
would have done if we'd woken it up.'
The Professor crawled back to the edge of the crater and peered down, his fear dispersing rapidly.
'Interesting,' he murmured to himself. 'Fascinating, unbelievable! And to think that we should have the
honour of finding it'
'What do you think it is. Professor?' Gavin asked with an arm around Liz. 'Or to be more precise where
do you think it came from? A prehistoric era? Life preserved in the mud?'
Professor Lowson shook his head.
'No,' he replied, 'definitely not. It is not of this earth. That slime is proof enough of that. I would say that
somehow it has come from another world - a distant planet; another galaxy. Somewhere where it lives
beneath greyish-green mud. Though how or why it is here is beyond me.'
That's crazy,' Gavin laughed. Hollow and unconvincingly. 'A beast from another planet! There has to be a
logical explanation somewhere. Maybe it's come from a zoo, or a safari park. Caught up in the wilds of
South America or some such place, then escaped.'
Professor Lowson rarely laughed. He did now, but there was no mirth in it, only peals of semi-hysterical
laughter rang out until Gavin and Liz both feared that his mind had snapped. Suddenly he stopped. He
was rational again and cantankerous.
'No,' he murmured. 'Not even the darkest jungles of the Amazon could produce anything like this. Yet it
has come from somewhere and we have been privileged to find it.'
Dusk was now turning to darkness. A good half-hour's walk lay ahead of them and Gavin did not relish
the idea of losing their way on the saltings. Especially with a loathsome creature like that in the vicinity. It
was sleeping, yes, but surely it must awake sometime.
'We'd better make a move.' He helped 'Liz to her feet 'First thing tomorrow morning I'll get a call through
to the British Museum. This is something they won't want to miss.'
But Lowson's voice stung him like a whiplash. 'No. This is ours. Yours, Liz's, Mine! The greatest
discovery of all time and you would let someone else take the credit for it! Allow ourselves to be merged
into anonymity? Think again, man! Anyway we haven't had a chance to examine it properly yet. We
cannot dismiss it with a cursory examination in the half-light. The best thing we can do is to come back
here tomorrow and have a good look in broad daylight; take a few tests, and then we can decide what
we are going to do.'
Gavin nodded. It seemed logical. Just so long as nobody else found it in the meantime!
Professor Lowson followed Gavin and Liz. He spoke little, his mind occupied with recent events. That
fool Gavin Royle. It was typical of his breed to want to call in the experts right away! Experts! They
would have even less idea of the beast's origin than he had. His theories would be dismissed Somebody
in authority would come up with some preposterous notion. Earliest form of man and all that rot. He
could visualise the small part his own expedition would play in the days that followed. The newspapers
would report the thing as having been 'discovered by a small party searching for King John's lost
treasure'. Maybe even no names would be mentioned. And what would they do with the monster? Most
likely put it in a cage and charge extortionate prices for the public to come and gawp at it! It might even