[Gutenberg 28628] • Devil Crystals of Arret

[Gutenberg 28628] • Devil Crystals of Arret
Authors
Wells, Hal K.
Tags
science fiction
Date
2009-04-27T00:00:00+00:00
Size
0.14 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 41 times

From Astounding Stories September 1931

" Facing a six-hour deadline of death, young Larry raids a

hostile world of rat-men and tinkling Devil Crystals.

Benjamin Marlowe and his young assistant, Larry Powell, opened the

door of the Marlowe laboratory, then stopped aghast at the sight

which greeted their startled eyes.

There on the central floor-plate directly in the focus of the big

atomic projector stood the slender figure of Joan Marlowe, old

Benjamin Marlowe's niece and Larry Powell's fiancee.

The girl had apparently only been awaiting their return to the

laboratory for around her gray laboratory smock was already fastened

one of their Silver Belts, and a cord was already in place running

from her wrist to the main switch of the projection mechanism.

Joan's clear blue eyes sparkled with the thrill of high adventure as

she swiftly raised a slender hand in a gesture of warning to the two

men.

"Don't try to stop me," she warned quietly. "I can jerk the switch

and be in Arret, before you've taken two steps. I'm going to Arret,

anyway. I was only waiting for you to return to the laboratory so

I'd be sure of having you here to bring me back to Earth again

before I have time to get into any serious trouble over there."

"But, Joan," Benjamin Marlowe protested, "this is sheer madness! No

one can possibly guess what terrible conditions you may confront in

Arret. We've never dared to send a human being across the atomic

barrier yet!"

"We've sent all kinds of animals across, though," Joan retorted

calmly, "and as long as we recalled them within the twelve-hour

limit they always came back alive and unhurt. There's no reason why

a human being should not be able to make the round trip just as

safely. Ever since our Silver Belts first came back with the weird

plant and mineral fragments which proved that there really is such a

place as Arret, I've been wild to see with my own eyes the

incredible things that must exist there..."