he, "here goes! And
may the best man win!"
Kamrou waved the circle back at one side. It opened,
revealing the great pit to southward of the flame. Stern saw the vapors rising,
bluish in that strange light, from the perpetual boiling of the black waters in
its depths. Oddly enough, even at that moment a stray bit of scientific thought
nicked into his consciousness--the memory that under compressed air water boils
only at very high temperatures. Down here, in this great pressure, the water
must easily be over three hundred degrees to seethe like that.
He, too, smiled.
"So much the better," thought he. "The
hotter, the sooner it's all over for the man who goes!"
Up rose numbers of the two-pronged torches. Stern got
confused glimpses of the Folk--he saw the terrible, barbaric eagerness with
which they now anticipated this inevitable tragedy of at least one human death
in its most awful form.
Beatrice he no longer saw. Where was she? He knew not.
But in a long, last cry of farewell he raised his voice. Then, with Kamrou, he
strode toward the steaming, boiling pit in the smooth rock floor.
Two tall men broke through the tensely eager throng.
In their hands they bore each a golden jar, curiously shaped and chiseled, and
bearing a whimsical resemblance to a coffee-urn.
"What the devil now?" wondered Stern, eager
to be at work. He saw at once the meaning of the jars. One of the bearers
approached Kamrou. The other came to him. They raised the vessels, and over the
antagonists' bare bodies poured a thin, warm stream of some rank-smelling oil.
All over the skin they rubbed it, till the bodies glistened strangely in the
flamelight. Then, with muttered words he could not catch, they withdrew.
All seemed confused and vague to Stern as in a painful
dream. Images and pictures seemed to present themselves to his brain. The
light, the fog and heat, the rising stream, the roaring of the flame, and over
all the throb-throb-throb of those infernal copper drums worked powerfully on
his senses.
Already he seemed to feel the grip of Kamrou, the
pangs of the hard struggle, the sudden plunge into the vat of scalding death.
With a strong effort he flung off these fancies and
faced his sneering foe, who now--his red-wealed face puckered into a malicious
grin--stood waiting.
Stern all at once saw the patriarch once more.
"Go, son!" cried the old man. "Now is
the moment! When the drums cease, lay hold of him!"
Even as he spoke, the great drums slowed their beat,
then stopped.
Stern, with a final thought of Beatrice, advanced.
All the advantage lay with Kamrou. Familiar with the
place was he, and with the rules of this incredible contest. Everywhere about
him stood crowding hundreds of his Foll; owing him their allegiance, hostile to
the newcomer, the man from another world. Out of all that multitude only two
hearts' beat in sympathy and hope for him; only two human beings gave him their
thoughts and their support--a helpless girl; a feeble, blind old man.
Kamrou stood taller, too, than Stern, and certainly
bulked heavier. He was in perfect condition, while Stern had not yet fully
recovered from the fight in the Abyss, from the great change in living
conditions there in the depths, and--more important still--from the harsh blow
of the rock that had numbed his elbow on the beach.
His arms and hands, too, still felt the cramping of
the cords that had bound him. He needed a few hours yet to work them into
suppleness and perfect strength. But respite there was none.
He must fight now at once under all handicaps, or
die--and in his death yield Beatrice to the barbaric passions of the chief.
Oddly enough there recurred to his mind, as he drew
near the waiting, sneering Kamrou, that brave old war-cry of the Greeks of Xenophon
as they hurled themselves against the vastly greater army of the
Persians--"Zeus Sotor kai Nike!--Zeus Savior and victory!"
The shout burst from his lips. Forward he ran, on to
the battle where either he or the barbarian must perish in the boiling pit--forward,
to what? To victory--to death?
Kamrou stood fast till Stern's right hand had almost
gripped his throat--for Stern, the challenger, had to deliver the first attack.
But suddenly he slipped aside; and as Stern swerved
for him, made a quick leap.
With an agility, a strength and skill tiger-like and
marvelous, he caught Stern round the waist, whirled him and would have dashed
him toward the pit. But already the engineer's right arm was under Kamrou's
left; the right hand had him by the throat, and Kamrou's head went sharply back
till the vertebrae strained hard.
Eel-like, elusive, oiled, the chief broke the hold,
even as he flung a leg about one of Stern's.
A moment they swayed, tugging, straining, panting. In
the old days Stern would not for one moment have been a match for this barbaric
athlete, but the long months of life close to nature had hardened him and
toughened every fiber. And now a stab of joy thrilled through him as he
realized that in his muscles lay at least a force to balk the savage for a
little while.
To Stern came back his wrestling lore of the very long
ago, the days of Harvard, in the dim, vanished past. He freed his left arm from
the gorilla-like grip of Kamrou, and, quick as lightning, got a jiu-jitsu
stranglehold.
The savage choked, gurgled, writhed; his face grew
purple with stagnant blood. Then he leaped, dragging the engineer with him;
they fell, rolled, twisted--and Stern's hold was broken.
A great shout rose as Kamrou struggled up and once
more seized the American. He raised him like a child, and took a step, two,
three, toward the infernal caldron in the rock floor.
Stern, desperate, wrenched his oiled arms clear. A
second later they had closed again about the chief's throat--the one point of
attack that Stern had chosen for his best.
The barbarian faltered. Grunting, panting, he shook
the engineer as a dog shakes a rat, but the hold was secure. Kamrou's great
arms wrapped themselves in a formidable "body-scissors" grip; Stern
felt the breath squeezed from his body.
Then suddenly the chief's oily heel slipped on the
smooth-worn rock, not ten feet from the lip of the bubbling vat--and for the
second time both fell.
This time Stern was atop. Over they rolled, once,
twice, straining with madness. Stern's thumbs were sunk deep in the throat of
the barbarian at either side. As he gouged harder, deeper, he felt the terrific
pounding of the chief's jugular. Hot on his own neck panted the choking breath
of Kamrou. Oh, could he only hold that grip a minute longer--even a
half-minute!
But already his own breath was gone. A buzzing filled
his ears; sparkling lights danced, quivering before his eyes. The blood seemed
bursting his brain; far off and vague he heard the droning of the flame, the
shouts and cries of the great horde of watchers.
A whiff of steam--hot, damp, terrifying--passed across
his face, in which the veins were starting from the oily skin. His eyes, half
closed, bulged from the sockets. He knew the pit was very close now; dully he
heard its steady bubbling.
"If I go--he goes, too!" the engineer swore
to himself. "He'll never have--Beatrice--anyway!"
Over and over they rolled, their grips tight-locked as
steel. Now Kamrou was on top, now Stern. But the chief's muscles were still
strong as ever; Stern's already had begun to weaken.
Strive as he might, he could not get another hold, nor
could he throw another ounce of power into that he already had. Up, up, slowly
up slipped the chief's arms; Stern knew the savage meant to throttle him; and
once those long, prehensile fingers reached his throat, good-by!
Then it seemed to him a voice, very far and small, was
speaking to him, coolly, impersonally, in a matter-of-fact way as though
suggesting an experiment.
Dazed as he was, he recognized that voice--it was the
voice of Dr. Harbutt, who once had taught him many a wily trick upon the mat;
Harbutt, dead and gone these thousand years or more.
"Why not try the satsu-da, Stern?" the voice
was saying. "Excellent, at times."
Though Stern's face was black and swollen, eyes shut
and mouth all twisted awry in this titanic struggle with the ape-hold of the
huge chief, yet the soul within him calmly smiled.
The satsu-da--yes, he remembered it now, strongest and
best of all the jiu-jitsu feats.
And, suddenly loosening his hands from the chief's throat,
he clenched his right fist, hard as steel.
A second later the "killing-blow" had fallen
on the barbarian's neck, just where the swelling protuberance behind the ear
marked the vital spot.
Terrible was the force of that blow, struck for his
own life, for the honor of Beatrice, the salvation of the world.
Kamrou gave a strange grunt. His head fell backward.
Both eyes closed; the mouth lolled open and a glairy froth began to trickle
down.
The frightful grip of the long, hairy arms relaxed.
Exhausted, Stern fell prone right on the slippery edge of the boiling pit.
He felt a sudden scalding dash of water, steam and
boiling spray; he heard a sudden splash, then a wild, barbarous, long-drawn
howling of the massed Folk.
Lying there, spent, gasping, all but dead in the thick
steam-drift of the vat, he opened his eyes.
Kamrou was nowhere to be seen.
Seemingly very distant, he heard the copper drums
begin to beat once more with feverish haste.
A great, compelling lassitude enveloped him. He knew
no more.
CHAPTER XXXVIII
THE SUN OF SPRING
"What altitude now? Can you make-out,
Allan?"
"No. The aneroid's only good up to five miles. We
must have made two hundred, vertically, since this morning. The way the
propeller takes hold and the planes climb in this condensed air is just a
miracle!"
"Two passengers at that!" Beatrice answered,
leaning back in her seat again. She turned to the patriarch, who, sitting in an
extra place in the thoroughly overhauled and newly equipped Pauillac, was
holding with nervous hands to the wire stays in front of him.
"Patience, father," she cheered him.
"Two hours more--not over three, at the outside--and you shall breathe the
upper air again! For the first time the sunlight shall fall upon your
face!"
"The sun! The sun! Oh, is it possible?"
murmured the aged man. "Verily, I had never thought to live until this
day! The sun!"
Came silence between these three for a time, while the
strong heart of the machine beat steadily; and the engineer, with deft and
skilful hand, guided it in wide-swept spirals upward, ever up, up, up, back
toward the realms of day, of life, once more; up through the fogs and clouds,
away from heat and dark and mystery, toward the clear, pure, refreshing air of heaven
again.
At last Stern spoke.
"Well, father," said he, "I never would
have thought it; but you were right, after all! They're like so much clay in
the potter's hand now, for me. I see I can do with them whatever I will.
"I was afraid some of them might object, after
all, to any such proposition. It's one thing for them to accept me as boss down
there, and quite another for them to consent to wholesale transplanting, such
as we've got under way. But I can't see any possible reason why--with plenty of
time and patience--the thing can't be accomplished all right. The main
difficulty was their consent; and now we've got that, the rest is mere detail
and routine work."
"Time and patience," repeated the girl.
"Those are our watchwords now, boy. And we've got lots of both, haven't
we?"
"Two passengers each trip," the engineer
continued, more practical than she, "and three trips a week, at the most,
makes six of the Folk landed on the surface weekly. In other words, it'll
take--"
"No matter about that now!" interrupted
Beatrice. "We've got all the time there is! Even if it takes five years,
what of that? What are months or even years in the life-history of the
world?"
Stern kept silence again. In his mind he was revolving
a hundred vital questions of shelter, feeding, acclimatization for these men,
now to be transported from a place of dark and damp and heat to the strange
outer regions of the surface-world.
Plainly he saw it would be a task of unparalleled
skill, delicacy, and difficult accomplishment; but his spirits rose only the
higher as he faced its actual details. After all that he and Beatrice had been
through since their wakening in the tower, he feared no failure to solve any
questions that now might rise. By care, by keeping the Folk at first in caves,
then gradually accustoming them to stronger and brighter light, more air, more
cold, he knew he could bridge the gap of centuries in a few years.
Ever adaptable, the human body would respond to
changed environments. Patience and time--these would solve all!
And as for this Folk's barbarism, it mattered not.
Much better such stock to rebuild from than some mild, supine race of far
higher culture. To fight the rough battles of life and re-establishment still
ahead, the bold and warlike Merucaans were all that he could wish.
"Imagine me as a school-teacher," suddenly
exclaimed the girl, laughing: "giving the children A B C and making them
read: 'I see the cat'--when there aren't any cats nowadays--no tame ones,
anyhow! Imagine--"
"Sh-h-h!" cautioned Stern. "Don't waste
your energies imagining things just yet. There's more than enough real work,
food-getting, house-building in caves, and all that, before we ever get to
schools. That's years ahead yet, education is!"
Silence again, save for the strong and ceaseless chatter
of the engine, that, noisy as a score of mowing machines, flung its indomitable
challenge to gravitation out into the fathomless void on every hand.
"Allan! Allan! Oh, a star! Look, look! A star!"
The girl was first to see that blest and wondrous thing.
Hours had passed, long, weary hours; steadily the air-pressure had sunk, the
vapors thinned; but light had not yet filtered through the mists. And Allan's
mind had been sore troubled thereat. He had not thought of the simple reason
that they were reaching the surface at night.
But now he knew, and as she cried to him "A
star!" he, too, looked and saw it, and as though he had been a little
child he felt the sudden tears start to his weary eyes.
"A star!" he answered. "Oh, thank
God--a star!"
It faded almost at once, as vapors shrouded it; but
soon it came again, and others, many more; and now the first breath of the cool
and blessed outer air was wafted to them.
Used as they had been, all these long months--for now
the year had turned again and early spring was coming up the world--used to the
closed and stifling atmosphere of the Abyss, its chemicalized fogs and mists,
the first effect of the pure surface-air was almost intoxicating as they
mounted higher, higher, toward the lip of the titanic gulf.
The patriarch, trembling with eagerness and with
exhaustion--for he was very old and now his vital forces were all but
spent--breathed it only with difficulty. Rapid was his respiration; on either
pallid cheek a strange and vivid patch of color showed.
Suddenly he spoke.
"Stars? You see them--really see them?"
faltered he. "Oh, for my sight again! Oh, that I might see them once, only
once, those wonderful things of ancient story! Then, verily, I should be glad
to die!"
Midnight.
Hard-driven now for many hours, heated, yet still
running true, the Pauillac had at length made a safe landing on the western
verge of the Abyss. Again the voyagers felt solid earth beneath their feet. By
the clear starlight Stern had brought the machine to earth on a little plateau,
wooded in part, partly bare sand. Numb and stiff, he had alighted from the
driver's seat, and had helped both passengers alight,
The girl, radiant with joy, had kissed him full upon
the lips; the patriarch had fallen on his knees, and, gathering a handful of
the sand--the precious surface of the earth, long fabled among his Folk, long
worshipped in his deepest reveries--had clasped it to his thin and heaving
breast.
If he had known how to pray he would have worshipped
there. But even though his lips were silent, his attitude, his soul were all
one vast and heartfelt prayer--prayer to the mother-earth, the unseen stars,
the night, the wind upon his brow, the sweet and subtle airs of heaven that
enfolded him like a caress.
Stern wrapped the old man in a spare mantle, for the
night was chill, then made a crackling fire on the sands. Worn out, they
rested, all. Little they said. The beauty and majesty of night now--seen again
after long absence--a hundred times more solemn than they had ever known it,
kept the two Americans from speech. And the old man, buried in his own
thoughts, sat by the fire, burning with a fever of impatient longings for the
dawn.
Five o'clock.
Now all across the eastern sky, shrouded as it was
with the slow, silent mist-wreaths rising ghostly from the Abyss, delicate pink
and pearl-gray tints were spreading, shading above to light blues and to
purples of exquisite depth and clarity.
No cloud flecked the sky, the wondrous sky of early
spring. Dawn, pure as on the primal day, was climbing from the eastern depths.
And, thrilled by that eternal miracle, the man and woman, hand in hand, awaited
the full coming of the light.
The patriarch spoke.
"Is the sun nigh arisen now?" he queried in
a strange, awed voice, trembling with eagerness and deep emotion. "Is it
coming, at last--the sun?"
"It'll be here now before long, father,"
answered Stern.
"From which direction does it come? Am I facing
it?" he asked, with pitiful anxiety.
"You're facing it. The first rays will fall on
you. Only be patient. I promise you it shall not fail!"
A pause. Then the aged man spoke again.
"Remember, oh, my children," said he, with
terrible earnestness, "all that I have told you, all that you must know.
Remember how to deal with my people. They are as children in your hands. Be
very patient, very firm and wise; all will be well.
"Remember my warnings of the Great Vortex, so
very far below our sea, the Lanskaarn, and all those other perils of the Abyss
whereof I have spoken. Remember, too, all the traditions of the Cave of
Records. Some day, when all else is accomplished, you may find that cave. I
have told you everything I know of its location. Seek it some day, and find the
history of the dead, buried past, from the time of the great catastrophe to the
final migration when my ancestors sought the lower sea."
Another silence. All three were too deeply moved for
any speech. And ever mounting higher, brighter and more clear, dawn flung its
glories wide across the sky.
"Help me that I may stand, to greet the
day!" at last the patriarch said. "I cannot rise, alone."
Stern and the girl, each taking an arm, got him to his
feet. He stood there facing the east, priestlike in venerable and solemn
worship of the coming sun.
"Give me each a hand, my children," he
commanded. In Stern's hand, strong, corded, toil-worn, he laid the girl's.
"Thus do I give you each to each," said he.
"Thus do I make you one!"
Stern drew Beatrice into his arms. Blind though the
old man was, he sensed the act, and smiled. A great and holy peace had shrouded
him.
"Only that I may feel the sun upon my face!"
breathed he.
All at once a thinning cloud-haze let the light glow
through.
Beatrice looked at Stern. He shook his head.
"Not yet," he answered.
Swiftly uprose the sun. The morning wind dispelled the
shrouding vapors.
"Oh, what is this warmth?" exclaimed the
patriarch, trembling violently. "What is this warmth, this glow upon my
face? This life, this--"
Out toward the east he stretched both hands.
Instinctively the priestlike worship of the sun, old when the world was still
in infancy, surged back to him again after the long, lost centuries of darkness
and oblivion.
"The sun! The sun!" he cried, his voice
triumphant as a trumpet-call. Tears coursed from his blind eyes; but on his
lips a smile of joy unutterable was set.
"The sun! At last! The--"
Stern caught his feeble body as he fell.
Down on the sands they laid him. To the stilled heart
Stern laid his ear.
Tears were in his eyes, too, and in the girl's, as
Stern shook his head, silently.
Up over the time-worn, the venerable, the kindly face
they drew the mantle, but not before each had reverently kissed the wrinkled
forehead.
"Better thus," whispered the engineer.
"Far better, every way. He had his wish; he felt the sunshine on his face;
his outgoing spirit must be mingled with that worshipped light and air and
sky--with dawn--with springtime--"
"With life itself!" said Beatrice.
And through her tears she smiled, while higher rose
the warm, life-giving sun of spring.
2 RTEXTR*ch
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