Ray Cummings

The Collected Works


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off his hat and coat.

      "In bed—see his stocking there."

      A childish treble voice was calling from upstairs. "Good night, Aura—good night, my friend Jack."

      "Good night, old man—see you to-morrow," the Very Young Man called back in answer.

      "You mustn't make so much noise," the Doctor said reprovingly. "He'll never get to sleep."

      "No, you mustn't," the Big Business Man agreed. "To-morrow's a very very big day for him."

      "Some Christmas," commented the Very Young Man looking around. "Where's the holly and stuff?"

      "Oh, we've got it all right, don't you worry," said the Banker.

      "And mistletoe," said Lylda, twinkling. "For you, Jack."

      Eena again stood in the doorway and said something to her mistress. "The tree is ready," said Lylda.

      The Chemist rose to his feet. "Come on, everybody; let's go trim it."

      They crowded gaily into the dining-room, leaving the Very Young Man and Aura sitting alone by the fire. For some time they sat silent, listening to the laughter of the others trimming the tree.

      The Very Young Man looked at the girl beside him as she sat staring into the fire. She had taken off her heavy coat, and her figure seemed long and very slim in the clothes she was wearing now. She sat bending forward, with her hands clasped over her knees. The long line of her slender arm and shoulder, and the delicacy of her profile turned towards him, made the Very Young Man realize anew how fragile she was, and how beautiful.

      Her mass of hair was coiled in a great black pile on her head, with a big, loose knot low at the neck. The iridescence of her skin gleamed under the flaming red of her cheeks. Her lips, too, were red, with the smooth, rich red of coral. The Very Young Man thought with a shock of surprise that he had never noticed before that they were red; in the ring there had been no such color.

      In the room adjoining, his friends were proposing a toast over the Christmas punch bowl. The Chemist's voice floated in through the doorway.

      "To the Oroids—happiness to them." Then for an instant there was silence as they drank the toast.

      Aura met the Very Young Man's eyes and smiled a little wanly. "Happiness—to them! I wonder. We who are so happy to-night—I wonder, are they?"

      The Very Young Man leaned towards her. "You are happy, Aura?"

      The girl nodded, still staring wistfully into the fire.

      "I want you to be," the Very Young Man added simply, and fell silent.

      A blazing log in the fire twisted and rolled to one side; the crackling flames leaped higher, bathing the girl's drooping little figure in their golden light.

      The Very Young Man after a time found himself murmuring familiar lines of poetry. His memory leaped back. A boat sailing over a silent summer lake—underneath the stars—the warmth of a girl's soft little body touching his—her hair, twisted about his fingers—the thrill in his heart; he felt it now as his lips formed the words:

      "The stars would be your pearls upon a string,

       The world a ruby for your finger-ring,

       And you could have the sun and moon to wear,

       If I were king."

      "You remember, Aura, that night in the boat?"

      Again the girl nodded. "I shall learn to read it—some day," she said eagerly. "And all the others that you told me. I want to. They sing—so beautifully."

      A sleigh passed along the road outside; the jingle of its bells drifted in to them. The Very Young Man reached over and gently touched the girl's hand; her fingers closed over his with an answering pressure. His heart was beating fast.

      "Aura," he said earnestly. "I want to be King—for you—this first Christmas and always. I want to give you—all there is in this life, of happiness, that I can give—just for you."

      The girl met his gaze with eyes that were melting with tenderness.

      "I love you, Aura," he said softly.

      "I love you, too, Jack," she whispered, and held her lips up to his.

      Beyond the Vanishing Point

       Table of Contents

       CHAPTER I.

       CHAPTER II.

       CHAPTER III.

       CHAPTER IV.

       CHAPTER V.

       CHAPTER VI.

       CHAPTER VII.

       CHAPTER VIII.

       CHAPTER IX.

       CHAPTER X.

       CHAPTER XI.

       CHAPTER XII.

      THEY OPENED THE PANDORA'S BOX OF ATOMIC TRAVEL

      When George Randolph first caught sight of Orena, he was astounded by its gleaming perfection. Here were hills and valleys, lakes and streams, glowing with the light of the most precious of metals. And, more astonishing than that, it was a world of miniature perfection—an infinitely tiny universe within a golden atom!

      But for Randolph it was also a world aglow with danger. Somewhere in its tiny vastness were the friends he had to rescue. Captives of a madman, they had been reduced to native Orena size; to return to Earth they needed the growth capsules Randolph was bringing them. It was up to Randolph to find them—and quickly—for the longer they stayed tiny, the closer they came to passing Beyond The Vanishing Point!

      CAST OF CHARACTERS

      Franz Polter

       He found a gold mine in a land where there was no gold.

      Dr. Kent

       His scientific studies could mean life or death to an entire universe!

      George Randolph

       He crossed the border into Canada, and found himself in another world.

      Alan Kent

       Twenty feet tall, or two inches high—which should he be?

      Glora

       She was only as large as a thumbnail, but she carried a gigantic secret.

      Babs Kent

       Did she live in a golden cage or a magnificent palace?

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