The Blind Spot, page 270 by Austin Hall
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just as substantial as our own. Moreover--somewhere, somehow, here must be a definite point of contact!
"That was approximately my theory. Of course I had no idea how close I had come to a great truth. To some extent it was pure guesswork.
"Then, one day Budge Kennedy brought me the blue stone. He told me its history, and he maintained that it was lighter than air, which of course I disbelieved until I took it out of the ring and saw for myself.
"I went at once to the house at 288 Chatterton Place. There I found an old lady who had lived in the house for some time. I asked to see the cellar where the stone had been unearthed. Understand, I had no idea of the great discovery I was about to make; I merely wanted to see. And I found something almost as impossible as the blue stone itself-a green one, heavier than any known mineral, answering to no known classification but of an entirely new element. It was no larger than a pea, but of incredible weight.
"Coming upstairs I found the old lady a bit perturbed. I had told her my name; she had recognised me as well.
"'Come with me,' she said.
"With that she opened a door. She was very old and very uncertain; yet she was scarcely afraid.
"'In there," she said, and pointed through the door.
"I entered an ordinary room, furnished as a parlour. There was a sofa, a table, a few chairs; little else.
"'What do you mean?' I asked.
"'The man!'
"'The man! What man?"
"'Oh!' she exclaimed, 'he came here one night when the moon was shining. He sat down on the doorstep. He was just the kind of a lad that's in need of a mother. So I asked him to lie on the sofa. He was tired, you see, and--I once had a son of my own.'
"She stopped, and it was a moment before she continued. I could feel the pressure of her hand on my arm, pitiful, beseeching.
"'So I took him in there. In there; see? On that sofa. I saw it! They took him! Oh, sir; it was terrible!'
"She was weird, uncanny, strangely