"IF A female figure in a white shroud enters your bedchamber at
midnight on the thirteenth day of this month, answer this letter;
otherwise, do not."
Having read this far in the letter, I was about to consign
it to the wastebasket, where all my crank letters go; but for some
reason I read on, "If she speaks to you, please remember her words
and repeat them to me when you write." I might have read on to the
end; but at this juncture the telephone bell rang, and I dropped
the letter into one of the baskets on my desk. It chanced to be the
"out" basket; and had events followed their ordinary course, this
would have been the last of the letter and the incident in so far
as I was concerned, for from the "out" basket the letter went to
the files.
It was Jason Gridley on the telephone. He seemed excited
and asked me to come to his laboratory at once. As Jason is seldom
excited about anything, I hastened to accede to his request and
satisfy my curiosity. Jumping into my roadster, I soon covered the
few blocks that separate us, to learn that Jason had good grounds
for excitement. He had just received a radio message from the inner
world, from Pellucidar.
On the eve of the departure of the great dirigible, O-220,
from the earth's core, following the successful termination of that
historic expedition, Jason had determined to remain and search for
von Horst, the only missing member of the party; but Tarzan, David
Innes, and Captain Zuppner had persuaded him of the folly of such
an undertaking, inasmuch as David had promised to dispatch an
expedition of his own native Pellucidarian warriors to locate the
young German lieutenant if he still lived and it were possible to
discover any clue to his whereabouts.
Jason waved me to a chair and offered me a cigarette. "I've
just had a message from Abner Perry," he announced, "the first for
months."
"It must have been interesting," I commented, "to excite
you."
"It was," he admitted. "A rumor has reached Sari that von
Horst has been found."
Now as this pertains to a subject entirely foreign to the
present volume, I might mention that I have alluded to it only for
the purpose of explaining two facts which, while not vital, have
some slight bearing on the remarkable sequence of events which
followed. First, it caused me to forget the letter I just
mentioned, and, second, it fixed the date in my mind-the tenth.
My principal reason for mentioning the first fact is to
stress the thought that the matter of the letter, so quickly and
absolutely forgotten, had no opportunity to impress itself upon my
mind and therefore could not, at least objectively, influence my
consideration of ensuing events. The letter was gone from my mind
within five minutes of its reading as completely as though it had
never been received.
The next three days were exceedingly busy ones for me, and
when I retired on the night of the thirteenth my mind was so filled
with the annoying details of a real estate transaction that was
going wrong, that it was some time before I could sleep. I can
truthfully affirm that my last thoughts were of trust deeds,
receivers in equity, and deficiency judgments.
What awoke me, I do not know. I sat up with a start just in
time to see a female figure, swathed in what appeared to be a white
winding sheet, enter my room through the door. You will note that I
say door rather than doorway, for such was the fact; the door was
closed. It was a clear, moonlit night; the various homely objects
in my room were plainly discernible, especially the ghostly figure
now hovering near the foot of my bed.
I am not subject to hallucinations, I had never seen a
ghost, I had never wished to, and I was totally ignorant of the
ethics governing such a situation. Even had the lady not been so
obviously supernatural, I should yet have been at a loss as to how
to receive her at this hour in the intimacy of my bedchamber, for
no strange lady had ever before invaded its privacy, and I am of
Puritan stock.
"It is midnight of the thirteenth," she said, in a low,
musical voice.
"So it is," I agreed, and then I recalled the letter that I
had received on the tenth.
"He left Guadalupe today," she continued; "he will wait in
Guaymas for your letter."
That was all. She crossed the room and passed out of it,
not through the window which was quite convenient, but through the
solid wall. I sat there for a full minute, staring at the spot
where I had last seen her and endeavoring to convince myself that I
was dreaming, but I was not dreaming; I was wide awake. In fact I
was so wide awake that it was fully an hour before I had
successfully wooed Morpheus, as the Victorian writers so neatly
expressed it, ignoring the fact that his sex must have made it
rather embarrassing for gentlemen writers.
I reached my office a little earlier than usual the
following morning, and it is needless to say that the first thing
that I did was to search for that letter which I had received on
the tenth. I could recall neither the name of the writer nor the
point of origin of the letter, but my secretary recalled the
latter, the letter having been sufficiently out of the ordinary to
attract his attention.
"It was from somewhere in Mexico," he said, and as letters
of this nature are filed by states and countries, there was now no
difficulty in locating it.
You may rest assured that this time I read the letter
carefully. It was dated the third and postmarked Guaymas. Guaymas
is a seaport in Sonora, on the Gulf of California.
Here is the letter:
My dear Sir:Being engaged in a venture of great
scientific importance, I find it necessary to solicit the
assistance (not financial) of some one psychologically harmonious,
who is at the same time of sufficient intelligence and culture to
appreciate the vast possibilities of my project.Why I have
addressed you I shall be glad to explain in the happy event that a
personal interview seems desirable. This can only be ascertained by
a test which I shall now explain.If a female figure in a white
shroud enters your bedchamber at midnight on the thirteenth day of
this month, answer this letter; otherwise, do not. If she speaks to
you, please remember her words and repeat them to me when you
write.
Assuring you of my appreciation of your
earnest consideration of this letter, which I realize is rather
unusual, and begging that you hold its contents in strictest
confidence until future events shall have warranted its
publication, I am, Sir,
Very respectfully yours,
CARSON NAPIER.
"It looks to me like another nut," commented Rothmund.
"So it did to me on the tenth," I agreed; "but today is the
fourteenth, and now it looks like another story."
"What has the fourteenth got to do with it?" he demanded.
"Yesterday was the thirteenth," I reminded him.
"You don't mean to tell me-" he started, skeptically.
"That is just what I do mean to tell you," I interrupted.
"The lady came, I saw, she conquered."
Ralph looked worried. "Don't forget what your nurse told
you after your last operation," he reminded me.
"Which nurse? I had nine, and no two of them told me the
same things."
"Jerry. She said that narcotics often affected a patient's
mind for months afterward." His tone was solicitous.
"Well, at least Jerry admitted that I had a mind, which
some of the others didn't. Anyway, it didn't affect my eyesight; I
saw what I saw. Please take a letter to Mr. Napier." A few days
later I received a telegram from Napier dated Guaymas.
"LETTER RECEIVED STOP THANKS STOP SHALL CALL ON YOU
TOMORROW," it read.
"He must be flying," I commented.
"Or coming in a white shroud," suggested Ralph. "I think
I'll phone Captain Hodson to send a squad car around here;
sometimes these nuts are dangerous." He was still skeptical.
I must admit that we both awaited the arrival of Carson
Napier with equal interest. I think Ralph expected to see a
wild-eyed maniac. I could not visualize the man at all.
About eleven o'clock the following morning Ralph came into
my study. "Mr. Napier is here," he said.
"Does his hair grow straight out from his scalp, and do the
whites of his eyes show all around the irises?" I inquired,
smiling.
"No," replied Ralph, returning the smile; "he is a very
fine looking man, but," he added, "I still think he's a nut."
"Ask him to come in," and a moment later Ralph ushered in
an exceptionally handsome man whom I judged to be somewhere between
twenty-five and thirty years old, though he might have been even
younger.
He came forward with extended hand as I rose to greet him,
a smile lighting his face; and after the usual exchange of
banalities he came directly to the point of his visit.
"To get the whole picture clearly before you," He
commenced, "I shall have to tell you something about myself. My
father was a British army officer, my mother an American girl from
Virginia. I was born in India while my father was stationed there,
and brought up under the tutorage of an old Hindu who was much
attached to my father and mother. This Chand Kabi was something of
a mystic, and he taught me many things that are not in the
curriculums of schools for boys under ten. Among them was
telepathy, which he had cultivated to such a degree that he could
converse with one in psychological harmony with himself quite as
easily at great distances as when face to face. Not only that, but
he could project mental images to great distances, so that the
recipient of his thought waves could see what Chand Kabi was
seeing, or whatever else Chand Kabi wished him to see. These things
he taught me."
"And it was thus you caused me to see my midnight visitor
on the thirteenth?" I inquired.
He nodded. "That test was necessary in order to ascertain
if we were in psychological harmony. Your letter, quoting the exact
words that I had caused the apparition to appear to speak,
convinced me that I had at last found the person for whom I have
been searching for some time.
"But to get on with my story. I hope I am not boring you,
but I feel that it is absolutely necessary that you should have
full knowledge of my antecedents and background in order that you
may decide whether I am worthy of your confidence and assistance or
not." I assured him that I was far from being bored, and he
proceeded.
"I was not quite eleven when my father died and my mother
brought me to America. We went to Virginia first and lived there
for three years with my mother's grandfather, Judge John Carson,
with whose name and reputation you are doubtless familiar, as who
is not?
"After the grand old man died, mother and I came to
California, where I attended public schools and later entered a
small college at Claremont, which is noted for its high scholastic
standing and the superior personnel of both its faculty and student
body.
"Shortly after my graduation the third and greatest tragedy
of my life occurred-my mother died. I was absolutely stunned by
this blow. Life seemed to hold no further interest for me. I did
not care to live, yet I would not take my own life. As an
alternative I embarked upon a life of recklessness. With a certain
goal in mind, I learned to fly. I changed my name and became a
stunt man in pictures.
"I did not have to work. Through my mother I had inherited
a considerable fortune from my great-grandfather, John Carson; so
great a fortune that only a spendthrift could squander the income.
I mention this only because the venture I am undertaking requires
considerable capital, and I wish you to know that I am amply able
to finance it without help.
"Not only did life in Hollywood bore me, but here in
Southern California were too many reminders of the loved one I had
lost. I determined to travel, and I did. I flew all over the world.
In Germany I became interested in rocket cars and financed several.
Here my idea was born. There was nothing original about it except
that I intended to carry it to a definite conclusion. I would
travel by rocket to another planet.
"My studies had convinced me that of all the planets Mars
alone offered presumptive evidence of habitability for creatures
similar to ourselves. I was at the same time convinced that if I
succeeded in reaching Mars the probability of my being able to
return to earth was remote. Feeling that I must have some reason
for embarking upon such a venture, other than selfishness, I
determined to seek out some one with whom I could communicate in
the event that I succeeded. Subsequently it occurred to me that
this might also afford the means for launching a second expedition,
equipped to make the return journey, for I had no doubt but that
there would be many adventurous spirits ready to undertake such an
excursion once I had proved it feasible.
"For over a year I have been engaged in the construction of
a gigantic rocket on Guadalupe Island, off the west coast of Lower
California. The Mexican government has given me every assistance,
and today everything is complete to the last detail. I am ready to
start at any moment."
As he ceased speaking, he suddenly faded from view. The
chair in which he had been sitting was empty. There was no one in
the room but myself. I was stunned, almost terrified. I recalled
what Rothmund had said about the effect of the narcotics upon my
mentality. I also recalled that insane people seldom realize that
they are insane. Was
I insane? Cold sweat broke out upon my forehead and the
backs of my hands. I reached toward the buzzer to summon Ralph.
There is no question but that Ralph is sane. If he had seen Carson
Napier and shown him into my study-what a relief that would be!
But before my finger touched the button Ralph entered the
room. There was a puzzled expression on his face. "Mr. Napier is
back again," he said, and then he added, "I didn't know he had
left. I just heard him talking to you."
I breathed a sigh of relief as I wiped the perspiration
from my face and hands; if I was crazy, so was Ralph. "Bring him
in," I said, "and this time you stay here."
When Napier entered there was a questioning look in his
eyes. "Do you fully grasp the situation as far as I have explained
it?" he asked, as though he had not been out of the room at all.
"Yes, but-" I started.
"Wait, please," he requested. "I know what you are going to
say, but let me apologize first and explain. I have not been here
before. That was my final test. If you are confident that you saw
me and talked to me and can recall what I said to you as I sat
outside in my car, then you and I can communicate just as freely
and easily when I am on Mars."
"But," interjected Rothmund, "you
were here. Didn't I shake hands with you when you came in,
and talk to you?"
"You thought you did," replied Napier.
"Who's loony now?" I inquired inelegantly, but to this day
Rothmund insists that we played a trick on him.
"How do you know he's here now, then?" he asked.
"I don't," I admitted.
"I am, this time," laughed Napier. "Let's see; how far had
I gotten?"
"You were saying that you were all ready to start, had your
rocket set up on Guadalupe Island," I reminded him.
"Right! I see you got it all. Now, as briefly as possible,
I'll outline what I hope you will find it possible to do for me. I
have come to you for several reasons, the more important of which
are your interest in Mars, your profession (the results of my
experiment must be recorded by an experienced writer), and your
reputation for integrity-I have taken the liberty of investigating
you most thoroughly. I wish you to record and publish the messages
you receive from me and to administer my estate during my absence."
"I shall be glad to do the former, but I hesitate to accept
the responsibility of the latter assignment," I demurred.
"I have already arranged a trust that will give you ample
protection," he replied in a manner that precluded further
argument. I saw that he was a young man who brooked no obstacles;
in fact I think he never admitted the existence of an obstacle. "As
for your remuneration," he continued, "you may name your own
figure."
I waved a deprecatory hand. "It will be a pleasure," I
assured him.
"It may take a great deal of your time," interjected Ralph,
"and your time is valuable."
"Precisely," agreed Napier. "Mr. Rothmund and I will, with
your permission, arrange the financial details later."
"That suits me perfectly," I said, for I detest business
and everything connected with it.
"Now, to get back to the more important and far more
interesting phases of our discussion; what is your reaction to the
plan as a whole?"
"Mars is a long way from earth," I suggested; "Venus is
nine or ten million miles closer, and a million miles are a million
miles."
"Yes, and I would prefer going to Venus," he replied.
"Enveloped in clouds, its surface forever invisible to man, it
presents a mystery that intrigues the imagination; but recent
astronomical research suggests conditions there inimical to the
support of any such life as we know on earth. It has been thought
by some that, held in the grip of the Sun since the era of her
pristine fluidity, she always presents the same face to him, as
does the Moon to earth. If such is the case, the extreme heat of
one hemisphere and the extreme cold of the other would preclude
life.
"Even if the suggestion of Sir James Jeans is borne out by
fact, each of her days and nights is several times as long as ours
on earth, these long nights having a temperature of thirteen
degrees below zero, Fahrenheit, and the long days a correspondingly
high temperature."
"Yet even so, life might have adapted itself to such
conditions," I contended; "man exists in equatorial heat and arctic
cold."
"But not without oxygen," said Napier. "St. John has
estimated that the amount of oxygen above the cloud envelope that
surrounds Venus is less than one tenth of one per cent of the
terrestrial amount. After all, we have to bow to the superior
judgment of such men as Sir James Jeans, who says, 'The evidence,
for what it is worth, goes to suggest that Venus, the only planet
in the solar system outside Mars and the earth on which life could
possibly exist, possesses no vegetation and no oxygen for higher
forms of life to breathe,' which definitely limits my planetary
exploration to Mars."
We discussed his plans during the remainder of the day and
well into the night, and early the following morning he left for
Guadalupe Island in his Sikorsky amphibian. I have not seen him
since, at least in person, yet, through the marvellous medium of
telepathy, I have communicated with him continually and seen him
amid strange, unearthly surroundings that have been graphically
photographed upon the retina of my mind's eye. Thus I am the medium
through which the remarkable adventures of Carson Napier are being
recorded on earth; but I am only that, like a typewriter or a
dictaphone-the story that follows is his.