CHAPTER V
"I looked for the building I knew. Then my eye
travelled along to the figure of the White Sphinx upon the pedestal of bronze,
growing distinct as the light of the rising moon grew brighter. I could see the
silver birch against it. There was the tangle of rhododendron bushes, black in
the pale light, and there was the little lawn. I looked at the lawn again. A
queer doubt chilled my complacency. 'No,' said I stoutly to myself,' that was
not the lawn.'
"But it was the lawn. For the white leprous face of the
sphinx was towards it. Can you imagine what I felt as this conviction came home
to me? But you cannot. The Time Machine was gone!
"At once, like a lash across the face, came the
possibility of losing my own age, of being left helpless in this strange new
world. The bare thought of it was an actual physical sensation. I could feel it
grip me at the throat and stop my breathing. In another moment I was in a
passion of fear and running with great leaping strides down the slope. Once I
fell headlong and cut my face; I lost no time in stanching the blood, but
jumped up and ran on, with a warm trickle down my cheek and chin. All the time
I ran I was saying to myself, 'They have moved it a little, pushed it under the
bushes out of the way.'
Nevertheless, I ran with all my might. All the time,
with the certainty that sometimes comes with excessive dread, I knew that such
assurance was folly, knew instinctively that the machine was removed out of my
reach. My breath came with pain. I suppose I covered the whole distance from
the hill crest to the little lawn, two miles perhaps, in ten minutes. And I am
not a young man. I cursed aloud, as I ran, at my confident folly in leaving the
machine, wasting good breath thereby. I cried aloud, and none answered. Not a
creature seemed to be stirring in that moonlit world.
"When I reached the lawn my worst fears were realized.
Not a trace of the thing was to be seen. I felt faint and cold when I faced the
empty space among the black tangle of bushes. I ran round it furiously, as if
the thing might be hidden in a corner, and then stopped abruptly, with my hands
clutching my hair. Above me towered the sphinx, upon the bronze pedestal,
white, shining, leprous, in the light of the rising moon. It seemed to smile in
mockery of my dismay.
"I might have consoled myself by imagining the little
people had put the mechanism in some shelter for me, had I not felt assured of
their physical and intellectual inadequacy. That is what dismayed me: the sense
of some hitherto unsuspected power, through whose intervention my invention had
vanished. Yet, for one thing I felt assured: unless some other age had produced
its exact duplicate, the machine could not have moved in time. The attachment
of the levers, I will show you the method later, prevented any one from
tampering with it in that way when they were removed. It had moved, and was
hid, only in space. But then, where could it be?
No comments:
Post a Comment