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The God In The Box
by
“But–but what am I to say?” I stammered. “I don’t speak their language.”
“It will be enough,” he muttered, “that they have heard your voice.”
He stood aside, and there was nothing for me to do but walk to the edge of the platform, as he had done, and speak.
My own voice, in that hushed silence, frightened me. I would not have believed that so great a gathering could maintain such utter, deathly silence. I stammered like a school-child reciting for the first time before his class.
“People of Strobus,” I said–this is as nearly as I remember it, and perhaps my actual words were even less intelligent–“we are glad to be here. The welcome accorded us overwhelms us. We have come … we have come from worlds like your own, and … and we have never seen a more beautiful one. Nor more kindly people. We like you, and we hope that you will like us. We won’t be here long, anyway. I thank you!”
* * * * *
I was perspiring and red-faced by the time I finished, and I caught Hendricks in the very act of grinning at his commander’s discomfiture. One black scowl wiped that grin off so quickly, however, that I thought I must have imagined it.
“How was that, Artur?” I asked. “All right?”
“Your words were good to hear, John Hanson,” he nodded gravely. “In behalf—-“
The hundreds of blue lights hung from the vaulted roof clacked suddenly and went out. Almost instantly they flashed on again–and then clicked out. A third time they left us momentarily in darkness, and, when they came on again, a murmur that was like a vast moan rose from the sea of humanity surrounding the dais. And the almost beautiful features of Artur were drawn and ghastly with pain.
“They come!” he whispered. “At this hour, they come!”
“Who, Artur?” I asked quickly. “Is there some danger?”
“Yes. A very great one. I will tell you, but first–” He strode to the edge of the dais and spoke crisply, his voice ringing out like the thin cry of military brass. The thousands in the auditorium rose in unison, and swept down the aisles toward the doors.
“Now,” cried Artur, “I shall tell you the meaning of that signal. For three or four generations, we have awaited it with dread. Since the last anniversary of his coming, we have known the time was not far off. And it had to come at this moment! But this tells you nothing.
* * * * *
“The signal warns us that the Neens have at last made good their threat to come down upon us with their great hordes. The Neens were once men like ourselves, who would have none of Him”–and Artur glanced toward the gleaming ship upon the dais–“nor His teachings. They did not like the new order, and they wandered off, to join those outcasts who had broken His laws, and had been sent to the smaller land of this world, where it is always warm, and where there are great trees thick with moss, and the earth underfoot steams, and brings forth wriggling life. Neen, we call that land, as this larger land is called Libar.
“These men of Neen became the enemies of Libar, and of us who call ourselves Libars, and follow His ways. In that warm country they became brown, and their hair darkened. They increased more rapidly than did the Libars, and as they forgot their learning, their bodies developed in strength.
“Yet they have always envied us; envied us the beauty of our women, and of our cities. Envied us those things which He taught us to make, and which their clumsy hands cannot fashion, and which their brutish brains do not understand.