City of Endless Night

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by Hastings , Milo M. ;


  After a hundred meters or so of going I came into a larger chamber. It was intensely cold. From out another branching passageway I could hear a sizzling sound as of steam escaping. I started to turn into this passage but was met with such a blast of cold air that I dared not face it for fear of being frozen. Stamping my feet, which were fast becoming numb, I made the rounds of the chamber, and examined the dead miners that were tumbled about. The bodies were frozen.

  One side of this chamber was partitioned off with some sort of metal wall. The door stood blown open. It felt a little warmer in here and I entered and closed the door. Exploring the room with my dim light I found one side of it filled with a row of bunks – in each bunk a corpse. Along the other side of the room was a table with eating utensils and back of this were shelves with food packages.

  I was in danger of freezing to death and, tumbling several bodies out of the bunks, I took the mattresses and built of them a clumsy enclosure and installed in their midst a battery heater which I found. In this fashion I managed to get fairly warm again. After some hours of huddling I observed that the temperature had moderated.

  My fear of freezing abated, I made another survey of my surroundings and discovered something that had escaped my first attention. In the far end of the room was a desk, and seated before it with his head fallen forward on his arms was the form of a man. The miners had all been dressed in a coarse artificial leather, but this man was dressed in a woven fabric of cellulose silk.

  The body was frozen. As I tumbled it stiffly back it fell from the chair exposing a ghastly face. I drew away in a creepy horror, for as I looked at the face of the corpse I suffered a sort of waking nightmare in which I imagined that I was gazing at my own dead countenance.

  I concluded that my normal mind was slipping out of gear and proceeded to back off and avail myself of a tube of stimulant which I carried in my pocket.

  This revived me somewhat, but again, when I tried to look upon the frozen face, the conviction returned that I was looking at my own dead self.

  I glanced at my watch and figured out that I had been in the German mine for thirty hours and had not tasted food or drink for nearly forty hours. Clearly I had to get myself in shape to escape hallucinations. I went back to the shelves and proceeded to look for food and drink. Happily, due to my work in my uncle’s laboratory, these synthetic foods were not wholly strange to me. I drank copiously of a non-alcoholic chemical liquor and warmed on the heater and partook of some nitrogenous and some starchy porridges. It was an uncanny dining place, but hunger soon conquers mere emotion, and I made out a meal. Then once more I faced the task of confronting this dead likeness of myself.

  This time I was clear-headed enough. I even went to the miners’ lavatory and, jerking down the metal mirror, scrutinized my own reflection and reassured myself of the closeness of the resemblance. My purpose framed in my mind as I did this. Clearly I was in German quarters and was likely to remain there. Sooner or later there must be a rescuing party.

  Without further ado, I set about changing my clothing for that of the German. The fit of the dead man’s clothes further emphasized the closeness of the physical likeness. I recalled my excellent command of the German language and began to wonder what manner of man I was supposed to be in this assumed personality. But my most urgent task was speedily to make way with the incriminating corpse. With the aid of the brighter flashlight which I found in my new pockets, I set out to find a place to hide the body.

  The cold that had so frightened me had now given way to almost normal temperature. There was no longer the sound of sizzling steam from the unexplored passageway. I followed this and presently came upon another chamber filled with machinery. In one corner a huge engine, covered with frost, gave off a chill greeting. On the floor was a steaming puddle of liquid, but the breath of this steam cut like a blizzard. At once I guessed it. This was a liquid air engine. The dead engineer in the corner helped reveal the story. With his death from the penetrating gas, something had gone wrong with the engine. The turbine head had blown off, and the conveying pipe of liquid air had poured forth the icy blast that had so nearly frozen me along with the corpses of the Germans. But now the flow of liquid had ceased, and the last remnants were evaporating from the floor. Evidently the supply pipe had been shut off further back on the line, and I had little time to lose for rescuers were probably on the way.

  Along one of the corridors running from the engine room I found an open water drain half choked with melting ice. Following this I came upon a grating where the water disappeared. I jerked up the grating and dropped a piece of ice down the well-like shaft. I hastily returned and dragged forth the corpse of my double and with it everything I had myself brought into the mine. Straightening out the stiffened body I plunged it head foremost into the opening. The sound of a splash echoed within the dismal depths.

  I now hastened back to the chamber into which I had first fallen and destroyed the scaffolding I had erected there. Returning to the desk where I had found the man whose clothing I wore, I sat down and proceeded to search my abundantly filled pockets. From one of them I pulled out a bulky notebook and a number of loose papers. The freshest of these was an official order from the Imperial Office of Chemical Engineers. The order ran as follows:

  Capt. Karl Armstadt

  Laboratory 186, E. 58.

  Report is received at this office of the sound of sapping operations in potash mine D5. Go at once and verify the same and report of condition of gas generators and make analyses of output of the same.

  Evidently I was Karl Armstadt and very happily a chemical engineer by profession. My task of impersonation so far looked feasible – I could talk chemical engineering.

  The next paper I proceeded to examine was an identification folder done up in oiled fabric. Thanks to German thoroughness it was amusingly complete. On the first page appeared what I soon discovered to be my pedigree for four generations back. The printed form on which all this was minutely filled out made very clear statements from which I determined that my father and mother were both dead.

  I, Karl Armstadt, twenty-seven years of age, was the fourteenth child of my mother and was born when she was forty-two years of age. According to the record I was the ninety-seventh child of my father and born when he was fifty-four. As I read this I thought there was something here that I misunderstood, although subsequent discoveries made it plausible enough. There was no further record of my plentiful fraternity, but I took heart that the mere fact of their numerical abundance would make unlikely any great show of brotherly interest, a presumption which proved quite correct.

  On the second page of this folder I read the number and location of my living quarters, the sources from which my meals and clothing were issued, as well as the sizes and qualities of my garments and numerous other references to various details of living, all of which seemed painstakingly ridiculous at the time.

  I put this elaborate identification paper back into its receptacle and opened the notebook. It proved to be a diary kept likewise in thorough German fashion. I turned to the last pages and perused them hastily.

  The notes in Armstadt’s diary were concerned almost wholly with his chemical investigations. All this I saw might be useful to me later but what I needed more immediately was information as to his personal life. I scanned back hastily through the pages for a time without finding any such revelations. Then I discovered this entry made some months previously:

  I cannot think of chemistry tonight, for the vision of Katrina dances before me as in a dream. It must be a strange mixture of bloodlines that could produce such wondrous beauty. In no other woman have I seen such a blackness of hair and eyes combined with such a whiteness of skin. I suppose I should not have danced with her – now I see all my resolutions shattered. But I think it was most of all the blackness of her eyes. Well, what care, we live but once!

  I read and reread this entry and searched feverishly in Armstadt’s diary for further evidence of a personal
life. But I only found tedious notes on his chemical theories. Perhaps this single reference to a woman was but a passing fancy of a man otherwise engrossed in his science. But if rescuers came and I succeeded in passing for the German chemist the presence of a woman in my new role of life would surely undo all my effort. If no personal acquaintance of the dead man came with the rescuing party I saw no reason why I could not for the time pass successfully as Armstadt. I should at least make the effort and I reasoned I could best do this by playing the malingerer and appearing mentally incompetent. Such a ruse, I reasoned, would give me opportunity to hear much and say little, and perhaps so get my bearings in the new role that I could continue it successfully.

  Then, as I was about to return the notebook to my pocket, my hopes sank as I found this brief entry which I had at first scanning overlooked:

  It is twenty days now since Katrina and I have been united. She does not interfere with my work as much as I feared. She even lets me talk chemistry to her, though I am sure she understands not one word of what I tell her. I think I have made a good selection and it is surely a permanent one. Therefore I must work harder than ever or I shall not get on.

  This alarmed me. Yet, if Armstadt had married he made very little fuss about it. Evidently it concerned him chiefly in relation to his work. But whoever and whatever Katrina was, it was clear that her presence would be disastrous to my plans of assuming his place in the German world.

  Pondering over the ultimate difficulty of my situation, but with a growing faith in the plan I had evolved for avoiding immediate explanations, I fell into a long-postponed sleep. The last thing I remember was tumbling from my chair and sprawling out upon the floor where I managed to snap out my light before the much needed sleep quite overcame me.

  III

  I was awakened by voices, and opened my eyes to find the place brightly lighted. I closed them again quickly as someone approached and prodded me with the toe of his boot.

  ‘Here is a man alive,’ said a voice above me.

  ‘He is Captain Armstadt, the chemist,’ said another voice, approaching; ‘this is good. We have special orders to search for him.’

  The newcomer bent over and felt my heart. I was quite aware that it was functioning normally. He shook me and called me by name. After repeated shakings I opened my eyes and stared at him blankly, but I said nothing. Presently he left me and returned with a stretcher. I lay inertly as I was placed thereon and borne out of the chamber. Other stretcher-bearers were walking ahead. We passed through the engine room where mechanics were at work on the damaged liquid air engine. My stretcher was placed on a little car which moved swiftly along the tunnel.

  We came into a large subterranean station and I was removed and brought before a bevy of white garbed physicians. They looked at my identification folder and then examined me. Through it all I lay limp and as near lifeless as I could simulate, and they succeeded in getting no speech out of me. The final orders were to forward me posthaste to the Imperial Hospital for Complex Gas Cases.

  After an eventless journey of many hours I was again unloaded and transferred to an elevator. For several hundred meters we sped upward through a shaft, while about us whistled a blast of cold, crisp air. At last the elevator stopped and I was carried out to an ambulance that stood waiting in a brilliantly lighted passage arched over with gray concrete. I was no longer beneath the surface of the earth but was somewhere in the massive concrete structure of the City of Berlin.

  After a short journey our ambulance stopped and attendants came out and carried my litter through an open doorway and down a long hall into the spacious ward of a hospital.

  From half-closed eyes I glanced about apprehensively for a black-haired woman. With a sigh of relief I saw there were only doctors and male attendants in the room. They treated me most professionally and gave no sign that they suspected I was other than Capt. Karl Armstadt, which fact my papers so eloquently testified. The conclusion of their examination was voiced in my presence. ‘Physically he is normal,’ said the head physician, ‘but his mind seems in a stupor. There is no remedy, as the nature of the gas is unknown. All that can be done is to await the wearing off of the effect.’

  I was then left alone for some hours and my appetite was troubling me. At last an attendant approached with some savory soup; he propped me up and proceeded to feed me with a spoon.

  I made out from the conversation about me that the other patients were officers from the underground fighting forces. An atmosphere of military discipline pervaded the hospital and I felt reassured in the conclusion that all visiting was forbidden.

  Yet my thoughts turned repeatedly to the black-eyed Katrina of Armstadt’s diary. No doubt she had been informed of the rescue and was waiting in grief and anxiety to see him. So both she and I were awaiting a tragic moment – she to learn that her husband or lover was dead, I for the inevitable tearing off of my protecting disguise.

  After some days the head physician came to my cot and questioned me. I gazed at him and knit my brows as if struggling to think.

  ‘You were gassed in the mine,’ he kept repeating, ‘can you remember?’

  ‘Yes,’ I ventured, ‘I went to the mine, there was the sound of boring overhead. I set men to watch; I was at the desk, I heard shouting, after that I cannot remember.’

  ‘They were all dead but you,’ said the doctor.

  ‘All dead,’ I repeated. I liked the sound of this and so kept on mumbling ‘All dead, all dead.’

  IV

  My plan was working nicely. But I realized I could not keep up this role forever. Nor did I wish to, for the idleness and suspense were intolerable and I knew that I would rather face whatever problems my recovery involved than to continue in this monotonous and meaningless existence. So I convalesced by degrees and got about the hospital, and was permitted to wait on myself. But I cultivated a slowness and brevity of speech.

  One day as I sat reading the attendant announced, ‘A visitor to see you, sir.’

  Trembling with excitement and fear I tensely waited the coming of the visitor.

  Presently a stolid-faced young man followed the attendant into the room. ‘You remember Holknecht,’ said the nurse, ‘he is your assistant at the laboratory.’

  I stared stupidly at the man, and cold fear crept over me as he, with puzzled eyes, returned my gaze.

  ‘You are much changed,’ he said at last. ‘I hardly recognize you.’

  ‘I have been very ill,’ I replied.

  Just then the head physician came into the room and seeing me talking to a stranger walked over to us. As I said nothing, Holknecht introduced himself. The medical man began at once to enlarge upon the peculiarities of my condition. ‘The unknown gas,’ he explained, ‘acted upon the whole nervous system and left profound effects. Never in the records of the hospital has there been so strange a case.’

  Holknecht seemed quite awed and completely credulous.

  ‘His memory must be revived,’ continued the head physician, ‘and that can best be done by recalling the dominating interest of his mind.’

  ‘Captain Armstadt was wholly absorbed in his research work in the laboratory,’ offered Holknecht.

  ‘Then,’ said the physician, ‘you must revive the activity of those particular brain cells.’

  With that command the laboratory assistant was left in charge. He took his new task quite seriously. Turning to me and raising his voice as if to penetrate my dulled mentality, he began, ‘Do you not remember our work in the laboratory?’

  ‘Yes, the laboratory, the laboratory,’ I repeated vaguely.

  Holknecht described the laboratory in detail and gradually his talk drifted into an account of the chemical research. I listened eagerly to get the threads of the work I must needs do if I were to maintain my role as Armstadt.

  Knowing now that visitors were permitted me, I again grew apprehensive over the possible advent of Katrina. But no woman appeared, in fact I had not yet seen a woman among the Germans. A
lways it was Holknecht and, strictly according to his orders, he talked incessant chemistry.

  V

  The day I resumed my normal wearing apparel I was shown into a large lounging room for convalescents. I seated myself a short distance apart from a group of officers and sat eyeing another group of large, hulking fellows at the far end of the room. These I concluded to be common soldiers, for I heard the officers in my ward grumbling at the fact that they were quartered in the same hospital with men of the ranks.

  Presently an officer came over and took a seat beside me. ‘It is very rarely that you men in the professional service are gassed,’ he said. ‘You must have a dull life, I do not see how you can stand it.’

  ‘But certainly,’ I replied, ‘it is not so dangerous.’

  ‘And for that reason it must be stupid – I, for one, think that even in the fighting forces there is no longer sufficient danger to keep up the military morale. Danger makes men courageous – without danger courage declines – and without courage what advantage would there be in the military life?’

  ‘Suppose,’ I suggested, ‘the war should come to an end?’

  ‘But how can it?’ he asked incredulously. ‘How can there be an end to the war? We cannot prevent the enemy from fighting.’

  ‘But what,’ I ventured, ‘if the enemy should decide to quit fighting?’

  ‘They have almost quit now,’ he remarked with apparent disgust; ‘they are losing the fighting spirit – but no wonder – they say that the World State population is so great that only two per cent of its men are in the fighting forces. What I cannot see is how a people so peaceful can keep from utter degeneration. And they say that the World State soldiers are not even bred for soldiering but are picked from all classes. If they should decide to quit fighting, as you suggest, we also would have to quit – it would be intolerable – it is bad enough now.’

 

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