In Search of The Unknown
In Search of The Unknown
Chambers 1
Language: English
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 2
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BY ROBERT W. CHAMBERS
THE AUTHOR.
PREFACE
It appears to the writer that there is urgent need of more "nature books"--books
that are scraped clear of fiction and which display only the carefully articulated
skeleton of fact. Hence this little volume, presented with some hesitation and
more modesty. Various chapters have, at intervals, appeared in the pages of
various publications. The continued narrative is now published for the first time;
and the writer trusts that it may inspire enthusiasm for natural and scientific
research, and inculcate a passion for accurate observation among the young.
THE AUTHOR.
April 1, 1904.
Where the slanting forest eaves, Shingled tight with greenest leaves, Sweep the
scented meadow-sedge, Let us snoop along the edge; Let us pry in hidden nooks,
Laden with our nature books, Scaring birds with happy cries, Chloroforming
butterflies, Rooting up each woodland plant, Pinning beetle, fly, and ant, So we
may identify What we've ruined, by-and-by.
what I now know to be true. Yet scarcely a month has elapsed since I heard the
stealthy purring of what I believed to be the shoaling undertow--scarcely a
month ago, with my own eyes, I saw that which, even now, I am beginning to
believe never existed. As for the harbor-master--and the blow I am now striking
at the old order of things--But of that I shall not speak now, or later; I shall try to
tell the story simply and truthfully, and let my friends testify as to my probity
and the publishers of this book corroborate them.
On the 29th of February I resigned my position under the government and left
Washington to accept an offer from Professor Farrago--whose name he kindly
permits me to use--and on the first day of April I entered upon my new and
congenial duties as general superintendent of the water-fowl department
connected with the Zoological Gardens then in course of erection at Bronx Park,
New York.
For a week I followed the routine, examining the new foundations, studying the
architect's plans, following the surveyors through the Bronx thickets, suggesting
arrangements for water-courses and pools destined to be included in the
enclosures for swans, geese, pelicans, herons, and such of the waders and
swimmers as we might expect to acclimate in Bronx Park.
It was at that time the policy of the trustees and officers of the Zoological
Gardens neither to employ collectors nor to send out expeditions in search of
specimens. The society decided to depend upon voluntary contributions, and I
was always busy, part of the day, in dictating answers to correspondents who
wrote offering their services as hunters of big game, collectors of all sorts of
fauna, trappers, snarers, and also to those who offered specimens for sale,
usually at exorbitant rates.
One day towards the end of May, however, just as I was leaving Bronx Park to
return to town, Professor Lesard, of the reptilian department, called out to me
that Professor Farrago wanted to see me a moment; so I put my pipe into my
pocket again and retraced my steps to the temporary, wooden building occupied
by Professor Farrago, general superintendent of the Zoological Gardens. The
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 5
professor, who was sitting at his desk before a pile of letters and replies
submitted for approval by me, pushed his glasses down and looked over them at
me with a whimsical smile that suggested amusement, impatience, annoyance,
and perhaps a faint trace of apology.
"Now, here's a letter," he said, with a deliberate gesture towards a sheet of paper
impaled on a file--"a letter that I suppose you remember." He disengaged the
sheet of paper and handed it to me.
"Oh yes," I replied, with a shrug; "of course the man is mistaken--or--"
After a silence he leaned back in his chair and bade me read the letter to him
again, and I did so with a contemptuous tolerance for the writer, who must have
been either a very innocent victim or a very stupid swindler. I said as much to
Professor Farrago, but, to my surprise, he appeared to waver.
"I suppose," he said, with his near-sighted, embarrassed smile, "that nine
hundred and ninety-nine men in a thousand would throw that letter aside and
condemn the writer as a liar or a fool?"
"What!" I exclaimed. "Here is a man living all alone on a strip of rock and sand
between the wilderness and the sea, who wants you to send somebody to take
charge of a bird that doesn't exist!"
"How do you know," asked Professor Farrago, "that the bird in question does not
exist?"
"It is generally accepted," I replied, sarcastically, "that the great auk has been
extinct for years. Therefore I may be pardoned for doubting that our
correspondent possesses a pair of them alive."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 6
"Oh, you young fellows," said the professor, smiling wearily, "you embark on a
theory for destinations that don't exist."
He leaned back in his chair, his amused eyes searching space for the imagery
that made him smile.
"Like swimming squirrels, you navigate with the help of Heaven and a stiff
breeze, but you never land where you hope to--do you?"
Rather red in the face, I said: "Don't you believe the great auk to be extinct?"
I laughed, too, considering the interview at an end, but the professor went on,
coolly:
Together we made out a list of articles necessary for me and itemized the
expenses I might incur, and I set a date for my return, allowing no margin for a
successful termination to the expedition.
"Never mind that," said the professor. "What I want you to do is to get those
birds here safely. Now, how many men will you take?"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 7
"Very well," said Professor Farrago, good-humoredly, "you shall have all the
assistance you may require. Can you leave to-night?"
The old gentleman was certainly prompt. I nodded, half-sulkily, aware of his
amusement.
"So," I said, picking up my hat, "I am to start north to find a place called Black
Harbor, where there is a man named Halyard who possesses, among other
household utensils, two extinct great auks--"
We were both laughing by this time. I asked him why on earth he credited the
assertion of a man he had never before heard of.
"I suppose," he replied, with the same half-apologetic, half-humorous smile, "it
is instinct. I feel, somehow, that this man Halyard has got an auk--perhaps two. I
can't get away from the idea that we are on the eve of acquiring the rarest of
living creatures. It's odd for a scientist to talk as I do; doubtless you're
shocked--admit it, now!"
But I was not shocked; on the contrary, I was conscious that the same strange
hope that Professor Farrago cherished was beginning, in spite of me, to stir my
pulses, too.
But I had nothing more to say, for the prospect of beholding with my own eyes a
living specimen of the great auk produced a series of conflicting emotions within
me which rendered speech profanely superfluous.
and put it into my pocket, as Halyard might require it for my own identification.
"One thing more," said Professor Farrago, gravely; "you know, in that last
paragraph of his letter, Halyard speaks of something else in the way of
specimens--an undiscovered species of amphibious biped--just read that
paragraph again, will you?"
"When you have seen the two living specimens of the great auk, and have
satisfied yourself that I tell the truth, you may be wise enough to listen without
prejudice to a statement I shall make concerning the existence of the strangest
creature ever fashioned. I will merely say, at this time, that the creature referred
to is an amphibious biped and inhabits the ocean near this coast. More I cannot
say, for I personally have not seen the animal, but I have a witness who has, and
there are many who affirm that they have seen the creature. You will naturally
say that my statement amounts to nothing; but when your representative arrives,
if he be free from prejudice, I expect his reports to you concerning this sea-biped
will confirm the solemn statements of a witness I know to be unimpeachable.
"BLACK HARBOR."
"Well," I said, after a moment's thought, "here goes for the wild-goose chase."
"Wild auk, you mean," said Professor Farrago, shaking hands with me. "You
will start to-night, won't you?"
"Yes, but Heaven knows how I'm ever going to land in this man Halyard's
door-yard. Good-bye!"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 9
"Oh, don't!" I said; "I can swallow the auks, feathers and claws, but if this fellow
Halyard is hinting he's seen an amphibious creature resembling a man--"
II
The three days' voyage by boat and rail was irksome. I bought my kit at Sainte
Croix, on the Central Pacific Railroad, and on June 1st I began the last stage of
my journey via the Sainte Isole broad-gauge, arriving in the wilderness by
daylight. A tedious forced march by blazed trail, freshly spotted on the wrong
side, of course, brought me to the northern terminus of the rusty, narrow-gauge
lumber railway which runs from the heart of the hushed pine wilderness to the
sea.
Already a long train of battered flat-cars, piled with sluice-props and roughly
hewn sleepers, was moving slowly off into the brooding forest gloom, when I
came in sight of the track; but I developed a gratifying and unexpected burst of
speed, shouting all the while. The train stopped; I swung myself aboard the last
car, where a pleasant young fellow was sitting on the rear brake, chewing spruce
and reading a letter.
"Come aboard, sir," he said, looking up with a smile; "I guess you're the man in
a hurry."
"I'm looking for a man named Halyard," I said, dropping rifle and knapsack on
the fresh-cut, fragrant pile of pine. "Are you Halyard?"
"No, I'm Francis Lee, bossing the mica pit at Port-of-Waves," he replied, "but
this letter is from Halyard, asking me to look out for a man in a hurry from
Bronx Park, New York."
"I'm that man," said I, filling my pipe and offering him a share of the weed of
peace, and we sat side by side smoking very amiably, until a signal from the
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 10
locomotive sent him forward and I was left alone, lounging at ease, head
pillowed on both arms, watching the blue sky flying through the branches
overhead.
Long before we came in sight of the ocean I smelled it; the fresh, salt aroma
stole into my senses, drowsy with the heated odor of pine and hemlock, and I sat
up, peering ahead into the dusky sea of pines.
Fresher and fresher came the wind from the sea, in puffs, in mild, sweet breezes,
in steady, freshening currents, blowing the feathery crowns of the pines, setting
the balsam's blue tufts rocking.
Lee wandered back over the long line of flats, balancing himself nonchalantly as
the cars swung around a sharp curve, where water dripped from a newly propped
sluice that suddenly emerged from the depths of the forest to run parallel to the
railroad track.
I nodded.
I would have told him why I was going if I had not already begun to feel
ashamed of my idiotic errand.
"I guess you're going to look at those birds of his," continued Lee, placidly.
"I guess I am," I said, sulkily, glancing askance to see whether he was smiling.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 11
But he only asked me, quite seriously, whether a great auk was really a very rare
bird; and I told him that the last one ever seen had been found dead off Labrador
in January, 1870. Then I asked him whether these birds of Halyard's were really
great auks, and he replied, somewhat indifferently, that he supposed they
were--at least, nobody had ever before seen such birds near Port-of-Waves.
He hesitated, and I could see that he was embarrassed, searching for the exact
words to convey his meaning.
"If," said I, "you have anything in this region more important to science than the
great auk, I should be very glad to know about it."
Perhaps there was the faintest tinge of sarcasm in my voice, for he shot a sharp
glance at me and then turned slightly. After a moment, however, he put his pipe
into his pocket, laid hold of the brake with both hands, vaulted to his perch aloft,
and glanced down at me.
"You'll know before long," he observed, with a satisfied glance into perspective.
This rather extraordinary observation puzzled me. I waited for him to resume,
and, as he did not, I asked him what he meant.
"If I knew," he said, "I'd tell you. But, come to think of it, I'd be a fool to go into
details with a scientific man. You'll hear about the harbor-master--perhaps you
will see the harbor-master. In that event I should be glad to converse with you on
the subject."
I could not help laughing at his prim and precise manner, and, after a moment,
he also laughed, saying:
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 12
"It hurts a man's vanity to know he knows a thing that somebody else knows he
doesn't know. I'm damned if I say another word about the harbor-master until
you've been to Halyard's!"
Lee jumped to the ground and aided me with my rifle and pack, and then the
train began to back away along a curved side-track which, Lee said, led to the
mica-pit and company stores.
"Now what will you do?" he asked, pleasantly. "I can give you a good dinner
and a decent bed to-night if you like--and I'm sure Mrs. Lee would be very glad
to have you stop with us as long as you choose."
I thanked him, but said that I was anxious to reach Halyard's before dark, and he
very kindly led me along the cliffs and pointed out the path.
"This man Halyard," he said, "is an invalid. He lives at a cove called Black
Harbor, and all his truck goes through to him over the company's road. We
receive it here, and send a pack-mule through once a month. I've met him; he's a
bad-tempered hypochondriac, a cynic at heart, and a man whose word is never
doubted. If he says he has a great auk, you may be satisfied he has."
My heart was beating with excitement at the prospect; I looked out across the
wooded headlands and tangled stretches of dune and hollow, trying to realize
what it might mean to me, to Professor Farrago, to the world, if I should lead
back to New York a live auk.
"He's a crank," said Lee; "frankly, I don't like him. If you find it unpleasant
there, come back to us."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 13
"A man?"
Presently he gave me a peculiar glance; hesitated, and finally said: "Ask Halyard
to tell you about his nurse and--the harbor-master. Good-bye--I'm due at the
quarry. Come and stay with us whenever you care to; you will find a welcome at
Port-of-Waves."
We shook hands and parted on the cliff, he turning back into the forest along the
railway, I starting northward, pack slung, rifle over my shoulder. Once I met a
group of quarrymen, faces burned brick-red, scarred hands swinging as they
walked. And, as I passed them with a nod, turning, I saw that they also had
turned to look after me, and I caught a word or two of their conversation,
whirled back to me on the sea-wind.
III
Towards sunset I came out on a sheer granite cliff where the sea-birds were
whirling and clamoring, and the great breakers dashed, rolling in
double-thundered reverberations on the sun-dyed, crimson sands below the rock.
Across the half-moon of beach towered another cliff, and, behind this, I saw a
column of smoke rising in the still air. It certainly came from Halyard's chimney,
although the opposite cliff prevented me from seeing the house itself.
I rested a moment to refill my pipe, then resumed rifle and pack, and cautiously
started to skirt the cliffs. I had descended half-way towards the beech, and was
examining the cliff opposite, when something on the very top of the rock
arrested my attention--a man darkly outlined against the sky. The next moment,
however, I knew it could not be a man, for the object suddenly glided over the
face of the cliff and slid down the sheer, smooth lace like a lizard. Before I could
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 14
get a square look at it, the thing crawled into the surf--or, at least, it seemed
to--but the whole episode occurred so suddenly, so unexpectedly, that I was not
sure I had seen anything at all.
However, I was curious enough to climb the cliff on the land side and make my
way towards the spot where I imagined I saw the man. Of course, there was
nothing there--not a trace of a human being, I mean. Something had been
there--a sea-otter, possibly--for the remains of a freshly killed fish lay on the
rock, eaten to the back-bone and tail.
The next moment, below me, I saw the house, a freshly painted, trim, flimsy
structure, modern, and very much out of harmony with the splendid savagery
surrounding it. It struck a nasty, cheap note in the noble, gray monotony of
headland and sea.
The descent was easy enough. I crossed the crescent beach, hard as pink marble,
and found a little trodden path among the rocks, that led to the front porch of the
house.
There were two people on the porch--I heard their voices before I saw them--and
when I set my foot upon the wooden steps, I saw one of them, a woman, rise
from her chair and step hastily towards me.
"Come back!" cried the other, a man with a smooth-shaven, deeply lined face,
and a pair of angry, blue eyes; and the woman stepped back quietly,
acknowledging my lifted hat with a silent inclination.
The man, who was reclining in an invalid's rolling-chair, clapped both large, pale
hands to the wheels and pushed himself out along the porch. He had shawls
pinned about him, an untidy, drab-colored hat on his head, and, when he looked
down at me, he scowled.
"I know who you are," he said, in his acid voice; "you're one of the Zoological
men from Bronx Park. You look like it, anyway."
"It is easy to recognize you from your reputation," I replied, irritated at his
discourtesy.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 15
"Really," he replied, with something between a sneer and a laugh, "I'm obliged
for your frankness. You're after my great auks, are you not?"
"Nothing else would have tempted me into this place," I replied, sincerely.
"Thank Heaven for that," he said. "Sit down a moment; you've interrupted us."
Then, turning to the young woman, who wore the neat gown and tiny cap of a
professional nurse, he bade her resume what she had been saying. She did so,
with deprecating glance at me, which made the old man sneer again.
"It happened so suddenly," she said, in her low voice, "that I had no chance to
get back. The boat was drifting in the cove; I sat in the stern, reading, both oars
shipped, and the tiller swinging. Then I heard a scratching under the boat, but
thought it might be sea-weed--and, next moment, came those soft thumpings,
like the sound of a big fish rubbing its nose against a float."
Halyard clutched the wheels of his chair and stared at the girl in grim
displeasure.
"No--not then," she said, coloring faintly; "but when, after a few moments, I
looked up and saw the harbor-master running up and down the beach, I was
horribly frightened."
"Really?" said Halyard, sarcastically; "it was about time." Then, turning to me,
he rasped out: "And that young lady was obliged to row all the way to
Port-of-Waves and call to Lee's quarrymen to take her boat in."
Completely mystified, I looked from Halyard to the girl, not in the least
comprehending what all this meant.
"That will do," said Halyard, ungraciously, which curt phrase was apparently the
usual dismissal for the nurse.
She rose, and I rose, and she passed me with an inclination, stepping noiselessly
into the house.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 16
"I want beef-tea!" bawled Halyard after her; then he gave me an unamiable
glance.
"I was a well-bred man," he sneered; "I'm a Harvard graduate, too, but I live as I
like, and I do what I like, and I say what I like."
"Why should I be?" he rasped; "I pay that young woman for my irritability; it's a
bargain between us."
"In your domestic affairs," I said, "there is nothing that interests me. I came to
see those auks."
I laid my rifle and pack on the veranda, and hastened off with mixed emotions,
among which hope no longer predominated. No man in his senses would keep
two such precious prizes in a pen in his backyard, I argued, and I was perfectly
prepared to find anything from a puffin to a penguin in that pen.
For a while excitement blinded, nay, deafened me. I tried to realize that I was
gazing upon the last individuals of an all but extinct race--the sole survivors of
the gigantic auk, which, for thirty years, has been accounted an extinct creature.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 17
I believe that I did not move muscle nor limb until the sun had gone down and
the crowding darkness blurred my straining eyes and blotted the great, silent,
bright-eyed birds from sight.
Even then I could not tear myself away from the enclosure; I listened to the
strange, drowsy note of the male bird, the fainter responses of the female, the
thin plaints of the chicks, huddling under her breast; I heard their flipper-like,
embryotic wings beating sleepily as the birds stretched and yawned their beaks
and clacked them, preparing for slumber.
"If you please," came a soft voice from the door, "Mr. Halyard awaits your
company to dinner."
IV
I dined well--or, rather, I might have enjoyed my dinner if Mr. Halyard had been
eliminated; and the feast consisted exclusively of a joint of beef, the pretty nurse,
and myself. She was exceedingly attractive--with a disturbing fashion of
lowering her head and raising her dark eyes when spoken to.
"Yah!" he snapped, "I'm sick of this cursed soup--and I'll trouble you to fill my
glass--"
"It is dangerous for you to touch claret," said the pretty nurse.
"Certainly," said I, cheerfully passing the decanter, but he did not appear
overpleased with the attention.
"I can't smoke, either," he snarled, hitching the shawls around until he looked
like Richard the Third.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 18
However, he was good enough to shove a box of cigars at me, and I took one
and stood up, as the pretty nurse slipped past and vanished into the little parlor
beyond.
I admitted that I had heard the term applied. Then I made a clean breast of the
matter, telling him that it was I who had doubted; that my chief, Professor
Farrago, had sent me against my will, and that I was ready and glad to admit that
he, Mr. Halyard, was a benefactor of the human race.
But he was pleased, nevertheless; and presently he asked me, not unamiably, to
punish his claret again.
"I'm done for," he said; "good things to eat and drink are no good to me. Some
day I'll get mad enough to have a fit, and then--"
He paused to yawn.
"Then," he continued, "that little nurse of mine will drink up my claret and go
back to civilization, where people are polite."
Somehow or other, in spite of the fact that Halyard was an old pig, what he said
touched me. There was certainly not much left in life for him--as he regarded
life.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 19
"I'm going to leave her this house," he said, arranging his shawls. "She doesn't
know it. I'm going to leave her my money, too. She doesn't know that. Good
Lord! What kind of a woman can she be to stand my bad temper for a few
dollars a month!"
"I think," said I, "that it's partly because she's poor, partly because she's sorry for
you."
Before I could answer he went on: "I'm no mawkish sentimentalist, and I won't
allow anybody to be sorry for me--do you hear?"
"Oh, I'm not sorry for you!" I said, hastily, and, for the first time since I had seen
him, he laughed heartily, without a sneer.
We both seemed to feel better after that; I drank his wine and smoked his cigars,
and he appeared to take a certain grim pleasure in watching me.
After fidgeting with his shawls, he gave me an oblique scowl and asked me my
age.
"Twenty-four," I replied.
"Oh, come," said I, "there's no use in trying to irritate me. I see through you; a
row acts like a cocktail on you--but you'll have to stick to gruel in my company."
"I don't care what you call it," I replied, undisturbed, "I am not going to be
worried by you. Anyway," I ended, "it is my opinion that you could be very
good company if you chose."
The proposition appeared to take his breath away--at least, he said nothing more;
and I finished my cigar in peace and tossed the stump into a saucer.
"Now," said I, "what price do you set upon your birds, Mr. Halyard?"
"You will receive a certified check when the birds are delivered," I said, quietly.
"You don't mean to say you agree to that outrageous bargain--and I won't take a
cent less, either--Good Lord!--haven't you any spirit left?" he cried, half rising
from his pile of shawls.
His piteous eagerness for a dispute sent me into laughter impossible to control,
and he eyed me, mouth open, animosity rising visibly.
Then he seized the wheels of his invalid chair and trundled away, too mad to
speak; and I strolled out into the parlor, still laughing.
"Indiscretion is the better part of valor," said she, dropping her head but raising
her eyes.
"Like the King of Yvetot, he wears his crown in bed," I said, flippantly.
"The King of Yvetot might have made that remark," she observed, re-threading
her needle.
It is unpleasant to be reproved. How large and red and hot a man's ears feel.
To cool them, I strolled out to the porch; and, after a while, the pretty nurse
came out, too, and sat down in a chair not far away. She probably regretted her
lost opportunity to be flirted with.
"I have so little company--it is a great relief to see somebody from the world,"
she said. "If you can be agreeable, I wish you would."
The idea that she had come out to see me was so agreeable that I remained
speechless until she said: "Do tell me what people are doing in New York."
So I seated myself on the steps and talked about the portion of the world
inhabited by me, while she sat sewing in the dull light that straggled out from the
parlor windows.
She had a certain coquetry of her own, using the usual methods with an
individuality that was certainly fetching. For instance, when she lost her
needle--and, another time, when we both, on hands and knees, hunted for her
thimble.
"I do not care to speak about it," she said, with a primness of which I had not
suspected her capable.
Of course I could scarcely pursue the subject after that--and, indeed, I did not
intend to--so I began to tell her how I fancied I had seen a man on the cliff that
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 22
afternoon, and how the creature slid over the sheer rock like a snake.
"It was only a sea-otter," I tried to explain, thinking perhaps she did not care for
snake stories.
But the explanation did not appear to interest her, and I was mortified to observe
that my impression upon her was anything but pleasant.
"She doesn't seem to like me and my stories," thought I, "but she is too young,
perhaps, to appreciate them."
So I forgave her--for she was even prettier than I had thought her at first--and I
took my leave, saying that Mr. Halyard would doubtless direct me to my room.
"Your room is next to mine," he said; "pleasant dreams, and kindly refrain from
snoring."
"May I venture an absurd hope that you will do the same!" I replied, politely.
I had been asleep for at least two hours when a movement by my bedside and a
light in my eyes awakened me. I sat bolt upright in bed, blinking at Halyard,
who, clad in a dressing-gown and wearing a night-cap, had wheeled himself into
my room with one hand, while with the other he solemnly waved a candle over
my head.
Then I returned to bed and propped the pillows up for a back-rest, ready to
quarrel with him if it might bring some little pleasure into his morbid existence.
"No," he said, amiably, "I'm too worried to quarrel, but I'm much obliged for
your kindly offer. I want to tell you something."
"I want to ask you if you ever saw a man with gills like a fish?"
"Gills?" I repeated.
"No, I never did," he said, in a curiously placid voice, "but there's a man with
gills like a fish who lives in the ocean out there. Oh, you needn't look that
way--nobody ever thinks of doubting my word, and I tell you that there's a
man--or a thing that looks like a man--as big as you are, too--all
slate-colored--with nasty red gills like a fish!--and I've a witness to prove what I
say!"
"Yes, she did. So did Francis Lee, superintendent of the Mica Quarry Company
at Port-of-Waves. So have a dozen men who work in the quarry. Oh, you needn't
laugh, young man. It's an old story here, and anybody can tell you about the
harbor-master."
"Yes, that slate-colored thing with gills, that looks like a man--and--by Heaven!
is a man--that's the harbor-master. Ask any quarryman at Port-of-Waves what it
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 24
is that comes purring around their boats at the wharf and unties painters and
changes the mooring of every cat-boat in the cove at night! Ask Francis Lee
what it was he saw running and leaping up and down the shoal at sunset last
Friday! Ask anybody along the coast what sort of a thing moves about the cliffs
like a man and slides over them into the sea like an otter--"
After a pause, Halyard said: "You saw the harbor-master, that's what you saw!"
"Don't mistake me," he said, pettishly; "I don't think that the harbor-master is a
spirit or a sprite or a hobgoblin, or any sort of damned rot. Neither do I believe it
to be an optical illusion."
"I think it's a man--I think it's a branch of the human race--that's what I think.
Let me tell you something: the deepest spot in the Atlantic Ocean is a trifle over
five miles deep--and I suppose you know that this place lies only about a quarter
of a mile off this headland. The British exploring vessel, Gull, Captain Marotte,
discovered and sounded it, I believe. Anyway, it's there, and it's my belief that
the profound depths are inhabited by the remnants of the last race of amphibious
human beings!"
"Believe it or not, as you will," he said, angrily; "one thing I know, and that is
this: the harbor-master has taken to hanging around my cove, and he is attracted
by my nurse! I won't have it! I'll blow his fishy gills out of his head if I ever get
a shot at him! I don't care whether it's homicide or not--anyway, it's a new kind
of murder and it attracts me!"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 25
I gazed at him incredulously, but he was working himself into a passion, and I
did not choose to say what I thought.
"Yes, this slate-colored thing with gills goes purring and grinning and spitting
about after my nurse--when she walks, when she rows, when she sits on the
beach! Gad! It drives me nearly frantic. I won't tolerate it, I tell you!"
"No," said I, "I wouldn't either." And I rolled over in bed convulsed with
laughter.
The next moment I heard my door slam. I smothered my mirth and rose to close
the window, for the land-wind blew cold from the forest, and a drizzle was
sweeping the carpet as far as my bed.
That luminous glare which sometimes lingers after the stars go out, threw a
trembling, nebulous radiance over sand and cove. I heard the seething currents
under the breakers' softened thunder--louder than I ever heard it. Then, as I
closed my window, lingering for a last look at the crawling tide, I saw a man
standing, ankle-deep, in the surf, all alone there in the night. But--was it a man?
For the figure suddenly began running over the beach on all fours like a beetle,
waving its limbs like feelers. Before I could throw open the window again it
darted into the surf, and, when I leaned out into the chilling drizzle, I saw
nothing save the flat ebb crawling on the coast--I heard nothing save the purring
of bubbles on seething sands.
I had constructed a cage made of osiers, in which my auks were to squat until
they arrived at Bronx Park. My telegrams to Professor Farrago were brief. One
merely said "Victory!" Another explained that I wanted no assistance; and a
third read: "Schooner chartered. Arrive New York July 1st. Send furniture-van to
foot of Bluff Street."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 26
As for the thing they called the harbor-master, I saw it a dozen times, but always
either at night or so far away and so close to the sea that of course no trace of it
remained when I reached the spot, rifle in hand.
I had quite made up my mind that the so-called harbor-master was a demented
darky--wandered from, Heaven knows where--perhaps shipwrecked and gone
mad from his sufferings. Still, it was far from pleasant to know that the creature
was strongly attracted by the pretty nurse.
"Besides," she said, with a shudder, "it's all slate color, like a porpoise, and it
looks as wet as a sheet of india-rubber in a dissecting-room."
The day before I was to set sail with my auks in a cat-boat bound for
Port-of-Waves, Halyard trundled up to me in his chair and announced his
intention of going with me.
"I don't; I need you," he said, savagely; "I need the stimulus of our daily quarrel.
I never disagreed so pleasantly with anybody in my life; it agrees with me; I am
a hundred per cent. better than I was last week."
I was inclined to resent this, but something in the deep-lined face of the invalid
softened me. Besides, I had taken a hearty liking to the old pig.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 27
"I don't want any mawkish sentiment about it," he said, observing me closely; "I
won't permit anybody to feel sorry for me--do you understand?"
"I'll trouble you to use a different tone in addressing me," I replied, hotly; "I'll
feel sorry for you if I choose to!" And our usual quarrel proceeded, to his deep
satisfaction.
By six o'clock next evening I had Halyard's luggage stowed away in the cat-boat,
and the pretty nurse's effects corded down, with the newly hatched auk-chicks in
a hat-box on top. She and I placed the osier cage aboard, securing it firmly, and
then, throwing tablecloths over the auks' heads, we led those simple and
dignified birds down the path and across the plank at the little wooden pier.
Together we locked up the house, while Halyard stormed at us both and wheeled
himself furiously up and down the beach below. At the last moment she forgot
her thimble. But we found it, I forget where.
"Come on!" shouted Halyard, waving his shawls furiously; "what the devil are
you about up there?"
He received our explanation with a sniff, and we trundled him aboard without
further ceremony.
"Don't run me across the plank like a steamer trunk!" he shouted, as I shot him
dexterously into the cock-pit. But the wind was dying away, and I had no time to
dispute with him then.
The sun was setting above the pine-clad ridge as our sail flapped and partly
filled, and I cast off, and began a long tack, east by south, to avoid the spouting
rocks on our starboard bow.
The sea-birds rose in clouds as we swung across the shoal, the black surf-ducks
scuttered out to sea, the gulls tossed their sun-tipped wings in the ocean, riding
the rollers like bits of froth.
Already we were sailing slowly out across that great hole in the ocean, five miles
deep, the most profound sounding ever taken in the Atlantic. The presence of
great heights or great depths, seen or unseen, always impresses the human
mind--perhaps oppresses it. We were very silent; the sunlight stain on cliff and
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 28
beach deepened to crimson, then faded into sombre purple bloom that lingered
long after the rose-tint died out in the zenith.
Our progress was slow; at times, although the sail filled with the rising land
breeze, we scarcely seemed to move at all.
"Of course," said the pretty nurse, "we couldn't be aground in the deepest hole in
the Atlantic."
"What's that soft thumping?" I asked. "Have we run afoul of a barrel or log?"
It was almost too dark to see, but I leaned over the rail and swept the water with
my hand.
Instantly something smooth glided under it, like the back of a great fish, and I
jerked my hand back to the tiller. At the same moment the whole surface of the
water seemed to begin to purr, with a sound like the breaking of froth in a
champagne-glass.
With a low cry, the pretty nurse clasped my arm in both her hands.
"What the devil's purring?" shouted Halyard. "I won't have anything purring
around me!"
At that moment, to my amazement, I saw that the boat had stopped entirely,
although the sail was full and the small pennant fluttered from the mast-head.
Something, too, was tugging at the rudder, twisting and jerking it until the tiller
strained and creaked in my hand. All at once it snapped; the tiller swung useless
and the boat whirled around, heeling in the stiffening wind, and drove
shoreward.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 29
It was then that I, ducking to escape the boom, caught a glimpse of something
ahead--something that a sudden wave seemed to toss on deck and leave there,
wet and flapping--a man with round, fixed, fishy eyes, and soft, slaty skin.
But the horror of the thing were the two gills that swelled and relaxed
spasmodically, emitting a rasping, purring sound--two gasping, blood-red gills,
all fluted and scolloped and distended.
Frozen with amazement and repugnance, I stared at the creature; I felt the hair
stirring on my head and the icy sweat on my forehead.
The harbor-master had gathered himself into a wet lump, squatting motionless in
the bows under the mast; his lidless eyes were phosphorescent, like the eyes of
living codfish. After a while I felt that either fright or disgust was going to
strangle me where I sat, but it was only the arms of the pretty nurse clasped
around me in a frenzy of terror.
There was not a fire-arm aboard that we could get at. Halyard's hand crept
backward where a steel-shod boat-hook lay, and I also made a clutch at it. The
next moment I had it in my hand, and staggered forward, but the boat was
already tumbling shoreward among the breakers, and the next I knew the
harbor-master ran at me like a colossal rat, just as the boat rolled over and over
through the surf, spilling freight and passengers among the sea-weed-covered
rocks.
When I came to myself I was thrashing about knee-deep in a rocky pool, blinded
by the water and half suffocated, while under my feet, like a stranded porpoise,
the harbor-master made the water boil in his efforts to upset me. But his limbs
seemed soft and boneless; he had no nails, no teeth, and he bounced and
thumped and flapped and splashed like a fish, while I rained blows on him with
the boat-hook that sounded like blows on a football. And all the while his gills
were blowing out and frothing, and purring, and his lidless eyes looked into
mine, until, nauseated and trembling, I dragged myself back to the beach, where
already the pretty nurse alternately wrung her hands and her petticoats in
ornamental despair.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 30
Beyond the cove, Halyard was bobbing up and down, afloat in his invalid's
chair, trying to steer shoreward. He was the maddest man I ever saw.
"I can't kill it," I shouted, breathlessly. "I might as well try to kill a football!"
"Can't you punch a hole in it?" he bawled. "If I can only get at him--"
"Oh, Lord!" I said. "I can't stand that," and, for the first time in my life, I fainted
peacefully--and appropriately--at the feet of the pretty nurse.
*****
It is within the range of possibility that this story may be doubted. It doesn't
matter; nothing can add to the despair of a man who has lost two great auks.
As for Halyard, nothing affects him--except his involuntary sea-bath, and that
did him so much good that he writes me from the South that he's going on a
walking-tour through Switzerland--if I'll join him. I might have joined him if he
had not married the pretty nurse. I wonder whether--But, of course, this is no
place for speculation.
In regard to the harbor-master, you may believe it or not, as you choose. But if
you hear of any great auks being found, kindly throw a table-cloth over their
heads and notify the authorities at the new Zoological Gardens in Bronx Park,
New York. The reward is ten thousand dollars.
VI
To separate fact from fancy has always been difficult for me, but now that I have
had the honor to be chosen secretary of the Zoological Gardens in Bronx Park, I
realize keenly that unless I give up writing fiction nobody will believe what I
write about science. Therefore it is to a serious and unimaginative public that I
shall hereafter address myself; and I do it in the modest confidence that I shall
neither be distrusted nor doubted, although unfortunately I still write in that
irrational style which suggests covert frivolity, and for which I am undergoing a
course of treatment in English literature at Columbia College. Now, having
promised to avoid originality and confine myself to facts, I shall tell what I have
to tell concerning the dingue, the mammoth, and--something else.
For some weeks it had been rumored that Professor Farrago, president of the
Bronx Park Zoological Society, would resign, to accept an enormous salary as
manager of Barnum & Bailey's circus. He was now with the circus in London,
and had promised to cable his decision before the day was over.
I hoped he would decide to remain with us. I was his secretary and particular
favorite, and I viewed, without enthusiasm, the advent of a new president, who
might shake us all out of our congenial and carefully excavated ruts. However, it
was plain that the trustees of the society expected the resignation of Professor
Farrago, for they had been in secret session all day, considering the names of
possible candidates to fill Professor Farrago's large, old-fashioned shoes. These
preparations worried me, for I could scarcely expect another chief as kind and
considerate as Professor Leonidas Farrago.
For a moment I had an indistinct impression of having met the elder lady
somewhere, and under circumstances not entirely agreeable, but beyond a stony
and indifferent glance she paid no attention to me. As for the younger lady, she
did not look at me at all. She was very young, with pretty eyes, a mass of silky
brown hair, and a skin as fresh as a rose which had just been rained on.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 32
With that delicacy peculiar to lonely scientific bachelors, I modestly sat down
beside the rough young man, although there was more room beside the younger
lady. "Some lazy loafer reading a penny dreadful," I thought, glancing at him,
then at the title of his book. Hearing me beside him, he turned around and
blinked over his shabby shoulder, and the movement uncovered the page he had
been silently conning. The volume in his hands was Darwin's famous
monograph on the monodactyl.
He noticed the astonishment on my face and smiled uneasily, shifting the short
clay pipe in his mouth.
"I guess," he observed, "that this here book is too much for me, mister."
After a silence I asked him if he would tell me why he had chosen Darwin as a
literary pastime.
"Well," he said, placidly, "I was tryin' to read about annermals, but I'm up
against a word-slinger this time all right. Now here's a gum-twister," and he
painfully spelled out m-o-n-o-d-a-c-t-y-l, breathing hard all the while.
He turned the page with alacrity. "Is that the beast he's talkin' about?" he asked.
I smiled and explained that the dingue had been extinct for some thousands of
years.
"Oh, I guess not," he replied, with cool optimism. Then he placed a grimy
forefinger on the mammoth.
Again I patiently pointed out his error, and suggested that he referred to the
elephant.
"Elephant be blowed!" he replied, scornfully. "I guess I know what I seen. An' I
seen that there thing you call a dingue, too."
"Right," he said. "And did you ever hear tell of the Hudson Mountings, mister?"
"Yes," I replied.
"Is the mammoth extinct? Is the dingue extinct? Probably. And yet the
aborigines of British America maintain the contrary. Probably both the
mammoth and the dingue are extinct; but until expeditions have penetrated and
explored not only the unknown region in Alaska but also that hidden table-land
beyond the Graham Glacier and the Hudson Mountains, it will not be possible to
definitely announce the total extinction of either the mammoth or the dingue."
When I had read it, slowly, for his benefit, he brought his hand down smartly on
one knee and nodded rapidly.
"Mister," he said, "that gent knows a thing or two, and don't you forgit it!" Then
he demanded, abruptly, how I knew he hadn't been behind the Graham Glacier.
I explained.
"Shucks!" he said; "there's a road five miles wide inter that there table-land.
Mister, I ain't been in New York long; I come inter port a week ago on the Arctic
Belle, whaler. I was in the Hudson range when that there Graham Glacier bust
up--"
"What!" I exclaimed.
"Didn't you know it?" he asked. "Well, mebbe it ain't in the papers, but it busted
all right--blowed up by a earthquake an' volcano combine. An', mister, it was
oreful. My, how I did run!"
"Do you mean to tell me that some convulsion of the earth has shattered the
Graham Glacier?" I asked.
"Convulsions? Ya-as, an' fits, too," he said, sulkily. "The hull blame thing
dropped inter a hole. An' say, mister, home an' mother is good enough fur me
now."
"Once," he said, "I ketched pelts fur them sharps at Hudson Bay, like any yaller
husky, but the things I seen arter that convulsion-fit--the things I seen behind the
Hudson Mountings--don't make me hanker arter no life on the pe-rarie wild,
lemme tell yer. I may be a Mother Carey chicken, but this chicken has got
enough."
After a long silence I picked up his book again and pointed at the picture of the
mammoth.
"One-toed," he said, quickly; "makes a noise like a bell when scutterin' about."
Intensely excited, I laid my hand on his arm. "My society will give you a
thousand dollars," I said, "if you pilot me inside the Hudson table-land and show
me either a mammoth or a dingue!"
"Mister," he said, slowly, "have you got a million for to squander on me?"
"Because," he went on, "it wouldn't be enough. Home an' mother suits me now."
He picked up his book and rose. In vain I asked his name and address; in vain I
begged him to dine with me--to become my honored guest.
But I was not going to lose him like that. I rose and deliberately started to stalk
him. It was easy. He shuffled along, pulling on his pipe, and I after him.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 36
It was growing a little dark, although the sun still reddened the tops of the
maples. Afraid of losing him in the falling dusk, I once more approached him
and laid my hand upon his ragged sleeve.
"Look here," he cried, wheeling about, "I want you to quit follerin' me. Don't I
tell you money can't make me go back to them mountings!" And as I attempted
to speak, he suddenly tore off his cap and pointed to his head. His hair was white
as snow.
He shambled on, doubled fists swinging by his side. The next moment, setting
my teeth obstinately, I followed him and caught him by the park gate. At my hail
he whirled around with a snarl, but I grabbed him by the throat and backed him
violently against the park wall.
"You invaluable ruffian," I said, "now you listen to me. I live in that big stone
building, and I'll give you a thousand dollars to take me behind the Graham
Glacier. Think it over and call on me when you are in a pleasanter frame of
mind. If you don't come by noon to-morrow I'll go to the Graham Glacier
without you."
He was attempting to kick me all the time, but I managed to avoid him, and
when I had finished I gave him a shove which almost loosened his spinal
column. He went reeling out across the sidewalk, and when he had recovered his
breath and his balance he danced with displeasure and displayed a vocabulary
that astonished me. However, he kept his distance.
As I turned back into the park, satisfied that he would not follow, the first person
I saw was the elderly, stony-faced lady of the wistaria arbor advancing on tiptoe.
Behind her came the younger lady with cheeks like a rose that had been rained
on.
Instantly it occurred to me that they had followed us, and at the same moment I
knew who the stony-faced lady was. Angry, but polite, I lifted my hat and
saluted her, and she, probably furious at having been caught tip-toeing after me,
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 37
cut me dead. The younger lady passed me with face averted, but even in the dusk
I could see the tip of one little ear turn scarlet.
"I'm only going to the theatre," he replied. "It's a good show--Adam and Eve;
there's a snake in it, you know. It's in my line."
"I can't help it," I said; and I told him briefly what had occurred in the arbor.
"But that's not all," I continued, savagely. "Those women followed us, and who
do you think one of them turned out to be? Well, it was Professor Smawl, of
Barnard College, and I'll bet every pair of boots I own that she starts for the
Graham Glacier within a week. Idiot that I was!" I exclaimed, smiting my head
with both hands. "I never recognized her until I saw her tip-toeing and craning
her neck to listen. Now she knows about the glacier; she heard every word that
young ruffian said, and she'll go to the glacier if it's only to forestall me."
Professor Lesard looked anxious. He knew that Miss Smawl, professor of natural
history at Barnard College, had long desired an appointment at the Bronx Park
gardens. It was even said she had a chance of succeeding Professor Farrago as
president, but that, of course, must have been a joke. However, she haunted the
gardens, annoying the keepers by persistently poking the animals with her
umbrella. On one occasion she sent us word that she desired to enter the tigers'
enclosure for the purpose of making experiments in hypnotism. Professor
Farrago was absent, but I took it upon myself to send back word that I feared the
tigers might injure her. The miserable small boy who took my message informed
her that I was afraid she might injure the tigers, and the unpleasant incident
almost cost me my position.
"I am quite convinced," said I to Professor Lesard, "that Miss Smawl is perfectly
capable of abusing the information she overheard, and of starting herself to
explore a region that, by all the laws of decency, justice, and prior claim, belongs
to me."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 38
"Well," said Lesard, with a peculiar laugh, "it's not certain whether you can go at
all."
"Professor Farrago has resigned," said Lesard. It was a bolt from a clear sky.
"Good Heavens!" I blurted out. "What will become of the rest of us, then?"
"I don't know," he replied. "The trustees are holding a meeting over in the
Administration Building to elect a new president for us. It depends on the new
president what becomes of us."
"Lesard," I said, hoarsely, "you don't suppose that they could possibly elect Miss
Smawl as our president, do you?"
"The lady would probably make you walk the plank for that tiger business," he
replied.
"See here, Lesard," I said, nervously, "I wish you would step over to the
Administration Building and ask the trustees if I may prepare for this expedition.
Will you?"
"You are quite right," he said; "the Graham Glacier would be the safest place for
you if our next president is to be the Lady of the Tigers." And he started across
the park puffing his cigar.
I sat down on the doorstep to wait for his return, not at all charmed with the
prospect. It made me furious, too, to see my ambition nipped with the frost of a
possible veto from Miss Smawl.
"If she is elected," thought I, "there is nothing for me but to resign--to avoid the
inconvenience of being shown the door. Oh, I wish I had allowed her to
hypnotize the tigers!"
Thoughts of crime flitted through my mind. Miss Smawl would not remain
president--or anything else very long--if she persisted in her desire for the tigers.
And then when she called for help I would pretend not to hear.
"I don't know. But I know this: the new president sanctions the expedition to the
Graham Glacier, and directs you to choose an assistant and begin preparations
for four people."
Overjoyed, I seized his hand and said, "Hurray!" in a voice weak with emotion.
"The old dragon isn't elected this time," I added, triumphantly.
"By-the-way," he said, "who was the other dragon with her in the park this
evening?"
With this curious remark my confrère followed me into my room and wrote
down the list of articles I dictated to him. The list included a complete camping
equipment for myself and three other men.
"Am I one of those other men?" inquired Lesard, with an unhappy smile.
Before I could reply my door was shoved open and a figure appeared at the
threshold, cap in hand.
"What do you want?" I asked, sternly; but my heart was beating high with
triumph.
"Mister, I guess I'll go back to the Graham Glacier along with you. I'm Billy
Spike, an' it kinder scares me to go back to them Hudson Mountains, but
somehow, mister, when you choked me and kinder walked me off on my ear,
why, mister, I kinder took to you like."
"All right, Billy," I said, briskly; "just look over those rifles and ammunition and
see that everything's sound."
He slowly lifted his tough young face and gave me a doglike glance. They were
hard eyes, but there was gratitude in them.
Late that night, as I was preparing for pleasant dreams, a knock came on my
door and a telegraph-messenger handed me a note, which I read, shivering in my
bare feet, although the thermometer marked eighty Fahrenheit:
"You will immediately leave for the Hudson Mountains via Wellman Bay,
Labrador, there to await further instructions. Equipment for yourself and one
assistant will include following articles" [here began a list of camping utensils,
scientific paraphernalia, and provisions]. "The steamer Penguin sails at five
o'clock to-morrow morning. Kindly find yourself on board at that hour. Any
excuse for not complying with these orders will be accepted as your resignation.
He appeared at his door, chastely draped in pajamas; and he read the insolent
letter with terrified alacrity.
"Do!" I snarled, grinding my teeth; "I'm going--that's what I'm going to do!"
"But--but you can't get ready and catch that steamer, too," he stammered.
VII
And so it came about that one calm evening towards the end of June, William
Spike and I went into camp under the southerly shelter of that vast granite wall
called the Hudson Mountains, there to await the promised "further instructions."
On the evening of the sixth day out from Fort Boisé we went into camp for the
last time before entering the unknown land.
I could see it already through my field-glasses, and while William was building
the fire I climbed up among the rocks above and sat down, glasses levelled, to
study the prospect.
There could be no doubt concerning the significance of that rent in the solid
mountain-wall; and, moreover, it was exactly as William Spike had described it.
However, I called to him and he came up from the smoky camp-fire, axe on
shoulder.
"Yep," he said, squatting beside me; "the Graham Glacier used to meander
through that there hole, but somethin' went wrong with the earth's in'ards an'
there was a bust-up."
"Hey? Seen it? Sure I seen it! I was to Spoutin' Springs, twenty mile west, with a
bale o' blue fox an' otter pelt. Fust I knew them geysers begun for to groan
egregious like, an' I seen the caribou gallopin' hell-bent south. 'This climate,' sez
I, 'is too bracin' for me,' so I struck a back trail an' landed onto a hill. Then them
geysers blowed up, one arter the next, an' I heard somethin' kinder cave in
between here an' China. I disremember things what happened. Somethin'
throwed me down, but I couldn't stay there, for the blamed ground was runnin'
like a river--all wavy-like, an' the sky hit me on the back o' me head."
"And then?" I urged, in that new excitement which every repetition of the story
revived. I had heard it all twenty times since we left New York, but mere
repetition could not apparently satisfy me.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 43
"Then," continued William, "the whole world kinder went off like a fire-cracker,
an' I come too, an' ran like--"
"I know," said I, cutting him short, for I had become wearied of the invariable
profanity which lent a lurid ending to his narrative.
"After that," I continued, "you went through the rent in the mountains?"
"Sure."
"And you saw something else?" I always asked this question; it fascinated me to
see the sullen fright flicker in William's eyes, and the mechanical backward
glance, as though what he had seen might still be behind him.
He had never answered this third question but once, and that time he fairly
snarled in my face as he growled: "I seen what no Christian oughter see."
William had retired to mix up with his mules; I resumed my binoculars and my
silent inspection of the great, smooth path left by the Graham Glacier when
something or other exploded that vast mass of ice into vapor.
The arid plain wound out from the unknown country like a river, and I thought
then, and think now, that when the glacier was blown into vapor the vapor
descended in the most terrific rain the world has ever seen, and poured through
the newly blasted mountain-gateway, sweeping the earth to bed-rock. To
corroborate this theory, miles to the southward I could see the débris winding out
across the land towards Wellman Bay, but as the terminal moraine of the
vanished glacier formerly ended there I could not be certain that my theory was
correct. Owing to the formation of the mountains I could not see more than half
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 44
a mile into the unknown country. What I could see appeared to be nothing but
the continuation of the glacier's path, scored out by the cloud-burst, and swept as
smooth as a floor.
Sitting there, my heart beating heavily with excitement, I looked through the
evening glow at the endless, pine-crowned mountain-wall with its giant's
gateway pierced for me! And I thought of all the explorers and the unknown
heroes--trappers, Indians, humble naturalists, perhaps--who had attempted to
scale that sheer barricade and had died there or failed, beaten back from those
eternal cliffs. Eternal? No! For the Eternal Himself had struck the rock, and it
had sprung asunder, thundering obedience.
In the still evening air the smoke from the fire below mounted in a straight,
slender pillar, like the smoke from those ancient altars builded before the first
blood had been shed on earth.
The evening wind stirred the pines; a tiny spring brook made thin harmony
among the rocks; a murmur came from the quiet camp. It was William adjuring
his mules. In the deepening twilight I descended the hillock, stepping cautiously
among the rocks.
Then, suddenly, as I stood outside the reddening ring of firelight, far in the
depths of the unknown country, far behind the mountain-wall, a sound grew on
the quiet air. William heard it and turned his face to the mountains. The sound
faded to a vibration which was felt, not heard. Then once more I began to divine
a vibration in the air, gathering in distant volume until it became a sound, lasting
the space of a spoken word, fading to vibration, then silence.
Was it a cry?
I got him to the little brook and poked his head into the icy water, and after a
while he sat up pluckily.
He replied that it was neither a mammoth nor a dingue, and added a strong
request for privacy, which I was obliged to grant, as I could not torture another
word out of him.
I slept little that night; the exciting proximity of the unknown land was too much
for me. But although I lay awake for hours, I heard nothing except the tinkle of
water among the rocks and the plover calling from some hidden marsh. At
daybreak I shot a ptarmigan which had walked into camp, and the shot set the
echoes yelling among the mountains.
William, sullen and heavy-eyed, dressed the bird, and we broiled it for breakfast.
Neither he nor I alluded to the sound we had heard the night before; he boiled
water and cleaned up the mess-kit, and I pottered about among the rocks for
another ptarmigan. Wearying of this, presently, I returned to the mules and
William, and sat down for a smoke.
"It strikes me," I said, "that our instructions to 'await further orders' are idiotic.
How are we to receive 'further orders' here?"
"You don't suppose," said I, in sudden disgust, "that Miss Smawl believes there
is a summer hotel and daily mail service in the Hudson Mountains?"
It irritated me beyond measure to find myself at last on the very border of the
unknown country, and yet checked, held back, by the irresponsible orders of a
maiden lady named Smawl. However, my salary depended upon the whim of
that maiden lady, and although I fussed and fumed and glared at the mountains
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 46
through my glasses, I realized that I could not stir without the permission of
Miss Smawl. At times this grotesque situation became almost unbearable, and I
often went away by myself and indulged in fantasies, firing my gun off and
pretending I had hit Miss Smawl by mistake. At such moments I would imagine
I was free at last to plunge into the strange country, and I would squat on a rock
and dream of bagging my first mammoth.
The time passed heavily; the tension increased with each new day. I shot
ptarmigan and kept our table supplied with brook-trout. William chopped wood,
conversed with his mules, and cooked very badly.
"See here," I said, one morning; "we have been in camp a week to-day, and I
can't stand your cooking another minute!"
"They must be messengers for us!" I cried, in chaste joy. "Three cheers for the
northward trail, William, and the mischief take Miss--Well, never mind now," I
added.
I stared at him for a second, then attempted to strike him. He dodged wearily and
repeated his incredible remark: "Ya-as, there is--wimmen--two female ladies
onto them there mules."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 47
Somewhat awed by my calm fury, he hastened back to camp and returned with
the binoculars. It was a breathless moment. I adjusted the lenses with a steady
hand and raised them.
Now, of all unexpected sights my fate may reserve for me in the future, I
trust--nay, I know--that none can ever prove as unwelcome as the sight I
perceived through my binoculars. For upon the backs of those distant mules
were two women, and the first one was Miss Smawl!
Upon her head she wore a helmet, from which fluttered a green veil. Otherwise
she was clothed in tweeds; and at moments she beat upon her mule with a thick
umbrella.
Surfeited with the sickening spectacle, I sat down on a rock and tried to cry.
"I told yer so," observed William; but I was too tired to attack him.
When the caravan rode into camp I was myself again, smilingly prepared for the
worst, and I advanced, cap in hand, followed furtively by William.
Miss Smawl gave me a stolid glance, then made directly for the camp-fire,
where a kettle of game-broth simmered over the coals. The last I saw of her she
was smelling of it, and I turned my back and advanced towards the second lady
pilgrim, prepared to be civil until snubbed.
Now, it is quite certain that never before had William Spike or I beheld so much
feminine loveliness in one human body on the back of a mule. She was clad in
the daintiest of shooting-kilts, yet there was nothing mannish about her except
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 48
the way she rode the mule, and that only accentuated her adorable femininity.
I remembered what Professor Lesard had said about blue stockings--but Miss
Dorothy Van Twiller's were gray, turned over at the tops, and disappearing into
canvas spats buckled across a pair of slim shooting-boots.
"Thank you," she replied, accepting my assistance very sweetly; "it is a pleasure
to meet a human being again."
I glanced at Miss Smawl. She was eating game-broth, but she resembled a
human being in a general way.
"I should very much like to wash my hands," said Professor Van Twiller,
drawing the buckskin gloves from her slim fingers.
She called to Professor Smawl to join her, and her voice was crystalline;
Professor Smawl declined, and her voice was batrachian.
"She is so hungry!" observed Miss Van Twiller. "I am very thankful we are here
at last, for we've had a horrid time. You see, we neither of us know how to
cook."
I wondered what they would say to William's cooking, but I held my peace and
retired, leaving the little brook to mirror the sweetest face that was ever bathed
in water.
VIII
That afternoon our expedition, in two sections, moved forward. The first section
comprised myself and all the mules; the second section was commanded by
Professor Smawl, followed by Professor Van Twiller, armed with a tiny
shot-gun. William, loaded down with the ladies' toilet articles, skulked in the
rear. I say skulked; there was no other word for it.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 49
"So you're a guide, are you?" observed Professor Smawl when William, cap in
hand, had approached her with well-meant advice. "The woods are full of lazy
guides. Pick up those Gladstone bags! I'll do the guiding for this expedition."
The encounter took place just as I, driving the five mules, entered the great
mountain gateway, thrilled with anticipation which almost amounted to
foreboding. As I was about to set foot across the imaginary frontier which
divided the world from the unknown land, Professor Smawl hailed me and I
halted until she came up.
"As commander of this expedition," she said, somewhat out of breath, "I desire
to be the first living creature who has ever set foot behind the Graham Glacier.
Kindly step aside, young sir!"
"Madam," said I, rigid with disappointment, "my guide, William Spike, entered
that unknown land a year ago."
"As you like," I replied; "but it is scarcely generous to forestall the person whose
stupidity gave you the clew to this unexplored region."
Her little, hard eyes grew harder, and she clutched her umbrella until the steel
ribs crackled.
"Young man," she said, insolently; "if I could have gotten rid of you I should
have done so the day I was appointed president. But Professor Farrago refused to
resign unless your position was assured, subject, of course, to your good
behavior. Frankly, I don't like you, and I consider your views on science
ridiculous, and if an opportunity presents itself I will be most happy to request
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 50
The journey was monotonous at first, but we shortly ascended a ridge from
which we could see, stretching out below us, the wilderness where, save the feet
of William Spike, no human feet had passed.
As for me, tingling with enthusiasm, I forgot my chagrin, I forgot the gross
injustice, I forgot my mules. "Excelsior!" I cried, running up and down the ridge
in uncontrollable excitement at the sublime spectacle of forest, mountain, and
valley all set with little lakes.
Exalted, inspired by the mysterious beauty of the view, we clasped hands and
ran up and down the grassy ridge.
"That will do," said Professor Smawl, coldly, as we raced about like a pair of
distracted kittens. The chilling voice broke the spell; I dropped Professor Van
Twiller's hand and sat down on a bowlder, aching with wrath.
Late that afternoon we halted beside a tiny lake, deep in the unknown
wilderness, where purple and scarlet bergamot choked the shores and the
spruce-partridge strutted fearlessly under our very feet. Here we pitched our two
tents. The afternoon sun slanted through the pines; the lake glittered; acres of
golden brake perfumed the forest silence, broken only at rare intervals by the
distant thunder of a partridge drumming.
Professor Smawl ate heavily and retired to her tent to lie torpid until evening.
William drove the unloaded mules into an intervale full of sun-cured, fragrant
grasses; I sat down beside Professor Van Twiller.
The wilderness is electric. Once within the influence of its currents, human
beings become positively or negatively charged, violently attracting or repelling
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 51
each other.
"There is something the matter with this air," said Professor Van Twiller. "It
makes me feel as though I were desperately enamoured of the entire human
race."
She leaned back against a pine, smiling vaguely, and crossing one knee over the
other.
It was clear that she was out for a holiday. The seriousness and restraints of
twenty-two years she had left behind her in the civilized world, and now, with a
shrug of her young shoulders, she unloosened her burden of reticence, dignity,
and responsibility and let the whole load fall with a discreet thud.
"Even hares go mad in March," she said, seriously. "I know you intend to flirt
with me--and I don't care. Anyway, there's nothing else to do, is there?"
"Suppose," said I, solemnly, "I should take you behind that big tree and attempt
to kiss you!"
The prospect did not appear to appall her, so I looked around with that sneaking
yet conciliatory caution peculiar to young men who are novices in the art. Before
I had satisfied myself that neither William nor the mules were observing us,
Professor Van Twiller rose to her feet and took a short step backward.
I looked at the big tree, undecided. "Come on," she said; "I'll show you how."
And away we went into the woods, she leading, her kilts flashing through the
golden half-light.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 52
Now I had not the faintest notion how to trap the dingue, but Professor Van
Twiller asserted that it formerly fed on the tender tips of the spruce, quoting
Darwin as her authority.
"The dingue, you know, was supposed to live in the water," she said, kneeling
beside me over our trap.
I took her little hand and thanked her for the information.
"Doubtless," she said, enthusiastically, "a dingue will come out of the lake
to-night to feed on our spruce-tips. Then," she added, "we've got him."
Her face was turned a little away; I don't remember what she said; I don't
remember that she said anything. A faint rose-tint stole over her cheek. A few
moments later she said: "You must not do that again."
It was quite late when we strolled back to camp. Long before we came in sight
of the twin tents we heard a deep voice bawling our names. It was Professor
Smawl, and she pounced upon Dorothy and drove her ignominiously into the
tent.
"As for you," she said, in hollow tones, "you may explain your conduct at once,
or place your resignation at my disposal."
"Billy," said I to William Spike, who regarded me morosely from the depths of
the tent, "I'm going out to bag a mammoth to-morrow, so kindly clean my
elephant-gun and bring an axe to chop out the tusks."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 53
That night Professor Smawl complained bitterly of the cooking, but as neither
Dorothy nor I knew how to improve it, she revenged herself on us by eating
everything on the table and retiring to bed, taking Dorothy with her.
I could not sleep very well; the mosquitoes were intrusive, and Professor Smawl
dreamed she was a pack of wolves and yelped in her sleep.
"Bird, ain't she?" said William, roused from slumber by her weird noises.
Dorothy, much frightened, crawled out of her tent, where her blanket-mate still
dreamed dyspeptically, and William and I made her comfortable by the
camp-fire.
To make sure, I tested her pulse. For an hour it varied more or less, but without
alarming either of us. Then she went back to bed and I sat alone by the
camp-fire.
Towards midnight I suddenly began to feel that strange, distant vibration that I
had once before felt. As before, the vibration grew on the still air, increasing in
volume until it became a sound, then died out into silence.
I roused him remorselessly, and he sat up scowling, but refused to tell me what
he had been dreaming.
"Was it about that third thing you saw--" I began. But he snarled up at me like a
startled animal, and I was obliged to go to bed and toss about and speculate.
The next morning it rained. Dorothy and I visited our dingue-trap but found
nothing in it. We were inclined, however, to stay out in the rain behind a big
tree, but Professor Smawl vetoed that proposition and sent me off to supply the
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 54
I returned, mad and wet, with a dozen partridges and a white hare--brown at that
season--and William cooked them vilely.
"You may hand in your resignation this evening!" cried Professor Smawl, in
hollow tones of passion.
I passed her the pancakes with a cheerful smile, and flippantly pressed the hand
next me. Unexpectedly it proved to be William's sticky fist, and Dorothy and I
laughed until her tears ran into Professor Smawl's coffee-cup--an accident which
kindled her wrath to red heat, and she requested my resignation five times during
the evening.
The next day it rained again, more or less. Professor Smawl complained of the
cooking, demanded my resignation, and finally marched out to explore, lugging
the reluctant William with her. Dorothy and I sat down behind the largest tree
we could find.
I don't remember what we were saying when a peculiar sound interrupted us, and
we listened earnestly.
"It is the note of the dingue!" I whispered, "and that explains its name, handed
down from remote ages along with the names of the behemoth and the coney. It
was because of its bell-like cry that it was named! Darling!" I cried, forgetting
our short acquaintance, "we have made a discovery that the whole world will
ring with!"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 55
Hand in hand we tiptoed through the forest to our trap. There was something in it
that took fright at our approach and rushed panic-stricken round and round the
interior of the trap, uttering its alarm-note, which sounded like the jangling of a
whole string of bells.
I seized the strangely beautiful creature; it neither attempted to bite nor scratch,
but crouched in my arms, trembling and eying me.
Delighted with the lovely, tame animal, we bore it tenderly back to the camp and
placed it on my blanket. Hand in hand we stood before it, awed by the sight of
this beast, so long believed to be extinct.
"It is too good to be true," sighed Dorothy, clasping her white hands under her
chin and gazing at the dingue in rapture.
"Yes," said I, solemnly, "you and I, my child, are face to face with the fabled
dingue--Dingus solitarius! Let us continue to gaze at it, reverently, prayerfully,
humbly--"
We were still mutely adoring the dingue when Professor Smawl burst into the
tent at a hand-gallop, bawling hoarsely for her kodak and note-book.
Dorothy seized her triumphantly by the arm and pointed at the dingue, which
appeared to be frightened to death.
"Madam," I said, firmly, "it is a dingue! It's a monodactyl! See! It has but a
single toe!"
"Of course," I said; "you didn't suppose a monodactyl meant a beast with one leg
and one toe!"
We squabbled for a while until I saw the significance of her attitude. The
unfortunate woman wished to find a dingue first and be accredited with the
discovery.
I lifted the dingue in both hands and shook the creature gently, until the chiming
ding-dong of its protestations filled our ears like sweet bells jangled out of tune.
Pale with rage at this final proof of the dingue's identity, she seized her camera
and note-book.
"I haven't any time to waste over that musical woodchuck!" she shouted, and
bounced out of the tent.
"What have you discovered, dear?" cried Dorothy, running after her.
Neither Dorothy nor I believed her. We watched the flight of the infatuated
woman in silence.
And now, at last, the tragic shadow falls over my paper as I write. I was never
passionately attached to Professor Smawl, yet I would gladly refrain from
chronicling the episode that must follow if, as I have hitherto attempted, I
succeed in sticking to the unornamented truth.
I have said that neither Dorothy nor I believed her. I don't know why, unless it
was that we had not yet made up our minds to believe that the mammoth still
existed on earth. So, when Professor Smawl disappeared in the forest, scuttling
through the underbrush like a demoralized hen, we viewed her flight with
unconcern. There was a large tree in the neighborhood--a pleasant shelter in case
of rain. So we sat down behind it, although the sun was shining fiercely.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 57
It was one of those peaceful afternoons in the wilderness when the whole forest
dreams, and the shadows are asleep and every little leaflet takes a nap. Under the
still tree-tops the dappled sunlight, motionless, soaked the sod; the forest-flies no
longer whirled in circles, but sat sunning their wings on slender twig-tips.
The heat was sweet and spicy; the sun drew out the delicate essence of gum and
sap, warming volatile juices until they exhaled through the aromatic bark.
The sun went down into the wilderness; the forest stirred in its sleep; a fish
splashed in the lake. The spell was broken. Presently the wind began to rise
somewhere far away in the unknown land. I heard it coming, nearer, nearer--a
brisk wind that grew heavier and blew harder as it neared us--a gale that swept
distant branches--a furious gale that set limbs clashing and cracking, nearer and
nearer. Crack! and the gale grew to a hurricane, trampling trees like dead twigs!
Crack! Crackle! Crash! Crash!
With the roaring in my ears I sprang up, staring into the forest vista, and at the
same instant, out of the crashing forest, sped Professor Smawl, skirts tucked up,
thin legs flying like bicycle-spokes. I shouted, but the crashing drowned my
voice. Then all at once the solid earth began to shake, and with the rush and roar
of a tornado a gigantic living thing burst out of the forest before our eyes--a vast
shadowy bulk that rocked and rolled along, mowing down trees in its course.
Two great crescents of ivory curved from its head; its back swept through the
tossing tree-tops. Once it bellowed like a gun fired from a high bastion.
The apparition passed with the noise of thunder rolling on towards the ends of
the earth. Crack! crash! went the trees, the tempest swept away in a rolling
volley of reports, distant, more distant, until, long after the tumult had deadened,
then ceased, the stunned forest echoed with the fall of mangled branches slowly
dropping.
That evening an agitated young couple sat close together in the deserted camp,
calling timidly at intervals for Professor Smawl and William Spike. I say
timidly, because it is correct; we did not care to have a mammoth respond to our
calls. The lurking echoes across the lake answered our cries; the full moon came
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 58
up over the forest to look at us. We were not much to look at. Dorothy was
moistening my shoulder with unfeigned tears, and I, afraid to light the fire, sat
hunched up under the common blanket, wildly examining the darkness around
us.
Chilled to the spinal marrow, I watched the gray lights whiten in the east. A
single bird awoke in the wilderness. I saw the nearer trees looming in the mist,
and the silver fog rolling on the lake.
All night long the darkness had vibrated with the strange monotone which I had
heard the first night, camping at the gate of the unknown land. My brain seemed
to echo that subtle harmony which rings in the auricular labyrinth after sound
has ceased.
There are ghosts of sound which return to haunt long after sound is dead. It was
these voiceless spectres of a voice long dead that stirred the transparent silence,
intoning toneless tones.
It was an uncanny night; morning whitened the east; gray daylight stole into the
woods, blotting the shadows to paler tints. It was nearly mid-day before the sun
became visible through the fine-spun web of mist--a pale spot of gilt in the
zenith.
By this pallid light I labored to strike the two empty tents, gather up our
equipments and pack them on our five mules. Dorothy aided me bravely,
whimpering when I spoke of Professor Smawl and William Spike, but abating
nothing of her industry until we had the mules loaded and I was ready to drive
them, Heaven knows whither.
"Where shall we go?" quavered Dorothy, sitting on a log with the dingue in her
lap.
One thing was certain; this mammoth-ridden land was no place for women, and I
told her so.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 59
We placed the dingue in a basket and tied it around the leading mule's neck.
Immediately the dingue, alarmed, began dingling like a cow-bell. It acted like a
charm on the other mules, and they gravely filed off after their leader, following
the bell. Dorothy and I, hand in hand, brought up the rear.
I shall never forget that scene in the forest--the gray arch of the heavens
swimming in mist through which the sun peered shiftily, the tall pines wavering
through the fog, the preoccupied mules marching single file, the foggy bell-note
of the gentle dingue in its swinging basket, and Dorothy, limp kilts dripping with
dew, plodding through the white dusk.
We followed the terrible tornado-path which the mammoth had left in its wake,
but there were no traces of its human victims--neither one jot of Professor
Smawl nor one solitary tittle of William Spike.
And now I would be glad to end this chapter if I could; I would gladly leave
myself as I was, there in the misty forest, with an arm encircling the slender
body of my little companion, and the mules moving in a monotonous line, and
the dingue discreetly jingling--but again that menacing shadow falls across my
page, and truth bids me tell all, and I, the slave of accuracy, must remember my
vows as the dauntless disciple of truth.
Towards sunset--or that pale parody of sunset which set the forest swimming in
a ghastly, colorless haze--the mammoth's trail of ruin brought us suddenly out of
the trees to the shore of a great sheet of water.
It was a desolate spot; northward a chaos of sombre peaks rose, piled up like
thunder-clouds along the horizon; east and south the darkening wilderness
spread like a pall. Westward, crawling out into the mist from our very feet, the
gray waste of water moved under the dull sky, and flat waves slapped the
squatting rocks, heavy with slime.
And now I understood why the trail of the mammoth continued straight into the
lake, for on either hand black, filthy tamarack swamps lay under ghostly sheets
of mist. I strove to creep out into the bog, seeking a footing, but the swamp
quaked and the smooth surface trembled like jelly in a bowl. A stick thrust into
the slime sank into unknown depths.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 60
Vaguely alarmed, I gained the firm land again and looked around, believing
there was no road open but the desolate trail we had traversed. But I was in
error; already the leading mule was wading out into the water, and the others,
one by one, followed.
How wide the lake might be we could not tell, because the band of fog hung
across the water like a curtain. Yet out into this flat, shallow void our mules
went steadily, slop! slop! slop! in single file. Already they were growing
indistinct in the fog, so I bade Dorothy hasten and take off her shoes and
stockings.
She was ready before I was, I having to unlace my shooting-boots, and she
stepped out into the water, kilts fluttering, moving her white feet cautiously. In a
moment I was beside her, and we waded forward, sounding the shallow water
with our poles.
When the water had risen to Dorothy's knees I hesitated, alarmed. But when we
attempted to retrace our steps we could not find the shore again, for the blank
mist shrouded everything, and the water deepened at every step.
I halted and listened for the mules. Far away in the fog I heard a dull splashing,
receding as I listened. After a while all sound died away, and a slow horror stole
over me--a horror that froze the little net-work of veins in every limb. A step to
the right and the water rose to my knees; a step to the left and the cold, thin
circle of the flood chilled my breast. Suddenly Dorothy screamed, and the next
moment a far cry answered--a far, sweet cry that seemed to come from the sky,
like the rushing harmony of the world's swift winds. Then the curtain of fog
before us lighted up from behind; shadows moved on the misty screen, outlines
of trees and grassy shores, and tiny birds flying. Thrown on the vapory curtain,
in silhouette, a man and a woman passed under the lovely trees, arms about each
other's necks; near them the shadows of five mules grazed peacefully; a dingue
gambolled close by.
"It is a mirage!" I muttered, but my voice made no sound. Slowly the light
behind the fog died out; the vapor around us turned to rose, then dissolved, while
mile on mile of a limitless sea spread away till, like a quick line pencilled at a
stroke, the horizon cut sky and sea in half, and before us lay an ocean from
which towered a mountain of snow--or a gigantic berg of milky ice--for it was
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 61
moving.
At the sound of my crazed cry the mountain of snow became a pillar, towering to
the clouds, and a wave of golden glory drenched the figure to its knees! Figure?
Yes--for a colossal arm shot across the sky, then curved back in exquisite grace
to a head of awful beauty--a woman's head, with eyes like the blue lake of
heaven--ay, a woman's splendid form, upright from the sky to the earth,
knee-deep in the sea. The evening clouds drifted across her brow; her
shimmering hair lighted the world beneath with sunset. Then, shading her white
brow with one hand, she bent, and with the other hand dipped in the sea, she sent
a wave rolling at us. Straight out of the horizon it sped--a ripple that grew to a
wave, then to a furious breaker which caught us up in a whirl of foam, bearing us
onward, faster, faster, swiftly flying through leagues of spray until consciousness
ceased and all was blank.
Yet ere my senses fled I heard again that strange cry--that sweet, thrilling
harmony rushing out over the foaming waters, filling earth and sky with its
soundless vibrations.
And I knew it was the hail of the Spirit of the North warning us back to life
again.
*****
Looking back, now, over the days that passed before we staggered into the
Hudson Bay outpost at Gravel Cove, I am inclined to believe that neither
Dorothy nor I were clothed entirely in our proper minds--or, if we were, our
minds, no doubt, must have been in the same condition as our clothing. I
remember shooting ptarmigan, and that we ate them; flashes of memory recall
the steady downpour of rain through the endless twilight of shaggy forests; dim
days on the foggy tundra, mud-holes from which the wild ducks rose in
thousands; then the stunted hemlocks, then the forest again. And I do not even
recall the moment when, at last, stumbling into the smooth path left by the
Graham Glacier, we crawled through the mountain-wall, out of the unknown
land, and once more into a world protected by the Lord Almighty.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 62
Curiously enough, Professor Van Twiller was not very much battered,
physically, for I had carried her for days, pickaback. But the awful experience
had produced a shock which resulted in a nervous condition that lasted so long
after she returned to New York that the wealthy and eminent specialist who
attended her insisted upon taking her to the Riviera and marrying her. I
sometimes wonder--but, as I have said, such reflections have no place in these
austere pages.
However, anybody, I fancy, is at liberty to speculate upon the fate of the late
Professor Smawl and William Spike, and upon the mules and the gentle dingue.
Personally, I am convinced that the suggestive silhouettes I saw on that ghastly
curtain of fog were cast by beatified beings in some earthly paradise--a mirage
of bliss of which we caught but the colorless shadow-shapes floating 'twixt sea
and sky.
At all events, neither Professor Smawl nor her William Spike ever returned; no
exploring expedition has found a trace of mule or lady, of William or the dingue.
The new expedition to be organized by Barnard College may penetrate still
farther. I suppose that, when the time comes, I shall be expected to volunteer.
But Professor Van Twiller is married, and William and Professor Smawl ought
to be, and altogether, considering the mammoth and that gigantic and splendid
apparition that bent from the zenith to the ocean and sent a tidal-wave rolling
from the palm of one white hand--I say, taking all these various matters under
consideration, I think I shall decide to remain in New York and continue writing
for the scientific periodicals. Besides, the mortifying experience at the Paris
Exposition has dampened even my perennially youthful enthusiasm. And as for
the late expedition to Florida, Heaven knows I am ready to repeat it--nay, I am
already forming a plan for the rescue--but though I am prepared to encounter any
danger for the sake of my beloved superior, Professor Farrago, I do not feel
inclined to commit indiscretions in order to pry into secrets which, as I regard it,
concern Professor Smawl and William Spike alone.
But all this is, in a measure, premature. What I now have to relate is the recital of
an eye-witness to that most astonishing scandal which occurred during the recent
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 63
exposition in Paris.
IX
Yet, had it not been for the pair of American newspapers published in Paris, this
scandal would never have been aired, for the continental press is so well
muzzled that when it bites its teeth merely meet in the empty atmosphere with a
discreet snap.
But to the Yankee nothing excepting the Monroe Doctrine is sacred, and the
unsopped watch-dogs of the press bite right and left, unmuzzled. The biter
bites--it is his profession--and that ends the affair; the bitee is bitten, and, in the
deplorable argot of the hour, "it is up to him."
So now that the scandal has been well aired and hung out to dry in the teeth of
decency and the four winds, and as all the details have been cheerfully and
grossly exaggerated, it is, perhaps, the proper moment for the truth to be written
by the only person whose knowledge of all the facts in the affair entitles him to
speak for himself as well as for those honorable ladies and gentlemen whose
names and titles have been so mercilessly criticised.
The International Scientific Congress, now adjourned sine die, met at nine
o'clock in the morning, May 3, 1900, in the Tasmanian Pavilion of the Paris
Exposition. There were present the most famous scientists of Great Britain,
France, Germany, Russia, Italy, Switzerland, and the United States.
This, then, was the composition of that now notorious ornithological committee,
a modest, earnest, self-effacing little band of workers, bound together--in the
beginning--by those ties of mutual respect and esteem which unite all laborers in
the vineyard of science.
From the first meeting of our committee, science, the great leveller, left no
artificial barriers of rank or title standing between us. We were enthusiasts in our
love for ornithology; we found new inspiration in the democracy of our common
interests.
As for me, I chatted with my fellows, feeling no restraint myself and perceiving
none. The King of Finland and I discussed his latest monograph on the speckled
titmouse, and I was glad to agree with the King in all his theories concerning the
nesting habits of that important bird.
Sir Peter Grebe, a large, red gentleman in tweeds, read us some notes he had
made on the domestic hen and her reasons for running ahead of a horse and
wagon instead of stepping aside to let the disturbing vehicle pass.
The Crown-Prince of Monaco took issue with Sir Peter; so did the Baron de
Becasse; and we were entertained by a friendly and marvellously interesting
three-cornered dispute, shared in by three of the most profound thinkers of the
century.
I shall never forget the brilliancy of that argument, nor the modest,
good-humored retorts which gave us all a glimpse into depths of erudition which
impressed us profoundly and set the seal on the bonds which held us so closely
together.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 65
Alas, that the seal should ever have been broken! Alas, that the glittering apple
of discord should have been flung into our midst!--no, not flung, but gently
rolled under our noses by the gloved fingers of the lovely Countess d'Alzette.
"Messieurs," said the fair Countess, when all present, excepting she and I, had
touched upon or indicated the subjects which they had prepared to present to the
congress--"messieurs mes confrères, I have been requested by our distinguished
chairman, the Crown-Prince of Monaco, to submit to your judgment the subject
which, by favor of the King of the Belgians, I have prepared to present to the
International Scientific Congress."
She made a pretty courtesy as she named her own sovereign, and we all rose out
of respect to that most austere and moral ruler the King of Belgium.
"But," she said, with a charming smile of depreciation, "I am very, very much
afraid that the subject which I have chosen may not meet with your approval,
gentlemen."
She stood there in her dainty Parisian gown and bonnet, shaking her pretty head
uncertainly, a smile on her lips, her small, gloved fingers interlocked.
"Oh, I know how dreadful it would be if this great congress should be compelled
to listen to any hoax like that which Monsieur de Rougemont imposed on the
British Royal Society," she said, gravely; "and because the subject of my paper
is as strange as the strangest phenomenon alleged to have been noted by
Monsieur de Rougemont, I hesitate--"
She glanced at the silent listeners around her. Sir Peter's red face had hardened;
the King of Finland frowned slightly; the Crown-Prince of Monaco and Baron de
Becasse wore anxious smiles. But when her violet eyes met mine I gave her a
glance of encouragement, and that glance, I am forced to confess, was not
dictated by scientific approval, but by something that never entirely dries up in
the mustiest and dustiest of savants--the old Adam implanted in us all.
Now, I knew perfectly well what her subject must be; so did every man present.
For it was no secret that his Majesty of Belgium had been swindled by some
natives in Tasmania, and had paid a very large sum of money for a skin of that
gigantic bird, the ux, which has been so often reported to exist among the
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 66
For six months there had been a most serious difference of opinion among
European ornithologists concerning the famous ux in the Antwerp Museum; and
this difference had promised to result in an open quarrel between a few Belgian
savants on one side and-all Europe and Great Britain on the other.
Therefore, it took no little courage for the Countess d'Alzette to touch, with her
dainty gloves, a subject which every scientist in Europe, with scarcely an
exception, had pronounced fraudulent and unworthy of investigation. And to
bring it before the great International Congress required more courage still; for
the person who could face, in executive session, the most brilliant intellects in
the world, and openly profess faith in a Barnumized bird skin, either had no
scientific reputation to lose or was possessed of a bravery far above that of the
savants who composed the audience.
I looked at her guiltily, already ashamed of myself for encouraging her to her
destruction. How lovely and innocent she appeared, standing there reading her
notes in a low, clear voice, fresh as a child's, with now and then a delicious
upward sweep of her long, dark lashes.
With a start I came to my senses and bestowed a pinch on myself. This was
neither the time nor the place to sentimentalize over a girlish beauty whose
small, Parisian head was crammed full of foolish, brave theories concerning an
imposition which her aged sovereign had been unable to detect.
I saw the gathering frown on the King of Finland's dark face; I saw Sir Peter
Grebe grow redder and redder, and press his thick lips together to control the
angry "Bosh!" which need not have been uttered to have been understood. The
Baron de Becasse wore a painfully neutral smile, which froze his face into a
quaint gargoyle; the Crown-Prince of Monaco looked at his polished fingernails
with a startled yet abstracted resignation. Clearly the young Countess had not a
sympathizer in the committee.
The Countess d'Alzette finished her notes, then glanced around with a
deprecating smile, which died out on her lips when she perceived the silent and
stony hostility of her fellow-scientists. A quick expression of alarm came into
her lovely eyes. Would they vote against giving her a hearing before the
congress? It required a unanimous vote to reject a subject. She turned her eyes
on me.
I rose, red as fire, my head humming with a chaos of ideas all disordered and
vague, yet whirling along in a single, resistless current. I had come to the
congress prepared to deliver a monograph on the great auk; but now the subject
went overboard as the birds themselves had, and I found myself pleading with
the committee to give the Countess a hearing on the ux.
"Why not?" I exclaimed, warmly. "It is established beyond question that the ux
does exist in Tasmania. Wallace saw several uxen, through his telescope,
walking about upon the inaccessible heights of the Tasmanian Mountains.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 68
Darwin acknowledged that the bird exists; Professor Farrago has published a
pamphlet containing an accumulation of all data bearing upon the ux. Why
should not Madame la Comtesse be heard by the entire congress?"
"Have you seen this alleged bird skin in the Antwerp Museum?" he asked,
perspiring with indignation.
"Yes, I have," said I. "It has been patched up, but how are we to know that the
skin did not require patching? I have not found that ostrich skin has been used. It
is true that the Tasmanians may have shot the bird to pieces and mended the skin
with bits of cassowary hide here and there. But the greater part of the skin, and
the beak and claws, are, in my estimation, well worth the serious attention of
savants. To pronounce them fraudulent is, in my opinion, rash and premature."
I mopped my brow; I was in for it now. I had thrown in my reputation with the
reputation of the Countess.
The effect of this vote on our little committee was most marked. Constraint took
the place of cordiality, polite reserve replaced that guileless and open-hearted
courtesy with which our proceedings had begun.
With icy politeness, the Crown-Prince of Monaco asked me to state the subject
of the paper I proposed to read before the congress, and I replied quietly that, as
I was partly responsible for advocating the discussion of the ux, I proposed to
associate myself with the Countess d'Alzette in that matter--if Madame la
Comtesse would accept the offer of a brother savant.
"Indeed I will," she said, impulsively, her blue eyes soft with gratitude.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 69
"Very well," observed Sir Peter Grebe, swallowing his indignation and waddling
off towards the door; "I shall resign my position on this committee--yes, I will, I
tell you!"--as the King of Finland laid a fatherly hand on Sir Peter's sleeve--"I'll
not be made responsible for this damn--"
He choked, sputtered, then bowed to the horrified Countess, asking pardon, and
declaring that he yielded to nobody in respect for the gentler sex. And he retired
with the Baron de Becasse.
But out in the hallway I heard him explode. "Confound it! This is no place for
petticoats, Baron! And as for that Yankee ornithologist, he's hung himself with
the Countess's corset--string--yes, he has! Don't tell me, Baron! The young idiot
was all right until the Countess looked at him, I tell you. Gad! how she crumpled
him up with those blue eyes of hers! What the devil do women come into such
committees for? Eh? It's an outrage, I tell you! Why, the whole world will jeer at
us if we sit and listen to her monograph on that fraudulent bird!"
The young Countess, who was writing near the window, could not have heard
this outburst; but I heard it, and so did King Christian and the Crown-Prince of
Monaco.
"Lord," thought I, "the Countess and I are in the frying-pan this time. I'll do what
I can to keep us both out of the fire."
When the King and the Crown-Prince had made their adieux to the Countess,
and she had responded, pale and serious, they came over to where I was
standing, looking out on the Seine.
"Though we must differ from you," said the King, kindly, "we wish you all
success in this dangerous undertaking."
I thanked him.
"You are a young man to risk a reputation already established," remarked the
Crown-Prince, then added: "You are braver than I. Ridicule is a barrier to all
knowledge, and, though we know that, we seekers after truth always bring up
short at that barrier and dismount, not daring to put our hobbies to the fence."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 70
"And risk staking our hobbies? No, no, that would make us ridiculous; and
ridicule kills in Europe."
When King Christian, of Finland, and the Crown-Prince of Monaco had taken
their hats and sticks and departed, I glanced across the room at the young
Countess, who was now working rapidly on a type-writer, apparently quite
oblivious of my presence.
I looked out of the window again, and my gaze wandered over the exposition
grounds. Gilt and scarlet and azure the palaces rose in every direction, under a
wilderness of fluttering flags. Towers, minarets, turrets, golden spires cut the
blue sky; in the west the gaunt Eiffel Tower sprawled across the glittering
Esplanade; behind it rose the solid golden dome of the Emperor's tomb, gilded
once more by the Almighty's sun, to amuse the living rabble while the dead
slumbered in his imperial crypt, himself now but a relic for the amusement of the
people whom he had despised. O tempora! O mores! O Napoleon!
Down under my window, in the asphalted court, the King of Finland was
entering his beautiful victoria. An adjutant, wearing a cocked hat and brilliant
uniform, mounted the box beside the green-and-gold coachman; the two
postilions straightened up in their saddles; the four horses danced. Then, when
the Crown-Prince of Monaco had taken a seat beside the King, the carriage
rolled away, and far down the quay I watched it until the flutter of the
green-and-white plumes in the adjutant's cocked hat was all I could see of
vanishing royalty.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 71
I was still musing there by the window, listening to the click and ringing of the
type-writer, when I suddenly became aware that the clicking had ceased, and,
turning, I saw the young Countess standing beside me.
"Thank you for your chivalrous impulse to help me," she said, frankly, holding
out her bare hand.
"I had not realized how desperate my case was," she said, with a smile. "I
supposed that they would at least give me a hearing. How can I thank you for
your brave vote in my favor?"
"By giving me your confidence in this matter," said I, gravely. "If we are to win,
we must work together and work hard, madame. We are entering a struggle, not
only to prove the genuineness of a bird skin and the existence of a bird which
neither of us has ever seen, but also a struggle which will either make us famous
forever or render it impossible for either of us ever again to face a scientific
audience."
"I know it," she said, quietly "And I understand all the better how gallant a
gentleman I have had the fortune to enlist in my cause. Believe me, had I not
absolute confidence in my ability to prove the existence of the ux I should not,
selfish as I am, have accepted your chivalrous offer to stand or fall with me."
The subtle emotion in her voice touched a responsive chord in me. I looked at
her earnestly; she raised her beautiful eyes to mine.
Would I help her? Faith, I'd pass the balance of my life turning flip-flaps to
please her. I did not attempt to undeceive myself; I realized that the lightning
had struck me--that I was desperately in love with the young Countess from the
tip of her bonnet to the toe of her small, polished shoe. I was curiously cool
about it, too, although my heart gave a thump that nigh choked me, and I felt
myself going red from temple to chin.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 72
If the Countess d'Alzette noticed it she gave no sign, unless the pink tint under
her eyes, deepening, was a subtle signal of understanding to the signal in my
eyes.
"Suppose," she said, "that I failed, before the congress, to prove my theory?
Suppose my investigations resulted in the exposure of a fraud and my name was
held up to ridicule before all Europe? What would become of you, monsieur?"
I was silent.
"You are already celebrated as the discoverer of the mammoth and the great
auk," she persisted. "You are young, enthusiastic, renowned, and you have a
future before you that anybody in the world might envy."
I said nothing.
"And yet," she said, softly, "you risk all because you will not leave a young
woman friendless among her confrères. It is not wise, monsieur; it is gallant and
generous and impulsive, but it is not wisdom. Don Quixote rides no more in
Europe, my friend."
"It is true enough," I said, with a laugh. "We are the only people who tilt at
windmills these days--we and our cousins, the British, who taught us."
"With your colors to wear, I shall have the honor of breaking a lance against the
biggest windmill in the world."
She looked at me thoughtfully, rolling and unrolling the scroll in her hands.
Then she sighed, smiled, and brightened, handing me the scroll.
"Read it carefully," she said; "it is an outline of the policy I suggest that we
follow. You will be surprised at some of the statements. Yet every word is the
truth. And, monsieur, your reward for the devotion you have offered will be no
greater than you deserve, when you find yourself doubly famous for our joint
monograph on the ux. Without your vote in the committee I should have been
denied a hearing, even though I produced proofs to support my theory. I
appreciate that; I do most truly appreciate the courage which prompted you to
defend a woman at the risk of your own ruin. Come to me this evening at nine. I
hold for you in store a surprise and pleasure which you do not dream of."
"Ah, but I do," I said, slowly, under the spell of her delicate beauty and
enthusiasm.
"How can you?" she said, laughing. "You don't know what awaits you at nine
this evening?"
I bowed, took my hat, gloves, and stick, and attended her to her carriage below.
Long after the blue-and-black victoria had whirled away down the crowded quay
I stood looking after it, mazed in the web of that ancient enchantment whose
spell fell over the first man in Eden, and whose sorcery shall not fail till the last
man returns his soul.
I lunched at my lodgings on the Quai Malthus, and I had but little appetite,
having fed upon such an unexpected variety of emotions during the morning.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 74
Now, although I was already heels over head in love, I do not believe that loss of
appetite was the result of that alone. I was slowly beginning to realize what my
recent attitude might cost me, not only in an utter collapse of my scientific
career, and the consequent material ruin which was likely to follow, but in the
loss of all my friends at home. The Zoological Society of Bronx Park and the
Smithsonian Institution of Washington had sent me as their trusted delegate,
leaving it entirely to me to choose the subject on which I was to speak before the
International Congress. What, then, would be their attitude when they learned
that I had chosen to uphold the dangerous theory of the existence of the ux.
Would they repudiate me and send another delegate to replace me? Would they
merely wash their hands of me and let me go to my own destruction?
"I will know soon enough," thought I, "for this morning's proceedings will have
been cabled to New York ere now, and read at the breakfast-tables of every old,
moss-grown naturalist in America before I see the Countess d'Alzette this
evening." And I drew from my pocket the roll of paper which she had given me,
and, lighting a cigar, lay back in my chair to read it.
Our time in Tasmania was too limited to admit of an exploration then. But
although we were perfectly aware that the summits of the Tasmanian Alps are
inaccessible, we certainly should have attempted to gain them had not the time
set for our departure arrived before we had completed the investigation for
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 75
One relic, however, I carried away with me. It was a single greenish bronzed
feather, found high up in the mountains by a native, and sold to me for a
somewhat large sum of money.
Darwin believed the ux to be covered with greenish plumage; Wallace was too
far away to observe the color of the great birds; but all the natives of Tasmania
unite in affirming that the plumage of the ux is green.
It was not only the color of this feather that made me an eager purchaser, it was
the extraordinary length and size. I knew of no living bird large enough to wear
such a feather. As for the color, that might have been tampered with before I
bought it, and, indeed, testing it later, I found on the fronds traces of sulphate of
copper. But the same thing has been found in the feathers of certain birds whose
color is metallic green, and it has been proven that such birds pick up and
swallow shining bits of copper pyrites.
Still, my only reason for believing in the existence of the bird was this single
feather. I had easily proved that it belonged to no known species of bird. I also
proved it to be similar to the tail-feathers of the ux-skin in Antwerp. But the
feathers on the Antwerp specimen were gray, and the longest of them was but
three feet in length, while my huge, bronze-green feather measured eleven feet
from tip to tip.
One might account for it supposing the Antwerp skin to be that of a young bird,
or of a moulting bird, or perhaps of a different sex from the bird whose feather I
had secured.
Still, these ideas were not proven. Nothing concerning the birds had been
proven. I had but a single fact to lean on, and that was that the feather I
possessed could not have belonged to any known species of bird. Nobody but
myself knew of the existence of this feather. And now I meant to cable to Bronx
Park for it, and to place this evidence at the disposal of the beautiful Countess
d'Alzette.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 76
My cigar had gone out, as I sat musing, and I relighted it and resumed my
reading of the type-written notes, lazily, even a trifle sceptically, for all the
evidence that she had been able to collect to substantiate her theory of the
existence of the ux was not half as important as the evidence I was to produce in
the shape of that enormous green feather.
I came to the last paragraph, smoking serenely, and leaning back comfortably,
one leg crossed over the other. Then, suddenly, my attention became riveted on
the words under my eyes. Could I have read them aright? Could I believe what I
read in ever-growing astonishment which culminated in an excitement that
stirred the very hair on my head?
"The ux exists. There is no longer room for doubt. Ocular proof I can now offer
in the shape of five living eggs of this gigantic bird. All measures have been
taken to hatch these eggs; they are now in the vast incubator. It is my plan to
have them hatch, one by one, under the very eyes of the International Congress.
It will be the greatest triumph that science has witnessed since the discovery of
the New World.
XI
That evening, a few minutes before nine o'clock, I descended from a cab in front
of No. 8 Rue d'Alouette, and was ushered into a pretty reception-room by an
irreproachable servant, who disappeared directly with my card.
In a few moments the young Countess came in, exquisite in her silvery
dinner-gown, eyes bright, white arms extended in a charming, impulsive
welcome. The touch of her silky fingers thrilled me; I was dumb under the
enchantment of her beauty; and I think she understood my silence, for her blue
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 77
eyes became troubled and the happy parting of her lips changed to a pensive
curve.
What evidence I possessed to sustain our theory concerning the existence of the
ux I hastened to reveal; then, heart beating excitedly, I asked her about the eggs
and where they were at present, and whether she believed it possible to bring
them to Paris--all these questions in the same breath--which brought a happy
light into her eyes and a delicious ripple of laughter to her lips.
"Why, of course it is possible to bring the eggs here," she cried. "Am I sure?
Parbleu! The eggs are already here, monsieur!"
"In Paris? Mais oui; and in my own house--this very house, monsieur. Come,
you shall behold them with your own eyes!"
Her eyes were brilliant with excitement; impulsively she stretched out her rosy
hand. I took it; and she led me quickly back through the drawing-room, through
the dining-room, across the butler's pantry, and into a long, dark hallway. We
were almost running now--I keeping tight hold of her soft little hand, she, raising
her gown a trifle, hurrying down the hallway, silken petticoats rustling like a silk
banner in the wind. A turn to the right brought us to the cellar-stairs; down we
hastened, and then across the cemented floor towards a long, glass-fronted shelf,
pierced with steam-pipes.
Never, never can I forget what that flood of gas-light revealed. In a row stood
five large, glass-mounted incubators; behind the glass doors lay, in dormant
majesty, five enormous eggs. The eggs were pale-green--lighter, somewhat, than
robins' eggs, but not as pale as herons' eggs. Each egg appeared to be larger than
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 78
Five little silver thermometers inside the glass doors indicated a temperature of
95° Fahrenheit. I noticed that there was an automatic arrangement connected
with the pipes which regulated the temperature.
I was too deeply moved for words. Speech seemed superfluous as we stood
there, hand in hand, contemplating those gigantic, pale-green eggs.
I held the hand of the young Countess very tightly. Her fingers closed slightly.
Then and there, in the solemn presence of those emotionless eggs, I placed my
arm around her supple waist and kissed her.
She said nothing. Presently she stooped to observe the thermometer. Naturally, it
registered 95° Fahrenheit.
I turned out the gas, with that instinct of economy which early wastefulness has
implanted in me, and followed the Countess Suzanne through the suite of rooms
and into the small reception-hall where she had first received me.
She was sitting on a low divan, head bent, slowly turning a sapphire ring on her
finger, round and round.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 79
"Because," she replied, which was also the correct and regular answer.
She turned the sapphire ring on her finger. Presently she tired of this, so I lifted
her passive hand very gently and continued turning the sapphire ring on her
finger, slowly, to harmonize with the cadence of our unspoken thoughts.
Towards midnight I went home, walking with great care through a new street in
Paris, paved exclusively with rose-colored blocks of air.
XII
At nine o'clock in the evening, July 31, 1900, the International Congress was to
assemble in the great lecture-hall of the Belgian Scientific Pavilion, which
adjourned the Tasmanian Pavilion, to hear the Countess Suzanne d'Alzette read
her paper on the ux.
That morning the Countess and I, with five furniture vans, had transported the
five great incubators to the platform of the lecture-hall, and had engaged an army
of plumbers and gas-fitters to make the steam-heating connections necessary to
maintain in the incubators a temperature of 100° Fahrenheit.
A heavy green curtain hid the stage from the body of the lecture-hall. Behind
this curtain the five enormous eggs reposed, each in its incubator.
The Countess Suzanne was excited and calm by turns, her cheeks were pink, her
lips scarlet, her eyes bright as blue planets at midnight.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 80
Without faltering she rehearsed her discourse before me, reading from her
type-written manuscript in a clear voice, in which I could scarcely discern a
tremor. Then we went through the dumb show of exhibiting the uxen eggs to a
frantically applauding audience; she responded to countless supposititious
encores, I leading her out repeatedly before the green curtain to face the great,
damp, darkened auditorium.
After that we retired behind the curtain to sit on an empty box and eat
sandwiches and watch the last lingering plumbers pasting up the steam
connections with a pot of molten lead.
They informed us that they were union men and that they hoped we were too.
And I replied that union was certainly my ultimate purpose, at which the young
Countess smiled dreamily at vacancy.
We did not dare leave the incubators. The plumbers lingered on, hour after hour,
while we sat and watched the little silver thermometers, and waited.
It was time for the Countess Suzanne to dress, and still the plumbers had not
finished; so I sent a messenger for her maid, to bring her trunk to the
lecture-hall, and I despatched another messenger to my lodgings for my evening
clothes and fresh linen.
There were several dressing-rooms off the stage. Here, about six o'clock, the
Countess retired with her maid, to dress, leaving me to watch the plumbers and
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 81
the thermometers.
When the Countess Suzanne returned, radiant and lovely in an evening gown of
black lace, I gave her the roses I had brought for her and hurried off to dress in
my turn, leaving her to watch the thermometers.
I was not absent more than half an hour, but when I returned I found the
Countess anxiously conversing with the plumbers and pointing despairingly at
the thermometers, which now registered only 95°.
"You must keep up the temperature!" I said. "Those eggs are due to hatch within
a few hours. What's the trouble with the heat?"
The plumber did not know, but thought the connections were defective.
"But that's why we called you in!" exclaimed the Countess. "Can't you fix things
securely?"
"Oh, we'll fix things, lady," replied the plumber, condescendingly, and he
ambled away to rub his thumb up and down a pipe.
As we alone were unable to move and handle the enormous eggs, the Countess,
whose sweet character was a stranger to vindictiveness or petty resentment, had
written to the members of the ornithological committee, revealing the
marvellous fortune which had crowned her efforts in the search for evidence to
sustain her theory concerning the ux, and inviting these gentlemen to aid her in
displaying the great eggs to the assembled congress.
This she had done the night previous. Every one of the gentlemen invited had
come post-haste to her "hotel," to view the eggs with their own sceptical and
astonished eyes; and the fair young Countess and I tasted our first triumph in her
cellar, whither we conducted Sir Peter Grebe, the Crown-Prince of Monaco,
Baron de Becasse, and his Majesty King Christian of Finland.
So it happened that these gentlemen were coming to-night to give their aid to us
in moving the priceless eggs, and lend their countenance and enthusiastic
support to the young Countess in her maiden effort.
Sir Peter Grebe arrived first, all covered with orders and decorations, and greeted
us affectionately, calling the Countess the "sweetest lass in France," and me his
undutiful Yankee cousin who had landed feet foremost at the expense of the
British Empire.
The King of Finland, the Crown-Prince, and Baron de Becasse arrived together,
a composite mass of medals, sashes, and academy palms. To see them moving
boxes about, straightening chairs, and pulling out rugs reminded me of those
golden-embroidered gentlemen who run out into the arena and roll up carpets
after the acrobats have finished their turn in the Nouveau Cirque.
I was aiding the King of Finland to move a heavy keg of nails, when the
Countess called out to me in alarm, saying that the thermometers had dropped to
80° Fahrenheit.
I spoke sharply to the plumbers, who were standing in a circle behind the
dressing-rooms; but they answered sullenly that they could do no more work that
day.
Indignant and alarmed, I ordered them to come out to the stage, and, after some
hesitation, they filed out, a sulky, silent lot of workmen, with their tools already
gathered up and tied in their kits. At once I noticed that a new man had appeared
among them--a red-faced, stocky man wearing a frock-coat and a shiny silk hat.
"Well?" said I.
"Come, come, that's all right," said the man in the silk hat. "These men know
their business without you tellin' them."
"Oh, I'm just a walkin' delegate," he replied, with a sneer. "There's a strike in
New York and I come over here to tie this here exposition up. See?"
"You mean to say you won't let these men finish their work?" I asked,
thunderstruck.
"What will you take to stay and attend to those steam-pipes?" I demanded,
desperately.
"It can't be done nohow," observed the man in the silk hat. "That New York
strike is good for a month yet." Then, turning to the workmen, he nodded and, to
my horror, the whole gang filed out after him, turning deaf ears to my entreaties
and threats.
There was a deathly silence, then Sir Peter exploded into a vivid shower of
words. The Countess, pale as a ghost, gave me a heart-breaking look. The
Crown-Prince wept.
The King of Finland sat down on a chair and pressed his hands over his eyes.
Baron de Becasse ran round and round, uttering subdued and plaintive screams;
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 84
"Gentlemen," I cried, desperately, "we must save those eggs! They are on the
very eve of hatching! Who will volunteer?"
"I'll show you," I exclaimed, running to the incubators and beckoning to the
Baron to aid me.
In a moment we had rolled out the great egg, made a nest on the stage floor with
the bales of cotton-wool, and placed the egg in it. One after another we rolled
out the remaining eggs, building for each its nest of cotton; and at last the five
enormous eggs lay there in a row behind the green curtain.
"Now," said I, excitedly, to the King, "you must get up on that egg and try to
keep it warm."
The King began to protest, but I would take no denial, and presently his Majesty
was perched up on the great egg, gazing foolishly about at the others, who were
now all climbing up on their allotted eggs.
"Great Heaven!" muttered the King, as Sir Peter settled down comfortably on his
egg, "I am willing to give life and fortune for the sake of science, but I can't bear
to hatch out eggs like a bird!"
The Crown-Prince was now sitting patiently beside the Baron de Becasse.
"I feel in my bones," he murmured, "that I'm about to hatch something. Can't you
hear a tapping on the shell of your egg, Baron?"
It certainly was; for, the next moment, the Baron fell into his egg with a crash
and a muffled shriek, and floundered out, dripping, yellow as a canary.
We all gave him a cheer, which was hushed as the stage-manager ran in, warning
us that the audience was already assembled and in place.
"You're not going to raise the curtain while we're sitting, are you?" demanded
the King of Finland, anxiously.
"No, no," I said; "sit tight, your Majesty. Courage, gentlemen! Our vindication is
at hand!"
The Countess glanced at me with startled eyes; I took her hand, saluted it
respectfully, and then quietly led her before the curtain, facing an ocean of
upturned faces across the flaring footlights.
Very quietly she touched her lips to the eau-sucrée, laid her manuscript on the
table, raised her beautiful head, and began:
A sharp report behind the curtain drowned her voice. She paled; the audience
rose amid cries of excitement.
"Sir Peter has hatched out his egg," I whispered. "Hark! There goes another
egg!" And I ran behind the curtain.
Such a scene as I beheld was never dreamed of on land or sea. Two enormous
young uxen, all over gigantic pin-feathers, were wandering stupidly about.
Mounted on one was Sir Peter Grebe, eyes starting from his apoplectic visage;
on the other, clinging to the bird's neck, hung the Baron de Becasse.
Before I could move, the two remaining eggs burst, and a pair of huge, scrawny
fledglings rose among the débris, bearing off on their backs the King and
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 86
Crown-Prince.
I sprang to his aid, but tripped on the curtain-spring. The next instant the green
curtain shot up, and there, revealed to that vast and distinguished audience,
roamed four enormous chicks, bearing on their backs the most respected and
exclusive aristocracy of Europe.
The Countess Suzanne turned with a little shriek of horror, then sat down in her
chair, laid her lovely head on the table, and very quietly fainted away,
unconscious of the frantic cheers which went roaring to the roof.
*****
This, then, is the true history of the famous exposition scandal. And, as I have
said, had it not been for the presence in that audience of two American reporters
nobody would have known what all the world now knows--nobody would have
read of the marvellous feats of bareback riding indulged in by the King of
Finland--nobody would have read how Sir Peter Grebe steered his mount safely
past the footlights only to come to grief over the prompter's box.
But this is scandal. And, as for the charming Countess Suzanne d'Alzette, the
public has heard all that it is entitled to hear, and much that it is not entitled to
hear.
However, on second thoughts, perhaps the public is entitled to hear a little more.
I will therefore say this much--the shock of astonishment which stunned me
when the curtain flew up, revealing the King-bestridden uxen, was nothing to the
awful blow which smote me when the Count d'Alzette leaped from the orchestra,
over the footlights, and bore away with him the fainting form of his wife, the
lovely Countess d'Alzette.
poisonous, and unobtrusive spot, and make a collection of isopods. The island of
Java appeared to me to be as poisonously unobtrusive and inexpensive a region
as I had ever heard of; a steamer sailed from Antwerp for Batavia in twenty-four
hours. Therefore, as I say, I took the night-train for Brussels, and the steamer
from Antwerp the following evening.
Letters from home came occasionally. Professor Farrago had returned to the
Bronx and had been re-elected to the high office he had so nobly held when I
first became associated with him.
Through his kindness and by his advice I remained for several years in the Far
East, until a letter from him arrived recalling me and also announcing his own
hurried and sudden departure for Florida. He also mentioned my promotion to
the office of subcurator of department; so I started on my homeward voyage
very much pleased with the world, and arrived in New York on April 1, 1904,
ready for a rest to which I believed myself entitled. And the first thing that they
handed me was a letter from Professor Farrago, summoning me South.
XIII
The letter that started me--I was going to say startled me, but only imaginative
people are startled--the letter, then, that started me from Bronx Park to the South
I print without the permission of my superior, Professor Farrago. I have not
obtained his permission, for the somewhat exciting reason that nobody knows
where he is. Publicity being now recognized as the annihilator of mysteries, a
benevolent purpose alone inspires me to publish a letter so strange, so
pathetically remarkable, in view of what has recently occurred.
As I say, I had only just returned from Java with a valuable collection of
undescribed isopods--an order of edriophthalmous crustaceans with seven free
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 88
thoracic somites furnished with fourteen legs--and I beg my reader's pardon, but
my reader will see the necessity for the author's absolute accuracy in insisting on
detail, because the story that follows is a dangerous story for a scientist to tell, in
view of the vast amount of nonsense and fiction in circulation masquerading as
stories of scientific adventure.
"One complete outfit of woman's clothing. "One camera. "One light steel cage,
large enough for you to stand in. "One stenographer (male sex). "One five-pound
steel tank, with siphon and hose attachment. "One rifle and ammunition. "Three
ounces rosium oxyde. "One ounce chlorate strontium.
"You will then, within twenty-four hours, set out with the stenographer and the
supplies mentioned and join me in camp on Little Sprite Lake. This order is
formal and admits of no delay. You will appreciate the necessity of absolute and
unquestioning obedience when I tell you that I am practically on the brink of the
most astonishing discovery recorded in natural history since Monsieur Zani
discovered the purple-spotted zoombok in Nyanza; and that I depend upon you
and your zeal and fidelity for success.
"I dare not, lest my letter fall into unscrupulous hands, convey to you more than
a hint of what lies before us in these uncharted solitudes of the Everglades.
"You must read between the lines when I say that because one can see through a
sheet of glass, the glass is none the less solid and palpable. One can see through
it--if that is also seeing it; but one can nevertheless hold it and feel it and receive
from it sensations of cold or heat according to its temperature.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 89
"Certain jellyfish are absolutely transparent when in the water, and one can only
know of their presence by accidental contact, not by sight.
"Have you ever thought that possibly there might exist larger and more highly
organized creatures transparent to eyesight, yet palpable to touch?
"Little Sprite Lake is the jumping-off place; beyond lie the Everglades, the
outskirts of which are haunted by the Seminoles, the interior of which have
never been visited by man, as far as we know.
"As you are aware, no general survey of Florida has yet been made; there exist
no maps of the Everglades south of Okeechobee; even Little Sprite Lake is but a
vague blot on our maps. We know, of course, that south of the eleven thousand
square miles of fresh water which is called Lake Okeechobee the Everglades
form a vast, delta-like projection of thousands and thousands of square miles.
Darkest Africa is no longer a mystery; but the Everglades to-day remain the
sombre secret of our continent. And, to-day, this unknown expanse of swamps,
barrens, forests, and lagoons is greater than in the days of De Soto, because the
entire region has been slowly rising.
"All this, my dear sir, you already know, and I ask your indulgence for recalling
the facts to your memory. I do it for this reason--the search for what I am
seeking may lead us to utter destruction; and therefore my formal orders to you
should be modified to this extent:--do you volunteer? If you volunteer, my
orders remain; if not, turn this letter over to Mr. Kingsley, who will find for me
the companion I require.
"In the event of your coming, you must break your journey at False Cape and
ask for an old man named Slunk. He will give you a packet; you will give him a
dollar, and drive on to Cape Canaveral, and you will do what is to be done there.
From there to Fort Kissimmee, to Okeechobee, traversing the lake to the Rita
River, where I have marked the trail to Little Sprite.
"At Little Sprite I shall await you; beyond that point a merciful Providence alone
can know what awaits us.
"Yours fraternally,
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 90
"FARRAGO.
"P.S.--I think that you had better make your will, and suggest the same idea to
the stenographer who is to accompany you.
F."
And that was the letter I received while seated comfortably on the floor of my
work-room, surrounded by innocent isopods, all patiently awaiting scientific
investigation.
And this is what I did: Within twenty-four hours I had assembled the supplies
required--the cage, the woman's clothing, tank, arms and ammunition, and the
chemicals; I had secured accommodations, for that evening, on the Florida,
Volusia, and Fort Lauderdale Railway as far as Citron City; and I had been
interviewing stenographers all day long, the result of an innocently worded
advertisement in the daily newspapers.
It was now very close to the time when I must summon a cab and drive to the
ferry; and yet I was still shy one stenographer.
I had seen scores; they simply would not listen to the proposition. "Why does a
gentleman in the backwoods of Florida want a stenographer?" they demanded;
and as I had not the faintest idea, I could only say so. I think the majority
interviewed concluded I had escaped from a State institution.
As the time for departure approached I became desperate, urging and beseeching
applicants to accompany me; but neither sympathy for my instant need nor
desire for salary moved them.
I waited until the last moment, hoping against hope. Then, with a groan of
despair, I seized luggage and raincoat, made for the door and flung it open, only
to find myself face to face with an attractive young girl, apparently on the point
of pressing the electric button.
She was noticeably attractive in her storm-coat and pretty hat, and I really was
sorry--so sorry that I added:
"I have about twenty-seven seconds to place at your service before I go."
"Twenty will be sufficient," she replied, pleasantly. "I saw your advertisement
for a stenographer--"
"N-no."
"What? Go to Florida?"
"Y-yes--if I must."
"Go?" I repeated, grimly; "then you've exactly two and three-quarter seconds left
for preparations."
Instinctively she raised her little gloved hand and patted her hair. "I'm ready,"
she said, unsteadily.
"One extra second to make your will," I added, stunned by her self-possession.
"I--I have nothing to leave--nobody to leave it to," she said, smiling; "I am
ready."
I took that extra second myself for a lightning course in reflection upon effects
and consequences.
"It's silly, it's probably murder," I said, "but you're engaged! Now we must run
for it!"
And that is how I came to engage the services of Miss Helen Barrison as
stenographer.
XIV
At noon on the second day I disembarked from the train at Citron City with all
paraphernalia--cage, chemicals, arsenal, and stenographer; an accumulation of
very dusty impedimenta--all but the stenographer. By three o'clock our hotel
livery-rig was speeding along the beach at False Cape towards the tall lighthouse
looming above the dunes.
The abode of a gentleman named Slunk was my goal. I sat brooding in the
rickety carriage, still dazed by the rapidity of my flight from New York; the
stenographer sat beside me, blue eyes bright with excitement, fair hair blowing
in the sea-wind.
Our railway companionship had been of the slightest, also absolutely formal; for
I was too absorbed in conjecturing the meaning of this journey to be more than
absent-mindedly civil; and she, I fancy, had had time for repentance and perhaps
for a little fright, though I could discover traces of neither.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 93
I remember she left the train at some city or other where we were held for an
hour; and out of the car-window I saw her returning with a brand-new grip sack.
She must have bought clothes, for she continued to remain cool and fresh in her
summer shirt-waists and short outing skirt; and she looked immaculate now,
sitting there beside me, the trace of a smile curving her red mouth.
After a moment's silent consideration of the Atlantic Ocean she said, "When do
my duties begin, Mr. Gilland?"
"The Lord alone knows," I replied, grimly. "Are you repenting of your bargain?"
Strange waters, strange skies--a strange, lost land aquiver under an exotic sun;
and there she sat with her wise eyes of a child, unconcerned, watching the world
in perfect confidence.
"Certainly," she said, smiling as the maid of Manhattan alone knows how to
smile--shyly, inquiringly--with a lingering hint of laughter in the curled lips'
corners. Then her sensitive features fell a trifle. "Not pluck," she said, "but
necessity; I had no chance to choose, no time to wait. My last dollar, Mr.
Gilland, is in my purse!"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 94
With a gay little gesture she drew it from her shirt-front, then, smiling, sat
turning it over and over in her lap.
The sun fell on her hands, gilding the smooth skin with the first tint of sunburn.
Under the corners of her eyes above the rounded cheeks a pink stain lay like the
first ripening flush on a wild strawberry. That, too, was the mark left by the
caress of wind and sun. I had had no idea she was so pretty.
"I try to make the best of things," she said, gazing off into the horizon haze.
"Look," she added; "is that a man?"
A spot far away on the beach caught my eye. At first I thought it was a
pelican--and small wonder, too, for the dumpy, waddling, goose-necked
individual who loomed up resembled a heavy bottomed bird more than a human
being.
"Do you suppose that could be Mr. Slunk?" asked the stenographer, as our
vehicle drew nearer.
He looked as though his name ought to be Slunk; he was digging coquina clams,
and he dug with a pecking motion like a water-turkey mastering a mullet too big
for it.
His name was Slunk; he admitted it when I accused him. Our negro driver drew
rein, and I descended to the sand and gazed on Mr. Slunk.
He was, as I have said, not impressive, even with the tremendous background of
sky and ocean.
"I've come something over a thousand miles to see you," I said, reluctant to
admit that I had come as far to see such a specimen of human architecture.
A weather-beaten grin stretched the skin that covered his face, and he shoved a
hairy paw into the pockets of his overalls, digging deeply into profound depths.
First he brought to light a twist of South Carolina tobacco, which he leisurely
inserted in his mouth--not, apparently, for pleasure, but merely to get rid of it.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 95
The second object excavated from the overalls was a small packet addressed to
me. This he handed to me; I gravely handed him a silver dollar; he went back to
his clam-digging, and I entered the carriage and drove on. All had been carried
out according to the letter of my instructions so far, and my spirits brightened.
"If you don't mind I'll read my instructions," I said, in high good-humor.
"Drive to Cape Canaveral along the beach. You will find a gang of men at work
on a government breakwater. The superintendent is Mr. Rowan. Show him this
letter.
"FARRAGO."
Rather disappointed--for I had been expecting to find in the packet some key to
the interesting mystery which had sent Professor Farrago into the Everglades--I
thrust the missive into my pocket and resumed a study of the immediate
landscape. It had not changed as we progressed: ocean, sand, low dunes crowned
with impenetrable tangles of wild bay, sparkleberry, and live-oak, with here and
there a weather-twisted palmetto sprawling, and here and there the battered
blades of cactus and Spanish-bayonet thrust menacingly forward; and over all
the vultures, sailing, sailing--some mere circling motes lost in the blue above,
some sheering the earth so close that their swiftly sweeping shadows slanted
continually across our road.
"Carrion-crows--yes.
--only they don't," I added, my song putting me in good-humor once more. And I
glanced askance at the pretty stenographer.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 96
How on earth could I have overlooked that well-known fact. The hurry and
anxiety, the stress of instant preparation and departure, had clean driven it from
my absent-minded head.
Jogging on over the sand, I sat silent, cudgelling my brains for a solution of the
disastrous predicament I had gotten into. I pictured the astonished rage of my
superior--my probable dismissal from employment--perhaps the general
overturning and smash-up of the entire expedition.
I forgot my predicament when I saw a thin white man in sun-helmet and khaki
directing the work from the beach; and as our horses plodded up, I stepped out
and hailed him by name.
"Yes, my name is Rowan," he said, instantly, turning to meet me. His sharp,
clear eyes included the vehicle and the stenographer, and he lifted his helmet,
then looked squarely at me.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 97
"My name is Gilland," I said, dropping my voice and stepping nearer. "I have
just come from Bronx Park, New York."
His formal manner changed at once. "Come over here and let us talk a bit," he
said, cordially--then hesitated, glancing at Miss Barrison--"if your wife would
excuse us--"
The pretty stenographer colored, and I dryly set Mr. Rowan right--which
appeared to disturb him more than his mistake.
"Pardon me, Mr. Gilland, but you do not propose to take this young girl into the
Everglades, do you?"
Perfectly aware that I resented his inquiry, he cast a perplexed and troubled
glance at her, then slowly led the way to a great block of sun-warmed coquina,
where he sat down, motioning me to do the same.
"I see," he said, "that you don't know just where you are going or just what you
are expected to do."
"Well, I'll tell you, then. You are going into the devil's own country to look for
something that I fled five hundred miles to avoid."
"Oh! And what is this object that I am to look for and from which you fled five
hundred miles?"
"No, sir. Perhaps if I had known I should have run a thousand miles."
"You think, then, that I'd better send Miss Barrison back to New York?" I asked.
"Then I'll do it!" I said, nervously. "Back she goes from the first railroad
station."
In a flash the thought came to me that here was a way to avoid the wrath of
Professor Farrago--and a good excuse, too. He might forgive my not bringing a
man as stenographer in view of my limited time; he never would forgive my
presenting him with a woman.
"She must go back," I repeated; and it rather surprised me to find myself already
anticipating loneliness--something that never in all my travels had I experienced
before.
"By the first train," I added, firmly, disliking Mr. Rowan without any reason
except that he had suddenly deprived me of my stenographer.
"What I have to tell you," he began, lighting a cigarette, the mate to which I
declined, "is this: Three years ago, before I entered this contracting business, I
was in the government employ as officer in the Coast Survey. Our duties took us
into Florida waters; we were months at a time working on shore."
He pulled thoughtfully at his cigarette and blew a light cloud into the air.
"I had leave for a month once; and like an ass I prepared to spend it in a
hunting-trip among the Everglades."
"I believe," he went on, "that we penetrated the Everglades farther than any
white man who ever lived to return. There's nothing very dismal about the
Everglades--the greater part, I mean. You get high and low hummock, marshes,
creeks, lakes, and all that. If you get lost, you're a goner. If you acquire fever,
you're as well off as the seraphim--and not a whit better. There are the usual
animals there--bears (little black fellows) lynxes, deer, panthers, alligators, and a
few stray crocodiles. As for snakes, of course they're there, moccasins a-plenty,
some rattlers, but, after all, not as many snakes as one finds in Alabama, or even
northern Florida and Georgia.
"The Seminoles won't help you--won't even talk to you. They're a sullen
pack--but not murderous, as far as I know. Beyond their inner limits lie the
unknown regions."
"Why?"
"What?"
"No, but I felt something." He dropped his cigarette and ground it into the sand
viciously. "To cut it short," he said, "I am most unwillingly led to believe that
there are--creatures--of some sort in the Everglades--living creatures quite as
large as you or I--and that they are perfectly transparent--as transparent as a
colorless jellyfish."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 100
Instantly the veiled import of Professor Farrago's letter was made clear to me.
He, too, believed that.
"It embarrasses me like the devil to say such a thing," continued Rowan, digging
in the sand with his spurred heels. "It seems so--so like a whopping lie--it seems
so childish and ridiculous--so cursed cheap! But I fled; and there you are. I
might add," he said, indifferently, "that I have the ordinary portion of courage
allotted to normal men."
"I don't know." An obstinate look came into his eyes. "I don't know, and I
absolutely refuse to speculate for the benefit of anybody. I wouldn't do it for my
friend Professor Farrago; and I'm not going to do it for you," he ended, laughing
a rather grim laugh that somehow jarred me into realizing the amazing import of
his story. For I did not doubt it, strange as it was--fantastic, incredible though it
sounded in the ears of a scientist.
What it was that carried conviction I do not know--perhaps the fact that my
superior credited it; perhaps the manner of narration. Told in quiet,
commonplace phrases, by an exceedingly practical and unimaginative young
man who was plainly embarrassed in the telling, the story rang out like a shout in
a cañon, startling because of the absolute lack of emphasis employed in the
telling.
"Professor Farrago asked me to speak of this to no one except the man who
should come to his assistance. He desired the first chance of clearing this--this
rather perplexing matter. No doubt he didn't want exploring parties prowling
about him," added Rowan, smiling. "But there's no fear of that, I fancy. I never
expect to tell that story again to anybody; I shouldn't have told him, only
somehow it's worried me for three years, and though I was deadly afraid of
ridicule, I finally made up my mind that science ought to have a hack at it.
"When I was in New York last winter I summoned up courage and wrote
Professor Farrago. He came to see me at the Holland House that same evening; I
told him as much as I ever shall tell anybody. That is all, Mr. Gilland."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 101
For a long time I sat silent, musing over the strange words. After a while I asked
him whether Professor Farrago was supplied with provisions; and he said he
was; that a great store of staples and tins of concentrated rations had been carried
in as far as Little Sprite Lake; that Professor Farrago was now there alone,
having insisted upon dismissing all those he had employed.
"There was no practical use for a guide," added Rowan, "because no cracker, no
Indian, and no guide knows the region beyond the Seminole country."
I rose, thanking him and offering my hand. He took it and shook it in manly
fashion, saying: "I consider Professor Farrago a very brave man; I may say the
same of any man who volunteers to accompany him. Good-bye, Mr. Gilland; I
most earnestly wish for your success. Professor Farrago left this letter for you."
And that was all. I climbed back into the rickety carriage, carrying my unopened
letter; the negro driver cracked his whip and whistled, and the horses trotted
inland over a fine shell road which was to lead us across Verbena Junction to
Citron City. Half an hour later we crossed the tracks at Verbena and turned into a
broad marl road. This aroused me from my deep and speculative reverie, and
after a few moments I asked Miss Barrison's indulgence and read the letter from
Professor Farrago which Mr. Rowan had given me:
"DEAR MR. GILLAND,--You now know all I dared not write, fearing to bring
a swarm of explorers about my ears in case the letter was lost, and found by
unscrupulous meddlers. If you still are willing to volunteer, knowing all that I
know, join me as soon as possible. If family considerations deter you from
taking what perhaps is an insane risk, I shall not expect you to join me. In that
event, return to New York immediately and send Kingsley.
"Yours, F."
"What the deuce is the matter with him!" I exclaimed, irritably. "I'll take any
chances Kingsley does!"
"Miss Barrison," I said, plunging into the subject headfirst, "I'm extremely sorry,
but I have news that forces me to believe the journey too dangerous for you to
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 102
attempt, so I think that it would be much better--" The consternation in her pretty
face checked me.
"But a verbal contract is binding between honorable people, isn't it, Mr.
Gilland?"
"Yes, but--"
"And ours was a verbal contract; and in consideration you paid me my first
week's salary, and I bought shirt-waists and a short skirt and three changes
of--and tooth-brushes and--"
"Why not?"
"Really I do. You are going into a dangerous country and you're afraid I'll be
frightened."
"Seminoles--"
"And that too. What else is there? Did the young man in the sun-helmet tell you
of something worse?"
"What?"
"I am not at liberty to tell you, Miss Barrison," I said, striving to appear shocked.
"It would not make any difference anyway," she observed, calmly. "I'm not
afraid of anything in the world."
"Yes, you are!" I said. "Listen to me; I'd be awfully glad to have you go--I--I
really had no idea how I'd miss you--miss such pleasant companionship. But it is
not possible--" The recollection of Professor Farrago's aversion suddenly
returned. "No, no," I said, "it can't be done. I'm most unhappy over this mistake
of mine; please don't look as though you were ready to cry!"
"I'm a brute to do it, but I must; I was a bigger brute to engage you, but I did.
Don't--please don't look at me that way, Miss Barrison! As a matter of fact, I'm
tender-hearted and I can't endure it."
"If you only knew what I had been through you wouldn't send me away," she
said, in a low voice. "It took my last penny to clothe myself and pay for the last
lesson at the college of stenography. I--I lived on almost nothing for weeks;
every respectable place was filled; I walked and walked and walked, and nobody
wanted me--they all required people with experience--and how can I have
experience until I begin, Mr. Gilland? I was perfectly desperate when I went to
see you, knowing that you had advertised for a man--" The slightest break in her
clear voice scared me.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 104
"I'm not going to cry," she said, striving to smile. "If I must go, I will go. I--I
didn't mean to say all this--but--but I've been so--so discouraged;--and you were
not very cross with me--"
Smitten with remorse, I picked up her hand and fell to patting it violently, trying
to think of something to say. The exercise did not appear to stimulate my wits.
"I will see," I said, weakly, "but I fear there's trouble ahead for this expedition."
"I fear there is," she agreed, in a cheerful voice. "You have a rifle and a cage in
your luggage. Are you going to trap Indians and have me report their language?"
"No, I'm not going to trap Indians," I said, sharply. "They may trap us--but that's
a detail. What I want to say to you is this: Professor Farrago detests unmarried
women, and I forgot it when I engaged you."
"Why? Well-bred people are not demonstrative in public," she retorted, turning a
trifle pink.
"I think there is no necessity for carrying a pleasantry into our private life," she
said, in a perfectly amiable voice. "Anyway, if Professor Farrago's feelings are to
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 105
be spared, no sacrifice on the part of a mere girl could be too great," she added,
gayly; "I will wear men's clothes if you wish."
"You may have to anyhow in the jungle," I said; "and as it's not an uncommon
thing these days, nobody would ever take you for anything except what you
are--a very wilful and plucky and persistent and--"
"You're welcome," I snapped. The near whistle of a locomotive warned us, and I
rose in the carriage, looking out across the sand-hills.
"Our train!"
"We'll wait till we get to Citron City," I said, weakly; "then it will be time
enough to discuss the situation, won't it?"
"Yes, indeed," she said, smiling; but she knew, and I already feared, that the
situation no longer admitted of discussion. In a few moments more we emerged,
without warning, from the scrub-crested sand-hills into the single white street of
Citron City, where China-trees hung heavy with bloom, and magnolias, already
set with perfumed candelabra, spread soft, checkered shadows over the marl.
The train lay at the station, oceans of heavy, black smoke lazily flowing from the
locomotive; negroes were hoisting empty fruit-crates aboard the baggage-car,
through the door of which I caught a glimpse of my steel cage and remaining
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 106
"Telegram hyah foh Mistuh Gilland," remarked the operator, lounging at his
window as we descended from our dusty vehicle. He had not addressed himself
to anybody in particular, but I said that I was Mr. Gilland, and he produced the
envelope. "Toted in from Okeechobee?" he inquired, listlessly.
"It's foh yoh, suh, I reckon," said the operator, handing it out with a yawn. Then
he removed his hat and fanned his head, which was perfectly bald.
I opened the yellow envelope. "Get me a good dog with points," was the laconic
message; and it irritated me to receive such idiotic instructions at such a time and
in such a place. A good dog? Where the mischief could I find a dog in a town
consisting of ten houses and a water-tank? I said as much to the bald-headed
operator, who smiled wearily and replaced his hat: "Dawg? They's moh
houn'-dawgs in Citron City than they's wood-ticks to keep them busy. I reckon a
dollah 'll do a heap foh you, suh."
"Points? I sholy can, suh;--plenty of points. What kind of dawg do yoh requiah,
suh?--live dawg? daid dawg? houn'-dawg? raid-dawg? hawg-dawg?
coon-dawg?--"
The locomotive emitted a long, lazy, softly modulated and thoroughly Southern
toot. I handed the operator a silver dollar, and he presently emerged from his
office and slouched off up the street, while I walked with Miss Barrison to the
station platform, where I resumed the discussion of her future movements.
"You are very young to take such a risk," I said, gravely. "Had I not better buy
your ticket back to New York? The north-bound train meets this one. I suppose
we are waiting for it now--" I stopped, conscious of her impatience.
Her face flushed brightly: "Yes; I think it best. I have embarrassed you too long
already--"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 107
"I am not an entertainer, only a stenographer," she said, curtly. "Please get me
my ticket, Mr. Gilland."
She gazed at me from the car-platform; the locomotive tooted two drawling
toots.
"It is for your sake," I said, avoiding her gaze as the far-off whistle of the
north-bound express came floating out of the blue distance.
She did not answer; I fished out my watch, regarding it in silence, listening to
the hum of the approaching train, which ought presently to bear her away into
the North, where nothing could menace her except the brilliant pitfalls of a
Christian civilization. But I stood there, temporizing, unable to utter a word as
her train shot by us with a rush, slower, slower, and finally stopped, with a
long-drawn sigh from the air-brakes.
"You have your hands full," she said to me; "I'll take him into the car for you."
She mounted the steps; I followed with the valises, striving to get a good view of
my acquisition over her shoulder.
"That isn't the kind of dog I wanted!" I repeated again and again, inspecting the
animal as it sprawled on the floor of the car at the edge of Miss Barrison's skirt.
"That dog is all voice and feet and emotion! What makes it stick up its paws like
that? I don't want that dog and I'm not going to identify myself with it! Where's
the operator--"
I turned towards the car-window; the operator's bald head was visible on a line
with the sill, and I made motions at him. He bowed with courtly grace, as though
I were thanking him.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 108
"I'm not!" I cried, shaking my head. "I wanted a dog with points--not the kind of
points that stick up all over this dog. Take him away!"
The operator's head appeared to be gliding out of my range of vision; then the
windows of the north-bound train slid past, faster and faster. A melancholy
grace-note from the dog, a jolt, and I turned around, appalled.
Miss Barrison sprang up and started towards the door, and I sped after her.
"I can jump," she said, breathlessly, edging out to the platform; "please let me!
There is time yet--if you only wouldn't hold me--so tight--"
A few moments later we walked slowly back together through the car and took
seats facing one another.
XV
It was on Sunday when I awoke to the realization that I had quitted civilization
and was afloat on an unfamiliar body of water in an open boat containing--
One light steel cage, One rifle and ammunition, One stenographer, Three ounces
rosium oxide, One hound-dog, Two valises.
A playful wave slopped over the bow and I lost count; but the pretty
stenographer made the inventory, while I resumed the oars, and the dog
punctured the primeval silence with staccato yelps.
A few minutes later everything and everybody was accounted for; the sky was
blue and the palms waved, and several species of dicky-birds tuned up as I
pulled with powerful strokes out into the sunny waters of Little Sprite Lake, now
within a few miles of my journey's end.
From ponds hidden in the marshes herons rose in lazily laborious flight, flapping
low across the water; high in the cypress yellow-eyed ospreys bent crested heads
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 109
"Who was it who shed crocodile tears at the prospect of shipping me North?" she
inquired.
"Pooh!" she said, and snapped her pretty, sun-tanned fingers; and I resumed the
oars in time to avoid shipwreck on a large mud-bar.
She reclined in the stern, serenely occupied with the view, now and then
caressing the discouraged dog, now and then patting her hair where the wind had
loosened a bright strand.
"If Professor Farrago didn't expect a woman stenographer," she said, abruptly,
"why did he instruct you to bring a complete outfit of woman's clothing?"
"But you bought them. Are they for a young woman or an old woman?"
"I don't know; I sent a messenger to a department store. I don't know what he
bought."
"No. Why? I should have been no wiser. I fancy they're all right, because the bill
was eighteen hundred dollars--"
"Is that much?" I asked, uneasily. "I've always heard women's clothing was
expensive. Wasn't it enough? I told the boy to order the best;--Professor Farrago
always requires the very best scientific instruments, and--I listed the clothes as
scientific accessories--that being the object of this expedition--What are you
laughing at?"
When it pleased her to recover her gravity she announced her desire to inspect
and repack the clothing; but I refused.
"They're for Professor Farrago," I said. "I don't know what he wants of them. I
don't suppose he intends to wear 'em and caper about the jungle, but they're his. I
got them because he told me to. I bought a cage, too, to fit myself, but I don't
suppose he means to put me in it. Perhaps," I added, "he may invite you into it."
"Let me refold the gowns," she pleaded, persuasively. "What does a clumsy man
know about packing such clothing as that? If you don't, they'll be ruined. It's a
shame to drag those boxes about through mud and water!"
So we made a landing, and lifted out and unlocked the boxes. All I could see
inside were mounds of lace and ribbons, and with a vague idea that Miss
Barrison needed no assistance I returned to the boat and sat down to smoke until
she was ready.
When she summoned me her face was flushed and her eyes bright.
"Those are certainly the most beautiful things!" she said, softly. "Why, it is like a
bride's trousseau--absolutely complete--all except the bridal gown--"
"No--not a day-dress."
"How do I know? I don't know anything; I can only presume that he doesn't
intend to open a department store in the Everglades. And if any lady is to wear
garments in his vicinity, I assume that those garments are to be anything except
diaphanous!... Please take your seat in the boat, Miss Barrison. I want to row and
think."
I had had my fill of exercise and thought when, about four o'clock in the
afternoon, Miss Barrison directed my attention to a point of palms jutting out
into the water about a mile to the southward.
She handed me the instrument; I hailed the shore; and presently a man appeared
under the palms at the water's edge.
"Hello!" I roared, trying to inject cheerfulness into the hollow bellow. "How are
you, professor?"
"Of course you expect to tell the truth," observed the pretty stenographer,
quietly.
I removed my lips from the megaphone and looked around at her. She returned
my gaze with a disturbing smile.
"Well, I do!" I fairly barked, and seizing the megaphone again, I set it to my lips
and roared, "My fiancée!"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 112
"Don't do that or you'll upset us," I snapped--"I'm telling the truth; I've engaged
myself to you; I did it mentally before I bellowed."
"But--"
"You know as well as I do what engagements mean," I said, picking up the oars
and digging them deep in the blue water.
"Good Lord!" he gasped, "are you mad, Gilland? I sent for a stenographer--"
Unloading the boat and carrying the luggage up under the palms, I heard her
saying:
"No, I am not in the least afraid of snakes, and I am quite ready to begin my
duties."
And she: "Mr. Gilland has been most thoughtful for my comfort. The journey
has been perfectly heavenly."
"Idiot!" I muttered, dragging the dog to the shore, where his yelps brought the
professor hurrying.
"Oh," mused the professor; "I thought he was full of--" He hesitated, inspecting
the animal, who, nose to the ground, stood investigating a smell of some sort.
"See," I said, with enthusiasm, "he's found a scent; he's trailing it already! Now
he's rolling on it!"
"He's rolling on one of our concentrated food lozenges," said the professor,
dryly. "Tie him up, Mr. Gilland, and ask Mrs. Gilland to come up to camp. Your
room is ready."
"Rooms," I corrected; "she isn't Mrs. Gilland yet," I added, with a forced smile.
"But you're practically married," observed the professor, "as you pointed out to
me. And if she's practically Mrs. Gilland, why not say so?"
From that moment, whenever we were alone together, he made a target of me. I
never had supposed him humorously vindictive; he was, and his apparently
innocent mistakes almost turned my hair gray.
But to Miss Barrison he was kind and courteous, and for a time over-serious.
Observing him, I could never detect the slightest symptom of dislike for her
sex--a failing which common rumor had always credited him with to the verge
of absolute rudeness.
On the contrary, it was perfectly plain to anybody that he liked her. There was in
his manner towards her a mixture of business formality and the deferential
attitude of a gentleman.
We were seated, just before sunset, outside of the hut built of palmetto logs,
when Professor Farrago, addressing us both, began the explanation of our future
duties.
"The reason I do this," he said, "is because I do not wish to hide anything that
transpires while we are on this expedition. Only the most scrupulously minute
record can satisfy me; no details are too small to merit record; I demand and I
court from my fellow-scientists and from the public the fullest investigation."
"You know, Mr. Gilland, how dangerous to the reputation of a scientific man is
any line of investigation into the unusual. If a man once is even suspected of
charlatanism, of sensationalism, of turning his attention to any phenomena not
strictly within the proper pale of scientific investigation, that man is doomed to
ridicule; his profession disowns him; he becomes a man without honor, without
authority. Is it not so?"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 115
"Yes," I said.
Sunk in profound reverie he sat there silent under the great, smooth palm-tree--a
venerable figure in his yellow dressing-gown and carpet slippers. Seated side by
side, we waited, a trifle awed. I could hear the soft breathing of the pretty
stenographer beside me.
"First of all," said Professor Farrago, looking up, "I must be able to trust those
who are here to aid me."
"I do not doubt you, my child," he said; "nor you, Gilland. And so I am going to
tell you this much now--more, I hope, later."
"Mr. Rowan, lately an officer of our Coast Survey, wrote me a letter from the
Holland House in New York--a letter so strange that, on reading it, I
immediately repaired to his hotel, where for hours we talked together.
"I have now been here two months, and I am satisfied of certain facts. First,
there do exist in this unexplored wilderness certain forms of life which are solid
and palpable, but transparent and practically invisible. Second, these living
creatures belong to the animal kingdom, are warm-blooded vertebrates, possess
powers of locomotion, but whether that of flight I am not certain. Third, they
appear to possess such senses as we enjoy--smell, touch, sight, hearing, and no
doubt the sense of taste. Fourth, their skin is smooth to the touch, and the
temperature of the epidermis appears to approximate that of a normal human
being. Fifth and last, whether bipeds or quadrupeds I do not know, though all
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 116
evidence appears to confirm my theory that they walk erect. One pair of their
limbs appear to terminate in a sort of foot--like a delicately shaped human foot,
except that there appear to be no toes. The other pair of limbs terminate in
something that, from the single instance I experienced, seemed to resemble soft
but firm antennæ or, perhaps, digitated palpi--"
"I don't know, but I think so. Once, when I was standing in the forest, perfectly
aware that creatures I could not see had stealthily surrounded me, the tension
was brought to a crisis when over my face, from cheek to chin, stole a soft
something, brushing the skin as delicately as a child's fingers might brush it."
A care-worn smile crept into his eyes. "A test for nerves, you think, Mr. Gilland?
I agree with you. Nobody fears what anybody can see."
"I was writing," she replied, steadily. "Did my elbow touch you?"
"By-the-way," said Professor Farrago, "I fear I forgot to congratulate you upon
your choice of a stenographer, Mr. Gilland."
"Am I to record that too?" she asked, raising her blue eyes.
"That is what the cage is for," he said. "I supposed you had guessed that."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 117
"What are the chemicals for--and the tank and hose attachment?"
He laughed. "The rosium oxide and salts of strontium are to be dumped into the
tank together. They'll effervesce, of course."
"And I can throw a rose-colored spray over any object by the hose attachment,
can't I?"
"Yes."
"Yes; you want to see what sort of creature you have to deal with."
"I don't think so," she said, with a sidelong lifting of the heavy lashes; and I
caught the color of her eyes for a second.
"You see how Miss Barrison spares your feelings," observed Professor Farrago,
dryly. "She owes you little gratitude for bringing her here, yet she proves a
generous victim."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 118
"Oh, I am very grateful for this rarest of chances!" she said, shyly. "To be among
the first in the world to discover such wonders ought to make me very grateful to
the man who gave me the opportunity."
I had never before seen Professor Farrago laugh such a care-free laugh; I had
never suspected him of harboring even an embryo of the social graces. Dry as
dust, sapless as steel, precise as the magnetic needle, he had hitherto been to me
the mummified embodiment of science militant. Now, in the guise of a perfectly
human and genial old gentleman, I scarcely recognized my superior of the Bronx
Park society. And as a woman-hater he was a miserable failure.
The professor was saying: "These transparent creatures break off berries and
fruits and branches; I have seen a flower, too, plucked from its stem by invisible
digits and borne swiftly through the forest--only the flower visible, apparently
speeding through the air and out of sight among the thickets.
"I have found the footprints that I described to you, usually on the edge of a
stream or in the soft loam along some forest lake or lost lagoon.
"Again and again I have been conscious in the forest that unseen eyes were fixed
on me, that unseen shapes were following me. Never but that one time did these
invisible creatures close in around me and venture to touch me.
"They may be weak; their structure may be frail, and they may be incapable of
violence or harm, but the depth of the footprints indicates a weight of at least one
hundred and thirty pounds, and it certainly requires some muscular strength to
break off a branch of wild guavas."
He bent his noble head, thoughtfully regarding the design on his slippers.
I hesitated, glancing at Miss Barrison. She was still writing, her pretty head bent
over the pad in her lap.
"I forgot the gown," I said, getting red about the ears.
"Yes--one kind of gown--the day kind. I--I got the other kind."
He was annoyed; so was I. After a moment he got up, and crossing to the log
cabin, opened one of the boxes of apparel.
"That's quite right," he said, musingly. "We use only the best of everything at
Bronx Park. It is traditional with us, you know."
He looked at me gravely over the tops of his spectacles--a striking and inspiring
figure in his yellow flannel dressing-gown and slippers.
"I shall tell you some day--perhaps," he said, mildly. "Good-night, Miss
Barrison; good-night, Mr. Gilland. You will find extra blankets on your bunk--"
"What!" I cried.
XVI
"There is something weird about this whole proceeding," I observed to the pretty
stenographer next morning.
"These pies will be weird if you don't stop talking to me," she said, opening the
doors of Professor Farrago's portable camping-oven and peeping in at the
fragrant pastry.
The professor had gone off somewhere into the woods early that morning. As he
was not in the habit of talking to himself, the services of Miss Barrison were not
required. Before he started, however, he came to her with a request for a dozen
pies, the construction of which he asked if she understood. She had been to
cooking-school in more prosperous days, and she mentioned it; so at his earnest
solicitation she undertook to bake for him twelve apple-pies; and she was now
attempting it, assisted by advice from me.
"No, they are not burned, Mr. Gilland, but my finger is," she retorted, stepping
back to examine the damage.
I offered sympathy and witch-hazel, but she would have none of my offerings,
and presently returned to her pies.
"Professor Farrago said they were not for us to eat," she said, dusting each pie
with powdered sugar.
"Well, what are they for? The dog? Or are they simply objets d'art to adorn the
shanty--"
"The pies annoy me; won't you tell me what they're for?"
"I have a pretty fair idea what they're for," she observed, tossing her head.
"Haven't you?"
"No. What?"
"Hooks! No, you silly man. They're for baiting the cage. He means to trap these
transparent creatures in a cage baited with pie."
She laughed scornfully; inserted the burned tip of her finger in her mouth and
stood looking at me defiantly like a flushed and bright-eyed school-girl.
"You think you're teasing me," she said; "but you do not realize what a
singularly slow-minded young man you are."
I stopped laughing. "How did you come to the conclusion that pies were to be
used for such a purpose?" I asked.
"I deduce," she observed, with an airy wave of her disengaged hand.
"Your deductions are weird--like everything else in this vicinity. Pies to catch
invisible monsters? Pooh!"
"Not particularly; but I could be, with you for my inspiration. I could even be
enthusiastic--"
"About my pies?"
"You are very frivolous--for a scientist," she said, scornfully; "please subdue
your enthusiasm and bring me some wood. This fire is almost out."
When I had brought the wood, she presented me with a pail of hot water and
pointed at the dishes on the breakfast-table.
She looked pensively at her scorched finger-tip, and, pursing up her red lips,
blew a gentle breath to cool it.
Splashing and slushing the cups and saucers about in the hot water, I reflected
upon the events of the last few days. The dog, stupefied by unwonted abundance
of food, lay in the sunshine, sleeping the sleep of repletion; the pretty
stenographer, all rosy from her culinary exertions, was removing the pies and
setting them in neat rows to cool.
"There," she said, with a sigh; "now I will dry the dishes for you.... You didn't
mention the fact, when you engaged me, that I was also expected to do general
housework."
"I didn't engage you," I said, maliciously; "you engaged me, you know."
"How thoroughly disagreeable you can be!" she said. "Dry your own dishes. I'm
going for a stroll."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 123
"May I join--"
"You may not! I shall go so far that you cannot possibly discover me."
I watched her forestward progress; she sauntered for about thirty yards along the
lake and presently sat down in plain sight under a huge live-oak.
First I approached and politely caressed the satiated dog. He woke up, regarded
me with dully meditative eyes, yawned, and went to sleep again. Never a flop of
tail to indicate gratitude for blandishments, never the faintest symptom of canine
appreciation.
Chilled by my reception, I moused about for a while, poking into boxes and
bundles; then raised my head and inspected the landscape. Through the vista of
trees the pink shirt-waist of the pretty stenographer glimmered like a rose
blooming in the wilderness.
From whatever point I viewed the prospect that pink spot seemed to intrude; I
turned my back and examined the jungle, but there it was repeated in a hundred
pink blossoms among the massed thickets; I looked up into the tree-tops, where
pink mosses spotted the palms; I looked out over the lake, and I saw it in my
mind's eye pinker than ever. It was certainly a case of pink-eye.
After I had strolled in a complete circle I found myself within three feet of a pink
shirt-waist.
She held it up. I took it gingerly; it was smooth and faintly rosy at the tip.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 124
After a silence she said, "Thank you, that has cooled the burning."
"I am determined," said I, "to expel the fire from your finger if it takes hours and
hours." And I seated myself with that intention.
For a while she talked, making innocent observations concerning the tropical
foliage surrounding us. Then silence crept in between us, accentuated by the
brooding stillness of the forest.
"I am afraid your hands are growing tired," she said, considerately.
I denied it.
Through the vista of palms we could see the lake, blue as a violet, sparkling with
silvery sunshine. In the intense quiet the splash of leaping mullet sounded
distinctly.
Once a tall crane stalked into view among the sedges; once an unseen alligator
shook the silence with his deep, hollow roaring. Then the stillness of the
wilderness grew more intense.
We had been sitting there for a long while without exchanging a word, dreamily
watching the ripple of the azure water, when all at once there came a scurrying
patter of feet through the forest, and, looking up, I beheld the hound-dog, tail
between his legs, bearing down on us at lightning speed. I rose instantly.
"What is the matter with the dog?" cried the pretty stenographer. "Is he going
mad, Mr. Gilland?"
"Something has scared him," I exclaimed, as the dog, eyes like lighted candles,
rushed frantically between my legs and buried his head in Miss Barrison's lap.
"Poor doggy!" she said, smoothing the collapsed pup; "poor, p-oor little beast!
Did anything scare him? Tell aunty all about it."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 125
When a dog flees without yelping he's a badly frightened creature. I instinctively
started back towards the camp whence the beast had fled, and before I had taken
a dozen steps Miss Barrison was beside me, carrying the dog in her arms.
I gaped stupidly at the rough pine table where the pies had stood in three neat
rows of four each. And then, in a moment, the purport of this robbery flashed
upon my senses.
I listened. I could hear nothing, see nothing, yet slowly I became convinced of
the presence of something unseen--something in the forest close by, watching us
out of invisible eyes.
A chill, settling along my spine, crept upward to my scalp, until every separate
hair wiggled to the roots. Miss Barrison was pale, but perfectly calm and
self-possessed.
I held the door open; she entered with the dog; I followed, closing and barring
the door, and then took my station at the window, rifle in hand.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 126
There was not a sound in the forest. Miss Barrison laid the dog on the floor and
quietly picked up her pad and pencil. Presently she was deep in a report of the
phenomena, her pencil flying, leaf after leaf from the pad fluttering to the floor.
Nor did I at the window change my position of scared alertness, until I was
aware of her hand gently touching my elbow to attract my attention, and her soft
voice at my ear--
"You don't suppose by any chance that the dog ate those pies?"
"Twelve pies, twelve inches each in diameter," she reflected, musingly. "One
dog, twenty inches in diameter. How many times will the pies go into the dog?
Let me see." She made a few figures on her pad, thought awhile, produced a
tape-measure from her pocket, and, kneeling down, measured the dog.
Inspired by her coolness and perfect composure, I set the rifle in the corner and
opened the door. Sunlight fell in bars through the quiet woods; nothing stirred on
land or water save the great, yellow-striped butterflies that fluttered and soared
and floated above the flowering thickets bordering the jungle.
The heat became intense; Miss Barrison went to her room to change her gown
for a lighter one; I sat down under a live-oak, eyes and ears strained for any sign
of our invisible neighbors.
When she emerged in the lightest and filmiest of summer gowns, she brought the
camera with her; and for a while we took pictures of each other, until we had
used up all but one film.
Desiring to possess a picture of Miss Barrison and myself seated together, I tied
a string to the shutter-lever and attached the other end of the string to the dog,
who had resumed his interrupted slumbers. At my whistle he jumped up
nervously, snapping the lever, and the picture was taken.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 127
With such innocent and harmless pastime we whiled away the afternoon. She
made twelve more apple-pies. I mounted guard over them. And we were just
beginning to feel a trifle uneasy about Professor Farrago, when he appeared,
tramping sturdily through the forest, green umbrella and butterfly-net under one
arm, shot-gun and cyanide-jar under the other, and his breast all criss-crossed
with straps, from which dangled field-glasses, collecting-boxes, and
botanizing-tins--an inspiring figure indeed--the embodied symbol of science
indomitable, triumphant!
We hailed him with three guilty cheers; the dog woke up with a perfunctory
bark--the first sound I had heard from him since he yelped his disapproval of me
on the lagoon.
Miss Barrison produced three bowls full of boiling water and dropped three
pellets of concentrated soup-meat into them, while I prepared coffee. And in a
few moments our simple dinner was ready--the red ants had been dusted from
the biscuits, the spiders chased off the baked beans, the scorpions shaken from
the napkins, and we sat down at the rough, improvised table under the palms.
The professor gave us a brief but modest account of his short tour of exploration.
He had brought back a new species of orchid, several undescribed beetles, and a
pocketful of coontie seed. He appeared, however, to be tired and singularly
depressed, and presently we learned why.
It seemed that he had gone straight to that section of the forest where he had
hitherto always found signs of the transparent and invisible creatures which he
had determined to capture, and he had not found a single trace of them.
"It alarms me," he said, gravely. "If they have deserted this region, it might take
a lifetime to locate them again in this wilderness."
Then, very quietly, sinking her voice instinctively, as though the unseen might
be at our very elbows listening, Miss Barrison recounted the curious adventure
which had befallen the dog and the first batch of apple-pies.
With visible and increasing excitement the professor listened until the very end.
Then he struck the table with clinched fist--a resounding blow which set the
concentrated soup dancing in the bowls and scattered the biscuits and the
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 128
"Eureka!" he whispered. "Miss Barrison, your deduction was not only perfectly
reasonable, but brilliant. You are right; the pies are for that very purpose. I
conceived the idea when I first came here. Again and again the pies that my
guide made out of dried apples disappeared in a most astonishing and mysterious
manner when left to cool. At length I determined to watch them every second;
and did so, with the result that late one afternoon I was amazed to see a pie
slowly rise from the table and move swiftly away through the air about four feet
above the ground, finally disappearing into a tangle of jasmine and grape-vine.
"The apparently automatic flight of that pie solved the problem; these
transparent creatures cannot resist that delicacy. Therefore I decided to bait the
cage for them this very night--Look! What's the matter with that dog?"
The dog suddenly bounded into the air, alighted on all fours, ears, eyes, and
muzzle concentrated on a point directly behind us.
"Good gracious! The pies!" faltered Miss Barrison, half rising from her seat; but
the dog rushed madly into her skirts, scrambling for protection, and she fell back
almost into my arms.
Clasping her tightly, I looked over my shoulder; the last pie was snatched from
the table before my eyes and I saw it borne swiftly away by something unseen,
straight into the deepening shadows of the forest.
The professor was singularly calm, even slightly ironical, as he turned to me,
saying:
"Perhaps if you relinquish Miss Barrison she may be able to free herself from
that dog."
I did so immediately, and she deposited the cowering dog in my arms. Her face
had suddenly become pink.
I passed the dog on to Professor Farrago, dumping it viciously into his lap--a
proceeding which struck me as resembling a pastime of extreme youth known as
"button, button, who's got the button?"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 129
The professor examined the animal gravely, feeling its pulse, counting its
respirations, and finally inserting a tentative finger in an attempt to examine its
tongue. The dog bit him.
"Ouch! It's a clear case of fright," he said, gravely. "I wanted a dog to aid me in
trailing these remarkable creatures, but I think this dog of yours is useless,
Gilland."
"Poor little thing," said Miss Barrison, softly; "I don't know why, but I love that
dog.... He has eyes like yours, Mr. Gilland--"
Exasperated, I rose from the table. "He's got eyes like holes burned in a blanket!"
I said. "And if ever a flicker of intelligence lighted them I have failed to observe
it."
"Certainly," said Miss Barrison; "we can lock the door while I make twelve more
pies."
I carried the portable camping-oven into the cabin, connected the patent asbestos
chimney-pipes, and lighted the fire. And in a few minutes Miss Barrison, sleeves
rolled up and pink apron pinned under her chin, was busily engaged in rolling
pie-crust, while Professor Farrago measured out spices and set the dried apples
to soak.
The swift Southern twilight had already veiled the forest as I stepped out of the
cabin to smoke a cigar and promenade a bit and cogitate. A last trace of color
lingering in the west faded out as I looked; the gray glimmer deepened into
darkness, through which the white lake vapors floated in thin, wavering strata
across the water.
For a while the frog's symphony dominated all other sounds, then lagoon and
forest and cypress branch awoke; and through the steadily sustained tumult of
woodland voices I could hear the dry bark of the fox-squirrel, the whistle of the
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 130
raccoon, ducks softly quacking or whimpering as they prepared for sleep among
the reeds, the soft booming of bitterns, the clattering gossip of the heronry, the
Southern whippoorwill's incessant call.
At regular intervals the howling note of a lone heron echoed the strident screech
of a crimson-crested crane; the horned owl's savage hunting-cry haunted the
night, now near, now floating from infinite distances.
Then the theatrical moon came up through filmy draperies of waving Spanish
moss thin as cobwebs; and far in the wilderness a cougar fell a-crying and
coughing like a little child with a bad cold.
I went in after that. Miss Barrison was sitting before the oven, knees gathered in
her clasped hands, languidly studying the fire. She looked up as I appeared,
opened the oven-doors, sniffed the aroma, and resumed her attitude of contented
indifference.
"Better take it down; that's what you're here for," I observed, closing and holding
the outside door. "Ugh! there's a chill in the air. The dew is pelting down from
the pines like a steady fall of rain."
"You will get fever if you roam about at night," she said. "Mercy! your coat is
soaking. Sit here by the fire."
So I pulled up a bench and sat down beside her like the traditional spider.
"Please don't."
"You mean because I went for a stroll by moonlight? I did that because you
always seem to make fun of me as soon as the professor joins us."
"Make fun of you? You surely don't expect me to make eyes at you!"
"What would you prescribe?" she inquired, with an absent-minded glance at the
professor's closed door.
"I don't know; perhaps a slight but firm pressure of the finger-tips--"
"What?"
Sitting there before the oven, side by side, hand innocently clasped in hand, we
heard the drumming of the dew on the roof, the night-wind stirring the palms,
the muffled snoring of the professor, the faint whisper and crackle of the fire.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 132
A single candle burned brightly, piling our shadows together on the wall behind
us; moonlight silvered the window-panes, over which crawled multitudes of
soft-winged moths, attracted by the candle within.
"See their tiny eyes glow!" she whispered. "How their wings quiver! And all for
a candle-flame! Alas! alas! fire is the undoing of us all."
She leaned forward, resting as though buried in reverie. After a while she
extended one foot a trifle and, with the point of her shoe, carefully unlatched the
oven-door. As it swung outward a delicious fragrance filled the room.
"They're done," she said, withdrawing her hand from mine. "Help me to lift them
out."
Together we arranged the delicious pastry in rows on the bench to cool. I opened
the door for a few minutes, then closed and bolted it again.
"Do you suppose those transparent creatures will smell the odor and come
around the cabin?" she suggested, wiping her fingers on her handkerchief.
I walked to the window uneasily. Outside the pane the moths crawled, some
brilliant in scarlet and tan-color set with black, some snow-white with black
tracings on their wings, and bodies peacock-blue edged with orange. The
scientist in me was aroused; I called her to the window, and she came and leaned
against the sill, nose pressed to the glass.
"I don't suppose you know that the antennæ of that silvery-winged moth are
distinctly pectinate," I said.
"Of course I do," she said. "I took my degree as D.E. at Barnard College."
"It was my undoing," she said. "The department was abolished the year I
graduated. There was no similar vacancy, even in the Smithsonian."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 133
She shrugged her shoulders, eyes fixed on the moths. "I had to make my own
living. I chose stenography as the quickest road to self-sustenance."
"I suppose you took me for an inferior?" she said. "But do you suppose I'd flirt
with you if I was?"
She pressed her face to the pane again, murmuring that exquisite poem of
Andrew Lang:
"Spooning is innocuous and needn't have a sequel, But recollect, if spoon you
must, spoon only with your equal."
Standing there, watching the moths, we became rather silent--I don't know why.
The fire in the range had gone out; the candle-flame, flaring above a saucer of
melted wax, sank lower and lower.
Suddenly, as though disturbed by something inside, the moths all left the
window-pane, darting off in the darkness.
"What's curious?" she asked, opening her eyes languidly. "Good gracious! Was
that a bat that beat on the window?"
A soft sound against the glass, as though invisible fingers were feeling the
pane--a gentle rubbing--then a tap-tap, all but inaudible.
The candle-flame behind us flashed and expired. Moonlight flooded the pane.
The sounds continued, but there was nothing there.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 134
We understood now what it was that so gently rubbed and patted the glass
outside. With one accord we noiselessly gathered up the pies and carried them
into my room.
Then she walked to the door of her room, turned, held out her hand, and
whispering, "Good-night! A demain, monsieur!" slipped into her room and softly
closed the door.
And all night long I lay in troubled slumber beside the pies, a rifle resting on the
blankets beside me, a revolver under my pillow. And I dreamed of moths with
brilliant eyes and vast silvery wings harnessed to a balloon in which Miss
Barrison and I sat, arms around each other, eating slice after slice of apple-pie.
XVII
Dawn came--the dawn of a day that I am destined never to forget. Long, rosy
streamers of light broke through the forest, shaking, quivering, like unstable
beams from celestial search-lights. Mist floated upward from marsh and lake;
and through it the spectral palms loomed, drooping fronds embroidered with
dew.
For a while the ringing outburst of bird music dominated all; but it soon ceased
with dropping notes from the crimson cardinals repeated in lengthening minor
intervals; and then the spell of silence returned, broken only by the faint splash
of mullet, mocking the sun with sinuous, silver flashes.
"Good-morning," said a low voice from the door as I stood encouraging the
camp-fire with splinter wood and dead palmetto fans.
Fresh and sweet from her toilet as a dew-drenched rose, Miss Barrison stood
there sniffing the morning air daintily, thoroughly.
Fishing out a cedar log from the lumber-stack, I fell to chopping it vigorously.
The axe-strokes made a cheerful racket through the woods.
"Did you hear anything last night after you retired?" I asked.
"All the same," said I, leaning on the axe and watching her, "you are about the
coolest and pluckiest woman I ever knew."
"No, we were not. Now I'll tell you the truth--my hair stood up the greater part of
the night. You are looking upon a poltroon, Miss Barrison."
"Something? A dozen! They were monkeying with the sashes and panes all night
long, and I imagined that I could hear them breathing--as though from effort of
intense eagerness. Ouch! I came as near losing my nerve as I care to. I came
within an ace of hurling those cursed pies through the window at them. I'd bolt
to-day if I wasn't afraid to play the coward."
The dog, who had slept under my bunk, and who had contributed to my
entertainment by sighing and moaning all night, now appeared ready for
business--business in his case being the operation of feeding. I presented him
with a concentrated tablet, which he cautiously investigated and then rolled on.
"Nice testimonial for the people who concocted it," I said, in disgust. "I wish I
had an egg."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 136
"There are some concentrated egg tablets in the shanty," said Miss Barrison; but
the idea was not attractive.
"I refuse to fry a pill for breakfast," I said, sullenly, and set the coffee-pot on the
coals.
In spite of the dewy beauty of the morning, breakfast was not a cheerful
function. Professor Farrago appeared, clad in sun-helmet and khaki. I had
seldom seen him depressed; but he was now, and his very efforts to disguise it
only emphasized his visible anxiety.
His preparations for the day, too, had an ominous aspect to me. He gave his
orders and we obeyed, instinctively suppressing questions. First, he and I
transported all personal luggage of the company to the big electric launch--Miss
Barrison's effects, his, and my own. His private papers, the stenographic reports,
and all memoranda were tied up together and carried aboard.
Then, to my surprise, two weeks' concentrated rations for two and mineral water
sufficient for the same period were stowed away aboard the launch. Several
times he asked me whether I knew how to run the boat, and I assured him that I
did.
In a short time nothing was left ashore except the bare furnishings of the cabin,
the female wearing-apparel, the steel cage and chemicals which I had brought,
and the twelve apple-pies--the latter under lock and key in my room.
Presently he bade me fetch the pies; and I brought them, and, at a sign from him,
placed them inside the steel cage, closing and locking the door.
"I believe," he said, glancing from Miss Barrison to me, and from me to the
dog--"I believe that we are ready to start."
He went to the cabin and locked the door on the outside, pocketing the key.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 137
Then he backed up to the steel cage, stooped and lifted his end as I lifted mine,
and together we started off through the forest, bearing the cage between us as
porters carry a heavy piece of luggage.
Miss Barrison came next, carrying the trousseau, the tank, hose, and chemicals;
and the dog followed her--probably not from affection for us, but because he was
afraid to be left alone.
At times across our course flowed shallow, rapid streams of water, clear as
crystal, and most alluring to the thirsty.
"There's fever in every drop," said the professor, as I mentioned my thirst; "take
the bottled water if you mean to stay a little longer."
The beauty of the tropics is marred somewhat for me; under all the fresh
splendor of color death lurks in brilliant tints. Where painted fruit hangs
temptingly, where great, silky blossoms exhale alluring scent, where the elaps
coils inlaid with scarlet, black, and saffron, where in the shadow of a palmetto
frond a succession of velvety black diamonds mark the rattler's swollen length,
there death is; and his invisible consort, horror, creeps where the snake whose
mouth is lined with white creeps--where the tarantula squats, hairy, motionless;
where a bit of living enamel fringed with orange undulates along a mossy log.
Thinking of these things, and watchful lest, unawares, terror unfold from some
blossoming and leafy covert, I scarcely noticed the beauty of the glade we had
entered--a long oval, cross-barred with sunshine which fell on hedges of
scrub-palmetto, chin high, interlaced with golden blossoms of the jasmine. And
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 138
all around, like pillars supporting a high green canopy above a throne, towered
the silvery stems of palms fretted with pale, rose-tinted lichens and hung with
draperies of grape-vine.
His quiet, passionless voice sounded strange to me; his words seemed strange,
too, each one heavily weighted with hidden meaning.
We set the cage on the ground; he unlocked and opened the steel-barred door,
and, kneeling, carefully arranged the pies along the centre of the cage.
"I have a curious presentiment," he said, "that I shall not come out of this
experiment unscathed."
"Don't, for Heaven's sake, say that!" I broke out, my nerves on edge again.
"Who spoke of dying?" he inquired, mildly. "What I said was that I do not
expect to come out of this affair unscathed."
I did not comprehend his meaning, but I understood the reproof conveyed.
He closed and locked the cage door again and came towards us, balancing the
key across the palm of his hand.
Miss Barrison had seated herself on the leaves; I stood back as the professor sat
down beside her; then, at a gesture from him, took the place he indicated on his
left.
"Before we begin," he said, calmly, "there are several things you ought to know
and which I have not yet told you. The first concerns the feminine wearing
apparel which Mr. Gilland brought me."
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 139
He turned to Miss Barrison and asked her whether she had brought a complete
outfit, and she opened the bundle on her knees and handed it to him.
"I cannot," he said, "delicately explain in so many words what use I expect to
make of this apparel. Nor do I yet know whether I shall have any use at all for it.
That can only be a theoretical speculation until, within a few more hours, my
theory is proven or disproven--and," he said, suddenly turning on me, "my
theory concerning these invisible creatures is the most extraordinary and
audacious theory ever entertained by man since Columbus presumed that there
must lie somewhere a hidden continent which nobody had ever seen."
He passed his hand over his protruding forehead, lost for a moment in deepest
reflection. Then, "Have you ever heard of the Sphyx?" he asked.
"Yes, the famous lines in the third volume which have set so many wise men
guessing. You recall them:
"'And there, alas! within sound of the Fountain of Youth whose waters tint the
skin till the whole body glows softly like the petal of a rose--there, alas! in the
new world already blooming, THE ETERNAL ENIGMA I beheld, in the flesh
living; yet it faded even as I looked, although I swear it lived and breathed. This
is the Sphyx.'"
The professor looked at her. "Ah, child! Ever subtler, ever surer--the Eternal
Enigma is no enigma to you."
"Yes, both. I remember now that De Soto records the Syachas legend of the
Sphyx--something about a goddess--"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 140
"Not a goddess," said Miss Barrison, her lips touched with a smile.
"'It has come to my ears while in the lands of the Syachas that the Sphyx surely
lives, as bolder and more curious men than I may, God willing, prove to the
world hereafter.'"
"For centuries wise men and savants have asked each other that question. I have
answered it for myself; I am now to prove it, I trust."
His face darkened, and again and again he stroked his heavy brow.
"If anything occurs," he said, taking my hand in his left and Miss Barrison's hand
in his right, "promise me to obey my wishes. Will you?"
"If I lose my life, or--or disappear, promise me on your honor to get to the
electric launch as soon as possible and make all speed northward, placing my
private papers, the reports of Miss Barrison, and your own reports in the hands
of the authorities in Bronx Park. Don't attempt to aid me; don't delay to search
for me. Do you promise?"
He looked at us solemnly. "If you fail me, you betray me," he said.
We swore obedience.
"Then let us begin," he said, and he rose and went to the steel cage. Unlocking
the door, he flung it wide and stepped inside, leaving the cage door open.
"The moment a single pie is disturbed," he said to me, "I shall close the steel
door from the inside, and you and Miss Barrison will then dump the rosium
oxide and the strontium into the tank, clap on the lid, turn the nozzle of the hose
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 141
on the cage, and spray it thoroughly. Whatever is invisible in the cage will
become visible and of a faint rose color. And when the trapped creature becomes
visible, hold yourselves ready to aid me as long as I am able to give you orders.
After that either all will go well or all will go otherwise, and you must run for
the launch." He seated himself in the cage near the open door.
I placed the steel tank near the cage, uncoiled the hose attachment, unscrewed
the top, and dumped in the salts of strontium. Miss Barrison unwrapped the
bottle of rosium oxide and loosened the cork. We examined this pearl-and-pink
powder and shook it up so that it might run out quickly. Then Miss Barrison sat
down, and presently became absorbed in a stenographic report of the
proceedings up to date.
When Miss Barrison finished her report she handed me the bundle of papers. I
stowed them away in my wallet, and we sat down together beside the tank.
Inside the cage Professor Farrago was seated, his spectacled eyes fixed on the
row of pies. For a while, although realizing perfectly that our quarry was
transparent and invisible, we unconsciously strained our eyes in quest of
something stirring in the forest.
"I should think," said I, in a low voice, "that the odor of the pies might draw at
least one out of the odd dozen that came rubbing up against my window last
night."
"Hush! Listen!" she breathed. But we heard nothing save the snoring of the
overfed dog at our feet.
"He'll give us ample notice by butting into Miss Barrison's skirts," I observed.
"No need of our watching, professor."
The professor nodded. Presently he removed his spectacles and lay back against
the bars, closing his eyes.
At first the forest silence seemed cheerful there in the flecked sunlight. The
spotted wood-gnats gyrated merrily, chased by dragon-flies; the shy wood-birds
hopped from branch to twig, peering at us in friendly inquiry; a lithe, gray
squirrel, plumy tail undulating, rambled serenely around the cage, sniffing at the
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 142
pastry within.
"Why did he act like that?" whispered Miss Barrison. And, after a moment:
"How still it is! Where have the birds gone?"
In the ominous silence the dog began to whimper in his sleep and his hind legs
kicked convulsively.
The words were almost driven down my throat by the dog, who, without a yelp
of warning, hurled himself at Miss Barrison and alighted on my chest, fore paws
around my neck.
I cast him scornfully from me, but he scrambled back, digging like a mole to get
under us.
"The transparent creatures!" whispered Miss Barrison. "Look! See that pie
move!"
"I've got one!" he shouted, frantically. "There's one in the cage! Turn on that
hose!"
"Wait a second," said Miss Barrison, calmly, uncorking the bottle and pouring a
pearly stream of rosium oxide into the tank. "Quick! It's fizzing! Screw on the
top!"
In a second I had screwed the top fast, seized the hose, and directed a hissing
cloud of vapor through the cage bars.
For a moment nothing was heard save the whistling rush of the perfumed spray
escaping; a delicious odor of roses filled the air. Then, slowly, there in the
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 143
"The Sphyx!" gasped the professor. "In the name of Heaven, play that hose!"
We ran frantically around, the cage in the obscurity, appealing for instructions
and feeling for the bars. Once the professor's muffled voice was heard
demanding the wearing apparel, and I groped about and found it and stuffed it
through the bars of the cage.
"Do you need help?" I shouted. There was no response. Staring around through
the thickening vapor of rosium rolling in clouds from the overturned tank, I
heard Miss Barrison's voice calling:
Blindly I rushed about, arms outstretched, and the next moment struck the door
of the cage so hard that the impact almost knocked me senseless. Clutching it to
steady myself, it suddenly flew open. A rush of partly visible creatures passed
me like a burst of pink flames, and in the midst, borne swiftly away on the crest
of the outrush, the professor passed like a bolt shot from a catapult; and his last
cry came wafted back to me from the forest as I swayed there, drunk with the
stupefying perfume: "Don't worry! I'm all right!"
I staggered out into the clearer air towards a figure seen dimly through swirling
vapor.
"No--oh no," she said, wringing her hands. "But the professor! I saw him! I
could not scream; I could not move! They had him!"
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 144
"I saw him too," I groaned. "There was not one trace of terror on his face. He
was actually smiling."
Overcome at the sublime courage of the man, we wept in each other's arms.
*****
True to our promise to Professor Farrago, we made the best of our way
northward; and it was not a difficult journey by any means, the voyage in the
launch across Okeechobee being perfectly simple and the trail to the nearest
railroad station but a few easy miles from the landing-place.
Shocking as had been our experience, dreadful as was the calamity which had
not only robbed me of a life-long friend, but had also bereaved the entire
scientific world, I could not seem to feel that desperate and hopeless grief which
the natural decease of a close friend might warrant. No; there remained a vague
expectancy which so dominated my sorrow that at moments I became
hopeful--nay, sanguine, that I should one day again behold my beloved superior
in the flesh. There was something so happy in his last smile, something so
artlessly pleased, that I was certain no fear of impending dissolution worried him
as he disappeared into the uncharted depth of the unknown Everglades.
I think Miss Barrison agreed with me, too. She appeared to be more or less
dazed, which was, of course, quite natural; and during our return voyage across
Okeechobee and through the lagoons and forests beyond she was very silent.
Except for one young man whom I encountered in the smoker, we had the train
to ourselves, a circumstance which, curiously enough, appeared to increase Miss
Barrison's depression, and my own as a natural sequence. The circumstances of
the taking off of Professor Farrago appeared to engross her thoughts so
completely that it made me uneasy during our trip out from Little Sprite--in fact
it was growing plainer to me every hour that in her brief acquaintance with that
distinguished scientist she had become personally attached to him to an extent
that began to worry me. Her personal indignation at the caged Sphyx flared out
at unexpected intervals, and there could be no doubt that her unhappiness and
resentment were becoming morbid.
Never but once had I been tempted to romance in any form; never but once had
sentiment interfered with a passionless transfer of scientific notes to the
sanctuary of the unvarnished note-book or the cloister of the juiceless
monograph. Nor have I the slightest approach to that superficial and doubtful
quality known as literary skill. Once, however, as I sat alone in the middle of the
floor, classifying my isopods, I was not only astonished but totally unprepared to
find myself repeating aloud a verse that I myself had unconsciously fashioned:
Never before in all my life had I made a rhyme; and it worried me for weeks,
ringing in my brain day and night, confusing me, interfering with my thoughts.
I said as much to the young man, who only laughed good-naturedly and replied
that it was the Creator's purpose to limit certain intellects, nobody knows why,
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 146
"There's one thing, however," he said, "that might be of some interest to you and
come within the circumscribed scope of your intelligence."
"A scientific experience of mine," he said, with a careless laugh. "It's so much
stranger than fiction that even Professor Bruce Stoddard, of Columbia, hesitated
to credit it."
I looked at the young fellow suspiciously. His bland smile disarmed me, but I
did not invite him to relate his experience, although he apparently needed only
that encouragement to begin.
"It would give me great pleasure to do so," said a quiet voice at the door. We
rose at once, removing the cigars from our lips; but Miss Barrison bade us
continue smoking, and at a gesture from her we resumed our seats after she had
installed herself by the window.
"Really," she said, looking coldly at me, "I couldn't endure the solitude any
longer. Isn't there anything to do on this tiresome train?"
"If you had your pad and pencil," I began, maliciously, "you might take down a
matter of interest--"
She looked frankly at the young man, who laughed in that pleasant,
good-tempered manner of his, and offered to tell us of his alleged scientific
experience if we thought it might amuse us sufficiently to vary the dull
monotony of the journey north.
I rose and went off to find pad and pencil. When I returned Miss Barrison was
laughing at a story which the young man had just finished.
"I am very glad to hear you say that," I exclaimed, warmly. He bowed, looked at
Miss Barrison, and asked her when he might begin his story.
"Whenever you are ready," replied Miss Barrison, smiling in a manner which I
had not observed since the disappearance of Professor Farrago. I'll admit that the
young fellow was superficially attractive.
"I first told the story on April 1, 1903, to the editors of the North American
Review, The Popular Science Monthly, the Scientific American, Nature, Outing,
and the Fossiliferous Magazine. All these gentlemen rejected it; some curtly
informing me that fiction had no place in their columns. When I attempted to
explain that it was not fiction, the editors of these periodicals either maintained a
contemptuous silence, or bluntly notified me that my literary services and
opinions were not desired. But finally, when several publishers offered to take
the story as fiction, I cut short all negotiations and decided to publish it myself.
Where I am known at all, it is my misfortune to be known as a writer of fiction.
This makes it impossible for me to receive a hearing from a scientific audience. I
regret it bitterly, because now, when it is too late, I am prepared to prove certain
scientific matters of interest, and to produce the proofs. In this case, however, I
am fortunate, for nobody can dispute the existence of a thing when the bodily
proof is exhibited as evidence.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 148
"This is the story; and if I tell it as I write fiction, it is because I do not know
how to tell it otherwise.
"I was walking along the beach below Pine Inlet, on the south shore of Long
Island. The railroad and telegraph station is at West Oyster Bay. Everybody who
has travelled on the Long Island Railroad knows the station, but few, perhaps,
know Pine Inlet. Duck-shooters, of course, are familiar with it; but as there are
no hotels there, and nothing to see except salt meadow, salt creek, and a strip of
dune and sand, the summer-squatting public may probably be unaware of its
existence. The local name for the place is Pine Inlet; the maps give its name as
Sand Point, I believe, but anybody at West Oyster Bay can direct you to it.
Captain McPeek, who keeps the West Oyster Bay House, drives duck-shooters
there in winter. It lies five miles southeast from West Oyster Bay.
"I had walked over that afternoon from Captain McPeek's. There was a reason
for my going to Pine Inlet--it embarrasses me to explain it, but the truth is I
meditated writing an ode to the ocean. It was out of the question to write it in
West Oyster Bay, with the whistle of locomotives in my ears. I knew that Pine
Inlet was one of the loneliest places on the Atlantic coast; it is out of sight of
everything except leagues of gray ocean. Rarely one might make out
fishing-smacks drifting across the horizon. Summer squatters never visited it;
sportsmen shunned it, except in winter. Therefore, as I was about to do a bit of
poetry, I thought that Pine Inlet was the spot for the deed. So I went there.
"As I was strolling along the beach, biting my pencil reflectively, tremendously
impressed by the solitude and the solemn thunder of the surf, a thought occurred
to me--how unpleasant it would be if I suddenly stumbled on a summer boarder.
As this joyless impossibility flitted across my mind, I rounded a bleak
sand-dune.
"She stared at me as though I had just crawled up out of the sea to bite her. I
don't know what my own expression resembled, but I have been given to
understand it was idiotic.
"Now I perceived, after a few moments, that the young lady was frightened, and
I knew I ought to say something civil. So I said, 'Are there many mosquitoes
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 149
here?'
"'No,' she replied, with a slight quiver in her voice; 'I have only seen one, and it
was biting somebody else.'
"The conversation seemed so futile, and the young lady appeared to be more
nervous than before. I had an impulse to say, 'Do not run; I have breakfasted,' for
she seemed to be meditating a flight into the breakers. What I did say was: 'I did
not know anybody was here. I do not intend to intrude. I come from Captain
McPeek's, and I am writing an ode to the ocean.' After I had said this it seemed
to ring in my ears like, 'I come from Table Mountain, and my name is Truthful
James.'
"However, the young lady seemed to be a trifle reassured. I noticed she drew a
sigh of relief and looked at my shoes. She looked so long that it made me
suspicious, and I also examined my shoes. They seemed to be in a fair state of
repair.
"'I--I am sorry,' she said, 'but would you mind not walking on the beach?'
"This was sudden. I had intended to retire and leave the beach to her, but I did
not fancy being driven away so abruptly.
"'Dear me!' she cried; 'you don't understand. I do not--I would not think for a
moment of asking you to leave Pine Inlet. I merely ventured to request you to
walk on the dunes. I am so afraid that your footprints may obliterate the
impressions that my father is studying.'
"'Oh!' said I, looking about me as though I had been caught in the middle of a
flower-bed; 'really I did not notice any impressions. Impressions of what?'
"'I don't know,' she said, smiling a little at my awkward pose. 'If you step this
way in a straight line you can do no damage.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 150
"I did as she bade me. I suppose my movements resembled the gait of a wet
peacock. Possibly they recalled the delicate manoeuvres of the kangaroo.
Anyway, she laughed.
"This seriously annoyed me. I had been at a disadvantage; I walk well enough
when let alone.
"'You can scarcely expect,' said I, 'that a man absorbed in his own ideas could
notice impressions on the sand. I trust I have obliterated nothing.'
"As I said this I looked back at the long line of footprints stretching away in
prospective across the sand. They were my own. How large they looked! Was
that what she was laughing at?
"'I wish to explain,' she said, gravely, looking at the point of her parasol. 'I am
very sorry to be obliged to warn you--to ask you to forego the pleasure of
strolling on a beach that does not belong to me. Perhaps,' she continued, in
sudden alarm, 'perhaps this beach belongs to you?'
"'Only one--and that does not necessitate owning the beach. I have observed,'
said I, frankly, 'that the people who own nothing write many poems about it.'
"'Would you rather I went away?' I asked, politely. 'My family is respectable,' I
added; and I told her my name.
"'Oh! Then you wrote Culled Cowslips and Faded Fig-Leaves and you imitate
Maeterlinck, and you--Oh, I know lots of people that you know;' she cried, with
every symptom of relief; 'and you know my brother.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 151
"'I am the author,' said I, coldly, 'of Culled Cowslips, but Faded Fig-Leaves was
an earlier work, which I no longer recognize, and I should be grateful to you if
you would be kind enough to deny that I ever imitated Maeterlinck. Possibly,' I
added, 'he imitates me.'
"'Never mind,' I said, magnanimously, 'you probably are not familiar with
modern literature. If I knew your name I should ask permission to present
myself.'
"'I didn't mean that,' said I. 'You know that your brother and I were great friends
in Paris--'
"She opened the sunshade and tipped it over one shoulder. It was white, and had
spots and posies on it.
"'Jack sends us every new book you write,' she observed. 'I do not approve of
some things you write.'
"The foam spume from the breakers was drifting across the dunes, and the little
tip-up snipe ran along the beach and teetered and whistled and spread their
white-barred wings for a low, straight flight across the shingle, only to tip and
run and sail on again. The salt sea-wind whistled and curled through the crested
waves, blowing in perfumed puffs across thickets of sweet bay and cedar. As we
passed through the crackling juicy-stemmed marsh-weed myriads of fiddler
crabs raised their fore-claws in warning and backed away, rustling, through the
reeds, aggressive, protesting.
"'Now I never imagined that authors were clever except in print,' she said.
"'I suppose,' she observed, after a moment's silence--'I suppose I am taking you
to my father.'
"'Yes; he bailed you and Jack out,' said Miss Holroyd, serenely.
"'Yes,' said Daisy Holroyd, 'but he has a most singular hotel clerk.'
"'I do.'
"'I know it!' exclaimed Daisy Holroyd, with some heat. 'He ruins landscapes
whenever he has an opportunity. Do you know that he has a passion for
bill-posting? He has; he posts bills for the pure pleasure of it, just as you play
golf, or tennis, or squash.'
"'But he's a hotel clerk now,' I said; 'nobody employs him to post bills.'
"'I know it! He does it all by himself for the pure pleasure of it. Papa has
engaged him to come down here for two weeks, and I dread it,' said the girl.
"What Professor Holroyd might want of Frisby I had not the faintest notion. I
suppose Miss Holroyd noticed the bewilderment in my face, for she laughed and
nodded her head twice.
"'Not only Mr. Frisby, but Captain McPeek also,' she said.
"'You don't mean to say that Captain McPeek is going to close his hotel!' I
exclaimed.
"'Oh no; his wife will keep it open,' replied the girl. 'Look! you can see papa
now. He's digging.'
"'Papa, dear,' said Miss Holroyd, 'here is Jack's friend, whom you bailed out of
Mazas.'
"'A little,' I replied, trying not to speak sarcastically. My output had rivalled that
of 'The Duchess'--in quantity, I mean.
"'I seldom read--fiction,' he said, looking restlessly at the hole in the ground.
"'That was a charming story you wrote last,' she said. 'Papa should read it--you
should, papa; it's all about a fossil.'
"We both looked narrowly at Miss Holroyd. Her smile was guileless.
"Now I am not perfectly sure what my object was in lying. I looked at Daisy
Holroyd's dark-fringed eyes. They were very grave.
"I think Miss Holroyd winced a little at this. I did not care. I went on:
"'I have seldom had the opportunity to study the subject, but, as a boy, I
collected flint arrow-heads--"
"'Yes; they were the nearest things to fossils obtainable,' I replied, marvelling at
my own mendacity.
"The professor looked into the hole. I also looked. I could see nothing in it. 'He's
digging for fossils,' thought I to myself.
"'Perhaps,' said the professor, cautiously, 'you might wish to aid me in a little
research--that is to say, if you have an inclination for fossils.' The
double-entendre was not lost upon me.
"'I have read all your books so eagerly,' said I, 'that to join you, to be of service
to you in any research, however difficult and trying, would be an honor and a
privilege that I never dared to hope for.'
"But the professor was still suspicious. How could he help it, when he
remembered Jack's escapades, in which my name was always blended!
Doubtless he was satisfied that my influence on Jack was evil. The contrary was
the case, too.
"'Fossils,' he said, worrying the edge of the excavation with his spade--'fossils
are not things to be lightly considered.'
"'Fossils are the most interesting as well as puzzling things in the world,' said he.
"This was a facer. I looked at Daisy Holroyd. She bit her lip and fixed her eyes
on the sea. Her eyes were wonderful eyes.
"'Did you think I was digging for fossils in a salt meadow?' queried the
professor. 'You can have read very little about the subject. I am digging for
something quite different.'
"I was silent. I knew that my face was flushed. I longed to say, 'Well, what the
devil are you digging for?' but I only stared into the hole as though hypnotized.
"'Captain McPeek and Frisby ought to be here,' he said, looking first at Daisy
and then across the meadows.
"I ached to ask him why he had subpoenaed Captain McPeek and Frisby.
"'They are coming,' said Daisy, shading her eyes. 'Do you see the speck on the
meadows?'
"'Miss Holroyd is right,' I said. 'A wagon and team and two men are coming
from the north. There's a dog beside the wagon--it's that miserable yellow dog of
Frisby's.'
"'Good gracious!' cried the professor, 'you don't mean to tell me that you see all
that at such a distance?'
"The professor removed his blue goggles and rubbed them, glancing obliquely at
me.
"'Haven't you heard what extraordinary eyesight duck-shooters have?' said his
daughter, looking back at her father. 'Jack says that he can tell exactly what kind
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 157
of a duck is flying before most people could see anything at all in the sky.'
"'It's true,' I said; 'it comes to anybody, I fancy, who has had practice.'
"The professor regarded me with a new interest. There was inspiration in his
eyes. He turned towards the ocean. For a long time he stared at the tossing waves
on the beach, then he looked far out to where the horizon met the sea.
"He produced a pair of binoculars from his coat-tail pocket, adjusted them, and
raised them to his eyes.
"'Surf-ducks and widgeon. There is one bufflehead among them--no, two; the
rest are coots,' I replied.
"'This,' cried the professor, 'is most astonishing. I have good eyes, but I can't see
a blessed thing without these binoculars!'
"'It's not extraordinary,' said I; 'the surf-ducks and coots any novice might
recognize; the widgeon and buffleheads I should not have been able to name
unless they had risen from the water. It is easy to tell any duck when it is flying,
even though it looks no bigger than a black pin-point.'
"But the professor insisted that it was marvellous, and he said that I might render
him invaluable service if I would consent to come and camp at Pine Inlet for a
few weeks.
"I looked at his daughter, but she turned her back. Her back was beautifully
moulded. Her gown fitted also.
"'I do not think he would care to,' said Miss Holroyd, without turning.
"'Above all things,' said I, in a clear, pleasant voice, 'I like to camp out.'
"'It is not exactly camping,' said the professor. 'Come, you shall see our
conservatory. Daisy, come, dear! You must put on a heavier frock; it is getting
towards sundown.'
"At that moment, over a near dune, two horses' heads appeared, followed by two
human heads, then a wagon, then a yellow dog.
"'You are the very man I want,' he muttered--'the very man--the very man.'
"I looked at Daisy Holroyd. She returned my glance with a defiant little smile.
"'Waal,' said Captain McPeek, driving up, 'here we be! Git out, Frisby.'
"'Come,' said the professor, impatiently moving across the dunes. I walked with
Daisy Holroyd. McPeek and Frisby followed. The yellow dog walked by
himself.
XVIII
"The sun was dipping into the sea as we trudged across the meadows towards a
high, dome-shaped dune covered with cedars and thickets of sweet bay. I saw no
sign of habitation among the sand-hills. Far as the eye could reach, nothing
broke the gray line of sea and sky save the squat dunes crowned with stunted
cedars.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 159
"Then, as we rounded the base of the dune, we almost walked into the door of a
house. My amazement amused Miss Holroyd, and I noticed also a touch of
malice in her pretty eyes. But she said nothing, following her father into the
house, with the slightest possible gesture to me. Was it invitation or was it
menace?
"The house was merely a light wooden frame, covered with some waterproof
stuff that looked like a mixture of rubber and tar. Over this--in fact, over the
whole roof--was pitched an awning of heavy sail-cloth. I noticed that the house
was anchored to the sand by chains, already rusted red. But this one-storied
house was not the only building nestling in the south shelter of the big dune. A
hundred feet away stood another structure--long, low, also built of wood. It had
rows on rows of round port-holes on every side. The ports were fitted with heavy
glass, hinged to swing open if necessary. A single, big double door occupied the
front.
"Behind this long, low building was still another, a mere shed. Smoke rose from
the sheet-iron chimney. There was somebody moving about inside the open
door.
"As I stood gaping at this mushroom hamlet the professor appeared at the door
and asked me to enter. I stepped in at once.
"The house was much larger than I had imagined. A straight hallway ran through
the centre from east to west. On either side of this hallway were rooms, the doors
swinging wide open. I counted three doors on each side; the three on the south
appeared to be bedrooms.
"The professor ushered me into a room on the north side, where I found Captain
McPeek and Frisby sitting at a table, upon which were drawings and sketches of
articulated animals and fishes.
"'You see, McPeek,' said the professor, 'we only wanted one more man, and I
think I've got him--Haven't I?' turning eagerly to me.
"'Your bedroom is the third on the south side; everything is ready. McPeek, you
can bring his trunk to-morrow, can't you?' demanded the professor.
"'Then it's all settled,' said the professor, and he drew a sigh of satisfaction. 'You
see,' he said, turning to me, 'I was at my wit's end to know whom to trust. I never
thought of you. Jack's out in China, and I didn't dare trust anybody in my own
profession. All you care about is writing verses and stories, isn't it?'
"'Just the thing!' he cried, beaming at us all in turn. 'Now I can see no reason
why we should not progress rapidly. McPeek, you and Frisby must get those
boxes up here before dark. Dinner will be ready before you have finished
unloading. Dick, you will wish to go to your room first.'
"My name isn't Dick, but he spoke so kindly, and beamed upon me in such a
fatherly manner, that I let it go. I had occasion to correct him afterwards, several
times, but he always forgot the next minute. He calls me Dick to this day.
"It was dark when Professor Holroyd, his daughter, and I sat down to dinner.
The room was the same in which I had noticed the drawings of beast and bird,
but the round table had been extended into an oval, and neatly spread with dainty
linen and silver.
"A fresh-cheeked Swedish girl appeared from a farther room, bearing the soup.
The professor ladled it out, still beaming.
"'I suppose,' said the professor, nodding mysteriously at his daughter, 'that Dick
knows nothing of what we're about down here?'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 161
"'I suppose,' said Miss Holroyd, 'that he thinks we are digging for fossils.'
"'Well, well,' said her father, smiling to himself, 'he shall know everything by
morning. You'll be astonished, Dick, my boy.'
"The professor said, 'Isn't it?' in an absent-minded way, and relapsed into
contemplation of my necktie.
"I asked Miss Holroyd a few questions about Jack, and was informed that he had
given up law and entered the consular service--as what, I did not dare ask, for I
know what our consular service is.
"'Choo Choo is the name of the city,' added her father, proudly; 'it's the terminus
of the new trans-Siberian railway.'
"'He'll make a good one,' I observed. I knew Jack. I pitied his consul.
"So we chatted on about my old playmate, until Freda, the red-cheeked maid,
brought coffee, and the professor lighted a cigar, with a little bow to his
daughter.
"'Of course, you don't smoke,' she said to me, with a glimmer of malice in her
eyes.
"'He mustn't,' interposed the professor, hastily; 'it will make his hand tremble.'
"'No, it won't,' said I, laughing; 'but my hand will shake if I don't smoke. Are you
going to employ me as a draughtsman?'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 162
"Miss Holroyd rose and crossed the hallway to her father's room, returning
presently with a box of promising-looking cigars.
"'I don't think he knows what is good for him,' she said. 'He should smoke only
one every day.'
"It was hard to bear. I am not vindictive, but I decided to treasure up a few of
Miss Holroyd's gentle taunts. My intimacy with her brother was certainly a
disadvantage to me now. Jack had apparently been talking too much, and his
sister appeared to be thoroughly acquainted with my past. It was a disadvantage.
I remembered her vaguely as a girl with long braids, who used to come on
Sundays with her father and take tea with us in our rooms. Then she went to
Germany to school, and Jack and I employed our Sunday evenings otherwise. It
is true that I regarded her weekly visits as a species of infliction, but I did not
think I ever showed it.
"'It is strange,' said I, 'that you did not recognize me at once, Miss Holroyd. Have
I changed so greatly in five years?'
"'You wore a pointed French beard in Paris,' she said--'a very downy one. And
you never stayed to tea but twice, and then you only spoke once.'
"'You asked me if I liked plums,' said Daisy, bursting into an irresistible ripple of
laughter.
"I saw that I must have made the same sort of an ass of myself that most boys of
eighteen do.
"It was too bad. I never thought about the future in those days. Who could have
imagined that little Daisy Holroyd would have grown up into this bewildering
young lady? It was really too bad. Presently the professor retired to his room,
carrying with him an armful of drawings, and bidding us not to sit up late. When
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 163
"'Papa will work over those drawings until midnight,' she said, with a despairing
smile.
"'It isn't good for him,' I said. 'What are the drawings?'
"'You may know to-morrow,' she answered, leaning forward on the table and
shading her face with one hand. 'Tell me about yourself and Jack in Paris.'
"'What! There isn't much to tell. We studied. Jack went to the law school, and I
attended--er--oh, all sorts of schools.'
"'Occasionally,' I nodded.
"'Miss Holroyd,' I said, 'I do care for fossils. You may think that I am a humbug,
but I have a perfect mania for fossils--now.'
"'Since when?'
"'About an hour ago,' I said, airily. Out of the corner of my eye I saw that she
had flushed up. It pleased me.
"'You will soon tire of the experiment,' she said, with a dangerous smile.
"She drew back. The movement was scarcely perceptible, but I noticed it, and
she knew I did.
"The atmosphere was vaguely hostile. One feels such mental conditions and
changes instantly. I picked up a chess-board, opened it, set up the pieces with
elaborate care, and began to move, first the white, then the black. Miss Holroyd
watched me coldly at first, but after a dozen moves she became interested and
leaned a shade nearer. I moved a black pawn forward.
"'Purely defensive,' I said. 'If her white highness will let the pawn alone, the
pawn will let the queen alone.'
"Miss Holroyd rested her chin on her wrist and gazed steadily at the board. She
was flushing furiously, but she held her ground.
"'If the white queen doesn't block that pawn, the pawn may become dangerous,'
she said, coldly.
"'True,' I said, 'it might even take the queen.' After a moment's silence I asked,
'What would you do in that case, Miss Holroyd?'
"'I should resign,' she said, serenely; then, realizing what she had said, she lost
her self-possession for a second, and cried: 'No, indeed! I should fight to the
bitter end! I mean--'
"'I mean,' she said, slowly, 'that your black pawn would never have the
chance--never! I should take it immediately.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 165
"'I believe you would,' said I, smiling; 'so we'll call the game yours, and--the
pawn captured.'
"'You know,' said I, gravely, 'that I am fonder of Jack than of anybody. That's the
reason we never write each other, except to borrow things. I am afraid that when
I was a young cub in France I was not an attractive personality.'
"'On the contrary,' said Daisy, smiling, 'I thought you were very big and very
perfect. I had illusions. I wept often when I went home and remembered that you
never took the trouble to speak to me but once.'
"'I was a cub,' I said--'not selfish and brutal, but I didn't understand school-girls.
I never had any sisters, and I didn't know what to say to very young girls. If I
had imagined that you felt hurt--'
"'Why, of course. I was very easily hurt when I was a child. I think I have
outgrown it.'
"'Yes. I had forgotten the whole thing until I met you an hour or so ago.'
"There was something that had a ring not entirely genuine in this speech. I
noticed it, but forgot it the next moment.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 166
"Presently she rose, touched her hair with the tip of one finger, and walked to the
door.
XIX
"The sea was a sheet of silver tinged with pink. The tremendous arch of the sky
was all shimmering and glimmering with the promise of the sun. Already the
mist above, flecked with clustered clouds, flushed with rose color and dull gold.
I heard the low splash of the waves breaking and curling across the beach. A
wandering breeze, fresh and fragrant, blew the curtains of my window. There
was the scent of sweet bay in the room, and everywhere the subtle, nameless
perfume of the sea.
"When at last I stood upon the shore, the air and sea were all a-glimmer in a rosy
light, deepening to crimson in the zenith. Along the beach I saw a little cove,
shelving and all a-shine, where shallow waves washed with a mellow sound.
Fine as dusted gold the shingle glowed, and the thin film of water rose, receded,
crept up again a little higher, and again flowed back, with the low hiss of snowy
foam and gilded bubbles breaking.
"I stood a little while quiet, my eyes upon the water, the invitation of the ocean
in my ears, vague and sweet as the murmur of a shell. Then I looked at my
bathing-suit and towels.
"'In we go!' said I, aloud. A second later the prophecy was fulfilled.
"I swam far out to sea, and as I swam the waters all around me turned to gold.
The sun had risen.
"There is a fragrance in the sea at dawn that none can name. Whitethorn a-bloom
in May, sedges a-sway, and scented rushes rustling in an inland wind recall the
sea to me--I can't say why.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 167
"Far out at sea I raised myself, swung around, dived, and set out again for shore,
striking strong strokes until the necked foam flew. And when at last I shot
through the breakers, I laughed aloud and sprang upon the beach, breathless and
happy. Then from the ocean came another cry, clear, joyous, and a white arm
rose in the air.
"She came drifting in with the waves like a white sea-sprite, laughing at me, and
I plunged into the breakers again to join her.
"Side by side we swam along the coast, just outside the breakers, until in the
next cove we saw the flutter of her maid's cap-strings.
"'I will beat you to breakfast!' she cried, as I rested, watching her glide up along
the beach.
"I made good speed along the shore, and I was not long in dressing, but when I
entered the dining-room she was there, demure, smiling, exquisite in her cool,
white frock.
"'The sea-shell is yours,' said I. 'I hope I can find one with a pearl in it.'
"The professor hurried in before she could reply. He greeted me very cordially,
but there was an abstracted air about him, and he called me Dick until I
recognized that remonstrance was useless. He was not long over his coffee and
rolls.
"'McPeek and Frisby will return with the last load, including your trunk, by early
afternoon,' he said, rising and picking up his bundle of drawings. 'I haven't time
to explain to you what we are doing, Dick, but Daisy will take you about and
instruct you. She will give you the rifle standing in my room--it's a good
Winchester. I have sent for an 'Express' for you, big enough to knock over any
elephant in India. Daisy, take him through the sheds and tell him everything.
Luncheon is at noon. Do you usually take luncheon, Dick?'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 168
"'Well,' said the professor, doubtfully, 'you mustn't come back here for it. Freda
can take you what you want. Is your hand unsteady after eating?'
"The professor tucked his drawings into a capacious pocket, pulled his sea-boots
up to his hips, seized a spade, and left, nodding to us as though he were thinking
of something else.
"We went to the door and watched him across the salt meadows until the distant
sand-dune hid him.
"'Come,' said Daisy Holroyd, 'I am going to take you to the shop.'
"The interior was lighted by the numberless little port-holes, and I could see
everything plainly. I acknowledge I was nonplussed by what I did see.
"In the centre of the shed, which must have been at least a hundred feet long,
stood what I thought at first was the skeleton of an enormous whale. After a
moment's silent contemplation of the thing I saw that it could not be a whale, for
the frames of two gigantic, batlike wings rose from each shoulder. Also I noticed
that the animal possessed legs--four of them--with most unpleasant-looking
webbed claws fully eight feet long. The bony framework of the head, too,
resembled something between a crocodile and a monstrous snapping-turtle. The
walls of the shanty were hung with drawings and blue prints. A man dressed in
white linen was tinkering with the vertebrae of the lizard-like tail.
"'If my father heard you say such things he would dislike you,' said Daisy. She
looked grieved, and moved towards the door. I apologized--for what, I knew
not--and we became reconciled. She ran into her father's room and brought me
the rifle, a very good Winchester. She also gave me a cartridge-belt, full.
"'Now,' she smiled, 'I shall take you to your observatory, and when we arrive you
are to begin your duty at once.'
"'That duty is to watch the ocean. I shall then explain the whole affair--but you
mustn't look at me while I speak; you must watch the sea.'
"I do not think she was offended at my speech; still she frowned for almost three
seconds.
"We passed through acres of sweet bay and spear grass, sometimes skirting
thickets of twisted cedars, sometimes walking in the full glare of the morning
sun, sinking into shifting sand where sun-scorched shells crackled under our
feet, and sun-browned sea-weed glistened, bronzed and iridescent. Then, as we
climbed a little hill, the sea-wind freshened in our faces, and lo! the ocean lay
below us, far-stretching as the eye could reach, glittering, magnificent.
"Daisy sat down flat on the sand. It takes a clever girl to do that and retain the
respectful deference due her from men. It takes a graceful girl to accomplish it
triumphantly when a man is looking.
"'You must sit beside me,' she said--as though it would prove irksome to me.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 170
"'Now,' she continued, 'you must watch the water while I am talking.'
"I nodded.
"I succeeded in wrenching my head towards the ocean, although I felt sure it
would swing gradually round again in spite of me.
"'To begin with,' said Daisy Holroyd, 'there's a thing in that ocean that would
astonish you if you saw it. Turn your head!'
"'Yes--er--a thing in the ocean that's going to astonish me.' Visions of mermaids
rose before me.
"'Please turn your eyes towards the water. Suppose a thermosaurus should look
out of the waves!'
"'It's that big, ugly, horrible creature that I showed you in the shed!' cried Daisy,
impatiently.
"'Eh!' I stammered.
"This was pleasant news. I glanced instinctively at my rifle and then at the
ocean.
"'Well,' said I at last, 'it strikes me that you and I resemble a pair of Andromedas
waiting to be swallowed. This rifle won't stop a beast, a live beast, like that
Nibelungen dragon of yours.'
"Then, for the first time, I noticed, just below the magazine, a cylindrical
attachment that was strange to me.
"'Now, if you will watch the sea very carefully, and will promise not to look at
me,' said Daisy, 'I will try to explain.'
"She did not wait for me to promise, but went on eagerly, a sparkle of
excitement in her blue eyes:
"'You know, of all the fossil remains of the great batlike and lizard-like creatures
that inhabited the earth ages and ages ago, the bones of the gigantic saurians are
the most interesting. I think they used to splash about the water and fly over the
land during the carboniferous period; anyway, it doesn't matter. Of course you
have seen pictures of reconstructed creatures such as the ichthyosaurus, the
plesiosaurus, the anthracosaurus, and the thermosaurus?'
"'And you know that the remains of the thermosaurus were first discovered and
reconstructed by papa?'
"'I am glad you do. Now, papa has proved that this creature lived entirely in the
Gulf Stream, emerging for occasional flights across an ocean or two. Can you
imagine how he proved it?'
"'It was rather slender rations for a thing like that, wasn't it? Did he ever swallow
bigger food--er--men?'
"'Oh yes. Tons of fossil bones from prehistoric men are also found in the interior
of the thermosaurus.'
"'Please turn around; don't be so foolish. I didn't say there was a live
thermosaurus in the water, did I?'
"'Isn't there?'
"'Why, no!'
"My relief was genuine, but I thought of the rifle and looked suspiciously out to
sea.
"'Listen, and I will explain. Papa has found out--how, I do not exactly
understand--that there is in the waters of the Gulf Stream the body of a
thermosaurus. The creature must have been alive within a year or so. The
impenetrable scale-armor that covers its body has, as far as papa knows,
prevented its disintegration. We know that it is there still, or was there within a
few months. Papa has reports and sworn depositions from steamer captains and
seamen from a dozen different vessels, all corroborating one another in essential
details. These stories, of course, get into the newspapers--sea-serpent stories--but
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 173
papa knows that they confirm his theory that the huge body of this reptile is
swinging along somewhere in the Gulf Stream.'
"She opened her sunshade and held it over her. I noticed that she deigned to give
me the benefit of about one-eighth of it.
"'Your duty with that rifle is this: if we are fortunate enough to see the body of
the thermosaurus come floating by, you are to take good aim and fire--fire
rapidly every bullet in the magazine; then reload and fire again, and reload and
fire as long as you have any cartridges left.'
"'A self-feeding Maxim is what I should have,' I said, with gentle sarcasm. 'Well,
and suppose I make a sieve of this big lizard?'
"Sure enough, somebody had driven heavy piles deep into the sand all around us,
and to the tops of these piles were attached steel rings, half buried under the
spear-grass. We sat almost exactly in the centre of a circle of these rings.
"'The reason is this,' said Daisy; 'every bullet in your cartridges is steel-tipped
and armor-piercing. To the base of each bullet is attached a thin wire of pallium.
Pallium is that new metal, a thread of which, drawn out into finest wire, will
hold a ton of iron suspended. Every bullet is fitted with minute coils of miles of
this wire. When the bullet leaves the rifle it spins out this wire as a shot from a
life-saver's mortar spins out and carries the life-line to a wrecked ship. The end
of each coil of wire is attached to that cylinder under the magazine of your rifle.
As soon as the shell is automatically ejected this wire flies out also. A bit of
scarlet tape is fixed to the end, so that it will be easy to pick up. There is also a
snap-clasp on the end, and this clasp fits those rings that you see in the sand.
Now, when you begin firing, it is my duty to run and pick up the wire ends and
attach them to the rings. Then, you see, we have the body of the thermosaurus
full of bullets, every bullet anchored to the shore by tiny wires, each of which
could easily hold a ton's strain.'
"'Your father,' said I, at length, 'must have spent years of labor over this
preparation.'
"Her face brightened, and she frankly held the sunshade over us both.
"'Ah, you don't know,' she said, 'what else papa has discovered. Would you
believe that he has found a loop in the Gulf Stream--a genuine loop--that swings
in here just outside of the breakers below? It is true! Everybody on Long Island
knows that there is a warm current off the coast, but nobody imagined it was
merely a sort of backwater from the Gulf Stream that formed a great circular
mill-race around the cone of a subterranean volcano, and rejoined the Gulf
Stream off Cape Albatross. But it is! That is why papa bought a yacht three years
ago and sailed about for two years so mysteriously. Oh, I did want to go with
him so much!'
"'Isn't it?' she said; 'and to think that you and papa and I are the only people in
the whole world who know this!'
"'Papa is writing the whole thing--I mean about the currents. He also has in
preparation sixteen volumes on the thermosaurus. He said this morning that he
was going to ask you to write the story first for some scientific magazine. He is
certain that Professor Bruce Stoddard, of Columbia, will write the pamphlets
necessary. This will give papa time to attend to the sixteen-volume work, which
he expects to finish in three years.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 175
"'We shall not fail,' I said, 'for I promise to sit on this sand-hill as long as I
live--until a thermosaurus appears--if that is your wish, Miss Holroyd.'
"Our eyes met for an instant. She did not chide me, either, for not looking at the
ocean. Her eyes were bluer, anyway.
"'I suppose,' she said, bending her head and absently pouring sand between her
fingers--'I suppose you think me a blue-stocking, or something odious?'
"'Not exactly,' I said. There was an emphasis in my voice that made her color.
After a moment she laid the sunshade down, still open.
"The ocean had turned a deep marine blue, verging on purple, that heralded a
scorching afternoon. The wind died away; the odor of cedar and sweet-bay hung
heavy in the air.
"In the sand at our feet an iridescent flower-beetle crawled, its metallic
green-and-blue wings burning like a spark. Great gnats, with filmy, glittering
wings, danced aimlessly above the young golden-rod; burnished crickets,
inquisitive, timid, ran from under chips of driftwood, waved their antennæ at us,
and ran back again. One by one the marbled tiger-beetles tumbled at our feet,
dazed from the exertion of an aërial flight, then scrambled and ran a little way,
or darted into the wire grass, where great, brilliant spiders eyed them askance
from their gossamer hammocks.
"Far out at sea the white gulls floated and drifted on the water, or sailed up into
the air to flap lazily for a moment and settle back among the waves. Strings of
black surf-ducks passed, their strong wings tipping the surface of the water;
single wandering coots whirled from the breakers into lonely flight towards the
horizon.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 176
"We lay and watched the little ring-necks running along the water's edge, now
backing away from the incoming tide, now boldly wading after the undertow.
The harmony of silence, the deep perfume, the mystery of waiting for that
something that all await--what is it? love? death? or only the miracle of another
morrow?--troubled me with vague restlessness. As sunlight casts shadows,
happiness, too, throws a shadow, an the shadow is sadness.
"And so the morning wore away until Freda came with a cool-looking hamper.
Then delicious cold fowl and lettuce sandwiches and champagne cup set our
tongues wagging as only very young tongues can wag. Daisy went back with
Freda after luncheon, leaving me a case of cigars, with a bantering smile. I
dozed, half awake, keeping a partly closed eye on the ocean, where a faint gray
streak showed plainly amid the azure water all around. That was the Gulf Stream
loop.
"About four o'clock Frisby appeared with a bamboo shelter-tent, for which I was
unaffectedly grateful.
"After he had erected it over me he stopped to chat a bit, but the conversation
bored me, for he could talk of nothing but bill-posting.
"'Ruin it!' repeated Frisby, nervously. 'It's ruined now; there ain't a place to stick
a bill.'
"'Bills,' said Frisby, 'give spice an' variety to nature. They break the monotony of
the everlastin' green and what-you-may-call-its.'
"'Bills,' he continued, 'are not easy to stick, lemme tell you, sir. Sign-paintin's a
soft snap when it comes to bill-stickin'. Now, I guess I've stuck more bills onto
New York State than ennybody.'
"'Yes, siree! I always pick out the purtiest spots--kinder filled chuck full of
woods and brooks and things; then I h'ist my paste-pot onto a rock, and I slather
that rock with gum, and whoop she goes!'
"'The bill. I paste her onto the rock, with one swipe of the brush for the edges
and a back-handed swipe for the finish--except when a bill is folded in two
halves.'
"I looked wearily out to sea. He also looked at the water and sighed
sentimentally.
"'Floatin' buoys with bills onto 'em is a idea of mine,' he observed. 'That damn
ocean is monotonous, ain't it?'
"I don't know what I might have done to Frisby--the rifle was so convenient--if
his mean yellow dog had not waddled up at this juncture.
"'Hi, Davy, sic 'em!' said Frisby, expectorating upon a clam-shell and hurling it
seaward. The cur watched the flight of the shell apathetically, then squatted in
the sand and looked at his master.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 178
"'Kinder lost his spirit,' said Frisby, 'ain't he? I once stuck a bill onto Davy, an' it
come off, an' the paste sorter sickened him. He was hell on rats--once!'
"After a moment or two Frisby took himself off, whistling cheerfully to Davy,
who followed him when he was ready. The rifle burned in my fingers.
"It was nearly six o'clock when the professor appeared, spade on shoulder, boots
smeared with mud.
"'Nothing, professor.'
"He wiped his shining face with his handkerchief and stared at the water.
"'My calculations lead me to believe,' he said, 'that our prize may be due any day
now. This theory I base upon the result of the report from the last sea-captain I
saw. I cannot understand why some of these captains did not take the carcass in
tow. They all say that they tried, but that the body sank before they could come
within half a mile. The truth is, probably, that they did not stir a foot from their
course to examine the thing.'
"'For two years,' he said, grimly. 'It's no use; it's accident when a ship falls in
with it. One captain reports it a thousand miles from where the last skipper spoke
it, and always in the Gulf Stream. They think it is a different specimen every
time, and the papers are teeming with sea-serpent fol-de-rol.'
"'Are you sure,' I asked, 'that it will swing into the coast on this Gulf Stream
loop?'
"'I think I may say that it is certain to do so. I experimented with a dead
right-whale. You may have heard of its coming ashore here last summer.'
"'I think I did,' said I, with a faint smile. The thing had poisoned the air for miles
around.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 179
"He laughed.
"'There I am lucky. Every night this month, and every day, too, the current of the
loop runs inland so far that even a porpoise would strand for at least twelve
hours. Longer than that I have not experimented with, but I know that the shore
trend of the loop runs across a long spur of the submerged volcanic mountain,
and that anything heavier than a porpoise would scrape the bottom and be
carried so slowly that at least twelve hours must elapse before the carcass could
float again into deep water. There are chances of its stranding indefinitely, too,
but I don't care to take those chances. That is why I have stationed you here,
Dick.'
"'There is another question I want to ask,' I said, 'if you don't mind.'
"'Why, simply for exercise. The doctor told me I was killing myself with my
sedentary habits, so I decided to dig. I don't know a better exercise. Do you?'
"'I suppose not,' I murmured, rather red in the face. I wondered whether he'd
mention fossils.
"'Did Daisy tell you why we are making our papier-maché thermosaurus?' he
asked.
"'We constructed that from measurements I took from the fossil remains of the
thermosaurus in the Metropolitan Museum. Professor Bruce Stoddard made the
drawings. We set it up here, all ready to receive the skin of the carcass that I am
expecting.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 180
"We had started towards home, walking slowly across the darkening dunes,
shoulder to shoulder. The sand was deep, and walking was not easy.
"'I wish,' said I at last, 'that I knew why Miss Holroyd asked me not to walk on
the beach. It's much less fatiguing.'
"'That,' said the professor, 'is a matter that I intend to discuss with you to-night.'
He spoke gravely, almost sadly. I felt that something of unparalleled importance
was soon to be revealed. So I kept very quiet, watching the ocean out of the
corners of my eyes.
XX
"Dinner was ended. Daisy Holroyd lighted her father's pipe for him, and insisted
on my smoking as much as I pleased. Then she sat down, and folded her hands
like a good little girl, waiting for her father to make the revelation which I felt in
my bones must be something out of the ordinary.
"The professor smoked for a while, gazing meditatively at his daughter; then,
fixing his gray eyes on me, he said:
"'Have you ever heard of the kree--that Australian bird, half parrot, half hawk,
that destroys so many sheep in New South Wales?'
"I nodded.
"'The kree kills a sheep by alighting on its back and tearing away the flesh with
its hooked beak until a vital part is reached. You know that? Well, it has been
discovered that the kree had prehistoric prototypes. These birds were enormous
creatures, who preyed upon mammoths and mastodons, and even upon the great
saurians. It has been conclusively proved that a few saurians have been killed by
the ancestors of the kree, but the favorite food of these birds was undoubtedly
the thermosaurus. It is believed that the birds attacked the eyes of the
thermosaurus, and when, as was its habit, the mammoth creature turned on its
back to claw them, they fell upon the thinner scales of its stomach armor and
finally killed it. This, of course, is a theory, but we have almost absolute proofs
of its correctness. Now, these two birds are known among scientists as the
ekaf-bird and the ool-yllik. The names are Australian, in which country most of
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 181
their remains have been unearthed. They lived during the Carboniferous period.
Now, it is not generally known, but the fact is, that in 1801 Captain Ransom, of
the British exploring vessel Gull, purchased from the natives of Tasmania the
skin of an ekaf-bird that could not have been killed more than twenty-four hours
previous to its sale. I saw this skin in the British Museum. It was labelled,
"Unknown bird, probably extinct." It took me exactly a week to satisfy myself
that it was actually the skin of an ekaf-bird. But that is not all, Dick,' continued
the professor, excitedly. 'In 1854 Admiral Stuart, of our own navy, saw the
carcass of a strange, gigantic bird floating along the southern coast of Australia.
Sharks were after it, and before a boat could be lowered these miserable fish got
it. But the good old admiral secured a few feathers and sent them to the
Smithsonian. I saw them. They were not even labelled, but I knew that they were
feathers from the ekaf-bird or its near relative, the ool-yllik.'
"I had grown so interested that I had leaned far across the table. Daisy, too, bent
forward. It was only when the professor paused for a moment that I noticed how
close together our heads were--Daisy's and mine. I don't think she realized it.
She did not move.
"'Now comes the important part of this long discourse,' said the professor,
smiling at our eagerness. "'Ever since the carcass of our derelict thermosaurus
was first noticed, every captain who has seen it has also reported the presence of
one or more gigantic birds in the neighborhood. These birds, at a great distance,
appeared to be hovering over the carcass, but on the approach of a vessel they
disappeared. Even in mid-ocean they were observed. When I heard about it I was
puzzled. A month later I was satisfied that neither the ekaf-bird nor the ool-yllik
was extinct. Last Monday I knew that I was right. I found forty-eight distinct
impressions of the huge, seven-toed claw of the ekaf-bird on the beach here at
Pine Inlet. You may imagine my excitement. I succeeded in digging up enough
wet sand around one of these impressions to preserve its form. I managed to get
it into a soap-box, and now it is there in my shop. The tide rose too rapidly for
me to save the other footprints.'
"'That is the reason that my daughter warned you off the beach,' he said, mildly.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 182
"'Hanging would have been too good for the vandal who destroyed such
priceless prizes,' I cried out, in self-reproach.
"Daisy Holroyd turned a flushed face to mine and impulsively laid her hand on
my sleeve.
"'It's all right now,' said her father, emphasizing each word with a gentle tap of
his pipe-bowl on the table-edge; 'don't be hard on yourself, Dick. You'll do
yeoman's service yet.'
"It was nearly midnight, and still we chatted on about the thermosaurus, the
ekaf-bird, and the ool-yllik, eagerly discussing the probability of the great
reptile's carcass being in the vicinity. That alone seemed to explain the presence
of these prehistoric birds at Pine Inlet.
"'Gracious!' he exclaimed, 'I never thought of that. And Daisy running about
out-of-doors! Dear me! It takes a scientist to be an unnatural parent!'
"His alarm was half real, half assumed; but, all the same, he glanced gravely at
us both, shaking his handsome head, absorbed in thought. Daisy herself looked a
little doubtful. As for me, my sensations were distinctly queer.
"'It is true,' said the professor, frowning at the wall, 'that human remains have
been found associated with the bones of the ekaf-bird--I don't know how
intimately. It is a matter to be taken into most serious consideration.'
"'The problem can be solved,' said I, 'in several ways. One is, to keep Miss
Holroyd in the house--'
"We all laughed, and her father assured her that she should not be abused.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 183
"'Even if I did stay in,' she said, 'one of these birds might alight on Master Dick.'
"She looked saucily at me as she spoke, but turned crimson when her father
observed, quietly, 'You don't seem to think of me, Daisy!'
"'Of course I do,' she said, getting up and putting both arms around her father's
neck; 'but Dick--as--as you call him--is so helpless and timid.'
"'Timid!' I repeated.
"'What are your other plans, Dick?' asked the professor. 'Daisy, let him alone,
you little tease!'
"'One is, to haul a lot of cast-iron boilers along the dunes,' I said. 'If these birds
come when the carcass floats in, and if they seem disposed to trouble us, we
could crawl into the boilers and be safe.'
"'Be quiet, my child. Dick, the plan is sound and sensible and perfectly practical.
McPeek and Frisby shall go for a dozen loads of boilers to-morrow.'
"'It will spoil the beauty of the landscape,' said Daisy, with a taunting nod to me.
"'And Frisby will probably attempt to cover them with bill-posters,' I added,
laughing.
"'That,' said Daisy, 'I shall prevent, even at the cost of his life.' And she stood up,
looking very determined.
XXI
"The week passed quickly for me, leaving but few definite impressions. As I
look back to it now I can see the long stretch of beach burning in the fierce
sunlight, the endless meadows, with the glimmer of water in the distance, the
dunes, the twisted cedars, the leagues of scintillating ocean, rocking, rocking,
always rocking. In the starlit nights the curlew came in from the sand-bars by
twos and threes; I could hear their querulous call as I lay in bed thinking. All day
long the little ring-necks whistled from the shore. The plover answered them
from distant, lonely inland pools. The great white gulls drifted like feathers upon
the sea.
"One morning towards the end of the week, I, strolling along the dunes, came
upon Frisby. He was bill-posting. I caught him red-handed.
"He stepped back from his work, laying his head on one side, considering first
me, then the bill that he had pasted on one of our big boilers.
"'Don't you like the color?' he asked. 'It goes well on them black boilers.'
"'Color! No, I don't like the color, either. Can't you understand that there are
some people in the world who object to seeing patent-medicine advertisements
scattered over a landscape?'
"I was too disgusted to speak, but my disgust turned to anger when I perceived
that, as far as the eye could reach, our boilers, lying from three to four hundred
feet apart, were ablaze with yellow-and-red posters extolling the 'Eureka Liver
Pill Company.'
"'It don't cost 'em nothin',' said Frisby, cheerfully; 'I done it fur the fun of it.
Purty, ain't it?'
"'They are Professor Holroyd's boilers,' I said, subduing a desire to beat Frisby
with my telescope. 'Wait until Miss Holroyd sees this work.'
"Frisby gaped at his handiwork and then at his yellow dog. After a moment he
mechanically spat on a clam-shell and requested Davy to 'sic' it.
"'Can't you comprehend that you have ruined our pleasure in the landscape?' I
asked, more mildly.
"'I've got some green bills,' said Frisby; 'I kin stick 'em over the yeller ones--'
"'Then,' observed Frisby, 'you don't like them pills. I've got some bills of the
"Cropper Automobile" and a few of "Bagley, the Gents' Tailor"--'
"'Frisby,' said I, 'use them all--paste the whole collection over your dog and
yourself--then walk off the cliff.'
"He sullenly unfolded a green poster, swabbed the boiler with paste, laid the
upper section of the bill upon it, and plastered the whole bill down with a thwack
of his brush. As I walked away I heard him muttering.
"Next day Daisy was so horrified that I promised to give Frisby an ultimatum. I
found him with Freda, gazing sentimentally at his work, and I sent him back to
the shop in a hurry, telling Freda at the same time that she could spend her
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 186
leisure in providing Mr. Frisby with sand, soap, and a scrubbing-brush. Then I
walked on to my post of observation.
"I watched until sunset. Daisy came with her father to hear my report, but there
was nothing to tell, and we three walked slowly back to the house.
"In the evenings the professor worked on his volumes, the click of his
type-writer sounding faintly behind his closed door. Daisy and I played chess
sometimes; sometimes we played hearts. I don't remember that we ever finished
a game of either--we talked too much.
"Now, love is a matter of interest to ten people out of ten. Why it was that it did
not appear to interest us is as interesting a question as love itself. We were
young, alert, enthusiastic, inquiring. We eagerly absorbed theories concerning
any curious phenomena in nature, as intellectual cocktails to stimulate
discussion. And yet we did not discuss love. I do not say that we avoided it. No;
the subject was too completely ignored for even that. And yet we found it very
difficult to pass an hour separated. The professor noticed this, and laughed at us.
We were not even embarrassed.
"Sunday passed in pious contemplation of the ocean. Daisy read a little in her
prayer-book, and the professor threw a cloth over his type-writer and strolled up
and down the sands. He may have been lost in devout abstraction; he may have
been looking for footprints. As for me, my mind was very serene, and I was
more than happy. Daisy read to me a little for my soul's sake, and the professor
came up and said something cheerful. He also examined the magazine of my
Winchester.
"That night, too, Daisy took her guitar to the sands and sang one or two Basque
hymns. Unlike us, the Basques do not take their pleasures sadly. One of their
pleasures is evidently religion.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 187
"The big moon came up over the dunes and stared at the sea until the surface of
every wave trembled with radiance. A sudden stillness fell across the world; the
wind died out; the foam ran noiselessly across the beach; the cricket's rune was
stilled.
"I leaned back, dropping one hand upon the sand. It touched another hand, soft
and cool.
"After a while the other hand moved slightly, and I found that my own had
closed above it. Presently one finger stirred a little--only a little--for our fingers
were interlocked.
"On the shore the foam-froth bubbled and winked and glimmered in the
moonlight. A star fell from the zenith, showering the night with incandescent
dust.
"If our fingers lay interlaced beside us, her eyes were calm and serene as always,
wide open, fixed upon the depths of a dark sky. And when her father rose and
spoke to us, she did not withdraw her hand.
"I stood up, still holding her hand, and aided her to rise. And when, at the door, I
said good-night, she turned and looked at me for a little while in silence, then
passed into her room slowly, with head still turned towards me.
"All night long I dreamed of her; and when the east whitened, I sprang up, the
thunder of the ocean in my ears, the strong sea-wind blowing into the open
window.
"'She's asleep,' I thought, and I leaned from the window and peered out into the
east.
"The sea called to me, tossing its thousand arms; the soaring gulls, dipping,
rising, wheeling above the sandbar, screamed and clamored for a playmate. I
slipped into my bathing-suit, dropped from the window upon the soft sand, and
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 188
in a moment had plunged head foremost into the surf, swimming beneath the
waves towards the open sea.
"Under the tossing ocean the voice of the waters was in my ears--a low, sweet
voice, intimate, mysterious. Through singing foam and broad, green, glassy
depths, by whispering sandy channels atrail with sea-weed, and on, on, out into
the vague, cool sea, I sped, rising to the top, sinking, gliding. Then at last I flung
myself out of water, hands raised, and the clamor of the gulls filled my ears.
"As I lay, breathing fast, drifting on the sea, far out beyond the gulls I saw a
flash of white, and an arm was lifted, signalling me.
"'Daisy!' I called.
"A clear hail came across the water, distinct on the sea-wind, and at the same
instant we raised our hands and moved towards each other.
"How we laughed as we met in the sea! The white dawn came up out of the
depths, the zenith turned to rose and ashes.
"And with the dawn came the wind--a great sea-wind, fresh, aromatic, that
hurled our voices back into our throats and lifted the sheeted spray above our
heads. Every wave, crowned with mist, caught us in a cool embrace, cradled us,
and slipped away, only to leave us to another wave, higher, stronger, crested
with opalescent glory, breathing incense.
"We turned together up the coast, swimming lightly side by side, but our words
were caught up by the winds and whirled into the sky.
"We looked up at the driving clouds; we looked out upon the pallid waste of
waters, but it was into each other's eyes we looked, wondering, wistful,
questioning the reason of sky and sea And there in each other's eyes we read the
mystery, and we knew that earth and sky and sea were created for us alone.
"Drifting on by distant sands and dunes, her white fingers touching mine, we
spoke, keying our tones to the wind's vast harmony. And we spoke of love.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 189
"Gray and wide as the limitless span of the sky and the sea, the winds gathered
from the world's ends to bear us on; but they were not familiar winds; for now,
along the coast, the breakers curled and showed a million fangs, and the ocean
stirred to its depths, uneasy, ominous, and the menace of its murmur drew us
closer as we moved.
"Where the dull thunder and the tossing spray warned us from sunken reefs, we
heard the harsh challenges of gulls; where the pallid surf twisted in yellow coils
of spume above the bar, the singing sands murmured of treachery and secrets of
lost souls agasp in the throes of silent undertows.
"But there was a little stretch of beach glimmering through the mountains of
water, and towards this we turned, side by side. Around us the water grew
warmer; the breath of the following waves moistened our cheeks; the water itself
grew gray and strange about us.
"'We have come too far,' I said; but she only answered:
"'Faster, faster! I am afraid!' The water was almost hot now; its aromatic odor
filled our lungs.
"Out across the waves it blundered, rising little by little from the water, and now,
to my horror, I saw another monstrous bird swinging in the air above it,
squealing as it turned on its vast wings. Before I could speak we touched the
beach, and I half lifted her to the shore.
"Her eyes were dark with fear, but she rested a hand on my shoulder, and we
crept up among the dune-grasses and sank down by the point of sand where the
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 190
"She lay there, breathing fast and deep, dripping with spray. I had no power of
speech left, but when I rose wearily to my knees and looked out upon the water
my blood ran cold. Above the ocean, on the breast of the roaring wind, three
enormous birds sailed, turning and wheeling among one another; and below,
drifting with the gray stream of the Gulf loop, a colossal bulk lay half
submerged--a gigantic lizard, floating belly upward.
"Then Daisy crept kneeling to my side and touched me, trembling from head to
foot.
"'I know,' I muttered. 'I must run back for the rifle.'
"I took her by the hand, and we dragged ourselves through the wire-grass to the
open end of a boiler lying in the sand.
"'You are safe now,' I cried. 'I must go back for the rifle.'
"'If they do I can get into one of the other boilers,' I said. 'Daisy, you must not
venture out until I come back. You won't, will you?'
"'Then--good-bye.'
"'Good-bye,' she answered, but her voice was very small and still.
"'Good-bye,' I said again. I was kneeling at the mouth of the big iron tunnel; it
was dark inside and I could not see her, but, before I was conscious of it, her
arms were around my neck and we had kissed each other.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 191
"I don't remember how I went away. When I came to my proper senses I was
swimming along the coast at full speed, and over my head wheeled one of the
birds, screaming at every turn.
"The intoxication of that innocent embrace, the close impress of her arms around
my neck, gave me a strength and recklessness that neither fear nor fatigue could
subdue. The bird above me did not even frighten me. I watched it over my
shoulder, swimming strongly, with the tide now aiding me, now stemming my
course; but I saw the shore passing quickly, and my strength increased, and I
shouted when I came in sight of the house, and scrambled up on the sand,
dripping and excited. There was nobody in sight, and I gave a last glance up into
the air where the bird wheeled, still screeching, and hastened into the house.
Freda stared at me in amazement as I seized the rifle and shouted for the
professor.
"'He has just gone to town, with Captain McPeek in his wagon,' stammered
Freda.
"'Yes, Jimmie; isn't there anybody here? Good Heavens! where's that man in the
shop?'
"'He also iss gone,' said Freda, shedding tears, 'to buy papier-maché. Yimmie, he
iss gone to post bills.'
"I waited to hear no more, but swung my rifle over my shoulder, and, hanging
the cartridge-belt across my chest, hurried out and up the beach. The bird was
not in sight.
"I had been running for perhaps a minute when, far up on the dunes, I saw a
yellow dog rush madly through a clump of sweet-bay, and at the same moment a
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 192
bird soared past, rose, and hung hovering just above the thicket. Suddenly the
bird swooped; there was a shriek and a yelp from the cur, but the bird gripped it
in one claw and beat its wings upon the sand, striving to rise. Then I saw
Frisby--paste, bucket, and brush raised--fall upon the bird, yelling lustily. The
fierce creature relaxed its talons, and the dog rushed on, squeaking with terror.
The bird turned on Frisby and sent him sprawling on his face, a sticky mass of
paste and sand. But this did not end the struggle. The bird, croaking horridly,
flew at the prostrate bill-poster, and the sand whirled into a pillar above its
terrible wings. Scarcely knowing what I was about, I raised my rifle and fired
twice. A scream echoed each shot, and the bird rose heavily in a shower of sand;
but two bullets were embedded in that mass of foul feathers, and I saw the wires
and scarlet tape uncoiling on the sand at my feet. In an instant I seized them and
passed the ends around a cedar-tree, hooking the clasps tight. Then I cast one
swift glance upward, where the bird wheeled, screeching, anchored like a kite to
the pallium wires; and I hurried on across the dunes, the shells cutting my feet
and the bushes tearing my wet swimming-suit, until I dripped with blood from
shoulder to ankle. Out in the ocean the carcass of the thermosaurus floated,
claws outspread, belly glistening in the gray light, and over him circled two
birds. As I reached the shelter I knelt and fired into the mass of scales, and at my
first shot a horrible thing occurred--the lizard-like head writhed, the slitted
yellow eyes sliding open from the film that covered them. A shudder passed
across the undulating body, the great scaled belly heaved, and one leg feebly
clawed at the air.
"Crushing back the horror that almost paralyzed my hands, I planted shot after
shot into the quivering reptile, while it writhed and clawed, striving to turn over
and dive; and at each shot the black blood spurted in long, slim jets across the
water. And now Daisy was at my side, pale and determined, swiftly clasping
each tape-marked wire to the iron rings in the circle around us. Twice I filled the
magazine from my belt, and twice I poured streams of steel-tipped bullets into
the scaled mass, twisting and shuddering on the sea. Suddenly the birds steered
towards us. I felt the wind from their vast wings. I saw the feathers erect,
vibrating. I saw the spread claws outstretched, and I struck furiously at them,
crying to Daisy to run into the iron shelter. Backing, swinging my clubbed rifle,
I retreated, but I tripped across one of the taut pallium wires, and in an instant
the hideous birds were on me, and the bone in my forearm snapped like a
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 193
*****
"When I struggled back to consciousness Daisy knelt silently beside me, while
Captain McPeek and Professor Holroyd bound up my shattered arm, talking
excitedly. The pain made me faint and dizzy. I tried to speak and could not. At
last they got me to my feet and into the wagon, and Daisy came, too, and
crouched beside me, wrapped in oilskins to her eyes. Fatigue, lack of food, and
excitement had combined with wounds and broken bones to extinguish the last
atom of strength in my body; but my mind was clear enough to understand that
the trouble was over and the thermosaurus safe.
"I heard McPeek say that one of the birds that I had anchored to a cedar-tree had
torn loose from the bullets and had winged its way heavily out to sea. The
professor answered: 'Yes, the ekaf-bird; the others were ool-ylliks. I'd have given
my right arm to have secured them.' Then for a time I heard no more; but the
jolting of the wagon over the dunes roused me to keenest pain, and I held out my
right hand to Daisy. She clasped it in both of hers, and kissed it again and again.
*****
*****
The young man hesitated, looking long and earnestly at Miss Barrison.
"You wouldn't believe it," said the young man, earnestly--"you wouldn't believe
it, after all that happened, if I should tell you that she married Professor Bruce
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 194
"Yes, I would," said Miss Barrison. "You never can tell what a girl will do."
"That story of yours," I said, "is to me the most wonderful and valuable
contribution to nature study that it has ever been my fortune to listen to. You are
fitted to write; it is your sacred mission to produce. Are you going to?"
"I am writing," said the young man, quietly, "a nature book. Sir Peter Grebe's
magnificent monograph on the speckled titmouse inspired me. But nature study
is not what I have chosen as my life's mission."
"A personal experience revealed to me my life's work," he, went on, thoughtfully
stroking his blond mustache. "If Miss Barrison would care to hear it--"
"I shall have to relate it clothed in that artificial garb known as literary style," he
explained, deprecatingly.
"It doesn't matter," I said, "I never noticed any style at all in your story of the
thermosaurus."
He smiled gratefully, and passed his hand over his face; a far-away expression
came into his eyes, and he slowly began, hesitating, as though talking to himself:
XXII
"It was high noon in the city of Antwerp. From slender steeples floated the
mellow music of the Flemish bells, and in the spire of the great cathedral across
the square the cracked chimes clashed discords until my ears ached.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 195
"When the fiend in the cathedral had jerked the last tuneless clang from the
chimes, I removed my fingers from my ears and sat down at one of the iron
tables in the court. A waiter, with his face shaved blue, brought me a bottle of
Rhine wine, a tumbler of cracked ice, and a siphon.
"'Yes--the head of the cathedral bell-ringer; bring it with vinegar and potatoes,' I
said, bitterly. Then I began to ponder on my great-aunt and the Crimson
Diamond.
"The white walls of the Hôtel St. Antoine rose in a rectangle around the sunny
court, casting long shadows across the basin of the fountain. The strip of blue
overhead was cloudless. Sparrows twittered under the eaves the yellow awnings
fluttered, the flowers swayed in the summer breeze, and the jet of the fountain
splashed among the water-plants. On the sunny side of the piazza the tables were
vacant; on the shady side I was lazily aware that the tables behind me were
occupied, but I was indifferent as to their occupants, partly because I shunned all
tourists, partly because I was thinking of my great-aunt.
"Most old ladies are eccentric, but there is a limit, and my great-aunt had
overstepped it. I had believed her to be wealthy--she died bankrupt. Still, I knew
there was one thing she did possess, and that was the famous Crimson Diamond.
Now, of course, you know who my great-aunt was.
"Excepting the Koh-i-noor and the Regent, this enormous and unique stone was,
as everybody knows, the most valuable gem in existence. Any ordinary person
would have placed that diamond in a safe-deposit. My great-aunt did nothing of
the kind. She kept it in a small velvet bag, which she carried about her neck. She
never took it off, but wore it dangling openly on her heavy silk gown.
"In this same bag she also carried dried catnip-leaves, of which she was
inordinately fond. Nobody but myself, her only living relative, knew that the
Crimson Diamond lay among the sprigs of catnip in the little velvet bag.
"'Harold,' she would say, 'do you think I'm a fool? If I place the Crimson
Diamond in any safe-deposit vault in New York, somebody will steal it, sooner
or later.' Then she would nibble a sprig of catnip and peer cunningly at me. I
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 196
loathed the odor of catnip and she knew it. I also loathed cats. This also she
knew, and of course surrounded herself with a dozen. Poor old lady! One day
she was found dead in her bed in her apartments at the Waldorf. The doctor said
she died from natural causes. The only other occupant of her sleeping-room was
a cat. The cat fled when we broke open the door, and I heard that she was
received and cherished by some eccentric people in a neighboring apartment.
"Now, although my great-aunt's death was due to purely natural causes, there
was one very startling and disagreeable feature of the case. The velvet bag
containing the Crimson Diamond had disappeared. Every inch of the apartment
was searched, the floors torn up, the walls dismantled, but the Crimson Diamond
had vanished. Chief of Police Conlon detailed four of his best men on the case,
and, as I had nothing better to do, I enrolled myself as a volunteer. I also offered
$25,000 reward for the recovery of the gem. All New York was agog.
"The case seemed hopeless enough, although there were five of us after the thief.
McFarlane was in London, and had been for a month, but Scotland Yard could
give him no help, and the last I heard of him he was roaming through Surrey
after a man with a white spot in his hair. Harrison had gone to Paris. He kept
writing me that clews were plenty and the scent hot, but as Dennet, in Berlin,
and Clancy, in Vienna, wrote me the same thing, I began to doubt these
gentlemen's ability.
"'You say,' I answered Harrison, 'that the fellow is a Frenchman, and that he is
now concealed in Paris; but Dennet writes me by the same mail that the thief is
undoubtedly a German, and was seen yesterday in Berlin. To-day I received a
letter from Clancy, assuring me that Vienna holds the culprit, and that he is an
Austrian from Trieste. Now, for Heaven's sake,' I ended, 'let me alone and stop
writing me letters until you have something to write about.'
"The night-clerk at the Waldorf had furnished us with our first clew. On the
night of my aunt's death he had seen a tall, grave-faced man hurriedly leave the
hotel. As the man passed the desk he removed his hat and mopped his forehead,
and the night-clerk noticed that in the middle of his head there was a patch of
hair as white as snow.
"We worked this clew for all it was worth, and, a month later, I received a cable
despatch from Paris, saying that a man answering to the description of the
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 197
Waldorf suspect had offered an enormous crimson diamond for sale to a jeweller
in the Palais Royal. Unfortunately the fellow took fright and disappeared before
the jeweller could send for the police, and since that time McFarlane in London,
Harrison in Paris, Dennet in Berlin, and Clancy in Vienna had been chasing men
with white patches on their hair until no gray-headed patriarch in Europe was
free from suspicion. I myself had sleuthed it through England, France, Holland,
and Belgium, and now I found myself in Antwerp at the Hôtel St. Antoine,
without a clew that promised anything except another outrage on some
respectable white-haired citizen. The case seemed hopeless enough, unless the
thief tried again to sell the gem. Here was our only hope, for, unless he cut the
stone into smaller ones, he had no more chance of selling it than he would have
had if he had stolen the Venus of Milo and peddled her about the Rue de Seine.
Even were he to cut up the stone, no respectable gem collector or jeweller would
buy a crimson diamond without first notifying me; for although a few red stones
are known to collectors, the color of the Crimson Diamond was absolutely
unique, and there was little probability of an honest mistake.
"Thinking of all these things, I sat sipping my Rhine wine in the shadow of the
yellow awnings. A large white cat came sauntering by and stopped in front of
me to perform her toilet, until I wished she would go away. After a while she sat
up, licked her whiskers, yawned once or twice, and was about to stroll on, when,
catching sight of me, she stopped short and looked me squarely in the face. I
returned the attention with a scowl, because I wished to discourage any advances
towards social intercourse which she might contemplate; but after a while her
steady gaze disconcerted me, and I turned to my Rhine wine. A few minutes
later I looked up again. The cat was still eying me.
"'Now what the devil is the matter with the animal,' I muttered; 'does she
recognize in me a relative?'
"I looked him full in the face. He was old and bald and appeared weak-minded.
His age protected his impudence. I turned my back on him. Then my eyes fell on
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 198
"Disgusted that she should take such pointed public notice of me, I wondered
whether other people saw it; I wondered whether there was anything peculiar in
my own personal appearance. How hard the creature stared! It was most
embarrassing.
"'What has got into that cat?' I thought. 'It's sheer impudence. It's an intrusion,
and I won't stand it!' The cat did not move. I tried to stare her out of
countenance. It was useless. There was aggressive inquiry in her yellow eyes. A
sensation of uneasiness began to steal over me--a sensation of embarrassment
not unmixed with awe. All cats looked alike to me, and yet there was something
about this one that bothered me--something that I could not explain to myself,
but which began to occupy me.
"She looked familiar--this Antwerp cat. An odd sense of having seen her before,
of having been well acquainted with her in former years, slowly settled in my
mind, and, although I could never remember the time when I had not detested
cats, I was almost convinced that my relations with this Antwerp tabby had once
been intimate if not cordial. I looked more closely at the animal. Then an idea
struck me--an idea which persisted and took definite shape in spite of me. I
strove to escape from it, to evade it, to stifle and smother it; an inward struggle
ensued which brought the perspiration in beads upon my cheeks--a struggle
short, sharp, decisive. It was useless--useless to try to put it from me--this idea
so wretchedly bizarre, so grotesque and fantastic, so utterly inane--it was useless
to deny that the cat bore a distinct resemblance to my great-aunt!
"I gazed at her in horror. What enormous eyes the creature had!
"'Blood is thicker than water,' said the man at the next table.
"'Chattering old imbecile,' I added to myself, and struck a match, for my cigar
was out; but, as I raised the match to relight it, I encountered the cat's eyes again.
I could not enjoy my cigar with the animal staring at me, but I was justly
indignant, and I did not intend to be routed. 'The idea! Forced to leave for a cat!'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 199
I sneered. 'We will see who will be the one to go!' I tried to give her a jet of
seltzer from the siphon, but the bottle was too nearly empty to carry far. Then I
attempted to lure her nearer, calling her in French, German, and English, but she
did not stir. I did not know the Flemish for 'cat.'
"'She's got a name, and won't come,' I thought. 'Now, what under the sun can I
call her?'
"I sat perfectly still. Could that man have answered my thoughts?--for I had not
spoken aloud. Of course not--it was a coincidence--but a very disgusting one.
"'Who knows?' sighed the man at the next table, and I sprang to my feet and
wheeled about. But I only caught a glimpse of a pair of frayed coat-tails and a
bald head vanishing into the dining-room. I sat down again, thoroughly
indignant. A moment later the cat got up and went away.
XXIII
"Daylight was fading in the city of Antwerp. Down into the sea sank the sun,
tinting the vast horizon with flakes of crimson, and touching with rich deep
undertones the tossing waters of the Scheldt. Its glow fell like a rosy mantle over
red-tiled roofs and meadows; and through the haze the spires of twenty churches
pierced the air like sharp, gilded flames. To the west and south the green plains,
over which the Spanish armies tramped so long ago, stretched away until they
met the sky; the enchantment of the after-glow had turned old Antwerp into
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 200
fairy-land; and sea and sky and plain were beautiful and vague as the night-mists
floating in the moats below.
"Along the sea-wall from the Rubens Gate all Antwerp strolled, and chattered,
and flirted, and sipped their Flemish wines from slender Flemish glasses, or
gossiped over krugs of foaming beer.
"From the Scheldt came the cries of sailors, the creaking of cordage, and the
puff! puff! of the ferry-boats. On the bastions of the fortress opposite, a bugler
was standing. Twice the mellow notes of the bugle came faintly over the water,
then a great gun thundered from the ramparts, and the Belgian flag fluttered
along the lanyards to the ground.
"I leaned listlessly on the sea-wall and looked down at the Scheldt below. A
battery of artillery was embarking for the fortress. The tublike transport lay
hissing and whistling in the slip, and the stamping of horses, the rumbling of gun
and caisson, and the sharp cries of the officers came plainly to the ear.
"When the last caisson was aboard and stowed, and the last trooper had sprung
jingling to the deck, the transport puffed out into the Scheldt, and I turned away
through the throng of promenaders; and found a little table on the terrace, just
outside of the pretty café. And as I sat down I became aware of a girl at the next
table--a girl all in white--the most ravishingly and distractingly pretty girl that I
had ever seen. In the agitation of the moment I forgot my name, my fortune, my
aunt, and the Crimson Diamond--all these I forgot in a purely human impulse to
see clearly; and to that end I removed my monocle from my left eye. Some
moments later I came to myself and feebly replaced it. It was too late; the
mischief was done. I was not aware at first of the exact state of my feelings--for
I had never been in love more than three or four times in all my life--but I did
know that at her request I would have been proud to stand on my head, or turn a
flip-flap into the Scheldt.
"I did not stare at her, but I managed to see her most of the time when her eyes
were in another direction. I found myself drinking something which a waiter
brought, presumably upon an order which I did not remember having given.
Later I noticed that it was a loathsome drink which the Belgians call 'American
grog,' but I swallowed it and lighted a cigarette. As the fragrant cloud rose in the
air, a voice, which I recognized with a chill, broke, into my dream of
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 201
enchantment. Could he have been there all the while--there sitting beside that
vision in white? His hat was off, and the ocean-breezes whispered about his bald
head. His frayed coat-tails were folded carefully over his knees, and between the
thumb and forefinger of his left hand he balanced a bad cigar. He looked at me
in a mildly cheerful way, and said, 'I know now.'
"'Know what?' I asked, thinking it better to humor him, for I was convinced that
he was mad.
"'I know why,' he repeated; 'can you guess why?' There was a covert tone of
triumph in his voice and he smiled encouragement. 'Come, try and guess,' he
urged.
"'Listen, young man,' he continued, folding his coat-tails closely about his
legs--'try to reason it out: why should cats bite? Don't you know? I do.'
"'Oh yes.'
"'Then why do you not ask me why?' he said, looking vaguely disappointed.
"'Well,' I said, in desperation, 'why do cats bite?--hang it all!' I thought, 'it's like
a burned-cork show, and I'm Mr. Bones and he's Tambo!'
"Then he smiled gently. 'Young man,' he said, 'cats bite because they feed on
catnip. I have reasoned it out.'
"I stared at him in blank astonishment. Was this benevolent-looking old party
poking fun at me? Was he paying me up for the morning's snub? Was he a
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 202
"'Wilhelmina,' he said, 'do you feel chilly?' The girl shook her head.
"'Her father!' I thought--'her father!' Thank God she did not say 'popper'!
"'I have been to the Zoo to-day,' announced the bald one, turning towards me.
"'Yes, the apes,' he murmured, fixing his mild eyes on me. Then he leaned
towards me confidentially and whispered, 'Can you tell me what a monkey
thinks?'
"'Ah,' he sighed, sinking back in his chair, and patting the slender hand of the
girl beside him--'ah, who can tell what a monkey thinks?' His gentle face lulled
my suspicions, and I replied, very gravely:
"'True, true! Who can tell whether they think at all; and if they do think, ah! who
can tell what they think?'
"'But,' I began, 'if you can't tell whether they think at all, what's the use of trying
to conjecture what they would think if they did think?'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 203
"He raised his hand in deprecation. 'Ah, it is exactly that which is of such
absorbing interest--exactly that! It is the abstruseness of the proposition which
stimulates research--which stirs profoundly the brain of the thinking world. The
question is of vital and instant importance. Possibly you have already formed an
opinion.'
"'I doubt,' he continued, swathing his knees in his coat-tails--'I doubt whether
you have given much attention to the subject lately discussed by the Boston
Dodo Society of Pythagorean Research.'
"'I am not sure,' I said, politely, 'that I recall that particular discussion. May I ask
what was the question brought up?'
"'Ah, that must indeed be interesting! And--er--what may be the Felis do--do--'
"'Indeed,' I murmured.
"I only half heard him. I could not turn my eyes from his daughter's face.
"'Cat!' shouted the bald one, and I almost leaped from my chair. 'Are you deaf?'
he inquired, sympathetically.
"'I was not discussing the dodo,' he sighed. 'I was speaking of cats.'
"'The question is,' he continued, twisting his frayed coat-tails into a sort of
rope--'the question is, how are we to ameliorate the present condition and social
status of our domestic cats?'
"He raised both hands. They were eloquent with patient expostulation. 'I mean
their spiritual condition,' he said.
"I nodded, but my eyes reverted to that exquisite face. She sat silent, her eyes
fixed on the waning flecks of color in the western sky.
"'Yes,' repeated the bald one, 'the spiritual welfare of our domestic cats.'
"'Papa!' exclaimed the girl, turning in dismay, as that gentleman gave a guilty
start, 'stop it at once!'
"He smiled apologetically and made a feeble attempt to conceal his coat-tails.
"The girl rose, and, bending over her untidy parent, deftly untied the knot in his
flapping coat. When he was disentangled, she sat down and said, with a ghost of
a smile, 'He is so very absent-minded.'
"'My first name is Penny--named after Professor Penny, of Harvard,' he said; 'but
I seldom use my first name in connection with my second, as the combination
suggests a household remedy of penetrating odor.'
"'Student?'
"'Er--a little.'
"'Student of diamonds?'
"I smiled. 'Oh, I see you know who my great-aunt was,' I said.
"'What do you study? You don't fiddle away all your time, do you?' he asked.
"Now that was just what I did, but I was not pleased to have Miss Wyeth know
it. Although my time was chiefly spent in killing time, I had once, in a fit of
energy, succeeded in writing some verses 'To a Tomtit,' so I evaded a
humiliating confession by saying that I had done a little work in ornithology.
"'Good!' cried the professor, beaming all over. 'I knew you were a
fellow-scientist. Possibly you are a brother-member of the Boston Dodo Society
of Pythagorean Research. Are you a dodo?'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 206
"'Only a jay?'
"'A jay. We call the members of the Junior Ornithological Jay Society of New
York, jays, just as we refer to ourselves as dodos. Are you not even a jay?'
"'I'm afraid I do not approve of Pythagorean research,' I began, but the beautiful
Miss Wyeth turned to me very seriously, and, looking me frankly in the eyes,
said:
"'Good Lord!' I thought. 'Can she be another lunatic?' I looked at her steadily.
What a little beauty she was! She also, then, belonged to the Pythagoreans--a
sect I despised. Everybody knows all about the Pythagorean craze, its rise in
Boston, its rapid spread, and its subsequent consolidation with mental and
Christian science, theosophy, hypnotism, the Salvation Army, the Shakers, the
Dunkards, and the mind-cure cult, upon a business basis. I had hitherto regarded
all Pythagoreans with the same scornful indifference which I accorded to the
faith-curists; being a member of no particular church, I was scarcely prepared to
take any of them seriously. Least of all did I approve of the 'business basis,' and I
looked very much askance indeed at the 'Scientific and Religious Trust
Company,' duly incorporated and generally known as the Pythagorean Trust,
which, consolidating with mind-curists, faith-curists, and other flourishing
salvation syndicates, actually claimed a place among ordinary trusts, and at the
same time pretended to a control over man's future life. No, I could never
listen--I was ashamed of even entertaining the notion, and I shook my head.
"'No, Miss Wyeth, I am afraid I do not care to listen to any reasoning on this
subject.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 207
"'Because,' I said, firmly, 'it is nonsense to say that the soul of a human being can
inhabit a hen!'
"'Put it in a more simplified form!' insisted the professor. 'Do you believe that
the soul of a hen can inhabit a human being?'
"'No, I don't!'
"'Did you ever hear of a hen-pecked man?' cried the professor, his voice ending
in a shout.
"'No,' I began, but I caught Miss Wyeth's blue eyes fixed on mine with an
expression so sad, so sweetly appealing, that I faltered.
"I was shocked to find myself wavering, but my eyes were looking into hers, and
I could not disobey what I read there. The longer I looked the greater inclination
I felt to waver. I saw that I was going to give in, and, strangest of all, my
conscience did not trouble me. I felt it coming--a sort of mild exhilaration took
possession of me. For the first time in my life I became reckless--I even gloried
in my recklessness.
"'Yes, yes,' I cried, leaning eagerly across the table, 'I shall be glad--delighted!
Will you take me as your pupil?' My single eye-glass fell from its position
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 208
unheeded. 'Take me! Oh, will you take me?' I cried. Instead of answering, the
professor blinked rapidly at me for a moment. I imagined his eyes had grown
bigger, and were assuming a greenish tinge. The corners of his mouth began to
quiver, emitting queer, caressing little noises, and he rapidly added knot after
knot to his twitching coat-tails. Suddenly he bent forward across the table until
his nose almost touched mine. The pupils of his eyes expanded, the iris assuming
a beautiful, changing, golden-green tinge, and his coat-tails switched violently.
Then he began to mew.
"I strove to rouse myself from my paralysis--I tried to shrink back, for I felt the
end of his cold nose touch mine. I could not move. The cry of terror died in my
straining throat, my hands tightened convulsively; I was incapable of speech or
motion. At the same time my brain became wonderfully clear. I began to
remember everything that had ever happened to me--everything that I had ever
done or said. I even remembered things that I had neither done nor said; I
recalled distinctly much that had never happened. How fresh and strong my
memory! The past was like a mirror, crystal clear, and there, in glorious tints and
hues, the scenes of my childhood grew and glowed and faded, and gave place to
newer and more splendid scenes. For a moment the episode of the cat at the
Hôtel St. Antoine flashed across my mind. When it vanished a chilly stupor
slowly clouded my brain; the scenes, the memories, the brilliant colors, faded,
leaving me enveloped in a gray vapor, through which the two great eyes of the
professor twinkled with a murky light. A peculiar longing stirred me--a strange
yearning for something, I knew not what--but, oh! how I longed and yearned for
it! Slowly this indefinite, incomprehensible longing became a living pain. Ah,
how I suffered, and how the vapors seemed to crowd around me! Then, as at a
great distance, I heard her voice, sweet, imperative:
"For a moment I seemed to see the interior of my own skull, lighted as by a flash
of fire; the rolling eyeballs, veined in scarlet, the glistening muscles quivering
along the jaw, the humid masses of the convoluted brain; then awful darkness--a
darkness almost tangible--an utter blackness, through which now seemed to
creep a thin, silver thread, like a river crawling across a world--like a thought
gliding to the brain--like a song, a thin, sharp song which some distant voice was
singing--which I was singing.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 209
"I threw myself back in my chair and mewed with all my heart. Oh, that heavy
load which was lifted from my breast! How good, how satisfying it was to mew!
And how I did miaul and yowl!
"I gave myself up to it, heart and soul; my whole being thrilled with the
passionate outpourings of a spirit freed. My voice trembled in the upper bars of a
feline love-song, quavered, descended, swelling again into an intimation that I
brooked no rival, and ended with a magnificent crescendo.
"I finished, somewhat abashed, and glanced askance at the professor and his
daughter, but the one sat nonchalantly disentangling his coat-tails, and the other
was apparently absorbed in the distant landscape. Evidently they did not
consider me ridiculous. Flushing painfully, I turned in my chair to see how my
grewsome solo had affected the people on the terrace. Nobody even looked at
me. This, however, gave me little comfort, for, as I began to realize what I had
done, my mortification and rage knew no bounds. I was ready to die of shame.
What on earth had induced me to mew? I looked wildly about for escape--I
would leap up--rush home to bury my burning face in my pillows, and, later, in
the friendly cabin of a homeward-bound steamer. I would fly--fly at once! Woe
to the man who blocked my way! I started to my feet, but at that moment I
caught Miss Wyeth's eyes fixed on mine.
"What in Heaven's name lay in those blue eyes? I slowly sank back into my
chair.
"She nodded her head, without turning her eyes from the sea. 'Is it important,
papa?'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 210
"'I should say so. The cashier of the local trust has compromised an astral body,
and has squandered on her all our funds, including a lot of first mortgages on
Nirvana. I suppose he's been dabbling in futures and is short in his accounts. I
sha'n't be gone long.'
"'Then, good-night, papa,' she said, kissing him; 'try to be back by eleven.' I sat
stupidly staring at them.
"'Presto! Presto!' shouted the professor, balancing himself on the edge of his
chair and waving his arms majestically, as if preparing for a sudden flight across
the Scheldt; and, firmly convinced that he not only meditated it, but was
perfectly capable of attempting it, I covered my eyes with my hands.
"I raised my head indignantly. 'Not at all, Miss Wyeth, only I'll bid you
good-evening, for this is the nineteenth century, and I'm a Christian.'
"How did she know I was profane? I had not spoken a word! Could it be
possible she was able to read my thoughts? This was too much, and I rose.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 211
"'I have the honor to bid you good-evening,' I began, and reluctantly turned to
include the professor, expecting to see that gentleman balancing himself on his
chair. The professor's chair was empty.
"'Gone! Where?'
"'I do not think he will stay very long--he promised to return by eleven,' she said,
timidly.
"I tried to realize the purport of it all. 'Gone to India? Gone! How? On a
broomstick? Good Heavens,' I murmured, 'am I insane?'
"'Perfectly,' she said, 'and I am tired; you may take me back to the hotel.'
"I scarcely heard her; I was feebly attempting to gather up my numbed wits.
Slowly I began to comprehend the situation, to review the startling and
humiliating events of the day. At noon, in the court of the Hôtel St. Antoine, I
had been annoyed by a man and a cat. I had retired to my own room and had
slept until dinner. In the evening I met two tourists on the sea-wall promenade. I
had been beguiled into conversation--yes, into intimacy with these two tourists! I
had had the intention of embracing the faith of Pythagoras! Then I had mewed
like a cat with all the strength of my lungs. Now the male tourist vanishes--and
leaves me in charge of the female tourist, alone and at night in a strange city!
And now the female tourist proposes that I take her home!
half dipping in the sea, flooding land and water with enchanted lights. Wind and
wave seemed to feel the spell of her eyes, for the breeze died away, the heaving
Scheldt tossed noiselessly, and the dark Dutch luggers swung idly on the tide
with every sail adroop.
"A sudden hush fell over land and water, the voices on the promenade were
stilled; little by little the shadowy throng, the terrace, the sea itself vanished, and
I only saw her face, shadowed against the moon.
"It seemed as if I had drifted miles above the earth, through all space and
eternity, and there was naught between me and high heaven but that white face.
Ah, how I loved her! I knew it--I never doubted it. Could years of passionate
adoration touch her heart--her little heart, now beating so calmly with no thought
of love to startle it from its quiet and send it fluttering against the gentle breast?
In her lap her clasped hands tightened--her eyelids drooped as though some
pleasant thought was passing. I saw the color dye her temples, I saw the blue
eyes turn, half frightened, to my own, I saw--and I knew she had read my
thoughts. Then we both rose, side by side, and she was weeping softly, yet for
my life I dared not speak. She turned away, touching her eyes with a bit of lace,
and I sprang to her side and offered her my arm.
"'No,' she said, in a hard voice. 'You can come if you like.' So I humbly attended
her to the Hôtel St. Antoine.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 213
XXIV
"As we reached the Place Verte and turned into the court of the hotel, the sound
of the midnight bells swept over the city, and a horse-car jingled slowly by on its
last trip to the railroad station.
"We passed the fountain, bubbling and splashing in the moonlit court, and,
crossing the square, entered the southern wing of the hotel. At the foot of the
stairway she leaned for an instant against the banisters.
"She gave a little movement of impatience. 'Don't,' she said, 'you tire
me--conventionalities tire me. Be satisfied--nobody has seen you.'
"'You are cruel,' I said, in a low voice--'what do you think I care for
conventionalities?'
"'You care everything--you care what people think, and you try to do what they
say is good form. You never did such an original thing in your life as you have
just done.'
"'Fair or not, I know what you consider me--ill-bred, common, pleased with any
sort of attention. Oh! why should I waste one word--one thought on you?'
"'Would you dare tell me what you think of me?--Would you dare tell me what
you think of my father?'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 214
"I was silent. She turned and mounted two steps of the stairway, then faced me
again.
"'Do you think it was for my own pleasure that I permitted myself to be left
alone with you? Do you imagine that I am flattered by your attention?--do you
venture to think I ever could be? How dared you think what you did think there
on the sea-wall?'
"'You turned on me like a tiger when you awoke from your trance. Do you really
suppose that you mewed? Are you not aware that my father hypnotized you?'
"'No--I did not know it,' I said. The hot blood tingled in my finger-tips, and I
looked angrily at her.
"'Why do you imagine that I waste my time on you?' she said. 'Your vanity has
answered that question--now let your intelligence answer it. I am a Pythagorean;
I have been chosen to bring in a convert, and you were the convert selected for
me by the Mahatmas of the Consolidated Trust Company. I have followed you
from New York to Antwerp, as I was bidden, but now my courage fails, and I
shrink from fulfilling my mission, knowing you to be the type of man you are. If
I could give it up--if I could only go away--never, never again to see you! Ah, I
fear they will not permit it!--until my mission is accomplished. Why was I
chosen--I, with a woman's heart and a woman's pride. I--I hate you!'
"Her wide, blue eyes turned back again, and I held them with mine. At last she
slowly drew a long-stemmed rose from the bunch at her belt, turned, and
mounted the shadowy staircase. For a moment I thought I saw her pause on the
landing above, but the moonlight was uncertain. After waiting for a long time in
vain, I moved away, and in going raised my hand to my face, but I stopped short,
and my heart stopped too, for a moment. In my hand I held a long-stemmed rose.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 215
"With my brain in a whirl I crept across the court and mounted the stairs to my
room. Hour after hour I walked the floor, slowly at first, then more rapidly, but it
brought no calm to the fierce tumult of my thoughts, and at last I dropped into a
chair before the empty fireplace, burying my head in my hands.
"Uncertain, shocked, and deadly weary, I tried to think--I strove to bring order
out of the chaos in my brain, but I only sat staring at the long-stemmed rose.
Slowly I began to take a vague pleasure in its heavy perfume, and once I crushed
a leaf between my palms, and, bending over, drank in the fragrance.
"Twice my lamp flickered and went out, and twice, treading softly, I crossed the
room to relight it. Twice I threw open the door, thinking that I heard some sound
without. How close the air was!--how heavy and hot! And what was that strange,
subtle odor which had insensibly filled the room? It grew stronger and more
penetrating, and I began to dislike it, and to escape it I buried my nose in the
half-opened rose. Horror! The odor came from the rose--and the rose itself was
no longer a rose--not even a flower now--it was only a bunch of catnip; and I
dashed it to the floor and ground it under my heel.
"Feeling very shaky, I crept to the window, opened it, and leaned out. The night
was calm. I heard the fountain splashing in the moonlight and the sea-winds
soughing through the palms. Then I closed the window and turned back into the
room; and as I stood there a sudden breeze, which could not have come from
without, blew sharply in my face, extinguishing the candle and sending the long
curtains bellying out into the room. The lamp on the table flashed and smoked
and sputtered; the room was littered with flying papers and catnip leaves. Then
the strange wind died away, and somewhere in the night a cat snarled.
"I turned desperately to my trunk and flung it open. Into it I threw everything I
owned, pell-mell, closed the lid, locked it, and, seizing my mackintosh and
travelling-bag, ran down the stairs, crossed the court, and entered the
night-office of the hotel. There I called up the sleepy clerk, settled my reckoning,
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 216
"'Anywhere!'
"The clerk locked the safe, and, carefully keeping the desk between himself and
me, motioned the office-boy to look at the time-tables.
"At that moment the cab rattled up by the curbstone, and I sprang in while the
porter tossed my traps on top. Away we bumped over the stony pavement, past
street after street lighted dimly by tall gas-lamps, and alley after alley brilliant
with the glare of villanous all-night café-concerts, and then, turning, we rumbled
past the Circus and the Eldorado, and at last stopped with a jolt before the
Brussels station.
"I had not a moment to lose. 'Paris!' I cried--'first-class!' and, pocketing the book
of coupons, hurried across the platform to where the Brussels train lay. A guard
came running up, flung open the door of a first-class carriage, slammed and
locked it after I had jumped in, and the long train glided from the arched station
out into the starlit morning.
"I was all alone in the compartment. The wretched lamp in the roof flickered
dimly, scarcely lighting the stuffy box. I could not see to read my time-table, so I
wrapped my legs in the travelling-rug and lay back, staring out into the misty
morning. Trees, walls, telegraph-poles flashed past, and the cinders drove in
showers against the rattling windows. I slept at times, fitfully, and once,
springing up, peered sharply at the opposite seat, possessed with the idea that
somebody was there.
"When the train reached Brussels I was sound asleep, and the guard awoke me
with difficulty.
"'Anything,' I sighed, and stepped out to the platform, rubbing my legs and
shivering. The other passengers were already breakfasting in the station café,
and I joined them and managed to swallow a cup of coffee and a roll.
"The morning broke gray and cloudy, and I bundled myself into my mackintosh
for a tramp along the platform. Up and down I stamped, puffing a cigar, and
digging my hands deep in my pockets, while the other passengers huddled into
the warmer compartments of the train or stood watching the luggage being lifted
into the forward mail-carriage. The wait was very long; the hands of the great
clock pointed to six, and still the train lay motionless along the platform. I
approached a guard and asked him whether anything was wrong.
"I followed the guard's advice, and, crawling into my corner, wrapped myself in
the rug and lay back watching the rain-drops spattering along the window-sill.
At noon the train had not moved, and I lunched in the compartment. At four
o'clock in the afternoon the station-master came hurrying along the platform,
crying, 'Montez! montez! messieurs, s'il vous plaît'--and the train steamed out of
the station and whirled away through the flat, treeless Belgian plains. At times I
dozed, but the shaking of the car always awoke me, and I would sit blinking out
at the endless stretch of plain, until a sudden flurry of rain blotted the landscape
from my eyes. At last a long, shrill whistle from the engine, a jolt, a series of
bumps, and an apparition of red trousers and bayonets warned me that we had
arrived at the French frontier. I turned out with the others, and opened my valise
for inspection, but the customs officials merely chalked it, without examination,
and I hurried back to my compartment amid the shouting of guards and the
clanging of station bells. Again I found that I was alone in the compartment, so I
smoked a cigarette, thanked Heaven, and fell into a dreamless sleep.
"How long I slept I do not know, but when I awoke the train was roaring through
a tunnel. When again it flashed out into the open country I peered through the
grimy, rain-stained window and saw that the storm had ceased and stars were
twinkling in the sky. I stretched my legs, yawned, pushed my travelling-cap back
from my forehead, and, stumbling to my feet, walked up and down the
compartment until my cramped muscles were relieved. Then I sat down again,
and, lighting a cigar, puffed great rings and clouds of fragrant smoke across the
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 218
aisle.
"The train was flying; the cars lurched and shook, and the windows rattled
accompaniment to the creaking panels. The smoke from my cigar dimmed the
lamp in the ceiling and hid the opposite seat from view. How it curled and
writhed in the corners, now eddying upward, now floating across the aisle like a
veil! I lounged back in my cushioned seat, watching it with interest. What queer
shapes it took! How thick it was becoming!--how strangely luminous! Now it
had filled the whole compartment, puff after puff crowding upward, waving,
wavering, clouding the windows, and blotting the lamp from sight. It was most
interesting. I had never before smoked such a cigar. What an extraordinary
brand! I examined the end, flicking the ashes away. The cigar was out. Fumbling
for a match to relight it, my eyes fell on the drifting smoke-curtain which
swayed across the corner opposite. It seemed almost tangible. How like a real
curtain it hung, gray, impenetrable! A man might hide behind it. Then an idea
came into my head, and it persisted until my uneasiness amounted to a vague
terror. I tried to fight it off--I strove to resist--but the conviction slowly settled
upon me that something was behind that smoke-veil--something which had
entered the compartment while I slept.
"'It can't be,' I muttered, my eyes fixed on the misty drapery; 'the train has not
stopped.'
"The car creaked and trembled. I sprang to my feet and swept my arm through
the veil of smoke. Then my hair rose on my head. For my hand touched another
hand, and my eyes had met two other eyes.
"I heard a voice in the gloom, low and sweet, calling me by name; I saw the eyes
again, tender and blue; soft fingers touched my own.
"My heart began to beat again, and my face warmed with returning blood.
"'How cruel of you!' she faltered; 'I am not alone.' At the same instant my eyes
fell upon the professor, calmly seated by the farther window. His hands were
thrust into the folds of a corded and tasselled dressing-gown, from beneath
which peeped two enormous feet encased in carpet slippers. Upon his head
towered a yellow night-cap. He did not pay the slightest attention to either me or
his daughter, and, except for the lighted cigar which he kept shifting between his
lips, he might have been taken for a wax dummy.
"'How did you come into this compartment? You--you do not possess wings, I
suppose? You could not have been here all the time. Will you explain--explain to
me? See, I ask you very humbly, for I do not understand. This is the nineteenth
century, and these things don't fit in. I'm wearing a Dunlap hat--I've got a copy
of the New York Herald in my bag--President Roosevelt is alive, and everything
is so very unromantic in the world! Is this real magic? Perhaps I'm filled with
hallucinations. Perhaps I'm asleep and dreaming. Perhaps you are not really
here--nor I--nor anybody, nor anything!'
"The train plunged into a tunnel, and when again it dashed out from the other
end the cold wind blew furiously in my face from the farther window. It was
wide open; the professor was gone.
"'Papa has changed to another compartment,' she said, quietly. 'I think perhaps
you were beginning to bore him.'
"I looked at her in silence. She sat very quietly, her hands clasped above her
knee, her curly hair glittering to her girdle. A long robe, almost silvery in the
twilight, clung to her young figure; her bare feet were thrust deep into a pair of
shimmering Eastern slippers.
"'When you fled,' she sighed, 'I was asleep and there was no time to lose. I barely
had a moment to go to Bombay, to find papa, and return in time to join you. This
is an East-Indian costume.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 220
"'You are very rude,' she said, with the tears starting to her eyes.
"'I do not mean to be. I only wish to go away--away somewhere and find out
what my name is.'
"'Is everything plain to you? Are you a sort of prophet and second-sight
medium? Is nothing hidden from you?' I asked.
"A sudden change came over her. 'I am human--believe me!' she said, with
piteous eagerness. 'Indeed, I do not seem strange to those who understand. You
wonder, because you left me at midnight in Antwerp and you wake to find me
here. If, because I find myself reincarnated, endowed with senses and
capabilities which few at present possess--if I am so made, why should it seem
strange? It is all so natural to me. If I appear to you--'
"'Appear?'
"'Yes--'
"'Don't!' she cried, with tears in her voice--'oh, please don't! Help me to bear it!
If you only knew how awful it is to be different from other girls--how mortifying
it is to me to be able to vanish--oh, how I hate and detest it all!'
"'Oh, dear me!' she sobbed. 'You shudder at the sight of me because I can
vanish.'
"'Yes, you do! You abhor me--you shrink away! Oh, why did I ever see
you?--why did you ever come into my life?--what have I done in ages past, that
now, reborn, I suffer cruelly--cruelly?'
"'Wilhelmina--my sweet Wilhelmina,' I said, 'I don't think you a fabled monster.
I love you; see--see--I am at your feet; listen to me, my darling--'
"She turned her blue eyes to mine. I saw tears sparkling on the curved lashes.
"Slowly she raised her hands to my head and held it a moment, looking at me
strangely. Then her face grew nearer to my own, her glittering hair fell over my
shoulders, her lips rested on mine.
"In that long, sweet kiss the beating of her heart answered mine, and I learned a
thousand truths, wonderful, mysterious, splendid; but when our lips fell apart,
the memory of what I learned departed also.
"'It was so very simple and beautiful,' she sighed, 'and I--I never saw it. But the
Mahatmas knew--ah, they knew that my mission could only be accomplished
through love.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 222
"'And it is,' I whispered, 'for you shall teach me--me, your husband.'
"'Even about--cats?'
"Before I could reply the farther window opened and a yellow night-cap,
followed by the professor, entered from somewhere without. Wilhelmina sank
back on her sofa, but the professor needed not to be told, and we both knew he
was already busily reading our thoughts.
"For a moment there was dead silence--long enough for the professor to grasp
the full significance of what had passed. Then he uttered a single exclamation,
'Oh!'
"After a while, however, he looked at me for the first time that evening, saying,
'Congratulate you, Mr. Kensett, I'm sure,' tied several knots in the cord of his
dressing-gown, lighted a cigar, and paid no further attention to either of us.
Some moments later he opened the window again and disappeared. I looked
across the aisle at Wilhelmina.
XXV
"It was nearly ten o'clock and our train was rapidly approaching Paris. We
passed village after village wrapped in mist, station after station hung with
twinkling red and blue and yellow lanterns, then sped on again with the echo of
the switch-bells ringing in our ears.
"When at length the train slowed up and stopped, I opened the window and
looked out upon a long, wet platform, shining under the electric lights.
"A guard came running by, throwing open the doors of each compartment, and
crying, 'Paris next! Tickets, if you please.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 223
"I handed him my book of coupons, from which he tore several and handed it
back. Then he lifted his lantern and peered into the compartment, saying, 'Is
monsieur alone?'
"'If your father has the tickets--' I began, but was interrupted by the guard, who
snapped:
"'Monsieur will give himself the trouble to remember that I do not understand
English.'
"The guard stared stupidly at me, then, at my luggage, and finally, entering the
car, knelt down and peered under the seats. Presently he got up, very red in the
face, and went out slamming the door. He had not paid the slightest attention to
Wilhelmina, but I distinctly heard him say, 'Only Englishmen and idiots talk to
themselves!'
"'Wilhelmina,' I faltered, 'do you mean to say that that guard could not see you?'
"She began to look so serious again that I merely added, 'Never mind, I don't
care whether you are invisible or not, dearest.'
"'I am not invisible to you,' she said; 'why should you care?'
"A great noise of bells and whistles drowned our voices, and, amid the whirring
of switch-bells, the hissing of steam, and the cries of 'Paris! All out!' our train
glided into the station.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 224
"It was the professor who opened the door of our carriage. There he stood,
calmly adjusting his yellow night-cap and drawing his dressing-gown closer with
the corded tassels.
"'No, I don't; I mean on the engine--on the pilot. It was very refreshing. Where
are we going now?'
"'Yes. I think your father had better take you to the Hôtel Normandie on the Rue
de l'Échelle--'
"'Don't you see that my father and I could not take rooms--now? You must
engage three rooms for yourself.'
"I tried to repress a shudder. The professor gave Wilhelmina his arm, and, as I
studied his ensemble, I thanked Heaven that he was invisible.
"At the gate of the station I hailed a four-seated cab, and we rattled away
through the stony streets, brilliant with gas-jets, and in a few moments rolled
smoothly across the Avenue de l'Opéra, turned into the Rue de l'Échelle, and
stopped. A bright little page, all over buttons, came out, took my luggage, and
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 225
"I, with Wilhelmina on my arm and the professor shuffling along beside me,
walked over to the desk.
"'Room?' said the clerk. 'We have a very desirable room on the second, fronting
the Rue St. Honoré--'
"'One lady.'
"'Married, of course?'
"'What's that to you?' I said, sharply. 'What do you mean by speaking to us--'
"'Us!'
"'I mean to me,' I said, badly rattled; 'give me the rooms and let me get to bed,
will you?'
"'Monsieur will remember,' said the clerk, coldly, 'that this is an old and
respectable hotel.'
"Swallowing the insult, I followed the bell-boy up the stairs, keeping between
him and Wilhelmina, for I dreaded to see him walk through her as if she were
thin air. A trim maid rose to meet us and conducted us through a hallway into a
large apartment. She threw open all the bedroom-doors and said, 'Will monsieur
have the goodness to choose?'
"That completely upset me. 'Here,' I muttered, slipping some silver into her
hand; 'now, for the love of Heaven, run away!'
"When she had vanished with a doubtful 'Merci, monsieur!' I handed the
professor the keys and asked him to settle the thing with Wilhelmina.
"Wilhelmina took the corner room, the professor rambled into the next one, and I
said good-night and crept wearily into my own chamber. I sat down and tried to
think. A great feeling of fatigue weighted my spirits.
"'I can think better with my clothes off,' I said, and slipped the coat from my
shoulders. How tired I was! 'I can think better in bed,' I muttered, flinging my
cravat on the dresser and tossing my shirt-studs after it. I was certainly very
tired. 'Now,' I yawned, grasping the pillow and drawing it under my head--'now I
can think a bit.' But before my head fell on the pillow sleep closed my eyes.
"I began to dream at once. It seemed as though my eyes were wide open and the
professor was standing beside my bed.
"'Young man,' he said, 'you've won my daughter and you must pay the piper!'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 227
"'The Pied Piper of Hamelin, I don't think,' replied the professor, vulgarly, and
before I could realize what he was doing he had drawn a reed pipe from his
dressing-gown and was playing a strangely annoying air. Then an awful thing
occurred. Cats began to troop into the room, cats by the hundred--toms and
tabbies, gray, yellow, Maltese, Persian, Manx--all purring and all marching
round and round, rubbing against the furniture, the professor, and even against
me. I struggled with the nightmare.
"I saw the white tabby cat of the Hôtel St. Antoine.
"'An old friend,' he repeated, and played a dismal melody on his reed.
"I saw Wilhelmina enter the room, lift the white tabby in her arms, and bring her
to my side.
"To my horror the tabby deliberately extended a paw and tapped me on the
knuckles.
"'Oh!' I cried, in agony; 'this is a horrible dream! Why, oh, why can't I wake!'
"'Yes,' she said, dropping the cat, 'it is partly a dream, but some of it is real.
Remember what I say, my darling; you are to go to-morrow morning and meet
the twelve-o'clock train from Antwerp at the Gare du Nord. Papa and I are
coming to Paris on that train. Don't you know that we are not really here now,
you silly boy? Good-night, then. I shall be very glad to see you.'
"I saw her glide from the room, followed by the professor, playing a gay
quick-step, to which the cats danced two and two.
"'Good-night, sir,' said each cat as it passed my bed; and I dreamed no more.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 228
"When I awoke, the room, the bed had vanished; I was in the street, walking
rapidly; the sun shone down on the broad, white pavements of Paris, and the
streams of busy life flowed past me on either side. How swiftly I was walking!
Where the devil was I going? Surely I had business somewhere that needed
immediate attention. I tried to remember when I had awakened, but I could not. I
wondered where I had dressed myself; I had apparently taken great pains with
my toilet, for I was immaculate, monocle and all, even down to a long-stemmed
rose nestling in my button-hole. I knew Paris and recognized the streets through
which I was hurrying. Where could I be going? What was my hurry? I glanced at
my watch and found I had not a moment to lose. Then, as the bells of the city
rang out mid-day, I hastened into the railroad station on the Rue Lafayette and
walked out to the platform. And as I looked down the glittering track, around the
distant curve shot a locomotive followed by a long line of cars. Nearer and
nearer it came, while the station-gongs sounded and the switch-bells began
ringing all along the track.
"'Antwerp express!' cried the sous-chef de gare, and as the train slipped along the
tiled platform I sprang upon the steps of a first-class carriage and threw open the
door.
"'How do you do, Mr. Kensett?' said Wilhelmina Wyeth, springing lightly to the
platform. 'Really it is very nice of you to come to the train.' At the same moment
a bald, mild-eyed gentleman emerged from the depths of the same compartment,
carrying a large, covered basket.
"'How are you, Kensett?' he said. 'Glad to see you again. Rather warm in that
compartment--no, I will not trust this basket to an expressman; give Wilhelmina
your arm and I'll follow. We go to the Normandie, I believe?'
"All the morning I had Wilhelmina to myself, and at dinner I sat beside her, with
the professor opposite. The latter was cheerful enough, but he nearly ruined my
appetite, for he smelled strongly of catnip. After dinner he became restless and
fidgeted about in his chair until coffee was brought, and we went up to the parlor
of our apartment. Here his restlessness increased to such an extent that I
ventured to ask him if he was in good health.
"'It's that basket--the covered basket which I have in the next room,' he said.
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 229
"'Yes,' he said, 'you may inquire of my daughter.' He left the room, but
reappeared shortly, carrying a saucer of milk.
"I watched him enter the next room, which was mine.
"'What on earth is he taking that into my room for?' I asked Wilhelmina. 'I don't
keep cats.'
"'I? Never!'
"'But I do.'
"'Wilhelmina!'
"'Harold!'
"'You will when I ask it. Have I not given myself to you? Will you not make a
little sacrifice for me?'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 230
"'Was that what your father had in that basket?' I asked, suspiciously.
"'Yes.'
"'Listen!' she said. 'I have a long story to tell you; come nearer, close to me. You
say you love me?'
"'Prove me!'
"'Listen. That cat is the same cat that ran out of the apartment in the Waldorf
when your great-aunt ceased to exist--in human shape. My father and myself,
having received word from the Mahatmas of the Trust Company, sheltered and
cherished the cat. We were ordered by the Mahatmas to convert you. The task
was appalling--but there is no such thing as refusing a command, and we laid our
plans. That man with a white spot in his hair was my father--'
"'He wore a wig then. The white spot came from dropping chemicals on the wig
while experimenting with a substance which you could not comprehend.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 231
"'Then--then that clew was useless; but who could have taken the Crimson
Diamond? And who was the man with the white spot on his head who tried to
sell the stone in Paris?'
"'Yes and no. That was only a paste stone that he had in Paris. It was to draw you
over here. He had the real Crimson Diamond also.'
"'Your father?'
"'Yes. He has it in the next room now. Can you not see how it disappeared,
Harold? Why, the cat swallowed it!'
"'Do you mean to say that the white tabby swallowed the Crimson Diamond?'
"'By mistake. She tried to get it out of the velvet bag, and, as the bag was also
full of catnip, she could not resist a mouthful, and unfortunately just then you
broke in the door and so startled the cat that she swallowed the Crimson
Diamond.'
"'Wilhelmina, as you are able to vanish, I suppose you also are able to converse
with cats.'
"'I am,' she replied, trying to keep back the tears of mortification.
"'She did.'
"'It is.'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 232
"I don't know to this day how I stood the shock of that announcement, or how I
managed to listen while Wilhelmina tried to explain the transmigration theory,
but it was all Chinese to me. I only knew that I was a blood relation of a cat, and
the thought nearly drove me mad.
"'Try, my darling, try to love her,' whispered Wilhelmina; 'she must be very
precious to you--'
"'Oh no, I'll always have my eye on her--I mean I will surround her with
luxury--er, milk and bones and catnip and books--er--does she read?'
"'Not the books that human beings read. Now, go and speak to your aunt,
Harold.'
"I drew her to me and kissed her. Beads of cold perspiration started in the roots
of my hair, but I clenched my teeth and entered the room alone. The room was
dark and I stood silent, not knowing where to turn, fearful lest I step on my aunt!
Then, through the dreary silence, I called, 'Aunty!'
Search of the Unknown, by Robert W. Chambers 233
"A faint noise broke upon my ear, and my heart grew sick, but I strode into the
darkness, calling, hoarsely:
"Again the faint sound. Something was stirring there among the shadows--a
shape moving softly along the wall, a shade which glided by me, paused,
wavered, and darted under the bed. Then I threw myself on the floor, profoundly
moved, begging, imploring my aunt to come to me.
"'Aunty! Aunty!' I murmured. 'Your nephew is waiting to take you to his heart!'
The young man's voice grew hushed and solemn, and he lifted his hand in
silence:
"Close the door. That meeting is not for the eyes of the world! Close the door
upon that sacred scene where great-aunt and nephew are united at last."
*****
A long pause followed; deep emotion was visible in Miss Barrison's sensitive
face. She said:
*****
"You see," he said, looking at Miss Barrison, "it may be interesting from a
purely scientific point of view, but it has already proved a bar to my marrying."
"I don't see," said Miss Barrison, "why the fact that your great-aunt is a cat
should prevent you from marrying."
Meanwhile I had been very busy thinking about Professor Farrago, and, coming
to an interesting theory, advanced it.
"If," I began, "he marries one of those transparent ladies, what about the
children?"
"Or partially opaque," I ventured. "But it's a risky marriage--not to be able to see
what one's wife is about--"
This observation seemed to end our postprandial and tripartite conference; Miss
Barrison retired to her stateroom presently; after a last cigar, smoked almost in
silence, the young man and I bade each other a civil good-night and retired to
our respective berths.
I think it was at Richmond, Virginia, that I was awakened by the negro porter
shaking me very gently and repeating, in a pleasant, monotonous voice:
"Teleg'am foh you, suh! Teleg'am foh Mistuh Gilland, suh. 'Done call you 'lev'm
times sense breakfass, suh! Las' call foh luncheon, suh. Teleg'am foh--"
"Telegram?" I said, yawning and rubbing my eyes. "Let me have it. All right, I'll
be out presently. Shut that curtain! I don't want the entire car to criticise my pink
pajamas!"
"Ain' nobody in de cyar, 'scusin yo'se'f, suh," grinned the porter, retiring.
I heard him, but did not comprehend, sitting there sleepily unfolding the
scrawled telegram. Suddenly my eyes flew wide open; I scanned the despatch
with stunned incredulity:
"ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
"We couldn't help it. Love at first sight. Married this morning in Atlanta. Wildly
happy. Forgive. Wire blessing.
"Oh, Lord!" I groaned, and rolled over, burying my head in the blankets; for I
understood at last that Science, the most jealous, most exacting of mistresses,
could never brook a rival.
THE END
*****
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