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Works of Robert W Chambers

Page 203

by Robert W. Chambers


  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.

  “It’s the harbor-master!” screamed Halyard.

  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.

  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.

  “Have you killed that rubber-headed thing yet?” he roared.

  “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—”

  His words were drowned in a thunderous splashing, a roar of great, broad flippers beating the sea, and I saw the gigantic forms of my two great auks, followed by their chicks, blundering past in a shower of spray, driving headlong out into the ocean.

  “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

  Before I proceed any further, common decency requires me to reassure my readers concerning my intentions, which, Heaven knows, are far from flippant.

  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.

  That afternoon in June I left my office in the Administration Building in Bronx Park and strolled out under the trees for a breath of air. But the heat of the sun soon drove me to seek shelter under a little square arbor, a shady retreat covered with purple wistaria and honeysuckle. As I entered the arbor I noticed that there were three other people seated there — an elderly lady with masculine features and short hair, a younger lady sitting beside her, and, farther away, a rough-looking young man reading a book.

  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.

  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.”

  “It’s rather technical,” I replied, smiling.

  “Yes,” he said, in vague admiration; “it’s fierce, ain’t it?”

  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.

  “Monodactyl,” I said, “means a single-toed creature.”

  He turned the page with alacrity. “Is that the beast he’s talkin’ about?” he asked.

  The illustration he pointed out was a wood-cut representing Darwin’s reconstruction of the dingue from the fossil bones in the British Museum. It was a well-executed wood-cut, showing a dingue in the foreground and, to give scale, a mammoth in the middle distance.

  “Yes,” I replied, “that is the dingue.”

  “I’ve seen one,” he observed, calmly.

  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.

  “I’ve seen them things, too,” he remarked.

  Again I patiently pointed out his error, and suggested that he referred to the elephant.

  “El
ephant be blowed!” he replied, scornfully. “I guess I know what I seen. An’ I seen that there thing you call a dingue, too.”

  Not wishing to prolong a futile discussion, I remained silent. After a moment he wheeled around, removing his pipe from his hard mouth.

  “Did you ever hear tell of Graham’s Glacier?” he demanded.

  “Certainly,” I replied, astonished; “it’s the southernmost glacier in British America.”

  “Right,” he said. “And did you ever hear tell of the Hudson Mountings, mister?”

  “Yes,” I replied.

  “What’s behind ‘em?” he snapped out.

  “Nobody knows,” I answered. “They are considered impassable.”

  “They ain’t, though,” he said, doggedly; “I’ve been behind ‘em.”

  “Really!” I replied, tiring of his yarn.

  “Ya-as, reely,” he repeated, sullenly. Then he began to fumble and search through the pages of his book until he found what he wanted. “Mister,” he said, “jest read that out loud, please.”

  The passage he indicated was the famous chapter beginning:

  “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.”

  I stared at him stupidly.

  “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.

  “What color is it?” I asked.

  “Kinder red an’ brown,” he answered, promptly. “It’s woolly, too.”

  Astounded, I pointed to the dingue.

  “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!”

  He looked me calmly in the eye.

  “Mister,” he said, slowly, “have you got a million for to squander on me?”

  “No,” I said, suspiciously.

  “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.

  “Nit,” he said, shortly, and shambled off down the path.

  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.

  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.

  “That’s what come of monkeyin’ inter your cursed mountings,” he shouted, fiercely. “There’s things in there what no Christian oughter see. Lemme alone er I’ll bust yer.”

  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, 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.

  Walking on hurriedly, I entered the Administration Building, and found Professor Lesard, of the reptilian department, preparing to leave.

  “Don’t you do it,” I said, sharply; “I’ve got exciting news.”

  “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 unpleasan
t 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.”

  “Well,” said Lesard, with a peculiar laugh, “it’s not certain whether you can go at all.”

  “Professor Farrago will authorize me,” I said, confidently.

  “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?”

  He looked at me askance and bit his cigar.

  “I’d be in a nice position, wouldn’t I?” said I, anxiously.

  “The lady would probably make you walk the plank for that tiger business,” he replied.

  “But I didn’t do it,” I protested, with sickly eagerness. “Besides, I explained to her—”

  He said nothing, and I stared at him, appalled by the possibility of reporting to Professor Smawl for instructions next morning.

  “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?”

  He glanced at me sympathetically. It was quite natural for me to wish to secure my position before the new president was elected — especially as there was a chance of the new president being Miss Smawl.

  “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.

 

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