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PAGE 6

The God In The Box
by [?]

There were four great aisles, leading from the four angles of the lozenge, and many narrower ones, to give ready access to the benches, all radiating from a raised dais in the center, and the whole building illuminated by bluish globes of light that I recognized from descriptions and visits to scientific museums, as replicas of an early form of the ethon tube.

These things I took in at a glance. It was the object upon the huge central dais that caught and held my attention.

“Hendricks!” I muttered, just loud enough to make my voice audible above the solemn chanting. “Are we dreaming?”

“No, sir!” Hendricks’ eyes were starting out of his head, and I have no doubt I looked as idiotic as he did. “It’s there.”

On the dais was a gleaming object perhaps sixty feet long–which is a length equal to the height of about ten full-sized men. It was shaped like an elongated egg–like the metal object surmounting the staffs of the pennon-bearers!

And, unmistakably, it was a ship for navigating space.

* * * * *

As we came closer, I could make out details. The ship was made of some bluish, shining metal that I took to be chromium, or some compound of chromium, and there was a small circular port in the side presented to us. Set into the blunt nose of the ship was a ring of small disks, reddish in color, and deeply pitted, whether by electrical action or oxidization, I could not determine. Around the more pointed stern were innumerable small vents, pointed rearward, and smoothly stream-lined into the body. The body of the ship fairly glistened, but it was dented and deeply scratched in a number of places, and around the stern vents the metal was a dark, iridescent blue, as though stained by heat.

The chanting stopped as we reached the dais, and I turned to our guide. He motioned that Hendricks and I were to precede him up a narrow, curving ramp that led upwards, while the three Zenians who accompanied us were to remain below. I nodded my approval of this arrangement, and slowly we made our way to the top of the great platform, while the pennon-bearers formed a close circle around its base, and the people, who had surrounded the great building filed in with military precision and took seats. In the short space of time that it took us to reach the top of the dais, the whole great building filled itself with humanity.

Artur turned to that great sea of faces and made a sweeping gesture, as of benediction.

“Toma annerson!” His voice rang out like the clear note of a bell, filling that vast auditorium. In a great wave, the assembled people seated themselves, and sat watching us, silent and motionless.

* * * * *

Artur walked to the edge of the dais, and stood for a moment as though lost in thought. Then he spoke, not in the language which I understood, but in a melodious tongue which was utterly strange. His voice was grave and tender; he spoke with a degree of feeling which stirred me even though I understood no word that he spoke. Now and again I heard one recognizable sequence of syllables, that now familiar phrase, “toma annerson.”

“Wonder what that means, sir?” whispered Hendricks. “‘Toma annerson?’ Something very special, from the way he brings it out. And do you know what we are here for, and what all this means?”

“No,” I admitted. “I have some ideas, but they’re too wild for utterance. We’ll just go slow, and take things as they come.”

As I spoke, Artur concluded his speech, and turned to us.

“John Hanson,” he said softly, “our people would hear your voice.”