[A Honeymoon in Space by George Griffith]@TWC D-Link bookA Honeymoon in Space CHAPTER XII 13/15
She rose a couple of hundred feet, her propellers began to whirl round, and Redgrave steered her out towards the centre of the vast cloud-sea which was almost surrounded by a thousand glittering peaks of ice and domes of snow. "I think we may as well put off dinner, or breakfast as it will be now, until we see what the world below is like," he said to Zaidie, who was standing beside him on the conning-tower. "Oh, never mind about eating just now, this is altogether too wonderful to be missed for the sake of ordinary meat and drink.
Let's go down and see what there is on the other side." He sent a message down the speaking tube to Murgatroyd, who was below among his beloved engines, and the next moment sun and clouds and ice-peaks had disappeared and nothing was visible save the all-enveloping silver-grey mist. For several minutes they remained silent, watching and wondering what they would find beneath the veil which hid the surface of Venus from their view.
Then the mist thinned out and broke up into patches which drifted past them as they descended on their downward slanting course. Below them they saw vast, ghostly shapes of mountains and valleys, lakes and rivers, continents, islands, and seas.
Every moment these became more and more distinct, and soon they were in full view of the most marvellous landscape that human eyes had ever beheld.
The distances were tremendous.
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