<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p>The astounded Polter was taken wholly by surprise. He
had no idea that anyone was following him. He thought he
was alone with tiny Babs in this rock-strewn metal desert.
What he saw as he scrambled to his feet were four insect-size
humans, two of them at a distance, and two within
reach of him, and all of them scampering in different directions.
The ground was littered with crags and boulders; it was
ridged and pitted, pock-marked, with tiny crater-holes and
caves. The four scuttling figures almost instantly had disappeared
from his sight.</p>
<p>I did not see where Babs went. I turned from the black
vial of Polter's enlarging drug, and with the huge pellet
under my arm I ran leaping over the rough ground and flung
myself into a gully. I lay prone, flattened against a rock. In
the murky distance of a pseudo-sky overhead, the monstrous
head and shoulders of Polter were visible. I could see down
to just below his waist. The empty cage with its door flapping
open hung against his shirt-front. He had stooped to try and
recover Babs. And instinctively his hands went to his belt to
seize his enlarging drug.</p>
<p>They were fumbling there now. He hauled out an opalescent<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</SPAN></span>
vial of the diminishing element. But his black vial was
gone. His annoyance turned into fear as he searched for it in
the other compartments of his belt. I had thought that he
had more than one black vial, but now it seemed not. His
huge face was swept with the panic of terror. He glanced
wildly around him.</p>
<p>Through the open end of my gully I saw in the distance,
miles away, the enlarging figure of Alan rising up. Then it
ducked in back of a distant rising peak. Polter undoubtedly
saw it. He was fumbling with his opalescent vial. In his
confused panic he made the mistake of taking the diminishing
drug and instantly seemed to regret it. His curse rumbled
above me. His glance went down to the rocks at his feet, and
there he saw his black vial lying with its stopper out. His
body already was beginning to dwindle. He stooped, seized
the vial, and took the enlarging drug. The shock of it mode
him stagger; momentarily he disappeared from my line of
vision but I could hear his panting breath and the unsteady
pound of his footsteps.</p>
<p>I still held that huge round ball of the drug. I seized a
loose stone and frantically knocked off a chunk-heaven
knows how much. I shoved it into my mouth, chewed and
hastily swallowed it. And with the lurching, swaying, shrinking
gully closing in upon me, I ran to get out of its distant
end.</p>
<p>I was heading toward where Alan and his father were
hiding. I came from the gully into the open, just as the
walls closed behind me. The whole scene was a dizzying,
blurred sway of contracting movement. I saw that I was in
a circular valley now some five miles in diameter, with its
jagged enclosing walls rising sheerly perpendicular out of
sight in the haze overhead.</p>
<p>Polter had staggered backward. I saw him a mile or so
away. His back at that instant was turned to me. He was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</SPAN></span>
now no more than three or four times my own height. He
scrambled against the valley cliff wall as though trying to
find a foothold to climb up it. He went a little way, but
fell back.</p>
<p>Near me, Alan and old Dr. Kent suddenly appeared. I
was larger than they. Alan gasped with surprise.</p>
<p>"You, George! You got Babs—"</p>
<p>"Yes—Babs is around somewhere! Stay down here! Don't
lose her in size! Stay small! Search and—"</p>
<p>"But, George—"</p>
<p>"I'll tackle Polter. I've taken—God, I don't know how much
I've taken of the drug!"</p>
<p>They were shrinking down by my boot tops. Alan shouted
suddenly, "There's Babs! Thank God, she's all right."</p>
<p>She was so small that I couldn't see her, or even hear her,
though she must have been calling to them. Alan again
screamed up at me with his little voice:</p>
<p>"She's here, George! You—go on and get Polter! I can't
overtake you—haven't enough of the drug!" His tiny voice
was fading away. "Go and get him, George! This time—get
him—"</p>
<p>I swung with a staggering step around to face the open
valley. It had by now shrunk to nearly half a mile in width.
Its smooth walls rose some two or three thousand feet to an
upper circular horizon with murky distance overhead. Polter
stood across from me. He had tried to climb out but could
not. He saw me and came lurching. We were a quarter of
a mile from each other. I ran forward through a shifting
scene of shrinking rock walls and crawling, contracting
ground. Quarter of a mile? It seemed hardly more than a
score of running strides before Polter loomed close ahead of
me. He was still nearly twice my size. I stooped, seized a
loose boulder, and flung it. I missed his face, but, as his
hand went up carrying a bare knife, by fortunate chance,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</SPAN></span>
the stone struck his wrist. The knife dropped to the rocks.
He stooped to recover it, but I was upon him. As I felt his
huge arms go about me, half lifting me, my foot struck the
knife. But in an instant it was swept down into smallness
beneath us as we expanded above it.</p>
<p>Both of us now were unarmed in this combat of size. I was
an immature youth in Polter's first grip upon me. I heard
his panting words, grimly triumphant:</p>
<p>"This—George Randolph, I haf been—waiting for so many
years! The hunchback—takes his revenge—now—"</p>
<p>He lifted me. His great arms were unbelievably powerful,
but I could feel them dwindling. I was enlarging faster. Just
a few moments—if I could last a few moments.... My
feet were off the ground, my chest pressed close against the
little cage between us. He had a hand shoving back my head;
his fingers sought my throat. I wound my legs around him,
and then he tried to throw me down and fall upon me. But
he had twisted and my back was against the cliff. The rocks
were shoving at us, insistently pushing with almost a living
movement. Polter staggered with me. His grip on my throat
tightened, shutting off my breath. My senses whirled. His
grim sardonic face over me became blurred. I tore futilely
at my throat to break his choking grip. All the world was a
roaring chaos to my fading senses. Then in the blur I saw
horror sweep his expression. His fingers involuntarily loosened.
I got a breath of blessed air, gasping, and my sight cleared.</p>
<p>Walls were closing around us! We were in a pit barely
ten feet wide, with the top a few feet above Polter's head.
The nearer wall shoved us again. Our bodies almost filled
the shrinking pit! Polter lurched and cast me off. I half
fell, striking my shoulder against the opposite wall, and I
saw Polter leap at the dwindling brink and scramble out.</p>
<p>I was nearly wedged. As I rose, the top of the pit only
reached my waist. Polter had fallen on the upper ground,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</SPAN></span>
and was on hands and knees. Instead of standing up, he
lurched at me trying to shove me back. But I was out; I
clutched at him. We were almost of a size now. We rolled on
the ground, locked together; rolled to the brink of the pit
and over it, as it shrank to a little round hole unnoticed
beneath our threshing bodies!</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>At the side of the circular valley Alan and Dr. Kent
crouched with the smaller figure of Babs between them. They
saw Polter and me as two swaying gigantic forms locked in
a death struggle, towering against the sky. Tremendous
expanded bodies! They saw us come to grips; saw the great
hunched Polter bend me backward, choking me.</p>
<p>Our bodies lurched. Our huge legs with a single step
brought us to the center of the valley. It was a shrinking
valley to Alan, Babs and Dr. Kent, for they too, were enlarging.
But the fighting giant figures were growing faster.
In only a moment their shoulders were up there in the sky,
pressing against the narrowing cliff walls.</p>
<p>Alan gasped, "But George will be crushed! Look at him!"</p>
<p>Horror swept them as they crouched, watching. The
enormous pillars of Polter's legs towered straight up from
near at hand. Alan was aware of himself screaming:</p>
<p>"George, get out! You're too large! Too large for in here!"</p>
<p>As though his microscopic voice could reach me—my head
a hundred feet above him. But he screamed it again. This
was all in a few horrible moments, though it seemed to the
three watchers an eternity. Alan was helpless to aid me;
they had taken all of the enlarging drug they had.</p>
<p>Then they saw Polter cast me off. I lurched and struck,
with my shoulders wedged against the cliff directly over
where they crouched. The overhead sky was darkened as
Polter scrambled upward.</p>
<p>Alan was still screaming futilely.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Babs huddled with white horrified face, staring. Then I
went out after Polter. My disappearing legs were great
dark blurs in the sky. Alan saw the valley now contracted
to a thousand feet of width, with its cliffs equally as high.
Then everything was smaller.... The sky overhead went
dark again from cliff to cliff as a segment of rolling bodies
momentarily spanned the opening.</p>
<p>Presently Alan realized that the valley had narrowed to
a pit. He stood up. "Hurry! Now we can go after them. Up
there!"</p>
<p>The opening above was empty. Polter and I were fighting
some distance away....</p>
<p>Dr. Kent was soon large enough to scramble out of the
pit. Alan handed the little Babs up to him and followed.
Alan saw that they were now in a long gully, blind at one
end with a five hundred foot perpendicular cliff. Against the
wall, the Titanic form of Polter stood at bay. And I was
confronting him. The summit of the cliff was lower than our
waists. Triumph swept Alan; he saw that I was the larger!
As Polter bored into me my backward step crossed the full
width of the gully. Alan shouted:</p>
<p>"Down! Babs—Father!"</p>
<p>They had barely time to flatten themselves in a narrow
crevice between upstanding rocks before my foot crashed
down. For an instant the sole of my foot formed a flat black
ceiling as it spanned the rocks. Then it lifted and was gone
with a blurred swoop. They saw the white blur of my hand
come down and snatch a tremendous boulder, raising it with
a great sweep of movement into the sky. They saw me crash
it against Polter; but it only struck his shoulder. He roared
with anger. The whole sky was roaring and rumbling with
our shouts and our panting breathing, and the ground was
clattering, pounding with our giant tread. Huge loose boulders
were tumbled in an avalanche everywhere.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Again it seemed to Alan that our lurching, heedlessly
surging bodies must be crushed within these contracting
walls. Only our locked, intertwined legs were visible; our
bodies were lost in the sky. Then it seemed to Alan that I
had heaved Polter upward. And followed him. We disappeared.
There was a distant overhead rumble, and the murky
sky, with vague patches of far-distant illumination in it,
became empty of movement....</p>
<p>The walls presently were again closing upon Alan and his
companions. They ran out of the open end of the shrinking
little gully and came to a new upward vista....</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>I found myself a full head and shoulders taller than
Polter. And he was tiring, panting heavily. His face was cut
and bleeding from the blows of my fist. The rock I heaved
struck his shoulder. He roared, head down, and bored into
me. He was heavier than I. His weight flung me back. My
foot slid on the loose stones of the gully floor. I did not know
that Babs, Alan and their father were huddled under those
stones!</p>
<p>My back struck the opposite wall. Polter's upflung knee
caught me in the stomach, all but knocking the breath out
of me. He was desperate, oblivious to the closing walls. And
as he flung his arms with a grip about my neck, hanging,
trying to bear down, I saw in his blazing dark eyes what
seemed the light of suicide. I think that then, with a sudden
frenzied madness he realized that he was beaten, and tried
to pull us to the ground and let the walls crush us.</p>
<p>I summoned all my remaining strength and heaved us
forward. I broke his hold. His body was jammed back against
a lowering wall. Its top seemed almost at our knees. I shoved
frantically. He fell backward and I jumped after him.</p>
<p>We were on a great rocky plateau. But it was shrinking,
crawling into itself. Spots of light were in the murk overhead:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</SPAN></span>
there seemed a distant circular horizon of emptiness around
us.</p>
<p>Polter was lying in a heap. But it was trickery, for as I
incautiously bent over him his hand crashed a rock against
my head. I reeled, with all the world turning black, but
didn't fall. There was a terrible instant when my senses
were going, but I fought to hold them. Blood from a
wound on my forehead was streaming in my eyes. I was
staggering. Then I realized that I was grimly tossing my head,
shaking the blood away; and little by little my sight came
back.</p>
<p>Polter was on his feet, rushing me. His fist came with an
upward swing at my chin, but I ducked.</p>
<p>And suddenly, fighting up there in the open, my mind
envisioned how gigantic we were! This was a great upland
plateau, rounded with miles of distance and shadowy dimly
radiant abyss beyond its circular horizon. And I was a
thousand feet or more tall! A Titan, looming here in the sky!</p>
<p>My fist quite unexpectedly caught Polter's jaw. His simultaneous
swing went wild, as I leapt backward from it. He
staggered, and his arms dropped to his sides. I was crouched
forward, guarded, watching him while I gasped for breath.
There was the briefest of instant when an expression of
vague surprise swept his face. But I had not knocked him
out.</p>
<p>It was death overtaking him. His heart was yielding,
overtaxed from the strain; and I think that there, at the
last, he realized it. The blood drained suddenly from his
face and lips, leaving them livid. I saw fear, then a wild
horror in his eyes. He stood swaying. Then his knees gave
way and he toppled. He fell from his height in the air where
I stood gazing at him—fell forward on his face, his Titanic
length spread all across the top of this rocky landscape!</p>
<p>For a moment I did not move. My head was reeling, my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</SPAN></span>
ears roaring. Blood streamed into my eyes. I wiped it away
with a torn sleeve and stood panting, gazing at the glowing
distance around me.</p>
<p>I was a Titan, standing there. The body of Polter was
shrinking at my feet. The circular abyss of emptiness came
nearer as this rocky eminence contracted.</p>
<p>Suddenly my attention went to the sky overhead. Vague
distant lights were there. Then a broad flat blur seemed
spread over me. Light everywhere was growing. Beyond the
nearby brink of the abyss was a white reflected radiance
from beneath. Abruptly I realized there was a level, flat
white plain running far off there in the distance.</p>
<p>Overhead a radiance contracted into a spot of light. A
shape in the sky moved! I heard a faraway rumble—a human
voice!</p>
<p>The body of Polter lay at my feet. It was hardly the
length of my forearm. I stood, a Titan.</p>
<p>And then, with a shock of realization, I saw how tiny I
was! This was the broken top of that fragment of golden
quartz the size of a walnut! I was standing there, under the
lens of the giant microscope in Polter's dome-room laboratory,
with half a dozen astounded Quebec police officials
peering down at me!</p>
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