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The Golden Age of Science Fiction Novels Vol 02

Page 98

by Anthology

Phoebe's polite cordiality gave place to amazed consternation. Droop raised a deprecating hand.

  "Now don't you go to think I'm tight or gone crazy. You'll understand it, fer you've ben to high school. Now see! What is it makes the days go by--ain't it the daily revolution of the sun?"

  Phoebe put on what her sister always called "that schoolmarm look" and replied:

  "Why, it's the turning round of the earth on its axis once in----"

  "Yes--yes--It's all one--all one," Droop broke in, eagerly. "To put it another way, it comes from the sun cuttin' meridians, don't it?"

  Rebecca, who found this technical and figurative expression beyond her, paused in her knitting and looked anxiously at Phoebe, to see how she would take it. After a moment of thought, the young woman admitted her visitor's premises.

  "Very good! An' you know's well's I do, Miss Phoebe, that ef a man travels round the world the same way's the sun, he ketches up on time a whole day when he gets all the way round. In other words, the folks that stays at home lives jest one day more than the feller that goes round the world that way. Am I right?"

  "Of course."

  Droop glanced triumphantly at Rebecca. This tremendous admission on her learned young sister's part stripped her of all pretended coldness. Her deep interest was evident now in her whole pose and expression.

  "Now, then, jest follow me close," Droop continued, sitting far forward in his chair and pointing his speech with a thin forefinger on his open palm.

  "Ef a feller was to whirl clear round the world an' cut all the meridians in the same direction as the sun, an' he made the whole trip around jest as quick as the sun did--time wouldn't change a mite fer him, would it?"

  Phoebe gasped at the suggestion.

  "Why, I should think--of course----"

  She stopped and put her hand to her head in bewilderment.

  "Et's a sure thing!" Droop exclaimed, earnestly. "You've said yerself that the folks who stayed to home would live one day longer than the fellow that went round. Now, ef that feller travelled round as fast as the sun, the stay-at-homes would only be one day older by the time he got back--ain't that a fact?"

  Both sisters nodded.

  "Well, an' the traveller would be one day younger than they'd be. An' ain't that jest no older at all than when he started?"

  "My goodness! Mr. Droop!" Phoebe replied, feebly. "I never thought of that."

  "Well, ain't it so?"

  "Of course--leastways--why, it must be!"

  "All right, then!"

  Droop rose triumphantly to his feet, overcome by his feelings.

  "Follow out that same reasonin' to the bitter end!" he cried, "an' what will happen ef that traveller whirls round, cuttin' meridians jest twice as fast as the sun--goin' the same way?"

  He paused, but there was no reply.

  "Why, as sure as shootin', I tell ye, that feller will get jest one day younger fer every two whirls round!"

  There was a long and momentous silence. The tremendous suggestion had for the moment bereft both women of all reasoning faculty.

  At length the younger sister ventured upon a practical objection.

  "But how's he goin' to whirl round as fast as that, Mr. Droop?" she said.

  Droop smiled indulgently.

  "Et does sound outlandish, when ye think how big the world is. But what if ye go to the North Pole? Ain't all the twenty-four meridians jammed up close together round that part of the globe?"

  "Thet's so," murmured Rebecca, "I've seen it many's the time on the map in Phoebe's geography book."

  "Sure enough," Droop rejoined. "Then ain't it clear that ef a feller'll jest take a grip on the North Pole an' go whirlin' round it, he'll be cuttin' meridians as fast as a hay-chopper? Won't he see the sun gettin' left behind an' whirlin' the other way from what it does in nature? An' ef the sun goes the other way round, ain't it sure to unwind all the time thet it's ben a-rollin' up?"

  Rebecca's ball of yarn fell from her lap at this, and, as she followed it with her eyes, she seemed to see a practical demonstration of Droop's marvellous theory.

  Phoebe felt all the tremendous force of Droop's logic, and she flushed with excitement. One last practical objection was obvious, however.

  "The thing must be all right, Mr. Droop," she said; "an' come to think of it, this must be the reason so many folks have tried to reach the North Pole. But it never has been reached yet, an' how are you agoin' to do it?"

  "You think it never hez," Copernicus replied. "The fact is, though, that I've ben there."

  "You!" Phoebe cried.

  "And is there a pole there?" Rebecca asked, eagerly.

  "The's a pole there, an' I've swung round it, too," Droop replied, sitting again with a new and delightful sense of no longer being unwelcome.

  "Here's how 'twas. About a year ago there come to my back door a strange-lookin' man who'd hurt his foot some way. I took him in an' fixed him up--you know I studied for a doctor once--an' while he was bein' fixed up, he sorter took a fancy to me an' he begun to give me the story of his life. He said he was born in the year 2582, an' had ben takin' what he called a historical trip into the past ages. He went on at a great rate like that, an' I thought he was jest wanderin' in his mind with the fever, so I humored him. But he saw through me, an' he wouldn't take no but I should go down into Burnham's swamp with him to see how he'd done it.

  "Well, down we went, and right spang in the thickest of the bushes an' muck we come across the queerest lookin' machine that ever ye see!

  "Right there an' then he told me all the scientific talk about time an' astronomy thet I've told you, an' then he tuck me into the thing. Fust thing I knew he give a yank to a lever in the machinery an' there was a big jerk thet near threw me on the back o' my head. I looked out, an' there we was a-flyin' over the country through the air fer the North Pole!"

  "There, now!" cried Rebecca, "didn't Si Wilkins' boy Sam say he seen a comet in broad daylight last June?"

  "Thet was us," Droop admitted.

  "And not a soul believed him," Phoebe remarked.

  "Well," continued Droop, "to make a long story short, thet future-man whirled me a few times 'round the North Pole--unwound jest five weeks o' time, an' back we come to Peltonville a-hummin'!"

  "And then?" cried the two women together.

  "Ef you'll believe me, there we was back to the day he fust come--an' fust thing I knew, thet future-man was a-comin' up to my back door, same ez before, a-beggin' to hev his foot fixed. It was hard on him, but I was convinced fer keeps."

  Copernicus shook his head sadly, with retrospective sadness.

  "An' where is the future-man now?" Phoebe asked.

  "Tuk cold on his lungs at the North Pole," said Droop, solemnly. "Hed pneumonia an' up'n died."

  "But there warn't nobody round heerd of him except you," said Rebecca. "Who buried him?"

  "Ah, thet's one o' the beauties o' the hull business. He'd showed me all the ropes on his machine--his Panchronicon, as he called it--an' so I up'n flew round the North Pole the opposite way as soon's he passed away, till I'd made up the five weeks we'd lost. Then when I got back it was five weeks after his funeral, an' I didn't hev to bother about it."

  The two sisters looked at each other, quite overcome with admiration.

  "My land!" Rebecca murmured, gathering up her yarn and knitting again. "Sence they've invented them X-rays an' took to picturin' folks' insides, I kin believe anythin'."

  "You don't hev to take my word fer it," Droop exclaimed. "Ef you'll come right along with me this blessed minute, I'll show you the machine right now."

  "I'd jest love to see it," said Rebecca, her coldness all forgotten, "but it's mos' too late fer this afternoon. There's the supper to get, you know, an'----"

  "But the plan, Rebecca," Phoebe cried. "You've forgotten that I haven't heard Mr. Droop's plan."

  "I wish 't you'd call me 'Cousin Copernicus,'" said Droop, earnestly. "You know I've sworn off--quit drinkin' now."

  Phoebe
blushed at his novel proposal and insisted on the previous question.

  "But what is the plan?" she said.

  "Why, my idea is this, Cousin Phoebe. I want we should all go back to 1876 again. Thet's the year your sister could hev married Joe Chandler ef she'd wanted to."

  Rebecca murmured something unintelligible, blushing furiously, with her eyes riveted to her knitting. Phoebe looked surprised.

  "You know you could, Cousin Rebecca," Droop insisted. "Now what I say is, let's go back there. I'll invent the graphophone, the kodak, the vitascope, an' Milliken's cough syrup an' a lot of other big modern inventions. Rebecca'll marry Chandler, an' she an' her husband can back up my big inventions with capital. Why, Cousin Phoebe," he cried, with enthusiasm, "we'll all hev a million apiece!"

  The sentimental side of Droop's plan first monopolized Phoebe's attention.

  "Rebecca Wise!" she exclaimed, turning with mock severity to face her sister. "Why is it I've never heard tell about this love affair before now? Why, Joe Chandler's just a fine man. Is it you that broke his heart an' made him an old bachelor all his life?"

  Rebecca must have dropped a stitch, for she turned toward the window again and brought her knitting very close to her face.

  "What brought ye so early to home, Phoebe?" she said. "Warn't there no Shakespeare meetin' to-day?"

  "No. Mis' Beecher was to lead, an' she's been taken sick, so I came right home. But you can't sneak out of answerin' me like that, Miss Slyboots," Phoebe continued, in high spirits.

  Seating herself on the arm of her sister's chair, she put her arms about her neck and, bending over, whispered:

  "Tell me honest, now, Rebecca, did Joe Chandler ever propose to you?"

  "No, he never did!" the elder sister exclaimed, rising suddenly.

  "Now, Mr. Droop," she continued, "your hull plan is jest too absurd to think of----"

  Droop tried to expostulate, but she raised her voice, speaking more quickly.

  "An' you come 'round again after supper an' we'll tell ye what we've decided," she concluded.

  The humor of this reply was lost on Copernicus, but he moved toward the door with a sense of distinct encouragement.

  "Remember the rumpus we'll make with all them inventions," Droop called back as he walked toward the gate, "think of the money we'll make!"

  But Rebecca was thinking of something very different as she stood at the front door gazing with softened eyes at the pasture and woods beyond the road. She seemed to see a self-willed girl breaking her own heart and another's rather than acknowledge a silly error. She was wondering if that had really been Rebecca Wise. She felt again all the old bewitching heart-pangs, sweetened and mellowed by time, and she wondered if she were now really Rebecca Wise.

  CHAPTER II

  A VISIT TO THE PANCHRONICON

  At precisely eight o'clock that evening, a knock was again heard at the door of the Wise home, and Droop was admitted by the younger sister. She did not speak, and her face was invisible in the dark hall. The visitor turned to the right and entered the parlor, followed by his young hostess. Rebecca was sitting by the lamp, sewing. As she looked up and nodded, Droop saw that her features expressed only gloomy severity. He turned in consternation and caught sight for the first time of Phoebe's face. Her eyes and pretty nose were red and her mouth was drawn into a curve of plaintive rebellion.

  "Set down, Mr. Droop. Give me yer hat," she said; and there was a suspicious catch in her voice.

  The visitor seated himself by the centre-table beside the lamp and sat slowly rubbing his hands, the while he gazed mournfully from one to the other of the silent sisters. Phoebe sat on the long horse-hair "settle," and played moodily with the tassel hanging at its head.

  There was a long pause. Each of the women seemed bent on forcing the other to break the silence.

  Poor Droop felt that his plans were doomed, and he dared not urge either woman to speech, lest he hear the death-sentence of his hopes. Finally, however, the awkward silence became unbearable.

  "Well?" he said, inquiringly, still rubbing his hands.

  "Well," Rebecca exclaimed, "it seems it's not to be done," and she looked reproachfully at Phoebe.

  The words fulfilled his fears, but the tone and glance produced a thrill of hope. It was evident that Rebecca at least favored his plans.

  Turning now to the younger sister, Droop asked, in a melancholy tone:

  "Don't you want to get rich, Cousin Phoebe?"

  "Rich--me!" she replied, indignantly. "A mighty lot of riches it'll bring me, won't it? That's just what riles me so! You an' Rebecca just think of nothin' but your own selves. You never stop to think of me!"

  Droop opened his eyes very wide indeed, and Rebecca said, earnestly:

  "Phoebe, you know you ain't got any call to say sech a thing!"

  "Oh, haven't I?" cried Phoebe, in broken accents. "Did either of you think what would happen to me if we all went back to 1876? Two years old! That's what I'd be! A little toddling baby, like Susan Mellick's Annie! Put to bed before supper--carried about in everybody's arms--fed on a bottle and--and perhaps--and perhaps getting spanked!"

  With the last word, Phoebe burst into tears of mingled grief and mortification and rushed from the room.

  The others dared not meet each other's guilty eyes. Droop gazed about the room in painful indecision. He could not bear to give up all hope, and yet--this unforeseen objection really seemed a very serious one. To leave the younger sister behind was out of the question. On the other hand, the consequences of the opposite course were--well, painful to her at least.

  In his nervousness he unconsciously grasped a small object on the table upon which his left hand had been lying. It was a miniature daintily painted on ivory. He looked vacantly upon it; his mind at first quite absent from his eyes. But as he gazed, something familiar in the lovely face depicted there fixed his attention. Before long he was examining the picture with the greatest interest.

  "Well, now!" he exclaimed, at length. "Ain't that pretty! Looks jest like her, too. When was that tuck, Miss Wise?"

  "That ain't Phoebe," said Rebecca, dejectedly.

  "Ain't Phoebe!" Droop cried, in amazement. "Why, it's the finest likeness--why--but--it must be yer sister!"

  "Well, 'tain't. Thet pictur is jest three hundred years old."

  "Three hundred--" he began--then very slowly, "Well, now, do tell!" he said.

  "Phoebe's got the old letter that tells about it. The's a lot of 'em in that little carved-wood box there. They say it come over in the Mayflower."

  Droop could not take his eyes from the picture. The likeness was perfect. Here was the pretty youthful oval of her face--the same playful blue eye--the sensitive red lips seeming about to sparkle into a smile--even the golden brown mist of hair that hid the delicately turned ear!

  Then Droop suddenly remembered his plans, and with his hand he dropped the picture as his mind dismissed it. He rose and looked about for his hat.

  "Ye wouldn't want to come back to '76 with me an' leave Cousin Phoebe behind, would ye?" he suggested, dismally.

  "What!" cried Rebecca, giving vent to her pent-up feelings, "an' never see my sister again! Why, I'd hev to come livin' along up behind her, and, all I could do, I'd never catch up with her--never! You'd ought to be ashamed to stand there an' think o' sech a thing, Copernicus Droop!"

  For some time he stood with bent head and shoulders, twirling his hat between his fingers. At length he straightened up suddenly and moved toward the door.

  "Well," he said, "the' isn't any use you seem' the Panchronicon now, is the'?"

  "What's it like, Mr. Droop?" Rebecca inquired.

  He paused helpless before the very thought of description.

  "Oh," he said, weakly, "et's like--et's a--why--Oh, it's a machine!"

  "Hez it got wings?"

  "Not exactly wings," he began, then, more earnestly, "why don't ye come and see it, anyway! It can't do ye any harm to jest look at it!"

  Rebecca dr
opped her hands into her lap and replied, with a hesitating manner:

  "I'd like to fust rate--it must be an awful queer machine! But I don't get much time fer traipsin' 'round now days."

  "Why can't ye come right along now?" Droop asked, eagerly. "It's dry as a bone underfoot down in the swamp now. The's ben no rain in a long time."

  She pondered some time before replying. Her first impulse was to reject the proposal as preposterous. The hour seemed very ill chosen. Rebecca was not accustomed to leaving home for any purpose at night, and she was extremely conservative.

  On the other hand, she felt that only under cover of the darkness could she consent to go anywhere in company with the village reprobate. Every tongue in the place would be set wagging were she seen walking with Copernicus Droop. She had not herself known how strong was the curiosity which his startling theories and incredible story had awakened in her. She looked up at her visitor with indecision in her eyes.

  "I don't see how I could go now," she said. "Besides, it's mos' too dark to see the thing, ain't it?"

  "Not a mite," he replied, confidently. "The's lights inside I can turn on, an' we'll see the hull thing better'n by daylight."

  Then, as she still remained undecided, he continued, in an undertone:

  "Cousin Phoebe's up in her room, ain't she? Ye might not get another chance so easy."

  He had guessed instinctively that, under the circumstances, Rebecca preferred not revealing to Phoebe her own continued interest in the wonderful machine.

  The suggestion was vital. Phoebe was in all probability sulking in her own bedroom, and in that event would not quit it for an hour. It seemed now or never.

  Rebecca rolled up her knitting work and rose to her feet.

  "Jest wait here a spell," she said, rapidly. "I won't be a minute!"

  * * * * *

  Shortly afterward, two swiftly moving, shadowy figures emerged from the little white gate and turned into a dark lane made more gloomy by overhanging maples. This was the shortest route to Burnham's swamp.

  Copernicus was now more hopeful. He could not but feel that, if the elder sister came face to face with his marvellous machine, good must result for his plans. Rebecca walked with nervous haste, dreading Phoebe's possible discovery of this most unconventional conduct.

 

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