Out of the Dark
Page 43
‘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.
I sat down on the doorstep to wait for his return, not at all charmed with the prospect. It made me furious, too, to see my ambition nipped with the frost of a possible veto from Miss Smawl.
‘If she is elected,’ thought I, ‘there is nothing for me but to resign – to avoid the inconvenience of being shown the door. Oh, I wish I had allowed her to hypnotise the tigers!’
Thoughts of crime flitted through my mind. Miss Smawl would not remain president – or anything else very long – if she persisted in her desire for the tigers. And then when she called for help I would pretend not to hear.
Aroused from criminal meditation by the return of Professor Lesard, I jumped up and peered into his perplexed eyes. ‘They’ve elected a president,’ he said, ‘but they won’t tell us who the president is until tomorrow.’
‘You don’t think—’ I stammered.
‘I don’t know. But I know this: the new president sanctions the expedition to the Graham Glacier, and directs you to choose an assistant and begin preparations for four people.’
Overjoyed, I seized his hand and said, ‘Hurray!’ in a voice weak with emotion. ‘The old dragon isn’t elected this time,’ I added triumphantly.
‘By the way,’ he said, ‘who was the other dragon with her in the park this evening?’
I described her in a more modulated voice.
‘Whew!’ observed Professor Lesard, ‘that must be her assistant, Professor Dorothy Van Twiller! She’s the prettiest blue-stocking in town.’
With this curious remark my confrére followed me into my room and wrote down the list of articles I dictated to him. The list included a complete camping equipment for myself and three other men.
‘Am I one of those other men?’ inquired Lesard, with an unhappy smile.
Before I could reply my door was shoved open and a figure appeared at the threshold, cap in hand.
‘What do you want?’ I asked sternly; but my heart was beating high with triumph.
The figure shuffled; then came a subdued voice:
‘Mister, I guess I’ll go back to the Graham Glacier along with you. I’m Billy Spike, an’ it kinder scares me to go back to them Hudson Mountains, but somehow, mister, when you choked me and kinder walked me off on my ear, why, mister, I kinder took to you, like.’
There was absolute silence for a minute; then he said:
‘So if you go, I guess I’ll go too, mister.’
‘For a thousand dollars?’
‘Fur nawthin’,’ he muttered, ‘or what you like.’
‘All right, Billy,’ I said briskly; ‘just look over those rifles and ammunition and see that everything’s sound.’
He slowly lifted his tough young face and gave me a doglike glance. They were hard eyes, but there was gratitude in them.
‘You’ll get your throat slit,’ whispered Lesard.
‘Not while Billy’s with me,’ I replied cheerfully.
Late that night, as I was preparing for pleasant dreams, a knock came on my door and a telegraph-messenger handed me a note, which I read, shivering in my bare feet, although the thermometer marked eighty Fahrenheit:
You will immediately leave for the Hudson Mountains via Wellman Bay, Labrador, there to await further instructions. Equipment for yourself and one assistant will include following articles [here began a list of camping utensils, scientific paraphernalia, and provisions]. The steamer Penguin sails at five o’clock tomorrow morning. Kindly find yourself on board at that hour. Any excuse for not complying with these orders will be accepted as your resignation.
SUSAN SMAWL
President Bronx Zoological Society
‘Lesard!’ I shouted, trembling with fury.
He appeared at his door, chastely draped in pyjamas; and he read the insolent letter with terrified alacrity.
‘What are you going to do – resign?’ he asked, much frightened.
‘Do!’ I snarled, grinding my teeth; ‘I’m going – that’s what I’m going to do!’
‘But – but you can’t get ready and catch that steamer, too,’ he stammered.
He did not know me.
II
And so it came about that one calm evening towards the end of June, William Spike and I went into camp under the southerly shelter of the vast granite wall called the Hudson Mountains, there to await the promised ‘further instructions’.
It had been a tiresome trip by steamer to Anticosti, from there by schooner to Widgeon Bay, then down the coast and up the Cape Clear River to Port Borpoise. There we bought three pack-mules and started due north on the Great Fur Trail. The second day out we passed Fort Boise, the last outpost of civilisation, and on the sixth day we were travelling eastward under the granite mountain parapets.
On the evening of the sixth day out from Fort Boise we went into camp for the last time before entering the unknown land.
I could see it already through my field-glasses, and while William was building the fire I climbed up among the rocks above and sat down, glasses levelled, to study the prospect.
There was nothing either extraordinary or forbidding in the landscape which stretched out beyond; to the right the solid palisade of granite cut off the view; to the left the palisade continued, an endless barrier of sheer cliffs crowned with pine and hemlock. But the interesting section of the landscape lay almost directly in front of me – a rent in the mountain-wall through which appeared to run a level, arid plain, miles wide, and as smooth and even as a highroad.
There could be no doubt concerning the significance of that rent in the solid mountain-wall; and, moreover, it was exactly as William Spike had described it. However, I called to him, and he came up from the smoky camp-fire, ax on shoulder.
‘Yep,’ he said, squatting beside me; ‘the Graham Glacier used to meander through that there hole, but somethin’ went wrong with the earth’s in’ards an’ there was a bust-up.’
‘And you saw it, William?’ I said, with a sigh of envy.
‘Hey? Seen it? Sure I seen it! I was to Spoutin’ Springs, twenty-mile west, with a bale o’ blue fox an’ otter pelt. Fust I knew them geysers begun for to groan egregious like, an’ I seen the caribou gallopin’ hell-bent south. “This climate,” sez I, “is too bracin’ for me” so I struck a back trail an’ landed on to a hill. Then them geysers blowed up, one arter the next, an’ I heard somethin’ kinder cave in between here an’ China. I disremember things what happened. Somethin’ throwed me down, but I couldn’t stay there, for the blamed ground was runnin’ like a river – all wavy-like, an’ the sky hit me on the back o’ me head.’
‘And then?’ I urged, in that new excitement which every repetition of the story revived. I had heard it all twenty times since we left New York, but mere repetition could not apparently satisfy me.
‘Then,’ continued William, ‘the whole world kinder went off like a firecracker, an’ I come to, an’ ran like—’
‘I know,’ said I, cutting him short, for I had become wearied of the invariable profanity which lent a lurid ending to his narrative.
‘After that,’ I continued, ‘you went thro
ugh the rent in the mountains?’
‘Sure.’
‘And you saw a dingue and a creature that resembled a mammoth?’
‘Sure,’ he repeated sulkily.
‘And you saw something else?’ I always asked this question; it fascinated me to see the sullen fright flicker in William’s eyes, and the mechanical backward glance, as though what he had seen might still be behind him.
He had never answered this third question but once, and that time he fairly snarled in my face as he growled: ‘I seen what no Christian oughter see.’
So when I repeated: ‘And you saw something else, William?’ he gave me a wicked, frightened leer, and shuffled off to feed the mules. Flattery, entreaties, threats left him unmoved; he never told me what the third thing was that he had seen behind the Hudson Mountains.
William had retired to mix up with his mules; I resumed my binoculars and my silent inspection of the great, smooth path left by the Graham Glacier when something or other exploded that vast mass of ice into vapor.
The arid plain wound out from the unknown country like a river, and I thought then, and think now, that when the glacier was blown into vapor the vapor descended in the most terrific rain the world has ever seen, and poured through the newly blasted mountain-gateway, sweeping the earth to bedrock. To corroborate this theory, miles to the southward I could see the dèbris winding out across the land towards Wellman Bay, but as the terminal moraine of the vanished glacier formerly ended there I could not be certain that my theory was correct. Owing to the formation of the mountains I could not see more than half a mile into the unknown country. What I could see appeared to be nothing but the continuation of the glacier’s path, scored out by the cloud-burst, and swept as smooth as a floor.
Sitting there, my heart beating heavily with excitement, I looked through the evening glow at the endless, pine-crowned mountain-wall with its giant’s gateway pierced for me! And I thought of all the explorers and the unknown heroes – trappers, Indians, humble naturalists, perhaps – who had attempted to scale that sheer barricade and had died there or failed, beaten back from those eternal cliffs. Eternal? No! For the Eternal Himself had struck the rock, and it had sprung asunder, thundering obedience.
In the still evening air the smoke from the fire below mounted in a straight, slender pillar, like the smoke from those ancient altars builded before the first blood had been shed on earth.
The evening wind stirred the pines; a tiny spring brook made thin harmony among the rocks; a murmur came from the quiet camp. It was William adjuring his mules. In the deepening twilight I descended the hillock, stepping cautiously among the rocks.
Then, suddenly, as I stood outside the reddening ring of firelight, far in the depths of the unknown country, far behind the mountain-wall, a sound grew on the quiet air. William heard it and turned his face to the mountains. The sound faded to a vibration which was felt, not heard. Then once more I began to divine a vibration in the air, gathering in distant volume until it became a sound, lasting the space of a spoken word, fading to vibration, then silence.
Was it a cry?
I looked at William inquiringly. He had quietly fainted away.
I got him to the little brook and poked his head into the icy water, and after a while he sat up pluckily.
To an indignant question he replied: ‘Naw, I ain’t a-cussin you. Lemme be or I’ll have fits.’
‘Was it that sound that scared you?’ I asked.
‘Ya-as,’ he replied with a dauntless shiver.
‘Was it the voice of a mammoth?’ I persisted excitedly. ‘Speak, William, or I’ll drag you about and kick you!’
He replied that it was neither a mammoth nor a dingue, and added a strong request for privacy, which I was obliged to grant, as I could not torture another word out of him.
I slept little that night; the exciting proximity of the unknown land was too much for me. But although I lay awake for hours, I heard nothing except the tinkle of water among the rocks and the plover calling from some hidden marsh. At daybreak I shot a ptarmigan which had walked into camp, and the shot sent the echoes yelling among the mountains.
William, sullen and heavy-eyed, dressed the bird, and we broiled it for breakfast.
Neither he nor I alluded to the sound we had heard the night before; he boiled water and cleaned up the mess-kit, and I pottered about among the rocks for another ptarmigan. Wearying of this, I returned to the mules and William, and sat down for a smoke.
‘It strikes me,’ I said, ‘that our instructions to “await further orders” are idiotic. How are we to receive “further orders” here?’
William did not know.
‘You don’t suppose,’ said I, in sudden disgust, ‘that Miss Smawl believes there is a summer hotel and daily mail service in the Hudson Mountains?’
William thought perhaps she did suppose something of the sort.
It irritated me beyond measure to find myself at last on the very border of the unknown country, and yet checked, held back, by the irresponsible orders of a maiden lady named Smawl. However, my salary depended upon the whim of that maiden lady, and although I fussed and fumed and glared at the mountains through my glasses, I realised that I could not stir without the permission of Miss Smawl. At times this grotesque situation became almost unbearable, and I often went away by myself and indulged in fantasies, firing my gun off and pretending I had hit Miss Smawl by mistake. At such moments I would imagine I was free at last to plunge into the strange country, and I would squat on a rock and dream of bagging my first mammoth.
The time passed heavily; the tension increased with each new day. I shot ptarmigan and kept our table supplied with brook-trout. William chopped wood, conversed with his mules, and cooked very badly.
‘See here,’ I said one morning; ‘we have been in camp a week today, and I can’t stand your cooking another minute!’
William, who was washing a saucepan, looked up and begged me sarcastically to accept the cordon bleu. But I know only how to cook eggs, and there were no eggs within some hundred miles.
To get the flavor of the breakfast out of my mouth I walked up to my favorite hillock and sat down for a smoke. The next moment, however, I was on my feet, cheering excitedly and shouting for William.
‘Here come “further instructions” at last!’ I cried, pointing to the southward, where two dots on the grassy plain were imperceptibly moving in our direction.
‘People on mules,’ said William, without enthusiasm.
‘They must be messengers for us!’ I cried, in chaste joy. ‘Three cheers for the northward trail, William, and the mischief take Miss— Well, never mind now,’ I added.
‘On them approachin’ mules,’ observed William, ‘there is wimmen.’
I stared at him for a second, then attempted to strike him. He dodged warily and repeated his incredible remark: ‘Ya-as, there is – wimmen – two female ladies onto them there mules.’
‘Bring me my glasses!’ I said hoarsely; ‘bring me those glasses, William, because I shall destroy you if you don’t!’
Somewhat awed by my calm fury, he hastened back to camp and returned with the binoculars. It was a breathless moment. I adjusted the lenses with a steady hand and raised them.
Now, of all unexpected sights my fate may reserve for me in the future, I trust – nay, I know – that none can ever prove as unwelcome as the sight I perceived through my binoculars. For upon the backs of those distant mules were two women, and the first one was Miss Smawl!
Upon her head she wore a helmet, from which fluttered a green veil. Otherwise she was clothed in tweeds; and at moments she beat upon her mule with a thick umbrella.
Surfeited with the sickening spectacle, I sat down on the rock and tried to cry.
‘I told yer so,’ observed William; but I was too tired to attack him.
When the caravan rode into camp I was myself again, smilingly prepared for the worst, and I advanced, cap in hand, followed furtively by William.
‘Welcome,’ I said, violently injecting joy into my voice. ‘Welcome, Professor Smawl, to the Hudson Mountains!’
‘Kindly take my mule,’ she said, climbing down to mother earth.
‘William,’ I said with dignity, ‘take the lady’s mule.’
Miss Smawl gave me a stolid glance, then made directly for the camp-fire, where a kettle of game broth simmered over the coals. The last I saw of her she was smelling of it, and I turned my back and advanced towards the second lady pilgrim, prepared to be civil until snubbed.
Now, it is quite certain that never before had William Spike or I beheld so much feminine loveliness in one human body on the back of a mule. She was clad in the daintiest of shooting-kilts, yet there was nothing mannish about her except the way she rode the mule, and that only accentuated her adorable femininity.
I remembered what Professor Lesard had said about blue stockings – but Miss Dorothy Van Twiller’s were gray, turned over at the tops, and disappearing into canvas spats buckled across a pair of slim shooting-boots.
‘Welcome,’ said I, attempting to restrain a too violent cordiality. ‘Welcome, Professor Van Twiller, to the Hudson Mountains.’
‘Thank you,’ she replied, accepting my assistance very sweetly; ‘it is a pleasure to meet a human being again.’
I glanced at Miss Smawl. She was eating game broth, but she resembled a human being in a general way.
‘I should very much like to wash my hands,’ said Professor Van Twiller, drawing the buckskin gloves from her slim fingers.
I brought towels and soap and conducted her to the brook.
She called to Professor Smawl to join her, and her voice was crystalline; Professor Smawl declined, and her voice was batrachian.
‘She is so hungry!’ observed Miss Van Twiller. ‘I am very thankful we are here at last, for we’ve had a horrid time. You see, neither of us knows how to cook.’
I wondered what they would say to William’s cooking, but I held my peace and retired, leaving the little brook to mirror the sweetest face that ever was bathed in water.
III