It came suddenly,
without warning, and it brought consternation to the people of the world.
A filament of
flame darted down the dark skies one moonless night and those who saw it
believed, at first, that it was a meteor. Instead of streaking away into
oblivion, however, it became larger and larger, until it seemed as though some
vagrant, blazing star was about to plunge into the earth and annihilate the
planet and every vestige of life upon it. But then it drew slowly to a stop
high up in the atmosphere, where it remained motionless, glowing white and
incandescent against the Stygian background of the overcast skies.
In shape it
resembled a Zeppelin, but its dimensions very apparently exceeded by far those
of any flying craft that ever had been fabricated by the hand of man.
As it hung poised
high up in the air it gradually lost its dazzling glow and became scarlet
instead of white. Then, as it continued to cool, the color swiftly drained from
it and, in a few minutes, it shone only with the dull and ugly crimson of an
expiring ember. In a half-hour after it first had appeared its effulgence had
vanished completely and it was barely visible to the millions who were staring
up toward it from the earth.
It seemed to be
suspended directly above Manhattan, and the inhabitants of New York were thrown
into a feverish excitement by the strange and unprecedented phenomenon.
For it scarcely
had come to a stop, and certainly it had not been poised aloft for more than a
few minutes, when most of those who had not actually witnessed its sensational
appearance were apprised of the inexplicable occurrence by the radiovision, which
were scattered throughout the vast metropolis. In theaters and restaurants and
other gathering places, as well as in millions of homes, a voice from the
Worldwide Broadcasting Tower announced the weird visitant. And its image, as it
glowed in the night, was everywhere transmitted to the public.
Only a short time
after it first had been observed people were thronging roof-tops, terraces, and
streets, and gazing with awe and wonder at the great luminous object that was
floating high above them.
There were those
who thought that the world was coming to an end, and they either were dumb with
fright or strident with hysteria. People with more judgment, and a smattering
of scientific knowledge, dismissed the thing as some harmless meteorological
manifestation that, while interesting, was not necessarily dangerous. And there
were many, inclined to incredulity and skepticism, who believed that they were
witnessing a hoax or an advertising scheme of some new sort.
But as the
moments went by the world commenced to become stirred and alarmed by the
reports which came over the radiovisors.
For powerful
planes and metal-shelled Zeppelins had climbed swiftly aloft to investigate the
incomprehensible Thing that was poised high above Manhattan, and almost
unbelievable reports were being sent earthward.
Dirk Vanderpool
had been sitting alone on the broad terrace of his apartment that occupied the
upper stories of the great Gotham Gardens Building when he saw that streak of
fire slip down against the darkness of the night.
For a moment he,
too, had believed that he was watching a meteor, but, when he saw it come to a
slow stop and hang stationary in the heavens, he rose to his feet with an
exclamation of surprise.
For a while he
gazed upward with an expression of astonishment on his face and then he turned
as he heard someone walking softly in his direction. It was Barstowe, his
valet, and the eyes of the man were alive with fear.
“What is that
thing, Mr. Vanderpool?” he asked in a voice that trembled with alarm. Barstowe
was a man of middle age, diminutive in size, and he had the appearance of being
nearly petrified with terror. “They are saying over the televisor that––”
“What are they
saying about it?” asked Dirk somewhat impatiently.
“That no one can
explain what it is,” continued Barstowe. “It must be something terrible, Mr.
Vanderpool.”
“Wheel out the
luciscope,” ordered Dirk.
Barstowe
disappeared into the apartment and returned with a cabinet that was mounted on
small, rubber-tired wheels. The top of it was formed of a metallic frame in
which a heavy, circular, concave glass was fitted. The frame was hinged in
front so that it could be raised from the rear and adjusted to any angle
necessary to catch the light rays from any distant object. Within the cabinet
the rays passed through an electrical device that amplified them millions of
times, thus giving a clear, telescopic vision of the object on which the
luciscope was focused.
This instrument,
years before, had supplanted entirely the old-fashioned telescopes which not
only had been immense and unwieldly but which also had a very limited range of
vision.
Dirk adjusted the
light-converger so that it caught the rays that were being emanated by the
weird and shimmering mass that was suspended almost directly above the lofty
terrace on which he was standing.
Then he switched
on the current and glanced into the eye-piece of the apparatus. For several
moments he remained silent, studying the image that was etched so vividly on
the ground-glass within the luciscope.
“It is a queer
thing, there is no doubt about that,” he confessed when finally he raised his
head. “It resembles a gigantic Zeppelin in shape but it does not seem to have
any undercarriage or, as far as I can see, any indication of propellers or
portholes. I would say, though, Barstowe, that it might be a ship from some other
planet if it wasn’t for the fact that it seems to be in an almost molten
state.”
Dirk again looked
into the luciscope and then he made a few adjustments with a thumb-screw that
projected from the side of the apparatus.
“It is up about
forty thousand feet,” he told Barstowe, “and it must be more than a half-mile
in length. Probably,” he added, “it is a planetary fragment of some odd
composition that is less responsive to gravitation than the materials with
which we are familiar. You will find, Barstowe, that there is nothing about it
that science will not be able to explain. That will be all now,” he concluded.
Barstowe walked
over the terrace and disappeared into the apartment. Dirk, left alone, wheeled
the luciscope over by the chair in which he had been sitting and near which a
radiovisor was standing.
He switched on
the latter and listened to the low but very distinct voice of the
news-dispatcher.
“––and planes and
Zeppelins now are starting up to investigate the strange phenomenon––”
Again Dirk placed
an eye to the lens of the luciscope and once more the Thing leaped into his
vision. The powerful machine brought it so close to him that he could see the
heat waves quiver up from it.
The light that it
radiated illuminated the night for thousands of feet and Dirk could see, by
means of that crimson glare, that many planes and Zeppelins were circling
around the mysterious visitant. None of them, however, approached the alien
freak, the heat apparently being too intense to permit close inspection.
Dirk himself was
tempted for a moment to jump into a plane and go up and take a look at the
fiery mass.
But, after a
moment’s consideration, he decided, that it would be far more interesting and
comfortable to remain right where he was and listen to the reports which were
being sent down from above.
“––thus far there
seems to be no cause for alarm, and people are advised to remain calm––careful
observations of the luminous monster are being made and further reports
concerning it will be broadcast––”
Dirk Vanderpool
rose to his feet, walked to the coping of the terrace and peered into the
magnascope that was set into the wall.
He saw that the
street, far below him, was jammed with struggling people and the device through
which he was looking brought their faces before him in strong relief. Dirk was
deeply interested and, at the same time, gravely concerned as he studied the
upturned countenances in the mob.
Fear, despair,
reckless abandon, mirth, doubt, religious ecstasy and all the other nuances in
the gamut of human emotions and passions were reflected in those distorted
visages which were gazing skyward.
The silvery
humming of a bell diverted his attention from the scene of congestion below him
and, turning away, he walked across the terrace and into the great living room
of his luxurious abode.
Stepping to the
televisor, he turned a tiny switch, and the face of a girl appeared in the
glass panel that was framed above the sound-box. He smiled as he lifted the
receiver and placed it to his ear.
“What is the
matter, Inga?” he asked. “You look as if you were expecting––well, almost
anything disastrous.”
“Oh, Dirk, what
is that thing?” the girl asked. “I really am frightened!”
He could see by
the expression in her blue eyes that she, too, was becoming a victim of the
hysteria that was taking possession of many people.
“I wouldn’t be
alarmed, Inga,” he replied reassuringly. “I don’t know what it is, and no one
else seems to be able to explain it.”
“But it is
frightful and uncanny, Dirk,” the girl insisted, “and I am sure that something
terrible is going to happen. I wish,” she pleaded, “that you would come over
and stay with me for a little while. I am all alone and––”
“All right,
Inga,” he told her. “I will be with you in a few minutes.”
He hung up the
receiver of the televisor and clicked off the switch. The image of the
golden-haired girl to whom he had been speaking slowly faded from the glass.
Attiring himself
for a short sixty-mile hop down Long Island, Dirk passed out to the landing
stage and, stepping into the cabin of his plane, he threw in the helicopter
lever. The machine rose straight into the air for a couple of hundred feet and
then Dirk headed it westward to where the nearest ascension beam sent its red
light towering toward the stars. It marked a vertical air-lane that led upward
to the horizontal lanes of flight.
Northbound ships
flew between two and four thousand feet; southbound planes between five and
seven thousand feet; those eastbound confined themselves to the level between nine
and eleven thousand feet, while the westbound flyers monopolized the air
between twelve and fourteen thousand feet.
All planes flying
parallel to the earth were careful to avoid those red beacons which marked
ascension routes, and the shafts of green light down which descending planes
dropped to the earth or into lower levels of travel.
When Dirk’s
altimeter indicated seventy-five hundred feet he turned the nose of his ship
eastward and adjusted his rheostat until his motors, fed by wireless current, were
revolving at top speed.
The great canyons
of Manhattan, linked by arches and highways which joined and passed through
various levels of the stupendous structures of steelite and quartzite, passed
swiftly beneath him; and, after passing for a few minutes over the deserted
surface of Long Island, he completed his sixty-mile flight and brought his ship
to a rest on a landing stage that was far up on the side of a vast pile that
rose up close to the shore of the Sound.
As soon as he
stepped from the door of the cabin he was joined by a girl who, apparently, had
been lingering there, awaiting his arrival.
She was perhaps
twenty years old, and she had the golden hair, the light complexion, and the
blue eyes which still were characteristic of the women of northern Europe.
The slender lines
of her exquisite figure and the supple grace which she displayed when she moved
toward Dirk were evidence, however, of the Latin blood which was in her veins.
For Inga Fragoni,
the daughter and heiress of Orlando Fragoni, seemed to be a culmination of all
of the desirable qualities of the women of the south and those of the north.
The terrace on
which Dirk had landed was illuminated by lights which simulated sunshine, and
their soft bright glow revealed the violet hue of her eyes and the shimmering
gloss of her silken hair. She wore a sleeveless, light blue tunic which was
gathered around her waist with a bejeweled girdle.
On her tiny feet
she wore sandals which were spun of webby filaments of gold and platinum.
“Dirk, I am so
glad that you are here!” she exclaimed. “I felt so much alone when I called you
up. Dad is locked in the observatory with Professor Nachbaren and three or four
other men and the servants––well, they all are so terrified that it simply
alarms me to have them around.”
“But that is
Stanton’s plane there, isn’t it?” asked Dirk, indicating a powerful looking
machine that stood on the terrace.
“Yes, Dirk,” the
girl replied. “He arrived here three or four minutes before you did. I thought,
at first, that it was you coming. And Dirk,” she continued, with a note of
excitement in her voice, “he flew up to look at that thing, and I know that he
is as frightened about it as I am.”
Dirk grunted, but
he gave no expression of the dislike and distrust that Stanton aroused in him.
The latter, he knew, was very much inclined to look with favor on Inga, and his
presumption annoyed Dirk because, while he and the girl had not declared their
intention of living together, they were very much in love with each other.
“You will want to
hear him tell about it, I know, Dirk,” the girl said. “I left Stanton up on the
garden terrace when I saw you coming down. Come; we will go and join him.”
Dirk and Inga
strolled slowly along paths which were lined with exotic shrubbery and plants.
Here and there a fountain tossed its glittering spray high into the air while
birds, invisible in the feathery foliage, warbled and thrilled entrancingly.
Soft music, transmitted from the auditoriums below, blended so harmoniously
with the atmosphere of the terraces that it seemed to mingle with and be a part
of the drifting, subtle scents of the abundant flowers which bloomed on every
side.
For these upper
terraces of Fragoni’s palace were enclosed, during inclement weather, with
great glass plates which, at the touch of a button, automatically appeared or
disappeared.
Winding their way
easily upward, Dirk and Inga came finally to a secluded terrace which
overlooked the Sound. Here they saw Stanton, who was unaware of their approach,
looking skyward at the dim and sinister shape which was outlined against the
sky. Stanton’s brow was contracted and his expression was filled with
apprehension. He started suddenly when he became conscious of the presence of
Dirk and the lovely daughter of Fragoni.
He rose to his
feet, a short man in his forties, stocky in build and somewhat swarthy in
complexion. He contrasted very unfavorably with Dirk, who was tall and
well-built and who had abundant blond hair and steady steel-blue eyes.
“What do you make
of that thing, Vanderpool?” he asked, almost ignoring the presence of Inga.
“I don’t know
enough about it yet to be able to express an opinion,” Dirk replied. “We will
find out about it soon enough,” he added, “so why worry about it in the
meantime?”
“It is well
enough to affect such an attitude,” said Stanton, with a touch of sarcasm in
his voice, “but let me tell you, Vanderpool, that there is good reason to worry
about it.”
Dirk frowned at
the statement as he saw a shadow pass over the fair face of Inga.
“That thing up
there,” continued Stanton, with conviction in his voice, “is not a natural
phenomenon. I flew fairly close to it in my plane and I know what I am speaking
about. That thing is some sort of a monster, Vanderpool, that is made of metal
or of some composition that is an unearthly equivalent of metal. It is a
diabolical creation of some sort that has come from out of the fathomless
depths of the universe.” He shuddered at the fantasy that his feverish
imagination was creating. “It is metal, I tell you,” he continued, “but it is
metal that is endowed with some sort of intelligence. I was up there,” he
breathed swiftly, “and I saw it hanging there in the sky, quivering with heat
and life.”
“You are nervous,
Stanton,” said Vanderpool coolly. “Get a grip on yourself, man, and look at the
thing reasonably. If that thing has intelligence,” he added, “we will find some
way to slay it.”
“Slay it!”
exclaimed Stanton. “How can you expect to slay a mad creation that can leap
through space, from world to world, like a wasp goes darting from flower to
flower? How can you kill a thing which not only defies absolute zero but also
the immeasurable heat which its friction with the atmosphere generated when it
plunged toward the earth? How can you kill a thing that seems to have brains
and nerves and bones and flesh of some strange substance that is harder and
tougher than any earthly compound we have discovered?”
He stopped
speaking for a moment. They listened to the voice that was broadcasting from
the Worldwide Tower.
“––our planes
have approached to within a few thousand feet of it and are playing their
searchlights over the surface of the leviathan. It is not a meteorite of any
kind that scientists have heretofore examined––its surface is smooth and unpitted
and shows no apparent effect of the tremendous heat to which it was subjected
during its drop through the atmosphere. It seems to be immune to gravity––its
weight must be tremendous, and it is fully three-quarters of a mile long and
between seven and eight hundred feet in diameter at its widest part, but it
lies motionless––motionless––at about forty thousand feet.”
“It doesn’t
appear now as if it would prove very dangerous,” remarked Dirk.
“––and people are
warned again to maintain their composure and to go to their homes and remain
there for their own protection and the protection of others. Riots and serious
disturbances are reported from cities in all parts of the world––mobs are
swarming the streets of Manhattan and the other boroughs of New York, and the
police are finding it difficult to restrain the frenzied populations in other
centers....”
There was a
pause, then, of some moments, and then the voice of the broadcaster, vibrant
with excitement, was heard again.
“––a plane has
made a landing on the surface of the monstrosity, which, it seems, has not only
lost its heat but is becoming decidedly cold––”
A servant
appeared from among the shrubbery and paused before Dirk.
“There is a call
for you, Mr. Vanderpool,” he said respectfully.
Dirk excused
himself and, entering the sumptuous apartment that opened from the terrace,
went to the televisor. He saw the face of Sears, the chief secretary of
Fragoni, in the glass panel.
“There will be a
meeting of the council at nine o’clock in the morning, Mr. Vanderpool,” came
the voice over the wire.
“Thank you,
Sears,” replied Dirk. “It happens that Stanton is here at the present time.
Shall I notify him of the conclave?”
“If you will,
please,” Sears responded. “By the way, Mr. Vanderpool, is there anything wrong
at your apartment? I tried to call you there before I located you here and I
failed to get any response.”
“I guess that all
of my servants have run out from under cover because of their fear of that
thing in the sky,” Dirk responded. “Do you know anything about it, Sears?” he
asked.
“It will be
discussed at the meeting to-morrow morning,” replied Sears shortly. “Good
night, Mr. Vanderpool.”
Dirk, upon
returning to the terrace, saw that both Stanton and Inga were silently and
fearfully looking up into the night.
“A meeting of the
council at nine o’clock in the morning, Stanton,” Dirk said abruptly. “I told
Sears I would notify you.”
“I thought that
we would be called together very soon,” said Stanton. “It’s concerning that
damn thing up there.”
“Perhaps,” agreed
Dirk carelessly. “Well,” he added, “I believe that I will hop home and get some
sleep.”
“Sleep!”
exclaimed Stanton. “Sleep? On a night like this?”
“Oh, Dirk,”
pleaded Inga, “stay here with me, won’t you? I am not going to bed because I
just know that I wouldn’t be able to close my eyes.”
“Let him go,
Inga, if he wants to sleep,” urged Stanton. “I will stay here and keep watch
with you.”
“––and if order
is not restored in the streets of Manhattan within the course of a short time,
the authorities will resort to morphite gas to quell the turbulence and
rioting––”
“The streets must
be frightfully congested,” said Inga. “It is the first occasion in a long time
that the police have had to threaten the use of morphite.”
“––we do not want
to alarm people unnecessarily but we have to report,” came the hurried voice of
the broadcaster, “that the monstrous mass that has been hanging above the city
just made a sudden drop of five thousand feet and again came to a stop. It is
now a little more than six miles over Manhattan and––again it has dropped. This
time it fell like a plummet for twelve thousand feet. It is now about twenty
thousand feet, some four miles, above Manhattan and––”
A cry of alarm
came from the lips of Inga as she gazed upward and saw that gigantic,
ominous-appearing object loom dim and vast in the darkness above them.
She went to Dirk
and threw her arms around him, as if she were clinging to him for protection.
“Don’t l eave me, Dirk,” she whispered. “I can just feel
that something terrible is going to happen, and I want you with me!”
“I’ll stay with
you, of course,” whispered Dirk. Something of that feeling of dread and
apprehension which so fully possessed his two companions entered into his mind.
“Don’t tremble so, Inga,” he pleaded. “It is a strange thing, but we will know
more about it in the morning. Be calm until then, my dear, if you can.”
He looked over
the shoulder of the girl, whose face was buried against his breast, and he saw
a hundred great red and green shafts of light shooting up into the air.
Fleeting shadows seemed to pass swiftly up and down them, and he knew that
thousands of planes were abroad, some of them seeking the heights and others
dropping down.
The great towers
of Long Island were all aglow, and it was apparent that few people were
sleeping that night. The scarlet sky over Manhattan indicated that the center
of the metropolis, too, was alive to the menace of the weird visitant that now
was so plainly visible.
All night long
they remained on the terrace. Dirk and Inga seated close together and Stanton,
at a distance, brooding alone over the disaster which he felt was impending.
The illuminated
dial of the great clock that was a part of the beacon-tower on the Metropole
Landing Field told of the slow passing of the hours.
All night long
they listened to the reports that came through the radiovisor and watched that
immobile, threatening monster of metal.
But it remained
static during the rest of the night. And, with the coming of a gray and sunless
dawn, it still hung there, motionless, silent and sinister.
The next morning
the President of the United States of the World, from the capitol at The Hague,
issued a proclamation of martial law, to become effective at once in all parts
of the world.
The edict forbade
people to leave their homes, and it was vigorously executed, wherever the
police themselves were not in a state of demoralization.
At about the same
time a special meeting of the Supreme Congress was called, the body to remain
in session until some solution of the mystery had been arrived at.
At the same time
that martial law was declared, however, and the special assemblage of lawmakers
convened, a statement was issued in which an attempt was made to eliminate from
the minds of the people the idea that the undefinable object above the
metropolis was at all dangerous.
It was, indeed,
suggested that it very probably was some sort of new device which had been
constructed on the earth and which was being introduced to the people of the
world in a somewhat sensational manner by the person or persons who were
responsible for it.
The fears of the
populace were, to some extent, allayed by this means, and some degree of order
restored.
At nine o’clock
Dirk Vanderpool was shown into the council chamber in the palace of Orlando
Fragoni, and he was closely followed by Stanton. Fragoni was already there, and
he greeted the two men with a countenance that was serene but that,
nevertheless, revealed indications of concern. He was a man past middle age,
tall and strikingly handsome in appearance. His eyes were dark and penetrating
and his forehead, high and wide, was crowned by an abundance of snow-white
hair. His voice, while pleasing to the ear, was vibrant with life and energy,
and he spoke with the incisive directness of one accustomed to command.
For Orlando
Fragoni, as nearly as any one man might be, was the ruler of the world.
It was in the
early part of the twentieth century that wealth had commenced to concentrate
into a relatively few hands. This was followed by a period in which vast
mergers and consolidations had been effected as a result of the financial power
and genius for organization which a few men possessed. A confederation of the
countries of the world was brought about by industrial kings who had learned,
in one devastating war, that militarism, while it might bring riches to a few,
was, in the final analysis, destructive and wasteful.
Mankind the world
over, relieved of the menace of war, made more progress in a decade than they
had made in any previous century, but all the time the invisible concentration
of power and money continued.
And, in 1975, the
affairs of the world were controlled by five men, of whom Orlando Fragoni was
the most powerful and most important.
His grandfather
had been a small banker, and out of his obscure transactions the great House of
Fragoni had arisen. The money power of the world was now controlled by Orlando
Fragoni. Dirk Vanderpool, partly as a result of a vast inheritance and partly
through his own ability and untiring industry, dominated the transportation
facilities of the world. Planes and Zeppelins, railroad equipment and ships,
were built in his plants and operated by the many organizations which he
controlled.
Stanton had
inherited the agricultural activities of the world and, in addition to this, he
was the sovereign of distribution. He owned immense acreages in all of the
continents; he not only cultivated every known variety of produce, but also
handled the sale of his products through his own great chains of stores. His
father had been one of the great geniuses of the preceding generation, but
Stanton, while inheriting the commercial empire which he had ruled, had not
inherited much of the ability which had gone into the establishment of it.
There were two
other members of that invisible council of Five, the very existence of which
was not even suspected by the general populace of the world.
Sigmund Lazarre
was the world’s mightiest builder, and millions of great structures, which were
built of material from his own mines, were under his control. It was Lazarre,
too, who owned the theaters and other amusement centers in which millions upon
millions of people sought relaxation every day. The creation and application of
electrical power made up the domain of Wilhelm Steinholt, who also owned the
factories that made the machinery of the world.
Absolute control
of all of the necessities and luxuries of life, in fact, were in the hands of
the five men, who used their vast power wisely and beneficently.
Ostensibly the
peoples of the world ruled themselves by means of a democratic form of
government.
In reality their
lives were directed by a few men whose power and wealth were entirely
unsuspected by any but those who were close to them.
The council room
in which Fragoni had received Dirk and Stanton was lofty and sumptuously
appointed.
The rugs which
covered the floor were soft to the tread, and the walls and ceiling were
adorned with a series of murals which represented the various heavenly
constellations.
At the far end of
the chamber there was a staircase, and Dirk was among those who knew that it
led up to the great observatory in which Fragoni and certain of his scientific
associates spent so much of their time at night.
For men had
commenced to talk about the conquest of the stars, and it was generally
believed that it would not be many years more before a way would be found to
traverse the interplanetary spaces.
“We are rather
fortunate, my friends,” Fragoni said to his two associates, “to have been the
witnesses of the event that transpired last night.”
“Fortunate!”
exclaimed Stanton. “Then you know that the thing is harmless?”
A little smile
lit the benign and scholarly countenance of Fragoni as he calmly regarded
Stanton.
“We know very
little about it,” he replied after a brief pause, “and, if our surmises are
correct, it may be very far from harmless. It is intensely interesting,
nevertheless,” he continued, “because that thing, as you term it,
unquestionably is directed by intelligence. Without the slightest doubt the
people of the earth are about to behold a form of life from some far-away
planet. What that form will be,” he added, with an almost imperceptible shrug
of his shoulders, “it is impossible to forecast.”
“But it was so
hot,” commenced Stanton, “that––”
“True,” agreed
Fragoni, “but it also is large and it may be that only the outer shell of it
was affected by friction with the atmosphere that surrounds the earth.
Nachbaren,” he continued, “is certain that there is intelligent life within it;
and Nachbaren,” he added dryly, “is usually right.”
While Fragoni had
been speaking, two more men had quietly joined them.
“Good morning,
Lazarre,” Fragoni said, addressing a short, swarthy man who, very apparently,
was of Jewish extraction.
“Good morning,”
the other replied in a soft and mellifluous voice. “It seems,” he continued,
with a twinkle in his eyes, “as if some of my pretty buildings may be toppled
over soon.”
“Maybe,” agreed
Fragoni. “And maybe,” he added more seriously, “much more than your buildings
will be toppled over, Lazarre.”
“That thing,
then, is...?” questioned the heavy-set, slow-speaking, blue-eyed Teuton who had
come into the room with Lazarre.
“We do not
know, Steinholt,” admitted Fragoni, “but our knowledge undoubtedly will be
increased considerably within the next few hours. And now,” he said, “we will
consider the problem at hand.”
“––the object
which has created such unrest is slowly rising. It is now some twenty-five
thousand feet above Manhattan. It is––”
The voice from
the radiovisor attracted the attention of the five men, and, with one accord,
they rushed to the terrace and looked toward Manhattan. They saw the great
leviathan high in the air for a moment, and then, suddenly, it seemed to vanish
from sight.
“It’s gone!”
exclaimed Stanton, with a sigh of relief. “It must have been some odd
atmospheric freak, that’s all.”
They searched the
skies through the luciscope that was on the terrace, but failed to detect any
trace of the monster.
“That seems to
simplify matters,” remarked Fragoni as they again walked back into the great
conference room. But here, once more, they heard the voice from the Worldwide
Tower.
“––we are advised
by Chicago that the thing, dull-red with heat, is hovering only a couple of
thousand feet over the city. Thousands in the streets are being killed by the
heat it is radiating––panic reigns, despite a rigorous enforcement of martial
law. The strange object just rose suddenly to a high altitude and disappeared––”
“It’s another one
of those damned things,” asserted Stanton. “That couldn’t go a thousand miles a
minute!”
“It can go faster
than that, if I am not mistaken,” said Fragoni. And it presently appeared that
he was right, for in a couple of minutes the radiovisor transmitted the news
that it was over San Francisco, where it remained for only a few seconds. It
was not more than a minute later that word came from Shanghai that it had
passed slowly over that city. Then again it was poised high over Manhattan, crimson
with heat.
“Is there any
possible defense against it, Steinholt?” Fragoni asked. The Teuton shook his
head with an air of finality.
“None,” he said,
“as far as I can determine now. We can create and direct artificial lightning
that would reduce this building to a mass of powdered stone and fused metal in
a fraction of a second. But I am certain that it wouldn’t leave as much as a
scratch on that monster up there. We might try the Z-Rays on it, but an
intelligence that could devise such a craft would undoubtedly have the wisdom
to protect it against such an elementary menace as rays. Even the mightiest
explosives that we have wouldn’t send a tremor through that mighty mass.”
“Why not await
developments?” asked Dirk. “We do not even know the nature of the thing we are
trying to combat.”
“It’s solid
metal,” insisted Stanton tenaciously. “It’s a metal body with a metal brain.”
“Don’t be
ridiculous,” said Steinholt. “It seems quite apparent that the craft has come
from another planet, and, if I am not greatly mistaken, there are intelligent
creatures inside it.”
“In any event,”
said Dirk, “it seems impractical to make any plans until we know more about it.
I suggest that we empower Fragoni to act for the rest of us in this matter.”
“That is very
agreeable to me,” said Steinholt. “A crisis very possibly may arise in which
the quick judgment of one man may be necessary to avert the danger that always
is inherent in delay.”
“You hold my
proxy,” Lazarre said to Fragoni, “and I assume that Stanton is agreeable to
this procedure.”
“––the thing is
moving very slowly eastward in the direction of Long Island Sound. It is, at
the same time, losing altitude. Its movements are being carefully watched. As
yet we see no cause for immediate alarm––people are advised to remain calm––”
“Yes, I am
agreeable,” said Stanton nervously and hastily. “If there are things in it with
which we can compromise, I would suggest that we do not offend them.”
“I am, then,
empowered to act for all of you,” said Fragoni, ignoring the suggestion of
Stanton.
He rose from his
chair and walked out on the terrace. The others followed after him.
Looking westward,
they saw the mammoth craft descending slowly in their direction.
Its vast
dimensions became more and more apparent as, spellbound, they watched it
approach closer and closer to them.
The thing in the
sky was now not more than three thousand feet above them and only a few miles
to the westward.
The observers on
the terrace regarded it for a moment in silence as it drifted forward and
downward.
“It’s colossal!”
Steinholt then exclaimed, lost in scientific admiration of the mammoth craft.
“Magnificent! Superb!”
“But it’s coming
right toward us!” cried Stanton.
“What makes it
move, I wonder?” asked Dirk. “And how in the world is it controlled?”
“It surely is not
of this world,” said Fragoni quietly. “That gigantic thing has come to us from
somewhere out of the infinite and terrible depths of space.”
Another minute
elapsed while they watched it, speechless with wonder.
“Do you know,”
Lazarre then said calmly, “I believe that it is going to land in the waters of
the Sound. It appears so to me, anyway.”
It was nearly
opposite them by this time, and not more than a thousand feet above the water.
A few planes which, very apparently, were being flown by intrepid and fearless
flyers, were hovering close around it.
Then finally it
came to rest, as Lazarre had predicted, in the water some two miles off shore,
and it was obscured by a great cloud of vapor for several minutes.
“Steam,” asserted
Steinholt. “That trip around the world, which it made in a few minutes,
generated considerable frictional heat in the shell.”
“Come,” said
Fragoni, “we’ll fly out and look the thing over.”
Around the corner
of the building, on the level of the terrace, there was a landing stage which
was occupied by a number of planes of various sizes.
Dirk entered the
door of a small twenty passenger speedster, and the others filed in after him.
“Ready?” he
asked, after he had seated himself at the controls.
“Ready!” replied
Fragoni.
The plane rose
straight up into the air and then darted gracefully out over the Sound.
Dirk swooped
straight down at the leviathan which lay so quietly on the surface of the Sound
and then slowly circled around it. No sign of an aperture of any sort could be
seen in the craft. Then he dropped the plane lightly on the water, close to the
metallic monster, which towered fully four hundred feet above them, despite the
fact that more than half of it was submerged.
“It must be hollow,”
remarked Steinholt, “or it wouldn’t be so far out of the water. In fact, it
most certainly would sink, if it was solid.”
At the touch of a
lever which lay under one of Dirk’s hands the plane rose straight out of the
water, and he maneuvered it directly over the top of the strange enigma. Then
he touched a button and the pontoons were drawn up into the undercarriage of
the craft.
“Shall I make a
landing on it?” he asked, turning his head and addressing Fragoni.
The latter nodded
his head, and Dirk dropped the ship gently onto the smooth surface of the
monster, the pneumatic gearing completely absorbing the shock of the landing.
Dirk relinquished
the controls and, opening the door of the cabin, he stepped out onto the rough
and pitted substance of which the leviathan was compounded. He stood there
while the others came out after him.
A large area on
the top of the monster was perfectly flat and, within a very few moments, Dirk
discovered that it was decidedly warm. He had brought the plane down close to
the middle of the length of the strange craft in the belief that there, if
anywhere, some indication of an entrance might be found.
The voice of
Steinholt, tense with suppressed excitement, appraised him that his surmise had
been correct.
“There is a
manhole of some sort,” the electrical wizard exclaimed. “And look, it is
turning!”
They saw, not far
ahead of them, a circular twelve-foot section of the deck slowly revolving,
and, even as they watched, it commenced to rise slowly upward as the threads
with which it was provided turned gradually around.
Almost
involuntarily they retreated a few feet and stood there, spellbound, as they
stared at the massive, revolving section of the deck.
It continued to
turn until fully ten feet of the mobile cylinder had been exposed. Then the
bottom of it appeared. Even then it continued to revolve and rise on a
comparatively small shaft which supported it and, at the same time, thrust it
upward. Dirk and his companions kept their eyes on the rim of the well which
had been exposed, and awaited the appearance of something, they knew not what.
When the top of the great cylinder was fully twelve feet above the deck of the
craft it slowly ceased to revolve.
Moment succeeded
moment as the members of the little group rigidly and almost breathlessly
awaited developments.
Then Dirk, with
an impatient ejaculation, stepped forward toward the yawning hole and
cautiously peered over the edge of it.
He stood there
for a moment, as if transfixed, and then, with an exclamation of horror,
retreated swiftly to where his friends were standing.
“What is it?”
gasped Steinholt. “What did you see when––”
But the words
died on his lips for, swarming swiftly over every side of the well, there
poured an array of erect, piercing-eyed beings, who had all the characteristics
of humans. They were clad in tight-fitting attire of thin and pliant metal
which, with the exception of their faces, shielded them from head to foot. On
their heads they wore close-fitting helmets, apparently equipped with visors
which could be drawn down to cover their unprepossessing features.
Each one of them
carried a tube which bore a striking resemblance to a portable electric
flashlight.
Swiftly they
advanced, in ranks of eight, toward Dirk and his companions who, gripped with
amazement, held their positions.
The first line
came to a halt not more than four feet from the little group on the deck. The
other lines halted, too, and formed a great platoon. Then a shrill whistle
sounded and the formation parted in the middle, leaving an open path that led
backward to the entrance, to the well.
A moment later
the watchers saw the regal figure of a man emerge from the orifice and, after a
moment’s pause, advance slowly in their direction with a stately stride.
He was tall and
muscular and blond and his attire, golden in texture, glittered with sparkling
gems.
As he approached
them he raised his right hand and, inasmuch as his countenance was calm and
benign, his gesture appeared to be one of peace and good-will.
Following close
behind him there was a younger man who, very apparently, was of the same
lineage. His expression, however, was petulant and haughty and it contained
more than a suggestion of rapacity and evil.
Behind him there
were others of the same fair type, all of them sumptuously and ornately
attired.
Fragoni stepped
forward, himself a dignified and striking figure, as the leader of the strange
adventurers came forth from the lane that had been formed by his immobile guard
of warriors.
The two men confronted
each other, one whose power and wealth gave him a dominate position on earth,
and the other a personage from some domain that was remote in the abyss of
space.
Fragoni bowed and
spoke a few friendly words of welcome and the stranger, to the utter amazement
of the banker and his associates, responded in an English that was rather
peculiar in accent but that they could understand without any difficulty.
“From what part
of the world do you come,” asked the astounded Fragoni, “that you speak our language?”
“We come from no
part of this world,” replied the stranger. “The empire of my ruler is
infinitely far away. But language, my friend, is not a thing of accident. Life
grows out of the substance of the universe and language comes out of life. The
speech of mankind, in your state of development, varies but little throughout
all space and I have heard your English, as you call it, spoken among those who
dwell in many, many worlds.”
“And your world?”
asked Steinholt with avid curiosity. “Tell us of the planet from which you
come.”
But Fragoni,
smiling at the eagerness of Steinholt, interposed with a kindly but arresting
gesture.
“My name is
Fragoni,” he said to the stranger, “and I would have you partake, of my
hospitality and refresh yourself after your long journey. These,” he added,
“are my friends, Steinholt, Vanderpool and Lazarre.”
“I am Teuxical,
vassal of his Supreme Highness, Malfero of Lodore,” the other replied. “This is
my son, Zitlan,” he continued, indicating the young man behind him, “and the
others are my high captains, Anteucan, Orzitza and Huazibar. More of my
officers are below together with ten thousand armed and armored men such as you
see before you.”
If the last part
of the statement was intended as a threat or a warning, the expression on
Fragoni’s face gave no indication that he was aware of it.
“You carry a
large crew, sir,” Fragoni replied, “but we gladly will make provisions for all
of your men. As for yourself, your son, and your captains, if you will come
with me....”
He nodded in the
direction of the plane which rested on the great interplanetary vessel and
started to walk slowly in the direction of it. The leader of the skymen walked
by his side and the other men from Lodore followed close after them.
Dirk, Steinholt and
Lazarre brought up the rear, while the soldiers remained motionless in their
serried array.
Innumerable
planes were circling overhead and hundreds of them had landed on the water in
the vicinity. Dirk saw that the wanderers from the stars regarded them
curiously as if they never before had seen aircraft of that particular type.
When the cabin
door of the plane was thrown open, Teuxical turned to one of his captains.
“Remain here,
Anteucan, with the soldiers,” he commanded, “and await our return.”
Teuxical then
entered the plane with his men and Fragoni, Steinholt and Lazarre followed
after them. Then Dirk took his seat at the controls.
“These are
strange craft you use,” he heard Teuxical say. “I have seen them in only one of
the multitude of other worlds on which I have set my feet, worlds which all pay
tribute to Malfero of Lodore. It is safer and swifter to ride the magnetic
currents than it is to ride the unstable currents of the air.”
Dirk caught the
significance of the reference to tribute and he admired the clever diplomacy of
Teuxical while, at the same time, he wondered if the earth and all of those who
dwelt upon it were doomed to fall under the sway of some remote and unseen
despot.
He also realized
that the Lodorians had, in some way, devised a craft that rode the great
magnetic streams which flowed through the universe in much the same way that
men, in ships, navigated the streams of the earth.
He threw on the
helicopter switch and the plane rose swiftly into the air, the myriad other
flying craft which were circling nearby keeping at a safe distance from it.
“Land on the
grand terrace,” Fragoni directed. The flight was short and rapid and it was
only a matter of seconds before Dirk brought the plane down on the landing
stage which they had left only a scant half-hour before.
He opened the
cabin door and stepped out of the plane and the others filed out after him.
Fragoni led the
way along the stage, walking and chatting with Teuxical, and Dirk, following
after the others, was the last to turn a corner that brought him a sweeping
view of the magnificent terrace that fronted the private apartments of the
banker and his daughter.
And, when he did,
he saw that Inga was standing there, superbly beautiful, with Stanton a few
paces behind her.
Her lovely eyes
were alive with awe and wonder and her slender white hands were crossed over
her heart.
And Dirk saw,
too, that Zitlan, son of Teuxical, had paused and was standing quite still,
with his unwavering and insolent eyes fixed on the girl. Resentment, and a
touch of apprehension, agitated Dirk when he saw the expression on the face of
the young Lodorian.
There was
admiration in that disagreeable countenance, but it was blended with arrogance,
haughtiness and ill-concealed desire.
Dirk went quickly
to Inga, standing between the girl and the one from Lodore who was staring at
her so brazenly.
“What does it all
mean, Dirk?” she asked in a low voice. “Those strange people, where are they
from?”
Stanton had come
quickly forward and had joined Inga and Dirk.
“They are from
some far-off world, Inga,” he explained, “that we know nothing about as yet.”
“But what do they
want?” she persisted. “What do they intend to do? I saw those horrible
creatures through the magnascope when they came swarming out of the inside of
that thing on the water and I thought, at first, that they were going to kill
you all.”
“No, they seem to
come in peace,” Dirk replied. “Teuxical, their leader, seems to be gracious and
kindly.”
“We are all
doomed,” asserted Stanton, “unless something happens. They can crumble our
cities with heat and bury us under the ruins of them.”
“Keep your
silence!” breathed Dirk, quietly but tensely. “We will find a way to destroy
those creatures if it becomes necessary.”
“That man who
keeps staring at me, who is he?” asked Inga in a voice that betrayed her
nervousness.
Dirk turned and
saw that Zitlan was still standing where he had paused and that he still was
looking with searching eyes in the direction of the girl.
He returned the
insolent gaze of the young Lodorian with an impatient and threatening stare and
the countenance of Zitlan at once became stern and menacing. He came striding
in the direction of Inga, Dirk and Stanton and paused within a few feet of
them, his rapacious eyes still fixed on the girl.
“My lady,” he
said, “your beauty pleases me. I have walked on many worlds but never before
have I seen one as lovely as yourself. Of the spoils of this world, all that I
crave possession of is you. When we return to Lodore,” he added with an air of
finality, “I will take you with me and place you with my other women in the
Seraglio of the Stars.”
Dirk swiftly
stepped close to Zitlan and the latter quickly clasped a tube that hung at his
side, a tube of the sort that the soldiers had carried.
“Your words and
your manner are insolent,” asserted Dirk angrily, “and I warn you now to cease
making yourself offensive.”
“Dog!” exclaimed
Zitlan fiercely, leveling the metal tube, “I’ll––”
But the left fist
of Dirk cut short his threat as it made a sudden impact with his chin, and the
Lodorian went crashing backward into some exotic shrubbery with a look of
surprise on his countenance.
Then Dirk heard
an odd hissing and crackling sound, and he felt himself becoming dizzy and
weak.
Darkness seemed
to sweep in upon him; he felt that he was dropping swiftly through space, and
then he lost consciousness.
A vague and
shadowy figure was standing close by his side and peering down into his face.
After a while he realized that it was Steinholt.
“Steinholt!” he
gasped. “Why––why am I here––in Fragoni’s? I must have had a dream––and
yet....”
He furrowed his
brow in thought and, gradually, he commenced to remember what had happened.
“It was no
dream,” said the scientist softly. “Do you remember the trouble that you had
with Zitlan?”
“Yes,” replied
Dirk. “I remember that he was insolent to Inga and that I lost my temper and
struck him. But what happened to me? I don’t recall that anybody hit me. I did
hear sort of a peculiar sound just before I started to pass out, but––”
“Teuxical took a
shot at you,” said Steinholt, “and you have been unconscious for over
thirty-six hours.”
“Took a shot at
me!” exclaimed Dirk. “What did he shoot me with?”
“That is what we
all would like to know,” said Steinholt. “He leveled one of those damn tubes at
you and pressed a button on it. There was a hissing sound, a flash of light,
and you got groggy, and went out. He potted Zitlan, too,” continued Steinholt,
“and he apologized for the trouble that his son was responsible for. Do you
know,” he added, “I sort of like the old man.”
Lazarre, with a
sympathetic smile on his face, entered the room at that moment and overheard
the conversation.
“Old man is
right,” he remarked, with a little note of awe in his voice. “Teuxical admits
that he is three thousand years old and that he has at least two thousand more
ahead of him. That Lodore must be a queer world,” he commented, shaking his
grizzly head.
“It is not so
queer when you take everything into consideration,” said Steinholt. “It seems
quite natural when Teuxical explains it. Lodore it seems, is something like a
hundred thousand times as big as this miniature world we live on. It took
Lodore infinitely longer to solidify from a gaseous state than it took this
world, and its entire evolution has been relatively slower than ours.
Therefore, according to Teuxical, the people up there live longer and,
incidentally, know infinitely more than we do.”
“What time is it
now?” asked Dirk, after a moment of thought.
“It is just about
twelve o’clock at night,” Steinholt informed him.
“Have these
Lodorians made any demands yet?” Dirk asked. “Does anybody know what they are
going to do or what they want?”
“They are liable
to do almost anything,” said Lazarre, “and it looks as though they will be able
to get anything that they want. Teuxical, as I understand it, just gave you a
slight shock with his death-ray device. If he had pulled the trigger all the
way you would have become just a little pile of dust that the first breeze would
have blown away.”
“Our own
death-rays are somewhat similar,” said Steinholt, “but they are not a hundredth
as powerful. And they won’t work on the Lodorians, either,” he added, “because
those metal sheaths that they wear make them immune to all kinds of destructive
rays.”
“It appears,”
remarked Lazarre morosely, “as if this little world of ours is going to be
taken for a ride. And it’s too bad, considering that it’s the only world we’ve
got. There has been no formal presentation of demands yet, but it seems to be
sort of understood that the earth is going to become a tributary of Lodore. It
is a good thing,” he added, “that Teuxical, and not Zitlan, is the boss of that
outfit. I don’t like the looks of that young fellow. He’s only twelve hundred
years old and he is sort of hot-blooded, I guess.”
“I was talking
with Anteucan,” said Steinholt, “and he told me that the Lodorians usually make
heavy levies on worlds which they discover and dominate. As soon as Teuxical
returns to Lodore and announces a new discovery a fleet of those damned
monsters is sent out to mop up the new planet. That Malfero, who is the emperor
of Lodore, is considerable of a monarch, and it seems that he has a passion for
piling up wealth. Gold and platinum are as precious on Lodore as they are here
and he also likes pretty stones.”
“And what is
worse,” added Steinholt, “is his practice of enslaving entire populations and
making toilers or warriors out of them. Those soldiers on the ship are not
Lodorians. Millions of them were seized on some planet and converted into
troops. It was a strange conversion, too,” said Steinholt with a shudder.
“Their brains were operated on and most of their faculties removed. They have
no sense of fear, no consciences, no power of reasoning. They respond only to
certain signals on a whistle and their only definite and active impulse is that
of murder and destruction.”
“There is nothing
to do,” said Dirk positively, “but to kill all of these interlopers, if we hope
to save our world from being desolated.”
The three men
looked at each other in silence for a moment and then Dirk, somewhat weakly,
rose into a sitting position in the bed which he had been occupying.
“But how,” asked
Steinholt, “can we kill them? We might, of course, get rid of a few of them,
but that simply would lead to our destruction by those who were left.”
“There must be
some way,” asserted Dirk, “and it is up to us to think of it without delay. If
we let those Lodorians get a foothold on the world all will be lost.”
“The old man seems
to be reasonable enough,” said Lazarre. “He doesn’t seem inclined to be
destructive.”
“We must not
trust him or any of the others,” said Dirk imperatively. “We must rid the earth
of every one of them. And the sooner we strike the better!”
“It had best be
soon if it is to be at all,” said Steinholt. “Fragoni has arranged to have
Teuxical appear before the Congress, and the meeting has been called for
to-night when, I imagine, certain specific demands will be made upon us. We all
will go to The Hague together on the ship of the Lodorians.”
“And we leave?”
questioned Dirk.
“The meeting is
set for ten P. M., New York time,” said Lazarre. “We will start east at about
four o’clock in the morning, I guess, because it will only take a minute or so
to arrive at our destination.”
“Is Fragoni
going?” asked Dirk.
“Naturally,”
replied Lazarre.
“And Inga?”
“I believe so,”
Lazarre told him. “Fragoni was both afraid to take her and to leave her behind,
but finally he decided that he wanted her with him in case of trouble.”
“And are
they––the Lodorians––still here?” queried Dirk.
“Yes,” responded
Lazarre. “Teuxical returned to his ship last night with Zitlan and his other
followers, but they came back late this afternoon, and they are still here.
Zitlan seemed to be all right this afternoon, too. They must have used some
means of bringing him out of the daze that he was in. We did everything we
could to revive you, but none of our measures were effective.”
“I’m all right
now,” asserted Dirk, as he finished attiring himself. “I want to see Fragoni at
once.”
“We’ll go out on
the terrace then,” said Steinholt. “They are all out there.”
Dirk, with his
two companions, strolled out through the maze of rooms and corridors that led
to the garden which hung so high above the city and the Sound below it.
The first thing
that Dirk saw, when he passed out onto the terrace, was the white tunic of
Inga, who was leaning against a coping and talking with Zitlan.
The latter was
pointing skyward and, very apparently, he was telling her of worlds which
circled high among the stars.
As if she were
suddenly aware of his presence, Inga turned and saw Dirk and he realized, by
the expression on her face, that she was distraught and nervous. She came
toward him quickly, after a few words to Zitlan, and the face of the latter
darkened. There was hatred in his expression as he stared malevolently at Dirk.
Steinholt and
Lazarre passed along and joined Fragoni and Teuxical, who were the center of a
group that had formed in another part of the terrace.
“Oh, Dirk,” said
Inga, “I am so afraid of that frightful Zitlan. He has been telling me again
that he is going to take me back to his own world with him and it makes me
shudder to think of it. He is so strange and queer and his eyes are so terrible.
He can’t be as young as he looks, because he speaks of years like we speak of
minutes. I will die if I ever find myself in that monster’s power! He has been
telling me of all the creatures he has slain on the worlds on which he has
landed, and I tell you, Dirk, that he is cruel and ruthless and horrible.”
“He will never
have you!” swore Dirk. “And if I hear of any more of his insolence, I will
throw him headlong from this terrace.”
“Please, Dirk,”
she begged, “don’t do anything––not yet. He is utterly unscrupulous, Dirk. He
told me that, even now, he is plotting against some Malfero who rules Lodore
like a god, and that he is planning to seize the throne of the planet. He wants
to make me the queen of that fearful world when he becomes king. He boasted
that, if I were on the throne, millions of people from other worlds would be
sacrificed in my honor in the temples of Lodore.” Her voice trembled and her
eyes were terror-stricken as she continued. “They tear out the hearts of living
victims,” she whispered, “and burn them on their high and mammoth pyramids.”
Rage took
possession of Dirk and, casting a glance at Zitlan, he saw that the Lodorian
was smiling insolently at him.
“I’ll kill that
beast, if it’s the last thing that I do!” he exclaimed to Inga.
“Dirk, Dirk,” she
implored, “don’t even look at him. He is proud and impetuous, and he will kill
you in defiance of his own father.”
“We will find
some way to rid the world of the scourge that has descended upon it,” asserted
Dirk confidently, “and he will die with the rest of that monstrous crew.”
“I am going in,
Dirk,” Inga said. “Please,” she begged, “don’t do anything rash.
If––something––should happen to you, I would lose all the hope that I have and
I would, I think, kill myself.”
“Don’t lose hope,
my dear,” said Dirk reassuringly. “I believe that I know of a way to destroy
the plague that menaces us.”
He pressed her
hand and, after she left him, he walked over and joined the other men on the
terrace. Zitlan, coming from the terrace wall, stretched out in a chair not far
from Dirk.
Teuxical regarded
the latter with a countenance that was calm and amicable. “I am sorry, my young
friend,” he apologized, “that I had to intervene between you and my son.” He
paused a moment and sat in silence, a thoughtful expression on his face. “Ah,”
he then said, “what disasters have arisen out of the desire of men for women.
In my wanderings over the starlit worlds, I have seen....” He ceased speaking,
brooded for a moment, and then shook his head slowly. “But you cannot say that
I was not just,” he continued, addressing Dirk. “I punished Zitlan for his
presumption. Fragoni tells me that the woman has pledged herself to you. Let
her pledge be kept!” he exclaimed sternly, looking straight at Zitlan.
“We are the
conquerors,” asserted the latter boldly, “and to us should belong the spoils of
our daring!”
“Silence!”
thundered Teuxical. “My own son, above all others, shall be obedient to my
commands! Or, like others have done, he shall die because of insubordination!”
Zitlan, a defiant
expression on his face, ceased to speak, but Dirk could see that he was livid
with suppressed rage.
“As I was
saying,” Teuxical remarked, turning to Fragoni, “I am getting old and long have
I been weary of conquest. I have seen your world and it pleases me. It is a
tiny and peaceful place, far removed from the strife and turbulence of the
restless centers of the universe. So it is my will to leave you unscathed and
return to Lodore for a brief time to ask of the mighty Malfero the grant of
this little provincial land. And then, with his permission, I will return here
and rule it with wisdom and benevolence.
“I will bring to
you much knowledge, and peace will be to the people of this earth and peace
will be to me.”
“It is well,” replied
Fragoni. “No world, I am certain, could hope for a wiser and more just ruler
than yourself, and our Congress surely will receive you with acclaim.”
Teuxical bowed in
recognition of the compliment, and his countenance indicated that he was
gratified.
“We will go, now,
back to our vessel,” he said, addressing the other Lodorians. “We will return
for you at the appointed hour and conduct you to our ship,” he added, speaking
to Fragoni.
“We will be
ready,” Fragoni replied.
Zitlan had arisen
with the rest of them and Dirk, with a look of contempt and amusement in his
eyes, regarded him casually.
“May I have the
honor of conducting our guests back to their ship in a plane?” Stanton
requested of Fragoni.
The latter nodded
and Stanton walked across the terrace in the direction of the landing stage.
Zitlan, as he
followed after the others, passed close to Dirk and, pausing for a moment,
fixed his hateful eyes on him.
“You dog,” he
whispered malignantly, “remember what I tell you! The time will come when I
will cast you to the carnaphlocti in the dark and icy caverns of sunless
Tiganda. You will die,” he swore, “the death of a million agonies!”
For a moment Dirk
felt an almost irresistible impulse to hurl himself on the Lodorian and slay
him.
He managed to
maintain his control, however, and only regarded Zitlan with disdain as the
latter turned and went on his way.
In another moment
the plane, containing Stanton and the Lodorians, was high up in the darkness.
Dirk glanced at
the great clock that gleamed atop of the beacon-tower on the Metropole Landing
Field.
The hour was
close to twelve-thirty A. M.
A moment of
silence on the terrace followed the departure of the plane that bore the
Lodorians back to their craft.
For an hour the
clouds had been gathering in the sky and now a fine, cold rain commenced to
fall.
A peal of thunder
echoed above them after a sharp flash of lightning had streaked across the
black night above them.
A servant
appeared from the entrance to the apartment and pressed a button close to the
door.
Protective plates
of glass noiselessly enveloped the terrace, sheltering those upon it from the
inclement weather.
“It is well,”
remarked Fragoni, breaking the silence, “that we were found by a leader like
Teuxical. Our tribute will not be unbearable, and he will bestow many benefits
upon us.”
“But surely,”
protested Dirk, “you do not intend to surrender without a struggle! Nothing but
disaster,” he asserted earnestly, “will come upon the earth if you do. Teuxical
may be honest and just but, after all, he neither is immortal nor all-powerful,
and something may happen to him at any moment. And there are those like Zitlan
who would turn the world over to ravage and rape, and then convert it into a
blazing pyre, if they had their way. These vandals,” he insisted, “must be
slain one and all, or, mark my words, our world will be laid waste.”
Dirk spoke with
such a sense of conviction that his words held his listeners spellbound.
“Who is
Teuxical,” he asked, “but the vassal of a monarch whose corsairs, very
apparently, are carrying on a war of conquest in the universe? It will be
disastrous, I say, to place any dependence in the good will of this one
Lodorian. If he, or any of his men, return to that far-off planet where they
dwell word will be carried there of the existence of our world. But who can say
that Teuxical ever will return here again? It may be the whim of his ruler to
refuse his request, or any one of a thousand other events might arise to thwart
his desire to live among us. No,” concluded Dirk passionately, “it never will
do to let that great engine of destruction rise into the skies again!”
“He is right!”
asserted Steinholt positively. “It will be far better to annihilate these
raiders, if such a thing can be accomplished!”
Lazarre was
rather inclined to take sides with Fragoni.
“But how,” he
demanded, “can such destruction be brought about? We know nothing of the
capabilities of that monster that is lying down there in the Sound. It is
undoubtedly equipped with the deadliest of devices and they all will be turned
upon us if we fail in an effort to destroy the thing and those who have come
from space upon it. If there was a way to smite them suddenly, to bring death
to the Lodorians and to those swarming, mindless, murderous minions who act in
obedience to them, I would favor doing it.
“But, as it is,”
he concluded, “it seems like inviting disaster even to think of such an
attempt, much less to try it.”
“It can be done,
though,” asserted Dirk, “or there is at least a fighting chance of
accomplishing it. The electrosceotan––” He paused, and looked questioningly at
Steinholt. “The top of that monster is open and....”
The Teuton
furrowed his brow and considered the proposition for a moment.
“Yes,” he said,
nodding his head, “it might be done.” Again he silently gave the subject his
thought. “It is well worth trying,” he asserted with an air of decision. “But
we will have to make haste,” he warned, “if the thing is to be done before the
flight to The Hague.”
“So be it,” said
Fragoni. “We will apply ourselves to the task at hand. I, too,” he confessed,
“had rather see these vandals destroyed like so much vermin rather than have
them carry the news of the existence of this earth back into those strange
worlds in the depth of space. I will only regret the passing of Teuxical, who
could have taught us much wisdom. And now,” he continued briskly, “I will place
myself under your orders, Dirk. You are the one who suggested this plan and
upon you will fall the responsibility of executing it. And, if it succeeds,” he
added, “the glory will be yours.”
“I care little
for the glory,” replied Dirk, “but I gladly accept the duties and the
responsibilities. These,” he said to Fragoni, “are my instructions to you.
Inasmuch as Teuxical and his captains will return here at about four o’clock in
the morning to convey us back to their craft, it will be necessary to have this
building emptied of its inhabitants by that time. Let all of those who dwell
here depart from it, a few at a time, so as not to excite suspicion. Inga,
above all others, must leave and retreat to a place of safety. Then, as the
hour approaches for the arrival of the Lodorians, we will escape by plane from
one of the rear terraces. They will land in search of us and––well, then they
will feel the force of our power.”
“I will follow
your orders explicitly,” promised Fragoni. “I wonder,” he added, “where Stanton
is? He should be advised of what we are going to attempt.”
“He will return
in due time,” replied Dirk. “And, if not, it will be the worse for him. Lazarre
will remain here with you,” he then told Fragoni, “and Steinholt and I will now
go about our part of the task at hand.”
Dirk, followed by
Steinholt, hurried across the terrace and, leaving the shelter of its quartzite
plates, sought the landing stage.
The rain still
was falling and the heavens were congested with dark and heavy clouds.
Dirk, selecting
one of the smaller planes, entered the cabin and Steinholt, following after
him, closed the door and threw on the lights.
Swiftly they shot
straight up into the air, Dirk ignoring all of the rules of flight in his haste
to be under way. Once in the westbound lane, he headed his plane toward
Manhattan and threw his rheostat wide open. In a few minutes they were skimming
over the great city and past the three-thousand-foot steel tower of the
Worldwide Broadcasting Station.
For fifteen
minutes more he kept the plane on a straight course and then, bringing it to a
quick stop, he let it drop like a plummet toward the earth.
It landed, among
many other planes, on the transparent, quartzite roof of a vast building and,
looking down into the interior, they could see several rows of great dynamos.
Some of them were turning, and the humming that they made could be heard
plainly.
Dirk and
Steinholt ran rapidly across the roof until they came to a superstructure,
which they entered. There was a shaft inside. Dirk pressed a button, and an
elevator shot up and stopped at the door, which automatically flashed open.
He closed it after
he and his companion had entered the cage and, dropping rapidly downward, they
came to a stop in a lighted chamber that was far below the surface of the
ground.
A
stoop-shouldered old man greeted them, an expression of surprise on his face.
“Gentlemen!” he
exclaimed. “What is––”
“Power, Gaeble!”
commanded Steinholt tensely. “Power! Let every dynamo run its swiftest.
To-night we have to use for the electrosceotan!”
“But I thought it
was peace that those from the stars desired,” said the old electrician.
“Through my radiovisor I heard––”
“That was sent
out,” explained Steinholt, “to relieve the fears of the people and to keep them
in order.”
Swiftly the
distorted figure of the old man sped to a great switchboard, where he pressed
button after button.
The very ground
commenced to vibrate around them and the massive structure seemed to be alive
with straining power.
Then Steinholt,
going to a corner of the intricate board, adjusted a few levers, while his
gnomelike companion watched him carefully.
“And now,
Gaeble,” the scientist said impressively, “these are your orders. At precisely
the hour of four o’clock in the morning make one connection with this switch.”
He indicated,
with a stubby finger, the lever to be operated.
“Keep the circuit
closed for just four seconds,” he added slowly, “and then break it. Do you
understand, Gaeble?” he demanded.
“I do,” replied
the old man.
“Then,” continued
Steinholt, “after you break that connection you quickly will close this next
circuit. Keep it closed for four seconds and then, after opening it for one
second, close it again for four seconds. Repeat the procedure twice more,
Gaeble, after that, and then await my further instructions. Is everything
clear?” he asked.
“It is, sir,” the
old man replied. “I will follow your orders implicitly.”
“There is one
thing more,” Steinholt said. “Get the Worldwide Tower on the televisor and warn
them of what is to happen.”
“I will do that
immediately,” Gaeble replied.
Dirk and
Steinholt shot up to the roof again and the building over which they walked
seemed to be quivering with life.
They could see
that all of the mammoth dynamos beneath them were revolving and the humming
which they had heard before had changed into an ugly, vibrant roar.
Again they took
flight and, reaching Manhattan, they continued north and east to the shore of
Long Island Sound.
Long before the
old East River had been filled in and the space which it had occupied reclaimed
for building purposes. All indications of its former bed had been obliterated
by mammoth terraced structures.
When they reached
their destination on the shore of the Sound a small submarine, which Dirk had
ordered by radio, was awaiting them.
“Submerge and
proceed up the Sound,” Dirk ordered the officer, “and take us directly under
the craft of the Lodorians.”
In a few minutes
they were skimming over the surface of the water and, when a sufficient depth
had been gained, the tiny boat disappeared beneath the rain-rippled sea.
Dirk sat at a
port and watched the aquatic life as it was illuminated by the powerful
aquamarine searchlights.
Progress under
the water was comparatively slow, as mankind had made but little progress in
underwater navigation. Air liners long before had almost superseded travel by
land and sea and the abolition of warfare had swept all of the old navies from
the ocean.
It was more than
an hour before the officer in charge of the boat announced that the mammoth
hull of the monster that was lying on the Sound was visible directly above
them.
Both Dirk and
Steinholt donned diving apparatus, and the former carefully adjusted the
mechanism that was contained in a metallic box about two feet square.
Then they stepped
up into a chamber in the conning tower of the boat and, after a door slipped
shut beneath them, water slowly commenced to pour into the compartment.
When it was full
a sliding door that was in front of them slowly opened and they passed out onto
the deck of the underwater craft.
Steinholt had
been provided with some welding apparatus and, in a few minutes, the box which
Dirk had carried was attached securely to the bottom of the craft of the
Lodorians.
They then
reentered the submarine by reversing the process which had attended their exit.
Very soon they were in the cabin of the boat again.
“If everything
goes well,” said Dirk, “those damned Lodorians will never know what struck
them.”
“I only hope,”
said Steinholt, “that we don’t destroy that leviathan altogether. We might
solve the secret of it and then we, too, could ride out into the heart of the
universe.”
“It is impossible
to imagine what will happen,” Dirk replied, “until after we launch our attack.”
Both of the men
were silent during the return trip of the small undersea craft, which emerged
at its dock a little before three-thirty in the morning.
“We’ll have to
hurry,” urged Dirk nervously, “because we will need a little time to make
preparations after we get back to Fragoni’s.”
They entered
their plane and Dirk shot it swiftly up into the night, following the red shaft
of light that rose almost directly from the point at which they had made their
landing.
Then, having
reached the eastbound level, he headed straight in the direction of the palace
of Fragoni.
Dirk cast a
glance at the great city that lay far beneath him. High up into the heavens it
tossed the fulgurant fires that betokened its wealth and power. And, down among
those myriad lights, millions and millions of people were restless under the
danger that menaced them. It was only a matter of moments now before their fate,
and the fate of their great metropolis, would be decided. By dawn they would be
free forever from the threat of subjugation and slavery or else they, and all
that they had toiled and striven for, would be the veriest dust of dying
embers.
And whatever befell
them likewise would befall the rest of the world and every living thing that
moved upon it.
Dirk was high
above Fragoni’s when he stopped the forward flight of the plane and, dropping
it rapidly through the misty night, brought up easily on the landing stage. The
other planes which had been there when he and Steinholt had taken their
departure were gone and Dirk felt a sense of relief when he observed this.
Inga, then, must have departed with the other occupants of the colossal
structure. Things were going according to the plan that he had conceived. He
stepped out of the cabin, followed by Steinholt, and proceeded hastily along
the terrace and turned the corner into the garden.
Then he came to
an abrupt halt because there, before him, was Zitlan, with one of the deadly
ray-tubes of the Lodorians in his hand.
Dirk knew
immediately that something unexpected had happened and that he was in the power
of one who not only hated him but who had an unholy desire for Inga.
He realized, too,
that any show of resistance would be nothing short of suicide, for he was well
aware of the deadliness of the strange weapon with which he and Steinholt were
being menaced by the gloating Lodorian.
“One false move
and you die!” warned Zitlan. “Come forward, now, and join those two others over
whom Anteucan and Huazibar are watching.”
Dirk and
Steinholt promptly obeyed the command of Zitlan and walked over to where
Fragoni and Lazarre were being guarded by two of the conquerors.
The rain had
ceased to fall, but the skies were dark and overcast with heavy clouds. There
was an occasional flash of lightning, and thunder rolled and echoed through the
night.
The terrace,
however, was brightly illuminated and every detail of the scene around him was
visible to Dirk.
He saw Stanton,
on another part of the terrace, standing among some Lodorians he had not seen
before. Stanton, apparently, was not being treated as a prisoner and Dirk
wondered, rather vaguely, why this was.
“What happened?”
Dirk asked Fragoni quietly.
“According to
what I have heard,” the latter replied, “Zitlan murdered his father in a fit of
rage, and has taken over the command of the ship. Many of the Lodorians are his
adherents and even those who do not favor him are so terrified that they will
be obedient to his wishes.”
“And Inga?”
questioned Dirk.
“She is inside
the apartment,” said Fragoni, a note of desperation in his voice. “Zitlan
surprised us completely and he and his men had us covered before we realized
that Teuxical was not among them.”
Zitlan, in the
meantime, had entered the suite of Fragoni and he now came out, Inga walking
before him.
She was silent
and proudly erect but there was a pallor in her face that indicated her
realization of the danger that she was threatened with.
When Dirk saw her
she gave him a brave smile, which he answered with a glance of reassurance.
He could see the
great clock in the Metropole Tower, and he noticed, with a feeling of grave
apprehension, that it was twenty minutes to four o’clock.
There were only a
few minutes more in which to make a desperate and apparently a hopeless effort
to save Inga, his friends and himself from a catastrophe which he had been
instrumental in contriving.
Then Zitlan stood
before him, haughty and arrogant, his lowering countenance ugly with hatred.
“So, dog,” he
said, “you who dared to defy Zitlan now stand before him a captive!”
Neither Dirk nor
any one of the three others who were guarded with him replied to the utterance.
“You and that
woman of yours,” continued the Lodorian insolently, “both are my prisoners to
do with as I please. Your fate,” he continued, “I already have planned for you
and I assure you that it will not be as pleasurable as the one to which she is
destined. You will find that Tigana, on which you and those with you will be
cast, is a world of terror such as you never could dream of. Even the monsters
which crawl through the deliriums of the mind are not as horrible as those
which infest the mad and haunted world of which I speak.”
He paused a
moment, a cruel smile on his face, as if he wished the full import of his words
to sear themselves into the minds of the doomed men.
“But the woman,”
he added, “will return to Lodore with me and be the queen of all women. And
soon,” he said savagely, “she may be queen of all Lodore, of the worlds which
pay tribute to Lodore, and of other worlds which I will conquer and ravage. My
father stood in my way and he died at my own hands. So will others perish who
thwart my ambition, and I will become supreme in the universe!”
A feeling of
reckless fury possessed Dirk as he listened to the words of Zitlan and he felt
an almost irresistible desire to drive a fist square between the mad,
glittering eyes of the Lodorian.
He glanced at the
great clock, however, and he saw that the time to act had not yet come. At the
last moment he would make one desperate attempt to frustrate the evil designs
of Zitlan. If it failed––well, all would be lost. But it was a far better thing
to die resisting the despicable Zitlan and his minions than it would be to live
and to know that, without a struggle, he had abandoned to degradation the girl
he loved.
“This world of
yours will be my world,” he heard Zitlan boast, “and the spoils from it will
add to my riches. This one here,” he continued, indicating Stanton, “has
offered to show me where all of the treasures of the earth may be found. And,
as a reward, he will return to Lodore with me and there be elevated to a high
position.”
That, then, was
why Stanton was not under guard like the rest of them.
“Our good friend,
Stanton,” said Lazarre, “seems to have become something of a Judas.”
“And let his name
be forever cursed, like the name of Judas,” said Dirk.
“Silence!”
thundered the Lodorian. “I, Zitlan, am speaking.” He paused a moment. “When I
garner up the treasures of this world in the way of precious stones and metals
I also shall gather more priceless loot in the way of women. And then, having
taken all that I desire, I will lay waste to this earth so that those who
survive will fear the name of Zitlan and will grovel before him like a god when
once again he appears to them.”
While Zitlan had
been speaking, Dirk had been studying the opponents with whom he soon had to
clash.
The two Lodorians
who were standing guard over himself and his companions were close to his left
side. Zitlan was directly in front of him, and there were seven of his minions
clustered behind him.
Again Dirk
glanced at the great dial of the clock, and he saw that it was seven minutes of
four.
The moment had
come to act if action was to prove of any avail.
“I will––”
But the words of
Zitlan were interrupted by Dirk, who suddenly made a mighty sweep with his left
arm and knocked the deadly tubes from the hands of Anteucan and Huazibar.
Startled by the assault, they went reeling backward. At almost the same instant
Dirk leaped forward and, seizing Zitlan, hurled him among those Lodorians who
had been massed behind him. Then he threw himself violently into the tangled
mass, his fists driving in and out with deadly strength!
Out of the corner
of one eye he saw Inga pass the melee and dart swiftly to the corner of the
terrace. Instead of passing around to the landing stage, however, she lingered
there and watched the combat.
Dirk, as he
fought, became conscious that Steinholt and Fragoni were at his side, battling
with him against his enemies. He saw, too, that Stanton had retired to the far
end of the terrace and that he was watching the struggle with frightened eyes.
“We must reach
the plane and get away,” gasped Dirk. “In another three minutes––”
He felled a
Lodorian who, having lost his tube, was about to grapple with him. He saw
Steinholt send another one of their opponents reeling backward.
“Fragoni!” he
exclaimed. “The plane! Get in with Inga! We will come!”
Even as he spoke
his fists were flailing back and forth between each one of his staccato
commands.
He saw beneath
him a hand reaching toward a tube, and he kicked the instrument of death. It
hurtled over in the direction of Stanton and landed close to his feet. Stanton
might have picked it up and been in possession of the means of aiding his old
friends or his new allies. But he shrunk away, panic-stricken, from the thing
that lay so close to his reach.
A Lodorian leaped
upon Dirk’s back in an effort to bring him to the ground, but he stooped
swiftly forward and his assailant was catapulted over his head into those who
were in front of him.
He caught a flash
of the contorted face of Zitlan flying through the air, and saw him land with a
crash on the terrace, and lie there writhing in pain.
“Steinholt,
Lazarre!” he said convulsively. “We’ve got to strike once more! And then––run!”
He plunged into
their enemies with every bit of energy that he had left, and saw two of them
toppling down. Then, like a flash, he turned to Lazarre, who was trying to
fight off three of the Lodorians. Seizing one of them by the waist, Dirk hurled
him backward and he disposed of another one in the same manner. His sheer
desperation seemed to have given him unbounded strength and power.
Lazarre sent his
third opponent down with a blow under the chin and then, with Dirk at his side,
they turned to the assistance of Steinholt.
With one mad rush
they crashed into a group of Lodorians and sent them reeling away like so many
nine-pins.
“Now! To the
plane!” exclaimed Dirk, taking to his heels across the terrace. Steinholt and
Lazarre followed after him and, turning the corner, they saw that the ship was
in place and that Fragoni was anxiously waiting by the door of the cabin. Inga,
Dirk knew, already was inside and safe. He stood aside while Steinholt and
Lazarre leaped in. During the momentary wait he caught a glimpse of the great
clock. It was one minute to four. Dirk jumping into the plane and switched on
the helicopter without even waiting to close the cabin door.
The ship shot
skyward like a rocket. When it reached an altitude of thirty-five hundred feet,
he turned it north and raced at top speed in that direction.
It was miles away
from the palace of Fragoni in less than thirty seconds. Dirk then stopped the
plane and held it poised in the air with the helicopter.
The skies were
turgid and black and the massed clouds, reflecting the lights of the great city
below them, were permeated with an ugly, feverish, red glow.
From where they
were hanging in midair, the occupants of the plane could plainly see the
sparkling palace of Fragoni towering high up into the darkness of the night.
The lights of the
magnificent mansion were reflected far out into the Sound where, looming in the
golden ripples, lay the sinister monster from the terrible depths of
unfathomable space.
Dirk took a watch
from his pocket and, after glancing at it, he hastily replaced it.
“Two seconds
more,” he said, “and––”
A sharp and
dazzling bolt of greenish fire came hurling suddenly out of the west and, with
a thunderous concussion, seemed to fasten itself on the crest of Fragoni’s
palace.
It trembled and
quivered, as if endowed with some uncanny life and power, as it remained there
against the darkness, throwing a weird, green tinge over the water and up into
the skies.
Blue waves of
light could be seen pulsing and racing along the terrible beam and there, where
it had fastened itself, they seemed to disappear in the vast and crumbling
structure.
For four seconds
that destructive streak of light, one end of which was lost back in the mists
that concealed Manhattan, tore at the proud pile.
And, as the stone
crumbled and the steelite fused under the mighty assault, an ominous roar swept
through the night. The air was so violently agitated that the plane, miles
away, tossed up and down like a tiny boat on a stormy sea.
Then suddenly the
bolt was gone, but its livid image still burned in the eyes of those who had
been watching it.
Once more, it
came hurling out of the west and, like the fang of some great and deadly
serpent, darted into the monster that lay in the waters of the Sound.
Dirk and his
companions could see plainly, by the light of the bolt itself, that it had
crashed into the well from which the Lodorians first had appeared, and that it
was beating and hammering its way into the very vitals of the craft.
Dazzling,
blinding fire seemed to pour from the aperture through which the bolt had
passed. The clamor that arose was deafening.
Then again the
streak of fires was withdrawn, leaving the night intensely black until, in a
moment more, it came thundering out of the west again and, with an impact that
made the land and the sea and the very heavens tremble, hurled its way into the
depths of the doomed leviathan.
Twice again it
fell, a fiery scimitar out of the darkness, and twice again it careened at the
vitals of the stricken monster.
Then, after the
assault was over, the ship still floated on the surface of the Sound and its
shell, as far as Dirk and the others could judge, still was unscathed.
“We will soon
know our fate,” remarked Steinholt calmly. “If that didn’t kill those beasts we
might as well give up our ghosts.”
“I’ll drop the
plane a little lower and a little nearer to the ship,” said Dirk. “I don’t
believe that any life is surviving in that thing.”
“My beautiful
palace is nothing but dust,” sighed Fragoni, mournfully. “And all my beautiful
treasures, too.”
“And that
beautiful Zitlan,” Lazarre reminded him, “and his beautiful boy friends, they
are all dust too, thank God!”
“It was a queer
fate that Stanton met,” suggested Dirk. “He thought that he would save his life
by going over to our enemies, and, instead of that, he lost it.”
“Poor Stanton,”
said Steinholt. “He was born that way, I suppose, and I, for one, am ready to
forgive and forget him. And now,” continued the Teuton, “I hope that we didn’t
do too much damage to that little boat of the Lodorians. If we could get just a
little peep at the inside of it we might learn the secret of its contrivance.
And then, my friends, we could do a little journeying ourselves.”
“Have you any
theory regarding it?” asked Fragoni.
“Teuxical
intimated that it rode the magnetic currents which, of course, flow through all
the suns and planets in the universe,” replied Steinholt. “We have been working
along that line ourselves, of course, and it probably won’t be very long anyway
before we have the solution of interplanetary travel.”
“Those Lodorians
would have solved it for us if it hadn’t been for that artificial lightning,”
said Lazarre. “That’s powerful stuff, Steinholt.”
“Yes, with that
three-thousand-foot Worldwide Tower to hurl it from,” agreed Steinholt, “we can
get fair range with it. If the Lodorians hadn’t left the well of their ship
open, though, the lightning wouldn’t have done us much good. I was afraid, too,
for a time, that we might have trouble in welding that automatic wireless
circuit box to the bottom of the ship.”
Dirk, in the
meantime, had brought the plane down to within a half-mile of the leviathan,
and he was holding it poised there.
“It seems to me,”
he said, after scrutinizing the monster for a couple of minutes, “that it is
moving in the water. It is!” he exclaimed. “Steinholt! Look!”
Only a
comparatively short time had elapsed since the last bolt of lightning had
vanished back into the darkness.
“It is still
rocking with the force of the shock that we gave it,” asserted Steinholt. “You
would be rocking, too, if you had been tickled by a bolt like that one.”
“It is rising, I
tell you!” said Dirk. “The front end of it is slowly getting higher in the
water!”
“You’re right,
Dirk,” said Fragoni, excitement straining his voice. “Look! It just dropped
back into the water!”
Then, as they
watched, the movements of the leviathan became more and more agitated, until it
was churning up the waves around it like a wounded and agonized monster of the
sea.
Suddenly the
front end tilted upward and the monster rose clear of the water. It shot
straight up into the air at a speed so terrific that they could scarcely follow
it.
“It’s gone!”
gasped Fragoni. “Those brainless, mindless automatons must have survived!”
“No,” remarked
Steinholt thoughtfully. “I don’t believe that there is any life left on that
thing. No one had closed the well when it rose, and it would mean death to go
out into space with the ship in that condition.”
“Then what made
it go up?” demanded Lazarre. “Can the damn thing run itself, Steinholt?”
“I imagine,”
recalled the Teuton, “that our bolts killed every living thing that was on the
craft but that, at the same time, they set the mechanism of the monster into
action. Ah,” he moaned, “but that is too bad. We could have learned much by an
examination of the interior of that liner of the air.”
A cry from Inga
startled them and they saw that she was looking skyward, with terror in her
eyes.
They followed her
gaze and there, streaking through the black clouds, they saw a long trail of
white fire.
“It’s that
thing!” exclaimed Fragoni. “I tell you that those upon it still live and that
they are about to wreak vengeance upon us.”
“No,” said
Steinholt positively. “You are wrong, Fragoni. What is happening may be almost
as disastrous, though,” he admitted. “That leviathan is in its death agonies;
it is a metal monster gone mad, and none can say what will happen before it
expires.”
“The place for
us,” asserted Dirk hurriedly, “is in the Worldwide Tower. There we can keep
track of what is transpiring and try to decide what to do.”
The others agreed
with him and, seeking the westward level of flight, he sped the plane in the
direction of the mammoth pyramid from which the news of the world was
broadcast.
They reached the
vast structure in a few minutes, and, after dropping the plane on a landing
stage, they went into the operating room.
Here they learned
quickly that the craft of the Lodorians was doing incalculable damage, and that
it was throwing the population of the world into an unprecedented panic.
It was,
apparently, following an erratic, uncertain orbit that took it far out into
space and then back quite close to the surface of the earth again.
It had passed
through the very heart of Chicago within a few yards of the ground, and it had
cut and burned a swath more than a mile wide through the buildings of that metropolis.
Other cities in
America had felt the devastating effects of its irresistible and molten heat
and, within a short time, thousands of people had been slain by it.
Time and again,
from the terrace of the great tower, Dirk and his companions saw the skies
above them light up as that terrible, blazing, projectile which, uncontrolled,
went hurtling on its way through the night.
For three hours
it careened on its mad course and hysteria reigned throughout the cities of the
whole civilized world.
But then a report
came from a rocket-liner that had left Berlin en route for San Francisco.
“Either a great
meteor or that leviathan of the Lodorians just swept down past us in
mid-Atlantic and plunged into the sea. Apparently it has exploded, for it has thrown
a great column of water for miles up into the air. We are stopping and standing
by, although the heat is intense and clouds of steam are rising from the sea.”
As the minutes
passed by after the report from the rocket-ship had been received, the disappearance
from the sky of the flaming craft from space seemed to confirm the belief that
it had been swallowed by the ocean. This was accepted as a certainty by eight
o’clock in the morning.
“Ah,” sighed
Steinholt, “if only it had crashed on land somewhere. If there only was enough
of it left for us to––”
“Enough of any
damn contraption of that kind,” swore Lazarre fervently, “is altogether too
much. I hope, for one, that its fragments are scattered so far that we never
can put them together again.”
Dirk and Inga
leaned against one of the parapets that evening on a gardened terrace of his
own great mansion in Manhattan.
Their little
party had gone there after leaving the Worldwide Tower in the morning.
After resting
during the day, Lazarre and Fragoni were somewhere together, discussing the
plans for a new palace to take the place of the one that was destroyed so that
Zitlan and his minions might die in its ruins.
Steinholt,
elsewhere, was delving into oceanography and submarine engineering, in an attempt
to learn whether or not it would be feasible to fish for the remains of the
lost ship of Lodore.
“It seems like a
dream, doesn’t it, Dirk?” the girl remarked. “It is difficult to believe that
we actually have seen and talked with people from some far-away world.”
Together they
looked up into the crystalline skies, where mazes of shining stars gave
testimony to the countless worlds which were wheeling around them.
“And just to
think, Dirk,” Inga continued proudly, “that it was you who saved this world and
all of its people from that horrible Zitlan and his horde.”
“I saved you,” he
told her gravely and tenderly, “and that somehow means more to me than saving
all of this world and all of the other worlds which are rolling through the
uncharted ways of time and space.”
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