<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p><i>Out of nowhere came these grim,
cold, black-clad men, to kidnap
three Earth people and carry
them to a weird and terrible
world where a man could be a
giant at will.</i></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illo.jpg" width-obs="460" height-obs="650" alt="" /> <span class="caption">Lee Anthony crouched and set himself to<br/> resist the attack of the robed men.</span></div>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="THE_WORLD_BEYOND" id="THE_WORLD_BEYOND"></SPAN>THE WORLD BEYOND</h2>
<p class="center">By RAY CUMMINGS</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107"></SPAN></span>
The old woman was dying.
There could be no doubt of
it now. Surely she would not last
through the night. In the dim
quiet bedroom he sat watching
her, his young face grim and
awed. Pathetic business, this
ending of earthly life, this passing
on. In the silence, from the
living room downstairs the gay
laughter of the young people at
the birthday party came floating
up. His birthday—Lee Anthony,
twenty-one years old today. He
had thought he would feel very
different, becoming—legally—a
man. But the only difference
now, was that old Anna Green
who had been always so good to
him, who had taken care of him
almost all his life, now was dying.</p>
<p>Terrible business. But old age
is queer. Anna knew what was
happening. The doctor, who had
given Lee the medicines and said
he would be back in the morning,
hadn't fooled her. And she
had only smiled.</p>
<p>Lee tensed as he saw that she
was smiling now; and she opened
her eyes. His hand went to
hers<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108"></SPAN></span>
where it lay, so white, blue-veined
on the white bedspread.</p>
<p>"I'm here, Anna. Feel better?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes. I'm all right." Her
faint voice, gently tired, mingled
with the sounds from the party
downstairs. She heard the laughter.
"You should be down there,
Lee. I'm all right."</p>
<p>"I should have postponed it,"
he said. "And what you did, preparing
for it—"</p>
<p>She interrupted him, raising
her thin arm, which must have
seemed so heavy that at once she
let it fall again. "Lee—I guess
I am glad you're here—want to
talk to you—and I guess it better
be now."</p>
<p>"Tomorrow—you're too tired
now—"</p>
<p>"For me," she said with her
gentle smile, "there may not be
any tomorrow—not here. Your
grandfather, Lee—you really
don't remember him?"</p>
<p>"I was only four or five."</p>
<p>"Yes. That was when your
father and mother died in the
aero accident and your grandfather
brought you to me."</p>
<p>Very vaguely he could remember
it. He had always understood
that Anna Green had loved his
grandfather, who had died that
same year.</p>
<p>"What I want to tell you, Lee—"
She seemed summoning all
her last remaining strength.
"Your grandfather didn't die.
He just went away. What you've
never known—he was a scientist.
But he was a lot more than that.
He had—dreams. Dreams of
what we mortals might be—what
we ought to be—but are
not. And so he—went away."</p>
<p>This dying old woman; her
mind was wandering?...</p>
<p>"Oh—yes," Lee said. "But
you're much too tired now, Anna
dear—"</p>
<p>"Please let me tell you. He
had—some scientific apparatus. I
didn't see it—I don't know where
he went. I think he didn't know
either, where he was going. But
he was a very good man, Lee.
I think he had an intuition—an
inspiration. Yes, it must have
been that. A man—inspired. And
so he went. I've never seen or
heard from him since. Yet—what
he promised me—if he
could accomplish it—tonight—almost
now, Lee, would be the
time—"</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Just a desperately sick old
woman whose blurred mind was
seeing visions. The thin wrinkled
face, like crumpled white
parchment, was transfigured as
though by a vision. Her sunken
eyes were bright with it. A wonderment
stirred within Lee Anthony.
Why was his heart
pounding? It seemed suddenly as
though he must be sharing this
unknown thing of science—and
mysticism. As though something
within him—his grandfather's
blood perhaps—was responding....
He felt suddenly wildly excited.</p>
<p>"Tonight?" he murmured.</p>
<p>"Your grandfather was a very
good man, Lee—"</p>
<p>"And you, Anna—all my life
I have known how good you are.
Not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></SPAN></span>
like most women—you're
just all gentleness—just kindness—"</p>
<p>"That was maybe—just an inspiration
from him." Her face
was bright with it. "I've tried to
bring you up—the way he told
me. And what I must tell you
now—about tonight, I mean—because
I may not live to see
it—"</p>
<p>Her breath gave out so that
her faint tired voice trailed
away.</p>
<p>"What?" he urged. "What is
it, Anna? About tonight—"</p>
<p>What a tumult of weird excitement
was within him! Surely
this was something momentous.
His twenty-first birthday. Different,
surely, for Lee Anthony
than any similar event had ever
been for anyone else.</p>
<p>"He promised me—when you
were twenty-one—just then—at
this time, if he could manage
it—that he would come back—"</p>
<p>"Come back, Anna? Here?"</p>
<p>"Yes. To you and me. Because
you would be a man—brought
up, the best I could do to make
you be—like him—because you
would be a man who would know
the value of love—and kindness—those
things that ought to rule
this world—but really do not."</p>
<p>This wild, unreasoning excitement
within him...! "You think
he will come—tonight, Anna?"</p>
<p>"I really do. I want to live to
see him. But now—I don't
know—"</p>
<p>He could only sit in silence,
gripping her hand. And again
the gay voices of his guests
downstairs came up like a roar
of intrusion. They didn't know
that she was more than indisposed.
She had made him promise
not to tell them.</p>
<p>Her eyes had closed, and now
she opened them again. "They're
having a good time, aren't they,
Lee? That's what I wanted—for
you and them both. You see, I've
had to be careful—not to isolate
you from life—life as it is. Because
your grandfather wanted
you to be normal—a healthy,
happy—regular young man. Not
queer—even though I've tried to
show you—"</p>
<p>"If he—he's coming tonight,
Anna—we shouldn't have guests
here."</p>
<p>"When they have had their
fun—"</p>
<p>"They have. We're about finished
down there. I'll get rid of
them—tell them you're not very
well—"</p>
<p>She nodded. "Perhaps that's
best—now—"</p>
<p>He was hardly aware of how
he broke up the party and sent
them away. Then in the sudden
heavy silence of the little cottage,
here in the grove of trees
near the edge of the town, he
went quietly back upstairs.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Her eyes were closed. Her
white face was placid. Her faint
breath was barely discernible.
Failing fast now. Quietly he sat
beside her. There was nothing
that he could do. The doctor
had said that very probably she
could not live through the night.
Poor old Anna. His mind rehearsed
the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></SPAN></span>
life that she had
given him. Always she had been
so gentle, so wise, ruling him
with kindness.</p>
<p>He remembered some of the
things she had reiterated so often
that his childish mind had
come to realize their inevitable
truth. The greatest instinctive
desire of every living creature
is happiness. And the way to
get it was not by depriving others
of it. It seemed now as
though this old woman had had
something of goodness inherent
to her—as though she were inspired?
And tonight she had
said, with her gentle smile as
she lay dying, that if that were
so—it had been an inspiration
from his grandfather.</p>
<p>Something of science which
his grandfather had devised, and
which had enabled him to—go
away. What could that mean? Go
where? And why had he gone?
To seek an ideal? Because he
was dissatisfied with life here?
Her half incoherent words had
seemed to imply that. And now,
because Lee was twenty-one—a
man—his grandfather was coming
back. Because he had thought
that Lee would be able to help
him?... Help him to do—what?</p>
<p>He stirred in his chair. It
was nearly midnight now. The
little cottage—this little second
floor bedroom where death was
hovering—was heavy with
brooding silence. It was awesome;
almost frightening. He
bent closer to the bed. Was she
dead? No, there was still a faint
fluttering breath, but it seemed
now that there would be no
strength for her to speak to him
again.</p>
<p>Mysterious business, this
passing on. Her eyelids were
closed, a symbol of drawn blinds
of the crumbling old house in
which she had lived for so long.
It was almost a tenantless house
now. And yet she was somewhere
down there behind those
drawn blinds. Reluctant perhaps
to leave, still she lingered, with
the fires going out so that it
must be cold ... cold and silent
where she huddled. Or was she
hearing now the great organ of
the Beyond with its sweep of
harmonies summoning her to
come—welcoming her....</p>
<p>A shiver ran through young
Lee Anthony as he saw that the
pallid bloodless lips of the white
wrinkled face had stirred into
a smile. Down there somewhere
her spirit—awed and a little
frightened doubtless—had opened
some door to let the sound
of the organ in—and to let in
the great riot of color which
must have been outside.... And
then she had not been frightened,
but eager....</p>
<p>He realized suddenly that he
was staring at an empty shell
and that old Anna Green had
gone....</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>A sound abruptly brought Lee
out of his awed thoughts. It
was outside the house—the
crunching of wheels in the gravel
of the driveway—the squeal of
grinding brakes. A car had
stopped.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></SPAN></span>
He sat erect in his chair,
stiffened, listening, with his
heart pounding so that the beat
of it seemed to shake his tense
body. His grandfather—returning?</p>
<p>An automobile horn honked.
Footsteps sounded on the verandah.
The front doorbell rang.</p>
<p>There were voices outside as
he crossed the living room—a
man's voice, and then a girl's
laugh. He flung open the door. It
was a young man in dinner
clothes and a tall blonde girl.
Tom Franklin, and a vivid, theatrical-looking
girl, whom Lee had
never seen before. She was
inches taller than her companion.
She stood clinging to his arm;
her beautiful face, with beaded
lashes and heavily rouged lips,
was laughing. She was swaying;
her companion steadied her, but
he was swaying himself.</p>
<p>"Easy, Viv," he warned. "We
made it—tol' you we would....
Hello there, Lee ol' man—your
birthday—think I'd forget a
thing like that, not on your life.
So we come t'celebrate—meet
Vivian Lamotte—frien' o' mine.
Nice kid, Viv—you'll like her."</p>
<p>"Hello," the girl said. She
stared up at Lee. He towered
above her, and beside him the
undersized and stoop-shouldered
Franklin was swaying happily.
Admiration leaped into the girl's
eyes.</p>
<p>"Say," she murmured, "you
sure are a swell looker for a
fact. He said you were—but my
Gawd—"</p>
<p>"And his birthday too,"
Frank agreed, "so we're gonna
celebrate—" His slack-jawed,
weak-chinned face radiated happiness
and triumph. "Came fas'
to get here in time. I tol' Viv
I could make it—we never hit a
thing—"</p>
<p>"Why, yes—come in," Lee
agreed awkwardly. He had only
met young Tom Franklin once
or twice, a year ago now, and
Lee had completely forgotten it.
The son of a rich man, with
more money than was good for
him.... With old Anna lying
there upstairs—surely he did not
want these happy inebriated
guests here now....</p>
<p>He stood with them just inside
the threshold. "I—I'm awfully
sorry," he began. "My birthday—yes,
but you see—old Mrs.
Green—my guardian—just all
the family I've got—she died,
just a few minutes ago—upstairs
here—I've been here alone with
her—"</p>
<p>It sobered them. They stared
blankly. "Say, my Gawd, that's
tough," the girl murmured.
"Your birthday too. Tommy listen,
we gotta get goin'—can't
celebrate—"</p>
<p>It seemed that there was just
a shadow out on the dark verandah.
A tall figure in a dark
cloak.</p>
<p>"Why—what the hell," Franklin
muttered.</p>
<p>A group of gliding soundless
figures were out there in the
darkness. And across the living
room the window sash went up
with a thump. A black shape
was there, huddled in a great
loose<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></SPAN></span>
cloak which was over the
head so that the thing inside was
shapeless.</p>
<p>For an instant Lee and his
two companions stood stricken.
The shapes seemed babbling
with weird unintelligible words.
Then from the window came
words of English:</p>
<p>"<i>We—want—</i>" Slow words,
strangely intoned. Young Tom
Franklin broke in on them.</p>
<p>"Say—what the devil—who
do you people think you are,
comin' in here—" He took a
swaying step over the threshold.
There was a sudden sharp command
from one of the shapes.
Lee jumped in front of the girl.
On the verandah the gliding figures
were engulfing Franklin;
he had fallen.</p>
<p>Lee went through the door
with a leap, his fist driving at
the cowled head of one of the
figures—a solid shape that staggered
backward from his blow.
But the others were on him,
dropping down before his rush,
gripping his legs and ankles. He
went down, fighting. And then
something struck his face—something
that was like a hand,
or a paw with claws that scratched
him. His head suddenly was
reeling; his senses fading....</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>How long he fought Lee did
not know. He was aware that the
girl was screaming—and that he
was hurling clutching figures
away—figures that came pouncing
back. Then the roaring in his
head was a vast uproar. The
fighting, scrambling dark shapes
all seemed dwindling until they
were tiny points of white light—like
stars in the great abyss of
nothingness....</p>
<p>He knew—as though it were
a blurred dream—that he was
lying inert on the verandah,
with Franklin and the girl lying
beside him.... The house was
being searched.... Then the
muttering shapes were standing
here. Lee felt himself being
picked up. And then he was
carried silently out into the
darkness. The motion seemed to
waft him off so that he knew
nothing more.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II</h2>
<p class="centersubhd"><i>The Flight Into Size and Space</i></p>
<p>Lee came back to consciousness
with the feeling that
some great length of time must
have elapsed. He was on a couch
in a small, weird-looking metal
room—metal of a dull, grey-white
substance like nothing he
had ever seen before. With his
head still swimming he got up
dizzily on one elbow, trying to
remember what had happened to
him. That fingernail, or claw,
had scratched his face. He had
been drugged. It seemed obvious.
He could remember his roaring
senses as he had tried to fight,
with the drug gradually overcoming
him....</p>
<p>The room had a small door,
and a single round window, like
a bullseye pane of thick lens.
Outside there was darkness, with
points of stars. His head was
still<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></SPAN></span>
humming from the remaining
effect of the drug. Or was
the humming an outside noise?
He was aware as he got to his
feet and staggered to the door,
that the humming was distantly
outside the room. The door was
locked; its lever resisted his
efforts to turn it.</p>
<p>There he saw the inert figures
of the girl, and Tom Franklin.
They were lying uninjured on
two other small couches against
the room's metal wall. The girl
stirred a little as he touched her
dank forehead. Her dyed blonde
hair had fallen disheveled to her
shoulders. Franklin lay sprawled,
his stiff white shirt bosom dirty
and rumpled, his thin sandy hair
dangling over his flushed face.
His slack mouth was open. He
was breathing heavily.</p>
<p>At the lens-window Lee stood
gasping, his mind still confused
and blurred, trying to encompass
what was out there. This
was a spaceship! A small globular
thing of white metal. He
could see a rim of it, like a flat
ring some ten feet beneath him.
A spaceship, and obviously it
had left the Earth! There was a
black firmament—dead-black
monstrous abyss with white
blazing points of stars. And
then, down below and to one side
there was just an edge of a great
globe visible. The Earth, with
the sunlight edging its sweeping
crescent limb—the Earth, down
there with a familiar coastline
and a huge spread of ocean like
a giant map in monochrome.</p>
<p>Back on the couch Lee sat
numbed. There was the sound of
scraping metal; a doorslide in
the wall opened. A face was
there—a man with a blur of opalescent
light behind him.</p>
<p>"You are all right now?" a
voice said.</p>
<p>"Yes. I guess so. Let me out
of here—"</p>
<p>Let him out of here? To do
what? To make them head this
thing back to Earth.... To Lee
Anthony as he sat confused, the
very thoughts were a fantasy....
Off the Earth! Out in Space!
So often he had read of it, as a
future scientific possibility—but
with this actuality now his mind
seemed hardly to grasp it....</p>
<p>The man's voice said gently,
"We cannot trust you. There
must be no fighting—"</p>
<p>"I won't fight. What good
could it do me?"</p>
<p>"You did fight. That was bad—that
was frightening. We must
not harm you—"</p>
<p>"Where are we going?" Lee
murmured. "Why in the devil
are you—"</p>
<p>"We think now it is best to
say nothing. We will give you
food through here. And over
there—behind you—a little doorslide
to another room. You and
these other two can be comfortable—"</p>
<p>"For how long?" Lee demanded.</p>
<p>"It should not seem many
days. Soon we shall go fast.
Please watch it at the window—he
would want that. You have
been taught some science?"</p>
<p>"Yes. I guess so."</p>
<p>To<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></SPAN></span>
Lee it was a weird, unnatural
exchange between captor
and captive. The voice, intoning
the English words so slowly, so
carefully, seemed gentle, concerned
with his welfare ... and
afraid of him.</p>
<p>Abruptly the doorslide closed
again, and then at once it reopened.</p>
<p>"He would want you to understand
what you see," the man
said. "You will find it very wonderful—we
did, coming down
here. This was his room—so long
ago when he used it. His dials
are there—you can watch them
and try to understand. Dials to
mark our distance and our size.
The size-change will start soon."</p>
<p>Size-change? Lee's numbed
mind turned over the words and
found them almost meaningless.</p>
<p>"From the window there—what
you can see will be very
wonderful," the man said again.
"He would want you to study it.
Please do that."</p>
<p>The doorslide closed....</p>
<p>What you can see from the
window will be very wonderful.
No one, during the days that followed
could adequately describe
what Lee Anthony and Thomas
Franklin and Vivian saw
through that lens-window. A
vast panorama in monochrome ...
a soundless drama of the stars,
so immense, so awesome that the
human mind could grasp only an
infinitesimal fragment of its
wonders....</p>
<p>They found the little door
which led into another apartment.
There were tables and
chairs of earth-style, quaintly
old-fashioned. Food and drink
were shoved through the doorslide;
the necessities of life and
a fair comfort of living were
provided. But their questions,
even as the time passed and
lengthened into what on Earth
might have been a week or more,
remained unanswered. There
was only that gentle but firm
negation:</p>
<p>"We have decided that he
would want us to say nothing.
We do not know about this girl
and this smaller man. We
brought them so that they could
not remain on Earth to talk of
having seen us. We are sorry
about that. He probably won't
like it."</p>
<p>"He? Who the devil are you
talking about?" Franklin demanded.
"See here, if I had you
fellows back on Earth now I'd
slam you into jail. Damned brigands.
You can't do this to me!
My—my father's one of the most
important men in New York—"</p>
<p>But now the doorslide quietly
closed.</p>
<p>A week? It could have been
that, or more. In a wall recess of
the room Lee found a line of tiny
dials with moving pointers.
Miles—thousands of miles. A
million; ten millions; a hundred
million. A light-year; tens, thousands.
And, for the size-change,
a normal diameter, Unit 1—and
then up into thousands.</p>
<p>For hours at a time, silent,
awed beyond what he had ever
conceived the emotion of awe
could mean, he sat at the
lens-window,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></SPAN></span>
staring out and trying
to understand.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>The globe-ship was some five-hundred
thousand miles out from
Earth when the size-change of
the weird little vehicle began. It
came to Lee with a sudden shock
to his senses, his head reeling,
and a tingling within him as
though every fibre of his being
were suddenly stimulated into a
new activity.</p>
<p>"Well, my Gawd," Vivian
gasped. "What're they doin' to us
now?"</p>
<p>The three of them had been
warned by a voice through the
doorslide, so that they sat together
on one of the couches,
waiting for what would happen.</p>
<p>"This—I wish they wouldn't
do it," Franklin muttered.
"Damn them—I want to get out
of here."</p>
<p>Fear seemed to be Franklin's
chief emotion now—fear and a
petty sense of personal outrage
that all this could be done to him
against his will. Often, when Lee
and the girl were at the window,
Franklin had sat brooding, staring
at his feet.</p>
<p>"Easy," Lee said. "It evidently
won't hurt us. We're started
in size-change. The globe, and
everything in it, is getting larger."</p>
<p>Weird. The grey metal walls
of the room were glowing now
with some strange current which
suffused them. The starlight
from the window-lens mingled
with an opalescent sheen from
the glowing walls. It was like an
aura, bathing the room—an aura
which seemed to penetrate every
smallest cell-particle of Lee's
body—stimulating it....</p>
<p>Size-change! Vaguely, Lee
could fathom how it was accomplished;
his mind went back to
many scientific articles he had
read on the theory of it—only
theory, those imaginative scientific
pedants had considered it;
and now it was a reality upon
him! He recalled the learned
phrases the writers had used....
The <i>state of matter</i>. In all
the Universe, the inherent factors
which govern the state of
matter yield most readily to a
change. An electronic charge—a
current perhaps akin to, but
certainly not identical with electricity,
would change the state
of all organic and inorganic substances
... a rapid duplication
of the fundamental entities
within the electrons—and electrons
themselves, so unsubstantial—mere
whirlpools of nothingness!</p>
<p>A rapid duplication of the
fundamental whirlpools—that
would add size. The complete
substance—with shape unaltered—would
grow larger.</p>
<p>All just theory, but here, now,
it was brought to an accomplished
fact. Within himself, Lee
could feel it. But as yet, he
could not see it. The glowing
room and everything in it was so
weirdly luminous, there was no
alteration in shape. These objects,
the figure of Vivian beside
him, and the pallid frightened
Franklin, relative to each other
they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></SPAN></span>
were no different from before.
And the vast panorama of
starry Universe beyond the lens-window,
the immense distances
out there, made any size-change
as yet unperceivable.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>But the size-change had begun,
there was no question of it.
With his senses steadying, Lee
crossed the room. A weird feeling
of lightness was upon him;
he swayed as he stood before the
little line of dials in the wall-recess.
Five hundred thousand
miles from Earth. More than
twice the distance of the Moon.
The globe had gone that far with
accelerating velocity so that now
the pointers marked a hundred
thousand miles an hour—out beyond
the Moon, heading for the
orbit-line of Mars. Now the size-change
pointers were stirring.
Unit One, the size this globe had
been as it rested on Earth, fifty
feet in height, and some thirty
feet at its mid-section bulge. Already
that unit was two, a globe—which,
if it were on Earth,
would be a hundred feet high.
And Lee himself? He would be
a giant more than twelve feet
tall now.... He stood staring
at the dials for a moment or
two. That little pointer of the
first of the size-change dials was
creeping around. An acceleration!
Another moment and it had
touched Unit four. A two hundred
foot globe. And Lee, if he
had been on Earth, would already
be a towering human nearly
twenty-five feet in height!</p>
<p>Behind him, he heard Franklin
suddenly muttering, "If only
I could change without everything
else changing! Damn them
all—what I could do—"</p>
<p>"You're nuts," Vivian said. "I
don't see anything growing bigger—everything
here—jus' the
same." Her laugh was abruptly
hysterical. "This room—you two—you
look like ghosts. Say, maybe
we're all dead an' don't know
it."</p>
<p>Queerly her words sent a shiver
through Lee. He turned, stared
blankly at her. This weird
thing! The electronic light
streaming from these walls had
a stroboscopic quality. The girl's
face was greenish, putty-colored,
and her teeth shone phosphorescent.</p>
<p>Maybe we're all dead and don't
know it.... Lee knew that this
thing was a matter of cold, precise,
logical science.... Yet
who shall say but what mysticism
is not mingled with science?
A thing, which if we understood
it thoroughly, would be
as logical, as precise as the mathematics
of science itself? Death?
Who shall say what, of actuality,
Death may be. A leaving of the
mortal shell? A departure from
earthly substance? A new state
of being? Surely some of those
elements were here now. And,
logically, why could there not
be a state of being not all Death,
but only with some of its elements?</p>
<p>"I—I don't like this," Franklin
suddenly squealed. On the
couch he sat hunched, trembling.
"Something wrong here—Lee—damn<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></SPAN></span>
you Lee—don't you feel
it?"</p>
<p>Lee tried to smile calmly.
"Feel what?"</p>
<p>"We're not—not alone here,"
Franklin stammered. "Not just
you and Vivian and me—something
else is here—something
you can't see, but you can almost
feel. An' I don't like it—"</p>
<p>A presence. Was there indeed
something else here, of which
now in this new state of being
they were vaguely aware? Something—like
a fellow voyager—making
this weird journey with
them? Lee's heart was so wildly
beating that it seemed smothering
him.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Unit Ten ... Twenty ... a
Hundred.... With steady acceleration,
the lowest size-change
pointer was whirling, and the
one above it was moving. The
globe was five thousand feet high
now. And on Earth Lee would
have been a monstrous Titan
over six hundred feet tall. A
globe, and humans in that tremendous
size—the very weight
of them—in a moment more of
this growth—would disarrange
the rotation of the Earth on its
axis!...</p>
<p>And then abruptly Lee found
himself envisaging the monstrous
globe out here in Space.
A thing to disarrange the mechanics
of all the Celestial Universe!
In an hour or two, with
this acceleration of growth, the
globe would be a huge meteorite—then
an asteroid....</p>
<p>He stared at the distance dials.
With the growth had come an
immense augmentation of velocity.
A hundred thousand miles
an hour—that had been accelerated
a hundred fold now. Ten
million miles an hour....
Through the window-lens Lee
gazed, mute with awe. The size-change
was beginning to show!
Far down, and to one side the
crescent Earth was dwindling
... Mars was far away in another
portion of its orbit—the
Moon was behind the Earth.
There were just the myriad
blazing giant worlds of the stars—infinitely
remote, with vast
distances of inky void between
them. And now there was a visible
movement to the stars! A
sort of shifting movement....</p>
<p>An hour.... A day.... A
week.... Who shall try and describe
what Lee Anthony beheld
during that weird outward journey?...
For a brief time, after
they swept past the orbit of
Mars, the great planets of Jupiter
and Saturn were almost in
a line ahead of the plunging,
expanding globe. A monstrous
thing now—with electronically
charged gravity-plates so that it
plunged onward by its own repellant
force—the repellant force
of the great star-field beneath
it.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Lee stared at Jupiter, a lead-colored
world with its red spot
like a monster's single glaring
eye. With the speed of light
Jupiter was advancing, swinging
off to one side with a visible flow
of movement, and dropping down
into<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></SPAN></span>
the lower void as the globe
went past it. Yet, as it approached,
visually it had not grown
larger. Instead, there was only a
steady dwindling. A dwindling of
great Saturn, with its gorgeous,
luminous rings came next. These
approaching planets, seeming to
shrink! Because, with Lee's expanding
viewpoint, everything in
the vast scene was shrinking!
Great distances here, in relation
to the giant globe, were dwindling!
These millions of miles
between Saturn and Jupiter had
shrunk into thousands. And then
were shrinking to hundreds.</p>
<p>Abruptly, with a startled
shock to his senses, Lee's viewpoint
changed. Always before he
had instinctively conceived himself
to be his normal six foot
earthly size. The starry Universe
was vast beyond his conception.
And in a second now, that
abruptly was altered. He conceived
the vehicle as of actuality
it was—a globe as large as the
ball of Saturn itself! And simultaneously
he envisaged the present
reality of Saturn. Out in the
inky blackness it hung—not a
giant ringed world millions of
miles away, but only a little
ringed ball no bigger than the
spaceship—a ringed ball only
eight or ten times as big as Lee
himself. It hung there for an instant
beside them—only a mile
or so away perhaps. And as it
went past, with both distance
and size-change combining now,
it shrank with amazing rapidity!
A ball only as big as this room....
Then no larger than Lee it
hung, still seemingly no further
away than before. And then in
a few minutes more, a mile out
there in the shrinking distance,
it was a tiny luminous point,
vanishing beyond his vision.</p>
<p>Uranus, little Neptune—Pluto,
almost too far away in its orbit
to be seen—all of them presently
were dwindled and gone. Lee had
a glimpse of the Solar system,
a mere bunch of lights. The Sun
was a tiny spot of light, holding
its little family of tiny planets—a
mother hen with her brood. It
was gone in a moment, lost like
a speck of star-dust among the
giant starry worlds.</p>
<p>Another day—that is a day as
it would have been on Earth.
But here was merely a progressing
of human existence—a
streaming forward of human
consciousness. The Light-year
dial pointers were all in movement.
By Earth standards of size
and velocity, long since had the
globe's velocity reached and
passed the speed of light. Lee
had been taught—his book-learning
colored by the Einstein postulates—that
there could be no
speed greater than the speed of
light—by Earth standards—perhaps,
yes. The globe—by comparison
with its original fifty-foot
earth-size—might still be
traveling no more than a few
hundred thousand miles an hour.
But this monster—a thing now
as big as the whole Solar System
doubtless—was speeding
through a light-year in a moment!</p>
<p>Futile figures! The human
mind<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></SPAN></span>
can grasp nothing of the
vastness of inter-stellar space.
To Lee it was only a shrinking
inky void—an emptiness crowded
with whirling little worlds all
dwindling.... This crowded
space! Often little points of star-dust
had come whirling at the
globe—colliding, bursting into
pin-points of fire. Each of them
might have been bigger than the
Earth.</p>
<p>There was a time when it
seemed that beneath the globe all
the tiny stars were shrinking into
one lens-shaped cluster. The
Inter-stellar Universe—all congealed
down there into a blob,
and everywhere else there was
just nothingness.... But then
little distant glowing nebulae
were visible—luminous, floating
rings, alone in the emptiness....
Distant? One of them drifted
past, seemingly only a few hundred
feet away—a luminous little
ring of star-dust. The passage
of the monstrous globe
seemed to hurl it so that like
a blown smoke ring it went into
chaos, lost its shape, and vanished.</p>
<p>Then at last all the blobs—each
of them, to Earth-size conception,
a monstrous Universe—all
were dwindled into one blob
down to one side of Lee's window.
And then they were
gone....</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Just darkness now. Darkness
and soundless emptiness. But as
he stared at intervals through
another long night of his human
consciousness, Lee seemed to
feel that the emptiness out there
was dwindling—a finite emptiness.
He noticed, presently, that
the size-change pointers had
stopped their movement; the
ultimate size of the globe had
been reached. The figures of the
Light-year dials were meaningless
to his comprehension. The
velocity was meaningless. And
now another little set of dials
were in operation. A thousand—something—of
distance. There
was a meaningless word which
named the unit. A thousand
Earth-miles, if he had been in
his former size? The pointer
marked nine hundred in a moment.
Was it, perhaps, the distance
now from their destination?</p>
<p>Vivian was beside him. "Lee,
what's gonna happen to us?
Won't this come to an end some
time? Lee—you won't let anybody
hurt me?"</p>
<p>She was like a child, almost
always clinging to him now. And
suddenly she said a very strange
thing. "Lee, I been thinkin'—back
there on Earth I was doin'
a lot of things that maybe were
pretty rotten—anglin' for his
money for instance—an' not
carin' much what I had to do to
get it." She gestured at the sullen
Franklin who was sitting on
the couch. "You know—things
like that. An' I been thinkin'—you
suppose, when we get where
we're goin' now, that'll be held
against me?"</p>
<p>What a queer thing to say!
She was like a child—and so often
a child has an insight into
that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN></span>
which is hidden from those
more mature!</p>
<p>"I—don't know," Lee muttered.</p>
<p>From the couch, Franklin
looked up moodily. "Whispering
about me again? I know you
are—damn you both. You and
everybody else here."</p>
<p>"We're not interested in you,"
Vivian said.</p>
<p>"Oh, you're not? Well you
were, back on Earth. I'm not
good enough for you now, eh?
He's better—because he's big—big
and strong—that the idea?
Well if I ever had the chance—"</p>
<p>"Don't be silly," Lee said.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>The sullen Franklin was working
himself into a rage. Lee
seemed to understand Franklin
better now. A weakling. Inherently,
with a complex of inferiority,
the vague consciousness of it
lashing him into baffled anger.</p>
<p>"You, Anthony," Franklin
burst out, "don't think you've
been fooling me. You can put it
over that fool girl, but not me.
I'm onto you."</p>
<p>"Put what over?" Lee said
mildly.</p>
<p>"That you don't know anything
about this affair or these
men who've got us—you don't
know who they are, do you?"</p>
<p>"No. Do you?" Lee asked.</p>
<p>Franklin jumped to his feet.
"Don't fence with me. By God,
if I was bigger I'd smash your
head in. They abducted us, because
they wanted you. That fellow
said as much near the start
of this damned trip. They won't
talk—afraid I'll find out. And
you can't guess what it's all
about! The hell you can't."</p>
<p>Lee said nothing. But there
was a little truth in what Franklin
was saying, of course....
Those things that the dying old
Anna Green had told him—surely
this weird voyage had
some connection.</p>
<p>He turned away; went back
to the window. There was a
sheen now. A vague outline of
something vast, as though the
darkness were ending at a great
wall that glowed a little.</p>
<p>It seemed, during the next
time-interval, as though the
globe might have turned over, so
that now it was dropping down
upon something tangible. Dropping—floating
down—with
steadily decreasing velocity, descending
to a Surface. The sheen
of glow had expanded until now
it filled all the lower hemisphere
of darkness—a great spread of
surface visually coming up. Then
there were things to see, illumined
by a faint half-light to
which color was coming; a faint,
pastel color that seemed a rose-glow.</p>
<p>"Why—why," Vivian murmured,
"say, it's beautiful, ain't
it? It looks like fairyland—or
Heaven. It does—don't it, Lee?"</p>
<p>"Yes," Lee murmured. "Like—like—"</p>
<p>The wall-slide rasped. The
voice of one of their captors
said, "We will arrive soon. We
can trust you—there must be no
fighting?"</p>
<p>"You can trust us," Lee said.</p>
<p>It<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></SPAN></span>
was dark in the little curving
corridor of the globe, where
with silent robed figures around
them, they stood while the globe
gently landed. Then they were
pushed forward, out through the
exit port.</p>
<p>The new realm. The World Beyond.
What was it? To Lee Anthony
then came the feeling that
there was a precise scientific explanation
of it, of course. And
yet, beyond all that pedantry of
science, he seemed to know that
it was something else, perhaps
a place that a man might mould
by his dreams. A place that
would be what a man made of it,
from that which was within himself.</p>
<p>Solemn with awe he went with
his companions slowly down the
incline.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER III</h2>
<p class="centersubhd"><i>Realm of Mystery</i></p>
<p>"We wish nothing of you,"
the man said, "save that
you accept from us what we have
to offer. You are hungry. You
will let us bring you food."</p>
<p>It was a simple rustic room
to which they had been brought—a
room in a house seemingly
of plaited straw. Crude furnishings
were here—table and chairs
of Earth fashion, padded with
stuffed mats. Woven matting
was on the floor. Through a
broad latticed window the faint
rose-light outside—like a soft
pastel twilight—filtered in, tinting
the room with a gentle glow.
Thin drapes at the window stirred
in a breath of breeze—a
warm wind from the hills, scented
with the vivid blooms which
were everywhere.</p>
<p>It had been a brief walk from
the space-globe. Lee had seen
what seemed a little village
stretching off among the trees.
There had been people crowding
to see the strangers—men, women
and children, in simple crude
peasant garb—brief garments
that revealed their pink-white
bodies. They babbled with strange
unintelligible words, crowding
forward until the robed men
from the globe shoved them
away.</p>
<p>It was a pastoral, peaceful
scene—a little country-side
drowsing in the warm rosy twilight.
Out by the river there
were fields where men stood at
their simple agricultural implements—stood
at rest, staring
curiously at the commotion in
the village.</p>
<p>And still Lee's captors would
say nothing, merely drew them
forward, into this room. Then
all of them left, save one. He had
doffed his robe now. He was an
old man, with long grey-white
hair to the base of his neck. He
stood smiling. His voice, with
the English words queerly pronounced,
was gentle, but with a
firm finality of command.</p>
<p>"My name is Arkoh," he said.
"I am to see that you are made
comfortable. This house is yours.
There are several rooms, so that
you may do in them as you
wish."</p>
<p>"Thank<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN></span>
you," Lee said. "But
you can certainly understand—I
have asked many questions and
never had any answers. If you
wish to talk to me alone—"</p>
<p>"That will come presently.
There is no reason for you to
be worried—"</p>
<p>"We're not worried," Franklin
burst out. "We're fed up with
this highhanded stuff. You'll
answer questions now. What I
demand to know is why—"</p>
<p>"Take it easy," Lee warned.</p>
<p>Franklin had jumped to his
feet. He flung off Lee's hand.
"Don't make me laugh. I know
you're one of them—everything
about you is a fake. You got us
into this—"</p>
<p>"So? You would bring strife
here from your Earth?" Arkoh's
voice cut in, like a knife-blade
cleaving through Franklin's
bluster. "That is not permissible.
Please do not make it necessary
that there should be violence
here." He stood motionless.
But before his gaze Franklin relaxed
into an incoherent muttering.</p>
<p>"Thank you," Arkoh said. "I
shall send you the food." He
turned and left the room.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Vivian collapsed into a chair.
She was trembling. "Well—my
Gawd—what is all this? Lee—that
old man with his gentle
voice—he looked like if you
crossed him you'd be dead. Not
that he'd hurt you—it would be—would
be something else—"</p>
<p>"You talk like an ass," Franklin
said. "You've gone crazy—and
I don't blame you—this
damned weird thing. For all that
old man's smooth talk, we're just
prisoners here. Look outside that
window—"</p>
<p>It was a little garden, drowsing
in the twilight. A man stood
watching the window. And as
Lee went to the lattice, he could
see others, like guards outside.</p>
<p>The man who brought their
simple food was a stalwart fellow
in a draped garment of
brown plaited fibre. His black
hair hung thick about his ears.
He laid out the food in silence.</p>
<p>"What's <i>your</i> name?" Franklin
demanded.</p>
<p>"I am Groff."</p>
<p>"And you won't talk either,
I suppose? Look here, I can make
it worth your while to talk."</p>
<p>"Everyone has all he needs
here. There is nothing that you
need give us."</p>
<p>"Isn't there? You just give me
a chance and I'll show you. No
one has all he needs—or all he
wants."</p>
<p>Groff did not answer. But as
he finished placing the food, and
left the room, it seemed to Lee
that he shot a queer look back
at Franklin. A look so utterly
incongruous that it was startling.
Franklin saw it and
chuckled.</p>
<p>"Well, at least there's one person
here who's not so damn
weird that it gives you the
creeps."</p>
<p>"You don't know what you're
talking about," Lee said. With
sudden impulse he lowered his
voice. "Franklin, listen—there
are<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN></span>
a few things that perhaps I
can tell you. Things that I can
guess—that Vivian senses—"</p>
<p>"I don't want to hear your explanation.
It would be just a lot
of damn lies anyway."</p>
<p>"All right. Perhaps it would.
We'll soon know, I imagine."</p>
<p>"Let's eat," Vivian said. "I'm
hungry, even if I am scared."</p>
<p>To Lee it seemed that the
weird mystery here was crowding
upon them. As though, here
in this dim room, momentous
things were waiting to reveal
themselves. A strange emotion
was upon Lee Anthony. A sort of
tense eagerness. Certainly it was
not fear. Certainly it seemed impossible
that there could be anything
here of which he should be
afraid. Again his mind went
back to old Anna Green and what
she had told him of his grandfather.
How far away—how long
ago that had been.... And yet,
was Anna Green far away now?
Something of her had seemed
always to be with him on that
long, weird voyage, from the infinite
smallness and pettiness of
Earth to this realm out beyond
the stars. And more than ever
now, somehow Lee seemed aware
of her presence here in this
quiet room. Occultism? He had
always told himself that surely
he was no mystic. A practical
fellow, who could understand
science when it was taught him,
but certainly never could give
credence to mysticism. The dead
are dead, and the living are
alive; and between them is a gulf—an
abyss of nothingness.</p>
<p>Now he found himself wondering.
Were all those people on
Earth who claimed to feel the
presence of dead loved ones near
them? Were those people just
straining their fancy—just comforting
themselves with what
they wished to believe? Or was
the scoffer himself the fool? And
if that could be so, on Earth,
why could not this strange realm
be of such a quality that an
awareness of those who have
passed from life would be the
normal thing? Who shall say
that the mysteries of life and
death are unscientific? Was it
not rather that they embraced
those gaps of science not yet understood?
Mysteries which, if
only we could understand them,
would be mysteries no longer?</p>
<p>Lee had left the table and
again was standing at the latticed
window, beyond which the
drowsing little garden lay silent,
and empty now. The guard who
had been out here had moved
further away; his figure was a
blob near a flowered thicket at
the house corner. And suddenly
Lee was aware of another figure.
There was a little splashing
fountain near the garden's center—a
rill of water which came
down a little embankment and
splashed into a pool where the
rose light shimmered on the ripples.</p>
<p>The figure was sitting at the
edge of the pool—a slim young
girl in a brief dress like a drape
upon her. She sat, half reclining
on the bank by the shimmering
water, with her long hair flowing
down<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></SPAN></span>
over her shoulders and
a lock of it trailing in the pool.
For a moment he thought that
she was gazing into the water.
Then as the light which tinted
her graceful form seemed to intensify,
he saw that she was
staring at him.</p>
<p>It seemed as though both of
them, for that moment, were
breathless with a strange emotion
awakened in them by the
sight of each other. And then
slowly the girl rose to her feet.
Still gazing at Lee, she came
slowly forward with her hair
dangling, framing her small oval
face. The glow in the night-air
tinted her features. It was a
face of girlhood, almost mature—a
face with wonderment on
it now.</p>
<p>He knew that he was smiling;
then, a few feet from the window
she stopped and said shyly:</p>
<p>"You are Lee Anthony?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"I am Aura. When you have
finished eating, I am to take you
to him."</p>
<p>"To him?"</p>
<p>"Yes. The One of Our Guidance.
He bade me bring you."
Her soft voice was musical; to
her, quite obviously, the English
was a foreign tongue.</p>
<p>"I'm ready," Lee said. "I'm
finished."</p>
<p>One of her slim bare arms
went up with a gesture. From
the corner of the little house the
guard there turned, came inside.
Lee turned to the room.
The guard entered. "You are to
come," he said.</p>
<p>"So we just stay here, prisoners,"
Franklin muttered. He
and Vivian were blankly staring
as Lee was led away.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Then in a moment he was
alone beside the girl who had
come for him. Silently they walked
out into the glowing twilight,
along a little woodland path with
the staring people and the rustic,
nestling dwellings blurring in
the distance behind them. A
little line of wooded hills lay
ahead. The sky was like a dark
vault—empty. The pastel light
on the ground seemed inherent to
the trees and the rocks; it
streamed out like a faint radiation
from everywhere. And then,
as Lee gazed up into the abyss
of the heavens, suddenly it
seemed as though very faintly he
could make out a tiny patch of
stars. Just one small cluster,
high overhead.</p>
<p>"The Universe you came
from," Aura said.</p>
<p>"Yes." The crown of her tresses
as she walked beside him
was at his shoulder. He gazed
down at her. "To whom are you
taking me? It seems that I
could guess—"</p>
<p>"I was told not to talk of
that."</p>
<p>"Well, all right. Is it far?"</p>
<p>"No. A little walk—just to
that nearest hill."</p>
<p>Again they were silent. "My
Earth," he said presently, "do
you know much about it?"</p>
<p>"A little. I have been told."</p>
<p>"It seems so far away to me
now."</p>
<p>She<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></SPAN></span>
gazed up at him. She was
smiling. "Is it? To me it seems
quite close." She gestured. "Just
up there. It seemed far to you,
I suppose—that was because you
were so small, for so long, coming
here."</p>
<p>Like a man the size of an ant,
trying to walk ten miles. Of
course, it would be a monstrous
trip. But if that man were steadily
to grow larger, as he progressed
he would cover the distance
very quickly.</p>
<p>"Well," Lee said, "I suppose I
can understand that. You were
born here, Aura?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Of course."</p>
<p>"Your world here—what is it
like?"</p>
<p>She gazed up at him as though
surprised. "You have seen it. It
is just a simple little place. We
have not so many people here in
the village, and about that many
more—those who live in the hills
close around here."</p>
<p>"You mean that's all? Just
this village? Just a few thousand
people?"</p>
<p>"Oh there are others, of
course. Other groups—like ours,
I guess—out in the forests—everywhere
in all the forests, maybe."
Her gesture toward the distant,
glowing, wooded horizons
was vague. "We have never tried
to find out. Why should we?
Wherever they are, they have all
that they need or want. So have
we."</p>
<p>The thing was so utterly simple.
He pondered it. "And you—you're
very happy here?"</p>
<p>Her wide eyes were childlike.
"Why yes. Of course. Why not?
Why should not everyone be happy?"</p>
<p>"Well," he said, "there are
things—"</p>
<p>"Yes. I have heard of them.
Things on your Earth—which
the humans create for themselves—but
that is very silly. We
do not have them here."</p>
<p>Surely he could think of no
retort to such childlike faith.
Her faith. How horribly criminal
it would be to destroy it. A priceless
thing—human happiness to
be created out of the faith that it
was the normal thing. He realized
that his heart was pounding,
as though now things which
had been dormant within him all
his life were coming out—clamoring
now for recognition.</p>
<p>And then, out of another silence
he murmured, "Aura—you're
taking me to my grandfather,
aren't you? He came
here from Earth—and then he
sent back there to get me?"</p>
<p>"Yes," she admitted. "So you
know it? But I was instructed
to—"</p>
<p>"All right. We won't talk of
it. And he's told you about me?"</p>
<p>"Yes," she agreed shyly. She
caught her breath as she added,
"I have been—waiting for you—a
long time." Shyly she gazed
up at him. The night-breeze had
blown her hair partly over her
face. Her hand brushed it away
so that her gaze met his. "I
hoped you would be, well, like
you are," she added.</p>
<p>"Oh," he said awkwardly.
"Well—thanks."</p>
<p>"And<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></SPAN></span>
you," she murmured out
of another little silence, "you—I
hope I haven't disappointed
you. I am the way you want—like
you wished—"</p>
<p>What a weird thing to say!
He smiled. "Not ever having
heard of you, Aura, I can't
exactly say that I—"</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>He checked himself. Was she
what he had wished? Why yes—surely
he had been thinking of
her—in his dreams, all his life
vaguely picturing something like
this for Lee Anthony....</p>
<p>"I guess I have been thinking
of you," he agreed. "No, you
haven't disappointed me, Aura.
You—you are—"</p>
<p>He could find no words to say
it. "We are almost there," she
said. "He will be very happy to
have you come. He is a very good
man, Lee. The one, we think, of
the most goodness—and wiseness,
to guide us all—"</p>
<p>The path had led them up a
rocky defile, with gnarled little
trees growing between the crags.
Ahead, the hillside rose up in a
broken, rocky cliff. There was a
door, like a small tunnel entrance.
A woman in a long white
robe was by the door.</p>
<p>"He is here," Aura said.
"Young Anthony."</p>
<p>"You go in."</p>
<p>Silently they passed her. The
tunnel entrance glowed with the
pastel radiance from the rocks.
The radiance was a soft blob of
color ahead of them.</p>
<p>"You will find that he cannot
move now," Aura whispered.
"You will sit by his bed. And
talk softly."</p>
<p>"You mean—he's ill?"</p>
<p>"Well—what you would call
paralysis. He cannot move. Only
his lips—his eyes. He will be
gone from us soon, so that then
he can only be unseen. A Visitor—"</p>
<p>Her whisper trailed off. Lee's
heart was pounding, seeming to
thump in his throat as Aura led
him silently forward. It was a
draped, cave-like little room.
Breathless, Lee stared at a couch—a
thin old figure lying there—a
frail man with white hair that
framed his wrinkled face. It was
a face that was smiling, its sunken,
burning eyes glowing with a
new intensity. The lips moved;
a faint old voice murmured:</p>
<p>"And you—you are Lee?"</p>
<p>"Yes—grandfather—"</p>
<p>He went slowly forward and
sat on the bedside.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<p class="centersubhd"><i>Mad Giant</i></p>
<p>To Lee, after a moment, his
grandfather seemed not
awe-inspiring, but just a frail
old man, paralyzed into almost
complete immobility, lying here
almost pathetically happy to have
his grandson at last with him.
An old man, with nothing of the
mystic about him—an old man
who had been—unknown to the
savants of his Earth—perhaps
the greatest scientist among
them. Quietly, with pride welling
in him, Lee held the wasted,
numbed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN></span>
hand of his grandfather
and listened....</p>
<p>Phineas Anthony, the scientist.
After many years of research,
spending his own private
fortune, he had evolved the secret
of size-change—solved the
intricate problems of anti-gravitational
spaceflight; and combining
the two, had produced that
little vehicle.</p>
<p>A man of science; and perhaps
more than that. As old Anna
Green had said, perhaps he was
a man inspired—a man, following
his dreams, his convictions,
convinced that somewhere in
God's great creation of things
that are, there must be an existence
freed of those things by
which Man himself so often
makes human life a tortured
hell.</p>
<p>"And Something led me here,
Lee," the gentle old voice was
saying. "Perhaps not such a coincidence.
On this great Inner
Surface of gentle light and gentle
warmth—with Nature offering
nothing against which one
must strive—there must be
many groups of simple people
like these. They have no thought
of evil—there is nothing—no
one, to teach it to them. If I had
not landed here, I think I would
have found much the same thing
almost anywhere else on the Inner
Surface."</p>
<p>"The Inner Surface? I don't
understand, grandfather."</p>
<p>A conception—a reality here—that
was numbing in its vastness.
This was the concave, inner
surface, doubtless deep within
the atom of some material substance.
A little empty Space here,
surrounded by solidity.</p>
<p>"And that—" Lee murmured,
"then that little space is our Inter-Stellar
abyss?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Of course. The stars,
as we call them—from here you
could call them tiny particles—like
electrons whirling. All of
them in this little void. With
good eyesight, you can sometimes
see them there—"</p>
<p>"I did."</p>
<p>And to this viewpoint which
Lee had now—so gigantic, compared
to Earth—all the Inter-Stellar
universe was a void here
of what old Anthony considered
would be perhaps eight or ten
thousand miles. A void, to Lee
now, was itself of no greater
volume than the Earth had been
to him before!</p>
<p>Silently he pondered it. This
Inner Surface—not much bigger,
to him now, than the surface
of the Earth is to its humans....
Suddenly he felt small—infinitely
tiny. Out here beyond
the stars, he was only within
the atom of something larger, a
human, partly on his way—emerging—outward—</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>It gave him a new vague conception.
As though now, because
he was partly emerged, the all-wise
Creator was giving him a
new insight. Surely in this simple
form of existence humans
were totally unaware of what
evil could be. Was not this a
higher form of life than down
there on his tiny Earth?</p>
<p>The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN></span>
conception numbed him
with awe....</p>
<p>"You see, Lee, I have been
looking forward to having you
become a man—to having you
here," old Anthony was saying.
As he lay, so utterly motionless,
only his voice, his face, his eyes,
seemed alive. It was an amazingly
expressive old face, radiant,
transfigured. "I shall not be
here long. You see? And when
I have—gone on—when I can
only come back here as a Visitor—like
Anna Green, you have
been aware of her, Lee?"</p>
<p>"Yes, grandfather. Yes, I
think I have."</p>
<p>"The awareness is more acute,
here, than it was back on Earth.
A very comforting thing, Lee. I
was saying—I want you here.
These people, so simple—you
might almost think them childlike—they
need someone to guide
them. The one who did that—just
as I came, was dying. Maybe—maybe
that is what led me
here. So now I need you."</p>
<p>It welled in Lee with an awe,
and a feeling suddenly of humbleness—and
of his own inadequacy,
so that he murmured,</p>
<p>"But grandfather—I would do
my best—but surely—"</p>
<p>"I think it will be given you—the
ability—and I've been
thinking, Lee, if only some time
it might be possible to show
them on Earth—"</p>
<p>Lee had been aware that he
and old Anthony were alone here.
When Lee entered, Aura had at
once withdrawn. Now, interrupting
his grandfather's faint, gentle
voice there was a commotion
outside the underground apartment.
The sound of women's
startled cries, and Aura's voice.</p>
<p>Then Aura burst in, breathless,
pale, with her hair flying
and on her face and in her eyes
a terror so incongruous that
Lee's heart went cold.</p>
<p>He gasped, "Aura! Aura, what
is it?"</p>
<p>"This terrible thing—that
man who came with you—that
man, Franklin—he talked with
Groff. Some evil spell to put
upon Groff—it could only have
been that—"</p>
<p>Lee seized her. "What do you
mean? Talk slower. Groff? The
man who served us that meal—"</p>
<p>"Yes, Groff. And two of the
men who were to guard there.
What that man said to them—did
to them—and when old Arkoh
found it out he opposed
them—" Her voice was drab with
stark horror—so new an emotion
that it must have confused
her, so that now she just stood
trembling.</p>
<p>"Child, come here—come here
over to me—" Old Anthony's
voice summoned her. "Now—talk
more slowly—try and think
what you want to tell us....
What happened?"</p>
<p>"Oh—I saw old Arkoh—him
whom I love so much—who always
has been so good to me—to
us all—I saw him lying there
on the floor—"</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Words so unnatural here that
they seemed to reverberate
through the little cave-room
with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></SPAN></span>
echoes that jostled and muttered
like alien, menacing things
which had no right here—and
yet, were here.</p>
<p>"You saw him—lying there?"
Lee prompted.</p>
<p>"Yes. His throat, with red
blood running out of it where
they had cut him—and he was
dying—he died while I stood
there—"</p>
<p>The first murder. A thing so
unnatural. Old Anthony stared
for an instant mute at the girl
who now had covered her face
with her hands as she trembled
against Lee.</p>
<p>"Killed him?" Lee murmured.</p>
<p>On Anthony's face there was
wonderment—disillusion, and
then bitterness. "So? This is
what comes to us, from Earth?"</p>
<p>Lying so helpless, old Anthony
could only murmur that now Lee
must do what he could.</p>
<p>"Your own judgement, my
son—do what you can to meet
this." The sunken, burning eyes
of the old man flashed. "If there
must be violence here, let it be
so. Violence for that which is
right."</p>
<p>"Grandfather—yes! That miserable
cowardly murderer—"</p>
<p>To meet force, with force.
Surely, even in a world of ideals,
there is no other way.</p>
<p>With his fists clenched, Lee
ran from the cave-room. Frightened
women scattered before him
at its entrance. Where had
Franklin gone? That fellow
Groff, and two or three of the
guards had gone with him. Cynicism
swept Lee; he remembered
the look Groff had flung at
Franklin. Even here in this
realm—because it was peopled
by humans—evil passions could
brood. Groff indeed must have
been planning something, and he
had seen in Franklin a ready
helper—a man from Earth,
whom Groff very well may have
thought would be more resourceful,
more experienced in
the ways of violence than himself.</p>
<p>This realm where everyone
had all of happiness that he
could want! Human perfection
of existence. A savage laugh of
irony was within Lee as he
thought of it. No one had ever
held out the offer of more than
perfection to these people. But
Franklin evidently had done it—playing
upon the evil which
must lie within every living
thing, no matter how latent it
may be. Awakening in those
guards the passion of cupidity—desire
for something better than
they had now.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>What had happened to Vivian?
Out in the rose-light dimness, a
little way down the path, Lee
found himself staring off toward
the forest where the village lay
nestled. Voices of the frightened
people came wafting through the
night silence.</p>
<p>"Lee—Lee—"</p>
<p>It was Aura behind him, running
after him. "Lee—wait—I
belong with you. You know
that—"</p>
<p>He gripped her. "That girl
from Earth—that Vivian—she
was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></SPAN></span>
with Franklin. What happened
to her?"</p>
<p>"She went. He took her—"</p>
<p>"She went—voluntarily?"</p>
<p>"Yes. The people saw her running
out with Franklin, and
Groff and the other men. Oh,
Lee—what—what are you going
to do?"</p>
<p>"I don't know." He stood for
a moment dazed, confused—panting,
his fingers twitching.
If only he could get a grip on
Franklin's throat. And so Vivian
went too! That was a laugh—girl
of the streets, pretty worthless,
on Earth. But here—she
had seemed to sense what this
realm could mean.</p>
<p>"Aura, where would Groff be
likely to go?"</p>
<p>"Go? Why—why I do remember,
Groff often went up into the
hills. He never said why?"</p>
<p>"Would they have any weapons?"</p>
<p>"Weapons?" Her eyes widened
as though for a second she did
not comprehend. "Weapons? You
mean—instruments with which
to kill people? No—how could
there be? But a knife can kill.
A knife cut old Arkoh's throat.
We have knives—in the houses—and
knives that are used for
the harvests—"</p>
<p>She had turned to gaze out toward
the glowing hills.... "Oh,
Lee—look—"</p>
<p>Numbed, with their breath
catching in their throats, they
stared. Out by the hills a man's
figure rose up—monstrous, gigantic
figure.</p>
<p>Franklin! He stood beside the
little hill, with a hand on its top,
his huge bulk dwarfing it!
Franklin, a titan, his head and
shoulders looming monstrously
against the inky blackness of
the sky!</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></SPAN>CHAPTER V</h2>
<p class="centersubhd"><i>Combat of Titans</i></p>
<p>"Aura, you think you know
where Groff may have
gone—those times he went out
into the hills?"</p>
<p>"Yes. I think so. Lee—that
giant, I think now I understand
what must have happened."</p>
<p>The giant shape of Franklin,
a mile or two from them, had
stood for a moment and then had
receded, vanished momentarily
as he moved backward behind the
hills. Lee and Aura, stunned, still
stood beside the little rocky path.
Lee's mind was a turmoil of confusion,
with only the knowledge
that he must do something now,
quickly. There were no weapons
here in this peaceful little realm.
Four or five of these madmen
villains—what need had they of
weapons? The monstrous power
of size. The thought of it struck
at Lee with a chill that seemed
turning his blood to ice. The
monster that Franklin had become—with
a size like that he
could scatter death with his
naked hands.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>"I remember now," Aura was
gasping. "There was a time
when your grandfather was
working on his science. Groff was
helping<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></SPAN></span>
him then. Your grandfather
taught Groff much."</p>
<p>"Working at what?"</p>
<p>"It was never said. Then your
grandfather gave it up—he had
decided it would not be wise
here."</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Some individual apparatus,
with the size-change principle of
the space-globe? And Groff had
gotten the secret. An abnormality
here—Groff with the power
of evil latent within him, tempted
by this opportunity. What
could he have hoped to accomplish?
Of what use to him would
it be to devastate this little
realm? Bitter irony swept Lee.
Of what use was vast personal
power to anyone? Those madmen
of Earth's history, with their
lust for conquest—of what use
could the conquest be to them?
And yet they had plunged on.</p>
<p>He realized that with Groff
there could have been a wider
field of conquest. Groff had heard
much of Earth. With the power
of size here, he could master this
realm; then seize the space-globe.
Go with it to Earth. Why,
in a gigantic size there, he and
a few villainous companions
could master the Earth-world. A
mad dream indeed, but Lee knew
it was a lustful possibility
matched by many in Earth's history.</p>
<p>And then Franklin had come
here. Franklin, with his knowledge
of Earth which Groff would
need. Franklin, with his inherent
feeling of inferiority—his groping
desire for the strength and
power of size. What an opportunity
for Franklin!</p>
<p>Lee heard himself saying out
of the turmoil of his thoughts:
"Then, Aura—out there in the
hills they've got some apparatus,
of course, which—"</p>
<p>His words were stricken away.
From somewhere in the glowing
dimness near at hand there was
a groan. A gasping, choking
groan; and the sound of something
falling.</p>
<p>"Lee—over there—" Aura's
whispered words were drab with
horror.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>A figure which had been staggering
among the rocks near
them, had fallen. They rushed to
it. Vivian! She was trying to
drag herself forward. Her hair,
streaming down in a sodden
mass, was matted with blood.
Her pallid face was blood-smeared.
Her neck and throat were a
welter of crimson horror. Beside
her on the ground lay a strange-looking
apparatus of grids and
wires—a metal belt—a skeleton
helmet.... She was gripping it
with a blood-smeared hand, dragging
it with her.</p>
<p>"Vivian—Vivian—"</p>
<p>"Oh—you, Lee? Thank Gawd
I got to you—"</p>
<p>Her elbows gave way; her
head and shoulders sank to the
rock. Faintly gasping, with
blood-foam at her livid lips, she
lay motionless. But her glazing
eyes gazed up at Lee, and she
was trying to smile.</p>
<p>"I went with them—that
damned Franklin—he thought I
was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></SPAN></span>
as bad as him—" Her faint
words were barely audible as he
bent down to her. "Just want
to tell you, Lee—you're perfectly
swell—I guess I fell for you,
didn't I? That's over now—just
wanted you to know it anyway.
There's one of the damned mechanisms
they've got—"</p>
<p>"Where are they, Vivian?"</p>
<p>"A cave, not very far from
here—down that little ravine—just
ahead—they're in there—four
or five of them, getting
ready to—" Blood was rattling
in her throat, choking her. She
tried, horribly, to cough. And
then she gasped:</p>
<p>"I stole this mechanism. He—Franklin—he
caught me—slashed
me. He thought I was dead, I
guess—but—when he had gone,
I got this mechanism—trying to
get to you—"</p>
<p>Her choking, rattling breath
again gave out. For a moment
she lay with a paroxysm of death
twitching her. And then, very
faintly she gasped:</p>
<p>"Sort of nice—I was able to
do one good thing—anyhow. I'm
glad of that—"</p>
<p>The paroxysm ended in a moment.
Her white lips were still
trying to smile as the light went
out of her eyes and she was
gone. Trembling, Lee stood up,
with the mute, white-faced Aura
clinging to him. It was fairly
obvious how the weird mechanism
should be adjusted—anklets,
the skeleton helmet of electrodes,
the belt around his waist,
with its grids, tiny dials and
curved battery box. In a moment
he stood with the wires strung
from his head, to wrist, ankles
and waist. There seemed but one
little control switch that would
slide over a metal arc of intensity
contacts.</p>
<p>"Oh, Lee—what—what are
you going to do—?" Aura stood
white with terror.</p>
<p>"She said—four or five of
them in a cave near here—perhaps
they haven't yet gotten
large—"</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Down in a little ravine Lee
found himself running forward
in the luminous darkness. He
called back, "Aura—you stay
where you are—you hide, until
it's over—"</p>
<p>Then, in the turmoil of his
mind, there was no thought of
the girl. There was only the vision
of old Anthony lying back
there so helpless—his burning
eyes bitter with this thing which
had so horribly come to his little
realm. To meet force with force
was the only answer.</p>
<p>It was not Lee's plan to increase
his size for a moment
now. By doing that, almost at
once he would be discovered. And
perhaps there were still four or
five of the murderers, still not
giants, in a cave nearby.</p>
<p>The dim rocky ravine, heavy
with shadows, led downward. He
came to a tunnel opening, advancing
more cautiously now.
And then, as he turned an angle
ahead of him, down a little subterranean
declivity a luminous
cave was visible. Groff's hideout.
At one of its entrances here Lee
stood<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></SPAN></span>
for an instant gasping.
The five men were here—Groff
and four of his villainous companions.</p>
<p>The five bodies lay strewn—horribly
mangled. And the
wreckage of their size-change
mechanisms was strewn among
them.</p>
<p>So obvious, what had happened!
Franklin had been the first
to get large. And at once he had
turned on them. Franklin, the
weakling who dared not have any
rivalry! And now Franklin was
outside, out in the hills, a raging,
murderous monster. For a
moment, in the grisly shambles
of the little cave Lee stood transfixed.
Then his hand was fumbling
at his belt. He shoved the
small switch-lever.</p>
<p>There was a shock—a humming—a
reeling of his senses. It
was akin to what he had felt on
the space-globe, but stronger,
more intense now. For an instant
he staggered, confused. The wires
strung on him were glowing; he
could feel their heat. Weird
luminous opalescence streamed
from them—it bathed him—strange
electrolite radiance that
permeated every minute fibre of
his being.</p>
<p>With his head steadying, Lee
suddenly was aware of movement
all about him. The dim outlines
of the cave-room were
shrinking with a creeping, crawling
movement. Cave-walls and
roof all shrinking, dwindling,
drawing down upon him. Under
his feet the rocky ground seemed
hitching forward.</p>
<p>This little cave! In a moment
while he stood shocked into immobility,
the cave was a tiny
cell. Down by his feet the gruesome
mangled corpses were the
size of children. The cave-roof
bumped his head. He must get
out of here! The realization
stabbed him. Why, in another
moment or two these dark walls
would close upon him! Then
with instant changing viewpoint
he saw the true actuality. He
was a growing giant, crouching
here underground—a giant who
would be crushed, mangled by
his own monstrous growth.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Lee turned, staggered into the
little tunnel, shoved his way out.
The walls pressed him; they
seemed in a moment to close after
him as he gained the outer
glowing darkness.... There was
only a narrow slit in the dwindling
cliff to mark the tunnel entrance.
Lee had the wits to
crouch in a fairly open space as
he stared at the dwindling trees,
the little hills, all shrinking.
Franklin must be around here
somewhere. Franklin doubtless
would see him in a moment.</p>
<p>And then as Lee rose up,
Franklin saw him. Lee put a
hand on one of the little hills at
his waist, vaulted it so that he
faced Franklin with what seemed
no more than a hundred feet
between them. For that second
Franklin was transfixed. Amazement
swept his face. His muttering
was audible:</p>
<p>"Why—why—what's this—"</p>
<p>An adversary had come to
challenge<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></SPAN></span>
his power. As Lee
bounded forward, on Franklin's
face while he stood transfixed,
there was wonderment—disappointment—sudden
instinctive
fear—and then wild rage. He
stooped; seized a boulder, hurled
it at the oncoming Lee. It
missed; and then Lee was on
him, seizing him.</p>
<p>Franklin's body had not been
enlarging, but as he saw Lee
coming, his hand had flung his
switch. They gripped each other
now, swaying, locked together,
staggering. Franklin still was
more than head and shoulders
above Lee. His huge arms, with
amazing power in them, bent Lee
backward. He stumbled, went
down with Franklin on him.
"Got you! Damn you," he said.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>His giant hands gripped Lee's
throat, but Lee was aware that
his own body was enlarging faster
than Franklin's, upon which
the size-current had only now
started to act. If Lee could only
resist—just a little bit longer!
His groping hands beside him
on the ground seized a rock.
Monstrous strangling fingers
were at this throat—his breath
was gone, his head roaring. Then
he was aware that he had seized
a rock and struck it up into
Franklin's face. For a second the
hands at Lee's throat relaxed.
He gulped in air, desperately
broke free and staggered to his
feet.</p>
<p>But Franklin was up as quickly.
The tiny forest trees crackled
under Lee's tread as again he
hurled himself viciously on his
antagonist....</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>At the head of the distant ravine,
the numbed Aura crouched
alone, staring out at the hills
with mute horror—staring at the
two monstrous giants slugging it
out. Franklin was the larger.
She saw Lee rise up, and with a
hand on one of the hills, vault
over it. Giants that loomed
against the sky as they fronted
each other and then crashed together,
went down.</p>
<p>Lee was underneath! Dear
God—</p>
<p>Two monstrous bodies—Lee
was lying with a ridge of crags
under his shoulders.... Franklin's
voice was a blurred roar of
triumph in the distance. Then
she saw Lee's groping hand come
up with a monstrous fifty foot
boulder. He crashed it home.</p>
<p>They were up again. Their
giant staggering lunges had carried
them five miles from her.
They were almost the size of
fighting titans. The blurred distant
shapes of them were silhouettes
against the glow of the sky.
The forest out there was crackling
under their tread ... a
blurred roar of breaking, mangled
trees....</p>
<p>It was just a few seconds
while Aura stared, but each second
was an eternity of horror.
Then one of the monstrous figures
was toppling. A great boulder
had crashed on Franklin's
head; he had broken loose, staggering
while Lee jumped backward
and crouched.</p>
<p>For<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></SPAN></span>
just a second the towering
shape of the stricken Franklin
loomed up in the sky. And then
it fell crashing forward. A swift-flowing
stream was there, and
the body fell across it—blocking
the water which dammed up, then
turned aside and went roaring
off through the mangled forest.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Lee, again in his former size,
sat at old Anthony's bedside,
with Aura behind him. The news
of the combat out there against
the sky had come to Anthony—the
excitement of it, too much
for his faltering old heart....</p>
<p>"But you will be all right,
grandfather. The thing is over
now."</p>
<p>"Yes. All right—of course,
Lee. Just a visitor here—and you
will take my place—"</p>
<p>He lay now—as old Anna
Green had been that night—just
on the brink. "Lee, listen to me—those
mechanisms—the space-globe—Lee,
I realize now there
is no possibility that we could
help Earth—and surely it could
only bring us evil here. What we
have found here—don't you see,
back on Earth each man must
create it for himself. Within
himself: He could do that, if
he chose. And so you—you
must disconnect us—forever—"</p>
<p>"Yes, grandfather—"</p>
<p>"And I—guess that is all—"</p>
<p>For some time he seemed to
hover on the brink, while Lee
and Aura, sitting hand in hand,
silently watched him. And then
he was gone.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>The last of the mechanisms
irrevocably was smashed. The
little line of vacuums and tubes
of the space-globe's mechanisms
went up into a burst of opalescent
light under Lee's grim
smashing blows.</p>
<p>Then silently he went outside
and joined Aura. Behind them,
down the declivity toward the
village, the people were gathering.
He was silent, his heart
pounding with emotion, as he
faced them from a little eminence—faced
them and heard
their shouts, and saw their arms
go up to welcome him.</p>
<p>Slowly he and Aura walked
down the slope toward his waiting
people. And with her by his
side, her hand in his, Lee Anthony
knew then that he had found
fulfillment—the attainment of
that which is within every man's
heart—man's heritage—those
things for which he must never
cease to strive.</p>
<p class="center" style="font-weight: bold; padding-top: 2em">THE END</p>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
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