Dare I say it? Dare I say that
I, a plain, prosaic lieutenant in the republican service
have done the incredible things here set out for the
love of a woman for a chimera in female
shape; for a pale, vapid ghost of woman-loveliness?
At times I tell myself I dare not: that you will
laugh, and cast me aside as a fabricator; and then
again I pick up my pen and collect the scattered pages,
for I must write it the pallid splendour
of that thing I loved, and won, and lost is ever before
me, and will not be forgotten. The tumult of
the struggle into which that vision led me still throbs
in my mind, the soft, lisping voices of the planet
I ransacked for its sake and the roar of the destruction
which followed me back from the quest drowns all other
sounds in my ears! I must and will write it
relieves me; read and believe as you list.
At the moment this story commences
I was thinking of grilled steak and tomatoes steak
crisp and brown on both sides, and tomatoes red as
a setting sun!
Much else though I have forgotten,
that fact remains as clear as the last sight
of a well-remembered shore in the mind of some wave-tossed
traveller. And the occasion which produced that
prosaic thought was a night well calculated to make
one think of supper and fireside, though the one might
be frugal and the other lonely, and as I, Gulliver
Jones, the poor foresaid Navy lieutenant, with the
honoured stars of our Republic on my collar, and an
undeserved snub from those in authority rankling in
my heart, picked my way homeward by a short cut through
the dismalness of a New York slum I longed for steak
and stout, slippers and a pipe, with all the pathetic
keenness of a troubled soul.
It was a wild, black kind of night,
and the weirdness of it showed up as I passed from
light to light or crossed the mouths of dim alleys
leading Heaven knows to what infernal dens of mystery
and crime even in this latter-day city of ours.
The moon was up as far as the church steeples; large
vapoury clouds scudding across the sky between us and
her, and a strong, gusty wind, laden with big raindrops
snarled angrily round corners and sighed in the parapets
like strange voices talking about things not of human
interest.
It made no difference to me, of course.
New York in this year of grace is not the place for
the supernatural be the time never so fit for witch-riding
and the night wind in the chimney-stacks sound never
so much like the last gurgling cries of throttled
men. No! the world was very matter-of-fact,
and particularly so to me, a poor younger son with
five dollars in my purse by way of fortune, a packet
of unpaid bills in my breastpocket, and round my neck
a locket with a portrait therein of that dear buxom,
freckled, stub-nosed girl away in a little southern
seaport town whom I thought I loved with a magnificent
affection. Gods! I had not even touched
the fringe of that affliction.
Thus sauntering along moodily, my
chin on my chest and much too absorbed in reflection
to have any nice appreciation of what was happening
about me, I was crossing in front of a dilapidated
block of houses, dating back nearly to the time of
the Pilgrim Fathers, when I had a vague consciousness
of something dark suddenly sweeping by me a
thing like a huge bat, or a solid shadow, if such a
thing could be, and the next instant there was a thud
and a bump, a bump again, a half-stifled cry, and
then a hurried vision of some black carpeting that
flapped and shook as though all the winds of Eblis
were in its folds, and then apparently disgorged from
its inmost recesses a little man.
Before my first start of half-amused
surprise was over I saw him by the flickering lamp-light
clutch at space as he tried to steady himself, stumble
on the slippery curb, and the next moment go down on
the back of his head with a most ugly thud.
Now I was not destitute of feeling,
though it had been my lot to see men die in many ways,
and I ran over to that motionless form without an
idea that anything but an ordinary accident had occurred.
There he lay, silent and, as it turned out afterwards,
dead as a door-nail, the strangest old fellow ever
eyes looked upon, dressed in shabby sorrel-coloured
clothes of antique cut, with a long grey beard upon
his chin, pent-roof eyebrows, and a wizened complexion
so puckered and tanned by exposure to Heaven only
knew what weathers that it was impossible to guess
his nationality.
I lifted him up out of the puddle
of black blood in which he was lying, and his head
dropped back over my arm as though it had been fixed
to his body with string alone. There was neither
heart-beat nor breath in him, and the last flicker
of life faded out of that gaunt face even as I watched.
It was not altogether a pleasant situation, and the
only thing to do appeared to be to get the dead man
into proper care (though little good it could do him
now!) as speedily as possible. So, sending
a chance passer-by into the main street for a cab,
I placed him into it as soon as it came, and there
being nobody else to go, got in with him myself, telling
the driver at the same time to take us to the nearest
hospital.
“Is this your rug, captain?”
asked a bystander just as we were driving off.
“Not mine,” I answered
somewhat roughly. “You don’t suppose
I go about at this time of night with Turkey carpets
under my arm, do you? It belongs to this old
chap here who has just dropped out of the skies on
to his head; chuck it on top and shut the door!”
And that rug, the very mainspring of the startling
things which followed, was thus carelessly thrown
on to the carriage, and off we went.
Well, to be brief, I handed in that stark old traveller from
nowhere at the hospital, and as a matter of curiosity sat in the waiting-room
while they examined him. In five minutes the house-surgeon on duty came in
to see me, and with a shake of his head said briefly
“Gone, sir clean
gone! Broke his neck like a pipe-stem.
Most strange-looking man, and none of us can even
guess at his age. Not a friend of yours, I suppose?”
“Nothing whatever to do with
me, sir. He slipped on the pavement and fell
in front of me just now, and as a matter of common
charity I brought him in here. Were there any
means of identification on him?”
“None whatever,” answered
the doctor, taking out his notebook and, as a matter
of form, writing down my name and address and a few
brief particulars, “nothing whatever except
this curious-looking bead hung round his neck by a
blackened thong of leather,” and he handed me
a thing about as big as a filbert nut with a loop
for suspension and apparently of rock crystal, though
so begrimed and dull its nature was difficult to speak
of with certainty. The bead was of no seeming
value and slipped unintentionally into my waistcoat
pocket as I chatted for a few minutes more with the
doctor, and then, shaking hands, I said goodbye, and
went back to the cab which was still waiting outside.
It was only on reaching home I noticed
the hospital porters had omitted to take the dead
man’s carpet from the roof of the cab when they
carried him in, and as the cabman did not care about
driving back to the hospital with it, and it could
not well be left in the street, I somewhat reluctantly
carried it indoors with me.
Once in the shine of my own lamp and
a cigar in my mouth I had a closer look at that ancient
piece of art work from heaven, or the other place,
only knows what ancient loom.
A big, strong rug of faded Oriental
colouring, it covered half the floor of my sitting-room,
the substance being of a material more like camel’s
hair than anything else, and running across, when examined
closely, were some dark fibres so long and fine that
surely they must have come from the tail of Solomon’s
favourite black stallion itself. But the strangest
thing about that carpet was its pattern. It was
threadbare enough to all conscience in places, yet
the design still lived in solemn, age-wasted hues,
and, as I dragged it to my stove-front and spread
it out, it seemed to me that it was as much like a
star map done by a scribe who had lately recovered
from delirium tremens as anything else. In the
centre appeared a round such as might be taken for
the sun, while here and there, “in the field,”
as heralds say, were lesser orbs which from their
size and position could represent smaller worlds circling
about it. Between these orbs were dotted lines
and arrow-heads of the oldest form pointing in all
directions, while all the intervening spaces were filled
up with woven characters half-way in appearance between
Runes and Cryptic-Sanskrit. Round the borders
these characters ran into a wild maze, a perfect jungle
of an alphabet through which none but a wizard could
have forced a way in search of meaning.
Altogether, I thought as I kicked
it out straight upon my floor, it was a strange and
not unhandsome article of furniture it would
do nicely for the mess-room on the Carolina, and if
any representatives of yonder poor old fellow turned
up tomorrow, why, I would give them a couple of dollars
for it. Little did I guess how dear it would
be at any price!
Meanwhile that steak was late, and
now that the temporary excitement of the evening was
wearing off I fell dull again. What a dark, sodden
world it was that frowned in on me as I moved over
to the window and opened it for the benefit of the
cool air, and how the wind howled about the roof tops.
How lonely I was! What a fool I had been to
ask for long leave and come ashore like this, to curry
favour with a set of stubborn dunderheads who cared
nothing for me or Polly, and could not
or would not understand how important it was to the
best interests of the Service that I should get that
promotion which alone would send me back to her an
eligible wooer! What a fool I was not to have
volunteered for some desperate service instead of wasting
time like this! Then at least life would have
been interesting; now it was dull as ditch-water,
with wretched vistas of stagnant waiting between now
and that joyful day when I could claim that dear, rosy-checked
girl for my own. What a fool I had been!
“I wish, I wish,” I exclaimed,
walking round the little room, “I wish I were
While these unfinished exclamations
were actually passing my lips I chanced to cross that
infernal mat, and it is no more startling than true,
but at my word a quiver of expectation ran through
that gaunt web a rustle of anticipation
filled its ancient fabric, and one frayed corner surged
up, and as I passed off its surface in my stride, the
sentence still unfinished on my lips, wrapped itself
about my left leg with extraordinary swiftness and
so effectively that I nearly fell into the arms of
my landlady, who opened the door at the moment and
came in with a tray and the steak and tomatoes mentioned
more than once already.
It was the draught caused by the opening
door, of course, that had made the dead man’s
rug lift so strangely what else could it
have been? I made this apology to the good woman,
and when she had set the table and closed the door
took another turn or two about my den, continuing as
I did so my angry thoughts.
“Yes, yes,” I said at
last, returning to the stove and taking my stand,
hands in pockets, in front of it, “anything were
better than this, any enterprise however wild, any
adventure however desperate. Oh, I wish I were
anywhere but here, anywhere out of this redtape-ridden
world of ours! I wish I were in
the planet Mars!”
How can I describe what followed those
luckless words? Even as I spoke the magic carpet
quivered responsively under my feet, and an undulation
went all round the fringe as though a sudden wind were
shaking it. It humped up in the middle so abruptly
that I came down sitting with a shock that numbed
me for the moment. It threw me on my back and
billowed up round me as though I were in the trough
of a stormy sea. Quicker than I can write it
lapped a corner over and rolled me in its folds like
a chrysalis in a cocoon. I gave a wild yell and
made one frantic struggle, but it was too late.
With the leathery strength of a giant and the swiftness
of an accomplished cigar-roller covering a “core”
with leaf, it swamped my efforts, straightened my limbs,
rolled me over, lapped me in fold after fold till
head and feet and everything were gone crushed
life and breath back into my innermost being, and
then, with the last particle of consciousness, I felt
myself lifted from the floor, pass once round the
room, and finally shoot out, point foremost, into
space through the open window, and go up and up and
up with a sound of rending atmospheres that seemed
to tear like riven silk in one prolonged shriek under
my head, and to close up in thunder astern until my
reeling senses could stand it no longer, and time and
space and circumstances all lost their meaning to me.