The Blind Spot eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 417 pages of information about The Blind Spot.

The Blind Spot eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 417 pages of information about The Blind Spot.

“Can you see them?”

“Perfectly.  It is the lady in the corner; she thinks—­”

“That you are a spirit!”

Watson laughed.  “I a spirit?  Try me and see!”

“Certainly,” asserted Mme. Le Fabre.  “You are out of the Blind Spot.  I know; it will prove everything!”

“Ah, yes; the Spot.”  Watson hesitated.  Again the indecision.  There was something latent that he could not recall; though conscious, part of his mind was still in the apparent fog that lingers back into slumber.

“I don’t understand,” he spoke.  “Who are you?”

It was Sir Henry this time.  “Mr. Watson, we are a sort of committee.  This is the house at 288 Chatterton Place.  We are after the great secret that was discovered by Dr. Holcomb.  We were summoned by Hobart Fenton.”

Consciousness is an enigma.  Hitherto Watson had been almost inert; his actions and manner of speech had been mechanical.  That it was the natural result of the strange force that had thrown him out, no one doubted.  The mention of Hobart Fenton jerked him into the full vigour of wide-awake thinking; he straightened himself.

“Hobart!  Hobart Fenton!  Where is he?”

“That we do not know,” answered Sir Henry.  “He was here a moment ago.  It is almost too impossible for belief.  Perhaps you can tell us.”

“You mean—­”

“Exactly.  Into the Blind Spot.  One and the other; your coming was coincident with his going!”

Chick raised up.  Even in that faint light they could appreciate the full vigour of his splendid form.  He was even more of an athlete than in his college days, before the Blind Spot took him.  And when he realised what Sir Henry had said he held up one magnificent arm, almost in the manner of benediction: 

“Hobart has gone through?  Thank Heaven for that!”

It was a puzzle.  True, in that little group there was represented the accumulated wisdom of human effort.  With the possible exception of the general, there was not a sceptic among them.  They were ready to explain almost anything—­but this.

In the natural weakness of futility they had come to associate the aspect of death or terror with the Blind Spot.  Yet, here was Watson!  Watson, alive and strong; he was the reverse of what they had subconsciously expected.

“What is this Blind Spot?” inquired Sir Henry evenly.  “And what do you mean by giving thanks that Fenton has gone into it?”

“Not now.  Not one word of explanation until—­What time is it?” Watson broke off to demand.

They told him.  He began to talk rapidly, with amazing force and decision, and in a manner whose sincerity left no chance for doubt.

“Then we have five hours!  Not one second to lose.  Do what I say, and answer my questions!” Then:  “We must not fail; one slip, and the whole world will be engulfed—­in the unknown!  Turn on the lights.”

There was that in the personality and the vehemence of the man that precluded opposition.  Out of the Blind Spot had come a dynamic quality, along with the man; a quickening influence that made Watson swift, sure, and positive.  Somehow they knew it was a moment of Destiny.

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Project Gutenberg
The Blind Spot from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.