"I was
hasty," he said.
"Let it pass." That, I let answer for an apology—really it was
more than I had expected—but the event was not unfortunate. I think
he treated me with far greater respect thereafter; but now he
turned immediately to the slab bearing the mortal remains of
4296-E-2631-H.
"Prepare the subject for revivification," he said, "and make
what study you can of all its reactions." With that he left the
room.
I was now fairly adept at this work which I set about with some
misgivings but with the assurance that I was doing right in obeying
Ras Thavas while I remained a member of his entourage. The blood
that had once flowed through the veins of the beautiful body that
Ras Thavas had sold to Xaxa reposed in an hermetically sealed
vessel upon the shelf above the corpse. As I had before done in
other cases beneath the watchful eyes of the old surgeon I now did
for the first time alone. The blood heated, the incisions made, the
tubes attached and the few drops of life-giving solution added to
the blood, I was now ready to restore life to that delicate brain
that had lain dead for ten years. As my finger rested upon the
little button that actuated the motor that was to send the
revivifying liquid into those dormant veins, I experienced such a
sensation as I imagined no mortal man has ever felt.
I had become master of life and death, and yet at this moment
that I stood there upon the point of resurrecting the dead I felt
more like a murderer than a saviour. I tried to view the procedure
dispassionately through the cold eye of science, but I failed
miserably. I could only see a stricken girl grieving for her lost
beauties. With a muffled oath I turned away. I could not do it! And
then, as though an outside force had seized upon me, my finger
moved unerringly to the button and pressed it. I cannot explain it,
unless upon the theory of dual mentality, which may explain many
things. Perhaps my subjective mind directed the act. I do not know.
Only I know that I did it, the motor started, the level of the
blood in the container commenced gradually to lower.
Spell-bound, I stood watching. Presently the vessel was empty. I
shut off the motor, removed the tubes, sealed the openings with
tape. The red glow of life tinged the body, replacing the sallow,
purplish hue of death. The breasts rose and fell regularly, the
head turned slightly and the eyelids moved. A faint sigh issued
from between the parting lips. For a long time there was no other
sign of life, then, suddenly, the eyes opened. They were dull at
first, but presently they commenced to fill with questioning
wonderment. They rested on me and then passed on about that portion
of the room that was visible from the position of the body. Then
they came back to me and remained steadily fixed upon my
countenance after having once surveyed me up and down. There was
still the questioning in them, but there was no fear.
"Where am I?" she asked. The voice was that of an old woman—high
and harsh. A startled expression filled her eyes. "What is the
matter with me? What is wrong with my voice? What has
happened?"
I laid a hand upon her forehead. "Don't bother about it now," I
said, soothingly. "Wait until sometime when you are stronger. Then
I will tell you."
She sat up. "I am strong," she said, and then her eyes swept her
lower body and limbs and a look of utter horror crossed her face.
"What has happened to me? In the name of my first ancestor, what
has happened to me?"
The shrill, harsh voice grated upon me.
1 comment