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Darkness and Dawn
Book 1. The Vacant World   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 28. The Pulverite
George Allan England
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       _ BOOK I. THE VACANT WORLD
       CHAPTER XXVIII. THE PULVERITE
       An hour passed. And now, under the circle of light cast by the hooded lamp upon the table, there in that bare, wrecked office-home of theirs, the Pulverite was coming to its birth.
       Already at the bottom of the metal dish lay a thin yellow cloud, something that looked like London fog on a December morning. There, covered with the water, it gently swirled and curdled, with strange metallic glints and oily sheens, as Beatrice with a gold spoon stirred it at the engineer's command.
       From moment to moment he dropped in a minute quantity of glycerin, out of a glass test-tube, graduated to the hundredth of an ounce. Keenly, under the lamp-shine, he watched the final reaction; his face, very pale and set, reflected a little of the mental stress that bound him.
       Along the table-edge before him, limp in its sling, his wounded arm lay useless. Yet with his left hand he controlled the sleeping giant in the dish. And as he dropped the glycerin, he counted.
       "Ten, eleven, twelve--fifteen, sixteen--twenty! Now! Now pour the water off, quick! Quick!"
       Splendidly the girl obeyed. The water ran, foaming strangely, out into a glass jar set to receive it. Her hands trembled not, nor did she hesitate. Only, a line formed between her brows; and her breath, half-held, came quickly through her lips.
       "Stop!"
       His voice rang like a shot.
       "Now, decant it through this funnel, into the vials!"
       Again, using both hands for steadiness, she did his bidding.
       And one by one as she filled the little flasks of chained death, the engineer stoppered them with his left hand.
       When the last was done, Stern drew a tremendous sigh, and dashed the sweat from his forehead with a gesture of victory.
       Into the residue in the dish he poured a little nitric acid.
       "That's got no kick left in it, now, anyhow," said he relieved. "The HNO3 tames it, quick enough. But the bottles--take care--don't tip one over, as you love your life!"
       He stood up, slowly, and for a moment remained there, his face in the shadow of the lamp-shade, holding to the table-edge for support, with his left hand.
       At him the girl looked.
       "And now," she began, "now--?"
       The question had no time for completion. For even as she spoke, a swift little something flicked through the window, behind them.
       It struck the opposite wall with a sharp crack! then fell slithering to the floor.
       Outside, against the building, they heard another and another little shock; and all at once a second missile darted through the air.
       This hit the lamp. Stern grabbed the shade and steadied it. Beatrice stooped and snatched up the thing from where it lay beside the table.
       Only one glance Stern gave at it, as she held it up. A long reed stem he saw wrapped at its base with cotton fibers--a fish-bone point, firm-lashed--and on that point a dull red stain, a blotch of something dry and shiny.
       "Blow-gun darts!" cried he. "Poisoned! They've seen the light--got our range! They're up there in the tree-tops--shooting at us!"
       With one puff, the light was gone. By the wrist he seized Beatrice. He dragged her toward the front wall, off to one side, out of range.
       "The flasks of Pulverite! Suppose a dart should hit one?" exclaimed the girl.
       "That's so! Wait here--I'll get them!"
       But she was there beside him as, in the thick dark, he cautiously felt for the deadly things and found them with a hand that dared not tremble. And though here, there, the little venom-stings whis-s-shed over them and past them, to shatter on the rear wall, she helped him bear the vials, all nine of them, to a place of safety in the left-hand front corner where by no possibility could they be struck.
       Together then, quietly as wraiths, they stole into the next room; and there, from a window not as yet attacked, they spied out at the dark tree-tops that lay in dense masses almost brushing the walls.
       "See? See there?" whispered Stern in the girl's ear. He pointed where, not ten yards away and below, a blacker shadow seemed to move along a hemlock branch. Forgotten now, his wounds. Forgotten his loss of blood, his fever and his weakness. The sight of that creeping stealthy attack nerved him with new vigor. And, even as the girl looked, Stern drew his revolver.
       Speaking no further word, he laid the ugly barrel firm across the sill.
       Carefully he sighted, as best he could in that gloom lit only by the stars. Coldly as though at a target-shot, he brought the muzzle-sight to bear on that deep, crawling shadow.
       Then suddenly a spurt of fire split the night. The crackling report echoed away. And with a bubbling scream, the shadow loosened from the limb, as a ripe fruit loosens.
       Vaguely they saw it fall, whirl, strike a branch, slide off, and disappear.
       All at once a pattering rain of darts flickered around them. Stern felt one strike his fur jacket and bounce off. Another grazed the girl's head. But to their work they stood, and flinched not.
       Now her revolver was speaking, in antiphony with his; and from the branches, two, three, five, eight, ten of the ape-things fell.
       "Give it to 'em!" shouted the engineer, as though he had a regiment behind him. "Give it to 'em!" And again he pulled the trigger.
       The revolver was empty.
       With a cry he threw it down, and, running to where the shotgun stood, snatched it up. He scooped into his pocket a handful of shells from the box where they were stored; and as he darted back to the window, he cocked both hammers.
       "Poom! Poom!"
       The deep baying of the revolver roared out in twin jets of flame.
       Stern broke the gun and jacked in two more shells.
       Again he fired.
       "Good Heaven! How many of 'em are there in the trees?" shouted he.
       "Try the Pulverite!" cried Beatrice. "Maybe you might hit a branch!"
       Stern flung down the gun. To the corner where the vials were standing he ran.
       Up he caught one--he dared not take two lest they should by some accident strike together.
       "Here--here, now, take this!" he bellowed.
       And from the window, aiming at a pine that stood seventy-five feet away--a pine whose branches seemed to hang thick with the Horde's blowgun-men--he slung it with all the strength of his uninjured arm.
       Into the gloom it vanished, the little meteorite of latent death, of potential horror and destruction.
       "If it hits 'em, they'll think we are gods, after all, what?" cried the engineer, peering eagerly. But for a moment, nothing happened.
       "Missed it!" he groaned. "If I only had my right arm to use now, I might--"
       Far below, down there a hundred feet beneath them and out a long way from the tower base, night yawned wide in a burst of hellish glare.
       A vast conical hole of flame was gouged in the dark. For a fraction of a second every tree, limb, twig stood out in vivid detail, as that blue-white glory shot aloft.
       All up through the forest the girl and Stern got a momentary glimpse of little, clinging Things, crouching misshapen, hideous.
       Then, as a riven and distorted whirl burst upward in a huge geyser of annihilation, came a detonation that ripped, stunned, shattered; that sent both the defenders staggering backward from the window.
       Darkness closed again, like a gaping mouth that shuts. And all about the building, through the trees, and down again in a titanic, slashing rain fell the wreckage of things that had been stone, and earth, and root, and tree, and living creatures--that had been--that now were but one indistinguishable mass of ruin and of death.
       After that, here and there, small dark objects came dropping, thudding, crashing down. You might have thought some cosmic gardener had shaken his orchard, his orchard where the plums and pears were rotten-ripe.
       "One!" cried the engineer, in a strange, wild, exultant voice. _
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本书目录

Book 1. The Vacant World
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 1. The Awakening
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 2. Realization
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 3. On The Tower Platform
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 4. The City Of Death
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 5. Exploration
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 6. Treasure-Trove
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 7. The Outer World
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 8. A Sign Of Peril
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 9. Headway Against Odds
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 10. Terror
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 11. A Thousand Years!
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 12. Drawing Together
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 13. The Great Experiment
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 14. The Moving Lights
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 15. Portents Of War
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 16. The Gathering Of The Hordes
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 17. Stern's Resolve
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 18. The Supreme Question
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 19. The Unknown Race
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 20. The Curiosity Of Eve
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 21. Eve Becomes An Amazon
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 22. Gods!
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 23. The Obeah
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 24. The Fight In The Forest
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 25. The Goal, And Through It
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 26. Beatrice Dares
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 27. To Work!
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 28. The Pulverite
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 29. The Battle On The Stairs
   Book 1. The Vacant World - Chapter 30. Consummation
Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 1. Beginnings
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 2. Settling Down
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 3. The Maskalonge
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 4. The Golden Age
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 5. Deadly Peril
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 6. Trapped!
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 7. A Night Of Toil
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 8. The Rebirth Of Civilization
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 9. Planning The Great Migration
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 10. Toward The Great Cataract
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 11. The Plunge!
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 12. Trapped On The Ledge
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 13. On The Crest Of The Maelstrom
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 14. A Fresh Start
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 15. Labor And Comradeship
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 16. Finding The Biplane
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 17. All Aboard For Boston!
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 18. The Hurricane
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 19. Westward Ho!
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 20. On The Lip Of The Chasm
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 21. Lost In The Great Abyss
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 22. Lights!
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 23. The White Barbarians
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 24. The Land Of The Merucaans
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 25. The Dungeon Of The Skeletons
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 26. "You Speak English!"
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 27. Doomed!
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 28. The Battle In The Dark
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 29. Shadows Of War
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 30. Exploration
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 31. Escape?
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 32. Preparations
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 33. The Patriarch's Tale
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 34. The Coming Of Kamrou
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 35. Face To Face With Death
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 36. Gage Of Battle
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 37. The Final Struggle
   Book 2. Beyond The Great Oblivion - Chapter 38. The Sun Of Spring
Book 3. The Afterglow
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 1. Death, Life, And Love
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 2. Eastward Ho!
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 3. Catastrophe!
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 4. "To-Morrow Is Our Wedding-Day"
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 5. The Search For The Records
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 6. Trapped!
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 7. The Leaden Chest
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 8. Till Death Us Do Part
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 9. At Settlement Cliffs
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 10. Separation
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 11. "Hail To The Master!"
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 12. Challenged!
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 13. The Ravished Nest
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 14. On The Trail Of The Monster
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 15. In The Grip Of Terror
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 16. A Respite From Toil
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 17. The Distant Menace
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 18. The Annunciation
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 19. The Master Of His Race
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 20. Disaster!
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 21. Allan Returns Not
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 22. The Treason Of H'yemba
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 23. The Return Of The Master
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 24. The Boy Is Gone!
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 25. The Fall Of H'yemba
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 26. The Coming Of The Horde
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 27. War!
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 28. The Besom Of Flame
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 29. Allan's Narrative
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 30. Into The Fire-Swept Wilderness
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 31. A Strange Apparition
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 32. The Meeting Of The Bands
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 33. Five Years Later
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 34. History And Roses
   Book 3. The Afterglow - Chapter 35. The Afterglow