Out of the Dark

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Out of the Dark Page 8

by Robert W. Chambers

THE MAKER OF MOONS

  ‘I have heard what the Talkers were talking – the talk

  Of the beginning and the end;

  But I do not talk of the beginning or the end.’

  I

  Concerning Yue-Laou and the Xin I know nothing more than you shall know. I am miserably anxious to clear the matter up. Perhaps what I write may save the United States Government money and lives, perhaps it may arouse the scientific world to action; at any rate it will put an end to the terrible suspense of two people. Certainty is better than suspense.

  If the Government dares to disregard this warning and refuses to send a thoroughly equipped expedition at once, the people of the State may take swift vengeance on the whole region and leave a blackened devastated waste where today forest and flowering meadowland border the lake in the Cardinal Woods.

  You already know part of the story; the New York papers have been full of alleged details. This much is true: Barris caught the ‘Shiner’ red-handed, or rather yellow-handed, for his pockets and boots and dirty fists were stuffed with lumps of gold. I say gold, advisedly. You may call it what you please. You also know how Barris was – but unless I begin at the beginning of my own experiences you will be none the wiser after all.

  On the third of August of this present year I was standing in Tiffany’s, chatting with George Godfrey of the designing department. On the glass counter between us lay a coiled serpent, an exquisite specimen of chiseled gold.

  ‘No,’ replied Godfrey to my question, ‘it isn’t my work; I wish it was. Why, man, it’s a masterpiece!’

  ‘Whose?’ I asked.

  ‘Now I should be very glad to know also,’ said Godfrey. ‘We bought it from an old jay who says he lives in the country somewhere about the Cardinal Woods. That’s near Starlit Lake, I believe—’

  ‘Lake of the Stars?’ I suggested.

  ‘Some call it Starlit Lake – it’s all the same. Well, my rustic Reuben says that he represents the sculptor of this snake for all practical and business purposes. He got his price too. We hope he’ll bring us something more. We have sold this already to the Metropolitan Museum.’

  I was leaning idly on the glass case, watching the keen eyes of the artist in precious metals as he stooped over the gold serpent.

  ‘A masterpiece!’ he muttered to himself, fondling the glittering coil, ‘look at the texture! whew!’ But I was not looking at the serpent. Something was moving – crawling out of Godfrey’s coat pocket – the pocket nearest me – something soft and yellow with crablike legs all covered with coarse yellow hair.

  ‘What in Heaven’s name,’ said I, ‘have you got in your pocket? It’s crawling out – it’s trying to creep up your coat, Godfrey!’

  He turned quickly and dragged the creature out with his left hand.

  I shrank back as he held the repulsive object dangling before me, and he laughed and placed it on the counter.

  ‘Did you ever see anything like that?’ he demanded.

  ‘No,’ said I truthfully, ‘and I hope I never shall again. What is it?’

  ‘I don’t know. Ask them at the Natural History Museum – they can’t tell you. The Smithsonian is all at sea too. It is, I believe, the connecting link between a sea urchin, a spider, and the devil. It looks venomous but I can’t find either fangs or mouth. Is it blind? These things may be eyes but they looks as if they were painted. A Japanese sculptor might have produced such an impossible beast, but it is hard to believe that God did. It looks unfinished too. I have a mad idea that this creature is only one of the parts of some larger and more grotesque organism – it looks so lonely, so hopelessly dependent, so cursedly unfinished. I’m going to use it as a model. If I don’t out-Japanese the Japs my name isn’t Godfrey.’

  The creature was moving slowly across the glass case towards me. I drew back.

  ‘Godfrey,’ I said, ‘I would execute a man who executed any such work as you propose. What do you want to perpetuate such a reptile for? I can stand the Japanese grotesque but I can’t stand that – spider—’

  ‘It’s a crab.’

  ‘Crab or spider or blindworm – ugh! What do you want to do it for? It’s a nightmare – it’s unclean!’

  I hated the thing. It was the first living creature that I had ever hated.

  For some time I had noticed a damp acrid odor in the air, and Godfrey said it came from the reptile.

  ‘Then kill it and bury it,’ I said, ‘and by the way, where did it come from?’

  ‘I don’t know that either,’ laughed Godfrey. ‘I found it clinging to the box that this gold serpent was brought in. I suppose my old Reuben is responsible.’

  ‘If the Cardinal Woods are the lurking places for things like this,’ said I, ‘I am sorry that I am going to the Cardinal Woods.’

  ‘Are you?’ asked Godfrey; ‘for the shooting?’

  ‘Yes, with Barris and Pierpont. Why don’t you kill that creature?’

  ‘Go off on your shooting trip, and let me alone,’ laughed Godfrey.

  I shuddered at the ‘crab’, and bade Godfrey good-bye until December.

  That night, Pierpont, Barris, and I sat chatting in the smoking car of the Quebec Express when the long train pulled out of the Grand Central Depot. Old David had gone forward with the dogs; poor things, they hated to ride in the baggage car, but the Quebec and Northern road provides no sportsman’s cars, and David and the three Gordon setters were in for an uncomfortable night.

  Except for Pierpont, Barris, and myself, the car was empty. Barris, trim, stout, ruddy, and bronzed, sat drumming on the window ledge, puffing a short fragrant pipe. His gun case lay beside him on the floor.

  ‘When I have white hair and years of discretion,’ said Pierpont languidly, ‘I’ll not flirt with pretty serving maids; will you, Roy?’

  ‘No,’ said I, looking at Barris.

  ‘You mean the maid with the cap in the Pullman car?’ asked Barris.

  ‘Yes,’ said Pierpont.

  I smiled, for I had seen it also.

  Barris twisted his crisp gray moustache, and yawned.

  ‘You children had better be toddling off to bed,’ he said. ‘That lady’s-maid is a member of the Secret Service.’

  ‘Oh,’ said Pierpont, ‘one of your colleagues?’

  ‘You might present us, you know,’ I said; ‘the journey is monotonous.’

  Barris had drawn a telegram from his pocket, and as he sat turning it over and over between his fingers he smiled. After a moment or two he handed it to Pierpont who read it with slightly raised eyebrows.

  ‘It’s rot – I suppose it’s cipher,’ he said. ‘I see it’s signed by General Drummond—’

  ‘Drummond, Chief of the Government Secret Service,’ said Barris.

  ‘Something interesting?’ I enquired, lighting a cigarette.

  ‘Something so interesting,’ replied Barris, ‘that I’m going to look into it myself—’

  ‘And break up our shooting trio—’

  ‘No. Do you want to hear about it? Do you, Billy Pierpont?’

  ‘Yes,’ replied that immaculate young man.

  Barris rubbed the amber mouthpiece of his pipe on his handkerchief, cleared the stem with a bit of wire, puffed once or twice, and leaned back in his chair.

  ‘Pierpont,’ he said, ‘do you remember that evening at the United States Club when General Miles, General Drummond, and I were examining that gold nugget that Captain Mahan had? You examined it also, I believe.’

  ‘I did,’ said Pierpont.

  ‘Was it gold?’ asked Barris, drumming on the window.

  ‘It was,’ replied Pierpont.

  ‘I saw it too,’ said I; ‘of course, it was gold.’

  ‘Professor La Grange saw it also,’ said Barris; ‘he said it was gold.’

  ‘Well?’ said Pierpont.

  ‘Well,’ said Barris, ‘it was not gold.’

  After a silence Pierpont asked what tests had been made.

  ‘The usual tests,’ replied Barris. �
��The United States Mint is satisfied that it is gold, so is every jeweller who has seen it. But it is not gold – and yet – it is gold.’

  Pierpont and I exchanged glances.

  ‘Now,’ said I, ‘for Barris’ usual coup-de-théâtre: what was the nugget?’

  ‘Practically it was pure gold; but,’ said Barris, enjoying the situation intensely, ‘really it was not gold. Pierpont, what is gold?’

  ‘Gold’s an element, a metal—’

  ‘Wrong! Billy Pierpont,’ said Barris coolly.

  ‘Gold was an element when I went to school,’ said I.

  ‘It has not been an element for two weeks,’ said Barris; ‘and, except General Drummond, Professor La Grange, and myself, you two youngsters are the only people, except one, in the world who know it – or have known it.’

  ‘Do you mean to say that gold is a composite metal?’ said Pierpont slowly.

  ‘I do. La Grange has made it. He produced a scale of pure gold day before yesterday. That nugget was manufactured gold.’

  Could Barris be joking? Was this a colossal hoax? I looked at Pierpont. He muttered something about that settling the silver question, and turned his head to Barris, but there was that in Barris’ face which forbade jesting, and Pierpont and I sat silently pondering.

  ‘Don’t ask me how it’s made,’ said Barris, quietly; ‘I don’t know. But I do know that somewhere in the region of the Cardinal Woods there is a gang of people who do know how gold is made, and who make it. You understand the danger this is to every civilized nation. It’s got to be stopped of course. Drummond and I have decided that I am the man to stop it. Wherever and whoever these people are – these gold makers – they must be caught, every one of them – caught or shot.’

  ‘Or shot,’ repeated Pierpont, who was owner of the Cross-Cut Gold Mine and found his income too small; ‘Professor La Grange will of course be prudent – science need not know things that would upset the world!’

  ‘Little Willy,’ said Barris laughing, ‘your income is safe.’

  ‘I suppose,’ said I, ‘some flaw in the nugget gave Professor La Grange the tip.’

  ‘Exactly. He cut the flaw out before sending the nugget to be tested. He worked on the flaw and separated gold into its three elements.’

  ‘He is a great man,’ said Pierpont, ‘but he will be the greatest man in the world if he can keep his discovery to himself.’

  ‘Who?’ said Barris.

  ‘Professor La Grange.’

  ‘Professor La Grange was shot through the heart two hours ago,’ replied Barris slowly.

  II

  We had been at the shooting box in the Cardinal Woods five days when a telegram was brought to Barris by a mounted messenger from the nearest telegraph station, Cardinal Springs, a hamlet on the lumber railroad which joins the Quebec and Northern at Three Rivers Junction, thirty miles below.

  Pierpont and I were sitting out under the trees, loading some special shells as experiments; Barris stood beside us, bronzed, erect, holding his pipe carefully so that no sparks should drift into our powder box. The beat of hoofs over the grass aroused us, and when the lank messenger drew bridle before the door, Barris stepped forward and took the sealed telegram. When he had torn it open he went into the house and presently reappeared, reading something that he had written.

  ‘This should go at once,’ he said, looking the messenger full in the face.

  ‘At once, Colonel Barris,’ replied the shabby countryman.

  Pierpont glanced up and I smiled at the messenger who was gathering his bridle and settling himself in his stirrups. Barris handed him the written reply and nodded good-bye: there was a thud of hoofs on the greensward, a jingle of bit and spur across the gravel, and the messenger was gone. Barris’ pipe went out and he stepped to windward to relight it.

  ‘It is queer,’ said I, ‘that your messenger – a battered native – should speak like a Harvard man.’

  ‘He is a Harvard man,’ said Barris.

  ‘And the plot thickens,’ said Pierpont; ‘are the Cardinal Woods full of your Secret Service men, Barris?’

  ‘No,’ replied Barris, ‘but the telegraph stations are. How many ounces of shot are you using, Roy?’

  I told him, holding up the adjustable steel measuring cup. He nodded. After a moment or two he sat down on a camp stool beside us and picked up a crimper.

  ‘That telegram was from Drummond,’ he said; ‘the messenger was one of my men as you two bright little boys divined. Pooh! If he had spoken the Cardinal County dialect you wouldn’t have known.’

  ‘His make-up was good,’ said Pierpont.

  Barris twirled the crimper and looked at the pile of loaded shells. Then he picked up one and crimped it.

  ‘Let ’em alone,’ said Pierpont, ‘you crimp too tight.’

  ‘Does his little gun kick when the shells are crimped too tight?’ enquired Barris tenderly; ‘well, he shall crimp his own shells then – where’s his little man?’

  ‘His little man,’ was a weird English importation, stiff, very carefully scrubbed, tangled in his aspirates, named Howlett. As valet, gilly, gunbearer, and crimper, he aided Pierpont to endure the ennui of existence, by doing for him everything except breathing. Lately, however, Barris’ taunts had driven Pierpont to do a few things for himself. To his astonishment he found that cleaning his own gun was not a bore, so he timidly loaded a shell or two, was much pleased with himself, loaded some more, crimped them, and went to breakfast with an appetite. So when Barris asked where ‘his little man’ was, Pierpont did not reply but dug a cupful of shot from the bag and poured it solemnly into the half filled shell.

  Old David came out with the dogs and of course there was a powwow when Voyou, my Gordon, wagged his splendid tail across the loading table and sent a dozen unstopped cartridges rolling over the grass, vomiting powder and shot.

  ‘Give the dogs a mile or two,’ said I; ‘we will shoot over the Sweet Fern Covert about four o’clock, David.’

  ‘Two guns, David,’ added Barris.

  ‘Are you not going?’ asked Pierpont, looking up, as David disappeared with the dogs.

  ‘Bigger game,’ said Barris shortly. He picked up a mug of ale from the tray which Howlett had just set down beside us and took a long pull. We did the same, silently. Pierpont set his mug on the turf beside him and returned to his loading.

  We spoke of the murder of Professor La Grange, of how it had been concealed by the authorities in New York at Drummond’s request, of the certainty that it was one of the gang of gold-makers who had done it, and of the possible alertness of the gang.

  ‘Oh, they know that Drummond will be after them sooner or later,’ said Barris, ‘but they don’t know that the mills of the gods have already begun to grind. Those smart New York papers built better than they knew when their ferret-eyed reporter poked his red nose into the house on 58th Street and sneaked off with a column on his cuffs about the “suicide” of Professor La Grange. Bill Pierpont, my revolver is hanging in your room; I’ll take yours too—’

  ‘Help yourself,’ said Pierpont.

  ‘I shall be gone over night,’ continued Barris; ‘my poncho and some bread and meat are all I shall take except the “barkers”.’

  ‘Will they bark tonight?’ I asked.

  ‘No, I trust not for several weeks yet. I shall nose about a bit. Roy, did it ever strike you how queer it is that this wonderfully beautiful country should contain no inhabitants?’

  ‘It’s like those splendid stretches of pools and rapids which one finds on every trout river and in which one never finds a fish,’ suggested Pierpont.

  ‘Exactly – and Heaven alone knows why,’ said Barris; ‘I suppose this country is shunned by human beings for the same mysterious reasons.’

  ‘The shooting is the better for it,’ I observed.

  ‘The shooting is good,’ said Barris, ‘have you noticed the snipe on the meadow by the lake? Why it’s brown with them! That’s a wonderful meadow.’


  ‘It’s a natural one,’ said Pierpont, ‘no human being ever cleared that land.’

  ‘Then it’s supernatural,’ said Barris; ‘Pierpont, do you want to come with me?’

  Pierpont’s handsome face flushed as he answered slowly, ‘It’s awfully good of you – if I may.’

  ‘Bosh,’ said I, piqued because he had asked Pierpont, ‘what use is little Willy without his man?’

  ‘True,’ said Barris gravely, ‘you can’t take Howlett you know.’

  Pierpont muttered something which ended in ‘d—n’.

  ‘Then,’ said I, ‘there will be but one gun on the Sweet Fern Covert this afternoon. Very well, I wish you joy of your cold supper and cold bed. Take your nightgown, Willy, and don’t sleep on the damp ground.’

  ‘Let Pierpont alone,’ retorted Barris, ‘you shall go next time, Roy.’

  ‘Oh, all right – you mean when there’s shooting going on?’

  ‘And I?’ demanded Pierpont grieved.

  ‘You too, my son; stop quarrelling! Will you ask Howlett to pack our kits – lightly mind you – no bottles – they clink.’

  ‘My flask doesn’t,’ said Pierpont, and went off to get ready for a night’s stalking of dangerous men.

  ‘It is strange,’ said I, ‘that nobody ever settles in this region. How many people live in Cardinal Springs, Barris?’

  ‘Twenty counting the telegraph operator and not counting the lumbermen; they are always changing and shifting. I have six men among them.’

  ‘Where have you no men? In the Four Hundred?’

  ‘I have men there also – chums of Billy’s only he doesn’t know it. David tells me that there was a strong flight of woodcock last night. You ought to pick up some this afternoon.’

  Then we chatted about alder-cover and swamp until Pierpont came out of the house and it was time to part.

  ‘Au revoir,’ said Barris, buckling on his kit, ‘come along, Pierpont, and don’t walk in the damp grass.’

  ‘If you are not back by tomorrow noon,’ said I, ‘I will take Howlett and David and hunt you up. You say your course is due north?’

  ‘Due north,’ replied Barris, consulting his compass.

 

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