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“Bud — Doc — pull away!
The current’s
too strong!“
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THE TOM SWIFT INVENTION ADVENTURES
TOM SWIFT
AND HIS ELECTRONIC HYDROLUNG
BY VICTOR APPLETON II
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TOM SWIFT AND HIS
ELECTRONIC HYDROLUNG |
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CHAPTER 1
THE
PIRATED PROBE
TENSE, excited men gazed spaceward from the ships and planes of the
Mid-Atlantic task force, eyes striving to pierce the barrier of a
lustrous blue sky. Other watchers waited breathlessly in the control
room of the mammoth ship Sea Charger. Among these was Tom Swift,
whose family’s fantastic invention factory in Shopton, New York — Swift
Enterprises — had deve- loped the advanced design of the high-tech vessel.
“How close to earth is the stardust catcher now?” Bud Barclay
asked Tom excitedly.
The slender blond youth beside him, in striped
t-shirt and slacks,
shot a glance at the dials xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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of the tracking equipment. “Three minutes closer from the last
time you asked, Bud. Eight thousand miles from this spot. It should land
here in fifteen minutes. If you think you can wait!”
“Sure. And ‘land’ is the key word, genius boy. Land, as
opposed to hit the deck!”
Tom, his father Damon Swift, Bud, and a host of scientists, Navy
officers, NASA representatives, and newsmen were crowded aboard the
Charger, big as an aircraft carrier, floating calm as concrete in
the Atlantic waters east of Barbados in the Caribbean. Most excited of
all were the designers of the returning deep-space probe, a team of
astronautics scientists and technicians from Japan who had launched the
challenging venture on its voyage to the far-distant edge of the solar
system nearly two decades previous.
“We are greatly confident in
imminent success for our mission, young man,” admonished Hideki
Moritsu coldly, the official chief of the team, representing the
Japanese government’s investment in its national space program. “I am
told all readings are precisely
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as they should
be.”
“No offense intended, sir. It’s just that this whole thing is
pretty complicated for a guy like me to get his brain around. But just
think!” Bud exulted. “Pretty soon you’ll have data that no one on earth
has yet been able to get, from way out where the sun looks like a
star!”
“If we recover the probe capsule safely,” Mr. Swift spoke
up hopefully. The elder scientist’s voice was quiet but taut with the
strain of waiting. The two Swifts resembled each other closely — each had
deep-set blue eyes and clean-cut features — although Tom was somewhat the
taller and rangier, and his father definitely the grayer.
“You’re right, Dad,” Tom agreed. “And I guess I’m as nervous as
Bud. If we don’t catch the Gojira and set her down safely, the whole
project will be a total loss to Mr. Moritsu’s space program! And I
wouldn’t blame Japan for blaming us in that case, since we came
up with the means of landing it.”
At Tom’s words, the watchers and crewmen who were crowded into the
Sea Charger’s control room stirred restlessly. Its bulkheads
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were banked with radar and telemetering devices. Tension had been
mounting throughout the morning aboard the ships and observation planes
of the task force as everyone awaited the climax of science’s deepest
penetration into space so far.
Tom stepped away to stretch his aching shoulder muscles, clenched
tight by the morning’s tension. Bud followed him. “What do you mean, a
total loss?” Bud argued quietly, trying not to stare too obviously at
the rather stolid Mr. Moritsu. “Even if the recovery operation’s a flop,
the shot will still pay off in valuable information, won’t it?”
Tom shook his head grimly. “I haven’t explained all the details to
you, pal. The main purpose of the mission wasn’t to record instrument
data but to carry back its payload of Kuiper matter to Earth.”
“Kuiper matter? You mean the cosmic dust?”
“It’s more than dust, chum. What we do know is that the Gojira
probe found ice, rock granules, hydrogen compounds, even micro-sized
particles of metal out in the Kuiper Belt — the leftover building blocks
of the primordial xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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solar system. But almost none of the info has been radioed
back to us.”
“How come?”
“Power problems,” Tom explained. “Gojira was supposed to be mainly
solar-powered, but the collector panels didn’t open properly. They’ve
been running it off battery power throughout the mission and didn’t want
to use it up on telemetry transmissions across billions of miles.
Draining the batteries would have pre- vented completing the real goal of
the mission — collecting the stuff and bringing it back home. It was a
jerry-rigged emergency fix. and they had to make every volt count.” Tom
concluded by noting that digital recordings had been made by the probe’s
instruments throughout the journey, to be studied after the landing.
“I get it,” Bud nodded. “Kind of ironic, though. One of your Swift
solar batteries would have made all the difference in the world. But it
hadn’t been invented yet.” The remarkable power source, compact and
lightweight, was manufactured 22,300 miles above the earth at the Swift
Enterprises outpost in space.
Tom leaned closer and lowered his voice.
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“There are a lot of things
Enterprises might have done to assist this project, Bud. We could easily
have met the probe out in space in one of our spacecraft. But Mr.
Moritsu’s people wouldn’t hear of it. They want things to proceed as
closely as possible to the original plan from the Stone Age of space
travel — national pride, I guess. All we were allowed to do was to update
and redesign the ‘catcher’ missile for them.” Bud shot his friend a wry
look to show he understood.
Outwardly calm, Tom was seething with inner excitement. Although to
the eye he seemed no older than a teenaged youth — the same age as his
husky, dark-haired pal and copilot, Bud Barclay — Tom was a world-famous
prodigy in scientific invention. He had been first choice for the job of
directing the recovery phase of the Japanese government’s Gojira Probe
mission. The Swifts and their rocket research staff had built the
special recovery missile that would intercept the probe’s payload
package as it approached the earth and gently carry its fragile cargo to
the xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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deck of the Sea Charger.
“Whew!” Bud gave a nervous whistle as the two strolled back to the
controls. “I’m about as tense as you are. With all our eggs in one
basket, we sure can’t afford to get butter-fingered with the Kuiper
probe.”
Admiral Walter, a tall, distinguished man, graying at the temples,
smiled. “It’s what we call in warfare a calculated risk, Bud,” he said.
“But with Tom in charge, I believe we have nothing to worry about.”
Mr. Swift’s eyes shone with fatherly pride at the admiral’s remark
and Bud whacked Tom heartily on the shoulder. “Better save your orchids
and keep your fingers crossed, flyboy,” the young inventor advised with
a wince. “The rocket’s not home yet.”
“I know,” responded the ex-footballer. “But it’s just about time
to go out for that long pass!”
Radio telescopes, both on land and aboard the ships of the task
force, were following the probe’s progress as it drew closer to earth.
All were feeding a steady stream of information to the ship’s computers.
In addition, the Deep Space xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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Tracking Network was keeping watch from orbit by radar, as was
the Swifts’ outpost space station with its powerful telescope.
“How soon will the primary retro-rockets fire, Tom?” Admiral
Walter inquired pre- sently.
“In about ten seconds, sir,” Tom replied, eyeing the digital clock
readout before him.
Moments later, a red light flashed on the master control panel. Far
out in space, the retarding rockets in the nose of the probe capsule
were triggered for a long and powerful burst. Returning from the outer
solar system at tremendous speed, Gojira would hurtle to flaming
destruction in the fringes of the atmosphere without this measure.
“We’ve picked it up on ship radar!” shouted a
radar man.
Bud gave a whoop of excitement and everyone crowded around the bank
of radar- scope monitors. Tom’s steel-blue eyes checked the blip, noting
that the capsule was slightly off the correct path. A new flow of
information now began pulsing in as other ships’ tracking radars
recorded its course.
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The
data was being fed automatically to the “capture” computer which would
calculate the correct flight path for the recovery missile, to be
launched in moments from the Sea Charger’s floating launch
platform. This mini-rocket was designed to seize the returning traveler
from space in mid-flight and bring it safely home.
The excited buzz of voices in the com- partment gradually quieted as
the clock ticked steadily toward the next step in the recovery
operation.
“Stand by for missile firing!” Tom snapped over a loudspeaker.
A seaman relayed the order over the ship’s intercom. An electrified
silence fell as Tom’s eyes followed the patterns sweeping across an
oscilloscope screen.
“All clear for blast-off!” came the report from the launch
pad — from a reporter.
With a glance at his father and Bud, Tom pressed the master firing
button that authorized the final ignition sequence.
A split second later
the listeners’ eardrums throbbed to a muffled roar from topside as the
slender recovery missile shot skyward. Through xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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the window they could see the launch
platform rocking convulsively despite its inbuilt gravitex stabilizers.
Then it steadied again as the advanced devices damped out the
vibrations.
“Wow!” Bud heaved a sigh of relieved tension. Then he dashed from
the compartment and onto the main deck for a quick look at the rocket as
it disappeared into the blue.
Tom watched the catcher missile, the Recoverer, intently on
the radarscope.
“Nice going, son,” said Mr. Swift quietly.
In response to his father’s reassuring grip on his arm, Tom flashed
him a hasty smile. For the first time, the young inventor realized he
was beaded with perspiration and that his pulse was hammering.
“Quite admirable, I should say,” muttered one of the Japanese
scientists, Dr. Otsukora. His white-coated countrymen, standing
toge- ther, murmured and nodded.
“It’s a case of wait and hope,” Tom murmured in response. “We’ll
know in a few minutes.”
Across half the world, and 22,300 miles deep
into space, eyes were glued to radar
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screens and electronic
monitors. To Tom Swift’s eyes, two small blips were visible — one the
incoming probe capsule, now barely beginning to skim the atmosphere; the
other the recovery missile, moving on a course that would soon intersect
its quarry.
One of the NASA observers suddenly spoke up. “Swift!
— am I seeing
things, or is Re- coverer deviating from course?”
Tom checked the readouts.
“She’s automatically compensating for
changes in the Gojira’s trajectory, updating her course with her inbuilt
tracking system.”
The youth’s voice trailed off uncertainly, and Mr. Swift put a hand
on his shoulder. “Such last- minute deviations are to be expected in a
ballistic reentry, son.”
“I know,” replied the young inventor. “Except
— the capsule hasn’t
entered the denser atmosphere yet. I don’t like the look of what I’m
seeing. The probe’s course seems to be flattening out considerably.” “Is this a difficulty?” demanded Mr. Moritsu.
“I’m hoping Recoverer will be able
to com- pensate, as it was designed to do,” Tom xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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said. “Its onboard computer can virtually think
for itself.”
But just as Bud returned to the compartment, several of the
watchers gave startled gasps. “You can’t call that a normal
variation!” declared one of the engineers. The glowing line on the
monitor, projecting the Gojira’s heading forward and back, had developed
a noticeable kink!
“Telemetry still nominal,” announced one of the flight engineers.
“No problem with the retros or the vernier thrusters. Whatever’s
affecting Gojira has nothing to do with its own instrumentation. There’s
some external cause.”
“It’s gone completely off course!” Admiral Walter exclaimed.
“What’s happening?”
“I ask the same question, young man,” grated Moritsu, not
bothering to look Tom’s way.
Tom stared at the moving blips. The Enterprises recovery missile
was clearly falling behind as the Gojira probe seemed to glide sideways
across the screen. It was all too clear
that by the time the Recoverer reached the newly plotted meeting
point, Gojira would be
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somewhere else!
Damon Swift looked up from the monitor bank and gazed steadily at
Mr. Moritsu and his colleagues. “I’m afraid we must face facts,
gentlemen. We can not compensate sufficiently to intercept the probe
with our recovery missile.”
“It’s a thief missile! A pirate!” Tom cried out in fury. “Some
enemy’s trying to steal the probe payload!”
“Good night!” Bud gulped. “Do you see it on the scope?”
“No,” Tom muttered tensely. “But what else could it be? Some kind
of interceptor vehicle with anti-radar protection must have latched onto
the capsule. Gojira’s being dragged away to another landing site!”
“Pirated!” Admiral Walter sounded as if he had paled under
his deep military tan. In stunned silence, the Navy officers and
scientists of two nations watched as Tom’s sinewy hands mani- pulated the
control dials.
“I’m trying to speed up our recovery mis-
sile,” Tom explained as he focused his attention on the board.
“Throwing everything we’ve got
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into it! Looks like a slim hope, though,
from the way Gojira is pulling away.”
“But at least the probe has slowed tremendously,” Mr. Swift noted.
“Whatever’s taken control of it isn’t letting it burn up.”
Wordlessly admitting failure, Tom rose from his chair and began to
pace angrily. “I can’t believe some enemy has access to all the
precision data they’d need to catch the probe in midflight, as we’d
planned to do. They may just be diverting it somehow, knocking it out of
our hands so they can recover it later.”
A newsman asked Dr. Otsukora, “What happens if it’s allowed to
splash down? Will the matter-retrieval experiment be ruined?” “I will not say ruined,” was the reply. “The
findings will have been compromised. But the contents will surely be of
scientific interest, ne- vertheless.”
Tom continued the thought. “If they let the probe capsule fall into
the sea, and the impact doesn’t destroy it, there’s only one hope of
recovery — to plot the exact geographical
position and then get to the spot before the enemy does!”
“Roger!” Bud agreed with excitement. He
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was ready for the chase!
The Sea Charger’s radar dishes had been shifting
constantly
to keep their focus on the two targets. Now the chief radar man reported:
“Gojira’s off the scope, over the horizon.”
“The probe’s guidance system is no longer acknowledging our
signals!” one of the telemetry scientists called out. “It’s blacked
out. We’re not getting a peep back from her.”
Admiral Walter was engaged in animated conversation with Mr.
Moritsu and his technical team, and more than a few arms were making
like dignified windmills. Then, as the admiral snapped out orders to his
own Navymen, Tom exchanged a brief worried glance with his father. Each
was pondering the same thought.
Could Tom find the priceless deep-space probe?
Or would it soon be
in possession of a mysterious enemy?
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CHAPTER 2
SARGASSO
LOOK-SEE
ADMIRAL Walter, grim-faced, flashed a questioning look at Tom. But what
it expressed was not really a question. “Then recovery has failed?”
“I’m afraid so, sir.”
The sole remaining blip, the Recoverer, was still visible on
screen as the radar dishes tracked it, moving in a way that indicated
the steep downward plunge of their target. Its desperate and futile race
had finally exhausted its fuel. This missile, at least, would be buried
at sea.
For a moment Tom felt numb with despair.
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But he set his jaw firmly and turned to the admiral. “Sir, I’d like
helicopters readied for take-off immediately,” Tom said. “As soon as we
get data from the tracking instruments on the more distant ships and
whatever the space station picked up, there’s a good chance we’ll know
where Gojira finally comes down. If it’s not too far distant I’ll be
able to lead the chopper fleet to the general location in my
jetrocopter. There are special sensor instruments aboard that could make
a difference.”
Admiral Walter nodded tersely. “Very well. Then what?”
“It depends of the details,” Tom replied. “If she’s gone into the
water, we can mark the site with a constant-position radio buoy.
Then...”
“Then you’ll do whatever you think up during the flight!”
declared Damon Swift.
Crewmen were detailed for the trip. Meanwhile the international
media crowd was milling about restlessly. “What about us?” asked
a woman whom Tom recognized as a respected network broadcaster. “You all have the right to report this matter
as you see fit,” responded the Admiral. “But I’d xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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ask you to be
responsible enough not to sensationalize what you’ve seen. This ‘pirate
missile’ business is unconfirmed speculation. We still have every reason
to hope for a complete recovery of the probe.” “In this case,” muttered Bud with a wink,
“every reason is one big reason — named Tom Swift!”
Bud’s best pal shrugged off the compliment, but the news people
couldn’t help nodding. Ever since his first adventure in his Flying Lab,
the youthful inventor had been involved in any number of daring exploits
and thrilling situations. Time and again, Tom had had to combat enemy
spies and vicious plotters bent on stealing the Swifts’ scientific
secrets or foiling their bold endeavors.
Tom’s research projects had taken him from one end of the world to
the other, far into outer space and into the depths of the ocean. His
latest achievement, receiving the visitor from Planet X, had been to
construct a robot body for the mysterious brain energy from that
distant, nameless star-world. Now, Tom realized, he was on the brink of
another ad- xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx |
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venture which might — surely
would! — hold unexpected dangers.
As a matter of fact, he
thought wryly, the “unexpected” has already happened!
He and Bud rushed onto the deck where the craft that had brought
them to the ship, named the Skeeter Two, awaited them. This was
the most recent model of the jetrocopter line manufactured by Swift
Enterprises’ affiliate, the Swift Construction Company.
The jetrocopters
were compact, streamlined vehicles that could hover on pulse-jet rotor
blades like a helicopter or soar at high speeds by means of tail jets.
The wingless helicraft was supported during forward flight by the
unpowered free action of its rotor blades, which functioned in the
manner of an autogyro to pro- vide lift.
The youths lifted off at jet speed in the direction in which the
Gojira capsule had disappeared, Tom on the stick and Bud taking the
copilot’s chair.
Other choppers from the Charger and the rest of
the recovery fleet joined them. But Tom had soon left them far behind.
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“Call me impatient,” he murmured to Bud. “We’ll radio our position
when we find something.”
Readings on the course of the probe were pouring in from a variety
of sources, fed into the craft’s guidance computer automatically. “So
where to?” asked Bud as the Skeeter be- gan to bank in a curve.
“A little west of due north, looks like.” Tom brought up a map on
the control board monitor screen. “In the direction of the Bahamas,
roughly.”
Bud asked if the highjacked probe were still descending.
“From the last reports, apparently so, though very shallowly. That’s
reassuring, at least. Whoever snagged it must know that the particle
collection cells can’t stand too much of a shock.”
“We’re the ones who got the shock,” Bud retorted.
Wryly agreeing, the blond-haired young inventor chuckled at his
black-haired friend. “It’s all very weird. Gojira is clearly under
someone’s physical control. Yet its speed and trajectory xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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suggested that it was still following a modified ballistic
course. Despite what I said about a missile, Gojira hasn’t been snapped
up, just diverted and slowed.”
Unfortunately, the jetrocopters were not designed for supersonic
flight. It seemed to the boys that a great deal of time was oozing by.
They continually corrected their heading as they received updated
information. “Well, Gojira is now outside the ground-space radar
window,” Tom reported. “And the outpost scope can’t pick it up anymore
either, even with electronic enhancement. Too deep in our muggy, murky
atmosphere.”
“Jetz!” grumbled Tom’s black-haired copilot. “What can we do?”
Tom brushed his hand through his blond crewcut. “By extrapolating
the course heading and rate of descent, we have a general area to
search. But that’s assuming the pirates don’t change its course toward
the end just to throw us off. For the time being, though, it’s all we
have to go on.”
“Then let’s go take a look-see, Skipper!”
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Finally Tom slowed the Skeeter, switching
over to hover mode. Bud craned his neck, gazing down intently through
his half of the double-domed cockpit viewport. “Just where are we, Tom?
The ocean’s a funny color, with big dark patches all over the place.
What are they, rocks?”
Tom shook his head. “Sargassum, pal — great big tangled clumps
of floating seaweed. Welcome to the Sargasso Sea!”
Bud had heard of the Sargasso, of course — the legendary, notorious
“Sea of Lost Ships” that had awed and worried Columbus during his
voyage. “Glad we’re not down there in a boat,” he remarked. “I hear the
stuff gets tangled in the screws. And if you try to cruise through it in
a sailboat, be prepared to spend a few centuries as a skeleton!”
Tom managed what passed for a smile. “The Sargasso has quite a rep,
even going back to the days of Roman triremes, who knew of its eastern
extension near the Azores. Gojira’s floating somewhere below — or more
than likely some- where on the bottom and not floating. We’ve
got to find it.”
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“C’mon, genius boy. You never fail! Like
they say, it’s not a problem, it’s a challenge.”
“Well,” said Tom, “I’m glad
you're optimistic! So far this
morning I feel like I’ve let down a whole country.”
Bud gave his chum a look of affectionate wrinkled-brow sympathy.
They sat quietly for a time as Tom guided the chopper back and forth
over a range of hundreds of miles.
“There’s gotta be a way to narrow things down,” Bud muttered.
“Can’t you drag out a new Tom Swift invention or something?”
“Funny you should say that, flyboy.” Tom gave a grin and jerked
his thumb backwards over his shoulder. “Maybe it’s time to give our own
‘precious cargo’ a try!”
Bud twisted in his seat, looking for the first time into the open
hold just behind the cockpit. Mounted on what looked like a swivel-base
of some sort was a long flat-sided object, very narrow. “Hmm. Could be a
box for some very long-stemmed roses. Or maybe a coffin for some
guy who got caught in a taffy-pulling machine.”
“Remind me to laugh after we find the probe. Anyway, it’s my
new LRGM.”
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“Right,” said Bud dryly. “Tom, whenever one of your gizmos has
initials instead of letters, I get nervous. Know why? Because if it’s
too complicated to give a real name to, chances are I won’t be able to
understand it at all!”
“This one’s not so bad,” was the response. “It just means Long
Range Gravitoscopic Mapper.”
“Just?”
The young inventor laughed.
“Okay, pal, you got me laughing
after all. Now listen.”
“Uh-huh. A Swift-Barclay explanation mo- ment.”
“Its major intended use, a pretty important one, will be to detect
fissile nuclear material from a distance — from a plane, for example. The
gimmick is to detect the greater atomic weight of plutonium or other
such stuff directly. Not by its radiation, in other words.” Tom
noted that the device would be much more sensitive and accurate than his
previous radioactive ore detection invention, called the Damonscope.
“That one sensed the effects of radiation in an indirect way, and
wouldn’t work if the tar- xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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get material was too deeply buried or shielded. But the LRGM
just laughs at barriers!”
“Good for it!” retorted Bud. “Do I dare ask how it works?”
“By gravitation.”
Tom explained that the long rectangular chassis
enclosed several thousand precisely tuned laser beams running parallel
to one another down its length, through a vacuum. “Now you’ve heard of
the red shift, haven’t you? — the cosmic Doppler effect?”
“It’s how they came up with the idea that the universe is
expanding.”
“That’s right. When astronomically distant objects are receding
from our instruments very rapidly, their characteristic spectrum-lines
get shifted toward the red — the lower-frequency — end of the spectrum, and
the degree of shift tells you how fast the source is moving.”
“Just as I thought. I did read the first chapters of all
those books, you know.”
Tom continued: “What you may not know is that gravity also causes
a similar shift. The wavelengths get stretched in a G-field, and the
amount of stretching tells you how strong the
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field is. What the LRGM does is measure the slight shift of frequencies
that can be attributed to variations in gravitational tension, which is
exactly proportionate to local mass — the greater the mass, the stronger
the gravitational effect. By measuring these variations along a straight
line as we scan back and forth, the pattern of masses can be mapped out
by a sort of triangulation.”
“Which lets you pinpoint where the nuke slugs are.” Tom’s pal gave
an appreciative whistle. “You know, I followed that pretty well! So how
do you use it to find the Gojira cap- sule?”
“You can use it to detect any sort of sub- stance, not just
nuclear material, provided the amount is great enough to produce a
detectable ‘bump’ in the ambient gravitational field. The LRGM might be
able to distinguish the metal of the capsule from the water around it,
or the sea floor beneath.” “Fantazmatic!” exulted Bud. “But I know these
gravity-bumps aren’t strong enough for a regular guy like me to
feel — even if I do have the bod of an athlete who likes to play
for xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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fun!
The thing must be pretty tightly calibrated, hmm? Real sensitive.”
Tom gave Bud a familiar look that said: that’s a mouthful, pal!
“Chum, the mass of the capsule is so slight compared to the surrounding
ocean and the earth that it’s like trying to take a snapshot of a human
hair on a barbershop floor — from Mars! But in theory the system
is just that sensitive.” He added that utilizing the gravitational
effect offered a great advantage, as nothing could block or shield this
fundamental force of nature.
After laying-in a search pattern on the Skeeter’s guidance
computer, the young inventor activated his machine and oriented it
downward to begin the scanning process. Its tiny electric motors whirred
as it swung gently back and forth on its gimballed supports.
“Anything, pal?”
“Not nuttin’, flyboy,” was the reply. “But we’ve
just started.”
The jetrocopter paced back and forth across the calculated target
area, which was roughly 60 miles in diameter — 2827 square miles of water!
“And that’s assuming she didn’t make any xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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last-minute turns, or get gobbled-up by some sort of recovery
craft,” Tom noted in a tone of tired discouragement. “The pirates could
have had a ship waiting on the surface.” “Don’t give up the waterlogged ghost just yet,”
counseled Bud. “At least your gravy-scope’s panning out fine.”
Tom snorted. “Nice nickname. But you’re right. The LRGM is giving
us some great topo- graphical data. Not to mention a sunken ship or two!” “Yeah,” Bud added nervously, “with real Sargasso
skeletons aboard. I never have gotten over — ” “Hey!” Tom interrupted. “What’s that?”
Bud looked past his chum’s pointing finger to the glowing readout
monitor. Superimposed over the multicolored contours of the sea floor
was a strange dead-white shape. It was somewhat triangular, like a broad
and curving spear-head, moving along slowly across the scope. “Looks like one of my old pals,” Bud said. “A
Devilfish. Seriously, is it a manta ray?”
Tom’s reply was faint with sheer bewilder-
ment. “Ohhh no — it’s not a fish. Look at the
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settings
dial. The area of the monitor sweep is almost a mile square!“
“Good night! Then that thing must be about a half mile across!”
Bud could hardly believe it. The object was larger than the Sea
Charger — larger than the biggest of aircraft carriers!
Tom clenched his hand on the pilot’s stick. “I’m steering us
closer, right over it.” In a moment he half-turned to his copilot. “Its
size isn’t the only thing that gets me, Bud. The shape shows on the
scope as white because we’re not getting anything from it. Nothing!
It’s not only not producing its own gravity distortion, it’s actually
blocking out the ambient field from below! But physics doesn’t allow — ”
His words were choked off as the Skeeter
abruptly woggled to
the right, then to the left. And then, her deck tilting violently, the
chopper lunged downward in a merciless dive!
Tom fought the controls, but it was no use. “We’re going to hit!”
he cried.
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CHAPTER 3
THE
TREACHEROUS
TRIANGLE
THE Skeeter Two was foundering as if caught in the world’s
champion downdraft! Despite the pulse of the rotors straining above
their heads, the waves were drawing nearer by the second.
Suddenly Tom reared back as Bud’s arm shot across in front of him.
The black-haired youth flopped a switch over with the back of his hand,
grabbing the copilot’s stick with the other. Then he began, frantically,
to manipulate the controls on the copilot’s board. The rotor jets fell
silent as the craft’s tail engines came on line with a roar. Bud was
trying to punch his xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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way to safety!
It took a moment — too long a moment! — for
Bud to use the jetrocopter’s
gyros to reverse the slant of the deck. The Skeeter’s nose now
angled skyward, her engines seaward. The powerful forward thrust would
now work against whatever unknown force was dragging them down.
The little jetcraft shook, rocked, vibrated like a guitar string.
Then with a sudden leap she broke free.
Climbing sharply, Bud put in a good vertical mile, then
leveled
off. “Figured the tail jets would give us more muscle than the hover
blades,” he explained to Tom, voice unsteady.
“Flyboy,” Tom gasped, “that was — ”
“You would have thought of it, Skipper. I was just a nanosec ahead
of you.”
“No. I don’t think I would have, not in time.” The young
inventor’s voice was sober. “You came through, Bud — as always. I push us
into danger; you pull me out.”
Bud Barclay turned his gray eyes toward his friend. “The day I
can’t be by your side anymore, doing whatever it is I manage to do,
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is the day I head for the clouds without a plane. You know that, don’t
you? It’s not just your life, Tom.” He looked away. “Control
back to pilot.”
They flew on for a time, taking care to avoid the area of the ocean
that the mysterious craft seemed to have been heading toward. Tom’s
“gravy-scope” revealed nothing else of interest. Finally they radioed
the helicopter fleet, still en route, to turn back unless ordered
otherwise by Admiral Walter. “There’s nothing here, folks. No sign of
the probe.” He then contacted the Sea Charger and reported to
the Admiral and his father. Tom had decided not to mention the weird
phenomenon they had encountered — not over the open radio fre- quencies.
The last leg of their search had taken them on an easterly heading.
Now Bud remarked, “Boats down below, small ones.”
“These are fishing waters,” commented Tom. “Warm and pretty
shallow in parts. They’re probably out of Dauphinville on Mer- Soleil.”
“Are we close?”
“Mer-Soleil’s about 330 miles to the southwest.”
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Bud knew that the
big Caribbean island sported a vigorous fishing industry. “You know,
maybe we could ask around among the fishing crews. They might have seen
the capsule come down.”
Tom nodded. “Good idea. Hopefully the political problems on the
island wouldn’t get in the way. I’ve heard things are a little hot for
Americans right now. Anyway, we might as well head on home to Shopton,
since Dad plans to stay on the Charger until she docks up north
tomorrow.” He added, “From the way he sounded on the radio, I think
he’s doing a little damage control on behalf of Swift Enterprises.” “Enterprises nothing
— on behalf of his genius
son!” retorted Bud.
As the jetrocopter streaked northward at jet speed, Tom continued
to scan the ocean with the LRGM. Fascinated, Bud watched the monitor
screen with keen attention.
“Looks like the sea floor terrain is
changing down there,” he said presently. “If I’m reading the contour
colors right, it’s getting deep all of a sudden.”
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Tom glanced at the navigation readout. “That’s the Nares Plain
below us. We’re a little south of the Tropic of Cancer.” He switched
his attention to the LRGM screen. “I see what you mean. Looks like the
sea floor drops down a couple thousand feet or so. I think it’s what
they call a ‘sinkhole’ — big, from the looks of it.”
In an hour the discouraged twosome landed at Fearing Island, the
Enterprises facility off the coast of Georgia. Here they refueled the
Skeeter for the last leg of the journey north. After some delays
they finally touched down on the Swift Enterprises airfield. Darkness
had fallen. “Want to come over for supper?” Tom asked his
pal.
Bud laughed. “Supper? It’s almost time for a midnight snack!”
Drowsy, Bud begged off, planning to placate his stomach with a fast-food
stop on the way back to his apartment in town.
Presently Tom’s low-slung sports car pulled to a stop in front of
the Swifts’ big, pleasant house on the outskirts of Shopton. Sandra,
Tom’s blond, vivacious sister, greeted him xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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at the door. “About
time!” she teased. “We were beginning to think you two sea-searchers
had taken off somewhere.” Not wishing to worry his mother and sister,
Tom had called home from Fearing during the stopover.
“Think I’d skip town while you and that fried chicken are in
Shopton?” Tom grinned.
“What a line!” Sandy’s blue eyes twinkled. “We know it’s the fried
chicken you’re really interested in, Tomonomo. But supper’s been over
for hours. How does the genius inventor feel about cold mashed
potatoes?”
Tom shrugged wearily. “San, today cold mashed potatoes is about all
the ‘genius inventor’ deserves. Where’s the rest of that ‘we’ you were
referring to?” he inquired. “Has Mom gone to bed?”
“Here I am, dear.” Mrs. Swift, slender and sweet-faced, gave Tom a
hug — with one arm, as the other bore a warm dinner plate. “Late or not,
you don’t think I’d miss this rare opportunity to chat with my favorite,
and only, son and daughter, do you?”
Over the delicious dinner Anne Swift had
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saved for Tom, the conversation turned to the mysterious theft of the
Gojira capsule. “We have no real idea how they managed it,” Tom
explained. “But it was way too high for any kind of conventional
aircraft. We assume it’s a missile.”
“Who on earth could have fired it?” Sandy asked.
Tom shrugged. “No telling — yet. There’s more than one unfriendly
country which would give a lot to embarrass the U.S. and mess up our
relations with Japan.” “Is the Gojira valuable in a monetary sense? Some
pirate may be planning to make a few doubloons off it!” speculated Mrs.
Swift. Then her voice became serious as she added, “You aren’t expecting
more trouble, are you?”
Her son grinned. “Mom, it’s the unexpected that I worry
about!” He noted re-assuringly that the probe thieves might now have
everything they had been after, and would have no reason to target Tom
or anyone else.
Tom had passed the question off lightly in order not to alarm his
mother and Sandy. But inwardly he was none too sure of what his
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further recovery efforts might encounter in trying to locate the lost
probe capsule. One thing was certain. Pirates or no pirates, he and
Swift Enterprises were not about to accept defeat!
Next morning at Enterprises the young inventor spent hours in the
office he shared with his father trying to work out the next steps in
the search. The search area needed to be narrowed down if they were to
have any real hope of success.
Bud’s suggestion might be the best way
to go, he thought. We might as well try to find someone who saw
the Gojira come down — or something else suspicious. As he gazed at
the models of his inventions that lined the office shelves, he decided
that an undersea survey of the region would be the best way to start.
“We could easily combine a survey trip with trying to interview the
locals,” he murmured to himself.
Tom repaired to his personal lab in the building next door.
Midmorning was heralded by a twangy foghorn.
“Tom! Tom!”
“What’s up, Chow?” Tom asked in
surprise xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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as the rotund ex-Texan,
ex-range cook, and fast friend, came bounding into the lab in something
of a panic.
“Boss, it ain’t what’s up that bothers me, it’s what’s down
— down in
th’ ocean!” gasped Chow Winkler in breathless excitement.
“You mean the lost probe?”
“Wa-aal, not the probe s’much as where it is! That feller Ned, the
jet mechanic — he says he heard about what happened and figgered you’d be
going down there agin to try’n find her with a sub. Is that true,
boss?”
Puzzled, Tom nodded. “That’s the plan for now.”
The westerner plopped down on a lab stool, which almost seemed to
groan beneath him as it vanished from sight.
“Lissen here, that there
stretch o’ ocean is haunted — spooked! Ned gave me th’ address fer one o’
them websites, an’ I jest now looked it up on my kitchen computer
thingy. Son, it’s the blame Devil’s Triangle!”
The young inventor gave his much-older friend a blank look.
“What
do you... Oh! What they also call the xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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the Bermuda Triangle? Is that it?”
“Abser-lootly!” cried the cook vigorously. “An’ I read all about
it. Boats go into it and show up gone. There was this plane that flew
over it on a trainin’ flight, an’ all a-sudden they radioed back that
they ’as travelin’ through another d’mension, not o’ sight er sound
but o’ mind!” He shuddered. “Never heard from agin! And
then there’s this big ship that up and disappeared and wound up in
Philadelphia — Philadelphia, mind you! Kin you b’lieve that?”
Tom spoke with cautious affection. “Pard, those are just old rumors
that a few people have sensationalized to sell books.”
“I dunno, son. Sounds t’me like that there triangle’s a mighty
treacherous place.” Then he paused thoughtfully for a moment. “Though
come t’think on it, I guess there were some books on that website
thet they said you could order.”
The young scientist-inventor put a hand on his friend’s shoulder.
“Chow, thanks for the warning. Tell you what — come down there
with us. Maybe you can steer us away from trouble.”
“M-me?” Chow paled slightly. “Er, wa-aal
— xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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guess I’m not one t’turn
you down. Been on enough o’ them exper-ditions to write one o’ them
travel books. And I’m still alive, ain’t I?” After patting his
midsection as if to confirm the supposition, he made up his big mind.
“Right then, I’m in! Guess I ’as bein’ a mite foolish, wuzzen I.”
“Not a bit, pardner,” Tom reassured him. “As a matter of fact,
‘devil’ or not, it turns out there really is something strange
and important about that part of the Atlantic. It just might have been
the site of an attack from outer space that changed human history
forever!”
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CHAPTER 4
DEEP-DOWN
JUNGLE
CHOW WINKLER’S eyes bulged out even further than before. “Now Tom, jest
remember — I kin change m’mind about goin’ with you any time! You mean
t’tell me some o’ them space friends of yours landed in th’ ocean just
like they did over in Yucky-tan?”
While on a recent scientific project in Mexico’s Yucatan
peninsula, Tom and his companions had found astonishing evidence that
the friendly if mysterious extraterrestrials, with whom he had been in
remote contact, had sent an expedition of their own to the jungle ages
ago. The area was not far at all from the xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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southernmost reaches of
the so-called Devil’s Triangle.
But Tom shook his head with an apologetic grin. “No
— this time
I’m the one being ‘sensational’. The attack wasn’t an invasion by
aliens, but a devastating strike by a meteor or some other kind of big
object from space. It happened thousands of years ago. Here, Chow, I’ll
show you.”
The cook stood up, surprised. “You mean you got a picture of it?” “Not a picture, but a computer simulation of the
sort of thing that might have happened, based on the evidence used by
the scientists who have advanced the hypothesis.”
The young inventor
switched on his computer terminal monitor and accessed a program he had
downloaded. “I was looking at it the other day — a reconstruction of the
sequence of events, applying mathematical and dynamical principles and
our knowledge of planetary space. Now watch and I’ll tell you what’s
happening.”
The screen first showed an “overhead”
schematic of the solar system, with dots xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
representing the planets
whirling along in their orbits. “This hazy ring at the outer edge of the
solar system is the Kuiper Belt, the same region the Gojira probe
visited. As you can see, it’s full of all sorts of floating junk and
fragmentary debris.” “Uh-huh,” said Chow. “Sorta a great big
junkyard.” “Right, or since you’re a cook you might call ’em
leftovers. Anyway, all these millions and billions of things
drift around in orbits of their own, one for each; and pretty often they
cross paths and collide — see?”
As he pointed, two of the objects came
together and shattered into many pieces. One piece was sent on a curving
trajectory toward the inner solar system. “That fragment looks small on
the screen, but it could be huge, tens or hundreds of miles across.”
Chow inquired, “What’s she made of? Hear tell it’s ice, mostly.” “Sometimes,” agreed Tom. “But some of the larger
chunks end up as the nuclei of comets, and we know now that such
objects aren’t just ‘dirty snowballs’ as was once thought — they can xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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be
fairly
solid, rocky masses.” “An’ yuh’re sayin’ that this one here came right
down on our heads?” “That’s the theory.” Tom explained that such a
long-orbit object would probably circle the sun thousands of times
before passing close enough to a planet like Earth to be diverted by its
gravitational field. But if the delicate orbital mechanics came out just
right, its trajectory could eventually cause it to plunge deep into our
atmosphere.
“As a matter of fact,” he continued, “that’s what probably
gave us our moon. A massive collision splashed enough material out into
space that it fell back together as a separate body.”
Chow studied the screen, which had jumped to a much greater
magnification, show- ing Earth as a disk. “Looks like this one’s gonna
hit, all right.”
The simulation showed the space stranger skimming the earth’s
envelope of air at a flat angle. At first it broke into a few smaller
fragments which rebounded back into space,
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making several high orbits before touching the atmosphere again.
Eventually, though, a herd of fragments entered deeply. With the screen
showing an outline of the American continents, the watchers could track
the fragments on a shallow arc across North America from the northwest
to the southeast. They finally plunged into the ocean beyond the
Bahamas, due east of the Straits of Florida and well out in the
Atlantic. “An’ that’s right inside the Triangle,” declared
Chow. “Which means it’s also where you’ll be pokin’ around fer that
rocket.”
Tom switched off the monitor.
“In fact, I think we passed close to
one of the supposed ‘impact craters’ when we were flying home yesterday.
There are two main ones, big oval depressions — and I do mean big! Almost
the size of Cuba.” “Which makes them jest finger-food compared to
Texas,” pronounced the cook with satisfaction. “Anyway it happened thousands of years ago, if it
happened at all,” Tom noted. “It’s just a theory. But it’s possible
the spreading effects xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
of the impact — monster-sized tsunami waves and fracturing ripples
through the Earth’s crust, as well as steam and dust in the upper
atmosphere that could have blocked the sun for years — well, it could have
destroyed early civilizations emerging in the Americas. It might even be
what sunk the island of Atlantis!” “Yup
— the sunken city o’ gold we went to.” As
Chow, thoughtful and momentarily calmed, went on his way back to the
kitchen, the postulated ancient cataclysm stuck in Tom’s mind. I sure
would like to look for scientific evidence while we’re down there on the
ocean floor, he told himself. But finding the capsule has to be
the first goal.
Early the next morning the majestic Sky Queen was lifted
into daylight from its underground hangar berth. This mammoth,
solar-powered skyship had been Tom’s first major invention. A three-deck
craft known as the Flying Lab, it was equipped with complete laboratory
facilities for research in any corner of the globe. Jet lifters in the
belly of the fuselage enabled the craft to take off vertically
and also to hover.
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The ship roared skyward with Bud at the controls and Tom working
out some ideas in one of the work cubicles. Along with a small crew,
Chow was aboard and already cooking a late breakfast in his
well-seasoned galley.
As Bud watched New York turn to New Jersey en route to Fearing Island,
he was suprised by a familiar voice greeting him from behind.
“Hey,
Doc!” responded the youth as he swiveled to face Doc Simpson,
Enterprises’ talented medic. “What’re you doing up here in the sky?
Somebody got the sniffles? — or are you on hand in case Tom or I get
conked on the head?” “That’s a given!” the young physician gibed.
“Actually, I invited myself along to Fearing to make one of my periodic
checks on the undersea farm. Got to make sure the fish haven’t turned it
into a cafeteria.”
Bud knew what Doc was referring to. A researcher in medicine as
well as a practicing medical doctor, he had recently been working on a
project involving some plants that he had run across in New Guinea on
one of Tom’s xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx |
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expeditions which had since been genetically altered. The hybridized, gene-spliced organisms were being grown underwater in the warm shallows next to Fearing’s shore, and Doc — like Tom and Bud an expert skin- and
scuba-diver — monitored their development with frequent visits. His hope
was to develop a medication that would counteract some of the physical
effects on humans of work in extreme environments, such as under water
or up in space. “Have you had much luck in your project?” Bud
inquired. “I heard you’d already begun some testing on animals.” “That’s right,”
was the reply, “and the results have been very promising, with no signs
of toxicity.
“And by the way, speaking of rumors — I hear there’s been a secret test or two on a
human subject. Namely the researcher him- self!”
As Bud chuckled, Simpson
added with a wink, “Can’t do science without a few calculated risks.
Those wonderful computer simulations only take you so far!”
“Yeah. Which is exactly why Tom and I get xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
conked on the head every third Tuesday,”
remarked Bud dryly.
Time flew like a jet. It wasn’t long before the supersonic craft
came in sight of Fearing Island base, a few miles off the coast. After
transmitting the coded clearance signal to the fleet of drone
mini-planes that guarded the aerial perimeter, Bud circled the island
once.
Though primarily the launch and control site for the Swifts’
various spacecraft, Fearing also served as a berthing and supply base
for Tom’s advanced submersibles — the seacopters and jetmarines. Bud
smiled as he saw the crimson Sea Hound seacopter gleaming in the
Atlantic sun far below. The saucer-shaped craft had carried Tom and Bud
into many an undersea adventure. It sported an enclosed central rotor
well outfitted with reversible-pitch blades to switch from air-cushion
lift to undersea diving. Superheated steam jets provided forward
propulsion in either element.
The Sky Queen settled down on its special landing pad and
its crew disembarked, and Doc Simpson headed off to suit-up for his
underwater inspection. Tom supervised the transfer of a special piece of
cargo from the Queen to
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the seacopter. For purposes of the subocean search, he
was adding his new LRGM device to the seacop’s arsenal of detection
instru-ments.
As the van carrying Tom, Bud, and Chow drew near the seacopter dock
with the gravy-scope snugged away in back, two figures in the Sea
Hound’s command compartment waved through the curving viewpane. One
was Zimby Cox, a veteran seacop pilot. The other was husky Mel Flagler,
a talented technician and deep-water engineer who, like Zimby, had
recently been part of the Swift expedition to Aurum City, the undersea
city of gold.
Zimby poked his head out the small hatch atop the flat hull. “All
set on our end,” he called. “Lead the way, Cap’n Tom!”
“Aye-aye!” Tom replied. “Just as soon as we’ve got the LRGM on
board and battened down.”
The atom-powered seacopter was able to travel through the ocean
depths nearly as fast as a surface speedboat. They reached the search
area for the lost probe before the sun had touched the top of the sky.
Already on xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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hand
were ships of the Navy task force assigned by Admiral Walter to
participate in the ongoing search operation. The Sea Hound buoyed
up and settled onto the surface of the water, and Tom spoke to the
Admiral for a time by radiocom.
Tom learned that as yet no sign of the lost far-space prober had
been detected. “My men are disappointed, as you can imagine,” Walter
reported grimly from his post on the Sea Charger. “As for our
colleagues from Japan — well, your Dad’s been sweet-talking them on the
subject of the wonders of science and technology and future joint
efforts. But I’d say we have a quiet diplomatic crisis on our hands.
Moritsu has already flown out, back to home. Happy he’s not. Most of
their technical team is still here, though.” In reply Tom again
promised to do his best. “I’ll gladly take you up on that, son,”
declared Admiral Walter. “I’m afraid all we can do up here is wish you
luck.”
Diving into the turquoise depths, the Sea Hound began a
predesigned survey pattern. “I’m hoping we’ll get some help this time
from some of our other detector instruments, now that xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
we’re under the surface,” Tom explained to Bud and Chow. “But I’ll
still keep the gravy-scope active.”
“Say,” Chow remarked, “that
there’s a right nice name fer an invention.”
For several dull hours the effort proved fruitless, and all the
crew could do was marvel at the weird submarine jungles of this shallow
part of the fabled Sargasso. They were at the very margins of the subsea
Great Bahama Bank, only a few miles from the cliffs that edged into the
deep waters of the Nares Plain. The nearest landfall was the Turks and
Caicos island group to the immediate southwest, then Mer-Soleil further
southward.
“Man, look at that stuff!” Bud exclaimed as he gazed at the
tangled expanse of subsea foliage. “Like they say, it’s a jungle out
there!”
“Sure is,” agreed Zimby. “I’ve studied up on aquatic vegetation.
‘Seaweed’ comes in all sizes and kinds, but it really is weed — tough,
resilient, and it grows just about everywhere.”
“It’s great big algae,” Tom remarked; “like the gunk you get on
your bathtub or in a xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
swimming pool. But whatever it is,” he continued, “if Gojira came down
in shallow waters, we’ll have to deal with it.”
Presently Mel Flagler called out that he had received an
encouraging signal on one of the detector instruments, the
sono-resonance locator. “The SRL’s getting something from portside,
about 39 degrees. The frequency mix makes sense, but the source is all
blurred out. I can’t pinpoint it.”
“Still, it’s our first lead!” Tom declared excitedly. “Let’s
cruise around and see if we can triangulate on it.” The plan was only
partially successful. The source of the resonance-tone, whatever it
might eventually turn out to be, could not be localized to less than a
region occupying several square miles of sea-bottom real estate.
“The densest part of the seaweed jungle, naturally,” complained
Bud.
“Maybe we’ll get lucky, flyboy,” Tom told Bud. “Let’s try the Fat
Man suits first.”
Turning to Zimby Cox, the young inventor
added, “Take over, will you, Zim? Merman Barclay and I may cover quite
a bit of acreage xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
with our suit jets.”
“Righto. We’ll stand-to and wait.” Cox eased into the pilot’s
seat.
“Got a job for me, Skipper?” asked Mel.
“Just keep watch on the detector instru-ments, please. We can’t predict
when something might happen to show up.” “I’ll sonophone you if anything shows.”
Chow frowned. “Don’t hear you givin’ me a job, boss. Seems t’me I
recollect you makin’ a point of askin’ me along on this here drive.” “I do have a job for you, pardner, and it’s
important,” replied Tom. “I hereby deputize you Acting Captain of the
Sea Hound. If you catch Zim or Mel kicking back or goofing off,
you’re authorized to clap ’em in irons!”
“You may think yuh’re joshin’ with me, Tom,” retorted the cook;
“but brand my sub- marine sixgun, these two young hoots better not test
me!”
Making their way back to the Sea Hound’s cramped airlock
hold, Tom and Bud each climbed into a Fat Man suit and went out through
the hatchway. The suits, shaped like huge steel eggs with an ultrastrong
Tomaquartz xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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viewdome at the top, had mechanical arms and legs that responded
delicately to the operator within. Several intense underwater lamps
pro- vided illumination, and small swivel-jets gave them mobility.
Entering the weed-jungle, the boys waddled about on their robotic
legs, the built-in searchlights of their suits piercing the murky gloom
surrounding the tall streamers of Sar- gassum bacciferum that
dangled from above or rose from rocky anchors below. They seemed to be
making their way through a dense forest of waterlogged weeping willow
trees! But they saw nothing on the ocean bottom but the deep
accumulation of sand and silt, which made the going even more difficult.
“This is too slow,” Tom called over his sonophone in frustration.
“We’ve been out a half-hour and we haven’t covered more than a few acres
between the two of us.” “I know,” came the reply signal. “Let’s try
cruising along on the suit-jets a little higher up, where the weed thins
out.” “Good idea,” Tom approved. “I’ll head off
eastward, you take the west. But remember,
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don’t get up too near the surface — the sun-glare in this murky water
makes it like trying to see through a gauze curtain.”
Setting off on his own, Tom prowled about for several minutes,
alarming a few fish but accomplishing nothing else.
“Tom! Help! Help me!”
Tom’s blood froze. An alarm signal from Bud
— and it sounded like
a matter of life and death!
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CHAPTER 5
IN
SEARCH OF AN
INVENTION
“BUD! Where are you? I can’t see you!” Tom’s sonophoned voice was
frantic with alarm — the dark seaweed jungle blocked his view
in all
directions.
The young inventor ascended another fifty feet with his suit-jets.
But as predicted, the wavering emerald sunlight from above only masked
the distant gloom with a nearby glare.
He repeated his call again and again, receiving no answer back from his
friend. Switching frequency, he called the Sea Hound and
breathlessly explained the situation.
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“Can you see Bud’s Fat Man on any of the
instruments, Mel? Sonarscope, metal detec- tor — anything?”
“Maybe, chief! Pretty strong readings delta northeast from you,
17 degrees.”
“Distance?”
“About a half-mile, little less. But with all the weed, I can’t
quite — ”
“Never mind! I’m on it!”
Tom jetted in the indicated direction, ordering Mel to switch over
to the LRGM. He realized with despair that neither Mel nor Zimby had
been given more than the briefest instruction in the operation of the
new invention. Nevertheless, Mel quickly called back — the gravy-scope
showed what was almost certainly Bud’s Fat Man suit dead ahead! “I see him!” Tom cried. “He’s all knotted up in
the weed!”
Arm-thick streamers all but completely covered Bud’s suit top to
bottom, wrapping about the metal egg like yarn about a yarn-ball. But
though Tom could not see his pal’s face, xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
the Fat Man’s metal arms were writhing and
chopping frantically, trying to tear away the weed. But the stuff was tough as burlap, and the
athletic young aquanaut seemed to be making little headway.
More alarming was the fact that a thick plume of bubbles was rising
from the weed-masked bulk of Bud’s suit. Good grief! Tom thought
in fear. The suit’s leaking air!
Jetting up close, Tom lent his own metal claws to the desperate
struggle. The combination of forces turned the tide of war against the
stubbornly clinging seaweed, and Tom was finally able to wrench his pal
free. He was limp with relief to see Bud’s head through the viewdome,
redfaced and panting violently but surrounded by open air, not shrouded
in invading seawater. “I — I couldn’t — catch my breath enough to talk,”
Bud gasped with heaving words. “I g-got cocky and — fouled the suit in the
weed stalks. Trying to twist my way out just — ” “I get the picture,” Tom sonophoned. “Then I started getting a spray of water
— ” “The bubbles are coming from a point on
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your hatch-seam, righthand side. How deep is the water inside?” “Not deep. It mostly pooled down in the leg
hollows.” Bud added: “Sure is wet, though!” “I’ll bet,” Tom replied. “Let’s get the Hound
to come pick us up.”
A quick exam aboard the seacopter showed that Bud was damp but none
the worse for wear. “But I didn’t see a thing out there, Tom,” the
youth admitted ruefully. “From up above you can’t see down into the
weed, but down on the sea floor you practically need a machete to get
anywhere.” “Yes, the Fat Men are just too big and bulky,”
the young inventor declared. “I’m still getting my readings, but no luck
zeroing in on the capsule,” Mel reported.
Chow added officiously: “An’ I hereby certify that these two have
been tryin’ their darndest the whole time.”
Zimby asked what Tom planned to try next. The young inventor did
not answer, deep in frowning thought. “Kin I say somethin’, boss?”
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Tom gave a distracted nod, and Chow
continued. “Wa-aal now, whyn’t you set up one o’ them air bubbles over
this whole stretch o’ land, jest like you did at the city of gold? Then
mebbe you could go through an’ cut down all that snakeweed out there,
so’s we could see.” “I gave some real thought to setting up a
hydrodome, Chow,” the young inventor re- sponded. The dome was a huge
underwater bubble of air, created by Tom’s repelatron device which
actually pushed the ocean water away. The air supply inside was kept
pure by one of Tom’s osmotic air conditioners which made use of the
oxygen dissolved in the water. “It makes sense. But for all the
advantages, there’s one big problem.” “Figgers. What is it?” “If what we’re picking up on the instruments
happens to be the Gojira, we still haven’t been able to pinpoint it.
That means we’re going to have to comb over many square miles of sea
floor, too much to just crawl along on one of the mobile platforms. And
even the most powerful water repelatron, like the one we use in Helium
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City, can’t produce a bubble more than a
few acres in area. Water’s just water, but when you start
measuring it out by the mile it weighs far too much for our puny
machinery to handle.”
As Chow nodded his understanding, Mel added,
“Even if you could build a great big repelatron and set it up
next to its own atomic reactor, the back-pressure from holding up all
that weight would drive it right down into the ground like a tent
stake.” “Okay, scratch one idea,” said Bud. “But
there must be other things to try.” Silence answered.
Finally Tom said, “Bud, we could skin-dive at this depth.”
“With scuba tanks? Let’s give it a whirl,” Bud urged.
The seacopter surfaced again, while the boys donned flippers,
masks, and air lungs from the Sea Hound’s supply locker. The gear
had been modified by Swift Enterprises inge-nuity. Most prominently, the
full-face Toma-quartz masks were unobstructed by the air-hose hookup,
which was underneath the chin.
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Tom and Bud dropped over the side and
made their way slowly downward into the gray-green depths, accustoming
themselves gradually to the increased pressure.
“A lot more freedom of action,” Tom told his pal through the
miniaturized sonophone unit in his facemask.
Bud replied, “Check! If only we could move along faster than
flipper-speed. Jetz, we’ll empty our tanks before we’ve poked through a
hundredth of this fish-feed factory!”
Tom conceded the point. Not only was the difficulty of merely
getting around in the weed growths a daunting factor, but they didn’t
even know if the vague detector-response was the probe in the first
place! But our mystery rivals must know exactly where she came down,
was his further grim thought. All they have to do is get together the
right equipment and come pluck it up! The Gojira could be lost for
good any day now — any hour! “Back to the Hound, flyboy. I think this
problem is going to take some inventing.” “Tom Swift, those are the words I’ve been waiting
for!” Bud exulted.
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The boys surfaced and reentered the bobbing
seacopter. Tom spoke to Admiral Walter and his father, reporting
with regret his lack of progress. After Tom had signed off, Mel Flagler approached him. “Skipper, I sure
don’t mean to add any discouraging words to the list, but...” “Has something happened?”
“Nothing good. That resonance-source I was
picking up on the sono-resonance locator has disappeared.”
Tom groaned softly. “All of a sudden?”
“It just faded out in a blurry-flurry. Since then
I’ve picked up a few more — some on the metal-detector, too — but they’re
all over the place in this weedy region, and I can’t pin them down. At
any rate,” he concluded, “they can’t all be Gojira — and maybe
none of them are.”
Chow reacted sympathetically to the expression on his young boss’s
face. “Now son, don’t get yerself discouraged. Mebbe that new
gravy-scope’ll turn the trick!”
But Tom could only shake his head listlessly. “I’m afraid the
‘gravy-scope’ is just another Swift flopperoo, Chow. It does okay with
larger bulks like the Fat Man suit, but it can’t
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separate out the mass-density gradients of smaller objects such as
the probe — not with all that floating gunk everywhere.”
Bud gave his chum a friendly nudge. “Just get a few circuit boards
in front of you, genius boy. You’ll lick this thing by morning!”
With a wan smile, Tom ordered Zimby Cox to submerge and head back
toward Fearing Island. “One day — lost,” he muttered.
After an early supper Tom plunged into the work of invention in his
private lab on Fearing.
It seemed to help him clarify his thoughts to carry on a running
conversation with himself. “Okay. Definition of problem: finding a small
metal capsule that might be somewhere inside a seaweed forest
miles across. What are the options?
“Some more sophisticated kind of detector device?
Hmm.”
He went through a little process he called checking in with my
brain. “Nope. Don’t feel anything along that line up there waiting
to pop out, and time’s a-wastin’. “So maybe we’ll just have to
eyeball it. If someone saw where Gojira hit the water, a xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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thorough yard-by-yard search of the bottom
could be practical after all. But...”
Tom visualized trying to mount such a search with several score
aquanauts in Fat Man suits. He frowned disgustedly. “We’d spend half the
time untangling the searchers from the seaweed, as with Bud. That’s not
it. What’s really needed is...”
An idea was beginning to break through the murk!
Suddenly Tom was startled by a sharp rap on the lab door. He
glanced at the wall clock — "suddenly” had taken up seven hours of
concerted work! With a chuckle he set aside a knot of circuitry and
opened the door. “Bud! And...?” He didn’t recognize the young man
standing next to his pal. “I’m Jay Willembart, Tom
— night shift guy in the
communications room.”
Tom nodded, shaking hands, and turned to Bud curiously. “Jay asked me where your lab was, and I walked
him over,” Bud said. “Besides, I was looking for an excuse to come bug
you. And this is a good one, pal!”
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Willembart held out a scrap of paper. “I
thought it might be better to come here with the written message rather
than call you. It came by radio from Mr. Swift on board the Sea
Char-ger.”
Tom read over the short message.
Tom, at four-twenty AM your time, go to the island videophone. Kaye
will put you in touch with a woman from the State Department, Oriella
Carne. Admiral Walter was just informed that the Japanese have received
a ransom demand for the Gojira probe.
Tom gasped in Bud’s direction. “Ransom!”
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CHAPTER 6
RANSOM
DEMAND
AT THE appointed time a physically weary but mentally energized Tom
Swift stood before the videophone console in the Fearing Island
communications center. Here he waited for whatever details of the
alarming event were to come through the private satellite-linked
television network that served Swift Enterprises and its affiliates from
sites across the country.
The newscaster at the Key West studio, Graham Kaye, appeared on the
screen and introduced the attractive African-American
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woman seated next to him, who then introduced herself again. “Tom, good
to meet you — at this late, or rather too early, hour. I’m Oriella Carne.
I don’t suppose you’ve run across my name, have you?”
Tom gave her a polite nod and said, “Well, I know I’ve seen
your name...”
She laughed daintily. “Thank you for being frank. Most people don’t
quite get what my job is, and whom I work for. I actually earn my
paycheck as a part of what’s called ‘the executive offices of the
President of the United States’. So I report to the big guy when he
wants me to. But I spend most of my day hangin’ around the Department of
State.” “That’s pretty impressive, ma’am.”
This brought another pleasant laugh. “Oh my, I’m talking to Tom
Swift and he’s impressed with me!” But then, as if a
button had been pushed, she lost her laughter and turned serious. “Let
me explain what’s going on — I’m sure the Admiral and your father told you
a bit of it.” When Tom bobbed his head in confirmation, she continued:
“Lately I have been working as a special liaison between our State
Department and the xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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American Interests office in Dauphinville,
Mer-Soleil.
“As you know, a few years back the aggrieved citizenry burned
the American Embassy to the ground — burned down several city blocks, in
fact. So we now run a little office inside the Brazilian Embassy. Do you
follow me?” “I do, ma’am,” was the reply. “I’m quite sure I got this job because I look
like the locals — maybe also because my father emigrated from Cuba as a
child. They seem to like me, anyway. Even the head of the ruling junta,
Colonel Maximille, seems to like me. I’ve never been bothered by the
Voudon-Machete.”
Responding to the puzzled look crossing Tom’s brow, she explained,
“The Voudon-Machete are the personal ‘police’ the junta uses to maintain
a nice, well-respected reputation among the populace. Street thugs and
murderers on the government payroll, basically. In Mer-Soleil, you
really can’t fight city hall.”
Tom remarked wryly, “Sounds like a typical setup.”
“Absolutely. And the point is, Maximille xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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and his party deny their existence. Which means they can saunter away
whistling when a message gets passed along by a known Voudon-Machete
contact — to the Japanese Ambassador, Mr. Saikura, in the present case.”
“I gather it had to do with the Gojira probe,”
prompted the young inventor.
Carne nodded. “It stated that the capsule had come into their
possession, that they know it is of great value to the Japanese
government, and that they would consider turning it over — if!”
“If a ransom is paid?” “Not a money ransom, Tom,” she re- sponded. “A
ransom in human form. They are demanding that Japan trade Jean-Sancte Léonide
for Gojira.”
That was a name Tom had definitely heard of! “Léonide!
The ex-President?” “Oh yes indeed,” she confirmed, “the famous,
controversial, much loved, much hated President of
Mer-Soleil — democratically elected, deposed in a violent coup, flown to
safety in his mother’s native country, Japan. Where he has lived ever
since in a sort of cordial house-arrest
situation.”
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“As I recall,” Tom said, “he was sort of the
champion of the poor in Mer-Soleil. Didn’t his followers charge the U.S.
with being behind the coup?”
Oriella Carne gave an eloquent shrug. “Let’s not debate the
mysteries of history, Tom. The poor people of Cité
Quai, the slum district of Dauphinville — about four-fifths of the
city! — worship their ‘Papa Sancte’. Others call him a complete fraud and
demagogue who looted the National Treasury, such as it was. All we need
to consider now is that the Maximille faction wants him extradited back
to Mer-Soleil. Supposedly to try him on various charges; in reality to
eliminate him as a symbol. In State we have a pool running — how many
minutes after arrival before his assassination by those mysterious
fun-loving guys, the Voudon-Ma- chete?” “Japan hasn’t cooperated, though.” “Not to date. But they might well be induced to
do so if the reward is the return of their precious Gojira.”
It was Tom’s turn to nod. “I see. Léonide’s
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life for Kuiper dust. But how do you know the claim isn’t bogus? Does
anyone really think Mer-Soleil, or those Voudon-Machetes, have the
technology to snatch the probe right out of the sky?” “As to your first question, the ransom note was
accompanied by some electronics parts that the Japanese are examining to
determine if they were indeed part of the probe capsule. No conclusion
yet. As to the question of high-tech — does the name Li Ching ring a
bell?”
Tom couldn’t help groaning inside. A stateless international
criminal specializing in technological theft, Li Ching had recently
shanghaied the Sea Charger using some very high-tech methods
indeed! Defeated by Tom, he had escaped by jet. His present whereabouts
were unknown. “That puts it in a new light, ma’am,” admitted the young
inventor. “My father and I suspect Li has been able to get ahold of
advanced scientific information from the extraterrestrials, the beings
on what we call Planet X.” “Mm-hmm. And of course the quake-maker technology
got into the hands of the Brunga-
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rians from a similar source.” Miss Carne was referring to the
recent crisis that transpired while Tom was involved with the visitor
from Planet X. Unlike the group known as the Swifts’ space friends, who
were stationed within the solar system, the authorities on their world
of origin had shown themselves willing to interfere in Earthly society
heedless of consequence as part of their scientific studies of the human
species.
The memory of the huge gravity-free shape he and Bud had detected
suddenly rose in Tom’s mind! Could the weird phenomenon be some sort
of advanced craft designed on another planet and piloted by the
Voudon- Machete gang?
But Tom was not yet ready to share the inexplicable sighting with
anyone outside his circle of close and trusted associates. Instead he
said, “I understand the general situation, Miss Carne. But what exactly
are you asking Swift Enterprises to do?”
She smiled a cool and rather charmless smile. “Only to continue to
use your scientific methods to search for the probe’s present loca-
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tion, at least until we confirm that the Mer-Soleilans really do
have their hands on it. I’ve provided this backgrounder so you’ll have
all the current information. And of course, if you happen to run across
any relevant evidence out there under the ocean, we’ll need to know
about it immediately. This is an election year in Japan, Tom. Given the
role of our Japanese colleagues in supporting us in the Korea face-off,
the whole thing is a very delicate diplomatic matter.” “I realize that,” replied the young inventor.
“We’ll do everything we can.”
The last thing Tom noted as the screen went dark was the strange,
stern, half-hopeful expression on the face of Oriella Carne.
After a few hours of haunted sleep, Tom returned to work on his
solution to the challenge of finding the Gojira probe. When Bud dropped
in with a lunch tray Chow had prepared, he found his friend gazing into
a large transparent tank with a froth of breaking bubbles at its
surface. “Feeding the fish, genius boy?” Bud asked as he
set the tray down within Tom’s reach.
“Just putting my new underwater breathing
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apparatus to the test.” The young inventor indicated a shoebox-sized
bulk of wires and components resting on the bottom of the tank. “I call
it my electronic hydrolung.”
Bud bent down to scrutinize the device, which was producing a
steady stream of bubbles. “Tell me something. Why do you need a new
approach in the first place? We breath okay in the Fat Men.” “We sure do,” agreed his pal. “But those
ultra-compressed air cartridges require a lot of de-compression support
equipment. Altoge- ther it amounts to almost half the weight of the
suit.” “Fine. How about the system we use in the
hydrodomes?” “The osmotic air conditioners?” Tom shook his
head with a rueful smile. “They function on the principle of fish gills,
drawing dissolved oxygen from the seawater. But have you noticed how big
they are, flyboy? You have to move quite a volume of water
through the machinery in order to extract enough oxygen to live off
of — and the deeper you go, the
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rarer
the dissolved oxygen is. Even the fish have to hold their
breath when they dive deep!”
Bud crossed his arms with a smile of resignation. “Not like I
didn’t know you had your reasons! So. What’s with Mr. Bubbly in there?”
Tom leaned close to the tank, his young face illuminated by the
soft light from inside. “Do you know how semiconductors work?” “A little bit. Sort of. No!” “Semiconductor materials
— we found some varieties
in New Guinea, you remember — conduct electric currents, but weakly. You
use ’em in circuit components when you’re looking for control and
information transfer rather than raw power.” “Sure! Transistors.”
“Among other types. The way semi- conductors work
is that loosely-bound electrons jump from one atom to the next — there’s
your current. And each time they do they leave behind a gap or ‘hole’
which has many of the physical properties of an electron, but with a
reverse charge.”
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Tom explained how, under
the influence of electrical “pressure,” the electron-current
would run in one direction along the material while a sort of
“hole-current” would flow in the opposite direction. “I follow you so far,” Bud declared. “So how does that help a guy
breath underwater?” “It doesn’t,” Tom conceded. “But the general
idea sort’ve sparked off my creative instincts. I got this picture in my
head of a kind of whole-atom semiconductor that would pry the
oxygen atoms loose from the hydrogen atoms in water molecules — which have
two atoms of hydrogen for one atom of oxygen. The idea, in other words,
is a setup in which the separated oxygen flows one way, the hydrogen the
other.” “But that stuff isn’t new,” objected Bud with a
head-scratch. “Back in high school chemistry, I remember a demonstration
of how you could use an electric current to do the same thing, by
putting the terminal leads in water.” “It’s called electrolysis,” Tom said. “But that
sort of approach wouldn’t be efficient or safe to use as part of the
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divers. What I want is something that produces a good volume
of oxygen in an efficient manner, using very low power.”
“And you’ve found it?”
The young inventor gave the tank a tap. “Inside the hydrolung are
long strips of artificially engineered material that look like lengths
of recording tape. They’re basically dense arrangements of nanotubules
winding between microscopic chips made of rare-earths composites. When a
low current flows down the strip, the atoms of the water molecules
inside the tubules become ‘de-coupled’ from one another and are forced to
migrate in opposite directions by what are called Van der Waal
forces, which are extremely weak except right at the surface of the
material. As a result, oxygen micro-bubbles accumulate on one side of
the strip, hydrogen on the other. Then we just sweep ’em together in
opposite directions — and there’s your breath of air.” “Hmm!”
Bud looked impressed. And he was impressed with himself for having
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hydrogen?”
“It gets combined with carbon dioxide exhaled
from the diver’s lungs, using what amounts to the same process, but in
reverse. The resultant hydrocarbons are vented into the surrounding
water in a very dilute form, safe and practically undetectable. The
whole gizmo,” concluded Tom, “is powered by just one of my little solar
batteries.”
Bud gave a couple claps of applause. “So when do we test her
out — you and I?”
“Now that I know the system works, it won’t take
long to miniaturize it. Give me a couple hours! For the test, we’ll just
hook the hydrolungs up to a regular scuba air-feed and face mask.”
He
added that an amount of compressed helium gas would be mixed into the
oxygen flow, to replace atmospheric nitrogen.
The afternoon’s test took place in a large saltwater tank near the
submersibles pier that was used to check out replacement parts for the
jetmarines and seacopters. Tom and Bud wore the new hydrolung units,
about the size of portable CD players, attached to their weight
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belts. Chow Winkler, wearing two big fretful
eyes, insisted on standing by. “I’m gonna jest wait at the top o’ this here
ladder,” he announced. “An’ if you two young’uns don’t come out when
you say you will, brand my sea monkeys, I’m gonna dive right in after
you!“
“That’s one quick way to
empty the tank,” Bud gibed.
The two dropped in feet-first and settled down to the bottom. Bud
made the OK sign at Tom, and the young inventor could almost hear his
thoughts: still breathing, pal!
Tom had planned the test to run for one hour. An hour underwater in
a barren tank proved to be a long long time! After some playful
aquabatics they sat down on the bottom, and Bud finally stretched out
and pretended to fall asleep. When they climbed out at last they found
Chow still at his post, looking fully as bored as they felt. “Wa-aal,”
said the cook sarcastically, “I sure hope you two had fun down
there.” “Fun or not, I feel great!” Tom declared
happily. “The hydrolungs worked perfectly!”
Bud clapped him on the back and chortled: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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“Now back to the briny deep!”
“But first,” Tom said, “since you don’t seem to
like ‘flipper-speed,’ chum — I have some ideas for a propulsion unit
that — ”
“Excuse me — Mr. Swift!” Tom turned as a man in the garb of
Island Security came trotting up to him. He handed Tom a cellphone. “Got
a call for you, sir, from the Sea Charger.”
The caller proved to be Tom’s father. “Son, Admiral Walter just
spoke to the woman from the State Department, Miss Carne.” “A new development?” “Yes, new and disappointing, I’m afraid. The
Japanese group in charge of the Gojira mission determined that the
materials enclosed with the ransom note definitely came from the
probe.”
Tom groaned. “Bad news. That means we won’t be searching the bottom
for the capsule itself anymore, but for clues as to where they took
it.” “Tom, I’m sorry to say — that wasn’t all I meant by
disappointing,” continued Damon Swift gravely. “It seems
the Japanese authori-
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ties have told the United States that they want to deal directly with
the pirate group in
their own way, through a process of negotiation. They may consent to
making the trade. We are to keep out of it. The search is over!”
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CHAPTER 7
HUMAN
SUBMARINES
TOM was amazed, dismayed — and angry! “Dad, that’s terrible! There
wouldn’t be any need to risk that man’s life if we could find — ”
“I feel as badly about the developments as you do, Tom,” Mr. Swift
interrupted. “Admiral Walter is here with me, and he’s nodding — he
regrets it too. But he has his orders.” There followed a long pause.
Tom waited curiously. Was there more? “Well, that’s all. I know you’ll
do the right thing.”
After the security staffer had left with the cellphone unit, Chow
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