HOME AGAIN.
We owed our salvation to Mr. Carmichael.
The firing of our magazine rifles, followed by the
news of our perilous situation, had roused him from
his lethargy. Although still unable to speak,
he had contrived by means of his eyes to make his
daughter understand that he wished another dose of
oxygen. When she was about to administer it, he
called her attention to the fact that in expanding
as it issued from the cylinder, the gas became very
cold. She caught his meaning instantly, and on
applying the gas to the sensitive parts of the machinery
had succeeded in cooling and releasing them.
It seems that Carmichael, in order
to save time, had been working the engines at an unusually
high speed, which, together with the heat of the sun,
had caused them to jam. Their enforced rest had
of itself allowed them to cool somewhat, and by reducing
the speed until we reached a cooler region, they did
not stick again.
Carmichael recovered from his illness,
and the journey to the earth was accomplished without
accident. We landed safely on some undiscovered
islands in the Arctic Circle, and after a flying visit
to the North Pole in the vicinity, we bore away for
England, keeping as high over the sea as possible
to escape notice. Going southward we passed through
all sorts of weather, thick snow, hurricanes of wind
and rain, dry or wet fogs, and so forth; but it made
no difference to us. Crossing Spitzbergen, the
car was frosted over with ice needles, which, however,
were soon thawed by a warmer current of air. Between
Iceland and the coast of Norway we glided through
a magnificent aurora borealis that covered
the whole sky with a luminous curtain, and made us
fancy we had floated unawares into the fabulous Niffleheim
of the old Scandinavian gods. Near the Faroe
Islands we dashed into a violent thunderstorm, and
were almost deafened by the terrific explosions, or
blinded by the flashes of lightning. Otherwise
we could enjoy both of these electrical displays without
fear, as the metallic shell of the car was a good
protective screen. Certainly our flying machine
would be an excellent means of making observations
in meteorology, from the sampling of cirrus cloud
to the chasing of a tornado.
The first sign of man we saw was a
ship rolling in a storm off the Hebrides; but apparently
she was not in distress, else we should have gone
to her succour. How easy with such a car to rescue
lives and property from sinking ships, and even patrol
the seas in search of them!
The sun was setting in purple and
gold as we approached the English coast, and although
at our elevation we were still in sunshine, the twilight
had begun to gather over the distant land. The
first sound we heard was the moaning of the tide along
the shore, and the mournful sighing of the wind among
the trees. Hills, fields, and woods lay beneath
us like a garden in miniature. The lamps and fires
of lonely villages and farmhouses twinkled like glow-worms
in the dusk. A railway train, with its white
puff of smoke and lighted carriages, seemed to be
crawling like a fiery caterpillar along the ground;
but in a few moments we had left it far behind.
As it grew darker and darker we descended nearer to
the surface. A herd of sheep stood huddled on
the grass, and stared at us; a flock of geese ran
cackling into a farmyard; the watch-dog barked and
tugged furiously at his chain; a little boy screamed
with fright.
“That sounds homely,”
said the professor to Miss Carmichael and myself,
who were standing with him on the gallery outside the
car. “It’s the sweetest music I’ve
heard for many a day. Certainly Venus was a charming
place, but I for one am jolly glad to get home again.”
Yes, I must confess that I too felt
a deep and tranquil pleasure in returning to the familiar
scenes and the beloved soil of my infancy.
“You don’t seem to care
much for Venus,” said Miss Carmichael to Gazen.
“Probably if you had been born there you would
have liked it better.”
“That may be. If you would
like a place, it is well to be born in it.”
“Perhaps if you are a good boy
you will go to Venus when you die.”
“I’m afraid it won’t
suit my mental constitution. They don’t
care for science there, and I don’t care for
anything else. Mars would fit me better, I imagine.”
“Venus is my favourite,” said Miss Carmichael.
“Well, then, it’s good enough for me,”
responded Gazen.
Their talk set me thinking of Alumion,
and my strange fancy that I had known her in another
world. Suddenly it occurred to me that in many
of her ways and looks she bore a singular resemblance
to my first love, who had died in childhood.
That was nearly seventeen years ago. Seventeen it
was just the age of Alumion. Could it be possible
that she and Alumion were one and the same soul?
“I should like to go back to
Venus,” said Miss Carmichael. “We
can go there now at any time.”
“Of course we can,” replied
Gazen; “and to Mars as well. Your father’s
invention opens up a bewildering prospect of complications
in the universe. So long as each planet was isolated,
and left to manage its own affairs, the politics of
the solar system were comparatively simple; but what
will they be when one globe interferes with another?
Think of a German fleet of ether-ships on the prowl
for a cosmical empire, bombarding Womla, and turning
it into a Prussian fortress, or an emporium for cheap
goods.”
“Father was talking of that
very matter the other night,” said Miss Carmichael,
“and he declared that rather than see any harm
come to Womla he would keep his invention a secret at
all events for a thousand years longer.”
We had glided rapidly across the Black
Country, with its furnaces and forges blazing in the
darkness, and now the dull red glow of the metropolis
was visible on the horizon. Half-an-hour later
we descended in the garden of Carmichael’s cottage,
and found everything as snug as when we had left it.
Leaving my fellow-travellers there,
I took the train for London, and was driven to my
club, where I intended to sleep. It was a raw
wet evening, and in spite of a certain joy at being
home again, I could not help feeling that my heart
was no longer here, but in another planet. After
the sublime deserts of space, and the delightful paradise
of Womla, the busy streets, the blinding glare of
the lamps, the splashing vehicles, the blatant newspaper
men, the swarms of people crossing each other’s
paths, and occasionally kicking each other’s
heels, everyone intent on his own affairs of business
or pleasure, were disenchanting, to say the least.
I seemed to have awakened from a beautiful dream, and
fallen into a dismal nightmare.
In the smoking-room of the club the
first person I saw was my friend the Viscount, who
was sitting just where I had left him on the night
we started for Venus, with his glass of toddy before
him, and a cigar between his lips.
“Hallo!” he exclaimed
on seeing me. “Haven’t seen you for
some time must be nearly two months.
Been abroad? You look brown.”
“Yes.”
“Well, suppose we finish our game of chess.”
“With pleasure.”
“You remember the wager a thousand
to a hundred sovereigns that I win.”
He was the better player, and although
I had a slight advantage in the game as it stood,
I was by no means certain of winning, especially as
I was tired and sleepy; but ever since my sojourn
in Venus, my intellect had been unusually clear and
active. I played as I had never played before,
and in three moves had won the wager.
“That will pay my travelling expenses,”
said I, pocketing his cheque.
I ought perhaps to mention that Professor
Gazen carried out his intention of reading a paper
to the Royal Astronomical Society on his alleged discovery
of a diurnal nutation or “wobbling” of
the planet Venus; but I regret to say that owing to
preconceived opinions and personal prejudices, his
ingenious theory met with a reception far below its
merits. By the terms of our agreement he was forbidden
to divulge the secret of our expedition until my own
account appeared, but some telescopic observations
he had made since coming home had provided him with
independent proofs.
“Do you think Professor Possil
will be present?” said I to him, as we dined
together before we went to the meeting.
“Sure to be,” replied
Gazen. “He never misses an opportunity of
attacking me. ’Tis the nature of the animal.
But I flatter myself I shall get the laugh on him
this time.”
The hall was full. The hearty
welcome of the Fellows showed their high appreciation
of Professor Gazen, and made me feel quite proud of
his acquaintance. They listened to his discourse
on the movements of Venus, and his new hypothesis,
with all the solemnity of a Roman senate deliberating
on the destiny of a nation. When he had finished
in a salvo of applause, the president, a man of grave
and dignified demeanour, as became his office, complimented
the author on his communication, which from the startling
novelty of the subject would, he believed, give rise
to an interesting discussion, and after calling on
Professor Possil, he resumed his chair. That
illustrious man, whose insignificant appearance belied
his fame, responded to the invitation with a show of
reluctance, from a conspicuous place in the front
row of the audience, and immediately assailed the
new hypothesis in his most uncompromising fashion.
“Never in his experience of
the Society,” he said, “and never perhaps
in the history of astronomy, had an alleged discovery
of such magnitude and consequence been promulgated
on the strength of such flimsy evidence;” and
after traversing in detail all the arguments of his
opponent, he declared it his firm conviction that
the effects which Professor Gazen had thought fit
to advance as a “discovery,” were neither
more nor less than an optical illusion, not to say
a mental hallucination.
Judging from the applause which greeted
his remarks, the majority of his hearers were evidently
of the same opinion.
A grim smile settled on my companion’s
face, and I could see that he maintained his temper
with increasing difficulty, as one speaker after another
delivered his mind in much the same sarcastic style
of criticism.
At length his turn came to make a reply.
“Mr. President and gentlemen,”
said he with an air of smiling confidence, “at
this late hour I do not propose to occupy the meeting
with a refutation of all the various comments of the
distinguished Fellows who have spoken; but as my learned
friend, Professor Possil, has thought fit to charge
me with bringing my discovery before the Society on
insufficient grounds, I think it right to say that
I possess much more conclusive evidence, which for
the present, circumstances have prevented me from
laying before you.”
“Mr. President,” exclaimed
the celebrated Possil, starting to his feet, “I
should like to ask whether it is altogether in good
faith for a Fellow of this Society to bring forward
what he calls a discovery, and keep back the most
important part of the proof. Might I enquire of
the author of the paper what is the nature of this
suppressed evidence?”
“Simply that I have been there,”
answered Gazen, forgetting his promise to me in the
excitement of the combat.
“Where?” demanded the astonished Possil.
“Venus.”
There was a loud burst of sceptical laughter.
“I think, sir,” said Professor
Possil to the Chair, with exasperating coolness, “I
think, sir, that after the astounding revelation of
the learned professor, we shall be perfectly justified
in concluding on sufficient evidence that the professor’s
head, and not the planet Venus, has been ‘wobbling’
of late.”
“What I say is true,” cried Gazen, nettled
at this rude insinuation.
Cries of “Order, order,”
“withdraw,” “apologise,” resounded
on every side.
“I cannot apologise for the truth,” retorted
Gazen hotly.
“Mr. President,” continued
the pugnacious and imperturbable Fossil, “I
venture to submit that the preposterous assertions
we have just heard are better adapted to a meeting
of the Fellows of Colney Hatch than of this Society,
and I beg to move that our unfortunate friend be called
upon to leave the meeting in charge of some responsible
person, who will conduct him safely to his home, and
deliver him into the custody of his friends.”
“Come on! They’re
a pack of fools!” cried Gazen to me hoarsely,
as, followed by the jeers of his companions, he arose
and left the room.
I have only to add that Professor
Gazen and Miss Carmichael are about to be married.
For myself, as soon as the ceremony is over I shall
return to Venus and Alumion.