“The network made no bones about her being an alien being. She was represented as a member of a mystery race that Juston Lloyd had found in the Asteroids. You remember Lloyd, the New York press agent.”
Nevin was leaning across the table. “And the people, the government, it does not suspect?”
West shook his head. “Why should it? Your Stella is a wonder. Everyone is batty over her. The newspapers went wild. The movie people—”
“And the cults?”
“The cults,” said West, “are doing fine.”
“And you?” asked Cartwright and in the man’s rumbling voice West felt the challenge.
“I found out,” he said, “I came here to get cut in.”
“You know exactly what you are asking?”
“I do,” said West, wishing that he did.
“A new philosophy,” said Cartwright. “A new concept of life. New paths for progress. Secrets the human race never has suspected. Remaking the human civilization almost overnight.”
“And you,” said West, “right at the center, pulling all the strings.”
“So,” said Cartwright.
“I want a few to pull myself.”
Nevin held up his hand. “Just a minute, Mr. West. We would like to know just how—”
Cartwright laughed at him. “Forget it, Louis. He knew about your painting. He had Annabelle. Where do you suppose he found out?”
“But—but—” said Nevin.
“Maybe he didn’t use a painting,” Cartwright declared. “Maybe he used other methods. After all, there are others, you know. Thousands of years ago men knew of the place we found. Mu, probably. Atlantis. Some other forgotten civilization. Just the fact that West had Annabelle is enough for me. He must have been there.”
West smiled, relieved. “I used other methods,” he told them.
III
The Painting
A robot came in, wheeling a tray with steaming dishes.
“Let’s sit down,” suggested Nevin.
“Just one thing,” asked West. “How did you get Stella back to Earth? None of you could have taken her. You’d have been recognized.”
Cartwright chuckled. “Robertson,” he said. “We had one ship and he slipped out. As to the recognition, Belden is our physician. He also, if you remember, is a plastic surgeon of no mean ability.”
“He did the job,” said Nevin, “for both Robertson and Stella.”
“Nearly skinned us alive,” grumbled Cartwright, “to get enough to do the work, I’ll always think that he took more than he really needed, just for spite. He’s a moody beggar.”
Nevin changed the subject. “Shall we have Rosie sit with us?”
“Rosie?” asked West.
“Rosie is Stella’s sister. We don’t know the exact relationship, but we call her that for convenience.”
“There are times,” explained Cartwright, “when we forget her face and let her sit at the table’s head, as if she were one of us. As if she were our hostess. She looks remarkably like a woman, you know. Those wings of hers are like an ermine cape, and that platinum hair. She lends something to the table … a sort of—”
“An illusion of gentility,” said Nevin.
“Perhaps we’d better not tonight,” decided Cartwright. “Mr. West is not used to her. After he’s been here awhile—”
He stopped and looked aghast.
“We’ve forgotten something,” he announced.
He rose and strode around the table to the imitation fireplace and took down a bottle that stood on the mantelpiece—a bottle with a black silk bow tied around its neck. Ceremoniously, he set it in the center of the table, beside the bowl of fruit.
“It’s a little joke we have,” said Nevin.
“Scarcely a joke,” contradicted Cartwright.
West looked puzzled. “A bottle of whisky?”
“But a special bottle,” Cartwright said. “A very special bottle. Back in the old days we formed a last man’s club, jokingly. This bottle was to be the one the last man would drink. It made us feel so adventuresome and brave and we laughed about it while we labored to find hormones. For, you see, none of us thought it would ever come to pass.”
“But now,” said Nevin, “there are only three of us.”
“You are wrong,” Cartwright reminded him. “There are four.”
Both of them looked at West.
“Of course,” decided Nevin. “There are four of us.”
Cartwright spread the napkin in his lap. “Perhaps, Louis, we might as well let Mr. West see the painting.”
Nevin hesitated. “I’m not quite satisfied, Cartwright. …”
Cartwright clucked his tongue. “You’re too suspicious, Louis. He had the creature, didn’t he? He knew about your painting. There was only one way that he could have learned.”
Nevin considered. “I suppose you’re right,” he said.
“And if Mr. West should, by any chance, turn out to be an impostor,” said Cartwright, cheerfully, “we can always take the proper steps.”
Nevin said to West: “I hope you understand.”
“Perfectly,” said West.
“We must be very careful,” Nevin pointed out. “So few would understand.”
“So very few,” said West.
Nevin stepped across the room and pulled a cord that hung along the wall. One of the tapestries rolled smoothly back, fold on heavy fold. West, watching, held his breath at what he saw.
A tree stood in the foreground, laden with golden fruit, fruit that looked exactly like some of that in the bowl upon the table. As if someone had just stepped into the painting and picked it fresh for dinner.
Under the tree ran a path, coming up to the very edge of the canvas in such detail that even the tiny pebbles strewn upon it were clear to the eye. And from the tree the path ran back against a sweep of background, climbing into wooded hills.
For the flicker of a passing second, West could have sworn that he heard the whisper of wind in the leaves of the fruit-laden tree, that he saw the leaves tremble in the wind, that he smelled the fragrance of little flowers that bloomed along the path.
“Well, Mr. West?” Nevin asked, triumphantly.
“Why,” said West, ears still cocked for the sound of wind in leaves again. “Why, it almost seems as if one could step over and walk straight down that path.”
Nevin sucked in his breath with a sound that was neither gasp nor sigh, but somewhere in between. Down at the end of the table,
