you, Mr. Hill?"
He swallowed something and managed to reply, "Great guns, yes! I've been in the wilds
of New Guinea for a year--without news of any kind! I saw my first newspaper on board
the dirigible this morning!"
"Ah, well," commented Mrs. Kinney provokingly, "you'll have to be humored, I
suppose." She cogitated unnecessarily long, then left the room to get a folio of
newspapers and magazines. One of these she selected with great deliberation, and opened
it at the leading article. Even then she would not hand it over right away. "You remember
that sky-car idea of the doctor's, don't you?"
"His machine to explore space? He couldn't talk of anything else when I--you don't mean
to say"--incredulously--"that he made a success of that!"
"He certainly did. Took a three weeks' tour of the planets, month before last!"
Hill stared in amazement, then leaned forward suddenly and whisked the magazine out of
Mrs. Kinney's fingers. He held the paper with hands that trembled in excitement; and this
is what he read, in the matter-of-fact black-and-white of The Scientific New Zealander:
STAR EXPLORERS RETURN
Dr. Kinney and Party Visit Venus and Mercury
Bringing proofs which will satisfy the most skeptical, Dr. William G. Kinney, G. Van
Emmon, E. Williams Jackson, and John W. Smith, who left the earth on December 9 in a
powerful sky-car of the doctor's design, returned on the 23rd, after having explored the
two planets which lie between the earth and the sun.
They found Mercury to be a dead world, like the moon, except that it once supported a
civilization nearly as advanced as our own. They tell of a giant human, a veritable
colossus, who was the planet's last survivor.
But on Venus they discovered people still living! They are marvelously developed people,
infinitely more advanced than the people of the earth, and enjoying a civilization that is
well-nigh incredible. Among other things, they have learned how to visit other worlds
without themselves leaving their planet. They do it by a kind of telepathy; they know all
about us here on the earth; and they have accumulated data regarding the peoples of
hundreds of thousands of other planets! The four explorers are able to prove their
statements beyond the shadow of doubt. They possess photographs which speak for
themselves; they have brought back relics from Mercury and materials from Venus, such
as never existed on the earth. They submit a vast library of extraordinarily advanced
scientific literature, which was given to them by the Venusians.
The article went on to detail, to the extent of some eight or ten pages, the main features of
the exploration. Hill, however, did not stop to read it all just then. He looked up, his
thoughts flying to the strange scene in the room up-stairs. "What are they
doing--recuperating?"
"Not exactly." Mrs. Kinney was a little disappointed. "Here--let me point out the
paragraph." And she ran a finger down the column until it indicated this line:
Among other things they have learned how to visit other worlds without themselves
leaving their planet. They do this by a kind of telepathy.
"That's the explanation," Mrs. Kinney said quietly. Hill fairly blinked when he read the
paragraph. "They are trying out one of the Venusian experiments?"
"Of course; you know the doctor. He couldn't resist the temptation. And I must say the
others are just as bad.
"Mr. Smith is quite as much interested as Mr. Van Emmon. Mr. Smith is an electrical
engineer; the other man is a geologist, and a very adventurous spirit. As for Mrs. Van
Emmon--"
"But this account mentions"--Hill referred to the magazine--"'E. Williams Jackson.' Who
was he?"
"She--not he. Mrs. Van Emmon now; she used to be an architect. She had the other three
fooled for ten days; she passed herself off as a man!"
But Hill was too absorbed in the general strangeness of the affair to note this amazing
item. He again glanced at the article, opened his mouth once or twice as though to ask a
question, thought better of it each time, and finally got to his feet.
"Let me have this?" referring to the magazine.
Mrs. Kinney handed over the rest of the collection.
"I am sure the doctor would want you to read them. I remember he said, just before they
started away, that he wished you could have gone with him."
"Did he?" much pleased. Hill made some affectionate remark, under his breath about "the
star-gazing old fraud"; then, evidently in a hurry to get off by himself and read, he made
his excuses and left the house.
Mrs. Kinney returned to the book she had been reading, glanced at the clock, and noted
that it was almost at the hour, previously agreed upon, that she should
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