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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Land of the Changing Sun
+by William N. Harben
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+Title: The Land of the Changing Sun
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+Author: William N. Harben
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Land of the Changing Sun
+by William N. Harben
+******This file should be named lcsun10.txt or lcsun10.zip******
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+
+
+
+The Land of the Changing Sun
+
+WILL. N. HARBEN
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I.
+
+The balloon seemed scarcely to move, though it was slowly sinking
+toward the ocean of white clouds which hung between it and the
+earth.
+
+The two inmates of the car were insensible; their faces were
+bloodless, their cheeks sunken. They were both young and
+handsome. Harry Johnston, an American, was as dark and sallow as
+a Spaniard. Charles Thorndyke, an English gentleman, had yellow
+hair and mustache, blue eyes and a fine intellectual face. Both
+were tall, athletic in build and well-proportioned.
+
+Johnston was the first to come to consciousness as the
+balloon sank into less rarefied atmosphere. He opened his eyes
+dreamily and looked curiously at the white face of his friend in
+his lap. Then he shook him and tried to call his name, but his
+lips made no sound. Drawing himself up a little with a hand on
+the edge of the basket, he reached for a water-jug and sprinkled
+Thorndyke's face. In a moment he was rewarded by seeing the eyes
+of the latter slowly open.
+
+"Where are we?" asked Thorndyke in a whisper.
+
+"I don't know;" Johnston answered, "getting nearer to the earth,
+for we can breathe more easily. I can't remember much after the
+professor fell from the car. My God, old man! I shall never
+forget the horror in the poor fellow's eyes as he clung to the
+rope down there and begged us to save him. I tried to get you to
+look, but you were dozing off. I attempted to draw him up, but
+the rope on the edge of the basket was tipping it, and both you
+and I came near following him. I tried to keep from seeing his
+horrible face as the rope began to slip through his fingers. I
+knew the instant he let go by our shooting upward."
+
+"I came to myself and looked over when the basket tipped,"
+replied the Englishman, "I thought I was going too, but I could
+not stir a muscle to prevent it. He said something desperately,
+but the wind blew it away and covered his face with his beard,
+so that I could not see the movement of his lips."
+
+"It may have been some instructions to us about the management
+of the balloon."
+
+"I think not--perhaps a good-bye, or a message to his wife and
+child. Poor fellow!"
+
+"How long have we been out of our heads?" and Johnston looked
+over the side of the car.
+
+"I have not the slightest idea. Days and nights may have passed
+since he fell."
+
+"That is true. I remember coming to myself for an instant, and it
+seemed that we were being jerked along at the rate of a gunshot.
+My God, it was awful! It was as black as condensed midnight. I
+felt your warm body against me and was glad I was not alone.
+Then I went off again, but into a sort of nightmare. I thought I
+was in Hell, and that you were with me, and that Professor
+Helmholtz was Satan."
+
+"Where can we be?" asked Thorndyke.
+
+"I don't know; I can't tell what is beneath those clouds. It may
+be earth, sea or ocean; we were evidently whisked along in a
+storm while we were out of our heads. If we are above the ocean
+we are lost."
+
+Thorndyke looked over the edge of the car long and attentively,
+then he exclaimed suddenly:
+
+"I believe it is the ocean."
+
+"What makes you think so?"
+
+"It reflects the sunlight. It is too bright for land. When we got
+above the clouds at the start it looked darker below than it
+does now; we may be over the middle of the Atlantic."
+
+"We are going down," said Johnston gloomily.
+
+"That we are, and it means something serious."
+
+Johnston made no answer. Half-an-hour went by. Thorndyke looked
+at the sun.
+
+"If the professor had not dropped the compass, we could find our
+bearings," he sighed.
+
+Johnston pointed upward. Thin clouds were floating above them.
+"We are almost down," he said, and as they looked over the sides
+of the car they saw the reflection of the sun on the bosom of the
+ocean, and, a moment later, they caught sight of the blue
+billows rising and falling.
+
+"I see something that looks like an island," observed Thorndyke,
+looking in the direction toward which the balloon seemed to be
+drifting. "It is dark and is surrounded by light. It is far
+away, but we may reach it if we do not descend too rapidly."
+
+"Throw out the last bag of sand," suggested the American, "we
+need it as little now as we ever shall."
+
+Thorndyke cut the bag with his knife and watched the sand filter
+through the bottom of the basket and trail along in a graceful
+stream behind the balloon. The great flabby bag overhead
+steadied itself, rose slightly and drifted on toward the dark
+spot on the vast expanse of sunlit water. They could now clearly
+see that it was a small island, not more than a mile in
+circumference.
+
+"How far is it?" asked Thorndyke.
+
+"About two miles," answered the American laconically, "it is a
+chance for us, but a slim one."
+
+The balloon gradually sank. For twenty minutes the car glided
+along not more than two hundred feet above the waves. The island
+was now quite near. It was a barren mound of stone, worn into
+gullies and sharp precipices by the action of the waves and
+rain. Hardly a tree or a shrub was in sight.
+
+"It looks like the rocky crown of a great stone mountain hidden
+in the ocean," said the Englishman; "half a mile to the shore, a
+hundred feet to the water; at this rate of speed the wind would
+smash us against those rocks like a couple of bird's eggs
+dropped from the clouds. We must fall into the water and swim
+ashore. There is no use trying to save the balloon."
+
+"We had better be about it, then," said Johnston, rising
+stiffly and holding to the ropes. "If we should go down in the
+water with the balloon we would get tangled in the ropes and get
+asphyxiated with the gas. We had better hang down under the
+basket and let go at exactly the same time."
+
+The water was not more than forty feet beneath, and the island
+was getting nearer every instant. The two aeronauts swung over
+on opposite sides of the car and, face to face, hung by their
+hands beneath.
+
+"I dread the plunge," muttered Thorndyke; "I feel as weak as a
+sick kitten; I am not sure that I can swim that distance, but
+the water looks still enough."
+
+"I am played out too," grunted the American, red in the face;
+"but it looks like our only chance. Ugh! she made a big dip then.
+We'd better let go. I'll count three, and three is the signal.
+Now ready. One, two, three!"
+
+Down shot the balloonists and up bounded the great liberated bag
+of gas; the basket and dangling ropes swung wildly from side to
+side. The aeronauts touched the water feet foremost at the same
+instant, and in half a minute they rose, not ten feet apart.
+
+"Now for it," sputtered Johnston, shaking his bushy head like a
+swimming dog. "Look, the shore is not very far." Thorndyke was
+saving his wind, and said nothing, but accommodated his stroke
+to that of his companion, and thus they breasted the gently-
+rolling billows until finally, completely exhausted, they
+climbed up the shelving rocks and lay down in the warm sunshine.
+
+"Not a very encouraging outlook," said Johnston, rising when his
+clothing was dry and climbing a slight elevation. "There is
+nothing in sight except a waste of stone. Let's go up to that
+point and look around."
+
+The ascent was exceedingly trying, for the incline was steep and
+it was at times difficult to get a firm footing. But they were
+repaid for the exertion, for they had reached the highest point
+of the island and could see all over it. As far as their vision
+reached there was nothing beyond the little island except the
+glistening waves that reached out till they met the sky in
+all directions. High up in the clouds they saw the balloon, now
+steadily drifting with the wind toward the south.
+
+"We might as well be dead and done with it," grumbled
+Thorndyke. "Ships are not apt to approach this isolated spot, and
+even if they did, how could we give a signal of distress?"
+
+Johnston stroked his dark beard thoughtfully, then he pointed
+toward the shore.
+
+"There are some driftwood and seaweed," he said; "with my sun-
+glass I can soon have a bonfire." He took a piece of punk from a
+waterproof box that he carried in his pocket and focussed the
+sun's rays on it. "Run down and bring me an armful of dry seaweed
+and wood," he added, intent on his work.
+
+Thorndyke clambered down to the shore, and in a few minutes
+returned with an armful of fuel. Johnston was blowing his punk
+into a flame, and in a moment had a blazing fire.
+
+"Good," approved the Englishman, rubbing his hands together over
+the flames. "We'll keep it burning and it may do some good."
+Then a smile of satisfaction came over his face as he began to
+take some clams from his pockets. "Plenty of these fellows down
+there, and they are as fat and juicy as can be. Hurry up and
+let's bake them. I'm as hungry as a bear. There is a fine spring
+of fresh water below, too, so we won't die of thirst."
+
+They baked the clams and ate them heartily, and then went down
+to the spring near the shore. The water was deliciously cool and
+invigorating. The sun sank into the quiet ocean and night crept
+on. The stars came out slowly, and the moon rose full and red
+from the waves, adding its beams to the flickering light of the
+fire on the hill-top.
+
+"Suppose we take a walk all round on the beach," proposed the
+Englishman; "there is no telling what we may find; we may run on
+something that has drifted ashore from some wrecked ship."
+
+Johnston consented. They had encompassed the entire island, which
+was oval in shape, and were about to ascend to the rock to put
+fresh fuel on the fire before lying down to sleep for the
+night, when Thorndyke noticed a road that had evidently been
+worn in the rock by human footsteps.
+
+"Made by feet," he said, bending down and looking closely at the
+rock and raking up a handful of white sand, "but whether the
+feet of savage or civilized mortal I can't make out."
+
+Johnston was a few yards ahead of him and stooped to pick up
+something glittering in the moonlight. It was a tap from
+the heel of a shoe and was of solid silver.
+
+"Civilized," he said, holding it out to his companion; "and of
+the very highest order of civilization. Whoever heard of people
+rich enough to wear silver heel-taps."
+
+"Are you sure it is silver?" asked the Englishman, examining it
+closely.
+
+"Pure and unalloyed; see how the stone has cut into it, and
+feel its weight."
+
+"You are right, I believe," returned Thorndyke, as Johnston put
+the strange trophy into his pocket-book, and the two adventurers
+paused a moment and looked mutely into each other's eyes.
+
+"We haven't the faintest idea of where we are," said Johnston,
+his tone showing that he was becoming more despondent. "We don't
+know how long we were unconscious in the balloon, nor where we
+were taken in the storm. We may now be in the very centre of the
+North Polar sea--this knob may be the very pivot on which this
+end of the earth revolves."
+
+The Englishman laughed. "No danger; the sun is too natural.
+>From the poles it would look different."
+
+"I don't mean the old sun that you read so much about, and that
+they make so much racket over at home, but another of which we
+are the original discoverer--a sun that isn't in old Sol's beat
+at all, but one that revolves round the earth from north to south
+and dips in once a day at the north and the south poles. See?"
+
+The Englishman laughed heartily and slapped his friend on the
+shoulder.
+
+"I think we are somewhere in the Atlantic; but your finding that
+heel-tap does puzzle me."
+
+"We are going to have an adventure, beside which all others of
+our lives will pale into insignificance. I feel it in my bones.
+See how evenly this road has been worn and it is leading toward
+the centre of the island."
+
+In a few minutes the two adventurers came to a point in the road
+where tall cliffs on either side stood up perpendicularly. It
+was dark and cold, and but a faint light from the moon shone
+down to them.
+
+"I don't like this," said Johnston, who was behind the
+Englishman; "we may be walking into the ambush of an enemy."
+
+"Pshaw!" and Thorndyke plunged on into the gloomy passage.
+Presently the walls began to widen like a letter "Y" and in a
+great open space they saw a placid lake on the bosom of which
+the moon was shining. On all sides the towering walls rose for
+hundreds of feet. Speechless with wonder and with quickly-
+beating hearts they stumbled forward over the uneven road till
+they reached the shore of the lake. The water was so clear and
+still that the moon and stars were reflected in it as if in a
+great mirror.
+
+"Look at that!" exclaimed Thorndyke, pointing down into the
+depths, "what can that be?"
+
+Johnston followed Thorndyke's finger with his eyes. At first he
+thought that it was a comet moving across the sky and reflected
+in the water; but, on glancing above, he saw his mistake. It
+looked, at first, like a great ball of fire rolling along the
+bottom of the lake with a stream of flame in its wake.
+
+
+
+Chapter II.
+
+The two men watched it for several minutes; all the time it
+seemed to be growing larger and brighter till, after a while,
+they saw that the light came from something shaped like a ship,
+sharp at both ends, and covered with oval glass. As it slowly
+rose to the surface they saw that it contained five or six men,
+sitting in easy chairs and reclining on luxurious divans. One of
+them sat at a sort of pilot-wheel and was directing the course
+of the strange craft, which was moving as gracefully as a great
+fish.
+
+Then the young men saw the man at the pilot-wheel raise his hand,
+and from the water came the musical notes of a great bell. The
+vessel stopped, and one of the men sprang up and raised an
+instrument that looked like a telescope to his eyes. With this he
+seemed to be closely searching the lake shores, for he did not
+move for several minutes. Then he lowered the instrument, and
+when the bell had rung again, the vessel rose slowly and
+perpendicularly to the surface and glided to the shore within
+twenty yards of where the adventurers stood.
+
+"Could they have seen us?" whispered Thorndyke, drawing Johnston
+nearer the side of the cliff.
+
+"I think so; at all events, they are between us and the outlet;
+we may as well make the best of it."
+
+The men, all except the pilot, landed, and a dazzling electric
+search-light was turned on the spot where Thorndyke and Johnston
+stood. For a moment they were so blinded that they could not
+see, and then they heard footsteps, and, their eyes becoming
+accustomed to the light, they found themselves surrounded by
+several men, very strangely clad. They all wore long cloaks that
+covered them from head to foot and every man was more than six
+feet in height and finely proportioned. One of them, who seemed
+to be an officer in command, bowed politely.
+
+"I am Captain Tradmos, gentlemen, in the king's service. It is my
+duty to make you my prisoners. I must escort you to the palace
+of the king."
+
+"That's cool," said Johnston, to conceal the discomfiture that he
+felt, "we had no idea that you had a kingdom. We have tramped all
+over this island, and you are the first signs of humanity we have
+met."
+
+He would have recalled his words before he had finished speaking,
+if he could have done so, for he saw by the manner of the captain
+that he had been over bold.
+
+"Follow me," answered the officer curtly, and with a motion of
+his hand to his men he turned toward the odd-looking vessel.
+
+The two adventurers obeyed, and the cloaked men fell in behind
+them. Neither Johnston nor Thorndyke had ever seen anything like
+the peculiar boat that was moored to the rocky shore. It was
+about forty feet in length, had a hull shaped like a racing
+yacht, but which was made of black rubber inflated with air. It
+was covered with glass, save for a doorway about six feet high
+and three feet wide in the side, and looked like a great oblong
+bubble floating on the still dark water. As they approached the
+searchlight was extinguished, and they were enabled to see the
+boat to a better advantage by the aid of the electric lights that
+illuminated the interior. It was with feelings of awe that the
+two adventurers followed the captain across the gang-plank into
+the vessel.
+
+The electric light was brilliantly white, and in various places
+pink, red and light-blue screens mellowed it into an artistic
+effect that was very soothing to the eye. The ceiling was hung
+with festoons of prisms as brilliant as the purest diamonds, and
+in them, owing to the gently undulatory movement of the vessel,
+colors more beautiful than those of a rainbow played
+entrancingly. Rare pictures in frames of delicate gold were
+interspersed among the clusters of prisms, and the floor was
+covered with carpets that felt as soft beneath the foot as
+pillows of eider-down.
+
+As he entered the door the officer threw off his gray cloak, and
+his men did likewise, disclosing to view the finest uniforms
+the prisoners had ever seen. Captain Tradmos's legs were clothed
+in tights of light-blue silk, and he wore a blue sack-coat of
+silk plush and a belt of pliant gold, the buckles of which were
+ornamented with brilliant gems. His eyes were dark and
+penetrating, and his black hair lay in glossy masses on his
+shoulders. He had the head of an Apollo and a brow indicative of
+the highest intellect.
+
+Leaving his men in the first room that they entered, he
+gracefully conducted his prisoners through another room to a
+small cabin in the stern of the boat, and told them to make
+themselves comfortable on the luxurious couches that lined the
+circular glass walls.
+
+"Our journey will be of considerable length," he said, "and as
+you are no doubt fatigued, you had better take all the rest
+you can get. I see that you need food and have ordered a repast
+which will refresh you." As he concluded he touched a button
+in the wall and instantly a table, laden with substantial food,
+rare delicacies and wines, rose through a trap-door in the floor.
+He smiled at the expressions of surprise on their faces and
+touched a green bottle of wine with his white tapering hand.
+
+"The greater part of our journey will be under water, and our
+wines are specially prepared to render us capable of
+subsisting on a rather limited quantity of air during the voyage,
+so I advise you to partake of them freely; you will find them
+very agreeable to the taste."
+
+"We are very grateful," bowed Thorndyke, from his seat on a
+couch. "I am sure no prisoners were ever more graciously
+or royally entertained. To be your prisoner is a pleasure to be
+remembered."
+
+"Till our heads are cut off, anyway," put in the irrepressible
+American.
+
+Tradmos smiled good-humoredly.
+
+"I shall leave you now," he said, and with a bow he withdrew.
+
+"This is an adventure in earnest," whispered Johnston; "my stars!
+what can they intend to do with us?"
+
+"One of the first things will be to take us down to the bottom of
+this lake where we saw them awhile ago, and I don't fancy it at
+all; what if this blasted glass-case should burst? We may have
+dropped into a den of outlaws on a gigantic scale, and it may be
+necessary to put us out of the way to keep our mouths closed."
+
+"I am hungry, and am going to eat," said the American, drawing a
+cushioned stool up to the table. "Here goes for some of the wine;
+remember, it is a sort of breath-restorer. I am curious enough
+not to want to collapse till I have seen this thing through. He
+said something about a palace and a king. Where can we be going?"
+
+"Down into the centre of the earth, possibly," and the handsome
+Englishman moved a stool to the table and took the glass of
+green-colored wine that Johnston pushed toward him. "Some
+scientists hold that the earth is filled with water instead of
+fire. Who knows where this blamed thing may not take us? Here is
+to a safe return from the amphibious land!"
+
+Both drank their wine simultaneously, lowered their glasses at
+the same instant, and gazed into each other's eyes.
+
+"Did you ever taste such liquor?" asked Thorndyke, "it seems to
+run like streams of fire through every vein I have."
+
+Johnston shook his head mutely, and held the sparkling
+effervescing fluid between him and the light.
+
+"Ugh! take it down," cried the Englishman, "it throws a green
+color on your face that makes you look like a corpse."
+Johnston clinked the glass against that of his companion and they
+drained the glasses. "Hush, what was that?" asked Thorndyke.
+
+There was a sound like boiling water outside and as if air were
+being pumped out of some receptacle, and the vessel began to move
+up and down in a lithe sort of fashion and to bend tortuously
+from side to side like a great sluggish fish. Through the
+partitions of glass they saw one of the men closing the door, and
+in a moment the vessel glided away from the shore. The men all
+sank into easy positions on the couches, and delightful music as
+soft as an Aeolian lyre seemed to be breathed from the walls
+and floor. Then the music seemed to die away and a bell down in
+the vessel's hull rang.
+
+"We are in the middle of the lake," said Thorndyke, looking
+through the glass toward the black cliffy shore; "the next thing
+will be our descent. I wonder----"
+
+But he was unable to proceed, and Johnston noticed in alarm that
+his eyes were slightly protruding from their sockets. The air
+seemed suddenly to become more com- pact as if compressed, and
+the water was set into such violent commotion that it was dashed
+against the glass sides in billows as white as snow. Then
+Johnston found that he could not breathe freely, and he
+understood the trouble of the Englishman.
+
+Captain Tradmos came suddenly to the door. He was smiling as he
+motioned toward the wines on the table.
+
+"You had better drink more of the wine," he advised sententiously.
+
+Both of the captives rushed to the table. The instant they had
+swallowed the wine they felt relieved, but were still weak.
+The captain bowed and went away. Thorndyke's hand trembled as he
+refilled his friend's glass. I thought I was gone up," he said,
+"I never had such a choky sensation in my life; you are still
+purple in the face."
+
+"Eat of what is before you," said the captain, looking in at the
+door; "you cannot stand the increasing pressure unless you do."
+
+They needed no second invitation, for they were half-famished.
+The fish and meat were delicious, and the bread was delightfully
+sweet.
+
+"Look outside!" cried Johnston. The water was now still, but it
+was gradually rising up the sides of the boat, and in a moment
+it had closed over the crystal roof. Both of the captives were
+conscious of a heavy sensation in the head and a dull roaring in
+the ears. Down they went, at first slowly and then more rapidly,
+till it seemed to them that they had descended over a thousand
+feet. Great monsters like whales swam to the vessel, as if
+attracted by the lights, and their massive bodies jarred against
+the glass walls as they turned to swim away. They sank about five
+hundred feet lower; and all at once the lights went out, and the
+boat gradually stopped.
+
+It was at once so dark that the two captives could not see each
+other, though only the width of the table separated them.
+Everything was profoundly still; not a sound came from the
+men in the other rooms. Presently Thorndyke whispered, "Look, do
+you see that red light overhead?"
+
+"Yes," said Johnston, "it looks like a star."
+
+"It is our bonfire," said Thorndyke, "that's what betrayed us."
+
+Again the vessel began to sink, and more rapidly than ever;
+indeed, as Thorndyke expressed it, he had the cool feeling
+that nervous people experience in going down quickly in an
+elevator.
+
+"If we go any lower," he added, as the great rubber hull seemed
+to struggle like some living monster, "the sides of this thing
+will collapse like an egg-shell and we will be as flat as
+pancakes."
+
+"You need not fear, we have much lower to go!" It was the
+captain's voice, but they could not tell from whence it
+came. Then they heard again the seductive music, and it was so
+soothing that they soon fell asleep.
+
+They had no idea how long they had slept, but they were awakened
+by the ringing of a bell and felt the vessel was coming to a
+stop. They were still far beneath the surface; indeed, the boat
+was resting on the bottom, for in the light of two or three
+powerful search-lights they saw a wide succession of submerged
+hills, vales, and rugged cliffs. Before them was a great
+mountain-side and in it they saw the mouth of a dark tunnel. They
+had scarcely noticed it before the vessel rose a little and
+glided toward the tunnel and entered it. Through the glass walls
+they could see that it was narrow, and that the ragged sides and
+roof were barely far enough apart to admit them.
+
+Suddenly one of the men came in and drew a curtain down behind
+them, and, with a vexed look on his face retired.
+
+When he was gone Johnston put his lips close to Thorndyke's ear
+and whispered:
+
+"Did you see that?"
+
+"See what?"
+
+"Just as he drew the curtain down I saw what looked to me like a
+cliff of solid gold. It had been dug out into a cavern in which I
+saw a vessel like this, and men in diving suits digging and
+loading it."
+
+This took the Englishman's breath away for a moment, then he
+remarked: "That accounts for the heel-tap we found; who knows,
+these people may be possessors of the richest gold and silver
+mines on earth."
+
+The bell rang again. "We are rising," said Johnston. "If this is
+the only way of reaching the king's domain, we could never get
+back to civilization unless they release us of their own accord,
+that's certain!"
+
+"Heavens, isn't it still!" exclaimed the Englishman. "The
+machinery of this thing moves as noiselessly as the backbone of
+an eel. I wish I could understand its works."
+
+"I am more concerned about where we are going. I tell you we are
+being taken to some wonderful place. People who can construct
+such marvels of mechanical skill as this boat will not be behind
+in other things; then look at the physiques of those giants."
+
+Just then the man who had drawn down the shade came in and raised
+it. Both the captives pretended to be uninterested in
+his movements, but when he had withdrawn they looked through the
+glass eagerly.
+
+"See," whispered Thorndyke, in the ear of his companion, "the
+walls are close to us, and are as perpendicular as those of
+the lake in which they found us."
+
+Johnston said nothing. His attention was riveted to the walls of
+rock; the vessel was rising rapidly. An hour passed. The soft
+music had ceased, and the air seemed less dense and fresher.
+Then the waters suddenly parted over the roof and ran in crystal
+streams down the oval glass.
+
+They were on the surface, and the vessel was slowly gliding
+toward the shore which could not be seen owing to there now
+being no light except that inside the boat. Captain Tradmos
+entered, followed by two of his men holding black silken
+bandages.
+
+"We must blindfold you," he said; "cap- tives are not allowed to
+see the entrance to our kingdom."
+
+Without a word they submitted.
+
+"This way," said the captain kindly, and, holding to an arm of
+each, he piloted them out of the vessel to the shore. Then he
+led them through what they imagined to be a long stone corridor
+or arcade from the ringing echoes of their feet on the stone
+pavement. Presently they came to what seemed to be an elevator,
+for when they had entered it and sat down, they heard a
+metallic door slide back into its place, and they descended
+quickly.
+
+They could form no idea as to the distance they went down; but
+Thorndyke declared afterward that it was over ten thousand feet.
+When the elevator stopped Captain Tradmos led them out, and both
+of the captives were conscious of breathing the purest, most
+invigorating air they had ever inhaled. Instantly their strength
+returned, and they felt remarkably buoyant as they were led along
+over another pavement of polished stone.
+
+Tradmos laughed. "You like the atmosphere?"
+
+"I never heard of anything like it," said Thorndyke. "It is so
+delightful I can almost taste it."
+
+"It was that which made Alpha what it is--the most wonderful
+country in the universe," said the officer. "There is much in
+store for you."
+
+The ears of the two captives were greeted by a vague, indefinable
+hum, like and yet unlike that of a busy city. It was like many
+far-off sounds carefully muffled. Now and then they heard human
+voices, laughter, and singing in the distance, and the twanging
+of musical instruments.
+
+Then they knew that they were entering a building of some sort,
+for they heard a key turn in a lock and the humming sound in the
+distance was cut off. They felt a soft carpet under their feet,
+and the feet of their guards no longer clinked on the stones.
+
+When the bandages were removed they found themselves in a
+sumptuous chamber, alone with the captain. The brilliant
+light from a quaintly-shaped candelabrum, in the centre of the
+chamber, dazzled them, but in a few minutes their eyes had become
+accustomed to it.
+
+Tradmos seemed to be enjoying the looks of astonishment on their
+faces as they glanced at the different objects in the room.
+
+"It is night," he said smilingly. "You need rest after your
+voyage. Lie down on the beds and sleep. To-morrow you will be
+conducted to the palace of the king."
+
+With a bow he withdrew, and they heard a massive bolt slide into
+the socket of a door hidden behind a curtain. The two men gazed
+at each other without speaking, for a moment, and then they began
+to inspect the room.
+
+In alcoves half-veiled with silken curtains stood statues in gold
+and bronze. The walls and ceilings were decorated with pictures
+unlike any they had ever seen. Before one, the picture of an
+angel flying through a dark, star-filled sky, they both stood
+enchanted.
+
+"What is it?" asked Thorndyke, finding voice finally. "It is not
+done with brush or pencil; the features seem alive and, by Jove,
+you can actually see it breathe. Don't you see the clouds gliding
+by, and the wings moving?"
+
+"It is light--it is formed by light!" declared the other
+enthusiastically, and he ran to the wall, about six feet from the
+picture, and put his hand on a square metal box screwed to the
+wall.
+
+"I have it," he said quickly, "come here!"
+
+The Englishman advanced curiously and examined the box.
+
+"Don't you see that tiny speck of light in the side towards the
+picture? Well, the view is thrown from this box on the wall, and
+it is the motion of the powerful light that gives apparent life
+to the angel. It is wonderful."
+
+In a commodious alcove, in a glow of pink light from above, was a
+life-sized group of musicians--statues in colored metal of
+a Spanish girl playing a mandora, an Italian with a slender
+calascione, a Russian playing his jorbon, and an African playing
+a banjo. Luxurious couches hung by spiral springs from the
+ceiling to a convenient height from the floor, and here and there
+lay rugs of rare beauty and great ottomans of artistic designs
+and colors.
+
+"We ought to go to bed," proposed Thorndyke; "we shall have
+plenty of time to see this Aladdin's land before we get away from
+it."
+
+There were two large downy beds on quaintly wrought bedsteads of
+brass, but the two captives decided to sleep together.
+
+Thorndyke was the first to awaken. The lights in the candelabrum
+were out, but a gray light came in at the top and bottom of the
+window. He rose and drew the heavy curtain of one of the windows
+aside. He shrank back in astonishment.
+
+
+
+Chapter III.
+
+"What is it, Thorndyke? What are you looking at?" And the
+American slowly left the bed and approached his friend.
+
+Thorndyke only held the curtain further back and watched
+Johnston's face as he looked through the wide plate-glass window.
+
+"My gracious!" ejaculated the latter as he drew nearer. It was a
+wondrous scene. The building in which they were imprisoned stood
+on a gentle hill clad in luxuriant, smoothly-cut grass and
+ornamented with beautiful flowers and plants; and below lay a
+splendid city--a city built on undulating ground with innumerable
+grand structures of white marble, with turrets, domes and
+pinnacles of gold. Wide streets paved in polished stone and
+bordered with lush-green grass interspersed with statues and beds
+and mounds of strange plants and flowers stretched away in front
+of them till they were lost in the dim, misty distance. Parks
+filled with pavilions, pleasure-lakes, fountains and tortuous
+drives and walks, dotted the landscape in all directions.
+
+Thorndyke's breath had clouded the glass of the window, and he
+rubbed it with his handkerchief. As he did so the sash slowly,
+and without a particle of sound, slid to one side, disclosing a
+narrow balcony outside. It had a graceful balustrade, made of
+carved red-and-white mottled marble, and on the end of the
+balcony facing the city sat a great gold and silver jug, ten
+feet high, of rare design. The spout was formed by the body of a
+dragon with wings extended; the handle was a serpent with
+the extremity of its tail coiled around the neck of the jug.
+
+The air that came in at the window was fresh and dewy, and laden
+with the most entrancing odors. Thorndyke led the way out,
+treading very gently at first. Johnston followed him, too much
+surprised to make any comment. From this position, their view to
+the left round the corner of the building was widened, and new
+wonders appeared on every hand.
+
+Over the polished stone pavements strange vehicles ran
+noiselessly, as if the wheels had cushioned tires, and the
+streets were crowded with an active, strangely- clad populace.
+
+"Look at that!" exclaimed the American, and from a street corner
+they saw a queer-looking machine, carrying half-a-dozen
+passengers,rise like a bird with wings outspread and fly away
+toward the east. They watched it till it disappeared in the
+distance.
+
+"We are indeed in wonderland," said the Englishman; "I can't make
+head nor tail of it. We were on an isolated island, the Lord only
+knows where, and have suddenly been transported to a new world!"
+
+"I can't feel at all as if we were in the world we were born in,"
+returned Johnston. "I feel strange."
+
+"The wine," suggested the Englishman, "you know it did wonders
+for us in that subwater thing."
+
+"No; the wine has nothing to do with it. My head never was
+clearer. The very atmosphere is peculiar. The air is
+invigorating, and I can't get enough of it."
+
+"That is exactly the way I feel," was Thorndyke's answer.
+
+"Look at the sunlight," went on Johnston; "it is gray like our
+dawn, but see how transparent it is. You can look through it for
+miles and miles. It is becoming pink in the east, the sun will
+soon be up, and I am curious to see it."
+
+"It must be up now, but we cannot see it for the hills and
+buildings. My goodness, see that!" and the Englishman pointed
+to the east. A flood of delicate pink light was now pouring into
+the vast body of gray and was slowly driving the more sombre
+color toward the west. The line of separation was marked--so
+marked, indeed, that it seemed a vast, rose-colored billow
+rolling, widening and sweeping onward like a swell of the ocean
+shoreward. On it came rapidly, till the whole landscape was
+magically changed. The flowers, the trees, the grass, the waters
+of the lakes, the white buildings, the costumes of the people in
+the streets, even the sky, changed in aspect. The white clouds
+looked like fire-lit smoke, and far toward the west rolled the
+long line of pink still struggling with the gray and driving
+it back.
+
+The sun now came into sight, a great bleeding ball of fire slowly
+rising above the gilded roofs in the distance.
+
+"By Jove, look at our shadows!" exclaimed Johnston, and both men
+gazed at the balcony floor in amazement; their shadows were as
+clearly defined and black as silhouettes. "How do you account
+for that?" continued the American, "I am firmly convinced that
+this sun is not the orb that shines over my native land."
+
+Thorndyke laughed, but his laugh was forced. "How absurd! and
+yet--" He extended his hand over the balustrade into the rosy
+glow, and without concluding his remark held it back into the
+shadow of the window-casement. "By Jove!" he exclaimed; "there is
+not a particle of warmth in it. It is exactly the same
+temperature in the shade as in the light." He moved back against
+the wall. "No; there is no difference; the blamed thing doesn't
+give out any warmth."
+
+Johnston's hands were extended in the light. "I believe you are
+right," he declared in awe, "something is wrong."
+
+At that moment appeared from the room behind them a handsome
+youth, attired in a suit of scarlet silk that fitted his
+athletic figure perfectly. He rapped softly on the window-
+casement and bowed when they turned.
+
+"Your breakfast is waiting for you," he announced. They followed
+him into a room adjoining the one they had occupied, and found a
+table holding a sumptuous repast. The boy gave them seats and
+handed them golden plates to eat upon. The fruits, wine and meats
+were very appetizing, and they ate with relish.
+
+"I believe we are to be conducted to the palace of your king to-
+morrow," ventured the Englishman to the boy.
+
+The boy shook his head, but made no reply, and busied himself
+with removing the dishes. As they were rising from the table,
+they heard footsteps in the hall outside. The door opened. It
+was Captain Tradmos, and he was accompanied by a tall, bearded
+man with a leather case under his arm.
+
+"You must undergo a medical examination," the captain said
+smilingly. "It is our invariable custom, but this is by a
+special order from the king."
+
+Johnston shuddered as he looked at the odd-looking instruments
+the medical man was taking from the case, but Thorndyke watched
+his movements with phlegmatic indifference. He stood erect; threw
+back his shoulders; expanded his massive chest and struck it with
+his clenched fist in pantomimic boastfulness.
+
+Tradmos smiled genially; but there was something curt and
+official in his tone when he next spoke that took the
+Englishman slightly aback. "You must bare your breast over your
+heart and lungs," he said; and while Thorndyke was unbuttoning
+his shirt, he and the medical man went to the door and brought
+into the room a great golden bell hanging in a metallic frame.
+
+The bell was so thin and sensitive to the slightest jar or
+movement that, although it had been handled with extreme care,
+the captives could see that it was vibrating considerably, and
+the room was filled with a low metallic sound that not only
+affected the ear of the hearer but set every nerve to tingling.
+The medical man stopped the sound by laying his hand upon the
+bell. To a tube in the top of the bell he fastened one end of a
+rubber pipe; the other end was finished with a silver device
+shaped like the mouth-piece of a speaking tube. This he firmly
+pressed over the Englishman's heart. Thorndyke winced and bit his
+lip, for the strange thing took hold of his flesh with the
+tenacity of a powerful suction-pump.
+
+"Ouch!" he exclaimed playfully, but Johnston saw that he had
+turned pale, and that his face was drawn as if from pain.
+
+"Hold still!" ordered the medical man; "it will be over in a
+minute; now, be perfectly quiet and listen to the bell!"
+
+The Englishman stood motionless, the sinews of his neck drawn and
+knotted, his eyes starting from their sockets. Thorndyke felt the
+rubber tube quiver suddenly and writhe with the slow energy of a
+dying snake, and then from the quivering bell came a low,
+gurgling sound like a stream of water being forced backward and
+forward.
+
+Tradmos and the medical man stepped to the bell and inspected a
+small dial on its top.
+
+"What was that?" gasped the Englishman, purple in the face.
+
+"The sound of your blood," answered Tradmos, as he removed the
+instrument from Thorndyke's flesh; "it is as regular as mine; you
+are very lucky; you are slightly fatigued, but you will be sound
+in a day or two."
+
+"Thank you," replied the Englishman, but he sank into a chair,
+overcome with weakness.
+
+"Now, I'll take you, please," said the medical man, motioning
+Johnston to rise.
+
+"I am slightly nervous," apologized the latter, as he stood up
+and awkwardly fumbled the buttons of his coat.
+
+"Nervousness is a mental disease," said the man, with
+professional brusqueness; "it has nothing to do with the body
+except to dominate it at times. If you pass your examination you
+may live to overcome it."
+
+The American looked furtively at Thorndyke, but the head of the
+Englishman had sunk on his breast and he seemed to be asleep.
+Johnston had never felt so lonely and forsaken in his life. From
+his childhood he had entertained a secret fear that he had
+inherited heart disease, and like Maupassant's "Coward," who
+committed suicide rather than meet a man in a duel, he had tried
+in vain to get away from the horrible, ever-present thought by
+plunging into perilous adventures.
+
+At that moment he felt that he would rather die than know the
+worst from the uncanny instrument that had just tortured his
+strong comrade till he was overcome with exhaustion.
+
+"I never felt better in my life," he said falteringly, but it
+seemed to him that every nerve and muscle in his frame was
+withering through fear. His tongue felt clumsy and thick and his
+knees were quivering as with ague.
+
+"Stand still," ordered the physician sternly, and Johnston was
+further humiliated by having Tradmos sympathetically catch hold
+of his arm to steady him.
+
+"Your people are far advanced in the sciences," went on the
+physician coldly, "but there are only a few out of their number
+who know that the mind governs the body and that fear is its
+prime enemy. Five minutes ago you were eating heartily and had
+your share of physical strength, and yet the mere thought that
+you are now to know the actual condition of your most vital organ
+has made you as weak as an infant. If you kept up this state of
+mind for a month it would kill you.
+
+"Now listen," he went on, as the instrument gripped Johnston's
+flesh and the rubber tube began to twist and move as if
+charged with electricity. The American held his breath. A sound
+as of water being forced through channels that were choked,
+mingled with a wheezing sound like wind escaping from a broken
+bellows came from the bell.
+
+"Your frame is all right," said the medical man, as he released
+the trembling American, "but you have long believed in the
+weakness of your heart and it has, on that account, become so.
+You must banish all fear from your thoughts. You perhaps
+know that we have a place specially prepared for those who are
+not physically sound. I am sorry that you do not stand a
+better examination."
+
+Tradmos regarded the American with a look of sympathy as he gave
+him a chair and then rang a bell on the table. Thorndyke looked
+up sleepily, as an attendant entered with a couple of parcels,
+and glanced wonderingly at his friend's white face and bloodshot
+eyes.
+
+"What's the matter?" he asked; but Johnston made no reply, for
+the captain had opened the parcels and taken out two suits of
+silken clothing.
+
+"Put them on," he said, giving a suit of gray to Johnston and one
+of light blue to Thorndyke. "We shall leave you to change your
+attire, and I shall soon come for you."
+
+
+
+Chapter IV.
+
+In a few minutes the captain returned and found his prisoners
+ready to go with him. Thorndyke looked exceedingly handsome in
+his glossy tights, close-fitting sack-coat, tinsel belt and low
+shoes with buckles of gold. The natural color had come back into
+his cheeks, and he was exhilarated over the prospect of further
+adventure.
+
+It was not so, however, with poor Johnston; his spirits had been
+so dampened by the physician's words that he could not rally from
+his despondency. His suit fitted his figure as well as that of
+the Englishman, but he could not wear it with the same hopeful
+grace.
+
+"Cheer up!" whispered Thorndyke, as they followed the captain
+through a long corridor, "if we are on our way to the stake or
+block we are at least going dressed like gentlemen."
+
+Outside they found the streets lined with spectators eagerly
+waiting to see them pass. The men all had suits like those which
+had been given the captives, and the women wore flowing gowns
+like those of ancient Greece.
+
+"These are the common people," whispered Thorndyke to Johnston,
+"but did you ever dream of such perfect features and physiques?
+Every face is full of merriment and good cheer. I am curious to
+see the royalty."
+
+Johnston made no reply, for Captain Tradmos turned suddenly and
+faced them.
+
+"Stand here till I return," he said, and he went back into the
+house.
+
+"Where in the deuce do you think we are?" pursued Thorndyke with
+a grim smile.
+
+"Haven't the slightest idea," sighed Johnston, and he shuddered
+as he looked down the long white street with its borders of human
+faces.
+
+Thorndyke was observant.
+
+"There is not a breath of air stirring," he said; "and yet the
+atmosphere is like impalpable delicacies to a hungry man's
+stomach.Look at that big tree, not a leaf is moving, and yet
+every breath I draw is as fresh as if it came from a mountain-
+top. Did you ever see such flowers as those? Look at that ocean
+of orchids."
+
+"They think we are a regular monkey-show," grumbled the American.
+"Look how the crowd is gaping and shoving and fighting for places
+to see us."
+
+"It's your legs they want to behold, old fellow. Do you know I
+never knew you had such knotty knee-joints; did you ever have
+rheumatism? I wish I had 'em; they wouldn't put me to death--they
+would make me the chief attraction in the royal museum." Thorndyke
+concluded his jest with a laugh, but the face of his
+friend did not brighten.
+
+"You bet that medical examination meant something serious," he
+said.
+
+"Pooh!" and the Englishman slapped his friend playfully on the
+shoulder.
+
+"Since I have seen that vast crowd of well-developed people, and
+remember what that medicine man said, I have made up my mind that
+we are going to be separated." Poor Johnston's lip was quivering.
+
+"Rubbish! but there comes the captain; put on a bold front; talk
+up New York; tell 'em about Chicago and the Fair, and ask to be
+allowed to ride in their Ferris Wheel--if they ain't got no
+wheel, ask 'em when the first train leaves town."
+
+"This is no time for jokes," growled Johnston, as Tradmos
+returned. Tradmos motioned to something that in the
+distance looked like a carriage, but which turned out to be a
+flying machine. It rose gracefully and glided over the ground and
+settled at their feet. It was large enough to seat a dozen
+people, and there was a little glass-windowed compartment at the
+end in which they could see "the driver," as he was termed by
+Tradmos. The mysterious machinery was hidden in the woodwork
+overhead and beneath.
+
+"Get in," said the captain, and the door flew open as if of its
+own accord. Thorndyke went in first and was followed by the moody
+American. "Let up on the ague," jested Thorndyke, nudging his
+friend with his elbow; "if you keep on quivering like that you
+may shake the thing loose from its moorings and we'd never know
+what became of us."
+
+Johnston scowled, and the officer, who had overheard the remark,
+smiled as he leaned toward the window and gave some directions to
+the man in the other compartment.
+
+"You both take it rather coolly," he remarked to Thorndyke. "I
+took a man and a woman over this route several years ago and both
+of them were in a dead faint; but, in fact, you have nothing to
+fear. We never have accidents."
+
+"It is as safe as a balloon, I suppose, and we are at home in
+them," said the Englishman, with just the hint of a swagger in
+his tone.
+
+"But your balloons are poor, primitive things at best," returned
+Tradmos in his soft voice. "They can't be compared to this mode
+of travel, though, of course, our machines would not operate in
+your atmosphere."
+
+"Why not?" impulsively asked the Englishman. "I thought----"
+
+But he did not conclude his remark, for they were rising, and
+both he and Johnston leaned apprehensively forward and looked out
+of one of the windows. Down below the long lines of people were
+silently waving their hats, scarfs and handkerchiefs as the
+machine swept along over their heads. As they rose higher the
+scene below widened like a great circular fan, and in the delicate
+roselight, the whole so appealed to Thorndyke's artistic sense
+that he ejaculated:
+
+"Glorious! Superb! Transcendent!" and he directed Johnston's
+attention to the wonderful pinkish haze which lay over the
+view toward the west like a vast diaphanous web of rosy sunbeams.
+
+"You ask why our air-ships would not operate in your atmosphere,"
+said the captain, showing pleasure at Thorndyke's enthusiasm.
+"It is simple enough when you have studied the climatic
+differences between the two countries. You have much to contend
+with--the winds, for instance, the heat and cold, etc.; this is
+the only known country where the winds are subjugated. I have
+never been in your world, but from what I have heard of it I am
+not anxious to see it. Your atmosphere and climate are so
+changeable and so diverse in different localities that I have
+heard your people spend much of their time in seeking congenial
+climes. I think it was a man who came from London that claimed he
+once had a cold--'a bad cold,' I think he called it. It was a
+standing joke in the royal family for a long time, and he heard
+so much about it that he tried to deny what he had said!"
+
+Johnston glanced at the speaker non-plussed, but the captain was
+looking at Thorndyke.
+
+"Your climate is delightful here now," said the Englishman; "is
+it so long at a time?"
+
+"Perpetually; it is regulated every moment, and every year we
+perfect it in some way."
+
+"Perfect it?"
+
+"Yes, of course, why not? If it ever fails to be up to the usual
+high standard, it is owing to neglect of those in charge, and
+neglect is punished severely."
+
+Thorndyke's eyes sought those of the American incredulously.
+Seeing which Tradmos looked amused.
+
+"You doubt it," he smiled. "Well, wait till you have been here
+longer. The fact is, any one born in our climate could not live
+in yours. The king experimented on a man who claimed to have only
+one lung, but who had two sound ones when he was cut open. Well,
+the king sent him to China, or America, or some such place, and
+he wheezed himself to death in a week by your clocks. The weather
+was too fickle for him. Our system has been perfected to such an
+extent that we live four lives to your one, and our fruits and
+vegetables are a hundred per cent. better than those in other
+countries."
+
+"What is the name of your country?" asked Thorndyke, feeling that
+he was not losing anything by his boldness.
+
+"Alpha."
+
+"Where is it located?"
+
+"I don't know." Tradmos looked out at the window for a moment as
+if to ascertain that they were going in the right direction, then
+he fixed his dark eyes on Thorndyke and asked hesitatingly:--
+
+"I never thought--I--but do you know where your country is
+located?"
+
+"Why, certainly."
+
+"Well, I don't know where this one is. We are taught everything,
+I think, except geography." Nothing more was said for several
+minutes, then an exclamation of admiration broke from the
+Englishman. The color of the sunlight was changing. From east to
+west within the entire arc of their observation rolled an endless
+billow of lavender light leaving a placid sea of the same color
+behind it. On it swept, slowly driving back the pink glow that
+had been over everything.
+
+"I see you like our sunlight?" said Tradmos, half interrogatively.
+
+"Never saw anything like it before."
+
+"Yours is, I think, the same color all day long."
+
+"Except on rainy days."
+
+"Must be a great bore, monotonous--too much sameness. It is
+white, is it not?"
+
+"Yes, rather--between white and yellow, I call it."
+
+"Something like our sixth hour, I suppose; this is the fourth
+hour of morning. Then come blue, yellow, green, and at noon red.
+The afternoon is divided up in the same way. The first hour is
+green, then follow yellow, blue, lavender, rose, gray and purple.
+Yes, I should think you would find yours somewhat tiresome."
+
+"We can rely on it," said Johnston speaking for the first time
+and in a wavering voice, "it is always there."
+
+"Doing business at the old stand," laughed Thorndyke, attempting
+an Americanism.
+
+"Well, that is a comfort, anyway," said the captain seriously.
+"In my time they have had no solar trouble, but some of the old
+people tell horrible tales of a period when our sun for several
+days did not shine at all."
+
+"Can it be possible?" said the Englishman dubiously.
+
+"Oh, yes; and the early settlers had a great deal of trouble in
+different ways; but I am not at liberty to give you information on
+that head. It is the king's special pleasure to have new-comers
+form their own impressions, and he is particularly fond of noting
+their surprise, and, above all, their approval. People usually
+come here of their own accord through the influence of our secret
+force of agents all over the earth, but you were brought because
+you happened to drop on our island and would have found out too
+much for our good, and that red light you kept burning night and
+day might have given us trouble. There is no telling how long you
+could have kept alive on those clams."
+
+"We meant no offence," apologized Thorndyke; "we----"
+
+"Oh, I know it, I was only explaining the situation," interrupted
+the officer.
+
+"What is that bright spot to the right?" asked Thorndyke, to
+change the subject.
+
+"The king's palace; that is the dome. We shall soon be there.
+Now, I must not talk to you any longer. Somebody may be watching
+us with glasses. I have taken a liking to you, and some time,
+when I get the opportunity, I shall give you some useful advice,
+but I must treat you very formally, at least till you have had
+audience with the king."
+
+"Thank you," said the Englishman, and Tradmos stood up in the car
+to watch their progress through the circular glass of a little
+cupola on top. Thorndyke smiled at Johnston, but the American was
+in no pleasant mood. The indifference with which Tradmos had
+treated him had nettled him.
+
+The machine was now slowly descending. A vast pile of white
+marble, with many golden domes and spires, rose between them and
+the earth below.
+
+"To the balcony on the central dome," ordered Tradmos through the
+window of the driver's compartment; and the adventurers felt the
+car sweep round in a curve that threw them against each other,
+and the next moment they had landed on a wide iron balcony
+encircling a great golden cone that towered hundreds of feet
+above them.
+
+
+
+Chapter V.
+
+"Follow me," said the captain stiffly, for there were several
+guards in white and gold uniforms pacing to and fro on the
+battlement-like walls. He led the two adventurers through a
+door in the base of the dome. At first they were dazed by a
+brilliant light from above, and looking up they beheld a marvel
+of kaleidoscopic colors formed by a myriad of electric-lighted
+prisms sloping gradually from the floor to the apex of the dome.
+Thorndyke could compare it to nothing but a stupendous diamond,
+the very heart of which the eye penetrated.
+
+"Don't look at it now," advised Tradmos, in an undertone; "it was
+constructed to be seen from below, and to light the great
+rotunda."
+
+Mutely the captives obeyed. At every turn they were greeted with
+a new wonder. The captain now led them round a narrow balcony on
+the inside of the vast dome, and, looking over the railing down
+below, they saw a vast tessellated pavement made of polished
+stones of various and brilliant colors and so artistically
+arranged that, from where they stood, lifelike pictures of
+landscapes seemed to rise to meet the vision wherever the eye
+rested. Statues of white marble, gold and bronze were placed here
+and there, and, in squares of living green, fountains threw up
+streams of crystal water. Tradmos paused for them to look down
+and smiled at their evident admiration.
+
+"How far is it down there?" Thorndyke ventured to ask.
+
+"Over a thousand feet," replied Tradmos. "Look across opposite
+and you will see that there are fifty floors beneath us, and each
+floor has a balcony like this overlooking the court."
+
+"What is the sound that comes up from below?" asked the
+Englishman.
+
+"It is the voices of the people and their footsteps on the
+stone."
+
+"What people?"
+
+"Don't you see them? Your eyes are dazzled by the light; I ought
+to have warned you against looking up into the dome. The people
+are down there; do the views in the pavement not look a little
+blurred?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, if you will look more closely you will see that it is a
+multitude of people."
+
+"Great heavens!" exclaimed the Englishman, and he became deeply
+absorbed in the contemplation of the rarest sight he had ever
+seen. As he looked closely he noticed a black spot growing larger
+and nearer, and he glanced inquiringly at the captain.
+
+"It is an elevator. There are a great many of them used in the
+palace, but none have happened to rise as high as this since we
+came. The one you see is coming for us." The next moment the
+strange vehicle was floating toward them. The captain opened the
+door and preceded the captives into the interior.
+
+"The royal audience chamber," he said, carelessly, to the driver
+behind the glass of the adjoining compartment, and down
+they floated as lightly as a bubble--down past balcony after
+balcony, laden with moving throngs, until they alighted in a
+great conservatory.
+
+Near them was a tall fountain the water of which was playing
+weird music on great bells of glass, some of which hung in
+the fountain's stream and others rose and fell, giving forth
+strange, submerged tones in the foaming basin.
+
+"It is a new invention recently placed here by the king's son who
+is a musical genius," explained Tradmos. "You will be astonished
+at some of his inventions."
+
+He led them, as if to avoid the great crowds that they could now
+hear on all sides, down a long vista of palms, the branches of
+which met over their heads, to the wide door of the audience
+chamber. A party of men dressed in uniforms of white silk with
+gold and silver ornaments bowed before the captain and made way
+for him.
+
+The captives now found themselves in the most splendid and
+spacious room they had ever seen, at the far end of which was
+a long dais and on it an elaborate throne.
+
+"I shall be obliged to leave you when the king comes," said
+Tradmos to Thorndyke, "but I shall hope to see you again. Don't
+forget my name and rank, for I may send you a message some time
+that may aid you." "Thank you," replied the Englishman, and
+then as a throng of beautiful young women came from a room on the
+side and gathered about the throne he added inquisitively: "Who
+are they?"
+
+"The wives and daughters of the king and the wives of the
+princes," was the cautious answer, "but don't look at any one of
+them closely."
+
+"I don't see how a fellow can help it; they are ravishingly
+beautiful, don't you think so, Johnston?"
+
+"Don't be a fool," snapped the American, "don't you know enough
+to hold your tongue."
+
+Tradmos smiled as if amused, and when he had shown them to seats
+near the great golden throne, he said:
+
+"Stay where you are till the king sends for you, and then go and
+kneel before the throne. Do not rise till he bids you."
+
+The captives thanked him and the captain turned away. The eyes of
+all the royal party now rested on the strangers, and it was
+hard for them to appear unconscious of it. A great crowd was
+slowly filling the room and an orchestra in a balcony on the left
+of the dais began to make delightful music on instruments the
+strangers had never before seen. After an entrancing prelude a
+sound of singing was heard, and far up in a grand dome, lighted
+like the one the captives had just admired over the central court
+of the palace, they saw a bevy of maidens, robed in white, moving
+about in mid-air, apparently unsupported by anything.
+
+"How on earth is that done?" asked Thorndyke.
+
+"I don't know," returned Johnston, speaking more freely now that
+the captain had gone. "I am not surprised at anything."
+
+"Their voices are exquisite, and that orchestra--a Boston
+symphony concert couldn't be compared to it."
+
+"There goes the sunlight again," cried Johnston, "by Jove, it is
+blue!"
+
+The transition was sublime. They seemed transported to some other
+scene. The great multitude, the elegantly-dressed attendants about
+the throne, the courtiers, the beautiful women, all seemed to
+change in appearance; on the view through the wide doors leading
+to the conservatory, and the great swarming court beyond, the soft
+blue light fell like a filmy veil of enchantment.
+
+"Wonderful!" exclaimed the American.
+
+"It is ahead of our clocks, anyway," jested Thorndyke. "Any
+child that can count on its fingers could tell that this is the
+fifth hour of the day."
+
+The music grew louder; there was a harmonious blare of mighty
+trumpets, the clang of gongs and cymbals, and then the
+music softened till it could scarcely be heard. There was
+commotion about the throne.
+
+The king was coming. Every person on the dais stood motionless,
+expectant. A page drew aside the rich curtain from a door on the
+right, and an old man, wearing a robe of scarlet ornamented with
+jewels and a crown set with sparkling gems, entered and seated
+himself on the throne. The music sank lower; so soft did it
+become that the tinkling bells of the great fountain outside
+could be heard throughout the room.
+
+The king bowed to the throng on the dais and spoke a few words to
+a courtier who advanced as he sat down. The courtier must have
+spoken of them, for the king at once looked down at Johnston and
+Thorn-dyke and nodded his head. The courtier spoke to a page,
+and the youth left the dais and came toward the captives.
+
+"We are in for it," cautioned Thorndyke, "now don't be afraid of
+your shadow; we'll come out all right."
+
+"The king has sent for you," said the page, the next instant. "Go
+to the throne."
+
+They were the cynosure of the entire room as they went up the
+carpeted steps of the dais and knelt before the king.
+
+
+
+Chapter VI.
+
+"Rise!" commanded the king, in a deep, well-modulated voice, and
+when they had arisen he inspected them critically, his eyes
+lingering on Thorndyke.
+
+"You look as if you take life easily; you have a jovial
+countenance," he said cordially.
+
+Thorndyke returned his smile and at once felt at ease.
+
+"There is no use in taking it any other way," he said; "it
+doesn't amount to much at best."
+
+"You are wrong," returned the king, playing with the jewels on
+his robe, "that is because you have been reared as you have--in
+your unsystematic world. Here we make life a serious study. It
+is our object to assist nature in all things. The efforts of your
+people amount to nothing because they are not carried far enough.
+Your scientists are dreaming idiots. They are continually groping
+after the ideal and doing nothing with the positive. It was for
+us to carry out everything to perfection. Show me where we can
+make a single improvement and you shall become a prince."
+
+"If my life depended on that, my head would be off this instant,"
+was the quick-witted reply of the Englishman.
+
+This so pleased the king that he laughed till he shook. "Well
+said," he smiled; "so you like our country?"
+
+"Absolutely charmed; my friend (Thorndyke was determined to
+bring his companion into favor, if possible) and I have been in
+raptures ever since we rose this morning."
+
+A flush of pleasure crossed the face of the king. "You have not
+seen half of our wonders yet. I confess that I am pleased with
+you, sir. The majority of people who are brought here are so
+frightened that they grow morbid and desirous to return to
+their own countries as soon as they learn that such a thing is
+out of the question."
+
+Thorndyke's stout heart suffered a sudden pang at the words, but
+he did not change countenance in the slightest, for the king was
+closely watching the effect of his announcement.
+
+"Of course," went on the ruler, gratified by the indifference of
+the Englishman, "of course, it could not be done. No one,
+outside of a few of the royal family and our trusted agents, has
+ever left us."
+
+"I can't see how any one could be so unappreciative as to want
+to go," answered Thorndyke, with a coolness that surprised even
+Johnston. "I have travelled in all countries under the sun--the
+sun I was born under--and got so bored with them that my friend
+and myself took to ballooning for diversion; but here, there is a
+delightful surprise at every turn."
+
+"I was told you were aeronauts," returned the ruler, deigning to
+cast a glance at the silent Johnston, who stood with
+eyes downcast, "and I confess that it interested me in you."
+
+At that juncture a most beautiful girl glided through the
+curtains at the back of the throne and came impulsively toward
+the king. Her brown hair fell in rich masses on her bare
+shoulders; her eyes were large, deep and brown, and her skin was
+exquisitely fine in texture and color; her dress was artistic
+and well suited to her lithe figure. She held an instrument
+resembling a lute in her hands, and stopped suddenly when she
+noticed that the king was engaged,
+
+"It is my daughter, the Princess Bernardino," explained the
+king, as he heard her light step and turned toward her;
+"she shall sing for you, and, yes (nodding to her) you shall
+dance also."
+
+As she took her position on a great rug in front of the throne,
+she kept her eyes on the handsome Englishman as if fascinated
+by his appearance. Thorndyke's heart beat quickly; the blood
+mantled his face and he stood entranced as she touched the
+resonant strings with her white fingers and began to play and
+sing. An innocent, artless smile parted her lips from her
+matchless teeth, and her face glowed with inspiration. Far above
+in the nooks and crannies of the vast dome, with its divergent
+corridors and arcades, the faint echoes of her voice seemed to
+reply to her during the pauses in her song. Then she ceased
+singing and to the far-away and yet distinct accompaniment of
+some stringed instrument in the orchestra, she began to dance.
+Holding her instrument in a graceful fashion against her shoulder
+as one holds a violin, and with her flowing white gown caught in
+the other hand, she bowed and smiled and instantly seemed
+transformed. From the statuesque and dreamy singer she became a
+marvel of graceful motion. To and fro she swept from end to end of
+the great rug, her tiny feet and slim ankles tripping so lightly
+that she seemed to move without support through the air.
+
+Thorndyke stood as if spell-bound, for, at every turn, as if
+seeking his approval, she glanced at him inquiringly. When
+she finished she stood for a moment in the centre of the rug
+panting, her beautiful bosom, beneath its filmy covering of
+lace, gently rising and falling. Then, asking her father's
+consent with a mute glance, she ran forward impulsively, and,
+kneeling at Thorndyke's feet, she took his hand and pressed it
+to her lips. And rising, suffused with blushes, she tripped from
+the dais and disappeared behind the curtain.
+
+The king frowned as he looked after her. "It is a mark of
+preference," he said coldly. "It is one of our customs for a
+dancer or singer to favor some one of her spectators in that way.
+My daughter evidently mistook you for an ambassador from one of
+my provinces, but it does not matter."
+
+"She is wonderfully beautiful," replied the tactful Englishman,
+pretending not to be flattered by the notice of the princess.
+
+"Do you think our people fine looking as a rule?" asked the king,
+to change the subject.
+
+"Decidedly; I never imagined such a race existed."
+
+Again the king was pleased. "That is one of the objects of our
+system. Generation after generation we improve mentally
+and physically. We are the only people who have ever attempted to
+thoroughly study the science of living. Your medical men may be
+numbered by the million; your remedies for your ills change
+daily; what you say is good for the health to-day is to-
+morrow believed to be poison; to-day you try to make blood to
+give strength, and half a century ago you believed in taking it
+from the weakest of your patients. With all this fuss over
+health, you will think nothing of allowing the son of a man who
+died with a loathsome hereditary disease to marry a woman whose
+family has never had a taint of blood. Here no such thing is
+thought of. To begin with, no person who is not thoroughly sound
+can remain with us. Every heart-beat is heard by our medical men
+and every vein is transparent. You see evidences of the benefit
+of our system in the men and women around you. All our
+conveniences, the excellence of our products, our great
+inventions are the result."
+
+"I have been wondering about the size of your country," ventured
+Thorndyke cautiously.
+
+The king smiled. "That will be one of the things for you to
+discover later," he returned. "But this, the City of Moron,
+is the capital; our provinces, farming lands, smaller cities,
+towns and hamlets lie around us. Come with me and I will show
+you something."
+
+He waved his hand and dismissed a number of courtiers who were
+waiting to be called, and rose from the throne and led the two
+captives into a large apartment adjoining the throne-room. Here
+they found six men in blue uniforms looking into a large circular
+mirror on a table. They all bowed and moved aside as the king
+approached.
+
+"These men are the municipal police," explained the king, resting
+his hand on the gold frame of the glass; "they are watching the
+city." And when the strangers drew nearer they were surprised to
+see reflected, in the deeply concave glass, the entire city in
+miniature; its streets, parks, public buildings, and moving
+populace. And what seemed to be the most remarkable feature of
+the invention was, that the instant the eye rested on any
+particular portion of the whole that part was at once magnified
+so that every detail of it was clearly observable.
+
+"This is an improvement on your police system," continued the
+king. "No sooner does anything go wrong than a red signal is
+given on the spot of the trouble and the attention of these
+officers is immediately called to it. A flying machine is sent
+out and the offender is brought to the police station; but
+trouble of any nature rarely occurs, and the duties of our police
+are merely nominal; my people live in thorough harmony. Now,
+come with me and I will give you an idea of the surrounding
+country."
+
+As the king spoke he led them into a circular room, the roof of
+which was of white glass, and the walls were lined with
+large mirrors.
+
+"This is our general observatory from which every part of Alpha
+can be seen," said the king with a touch of pride in his tone.
+"Look at the mirror in front of you."
+
+They did as he requested, and at first saw nothing; but, as he
+went to a stone table in the centre of the room and touched
+an electric button, a grand view of green fields, forests,
+streams, lakes and farm-houses flashed upon the mirror. The king
+laughed at their surprise and touched another button. As he did
+so the scene shifted gradually; the landscapes ran by like a
+panorama. A pretty village came into sight, and passed; then a
+larger town and still a larger; then fields, hills and valleys
+and forests of giant trees.
+
+"It is that way all over my kingdom," said the king; "in an hour
+I can inspect it all."
+
+"But how is it done?" asked Thorndyke, forgetting himself in
+wonder.
+
+"Through a telescopic invention, aided by electricity and the
+clearness of our atmosphere," replied the king. "It would
+take too long to go into the details. The views, however, are
+reflected to this point from various observatories throughout the
+land. Such a system would be impossible in any other country on
+account of the clouds and atmospheric changes; but here we
+control everything."
+
+"I noticed," returned the Englishman, "that green fields lie
+beside ripening ones and those in which the grain is being
+harvested."
+
+"We have no change of seasons," answered the king. "Change of
+seasons may be according to nature, but it is in the province of
+man's intellect to improve on nature. But I must leave you now; I
+shall summon you again when I have the leisure to continue our
+conversation."
+
+"Well, what do you think of it?" asked Johnston, as the king
+disappeared behind a curtain in the direction of the audience
+chamber.
+
+"I give it up; I only know that the old fellow's daughter, the
+Princess Bernardino is the most beautiful, the most bewitching
+creature that ever breathed. Did you notice her eyes and form?
+Great heavens! was there ever such a vision of human loveliness?
+Her grace, her voice, her glances drove me wild with delight."
+
+"You are dead gone," grumbled the American despondently; "we'll
+never get away from here in the world. I can see that."
+
+"I gave up all hope in that direction some time ago," said
+Thorndyke; "and why should we care? We were awfully bored with
+life before we came; for my part I'd as soon end mine up here as
+anywhere else. Besides, didn't his majesty say that they live
+longer under his system than we do?"
+
+"I don't take stock in all he says," growled the American; "he
+talks like a Chicago real estate agent who wants to sell a lot.
+Why doesn't he chop off our heads and be done with it?"
+
+Thorndyke burst into a jovial laugh. "You are coming round all
+right; that is the first joke you have got off since we came
+here; his royal Nibs may need a court-jester and give you a job."
+
+"There goes that blamed sunlight again," exclaimed Johnston,
+grasping his companion's arm, "don't you see it changing?"
+
+"Yes, and this time it is white, like old Sol's natural smile;
+but isn't it clear? It seems to me that I could see to the end
+of the earth in that light. I want to know how he does it."
+
+"How who does it?"
+
+"Why, the king, of course, it is his work--some sort of
+invention; but we must keep civil tongues in our heads when we
+are dealing with a man who can color the very light of the sun."
+
+They were walking back toward the great rotunda, and, as they
+entered the conservatory, the crowds of men and women stared at
+them curiously. They had paused to inspect the statue of a
+massive stone dragon when a young officer in glittering
+uniform approached and addressed Johnston.
+
+"Follow me," he said simply; "it is the king's command."
+
+The American started and looked at Thorndyke apprehensively.
+
+"Go," said the latter; "don't hesitate an instant."
+
+Poor Johnston had turned white. He held out his hand to
+Thorndyke, "Shake," he said in a whisper, not intended for
+the ears of the officer, "I don't believe that we shall meet
+again. I felt that we were to be parted ever since that medical
+examination."
+
+Thorndyke's face had altered; an angry flush came in his face and
+his eyes flashed, but with an effort he controlled himself.
+
+"Tut, tut, don't be silly. I shall wait for you round here; if
+there is any foul play I shall make some one suffer for it. You
+can depend on me to the end; we are hand in hand in this
+adventure, old man."
+
+
+
+Chapter VII.
+
+Johnston followed his guide to a flying machine outside. He
+hesitated an instant, as the officer was holding the door
+open, and looked back toward the conservatory; but he could not
+see Thorndyke.
+
+"Where are you taking me?" he asked desperately. But the officer
+did not seem to hear the question. He was motioning to a tall man
+of athletic build who wore a dark blue uniform and who came
+hastily forward and pushed the American into the machine. Through
+the open door Johnston saw Thorndyke's anxious face as the
+Englishman emerged from the conservatory and strode toward them.
+The two officers entered and closed the glass door.
+
+Then the machine rose and Johnston's spirits sank as they shot
+upward and floated easily over the humming crowd into the
+free white light above the smokeless city. The poor captive
+leaned on the window-sill and looked out. There was no breeze,
+and no current of air except that caused by their rapid passage
+through the atmosphere.
+
+Up, up, they went, till the city seemed a blur of mingled white
+and gray, and then the color below changed to a vague blue
+as they flew over the fields of the open country.
+
+The first officer took a glass and a decanter from a receptacle
+under a seat, and, pouring a little red fluid into the
+glass, offered it to the American.
+
+"Drink it," he said, "it will put you to sleep for a time."
+
+"I don't want to be drugged."
+
+"The journey will try your nerves. It is harmless."
+
+"I don't want it; if I take it, you will have to pour it down my
+throat."
+
+The officer smiled as he put the glass and decanter away. Faster
+and faster flew the machine. They had to put the window down, for
+the current of air had become too strong and cool to be pleasant.
+The color of the sunlight changed to green, and then at noon,
+from the zenith, a glorious red light shimmered down and veiled
+the earth with such a beautiful translucent haze that the poor
+American for a moment almost forgot his trouble.
+
+The afternoon came on. The sunlight became successively green,
+white, blue, lavender, rose and gray. The sun was no longer in
+sight and the gray in the west was darkening into purple, the
+last hour of the day. Night was at hand. Johnston's limbs were
+growing stiff from inaction, and he had a strong desire to speak
+or to hear one of the officers say something, but they were
+dozing in their respective corners. The moon had risen and hung
+far out in space overhead, but they seemed to be leaving it
+behind. Later he felt sure of this, for its light gradually
+became dimmer and dimmer till at last they were in total
+darkness--darkness pierced only by the powerful search-light
+which threw its dazzling, trumpet-shaped rays far ahead. But,
+search as he would in the direction they were going, the
+unfortunate American could see nothing but the ever-receding wall
+of blackness.
+
+Suddenly they began to descend. The officers awoke and stretched
+themselves and yawned. One of them opened the window and Johnston
+heard a far-off, roaring sound like that of a multitude of
+skaters on a vast sheet of ice.
+
+Down, down, they dropped. Johnston's heart was in his mouth.
+
+The machine suddenly slackened in its speed and then hung poised
+in mid-air. The rays of the search-light were directed downward
+and slowly shifted from point to point. Looking down, the American
+caught glimpses of rugged rocks, sharp cliffs and yawning chasms.
+
+"How is it?" asked the first officer, through a speaking-tube, of
+the driver.
+
+"A good landing!" was the reply.
+
+"Well, go down." And a moment later the machine settled on the
+uneven ground.
+
+The same officer opened the door, and gently pushed Johnston out.
+Johnston expected them to follow him, but the door of the machine
+closed behind him.
+
+"Stand out of the way," cried out the officer through the window;
+"you may get struck as we rise."
+
+Involuntarily Johnston obeyed. There was a sound of escaping air
+from beneath the machine, a fierce commotion in the atmosphere
+which sucked him toward the machine, and then the dazzling
+search-light blinded him, as the air-ship bounded upward and
+sailed back over the course it had come.
+
+Johnston stood paralyzed with fear. "My God, this is awful!" he
+exclaimed in terror, and his knees gave way beneath him and
+he sank to the rock. "They have left me here to starve in this
+hellish darkness!" He remained there for a moment, his face
+covered with his hands, then he sprang up desperately, and
+started to grope through the darkness, he knew not whither. He
+stumbled at almost every step, and ran against boulders which
+bruised his hands and face, and went on till his strength was
+gone. Then he paused and looked back toward the direction from
+which he had come. It seemed to him that he could see the
+straight line of mighty black wall above which there was a faint
+appearance of light. A lump rose in the throat of the poor
+fellow, and tears sprang into his eyes.
+
+But what was that? Surely it was a sound. It could not have been
+the wind, for the air was perfectly still. The sound was
+repeated. It was like the moaning of a human voice far away in
+the dark. Could it be some one in distress, some poor
+unfortunate, banished being, like himself? Again he heard the
+sound, and this time, it was like the voice of some one talking.
+
+"Hello!" shouted the American, and a cold shudder went over him
+at the sound of his own husky voice. There was a dead silence,
+then, like an echo of his own cry, faintly came the word, "Hello!"
+
+Filled with superstitious fear, the American cautiously groped
+toward the sound. "Hello, there, who are you?"
+
+"Help, help!" said the voice, and it was now much nearer.
+
+Johnston plunged forward precipitately. "Where are you?"
+
+"Here," and a human form loomed up before him.
+
+For a moment neither spoke, then the strange figure said: "I
+thought at first that you were some one sent to rescue me, but I
+see you are alone--damned like myself."
+
+"It looks that way," replied Johnston.
+
+"When did they bring you?"
+
+"Only a moment ago."
+
+"My God, it is awful! A week ago I did not dream of such a fate
+as this. I had enemies. The medical men were bribed to vote
+against me. Am I not strong? Am I not muscular? Feel my arms and
+thighs."
+
+He held out an arm and Johnston felt of it. The muscles were like
+stone.
+
+"You are a giant."
+
+"Ah! you are right; but they reported that there was a taint in
+my blood. I was to marry Lallio, the most beautiful creature in
+our village--Madryl, you know, the nearest hamlet to the home of
+the Sun. I was rich, and the best farmer there. But Lyngale
+wanted her. She hated him and spat at him when he spoke against
+me. He proved by others that my lungs were weak, and showed them
+the blood of a slain dog in my fields that they said had come
+from my lungs. Ah, they were curs! My lungs weak! Strike my chest
+with all your might. Does it not sound like the king's thunder?
+Strike, I say!" and as the enfeebled American struck his bare
+breast he cried:--Harder, harder! Pooh, you are a child, see
+this, and this," and he emphasized his words with thunderous
+blows on his resounding chest.
+
+"But it has been so for a century," he panted; "hundreds have
+been unjustly buried alive here. The king thinks it is not murder
+because they die of starvation. I have stumbled over the bones of
+giants here in the dark lands, and have met dying men that are
+stronger than the king's athletes."
+
+"What, are there others here?" gasped the American.
+
+The Alphian was silent in astonishment.
+
+"Why, where did you come from?" he asked, after a pause.
+
+"From New York City."
+
+"I don't know of it, and yet I thought I knew of all the places
+inside the great endless wall."
+
+Johnston was mystified in his turn. "It is not in your country--
+your world, or whatever you call it. It is far away."
+
+"Ah, under the white sun! In the 'Ocean Country,' and the world
+of fierce winds and disease. And you are from there. I had heard
+of it before they banished me; but two days since I came across a
+dying man, away over there. He was huddled against the wall, and
+had fallen and killed himself in his efforts to climb back to
+food and light.
+
+"I saw him die. He told me that he had come from your land when
+he was a child. His trouble was the lungs and he had fallen off
+to a skeleton. He talked to me of your wide ocean land. Is it,
+indeed so great? And has it no walls about it?"
+
+"No, it is surrounded by water."
+
+"I cannot understand," and, after a pause, in which Johnston
+could hear the great fellow's heart beating, he continued; "That
+must be the Heaven the man spoke about. And beyond the water is
+it always dark like this, and do they banish people there as the
+king has us?"
+
+"No; beyond are other countries. But is there no chance for us to
+escape from here?"
+
+The Alphian laughed bitterly. "None. What were you banished for?"
+
+"I hardly know."
+
+"Hold out your arm. There," as he grasped Johnston's arm in a
+clasp of iron, "I see; you are undeveloped, unfit--none but
+the healthy and strong are allowed to live in Alpha. It is right,
+of course; but it is hard to bear. But I must lie down. I
+am wearied with constant rambling. I am nervous too. I fell
+asleep awhile ago and dreamt I heard all my friends in a
+great clamoring body calling my name, 'Branasko!' and then I
+awoke and cried for help."
+
+As he spoke he sank with a sigh to the ground and rested his head
+on his elbows and knees and seemed asleep. The American sat down
+beside him, and, for a long time, neither spoke. Branasko broke
+the silence; he awoke with a start and eyed his companion in
+sleepy wonder.
+
+"Ugh, I dreamt again," he grunted, "are you asleep?"
+
+"No," was Johnston's reply. "I am hungry and thirsty and cannot
+sleep."
+
+"So am I, but we must wait till it is lighter, then we can go in
+search of food. When I was a boy I learned to catch fish in pools
+with my hands and it has prolonged my life here. When the light
+comes again, I shall show you how I do it."
+
+"Then the day does break? I thought it was eternally dark here."
+
+"It does not get very light, because we are behind the sun; but
+it is lighter than now, for we get the sun's reflection, enough
+at least to keep us from falling into the chasms."
+
+Branasko lowered his head to his knees and slept again, but the
+American, though wearied, was wakeful. Several hours passed. The
+Alphian was sleeping soundly, his breathing was very heavy and he
+had rolled down on his side.
+
+Far away in the east the darkness gradually faded into purple,
+and then into gray, and slowly hints of pink appeared in
+the skies. It was dawn. Johnston touched his companion. The man
+awoke and looked at him from his great swollen eyes.
+
+"It is day," he yawned, rising and stretching himself.
+
+"But the sun is not in sight."
+
+"No; it shows itself only in the middle of the day, and then but
+for a few minutes. We must go now and search for food. I will
+show you how to catch the eyeless fish in the black caverns over
+there." And he led the American into the blackness behind them.
+Every now and then, as they stumbled along, Johnston would look
+longingly back toward the faint pink light that shone above the
+high black wall. But Branasko hastened on.
+
+Presently they came to the edge of a black chasm and the American
+was filled with awe, for, from the seemingly fathomless depths,
+came a great roaring sound like that of a mighty wind and the air
+that came from it was hot, though pure and free from the odor of
+gas.
+
+"What is this?" he asked.
+
+"They are everywhere," answered Branasko, "if it were not for
+their hot breathing the Land of the Changing Sun would be cold
+and damp."
+
+"Then the sun does not give out heat?"
+
+"No."
+
+"It is cold?"
+
+"I believe so, I have never thought much about it."
+
+The American was mystified, but he did not question farther, for
+Branasko was carefully lowering himself into the hot gulf.
+
+"Follow me," he said; "we must cross it to reach the caves. I
+will guide you. I have been over this way before."
+
+"But can we stand the heat?"
+
+"Oh, yes; when we get used to it, it is invigorating. I perspire
+in streams, but I feel better afterward. Come on."
+
+Branasko's head only was above the ground. "I am standing on a
+ledge," he said. "Get down beside me. Fear nothing. It is solid;
+besides, what does it matter? You can die but once, and it would
+really be better to fall down there into the internal fires than
+to starve slowly."
+
+Johnston shuddered convulsively as he let himself down beside
+Branasko. His foot dislodged a stone. With a crash it fell upon a
+lower ledge and bounded off and went whizzing down into the
+depths. Both men listened. They heard the stone bounding from
+ledge to ledge till the sound was lost in the internal roaring.
+
+"It is mighty deep," said Johnston.
+
+"Yes, but follow me; we cannot stop here; we must go along this
+ledge till we get to the point where the chasm is narrow enough
+to jump across. I have done it."
+
+"The American held to his companion with one hand and the rock
+with the other, and they slowly made their way along the narrow
+ledge, pausing every now and then to rest. At every step the path
+grew more perilous and narrower, and the cliff on their left rose
+higher and higher, till the reflected light of the sun had
+entirely disappeared. At certain points the hot wind dashed
+upon them as furiously as the whirling mist in "The Cave of
+Winds" at Niagara Falls. Once Johnston's foot slipped and he
+fell, but was drawn back to safety by the strong arm of the
+Alphian.
+
+"Be careful; hold to the cliff's face," warned Branasko
+indifferently, and he moved onward as if nothing unusual had
+occurred. Presently they reached a point where a narrow boulder
+jutted out over the chasm toward the opposite side, and
+Branasko cautiously crawled out upon it. When he had got to its
+end, Johnston could not see him in the gloom, but his voice came
+to him out of the roaring of the chasm.
+
+"I can see the other side, and am going to jump." An instant
+later, the American heard the clatter of the Alphian's shoes
+on the rock, and his grunt of satisfaction. Then Branasko called
+out: "Come on; crawl out till you feel the end of the rock, and
+then you can see me."
+
+In great trepidation the American slowly crawled out on the
+narrow rock. Below him yawned the hot darkness, above hung
+that black ominous canopy of nothingness. Slowly he advanced on
+hands and knees, every moment feeling the sharp rock growing
+narrower, till finally he reached the end. He looked ahead. He
+could but faintly see the ledge and Branasko's tall form
+silhouetted upon it.
+
+"See, this is where you have to alight," cried the Alphian.
+"Jump, I will catch you!"
+
+"I am afraid I shall topple over when I stand up," replied the
+American. "The rock is narrow and my head is already swimming. I
+fear I cannot reach you. It is no use."
+
+"Tut, tut!" exclaimed Branasko. "Stand up quickly, and jump at
+once. Don't stop to think about it."
+
+Johnston obeyed. He felt his feet firmly braced on the rock and
+he sprang toward the opposite ledge with all his might. Branasko
+caught him.
+
+"Good," he grunted. "There is another place, we must jump again.
+It is further on." Along this ledge they went for some distance,
+Branasko leading the way and holding the arm of the American.
+
+"Now here we are, the chasm is a little wider, but the ledge on
+the other side is broader." As he spoke he released Johnston's
+arm and prepared to jump. He filled his lungs two or three
+times. But he seemed to hesitate. "Pshaw, watching you back there
+has made me nervous. I never cared before. If I should happen to
+fall, go back to where we met, it is safer there without a guide
+than here."
+
+Without another word Branasko hurled himself forward. Johnston
+held his breath in horror, for Branasko's foot had slipped as he
+jumped. The Alphian had struck the opposite ledge, but not with
+his feet, as he intended. He clutched it with his hands and hung
+there for a moment, struggling to get a foothold in the emptiness
+beneath him.
+
+"It's no use, I am falling; I can hold no longer!" And Johnston,-
+-too terrified to reply,--heard the poor fellow's hands
+slipping from the rock, causing a quantity of loose stones to go
+rattling down below. With a low cry Branasko fell. An instant
+later Johnston heard him strike the ledge beneath, and heard him
+cry out in pain. Then all was still except the echoes of
+Branasko's cry, which bounded and rebounded from side to side of
+the chasm, and grew fainter and fainter, till it was submerged in
+the roaring below. Then there was a rattle of stones, and
+Branasko's voice sounded: "A narrow escape!" he said faintly. "I
+am on another ledge"--then after a slight pause, "it is much
+wider, I don't know how wide. Are you listening?"
+
+"Yes, but are you hurt?"
+
+"Not at all. Simply knocked the breath out of me for a moment.
+There is a cave behind me, and (for a moment there was silence) I
+can see a light ahead in the cave. I think it must be the
+reflection of the internal fire. Come down to me and we will
+explore the cavern, and see where the light comes from."
+
+"I can't get down there!" shouted Johnston, to make himself
+heard above a sudden increase in the roaring in the chasm,
+"there is no way."
+
+"Wait a moment!" came from the Alphian. "This ledge seems to
+incline upward."
+
+Johnston stood perfectly motionless, afraid to move from the
+ledge either to right or to left, and heard Branasko's footsteps
+along the rock beneath. "All right so far," he called up, and his
+voice showed that he had gone to a considerable distance to the
+left, "the ledge seems to be still leading gradually upward. I
+think I can reach you."
+
+Fifteen minutes passed. The lone American could no longer hear
+Branasko's footsteps. Johnston was becoming uneasy and the hot
+air was causing his head to swim. He was thinking of trying to
+retrace his footsteps to a place of more security when he heard
+footsteps, and then the cheery voice of Branasko nearly opposite
+him across the chasm:
+
+"Are you there?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"It is well; I have discovered a good pathway down to the cave,
+and a pool of fish besides. I have saved some for you. I was so
+hungry I had to eat. Now, you must jump over to me."
+
+"I cannot," declared the American. "I cannot jump so far;
+besides, you failed."
+
+Branasko laughed. "I did not leap in the right direction. It is
+this point on which I am now standing that I should have tried to
+reach. Come, I will catch you."
+
+Johnston could not bear to be considered cowardly, so he stepped
+to the verge of the chasm and prepared to jump. His head felt
+more dizzy as he thought of the fathomless depths beneath, and
+the rush of hot air up the side of the cliff took his breath away,
+but he braced himself and said calmly: "All right, I am coming."
+The next instant he sprang forward. Branasko caught him into his
+arms and they both rolled back on the level stone.
+
+"Good," cried the Alphian, trying to catch his breath, which
+Johnston had knocked out of him by the fall. "You did better
+than I; you are lighter."
+
+"Where shall we go now?" asked Johnston, regaining his feet and
+feeling of his legs and arms to see if he had broken any bones.
+
+"Down this winding path to the place where I saw that light. I
+want to understand it. But you must first eat this fish. It is
+delicious. They are swarming in the pools below."
+
+"And water?" said Johnston.
+
+"An abundance of it, and as cold as ice."
+
+As Branasko preceded him down the tortuous path, Johnston ate the
+raw fish eagerly. Presently they came to a deep pool of water,
+and both men threw themselves down on their stomachs and drank
+freely. After this they proceeded slowly for several hundred
+yards, and finally reached the entrance to the cave in which
+Branasko had seen the light. At that distance it looked like the
+light of some great conflagration reflected from the face of a
+cliff.
+
+They entered the cave and made good progress toward the light,
+for it showed them the dangerous fissures, sharp boulders and
+stalactites. They had walked along in silence for several minutes
+when the Alphian stopped abruptly and turned to his companion.
+What is the matter?" asked Johnston.
+
+"It cannot come from the internal fires," replied Branasko,"for
+the atmosphere grows cooler as we get nearer the light and
+away from the chasm."
+
+Johnston was too much puzzled to formulate a reply, and he
+simply waited for the Alphian to continue.
+
+"Let's go on," said Branasko; and in his tone and hesitating
+manner Johnston detected the first appearance of
+superstitious fear that he had seen in the brawny Alphian.
+
+
+
+ Chapter VIII.
+
+As Thorndyke watched the flying machine that was bearing his
+friend away a genuine feeling of pity went over him. Poor
+Johnston! He had been haunted all day with the belief that he was
+to meet with some misfortune from which Thorndyke was to be
+spared, and Thorndyke had ridiculed his fears. When the air-ship
+had become a mere speck in the sky, the Englishman turned back
+into the palace and strolled about in the vast crowd.
+
+A handsome young man in uniform approached and touched his hat:
+
+"Are you the comrade of the fellow they are just sending away?" he
+asked.
+
+"Yes. Where are they taking him?"
+
+"To the 'Barrens,' of course; where do you suppose they would take
+such a man? He couldn't pass his examination. You are not a great
+physical success yourself, but they say you pleased the king with
+your tongue."
+
+"To the Barrens," repeated Thorndyke, too much concerned over the
+fate of his comrade to notice the speaker's tone of contempt;
+"what are they, where are they?"
+
+The Alphian officer changed countenance, as he looked him over
+with widening eyes.
+
+"Your accent is strange; are you from the other world?"
+
+"I suppose so,--this is a new one to me at any rate."
+
+"The world of endless oceans?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And the unchanging sun--forever white and ----?"
+
+"Yes; but where the devil is the Barrens?"
+
+"Behind the sun, beyond the great endless wall."
+
+"Do they intend to put him to death?"
+
+"No, that would be--what do you call it? murder; they will simply
+leave him there to die of his own accord. And the king is right. I
+never saw such a weakling. He would taint our whole race with his
+presence."
+
+Without a word Thorndyke abruptly turned from the officer and
+hastened toward the apartment of the king. He would demand the
+return of poor Johnston or kill the king if his demand was not
+granted. In his haste and perturbation, however, he lost his way
+and wandered into a part of the palace he had not seen. At every
+step he was more and more impressed with the magnificent
+proportions of the structure and the grandeur of everything about
+it.
+
+Passing hurriedly through a large hall he saw an assemblage of
+beautiful women and handsome men dancing to the music of a great
+orchestra. Further on--in a great court--a regiment of soldiers
+were drilling, their rapid evolutions making no more sound than if
+they were moving in mid-air. In another room he saw a great body
+of men, women and children in vari-colored suits bathing in a
+pool of rose-colored, perfumed water.
+
+He was passing on when a woman, closely veiled and simply dressed,
+touched his arm.
+
+"Be watchful and follow me," she said, in a low, guarded tone.
+
+The heart of the Englishman bounded and his blood rushed to his
+face, for the speaker was the Princess Bernardino. She did not
+pause, but glided on into the shade of a great palm tree, and,
+behind a row of thick-growing ferns of great height and thickness,
+she waited for him.
+
+She lowered her veil as he approached and looked at him from
+her deep brown eyes in great concern. He stood spell-bound
+under the witchery of her beauty.
+
+"I came to warn you, Prince," she said, and her soft musical voice
+set every nerve in Thorndyke's body to tingling with delight.
+"My father has banished the faithful slave that you love, but you
+must not show the anger that you feel, else he will kill you. You
+must be exceedingly cautious if you would save him. My father
+would punish me severely if he knew that I had sought you in this
+way. I was obliged to come in disguise; this dress belongs to my
+most trusted maid."
+
+"And you came for my sake?" blurted out the Englishman, much
+embarrassed; "I am not worthy of such a high honor."
+
+She smiled and tears rose in her eyes.
+
+"Oh, Prince, don't speak to me so! You are far above me. I am
+weak. I know nothing. I never cared for other men than the king
+and my brothers till I saw you today, but now I would willingly be
+your slave."
+
+"I am yours forever, and an humble one," bowed the courteous
+Englishman. "The moment I saw you at the throne of your father my
+heart went out to you. You wound it up in your music and trampled
+it under your dancing feet. I have been over the whole world, and
+you are the loveliest creature in it. It is because I saw you,
+because you are here, that I do not want to leave your country.
+They may do as they will with me if they only will let me see you
+now and then."
+
+The princess was deeply moved. The blood rushed to her face and
+beautified it. Her eyes fell beneath his admiring glance.
+Thorndyke could not restrain himself. He caught her slender hand
+and pressed it passionately to his lips, and she made only a
+slight effort to prevent it.
+
+"I am your obedient slave; what shall I do?" he asked.
+
+"Do not try to rescue him now," she said softly. "I shall come to
+you again when we are not watched--you can know me by this dress.
+There is no need for great haste, he could live in the Barrens
+several days; I shall try to think of some way to save him, though
+such a thing has never been done--never."
+
+Footsteps were heard on the other side of the row of ferns. A man
+was passing and others soon followed him. The bathers were leaving
+the great pool.
+
+"I must leave you now," she whispered. "If the king honors you
+again by talking of his kingdom, continue to act as you did; your
+fearlessness and good humor have pleased him greatly."
+
+"Could I not persuade him to bring Johnston back?"
+
+"No; that would be impossible; those who are pronounced physically
+unfit are obliged to die. It has been a law for a long time; you
+must not count on that. I have, however, another plan, but I
+cannot tell you of it now, for they may miss me and wonder where I
+am, and then, too, my father may be looking for you. He will
+naturally desire to see you soon again."
+
+Bowing, she turned away and passed on toward the apartments of the
+king, which the Englishman now recognized in the distance.
+Thorndyke went into the bathing-room to watch those remaining in
+the great pool of rose-colored water. The sight was beautiful. The
+waves which lapped against the shelving shores of white marble
+were pink and white, and the deeper water was as red as coral.
+
+The Englishman was at once troubled over the fate of Johnston and
+elated over having won Bernardino's regard. Thoughtfully he
+strolled away from the bathers into a great picture-gallery. Here
+hung on the walls and stood on pedestals some of the rarest works
+of art he had ever seen. He passed through this room and was
+entering a shady retreat where plants, flowers and umbrageous
+trees grew thickly, when he heard a step behind him and the
+rustling of a silken skirt against the plants.
+
+It was Bernardino.
+
+"We can be unobserved here," she said, taking off her thick veil
+and arranging her luxuriant hair. "I hasten back. The king thinks,
+so my maid tells me, that I am asleep in my chamber. He is busy
+with an audience of police from a neighboring town and will not
+think of us."
+
+She sat down on a sofa upholstered in leather, and he took a seat
+beside her. "I am glad that we can talk alone," he said, "for I
+have much to ask you. First, tell me where we are,--where this
+strange country is on the map of the world."
+
+"It is a long story," she replied, "and it would greatly incense
+the king if he should find out that I had told you, for one of his
+chief pleasures is to note the surprise and admiration of new-
+comers over what they see here. But if you will promise to gratify
+his vanity in this particular I will try to explain it all."
+
+"I promise, and you can depend on my not getting you into
+trouble," replied Thorndyke. "I never was so puzzled in my life,
+with that sullen sky overhead, the wonderful changing sunlight,
+and the remarkable atmosphere. I am both bewildered and entranced.
+Every moment I see something new and startling. Where are we?"
+
+"Far beneath the ocean and the surface of the earth. I only know
+what the king has let fall in my hearing in his conferences with
+his men of science and inventors; but I shall try to make you
+understand how it all came about."
+
+"It was a long time ago, two hundred years back, I suppose, that
+one of my ancestors discovered a little isolated island in the
+Atlantic Ocean. He was forced in a storm to land there with his
+ship and crew to make some repairs in his vessel. In wandering
+about over the island he discovered a narrow entrance to a cave,
+and, with two or three of his men, he began to explore it. When
+they had gone for a mile or two down into the interior of the
+cavern, which seemed to lead straight down toward the centre of
+the earth, they began to find small pieces of gold. The further
+they went the more they found, till at last the very cavern walls
+seemed lined with it.
+
+"They were at first wildly excited over their sudden good fortune
+and were about to load their ship with it and return to Europe at
+once, but the better judgment of my ancestor prevailed. He
+explained that, if the world were informed of the discovery of
+such an inexhaustible mine of gold, that the value of the precious
+metal would decline till it would be worth little more than some
+grosser metal, and that if they would only keep their secret to
+themselves they could in time control the finances of the world.
+So, acting on this suggestion, they only dug out a few thousand
+pounds and took part of it to Europe and part of it to America
+and turned it into money.
+
+"Then, to curtail my story, they elected my ancestor as ruler,
+and, with ships loaded with every available convenience that
+inexhaustible wealth could procure and a colony of carefully
+chosen men, they returned to the island.
+
+"After the men and their families had settled in the great roomy
+mouth of the cavern my ancestor supplied himself with several
+strong men and food and lights, and sought to explore the entire
+cavern.
+
+"To their astonishment they found that it was practically endless.
+When they had gone down about sixty or seventy miles below the sea
+level they found themselves on a vast, undulating plain, the soil
+of which was dark and rich, with the black roof of the cavern
+arching overhead like the bottom of a great inverted bowl. And
+when they had travelled about ten days and reached the other side
+my ancestor calculated that the cave must be over one hundred
+miles in diameter and almost circular in shape. But what elated
+and surprised them most was the remarkable salubrity of the
+atmosphere. In all parts of the cave it was exactly the same
+temperature, and they found that they scarcely felt any fatigue
+from their journey, and that they had little desire to eat the
+provisions with which they were supplied. Indeed, the very air
+seemed permeated with a subtle quality that gave them strength and
+energy of mind and body.
+
+"Finally, when, after a month had passed, and they returned to
+their anxious friends, these people overwhelmed them with
+exclamations of surprise over their appearance. And in the light
+of day the explorers looked at one another in astonishment, for,
+in the dim light of the lanterns they had carried, they had not
+noticed the great change that had come over them. They had all
+become the finest specimens of physical health that could be
+imagined. Their bodies had filled out; they were remarkably
+strong; their skins shone with healthful color and their eyes
+sparkled with intellectual energy, and their minds, even to the
+humblest burden-carrier, were astonishingly acute and active.
+
+"My ancestor was a remarkable man, and he had hitherto shown much
+inventive ability; but in that month in the cave he had developed
+into an intellectual giant. After mature deliberation, he proposed
+a prodigious scheme to his followers. He explained that, while
+they might, by using the utmost discretion, hold the financial
+world in their power by means of their inexhaustible wealth, that
+the laws and restrictions of different countries prevented men of
+vast wealth from really enjoying more privileges than men of
+moderate means. He grew eloquent in speaking of the underground
+atmosphere, and proposed that they light the great cavern from end
+to end and make it an ideal place where they could live as it
+suited them.
+
+"I see that you guess the end. My ancestor was a great student of
+the sciences and had already thought of putting electricity to
+practical use. You are surprised? Yes, it has been applied to our
+purposes for two hundred years, while your people have understood
+its use such a short time."
+
+"Great heavens!" exclaimed the Englishman. "I see it all; the sun
+is an electric one!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And it runs mechanically over its great course as regularly as
+clock-work."
+
+"More accurately, I assure you, but there probably never was a
+greater mathematical problem than they solved in deciding on the
+size the sun should be and amount of light necessary to fill up
+all the recesses of the great vacancy. It was all very crude at
+the start; for years a great electric light was simply suspended
+in the centre of the cavern's roof and the light did not vary in
+color. A son of the first king suggested the plan of giving the
+sun diurnal movement and the changing light. The moon and stars
+were a later development. They found, too, that the light could
+not be made to reach certain recesses in the cavern where the roof
+approached the earth, so they finally built a great wall to keep
+the inhabitants within proscribed boundaries, and to prevent them
+from understanding the machinery of the heavens."
+
+"Wonderful!" exclaimed Thorndyke. "But the temperature of the
+atmosphere, how does that happen to be so delightful and
+beneficial?"
+
+"I believe they do not themselves thoroughly comprehend that. The
+heat comes from the internal fires, and the fresh air from without
+in some mysterious way. At first, in a few places, the heat was
+too severe, but the scientific men among the first settlers
+obviated this difficulty by closing up the hottest of the fissures
+and opening others in the cooler parts of the cavern."
+
+"And the people, where did they come from?"
+
+"From all parts of the earth. We had agents outside who selected
+such men and women that were willing to come, and who filled all
+the requirements, mentally and physically."
+
+"But why do they desire to live here instead of out in the world,
+when they have all the wealth that they need to assure every
+advantage."
+
+"They dread death, and it is undoubtedly true that life is
+prolonged here; our medical men declare that the longevity of
+every generation is improved."
+
+"Is it possible? But tell me about the sun, when it sets, what
+becomes of it?"
+
+"It goes back to its place of rising through a great tunnel
+beneath us."
+
+Thorndyke sat in deep thought for a moment; then he looked so
+steadily and so admiringly into Bernardino's eyes that she grew
+red with confusion. "But you, yourself, are you thoroughly
+content here?"
+
+"I know nothing else," she continued. "I have heard little about
+your world except that your people are discontented, weak and
+insane, and that your changeable weather and your careless laws
+regarding marriage and heredity produce perpetual and innumerable
+diseases; that your people are not well developed and beautiful;
+that you war with one another, and that one tears down what
+another builds. I have, too, always been happy, and since you came
+I am happier still. I don't know what it means. I have never been
+so much interested in any one before."
+
+"It is love on the part of both of us," replied the Englishman
+impulsively, taking her hand. "I never was content before. I went
+roving over the earth trying to end my life at sea or in balloon
+voyages, but now I only want to be with you. I have never dreamed
+that I could be so happy or that I would meet any one so beautiful
+as you are."
+
+Bernardino's delight showed itself in blushes on her face, and
+Thorndyke, unable to restrain himself, put his arm around her and
+drew her to his breast and kissed her.
+
+She sprang up quickly and he saw that she was trembling and that
+all the color had fled from her face.
+
+"What is the matter?" he asked, in alarm.
+
+At first she did not answer, but only looked at him half-
+frightened, and then covered her face with her hands. He drew them
+from her face and compelled her to look at him.
+
+"What is the matter?" he repeated, a strange fear at his heart.
+
+"You have broken one of the most sacred laws of our country," she
+faltered, in great embarrassment; "my father would punish me very
+severely if he knew of it, and he would banish you; for, to treat
+me in that manner, as his daughter, is regarded as an insult to
+him."
+
+"I beg your pardon most humbly," said the contrite Englishman. "It
+was all on account of my ignorance of your customs and my
+impulsiveness. It shall never happen again, I promise you."
+
+Her face brightened a little and the color came back slowly. She
+sat down again, but not so near Thorndyke, and seemed desirous of
+changing the subject.
+
+"And do you love the man my father has transported?" she
+questioned.
+
+"Yes, he is a good, faithful fellow, and it is hard to die so far
+away from friends."
+
+"We must try to save him, but I cannot now think of a safe plan.
+The police are very vigilant."
+
+"Where was he taken?"
+
+"Into the darkness behind the sun--beyond the wall of which I
+spoke."
+
+A flush of shame came into Thorndyke's face over the remembrance
+that he had made no effort to aid poor Johnston, and was sitting
+listening with delight to the conversation of Bernardino. He rose
+suddenly.
+
+"I must be doing something to aid him," he said. "I cannot sit
+here inactive while he is in danger."
+
+"Be patient," she advised, looking at him admiringly; "it is near
+night; see, it is the gray light of dusk; the sun is out of sight.
+To-night, if possible, I shall come to you. Perhaps I shall
+approach you without disguise if you are in the throne-room and
+my father does not object to my entertaining you, but for the
+present we must separate. Adieu."
+
+He bowed low as she turned away, and joined the throng that was
+passing along outside. An officer approached him. It was Captain
+Tradmos, who bowed and smiled pleasantly.
+
+"I congratulate you," he said, with suave pleasantness.
+
+"Upon what?" Thorndyke was on his guard at once.
+
+"Upon having pleased the king so thoroughly. No stranger, in my
+memory, has ever been treated so courteously. Every other new-
+comer is put under surveillance, but you are left unwatched."
+
+"He is easily pleased," said the Englishman, "for I have done
+nothing to gratify him."
+
+"I thought he would like you; and I felt that your friend would
+have to suffer, but I could not help him."
+
+"He shall not suffer if I can prevent it."
+
+"Sh--be cautious. Those words, implying an inclination to treason,
+if spoken to any other officer would place you under immediate
+arrest. I like you, therefore I want to warn you against such
+folly. You are wholly in the king's power. Another thing I would
+specially warn you against----"
+
+"And that is?"
+
+"Not to allow the king to suspect your admiration for the Princess
+Bernardino. It would displease the king. She is much taken with
+you; I saw it in her eyes when she danced for your entertainment."
+
+Thorndyke made no reply, but gazed searchingly into the eyes of
+the officer. Tradmos laughed.
+
+"You are afraid of me."
+
+"No, I am not, I trust you wholly; I know that you are honorable;
+I never make a mistake along that line."
+
+Tradmos bowed, pleased by the compliment.
+
+"I shall aid you all I can with my advice, for I know you will not
+betray me; but at present I am powerless to give you material aid.
+Every subject of this realm is bound to the autocratic will of the
+king. It is impossible for any one to get from under his power."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"The only outlet to the upper world is carefully guarded by men
+who would not be bribed."
+
+"Is there any chance for my friend?"
+
+"None that I can see, but I must walk on; there comes one of the
+king's attendants."
+
+"The king has asked to speak to you," announced the attendant to
+Thorndyke.
+
+"I will go with you," was his reply, and he followed the man
+through the crowded corridors into the throne-room of the king.
+Thorndyke forced a smile as he saw the king smiling at him as he
+approached the throne.
+
+"What do you think of my palace?" asked the king, after Thorndyke
+had knelt before him.
+
+"It is superb," answered the Englishman, recalling the advice of
+Bernardino. "I am dazed by its splendor, its architecture, and its
+art. I have seen nothing to equal it on earth."
+
+The king rose and stood beside him. His manner was both pleasing
+and sympathetic. "I am persuaded," said he, "that you will make a
+good subject, and have the interest of Alpha always at heart, but
+I have often been mistaken in the character of men and think it
+best to give you a timely warning. An attendant will conduct you
+to a chamber beneath the palace where it will be your privilege to
+converse with a man who once planned to get up a rebellion among
+my people."
+
+There had come suddenly a stern harshness into the king's tone
+that roused the fears of Thorndyke. He was about to reply, but the
+king held up his hand. "Wait till you have visited the dungeon of
+Nordeskyne, then I am sure that you will be convinced that strict
+obedience in thought as well as deed is best for an inhabitant of
+Alpha." Speaking thus, he signed to an attendant who came forward
+and bowed.
+
+"Conduct him to the dungeon of Nordeskyne, and return to me,"
+ordered the king.
+
+Thorndyke's heart was heavy, and he was filled with strange
+forebodings, but he simply smiled and bowed, as the attendant led
+him away. The attendant opened a door at the back of the throne-
+room and they were confronted by darkness. They went along a
+narrow corridor for some distance, the dark- ness thickening at
+every step. There was no sound except the sound of the guide's
+shoes on the smooth stone pavement. Presently the man released
+Thorndyke's arm, saying:
+
+"It is narrow here, follow close behind, and do not attempt to go
+back."
+
+"I shall certainly stick to you," replied the Englishman drily.
+They turned a sharp corner suddenly, and were going in another
+direction when Thorndyke felt a soft warm hand steal into his from
+behind, and knew intuitively that it was Bernardino. The guide was
+a few feet in advance of them and she drew Thorndyke's head down
+and whispered into his ear.
+
+"Be brave--by all that you love--for your life, keep your presence
+of mind, and----"
+
+"What was that?" asked the guide, turning suddenly and catching
+the Englishman's arm, "I thought I heard whispering."
+
+"I was saying my prayers, that is all," and the Englishman pressed
+the hand of the princess, who, pressed close against the wall, was
+gliding cautiously away.
+
+"Prayers, humph--you'll need them later,come on!" and he caught
+the Englishman's arm and hastily drew him onward. Thorndyke's
+spirits sank lower. The air of the narrow under-ground corridor
+was cold and damp, and he quivered from head to foot.
+
+
+
+Chapter IX.
+
+Branasko paused again in his walk towards the mysterious light.
+
+"It cannot be from the internal fires," said he, "for this light
+is white, and the glow of the fires is red."
+
+"Let's turn back," suggested Johnston, "it can do us no good to go
+down there; it is only taking us further from the wall."
+
+"I should like to understand it," returned the Alphian
+thoughtfully; "and, besides, there can be no more danger there
+than back among the hot crevices. We have got to perish anyway,
+and we might as well spice the remainder of our lives with
+whatever adventure we can. Who knows what we may not discover?
+There are many things about the land of Alpha that the inhabitants
+do not understand."
+
+"I'll follow you anywhere," acquiesced Johnston; "you are right."
+
+They stumbled on over the rocky surface in silence. At times, the
+roof of the cavern sank so low that they had to stoop to pass
+under it, and again it rose sharply like the roof of a cathedral,
+and the rays of the far-away, but ever-increasing light, shone
+upon glistening stalactites that hung from the darkness above them
+like daggers of diamonds set in ebony.
+
+"It is not so near as I supposed," said the Alphian wearily. "And
+the light seemed to me to be shining on a cliff over which water
+is pouring in places. Yes, you can see that it is water by the
+ripples in the light."
+
+"Yes, but where can the light itself be?"
+
+"I cannot yet tell; wait till we get nearer."
+
+In about an hour they came to a wide chasm on the other side of
+which towered a vast cliff of white crystal. It was on this that
+the trembling light was playing.
+
+"Not a waterfall after all," said Branasko; "see, there is the
+source of the reflection," and he pointed to the left through a
+series of dark chambers of the cavern to a dazzling light. "Come,
+let's go nearer it." He moved a few steps forward and then
+happening to look over his shoulder he stopped abruptly, and
+uttered an exclamation of surprise.
+
+"What is it?" And Johnston followed the eyes of the Alphian.
+
+"Our shadows on the crystal cliff," said Branasko in an awed
+tone; "only the light from the changing sun could make them so."
+
+Johnston shuddered superstitiously at the tone of Branasko's
+quivering voice, and their giant shadows which stood out on
+the smooth crystal like silhouettes. So clear-cut were they,
+that, in his own shadow, the American could see his breast
+heaving and in Branasko's the quivering of the Alphian's huge
+body and limbs.
+
+"If we have happened upon the home of the sun, only the spirit of
+the dead kings could tell what will become of us," said Branasko.
+
+"Puh! you are blindly superstitious," said Johnston; "what if we
+do come upon the sun? Let's go down there and look into the
+mystery."
+
+Branasko fell into the rear and the American stoutly pushed ahead
+toward the light which was every moment increasing. As they
+advanced the cave got larger until it opened out into a larger
+plain over which hung fathomless darkness, and out of the plain a
+great dazzling globe of light was slowly rising.
+
+"It is the sun itself," exclaimed Branasko, and he sank to the
+earth and covered his face with his hands. "I have not thought
+ever to see it out of the sky."
+
+The American was deeply thrilled by the grand sight. He sat down
+by Branasko and together they watched the vast ball of light
+emerge from the black earth and gradually disappear in a great
+hole in the roof of the cavern. It left a broad stream of light
+behind it, and, now that the sun it- self was out of view, the
+silent spectators could see the great square hole from which it
+had risen.
+
+As if by mutual consent, they rose and made their way over the
+rocks to the verge of the hole, which seemed several thousand feet
+square. At first, owing to the brightness of the sun overhead,
+they could see nothing; but, as the great orb gradually
+disappeared, they began to see lights and the figures of men
+moving about below. Later they observed the polished parts of
+stupendous machinery--machinery that moved almost noiselessly.
+
+Johnston caught sight of a great net-work of moving cables
+reaching from the machinery up through the hole above and
+exclaimed enthusiastically:--"A mechanical sun! electric daylight!
+What genius! A world in a great cave! Hundreds of square miles
+and thousands of well organized people living under the light of
+an artificial sun!"
+
+The Alphian looked at him astonished. "Is it not so in your
+country?" he asked.
+
+Johnston smiled. "The great sun that lights the outer world is as
+much greater than that ball of light as Alpha is greater than a
+grain of sand. But this surely is the greatest achievement of man.
+But while I now understand how your sun goes over the whole of
+Alpha, I cannot see how it returns."
+
+"Then you have not heard of the great tunnel of the Sun," replied
+the Alphian.
+
+"No,what is it?"
+
+"It runs beneath Alpha and connects the rising and setting
+points of the sun. There is a point beneath the king's palace
+where, by a staircase, the king and his officers may go down and
+inspect the sun as it is on its way back to the east during the
+day."
+
+"Wonderful!"
+
+"And once a year a royal party goes in the sun over its entire
+course. It is said that it is sumptuously furnished inside, and
+not too warm, the lights being only innumerable small ones on the
+outside."
+
+The two men were silent for a moment then Johnston said:
+
+"Perhaps we might be able to get into it unobserved and be thus
+carried over to the other side, or reach the palace through the
+tunnel."
+
+Branasko started convulsively, and then, as he looked into the
+earnest eyes of the American, he said despondently:
+
+"We have got to die, anyway; it may be well for us to think of it;
+but on the other side, in the Barrens, there is no more chance for
+escape than here. But the adventure would at least give us
+something to think about; let's try it."
+
+"All right; but how can we get down there where the sun starts to
+rise?" asked the American, peering cautiously over the edge of
+the hole.
+
+"There must be some way," answered Branasko. "Ah, see! further to
+the left there are some ledges; let's see what can be done that
+way."
+
+"I am with you."
+
+The rays of the departing sun were almost gone, and the electric
+lights down among the machinery seemed afar off like stars
+reflected in deep water. With great difficulty the two men lowered
+themselves from one sharp ledge to another till they had gone half
+down to the bottom.
+
+"It is no use," said Branasko, peering over the lowest ledge.
+"There are no more ledges and this one juts out so far that even
+if there were smaller ones beneath we could not get to them."
+
+"That is true," agreed the American, "but look, is not that a lake
+beneath? I think it must be, for the lights are reflected on its
+surface."
+
+"You are right," answered Branasko; "and I now see a chance for us
+to get down safely."
+
+"How?"
+
+"The workers are too far from the lake to see us; we can drop into
+the water and swim ashore."
+
+"Would they not hear the splashing of our bodies?"
+
+"I think not; but first let's experiment with a big stone."
+
+Suiting the action to the word, they secured a stone weighing
+about seventy-five pounds and brought it to the ledge. Carefully
+poising it in mid-air, they let it go. Down it went, cutting the
+air with a sharp whizzing sound. They listened breathlessly, but
+heard no sound as the rock struck the water, and the men among the
+machinery seemed undisturbed. Only the widening circles of rings
+on the lake's surface indicated where the stone had fallen.
+
+"Good," ejaculated the Alphian; "are you equal to such a plunge?
+The water must be deep, and we won't be hurt at all if only we can
+keep our feet downward and hold our breath long enough. Our
+clothing will soon dry down there, for feel the warmth that comes
+from below."
+
+The Alphian slowly crawled out on the sharpest projection of the
+ledge. "Are you willing to try it?" he asked, over his shoulder.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, wait till you see me swim ashore, and then follow."
+
+Johnston shuddered as the strong fellow swung himself over the
+ledge and hung downward.
+
+"Adieu," said Branasko, and he let go. Down he fell, as straight
+as an arrow, into the shadows below. For an instant Johnston heard
+the fluttering of the fellow's clothing as he fell through the
+darkness, and then there was no sound except the low whirr of the
+cables and the monotonous hum of the great wheels beneath. Then
+the smooth surface of the lake was broken in a white foaming spot,
+and, later, he saw something small and dark slowly swimming
+shoreward. It was Branasko, and the men to the right had not heard
+or seen him.
+
+Johnston saw him reach the shore, then he crawled out to the point
+of the projecting rock and tremblingly lowered himself till he
+hung downward as Branasko had done. He had just drawn a deep
+breath preparatory to letting go his hold, when, chancing to look
+down, he saw a long narrow barge slowly emerging from the cliff
+directly under him. For an instant he was so much startled that he
+almost lost his grip on the rock. He tried to climb back on the
+ledge, but his strength was gone. He felt that he could not hold
+out till the boat had passed. Death was before him, and a horrible
+one. The boat seemed to crawl. Everything was a blur before his
+eyes. His fingers began to relax, and with a low cry he fell.
+
+
+
+Chapter X.
+
+To Thorndyke the dark corridor seemed endless. The king's last
+words had now a sinister meaning, and Bernardino's whispered
+warning filled him with dread. "Keep your presence of mind," she
+urged; was it then, some frightful mental ordeal he was about to
+pass through?
+
+Presently they came to a door. Thorn- dyke heard his guide feeling
+for the bolt and key-hole. The rattling of the keys sounded like a
+ghostly threat in the empty corridors. The air was as damp as a
+fog, and the stones were cold and slimy. After a moment the guard
+succeeded in unlocking the door and roughly pushed the Englishman
+forward. The door closed with a little puff, and Thorndyke felt
+about him for the guide; but he was alone. For a moment there was
+no sound. With the closing of the door it seemed to him that he
+was cut off from every living creature. In the awful silence he
+could hear his own heart beating like a drum.
+
+"Stand where you are!" came in a hissing whisper from the
+darkness near by, and then the invisible whisperer moved away,
+making a weird sound as he slid his hand along a wall, till
+it died away in the distance.
+
+A cold thrill ran over him. He was a brave man and feared no
+living man or beast, but the superstitious fears of his childhood
+now came upon him with redoubled force. For several minutes he did
+not stir; presently he put out his hand to the door and his blood
+ran cold. There was no knob, latch, or key-hole, and he could feel
+the soft padding into which the door closed to keep out sound.
+Then he remembered the warning of the princess, and strove with
+all his might to fight down his apprehensions. "For your life keep
+your presence of mind," he repeated over and over, but try as he
+would his terror over-powered him. He laughed out loud, but in the
+dreadful silence and darkness his laugh sounded unearthly.
+
+A cold perspiration broke out on him. It seemed as if hours passed
+before he again heard the sliding noise on the wall. Some one was
+coming to him. The sound grew louder and nearer, till a firm hand
+was laid on his arm; it felt as cold as ice through his clothing.
+
+"Come," a voice whispered, and the Englishman was led forward.
+Presently another door opened--a door that closed after them
+without any sound. Here the silence was more intensified, the
+darkness thicker as if compressed like air.
+
+Hands were placed on the shoulders of Thorndyke and he was gently
+forced into a chair. As soon as he was seated two metal clamps
+grasped like a vise his arms between the elbows and the shoulders,
+and two more fastened round his ankles.
+
+There was a faint puff of air from the door and the prisoner felt
+that he was alone. Terror held him in bondage. He tried to think
+of Bernardino, but in vain. Did they intend to drive him to
+madness? He began to suspect that the king had discovered his
+natural superstition and had decided to put it to a test. What he
+had undergone so far he felt was but the introduction to greater
+terrors in store for him.
+
+There was a sigh far away in the darkness--then a groan that
+seemed to flit about in space, as if seeking to escape the dark,
+and then died away in a low moan of despair. Before him the
+blackness seemed to hang like a dark curtain about ten yards in
+front of him, and in it shone a tiny speck of light no larger than
+the head of a pin, and which was so bright that he could not look
+at it steadily. It increased to the size of a pea, and then he
+discovered that, at times, it would seem miles away in space and
+then again to draw quite near to hand. Glancing down, he noticed
+that it cast a bright round spot about an inch in diameter on the
+floor, and that the spot was slowly revolving in a circle so
+small that its motion was hardly observable. Surely the mind of a
+superstitious man was never so punished! When Thorndyke looked
+steadily at the spot, the black floor seemed to recede, and the
+spot to sink far down into the empty darkness below like a
+solitary star; So realistic was this that the Englishman could not
+keep from fancying that this chair was poised in some way over
+fathomless space. Presently he noticed that the spot had ceased
+its circular movement and was slowly--almost as slowly as the
+movement of the hand of a clock--advancing in a straight line
+toward him.
+
+No such terror had ever before possessed the stout heart of the
+Englishman. As the uncanny spot, ever growing brighter, advanced
+toward him, he thought his heart had stopped beating; his brain
+was in a whirl. After a long while the spot reached his feet and
+began to climb up his legs. With a shudder and a smothered cry, he
+tried to draw his feet away, but they were too firmly manacled.
+
+"It is searching for my heart," thought Thorndyke. "My God, when
+it reaches it, I shall die!" As the strange spot, gleaming like a
+burning diamond in whose heart leaped a thousand different colored
+flames, and which seemed possessed of some strange hellish
+purpose, crossed his thighs and began to climb up his body, the
+brain of the prisoner seemed on fire. He tried to close his eyes,
+but, horror of horrors! his eyelids were paralyzed. It was almost
+over his heart, and Thorndyke was fainting through sheer mental
+exhaustion when it stopped, began to descend slowly, and, then,
+with a rapid, wavering motion, it fell to the floor, flashed about
+in the darkness, and vanished.
+
+An hour dragged slowly by. What would happen next? The Englishman
+felt that his frightful ordeal was not over. To his surprise the
+darkness began to lighten till he could see dimly the outlines of
+the chamber. It was bare save for the chair he occupied against a
+wall, and a couch on the opposite side of the room. The couch held
+something which looked like a human body covered with a white
+cloth. He could see where the sheet rounded over the head and rose
+sharply at the feet.
+
+Something told him that it was a corpse and a new terror possessed
+him. For several minutes he gazed at the couch in dreadful
+suspense, then his heart stopped pulsing as the figure on the
+couch began to move. Slowly the sheet fell from the head and the
+figure sat up stiffly. There was a faint hum of hidden machinery
+at the couch, and a flashing blue and green line running from the
+couch to the wall betrayed the presence of an electric wire.
+
+Slowly the figure rose, and with creaking, rattling joints stood
+erect. Pale lights shone in the orbits of the eyes and the sound
+of harsh automatic breathing came from the mouth and nostrils.
+Slowly and haltingly the figure advanced toward Thorndyke. The
+poor fellow tried to wrench himself free from the chair, but he
+could not stir an inch. On came the figure, its long arms
+swinging mechanically, and its feet slurring over the stone
+pavement.
+
+When within ten feet of the Englishman it stopped, nodded its head
+three or four times, and slowly opened its mouth. There was a
+sharp, whirring noise, such as comes from a phonograph, and a
+voice spoke:
+
+"My voice shall sound on earth for a million years after my spirit
+has left my body; and I shall wander about my dark dungeon as a
+warning to men not to do as I have done."
+
+The voice ceased, but the whirring sound in the creature's breast
+went on. The figure shambled nearer to Thorndyke and the voice
+began again:
+
+"I disobeyed the laws of great Alpha and her imperial king and am
+to die. Beware of the temptation to search into the royal motives
+or attempt to escape. The fate of all the inhabitants of Alpha,
+the wonderful Land of the Changing Sun, is in the hands of its
+ruler. Beware! My death-torture is to be lingering and horrible.
+I sink into deepest dejection. I was eager to return to my native
+land and tried to escape. Behold my punishment! Even my bones and
+flesh will not be allowed to rest or decay. Beware, the king is
+just and good, but he will be obeyed!"
+
+Slowly the figure retreated toward the couch and lay down on it.
+The whirring sound ceased, the light along the wire went out, and
+the darkness thickened till the couch and the outlines of the
+chamber were obscured. Then Thorndyke's chair was lift- ed, as if
+by unseen hands, and he was borne backward. In a moment he felt
+the cool, damp air of the corridor, and some one raised him to his
+feet and led him back to the throne-room.
+
+In the bright light which burst on him as the door opened, the
+beautiful women and handsome men moving about the throne were to
+him like a glimpse of Paradise. The attendant left him at the door
+and he walked in, so dazed and weak that he hardly knew what to
+do. No one seemed to notice him and the king was engaged in an
+animated conversation with several ladies who were sitting at his
+feet.
+
+In a bevy of women Thorndyke noticed Bernardino. She gave him a
+quick, sympathetic glance of recognition and then looked down
+discreetly. Presently she left the others and moved on till she
+had disappeared behind a great carved wine-cistern which stood on
+the backs of four crouching golden leopards in a retired part of
+the room. Something in her sudden movement made the Englishman
+think she wanted to speak to him, and he went to her. He was not
+mistaken, for she smiled as he approached.
+
+"I am glad," she whispered, touching his arm impulsively, and then
+quickly removing her hand as if afraid of detection.
+
+"Glad of what?" he asked.
+
+"Glad that you stood that--that torture so well; several men have
+died in that chair and some went mad."
+
+"I remembered your advice; that saved me."
+
+"I have a plan for us to try to rescue your friend."
+
+"Ah, I had forgotten him! what is it?"
+
+"Captain Tradmos likes you and has consented to aid us. We shall
+need an air-ship and he has one at his disposal which is used only
+for governmental purposes."
+
+"What do you want with the air-ship?"
+
+"To go beyond and over the great wall."
+
+"But can we get away from here without being seen?"
+
+"Under ordinary circumstances, neither by day nor night, but
+tomorrow the king has planned to let his people witness a 'War of
+the Elements.'"
+
+"A War of the Elements?"
+
+"Yes, the grandest fete of Alpha. There will be a frightful storm
+in the sky; no light for hours; the thunder will be musical and
+the lightning will seem to set the world on fire. That will be our
+chance. When it is darkest we shall try to get away unseen. We may
+fail. Such a daring thing has never been attempted by any one. If
+we are detected we shall suffer death as the penalty, the king
+could never pardon such a bold violation of law."
+
+
+
+Chapter XI.
+
+Johnston clung tenaciously to the rock. He tried to look down to
+see if the barge had passed beneath him, but the intense strain on
+his arm now drew his head back, so that he could not do so. Once
+more he made an effort to regain his position on the rock, but he
+was not able to raise himself an inch.
+
+He felt certain that the fall would kill him, and he groaned in
+agony. His fingers were benumbed and beginning to slip. Then he
+fell. The air whizzed in his ears. He tried to keep his feet
+downward, but it was no use. He was whirled heels over head many
+times, and his senses were leaving him when he was restored by a
+plunge into the cold water.
+
+Down he sank. It seemed to him that he never would lose his
+momentum and that he would strangle before he could rise to the
+surface. Finally, however, he came up more dead than alive. He had
+narrowly missed the flat-boat, for he saw it receding from him
+only a few yards away. On the shore stood Branasko motioning to
+him; and, slowly, for his strength was almost gone, Johnston swam
+toward him.
+
+The latter waded out into the shallow water and drew him ashore.
+
+"You had a narrow escape," he said, with a dry laugh. "I saw the
+boat come from under the cliff just as you hung down from the
+ledge. At first I hoped that you would get back on the rock, but
+when I saw you try and do it and fail I thought that you were
+lost."
+
+The American could not speak for exhaustion; but, as he looked at
+the departing craft with concern, Branasko laughed again: "Oh, you
+thought it had a crew; so did I at first, but it has no one
+aboard. It is drawn by a cable, and seems to be laden with coal."
+
+"Did they notice our fall up there?" panted Johnston, nodding
+toward the lights in the distance.
+
+"No, they are farther away than I thought."
+
+"Well, what ought we to do?"
+"Hide here among the rocks till our clothing dries and then look
+about us. We have nearly twenty-four hours to wait for the sun to
+return through the tunnel."
+
+"Where is the tunnel?"
+
+"Over on the other side of that black hill. There, you can see the
+mouth of the tunnel through which the sun comes."
+
+"We need sleep," said the Alphian, when their clothing was dry,
+"and it may be a long time before we get a chance to get it. Let
+us lie down in the shadow of that rock and rest."
+
+Johnston consented, and, lying down together, they soon dropped
+asleep. They slept soundly.
+
+Johnston was the first to awake. He felt so refreshed that he knew
+he must have been unconscious several hours. He touched Branasko
+and the latter sat up and rubbed his eyes and looked about him
+bewildered.
+
+"I had a horrible dream," he said shuddering. "I thought that we
+were in the sun and over the capital city when it fell down. I
+thought the fall was awful, and that all Alpha was aflame. Then
+the fires went out. Everything was black, and the whole world rang
+with cries of terrified people. Ugh! I don't want to dream so
+again; I'd rather not sleep at all. But hush! what is that?"
+
+Far away, as if in the centre of the earth, they heard a low
+monotonous rumbling. They listened breathlessly. Every moment the
+sound increased. They could feel the ground trembling as if shaken
+by an earthquake.
+
+"It is the coming sun," said Branasko. "We must get nearer the
+tunnel and see what can be done. It would be useless to try to go
+back now."
+
+Stealing along in the shadow of the cliffs to keep from being
+seen by the workmen on the plateau above, they climbed over a
+rocky incline and saw in the side of a towering cliff, a great
+black hole. It was the mouth of the tunnel. Into it ran eight
+wide tracks of railway and six mammoth cables each twenty or
+thirty feet in diameter.
+
+"The sun cannot be far away now," remarked the Alphian.
+
+"Is it not lighted?"
+
+"I presume not; I think it comes through in darkness. The light is
+saved for its passage over Alpha."
+
+"Would it not be as safe for us to attempt to walk through the
+tunnel to the palace of the king?"
+
+"Never; it would be over fifty miles in utter darkness. There may
+be a thousand trestles and bridges over frightful chasms: for the
+most part, I have heard the tunnel is a natural channel or a
+succession of caverns united by tunnels. The other is the safer
+way, though it certainly is risky enough."
+
+Louder and nearer grew the rumbling noise, and a faint light began
+to shine from the tunnel and flash on the cliff opposite.
+
+"It is the sun's headlight," explained Branasko.
+
+Johnston was thrilled to the centre of his being as he saw the
+light playing over the polished tracks and cables and illuminating
+the walls of the great tunnel.
+
+Suddenly there was a deep, mellow-toned stroke of a bell in the
+sun, and, as the two men shrank involuntarily into the deeper
+shade of the cliff, the great globe, a stupendous ball of crystal,
+five hundred feet in height, slowly emerged from the mouth of the
+tunnel and came to a stop under the opening in the rock which led
+to the space above.
+
+"What had we better do now?" said Johnston.
+
+"Wait," cautioned Branasko, and he drew the American to a great
+boulder nearer the sun, from behind which they could, without
+being seen, watch the action of the crowd of workmen that was
+hurriedly approaching. They placed ladders of steel against the
+sides of the sun and swarmed over it like bees.
+
+"They are cleaning the glass and adjusting the lights," said the
+Alphian; "wait till they go round to the other side. Don't you see
+that square opening near the ground?"
+
+The American nodded.
+
+"It is the door," said Branasko, "and we must try to enter it
+while they are on the other side. Let us slip nearer; there is
+another rock ahead that we can hide behind." Suiting the action to
+the word, Branasko led the way, stooping near to the ground until
+both were safely ensconced behind the boulder in question. They
+were now so near that they could hear the electricians rubbing the
+glass.
+
+One who seemed to be superintending the work opened the door and
+went into the sun and lighted a bright light. From where they
+were crouched Johnston and Branasko caught a view of a little
+hall, a flight of stairs, and some pictures on the walls.
+
+Presently the man extinguished the light and came out.
+
+"They are removing their ladders from this side," said Branasko in
+a whisper. "Be ready; we must act quickly and without a particle
+of sound. Run straight for that door and climb up the steps
+immediately."
+
+The men had all gone round to the other side, and no one was in
+sight.
+
+"Quick! Follow me," and bending low to the earth the Alphian
+darted across the intervening space and into the doorway. Johnston
+was quite as successful. As he entered the door he saw Branasko
+crawling up the carpeted stairs ahead of him, and, on his all-
+fours, he followed. The first landing was large, and there in the
+wall they found a closet. It would have been dark but for a dim
+light that streamed down from above. Branasko opened the closet
+door. "We must hide here for the present," he whispered.
+
+They had barely got seated on the floor and closed the door when a
+bright light broke round them and they heard somebody ascending
+the stairs. The person passed by and went on further up. The two
+adventurers dared not exchange a word. They could hear the
+footsteps above and the sound of the electricians outside as
+they polished the lights and moved their ladders from place to
+place.
+
+"If he should stay, what could we do?" asked Johnston, after a
+long pause, and when the footsteps sounded farther away.
+
+"There are two of us and one of him," grimly replied the brawny
+Alphian.
+
+Johnston shuddered. "Let's not commit murder in any emergency," he
+said.
+
+"It would not be murder; every man has a right to save his own
+life."
+
+Nothing more was said just then, for the footsteps were growing
+nearer. The man was descending. He crossed the landing they were
+on and went down the last flight of stairs and out of the door.
+
+Branasko rubbed his rough hands together. "We are going alone," he
+said with satisfaction.
+
+There was a sound of sliding ladders on the walls outside. The
+workmen had finished their task. A moment later a great bell
+overhead rang mellowly; the colossal sphere trembled and rocked
+and then rose and swung easily forward like the car of a balloon.
+
+"We are rising," said the Alphian, in a tone of superstitious awe.
+Johnston said nothing. There was a cool, sinking sensation in
+his stomach and his head was swimming. Branasko, however, was in
+possession of all his faculties.
+
+"We shall soon be through the shaft we first discovered and throw
+our light over Alpha." As he spoke the space about them broke into
+blinding brightness and for a few moments they could only open
+their eyes for an instant at a time. After a while Branasko opened
+the closet door and they went up the stairs.
+
+The first apartment they entered was most luxuriously
+furnished. Sofas, couches and reclining-chairs were scattered
+here and there over the elegant carpet, and statues of gold and
+marble stood in alcoves and niches and strange stereopticon
+lanterns, hanging from the ceiling threw ever-changing and
+life-like pictures on the walls. The light streamed in from
+without through small circular windows. After they had walked
+about the room for some minutes, the Alphian pointed to a half-
+open door and a staircase at one side of the room.
+
+"I think it leads to some sort of observatory on top," he said. "I
+have heard that when the royal family makes this voyage they are
+fond of looking out from it. Suppose we see."
+Johnston acquiesced, and Branasko opened the door. From the
+increased brightness that came in they were assured that the
+stairs led outward.
+
+Ascending many flights of stairs and traversing a narrow winding
+gallery which seemed to be gradually sloping upward, they finally
+reached the outside, and found themselves on a platform about
+forty feet square surrounded by iron balustrades. Above hung
+impenetrable blackness, below curved a majestic sphere of white
+light.
+
+
+
+Chapter XII.
+
+The sunlight was fading into gray when the princess turned to
+leave Thorndyke. Night was drawing near.
+
+"Have they assigned you a chamber yet?" she paused to ask.
+
+"No."
+
+"Then they have overlooked it; I shall remind the king."
+
+Her beautiful, lithe form was clearly outlined against the red
+glow of the massive swinging lamp as she moved gracefully away,
+and Thorndyke's heart bounded with admiration and hope as he
+thought of her growing regard for him. He resumed his seat among
+the flowers, listening, as if in a delightful dream, to the
+seductive music from bands in different parts of the palace and
+the never-ceasing sound in the air which seemed to him to be the
+concentrated echo of all the sounds in the strange country
+rebounding from the vast cavern roof.
+
+It grew darker. The gray outside had changed to purple. In the
+palace the brilliant electric lights in prismatic globes refused
+to allow the day to die. He was thinking of returning to the
+throne-room when a page in silken attire approached from the
+direction of the king's quarters.
+
+"To your chambers, master," he announced, bowing respectfully.
+
+Thorndyke arose and followed him to an elevator near by. They
+ascended to the highest balcony of the great rotunda. Here they
+alighted and turned to the right, the page leading the way, a key
+in his hand. Presently the page stopped at a door and unlocked it
+and preceded the Englishman into the room. As they entered an
+electric light in a chandelier flashed up automatically.
+
+It was a sumptuous apartment, and adjoining it were several
+connecting rooms all elegantly furnished. The page crossed
+the room and opened a door to a little stairway.
+
+"It leads to the roof," he said. "The princess told me to call
+your attention to it, that you might go out and view the
+starlight."
+
+When the page had retired, Thorndyke, feeling lonely, ascended the
+stairs to the roof. It was perfectly flat save for the great dome
+which stood in the centre and the numerous pinnacles and cupolas
+on every hand, and was very spacious. The Englishman's loneliness
+increased, for no matter in what direction he looked, there was
+not a living soul in sight. Far in front of him he saw a stone
+parapet. He went to this and looked down on the city. The electric
+lights were vari-colored, and arranged so that when seen from a
+distance or from a great height they assumed artistic designs that
+were beautiful to behold.
+
+The regular streets and rows of buildings stretched away till the
+light in the farthest distance seemed an ocean of blending
+colors. Overhead the vault was black, and only here and there
+shone a star; but as he looked upward they began to flash into
+being, and so rapidly that the sky seemed a vast battlefield of
+electricity.
+
+"Wonderful! Wonderful!" he ejaculated enthusiastically, when the
+black dome was filled with twinkling stars. He leaned for a long
+time against the parapet, listening to the music from the streets
+below, and watching the flying-machines with their vari-colored
+lights rise from the little parks at the intersection of the
+streets and dart away over the roofs like big fireflies. Then
+he began to feel sleepy, and, going back to his chambers, he
+retired.
+
+When he awoke the next morning, the rosy glow of the sun was
+shining in at his windows. On rising he was surprised to find a
+delectable breakfast spread on a table in his sitting-room.
+
+"Treating me like a lord, any way," he said drily. "I can't say I
+dislike the thing as a whole." When he had satisfied his sharp
+hunger he went out into a corridor and seeing an elevator he
+entered it and went down to the throne-room. The king was just
+leaving his throne, but seeing Thorndyke he turned to him with a
+smile.
+
+"How did you sleep?" he asked.
+
+"Well, indeed," replied Thorndyke, with a low bow.
+
+"I cannot talk to you now. I intended to, but I have promised my
+people a 'War of the Elements' to-day and am busy. You will enjoy
+it, I trust."
+
+"I am sure of it, your Majesty."
+
+"Well, be about the palace, for it is a good point from which to
+view the display."
+
+With these words he turned away and the Englishman, as if drawn
+there by the memory of his last conversation with Bernardino,
+sought the retreat where he had bidden her good-night. He sat down
+on the seat they had occupied, and gave himself over to delightful
+reveries about her beauty and loveliness of nature. Looking up
+suddenly he saw a pair of white hands part the palm leaves in
+front of him and the subject of his thoughts emerged into view.
+
+She wore a regal gown and beautiful silken head-dress set with
+fine gems, and gave him a warm glance of friendly greeting.
+
+"I half hoped to find you here," she said, blushing modestly under
+his ardent gaze; "that is, I knew you would not know where to go -
+---" She paused, her face suffused with blushes.
+
+"I did not hope to find you here," he said, coming to her aid
+gallantly, "but it was a delight to sit here where I last saw
+you."
+
+She blushed even deeper, and a pleased look flashed into her eyes.
+"It was important that I should see you this morning," she
+continued, with a womanly desire to disguise her own feeling. "I
+wanted to tell you where to meet me when the storm begins."
+
+"Where?" he asked.
+
+"On the roof of the palace, near the stairs leading down to your
+chambers. At first it will be very dark, and it is then that we
+must get out of sight of the palace. No other flying-machines will
+be in the air, and Captain Tradmos thinks, if we are very careful,
+we can get away safely before the display of lightning."
+
+"If we find my friend what can we do with him?"
+
+She hesitated a moment, a look of perplexity on her face, then she
+said: "We can bring him back and keep him hidden in your chambers
+till some better arrangement can be made. We shall think of some
+expedient before long, but at present he must be saved from
+starvation."
+
+Thorndyke attempted to draw her to a seat beside him, but she
+held back. "No," she said resolutely, "it would never do for us
+to be seen together. If my father should suspect anything now,
+all hope would be lost."
+
+Thorndyke reluctantly released her hand.
+
+"You are right, I beg your pardon," he said humbly. "I shall meet
+you promptly. Of course I want to save poor Johnston, but the
+delight of being with you again, even for a moment, so
+intoxicates me that I forget even my duty to him."
+
+After she left him he wandered out in the streets along the busy
+thoroughfares, and into the beautiful parks, the flowers and
+foliage changing color as each new hour dawned. The fragrance of
+the flowers delighted his sense of smell, and the luscious fruits
+hung from vine and tree in great abundance.
+
+He was impatient for the time to arrive at which he was to meet
+the princess. After awhile he noticed the people closing the shops
+and booths, and in holiday dress going to the parks and public
+squares. He hastened to the palace. The great rotunda and the
+throne-room were energetically astir. Everybody wore rich apparel
+and was talking of the coming fete. The king was on his throne
+surrounded by his men of science. In a cluster of ladies in court
+dress, the Englishman recognized Bernardino. Catching his eye, she
+looked startled for an instant, and, then, with a furtive glance
+at the king, she swept her eyes back to Thorndyke and raised them
+significantly toward his chambers. He understood, and his quick
+movement was his reply. He turned immediately to an elevator that
+was going up, and entered it. Again he was alone on the palace
+roof. The color of the sunlight looked so natural that he studied
+it closely to see if he could not detect something artificial in
+its appearance, but in vain. He found that it did not pain his
+eyes to look at the sun steadily. He took from his pocket a small
+sunglass, and focussed the rays on his hand, but the heat was not
+intensified sufficiently to burn him.
+
+Just then he heard a loud blast of a trumpet in a tall tower to
+the left of the palace. It seemed a momentous signal. The jostling
+crowds in the streets below suddenly stood motionless. Every eye
+was raised to the sky. Not a sound broke the stillness. Following
+the glances of the crowd a few minutes later, Thorndyke noticed a
+dark cloud rising in the west, and spreading along the horizon. A
+feeling of awe came over him as it gradually increased in volume,
+and, in vast black billows, began to roll up toward the sun.
+
+Suddenly out of the stillness came a faraway rumble like a
+fusillade of cannon, now dying down low, again reaching such a
+height that it pained the ears. Belated flying- machines darted
+across the sky here and there, like storm-frightened birds, but
+they soon settled to earth. Every eye was on the cloud which was
+now gashed with dazzling, vivid, electric flashes. Thorndyke
+looked over the vast roof. He was alone. He walked to the western
+parapet to get a broader view.
+
+The clouds had increased till almost a third of the heavens were
+obscured by the madly whirling blackness. There was a rumble in
+the cloud, or beyond it, like thunder, and yet it was not, unless
+thunder can be attuned, for the sound was like the music of a
+great orchestra magnified a thousand-fold. The grand harmony died
+down. There was a blinding flash of electricity in the clouds, and
+the Englishman involuntarily covered his eyes with his hands. When
+he looked again the blackness was covering the sun. For a moment
+its disk showed blood-red through the fringe of the cloud and
+then disappeared. Total darkness fell on everything.
+
+The silence was profound. The very air seemed stagnant.
+
+Then the wind overhead, by some unseen force, was lashed into
+fury, and all the sky was filled with whirlpools of deeper
+blackness. Suddenly there was a flash of soft golden light; this
+was followed by streams of pink, of blue and of purple till the
+whole heavens were hung with banners, flags, and rain-bows of
+flame. Again darkness fell, and it seemed all the deeper after the
+gorgeous scene which had preceded it. Thorndyke strained his sight
+to detect something moving below, but nothing could be seen, and
+no sound came up from the motionless crowds.
+
+Behind him he heard a soft footstep on the stone tiling. It drew
+nearer. A hand was being carefully slid along the parapet. The
+hand reached him and touched his arm.
+
+It was the princess. "Ah, I have at last found you," she
+whispered, "I saw you in the lightning, but lost you again."
+
+He put his arm round her and drew her into his embrace. He tried
+to speak, but uttered only an inarticulate sound.
+
+"I could not possibly come earlier," she apologized, nestling
+against him so closely that he could feel the quick and excited
+beating of her heart. "My father kept me with him till only a
+moment ago. Captain Tradmos will be here soon."
+
+"When do we start?" he asked.
+
+"That is the trouble," she replied. "We had counted on getting
+away in the darkness, before the display of lightning, but there
+is more danger now. If our flying-machine were noticed the search-
+lights would be turned on us and we would be discovered at once."
+
+"But even if we get safely away in the darkness when could we
+return?"
+
+"Oh, that would be easy," she replied. "As soon as the fete is
+over, commerce will be resumed and the air will be filled with
+air-ships that have been delayed in their regular business, and,
+in the disguises which I have for us both, we could come back
+without rousing suspicion. We could alight in Winter Park and
+return home later."
+
+"What is Winter Park?"
+
+"You have not seen it? You must do so; it is one of the wonders of
+Alpha. It is a vast park enclosed with high walls and covered with
+a roof of glass. Inside the snow falls, and we have sleighing and
+coasting and lakes of ice for skating. It was an invention of the
+king. The snowstorms there are beautiful."
+
+Thorndyke's reply was drowned in a harmonious explosion like that
+of tuned cannon; this was followed by the chimes of great bells
+which seemed to swing back and forth miles overhead.
+
+"Listen!" whispered Bernardino, "father calls it 'musical
+thunder,' and he declares that it is produced in no other country
+but this."
+
+"It is not; he is right." And the heart of the Englishman was
+stirred by deep emotion. He had never dreamed that anything could
+so completely chain his fancy and elevate his imagination as what
+he heard. The musical clangor died down. The strange harmony grew
+more entrancing as it softened. Then the whole eastern sky began
+to flush with rosy, shimmering light.
+
+"My father calls this the 'Ideal Dawn of Day,'" whispered
+Bernardino. "See the faint golden halo near the horizon; that is
+where the sun is supposed to be."
+
+"How is it done?" asked the Englishman.
+
+"Few of our people know. It is a secret held only by the king and
+half a dozen scientists. The whole thing, however, is operated by
+two men in a room in the dome of the palace. The musician is a
+young German who was becoming the wonder of the musical world
+when father induced him to come to us. I have met him. He says he
+has been thoroughly happy here. He lives on music. He showed me
+the instrument he used to play, a little thing he called a violin,
+and its tones could not reach beyond the limits of a small room.
+He laughs at it now and says the instrument that father gave him
+to play on has strings drawn from the centre of the earth to the
+stars of heaven."
+
+The rose-light had spread over the horizon and climbed almost to
+the zenith, and with the dying booming and gentle clangor it began
+to fade till all was dark again.
+
+"Captain Tradmos ought to be here now," continued the princess,
+glancing uneasily toward the stairway. "We may not have so good an
+opportunity as this."
+
+Ten minutes went by.
+
+"Surely, something has gone wrong," whispered Bernardino. "I have
+never seen the darkness last so long as this; besides, can't you
+hear the muttering of the people?"
+
+Thorndyke acknowledged that he did. He was about to add something
+else, but was prevented by a loud blast from the trumpet in the
+tower.
+
+Bernardino shrank from him and fell to trembling.
+
+"What is the matter?" he asked.
+"The trumpet!" she gasped, "something awful has happened!"
+
+A moment of profound silence, then the murmuring of the crowd rose
+sullenly like the moaning of a rising storm; a search-light
+flashed up in the gloom and swept its uncertain stream from point
+to point, but it died out. Another and another shone for an
+instant in different parts of the city, but they all failed.
+
+"Something awful has happened," repeated Bernardino, as if to
+herself; "the lights will not burn!"
+
+"Had we not better go down?" asked Thorndyke anxiously, excited by
+her unusual perturbation.
+
+For answer she mutely drew him to the eastern parapet. Far away in
+the east there still lingered a faint hint of pink, but all over
+the whole landscape darkness rested.
+
+"See!" she exclaimed, pointing upward, "the clouds are thinning
+over the sun, and yet there is no light. What can be the matter?"
+
+At that juncture they heard soft steps on the roof and a voice
+calling:
+
+"Bernardino! Princess Bernardino!"
+
+"It is Tradmos," she ejaculated gladly, then she called out
+softly:
+
+"Tradmos! Tradmos!"
+
+"Here!" the voice said, and a figure loomed up before them. It was
+the captain. He was panting violently, as if he had been running.
+
+"What is it?" she asked, clasping his arm.
+
+"The sun has gone out," he announced.
+
+A groan escaped her lips and she swayed into Thorndyke's arms.
+
+"The clouds are thinning over the sun, yet there is no light. The
+king is excited; he fears a panic!"
+
+"Has such a thing never happened?" asked Thorndyke.
+
+"An hundred years ago; then thousands lost their lives. As soon as
+the people suspect the cause of the delay they will go mad with
+fear."
+
+"What can we do?" asked the princess, recovering her self-
+possession.
+
+"Nothing, wait!" replied Tradmos. "This is as safe a place as you
+could find. Perhaps the trouble may be averted. Look!"
+
+The disk of the veiled sun was aglow with a faintly trembling
+light; but it went out. The silence was profound. The populace
+seemed unable to grasp the situation, but when the light had
+flickered over the black face of the sun once more and again
+expired, a sullen murmur rose and grew as it passed from
+lip to lip.
+
+It became a threatening roar, broken by an occasional cry of
+pain and a dismal groan of terror. There was a crash as if a
+mountain had been burst by explosives.
+
+"The swinging bridge has been thrown down!" said Tradmos.
+
+Light after light flashed up in different parts of the city, but
+they were so small and so far apart that they seemed to add to the
+darkness rather than to lessen it.
+
+"The moon, it will rise!" cried the princess.
+
+"It cannot," said Tradmos in his beard, "at least not for several
+hours."
+
+"They will kill my father," she said despondently, "they always
+hold him responsible for any accident."
+
+"They cannot reach him," consoled Tradmos. "He is safe for the
+present at least."
+
+"Is it possible to make the repairs needed?"
+
+"I don't know. When the accident happened long ago the sun was
+just rising."
+
+"Has it stopped?"
+
+"I think not; it has simply gone out; the electric connection has,
+in some way, been cut off."
+
+The tumult seemed to have extended to the very limits of the city,
+and was constantly increasing. The smashing of timber and the
+falling of heavy stones were heard near by.
+
+Tradmos leaned far over the parapet. "They are coming toward us!"
+he said; "they intend to destroy the palace; we must try to get
+down, but we shall meet danger even there."
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII.
+
+Johnston and Branasko looked down at the great ball of light
+below them in silent wonder. Johnston was the first to speak. He
+pointed to the four massive cables which supported the sun at
+each corner of the platform and extended upward till they were
+enveloped in the darkness.
+
+"They hold us up," he said, "where do they go to?"
+
+"To the big trucks which run on the tracks near the roof of the
+cavern; the endless cables are up there, too, but we can not see
+them with this glare about us."
+
+"We can see nothing of Alpha from here," remarked Johnston
+disappointedly, "we can see nothing beyond our circle of light."
+
+"I should like to look down from this height at night," said the
+Alphian. "It would be a great view."
+
+"What is this?" Johnston went to one side of the platform and laid
+his hand on the spokes of a polished metal wheel shaped like the
+pilot-wheel of a steamboat. Branasko hastened to him.
+
+"Don't touch it," he warned. "It looks as if it were to turn the
+electric connection off and on. If the sun should go out, the
+consequences would be awful. The people of Alpha would go mad
+with fear."
+
+The American withdrew his hand, and he and Branasko walked back to
+the centre of the platform. Johnston uttered an exclamation of
+surprise. "The light is changing."
+
+And it was, for it was gradually fading into a purple that was
+delightfully soothing to the eye after the painful brightness of a
+moment before.
+
+"I understand," said the Alphian, "we are running very
+slow and are only now about to approach the great wall, for
+purple is the color of the first morning hour."
+
+"But how is the light changed?" asked Johnston curiously.
+
+"By some shifting of glasses through which the rays shine, I
+presume," returned the Alphian; "but the mechanism seems to be
+concealed in the walls of the globe."
+
+Not a word was spoken for an hour. They had lain down on the
+platform near the iron railing which encompassed it, and Branasko
+was dozing intermittently. Again the light began to change
+gradually. This time it was gray. Johnston put out his hand to
+touch Branasko, but the Alphian was awake. He sat up and nodded
+smiling. "Wait till the next hour," he said; "it will be rose-
+color; that is the most beautiful."
+
+Slowly the hours dragged by till the yellow light showed that it
+was the sixth hour. Branasko had been exploring the vast interior
+below and came back to Johnston who was asleep on the floor of
+the platform.
+
+"I have just thought of something," said Branasko. "This is the
+day appointed by the king to entertain his subjects with a grand
+display of the elements."
+
+"I do not understand," said Johnston.
+
+"The king," explained the Alphian, "darkens the sun with clouds so
+that all Alpha is blacker than night, and then he produces great
+storms in the sky, and lightning and musical thunder. We may,
+perhaps, hear the music, but we cannot witness the storm and
+electric display on account of the light about us. It usually
+begins at this hour; so be silent and listen."
+
+After a few minutes there was a rumble from below like the roar of
+a volcano and an answering echo from the black dome overhead. This
+died away and was succeeded by a crash of musical thunder that
+thrilled Johnston's being to its very core. Branasko's face was
+aglow with enthusiasm.
+
+"Grand, glorious!" he ejaculated, "but if only you could see the
+lightning and the dawn in the east you would remember it all your
+life. The sunlight is cut off from Alpha by the clouds, and there
+is no light except the wonderful effects in the sky."
+
+Johnston had gone back to the wheel and was examining it
+curiously.
+
+"I have a mind to turn off the current for a moment anyway," he
+said doggedly; "if the sun is hidden they would not discover it."
+
+Branasko came to him, a weird look of interest in his eyes.
+"That is true," he said; "besides, what matters it? We may not
+live to see another day."
+
+Johnston acted on a sudden impulse. He intended only to frighten
+Branasko by moving the wheel slightly, and he had turned it barely
+an eighth of an inch, when, as if controlled by some powerful
+spring, it whirled round at a great rate, making a loud rattling
+noise. To their dismay the light went out.
+
+"My God! what have I done?" gasped the American in alarm.
+
+"Settled our fate, I have no doubt," muttered the Alphian from the
+darkness.
+
+Johnston had recoiled from the whirling wheel, and now cautiously
+groped back to it, and attempted to turn it. It would not move.
+
+"It has caught some way," he groaned under his breath.
+
+"And we have no light to find the cause of the trouble," added the
+Alphian, who had knelt down and was feeling about the wheel.
+Presently he rose.
+
+"I give it up," he sighed, "I cannot understand it. The machinery
+is somewhere inside."
+
+"It has grown colder," shuddered Johnston.
+
+"We were warmed by the light, of course," remarked Branasko, "and
+now we feel the dampness more. We are going at a frightful speed."
+
+Just then there was a jar, and the sun swung so violently from
+side to side that the two men were prostrated on the floor. The
+speed seemed to slacken.
+
+"I wonder if we are going to stop," groaned the American, and he
+sat up and held to Branasko. "Perhaps they will draw us back to
+rectify the mistake, and then----"
+
+"It cannot be done," interrupted the Alphian. "The machinery runs
+only one way. We shall simply have to finish our journey in
+darkness."
+
+"They may catch us on the other side before the sun starts back
+through the tunnel," suggested the American.
+
+"Not unlikely," returned Branasko. "There, we are going ahead
+again. One thing in our favor is that we can more easily escape
+capture in darkness than if the sun were shining."
+
+"Does the sun stop before entering the tunnel?"
+
+"I do not know," replied Branasko; "perhaps somebody will be there
+to see what is wrong with the light. We must have our wits about
+us when we land."
+
+Johnston was looking over the edge of the platform. "If the
+king's display is taking place down there I can see no sign of
+it."
+
+"How stupid of us!" ejaculated Branasko. "Of course, clouds
+sufficiently dense to hide the sun from Alpha would also prevent
+us from seeing the display below. I ought to----"
+
+He was interrupted by a grand outburst of harmony. The whole
+earth seemed to vibrate with sublime melody. "Our blunder has not
+been discovered yet," finished Branasko, after a pause, "else
+the fete down below would have been over. I am cold; shall we go
+inside?"
+
+Johnston's answer was taken out of his mouth by a loud rattling
+beneath the floor, near the wheel he had just turned; the sun
+shook spasmodically for an instant, and its entire surface was
+faintly illuminated, but the light failed signally.
+
+"It must have been an extra current of electricity sent to relight
+the lamps," remarked Johnston; and, as he concluded, the sun
+trembled again, and another flash and failure occurred. "Look,"
+cried the American, "the clouds are thinning; see the lights
+below! They have discovered the accident!"
+
+They both leaned over the railing and looked below. As far as the
+eye could reach, within the arc of their vision, they could see
+fitful lights flashing up, here and there, and going out again.
+And then they heard faint sounds of crashing masonry and the
+condensed roar of human voices, which seemed to come from above
+rather than from below. The Alphian turned. "I cannot stand the
+cold," he said.
+
+Johnston followed him. The rapid motion of the swinging sphere
+made him dizzy, and he caught Branasko's arm to keep from falling.
+
+"How can we tell when we go over the wall?" he asked anxiously.
+
+"We shall have to guess at it," was the answer. "At any rate we
+must be near the lower door so as to get out quickly if it is
+necessary to do so to escape detection."
+
+In the darkness they slowly made their way down the stairs to the
+great room.
+
+"There ought to be some way of making a light," said the Alphian,
+and his voice sounded loud and hollow in the empty chamber. After
+several failures to find the stairs they descended to the door
+they had entered. Branasko opened it a little, and a breeze came
+in. They sat down on the stone, and after a while, in sheer
+fatigue, they fell asleep. Hours passed. Branasko rose with a
+start, and shook Johnston.
+
+"Our speed is lessening," he exclaimed. "We must be going down. Be
+ready to jump out the instant we stop. There, let me open the door
+wider."
+
+
+
+Chapter XIV.
+
+When Tradmos spoke the words of warning, Thorndyke put his arm
+round the princess and drew her after Tradmos, who was hastening
+away in the gloom.
+
+"Wait," she said, drawing back. "Let us not get excited. We are
+really as safe here as there; for in their madness they will kill
+one another and trample them under foot." She led him to a parapet
+overlooking the great court below. "Hear them," she said, in pity,
+"listen to their blows and cries. That was a woman's voice, and
+some man must have struck her."
+
+"Tell me what is best to do," said the Englishman. "I want to
+protect you, but I am helpless; I don't know which way to turn."
+
+"Wait," she said simply, and the Englishman thought she drew
+closer to him, as if touched by his words.
+
+There was a crash of timbers--a massive door had fallen--a
+scrambling of feet on the stone pavement, and they could see the
+dark human mass surging into the court through the corridors
+leading from the streets.
+
+"What are they doing?" asked Thorn dyke.
+
+She shrank from the parapet as if she had been struck.
+
+"Tearing the pillars down," she replied aghast; "this part of the
+palace will fall. Oh, what can be done!"
+
+There was a grinding of stone upon stone, a mad yell from an
+hundred throats, the crash of glass, and, with a thunderous sound,
+a colossal pillar fell to the earth. The roof beneath the feet of
+the princess and Thorndyke trembled and sagged, and the tiling
+split and showered about them.
+
+Raising Bernardino in his arms, as if she were an infant,
+Thorndyke sprang toward the stairway leading to his chambers, but
+the roof had sunken till it was steep and slippery. One instant he
+was toppling over backward, the next, by a mighty effort, he had
+recovered his equilibrium, and finally managed to reach a safer
+place. As he hurried on another pillar went down. The roof sagged
+lower, and an avalanche of mortar and tiling slid into the court
+below. Yells, groans, and cries of fury rent the air.
+
+Bernardino had fainted. Thorndyke tried to restore her to
+consciousness, but dared not put her from him for an instant. On
+he ran, and presently reached a flight of stairs which he thought
+led to his chambers. He descended them, and was hastening along
+a narrow corridor on the floor beneath when Bernardino opened her
+eyes. She asked to be released from his arms. He put her down,
+but supported her along the corridor.
+
+"We have lost our way," he said, as he discovered that the
+corridor, instead of leading to his chambers, turned off obliquely
+in another direction.
+
+"Let's go on anyway," she suggested; "it may lead us out. I have
+never been here before. I--" A great crash drowned her words.
+The floor quivered and swayed, but it did not fall. On they ran
+through the darkness, till Thorndyke felt a heavy curtain before.
+He paused abruptly, not knowing what to do. Bernardino felt of
+its texture, perplexed for an instant.
+
+"Draw it aside, it seems to hang across the corridor," she said.
+He obeyed her, and only a few yards further on they saw another
+curtain with bars of light above and below it. They drew this
+aside, and found themselves on the threshold of a most beautiful
+apartment.
+
+In the mosaic floor were pictures cut in colored stones, and the
+ceiling was a silken canopy as filmy and as delicately blue as the
+sky on a summer's night. The floor was strewn with richly
+embroidered pillows, couches, rugs and ottomans; and here and
+there were palm trees and beds of flowers and grottoes. A solitary
+light, representing the moon, showed through the silken canopy in
+whose folds little lights sparkled like far-off stars.
+
+Thorndyke looked at the princess inquiringly. She was bewildered.
+
+"I have no idea where we are," she murmured. "I am sure I have
+never been here before; but there is another apartment beyond.
+Listen! I hear cries."
+
+"Some one in distress," he answered, and he drew her across the
+room and through a door into another room more beautiful than the
+one they had just left. Here, huddled together at a window
+overlooking the court, were six or eight beautiful young
+women. They were staring out into the darkness, and moaning and
+muttering low cries of despair.
+
+"It is my father's ladies," ejaculated the princess aghast. "He
+would be angry if he knew we had come here. No one but himself
+enters these apartments."
+
+Just then one of the women turned a lovely and despairing face
+toward them, and came forward and knelt at the feet of Bernardino.
+
+"Oh, save us, Princess," she cried.
+
+"Be calm," said the princess, touching the white brow of the
+woman. "The danger may soon pass; this portion of the palace is
+too strongly built for them to injure it." Then she turned to
+Thorndyke: "We must hasten on and find our way down; it would
+never do for us to be seen here." Then she turned to the kneeling
+woman and said gently: "I hope you will say nothing to the king of
+this; we lost our way in trying to get down from the roof."
+
+"I will not," gladly promised the woman, and seeing that
+Bernardino knew not which way to turn, she guided them to a door
+opening into a dimly-lighted corridor. "It will take you out to
+the balconies and down to the audience-chamber," she said.
+The princess thanked her, and she and the Englishman descended
+several flights of stairs. Reaching one of the balconies they met
+the denser darkness of the outside and the deafening clang and
+clamor of the multitude. There was no light of any kind, and
+Thorndyke and his charge had to press close against the balustrade
+of the balcony to keep from being crushed by the mad torrent of
+humanity.
+
+Now and then a strident voice would rise above the din:--
+
+"Down with the palace! Death to the king!"
+
+The trumpet in the tower sounded again and again.
+
+"It is my father trying to attract their attention," explained the
+princess. "Something very serious has happened for once. In
+speaking of the time the sun went out before, he told me that he
+had made an invention which, in such a crisis, would instantly
+restore confidence to the people. I cannot understand why he does
+not use it. Oh, I am afraid they will kill him!"
+
+Thorndyke tried to console her, for he saw that she was weeping,
+but just then there was a strange lull in the general tumult. What
+could have happened?
+
+"The dawn! the ideal dawn!" cried Bernardino, pointing to the
+eastern sky. Thorndyke looked in wonder. A purple light had spread
+along the horizon, and as it gradually softened into gray and
+slowly turned to pink, the noise of the populace died down. No
+sound could now be heard save the low groans of wounded men and
+women. What a sight met the view as the rose-light shimmered over
+the city! The dead and dying lay under the feet of the crowd.
+Almost every creature bore some mark of violence. Eyes were blood-
+shot, clothing torn, limbs were bleeding, and mingled fury and
+sudden hope struggled in each ashen face. The young trees and
+shrubbery had been trampled under foot, and walls, arcades and
+triumphal arches had been thrown down. The fragments of statues
+lay here and there, and the bodies of human beings filled the
+basins of broken fountains.
+
+"It is not the sun," explained Bernardino; "but the invention my
+father spoke of. He is doing it to calm them."
+
+Thorndyke made no answer. He stood as if transfixed, gazing at the
+horizon. The rose-light had spread over a third of the sky when
+gradually there appeared in its centre a bright circle of yellow
+light. The yellow light faded, leaving a perfect picture of the
+throne of the king; and as the now silent masses looked at the
+picture, a curtain behind the throne parted and the king himself
+appeared. He advanced and sat on the throne, and turned a calm
+face towards his subjects.
+
+"Wonderful!"ejaculated Bernardino, and her face was full of hope.
+"See what he will do!"
+
+"Where is the picture?" asked Thorndyke; "can it be seen by all
+of--of the people?"
+
+"Yes, by all Alpha, for it is on the sky."
+
+Thorndyke said nothing further, for the king had stood up, and
+with hands out-stretched was bowing. Above the circle of light,
+as if cut out of the solid blackness, in flaming letters stood
+the word,
+
+"SILENCE!"
+
+And there was silence. Even the lips of the wounded men closed
+as the king began to speak. The sound of his voice seemed as far
+away as the stars, and to permeate all space:--
+
+"All danger is over. Tidings from the west state that the sun is
+setting. No harm has come to it. It will rise in the morning, and
+the moon and stars will be out in a few hours. Let the dead be
+removed, the wounded cared for, and everything be repaired. This
+is my will."
+
+That was all. The king bowed sedately and retired from the throne,
+and the circle and pink glow faded from the black sky. The
+stillness was unbroken for a moment, then glad murmurings were
+heard in all directions.
+
+"They are lighting the palace," cried the princess. "See, down
+there is the arcade leading to the rotunda."
+
+"I am glad it is over," said Thorndyke.
+
+She grasped his arm and impulsively looked into his face.
+"But your friend, we have forgotten him, and done nothing
+to save him, and now it is too late."
+
+"We could not help it; we had to think of our own safety."
+
+"I shall send for Captain Tradmos and try to devise some other
+plan," she said, as they descended the stairs.
+
+"We should not be seen together," she added, as they approached
+the throne-room; "besides, you ought to go to your chambers. No
+one is allowed to be out when the dead is being removed."
+
+"Where is the dead taken?"
+
+"Over the wall, to be burned in the internal fires," she
+concluded, as she was leaving him.
+
+He found everything in order in his rooms and he lay down and
+tried to sleep, but he was too much excited over the happenings of
+the day. Hours must have passed when his attention was drawn to a
+bright light shining on the wall of his room. He went to a window
+and looked out on the court. The light came from the rising moon.
+
+Below lay the ruins of fallen columns, capitals, cornices and
+statues. Figures in black cloaks and cowls were removing the dead
+from the debris. With a fluttering sound something swooped down
+past his window to the ground. It looked like a great bird,
+carrying the car of a flying-machine. Thorndyke watched its
+circular descent to the earth, and shuddered with horror as the
+black figures filled the car with bodies and the gruesome machine
+spread its wings and rose slowly till it was clear of the domes
+and pinnacles of the palace, and then flew away westward.
+
+Other machines came, and, one after another, received their
+ghastly burdens and departed. In a short time all the dead was
+removed, and hundreds of workmen came from the palace and began
+repairing the fallen masonry.
+
+Thorndyke went back to his couch and tried to sleep, but in vain.
+Slowly the hours of night passed, and as the purple of dawn rose
+in the east he dressed himself and went up on the roof. The moon
+had gone down and the stars were fading from the sky. The dark
+earth below showed no signs of life; but as the purple light
+softened into gray he saw that the streets of the city
+were filled with silent expectant people, all watching the
+eastern sky. And, as the gray light flushed into rose, and the
+rose began to scintillate with gold, they began to stir, and a
+hum of joyful voices was heard. The promised day had come.
+
+
+
+Chapter XV.
+
+The sun was, indeed, slowing up. The two men peered out at the
+door.
+
+"It would be unlucky for us if it should not come so near
+to the earth as it did on the other side," whispered Branasko.
+
+"I can hardly feel any motion to the thing at all," replied the
+American. "Look! for some reason it is not so dark below. I
+can see the rocks. Surely we have already passed over the wall."
+
+"That's so," returned the Alphian. "Come; we must be quick and
+watch our opportunity to land. I can't imagine where the light
+comes from unless it be from the people waiting for the arrival
+of the sun." Every instant the speed was lessening. Overhead the
+cables were beginning to creak and groan, and, now and then, the
+great globe swung perilously near some tall stony peak, or passed
+under a mighty stalactite. Slower and slower it got till, when
+within a few feet of the ground, it stopped its onward motion and
+only swung back and forth like a pendulum.
+
+"Quick," whispered Branasko, "we must get down while it is
+swinging, no time to lose--not an instant!" And as the sun moved
+backward, with his hand on the doorsill, he leaped to the earth.
+Johnston followed him. They were not a moment too soon, for about
+fifty yards away they saw a body of sixty or seventy men with
+lights in their hands hastening toward them.
+
+"Just in time," exulted Branasko, and he quickly drew Johnston
+into a little cave in the face of a cliff. Crouching behind a
+great rock, they saw and heard the men as they approached.
+
+Some of them walked around the sun, and two, evidently in
+authority, entered the door. The others were placing ladders
+against the side of the sphere, when suddenly there was a loud
+clattering in the interior, a whirling of wheels under the
+platform above, and the surface of the sun burst into light.
+
+The two refugees were momentarily blinded. Branasko had the
+presence of mind to quickly draw his companion down close to the
+earth behind the rock. "They could see us in the light," he
+whispered.
+
+There was a joyous clamoring of voices among the men, and they
+withdrew several yards to look at the sun. This drew them nearer
+the hiding-place of the two refugees.
+
+"Only an accident," said a voice; "it won't happen again."
+
+Then one of them went into the sun and the lights died out. In a
+moment the sun began to move. Slowly and majestically it swept
+over the rocky earth, followed by the crowd, till it reached a
+great hole and sank into it.
+
+"Gone into the tunnel," said the Alphian, as the crowd disappeared
+behind the cliff.
+
+"What are we to do now?" asked Johnston. "We certainly can't go
+through with the sun."
+
+"Wait till the next trip," grimly replied Branasko.
+
+The rumbling noise from the big hole gradually died away, and the
+two men left their hiding-place.
+
+"What is that?" asked Johnston. He pointed to the west, where a
+red light shone against the towering cliffs.
+
+"It must be the internal fires," answered Branasko, with a
+noticeable shudder. "Let's go nearer; I have heard that there is a
+point near here where one can look down into the Lake of Flame."
+
+"The Lake of Flame!" echoed the American, "What is that?"
+"It is where all of the dead of Alpha is cast by the black
+'vultures of death.'"
+
+Johnston said nothing, for it was difficult to keep up with the
+Alphian, who was bounding over rocks and dangerous fissures toward
+the red glow in the distance.
+
+At every step the atmosphere got warmer, and they detected a
+slight gaseous odor in the air. Finally, after an arduous tramp of
+an hour, they climbed up a steep hill and looked sharply down into
+a vast bubbling lake of molten matter more than a thousand yards
+below. Branasko noticed a stone weighing several tons evenly
+balanced on the verge of the great gulf, and pushed it with both
+his hands. It rocked, broke loose from its slender hold on the
+cliff and bounded out into the red space. Down it went, lessen-
+ing as it sank till it became a mere black speck and then
+disappeared.
+
+"That's where the dead go," said Branasko gloomily.
+
+Just then the American, happening to glance up, saw something like
+a huge black bird with outspread wings circling about in the red
+light over the pit. Branasko saw it, too, and his face paled and a
+tremolo was in his voice when he spoke.
+
+"It is one of the 'vultures of death;' don't stir; we won't be
+seen if we remain where we are!" The strange machine sank lower
+over the lake of fire, till, as if buoyed up on the hot air, with
+faintly quivering wings, it paused. A man opened a door of the
+black car and carelessly threw out the bodies of a woman and a
+child.
+
+The bodies whirled over and over and disappeared in the pit, and
+the man closed the door. The machine then rose and gracefully
+winged its flight to the east. In a moment others came with their
+grim burdens, and still others, till the mouth of the pit was
+dark with them.
+
+"Something has happened," whispered Branasko, "some great
+calamity, for surely so many people do not die in Alpha in a
+single day."
+
+For an hour they watched the coming and going of the vultures,
+till, finally the last one hovered over the lake of fire. Suddenly
+the machine swerved so near to Branasko and Johnston that they
+shrank close to the earth to keep from being seen. Something was
+evidently wrong with the machine, for there was a wild look of
+desperation on the driver's face as he tugged excitedly at the
+pilot-wheel. But all his efforts only caused the air-ship to dart
+irregularly from side to side, and, now and then, to strike the
+rocks of the pit's mouth, to shoot up suddenly, or to sink
+dangerously down toward the fire.
+
+"He is losing control of it," whispered Branasko,"he does not know
+what to do. See, he is trying to lighten the load, by kicking out
+the body."
+
+That was true, and, as the machine made a sudden plunge toward the
+cliff a few yards to the left of the refugees, the dead body,
+which the driver had managed to move to the door with his feet,
+fell out and lodged upon the edge of the cliff instead of falling
+into the fiery depths. The machine bounded up a few yards and
+paused, now apparently under the control of its driver. The man
+looked down hesitatingly at the corpse for a moment and then
+lowered the machine to the sloping rock near where the body lay.
+He alighted and cautiously crept down the steep incline to the
+body. He raised it in his arms and was about to cast it from him
+when his foot slipped, and with a cry of horror he fell with his
+burden over the cliff's edge into the red abyss.
+
+Johnston uttered an exclamation of horror, but Branasko was
+unmoved. After a moment he rose, and carefully scanning the space
+overhead, he crawled on hands and knees toward the machine.
+Johnston heard him chuckling to himself and uttering spasmodic
+laughs, and he watched him closely as he reached the machine. For
+several minutes he seemed to be inspecting it critically, both
+inside and out; then he stood away from it, a bold, black
+silhouette on a background of flame, and motioned the American to
+come to him.
+
+Johnston promptly, but not without many misgivings, obeyed his
+signal. "What are you up to?" asked he, as the Alphian assisted
+him to rise from his hands and knees.
+
+Branasko touched the machine and smiled. His face was shining with
+enthusiasm.
+
+"The question of our returning to Alpha is settled," he said
+sententiously.
+
+"How?"
+
+"We can go in this."
+
+"Can you manage it?"
+
+"Easily; that fellow must have been drunk; the machine is in good
+order, I think."
+
+"When do you propose to start?" and the American eyed the funeral-
+car dubiously.
+
+"The night is before us; we could not get a better time." As he
+spoke he entered the car and laid his hand on the wheel. Johnston,
+obeying his nod, followed, shuddering as he remarked the traces of
+blood on the floor.
+
+"All right!" Branasko turned the wheel slowly, and the wings
+outside began to flap, and the car mounted into the air like a
+startled bird and flew out quickly over the pit.
+
+Branasko bit his lip, and Johnston heard him stifle an exclamation
+of impatience. As for the American, he was at once thrilled and
+fascinated by the awful sight below; he could now see beneath the
+overhanging mouth of the pit, and look far down into a boundless
+lake of molten matter that seemed as restless as an ocean in a
+storm.
+
+Then the air became so hot he could hardly breathe. He looked at
+the Alphian in alarm. The latter was whirling the wheel first one
+way and then another with a startled look of fear in his eyes, and
+then Johnston noticed that the walls of the pit were rising about
+them, and the black canopy overhead rapidly receding.
+
+They were sinking down into the fire.
+
+Almost wild with terror, the American sprang toward the wheel, but
+Branasko pushed him away roughly.
+
+"Stand back," he ordered gruffly. "It is the heat; let me alone!"
+
+The American sank into his seat. The heat became more and more
+intense. Both men were purple in the face, and the perspiration
+was rolling from their bodies in streams. Down sank the machine.
+
+"I can't manage it," said Branasko hoarsely, "we'd as well give
+up."
+Just then Johnston noticed the mouth of a cave behind Branasko.
+
+"Look," he cried, "can't we get into it?"
+
+Branasko looked over his shoulder, and, as he saw the cave, he
+uttered a glad cry. He quickly turned the wheel and drew out a
+lever at his right. The machine obeyed instantly; it swerved round
+suddenly and dived into the cave. The cool air soon revived them,
+and Branasko had little trouble in bringing the car to a resting-
+place on the rocky floor of the cave. Before them hung
+impenetrable darkness, behind a curtain of red light.
+
+"We are in a pretty pickle now," said Johnston despondently, as
+they alighted from the car.
+
+"Nothing to do but to make the best of it," sighed Branasko.
+
+"Perhaps this cave may lead out into some place of safety."
+
+Johnston's eyes had become somewhat accustomed to the gloom, and
+he began to peer into the darkness.
+
+"I see a light," he exclaimed; "it cannot be a reflection from
+the fire in the pit, for it is whiter."
+
+The Alphian gazed at it steadily for a moment, then he said
+decidedly: "We must go and see what it is." Without another word
+he started toward the white, star-like spot, sliding his hand over
+the rocky wall, and springing over a fissure in the floor.
+
+Gradually the light grew brighter, till, as they suddenly rounded
+a cliff, a grand sight burst upon their view. They found
+themselves in a vast dome-shaped cavern, thousands of yards in
+diameter and height. And almost in the centre of the floor, from a
+red and purple mound of cooling lava, leapt a white stream of
+molten matter from the floor to the dome. And in the black dome,
+where the lava turned to molten spray, hung countless stalactites
+of every color known to the artistic eye. And from the foot of the
+fountain ran a tortuous rivulet that lighted the walls and roof
+of a narrow chamber that extended for miles down toward the bowels
+of the earth.
+
+Branasko was delighted.
+
+"The king does not know of this," he declared, "else he would make
+it accessible to his people, and call it one of the wonders of
+Alpha. By accidentally sinking into the pit we have discovered it.
+But," he concluded, "we must at once try to find some way out
+other than that by which we came."
+
+They turned from the beautiful fountain, and, holding to each
+other's hands, and aided by the light behind them, they stumbled
+laboriously through the semi-darkness. Branasko's ears were very
+acute. He paused to listen.
+
+"Hark ye!" he cautioned.
+
+The combined roar of the pit and the fountain of lava had sunk to
+a low murmur, but ahead of them they now heard a rushing sound
+like a distant tornado.
+
+"Come on," said the Alphian, and he drew his companion after him
+with an eagerness the American was slow to understand. The light
+in the cavern gradually grew brighter. By a circuitous route they
+were again approaching the pit of fire, though it was still hidden
+from sight.
+
+Finally they reached a point where the wind was blowing stiffly,
+and further on a volume of cold spray suddenly dashed upon them
+and wet them to the skin. And when their eyes had become
+accustomed to the rolling mist, they saw a great lake, and pouring
+into it from high above was a mighty waterfall.
+
+"Mercy!" ejaculated the Alphian, in great alarm. "If this is salt
+water we are lost. All Alpha will come to an end!"
+
+"What do you mean?" And Johnston wondered if Branasko's trials and
+struggle could have turned his brain.
+
+"If it be salt water, then it has broken in from the ocean above
+Alpha," he explained. "The king has often said that not a drop
+of the ocean has ever entered the great cavern."
+
+Branasko stooped and wet his hand in a little pool at his feet. "I
+am almost afraid to taste it," said he, holding his hand near
+his mouth. "It would settle all our fates." He waited a moment
+and then touched his fingers to his tongue.
+
+"Salt!" That was all he said for several moments. He folded his
+arms and looked mutely toward the boiling lake. Presently he
+raised his eyes to the great hole in the roof, and groaned: "The
+break is gradually widening. These stones are freshly broken, and
+the great bowl is filling."
+
+"It will fill all Alpha with water and drown every soul in it,"
+added the terrified American.
+
+"That, however, is not the most immediate danger," said Branasko
+wisely. "They would first suffocate, and later their bodies would
+be swallowed up in the stomach of the earth."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+Branasko shrugged his shoulders. "As soon as this bowl is filled
+with water, which would not take many hours, it would run over
+into the lake of fire and produce an explosion that would rend
+Alpha from end to end."
+
+"Who knows, it might turn the whole Atlantic into the centre of
+the earth, and destroy the entire earth."
+But Branasko was unable to grasp the full magnitude of the remark,
+for to him the world was simply a vast cavern lighted by human
+ingenuity. He fastened a narrow splinter of stone upright in the
+shallow water at his eet, and, lying down on his stomach with his
+eyes close to it, he studied it for several minutes. When he got
+up, a desperate gleam was in his dark eyes.
+
+"It is rising fast," he said. "We must attempt to get to the
+capitol and warn the king. It is possible that he may be able
+to stop the opening. The only thing left to us is to try our
+machine again."
+
+Johnston found it hard to keep pace with him as he bounded out of
+the mist and on toward the faint glow ahead. Reaching the flying
+machine Branasko entered it and turned on a small electric light.
+
+"Ah," he grunted with satisfaction, "I have found a light. I can
+now see what is the matter with it."
+
+Johnston stood outside and heard him hammering on the metal parts
+in the car, and became so absorbed in thinking of the peril of
+their position that he was startled when Branasko cried out to
+him:--"All right. I think we can make it do; a pin has lost out,
+but perhaps I can hold the piece in place with my foot. If only we
+can stand the heat of the pit long enough to rise above it, we may
+escape."
+
+Johnston followed him into the car. Branasko seated himself firmly
+and gave the wheel a little turn. Slowly the machine rose. "See!"
+cried Branasko, "it is under control. "We must not be too hasty.
+Now for the pit!"
+
+The heart of the American was in his mouth as the long black
+wings waved up and down and the air-ship, like some live thing,
+shuddered and swept gracefully out of the mouth of the cave into
+the glare and heat of the pit.
+
+"Hold your breath!" yelled Branasko, and he bent lower into the
+car to escape the shower of hot ashes that was falling about them.
+Far out over the lake in a straight line they glided, and there
+came to a sudden halt. Johnston's eyes were glued on his
+companion's face. Branasko sat doubled up, every muscle drawn, his
+eyes bulging from their sockets. Would he be strong enough? To
+Johnston everything seemed in a whirl. The walls of the pit were
+rising around them.
+
+
+
+Chapter XVI.
+
+Thorndyke went down into his chambers to make his toilet and was
+ready to leave when there was a soft rap on his door. He opened
+it, and to his surprise saw Bernardino modestly draw herself back
+into the shadow of the hall.
+
+"Pardon me, but I must speak to you," she stammered in confusion.
+
+"What is it?" he asked, going out to her.
+
+"I want to advise you to avoid my father to-day. He is greatly
+disappointed with the accident of yesterday, and he is never
+courteous to strangers when he is displeased. He was particularly
+anxious to have you entertained by the fete."
+
+"Thank you; I shall keep out of his way," promised the Englishman.
+"Where had I better stay--here in my rooms?"
+
+"No, he might send for you. If you would care to see Winter Park,
+I can go with you as your guide."
+
+"I should be delighted; nothing could please me more."
+
+"But," (as a servant passed in the room with a tray) "that is your
+breakfast. Meet me at the fountain at the north entrance of the
+palace in half an hour." And, drawing her veil over her face, she
+vanished in the darkness of the corridor.
+
+After he had breakfasted and sent the man away, he hastened below
+to the place designated by the princess. She was waiting for him
+under the palm trees, and was so disguised that he would not have
+known her but for her low amused laugh as he was about to pass
+her.
+
+"It would not do for any one to suspect me," she explained; "my
+father would never forgive me for doing this." She pointed to a
+flying-machine near by. "We must take the air; I have made all the
+arrangements. Winter Park is beyond the limits of the city."
+
+He followed her across the grass to the machine and into the car.
+They could see the driver behind the glass of the narrow
+compartment in which he sat, and when he turned the polished metal
+wheel the machine rose like a liberated balloon.
+
+Thorndyke looked out of the window. The blue haze of the fifth
+hour of the morning was breaking over everything, and as the
+domes, pinnacles, and vari-colored roofs fell away in the
+beautiful light, the breast of the Englishman heaved with
+delightful emotions. Bernardino was watching his face with a
+gratified smile.
+
+"You like Alpha," she said, half anxiously, half inquiringly.
+
+"Very much," he replied; "but I want to show you the great world I
+came from;--and some day perhaps I can."
+
+The blood ran into her cheeks suddenly, and then as quickly
+receded, leaving a wistful expression in her eyes. She sighed. "It
+has been my dream for a long time. I have always imagined that it
+is more wonderful than Alpha; but you know there is no chance for
+you to return now."
+
+"I shall manage to escape some way and you shall go with me as my
+wife."
+
+Her blushes came again. "I did not know that you cared that much
+for me," she said. Then, as if to change the subject, she
+pointed through the window. "See, we are approaching the Park,
+and shall descend in a moment."
+
+He looked out of the window and then drew his head in quickly.
+
+"We are coming down into a big lake!" he cried out.
+"Oh, no, it is only the glass roof of the park," she laughed;
+"true, it does look like water in the sunlight."
+
+The machine sank lower and finally rested on a plot of grass in a
+little square ornamented with beds of flowers and white statues.
+Thorndyke saw a seemingly endless wall, so high that he could not
+calculate its height. Bernardino preceded him in at a great
+arching door in the wall, and they found themselves in a stone-
+paved vestibule several hundred feet square.
+
+A maid servant came forward at once and brought heavy fur clothing
+for them and invited them into separate toilet rooms. When he came
+out Bernardino was waiting for him. He could hardly breathe, so
+thick were the furs he had put on.
+
+"It is warm here, but it will be colder in a moment," said the
+princess. And she led him to a door across the room. When the door
+was opened, Thorndyke uttered an exclamation of astonishment.
+Before their eyes lay a wide expanse of snow-covered roads,
+woodlands and frozen lakes and streams. The air was as crisp and
+invigorating as a Canadian winter.
+
+Bernardino led him to a pavilion where a number of pleasure-
+seekers were gathered and selected a sleigh and two mettlesome
+horses. She took the reins from the man, and sprang lightly into
+the graceful cutter. Thorndyke followed her and wrapped the thick
+robes about her feet. Away they sped like the wind down the smooth
+road, through a leafless forest. Overhead the glass roof could not
+be seen, but a lowering gray cloud hung over them and a light snow
+was falling.
+
+"Winter Park is a great resort," the princess explained; "we get
+tired of the unchanging climate, and it is pleasant to visit such
+a place as this. There is a winter park in every town of any size
+in Alpha."
+
+They drove along the shore of a beautiful lake, on the
+frozen surface of which hundreds of skaters were darting here
+and there, and passed hillsides on which crowds of young people
+were coasting in sleds. When they had driven about ten miles in a
+circuitous route she turned the horses round.
+
+"We had better return," she said; "you have not seen all of the
+Park, but we can visit it some other time."
+
+Outside they found their flying-machine awaiting them, and were
+soon on the way back to the city. They parted at the fountain in
+the park, she hastening to the palace, and he turning to stroll
+through the little wood behind him.
+
+He was passing a thick bunch of trees when he was startled by
+hearing his name called. He turned round, but at first saw no one.
+
+"Thorndyke!" There it was again, and then he saw a hand beckoning
+to him from a hedge of ferns at his right. He stepped back a few
+paces; a man came out of the wood.
+
+It was Johnston, his face was white and haggard, his clothing rent
+and soiled.
+
+"My God, can it be you?" gasped the Englishman.
+
+"Nobody else," groaned Johnston, cautiously advancing and laying a
+trembling hand on the arm of Thorndyke; "but don't talk loud, they
+will find me."
+
+"Where did you come from?"
+
+Johnston pointed first to the east, and then swept his hand over
+the sky to the west.
+
+"Over the wall," he said despondently. "From the dead lands behind
+the sun."
+
+"How did you get back here?"
+
+For reply Johnston parted the fern leaves and pointed to the lank
+figure of the tall Alphian, who lay curled up on the grass as if
+asleep. "He brought me in that flying- machine there; but he has
+spent all his strength in trying to manage the thing, which was
+out of order, and now he is helpless. Twice we came within an inch
+of sinking down into the internal fires. The last time we escaped
+only by the breadth of a hair; if he had not had the endurance of
+a man of iron he would have succumbed to the heat and we would
+have been lost. We sank so far down that I became insensible and
+never knew a thing till the fresh air revived me. See, my beard
+and hair are singed, and look how he is blistered. Poor fellow! He
+is a hero." Johnston stepped back and shook the Alphian, but the
+poor fellow's head only rolled to one side, showing his bloodshot
+eyes. He was in- sensible.
+
+"He is in a bad fix," said Thorndyke; "where did he come from?"
+
+"Banished like myself; we met over there in the dark and roamed
+about together."
+
+"What are you going to do?"
+
+"I don't know; I was following his lead. We will both be put to
+death if we are discovered."
+
+"Did he not tell you his plan?"
+
+Johnston started visibly. "Oh, I forgot," he exclaimed. "He
+declares that all this vast cavern is in danger. Over in the west
+we discovered a hole in the roof through which the ocean is
+streaming in a torrent. He calculated that before many hours the
+water would overflow into the internal fires and produce a
+volcanic eruption that will swallow up all of Alpha."
+
+"Merciful Heaven! and you are hiding here at such a moment? The
+king must be informed at once."
+
+Johnston had grown suddenly paler. "It may not be as bad as
+Branasko feared, and the king would have no mercy on me and him."
+
+"Leave that to me," said Thorndyke; "I have made a good friend of
+the Princess Bernardino. She will tell me what is best to do.
+Remain here."
+
+In breathless haste, Thorndyke went into the audience chamber.
+Fortunately the king was not on his throne, and he caught sight of
+the confidential maid of the princess.
+
+She saw him approaching, and withdrew behind a cluster of tall
+white jars of porcelain containing rare plants.
+
+"I must see your mistress," he said; "tell her to come to me at
+once; we are in great peril!"
+
+The girl swept her eyes over the balconies and the throne and
+said: "She is in her apartments, sir; I shall bring her."
+
+"Tell her to meet me at the fountain where we last met," and he
+hastened back to the spot mentioned.
+
+She soon came. "What is it?" she asked excitedly.
+
+"Johnston is back," he replied. "He is in the wood there with a
+fellow who escaped with him in a disabled flying-machine. He
+says the sea has broken through over in the west and is streaming
+into Alpha in a torrent."
+
+"Surely there is some mistake," she said; "such a thing has never
+happened."
+
+"It may have been caused by the explosives during the storm," went
+on Thorndyke. "Branasko, the Alphian who was with Johnston, says
+we are in imminent peril."
+
+"There must be some mistake," she repeated incredulously, as she
+looked to westward. The green glow of the second hour of the
+afternoon lay over everything. She stood mute and motionless for a
+long time,
+
+looking steadily at the horizon; then she started suddenly,
+changed her position, and shaded her eyes from the sunlight.
+
+"It really does seem to me that there is a cloud rising, and it
+is unlike any cloud I ever saw."
+
+"I see it too!" cried the Englishman; "it must be that the water
+has already reached the internal fires."
+
+Bernardino was very pale when she turned to him.
+
+"My father must know this at once; come with me."
+
+Into the palace, through the vast rotunda, past the throne, and
+into the very apartment of the king himself she led him hastily. A
+royal attendant met them and held up his hands warningly. "The
+king is asleep," he said in an undertone.
+
+"Wake him -- wake him at once!" commanded the excited girl.
+
+"I cannot, it would offend him," was the reply.
+
+She did not pause an instant, but darting past the man and running
+to the king's couch, she drew the curtain aside and touched the
+sleeper. He waked in anger, but her first word disarmed him.
+
+"Alpha is in danger."
+
+"What!" he growled, half awake.
+"The sea is breaking through in the west, and running into the
+internal fires."
+
+"How do you know that?"
+
+"A dense cloud is rising in the west, and:----"
+
+"Impossible!" the word came from far down in his throat, and he
+was ghastly pale. He ran to the table and touched a button and, to
+the astonishment of Thorndyke, the walls on the western side of
+the room silently parted, showing a little balcony overlooking the
+street below. The king went hastily out and looked toward the
+west. The others followed him.
+The princess stifled a cry of alarm when she glanced at the sky.
+
+Great black, rolling clouds were rapidly spreading along the
+horizon.
+
+The king looked at them as helplessly as a frightened child. "The
+air!" he groaned. "It is hot!" and then he held out his hand to
+the princess, and showed her a flake of soot on it, and he dumbly
+pointed to others that were falling about them.
+
+"How did you discover it?" he asked, and Thorndyke saw that he was
+trying to appear calm.
+
+"Mr.--this gentleman's friend has returned from banishment,
+and----"
+
+"Returned! has the wall been destroyed?"
+
+"No; he accidentally discovered the danger, and came in a flying-
+machine to warn you."
+
+"Where is he? bring him to me, quick!"
+
+"But you will not ----"
+
+He waved his hand impatiently. "Go; if Alpha is saved he shall be
+at liberty--if it is not, what does it matter?"
+
+Thorndyke hastened away after Johnston, who, when he was told of
+the king's words, readily accompanied his friend to the presence
+of the ruler. They found him with his daughter still on the
+balcony.
+
+"How did you discover this?" asked the king, turning to the
+American.
+
+As quickly as possible, Johnston related his adventures, and
+particularly the story of the shooting fountain and the fall of
+salt water. The king did not wait for him to conclude. He ran back
+into his chamber, touched another button, and the next instant
+alarm-bells were ringing all over the city.
+
+"A signal to the protectors," explained the princess to Thorndyke;
+"by this time they are ringing all over Alpha. Oh, what will
+become of us?" as she spoke she leaned over the balustrade and
+looked down into the street. Vast crowds had gathered and were
+motionless, except at points where the purple-clad "protectors"
+rushed from public buildings to assemble in squads on the street
+corner.
+
+
+
+Chapter XVII.
+
+Bernardino turned to look after her father as he was leaving
+the room.
+
+"He is going to the observatory," she said to Thorndyke and
+Johnston. "Let us go also." And they followed the king into the
+room with the glass roof and walls covered with mirrors which he
+had shown the strangers several days before. A white-headed old
+man stood at the stand, his fingers trembling over the half circle
+of electric buttons. In a mirror before him he was studying the
+reflection of a town of perhaps a hundred houses. The streets were
+filled with excited citizens, and a squad of protectors stood
+ready for action near a row of flying-machines.
+
+"Ornethelo," said the king, and at the sound of his voice the old
+man turned and bowed humbly.
+
+"All right," went on the king, "I will take your place a moment."
+
+He went to the stand and touched a button. Instantly the scene
+changed; fields, forests, streams and hills ran by in a murky
+blur, and then a larger town flashed on the mirror. Here the same
+stir and alertness characterized the scene. The gaze of every
+inhabitant was fixed on the threatening horizon. Rapidly the
+scenes shifted at the king's will, till a hundred cities, towns
+and villages had been reviewed.
+
+"Enough! They are all ready--all faithful," groaned the king,
+"and, Ornethelo, they may all have to perish to-day, and all for
+our ambition. Poor mortals!"
+
+Ornethelo's face was half submerged in the beard on his breast,
+but he looked up suddenly and spoke:
+
+"For their sakes, then, we ought not to delay; there may yet be
+hope."
+
+"You are right, Ornethelo." There was a ring of hope in the voice
+of the king. "Quick! show me my capitol, that I may see if all the
+protectors are ready."
+
+Ornethelo touched another button, and, as if seen from a great
+height, the fair and wondrous city dawned before the eyes of the
+spectators. In every street policemen and protectors and flying-
+machines stood in orderly readiness. The housetops were colored
+with the variegated costumes of men, women and children. Over all
+lay the wondrous sunlight, through the green splendor of which the
+flakes of soot were falling like black snow.
+
+The king touched the old man's arm. "I must see beyond the walls;
+are the connections made?"
+
+"Ready, sir."
+
+"Try them; they must not fail me now!"
+
+The old man tremblingly unlocked a cabinet on the table, and
+another row of electric buttons was displayed. Ornethelo touched
+one. Immediately there was a sharp clicking sound under the stand,
+and the view was swept from the mirror. Nothing could be seen but
+a dark suggestion of towering cliffs and yawning caverns.
+
+"Not the east, Ornethelo," cried the king impatiently. "Go on! the
+west! the west!"
+
+The black landscape flashed by like a glimpse of night from a
+flying train, and then a blur of redly illuminated smoke in
+rolling billows seemed to swell out from the surface of the mirror
+into the room.
+
+"There, slow!" cried the king, and then a frightful scene burst
+upon their sight. They beheld a great belching pit of fire and
+flames. The sky from the earth to the zenith was a vast expanse of
+illuminated smoke, and the black landscape round about was cut by
+rivulets of molten lava rolling on and on like restless streams of
+quicksilver.
+
+The king leaned against the stand as if faint with despair. "Call
+Prince Arthur!" he ordered, and almost at that instant the young
+man appeared.
+
+"Father!"
+
+The king pointed a quivering finger at the mirror, and said
+huskily:
+
+"Let not the sun go down! Let its light be white as at noon."
+
+"But, father, it has never been done before; it----"
+
+"Alpha has never faced such danger. All our dream is about to end.
+Go!"
+
+Without a word the young man hastened away, and it seemed scarcely
+a moment before the sunlight streaming in at the oval glass roof
+changed from green to white.
+
+The king pushed Ornethelo impatiently aside; his eyes held a dull
+gleam of despair, and he seemed to have grown ten years older. He
+touched a button, and the awful scene at the pit gave place to a
+bright view of the capitol, which was plainly seen from its
+crowded centre to its scattering suburbs. The squads of
+"protectors" stood like armies ready for battle, their rigid faces
+still toward the awful west.
+
+"They are ready--the signal!" yelled the king, waving his hand,
+"the signal!" Ornethelo caught his breath suddenly and tottered as
+he went across the room, and touched a button on the wall. The
+king's eyes were glued on the mirrored view of the capitol, his
+trembling hands held out, as if commanding silence. Then a
+deafening trumpet blast broke on the ear. The masses of citizens
+pressed near the edges of the roofs and close against the walls
+along the streets, as the protectors rushed into the flying-
+machines. Another trumpet-blast, and away they flew, a long black
+line, every instant growing smaller as it receded in the murky
+distance. The princess, white and silent, led Thorndyke and
+Johnston back to the balcony. The line of machines was now a
+mere thread in the sky, but the ominous cloud in the west had
+increased, and fine sand and ashes were added to the fall of
+soot.
+
+"What was that?" gasped the princess. It was a low rumble
+like distant thunder, and the balcony shook violently.
+
+"An earthquake," said Thorndyke. "I am really afraid there is not
+a ghost of a chance for us; the water running into the fire is
+sure to cause an eruption of some sort, and even a slight one
+would be likely to enlarge the opening to the ocean."
+
+Johnston nodded knowingly as he looked into his friend's face,
+but, considering the presence of the princess, he said nothing.
+
+"My brother, Prince Marentel, is the greatest man in our kingdom,"
+she re marked. "He has taken enough explosives to remove a
+mountain."
+
+"How will he use them?" asked Thorndyke.
+
+"I don't know, but I fancy he will try to close the opening in
+some way."
+
+The latter slowly shook his head. "I fear he will fail. The fall
+must be as voluminous as Niagara by this time."
+
+"My father must have lost hope, or he would not have stopped the
+sun," sighed the princess, and she cast a sad glance towards the
+west. The rolling clouds had become more dense, and the rumbling
+and booming in the distance was growing more frequent. A thin gray
+cloud passed before the sun, and a dim shadow fell over the city.
+
+"That is a natural cloud," said Thorndyke; "it comes from the
+steam that rises from the pit."
+
+"It is exactly like our rain clouds," returned the princess; "but
+it comes from the steam, as you say. But let us go into the
+Electric Auditorium and hear the news. As soon as anything is done
+we will hear of it there." The others had no time to question her,
+for she was hastening into the corridor outside. She piloted them
+down a flight of stairs into a large circular room beneath the
+surface of the ground. It was filled with seats like a modern
+theatre, and in the place where the stage would have been, stood a
+mighty mirror over an hundred feet square. She led them to a
+private box in front of the mirror. The room was filled from the
+first row of chairs to the rear with a silent, anxious crowd. In
+the massive frame of the mirror were numerous bell-shaped trumpets
+like those on the ordinary phonograph, though much larger.
+
+"Watch the mirror," whispered Bernardino as she sat down.
+
+And at that instant the surface of the great glass began to glow
+like the sky at dawn, and all the lights in the room went out.
+Then from the trumpets in the frame came the loud ringing of
+musical bells.
+
+"They are ready," whispered Bernardino; "now watch and listen."
+
+The pink light on the mirror faded, and a life-like reflection
+appeared--the reflection of a young man standing on a rock in bold
+relief against a dark background of rugged, slabbering cliffs and
+the forbidding mouths of caves.
+
+"Waldmeer!" ejaculated the princess, and she relapsed into
+silence.
+
+The young man held in his hand a cup-shaped instrument from which
+extended a wire to the ground. He raised it to his lips, and
+instantly a calm, deliberate voice came from the mirror, soft and
+low and yet loud, enough to reach the most remote parts of the
+great room.
+
+"The ocean," began he, "is pouring into the 'Volcano of the Dead'
+in a gradually increasing torrent. Prince Marentel hopes
+temporarily to delay the crisis by partially turning the torrent
+away from the pit into the lowlands of the country. For that
+purpose a portion of the endless wall is being torn down, and
+Marentel's forces are placing their explosives. After this is done
+an attempt will be made to stop the original break. There is,
+however, little hope. The prince has warned the king to be
+prepared for the worst."
+
+At this point, the speaker turned as if startled toward the red
+glare at his right. He quickly picked up another instrument
+attached to a wire and put it to his ear. A look of horror changed
+his face as he turned to the audience and began to speak:--"The
+opening in the wall is not progressing rapidly. Workmen are
+drowning and the tunnel of the sun is filling with water. It will
+be impossible for the sun to go through to the east."
+
+Just then there was a far-away crash, and instantly the mirror was
+void. There was now no sound except the low groans of women in the
+audience and the subdued curses of maddened men. The silence was
+profound. Then the mirror began to glow, and the image of another
+man took Waldmeer's place.
+
+"It is the Mayor of Telmantio," whispered the princess, "a place
+near the western limits of Alpha."
+
+He held a like instrument to the one used by Waldmeer, and through
+it spoke:--"Venus, one of the great stars, has been shaken from
+the firmament. It fell in the suburbs of Telmantio, and many lives
+were lost."
+
+That was all, and the figure vanished. Presently Waldmeer
+reappeared. He seemed to be standing nearer the pit, for the
+entire background was aflame; volumes of black smoke now and then
+hid him from view, and a thick shower of ashes and small stones
+were falling round him. He spoke, but his voice was drowned in a
+deafening explosion, and the whole landscape about him seemed
+afire. In the semi-darkness hundreds of protectors could be seen
+struggling in the rushing water, moving stones and building a dam.
+Waldmeer again faced his far-off audience and spoke:--"Prince
+Marentel has turned the course of the stream. All now depends on
+the success or failure of his final test with explosives, which
+will take place in about half an hour."
+
+"We ought to go outside again," suggested Bernardino, as
+Waldmeer's image disappeared; "my father might want us."
+
+Seeing no one in the king's apartment, they passed through it to
+the balcony. Half the sky was now covered with mingled fog and
+smoke, and the sun could be seen only now and then. A drizzling
+rain was falling--a rain that brought down clots of ashes and
+soot. But this made no difference to the throngs in the now muddy
+and slippery streets. They stood shivering in damp and soiled
+clothing, their blearing eyes fixed hopelessly on the lowering
+signs in the west. Johnston noticed a bent figure crouched against
+a wall beneath them. It was Branasko.
+
+"Who is it?" inquired the princess.
+
+"Branasko, the companion of my adventures," he replied.
+
+"Call him to us," she said eagerly, and the American went down to
+the Alphian.
+
+As they entered together, Branasko uncovered his dishevelled head
+and bowed most humbly.
+
+"You look tired and sick and hungry; have you eaten anything
+today?" she asked.
+
+"Not in two days," he replied.
+
+The princess called to a frightened maid who was wringing her
+hands in a corridor.
+
+"Give this man food and drink at once," she ordered, and Branasko,
+with a grateful bow and glance, withdrew. Johnston followed him to
+the door.
+
+"Fear nothing," he said. "If the danger passes we are safe; the
+king has promised to pardon me, and he will do the same for you."
+
+"There is no hope for any of us," replied Branasko grimly; "but I
+do not want to die with this gnawing in my stomach; adieu."
+
+"If the worst comes, is there any chance for us to escape from
+here to the outer world?" the Englishman was asking the princess
+when Johnston turned back to them.
+
+"For a few hundred, yes,--by the sub-water ships, but for all, no;
+and, then, my father would not consent to rescue a part and not
+the whole of his subjects. He would not try to save himself or any
+of his family."
+
+The clouds still covered the sun; but on the eastern sky its rays
+were shining gloriously. Ever and anon there sounded from afar a
+low rumbling as if the earth were swelling with heat.
+
+Johnston left the two lovers together and went to the door of the
+Electric Auditorium, and over the heads of the breathless crowd he
+watched the great mirror. After a few moments Waldmeer appeared
+and spoke:
+
+"Prince Marentel is operating with great difficulty. A large
+quantity of his explosives has been injured by water, but he hopes
+there is enough left intact to serve his purpose. The final
+explosion will soon take place. The greatest peril hangs over
+Alpha."
+
+Waldmeer's reflection was becoming in-distinct, and sick at heart
+the American elbowed his way through the muttering crowd into the
+corridor. Here he met Branasko, and together they walked back to
+Thorndyke and the princess, who were mutely watching the signs in
+the east. Just then the sun slowly emerged from the cloud.
+
+"Look!" cried Bernardino in horror. "The cloud is not moving; the
+sun has not stopped! It is going down and we shall soon be in
+utter darkness. Oh, it is awful--to die in this way!"
+
+The king had just returned, and he over-heard her words. He came
+hastily to the edge of the balcony, and gazed at the sun. The
+others held their breath and waited. His face became more rigid;
+he swayed a little as he turned to her.
+
+"You are right, my daughter," he groaned; "it is going down; the
+cowardly dogs in the east have deserted their posts. It is going
+down! It will sink into a tunnel filled with water, and the light
+of Alpha will be extinguished forever. We are undone! Say your
+prayers, my child, your prayers, I tell you, for an Infinite God
+is angry at our pretensions!"
+
+"Don't despair, father," and Bernardino put her arms gently round
+the old man's neck. "You understand the solar machinery; could you
+not stop the sun?"
+
+The eyes of the old man flashed. He seemed electrified as he drew
+himself from her embrace and looked anxiously over the balustrade
+to a flying-machine in the street below.
+
+"I might reach the east in time," he cried; "yes, you are right, I
+was acting cowardly. The fastest air-ship in Alpha is ready, and
+Nanleon can drive it to its utmost speed. If the worst comes, I
+shall see you no more, good-bye!" He kissed her brow tenderly, and
+her eyes filled as he hastened away. Down below they saw him
+spring lightly into the gold-mounted car, and the next instant the
+graceful vessel rose above the palace roof and sped like an arrow
+across the sky toward the east.
+
+A faint cheer broke from the lips of the crowd which seemed
+suddenly to take new hope from the king's departure. Some of them
+waved their hats and scarfs, and many watched the air-ship till it
+had disappeared in the murky distance.
+
+"He may not get there in time!" cried the princess; "it seems to
+be going down faster than it ever did before, and he has a great
+distance to go."
+
+The little party on the balcony were silent for a long time.
+Presently Bernardino turned her tearful eyes to the face of
+Thorndyke.
+
+"The smoke and steam do not seem so voluminous, do you think all
+will go well?"
+
+The Englishman slowly shook his head. "I don't want to depress you
+more than you are; but I think at such a time we ought to realize
+the worst. It is true, the clouds are not so heavy, and the earth-
+quakes are less frequent, but, unfortunately, it is owing to the
+fact that the volume of water has been turned away from the pit
+into the tunnel. Be prepared for the worst. If your father cannot
+reach the machinery in the east soon enough, our light will go
+out; and, worse than that, if Prince Marentel should fail in his
+next venture with explosives, all hope will be gone."
+
+"I have never desired to live so much as now," she answered,
+inclining with an air of tenderness toward, him. "I never knew
+what it was to fear death till--till you came to us."
+
+He made no reply. There was a lump in his throat and he could not
+trust his voice to speech. Branasko and Johnston left them
+together to go into the Electric Auditorium. They returned in
+great haste.
+
+"The prince is ready for the explosion," panted Johnston.
+Thorndyke, old man, this is simply awful! It is not like standing
+up to be shot at, or being jerked through the clouds in a balloon.
+It seems to me that out there is the endless space of infinity,
+and that all the material world is coming to an end. My God! look
+at that hellish fire, the awful smoke and that black sky! Oh, the
+blasphemy of a such a paltry imitation of the handiwork of the
+Creator! We are damned! I say damned, and by a just and angry
+God!"
+
+"Don't be a fool," said Thorndyke, and he threw a warning glance
+at Bernardino, who, with staring, distended eyes was listening to
+Johnston.
+
+"No, he is right," she said in a low tone. "I have never seen your
+world, but I know my people must be woefully wrong. In your land
+they say men teach things about Infinity and an eternal life for
+the soul; and that one may prepare for that life by living pure,
+and in striving to attain a high spiritual state. Oh, why have you
+not told me about that? It is the one important thing. I have long
+wanted to know if my soul will be safe at death, but I can learn
+nothing of my people. They have always tried to rival God, and,
+in their mad pursuit of perfection in science, they have been
+reduced to--this. That black cloud is the frown of God, hose mad
+flames may burst forth at any moment and engulf us."
+
+She uttered a low groan and hung her head as if in prayer.
+Johnston and Thorndyke were awed to silence. Never had the
+Englishman loved her as at that moment. She was no longer simply a
+beautiful human creature, but a divinity, speaking truths from
+Heaven itself. He felt too unworthy to stand in her presence, and
+yet his heart was aching to comfort her.
+
+She raised her pallid face heavenward and extended her fair,
+fragile hands toward the lowering sky and began to pray. "My
+Creator," she said reverently, childishly, "I have never come to
+Thee, but they say that people far away from this dark land, under
+Thy own sun, moon and stars do ask aid of Thee, and I, too, want
+Thy help. Forgive me and my people. They have been sinful, and
+vain, and thoughtless, but let them not perish in utter gloom.
+Forgive them, O thou Maker of all that exists--thou Creator of
+pain that we may love joy, Creator of evil that we may know good,
+turn not from us! We are but thoughtless children--and Thy
+children--give us time to realize the awful error of our hollow
+pretensions! Give them all now, at once, if they are to die, that
+spirit which is awakened in me by the awful majesty of Thy anger!
+Hear me, O God!" And with a sob she sank on her knees, clasped her
+hands and raised them upward. Thorndyke tried to lift her up, but
+she shook her head and continued her prayer in silence. A marked
+change had come over Branasko. He looked at Johnston and Thorndyke
+in a strange, helpless way, and then, in a corner of the balcony
+the begrimed and tattered man fell on his knees. He knew not the
+meaning of prayer, but there was something in the reverent
+attitude of the princess that drew his untutored being toward his
+Maker. He covered his face with his hands and his shaggy head sank
+to his knees.
+
+Johnston hastened back into the Auditorium. Returning in a moment,
+he found the Englishman tenderly lifting Bernardino from her knees
+and Branasko still crouching in a corner.
+
+"What is the news?" asked Thorndyke.
+
+"Everything is ready for the explosion. The prince seems only
+waiting because he dreads failure. The people in there are so
+frightened that they cannot move from their seats."
+
+Just then Branasko raised a haggard face and looked appealingly at
+the princess. She caught his eye.
+
+"Fear nothing, good man," she said; "the God of the Christians
+will not harm us; we are safe in His hands. I felt it here in my
+heart when I prayed to Him. Oh, why has my father and the other
+kings of Alpha not taught us that grand simple truth! But before I
+die I want to leave this dark pit of sin, and look out once into
+endless, world- filled space."
+
+A joyous flush came into the face of the Alphian. His fear had
+vanished. She had promised him safety. He bowed worshipfully, but
+he spoke not, for Bernardino was eagerly pointing to the sun.
+
+"Look!" she cried gleefully, with the merry tremolo of a happy,
+surprised child. "The sun is not moving. Father has been
+successful! It is a good omen! God will save us!"
+
+It was true; the sun was standing still. A deep silence was on the
+city. The crowds in the street neither moved nor spoke. Without a
+murmur or complaint they stood facing the frowning west. Suddenly
+the silence was interrupted by a low volcanic rumble. The earth
+heaved, and rolled, and far away in the suburbs of the city the
+spire of a public building fell with a loud crash. A groan swept
+from mouth to mouth and then died away.
+
+"The cloud is increasing rapidly," said Thorndyke. "I can really
+see little hope. I shall return in a moment."
+
+While he was gone Bernardino knelt and prayed. Again overcome with
+fear Branasko crouched down in his corner. Another shudder and
+rumble from the earth, another long moan from the people.
+Thorndyke came back. He spoke to the princess:
+
+"The dam built by Prince Marentel has been swept away. The ocean
+is pouring into the internal fires. There is scarcely any hope
+now."
+
+Branasko groaned, but Bernardino's face was aglow with celestial
+faith. She shook her head.
+
+"They will not be destroyed in this way," she said;" they have
+had no chance to know God."
+
+"It all depends on the explosion which may take place at any
+moment," and Thorndyke took her into his arms and whispered into
+her ear, "I do not care for myself; but I cannot bear to think of
+your suffering pain."
+
+She answered only by pressing his hand. The clouds were now
+rolling upward in greater volume than ever. It was growing darker.
+The little group on the balcony could now scarcely see the people
+below them. The fall of damp ashes was resumed. The air had grown
+hot and close.
+
+Boom! Boom! Boom! the streets of the city rose nd fell with the
+undulating motion of a swelling sea. Blacker and blacker grew the
+sky; closer and closer the atmosphere; damper and damper became
+the fog; thicker and thicker fell the wet sand and ashes.
+
+"Perhaps we would be safer in the streets," suggested Thorndyke,
+drawing Bernardino closer into his arms, "the palace may fall on
+us."
+
+But the princess shook her head. "Father would not know where to
+find me, I shall await him here." Branasko had edged nearer to
+her. His eyes were glued on her face and he hung on her words as
+if his fate were in her hands. He had no regard for the opinions
+of the others.
+
+"The explosion will soon take place now unless something has
+happened contrary to the expectations of the prince," said the
+Englishman.
+
+Boom! Boom! kr-kr-kr-kr-boom! The noise seemed to shake the earth
+to its centre. Now the far-away pit was belching forth fire and
+molten lava rather than steam and smoke. The flames had spread out
+against the sloping roof of the cavern, and seemed to extend for a
+mile along the horizon. "They can do nothing in that heat,"
+exclaimed Johnston; "they could not get near enough to the pit.
+Thorndyke, old fellow, I can't see a ghost of a chance. We might
+as well say good-bye."
+
+"Hush!" It was the voice of the princess. "I feel that we shall
+not be lost, I say." And as she spoke Branasko crept toward her
+and raised the hem of her gown to his white lips. Something dark
+came between them and the far-off glare. It was a flying-machine.
+
+"It is father," cried Bernardino, and she called out to him:
+"Father! father! Here we are, waiting for you!" In a moment he was
+with them.
+
+"All right in the east," he said gloomily. "Baryonay is there.
+They deserted him, but they returned when the flames went down.
+This is awful, daughter; it means death! It means annihilation!"
+
+She put her arms round his neck and drew his face close to hers.
+"No, no," she said earnestly; "I see with a new light--a new
+spiritual light. There is mercy in the divine heart of Him that
+made the walls of our little world and constructed countless other
+worlds. I have prayed for mercy, and into my heart has come a
+sweet peace I never knew before. We shall not be lost. He will
+give us time to give up our sinful life here and seek Him."
+
+The old man quivered as with ague; he searched her face eagerly,
+drew her spasmodically into his arms, and then sank to the floor,
+overcome with exhaustion.
+
+The roar in the west was increasing. Hot ashes, gravel and small
+stones were falling on the roofs and the people. Now and then a
+cry of pain was heard, but they would not seek the shelter of the
+buildings. If they had to die they wanted to fall facing the
+enemy. Suddenly the king rose. He looked to the west and groaned.
+Something told them that the explosion was coming. Expectation,
+horrible suspense was in the air. There was a mighty flare of
+light. The entire heavens were lighted from horizon to horizon,
+and then the light went out.
+
+"Oh, I thought it ----" but the princess did not finish her
+sentence.
+
+"The explosion," said Thorndyke, "the sound will follow in a
+moment."
+
+"My God, have mercy on us!" cried the king. But his prayer was
+drowned in a deafening sound. Bernardino had leaned into the arms
+of her lover. "Don't despair," he said tenderly, "the prince
+may have been successful."
+
+"I feel that he has," she replied. "But, oh, it is dreadful!"
+
+The crowds below seemed to understand that their fate depended on
+the news that would reach them in a few minutes.
+
+Boom! Boom! kr-kr-kr-kr-boom! There seemed to be no lessening of
+the volcanic disturbance, and the earth groaned and rocked and
+quivered as before.
+
+"It is impossible to tell yet," groaned the king. "Oh, God, save
+us; give us a chance to escape this awful doom!"
+
+Johnston bethought himself that he might learn something in the
+Electric Auditorium and he went into it. It was empty and dark;
+not a soul was there save himself. He was turning to leave when
+his eye was drawn to the great mirror by a faint pink glow
+appearing upon it. He stood still, a superstitious fear coming
+over him as he thought of being alone with a possible messenger
+from the far-away scene of disaster. The light went out
+tremblingly; then it flashed up again, and the American thought he
+saw the face of Waldmeer. The light grew steadier, stronger. It
+was Waldmeer, but he was submerged in smoke. Hark! he was
+speaking.
+
+"Marentel is successful! Entrance closed temporarily, and will be
+strengthened!"
+
+Johnston rushed out to the balcony.
+"I have been to the Auditorium," he announced. "I have seen
+Waldmeer. He says the experiment was successful. It is closed
+temporarily, and can be strengthened."
+
+The king grasped the hand of the American. "Thank God!" he
+ejaculated, "if I can only save my people I shall desire nothing
+more." The princess moved toward him affectionately, but he put
+her aside and retired into the palace.
+
+"He will at once communicate with the people," remarked
+Bernardino hopefully, and she turned her face again toward the
+west. The red glare was dying down, and the dense clouds in the
+sky were thinning. In an hour the face of the sun broke through
+the smoke, and the flying-machines of the protectors began to
+return.
+
+That night the king caused the pink light of the "Ideal Dawn" to
+flood the eastern sky, and, as before, he appeared in a circle of
+dazzling light and addressed his subjects:
+
+"All danger to life is over; but the ultimate fate of Alpha is
+sealed. Prince Marentel has effectually closed the entrance of the
+ocean, but the internal fires are gradually burning through the
+rocky bed of the ocean. In a couple of years Alpha will be
+demolished. All our wealth shall be equally distributed among you,
+and my ships shall transport you to whatever destination you
+desire. Let there be no haste. Order shall be preserved
+throughout."
+
+That was all. The king bowed and the picture faded from view. A
+deep silence was over everything. The only light came from the
+stars and from the moon. Then there was a sound like the wind
+passing over a vast forest of dry-leaved trees--the people were
+returning to their homes.
+
+"I should have thought they would greet the king's announcement
+with a cheer of joy," said Thorndyke to the princess, as they
+returned to the palace.
+
+"They don't know whether to weep or laugh," she replied. "They
+love Alpha, and the other world will be strange to most of them.
+As for myself, now that I am to leave, I feel a few misgivings."
+
+"I shall see that you are perfectly happy," he said tenderly. "You
+are to be my wife. I shall always love you and care for you; you
+need have no fears."
+
+And a moment later, with joyous tears and face aglow, she assured
+him she had none.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Land of the Changing Sun
+by William N. Harben
+
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