Part 36 (1/2)

Clarke interrupted almost angrily. ”Not unless you promise to--”

”Be silent!” commanded Weissmann.

From the horn came a faint murmur, so dim, so far, Serviss could, with difficulty, distinguish the words. ”We will consider that. I am going.

Guard my girl. Good-bye.”

The horn, again seemed to rest, and for a long time no sound or stir broke the silence, till at last Viola began to writhe in her chair in greater agony than before.

”I think she is waking,” said Morton.

Mrs. Lambert answered, quickly: ”No. Some great event is preparing--when this paroxysm pa.s.ses some very beautiful test will come.”

While Morton and Weissmann were considering this the girl again became silent as a stone, and a moment later a clear, sweet sound pulsed through the air as if an exquisite crystal bell had been struck. Then, while still this signal trembled in his ear, a whispering noise developed just before the young man's face, as if tremulous lips were closing and unclosing in anxious effort to communicate a message without the use of the trumpet.

”Is some one trying to speak to me?” he asked, gently.

Three measured strokes upon, the tiny bell replied, and with their pulsations the room seemed to stir with a new and different throng of winged memories. The very air took on mystery and beauty and a sweet gravity. Matter was for the moment as subtle, as imponderable as soul.

”Who is it?” he asked, and into his voice, in spite of himself, crept a note of awe.

The answer came instantly, faint as the fall of an autumn leaf on the gra.s.s.

”Mother.”

Kate bent eagerly forward, ”Who was it, Morton?”

Ignoring her question Morton addressed the invisible one. ”Can't you speak again?”

There was no reply and the whispering ceased. Almost instantly the horn seemed grasped by a firm and masterful hand, and the rollicking voice of a man broke startlingly from the darkness in words so clear, so resonant, that all could hear them.

”h.e.l.lo, folks. Is this a Quaker meeting?”

”Who are you?” asked Morton.

”Can't you guess?”

Kate gasped. ”Why, it's Uncle Ben Roberts!”

The voice chuckled. ”Right the first time. It's old 'Loggy'--true bill. How are you all?”

Kate could hardly speak, so great was her fear and joy. ”Morton Serviss, what do you think now? Ask him--”

The voice from the trumpet interposed. ”Don't ask me a word about conditions over here--it's no use. I can't tell you a thing.”

”Why not?” asked Morton.

”Well, how would you describe a Connecticut winter to a Hottentot? Not that you're a Hottentot”--the voice broke into an oily chuckle--”or that I'm in a cold climate.” The chuckle was renewed. ”I'm very comfortable, thank you.” Here the invisible one grew tender. ”My boy, your mother is here and wants to speak to you but can't do so. She asked me to manifest for her. She says to trust this girl and to carry a message of love to Henry. I brought one of her colonial winegla.s.ses with me--as a sign of her presence and as a test of the power we have of pa.s.sing through matter.”

For nearly an hour this voice kept up a perfectly normal conversation with a running fire of quips and cranks--recalling incidents in the lives of both Kate and Morton, arguing basic principles with Weissmann yet never quite replying to the most searching questions, and finally ended by saying: ”Your conception of matter is childish. There is no such thing as you understand it, and yet the universe is not as Kant conceived it. As liberated spirits we move in an essence subtler than any matter known to you--ether is a gross thing compared to spirit.

Your knowledge is merely rudimentary--but keep on. Take up this work and my band will meet you half-way. My boy, the question of the persistence of the individual after death is the most vital of all questions. Apply your keen mind to it and depend on old 'Loggy.'