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Wonder Stories Super Pack. Fletcher PrattЧитать онлайн книгу.

Wonder Stories Super Pack - Fletcher  Pratt


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came the sound Marta Lami had heard, and when the light went back those unseeing eyes had moved.

      For a few seconds no one spoke. Then:

      “Good God, it’s alive!” said Vanderschoof in a hushed voice and a thrill of horror went through the others as they recognized the truth of his words.

      Stevens broke the spell, stepping swiftly to the desk. “Can we do anything for you?” he asked. No movement from the metal figure—only that ghastly rustle of the eyes as they turned here and there in the fixed head, searching for the light they would never find again. The Wall Street man lifted one of the hands, tried to flex the arm that held it. It dropped back to the deck with a crash. Yet the metal of which they were composed seemed in itself to be as pliant as that of their own arms.

      A feeling of wonderment mingled with the horror of the spectators.

      “What happened to him?” asked Marta Lami in a whisper as though she feared awakening a sleeper.

      Stevens shrugged. “What’s happened to all of us? He’s alive, I tell you. Let’s ... get out of here. I don’t like it.”

      “But where to?” asked Vanderschoof.

      “Follow the Albany road,” said Stevens. “We ought to move on. If those birds come back in the morning—” he left the sentence unfinished.

      “But what about this poor egg?” asked Marta Lami.

      “Leave him,” said Stevens, then suddenly giving way, “there’s too much mystery about this whole business around here. I’m going, I tell you, going. You can stay here till you rot if you like. I’m clearing out.”

      Chapter V

       The Menace

       Naturally, exploration of the familiar, yet unfamiliar world into which they had suddenly been thrown was the first preoccupation of the New York colonists. None of the group cared to wander far from the Institute during the first weeks, however, in view of the possible difficulty of obtaining electrical food for a long trip, and Beeville’s researches on the potentialities of their new bodily form advanced so slowly that they hardly dared leave.

      His discoveries in the first weeks were, in fact, purely negative. Farrelly, the publisher, smashed a finger in some machinery, but when O’Hara turned an exact duplicate out on his lathe and Beeville attached it, the new member altogether lacked sensation and could be moved only with conscious effort—an indication that some as yet unfamiliar reaction underlay the secret of motion in their metal form.

      But the greatest difficulty in the way of any activity lay in the almost abysmal ignorance of the mechanical and technical arts on the part of the whole group. O’Hara was a fair mechanic; Dangerfield dabbled in radio, and Farrelly could run a printing press (he published a comical parody of a newspaper on one for several days; then abandoned the effort); but beyond that the utmost accomplishment was driving a car, and most of them realized how helpless the old civilization had been without its hewers of wood and drawers of water.

      To remedy this condition, as much as to keep them busy, Ben assigned to each some branch of mechanical science to be learned, the supply of information, in the form of books, and of experimental material, in every form, being inexhaustible. Thus the first week found Tholfsen and Mrs. Roberts scouring the line of the New York Central for a locomotive in running order. After numerous failures, they succeeded in getting the thing going, only to discover that the line was blocked with wrecks and they would need a crane to clear the track for an exploring journey of even moderate length.

      At the same time, Murray Lee, with Dangerfield and two or three others, made an effort to get the Park Central’s broadcasting station in operation; a work of some difficulty, since it involved ventures into what were, for them, unknown fields. Daily they tap-tapped messages to each other on telegraph sets rescued from a Western Union office, in preparation for the time when they could get a sending set put together.

      But the most ambitious effort and the one that was to have the largest share of ultimate consequences, was the expedition of Farrelly, Gloria and a clothing-store proprietor named Kevitz in quest of naval adventure. After a week’s intensive study of marine engines from books the three appropriated a tug from the Battery and set off on a cruise of the harbor.

      Half an hour later they were high and dry off Bedloe’s Island, gloomily contemplating the prospect of spending their lives there, for an attempt to swim when weighted down with three hundred pounds of hardware could end only in failure. Fortunately the tide came to their rescue, and with more daring than judgment, they continued their voyage to Governor’s Island, where they were lucky enough to find a solitary artilleryman, weak with hunger, but hilarious with delight at the discovery that his metallic form was not a delirium tremens delusion induced by the quart of gin he had absorbed on the night before the change.

      The giant birds, which Beeville had professionally named “tetrapteryxes,” seemed to have vacated the city with the appearance of the colonists. Even the nest Roberts had stumbled on proved deserted when an expedition cautiously revisited the place; and the memory of the birds had sunk to the level of a subject for idle remarks when a new event precipitated it into general attention.

      Massey, the artist, with all the time in the world, and the art supplies of New York under his finger, had gone off on an artistic jag, painting day and night. One morning he took his canvas to the top of the Daily News building to paint the city at dawn from its weather-observation station. The fact that he had to climb stairs the whole way up and finally chisel through the door at the top was no bar to his enthusiasm. Kevitz, hurrying down Lexington Avenue in a car to join his fellow mariners in investigating the machinery of a freighter, saw him in the little steel cage, silhouetted against the reddening light of day.

      There was an informal rule that everyone should gather at the Institute at ten in the evening, unless otherwise occupied, to report on the day’s events, and when Massey did not appear two or three people made comments on the fact, but it was not treated as a matter of moment. When the artist had not shown up by dawn of the next day, however, Murray and Gloria went to look for him, fearing accident. As they approached the building Murray noticed that the edge of the weather observation platform was twisted awry. He speeded up his car, but when they arrived and climbed the mountainous flights of stairs he found no bent and damaged form, as he had expected.

      *

      The roof of the building held nothing but the painting on which he had been working—a half-completed color sketch of the city as seen from the tower.

      “Where do you s’pose he went?” asked Gloria.

      “Don’t know, but he went in a hurry,” replied Murray. “He doesn’t care about those paintings much more than he does about his life.”

      “Maybe he took a tumble,” she suggested. “Look, there’s his easel, and it’s busted.”

      “Yes, and that little chair he totes around, and look how it’s all twisted out of shape.”

      “Let’s look over the edge. Maybe he went bugs and jumped. I knew a guy that did that once.”

      “Nothing doing,” said Murray, peering over the parapet of the building.

      Mystery.

      “Say—” it was Gloria who spoke. “Do you suppose those birds—the tetra-axes or whatever Beeville calls them—?”

      They turned and scanned the sky. The calm blue vault, flecked by the fleecy clouds of summer, gave no hint of the doom that had descended on the artist.

      “Nothing to do but go home, I guess,” said Murray, “and report another robbery in Prospect Park.”

      The meeting of the colonists that evening was serious.

      “It comes to this, then,” said Ben, finally. “These birds are dangerous. I’m willing to grant that it might not have been they who copped Massey, but I can’t think of anything else. I think it’s a good idea for us to


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