Philip Wylie & Edwin Balmer - After Worlds Collide

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After Worlds Collide
By
Philip Wylie
And
Edwin Balmer
FOREWORD
Early in the middle third of the twentieth century a brilliant astronomer named
Sven Bronson observed through a telescope in South Africa that two bodies
were moving through space toward the solar system.
Bronson's calculations revealed to him that these wandering spheres would
pass very close to the earth, make a circuit of our sun, and turn back toward
space and infinity. The larger of the two wandering worlds would strike and
annihilate the earth. Finer and more delicate calculations tended to show that
the smaller body, which was of the same magnitude as the earth, would be
"caught" by the sun and held in an orbit between the courses of Mars and
Venus.
In other words, Bronson's discovery was an announcement of the end of the
world.
It would be an end of the world preceded by the close passage of two mighty
planets from some sun lost in the void— two planets which had been pulled
from their pathways ages ago by a passing star. The world would be replaced by
a new earth whose pathway would take it alternately out to the cold orbit of
Mars and back again to the vicinity of Venus.
The bodies were named for their discoverer: the larger one, Bronson Alpha, and
the smaller, Bronson Beta.
Sven Bronson knew the horrors that would attend the announcement of his
awful findings.
He and Lord Rhondin, the Governor of the South African Dominion, summoned
David Ransdell, a war veteran and flier, to carry the tangible demonstration to
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an American scientist, Cole Hendron. Ransdell started out with photographic
plates which proved the discovery.
Cole Hendron, the greatest astrophysicist and engineer of the century, had
already been notified of the approaching doom. He and his daughter Eve, who
acted as his assistant, checked Bronson's calculations.
There was no doubt. The earth was doomed.
Hendron, Bronson and others united the foremost scientists of the world in a
secret organization known as "The League of the Last Days" and these men
kept the information from the public for some time. Among the first laymen to
know, or guess the truth were Ransdell, the flier, and Anthony Drake, a young
New York man-about-town who was in love with Eve Hendron.
Most of the informed scientists were ready to resign themselves to universal
destruction. Cole Hendron, however, perceived a possibility of escape: if the
planet which was to occupy the earth's position were habitable, and if a vessel
capable of transporting human beings and their possessions through a few
hundred thousand miles of space could be made, a small and select group of
people might "jump" from the doomed earth to the new arrival in the solar
system. This group could then set about reestablishing mankind on a new
earth.
Hendron and his assistants set to work at once. Atomic energy adequate to
drive such a vessel exactly as a rocket is propelled was released in his
laboratories. At first it could not be harnessed, as it fused everything with
which it came in contact. Nevertheless Hendron persisted in his plans for the
space ship. The "Ark" was the name given to the ship eventually built.
For its construction, Hendron established a vast manufacturing city in
Michigan, and to it he took a thousand selected human beings—men and
women with scientific training, healthy physiques, and great courage.
While Hendron labored frantically, the world found out what was in store for it.
Society disintegrated. The first, and relatively harmless "passage" of the
Bronson bodies would be sufficiently close to cause vast terrestrial disturbances
—tides, cyclones, terrific volcanic disturbances, and earthquakes. All the
seacoast cities of the world were evacuated. New York, Boston, Philadelphia
were cleared of their population, which was moved inland at the order of the
President.
One bit of fortune came in the discovery of a new metal in the material forced
from the depths of the earth during the great eruptions. Ransdell found it and
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brought it to camp where Hendron tested it. This metal proved able to
withstand the heat of the atomic blast. The problem of propulsion of the "Ark"
was solved.
In the fantastic days that followed, Hendron and his band manufactured the
Ark, and found time and materials to make a second ship so that the balance of
their heroic group could be transported to Bronson Beta and not sacrificed. The
Michigan cantonment was attacked by bloodthirsty and hungry mobs. The first
passage killed more than half of the people of the earth. Continents split apart.
Seas rose. The internal fires of the earth burst to the surface. The moon was
smashed to atoms.
Months afterward the celestial wanderers rounded the sun and returned.
Hendron's two ships "took off" for Bronson Beta. Other ships, frantically
constructed by other nations, also leaped into space as doom fell upon our
world.
Bronson Alpha annihilated the earth and moved into the void.
Bronson Beta swung into a course about our sun.
Upon it, Hendron brought down the "Ark." With him was a company of a
hundred and three human beings. Tony Drake was one of them, and his
Japanese servant, Kyto. Eliot James, the diarist and historian of the party was
in the "Ark." So was Dodson, the surgeon, and Duquesne, the French physicist
who had been saved at the eleventh hour as the Ark stood ready to rise from
Holocaust.
A safe landing was made. The air of Bronson Beta was found to be breathable.
But there was no word of the second ship—the vessel under Ransdell's
command which had left with them. It was given up for lost Ransdell, who also
loved Eve, was presumed to have died somewhere in space with his brave
companions— Jack Taylor, the college boy who had become one of Tony's best
friends, and Peter Vanderbilt, the cynical and fearless New Yorker, and Greve
and Smith, and four hundred others.
The arrivals on Bronson Beta could rouse no answer to their radio signals.
They were forced into the awful realization that of all humanity they alone
survived. They were alone on an unknown world where a nameless and dead
race had once built cities—on a world which had been drifting through the
absolute zero of space for nameless millenia. They faced the problem of
survival. Responsibility for the future of the species was theirs.
Resolutely, they turned to their prodigious task.
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CHAPTER I THE FIRST DAY ON THE NEW PLANET
Eliot James sat at a metal desk inside the space ship which had conveyed a few
score human beings from the doomed earth to safety on the sun's new planet
Bronson Beta. In front of Eliot James was his already immemorial diary, and
over it he poised a fountain pen.
He had written several paragraphs:
"April—what shall I call it? Is it the 2nd day of April, or is it the first? Have we,
the last survivors of the earth, landed upon our new planet on All Fools Day?
That would be ironic, and yet trivial in the face of all that has happened. But as
I meditate on the date, I am in doubt about how to express time in my diary.
"The earth is gone—smashed to fragments; and the companion of its destroying
angel, upon which our band of one hundred and three Argonauts holds so brief
and hazardous a residence, is still without names, seasons and months. But
April has vanished with the earth; and for all I know, spring, winter, summer
and fall may also be absent in the new world.
"I have pledged myself to write in this diary every day, as Hendron assures me
there will be no other record of our adventures here until we have become well
enough established to permit the compilation of a formal history. And yet it is
with the most profound difficulty that I compel myself to set down words on
this, man's first morning in his new home.
"What shall I say?
"That question in truth must be read by the future generations as a cry at once
of ecstasy and despair. Ecstasy because even while the heavens fell upon them,
my companions remained firm and courageous—because in the face of
earthquakes, tornadoes, bloody battles and the unimaginable holocaust of
Destruction Day itself, they not only preserved whatever claims the race of man
may have to majesty, but by their ingenuity they escaped from the earth to this
new planet, which has invaded and attached itself to our solar system.
"And I am in despair not only because, so far as we can tell, all but one
hundred and three members of the human race have perished, not only
because my friends, my home, the cities that were familiar to me, the trees and
flowers I knew, the rivers and the oceans, the scent of the wind and the
accustomed aspects of the sky have forevermore disappeared from the universe,
and not only because I am incapable of setting down the emotions to which
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those cosmic calamities give rise, but for another reason: as vast, as stirring, as
overwhelming to the mind as those foregoing, the responsibility for half a billion
years of evolution which terminated in man rests upon myself and one hundred
and two others.
"They stand there in the sunshine under the strange sky on our brown earth—
forty-three men, fifty-seven women, two children. They have been singing—a
medley of songs which under other circumstances might seem irrelevant. Many
of them are foreigners and do not know the words, but they also sing—with
tears streaming down their faces and a catch in their voices. They sang ‘The
Processional' and they sang 'Nearer, My God, to Thee.' After that they sang
'Hail, Hail, the Gang's All Here.' Then they sang 'The Marseillaise' with
Duquesne leading—leading and bellowing the words, and weeping.
"What a spectacle! Beside it, the picture of Leif Ericsson or Columbus reaching
green shores at last is dimmed to insignificance. For those ancient explorers
found the path to a mere continent, while this band has blazed a trail of fire
through space to a new planet.
"Cole Hendron is there, his magnificent head thrown back, and his face grave
under its thatch of newly whitened hair. No doubt replicas of Hendron's head
will be handed down through the ages, if ages are to follow us. His daughter
Eve has been near him, and near to Tony Drake. In young Drake one sees the
essence of the change which has taken place in all the members of our
company. The fashionable, gay-hearted New Yorker is greatly changed. So
many times in the past two years has he resigned himself to death, and so
many times has he escaped from it only through courage, audacity and good
fortune, that he seems superior to death. His face is no longer precisely young,
and it contains, side by side, elements of the stoniest inflexibility and the most
willing unselfishness. I have no doubt that if this colony survives, when the
time comes to bury our leader and our hero,—the incomparable Cole Hendron,
—it will be Drake who supersedes him in command. For by that day I am sure
the great person in that young man will have availed itself of all our technical
knowledge as a mere corollary of his remarkable character.
"And now,"—the pen wavered,—"to what I imagine whimsically as the new
future readers of my notes, I make an apology. This is our first day on Bronson
Beta. My impatience has exhausted my conscience. I must lay down my pen,
leave the remarkable ship wherein I write, and go but upon the face of this
earth untrod by man. I can restrain myself no longer."
Eliot James stepped to the gangplank that had been laid down from the Ark.
The earth around the huge metal cylinder had been melted by the blasts of its
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