So I can think beautiful thoughts and perform
beautiful deeds and that, I think, is the real test of beauty,
after all."
"And there is hope," I added, almost in a whisper.
"Hope? No, there is no hope, if what you mean to suggest is that
I may some time regain my lost self. You have told me enough to
convince me that that can never be."
"We will not speak of it," I said, "but we may think of it and
sometimes thinking a great deal of a thing helps us to find a way
to get it, if we want it badly enough."
"I do not want to hope," she said, "for it will but mean
disappointment for me. I shall be happy as I am. Hoping, I should
always be unhappy."
I had ordered food for her and after it was brought Ras Thavas
sent for me and I left her, locking the door of her chamber as the
old surgeon had instructed. I found Ras Thavas in his office, a
small room which adjoined a very large one in which were a score of
clerks arranging and classifying reports from various departments
of the great laboratory. He arose as I entered.
"Come with me, Vad Varo," he directed. "We will have a look at
the two cases in L-42-X, the two of which I spoke."
"The man with half a simian brain and the ape with a half human
brain?" I asked.
He nodded and preceded me towards the runway that led to the
vaults beneath the building. As we descended, the corridors and
passageways indicated long disuse.
The floors were covered with an impalpable dust, long
undisturbed; the tiny radium bulbs that faintly illuminated the
sub-barsoomian depths were likewise coated. As we proceeded, we
passed many doorways on either side, each marked with its
descriptive hieroglyphic. Several of the openings had been tightly
sealed with masonry. What gruesome secrets were hid within? At last
we came to L-42-X. Here the bodies were arranged on shelves,
several rows of which almost completely filled the room from floor
to ceiling, except for a rectangular space in the centre of the
chamber, which accommodated an ersite topped operating table with
its array of surgical instruments, its motor and other laboratory
equipment.
Ras Thavas searched out the subjects of his strange experiment
and together we carried the human body to the table. While Ras
Thavas attached the tubes I returned for the vessel of blood which
reposed upon the same shelf with the corpse. The now familiar
method of revivification was soon accomplished and presently we
were watching the return of consciousness to the subject.
The man sat up and looked at us, then he cast a quick glance
about the chamber; there was a savage light in his eyes as they
returned to us. Slowly he backed from the table to the floor,
keeping the former between us.
"We will not harm you," said Ras Thavas.
The man attempted to reply, but his words were unintelligible
gibberish, then he shook his head and growled. Ras Thavas took a
step towards him and the man dropped to all fours, his knuckles
resting on the floor, and backed away, growling.
"Come!" cried Ras Thavas. "We will not harm you." Again he
attempted to approach the subject, but the man only backed quickly
away, growling more fiercely; and then suddenly he wheeled and
climbed quickly to the top of the highest shelf, where he squatted
upon a corpse and gibbered at us.
"We shall have to have help," said Ras Thavas and, going to the
doorway, he blew a signal upon his whistle.
"What are you blowing that for?" demanded the man suddenly. "Who
are you? What am I doing here? What has happened to me?"
"Come down," said Ras Thavas. "We are friends."
Slowly the man descended to the floor and came towards us, but
he still moved with his knuckles to the pavement He looked about at
the corpses and a new light entered his eyes.
"I am hungry!" he cried. "I will eat!" and with that he seized
the nearest corpse and dragged it to the floor.
"Stop! Stop!" cried Ras Thavas, leaping forward. "You will ruin
the subject," but the man only backed away, dragging the corpse
along the floor after him. It was then that the attendants came and
with their help we subdued and bound the poor creature. Then Ras
Thavas had the attendants bring the body of the ape and he told
them to remain, as we might need them.
The subject was a large specimen of the Barsoomian white ape,
one of the most savage and fearsome denizens of the Red Planet, and
because of the creature's great strength and ferocity Ras Thavas
took the precaution to see that it was securely bound before
resurgence.
It was a colossal creature about ten or fifteen feet tall,
standing erect, and had an intermediary set of arms or legs midway
between its upper and lower limbs. The eyes were close together and
nonprotruding; the ears were high set, while its snout and teeth
were strikingly like those of our African gorilla.
With returning consciousness the creature eyed us questioningly.
Several times it seemed to essay to speak but only inarticulate
sounds issued from its throat.
Then it lay still for a period.
Ras Thavas spoke to it. "If you understand my words, nod your
head." The creature nodded.
"Would you like to be freed of your bonds?" asked the
surgeon.
Again the creature nodded an affirmative.
"I fear that you will attempt to injure us, or escape," said Ras
Thavas.
The ape was apparently trying very hard to articulate and at
last there issued from its lips a sound that could not be
misunderstood. It was the single word no.
"You will not harm us or try to escape?" Ras Thavas repeated his
question.
"No," said the ape, and this time the word was clearly
enunciated.
"We shall see," said Ras Thavas. "But remember that with our
weapons we may dispatch you quickly if you attack us."
The ape nodded, and then, very laboriously: "I will not harm
you."
At a sign from Ras Thavas the attendants removed the bonds and
the creature sat up. It stretched its limbs and slid easily to the
floor, where it stood erect upon two feet, which was not
surprising, since the white ape goes more often upon two feet than
six; a fact of which I was not cognizant at the time, but which Ras
Thavas explained to we later in commenting upon the fact that the
human subject had gone upon all fours, which, to Ras Thavas,
indicated a reversion to type in the fractional ape-brain
transplanted to the human skull.
Ras Thavas examined the subject at considerable length and then
resumed his examination of the human subject which continued to
evince more simian characteristics than human, though it spoke more
easily than the ape, because, undoubtedly, of its more perfect
vocal organs. It was only by exerting the closest attention that
the diction of the ape became understandable at all.
"There is nothing remarkable about these subjects," said Ras
Thavas, after devoting half a day to them. "They bear out what I
had already determined years ago in the transplanting of entire
brains; that the act of transplanting stimulates growth and
activity of brain cells.
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