CITY OF
ENDLESS NIGHT
Milo M. Hastings
Contents
Title Page
The Red and Black and Gold Struggle for Supremacy on the Changing Map of the World
I Explore the Potash Mines of Stassfurt and Find a Diary in a Dead Man’s Pocket
In a Black Utopia the Blond Brood Breeds and Swarms
I Go Pleasuring on the Level of Free Women and Drink Synthetic Beer
I Am Drafted for Paternity and Make Extraordinary Petition to the Chief of the Eugenic Staff
In which I Learn that Competition Is Still the Life of the Oldest Trade in the World
The Sun Shines Upon a King and a Girl Reads of the Fall of Babylon
Finding therein One Righteous Man I Have Compassion on Berlin
In which I Salute the Statue of God and a Psychic Expert Explores My Brain and Finds Nothing
A Goddess who Is Suffering from Obesity and a Brave Man Who Is Afraid of the Law of Averages
In which the Talking Delegate Is Answered by the Royal Voice and I Learn that Labor Knows Not God
The Divine Descendants of William the Great Give a Benefit for the Canine Gardens and Pay Tribute to the Piggeries
In which a Woman Accuses Me of Murder and I Place a Ruby Necklace About Her Throat
The Black Spot Is Erased from the Map of the World and there Is Dancing in the Sunlight on the Roof of Berlin
Biographical Note
Copyright
The Red and Black and Gold Struggle for Supremacy on the Changing Map of the World
I
When but a child of seven my uncle placed me in a private school in which one of the so-called redeemed sub-sailors was a teacher of the German language. As I look back now, in the light of my present knowledge, I better comprehend the docile humility and carefully nurtured ignorance of this man. In his classrooms he used as a text a description of German life, taken from the captured submarine. From this book he had secured his own conception of a civilization of which he really knew practically nothing. I recall how we used to ask Herr Meineke if he had actually seen those strange things of which he taught us. To this he always made answer, ‘The book is official, man’s observation errs.’
II
‘He can talk it,’ said my playmates who attended the public schools where all teaching of the language of the outcast nation was prohibited. They invariably elected me to be ‘the Germans’, and locked me up in the old garage while they rained a stock of sun-dried clay bombs upon the roof and then came with a rush to ‘batter down the walls of Berlin’ by breaking in the door, while I, muttering strange guttural oaths, would be led forth to be ‘exterminated’.
On rainy days I would sometimes take my favored playmates into my uncle’s library where five great maps hung in ordered sequence on the paneled wall.
The first map was labeled ‘The Age of Nations – 1914’, and showed the black spot of Germany, like in size to many of the surrounding countries, the names of which one recited in the history class.
The second map – ‘Germany’s Maximum Expansion of the First World War – 1918’ – showed the black area trebled in size, crowding into the pale gold of France, thrusting a hungry arm across the Hellespont towards Baghdad, and, from the Balkans to the Baltic, blotting out all else save the flaming red of Bolshevist Russia, which spread over the Eastern half of Europe like a pool of fresh spilled blood.
Third came ‘The Age of the League of Nations, 1919–1983’, with the gold of democracy battling with the spreading red of socialism, for the black of autocracy had erstwhile vanished.
The fourth map was the most fascinating and terrible. Again the black of autocracy appeared, obliterating the red of the Brotherhood of Man, spreading across half of Eurasia and thrusting a broad black shadow to the Yellow Sea and a lesser one to the Persian Gulf. This map was labeled ‘Maximum German Expansion of the Second World War, 1988’, and lines of dotted white retreated in concentric waves till the line of 2041.
This same year was the first date of the fifth map, which was labeled ‘A Century of the World State’, and here, as all the sea was blue, so all the land was gold, save one black blot that might have been made by a single spattered drop of ink, for it was no bigger than the Irish Island. The persistence of this remaining black on the map of the world troubled my boyish mind, as it has troubled three generations of the United World, and strive as I might, I could not comprehend why the great blackness of the fourth map had been erased and this small blot alone remained.
III
When I returned from school for my vacation, after I had my first year of physical science, I sought out my uncle in his laboratory and asked him to explain the mystery of the little black island standing adamant in the golden sea of all the world.
‘That spot,’ said my uncle, ‘would have been erased in two more years if a Leipzig professor had not discovered The Ray. Yet we do not know his name nor how he made his discovery.’
‘But just what is The Ray?’ I asked.
‘We do not know that either, nor how it is made. We only know that it destroys the oxygen-carrying power of living blood. If it were an emanation from a substance like radium, they could have fired it in projectiles and so conquered the earth. If it were ether waves like electricity, we should have been able to have insulated against it, or they should have been able to project it further and destroy our aircraft, but The Ray is not destructive beyond two thousand meters in the air and hardly that far in the earth.’
‘Then why do we not fly over and land an army and great guns and batter down the walls of Berlin and be done with it?’
‘That, as you know if you studied your history, has been tried many times and always with disaster. The bomb-torn soil of that black land is speckled white with the bones of World armies who were sent on landing invasions before you or I was born. But it was only heroic folly, one gun popping out of a tunnel mouth can slay a thousand men. To pursue the gunners into their catacombs meant to be gassed; and sometimes our forces were left to land in peace and set up their batteries to fire against Berlin, but the Germans would place Ray generators in the ground beneath them and slay our forces in an hour, as the Angel of Jehovah withered the hosts of the Assyrians.’
‘But why,’ I persisted, ‘do we not tunnel under the Ray generators and dig our way to Berlin and blow it up?’
My uncle smiled indulgently. ‘And that has been tried too, but they can hear our borings with microphones and cut us off, just as we cut them off when they try to tunnel out and place new generators. It is too slow, too difficult, either way; the line has wavered a little with the years but to no practical avail; the war in our day has become merely a watching game, we to keep the Germans from coming out, they to keep us from penetrating within gunshot of Berlin; but to gain a mile of worthless territory either way means too great a human waste to be worth the price. Things must go on as they are till the Germans tire of their sunless imprisonment or till they exhaust some essential element in their soil. But wars such as you read of in your history, will never happen again. The Germans cannot fight the world in the air, nor in the sea, nor on the surface of the earth; and we cannot fight the Germans in the ground; so the war has become a fixed state of standing guard; the hope of victory, the fear of defeat have vanished; the romance of war is dead.’
‘But why, then,’ I asked, ‘does the World Patrol continue to bomb the roof of Berlin?’
‘Politics,’ replied my uncle, ‘military politics, just futile display of pyrotechnics to amuse the populace and give heroically inclined young men a chance to strut in uniforms – but after the election this fall such folly will cease.’
IV
My u
ncle had predicted correctly, for by the time I again came home on my vacation, the newly elected Pacifist Council had reduced the aerial activities to mere watchful patrolling over the land of the enemy. Then came the report of an attempt to launch an aeroplane from the roof of Berlin. The people, in dire panic lest Ray generators were being carried out by German aircraft, had clamored for the recall of the Pacifist Council, and the bombardment of Berlin was resumed.
During the lull of the bombing activities my uncle, who stood high with the Pacifist Administration, had obtained permission to fly over Europe, and I, most fortunate of boys, accompanied him. The plane in which we traveled bore the emblem of the World Patrol. On a cloudless day we sailed over the pockmarked desert that had once been Germany and came within field-glass range of Berlin itself. On the wasted, bomb-torn land lay the great gray disc – the city of mystery. Three hundred meters high they said it stood, but so vast was its extent that it seemed as flat and thin as a pancake on a griddle.
‘More people live in that mass of concrete,’ said my uncle, ‘than in the whole of America west of the Rocky Mountains.’ His statement, I have since learned, fell short of half the truth, but then it seemed appalling. I fancied the city a giant anthill, and searched with my glass as if I expected to see the ants swarming out. But no sign of life was visible upon the monotonous surface of the sand-blanketed roof, and high above the range of naked vision hung the hawk-like watchers of the World Patrol.
The lure of unraveled secrets, the ambition for discovery and exploration stirred my boyish veins. Yes, I would know more of the strange race, the unknown life that surged beneath that gray blanket of mystery. But how? For over a century millions of men had felt that same longing to know. Aviators, landing by accident or intent within the lines, had either returned with nothing to report, or they had not returned. Daring journalists, with baskets of carrier pigeons, had on foggy nights dropped by parachute to the roof of the city; but neither they nor the birds had brought back a single word of what lay beneath the armed and armored roof.
My own resolution was but a boy’s dream and I returned to Chicago to take up my chemical studies.
I Explore the Potash Mines of Stassfurt and Find a Diary in a Dead Man’s Pocket
I
When I was twenty-four years old, my uncle was killed in a laboratory explosion. He had been a scientist of renown and a chemical inventor who had devoted his life to the unraveling of the secrets of the synthetic foods of Germany. For some years I had been his trusted assistant. In our Chicago laboratory were carefully preserved food samples that had been taken from the captured submarines in years gone by; and what to me was even more fascinating, a collection of German books of like origin, which I had read with avidity. With the exception of those relating to submarine navigation, I found them stupidly childish and decided that they had been prepared to hide the truth and not reveal it.
My uncle had bequeathed me both his work and his fortune, but despairing of my ability worthily to continue his own brilliant researches on synthetic food, I turned my attention to the potash problem, in which I had long been interested. My reading of early chemical works had given me a particular interest in the reclamation of the abandoned potash mines of Stassfurt. These mines, as any student of chemical history will know, were one of the richest properties of the old German state in the days before the endless war began and Germany became isolated from the rest of the world. The mines were captured by the World in the year 2020, and were profitably operated for a couple of decades. Meanwhile the German lines were forced many miles to the rear before the impregnable barrier of The Ray had halted the progress of the World Armies.
A few years after the coming of the Ray defenses, occurred what history records as ‘The Tragedy of the Mines’. Six thousand workmen went down into the potash mines of Stassfurt one morning and never came up again. The miners’ families in the neighboring villages died like weevils in fumigated grain. The region became a valley of pestilence and death, and all life withered for miles around. Numerous governmental projects were launched for the recovery of the potash mines but all failed, and for one hundred and eleven years no man had penetrated those accursed shafts.
Knowing these facts, I wasted no time in soliciting government aid for my project, but was content to secure a permit to attempt the recovery with private funds, with which my uncle’s fortune supplied me in abundance.
In April, 2151, I set up my laboratory on the edge of the area of death. I had never accepted the orthodox view as to the composition of the gas that issued from the Stassfurt mines. In a few months I was gratified to find my doubts confirmed. A short time after this I made a more unexpected and astonishing discovery. I found that this complex and hitherto misunderstood gas could, under the influence of certain high-frequency electrical discharges, be made to combine with explosive violence with the nitrogen of the atmosphere, leaving only a harmless residue. We wired the surrounding region for the electrical discharge and, with a vast explosion of weird purple flame, cleared the whole area of the century-old curse. Our laboratory was destroyed by the explosion. It was rebuilt nearer the mineshafts from which the gas still slowly issued. Again we set up our electrical machinery and dropped our cables into the shafts, this time clearing the air of the mines.
A hasty exploration revealed the fact that but a single shaft had remained intact. A third time we prepared our electrical machinery. We let down a cable and succeeded in getting but a faint reaction at the bottom of the shaft. After several repeated clearings we risked descent.
Upon arrival at the bottom we were surprised to find it free from water, save for a trickling stream. The second thing we discovered was a pile of huddled skeletons of the workmen who had perished over a century previous. But our third and most important discovery was a boring from which the poisonous gas was slowly issuing. It took but a few hours to provide an apparatus to fire this gas as fast as it issued, and the potash mines of Stassfurt were regained for the world.
My associates were for beginning mining operations at once, but I had been granted a twenty years’ franchise on the output of these mines, and I was in no such haste. The boring from which this poisonous vapor issued was clearly man-made; moreover I alone knew the formula of that gas and had convinced myself once for all as to its man-made origin. I sent for microphones and with their aid speedily detected the sound of machinery in other workings beneath.
It is easy now to see that I erred in risking my own life as I did without the precaution of confiding the secret of my discovery to others. But those were days of feverish excitement. Impulsively I decided to make the first attack on the Germans as a private enterprise and then call for military aid. I had my own equipment of poisonous bombs and my sapping and mining experts determined that the German workings were but eighty meters beneath us. Hastily, among the crumbling skeletons, we set up our electrical boring machinery and began sinking a one-meter shaft towards the nearest sound.
After twenty hours of boring, the drill head suddenly came off and rattled down into a cavern. We saw a light and heard guttural shouting below and the cracking of a gun as a few bullets spattered against the roof of our chamber. We heaved down our gas bombs and covered over our shaft. Within a few hours the light below went out and our microphones failed to detect any sound from the rocks beneath us. It was then perhaps that I should have called for military aid, but the uncanny silence of the lower workings proved too much for my eager curiosity. We waited two days and still there was no evidence of life below. I knew there had been ample time for the gas from our bombs to have been dissipated, as it was decomposed by contact with moisture. A light was lowered, but this brought forth no response.
I now called for a volunteer to descend the shaft. None was forthcoming from among my men, and against their protest I insisted on being lowered into the shaft. When I was a few meters from the bottom the cable parted and I fell and lay stunned on the floor below.
II
When I r
ecovered consciousness the light had gone out. There was no sound about me. I shouted up the shaft above and could get no answer. The chamber in which I lay was many times my height and I could make nothing out in the dark hole above. For some hours I scarcely stirred and feared to burn my pocket flash both because it might reveal my presence to lurking enemies and because I wished to conserve my battery against graver need.
But no rescue came from my men above. Only recently, after the lapse of years, did I learn the cause of their deserting me. As I lay stunned from my fall, my men, unable to get answer to their shoutings, had given me up for dead. Meanwhile the apparatus which caused the destruction of the German gas had gone wrong. My associates, unable to fix it, had fled from the mine and abandoned the enterprise.
After some hours of waiting I stirred about and found means to erect a rough scaffold and reach the mouth of the shaft above me. I attempted to climb, but, unable to get a hold on the smooth wet rock, I gave up exhausted and despairing. Entombed in the depths of the earth, I was either a prisoner of the German potash miners, if any remained alive, or a prisoner of the earth itself, with dead men for company.
Collecting my courage I set about to explore my surroundings. I found some mining machinery evidently damaged by the explosion of our gas bombs. There was no evidence of men about, living or dead. Stealthily I set out along the little railway track that ran through a passage down a steep incline. As I progressed I felt the air rapidly becoming colder. Presently I stumbled upon the first victim of our gas bombs, fallen headlong as he was fleeing. I hurried on. The air seemed to be blowing in my face and the cold was becoming intense. This puzzled me for at this depth the temperature should have been above that on the surface of the earth.
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