When I awakened the sun was streaming
through the cabin porthole. Outside a fresh voice
lilted. I lay on my two chairs and listened.
The song was one with the wholesome sunshine and the
breeze blowing stiffly and whipping the curtains.
It was Larry O’Keefe at his matins:
The little red lark is shaking his wings,
Straight from the breast of his love he
springs
Larry’s voice soared.
His wings and his feathers are sunrise
red,
He hails the sun and his golden head,
Good morning, Doc, you are long abed.
This last was a most irreverent interpolation,
I well knew. I opened my door. O’Keefe
stood outside laughing. The Suwarna, her engines
silent, was making fine headway under all sail, the
Brunhilda skipping in her wake cheerfully with half
her canvas up.
The sea was crisping and dimpling
under the wind. Blue and white was the world
as far as the eye could reach. Schools of little
silvery green flying fish broke through the water
rushing on each side of us; flashed for an instant
and were gone. Behind us gulls hovered and dipped.
The shadow of mystery had retreated far over the rim
of this wide awake and beautiful world and if, subconsciously,
I knew that somewhere it was brooding and waiting,
for a little while at least I was consciously free
of its oppression.
“How’s the patient?” asked O’Keefe.
He was answered by Huldricksson himself,
who must have risen just as I left the cabin.
The Norseman had slipped on a pair of pajamas and,
giant torso naked under the sun, he strode out upon
us. We all of us looked at him a trifle anxiously.
But Olaf’s madness had left him. In his
eyes was much sorrow, but the berserk rage was gone.
He spoke straight to me: “You
said last night we follow?”
I nodded.
“It is where?” he asked again.
“We go first to Ponape and from
there to Metalanim Harbour to the Nan-Matal.
You know the place?”
Huldricksson bowed a white gleam as of
ice showing in his blue eyes.
“It is there?” he asked.
“It is there that we must first search,”
I answered.
“Good!” said Olaf Huldricksson.
“It is good!”
He looked at Da Costa inquiringly
and the little Portuguese, following his thought,
answered his unspoken question.
“We should be at Ponape tomorrow morning early,
Olaf.”
“Good!” repeated the Norseman. He
looked away, his eyes tear-filled.
A restraint fell upon us; the embarrassment
all men experience when they feel a great sympathy
and a great pity, to neither of which they quite know
how to give expression. By silent consent we discussed
at breakfast only the most casual topics.
When the meal was over Huldricksson
expressed a desire to go aboard the Brunhilda.
The Suwarna hove to and Da Costa and
he dropped into the small boat. When they reached
the Brunhilda’s deck I saw Olaf take the wheel
and the two fall into earnest talk. I beckoned
to O’Keefe and we stretched ourselves out on
the bow hatch under cover of the foresail. He
lighted a cigarette, took a couple of leisurely puffs,
and looked at me expectantly.
“Well?” I asked.
“Well,” said O’Keefe,
“suppose you tell me what you think and
then I’ll proceed to point out your scientific
errors.” His eyes twinkled mischievously.
“Larry,” I replied, somewhat
severely, “you may not know that I have a scientific
reputation which, putting aside all modesty, I may
say is an enviable one. You used a word last
night to which I must interpose serious objection.
You more than hinted that I hid superstitions.
Let me inform you, Larry O’Keefe, that I am
solely a seeker, observer, analyst, and synthesist
of facts. I am not” and I tried
to make my tone as pointed as my words “I
am not a believer in phantoms or spooks, leprechauns,
banshees, or ghostly harpers.”
O’Keefe leaned back and shouted with laughter.
“Forgive me, Goodwin,”
he gasped. “But if you could have seen
yourself solemnly disclaiming the banshee” another
twinkle showed in his eyes “and then
with all this sunshine and this wide-open world” he
shrugged his shoulders “it’s
hard to visualize anything such as you and Huldricksson
have described.”
“I know how hard it is, Larry,”
I answered. “And don’t think I have
any idea that the phenomenon is supernatural in the
sense spiritualists and table turners have given that
word. I do think it is supernormal; energized
by a force unknown to modern science but
that doesn’t mean I think it outside the radius
of science.”
“Tell me your theory, Goodwin,”
he said. I hesitated for not yet
had I been able to put into form to satisfy myself
any explanation of the Dweller.
“I think,” I hazarded
finally, “it is possible that some members of
that race peopling the ancient continent which we know
existed here in the Pacific, have survived. We
know that many of these islands are honeycombed with
caverns and vast subterranean spaces, literally underground
lands running in some cases far out beneath the ocean
floor. It is possible that for some reason survivors
of this race sought refuge in the abysmal spaces,
one of whose entrances is on the islet where Throckmartin’s
party met its end.
“As for their persistence in
these caverns we know they possessed a
high science. They may have gone far in the mastery
of certain universal forms of energy especially
that we call light. They may have developed a
civilization and a science far more advanced than
ours. What I call the Dweller may be one of the
results of this science. Larry it
may well be that this lost race is planning to emerge
again upon earth’s surface!”
“And is sending out your Dweller
as a messenger, a scientific dove from their Ark?”
I chose to overlook the banter in his question.
“Did you ever hear of the Chamats?”
I asked him. He shook his head.
“In Papua,” I explained,
“there is a wide-spread and immeasurably old
tradition that ‘imprisoned under the hills’
is a race of giants who once ruled this region ’when
it stretched from sun to sun before the moon god drew
the waters over it’ I quote from the
legend. Not only in Papua but throughout Malaysia
you find this story. And, so the tradition runs,
these people the Chamats will
one day break through the hills and rule the world;
‘make over the world’ is the literal translation
of the constant phrase in the tale. It was Herbert
Spencer who pointed out that there is a basis of fact
in every myth and legend of man. It is possible
that these survivors I am discussing form Spencer’s
fact basis for the Malaysian legend.
“This much is sure the
moon door, which is clearly operated by the action
of moon rays upon some unknown element or combination
and the crystals through which the moon rays pour
down upon the pool their prismatic columns, are humanly
made mechanisms. So long as they are humanly
made, and so long as it is this flood of moonlight
from which the Dweller draws its power of materialization,
the Dweller itself, if not the product of the human
mind, is at least dependent upon the product of the
human mind for its appearance.”
“Wait a minute, Goodwin,”
interrupted O’Keefe. “Do you mean
to say you think that this thing is made of well of
moonshine?”
“Moonlight,” I replied,
“is, of course, reflected sunlight. But
the rays which pass back to earth after their impact
on the moon’s surface are profoundly changed.
The spectroscope shows that they lose practically
all the slower vibrations we call red and infra-red,
while the extremely rapid vibrations we call the violet
and ultra-violet are accelerated and altered.
Many scientists hold that there is an unknown element
in the moon perhaps that which makes the
gigantic luminous trails that radiate in all directions
from the lunar crater Tycho whose energies
are absorbed by and carried on the moon rays.
“At any rate, whether by the
loss of the vibrations of the red or by the addition
of this mysterious force, the light of the moon becomes
something entirely different from mere modified sunlight just
as the addition or subtraction of one other chemical
in a compound of several makes the product a substance
with entirely different energies and potentialities.
“Now these rays, Larry, are
given perhaps still another mysterious activity by
the globes through which Throckmartin said they passed
in the Chamber of the Moon Pool. The result is
the necessary factor in the formation of the Dweller.
There would be nothing scientifically improbable in
such a process. Kubalski, the great Russian physicist,
produced crystalline forms exhibiting every faculty
that we call vital by subjecting certain combinations
of chemicals to the action of highly concentrated
rays of various colours. Something in light and
nothing else produced their pseudo-vitality. We
do not begin to know how to harness the potentialities
of that magnetic vibration of the ether we call light.”
“Listen, Doc,” said Larry
earnestly, “I’ll take everything you say
about this lost continent, the people who used to live
on it, and their caverns, for granted. But by
the sword of Brian Boru, you’ll never get me
to fall for the idea that a bunch of moonshine can
handle a big woman such as you say Throckmartin’s
Thora was, nor a two-fisted man such as you say Throckmartin
was, nor Huldricksson’s wife and
I’ll bet she was one of those strapping big northern
women too you’ll never get me to
believe that any bunch of concentrated moonshine could
handle them and take them waltzing off along a moonbeam
back to wherever it goes. No, Doc, not on your
life, even Tennessee moonshine couldn’t do that nix!”
“All right, O’Keefe,”
I answered, now very much irritated indeed. “What’s
your theory?” And I could not resist adding:
“Fairies?”
“Professor,” he grinned,
“if that Thing’s a fairy it’s Irish
and when it sees me it’ll be so glad there’ll
be nothing to it. ’I was lost, strayed,
or stolen, Larry avick,’ it’ll say, ‘an’
I was so homesick for the old sod I was desp’rit,’
it’ll say, an’ ’take me back quick
before I do any more har-rm!’ it’ll tell
me an’ that’s the truth.
“Now don’t get me wrong.
I believe you all saw something all right. But
what I think you saw was some kind of gas. All
this region is volcanic and islands and things are
constantly poking up from the sea. It’s
probably gas; a volcanic emanation; something new to
us and that drives you crazy lots of kinds
of gas do that. It hit the Throckmartin party
on that island and they probably were all more or
less delirious all the time; thought they saw things;
talked it over and collective hallucination just
like the Angels of Mons and other miracles of the
war. Somebody sees something that looks like something
else. He points it out to the man next him.
‘Do you see it?’ asks he. ‘Sure
I see it,’ says the other. And there you
are collective hallucination.
“When your friends got it bad
they most likely jumped overboard one by one.
Huldricksson sails into a place where it is and it
hits his wife. She grabs the child and jumps
over. Maybe the moon rays make it luminous!
I’ve seen gas on the front under the moon that
looked like a thousand whirling dervish devils.
Yes, and you could see the devil’s faces in
it. And if it got into your lungs nothing could
ever make you think you hadn’t seen real devils.”
For a time I was silent.
“Larry,” I said at last,
“whether you are right or I am right, I must
go to the Nan-Matal. Will you go with me, Larry?”
“Goodwin,” he replied,
“I surely will. I’m as interested
as you are. If we don’t run across the
Dolphin I’ll stick. I’ll leave word
at Ponape, to tell them where I am should they come
along. If they report me dead for a while there’s
nobody to care. So that’s all right.
Only old man, be reasonable. You’ve thought
over this so long, you’re going bug, honestly
you are.”
And again, the gladness that I might
have Larry O’Keefe with me, was so great that
I forgot to be angry.