I screamed at Scott.
“Quick! The universe! He is going to destroy it!”
Scott leaped forward. Together we raced toward the table where the mass of created matter lay in its receptacle. Behind us padded the elephant-men.
As we reached the table, I felt a sinuous trunk wrap about me. With a flip I was hurled to the table top. It was but a step to the dish containing the universe. I snatched it up, dish and all, and handed it down to Scott. I let myself over the table edge, hung by my hands for an instant, and dropped. I raced after the others toward the workshop.
As we gained the room, the walking-stick-man made an adjustment on his machine. The purple rod faded away. The Creator, a towering cone of light, tottered for a moment and then glided swiftly for the doorway.
Instantly a sheet of purple radiance filled the opening. The Creator struck against it and was hurled back.
The radiance was swiftly arching overhead and curving beneath us, cutting through the floor, walls, and ceiling.
“He’s enclosing us in a globe of that stuff,” cried Scott. “It must be an energy screen of some sort. I can’t imagine what it is. Can you?”
“I don’t care what it is, so long as it works,” I panted.
Through the steady purple light I could see the Creator. Repeatedly he hurled himself against the screen and each time he was hurled back.
“We’re moving,” announced Scott.
The great purple globe was moving upward, carrying in its interior we five universe-men, our machines, and fragments of the room in which we but recently had stood. It was cutting through the building like the flame of a torch through soft steel. We burst free of the building into the brilliant blue sunlight of that weird world.
Beneath us lay the building, a marvel of outre architecture, but with a great circular shaft cut through it, the path of the purple globe. All about the building lay a forest of red and yellow vegetation, shaped as no vegetation of the Earth is shaped, bent into hundreds of strange and alien forms.
Swiftly the globe sprang upward to hang in the air some distance above the building. As far as eye could see stretched the painted forest. The laboratory we had just quitted was the only sign of habitation. No roads, no lakes, no rivers, no distant mountaintop—nothing relieved the level plain of red and yellow which stretched away to faint horizons.
Was the Creator, I wondered, the sole denizen of this land? Was he the last survivor of a mystic race? Had there ever been a race at all? Might not the Creator be a laboratory product, even as the things he created were laboratory products? But if so, who or what had set to work the agents which resulted in the uncanny cone of energy?
My reflections were cut short as the walking-stick-man reached out his skinny hand for the mass of matter which Scott still held. As I watched him breathlessly, he laid it gently on a part of the floor which still remained in the globe and pulled a sliding rod from the side of the machine. A faint purple radiance sprang from the point of the rod, bathing the universe. The radiant purple surrounded the mass, grew thicker and thicker, seeming to congeal into layer after layer until the mass of matter lay sealed in a thick shell of the queer stuff. When I touched it, it did not appear to be hard or brittle. It was smooth and slimy to the touch, but I could not dent it with my fingers.
“He’s building up the shell of the globe in just the same way,” Scott said. “The machine seems to be projecting that purple stuff to the outside of the shell, where it is congealed into layers.”
I noted that what my friend said was true. The shell of the globe had taken on a thickness that could be perceived, although the increased thickness did not seem to interfere with our vision.
Looking down at the laboratory, I could see some strange mechanism mounted on the roof of the building. Beside the massive mechanism stood the Creator.
“Maybe it’s a weapon of some sort,” suggested Scott.
Hardly had he spoken when a huge column of crimson light leaped forth from the machine. I threw up my hands before my eyes to protect them from the glare of the fiery column. For an instant the globe was bathed in the red glow, then a huge globule of red collected on its surface and leaped away, straight for the laboratory, leaving a trail of crimson behind.
The globe trembled to the force of the explosion as the ball of light struck. Where the laboratory had stood yawned a great hole, blasted to the primal rock beneath. The vegetation for great distances on every side was sifting ash. The Creator was no more! The colorful world beneath stretched empty to the horizon. The men of the universe had proven to be stronger than their Creator!
“If there’s any more Creators around these parts,” said Scott, smiling feebly, “they won’t dare to train another gun on this thing in the next million years. It gives them exactly what was meant for the other fellow; it crams their poison right down their own throats. Pete, that mass of matter, whether or not it is the universe, is saved. All hell couldn’t get at it here.”
The walking-stick-man, his mummy-like face impassive as ever, locked the controls of the machine. It was, I saw, still operating, was still building up the shell of the globe. Second by second the globe was adding to its fortress - light strength. My mind reeled as I thought of it continuing thus throughout eternity.
The elephant-men were climbing into their machine.
Scott smiled wanly.
“The play is over,” he said. “The curtain is down. It’s time for us to go.”
He stepped to the side of the walking-stick-man.
“I wish you would use our machine.” he said, evidently forgetting our friend could understand no word he spoke. “You threw away your chance back there when you built this contraption instead of a transmitter. Our machine will take you wherever you wish to go.”
He pointed to the machine and to the universe, then tapped his head. With the strange being at his side, he walked to our machine, pointed out the controls, explained its use in pantomime.
“I don’t know if he understands,” said Scott, “but I did the best I could.”
As I walked past the walking-stick-man to step into the time-power machine, I believe I detected a faint flicker of a smile on his face. Of that, however, I can never be sure.
CHAPTER SIX
Marooned in Time
I know how the mistake was made. I was excited when I stepped into the machine. My mind was filled with the many strange happenings I had just witnessed. I thought along space directional lines, but I forgot to reckon the factor of time.
I thought of the Earth, but I did not consider time. I willed myself to be back on Earth, but I forgot to will myself in any particular time era. Consequently when Scott shoved over the lever, I was shot to Earth, but the time element was confused.
I realize that life in the super-universe of the Creator, being billions of times larger than life upon the Earth, was correspondingly slower. Every second in the super-universe was equal to years of Earth-time. My life in the Creator’s universe had equaled millions of years of terrene existence.
I believe that my body was projected along a straight line and not along the curve which would have been necessary to place me back in the twentieth century.
This is theory, of course. There might have been some fault in the machine. The purple globe might have exerted some influence to distort our calculations.
Be that as it may, I reached a dying planet. It has been given to me, a man of the twentieth century, to live out the last years of my life on my home planet some millions of years later than the date of my birth. I, a resident of a comparatively young dynasty in the history of the Earth, now am tribal chieftain and demi-god of the last race, a race that is dying even as the planet is dying.