"I must have military protection for my mine
and reducing works," replied Dr. Syx. "Then I
shall ask the return of one per cent, on the circulating medium, together with the privilege of disposing of a certain amount of the metal — to be limited
by agreement — to the public for use in the arts. Of
the proceeds of this sale I wiH pay ten per cent, to
the government in consideration of its protection."
"But," exclaimed President Boon, "that will make
you the richest man who ever lived!"
"Undoubtedly," was the reply.
"Why," added Mr. Boon, opening his eyes wider
as the facts continued to dawn upon him, "you will
become the financial dictator of the whole earth 1"
"Undoubtedly,™ again responded Dr. Syx, un-
moved. "That is what I purpose to become. My
discovery entitles me to no less. But, remember, I
place myself under government inspection and re-
striction. I should not he allowed to flood the
market, even if I were disposed to do so. But my
own interest would restrain me. It is to my ad-
vantage that avtemisium, once adopted, shall re-
main stable in value."
A shadow of doubt suddenly crossed the presi-
dent's face.
"Suppose' your secret is discovered," he said.
"Surely your mine will not remain the only one. If
you, in so short a time, have been able to accum-
ulate an immense quantity of the new metal, it must
be extremely abundant. Others will discover it,, and
then where shall we be?"
While; Mr. Boon uttered these words, those who
were watching Dr. Syx (as the president was not)
resembled persons whose startled eyes are, fixed up-
on a wild beast preparing to spring. As Mr. Boon
ceased speaking he turned towards the visitor, and
instantly his lips, fell apart and his face paled.
Dr. Syx, the Visitor, is Imperious
DE. Syx had drawn himself up to his full stat-
ure, and his. features' were distorted with
that peculiar mocking smile which had now
returned with a concentrated expression of mingled
self-confidence and' disdain'.
"Will you have relief, or not?" he asked' in; a dry,
hard voice. "What can you do ; ? I alone possess the
secret which can restore industry and commerce'. If
you reject my offer, do. you think a second one will
President Boon found voice, to reply, stammer-
ingly;
".! did not mean, to suggest a rejection of the of-
fer.. I only wished to. inquire if you thought it
probable that there, would be no repetition, of. what
occurred after gold was found at the south pole?."
"The earth may be full of my metal," returned
Dr. Syx,, almost fiercely,, "but so long as: I alone
possess the knowledge how to extract it, is it of" any
more worth- than common dirt? But. come"' he
added, after a pause and softening his manner;. "I
have other schemes. WiH youv as- representatives I of
the leading nations, undertake- the; introduction 1 of
ar.temiai.uni' as a- substitute for gold;, or- wilL you
not?"
"Can we not have time for deliberation?" asked
President Boon;
"Yes, one hour. Within that time* I shall return
to learn your decision," replied Dr. Syx, rising and
preparing to depart. "I leave these things," point-
ing to the tray, "in your keeping, and," significantly,
"I trust your decision will be a wise one/'
His curious smile again curved his lips and shot
the ends of his mustache upward, and the influence
of that smile remained in. the room when he bad
closed the door behind him. The financiers gazed at
one another for several minutes in silence, then
they turned towards the coruscating metal that filled
the tray.
CHAPTER. Ill
The Teton Mountains
AWAY on the western- border of Wyoming, in
the all but inaccessible heart of the Rocky
Mountains, three' mighty brothers, "ih& Big
Tetons," look perpendicularly into the blue eye of
Jenny's I.ake> lying at the bottom, of the profound
depression among the mountains called Jacksoir"s
Hole. Bracing against one another for support,
these remarkable peaks lift their granite apirea- from
12,GG0 to nearly 14,000- feet into the blue dome that
arches the crest of the continent. Their sides, and
especially those of their chief, the Grand Teton, are
streaked with glaciers, which shine like silver trap-
pings when the morning sun eomes up above the
wilderness of mountains stretching away eastward
from the hole-.
When the first, white men penetrated this wonder-
ful region, and one of them bestowed his wife's
name upon Jenny's Labe, they were intimidated by
the Grand Teton. It made, their flesh creep', ac-
customed thought they were to rough scrambling
among mountain gorges and on the brews of im-
mense precipices, when they glanced up the face of
the peak,, where the cliffs fall, one below another,
in a series of breathless descents, and imagined
themselves clinging for' dear life to those skyey
battlements.
But when, in' 1872; Messrs. Stevenson 1 ami Lang-
ford finally reached the- top of the Grand Teton-—
the only successful members of a party of nine
practised 1 climBers 1 who' had started together from
the bottom— they found- there a little rectangular
enclosure, made by piling up 1 rocks, six or seven feet
across and three feet in height, bearing evidences
of great age; and 1 indicating that the red Indians
had; for some unknown purpose, resorted to the
summit of this tremendous peak long before the
white men invaded their mountains. Yet neither the
Indians nor the whites: ever really conquered the
Teton, for above the highest point that they at-
tained rises a granite' Buttress, whose smooth verti-
cal: sides- seemed, to- them to- defy everything bat
wings-
Winding: across the'sage-CGvered floor of Jackson's
Hole; runs! the: Shoshone;, or Snake Rivera which . ,
takes- its rise from; J:aclfeson's'. Lake- at the northern
end of. the basin,, and t&em, as: if shrinking-, from, the
threatening brows- of the Tetons, whose Sail' would
Bleak, its progress-,, makes; a. detour of one: hundred
miles' around the- Buttressed heights' of the? range
before it finds: a clear way across' IdaiftD,. and; soi on
to the Columbia River and- the: Pacific Ocean:
Page:Amazing Stories Volume 01 Number 04.djvu/38
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AMAZING STORIES