Part 10 (1/2)
”Suppose it should turn out that there is nothing but an ocean on this side of the planet,” I suggested.
”That I believe to be impossible,” Edmund responded. ”This hemisphere must be, as a whole, broken up into highlands and depressions. The geological formation of the other side, as far as I could make it out from the appearance of the rocks in the caverns, indicates that Venus has undergone the same experience of upheavals and fracturings of the crust that the earth has been through. If that is true of one side it must be true of the other also, for during a large part of these geological changes she undoubtedly rotated rapidly on her axis like the earth.”
”But we traveled five thousand miles on the other side without encountering anything but a frozen prairie,” I objected.
”True enough, and yet I would lay a wager that all of that side of the planet is not equally level. Remember the vast plains of Russia and Siberia.”
”Well,” put in Jack, whose spirits were beginning to revive, ”if there's a sh.o.r.e somewheres, let's find it. I want to see the other kind of inhabitants. These that we've met don't accord with my ideas of Venus.”
”We shall find them,” responded Edmund, ”and I think I can promise you that they will not disappoint your expectations.”
Yet there seemed to be nothing in our present situation to warrant the confidence expressed by our leader's words and manner. The current that had carried us out of the crystal mountains gradually disappeared in a vast waste of waters, and we were driven hither and thither by the tempestuous wind. Its force increased hour by hour, and at last the sky, which at brief intervals had been clear and exquisitely blue, became choked with black clouds, sweeping down upon the face of the waters, and often whirled into great _trombes_ by the tornadic blasts. Several times the car was deluged by waterspouts, and once it was actually lifted up into the air by the mighty suction. An ordinary vessel would not have lived five minutes in that h.e.l.l of winds and waters. But the car, if it had been built for this kind of navigation, could not have behaved better.
I do not know how long all this lasted. It grew worse and worse.
Sometimes a flood of rain fell, and then would come a storm of lightning, and a downpour of gigantic hailstones that rattled upon the steel sh.e.l.l of the car like a rain of bullets from a battery of machine guns. Half the time one window or the other was submerged by the waves, and when we got an opportunity to glance out, we saw nothing but torn streamers of cloud whipping the face of the waters. But when the change came at last, it was as sudden as the dropping of a curtain. The clouds broke away, a soft light filled the atmosphere, the waves ceased to break and rolled in long undulations, and a marvelous dome appeared overhead.
That dome, at its first dramatic appearance, was one of the most astonis.h.i.+ng things that we saw in the whole course of our adventures. It was not a cerulean vault like that which covers the earth in halcyon weather, but an indescribably soft, pinkish-gray concavity that seemed nearer than the sky and yet farther than the clouds. Here and there, far beneath it, but still at a vast elevation, floated delicate gauzy curtains, tinted like sheets of mother-of-pearl. The sun was no longer visible, but the air was filled with a delicious luminousness, which bathed the eyes as if it had been an ethereal liquid.
Below each window was a steel ledge, broad enough to stand on, with convenient hold-fasts for the hands. These had evidently been prepared for some such contingency, and Edmund, throwing open the windows, invited us to go outside. We gladly accepted the invitation, and all, except Juba, issued into the open air. The temperature was that of an early spring day, and the air was splendidly fresh and stimulating. The rolling of the car had now nearly ceased, and we had no difficulty in maintaining our positions. For a long while we admired, and talked of, the great dome overhead, which drew our attention, for the time, from the sea that had so strangely brought us. .h.i.ther.
”There,” said Edmund, pointing to the dome, ”is the inside of the sh.e.l.l of cloud whose exterior, gleaming in the suns.h.i.+ne, baffles our astronomers in their efforts to see the surface of Venus. I believe that we shall find the whole of this hemisphere covered by it. It is a s.h.i.+eld for the inhabitants against the fervors of an unsetting sun. Its presence prevents their real world from being seen from outside.”
”Well,” said Jack, laughing, ”I never heard before that Venus was fond of a veil.”
”Not only can they not be seen,” continued Edmund, ”but they cannot themselves see beyond the screen that covers them.”
”Worse and worse!” exclaimed Jack. ”The astronomers have certainly made a mistake in naming this bashful planet Venus.”
We continued for a long time to gaze at the great dome, admiring the magnificent play of iridescent colors over its vast surface, until suddenly Jack, who had gone to the other side of the car, called out to us:
”Come here and tell me what this is.”
We hurried to his side and were astonished to see a number of glittering objects which appeared to be floating in the atmosphere. They were arranged in an almost straight row, at an elevation of perhaps two thousand feet, and were apparently about three miles away. After a few moments of silence, Edmund said, in his quiet way:
”Those are air s.h.i.+ps.”
”Air s.h.i.+ps!”
”Yes, surely. An exploring expedition, I shouldn't wonder. I antic.i.p.ated something of that kind. You know already how dense the atmosphere of Venus is. It follows that balloons, and all sorts of machines for aerial navigation, can float much more easily here than over the earth. I was prepared to find the inhabitants of Venus skilled in such things, and I'm not surprised by what we see.”
”Venus with wings!” cried Jack. ”Now, Edmund, that sounds more like it. I guess we've struck the right planet after all.”
”But,” I said, ”you spoke of an exploring expedition. How in the world do you make that out?”
”It seems perfectly natural to me,” replied Edmund. ”Remember the two sides of the planet, so wonderfully different from one another. If we on the earth are so curious about the poles of our planet, simply because they are unlike other parts of the world, don't you think that the inhabitants of Venus should be at least equally curious concerning a whole hemisphere of their world, which differs _in toto_ from the half on which they live?”
”That does seem reasonable,” I a.s.sented.
”Of course it's reasonable, and I imagine that we, ourselves, are about to be submitted to investigation.”