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Project Gutenberg

Hunters Out of Space

Kelleam, Joseph E. (Joseph Everidge)

2008enGutenberg #25270Original source
Chimera32
High School

2% complete · approximately 4 minutes per page at 250 wpm

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                               HUNTERS

                               OUT  OF

                                SPACE




                        By  JOSEPH E. KELLEAM

                        ILLUSTRATED by FINLAY




CHAPTER 1


In Kansas, spring usually falls on the day before summer. It had been such
a day, and now at midnight I was sitting at my desk. Both hands of the
clock were pointing to the ceiling--and to the limitless stars beyond. My
wife and daughter had long been asleep. I had stayed up to write a few
letters but it was not a night for working. Although it was a bit chilly
outside, the moon was bright and a bird was singing a glad and plaintive
song about the summer that was coming and all the summers that had passed
and all that would be. Adding, here and there, a bit of melody about all
the good things that happen to birds and men without their knowing why.

Both hands of the clock were pointing upward. And I was half-asleep, and
half-dreaming. Remembering all the friends I had--most of them scattered to
the four winds by now. And that best friend of all, Doctor Jack Odin! I
wondered where he was and how he had fared since he disappeared into that
dark cave in Texas.

Suddenly I became aware of a flickering light above me. I looked up. I had
thought that the lights were winking, but they were not. The room was lit
by a reading lamp, and the ceiling was so shadowy that at first I could see
nothing at all. Then I saw the light--or the ghost of a light--gleaming
faintly upon--or through--the ceiling. It was the faintest yellow, neither
a bull's eye nor a splotch. Instead, it seemed to be a tiny whirlpool of
movement--the faintest nebula in miniature with spirals of light swiftly
circling a central core. For a second I thought I could see through the
roof, and the stars swarmed before me. It was as though I was at the
vortex of a high whirlwind of dancing, shining specks of light. Then that
sensation was gone, and there were two faint coiling spirals of yellow
light upon the ceiling.

The lights began to whisper.

"We are Ato and Wolden," they said. "Remember us?"

I remembered them from the notes that I had pieced together to tell the
story of my old friend, Doctor Jack Odin, and his adventure in the World of
Opal. It seemed impolite to tell them that we had never met. So I listened.

"Wolden's work has succeeded," the whispering continued. "We have reduced
time and space to nothing. You see us as lights, or as we once put it, 'as
flame-winged butterflies,' but we are neither. We are Ato and Wolden. By
adding ourselves to another dimension we are hardly recognizable to you.
Actually, we are at our starting point billions of miles away! We are
traveling through space toward you at a speed which would make the speed
of light look like a glow-worm crawling across the dark ground; and at the
same time, we are there in your room. Do you understand?"

I didn't, but I have learned that a man can live quite comfortably by
merely keeping his mouth shut. So I kept still.

       *       *       *       *       *

My little daughter had been playing in the room before she had unwillingly
gone to bed. She had left a red rubber ball upon my desk.

"Look at the ball," the voices whispered. "We will give you an idea of the
time-space in which we live."

I looked. Suddenly the little ball twitched, vanished and reappeared. I
gazed in wonder. It had been red. Now it was white. I picked it up and a
white powder rubbed off upon my fingertips.

"See." The lights whispered. "We have turned it inside out--"

The whispering continued.

       *       *       *       *       *

"We are bringing you a gift. Our last gift, probably, because we are weary
of your world and the affairs of men. Pygmies! Now, stand back from your
desk--"

It was such a command that I fairly leaped out of my chair and drew away
from the desk. Still leaning upon it I stared in wonder at the shadow which
was forming itself upon the cleared space by the side of my typewriter.
At first it was merely a dark square. Then it was a shadowy cube, growing
denser all the time until it became a dim shape. The shape grew brighter.
There was a tiny spitting sound, like two hot wires being touched together.
There was a smell in the room, not unpleasant but not pleasant either--a
completely alien smell. A wave of cold air struck me, and passed by,
leaving me shivering. Our furnace came on with a start.

Then the lights were gone and I was looking in wonder at a leaden box,
about a foot square. It had a hinged lid, and around the middle of it the
figure of a snake was excellently carved. It held its tail in its mouth,
locking the box securely. Its eyes were two great moonstones that appeared
to look up at me with half-blind amusement--winking at the wisdom they had
forgotten and the fear that I was feeling.

I touched the box and drew my hand away in pain. 

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