By Hal K. Wells
Layroh’s hiring of husky down-and-outers
for his expedition is part of a plan
made ages past.
It was shortly after midnight when
a persistent nightmare aroused Don Foster from sleep.
For a moment he lay drowsily in his blankets there
on the sand, with memory of the nightmare still vivid.
It had been a monstrous flying thing
like a giant blue-bottle fly that he had been battling
in his sleep. Memory of the thing’s high-pitched,
droning buzz still rang in his ears. Then abruptly
he realized that the peculiar buzzing was no mere
echo of a nightmare. It was an actual sound that
still vibrated from somewhere within the camp.
Startled into full awakening, Foster
propped himself up on one elbow. The sound was
penetrating, but not particularly loud. He was
apparently the only one whom it had awakened.
In the gray gloom of the desert starlight he saw the
blanket-shrouded figures of the rest of the men still
deep in slumber.
He realized the source of the sound
now. It came from inside the black walls of Layroh’s
tent, pitched there in its usual isolation on a slight
rise fifty yards from the sleeping group. Foster
grunted disgustedly to himself. More of Layroh’s
scientific hocus-pocus! The man seemed to go
out of his way to add new phases of mystery to this
crazy expedition of his through the barren wastelands
of the Mojave.
For a solid week now they had been
working their way back and forth over a thirty-mile
stretch of desert, while Layroh labored with his intricate
instruments searching for something known only to himself.
Whatever reason Layroh had for recruiting a party
of fifteen to accompany him was still a mystery.
So far the men had done practically nothing except
trail along after Layroh while he worked with his apparatus.
It was a state of affairs that caused
the men little worry. As long as they had enough
to eat they were quite content. They were down-and-outers,
all of them, human derelicts recruited from the park
benches and cheap flop houses of Los Angeles.
They had only one thing in common: all of them
were large and powerful men.
Don Foster was the youngest of the
fifteen, and the only college man in the group.
A succession of bad breaks had finally landed him broke
and hungry on a park bench, where Layroh found him.
Layroh’s offer of ten dollars a day and all
expenses had seemed a godsend. Foster had promptly
jumped at the offer. Layroh’s peculiar conditions
and rules had seemed trivial details at the time.
Foster scowled as he lit a cigarette
and stared through the gloom at the violet-lighted
tent from which the disturbing sound still came.
Seven days of experience with Layroh’s peculiarities
had begun to make them a little irritating. His
sternly enforced code of rules was simple enough.
Never approach Layroh unless called. Never touch
Layroh’s instruments. Never approach Layroh’s
tent. Never ask questions.
Layroh neither ate with the men nor
mingled with them in any way that could possibly be
avoided. As soon as they made camp each night
he set up his small black tent and remained inside
it until camp was broken the next morning. No
one knew whether the man ever slept. All night
long the violet light glowed inside the black tent.
The men had wondered about the unusual color of that
light, then had finally decided it was probably something
required by the same eye weakness that made Layroh
wear heavily smoked goggles, both day and night.
Strange sounds in the night as Layroh
worked with his apparatus in the black tent were nothing
unusual, but to-night was the first time that Foster
had ever heard this peculiar whining buzz. As
he listened it rose in a sudden thin crescendo that
rippled along his spine like a file rasping over naked
nerve-ends. For one shuddering second there seemed
to be an intangible living quality in that
metallic drone, as though some nameless creature sang
in horrible exultance. Then abruptly the sound
ceased.
Foster drew a deep breath of relief
and ground his cigarette into the sand beside him.
Better try to get to sleep again before Layroh started
some new disturbance with his infernal apparatus.
He was just settling down into his
blankets when a movement in the tent drew his attention
back to it. Layroh was apparently changing the
position of the violet light, for his tall figure was
suddenly silhouetted against the tent wall in sharp
relief.
Foster started in surprise as another
figure loomed darkly beside that of Layroh. For
a moment he thought that the unprecedented had happened
and some member of the expedition was inside those
jealously guarded tent walls with Layroh. Then
he saw that the figure must be a mere trick of the
shadows cast by the moving light upon some piece of
luggage. It looked like the torso of a man, but
the head was a shapeless blob and the arms were nothing
more than boneless dangling flaps. A moment later
the light moved on and both shadows vanished.
Foster grinned sheepishly over the
momentary start the distorted shadow had given him,
and determinedly rolled himself in his blankets to
sleep. It was after sunrise when he awoke.
The rest of the camp was already up, but there was
one member of the party missing.
Jeff Peters’ empty blankets
were still spread there on the sand, but no one had
seen the big Negro since the camp turned in the night
before. The expedition’s daily travels
under the blazing sun of the Mojave never had appealed
particularly to Jeff, and he had apparently at last
made good his repeated threats to desert.
The men were just getting up from
breakfast when Layroh finished packing his tent and
apparatus in his sedan, and started down toward the
camp. As usual, he halted some five yards away
from them, standing there for a moment in stony silence.
Physically, the man was a giant, towering
well over six feet in height. On several occasions
when the expedition’s cars had stalled in deep
sand he had strikingly demonstrated the colossal strength
in his tall body.
His aquiline features, his red-bronze
complexion, and his long black hair, were all suggestive
of Incan or Mayan ancestry. No one had ever seen
any trace of feeling or emotion upon his impassive
features. Foster would have given a good deal
for just one glimpse of the eyes hidden behind the
dark-colored goggles. In their depths he might
be able to find some reason for the tingling surge
of nameless dread that Layroh’s close approach
always inspired.
Layroh noted Jeff Peters’ absence
at once. “We seem to have our first deserter,”
he commented evenly. His voice was as richly resonant
as the tone of some fine old violin. He hesitated
almost imperceptibly between words, like one to whom
English was not a native tongue.
“It does not matter,”
he continued indifferently. “We can spare
one man easily enough. To-day we shall continue
toward the east. Pack the truck at once.
We are ready to start.”
Without waiting for an answer, he
turned and strode back to the sedan. A curious
thought struck Foster as he stared after Layroh’s
retreating figure. What if the oddly distorted
shadow he had seen against the tent wall last night
had really been that of a man-had been that
of Jeff Peters?
For only a moment did Foster mull
over the idea. Then he promptly dismissed it
as being absurd. He could imagine no possible
reason for Jeff Peters being in Layroh’s tent
in the middle of the night. The shadow had been
only remotely like that of a man, anyway. There
had been neither head nor arms to the figure, only
shapeless masses totally unlike anything human.
They finished packing the breakfast
stuff in the supply truck, and the party started out
along the trail with Layroh’s sedan leading the
way. For nearly two hours they followed their
usual routine, working steadily eastward and stopping
at regular intervals while Layroh made his methodical
tests with his instruments.
Then near the end of the second hour
something happened that abruptly sent a thrill of
excitement through the entire expedition. Layroh
had just set his apparatus up on a small sand dune
beside the trail. The mechanism looked somewhat
like a portable radio, with two slender parallel rods
on top and a number of dials on the main panel.
Layroh swung the rods slowly around
the horizon while he carefully tuned the various dials.
It was when the rods pointed toward the southeast
that there suddenly came the first response he had
ever received. From somewhere within the mechanism
there came a faint staccato ripple of clear beauty
like countless tiny hammers beating upon a crystal
gong.
The sound galvanized Layroh into the
nearest approach to emotion anyone had ever seen him
display. The giant moved with the furious speed
of a madman as he returned the apparatus to the sedan
and swung the car out across the sand toward the southeast.
After a mile he stopped and hurriedly set the apparatus
up again. This time the crystalline signal came
in with a noticeable increase in volume.
From then on the progress of the party
became a mad dash that taxed the endurance of everyone
except Layroh himself. After the first hour they
entered a terrain so rugged that the cars had to be
abandoned and they fought their way forward on foot.
Layroh was forced to turn the radiolike apparatus
over to one of the men, while he himself carried another
mechanism that consisted of a heavy silver cylinder
with four flexible nozzles emerging from one end.
They held as rigidly as possible to
a straight line toward the southeast, scrambling over
whatever obstacles intervened. Their only stops
were at regular intervals when Layroh checked their
course. Each time the crystalline signal came
in with greater volume.
Their objective appeared to be a cone-shaped
peak several miles ahead that loomed up high above
the surrounding rock masses. The oddly shaped
mountain was identified by one of the men who had once
been a Mojave desert rat.
“Lodestone Peak,” he announced
succinctly. “Full of iron, or somethin’.
A compass always goes haywire within a radius of ten
miles of it.”
It was early afternoon when they finally
arrived at a level area at the base of the mountain.
For the last two miles Layroh had not stopped long
enough to make any tests. Now he set the radiolike
apparatus in place some ten yards from the face of
a sheer cliff that towered high above them.
The crystalline signal came in a rippling
flood. He spun the dials. The sound ceased,
and the pointing rods glowed with an aura of amber
light at their tips. Swift and startling answer
came from deep within the heart of the cliff, a mighty
note of sonorous beauty like the violent plucking
of a string on some colossal bass viol. So powerful
was the timbre of the pulsing sound that the entire
side of the mountain seemed to vibrate in harmony
with it.
Layroh snapped off the apparatus and
the sound ceased. Carefully searching until he
found a certain spot on the cliff face, he stepped
close to it and unlimbered the nozzles of the silver
cylinder. Foster noted that at the place selected
by Layroh there was a five-foot-wide stratum of slightly
lighter-colored rock extending from the sand to a
point high up on the cliff face.
From the metal nozzles of the cylinder
there spurted a broad beam of dead black. There
was a searing flash of blue-white flame as the black
beam struck the cliff face. There followed a brief
second during which the rock melted into nothingness
in the heart of that area of blue radiance. Then
the stabbing beam bored steadily on back into the cliff
like the flame of a blow torch melting a way through
a block of butter.
Layroh adjusted the nozzles until
the black beam was a solid shaft of opacity seven
feet in height and nearly five in width. The hole
in the cliff became a tunnel from which blue radiance
surged outward in a shimmering mist as the black beam
steadily bit deeper into the rock.
“Follow me,” Layroh ordered
the men, “but do not approach too close.”
He stepped forward and entered the
mouth of the tunnel. Shaken by the spectacular
thing occurring before their eyes, yet, driven by curiosity
as to what might lie at the end of that swift-forming
tunnel, the men came crowding obediently after him.
A moment later they were within the passage, stumbling
dazedly forward through the billowing fog of bluish
radiance. There was an odd, almost electric, tingle
of exhilaration in that radiant mist as it surged
about their bodies.
Fragments of almost-forgotten scientific
lore flitted through Foster’s brain as he groped
for a clue to the action of the strange ray. Not
quite complete disintegration of matter, but something
very close to it-probably the transformation
of matter into radiant energy, an ingenious harnessing
of the same forces that are forever at work in the
cosmic crucibles of the universe’s myriad suns.
The action of the black ray was amazingly
rapid. They were forced to hurry forward at a
fast walk to keep their distance behind Layroh.
The vertical stratum of lighter-colored rock continued
straight back into the heart of the mountain.
It apparently served as a guide. The color of
the blue flame-mist changed perceptibly whenever Layroh
allowed the black ray to stray into the rock at either
side of it.
For nearly two hundred yards they
bored their way steadily into the mountain, their
path gradually sloping downward. The walls and
floor of the swift-forming tunnel were as smooth and
hard as though glazed with a film of diamond.
Then abruptly Layroh shut the black
ray projector off as the rock ahead of them ended
and they broke through into another larger tunnel,
dimly lighted by small globes of violet radiance set
at intervals in the glassy ceiling. After thirty
yards of travel along this tunnel they found their
way barred by a massive door of copper-colored metal.
At Layroh’s imperious gesture
the men halted a dozen feet back of him in the tunnel
while he brought something out of his leather belt-case.
Foster was the only one of the group who was near enough
to see that the object was a small tube closely resembling
a pocket flashlight.
The only break in the surface of the
great door was a six-inch disk over near its right-hand
edge. Layroh slid this disk aside. Into the
opening that was revealed he sent a series of flashes
of colored light from the tube-two red,
three green, and two blue. The colors were the
combination to the light-activated mechanism of the
lock. At the last of the blue flashes there was
a whirring of hidden mechanism and the portal swung
slowly and ponderously open.
Layroh beckoned to the men to follow
him as he strode swiftly on into a vast room that
was flooded with bluish light from scores of the radiant
globes. As the men passed through the door it
reached the limit of its opening swing and began automatically
closing again behind them, but they were too completely
engrossed in the scene before them to notice it.
They were in a great cavern whose
glass-smooth floor was nearly a hundred yards square,
and whose ceiling was so high that it was lost in
the shadows above the maze of metal girders and cables
that made a webwork some forty feet overhead.
There was a feeling of almost incredible age about
the place, as though it had been sealed away there
in the heart of the mountain for countless centuries.
On every hand there was evidence that
the cavern and all its contents were the products
of a race of beings whose science was one that was
utterly strange to that of the modern world. At
the end of the room where they stood were row after
row of different machines, great engines with bodies
of dull silver metal and with stiltlike legs and jointed
arms that made them look like giant metal insects.
Foster could understand few of the details of the
machines, but he felt that in efficiency and versatility
they were far ahead of Earth’s best modern efforts.
Grouped together in the center of
the cavern were many assemblies of apparatus linked
together by small cables that descended from main
cables in the girder-crisscrossed ceiling overhead.
There was a soft hissing of sparks leaping between
terminals and a steady glow from oddly shaped tubes
which indicated that the mechanisms were still functioning
in silent and efficient performance of their unknown
tasks.
The piece of apparatus nearest the
door was an upright skeleton framework of slender
pillars housing in their center a cluster of coils
set around a large drumlike diaphragm. Foster
wondered if this were not the signal device with which
Layroh had tuned in his own portable instrument.
The principal piece of mechanism in the central space,
however-a great crystal-walled case filled
with an intricate array of rods and wires-was
something at whose purpose Foster could not even guess.
Layroh strode on past the central
apparatus toward the back wall. The men followed
him. Then as they rounded the apparatus and saw
for the first time the incredible things lining that
rear wall, tier upon tier, they stopped short in utter
stupefaction. Before them was Life, but Life
so hideously and abysmally alien that their brains
reeled in horror.
Great shining slugs slumbered there
by the hundreds in their boxlike crystal cells, their
gelatinous bodies glowing with pale and ever-changing
opalescence. The things were roughly pear-shaped,
with the large end upward. Deep within this globular
portion glowed a large nucleus spot of red. From
the tapering lower part of each slug’s body
there sprouted scores of long slender tendrils like
the gelatinous fringe of a jelly-fish.
The things measured nearly four feet
in height. Each was suspended upright in an individual
glass-walled cell, its body supported by a loop of
wire that dropped from larger cables running between
each row of cells. There was steady and exhaustless
power of some kind coursing through those cables.
Where they branched at the end of each cell-row there
was a small unit of glowing tubes and silver terminals
whose tips glowed with faint auras of leaping sparks.
The slugs were dormant now but the
regular changes in the opalescent sheen which coursed
over their bodies like the slow breathing of a sleeping
animal, gave mute evidence that life was still in those
grotesque forms, waiting only to be awakened.
Fascinated by the tiers of glowing
things, one of the men started slowly forward with
a hand outstretched as though to touch one of the cells.
His advance aroused Layroh to swift action. The
bronze-faced giant whirled and swung the nozzles of
the black ray projector into line with the man.
“Back, yaharigan, back!”
he ordered imperiously. “The Shining Ones
have slumbered, undisturbed for a thousand centuries.
They shall not awake from their long sleep to find
the filthy fingers of a yaharigan defiling
their crystal cells. Back!”
Panic-stricken at the threat of the
black ray, the man stumbled backward to join his fellows.
Layroh’s startling statement of the incredible
age of the shining things in the cases erased all
thought of the expedition’s code of rules from
Foster’s mind.
“You mean that those-those
things-moved and lived in the outside
world a hundred thousand years ago?” he asked
dazedly. “But there is no indication of
there ever having been any such creatures among Earth’s
early forms of life.”
“Fool!” There was angry
disdain in Layroh’s resonant voice. “They
who slumber here are a race born far from this planet.
They are the Shining Ones of Rikor. Rikor is
a tiny planet circling a wandering sun whose orbit
is an ellipse so vast that only once in a hundred thousand
years does it approach your solar system. Rikor’s
sun was nearly dead and the Shining Ones had to find
a new home soon or else perish. Then their planet
swung near the Earth, and their scouts returned with
the news that Earth was ideally suited for their purpose.
There were barely five hundred of the Shining Ones
all told, and they migrated to Earth in a body.”
“And they’ve been in this
cavern ever since, sealed up like tadpoles in fish
bowls?” The question came from Garrigan, a strapping
sandy-haired Irishman whose first blind panic at the
black ray’s menace was swiftly giving way to
curiosity.
“It was your ancestors who drove
the Shining Ones into their retreat here,” Layroh
answered grimly. “When the Shining Ones
arrived upon Earth they found the planet already in
the possession of a race of human beings whose science
was so far advanced that it compared favorably even
with the science of Rikor. This race was comparatively
few in numbers, and was concentrated upon a small
island-continent known as Atlantis. Shining Ones
and Atlanteans met in a war of titans, with a planet
as the stake. The Shining Ones were vanquished
in that first battle. They lost a fifth of their
number and barely half a dozen of their smallest space
ships escaped destruction.
“Planning a new and decisive
assault, the Shining Ones planted atomic mines throughout
the foundations of Atlantis. But the Atlanteans
struck first by a matter of hours. At a set moment
every volcanic vent on the Earth’s surface belched
forth colossal volumes of a green gas. Though
that gas was harmless to creatures of Earth, it meant
slow but certain death to all Rikorians. Furiously
the Shining Ones struck their own blow, setting off
the cataclysmic explosion that sank Atlantis forever
beneath the waters of the Atlantic. Scarcely a
handful of Atlanteans escaped, but Rikor’s victory
was a hollow one. Earth’s air was so thoroughly
poisoned that it would require centuries of slow ionization
by sunlight to again make it fit for Rikorian breathing.
The Shining Ones had at most three months before the
slow poison would weaken their bodies to the danger
point.”
“Why didn’t they go back
to their own planet, then, where they belonged?”
broke in the truculent voice of Garrigan again.
“That was impossible,”
Layroh answered impatiently. “The few space
ships they had left would carry barely a score, and
Rikor’s sun was already so far advanced in its
swing away from Earth that there would be time for
only one trip. There was only one chance for survival
remaining to them. They knew of a process of
suspended animation in which their bodies could survive
almost indefinitely without being harmed by the Atlantean
gas. They would require outside aid to be awakened
from that dormant state, so a small group of them
must remain active and embark for Rikor, to try to
survive there until Rikor returned near enough to the
Earth for them to again cross the void.
“The dormant ones must have
a retreat so well hidden that they would not be disturbed
during the thousand centuries that must elapse before
they could be awakened. The Shining Ones sped
back to their base on the North American continent
and in the three months remaining to them they prepared
this cavern here in the heart of the mountain.
Radium bulbs supplied its light. For the unfailing
source of electrical energy needed to course through
the dormant bodies and keep them alive they tapped
the magnetic field of the planet itself, the force
produced as the Earth rotates in the sun’s electrical
field like an armature spinning within the coils of
a dynamo.”
It was Foster who broke in with the
question that was in the thoughts of the entire party.
“Just where do you come in on all this?”
he asked bluntly. “And what was your reason
for bringing us here?”
There was blazing contempt in Layroh’s
rich voice as he turned toward Foster. “Yaharigan
of Earth!” he jeered. “Your brain
is as stupid as the feeble brains of those true yaharigans
of Rikor whose physical structure your human bodies
so closely resemble. Have you not guessed yet
that I am no contemptible creature of Earth-that
this human shell I wear is nothing but a cleverly
contrived disguise? Look, yaharigans,
look upon the real face of the one who has come to
restore the Earth to its rightful masters!”
With a single swift movement, Layroh
snatched the colored goggles from his face and flung
them aside. There was a smothered gasp of horror
from the group. They saw now why Layroh had always
worn those concealing lenses. There were no eyes
in that bronzed face, nothing but two empty sockets.
And from deep within the skull there glowed through
those gaping sockets a seething pool of lurid red-the
nucleus spot of a Shining One!
Reeling backward with the rest of
the men from the horror of the glowing thing within
the skull, Foster dazedly heard Layroh’s resonant
voice ring exultantly on: “My ancestors
were among the twenty Shining Ones who remained active.
After placing their comrades in their long sleep those
twenty survivors set up signal apparatus in the cavern
so that it could be found again no matter how much
the outside terrain might change. Then they filled
in the entrance tunnel with synthetic rock and embarked
for Rikor.
“There upon that dying planet
generations passed. When the time came that Rikor’s
sun again neared Earth, so rigorous had life become
upon Rikor that only six Rikorians remained alive.
In order to increase our chances of winning through
on the perilous trip to Earth, each of us traveled
in a separate space ship. The precaution was well
taken. We encountered a dense cloud of meteors
near Alpha Centauri and I was the only survivor.”
Layroh gestured briefly toward the
rows of many-armed metal engines. “There
are the normal vehicles for a Shining One’s body-armored
machines powered by sub-atomic motors and with appendages
equipped for every task of peace or war. This
synthetic human figure which I now wear was donned
only in order that I might have no difficulty in mingling
with Earthmen while I sought the cavern. It is
an exact replica of the body of an Atlantean, including
artificial vocal chords. Even the colored goggles
necessary to hide the glowing red of my nucleus are
similar to those worn by Atlantean scientists while
working with their ray machines-
Layroh was abruptly interrupted by
a scream of maniacal fury from Olsen, a shambling
Swede who stood near the edge of the group. Ever
since Layroh’s unmasking the Swede had been
staring at him with eyes rigidly wide in terror like
those of a bird confronting a snake. The steady
contemplation of the horror of the blaring red thing
behind Layroh’s empty eye-sockets had apparently
at last driven the Swede completely insane. He
snatched a revolver from his belt as he leaped forward,
and fired once. His shot struck Layroh in the
forehead.
The bullet ripped through the surface
of Layroh’s face, then glanced harmlessly aside
as it struck metal underneath. Layroh never even
staggered from the impact. The black ray from
the projector caught Olsen before he could fire again.
There was a searing flash of flame, then a swiftly
melting cloud of blue-white radiance, and the Swede
was gone.
Layroh swung the projector back to
menace the others. “I had forgotten that
yaharigans of Earth have weapons that might
be annoying,” he said evenly. “Two
more of you have pistols-Garrigan and Ransome.
Toss them away from you at once. Hesitate-and
the black ray speaks again.”
Sullenly the two men obeyed his order.
“Good,” commended Layroh.
“In the pits where you are going you will have
little use for pistols. When I again take you
from those pits you will quickly learn why I brought
you with me. Yaharigans, I have called you,
and yaharigans you shall be-Earthly
counterparts of those miserable beasts of Rikor who
have for ages been bred only for the one purpose of
supplying food for the Shining Ones. I knew that
when I found the cavern the process of awakening the
Shining Ones would require that they be carefully
fed with the calcium and lime from the bones of living
yaharigans, the normal food of all Rikorians.
“The few yaharigans I
had brought from Rikor were consumed on my long trip
to Earth. So I had to recruit a party of human
beings to go with me and serve as the necessary food
for the Shining Ones. My search for the cavern
took longer than I had expected for I knew only its
approximate location. My own body at last had
to have sustenance. Last night the Negro, Jeff
Peters, provided that sustenance.
“I shall feed those of you who
remain to the first group of Shining Ones to be awakened.
After that we shall be strong enough in numbers to
sally forth and capture ample food for awakening the
rest of our comrades. Then in our full strength
we shall emerge and again become masters of a planet
upon which your crude race shall exist only as yaharigan
herds for our sustenance.”
Layroh’s resonant voice ceased.
Keeping the black ray projector alertly covering the
men, he strode over to a closed metal door in the wall
just beyond them. He took a small tube from a
rack beside it and opened the door by sending a flash
of yellow light into the mechanism of its lock.
“Into the pits until I am ready
for you,” he commanded curtly. “They
were first constructed for keeping our own yaharigans
while we were working in the cavern, and they should
serve just as well for you.”
With the memory of Olsen’s tragic
fate still fresh in their minds, the men obediently
filed into the next room, with Layroh bringing up the
rear. The room was little more than a single large
cell carved from the living rock, and lighted by a
single radium bulb in the ceiling.
Its smooth glasslike floor was broken
at intervals of ten feet by circular pits fifteen
feet deep. At Layroh’s order the men entered
the floor-pits, one man to each pit. As Foster
lowered himself into one of them he saw how grimly
efficient a trap the pit was.
An unusually tall and active man might
be able to jump high enough to touch the edge, but
the effort would be useless. Those glass-smooth
edges were so cunningly rounded that they offered no
possible purchase for clutching fingers. The
diameter of the pit, ten feet, was too great to permit
any effort at climbing by wedging one’s body
between two opposing walls.
Layroh sent every man into the pits but one.
“You will return to the cavern
with me, Carter,” he ordered. “I have
need for you at once.”
They heard the door clang shut as
Layroh and Carter left the pit room. Chaos reigned
as the men flung their bodies against the pit walls
in efforts to escape. There was the click of
metal as several of them tried with pocket knives
to chip finger-holes in the walls, but the glassy
surfaces were of diamond hardness.
Foster’s brain was numb with
despair as he began to realize the true meaning of
those sleeping things out in the cavern. Death
in some unknown and horrible form was imminent for
himself and his companions, he knew, but his thoughts
were going far beyond that, to the time when the Shining
Ones would emerge in all their resistless power to
ravage and conquer a helpless world.
There could be little doubt as to
the futility of Earth’s best efforts against
the advanced science of these invaders from far-off
Rikor. Encased in their colossal machine-bodies
of glittering metal, and armed with such terrible
weapons as the black ray projector, the Shining Ones
would be as invulnerable as men trampling an anthill
underfoot.
The future status of mankind upon
the Earth would be that of vast herds of human yaharigans,
probably bred for ever greater bone content as men
breed cattle for superior food values. The picture
aroused Foster to a fury of cold desperation.
If they could only escape from the pits there might
be a chance to trap Layroh and slay him before he brought
those hordes of opalescent slugs to life. Then
escape from the cavern itself would be an easy matter.
Even if the outer door had been locked since they
passed through it Layroh had the light-key and Foster
remembered the combination.
Half a dozen wild schemes flitted
through Foster’s brain, only to be discarded
as futile. Then suddenly he thought of something
that had every chance of success if only they were
given time enough. Layroh in his arrogance had
forgotten that his prisoners were not naked brutes
of Rikor. In the very clothing the men wore was
the means of escape from the pits.
Foster’s voice cut through the
babel in the room until he gained everyone’s
attention.
“Our only chance for escape
is to get a rope between two pits,” he said
curtly. “Then one man can climb out while
the other holds the rope. We’ll have to
make that rope from our clothing. No one man can
get a strip strong enough, so we’ll have to
work the strips to a central man who can braid them
into a single heavy rope. I’m near the center.
Get the strips to me. Tear your clothing into
ribbons, and knot them together. Use your knives,
watches, anything to weight one end of the strip.
Then cast until you get contact with the pit next to
you. That way all the strips can be worked to
me.”
A period of feverish activity followed
while the men went to work. Layroh also was busy.
Through several narrow ventilating slits high in the
cavern wall they heard the hum of machinery.
The first of the men finished knotting
their ropes together. With weighted ends muffled
to deaden their fall upon the rock floor, they began
casting to get contact with their neighbors.
Success came slowly. There were
often scores of blind casts made before a weighted
end came into an adjoining pit. But the time finally
came when Foster had a twenty-five-foot length of
rope strong enough to bear his weight. He already
had a single strand making contact with Garrigan in
the next pit. Garrigan drew the heavier rope in
to him, then acted as an anchor while Foster climbed
to the floor above.
His downstretched hand pulled Garrigan
to freedom. Getting the other men up to the floor
was the work of but a few moments. They were a
weird-looking crew in the torn fragments of clothing
that remained to them. Foster stationed them
beside the locked cavern door so that they would be
hidden behind it when it opened.
“Wait till Layroh is safely
inside,” he ordered, “then rush him.
Get that black ray thing out of commission first.
Without that, we should be more than a match for him.
In the meantime you come with me, Garrigan. Maybe
we can get a look into the cavern.”
By climbing on Garrigan’s broad
shoulders Foster found that he had a clear view through
one of the narrow ventilating slits. Layroh had
made efficient use of the time since he had left the
pit room. Suspended from softly glowing wires
in the large central glass case was a circular group
of ten of the Shining Ones.
Foster’s eyes widened in horror
as he saw the object in which the trailing tendrils
of the luminous slugs were sunk. It was the naked
body of Carter. As those sucking tendrils drew
out the substance of his skeleton, Carter’s
body was changing slowly, horribly, sinking into a
flabby mass of puttylike flesh.
The dormant bodies of the great slugs
glowed perceptibly brighter as they fed, and the pulsations
of opalescence quickened. The Shining Ones were
beginning to awaken. Faint but unmistakable there
came to Foster’s ears a low singing drone from
the group.
He shuddered. He knew now why
Jeff Peters’ shadow had seemed so grotesquely
boneless. That droning buzzing sound he
had heard from the black tent had been the feeding
cry of a Shining One-of Layroh. Then,
his horrible feast ended, Layroh had blasted what remained
of his victim into nothingness with the black ray.
Foster was abruptly startled into
action as Layroh turned from watching the central
case. Picking up the black ray projector, he started
toward the pit-room door. Foster scrambled down.
With Garrigan he joined the tensely waiting group
beside the door.
There was the sound of the mechanism
unlocking. The door opened and Layroh came striding
in. In a concerted rush the men were upon him.
Foster’s hurtling dive for the black ray projector
knocked the apparatus out of Layroh’s hands.
It crashed to the floor with a violence that left
it shattered and useless. Swept off his feet by
the savage fury of the unexpected attack, Layroh went
to the floor beneath the writhing group of men.
The metal sinews of his magnificent
body brought him to his knees in one mighty effort,
but the numbers of his assailants were too great.
Again he was beaten down while powerful hands tore
at his limbs. The metal of the ingenious machine
that was Layroh’s body began twisting and giving
way before the savagery of the assault.
He staggered to his feet, flinging
the men aside in one last mad surge of power, and
lurched toward the cavern. His effort to slam
the door closed behind him was blocked by the swift
leap of two of the men. Layroh staggered on into
the cavern. Then suddenly the torn framework of
his legs collapsed completely, and he fell heavily
on his back.
The men surged forward with a shout
of triumph. But before they could reach Layroh’s
prostrate figure one of his hands reached up and opened
his skull as one opens the hinged halves of a box.
From within the skull there rolled a great shining
slug, a sinisterly beautiful figure of glowing opalescence,
with a scarlet nucleus! For one breath-taken
instant it rose to its full height of four feet, hesitated,
as if warily regarding the horror-struck men, then
with tendrils pressed into its body until it was nearly
spherical, the slug that had been Layroh rolled like
a ball of living fire across the cavern toward the
cluster of machines. Foster snatched up one of
the discarded pistols from the floor and fired twice
at that hurtling globe of flame, but both shots missed.
A moment later the slug reached the
machines. It fled swiftly past a group of smaller
mechanisms and selected a gleaming metal colossus whose
size and formidable armament indicated that it was
designed primarily as an instrument of war. With
whipping tendrils the slug swarmed up one of the metal
legs and into a small crystal-walled compartment in
the forward end of the machine.
There was the crackling hiss of unleashed
sub-atomic forces somewhere within the metal body.
The machine moved in fumbling uncertainty for a moment
as the slug fought to get control of mechanism that
had lain idle for a thousand centuries! Then
swiftly full control came, and the machine came charging
toward the men.
They broke in wild panic before the
onslaught of the metal monster. As an engine
of war it was invincible. Six feet in height and
nearly twenty feet in length, it maneuvered upon its
jointed legs with bewildering speed and efficiency.
A score of rodlike arms projected from the main trunk,
arms that were equipped for nearly every purpose.
Some ended in pincers, others in barbed points, and
others in clusters of flexible metal tentacles.
One of the men screamed in terror
and broke for the door back into the pit room.
Foster flung him aside and slammed the door shut and
locked.
“You’d be trapped like
a rat in there,” he grated. “Our only
chance is to stick together and fight it out.”
It was a chance that seemed increasingly
slight as they tried to close in upon the machine.
Garrigan had recovered the other pistol from the floor.
He emptied it into the metal monster at a range of
less than ten feet but the bullets glanced harmlessly
off as from armor plate.
The machine fought back with deadly
efficiency. One of the dagger-pointed arms impaled
a man like a speared fish. Pincers closed upon
the neck of another, half tearing his head from his
body. With the strength of desperation the men
wrecked the pillars-and-diaphragm apparatus and from
the debris tore metal fragments to serve as clubs.
Their blows against the thing’s pistonlike legs
failed to even shake it. Two more men died before
the grim efficiency of the stabbing arms.
Foster had held the remaining bullets
in his own pistol, waiting for a chance to use them
against some vulnerable spot in the machine, but he
saw none. There was a bare chance that if he could
gain the machine’s back he might find some crevice
through which he could send a telling shot. Cramming
the pistol into his belt, he watched his chance, then
used the debris of the wrecked apparatus as a stepping
stone for a running leap that landed him solidly on
top of the metal bulk just back of the crystal compartment.
He fumbled for the pistol in his belt,
but before he could even touch it a tentacle-tipped
arm lashed down toward him, picked him off the thing’s
back, and flung him with terrific force high into the
air....
For a breathless moment he saw the
girders and cables of the ceiling hurtling toward
him. Instinctively he grabbed with both hands
at one of the lower girders as his body thudded into
it. His clutching fingers slipped momentarily,
then held, leaving him dangling there at arms’
length thirty feet above the floor.
His wits swiftly clearing from the
shock of that mighty toss through space, Foster scrambled
up on the narrow girder. Sitting astride the
metal beam, he looked down at the scene below.
The battle down there was nearly over.
The glowing slug in the machine was now obviously
trying to capture the remaining men alive for further
use. Instead of slaying, its lashing arms fought
only to stun and cripple.
Six of the men still remained on their
feet but they were trapped in an angle between heavy
apparatus and one of the walls. In the central
case the ten semi-dormant slugs, still too inactive
to take part in the battle themselves, seemed watching
the conflict with great unwinking eyes of crimson.
Foster groaned. The metal colossus
was too powerful for their feeble efforts. It
would take a bolt of lightning to have any effect upon
that mighty engine of war. At the thought, Foster’s
heart leaped in sudden inspiration. There was
lightning, the terrific electrical force of a spinning
planet, in the cables up here among the girders, if
he could only release it.
Slightly below his position and barely
six feet away from him one of the main power cables
of the cavern was suspended from heavy insulators.
If the cable had ever had an insulating sheath around
it the fabric had vanished during the centuries for
the dull silver-colored metal was now completely bare.
If that naked cable could be dropped
into contact with Layroh’s machine-body, the
entire power of one of the cavern’s main lines
would be grounded through the metal of the machine.
The position of the cable with regard to where the
machine was now, was perfect for the scheme. If
Foster could sever the cable just opposite him there
was an excellent chance that the longer one of the
free ends would drop directly upon the machine.
And in his possession he had a possible
means of severing that cable-the pistol
that was still crammed in his belt. There were
four shots remaining in the pistol. The cable
was barely half an inch thick, but the range was so
short that he could not very well miss. If the
silver-colored metal was as soft as it looked, the
heavy bullets should be enough to tear through it.
Foster thrust the pistol as close
to the cable as he could reach. Then, with the
muzzle scarcely a yard from the silver strand, he fired.
The heavy bullet caromed from the cable’s surface,
but not before it had torn a gash nearly a third of
the way through it.
There was a sudden cessation of activity
below as the slug in the machine looked up at the
sound of the shot. Swift inspiration seized Foster
and he promptly sent his next shot down at the machine
itself. The bullet glanced harmlessly off, but
his ruse worked. Apparently believing that Foster
was merely trying another futile attack upon it, the
machine turned its attention back to the men it had
cornered. Foster could be attended to later.
Foster slipped and nearly fell just
as he fired at the power line the next time and his
shot missed. That left him only one remaining
cartridge. Aiming with infinite care he sent his
last shot smashing squarely into the part of the cable
remaining intact.
It trembled and sagged as the bullet
cut the remaining metal nearly through. Only
a bare thread was left, yet that thread held.
Sick at heart over the narrow margin by which his
effort had failed, Foster stared in despair at the
nearly severed cable. It needed only one solid
blow to tear that last thread of metal apart, but the
cable was just far enough away to be effectively beyond
his reach.
Then suddenly Foster’s eyes
narrowed. There was a way remaining by which
the weakened power line could be broken. A single
hurtling dive out and downward from the girder would
send his own body crashing squarely into the metal
strand. Beneath the smashing impact of his one
hundred and eighty pounds the nearly severed cable
was certain to break.
Foster shuddered as he realized what
that dive into space would mean. He was not thinking
of the fall itself. The thirty-foot drop to the
diamond-hard floor of the cavern would in all probability
mean death or broken bones, but that was a hazard
which Foster was willing to take.
It was the thought of what would happen
in the brief moment of contact when his body met that
bare cable that drained the color from Foster’s
face. There was the terrific electrical energy
from a spinning world coursing through that silver
strand, a force that in all probability was powerful
enough to instantly char a human body to a glowing
cinder!
If he could only insulate his body
at the point where it would touch the cable he might
have at least a chance of surviving the contact.
The only possible insulating medium he had was the
clothing he wore-a pair of heavy corduroy
trousers and the sleeveless remnant of a woolen shirt.
They could be rolled into a bundle that would be bulky
enough to at least give him some protection from contact
with the bare cable.
Laying the empty pistol on the girder
beside him, he stripped as quickly as his precarious
perch would permit. Then, using the pistol as
a central core to give body to the bundle, he swathed
it deep within the folds of the clothing, making a
thick roll that he could hold in his right hand as
he leaped.
At best the insulating qualities of
the roll would be far from perfect, yet it might serve
to minimize the effects of the cable’s charge
enough to give him some chance of escaping alive.
His contact with the power line would be only for
the fractional part of a second and his body would
be completely in the air at the time, out of direct
contact with anything through which the cable’s
charge might ground.
Foster crouched on the girder, his
eyes fixed upon the scene below as he tensely waited
for the best moment to make the leap. The machine
had shifted its position slightly while he had been
stripping. It was now too far over the right
to be under the cable when it fell.
For a moment as the machine maneuvered
still farther over to the right in its conflict with
the cornered men, Foster was afraid that his opportunity
had passed. An idea came to him and he yelled
directions. One of the men suddenly dashed to
the left, apparently in a last frantic effort to escape
the metal colossus. The machine flashed quickly
over to head the fugitive off. The maneuver brought
it for the moment directly under Foster’s position.
Foster’s muscles tensed swiftly,
then flung his body headlong out into space.
His aim was perfect. The bulky roll of cloth in
his outstretched right hand struck the cable squarely
with all the force of his hurtling body behind it.
There was a searing flash of blue
flame as the last thread of the cable snapped, and
a tearing flood of agony that blotted all consciousness
from Foster’s brain as his falling body hurtled
on toward the cavern floor.
He struggled slowly back to consciousness
to find Garrigan and another of the men working over
him. There was the stabbing pain of broken bones
in his left ankle. With the men helping him, he
sat up and looked around.
The scene was one of utter chaos and
destruction. The falling cable had obviously
found its mark on Layroh’s machine-body and in
its last furious convulsions the metal colossus had
completely wrecked the great glass case in the center
of the cavern floor.
The machine itself was now nothing
more than a tangled heap of twisted metal. In
its shattered crystal compartment was a torn blob of
swiftly blackening gelatin-all that remained
of Layroh, the Shining One. Other shredded figures
of dead flesh marked where the ten half-awakened slugs
had died in the wreckage of the glass-walled case.
And in the many tiers of small cells
along the cavern’s back wall were more figures
of death. The severed cable had been the source
of the energy that had kept those dormant figures
alive. When that energy ceased death had come
quickly. Those figures in the cells were no longer
Shining Ones. Their bodies were already swiftly
darkening in decay.
Foster smiled grimly as he looked
around the cavern. There were scientific treasures
here that would revolutionize a world. It was
a fitting retribution for the Shining Ones. When
they had destroyed Atlantis they had robbed Earth
of countless centuries of scientific knowledge and
progress. Now, here in the cavern that had at
last become their tomb, they were leaving a legacy
of science that would go far toward repaying that
ancient debt.