<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN>CHAPTER I</h2>
<p>It was shortly after noon of December 31, 1970, when
the series of weird and startling events began which took
me into the tiny world of an atom of gold, beyond the vanishing
point, beyond the range of even the highest-powered
electric-microscope. My name is George Randolph. I was,
that momentous afternoon, assistant chemist for the Ajax
International Dye Company, with main offices in New York
City.</p>
<p>It was twelve-twenty when the local exchange call-sorter
announced Alan's connection from Quebec.</p>
<p>"Hello, George? Look here, you've got to come up here
at once. Chateau Frontenac, Quebec. Will you come?"</p>
<p>I could see his face imaged in the little mirror on my
desk; the anxiety, tenseness in his voice, was duplicated in
his expression.</p>
<p>"Well—" I began.</p>
<p>"You must, George. Babs and I need you. See here...."</p>
<p>He tried at first to make it sound like an invitation for a
New Year's Eve holiday. But I knew it was not that. Alan
and Barbara were my best friends. They were twins,
eighteen years old. I felt that Alan would always be my best
friend; but for Babs, my hopes, longings, went far deeper,
though as yet I had never brought myself to the point of
telling her so.</p>
<p>"I'd like to come, Alan. But—"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You've got to George! I can't tell you everything over
the public air. But I've seen <i>him</i>: He's diabolical. I know
it now!"</p>
<p><i>Him</i>! It could only mean, of all the world, one person!</p>
<p>"He's here!" he went on. "Near here. We saw him today!
I didn't want to tell you, but that's why we came. It seemed
a long chance, but it's he, I'm positive!"</p>
<p>I was staring at the image of Alan's eyes; there was horror
in them. And his voice too. "God, George, it's weird! Weird,
I tell you. His looks—he—oh I can't tell you now! Only, come!"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>I was busy at the office in spite of the holiday season,
but I dropped everything and went. By one o'clock that
afternoon I was wheeling my little sport Midge from its cage
on the roof of the Metropole building, and went into the air.</p>
<p>It was a cold gray afternoon with the feel of coming snow.
I made a good two hundred and fifty miles at first, taking
the northbound through-traffic lane which today the meteorological
conditions had placed at an altitude of 6,200 feet.</p>
<p>Flying is largely automatic. There was not enough traffic
to bother me. The details of leaving the office so hastily had
been too engrossing for thought of Alan and Babs. But now,
in my little pit at the controls, my mind flung ahead. They
had located him. That meant Franz Polter, for whom we
had been searching nearly four years. And my memory went
back into the past with vivid vision....</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The Kents, four years ago, were living on Long Island.
Alan and Babs were fourteen at the time, and I was seventeen.
Even then Babs was something kind of special to me.
I lived in a neighboring house that summer and saw them
every day.</p>
<p>To my adolescent mind a thrilling mystery hung upon
the Kent family. The mother was dead. Dr. Kent, father of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</SPAN></span>
Alan and Babs, maintained a luxurious home, with only a
housekeeper and no other servant. Dr. Kent was a retired
chemist. He had, in his home, a laboratory in which he was
working upon some mysterious problem. His children did
not know what it was, nor, of course, did I. And none of us
had ever been in the laboratory, except that when occasion
offered we stole surreptitious peeps.</p>
<p>I recall Dr. Kent as a kindly, iron-gray haired gentleman.
He was stern with the discipline of his children; but he
loved them, and was indulgent in many ways. They loved
him; and I, an orphan, began looking upon him almost as a
father. I was interested in chemistry. He knew it, and did
his best to help and encourage me in my studies.</p>
<p>There came an afternoon in the summer of 1966, when
arriving at the Kent home, I ran upon a startling scene. The
only other member of the household was a young fellow of
twenty-five, named Franz Polter. He was a foreigner, born,
I understood, in one of the Balkan Protectorates; he was
here, employed by Dr. Kent as laboratory assistant.</p>
<p>He had been with the Kents, at this time, two years. Alan
and Babs didn't like him, nor did I. He must have been a
clever, skillful chemist. No doubt he was. But he was, to us,
repulsive. A hunchback, with a short, thick body; dangling
arms that suggested a gorilla; barrel chest; a lump set askew
on his left shoulder, and his massive head planted down with
almost no neck. His face was rugged in feature; a wide
mouth, a high-bridged heavy nose; and above the face a
great shock of wavy black hair. It was an intelligent face;
in itself, not repulsive.</p>
<p>But I think we all three feared Franz Polter. There was
always something sinister about him, that had nothing to do
with his deformity.</p>
<p>When I came, that afternoon, Babs and Polter were under
a tree on the Kent lawn. Babs, at fourteen, with long black<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</SPAN></span>
braids down her back, bare-legged and short-skirted in a
summer sport costume, was standing against the tree with
Polter facing her. They were about the same height. To my
youthful imaginative mind rose the fleeting picture of a
young girl in a forest menaced by a gorilla.</p>
<p>I came upon them suddenly. I heard Polter say:</p>
<p>"But I lof you. And you are almos' a woman. Some day
you lof me."</p>
<p>He put out his thick hand and gripped her shoulder. She
tried to twist away. She was frightened, but she laughed.</p>
<p>"You—you're crazy!"</p>
<p>He was suddenly holding her in his arms, and she was
fighting him. I dashed forward. Babs was always a spunky
sort of girl. In spite of her fear now, she kept on struggling,
and she shouted:</p>
<p>"You—let me go, you—you hunchback!"</p>
<p>He did let her go; but in a frenzy of rage he hauled back
his hand and struck her in the face. I was upon him the
next second. I had him down on the lawn, punching him;
but though at seventeen I was a reasonably husky lad, the
hunchback with his thick, hairy gorilla arms proved much
stronger. He heaved me off. The commotion had brought
Alan and without waiting to find out what the trouble was,
he jumped on Polter. Between us, I think we would have
beaten him pretty badly. But the housekeeper summoned
Dr. Kent and the fight was over.</p>
<p>Polter left for good within an hour. He did not speak to
any of us. But I saw him as he put his luggage into the
taxi which Dr. Kent had summoned. I was standing silently
nearby with Babs and Alan. The look he flung us as he
drove away carried an unmistakable menace—the promise
of vengeance. And I think now that in his warped and
twisted mind he was telling himself that he would some
day make Babs regret that she had repulsed his love.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>What happened that night none of us ever knew. Dr.
Kent worked late in his laboratory; he was there when Alan
and Babs and the housekeeper went to bed. He had written
a note to Alan; it was found on his desk in a corner of the
laboratory next morning, addressed in care of the family
lawyer to be given Alan in the event of his death. It said
very little. Described a tiny fragment of gold quartz rock
the size of a walnut which would be found under the giant
microscope in the laboratory; and told Alan to give it to the
American Scientific Society to be guarded and watched very
carefully.</p>
<p>This note was found, but Dr. Kent had vanished! There
had been a midnight marauder. The laboratory was on the
lower floor of the house. Through one of its open windows,
so the police said, an intruder had entered. There was
evidence of a struggle, but it must have been short, because
neither Babs, Alan, the housekeeper, nor any of the neighbors
had heard anything. And the fragment of golden quartz was
gone!</p>
<p>The police investigation came to nothing. Polter was found
in New York. He withstood the police questions. There was
nothing except suspicion upon which he could be held, and
he was finally released. Immediately thereafter, he disappeared.</p>
<p>Neither Alan, Babs nor I saw Polter again. Dr. Kent had
never been heard from to this day, four years later when
I flew to join the twins in Quebec. And now Alan told me
that Polter was up there! We had never ceased to believe
that Dr. Kent was alive, and that Polter was the midnight
marauder. As we grew older, we began to search for Polter.
It seemed to us, that if we could once get our hands on
him, we could drag from him the truth which the police
had failed to get.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The call of a traffic director in mid-Vermont brought
me back from these memories. My buzzer was clanging;
a peremptory halting signal day-beam came darting up at
me from below. It caught me and clung. I shouted down
at it.</p>
<p>"What's the matter?" I gave my name and number and
all the details in one breath. Above everything I had no
wish to be halted now. "What's the matter? I haven't
done anything wrong."</p>
<p>"The hell you haven't," the director roared. "Come
down to three thousand. That lane's barred."</p>
<p>I dove obediently and his beam followed me. "Once
more, like that, young fellow—" But he went busy with
somebody else and I didn't hear the end of his threat.</p>
<p>I crossed into Maine in mid-afternoon. It was already
twilight. The sky was solid lead and the landscape all up
through here was gray-white with snow in the gathering
darkness. I passed the City of Jackman, crossing full over
it to take no chances of annoying the border officials; and
a few miles further, I dropped to the glaring lights of
International Inspection Field. The formalities were soon
finished. I was ready to take-off when Alan rushed at me.</p>
<p>"George! I thought I could connect here." He gripped
me. He was wild-eyed, incoherent. He waved his taxiplane
away. "I'm going with you, George. I'm almost out of my
mind. I can't—I don't know what's happened to her. She's
gone, now—"</p>
<p>"Who's gone? Babs?"</p>
<p>"Yes." He pushed me into my plane and climbed in
after me. "Don't talk. Get us up! I'll tell you then. I
shouldn't have left."</p>
<p>When we were up in the air, I swung on him. "What
are you talking about? Babs gone?"</p>
<p>I could feel myself shuddering with a nameless horror.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I don't know what I'm talking about, George. I'm
about crazy. The Quebec police think I am, anyway. I've
been raising hell with them for an hour. Babs is gone! I can't
find her. I don't know where she is."</p>
<p>He finally calmed down enough to tell me what happened.
Shortly after his radiophone to me in New York,
he had missed Babs. They had had lunch in the huge
hotel and then walked on the Dufferin Terrace—the famous
promenade outside looking down over the Lower City,
the great sweep of the St. Lawrence River and the gray-white
distant Laurentian mountains.</p>
<p>"I was to meet her inside. I went in ahead of her. But
she didn't come. I went back to the Terrace but she was
gone. She wasn't in our rooms. Nor the library, the lobby—anywhere."</p>
<p>But it was afternoon, in the public place of a civilized
city. In the daylight of the Dufferin Terrace, beside the
long ice toboggan slide, under the gaze of skaters on the
ice-rink and several hundred holiday merrymakers, a young
girl could hardly be murdered, or kidnapped, without
attracting attention! The Quebec police thought the young
American unduly excited about his sister, who was missing
only an hour. They would do what they could, if by dark
she had not rejoined him. They suggested that doubtless
the young lady had gone shopping.</p>
<p>"Maybe she did," I agreed. But in my heart, I felt differently.
"She'll be waiting for us in the Hotel when we get
there, Alan."</p>
<p>"But I'm telling you we saw Polter this morning. He
lives here—not thirty miles from Quebec. We saw him on
the Terrace after breakfast. Recognized him immediately
of course."</p>
<p>"Did he see you?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. He was lost in the crowd in a minute.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</SPAN></span>
But I asked a young French fellow if he knew him. He
did know him, as Frank Rascor. That must be the name
he wears now. He's a famous man up here—well known,
immensely rich. I didn't know if he saw us or not. What
a fool I was to leave Babs alone, even for a minute."</p>
<p>We were speeding over a white-clad valley with a little
frozen river winding down its middle. Night had almost come.
The leaden sky was low above us. It began snowing. The
lights of the small villages along the river were barely visible.</p>
<p>"Can you land us, Alan?"</p>
<p>"Yes, surely. At the Municipal Field just beyond the
Citadel. We can get to the Hotel in five minutes."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>It was a flight of only half an hour. During it, Alan told
me about Polter. The hunchback, known now as Frank
Rascor, owned a mine in the Laurentians, some thirty
miles from Quebec City—a fabulously productive mine
of gold. It was an anomaly that gold should be produced
in this region. No vein of gold-bearing rock had been found,
except the one on Polter's property. Alan had seen a
newspaper account of the strangeness of it; and on a
hunch had come to Quebec, being intrigued by the description
of the mine owner. He had seen Frank Rascor on
the Dufferin Terrace, and recognized him as Polter.</p>
<p>Again my thoughts went back into the past. Had Polter
stolen that missing fragment of golden quartz the size of a
walnut which had been beneath Dr. Kent's microscope? We
always thought so. Dr. Kent had some secret, some great
problem upon which he was working. Polter, his assistant,
had evidently known, or partially known, its details. And
now, four years later, Polter was immensely rich, with a
"gold mine" in mountains where there was no other evidence
of gold!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I seemed to see some connection. Alan, I knew, was groping
with a dim idea, so strange he hardly dared voice it.</p>
<p>"I tell you, it's weird, George. The sight of him. Polter—heavens,
one couldn't mistake that build—and his face, his
features, just the same as when we knew him."</p>
<p>"Then what's so weird?" I demanded.</p>
<p>"His age." There was a queer solemn hush in Alan's voice.
"George, when we knew Polter, he was about twenty-five,
wasn't he? Well, that was four years ago. But he isn't twenty-nine
now. I swear it is the same man, but he isn't around
thirty. Don't ask me what I'm talking about. I don't know.
But he isn't thirty. He's nearer fifty! Unnatural! Weird! I
felt it, and so did Babs, just that brief look we had of him."</p>
<p>I didn't answer. My attention was on managing the plane.
The lights of Levis were under us. Beyond the City cliffs,
the St. Lawrence lay in its deep valley; the Quebec lights,
the light-dotted ramparts with the Terrace and the great
fortresslike Hotel showed across the river.</p>
<p>"Better take the stick, Alan. I don't know where the field
is. And don't you worry about Babs. She'll be back by now."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>But she was not. We went to the two connecting rooms
in the tower of the Hotel which Alan and Babs had engaged.
We inquired with half a dozen phone calls. No one had seen
or heard from her. The Quebec police were sending a man
up to talk with Alan.</p>
<p>"Well, we won't be here," Alan called to me. He was
standing by the window in Babs' room; he was trembling
too much to use the phone. I hung up the receiver and went
though the connecting door to join him.</p>
<p>Babs' room! It sent a pang through me. A few of her
garments were lying around. A negligee was laid out on the
large bed. A velvet boudoir doll—she had always loved them—stood
on the dresser. Upon this Hotel room, in one day, she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span>
had impressed her personality. Her perfume was in the air.
And now she was gone.</p>
<p>"We won't be here," Alan was repeating. He gripped me at
the window. "Look." In his hand was an ugly-looking, smokeless,
soundless automatic of the Essen type. "And I've got
another one for you. Brought them with me."</p>
<p>His face was white and drawn, but his hands had steadied.
The tremble was gone out of his voice.</p>
<p>"I'm going after him, George! Now! Understand that? Now?
His place is only thirty miles from here, out there in the
mountains. You can see it in the daylight—a wall around
his property and a stone castle which he built in the middle
of it. A gold mine? Hell!"</p>
<p>There was nothing to be seen now out of the window but
the snow-filled darkness, the blurred lights of Lower Quebec
and the line of dock lights five hundred feet below us.</p>
<p>"Will you fly me, George?"</p>
<p>"Of course."</p>
<p>I was the one trembling now; the cool feel of the automatic
which Alan thrust into my hand seemed suddenly to
crystallize Babs' peril. I was here in her room, with the
scent of her perfume around me, and this deadly weapon
was needed! But the trembling was gone in a moment.</p>
<p>"Yes, of course, Alan. No use talking to the police. I gave
them all the information—a description of her, what you said
she was wearing. No sense dragging Polter's name into it,
with nothing tangible to go on. The police won't ransack the
castle of a rich man just because you can't find your sister.
Come on. You can tell me what this place is like as we go."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Bundled in our flying suits we hurried from the Hotel,
climbed the Citadel slope and in ten minutes were in the air.
The wind sucked at us. The snow now was falling with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span>
thick, huge flakes. Directed by Alan, I headed out over this
ice-filled St. Lawrence, past the frozen Ile d'Orleans, toward
Polter's mysterious mountain castle.</p>
<p>Suddenly Alan burst out, "I know what father's secret
was! I can piece it together now, from little things that
were meaningless when I was a kid. He invented the electro-microscope.
You know that. The infinitely small fascinated
him. I remember he once said that if we could see far
enough down into smallness, we would come upon human
life!"</p>
<p>Alan's low, tense voice was more vehement than I had
ever heard it before. "It's clear to me now, George. That
little fragment of golden quartz which he wanted me to be
so careful of contained a world with human inhabitants!
Father knew it, or suspected it. And I think the chemical
problem on which he was working aimed for some drug.
I know it was a drug they were compounding, Polter said
so once, a radioactive drug; I remember listening at the door.
A drug, George, capable of making a human being infinitely
small!"</p>
<p>I did not answer when momentarily Alan paused. So
strange a thing. My mind whirled with it; struggled to
encompass it. And like the meaningless individual pieces of
a puzzle, dropping so easily into place when the key piece
is fitted, I saw Polter stealing that fragment of gold; abducting
Dr. Kent—perhaps because Polter himself was not fully
acquainted with the secret. And now, Polter up here with
a fabulously rich "gold mine." And Babs, abducted by him,
to be taken—where?</p>
<p>It set me shuddering.</p>
<p>"That's what it was," Alan reiterated. "And Polter, here
now with what he calls a 'mine.' It isn't a mine, it's a laboratory!
He's got father too, hidden God knows where! And<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span>
now Babs. We've got to get them, George! The police can't
help us! It's just you and me, to fight this thing. And it's
diabolical!"</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
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