IT had rained in torrents all the way down from Schenectady, so when Jack Duane glimpsed the lights of what looked to be a big house through the trees, he braked his battered, convertible sedan to a stop at the side of the road.
Mud lay along the fenders and running boards; mud and water had spumed up and freckled Duaneโs face and hat. He pulled off the latterโit was soggyโand slapped it on the seat beside him, leaning out and squinting through the darkness and falling water.
He was on the last lap of a two weeksโ journey from San Francisco, his objective being New York City. There he hoped to wangle a job as foreign correspondent from an old crony, J. J. Molloy, now editor of the New York Globe. Adventurer, journalist, globetrotter, Duane was of the type that is always on the move.
โItโs a place, anyway, Moses,โ he said to the large black man beside him, his servitor and bodyguard, who had accompanied him everywhere for the past three years. โSomebody lives there; they ought to have some gas.โ
โYasah,โ said Moses, staring past Duaneโs shoulder, โitโs a funny-looking place, suh.โ
Duane agreed. Considering that they were seventy miles from New York, in the foothills of the Catskills, with woods all around them and the rain pouring down, the thing they saw through the trees, some three hundred yards from the country road, was indeed peculiar. It looked more like a couple of Pullman cars coupled together and lighted, than like a farmerโs dwelling.
โFenced in, too,โ said Duane, pointing to the high steel fence that bordered the road, separating them from the object of their vision. โAnd look thereโโ
A fitful flash of lightning in the east, illuminating the distant treetops, showed up the towering steel and network of a high-voltage electric lineโs tower.
The roving journalist muttered something to express his puzzlement, and got out of the car. Moses followed him. โWell,โ said Duane presently, when they had stared a moment longer, โwhatever it is, Iโm barging in. Weโve got to have some gas or weโll never make New York tonight.โ
MOSES agreed. The two men started across the roadโthe big Negro hatless and wearing a slickerโthe reporter in a belted trench coat, his brown felt hat pulled out of shape on his head.
โItโs a big thing,โ Duane said as he and Moses halted at the fence and peered through. Distantly, he could see now that the mysterious structure in the woods was at least a hundred yards long, flat-topped and black as coal except from narrow shafts of light that came from its windows. โAnd look at the light coming out of the roof.โ
That was, indeed, the most peculiar feature of this place they had discovered. From a section of the roof near the center, as though through a skylight, a great white light came out, illuminating the slanting rain and the bending trees.