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The Golden Age of Science Fiction Novels Vol 04

Page 95

by Anthology


  I cast a desperate eye upon him.

  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.

  Miss Barrison, it appeared, was to note everything said by himself, making several shorthand copies by evening. In other words, she was to report every scrap of conversation she heard while in the Everglades. And she nodded intelligently as he finished, and drew pad and pencil from the pocket of her walking-skirt, jotting down his instructions as a beginning. I could see that he was pleased.

  "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."

  He smiled slightly, turning towards me.

  "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?"

  "Yes," I said.

  "Therefore," he resumed, thoughtfully, "as I do most firmly believe in the course I am now pursuing, whether I succeed or fail I desire a true and minute record made, hiding nothing of what may be said or done. A stenographer alone can give this to the world, while I can only supplement it with a description of events—if I live to transcribe them."

  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—I will be faithful," said the girl, in a low voice.

  "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."

  And he sat up straight, lifting an impressive forefinger.

  "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.

  "The result of that conference is this expedition.

  "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 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—"

  "Feelers!" I blurted out.

  "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."

  "Good Lord!" I breathed.

  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."

  There came the slightest movement beside me.

  "Are you trembling?" I asked, turning.

  "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."

  A rosy light stole over her pale face.

  "Am I to record that too?" she asked, raising her blue eyes.

  "Certainly," he replied, gravely.

  "But, professor," I began, a prey to increasing excitement, "do you propose to attempt the capture of one of these animals?"

  "That is what the cage is for," he said. "I supposed you had guessed that."

  "I had," murmured the pretty stenographer.

  "I do not doubt it," said Professor Farrago, gravely.

  "What are the chemicals for—and the tank and hose attachment?"

  "Think, Mr. Gilland."

  "I can't; I'm almost stunned by what you tell me."

  He laughed. "The rosium oxide and salts of strontium are to be dumped into the tank together. They'll effervesce, of course."

  "Of course," I muttered.

  "And I can throw a rose-colored spray over any object by the hose attachment, can't I?"

  "Yes."

  "Well, I tried it on a transparent jelly-fish and it became perfectly visible and of a beautiful rose-color: and I tried it on rock-crystal, and on glass, and on pure gelatine, and all became suffused with a delicate pink glow, which lasted for hours or minutes according to the substance…. Now you understand, don't you?"

  "Yes; you want to see what sort of creature you have to deal with."

  "Exactly; so when I've trapped it I am going to spray it." He turned half humorously towards the stenographer: "I fancy you understood long before Mr. Gilland did."

  "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."

  "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."

  "Do you mean Mr. Gilland?" asked the professor, laughing.

  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.

  "Heavens," I thought to myself, "am I becoming jealous of my revered professor's social success with a stray stenographer?" I felt mean, and I probably looked it, and I was glad that telepathy did not permit Miss Barrison to record my secret and unworthy ruminations.

  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 speed
ing 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.

  "What was the rifle for?" I asked.

  "Defence, not aggression," he said, simply.

  "And the camera?"

  "A camera record is necessary in these days of bad artists."

  I hesitated, glancing at Miss Barrison. She was still writing, her pretty head bent over the pad in her lap.

  "And the clothing?" I asked, carelessly.

  "Did you get it?" he demanded.

  "Of course—" I glanced at Miss Barrison. "There's no use writing down everything, is there?"

  "Everything must be recorded," said Professor Farrago, inflexibly. "What clothing did you buy?"

  "I forgot the gown," I said, getting red about the ears.

  "Forgot the gown!" he repeated.

  "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.

  "Is it what you wanted?" I inquired.

  "Y-es, I presume so," he replied, visibly perplexed.

  "It's the best to be had," said I.

  "That's quite right," he said, musingly. "We use only the best of everything at Bronx Park. It is traditional with us, you know."

  Curiosity pushed me. "Well, what on earth is it for?" I broke out.

  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.

  "Bunks," he said, and shut the door.

  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.

  "Are they burned?" I asked, sniffing the air.

  "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.

  "We can't eat all that pastry," I protested.

  "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—"

  "You annoy me," she said.

  "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?"

  "These pies are for bait."

  "To bait hooks with?" I exclaimed.

  "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!"

  "You're not particularly complimentary, are you?" she said.

  "Not particularly; but I could be, with you for my inspiration. I could even be enthusiastic—"

  "About my pies?"

  "No—about your eyes."

  "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.

  "Never!" I cried, revolted.

  "Then I suppose I must do them—"

  She looked pensively at her scorched finger-tip, and, pursing up her red lips, blew a gentle breath to cool it.

  "I'll do the dishes," I said.

  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."

  She regarded me disdainfully, nose uptilted.

  "How thoroughly disagreeable you can be!" she said. "Dry your own dishes. I'm going for a stroll."

  "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.

  A few moments later I had completed my task as general bottle-washer, and I cast about for something to occupy me.

  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.

  "I'll go for a stroll, too; it's a free country," I muttered.

  After I had strolled in a complete circle I found myself within three feet of a pink shirt-waist.

  "I beg your pardon," I said; "I had no inten—"

  "I thought you were never coming," she said, amiably.

  "How is your finger?" I asked.

  She held it up. I took it gingerly; it was smooth and faintly rosy at the tip.

  "Does it hurt?
" I inquired.

  "Dreadfully. Your hands feel so cool—"

  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."

  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've an idea," she said, under her breath.

  "What?" I asked, keeping my eyes on the camp.

  "It's this: I'll wager that we find those pies gone!"

  "Pies gone?" I repeated, perplexed; "what makes you think—"

  "They are gone!" she exclaimed. "Look!"

  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.

 

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