In a night club of many lights and much
high-pitched laughter, where he had come for an hour of forgetfulness and an
execrable dinner, John Northwood was suddenly conscious that Fate had begun
shuffling the cards of his destiny for a dramatic game.
First, he was aware that the singularly ugly and
deformed man at the next table was gazing at him with an intense, almost
excited scrutiny. But, more disturbing than this, was the scowl of hate on the
face of another man, as handsome as this other was hideous, who sat in a far
corner hidden behind a broad column, with rude elbows on the table, gawking
first at Northwood and then at the deformed, almost hideous man.
Northwood's blood chilled over the expression on
the handsome, fair-haired stranger's perfectly carved face. If a figure in
marble could display a fierce, unnatural passion, it would seem no more
eldritch than the hate in the icy blue eyes.
It was not a new
experience for Northwood to be stared at: he was not merely a good-looking
young fellow of twenty-five, he was scenery, magnificent and compelling.
Furthermore, he had been in the public eye for years, first as a precocious
child and, later, as a brilliant young scientist. Yet, for all his experience
with hero worshippers to put an adamantine crust on his sensibilities, he grew
warm-eared under the gaze of these two strangers - this hunchback with a face
like a grotesque mask in a Greek play, this other who, even handsomer than
himself, chilled the blood queerly with the cold perfection of his godlike
masculine beauty.
Northwood sensed something familiar about the
hunchback. Somewhere he had seen that huge, round, intelligent face splattered
with startling features. The very breadth of the man's massive brow was not
altogether unknown to him, nor could Northwood look into the mournful,
near-sighted black eyes without trying to recall when and where he had last
seen them.
But this other of
the marble-perfect nose and jaw, the blond, thick-waved hair, was totally a
stranger, whom Northwood fervently hoped he would never know too well.
Trying to analyze
the queer repugnance that he felt for this handsome, boldly staring fellow,
Northwood decided: "He's like a newly-made wax figure endowed with
life."
Shivering over
his own fantastic thought, he again glanced swiftly at the hunchback, who he
noticed was playing with his coffee, evidently to prolong the meal.
One year of
calm-headed scientific teaching in a famous old eastern university had not made
him callous to mysteries. Thus, with a feeling of high adventure, he finished
his supper and prepared to go. From the corner of his eye, he saw the hunchback
leave his seat, while the handsome man behind the column rose furtively, as
though he, too, intended to follow.
Northwood was out
in the dusky street about thirty seconds, when the hunchback came from the
foyer. Without apparently noticing Northwood, he hailed a taxi. For a moment,
he stood still, waiting for the taxi to pull up at the curb. Standing thus,
with the street light limning every unnatural angle of his twisted body and
every queer abnormality of his huge features, he looked almost repulsive.
On his way to the
taxi, his thick shoulder jostled the younger man. Northwood felt something
strike his foot, and, stooping in the crowded street, picked up a black leather
wallet.
"Wait!"
he shouted as the hunchback stepped into the waiting taxi.
But the man did
not falter. In a moment, Northwood lost sight of him as the taxi moved away.
He debated with
himself whether or not he should attempt to follow. And while he stood thus in
indecision, the handsome stranger approached him.
"Good
evening to you," he said curtly. His rich, musical voice, for all its
deepness, held a faint hint of the tremulous, birdlike notes heard in the voice
of a young child who has not used his vocal chords long enough for them to have
lost their exquisite newness.
"Good
evening," echoed Northwood, somewhat uncertainly. A sudden aura of
repulsion swept coldly over him. Seen close, with the brilliant light of the
street directly on his too perfect face, the man was more sinister than in the
café. Yet Northwood, struggling desperately for a reason to explain his violent
dislike, could not discover why he shrank from this splendid creature, whose
eyes and flesh had a new, fresh appearance rarely seen except in very young
boys.
"I want what
you picked up," went on the stranger.
"It isn't
yours!" Northwood flashed back. Ah! that effluvium of hatred which seemed
to weave a tangible net around him!
"Nor is it
yours. Give it to me!"
"You're
insolent, aren't you?"
"If you
don't give it to me, you will be sorry." The man did not raise his voice
in anger, yet the words whipped Northwood with almost physical violence.
"If he knew that I saw everything that happened in there - that I am talking
to you at this moment - he would tremble with fear."
"But you
can't intimidate me."
"No?"
For a long moment, the cold blue eyes held his contemptuously. "No? I
can't frighten you - you worm of the Black Age?"
Before
Northwood's horrified sight, he vanished; vanished as though he had turned
suddenly to air and floated away.
The street was
not crowded at that time, and there was no pressing group of bodies to hide the
splendid creature. Northwood gawked stupidly, mouth half open, eyes searching
wildly everywhere. The man was gone. He had simply disappeared, in this sane,
electric-lighted street.
Suddenly, close
to Northwood's ear, grated a derisive laugh. "I can't frighten you?"
From nowhere came that singularly young-old voice.
As Northwood
jerked his head around to meet blank space, a blow struck the corner of his
mouth. He felt the warm blood run over his chin.
"I could
take that wallet from you, worm, but you may keep it, and see me later. But
remember this - the thing inside never will be yours."
The words fell
from empty air.
For several
minutes, Northwood waited at the spot, expecting another demonstration of the
abnormal, but nothing else occurred. At last, trembling violently, he wiped the
thick moisture from his forehead and dabbed at the blood which he still felt on
his chin.
But when he
looked at his handkerchief, he muttered:
"Well, I'll
be jiggered!"
The handkerchief
bore not the slightest trace of blood.
Under the light
in his bedroom, Northwood examined the wallet. It was made of alligator skin,
clasped with a gold signet that bore the initial M. The first pocket was empty;
the second yielded an object that sent a warm flush to his face.
It was the photograph
of a gloriously beautiful girl, so seductively lovely that the picture seemed
almost to be alive. The short, curved upper lip, the full, delicately
voluptuous lower, parted slightly in a smile that seemed to linger in every
exquisite line of her face. She looked as though she had just spoken
passionately, and the spirit of her words had inspired her sweet flesh and
eyes.
Northwood turned
his head abruptly and groaned, "Good Heavens!"
He had no right
to palpitate over the picture of an unknown beauty. Only a month ago, he had
become engaged to a young woman whose mind was as brilliant as her face was
plain. Always he had vowed that he would never marry a pretty girl, for he
detested his own masculine beauty sincerely.
He tried to grasp
a mental picture of Mary Burns, who had never stirred in him the emotion that
this smiling picture invoked. But, gazing at the picture, he could not remember
how his fiancée looked.
Suddenly the
picture fell from his fingers and dropped to the floor on its face, revealing
an inscription on the back. In a bold, masculine hand, he read: "Your
future wife."
"Some lucky
fellow is headed for a life of bliss," was his jealous thought.
He frowned at the
beautiful face. What was this girl to that hideous hunchback? Why did the
handsome stranger warn him, "The thing inside never will be yours?"
Again he turned
eagerly to the wallet.
In the last flap
he found something that gave him another surprise: a plain white card on which
a name and address were written by the same hand that had penned the
inscription on the picture.
Emil Mundson, Ph.
D.,
44-1/2 Indian
Court
Emil Mundson, the electrical wizard and
distinguished scientific writer, friend of the professor of science at the
university where Northwood was an assistant professor; Emil Mundson, whom, a
week ago, Northwood had yearned mightily to meet.
Now Northwood
knew why the hunchback's intelligent, ugly face was familiar to him. He had
seen it pictured as often as enterprising news photographers could steal a
likeness from the over-sensitive scientist, who would never sit for a formal
portrait.
Even before
Northwood had graduated from the university where he now taught, he had been
avidly interested in Emil Mundson's fantastic articles in scientific journals.
Only a week ago, Professor Michael had come to him with the current issue of
New Science, shouting excitedly:
"Did you
read this, John, this article by Emil Mundson?" His shaking, gnarled old
fingers tapped the open magazine.
Northwood seized
the magazine and looked avidly at the title of the article, "Creatures of
the Light."
"No, I haven't
read it," he admitted. "My magazine hasn't come yet."
"Run through
it now briefly, will you? And note with especial care the passages I have
marked. In fact, you needn't bother with anything else just now. Read this - and
this - and this." He pointed out penciled paragraphs.
Northwood read:
Man always has been, always will be a
creature of the light. He is forever reaching for some future point of
perfected evolution which, even when his most remote ancestor was a fish
creature composed of a few cells, was the guiding power that brought him up
from the first stinking sea and caused him to create gods in his own image.
It is this yearning for perfection which
sets man apart from all other life, which made him man even in the rudimentary
stages of his development. He was man when he wallowed in the slime of the new
world and yearned for the air above. He will still be man when he has evolved
into that glorious creature of the future whose body is deathless and whose
mind rules the universe.
Professor Michael, looking over Northwood's
shoulder, interrupted the reading:
"Man always has been man," he droned
emphatically. "That's not original with friend Mundson, of course; yet it
is a theory that has not received sufficient investigation." He indicated
another marked paragraph. "Read this thoughtfully, John. It's the crux of
Mundson's thought."
Northwood
continued:
Since the human body is chemical and
electrical, increased knowledge of its powers and limitations will enable us to
work with Nature in her sublime but infinitely slow processes of human
evolution. We need not wait another fifty thousand years to be godlike
creatures. Perhaps even now we may be standing at the beginning of the splendid
bridge that will take us to that state of perfected evolution when we shall be
Creatures who have reached the Light.
Northwood looked questioningly at the professor.
"Queer, fantastic thing, isn't it?"
Professor Michael
smoothed his thin, gray hair with his dried-out hand. "Fantastic?"
His intellectual eyes behind the thick glasses sought the ceiling. "Who
can say? Haven't you ever wondered why all parents expect their children to be
nearer perfection than themselves, and why is it a natural impulse for them to
be willing to sacrifice themselves to better their offspring?" He paused
and moistened his pale, wrinkled lips. "Instinct, Northwood. We Creatures
of the Light know that our race shall reach that point in evolution when, as
perfect creatures, we shall rule all matter and live forever." He punctuated
the last words with blows on the table.
Northwood laughed
dryly. "How many thousands of years are you looking forward,
Professor?"
The professor
made an obscure noise that sounded like a smothered sniff. "You and I
shall never agree on the point that mental advancement may wipe out physical
limitations in the human race, perhaps in a few hundred years. It seems as
though your profound admiration for Dr. Mundson would win you over to this pet
theory."
"But what
sane man can believe that even perfectly developed beings, through mental
control, could overcome Nature's fixed laws?"
"We don't
know! We don't know!" The professor slapped the magazine with an emphatic
hand. "Emil Mundson hasn't written this article for nothing. He's paving
the way for some announcement that will startle the scientific world. I know
him. In the same manner he gave out veiled hints of his various brilliant discoveries
and inventions long before he offered them to the world."
"But Dr.
Mundson is an electrical wizard. He would not be delving seriously into the
mysteries of evolution, would he?"
"Why
not?" The professor's wizened face screwed up wisely. "A year ago,
when he was back from one of those mysterious long excursions he takes in that
weirdly different aircraft of his, about which he is so secretive, he told me
that he was conducting experiments to prove his belief that the human brain
generates electric current, and that the electrical impulses in the brain set
up radioactive waves that some day, among other miracles, will make thought
communication possible. Perfect man, he says, will perform mental feats which
will give him complete mental domination over the physical."
Northwood
finished reading and turned thoughtfully to the window. His profile in repose
had the straight-nosed, full-lipped perfection of a Greek coin. Old, wizened
Professor Michael, gazing at him covertly, smothered a sigh.
"I wish you
knew Dr. Mundson," he said. "He, the ugliest man in the world,
delights in physical perfection. He would revel in your splendid body and
brilliant mind."
Northwood blushed
hotly. "You'll have to arrange a meeting between us."
"I
have." The professor's thin, dry lips pursed comically. "He'll drop
in to see you within a few days."
And now John
Northwood sat holding Dr. Mundson's card and the wallet which the scientist had
so mysteriously dropped at his feet.
Here was high
adventure, perhaps, for which he had been singled out by the famous electrical
wizard. While excitement mounted in his blood, Northwood again examined the
photograph. The girl's strange eyes, odd in expression rather than in size or
shape, seemed to hold him. The young man's breath came quicker.
"It's a
challenge," he said softly. "It won't hurt to see what it's all
about."
His watch showed
eleven o'clock. He would return the wallet that night. Into his coat pocket he
slipped a revolver. One sometimes needed weapons in Indian Court.
He took a taxi,
which soon turned from the well-lighted streets into a section where squalid
houses crowded against each other, and dirty children swarmed in the streets in
their last games of the day.
Indian Court was
little more than an alley, dark and evil smelling.
The chauffeur
stopped at the entrance and said:
"If I drive
in, I'll have to back out, sir. Number forty-four and a half is the end house,
facing the entrance."
"You've been
here before?" asked Northwood.
"Last week I
drove the queerest bird here - a fellow as good-looking as you, who had me
follow the taxi occupied by a hunchback with a face like Old Nick." The
man hesitated and went on haltingly: "It might sound goofy, mister, but there
was something funny about my fare. He jumped out, asked me the charge, and, in
the moment I glanced at my taxi-meter, he disappeared. Yes, sir. Vanished,
owing me four dollars, six bits. It was almost ghostlike, mister."
Northwood laughed
nervously and dismissed him. He found his number and knocked at the dilapidated
door. He heard a sudden movement in the lighted room beyond, and the door
opened quickly.
Dr. Mundson faced
him.
"I knew
you'd come!" he said with a slight Teutonic accent. "Often I'm not
wrong in sizing up my man. Come in."
Northwood cleared
his throat awkwardly. "You dropped your wallet at my feet, Dr. Mundson. I
tried to stop you before you got away, but I guess you did not hear me."
He offered the
wallet, but the hunchback waved it aside.
"A ruse, of
course," he confessed. "It just was my way of testing what your
Professor Michael told about you - that you are extraordinarily intelligent,
virile, and imaginative. Had you sent the wallet to me, I should have sought
elsewhere for my man. Come in."
Northwood followed him into a living room evidently
recently furnished in a somewhat hurried manner. The furniture, although rich,
was not placed to best advantage. The new rug was a trifle crooked on the
floor, and the lamp shades clashed in color with the other furnishings.
Dr. Mundson's
intense eyes swept over Northwood's tall, slim body.
"Ah, you're a man!" he said softly.
"You are what all men would be if we followed Nature's plan that only the
fit shall survive. But modern science is permitting the unfit to live and to
mix their defective beings with the developing race!" His huge fist
gesticulated madly. "Fools! Fools! They need me and perfect men like
you."
"Why?"
"Because you
can help me in my plan to populate the earth with a new race of godlike people.
But don't question me too closely now. Even if I should explain, you would call
me insane. But watch; gradually I shall unfold the mystery before you, so that
you will believe."
He reached for
the wallet that Northwood still held, opened it with a monstrous hand, and
reached for the photograph. "She shall bring you love. She's more
beautiful than a poet's dream."
A warm flush
crept over the young man's face.
"I can
easily understand," he said, "how a man could love her, but for me
she comes too late."
"Pooh!
Fiddlesticks!" The scientist snapped his fingers. "This girl was
created for you. That other - you will forget her the moment you set eyes on
the sweet flesh of this Athalia. She is an houri from Paradise - a maiden of
musk and incense." He held the girl's photograph toward the young man.
"Keep it. She is yours, if you are strong enough to hold her."
Northwood opened
his card case and placed the picture inside, facing Mary's photograph. Again
the warning words of the mysterious stranger rang in his memory: "The
thing inside never will be yours."
"Where
to," he said eagerly; "and when do we start?"
"To the new
Garden of Eden," said the scientist, with such a beatific smile that his
face was less hideous. "We start immediately. I have arranged with
Professor Michael for you to go."
Northwood
followed Dr. Mundson to the street and walked with him a few blocks to a garage
where the scientist's motor car waited.
"The
apartment in Indian Court is just a little eccentricity of mine,"
explained Dr. Mundson. "I need people in my work, people whom I must
select through swift, sure tests. The apartment comes in handy, as
to-night."
Northwood
scarcely noted where they were going, or how long they had been on the way. He
was vaguely aware that they had left the city behind, and were now passing
through farms bathed in moonlight.
At last they
entered a path that led through a bit of woodland. For half a mile the path continued,
and then ended at a small, enclosed field. In the middle of this rested a queer
aircraft. Northwood knew it was a flying machine only by the propellers mounted
on the top of the huge ball-shaped body. There were no wings, no birdlike hull,
no tail.
"It looks
almost like a little world ready to fly off into space," he commented.
"It is just
about that." The scientist's squat, bunched-out body, settled squarely on
long, thin, straddled legs, looked gnomelike in the moonlight. "One cannot
copy flesh with steel and wood, but one can make metal perform magic of which
flesh is not capable. My sun-ship is not a mechanical reproduction of a bird.
It is - but, climb in, young friend."
Northwood
followed Dr. Mundson into the aircraft. The moment the scientist closed the
metal door behind them, Northwood was instantly aware of some concealed horror
that vibrated through his nerves. For one dreadful moment, he expected some
terrific agent of the shadows that escaped the electric lights to leap upon
him. And this was odd, for nothing could be saner than the globular interior of
the aircraft, divided into four wedge-shaped apartments.
Dr. Mundson also
paused at the door, puzzled, hesitant.
"Someone has
been here!" he exclaimed. "Look, Northwood! The bunk has been
occupied - the one in this cabin I had set aside for you."
He pointed to the
disarranged bunk, where the impression of a head could still be seen on a
pillow.
"A tramp,
perhaps."
"No! The
door was locked, and, as you saw, the fence around this field was protected
with barbed wire. There's something wrong. I felt it on my trip here all the
way, like someone watching me in the dark. And don't laugh! I have stopped
laughing at all things that seem unnatural. You don't know what is
natural."
Northwood
shivered. "Maybe someone is concealed about the ship."
"Impossible.
Me, I thought so, too. But I looked and looked, and there was nothing."
All evening Northwood had burned to tell the scientist
about the handsome stranger in the Mad Hatter Club. But even now he shrank from
saying that a man had vanished before his eyes.
Dr. Mundson was
working with a succession of buttons and levers. There was a slight jerk, and
then the strange craft shot up, straight as a bullet from a gun, with scarcely
a sound other than a continuous whistle.
"The
vertical rising aircraft perfected," explained Dr. Mundson. "But what
would you think if I told you that there is not an ounce of gasoline in my
heavier-than-air craft?"
"I shouldn't
be surprised. An electrical genius would seek for a less obsolete source of
power."
In the bright
flare of the electric lights, the scientist's ugly face flushed. "The man
who harnesses the sun rules the world. He can make the desert places bloom, the
frozen poles balmy and verdant. You, John Northwood, are one of the very few to
fly in a machine operated solely by electrical energy from the sun's
rays."
"Are you
telling me that this airship is operated with power from the sun?"
"Yes. And I
cannot take the credit for its invention." He sighed. "The dream was
mine, but a greater brain developed it - a brain that may be greater than I
suspect." His face grew suddenly graver.
A little later
Northwood said: "It seems that we must be making fabulous speed."
"Perhaps!"
Dr. Mundson worked with the controls. "Here, I've cut her down to the
average speed of the ordinary airplane. Now you can see a bit of the night
scenery."
Northwood peeped
out the thick glass porthole. Far below, he saw two tiny streaks of light, one
smooth and stationery, the other wavering as though it were a reflection in
water.
"That can't
be a lighthouse!" he cried.
The scientist
glanced out. "It is. We're approaching the Florida Keys."
"Impossible!
We've been traveling less than an hour."
"But, my
young friend, do you realize that my sun-ship has a speed of over one thousand
miles an hour, how much over I dare not tell you?"
Throughout the
night, Northwood sat beside Dr. Mundson, watching his deft fingers control the
simple-looking buttons and levers. So fast was their flight now that, through
the portholes, sky and earth looked the same: dark gray films of emptiness. The
continuous weird whistle from the hidden mechanism of the sun-ship was like the
drone of a monster insect, monotonous and soporific during the long intervals
when the scientist was too busy with his controls to engage in conversation.
For some reason
that he could not explain, Northwood had an aversion to going into the sleeping
apartment behind the control room. Then, towards morning, when the suddenly
falling temperature struck a biting chill throughout the sun-ship, Northwood,
going into the cabin for fur coats, discovered why his mind and body shrank in
horror from the cabin.
After he had
procured the fur coats from a closet, he paused a moment, in the privacy of the
cabin, to look at Athalia's picture. Every nerve in his body leaped to meet the
magnetism of her beautiful eyes. Never had Mary Burns stirred emotion like this
in him. He hung over Mary's picture, wistfully, hoping almost prayerfully that
he could react to her as he did to Athalia; but her pale, over-intellectual
face left him cold.
"Cad!"
he ground out between his teeth. "Forgetting her so soon!"
The two pictures
were lying side by side on a little table. Suddenly an obscure noise in the
room caught his attention. It was more vibration than noise, for small sounds
could scarcely be heard above the whistle of the sun-ship. A slight compression
of the air against his neck gave him the eery feeling that someone was standing
close behind him. He wheeled and looked over his shoulder. Half ashamed of his
startled gesture, he again turned to his pictures. Then a sharp cry broke from
him.
Athalia's picture
was gone.
He searched for
it everywhere in the room, in his own pockets, under the furniture. It was
nowhere to be found.
In sudden,
overpowering horror, he seized the fur coats and returned to the control room.
Dr. Mundson was
changing the speed.
"Look out
the window!" he called to Northwood.
The young man
looked and started violently. Day had come, and now that the sun-ship was
flying at a moderate speed, the ocean beneath was plainly visible; and its
entire surface was covered with broken floes of ice and small, ragged icebergs.
He seized a telescope and focused it below. A typical polar scene met his eyes:
penguins strutted about on cakes of ice, a whale blowing in the icy water.
"A part of
the Antarctic that has never been explored," said Dr. Mundson; "and
there, just showing on the horizon, is the Great Ice Barrier." His
characteristic smile lighted the morose black eyes. "I am enough of the
dramatist to wish you to be impressed with what I shall show you within less
than an hour. Accordingly, I shall make a landing and let you feel polar ice
under your feet."
After less than a
minute's search, Dr. Mundson found a suitable place on the ice for a landing,
and, with a few deft manipulations of the controls, brought the sun-ship
swooping down like an eagle on its prey.
For a long moment
after the scientist had stepped out on the ice, Northwood paused at the door.
His feet were chained by a strange reluctance to enter this white, dead
wilderness of ice. But Dr. Mundson's impatient, "Ready?" drew from
him one last glance at the cozy interior of the sun-ship before he, too, went
out into the frozen stillness.
They left the
sun-ship resting on the ice like a fallen silver moon, while they wandered to
the edge of the Barrier and looked at the gray, narrow stretch of sea between
the ice pack and the high cliffs of the Barrier. The sun of the commencing
six-months' Antarctic day was a low, cold ball whose slanted rays struck the
ice with blinding whiteness. There were constant falls of ice from the Barrier,
which thundered into the ocean amid great clouds of ice smoke that lingered
like wraiths around the edge. It was a scene of loneliness and waiting death.
"What's
that?" exclaimed the scientist suddenly.
Out of the white
silence shrilled a low whistle, a familiar whistle. Both men wheeled toward the
sun-ship.
Before their
horrified eyes, the great sphere jerked and glided up, and swerved into the
heavens.
Up it soared;
then, gaining speed, it swung into the blue distance until, in a moment, it was
a tiny star that flickered out even as they watched.
Both men screamed
and cursed and flung up their arms despairingly. A penguin, attracted by their
cries, waddled solemnly over to them and regarded them with manlike curiosity.
"Stranded in
the coldest spot on earth!" groaned the scientist.
"Why did it
start itself, Dr. Mundson!" Northwood narrowed his eyes as he spoke.
"It
didn't!" The scientist's huge face, red from cold, quivered with helpless
rage. "Human hands started it."
"What! Whose
hands?"
"Ach! Do I
know?" His Teutonic accent grew more pronounced, as it always did when he
was under emotional stress. "Somebody whose brain is better than mine.
Somebody who found a way to hide away from our eyes. Ach, Gott! Don't let me
think!"
His great head
sank between his shoulders, giving him, in his fur suit, the grotesque
appearance of a friendly brown bear.
"Doctor
Mundson," said Northwood suddenly, "did you have an enemy, a man with
the face and body of a pagan god - a great, blond creature with eyes as cold
and cruel as the ice under our feet?"
"Wait!"
The huge round head jerked up. "How do you know about Adam? You have not
seen him, won't see him until we arrive at our destination."
"But I have
seen him. He was sitting not thirty feet from you in the Mad Hatter's Club last
night. Didn't you know? He followed me to the street, spoke to me, and then - "
Northwood stopped. How could he let the insane words pass his lips?
"Then, what?
Speak up!"
Northwood laughed
nervously. "It sounds foolish, but I saw him vanish like that." He
snapped his fingers.
"Ach,
Gott!" All the ruddy color drained from the scientist's face. As though
talking to himself, he continued:
"Then it is
true, as he said. He has crossed the bridge. He has reached the Light. And now
he comes to see the world he will conquer - came unseen when I refused my
permission."
He was silent for
a long time, pondering. Then he turned passionately to Northwood.
"John
Northwood, kill me! I have brought a new horror into the world. From the unborn
future, I have snatched a creature who has reached the Light too soon. Kill
me!" He bowed his great, shaggy head.
"What do you
mean, Dr. Mundson: that this Adam has arrived at a point in evolution beyond
this age?"
"Yes. Think
of it! I visioned godlike creatures with the souls of gods. But, Heaven help
us, man always will be man: always will lust for conquest. You and I,
Northwood, and all others are barbarians to Adam. He and his kind will do what
men always do to barbarians - conquer and kill."
"Are there
more like him?" Northwood struggled with a smile of unbelief.
"I don't
know. I did not know that Adam had reached a point so near the ultimate. But
you have seen. Already he is able to set aside what we call natural laws."
Northwood looked
at the scientist closely. The man was surely mad - mad in this desert of white
death.
"Come!"
he said cheerfully. "Let's build an Eskimo snow house. We can live on
penguins for days. And who knows what may rescue us?"
For three hours
the two worked at cutting ice blocks. With snow for mortar, they built a crude
shelter which enabled them to rest out of the cold breath of the spiral polar
winds that blew from the south.
Dr. Mundson was
sitting at the door of their hut, moodily pulling at his strong, black pipe. As
though a fit had seized him, he leaped up and let his pipe fall to the ice.
"Look!"
he shouted. "The sun-ship!"
It seemed but a
moment before the tiny speck on the horizon had swept overhead, a silver comet
on the grayish-blue polar sky. In another moment it had swooped down,
eaglewise, scarcely fifty feet from the ice hut.
Dr. Mundson and
Northwood ran forward. From the metal sphere stepped the stranger of the Mad
Hatter Club. His tall, straight form, erect and slim, swung toward them over
the ice.
"Adam!"
shouted Dr. Mundson. "What does this mean? How dare you!"
Adam's laugh was
like the happy demonstration of a boy. "So? You think you still are
master? You think I returned because I reverenced you yet?" Hate shot viciously
through the freezing blue eyes. "You worm of the Black Age!"
Northwood shuddered. He had heard those strange
words addressed to himself scarcely more than twelve hours ago.
Adam was still
speaking: "With a thought I could annihilate you where you are standing.
But I have use for you. Get in." He swept his hand to the sun-ship.
Both men
hesitated. Then Northwood strode forward until he was within three feet of
Adam. They stood thus, eyeing each other, two splendid beings, one blond as a
Viking, the other dark and vital.
"Just what
is your game?" demanded Northwood.
The icy eyes shot
forth a gleam like lightning. "I needn't tell you, of course, but I may as
well let you suffer over the knowledge." He curled his lips with superb
scorn. "I have one human weakness. I want Athalia." The icy eyes warmed
for a fleeting second. "She is anticipating her meeting with you - bah!
The taste of these women of the Black Age! I could kill you, of course; but
that would only inflame her. And so I take you to her, thrust you down her
throat. When she sees you, she will fly to me." He spread his magnificent
chest.
"Adam!"
Dr. Mundson's face was dark with anger. "What of Eve?"
"Who are you
to question my actions? What a fool you were to let me, whom you forced into
life thousands of years too soon, grow more powerful than you! Before I am
through with all of you petty creatures of the Black Age, you will call me more
terrible than your Jehovah! For see what you have called forth from unborn
time."
He vanished.
Before the
startled men could recover from the shock of it, the vibrant, too-new voice
went on:
"I am sorry
for you, Mundson, because, like you, I need specimens for my experiments. What
a splendid specimen you will be!" His laugh was ugly with significance.
"Get in, worms!"
Unseen hands
cuffed and pushed them into the sun-ship.
Inside, Dr.
Mundson stumbled to the control room, white and drawn of face, his great brain
seemingly paralyzed by the catastrophe.
"You needn't
attempt tricks," went on the voice. "I am watching you both. You
cannot even hide your thoughts from me."
And thus began
the strange continuation of the journey. Not once, in that wild half-hour's
rush over the polar ice clouds, did they see Adam. They saw and heard only the
weird signs of his presence: a puffing cigar hanging in midair, a glass of
water swinging to unseen lips, a ghostly voice hurling threats and insults at
them.
Once the
scientist whispered: "Don't cross him; it is useless. John Northwood,
you'll have to fight a demigod for your woman!"
Because of the
terrific speed of the sun-ship, Northwood could distinguish nothing of the
topographical details below. At the end of half-an-hour, the scientist slowed
enough to point out a tall range of snow-covered mountains, over which hovered
a play of colored lights like the aurora australis.
"Behind those
mountains," he said, "is our destination."
Almost in a
moment, the sun-ship had soared over the peaks. Dr. Mundson kept the speed low
enough for Northwood to see the splendid view below.
In the giant cup
formed by the encircling mountain range was a green valley of tropical
luxuriance. Stretches of dense forest swept half up the mountains and filled
the valley cup with tangled verdure. In the center, surrounded by a broad field
and a narrow ring of woods, towered a group of buildings. From the largest,
which was circular, came the auroralike radiance that formed an umbrella of
light over the entire valley.
"Do I guess
right," said Northwood, "that the light is responsible for this oasis
in the ice?"
"Yes,"
said Dr. Mundson. "In your American slang, it is canned sunshine
containing an overabundance of certain rays, especially the Life Ray, which I
have isolated." He smiled proudly. "You needn't look startled, my
friend. Some of the most common things store sunlight. On very dark nights, if
you have sharp eyes, you can see the radiance given off by certain flowers,
which many naturalists say is trapped sunshine. The familiar nasturtium and the
marigold opened for me the way to hold sunshine against the long polar night,
for they taught me how to apply the Einstein theory of bent light. Stated
simply, during the polar night, when the sun is hidden over the rim of the
world, we steal some of his rays; during the polar day we concentrate the light."
"But could
stored sunshine alone give enough warmth for the luxuriant growth of those
jungles?"
"An
overabundance of the Life Ray is responsible for the miraculous growth of all
life in New Eden. The Life Ray is Nature's most powerful force. Yet Nature is
often niggardly and paradoxical in her use of her powers. In New Eden, we have
forced the powers of creation to take ascendency over the powers of
destruction."
At Northwood's
sudden start, the scientist laughed and continued: "Is it not a pity that
Nature, left alone, requires twenty years to make a man who begins to die in
another ten years? Such waste is not tolerated in New Eden, where supermen are
younger than babes and -"
"Come,
worms; let's land."
It was Adam's
voice. Suddenly he materialized, a blond god, whose eyes and flesh were too
new.
They were in a
world of golden skylight, warmth and tropical vegetation. The field on which
they had landed was covered with a velvety green growth of very soft,
fine-bladed grass, sprinkled with tiny, star-shaped blue flowers. A balmy,
sweet-scented wind, downy as the breeze of a dream, blew gently along the grass
and tingled against Northwood's skin refreshingly. Almost instantly he had the
sensation of perfect well being, and this feeling of physical perfection was
part of the ecstasy that seemed to pervade the entire valley. Grass and breeze
and golden skylight were saturated with a strange ether of joyousness.
At one end of the
field was a dense jungle, cut through by a road that led to the towering
building from which, while above in the sun-ship, they had seen the golden
light issue.
From the jungle
road came a man and a woman, large, handsome people, whose flesh and eyes had
the sinister newness of Adam's. Even before they came close enough to speak,
Northwood was aware that while they seemed of Adam's breed, they were yet
unlike him. The difference was psychical rather than physical; they lacked the
aura of hate and horror that surrounded Adam. The woman drew Adam's head down
and kissed him affectionately on both cheeks.
Adam, from his
towering height, patted her shoulder impatiently and said: "Run on back to
the laboratory, grandmother. We're following soon. You have some new human
embryos, I believe you told me this morning."
"Four fine
specimens, two of them being your sister's twins."
"Splendid! I
was sure that creation had stopped with my generation. I must see them."
He turned to the scientist and Northwood. "You needn't try to leave this
spot. Of course I shall know instantly and deal with you in my own way. Wait
here."
He strode over
the emerald grass on the heels of the woman.
Northwood asked:
"Why does he call that girl grandmother?"
"Because she
is his ancestress." He stirred uneasily. "She is of the first
generation brought forth in the laboratory, and is no different from you or I,
except that, at the age of five years, she is the ancestress of twenty
generations."
"My
God!" muttered Northwood.
"Don't start
being horrified, my friend. Forget about so-called natural laws while you are
in New Eden. Remember, here we have isolated the Life Ray. But look! Here comes
your Athalia!"
Northwood gazed
covertly at the beautiful girl approaching them with a rarely graceful walk.
She was tall, slender, round-bosomed, narrow-hipped, and she held her lovely
body in the erect poise of splendid health. Northwood had a confused
realization of uncovered bronzy hair, drawn to the back of a white neck in a
bunch of short curls; of immense soft black eyes; lips the color of blood, and
delicate, plump flesh on which the golden skylight lingered graciously. He was
instantly glad to see that while she possessed the freshness of young girlhood,
her skin and eyes did not have the horrible newness of Adam's.
When she was
still twenty feet distant, Northwood met her eyes and she smiled shyly. The
rich, red blood ran through her face; and he, too, flushed.
She went to Dr.
Mundson and, placing her hands on his thick shoulders, kissed him
affectionately.
"I've been
worried about you, Daddy Mundson." Her rich contralto voice matched her
exotic beauty. "Since you and Adam had that quarrel the day you left, I
did not see him until this morning, when he landed the sun-ship alone."
"And you
pleaded with him to return for us?"
"Yes."
Her eyes drooped and a hot flush swept over her face.
Dr. Mundson
smiled. "But I'm back now, Athalia, and I've brought some one whom I hope
you will be glad to know."
Reaching for her
hand, he placed it simply in Northwood's.
"This is
John, Athalia. Isn't he handsomer than the pictures of him which I televisioned
to you? God bless both of you."
He walked ahead
and turned his back.
A magical half
hour followed for Northwood and Athalia. The girl told him of her past life,
how Dr. Mundson had discovered her one year ago working in a New York sweat
shop, half dead from consumption. Without friends, she was eager to follow the
scientist to New Eden, where he promised she would recover her health
immediately.
"And he was
right, John," she said shyly. "The Life Ray, that marvelous energy
ray which penetrates to the utmost depths of earth and ocean, giving to the
cells of all living bodies the power to grow and remain animate, has been
concentrated by Dr. Mundson in his stored sunshine. The Life Ray healed me
almost immediately."
Northwood looked
down at the glorious girl beside him, whose eyes already fluttered away from
his like shy black butterflies. Suddenly he squeezed the soft hand in his and
said passionately:
"Athalia!
Because Adam wants you and will get you if he can, let us set aside all the
artificialities of civilization. I have loved you madly ever since I saw your
picture. If you can say the same to me, it will give me courage to face what I
know lies before me."
Athalia, her face
suddenly tender, came closer to him.
"John
Northwood, I love you."
Her red lips came
temptingly close; but before he could touch them, Adam suddenly pushed his body
between him and Athalia. Adam was pale, and all the iciness was gone from his
blue eyes, which were deep and dark and very human. He looked down at Athalia,
and she looked up at him, two handsome specimens of perfect manhood and womanhood.
"Fast work,
Athalia!" The new vibrant voice was strained. "I was hoping you would
be disappointed in him, especially after having been wooed by me this morning.
I could take you if I wished, of course; but I prefer to win you in the ancient
manner. Dismiss him!" He jerked his thumb over his shoulder in Northwood's
direction.
Athalia flushed
vividly and looked at him almost compassionately. "I am not great enough
for you, Adam. I dare not love you."
Adam laughed, and
still oblivious of Northwood and Dr. Mundson, folded his arms over his breast.
With the golden skylight on his burnished hair, he was a valiant, magnificent
spectacle.
"Since the
beginning of time, gods and archangels have looked upon the daughters of men
and found them fair. Mate with me, Athalia, and I, fifty thousand years beyond
the creature Mundson has selected for you, will make you as I am, the deathless
overlord of life and all nature."
He drew her hand
to his bosom.
For one dark
moment, Northwood felt himself seared by jealousy, for, through the plump,
sweet flesh of Athalia's face, he saw the red blood leap again. How could she
withhold herself from this splendid superman?
But her answer,
given with faltering voice, was the old, simple one: "I have promised him,
Adam. I love him." Tears trembled on her thick lashes.
"So! I
cannot get you in the ancient manner. Now I'll use my own."
He seized her in
his arms crushed her against him, and, laughing over her head at Northwood,
bent his glistening head and kissed her on the mouth.
There was a
blinding flash of blue electric sparks - and nothing else. Both Adam and
Athalia had vanished.
Adam's voice came
in a last mocking challenge: "I shall be what no other gods before me have
been - a good sport. I'll leave you both to your own devices, until I want you
again."
White-lipped and
trembling, Northwood groaned: "What has he done now?"
Dr. Mundson's
great head drooped. "I don't know. Our bodies are electric and chemical
machines; and a super intelligence has discovered new laws of which you and I
are ignorant."
"But Athalia..."
"She is
safe; he loves her."
"Loves
her!" Northwood shivered. "I cannot believe that those freezing eyes
could ever look with love on a woman."
"Adam is a
man. At heart he is as human as the first man-creature that wallowed in the new
earth's slime." His voice dropped as though he were musing aloud. "It
might be well to let him have Athalia. She will help to keep vigor in the new
race, which would stop reproducing in another few generations without the
injection of Black Age blood."
"Do you want
to bring more creatures like Adam into the world?" Northwood flung at him.
"You have tampered with life enough, Dr. Mundson. But, although Adam has
my sympathy, I'm not willing to turn Athalia over to him."
"Well said!
Now come to the laboratory for chemical nourishment and rest under the Life
Ray."
They went to the
great circular building from whose highest tower issued the golden radiance
that shamed the light of the sun, hanging low in the northeast.
"John
Northwood," said Dr. Mundson, "with that laboratory, which is the
center of all life in New Eden, we'll have to whip Adam. He gave us what he
called a 'sporting chance' because he knew that he is able to send us and all
mankind to a doom more terrible than hell. Even now we might be entering some
hideous trap that he has set for us."
They entered by a
side entrance and went immediately to what Dr. Mundson called the Rest Ward.
Here, in a large room, were ranged rows of cots, on many of which lay men
basking in the deep orange flood of light which poured from individual lamps
set above each cot.
"It is the
Life Ray!" said Dr. Mundson reverently. "The source of all growth and
restoration in Nature. It is the power that bursts open the seed and brings
forth the shoot, that increases the shoot into a giant tree. It is the same
power that enables the fertilized ovum to develop into an animal. It creates
and recreates cells almost instantly; accordingly, it is the perfect substitute
for sleep. Stretch out, enjoy its power; and while you rest, eat these
nourishing tablets."
Northwood lay on
a cot, and Dr. Mundson turned the Life Ray on him. For a few minutes a
delicious drowsiness fell upon him, producing a spell of perfect peace which
the cells of his being seemed to drink in. For another delirious, fleeting
space, every inch of him vibrated with a thrilling sensation of freshness. He
took a deep, ecstatic breath and opened his eyes.
"Enough,"
said Dr. Mundson, switching off the Ray. "After three minutes of
rejuvenation, you are commencing again with perfect cells. All ravages from
disease and wear have been corrected."
Northwood leaped
up joyously. His handsome eyes sparkled, his skin glowed. "I feel great!
Never felt so good since I was a kid."
A pleased grin
spread over the scientist's homely face. "See what my discovery will mean
to the world! In the future we shall all go to the laboratory for recuperation
and nourishment. We'll have almost twenty-four hours a day for work and
play."
He stretched out
on the bed contentedly. "Some day, when my work is nearly done, I shall
permit the Life Ray to cure my hump."
"Why not
now?"
Dr. Mundson
sighed. "If I were perfect, I should cease to be so overwhelmingly
conscious of the importance of perfection." He settled back to enjoyment
of the Life Ray.
A few minutes
later, he jumped up, alert as a boy. "Ach! That's fine. Now I'll show you
how the Life Ray speeds up development and produces four generations of humans
a year."
With restored
energy, Northwood began thinking of Athalia. As he followed Dr. Mundson down a
long corridor, he yearned to see her again, to be certain that she was safe.
Once he imagined he felt a gentle, soft-fleshed touch against his hand, and was
disappointed not to see her walking by his side. Was she with him, unseen? The
thought was sweet.
Before Dr.
Mundson opened the massive bronze door at the end of the corridor, he said:
"Don't be
surprised or shocked over anything you see here, John Northwood. This is the
Baby Laboratory."
They entered a
room which seemed no different from a hospital ward. On little white beds lay
naked children of various sizes, perfect, solemn-eyed youngsters and older
children as beautiful as animated statues. Above each bed was a small Life Ray
projector. A white-capped nurse went from bed to bed.
"They are
recuperating from the daily educational period," said the scientist.
"After a few minutes of this they will go into the growing room, which I
shall have to show you through a window. Should you and I enter, we might be
changed in a most extraordinary manner." He laughed mischievously. "But,
look, Northwood!"
He slid back a
panel in the wall, and Northwood peered in through a thick pane of clear glass.
The room was really an immense outdoor arena, its only carpet the fine-bladed
grass, its roof the blue sky cut in the middle by an enormous disc from which
shot the aurora of trapped sunshine which made a golden umbrella over the
valley. Through openings in the bottom of the disc poured a fine rain of rays
which fell constantly upon groups of children, youths and young girls, all clad
in the merest scraps of clothing. Some were dancing, others were playing games,
but all seemed as supremely happy as the birds and butterflies which fluttered
about the shrubs and flowers edging the arena.
"I don't
expect you to believe," said Dr. Mundson, "that the oldest young man in
there is three months old. You cannot see visible changes in a body which grows
as slowly as the human being, whose normal period of development is twenty
years or more. But I can give you visible proof of how fast growth takes place
under the full power of the Life Ray. Plant life, which, even when left to
nature, often develops from seed to flower within a few weeks or months, can be
seen making its miraculous changes under the Life Ray. Watch those gorgeous
purple flowers over which the butterflies are hovering."
Northwood
followed his pointing finger. Near the glass window through which they looked
grew an enormous bank of resplendent violet colored flowers, which literally
enshrouded the entire bush with their royal glory. At first glance it seemed as
though a violent wind were snatching at flower and bush, but closer inspection
proved that the agitation was part of the plant itself. And then he saw that
the movements were the result of perpetual composition and growth.
He fastened his
eyes on one huge bud. He saw it swell, burst, spread out its passionate purple
velvet, lift the broad flower face to the light for a joyous minute. A few
seconds later a butterfly lighted airily to sample its nectar and to brush the
pollen from its yellow dusted wings. Scarcely had the winged visitor flown away
than the purple petals began to wither and fall away, leaving the seed pod on
the stem. The visible change went on in this seed pod. It turned rapidly brown,
dried out, and then sent the released seeds in a shower to the rich black earth
below. Scarcely had the seeds touched the ground than they sent up tiny green
shoots that grew larger each moment. Within ten minutes there was a new plant a
foot high. Within half an hour, the plant budded, blossomed, and cast forth its
own seed.
"You
understand?" asked the scientist. "Development is going on as rapidly
among the children. Before the first year has passed, the youngest baby will
have grandchildren; that is, if the baby tests out fit to pass its seed down to
the new generation. I know it sounds absurd. Yet you saw the plant."
"But
Doctor," Northwood rubbed his jaw thoughtfully, "Nature's forces of
destruction, of tearing down, are as powerful as her creative powers. You have
discovered the ultimate in creation and upbuilding. But perhaps - oh, Lord, it
is too awful to think!"
"Speak,
Northwood!" The scientist's voice was impatient.
"It is
nothing!" The pale young man attempted a smile. "I was only imagining
some of the horror that could be thrust on the world if a supermind like Adam's
should discover Nature's secret of death and destruction and speed it up as you
have sped the life force."
"Ach
Gott!" Dr. Mundson's face was white. "He has his own laboratory,
where he works every day. Don't talk so loud. He might be listening. And I
believe he can do anything he sets out to accomplish."
Close to
Northwood's ear fell a faint, triumphant whisper: "Yes, he can do
anything. How did you guess, worm?"
It was Adam's
voice.
"Now come
and see the Leyden jar mothers," said Dr. Mundson. "We do not wait
for the child to be born to start our work."
He took Northwood
to a laboratory crowded with strange apparatus, where young men and women
worked. Northwood knew instantly that these people, although unusually handsome
and strong, were not of Adam's generation. None of them had the look of newness
which marked those who had grown up under the Life Ray.
"They are
the perfect couples whom I combed the world to find," said the scientist.
"From their eugenic marriages sprang the first children that passed
through the laboratory. I had hoped," he hesitated and looked sideways at
Northwood, "I had dreamed of having the children of you and Athalia to
help strengthen the New Race."
A wave of sudden
disgust passed over Northwood.
"Thanks,"
he said tartly. "When I marry Athalia, I intend to have an old-fashioned
home and a Black Age family. I don't relish having my children turned into - experiments."
"But wait
until you see all the wonders of the laboratory! That is why I am showing you
all this."
Northwood drew
his handkerchief and mopped his brow. "It sickens me, Doctor! The more I
see, the more pity I have for Adam - and the less I blame him for his rebellion
and his desire to kill and to rule. Heavens! What a terrible thing you have
done, experimenting with human life."
"Nonsense!
Can you say that all life - all matter - is not the result of scientific
experiment? Can you?" His black gaze made Northwood uncomfortable.
"Buck up, young friend, for now I am going to show you a marvelous
improvement on Nature's bungling ways - the Leyden jar mother." He raised
his voice and called, "Lilith!"
The woman whom
they had met on the field came forward.
"May we take
a peep at Lona's twins?" asked the scientist. "They are about ready
to go to the growing dome, are they not?"
"In five
more minutes," said the woman. "Come see."
She lifted one of
the black velvet curtains that lined an entire side of the laboratory and
thereby disclosed a globular jar of glass and metal, connected by wires to a
dynamo. Above the jar was a Life Ray projector. Lilith slid aside a metal
portion of the jar, disclosing through the glass underneath the squirming,
kicking body of a baby, resting on a bed of soft, spongy substance, to which it
was connected by the navel cord.
"The Leyden
jar mother," said Dr. Mundson. "It is the dream of us scientists
realized. The human mother's body does nothing but nourish and protect her
unborn child, a job which science can do better. And so, in New Eden, we take
the young embryo and place it in the Leyden jar mother, where the Life Ray,
electricity, and chemical food shortens the period of gestation to a few
days."
At that moment a
bell under the Leyden jar began to ring. Dr. Mundson uncovered the jar and
lifted out the child, a beautiful, perfectly formed boy, who began to cry
lustily.
"Here is one
baby who'll never be kissed," he said. "He'll be nourished
chemically, and, at the end of the week, will no longer be a baby. If you are
patient, you can actually see the processes of development taking place under
the Life Ray, for babies develop very fast."
Northwood buried
his face in his hands. "Lord! This is awful. No childhood; no mother to
mould his mind! No parents to watch over him, to give him their tender
care!"
"Awful, fiddlesticks!
Come see how children get their education, how they learn to use their hands
and feet so they need not pass through the awkwardness of childhood."
He led Northwood
to a magnificent building whose façade of white marble was as simply beautiful
as a Greek temple. The side walls, built almost entirely of glass, permitted
the synthetic sunshine to sweep from end to end. They first entered a library,
where youths and young girls poured over books of all kinds. Their manner of
reading mystified Northwood. With a single sweep of the eye, they seemed to
devour a page, and then turned to the next. He stepped closer to peer over the
shoulder of a beautiful girl. She was reading "Euclid's Elements of
Geometry," in Latin, and she turned the pages as swiftly as the other girl
occupying her table, who was devouring "Paradise Lost."
Dr. Mundson
whispered to him: "If you do not believe that Ruth here is getting her Euclid,
which she probably never saw before to-day, examine her from the book; that is,
if you are a good enough Latin scholar."
Ruth stopped her
reading to talk to him, and, in a few minutes, had completely dumbfounded him
with her pedantic replies, which fell from lips as luscious and unformed as an
infant's.
"Now,"
said Dr. Mundson, "test Rachael on her Milton. As far as she has read, she
should not misquote a line, and her comments will probably prove her scholarly
appreciation of Milton."
Word for word,
Rachael was able to give him "Paradise Lost" from memory, except the
last four pages, which she had not read. Then, taking the book from him, she
swept her eyes over these pages, returned the book to him, and quoted copiously
and correctly.
Dr. Mundson gloated triumphantly over his
astonishment. "There, my friend. Could you now be satisfied with
old-fashioned children who spend long, expensive years in getting an education?
Of course, your children will not have the perfect brains of these, yet,
developed under the Life Ray, they should have splendid mentality.
"These
children, through selective breeding, have brains that make everlasting records
instantly. A page in a book, once seen, is indelibly retained by them, and
understood. The same is true of a lecture, of an explanation given by a
teacher, of even idle conversation. Any man or woman in this room should be
able to repeat the most trivial conversation days old."
"But what of
the arts, Dr. Mundson? Surely even your supermen and women cannot instantly
learn to paint a masterpiece or to guide their fingers and their brains through
the intricacies of a difficult musical composition."
"No?"
His dark eyes glowed. "Come see!"
Before they
entered another wing of the building, they heard a violin being played
masterfully.
Dr. Mundson
paused at the door.
"So that you
may understand what you shall see, let me remind you that the nerve impulses
and the coordinating means in the human body are purely electrical. The world
has not yet accepted my theory, but it will. Under superman's system of
education, the instantaneous records made on the brain give immediate skill to
the acting parts of the body. Accordingly, musicians are made over night."
He threw open the
door. Under a Life Ray projector, a beautiful, Juno-esque woman was playing a
violin. Facing her, and with eyes fastened to hers, stood a young man, whose
arms and slender fingers mimicked every motion she made. Presently she stopped
playing and handed the violin to him. In her own masterly manner, he repeated
the score she had played.
"That is
Eve," whispered Dr. Mundson. "I had selected her as Adam's wife. But
he does not want her, the most brilliant woman of the New Race."
Northwood gave
the woman an appraising look. "Who wants a perfect woman? I don't blame
Adam for preferring Athalia. But how is she teaching her pupil?"
"Through
thought vibration, which these perfect people have developed until they can
record permanently the radioactive waves of the brains of others."
Eve turned,
caught Northwood's eyes in her magnetic blue gaze, and smiled as only a goddess
can smile upon a mortal she has marked as her own. She came toward him with
outflung hands.
"So you have come!" Her vibrant contralto
voice, like Adam's, held the birdlike, broken tremulo of a young child's.
"I have been waiting for you, John Northwood."
Her eyes, as blue
and icy as Adam's, lingered long on him, until he flinched from their steely
magnetism. She slipped her arm through his and drew him gently but firmly from
the room, while Dr. Mundson stood gaping after them.
They were on a
flagged terrace arched with roses of gigantic size, which sent forth billows of
sensuous fragrance. Eve led him to a white marble seat piled with silk
cushions, on which she reclined her superb body, while she regarded him from
narrowed lids.
"I saw your
picture that he televisioned to Athalia," she said. "What a botch Dr.
Mundson has made of his mating." Her laugh rippled like falling water.
"I want you, John Northwood!"
Northwood started
and blushed furiously. Smile dimples broke around her red, humid lips.
"Ah, you're
old-fashioned!"
Her large,
beautiful hand, fleshed more tenderly than any woman's hand he had ever seen,
went out to him appealingly. "I can bring you amorous delight that your
Athalia never could offer in her few years of youth. And I'll never grow old,
John Northwood."
She came closer
until he could feel the fragrant warmth of her tawny, ribbon bound hair pulse
against his face. In sudden panic he drew back.
"But I am
pledged to Athalia!" tumbled from him. "It is all a dreadful mistake,
Eve. You and Adam were created for each other."
"Hush!"
The lightning that flashed from her blue eyes changed her from seductress to
angry goddess. "Created for each other! Who wants a made-to-measure
lover?"
The luscious lips
trembled slightly, and into the vivid eyes crept a suspicion of moisture.
Eternal Eve's weapons! Northwood's handsome face relaxed with pity.
"I want you,
John Northwood," she continued shamelessly. "Our love will be
sublime." She leaned heavily against him, and her lips were like a blood
red flower pressed against white satin. "Come, beloved, kiss me!"
Northwood gasped
and turned his head. "Don't, Eve!"
"But a kiss
from me will set you apart from all your generation, John Northwood, and you
shall understand what no man of the Black Age could possibly fathom."
Her hair had
partly fallen from its ribbon bandage and poured its fragrant gold against his
shoulder.
"For God's
sake, don't tempt me!" he groaned. "What do you mean?"
"That mental
and physical and spiritual contact with me will temporarily give you, a
three-dimension creature, the power of the new sense, which your race will not
have for fifty thousand years."
White-lipped and
trembling, he demanded: "Explain!"
Eve smiled.
"Have you not guessed that Adam has developed an additional sense? You've
seen him vanish. He and I have the sixth sense of Time Perception - the new
sense which enables us to penetrate what you of the Black Age call the Fourth
Dimension. Even you whose mentalities are framed by three dimensions have this
sixth sense instinct. Your very religion is based on it, for you believe that
in another life you shall step into Time, or, as you call it, eternity."
She leaned closer so that her hair brushed his cheek. "What is eternity,
John Northwood? Is it not keeping forever ahead of the Destroyer? The future is
eternal, for it is never reached. Adam and I, through our new sense which
comprehends Time and Space, can vanish by stepping a few seconds into the
future, the Fourth Dimension of Space. Death can never reach us, not even
accidental death, unless that which causes death could also slip into the
future, which is not yet possible."
"But if the
Fourth Dimension is future Time, why can one in the third dimension feel the
touch of an unseen presence in the Fourth Dimension - hear his voice,
even?"
"Thought
vibration. The touch is not really felt nor the voice heard: they are only
imagined. The radioactive waves of the brain of even you Black Age people are
swift enough to bridge Space and Time. And it is the mind that carries us
beyond the third dimension."
Her red mouth
reached closer to him, her blue eyes touched hidden forces that slept in remote
cells of his being. "You are going into Eternal Time, John Northwood,
Eternity without beginning or end. You understand? You feel it? Comprehend it?
Now for the contact - kiss me!"
Northwood had
seen Athalia vanish under Adam's kiss. Suddenly, in one mad burst of
understanding, he leaned over to his magnificent temptress.
For a split
second he felt the sweet pressure of baby-soft lips, and then the atoms of his
body seemed to fly asunder. Black chaos held him for a frightful moment before
he felt sanity return.
He was back on
the terrace again, with Eve by his side. They were standing now. The world
about him looked the same, yet there was a subtle change in everything.
Eve laughed
softly. "It is puzzling, isn't it? You're seeing everything as in a
mirror. What was left before is now right. Only you and I are real. All else is
but a vision, a dream. For now you and I are existing one minute in future
time, or, more simply, we are in the Fourth Dimension. To everything in the third
dimension, we are invisible. Let me show you that Dr. Mundson cannot see
you."
They went back to
the room beyond the terrace. Dr. Mundson was not present.
"There he
goes down the jungle path," said Eve, looking out a window. She laughed.
"Poor old fellow. The children of his genius are worrying him."
They were
standing in the recess formed by a bay window. Eve picked up his hand and laid
it against her face, giving him the full, blasting glory of her smiling blue
eyes.
Northwood,
looking away miserably, uttered a low cry. Coming over the field beyond were
Adam and Athalia. By the trimming on the blue dress she wore, he could see that
she was still in the Fourth Dimension, for he did not see her as a mirror
image.
A look of fear
leaped to Eve's face. She clutched Northwood's arm, trembling.
"I don't
want Adam to see that I have passed you beyond," she gasped. "We are
existing but one minute in the future. Always Adam and I have feared to pass
too far beyond the sweetness of reality. But now, so that Adam may not see us,
we shall step five minutes into what-is-yet-to-be. And even he, with all his
power, cannot see into a future that is more distant than that in which he
exists."
She raised her
humid lips to his. "Come, beloved."
Northwood kissed
her. Again came the moment of confusion, of the awful vacancy that was like
death, and then he found himself and Eve in the laboratory, following Adam and
Athalia down a long corridor. Athalia was crying and pleading frantically with
Adam. Once she stopped and threw herself at his feet in a gesture of dramatic
supplication, arms outflung, streaming eyes wide open with fear.
Adam stooped and
lifted her gently and continued on his way, supporting her against his side.
Eve dug her
fingers into Northwood's arm. Horror contorted her face, horror mixed with
rage.
"My mind
hears what he is saying, understands the vile plan he has made, John Northwood.
He is on his way to his laboratory to destroy not only you and most of these in
New Eden, but me as well. He wants only Athalia."
Striding forward
like an avenging goddess, she pulled Northwood after her.
"Hurry!"
she whispered. "Remember, you and I are five minutes in the future, and
Adam is only one. We are witnessing what will occur four minutes from now. We
yet have time to reach the laboratory before him and be ready for him when he
enters. And because he will have to go back to Present Time to do his work of
destruction, I will be able to destroy him. Ah!"
Fierce joy burned
in her flashing blue eyes, and her slender nostrils quivered delicately.
Northwood, peeping at her in horror, knew that no mercy could be expected of
her. And when she stopped at a certain door and inserted a key, he remembered
Athalia. What if she should enter with Adam in Present Time?
They were inside
Adam's laboratory, a huge apartment filled with queer apparatus and cages of
live animals. The room was a strange paradox. Part of the equipment, the walls,
and the floor was glistening with newness, and part was moulding with extreme
age. The powers of disintegration that haunt a tropical forest seemed to be
devouring certain spots of the room. Here, in the midst of bright marble, was a
section of wall that seemed as old as the pyramids. The surface of the stone
had an appalling mouldiness, as though it had been lifted from an ancient
graveyard where it had lain in the festering ground for unwholesome centuries.
Between cracks in
this stained and decayed section of stone grew fetid moss that quivered with
the microscopic organisms that infest age-rotten places. Sections of the
flooring and woodwork also reeked with mustiness. In one dark, webby corner of
the room lay a pile of bleached bones, still tinted with the ghastly grays and
pinks of putrefaction. Northwood, overwhelmingly nauseated, withdrew his eyes
from the bones, only to see, in another corner, a pile of worm-eaten clothing
that lay on the floor in the outline of a man.
Faint with the
reek of ancient mustiness, Northwood retreated to the door, dizzy and
staggering.
"It sickens
you," said Eve, "and it sickens me also, for death and decay are not
pleasant. Yet Nature, left to herself, reduces all to this. Every grave that
has yawned to receive its prey hides corruption no less shocking. Nature's
forces of creation and destruction forever work in partnership. Never satisfied
with her composition, she destroys and starts again, building, building towards
the ultimate of perfection. Thus, it is natural that if Dr. Mundson isolated
the Life Ray, Nature's supreme force of compensation, isolation of the Death
Ray should closely follow. Adam, thirsting for power, has succeeded. A few
sweeps of his unholy ray of decomposition will undo all Dr. Mundson's work in
this valley and reduce it to a stinking holocaust of destruction. And the time
for his striking has come!"
She seized his
face and drew it toward her. "Quick!" she said. "We'll have to
go back to the third dimension. I could leave you safe in the fourth, but if
anything should happen to me, you would be stranded forever in future
time."
She kissed his
lips. In a moment, he was back in the old familiar world, where right is right
and left is left. Again the subtle change wrought by Eve's magic lips had taken
place.
Eve went to a
machine standing in a corner of the room.
"Come here
and get behind me, John Northwood. I want to test it before he enters."
Northwood stood
behind her shoulder.
"Now
watch!" she ordered. "I shall turn it on one of those cages of guinea
pigs over there."
She swung the
projector around, pointed it at the cage of small, squealing animals, and threw
a lever. Instantly a cone of black mephitis shot forth, a loathsome, bituminous
stream of putrefaction that reeked of the grave and the cesspool, of the utmost
reaches of decay before the dust accepts the disintegrated atoms. The first
touch of seething, pitchy destruction brought screams of sudden agony from the
guinea pigs, but the screams were cut short as the little animals fell in
shocking, instant decay. The very cage which imprisoned them shriveled and retreated
from the hellish, devouring breath that struck its noisome rot into the heart
of the wood and the metal, reducing both to revolting ruin.
Eve cut off the
frightful power, and the black cone disappeared, leaving the room putrid with
its defilement.
"And Adam
would do that to the world," she said, her blue eyes like electric-shot
icicles. "He would do it to you, John Northwood - and to me!" Her
full bosom strained under the passion beneath.
"Listen!"
She raised her hand warningly. "He comes! The destroyer comes!"
A hand was at the door. Eve reached for the lever,
and, the same moment, Northwood leaned over her imploringly.
"If Athalia
is with him!" he gasped. "You will not harm her?"
A wild shriek at
the door, a slight scuffle, and then the doorknob was wrenched as though two
were fighting over it.
"For God's
sake, Eve!" implored Northwood. "Wait! Wait!"
"No! She
shall die, too. You love her!"
Icy, cruel eyes
cut into him, and a new-fleshed hand tried to push him aside. The door was
straining open. A beloved voice shrieked. "John!"
Eve and Northwood
both leaped for the lever. Under her tender white flesh she was as strong as a
man. In the midst of the struggle, her red, humid lips approached his - closer.
Closer. Their merest pressure would thrust him into Future Time, where the
laboratory and all it contained would be but a shadow, and where he would be
helpless to interfere with her terrible will.
He saw the door
open and Adam stride into the room. Behind him, lying prone in the hall where
she had probably fainted, was Athalia. In a mad burst of strength he touched
the lever together with Eve.
The projector,
belching forth its stinking breath of corruption swung in a mad arc over the
ceiling, over the walls - and then straight at Adam.
Then, quicker
than thought, came the accident. Eve, attempting to throw Northwood off,
tripped, fell half over the machine, and, with a short scream of despair,
dropped into the black path of destruction.
Northwood paused,
horrified. The Death Ray was pointed at an inner wall of the room, which, even
as he looked, crumbled and disappeared, bringing down upon him dust more foul
than any obscenity the bowels of the earth might yield. In an instant the black
cone ate through the outer parts of the building, where crashing stone and
screams that were more horrible because of their shortness followed the ruin
that swept far into the fair reaches of the valley.
The paralyzing
odor of decay took his breath, numbed his muscles, until, of all that huge
building, the wall behind him and one small section of the room by the doorway
alone remained whole. He was trying to nerve himself to reach for the lever
close to that quiet formless thing still partly draped over the machine, when a
faint sound in the door electrified him. At first, he dared not look, but his
own name, spoken almost in a gasp, gave him courage.
Athalia lay on the floor, apparently untouched.
He jerked the
lever violently before running to her, exultant with the knowledge that his own
efforts to keep the ray from the door had saved her.
"And you're
not hurt!" He gathered her close.
"John! I saw
it get Adam." She pointed to a new mound of mouldy clothes on the floor.
"Oh, it is hideous for me to be so glad, but he was going to destroy
everything and everyone except me. He made the ray projector for that one
purpose."
Northwood looked
over the pile of putrid ruins which a few minutes ago had been a building.
There was not a wall left intact.
"His
intention is accomplished, Athalia," he said sadly. "Let's get out
before more stones fall."
In a moment they
were in the open. An ominous stillness seemed to grip the very air - the awful
silence of the polar wastes which lay not far beyond the mountains.
"How dark it
is, John!" cried Athalia. "Dark and cold!"
"The
sunshine projector!" gasped Northwood. "It must have been destroyed.
Look, dearest! The golden light has disappeared."
"And the
warm air of the valley will lift immediately. That means a polar
blizzard." She shuddered and clung closer to him. "I've seen
Antarctic storms, John. They're death."
Northwood avoided
her eyes. "There's the sun-ship. We'll give the ruins the once over in
case there are any survivors; then we'll save ourselves."
Even a cursory
examination of the mouldy piles of stone and dust convinced them that there
could be no survivors. The ruins looked as though they had lain in those
crumbling piles for centuries. Northwood, smothering his repugnance, stepped
among them - among the green, slimy stones and the unspeakable revolting
débris, staggering back and faint and shocked when he came upon dust that was
once human.
"God!"
he groaned, hands over eyes. "We're alone, Athalia! Alone in a charnal
house. The laboratory housed the entire population, didn't it?"
"Yes.
Needing no sleep nor food, we did not need houses. We all worked here, under
Dr. Mundson's generalship, and, lately under Adam's, like a little band of
soldiers fighting for a great cause."
"Let's go to
the sun-ship, dearest."
"But Daddy
Mundson was in the library," sobbed Athalia. "Let's look for him a
little longer."
Sudden
remembrance came to Northwood. "No, Athalia! He left the library. I saw
him go down the jungle path several minutes before I and Eve went to Adam's
laboratory."
"Then he
might be safe!" Her eyes danced. "He might have gone to the
sun-ship."
Shivering, she
slumped against him. "Oh, John! I'm cold."
Her face was
blue. Northwood jerked off his coat and wrapped it around her, taking the
intense cold against his unprotected shoulders. The low, gray sky was rapidly
darkening, and the feeble light of the sun could scarcely pierce the clouds. It
was disturbing to know that even the summer temperature in the Antarctic was
far below zero.
"Come,
girl," said Northwood gravely. "Hurry! It's snowing."
They started to
run down the road through the narrow strip of jungle. The Death Ray had cut
huge swathes in the tangle of trees and vines, and now areas of heaped débris,
livid with the colors of recent decay, exhaled a mephitic humidity altogether
alien to the snow that fell in soft, slow flakes. Each hesitated to voice the
new fear: had the sun-ship been destroyed?
By the time they
reached the open field, the snow stung their flesh like sharp needles, but it
was not yet thick enough to hide from them a hideous fact.
The sun-ship was
gone.
It might have occupied
one of several black, foul areas on the green grass, where the searching Death
Ray had made the very soil putrefy, and the rocks crumble into shocking dust.
Northwood
snatched Athalia to him, too full of despair to speak. A sudden terrific flurry
of snow whirled around them, and they were almost blown from their feet by the
icy wind that tore over the unprotected field.
"It won't be
long," said Athalia faintly. "Freezing doesn't hurt, John,
dear."
"It isn't
fair, Athalia! There never would have been such a marriage as ours. Dr. Mundson
searched the world to bring us together."
"For
scientific experiment!" she sobbed. "I'd rather die, John. I want an
old-fashioned home, a Black Age family. I want to grow old with you and leave
the earth to my children. Or else I want to die here now under the kind, white
blanket the snow is already spreading over us." She drooped in his arms.
Clinging
together, they stood in the howling wind, looking at each other hungrily, as
though they would snatch from death this one last picture of the other.
Northwood's
freezing lips translated some of the futile words that crowded against them.
"I love you because you are not perfect. I hate perfection!"
"Yes.
Perfection is the only hopeless state, John. That is why Adam wanted to
destroy, so that he might build again."
They were sitting
in the snow now, for they were very tired. The storm began whistling louder, as
though it were only a few feet above their heads.
"That sounds
almost like the sun-ship," said Athalia drowsily.
"It's only
the wind. Hold your face down so it won't strike your flesh so cruelly."
"I'm not
suffering. I'm getting warm again." She smiled at him sleepily.
Little icicles
began to form on their clothing, and the powdery snow frosted their uncovered
hair.
Suddenly came a
familiar voice: "Ach Gott!"
Dr. Mundson stood
before them, covered with snow until he looked like a polar bear.
"Get
up!" he shouted. "Quick! To the sun-ship!"
He seized Athalia
and jerked her to her feet. She looked at him sleepily for a moment, and then
threw herself at him and hugged him frantically.
"You're not
dead?"
Taking each by
the arm, he half dragged them to the sun-ship, which had landed only a few feet
away. In a few minutes he had hot brandy for them.
While they sipped
greedily, he talked, between working the sun-ship's controls.
"No, I
wouldn't say it was a lucky moment that drew me to the sun-ship. When I saw Eve
trying to charm John, I had what you American slangists call a hunch, which
sent me to the sun-ship to get it off the ground so that Adam couldn't
commandeer it. And what is a hunch but a mental penetration into the Fourth
Dimension?" For a long moment, he brooded, absent-minded. "I was in
the air when the black ray, which I suppose is Adam's deviltry, began to
destroy everything it touched. From a safe elevation I saw it wreck all my
work." A sudden spasm crossed his face. "I've flown over the entire
valley. We're the only survivors - thank God!"
"And so at
last you confess that it is not well to tamper with human life?"
Northwood, warmed with hot brandy, was his old self again.
"Oh, I have
not altogether wasted my efforts. I went to elaborate pains to bring together a
perfect man and a perfect woman of what Adam called our Black Age." He
smiled at them whimsically.
"And who can
say to what extent you have thus furthered natural evolution?" Northwood
slipped his arm around Athalia. "Our children might be more than geniuses,
Doctor!"
Dr. Mundson
nodded his huge, shaggy head gravely.
"The true
instinct of a Creature of the Light," he declared.