- [list:b8hmaizt]Title: Finis
Author: Frank L. Pollack
First published in 1906
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"I'm getting tired," complained Davis, lounging in the window of the
Physics Building, "and sleepy. It's after eleven o'clock. This makes the
fourth night I've sat up to see your new star, and it'll be the last.
Why, the thing was billed to appear three weeks ago."
"Are _you_ tired, Miss Wardour?" asked Eastwood, and the girl glanced up
with a quick flush and a negative murmur.
Eastwood made the reflection anew that she certainly was painfully shy.
She was almost as plain as she was shy, though her hair had an unusual
beauty of its own, fine as silk and colored like palest flame.
Probably she had brains; Eastwood had seen her reading some extremely
"deep" books, but she seemed to have no amusements, few interests. She
worked daily at the Art Students' League, and boarded where he did, and
he had thus come to ask her with the Davis's to watch for the new star
from the laboratory windows on the Heights.
"Do you really think that it's worth while to wait any longer,
professor?" enquired Mrs Davis, concealing a yawn.
Eastwood was somewhat annoyed by the continued failure of the star to
show itself and he hated to be called "professor", being only an
assistant professor of physics.
"I don't know," he answered somewhat curtly. "This is the twelfth night
that I have waited for it. Of course, it would have been a mathematical
miracle if astronomers should have solved such a problem exactly, though
they've been figuring on it for a quarter of a century."
The new Physics Building of Columbia University was about twelve stories
high. The physics laboratory occupied the ninth and tenth floors, with
the astronomical rooms above it, an arrangement which would have been
impossible before the invention of the oil vibration cushion, which
practically isolated the instrument rooms from the earth.
Eastwood had arranged a small telescope at the window, and below them
spread the illuminated map of Greater New York, sending up a faintly
musical roar. All the streets were crowded, as they had been every night
since the fifth of the month, when the great new star, or sun, was
expected to come into view.
Some error had been made in the calculations, though, as Eastwood said,
astronomers had been figuring on them for twenty-five years.
It was, in fact, nearly forty years since Professor Adolphe Bernier
first announced his theory of a limited universe at the International
Congress of Sciences in Paris, where it was counted as little more than
a masterpiece of imagination.