<h3><SPAN name="THE_FOUR_DAYS_NIGHT"></SPAN>THE FOUR DAYS' NIGHT.</h3>
<h4>The Story of a London Fog that
turned Daylight into Darkness
for Four Days.</h4>
<h4>I.</h4>
<p>The weather forecast for London and the
Channel was "light airs, fine generally,
milder." Further down the fascinating
column Hackness read that "the conditions
over Europe generally favoured a continuance
of the large anti-cyclonic area, the barometer
steadily rising over Western Europe, sea
smooth, readings being unusually high for
this time of the year."</p>
<p>Martin Hackness, B.Sc., London, thoughtfully
read all this and more. The study of
the meteorological reports was part of his
religion almost. In the laboratory at the
back of his sitting-room were all kinds of
weird-looking instruments for measuring sunshine
and wind pressure, the weight of
atmosphere and the like. Hackness trusted
before long to be able to foretell a London
fog with absolute accuracy, which, when you
come to think of it, would be an exceedingly
useful matter. In his queer way Hackness
described himself as a fog specialist. He
hoped some day to prove himself a fog-disperser,
which is another word for a great
public benefactor.</p>
<p>The chance he was waiting for seemed to
have come at last. November had set in, mild
and dull and heavy. Already there had been
one or two of the dense fogs under which
London periodically groans and does nothing
to avert. Hackness was clear-sighted enough
to see a danger here that might some day
prove a hideous national disaster. So far as
he could ascertain from his observations
and readings, London was in for another dense
fog within the next four-and-twenty hours.
Unless he was greatly mistaken, the next
fog was going to be a particularly thick one.
He could see the yellow mists gathering in
Gower Street, as he sat at his breakfast.</p>
<p>The door flew open and a man rushed in
without even an apology. He was a little
man, with sharp, clean-shaven features, an
interrogative nose and assertive <i>pince-nez</i>. He
was not unlike Hackness, minus his calm
ruminative manner. He fluttered a paper in
his hand like a banner.</p>
<p>"It's come, Hackness," he cried. "It
was bound to come sometime. It's all here
in a late edition of the Telegraph. We must
go and see it."</p>
<p>He flung himself into an armchair.</p>
<p>"Do you remember," he said, "the day
in the winter of 1898, the day that petroleum
ship exploded? You and I were playing golf
together on the Westgate links."</p>
<p>Hackness nodded eagerly.</p>
<p>"I shall never forget it, Eldred," he said,
"though I have forgotten the name of the ship.
She was a big iron boat, and she caught fire
about daybreak. Of her captain and her
crew not one fragment was ever found."</p>
<p>"It was perfectly still and the effect of that
immense volume of dense black smoke was
marvellous. Do you recollect the scene at
sunset? It was like looking at half-a-dozen
Alpine ranges piled one on the top of the
other. The spectacle was not only grand, it
was appalling, awful. Do you happen to
recollect what you said at the time?"</p>
<p>There was something in Eldred's manner
that roused Hackness.</p>
<p>"Perfectly well," he cried. "I pictured
that awful canopy of sooty, fatty matter
suddenly shut down over a great city by a
fog. A fog would have beaten it down and
spread it. We tried to imagine what might
happen if that ship had been in the Thames,
say at Greenwich."</p>
<p>"Didn't you prophesy a big fog for
to-day?"</p>
<p>"Certainly I did. And a recent examination
of my instruments merely confirms my
opinion. Why do you ask?"</p>
<p>"Because early this morning a fire broke
out in the great petroleum storage tanks,
down the river. Millions of gallons of oil
are bound to burn themselves out—nothing
short of a miracle can quench the fire, which
will probably rage all through to-day and
to-morrow. The fire-brigades are absolutely
powerless—in the first place the heat is too
awful to allow them to approach; in the
second, water would only make things worse.
It's one of the biggest blazes ever known.
Pray Heaven, your fog doesn't settle down on
the top of the smoke."</p>
<p>Hackness turned away from his unfinished
breakfast and struggled into an
overcoat. There was a peril here that
London little dreamt of. Out in the yellow
streets newsboys were yelling of the conflagration
down the Thames. People were talking
of the disaster in a calm frame of mind
between the discussion of closer personal
matters.</p>
<p>"There's always the chance of a breeze
springing up," Hackness muttered. "If it
does, well and good, if not—but come along.
We'll train it from Charing Cross."</p>
<p>A little way down the river the mist curtain
lifted. A round magnified sun looked down
upon a dun earth. Towards the South-east
a great black column rose high in the sky.
The column appeared to be absolutely
motionless; it broadened from an inky base
like a grotesque mushroom.</p>
<p>"Fancy trying to breathe <i>that</i>," Eldred
muttered. "Just think of the poison there.
I wonder what that dense mass would weigh
in tons. And it's been going on for five
hours now. There's enough there to
suffocate all London."</p>
<p>Hackness made no reply. On the whole
he was wishing himself well out of it. That
pillar of smoke would rise for many more
hours yet. At the same time here was his
great opportunity. There were certain
experiments that he desired to make and for
which all things were ready.</p>
<p>They reached the scene of the catastrophe.
Within a radius of five hundred yards the
heat was intense. Nobody seemed to know
the cause of the disaster beyond the general
opinion that the oil gases had ignited.
And nothing could be done. No engine
could approach near enough to do any good.
Those mighty tanks and barrels filled with
petroleum would have to burn themselves
out.</p>
<p>The sheets of flame roared and sobbed.
Above the flames rose the column of thick
black smoke, with just the suspicion of a
slight stagger to the westward. The inky
vapour spread overhead like a pall. If
Hackness's fog came now it meant a terrible
disaster for London.</p>
<p>Further out in the country, where the sun
was actually shining, people watched that
great cloud with fearsome admiration. From
a few miles beyond the radius it looked as if
all the ranges of the world had been piled
atop of London. The fog was gradually
spreading along the South of the Thames,
and away as far as Barnet to the North.</p>
<p>There was something in the stillness and
the gloom that London did not associate with
ordinary fogs.</p>
<p>Hackness turned away at length, conscious
of his sketchy breakfast and the fact that he
had been watching this thrilling spectacle for
two hours.</p>
<p>"Have you thought of a way out?" Eldred
asked. "What are you going to do?"</p>
<p>"Lunch," Hackness said curtly. "After
that I propose to see to my arrangements in
Regent's Park. I've got Grimfern's aeroplane
there, and a pretty theory about high
explosives. The difficulty is to get the
authorities to consent to the experiments.
The police have absolutely forbidden experiments
with high explosives, fired in the air
above London. But perhaps I shall frighten
them into it this time. Nothing would please
me better than to see a breeze spring up, and
yet on the other hand——"</p>
<p>"Then you are free to-night?" Eldred
asked.</p>
<p>"No, I'm not. Oh, there will be plenty
of time. I'm going with Sir Edgar Grimfern,
and his daughter to see Irving, that is if it is
possible for anyone to <i>see</i> Irving to-night.
I've got the chance of a lifetime at hand,
but I wish that it was well over, Eldred
my boy. If you come round about midnight——"</p>
<p>"I'll be sure to," Eldred said eagerly.
"I'm going to be in this thing. And I want
to know all about that explosive idea."</p>
<h4>II.</h4>
<p>Martin Hackness dressed with less than his
usual care that evening. He even forgot
that Miss Cynthia Grimfern had a strong
prejudice in favour of black evening ties, and,
usually, he paid a great deal of deference to
her opinions. But he was thinking of other
matters now.</p>
<p>There was no sign of anything abnormal as
Hackness drove along in the direction of
Clarence Terrace. The night was more than
typically yellow for the time of year, but
there was no kind of trouble with the traffic
though down the river the fairway lay under
a dense bank of cloud.</p>
<p>Hackness sniffed the air eagerly. He
detected or thought he detected a certain
acrid suggestion in the atmosphere. As the
cab approached Trafalgar Square Hackness
could hear shouts and voices raised high in
protestation. Suddenly his cab seemed to
be plunged into a wall of darkness.</p>
<p>It was so swift and unexpected that it came
with the force of a blow. The horse appeared
to have trotted into a bank of dense blackness.
The wall had shut down so swiftly, blotting
out a section of London, that Hackness could
only gaze at it with mouth wide open.</p>
<p>Hackness hopped out of his cab hurriedly.
So sheer and stark was the black wall that the
horse was out of sight. Mechanically the
driver reined back. The horse came back
to the cab with the dazzling swiftness of a
conjuring trick. A thin stream of breeze
wandered from the direction of Whitehall.
It was this air finding its way up the funnel
formed by the sheet that cut off the fog to a
razor edge.</p>
<p>"Been teetotal for eighteen years," the
cabman muttered, "so <i>that's</i> all right. And
what do you please to make of it, sir?"</p>
<p>Hackness muttered something incoherent.
As he stood there, the black wall lifted like a
stage curtain, and he found himself under the
lee of an omnibus. In a dazed kind of way
he patted the cabhorse on the flank. He
looked at his hand. It was greasy and oily
and grimy as if he had been in the engine-room
of a big liner.</p>
<p>"Get on as fast as you can," he cried. "It
was fog, just a little present from the burning
petroleum. Anyway, it's gone now."</p>
<p>True, the black curtain had lifted, but the
atmosphere reeked with the odour of burning
oil. The lamps and shop windows were
splashed and mottled with something that
might have passed for black snow. Traffic
had been brought to a standstill for the
moment, eager knots of pedestrians were
discussing the situation with alarm and
agitation, a man in evening dress was busily
engaged in a vain attempt to remove sundry
black patches from his shirt front.</p>
<p>Sir Edgar Grimfern was glad to see his
young friend. Had Grimfern been comparatively
poor, and less addicted to big game
shooting, he would doubtless have proved a
great scientific light. Anything with a dash
of adventure fascinated him. He was
enthusiastic on flying machines and
aeroplanes generally. There were big work-shops
at the back of 119, Clarence Terrace,
where Hackness put in a good deal of his
spare time. Those two were going to startle
the world presently.</p>
<p>Hackness shook hands thoughtfully with
Cynthia Grimfern. There was a slight frown
on her pretty intellectual face as she noted
his tie.</p>
<p>"There's a large smut on it," she
remarked, "and it serves you right."</p>
<p>Hackness explained. He had a flattering
audience. He told of the strange happening
in Trafalgar Square and the majestic scene
on the river. He gave a graphic account of
the theory that he had built upon it. There
was an animated discussion all through dinner.</p>
<p>"The moral of which is that we are going
to be plunged into Cimmerian darkness,"
Cynthia said, "that is, <i>if</i> the fog comes down.
If you think you are going to frighten me out
of my evening's entertainment you are
mistaken."</p>
<p>All the same it had grown much darker
and thicker as the trio drove off in the
direction of the Lyceum Theatre. There
were patches of dark acrid fog here and there
like ropes of smoke into which figures passed
and disappeared only to come out on the
other side choking and coughing. So local
were these swathes of fog that in a wide
thoroughfare it was possible to partially
avoid them. Festoons of vapour hung from
one lamp-post to another, the air was filled
with a fatty sickening odour.</p>
<p>"How nasty," Cynthia exclaimed. "Mr.
Hackness, please close that window. I am
almost sorry that we started. What's that?"</p>
<p>There was a shuffling movement under the
seat of the carriage, the quick bark of a dog;
Cynthia's little fox terrier had stolen into the
brougham. It was a favourite trick of his,
the girl explained.</p>
<p>"He'll go back again," she said. "Kim
knows that he has done wrong."</p>
<p>That Kim was forgotten and discovered
later on coiled up under the stall of his
mistress was a mere detail. Hackness was
too preoccupied to feel any uneasiness. He
was only conscious that the electric lights
were growing dim and yellow, and that a
brown haze was coming between the auditorium
and the stage. When the curtain fell
on the third act it was hardly possible to see
across the theatre. Two or three large
heavy blots of some greasy matter fell on
to the white shoulders of a lady in the
stalls to be hastily wiped away by her
companion. They left a long greasy smear
behind.</p>
<p>"I can hardly breathe," Cynthia gasped.
"I wish I had stopped at home. Surely those
electric lights are going out."</p>
<p>But the lights were merely being wrapped
in a filament that every moment grew more
and more dense. As the curtain went up
again there was just the suspicion of a
draught from the back of the stage, and the
whole of it was smothered in a small brown
cloud that left absolutely nothing to the view.
It was impossible now to make out a single
word of the programme, even when it was
held close to the eyes.</p>
<p>"Hackness was right," Grimfern growled.
"We had far better have stayed at home."</p>
<p>Hackness said nothing. He had no pride
in the accuracy of his forecast. Perhaps he
was the only man in London who knew what
the full force of this catastrophe meant. It
grew so dark now that he could see no more
than the mere faint suggestion of his fair
companion, something was falling out of the
gloom like black ragged snow. As the pall
lifted just for an instant he could see the
dainty dresses of the women absolutely
smothered with the thick oily smuts. The
reek of petroleum was stifling.</p>
<p>There was a frightened scream from behind,
and a yell out of the ebony wall to the effect
that somebody had fainted. Someone was
speaking from the stage with a view to stay
what might prove to be a dangerous panic.
Another sombre wave filled the theatre and then
it grew absolutely black, so black that a match
held a foot or so from the nose could not be
seen. One of the plagues of Egypt with all
its horrors had fallen upon London.</p>
<p>"Let us try and make our way out,"
Hackness suggested. "Go quietly."</p>
<p>Others seemed to be moved by the same
idea. It was too black and dark for anything
like a rush, so that a dangerous panic
was out of the question. Slowly but surely
the fashionable audience reached the vestibule,
the hall, and the steps.</p>
<p>Nothing to be seen, no glimmer of anything,
no sound of traffic. The destroying
angel might have passed over London and
blotted out all human life. The magnitude
of the disaster had frightened London's
millions as it fell.</p>
<h4>III.</h4>
<p>A city of the blind! Six millions of
people suddenly deprived of sight!</p>
<p>The disaster sounds impossible—a nightmare,
the wild vapourings of a diseased
imagination—and yet why not? Given a
favourable atmospheric condition, something
colossal in the way of a fire, and there it is.
And there, somewhere folded away in the
book of Nature, is the simple remedy.</p>
<p>Such thoughts as these flashed through
Hackness's mind as he stood under the
portico of the Lyceum Theatre, quite helpless
and inert for the moment.</p>
<p>But the darkness was thicker and blacker
than anything he had ever imagined. It was
absolutely the darkness that could be felt.
Hackness could hear the faint scratching of
matches all around him, but there was no
glimmer of light anywhere. And the atmosphere
was thick, stifling, greasy. Yet it was
not quite as stifling as perfervid imagination
suggested. The very darkness suggested
suffocation. Still, there was air, a sultry light
breeze that set the murk in motion, and
mercifully brought from some purer area the
oxygen that made life possible. There was
always air, thank God, to the end of the Four
Days' Night.</p>
<p>Nobody spoke for a time. Not a sound
of any kind could be heard. It was odd to
think that a few miles away the country might
be sleeping under the clear stars. It was
terrible to think that hundreds of thousands
of people must be standing lost in the streets
and yet near to home.</p>
<p>A little way off a dog whined, a child in a
sweet refined voice cried that she was lost.
An anxious mother called in reply. The
little one had been forgotten in the first flood
of that awful darkness. By sheer good luck
Hackness was enabled to locate the child.
He could feel that her wraps were rich and
costly, though the same fatty slime was upon
them. He caught the child up in his arms
and yelled that he had got her. The mother
was close by, yet full five minutes elapsed
before Hackness blundered upon her.
Something was whining and fawning about
his feet.</p>
<p>He called upon Grimfern, and the latter
answered in his ear. Cynthia was crying
pitifully and helplessly. Some women there
were past that.</p>
<p>"For Heaven's sake tell us what we are to
do," Grimfern gasped. "I flatter myself that
I know London well, but I couldn't find my
way home in this."</p>
<p>Something was licking Hackness's hand.
It was the dog Kim. There was just a
chance here. He tore his handkerchief in
strips and knotted it together. One end he
fastened to the little dog's collar.</p>
<p>"It's Kim," he explained. "Tell the dog
'home.' There's just a chance that he may
lead you home. We're very wonderful
creatures, but one sensible dog is worth a
million of us to-night. Try it."</p>
<p>"And where are you going?" Cynthia
asked. She spoke high, for a babel of voices
had broken out. "What will become of
you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I am all right," Hackness said with
an affected cheerfulness. "You see, I was
fairly sure that this would happen sooner or
later. So I pigeon-holed a way of dealing
with the difficulty. Scotland Yard listened,
but thought me a bore all the same. This is
the situation where I come in."</p>
<p>Grimfern touched the dog and urged him
forward.</p>
<p>Kim gave a little bark and a whine. His
muscular little body strained at the leash.</p>
<p>"It's all right," Grimfern cried. "Kim
understands. That queer little pill-box of a
brain of his is worth the finest intellect in
England to-night."</p>
<p>Cynthia whispered a faint good-night, and
Hackness was alone. As he stood there in
the blackness the sense of suffocation was
overwhelming. He essayed to smoke a
cigarette, but he hadn't the remotest idea
whether the thing was alight or not. It had
no taste or flavour.</p>
<p>But it was idle to stand there. He must
fight his way along to Scotland Yard to
persuade the authorities to listen to his ideas.
There was not the slightest danger of belated
traffic, no sane man would have driven a
horse in such dense night. Hackness
blundered along without the faintest idea
to which point of the compass he was facing.</p>
<p>If he could only get his bearings he felt
that he should be all right. He found his
way into the Strand at length; he fumbled up
against someone and asked where he was.
A hoarse voice responded that the owner
fancied it was somewhere in Piccadilly.
There were scores of people in the streets
standing about talking desperately, absolute
strangers clinging to one another for sheer
craving for company to keep the frayed
senses together. The most fastidious clubman
there would have chummed with the
toughest Hooligan rather than have his own
thoughts for company.</p>
<p>Hackness pushed his way along. If he
got out of his bearings he adopted the simple
experiment of knocking at the first door he
came to and asking where he was. His
reception was not invariably enthusiastic, but
it was no time for nice distinctions. And a
deadly fear bore everybody down.</p>
<p>At last he came to Scotland Yard, as
the clocks proclaimed that it was half-past
one. Ghostly official voices told Hackness
the way to Inspector Williamson's office,
stern officials grasped him by the arm and
piloted him up flights of stairs. He blundered
over a chair and sat down. Out of the
black cavern of space Inspector Williamson
spoke.</p>
<p>"I am thankful you have come. You are
just the man I most wanted to see. I want
my memory refreshed over that scheme of
yours," he said. "I didn't pay very much
attention to it at the time."</p>
<p>"Of course you didn't. Did you ever
know an original prophet who wasn't laughed
at? Still, I don't mind confessing that I
hardly anticipated anything quite so awful as
this. The very density of it makes some
parts of my scheme impossible. We shall
have to shut our teeth and endure it. Nothing
really practical can be done so long as this
fog lasts."</p>
<p>"But, man alive, how long <i>will</i> it last?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps an hour or perhaps a week. Do
you grasp what an awful calamity faces us?"</p>
<p>Williamson had no reply. So long as the
fog lasted, London was in a state of siege,
and, not only this, but every house in it was a
fort, each depending upon itself for supplies.
No bread could be baked, no meal could be
carried round, no milk or vegetables delivered
so long as the fog remained. Given a day
or two of this and thousands of families
would be on the verge of starvation. It was
not a pretty picture that Hackness drew, but
Williamson was bound to agree with every
word of it.</p>
<p>These two men sat in the darkness till
what should have been the dawn, whilst
scores of subordinates were setting some sort
of machinery in motion to preserve order.</p>
<p>Hackness stumbled home to his rooms
about nine o'clock in the morning, without
having succeeded in persuading the officials
to grant him permission to experiment.
Mechanically he felt for his watch to see the
time. The watch was gone. Hackness
smiled grimly. The predatory classes had
not been quite blind to the advantages of the
situation.</p>
<p>There was no breakfast for Hackness for
the simple reason that it had been found
impossible to light the kitchen fire. But there
was a loaf of bread, some cheese, and a knife.
Hackness fumbled for his bottled beer and
a glass. There were many worse breakfasts
in London that morning.</p>
<p>He woke presently, conscious that a clock
was striking nine. After some elaborate
thought and the asking of a question or
two from another inmate of the house,
Hackness found to his horror that he
had slept the clock round nearly twice. It
was nine o'clock in the morning, twenty-three
hours since he had fallen asleep! And, so
far as Hackness could judge, there were no
signs of the fog's abatement.</p>
<p>He changed his clothes and washed the
greasy slime off him so far as cold water and
soap would allow. There were plenty of
people in the streets, hunting for food for the
most part; there were tales of people found
dead in the gutters. Progression was slow,
but the utter absence of traffic rendered it
safe and possible. Men spoke with bated
breath, the weight of the great calamity upon
them.</p>
<p>News that came from a few miles
outside the radius spoke of clear skies and
bright sunshine. There was a great deal of
sickness, and the doctors had more than they
could manage, especially with the young and
the delicate.</p>
<p>And the calamity looked like getting worse.
Six million people were breathing what
oxygen there was. Hackness returned to his
chambers to find Eldred awaiting him.</p>
<p>"This can't go on, you know," the latter
said tersely.</p>
<p>"Of course it can't," Hackness replied.
"All the air is getting exhausted. Come
with me down to Scotland Yard and help to
try and persuade Williamson to test my
experiment."</p>
<p>"What! Do you mean to say he is still
obstinate?"</p>
<p>"Well, perhaps he feels different to-day.
Come along."</p>
<p>Williamson was in a chastened frame of
mind. He had no optimistic words when
Hackness suggested that nothing less than
a violent meteorological disturbance would
clear the deadly peril of the fog away.
It was time for drastic remedies, and if
they failed things would be no worse than
before.</p>
<p>"But can you manage it?" Williamson
asked.</p>
<p>"I fancy so," Hackness replied. "It's a
risk, of course, but everything has been ready
for a long time. We could start after to-morrow
midnight, or any time for that
matter."</p>
<p>"Very well," Williamson sighed with the
air of a man who realises that after all the
tooth must come out. "If this produces a
calamity I shall be asked to send in my
resignation. If I refuse——"</p>
<p>"If you refuse there is more than a chance
that you won't want another situation,"
Hackness said grimly. "Let's get the thing
going, Eldred."</p>
<p>They crawled along through the black
suffocating darkness, feeble, languid, and
sweating at every pore. There was a murky
closeness in the vitiated atmosphere that
seemed to take all the strength and energy
away. At any other time the walk to
Clarence Terrace would have been a pleasure,
now it was a penance. They found their
objective after a deal of patience and trouble.
Hackness yelled in the doorway. There was
a sound of footsteps and Cynthia Grimfern
spoke.</p>
<p>"Ah, what a relief it is to know that you
are all right," she said. "I pictured all sorts
of horrors happening to you. Will this never
end, Martin?"</p>
<p>She cried softly in her distress. Hackness
felt for her hand and pressed it tenderly.</p>
<p>"We are going to try my great theory,"
he said. "Eldred is with me, and we have
got Williamson's permission to operate with
the aerophane. Where is Sir Edgar?"</p>
<p>Grimfern was in the big workshop in the
garden. As best he could, he was fumbling
over some machinery for the increase of
power in electric lighting. Hackness took a
queer-looking lamp with double reflectors
from his pocket.</p>
<p>"Shut off that dynamo," he said, "and
give me the flex. I've got a little idea here
Bramley, the electrician, lent me. With that
1000-volt generator of yours I can get a light
equal to 40,000 candles. There."</p>
<p>Flick went the switch, and the others
staggered back with their hands to their eyes.
The great volume of light, impossible to face
under ordinary circumstances, illuminated
the workshop with a faint glow like a winter's
dawn. It was sufficient for all practical
purpose, but to eyes that had seen absolutely
nothing for two days and nights very
painful.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/light_illuminated_workshop.jpg" width-obs="600" alt="" /> <div class="caption">The great volume of light, impossible to face under ordinary circumstances, illuminated the workshop with a faint glow.</div>
</div>
<p>Cynthia laughed hysterically. She saw the
men grimed and dirty, blackened and greasy,
as if they were fresh from a stoker's hole in a
tropical sea. They saw a tall, graceful girl
in the droll parody of a kitchen-maid who
had wiped a tearful face with a blacklead
brush.</p>
<p>But they could <i>see</i>. Along the whole
floor of the workshop lay a queer, cigar-shaped
instrument with grotesque wings and
a tail like that of a fish, but capable of being
turned in any direction. It seemed a problem
to get this strange-looking monster out of the
place, but as the whole of the end of the
workshop was constructed to pull out, the
difficulty was not great.</p>
<p>This was Sir Edgar Grimfern's aerophane,
built under his own eyes and with the assistance
of Hackness and Eldred.</p>
<p>"It will be a bit of risk in the dark," Sir
Edgar said thoughtfully.</p>
<p>"It will, sir, but I hope it will mean the
saving of a great city," Hackness remarked.
"We shall have no difficulty in getting
up, and as to the getting down, don't
forget that the atmosphere a few miles
beyond the outskirts of London is quite
clear. If only the explosives are strong
enough!"</p>
<p>"Don't theorise," Eldred snapped. "We've
got a good day's work before we start. And
there is no time to be lost."</p>
<p>"Luncheon first," Sir Edgar suggested,
"served in here. It will be plain and
cold; but, thank goodness, there is plenty
of it. My word, after that awful darkness
what a blessed thing light is once
more!"</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Two hours after midnight the doors of the
workshop were pulled away and the
aerophane was dragged on its carriage into
the garden. The faint glimmer of light only
served to make the blackness all the thicker.
The three men waved their hands silently to
Cynthia and jumped in. A few seconds
later and they were whirred and screwed
away into the suffocating fog.</p>
<h4>IV.</h4>
<p>London was holding out doggedly and
stolidly. Scores of houses watched and
waited for missing ones who would never
return, the streets and the river had taken
their toll, in open spaces, in the parks, and
on the heaths many were shrouded. But the
long black night held its secret well.
There had been some ruffianism and
plundering at first. But what was the use of
plunder to the thief who could not dispose
of his booty, who could not exchange a rare
diamond for so much as a mouthful of
bread? Some of them could not even find
their way home, they had to remain in the
streets where there was the dread of the
lifting blanket and the certainty of punishment
with the coming of the day.</p>
<p>But if certain houses mourned the loss of
inmates, some had more than their share.
Belated women, frightened business girls,
caught in the fog had sought the first haven
at hand, and there they were free to remain.
There were sempstresses in Mayfair, and
delicately-nurtured ladies in obscure
Bloomsbury boarding-houses. Class distinction
seemed to be remote as the middle ages.</p>
<p>Scotland Yard, the local authorities, and
the County Council had worked splendidly
together. Provisions were short, though a
good deal of bread and milk had with greatest
difficulty been imported from outside the
radius of the scourge. Still the poor were
suffering acutely, and the cries of frightened
children were heard in every street. A few
days more and the stoutest nerves must give
way. Nobody could face such a blackness
and retain their senses for long. London
was a city of the blind. Sleep was the only
panacea for the creeping madness.</p>
<p>There were few deeds of violence done.
The most courageous, the most bloodthirsty
man grew mild and gentle before the scourge.
Desperate men prowled about in search of
food, but they wanted nothing else. Certainly
they would not have attempted violence to
get it.</p>
<p>Alarmists predicted that in a few hours
life in London would be impossible. For
once they had reason on their side. Every
hour the air, or what passed for air, grew
more poisonous. Men fancied a city with six
million corpses!</p>
<p>The calamity would kill big cities
altogether. No great mass of people would
ever dare to congregate together again where
manufacturers made a hideous atmosphere
overhead. It would be a great check upon
the race for gold. There was much justification
for this morbid condition of public
feeling.</p>
<p>So the third long weary day dragged to an
end, and people went to bed in the old
mechanical fashion hoping for better signs
in the morning. How many weary years
since they had last seen the sunshine, colour,
anything?</p>
<p>There was a change from the black
monotony some time after dawn. Most
people had nearly lost all sense of time when
dawn ought to have been. People were
struggling back to their senses again, trying
to pierce the thick curtain that held everything
in bondage. Doors were opened and restless
ones passed into the street.</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a smiting shock from
somewhere, a deafening splitting roar in the
ears, and central London shivered. It was
as if some mighty explosion had taken place
in space, and as if the same concussion had
been followed by a severe shock of earthquake.</p>
<p>Huge buildings shook and trembled,
furniture was overturned, and from every
house came the smash of glass. Was this
merely a fog or some thick curtain that veiled
the approaching dissolution of the world?
People stood still, trembling and wondering.
And before the question was answered, a
strange thing, a modern miracle happened. A
great arc of the blackness peeled off and
stripped the daylight bare before their startled
eyes.</p>
<h4>V.</h4>
<p>The work was full of a real live peril, but
the aerophane was cast loose at length. Its
upward motion was slow, perhaps owing to
the denseness of the atmosphere.</p>
<p>For some time nobody spoke. Something
seemed to oppress their breathing. They
were barely conscious of the faint upward
motion. If they only rose perfectly straight
all would be well.</p>
<p>"That's a fine light you had in the workshop,"
said Eldred. "But why not have
established a few hundreds of them——"</p>
<p>"All over London," Hackness cut in.
"For the simple reason that the lamp my
friend lent me is the only one in existence.
It is worked at a dangerous voltage too."</p>
<p>The upward motion continued. The sails
of the aerophane rustled slightly. Grimfern
drew a deep breath.</p>
<p>"Air," he gasped, "real pure fresh air!
Do you notice it?"</p>
<p>The cool sweetness of it filled their lungs.
The sudden effect was almost intoxicating.
A wild desire to laugh and shout
and sing came over them. Then gradually
three human faces and a ghostly shaped
aerophane emerged out of nothingness.
They could see one another plainly now;
they felt the upward rush; they were
passing through a misty envelope
that twisted and curled like live
ropes. Another minute and they
were beyond the fog belt.</p>
<p>They looked at one another
and laughed. All three of
them were blackened and
grimed and greasy, smothered
from head to foot in fatty soot
flakes. Three more disreputable
looking ruffians it would
have been hard to imagine.
There was something grotesque
in the reflection that every
Londoner was the same.</p>
<p>It was light now, broad daylight,
with a round globe of sun
climbing up out of the pearly
mists in the East. They revelled
in the brightness and the
light. Below them lay the thick
layers of fog that would be a
shroud in earnest if nothing
came to dispel it.</p>
<p>"We're a thousand feet above
the city," Eldred said presently.
"We had better pay out five
hundred feet of cable."</p>
<p>To a hook at the end of a
flexible wire Hackness attached
a large bomb filled with a
certain high explosive.
Through the eye of the
hook another wire—an
electric one—was
attached. The
whole thing was
carefully lowered
to the full extent
of the cable. Two
anxious faces
peered from the
car. Grimfern
appeared to be
playing carelessly with
a polished switch spliced into
the wire. But his hands were
shaking.</p>
<p>Eldred nodded. He had no words to spare
just then.</p>
<p>Grimfern's forefinger pressed the polished
button, there was a snap and almost immediately
a roar and a rush of air that set the aerophane
rocking violently. All about them the
clouds were spinning, below the foggy envelope
was twisted and torn as smoke is blown away
from a huge stack by a high wind.</p>
<p>"Look," Hackness yelled. "Look at
that!"</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/london_in_daylight.jpg" width-obs="400" alt="" /> <div class="caption">The brilliant light of day shone through down into London as from a gigantic skylight.</div>
</div>
<p>He pointed downwards. The force of the
explosion had literally torn a hole in the
dense foggy curtain. The brilliant light of
day shone through down into London as
from a gigantic skylight.</p>
<p>This is what the amazed inhabitants of
central London saw as they rushed out of
their houses after what they imagined to be
a shock of earthquake. The effect was
weird, wonderful, one never to be forgotten.
From a radius of half a mile from St. Paul's,
London was flooded with brilliant light.
People rubbed their eyes, unable to face the
sudden and blinding glare. They gasped
and thrilled with exultation as a column of
fresh sweet air rushed to fill the vacuum. As
yet they knew nothing of the cause.
That brilliant shaft of light showed strange
things. Every pavement was black as ink,
the fronts of the houses looked as if they had
been daubed over with pitch. The roads
were dark with fatty soot. On Ludgate Hill
were dozens of vehicles from which the horses
had been detached. There were numerous
motor cars apparently lacking owners. A
pickpocket sat in the gutter with a pile of
costly trinkets about him, gems that glittered
in the mud. These things had been collected
before the fog grew beyond endurance. Now
they were about as useful to the thief as an
elephant might have been.</p>
<p>At the end of five minutes the curtain fell
again. The flying, panic-stricken pickpocket
huddled down once more with a frightened
curse.</p>
<p>But London was no longer alarmed. A
passing glimpse of the aerophane had been
seen, and better informed folks knew what
was taking place. Presently another explosion
followed, tearing the curtain away over
Hampstead; for the next two hours the
explosions continued at short intervals. There
were tremendous outbursts of cheering
whenever the relief came.</p>
<p>Presently a little light seemed to be
coming. Ever and again it was possible for
a man to see his hands before his face.
Above the fog banks a wrack of cloud had
gathered, the aerophane was coated with a
glittering mist. An hour before it had been
perfectly fair overhead. Then it began to
rain in earnest. The constant explosions
had summoned up and brought down the
rain as the heavy discharge of artillery used
to do in the days of the Boer War.</p>
<p>It came down in a drenching stream that
wetted the occupants of the aerophane to the
skin. They did not seem to mind. The
exhilaration of the fresh sweet air was still in
their veins, they worked on at their bombs
till the last ounce of the high explosives was
exhausted.</p>
<p>And the rain was falling over London.
Wherever a hole was torn in the curtain, the
rain was seen to fall—black rain as thick as
ink and quite as disfiguring. The whole city
wore a suit of mourning.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/rain_seen_to_fall.jpg" width-obs="400" alt="" /> <div class="caption">Wherever a hole was torn in the curtain, the rain was seen to fall.</div>
</div>
<p>"The cloud is passing away." Eldred
cried. "I can see the top of St. Paul's."</p>
<p>Surely enough, the cross seemed to lift
skyward. Bit by bit and inch by inch the
panorama of London slowly unfolded itself.
Despite the sooty flood—a flood gradually
growing cleaner and sweeter every moment—the
streets were filled with people gazing up
in fascination at the aerophane.</p>
<p>The tumult of their cheers came upwards.
It was their thanks for the forethought and
scientific knowledge that had proved to be
the salvation of London. As a matter of
fact, the high explosives had only been the
indirect means of preserving countless
lives. The conjuring up of that heavy rain
had been the real salvation. It had condensed
the fog and beaten it down to earth in a
sooty flow of water. It was a heavy, sloppy,
gloomy day, such as London ever enjoys the
privilege of grumbling over, but nobody
grumbled now. The blessed daylight had
come back, it was possible to fill the lungs
with something like pure air once more, and
to realise the simple delight of living.</p>
<p>Nobody minded the rain, nobody cared an
atom for the knowledge that he
was a little worse and a little
more grimy than the dirtiest
sweep alive. What did it matter
so long as everybody was alike?
Looking down, the trio in the
aerophane could see London
grow mad, grave men skipping
about in the rain like school-boys
at the first fall of snow.</p>
<p>"We had better get down,"
said Grimfern. "Otherwise we
shall have an ovation ready for
us, and, personally, I should prefer
a breakfast. In a calm like
this we need not have any difficulty
in making Regent's Park
safely."</p>
<p>The valve was opened and the
great car dropped like a flashing
bird. They saw the rush in the
streets, they could hear the tramp
of feet now. They dropped at
length in what looked like a yelling
crowd of demented
Hottentots.</p>
<h4>VI.</h4>
<p>The aerophane was
safely housed once more,
the yelling mob had
departed. London was
bent upon one of its
occasional insane
holidays. The
pouring rain did
not matter one
jot—had not the
rain proved to be
the salvation of
the great city?
What did it
matter that the
streets were black
and the people
blacker still? The
danger was
averted. "We
will go out and explore presently,"
said Grimfern.
"Meanwhile, breakfast. A thing
like this must never occur again, Hackness."</p>
<p>Hackness sincerely hoped not. Cynthia
Grimfern came out to meet them. A liberal
application of soap and water had rendered
her sweet and fair, but it was impossible to
keep clean for long. Everywhere lay
evidences of the fog.</p>
<p>"It's lovely to be able to see and breathe
once more," she said. "Last night every
moment I felt as if I must be suffocated.
To-day it is like suddenly finding Paradise."</p>
<p>"A sooty paradise," Grimfern growled.</p>
<p>Cynthia laughed a little hopelessly.</p>
<p>"It's dreadful," she said. "I have had no
table-cloth laid, it is useless. But the table
itself is clean, and that is something. I
don't think London will ever be perfectly
clean again."</p>
<p>The reek was still upon the great city, the
taint of it hung upon the air. By one o'clock
it had ceased raining and the sky cleared.
A startled sun looked down on strange things.
There was a curious thickness about the
trees in Regent's Park, they were as black as
if they had been painted. The pavements were
greasy and dangerous to pedestrians in a
hurry.</p>
<p>There was a certain jubilation still to be
observed, but the black melancholy desolation
was bound to depress the most exuberant
spirits. For the last three days everything
had been at a standstill.</p>
<p>In the thickly populated districts the
mortality amongst little children had been
alarmingly high. Those who had any
tendency to lung or throat or chest troubles
died like flies before the first breath of frost.
The evening papers, coming out as usual, a
little late in the day, had many a gruesome
story to tell. It was the harvest of the scare-line
journalist, and he lost no chance. He
scented his gloomy copy and tracked it down
unerringly.</p>
<p>Over two thousand children—to say nothing
of elderly people—had died in the East End.
The very small infants had had no chance
at all.</p>
<p>The Lord Mayor promptly started a
Mansion House fund. There would be
work and to spare presently. Meanwhile
tons upon tons of machinery stood idle until
it could be cleaned; all the trade of London
was disorganised.</p>
<p>The river and the docks had taken a
dreadful toll. Scores of labourers and sailors,
overtaken by the sudden scourge, had
blundered into the water to be seen no more.
The cutting off of the railways and other
communications that brought London its
daily bread had produced a temporary, but
no less painful lack of provisions.</p>
<p>"It's a lamentable state of things," Grimfern
said moodily as the two trudged back to
Regent's Park later in the evening. It was
impossible to get a cab for the simple reason
that there was not one in London fit to be
used. "But I don't see how we are going to
better it. We can dispel the fogs, but not
before they have done terrible damage."</p>
<p>"There is an easy way out of the
difficulty," Eldred said quietly.
The others turned eagerly to listen. As a
rule Eldred did not speak until he had
thought the matter deliberately out.</p>
<p>"Abolish all fires throughout the Metropolitan
area," he said. "In time it will <i>have</i>
to be done. All London must warm itself
and cook its food and drive all its machinery
by electric power. Then it will be one of the
healthiest towns in the universe. Everything
done by electric power. No thousands of
chimneys belching forth black poisonous
smoke, but a clear, pure atmosphere. In
towns like Brighton, where the local authorities
have grappled the question in earnest, electric
power is half the cost of gas.</p>
<p>"If only London combined it would be less
than that. No dirt, no dust, no smell, no
smoke! The magnificent system at Brighton
never cost the ratepayers anything, indeed a
deal of the profit has gone to the relief of
the local burdens. Perhaps this dire calamity
will rouse London to a sense of its dangers—but
I doubt it."</p>
<p>Eldred shook his head despondingly at the
dark chaos of the park. Perhaps he was
thinking of the victims that the disaster had
claimed. The others had followed sadly, and
Grimfern, leading the way into his house,
banged the door on the darkening night.</p>
<blockquote><p>(<i>Next month Mr. F. M. White will tell the story
of a terrible London water famine, entitled "The
River of Death."</i>)</p>
</blockquote>
<p class = "transnote">[Transcriber's Note: In the event "The Dust of Death" was the next story to
appear in <i>Pearson's Magazine</i>. "The River of Death" would be the last.]</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />