The Secret of Producing Artemisium. Becomes
Public Property
■<jOON after came a report that Dr. Syx had
in seen again ; this time at Ekaterinburg, in
' the Urals. Next he was said to have paid a
visit to Batang, in the mountainous district of
southwestern China, and finally, according to ru-
mor, he was seen in Sicily, at Nicolosi, among the
volcanic pimples on the southern slope of Mount
Etna.
Next followed something of more curious and even
startling interest. A chemist at Budapest, where
the first rumors of Syx's reappearance had placed
the mysterious doctor, announced that he could pro-
duce artemisium, and proved it, although he kept his
process secret. ' Hardly had the sensation caused by
this news partially subsided when p similar report
arrived from Ekaterinburg ; then another from Ba-
tang; after that a fourth from Nicolosi!
Nobody could fail to notice the coincidence;
wherever the doctor— or was it his ghost? — appear-
ed, there, shortly afterwards, somebody discovered
the much-sought secret.
After Syx's apparitions rapidly increased in fre-
quency, followed in each instance by the announce-
ment of another productive artemisium mill. He
appeared in Germany, Italy, France, England, and
finally at many places in the United States.
"It is the old doctor's revenge," said Hall to me
. one day, trying to smile, although the matter was
too serious to be taken humorously. "Yes, it is his
revenge, and I must admit that it is complete. The
price of artemisium has fallen one-half 1 within six
months. All the efforts we have made to hold back
the floor have proved useless. The secret itself is
becoming public property. We shall inevitably be
overwhelmed with artemisium, just as we were with
gold, and the last condition of the financial world
will be worse than the first." ...
My friend's gloomy prognostications came near
being fulfilled to the letter. Ten thousand artemisi-
um mills shot their etherie rays upon the moon, and
our unfortunate satellite's metal ribs were stripped
by atomic force. Some of the great white rays that
had been one of the telescopic wonders of the lunar
landscapes disappeared, and the face of the moon,
which had remained unchanged before the eyes of
the children of Adam from the beginning of their
race, now looked as if the blast of a furnace had
swept it. At night, on the moonward side, the
earth was studded with brilliant spikes, all pointed
at the heart of its child in the sky.
But the looting of the moon brought disaster to
the robber planet. So mad were the efforts to get
the precious metal that the surface of our globe
was fairly showered with it, productive fields were,
in some cases, almost smothered under a metallic
coating, the air was filled with shining dust, until
finally famine and pestilence joined hands with fin-
ancial disaster to punish the grasping world.
Then, at last, the various governments took effec-
tive measures to protect themselves and their people.
Another combined effort resulted in an interna-
tional agreement whereby the production of the
precious moon metal was once more rigidly con-
trolled. But the existence of a monopoly, such as
Dr. Syx had so long enjoyed, and in the enjoyment
Ml
of which Andrew Hall had for a brief period suc-
ceeded him, wa3 henceforth rendered impossible.
CHAPTER XII
The Last of Dr. Syx
ANY years after the events last recorded I
sat, at the close of a brilliant autumn day,
ride by side with my old friend Andrew
Hall, on a broad, vine-shaded piazza which faced
the east, where the full moon was just rising above
the rim of the Sierra, and replacing the rosy coun-
ter-glow of sunset with its silvery radiance. The
sight was calculated to carry the minds of both back
to the events of former years. But I noticed that
Hall quickly changed the position of his chair, and
sat down again with his back to the rising moon.
He had managed to save some .millions from the
wreck of his vast fortune when artemisium started
to go to the dogs, and I was now paying him one of
my annual visits at his palatial home in California.
"Did I ever tell you of my last trip to the Teton?"
he asked, as I continued to gaze contemplatively at
the broad lunar disk which slowly detached itself
from the horizon and began to swim in the clear
evening sky.
"No," I "replied, '-but I should like to hear about
it."
"Or of my last sight of Dr. Syx?"
"Indeed! 1 did not suppose that you ever saw him
after that conference in your mill, when he had to
surrender half of the world to you."
"Once only I saw him again," said Hall, with a
peculiar intonation.
"Pray go ahead, and tell me the whole story."
My friend lighted a fresh cigar, tipped his chair
into a more comfortable position, and began:
"It was about seven years ago. I had long felt
an unconquerable desire to have another look at the
Teton and the scenes amid which so many strange
events in my life had occurred. I thought of send-
ing for you to go with me, but I knew you were
abroad much ofiyour time, and I could not be cer-
tain of eatehing you. Finally I decided to go alone.
I travelled on horseback by way of the Snake River
canyon, and arrived early one morning in Jackson's
Hole. I can tell you it was a gloomy place, as barren
andedeserted as some of those Arabian wadies that
you have been describing to me. The railroad had
long ago been abandoned, and the site of the mili-
tary camp could scarcely be recognized. An immense
cavity with ragged walls showed where Dr. Syx's
mill used to send up its plume of black smoke.
"As I started up the gaunt form of the Teton,
whose beetling precipices had been smashed and
split by the great explosion, I was seized with a
resistless impulse to climb it. I thought I should
like to peer off again from that pinnacle wnich had
once formed so fateful a watch-tower for me. Turn-
ing my horse lgose to graze in the grassy river bot-
tom, and carrying my rope tether along as a pos-
sible aid in climbing, I set out for the ascent. I
knew I could got get up the precipices on the east-
ern side, which we were able to master with the
aid of our balloon, and so I bore round, when I
reached the steepest cliffs, until I was on the south-
western side of the peak, where the climbing was
easier.
(Continued on page 381)
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THE MOON METAL
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