The Moon Pool A. Merritt (pdf ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: A. Merritt
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âGoodwin,â he replied, âI surely will. Iâm as interested as you are. If we donât run across the Dolphin Iâll stick. Iâll leave word at Ponape, to tell them where I am should they come along. If they report me dead for a while thereâs nobody to care. So thatâs all right. Only old man, be reasonable. Youâve thought over this so long, youâre going bug, honestly you are.â
And again, the gladness that I might have Larry OâKeefe with me, was so great that I forgot to be angry.
X The Moon PoolDa Costa, who had come aboard unnoticed by either of us, now tapped me on the arm.
âDoctair Goodwin,â he said, âcan I see you in my cabin, sair?â
At last, then, he was going to speak. I followed him.
âDoctair,â he said, when we had entered, âthis is a veree strange thing that has happened to Olaf. Veree strange. Anâ the natives of Ponape, they have been very much exciteâ lately.
âOf what they fear I know nothing, nothing!â Again that quick, furtive crossing of himself. âBut this I have to tell you. There came to me from Ranaloa last month a man, a Russian, a doctair, like you. His name it was Marakinoff. I take him to Ponape anâ the natives there they will not take him to the Nan-Matal where he wish to goâ âno! So I take him. We leave in a boat, witâ much instrument carefully tied up. I leave him there witâ the boat anâ the food. He tell me to tell no one anâ pay me not to. But you are a friend anâ Olaf he depend much upon you anâ so I tell you, sair.â
âYou know nothing more than this, Da Costa?â I asked. âNothing of another expedition?â
âNo,â he shook his head vehemently. âNothing more.â
âHear the name Throckmartin while you were there?â I persisted.
âNo,â his eyes were steady as he answered but the pallor had crept again into his face.
I was not so sure. But if he knew more than he had told me why was he afraid to speak? My anxiety deepened and later I sought relief from it by repeating the conversation to OâKeefe.
âA Russian, eh,â he said. âWell, they can be damned nice, or damnedâ âotherwise. Considering what you did for me, I hope I can look him over before the Dolphin shows up.â
Next morning we raised Ponape, without further incident, and before noon the Suwarna and the Brunhilda had dropped anchor in the harbour. Upon the excitement and manifest dread of the natives, when we sought among them for carriers and workmen to accompany us, I will not dwell. It is enough to say that no payment we offered could induce a single one of them to go to the Nan-Matal. Nor would they say why.
Finally it was agreed that the Brunhilda should be left in charge of a half-breed Chinaman, whom both Da Costa and Huldricksson knew and trusted. We piled her longboat up with my instruments and food and camping equipment. The Suwarna took us around to Metalanim Harbour, and there, with the tops of ancient seawalls deep in the blue water beneath us, and the ruins looming up out of the mangroves, a scant mile from us, left us.
Then with Huldricksson manipulating our small sail, and Larry at the rudder, we rounded the titanic wall that swept down into the depths, and turned at last into the canal that Throckmartin, on his map, had marked as that which, running between frowning Nan-Tauach and its satellite islet, Tau, led straight to the gate of the place of ancient mysteries.
And as we entered that channel we were enveloped by a silence; a silence so intense, soâ âweighted that it seemed to have substance; an alien silence that clung and stifled and still stood aloof from usâ âthe living. It was a stillness, such as might follow the long tramping of millions into the grave; it wasâ âparadoxical as it may beâ âfilled with the withdrawal of life.
Standing down in the chambered depths of the Great Pyramid I had known something of such silenceâ âbut never such intensity as this. Larry felt it and I saw him look at me askance. If Olaf, sitting in the bow, felt it, too, he gave no sign; his blue eyes, with again the glint of ice within them, watched the channel before us.
As we passed, there arose upon our left sheer walls of black basalt blocks, cyclopean, towering fifty feet or more, broken here and there by the sinking of their deep foundations.
In front of us the mangroves widened out and filled the canal. On our right the lesser walls of Tau, sombre blocks smoothed and squared and set with a cold, mathematical nicety that filled me with vague awe, slipped by. Through breaks I caught glimpses of dark ruins and of great fallen stones that seemed to crouch and menace us, as we passed. Somewhere there, hidden, were the seven globes that poured the moon fire down upon the Moon Pool.
Now we were among the mangroves and, sail down, the three of us pushed and pulled the boat through their tangled roots and branches. The noise of our passing split the silence like a profanation, and from the ancient bastions came murmursâ âforbidding, strangely sinister. And now we were through, floating on a little open space of shadow-filled water. Before us lifted the gateway of Nan-Tauach, gigantic, broken, incredibly old; shattered portals through which had passed men and women of Earthâs dawn; old with a weight of years that pressed leadenly upon the eyes that looked upon it, and yet was in some curious indefinable wayâ âmenacingly defiant.
Beyond the gate, back from the portals, stretched a flight of enormous basalt slabs, a giantâs stairway indeed; and from each side of it marched the high walls that were
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