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The little girl was gazing intently, desperately,
into Tom’s eyes |
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THE TOM SWIFT INVENTION ADVENTURES
TOM SWIFT
AND HIS 3-D TELEJECTOR
BY VICTOR APPLETON II
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TOM SWIFT AND HIS
3-D TELEJECTOR
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CHAPTER 1
THE PEG-LEGGED GHOST
“HOW would you girls like to visit a haunted house?” asked Tom Swift
as Bud Barclay’s red convertible sped through the late evening darkness.
Leaning forward from the back seat, his blue eyes sparkled with
excitement.
Tom’s sister Sandra, a pretty blond girl, turned slightly to glance
back suspiciously at her famous brother. “Are you kidding?”
“No. You’ve heard me speak of Dr. Grim- sey?”
“That new scientist you mentioned, the one you and Daddy just hired
at Enterprises?”
Tom nodded. “The house he rented came
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complete with a housemate
from the Great Beyond! I’d like to drop in.”
The dark-haired girl in the back seat next to Tom spoke up. “Grimsey
— already, a creepy name. What is his field, Thomas? Exorcism?” asked
Bashalli Prandit dryly.
“Parapsychology,” Tom said in reply. “The scientific study of ESP
and other ‘paranormal’ phenomena. Including ghosts and hauntings!”
Bud Barclay chuckled. “You should hear the stories he tells about
that place! One night he beard boots clumping outside his room. He
jumped out of bed and glimpsed the figure of a dead sea captain who used
to own the house. Then it disappeared right before his eyes!”
“Oo-ooo!” Bash shivered — a mocking shiver. “Where is this sanctuary
for spooks?”
“It’s the old Gullbracken House, up on the ridge overlooking Lake
Carlopa,” Tom said.
Sandy was unconvinced, but gave a tentative nod. “I know, that big
gloomy old house you can see from Rickman Dunes. Remember, Bashi?”
Bashalli nodded.
“Another night,” Bud went on, “Dr. Grimsey was awakened by clammy
fingers touching his face. There was Pegleg the Ghost bending over xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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him! And it wasn’t
fingers, it was seaweed hanging down from his head!”
“Oh, stop it!” commanded Sandy. “You’ll scare Bashalli.”
“What nonsense,” retorted the Pakistani. “I am very comfortable with
‘ghosts,’ for I know they do not exist. All such things, just hoaxes and
rumors, or tricks of the eye.”
Tom shrugged. “Then I take it you wouldn’t be interested.”
“I did not say that,” she replied defensively.
“You’re giving us goose bumps!” Sandy declared with a frown of only
half-disbelief. “But let’s go see the place, anyhow. Shouldn’t we
call first, though?”
“The guy’s not home,” Bud said, slowing to turn the car around away
from Shopton, where they had wiled the evening that had now turned to
starry, moonless night. “He’s been out of town for a few days — gave me
the house keys and asked me to feed his birds. When he told me the
story, he said he wouldn’t mind if I spent the night there to see for
myself.”
Bashalli asked, “And just what is the story? Who is this
sailor-man supposed to be?”
“No one really knows,” answered Tom so- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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berly. “Dr. Grimsey did
a little research, though, at the library. Supposedly he was an old sea
captain, back in the early 19th century when Shopton was just a little
crossroads village — a suspected slaver and latter-day pirate. Seems he
kept people chained up in the attic, and killed anyone who threatened to
talk. Then one day...” The youth paused. “One day he just disap- peared.
Never seen again.”
“Except for one thing,” added Bud. “On his bed was a black
char-mark, the size and shape of a man!”
Tense silence followed, dark as the night but starless and
moonless. Bash eyed Tom suspiciously, but kept her thoughts close.
Paralleling the lakeshore, the convertible presently turned off onto
a dirt road which wound upward onto the low ridge that framed the lake
road on the inland side. Soon a house loomed ahead against the night
sky. It was an old frame building, two stories, with a high gabled roof.
Slats of light shone through the shuttered windows of the ground floor,
but the second story was only a silhouette, slightly paled by the
reflection from Lake Carlopa. Bud parked and the four young people got
out.
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Unlocking the heavy
wooden door, Bud led his friends into the parlor, switching on some
additional lamps. Yet even in bright light the room seemed strange and
half-hidden — to the girls at least, though Bud maintained his usual
joking commentary. “Come on,” urged the youthful San Franciscan, “I’ll
show you the big aviary on the back porch.”
Bashalli’s eyes narrowed. She glanced toward Sandy and said, “No
doubt these bright boys have set up their spook show back there to
thrill and chill us.”
“We’ll wait here,” pronounced Sandy smugly, giving Tom and Bud a
dismissive wave.
“Okay, San. But...” The young inventor’s voice trailed off into a
slight frown. “Stay here in the parlor. It might not be safe, wandering
around in the dark.”
“We shall be quite fine,” Bashalli declared, “even deprived
of our brave protectors.”
Left alone, the girls made a closer inspection of the room. The
walls were covered with dark-patterned paper, and red-plush drapes hung
at the windows. The lamps and fixtures were modern, but most of the
furniture was massive and old fashioned.
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“What a dreary place!” Sandy murmured. “It smells musty in here,
doesn’t it? Like it’s all been closed up for a hundred years.”
“Part of the effects. Please do not say the scent reminds you
of seaweed.”
“Imagine being alone here on one of those ‘dark and stormy’ nights!”
Bashalli sniffed haughtily. “But Americans enjoy being frightened.
Your movies are all about fear and danger.”
“Uh-huh. And what are Pakistan movies about?”
“We watch American movies.”
They could hear Tom and Bud talking at the back side of the house,
and the occasional twitter of a bird.
Suddenly Bash looked up, toward the high ceiling. “What was — ?”
“What?” Sandy gulped.
“A sound up above.”
“Above in the — in the attic?”
“‘Above’ is where attics usually are, Sandra. — there!”
Sandy had heard it too. A scraping sound and the creak of a single
footfall. And then one more sound. Thunk!
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Like a wooden peg-leg against a floor!
“T-Tom? Bud?” Sandy called out with false calm. “Are — er — you
all right?”
“Sure, just feeding the birds,” came a pair of voices from the porch
— definitely not the attic.
A grandfather clock ticked loudly in the silence; but the silence
seemed to be becoming louder than the sound. Suddenly Bashalli gave a
stifled gasp and pointed with a quivering hand.
“Sandy! Look!”
The yawning mouth of the old fireplace, dark and empty a moment
before, had taken on a faint, wavering phosphorescence. In a moment it
had coalesced into the form of flames licking at the edges of the
darkness — silent flames without a crackle and without heat.
“Obviously — just a gas log — don’t you think?” murmured Bash in the
faintest of voices. “Surely on a timer.”
Wide-eyed, Sandy could not answer. And then her eyes grew wider.
A
weird shape, like a twist of smoke, had materialized in front of the
fireplace! Expanding and growing more solid, it coalesced into the
figure of a peg-legged man in a brass buttoned coat with a sea captain’s
hat pulled low over xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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his eyes. He was drenched and dripping,
and seaweed clung to his clothes! As he stepped forward, he
stretched out a clawlike hand in the direction of the girls. His head
seemed to become luminous, as if from an inner flame, revealing his
skull as a black shadow around two glowing eyes!
The girls watched, frozen with terror.
“H-h-he’s dripping wet,” Bash whispered, “but he’s not leaving any
tracks on the carpet!”
Sandy summoned courage from somewhere. “He just can’t be a
ghost!” she insisted. “This is just something Tom and Bud have rigged
up.” Yet even as she spoke she was well aware that she could still hear
the boys talking and moving about half a house away.
Gathering all her nerve, Sandy got up and approached the specter,
circling warily.
“Sandra, no!” protested Bashalli.
Sandy reached out to touch the otherworldly intruder — but her
hand went through his body!
Reduced to quaint stereotypes the girls screamed and flew into
each other’s arms. They were clinging in panic as Tom and Bud came
rushing into the parlor.
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“What’s wrong?” Tom
inquired. “What happened?”
“W-w-we just saw the ghost!” Bash quavered. “Sandy tried to touch —
it!”
Bud stared at them, then looked around. “Stop joking — there’s no
one here but us.”
The apparitions, ghostly fire and ghostly sailor, had vanished!
Sandy was about to speak when she saw smiles twitching at the boys’
lips. As her expression changed Tom and Bud burst into laughter.
“Of all the mean tricks!” Sandy exclaimed in disgust. “They’ve been
playing a joke on us, Bashi!”
“But — but how? I know we saw it!” Bewildered, the pretty
Pakistani turned to Tom Swift, eyes flashing. “I must say, for someone
dead he was most lifelike. One of your silly robots, Thomas?”
The young scientist-inventor reddened. “Didn’t mean to scare you two
all that much, Bash.”
“It was pretty much my idea,” Bud con- fessed.
Sandy conceded a smile, good-naturedly, at xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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the sheepish expressions
on the boys’ faces. “Okay, whatever. Brother dear, you’ve had your fun.
Now explain.”
The young inventor was still chuckling. “What you’ve just seen,” he
announced, “is a demonstration of the new invention I’m working on — a
three-dimensional television system.”
“We might have known, Sandra,” pro- nounced Bashalli. “Television is
as good a source of anxiety as movies.”
“Television?” Sandy wrinkled her forehead. “But the spook we saw
wasn’t on a screen — it was walking right through the room!”
“Exactly, because my system doesn’t need a screen.”
Tom
walked over and pulled aside some draperies. Concealed behind them was a
boxlike device about four feet high, studded with tuning knobs and
dials. A short latticework antenna on an adjustable base was mounted on
the top of the chassis. “This telejector, as I call it, projects 3-D
images right into the room. You were actually watching a digital video
recording which I switched on by remote control from Dr. Grimsey’s
porch.” He added that he had similarly switched on a sound player set up
in xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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the room overhead to
provide an eerie atmosphere.
“Then the ‘ghost’ we saw was really just — well, just light?”
Bashalli asked in amazement.
“Not quite, although I hope to achieve that later,” Tom said. “The
images were formed from a chemical mist which Bud sprayed into the air
earlier tonight, before he swung by to pick us up. The tiny globules are
slightly buoyant and much too small and diffuse to be seen in dim light
like this.”
“An electronic field gimmick keeps them in place in the air,” Bud
noted. “Same sort of deal Tom uses on his skywriting machine.”
Bash nodded. “Ah! That very atmospheric musty smell.”
Tom continued, “When the phase-tuned microwave beams from the
telejector strike the mist particles, it makes them glow at the point in
the air where the energy load exceeds the absorption threshold of the
particles.”
Sandy nodded. “But it wasn’t like a TV image,” she objected. “It was
in 3-D — I walked partly around it.”
“That’s the main idea,” Tom replied. “The beam paints a sort of
glowing 3-D ‘shell’ in xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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mid-air while dimming-down
the background.” He added that the phony “sea captain” was actually an
Enterprises employee, Sam Barker, in a rented costume. “We recorded him
this morning, using another part of my new system.”
“He’ll be glad to hear he has a future in acting,” Bud gibed.
“I suppose this was a historic moment in science, even if Sandy
was almost scared out of her lovely blond hair,” Bashalli commented.
“Will your new 3-D system be used for home television, Tom?”
The young inventor smiled modestly. “It will eventually, I hope, but
it’s not perfected yet. This version can handle individual objects that
appear fairly close to the viewer, but not scenery, or images of varying
distance. It’s hard to deal with parallax and perspective, you know.”
“Isn’t it, though.”
Bud produced refreshments from the kitchen. The four sat on the
sofas and chatted for a time. Then Sandy glanced across the room.
“Oh, good — I was going to ask you to show us the ghost again.”
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The hazy, glowing
image stood indistinctly in a dark corner of the room, arms extended
toward them.
Tom stood. “But — I switched off the machine.” He turned toward Bud.
“Flyboy, is this another one of your pranks? Like you did that time with
the robot?”
Bud shook his head vigorously. “Don’t know anything about it. Maybe
you accidentally bumped the remote.”
“No,” Tom stated, puzzled. “It’s still in the other room.”
“Well, you surely don’t expect us to be scared twice, do you?” asked
Bashalli smugly. “One must not repeat a trick too soon.”
The image was the phantom sea captain as before, seaweed and all.
Yet there was some- thing different in the quality of light. The parts of
the image seemed to waver, as if it were about to fall to pieces. It
seemed somehow unreal.
The eyes fixed on Tom. The figure extended a hand, and they could
all make out its lips moving amid a pleading expression.
Then, suddenly, it dissolved into air.
The four exchanged glances, reactions mixed. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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“Well,” said Bash, “I will admit it is all very impressive.
But you forgot to switch on the sound.”
“The telejector prototype isn’t set up for sound,” muttered Tom,
still staring. “I read his lips, though.”
“Hunh? What did he say?” Bud demanded.
“He said, ‘Tom Swift, Tom Swift — the time is near!’”
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CHAPTER 2
SPACE INTRUDER
“THE time is near,” repeated Bashalli. “Now I know we are
dealing with television, the land of abundant cliches!”
Puzzled and frowning, Tom strode over to the telejector and crouched
down to examine it. “The power’s off, just as it should be.” He
depressed a button and a small DVD-type disk popped out into his hand.
“And this is definitely the recording disk we made — I wrote a label on
the top by hand, myself.”
Sandy asked if a further video track could have been added to the
disk. “No,” the young inventor replied. “This is an experimental disk xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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specifically designed for
the telejector system. Nothing can be added after the original imprint.”
“And let’s not forget that the machine was switched off,” Bud noted.
“Then what was it, Thomas, the real ghost of Old Pegleg?” demanded
Bashalli. “Perhaps we should check the attic for skeletons!”
“This house doesn’t have an attic! We just made up the
story,” Tom retorted. “Dr. Grimsey is a communications technology
engineer — nothing to do with ghosts.”
“Well,” said Bashalli, “I want nothing to do with them either. Let’s
go.”
They loaded the equipment into the trunk of the convertible and left
the old house, mystified and just a bit spooked.
Minutes later, passing Swift Enterprises on the way to the Swift
home, Tom asked Bud to drive in through the executive gate and let him
off. “Dad’s working late in the observatory. I said I’d join him. We’ll
drive home in his car.”
“Looking over the Green Orb with your space prober, Tomonomo?” Sandy
guessed.
“Right. We finished refurbishing the liquid helium feed this
afternoon. Now we can try the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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megascope on her.”
A strange heavenly body had been sighted only days before by
astronomers in the Enterprises outpost in space, orbiting the planet at
a distance of 22,300 miles. Still unseen by Earth-based instruments, the
station’s powerful electronic telescope had detected the extremely
faint, greenish object, which the scientific press had instantly named
the Green Orb. It was apparently moving in an elongated, sharply canted
orbit about the sun. Tom and his father hoped to scrutinize the space
phantom with Tom’s revolutionary video-telescope.
Bash glanced up at the night sky from the open convertible. “Can we
see it from here?”
“Not with the naked eye,” Tom said. “But if it were visible,
it might be quite an exotic sight. Its greenish color isn’t like
anything else in the sky.”
Let off in the walled, four-mile-square experimental station outside
the town, Tom took a ridewalk ground-conveyor past the broad air- field to
the high dome of the observatory.
The interior was dominated by the latticework antenna of the space
prober, which utilized an electronic quantum-link principle to xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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establish an invisible
“camera eye” in space. Beneath the huge, slanting column of metal rings
was the monitor and control console, where Damon Swift was intently at
work. “Just finished powering up the system and checking her out,” he
greeted his son. “No sign of that leak in the helium gasket.”
“I knew we could count on Hank,” Tom nodded. Hank Sterling, a good
friend, was the Swifts’ talented chief engineer.
Tom pressed a button to open the dome, then tuned the electronic
circuitry and shifted the looming antenna into position, using the
parameters sent down from the space outpost. A flashing light confirmed
that the megascope’s tightly focused beam was on its way to the vicinity
of the Orb.
“It’ll take about fourteen seconds at light-speed for the beam
terminus to get there,” Tom remarked. “The Orb’s some two and a half
million miles away. Let’s look over the data and photos Professor
Goldstone transmitted.”
“It’s all pretty puzzling, son.”
“Hey, wait’ll I tell you how my joke on the girls worked out. Now
that’s a puzzle!”
Presently a beep alerted the two that the ima- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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ging point had been
established in deep space. Before switching on the viewscreen, the
scientist-inventors studied the high-definition photographs from the
outpost. Even at maximum enhancement and magnification, the space
station’s telescope showed nothing but a dim, hazy disk floating among
the stars, slightly yellow-green in hue. It was utterly featureless.
“They can’t get a better image?” asked Tom.
“There’s no more light to collect,” Mr. Swift replied. “Even the
Hubble Telescope shows only the same blur — no surface features at all.”
He added: “If it even has a surface.”
“But they’ve calculated the Orb’s size, at least.”
“About ninety miles in diameter. Bigger than Nestria.” Mr. Swift
referred to Earth’s second moon, which Tom had explored in the name of
his country. “A fairly healthy-sized asteroid, son — and yet it has many
peculiar characteristics. An atmosphere, apparently.”
“Assuming that’s the cause of that hazy halo.” Tom nodded
thoughtfully. “Speaking of Nes- tria... You know, Dad, it’s possible the
Space Friends are behind this. They certainly have the ability to
manipulate celestial bodies.”
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For a considerable
period of time Earth had been in cryptic contact with extraterrestrials,
radio contact by way of Swift Enterprises. The unseen beings, who
communicated with humanity by means of a concept-language of
mathematical symbols, had moved the moonlet Nestria into Earth orbit for
reasons never adequately clarified. Though trusting Tom and his
associates, these friends, who appeared to have established a scientific
station in orbit about Mars, preferred to remain secretive and
enigmatic.
“The thought occurred to me as well,” Mr. Swift responded. “Tomorrow
let’s begin com- posing a message to send them.”
Tom turned his attention to a set of long-range spectrographs, and
his surprise increased. “Good night! This doesn’t look like a spectral
profile at all!”
Mr. Swift nodded, grinning at the beckoning scientific mystery.
“Just a blur without a trace of data. And as you’ll see, radar probes
get only a weak, diffuse bounceback at the threshold of detectability.
Clearly the intruder isn’t a solid object at all. It must be a cloud of
gases and ice particles — but unlike a comet, it has no core.”
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“A cosmic dust bunny,”
Tom joked. “It sure doesn’t reflect much light from the sun.”
“Goldstone doesn’t think it’s reflecting any light from
outside sources,” was the response. “What we see is some sort of natural
luminance, perhaps from a radioactive process.”
“We know one thing, though,” said Tom thoughtfully. “It’s not part
of our solar system. It’s coming in practically at right angles to the
plane of the ecliptic.”
“Yes, from interstellar space, I would suppose. Quite a
long-range traveler.”
Tom activated the monitor. After he had tuned several dials, a
picture came onto the prober’s circular screen.
There was no trace of the target. “Just stars,” Mr. Swift muttered
in baffled surprise.
“I’ll check the settings.”
But in a moment Tom reported that the imaging point was precisely
where it had been sent. He rubbed his chin. “Could the figures from the
outpost be off?”
“Rotate the view angle,” suggested Mr. Swift. “Let’s look around.”
Almost immediately the screen showed a small blob of greenish light
against the black of xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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space. “Well, there’s the
Orb,” Tom declared. “But if the parameters weren’t plain wrong, it has
an irregular orbit. It’s a good hundred thousand miles from where it
ought to be.”
“But perhaps that’s to be expected with an object of such low mass,”
the elder scientist mused. “It’s further away from the sun than we are,
but getting closer by the hour. Even something as slight as the pressure
of sunlight, or the solar magnetosphere, might deflect its course.”
“And yet it doesn’t dissipate. Looks like a puff of smoke,” Tom
remarked, a tiny bell of memory in his brain trying to remind him of —
something. He manipulated the controls to bring the viewpoint
close to the space body. But as the disk swelled on the monitor, he
suddenly halted the approach. “Look at that, Dad.”
The mysterious object had begun to shine with a weird green aura,
vividly reproduced on the megascope viewscreen. Second by second the
glow became more and more intense and brilliant — alarmingly so!
Damon Swift gasped softly. “What could be happening, Tom?’’
“I don’t know. I can’t even guess — but the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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Green Orb sure isn’t a dim
bulb anymore!” Alight with a fiery halo, the disk, still small and
distant, showed hints of a writhing turbulence!
Suddenly the picture wavered and rolled across the screen. Tom
reached out to adjust the monitor. As he did so, he and his father
jumped back in surprise as a streamer of sparks wisped down in front of
their faces, from above them.
Tom glanced upward — and cried out in alarm. An entire section of
the antenna was enveloped in steam and smoke, and sparking violently!
As the pair began to back away, a cluster of metal rings broke loose
and arced down directly on top of them!
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CHAPTER 3
FALSE PRETENSES
“DAD!” Tom snatched at the older man’s arm and yanked him back full
force as the antenna section, still connected to its support struts,
smashed down on the megascope control chassis. The next instant, the
broad circular viewscreen exploded with a lurid electrical discharge and
a spray of shattering glass! Father and son staggered backward,
clutching their faces.
The observatory quieted. Scratched and cut by the hurtling glass,
the hands of both were flecked with blood as they dropped them from xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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their faces.
“Whew!” Damon
Swift looked at his fingers. “Think we’ll need major surgery, Tom?”
The youth smiled ruefully. “No, but I guess we could use some
first aid.”
Taking the electric nanocar Mr. Swift had parked next to the
observatory, the two scientist-inventors whisked across the experi- mental
station to the plant’s infirmary. Here they found Doc Simpson,
Enterprises’ young medic, on late-evening duty. With a few wry and apt
comments about the durability of Tom and his father, he cleaned their
cuts and applied anti- septic.
When they returned to the observatory, Tom unscrewed the back panel
of the prober console to examine the circuitry. Many of the electronic
parts were still hot, and some of the fused in- sulation and resistors
were smoking faintly.
“What the devil happened, Tom?” asked Damon Swift.
“Something must have been knocked out in the power stages, causing
an extra big surge. All the liquid helium gaskets cracked, and the
overheated, charged-up ring section came down, with its power cables
still attached. And xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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goodbye monitor!” The
young inventor sighed. “A chance in a million.”
“The new helium feed setup must have failed — an undetected flaw.”
Tom stood up in disgust and added, “Well, it’s a cinch we can’t fix
all that tonight. So much for our lookover of the Green Orb.”
Before leaving, Tom contacted the space outpost on his quantum-link
parallelophone, nicknamed the Private-Ear Radio, or PER. Dr. Goldstone
reported that the mysterious sky object still glowed with a weird
brilliance in the electronic telescope. “Seems to be calming down,
though,” the astronomer remarked. “Yet it’s strange — we’ve detected no
radiation or unusual electromagnetic activity.”
“The little orb that isn’t there,” Tom mur- mured.
Next morning, the young inventor and his father were down early for
breakfast, eager to hear the latest news reports about the strange
heavenly body. As they tuned the big wall-mounted television to a
science channel, Mrs. Swift, a dainty, pretty woman, joined them, then
Sandy.
The newscaster was saying, “As an update on an
ongoing story, that strange object in the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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sky is still baffling astronomers. At first it was
thought to be a new asteroid because of its orbital path around the sun.
But last night the space voyager briefly took on a mysterious green glow
that has thrown observers into an uproar. Where the Green Orb came from
is now a bigger question than ever, and the world scientific community
has yet to determine just what it is — but whatever the answer, on the
human scale it’s far from Earth, and will be getting farther as it
crosses the plane of the solar system and begins its return to deep
space. Perhaps we should be grate- ful!”
“You had a front row seat at the big sky show last night, Dear,”
Mrs. Swift remarked to Tom.
Tom grinned wryly. “Ringside seat is more like it.”
“All that and a waterlogged ghost,” Sandy observed. “Just another
quiet evening in Shopton.”
Tom spent much of the following day working to repair the megascope
with the assistance of Hank Sterling. They were joined by Enterprises’
new hire, Dr. Edmund Grim- sey, a somewhat exotic figure with his full xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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bushy beard and shock of
iron-gray hair.
“Good to be here, Tom — learning by doing, so to speak,” he said to
his young employer. “Swift Enterprises gives its people rather more
freedom to learn and explore than was typical at my last position.”
Tom grinned at the older man. “We’re glad to have you with us, sir.”
“Mmm. Rather difficult yesterday, back in Thessaly to collect my
remaining files at the old office.”
“Oh?”
“My farewell to your counterpart was rather — less than warm.”
Upon the death of its founder, Wickliffe Laboratories of Thessaly
had passed into the hands of a brilliant scientist-technician with a
national reputation. Peter Langley was a few spare years older than Tom
Swift, but the media liked to call him “America’s other young
inventor,” and had encouraged what some thought was a spirit of rivalry
between the two. Tom was well aware that Langley had been displeased by
the loss of a key employee to nearby Shopton.
Hank Sterling broke into the conversation. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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“Looks like we’re doing
well on the reconstruction of the Mighty Eye, Tom,” he called down from
the antenna work platform up above. “We could be up and running by
tomorrow.”
“I imagine the Green Orb will still be out there,” Tom laughed. “But
as for me, I think I’ll break for lunch and check things out over in the
office. I should think about getting back to work on the telejector.”
In the office in the administration building he shared with his
father, Tom sorted through the various messages handed him by Trent,
their secretary. One name caught his eye im- mediately. Well, whattaya
know! he thought. We were just talking about you, Pete!
Tom called the number on the note, which he recognized as Pete
Langley’s private line. The CEO-scientist himself answered the buzz.
“Hi, Pete. This is Tom Swift returning your call.”
“Tom.” There was a moment of cool hesitation — a chill in the air —
and then a silence that felt oddly prolonged. “Got a busy afternoon
going?”
“Well — er — ”
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“Too busy to drop by a
competitor?”
Tom decided business diplomacy was the better part of valor. “I can
break away. Do I get a clue as to what’s up?”
Again, silence. Langley ignored the question. “Would three o’clock
work? My office?”
“Fine.”
Tom puzzled over the matter in the air, flying to Thessaly in one of
Enterprises’ Pigeon Special miniplanes. But puzzlement came to nothing
by the time Tom found himself setting down on the Wickliffe Labs
airfield.
In the management office building Tom approached Langley’s
receptionist.
“Would you tell him I’m here, Sue?”
“Oh, I didn’t realize — ”
“Pete’s expecting me.”
The young woman disappeared into the office behind her, returning in
a moment to wave Tom in.
Pete Langley, thinly handsome and dark-haired, stood next to his
desk with hand ex- tended. “Hi, Swiftola.”
They shook hands and sat down facing one another. There was a moment
of silence — and then a few more.
“Pete, is something wrong?” asked the blond xxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
young inventor.
“That’s what I was about to ask you,” replied the black-haired young
inventor.
“Excuse me?”
Langley shrugged. “You dropped by unannounced. Some problem?”
“I — I don’t get it,” Tom responded in surprise. “When you called me
to come over — ”
“I called you? Come on, guy.”
It became evident that the call Tom’s office had received had not
originated with Pete Langley! “Don’t know the first thing about it. And
you say you called back — and spoke to me? Weird city. I’ve been here
all day. No incoming on my private number. Sure you punched the keys
right?”
Tom pulled the crumpled note from his pocket and read the number
off. Langley snorted. “There’s the prob, bob. I don’t use that number
anymore. Wick still owns it, but it doesn’t link to anything right now.”
Tom could see that his counterpart, who also had deep-set blue eyes,
was as baffled as he was. “This is embarrassing, Pete,” said Tom. “But I
can’t understand how it could have happened. It was
this number I called, xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
and I recognized your voice.”
“Yeah, well, voice-mimicry technology is cutting-edge these days. No
news to you — you folks have your TeleVoc system. Which we plan to make
obsolete as soon as we can.” Langley laughed, and Tom joined in
pleasantly. “Let’s back-burner it, Swiftorini.”
“I’m just sorry to interrupt your day. I’m sure you’re as busy as I
am.”
“Busier. But as a matter of fact, I was thinking about giving you a
call. We need to do a little out-hashing, Tom.”
“Excuse me?”
“To clear the air. About you-know-himsey.”
Tom got the idea. “Dr. Grimsey.”
“Shoot me, but I don’t like the idea of you and your Dad raiding our
staff.”
The youth reddened. “Is that really what you think, Pete?
Enterprises doesn’t use unethical methods, any more than you do. The man
approached us out of the blue. It was com- pletely unexpected.”
“No inducements, hmm. No playing up the usual damages that these
scientific egos like to collect? ‘Oh, those mean guys at Wickliffe!’ The xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
The guy’s a prima donna,
Tomsky-omsky.”
Tom stood abruptly. “I’d rather not discuss our employees behind
their backs, Pete.”
Langley also rose to his feet. “Oooh, don’t go away mad, budnik. I’d
like you to say-hey to one of our own new hires.”
The executive stepped out of the office for a minute as Tom waited,
fuming. Whatever was going on at Wickliffe Labs — he didn’t like it!
The door swung open. Peter Langley entered with a smirk on his face.
The smirk was follow- ed by an attractive young woman in shark-sharp
business attire.
She threw Tom a bland, somehow challenging smile. “Hello, Tom. Long
time. Well, maybe not so long. Surprised to see me?”
Tom’s youthful face bore a frown of steel.
“Very!”
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|
CHAPTER 4
AN UNEXPECTED BACKLASH
IT WAS obvious that Pete Langley was enjoying greatly his supposed
rival’s dis- comfiture. “Amelia’s one of the nation’s top attorneys in
high-tech matters,” he remarked. “Commercial patents — you know. Given
our expansion goals here at Wickie, she’s a perfect fit.”
“Call me a nice piece,” added the woman in question, “of the
puzzle.”
Amelia Foger, Esq., had briefly worked in the Swift Enterprises
legal office. She had resigned in anger, certain that the Swifts were
prejudiced against her because of her great xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
uncle Andy Foger, who had
made himself a persistent problem for the first Tom Swift, Tom’s
great-grandfather. “I didn’t realize you were working for Pete, Amy,” Tom said.
“As shown by your red, white, and blue face, Tom.”
“Say now, don’t take it personal, kiddoo,” smarmed Langley. “I mean
— she approached us.”
“I won’t interrupt your confab, boys,” Amelia said. “But Tom, Pete
wanted me to mention one little thing to an old friend. I won’t call it
advice. I don’t give free advice. Unprofessional.
“Our mutual friend Dr. Grimsey worked here for quite a few years on
some — well, let’s call them projects of significance. Com- puter-like he
may be, but we can’t quite delete his memory. I know you’ll bear
in mind the need to tread carefully in dealing with possible proprietary
information of value to this company. We’re obligated to protect our
in- terests.”
“If you or Pete have any such concerns, Amy,” Tom snapped, “I’m sure
you still have Willis Rodellin’s number in our legal de- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
partment.”
“Hmm. I might. Somewhere.”
Langley accompanied his counterpart’s stalk out to the airfield and
the Pigeon Special. “I love these little miniplanes your Construction
affiliate cranks out,” he remarked. He added: “But you know, I was
thinking... I have a little free advice for you, even if Amy doesn’t.”
Tom looked at him levelly. “What?”
“Check out the plane carefully before you take off. See, look at it
this way — you got an elaborately staged bogus call that brought you
here to Wickliffe in a plane. So why? I have this slogan: the
consequence is the cause. Maybe the call was to get you here in
order to plant a bomb or something in your plane. Happens to people like
us — right? Think of that?”
“Yes.”
“What do you think of my slogan?”
“Nothing so far.”
After a thorough look-over, Tom flew the plane back to Enterprises,
fuming. He talked to himself — and was glad there were only a few clouds
to catch his words.
Narrating the story to his father, he con- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
cluded with, “So Amy
Foger is involved in all this!”
Damon Swift nodded, a certain kind of faint smile on his face. “Yes,
‘involved’ may be the word exactly. She and Pete may be seeing one
another on a personal basis. Pete Langley is unmarried, and Amelia
wouldn’t care anyway, I’d wager. Miss Foger strikes me as rather
am- bitious.”
Tom plunked himself down behind his desk. “I’m mainly interested in
the business of the fake call. Dad, whoever I reached has obviously set
up some gimmick to intercept and divert calls — either at our end or at
Pete’s end.”
“Yet it may not be the work of an enemy, son. Pete Langley is a
driven young man with big responsibilities and the same sort of big,
powerful imagination as yours. In situations like that, minds like that
can develop — problems.”
“You think he’s having a breakdown of some kind?”
“Nothing that dramatic, necessarily. But it’s clear you’ve been on
his mind. He was thinking of calling you over, wasn’t he? Perhaps he did
place, and answer, those calls himself, using the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
dead line.”
“And blocked out the memory of doing so.” Tom shrugged. “Maybe.
Sometimes when I get into some problem, I guess I do lose touch with
things around me. So I’m told.”
His father chuckled affectionately. “We’re all blessed with a
wonderful auxiliary mechanism in our skulls called our brain.
It’s more than willing to take things over when necessary, when the
mind decides to step out for a while.”
Tom discussed the matter with Harlan Ames in the plant security
office next door, then called Willis Rodellin to keep him on top of
things. Finally, restless, he drove over to the ob- servatory to see what
progress had been made by Hank and Dr. Grimsey in repairing the
megascope.
Hank was all smiles. “Boss, Edmund here is a Godsend! Believe it or
not, we’re ready for some serious testing.”
Delighted, Tom exclaimed, “Great! Dr. Grimsey, I can’t thank you
enough.”
“Oh pshaw!” the older man grinned. “Let’s take a look around the
solar system, shall we?”
They actuated the Mighty Eye and made the antenna’s aiming motors
hum. In moments they xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
were looking down on
Fearing Island, the Enterprises space-launch facility off the coast of
Georgia, with Tom’s huge repelatron-powered spaceship Challenger
looming like a fantastic gyroscope over its launch pad. Next came a view
of the glittering, elegantly rotating space outpost; and then, kinking
and curving the invisible microwave helix-tube that upheld the viewpoint
terminus, the three took a look at the far side of the moon.
“Electrifying!” murmured Grimsey. “This, Tom boy, is what one might
call a scientific turn-on!” The man was that old.
“No reason not to make up for lost time,” Tom said. He adjusted the
megascope system to send the imaging point toward the Green Orb, which
was now considerably closer to the Earth, although still above the plane
of the ecliptic.
As the beam readjusted at light-speed, Tom asked his companions if
they had determined what had caused the space prober’s disastrous
burnout. “If you mean the ultimate, original cause, Skipper, we haven’t
doped that out. Best guess is that the circuit supercooling system
failed at some unidentified weak spot.”
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|
“But we’ve checked
that element quite thoroughly now,” Dr. Grimsey assured Tom. “Thank
goodness your translimator machine provides a ready source of liquid
helium.” This invention of Tom’s made modifications in the molecular
state constants of gases and liquids, easily converting gaseous helium
to its supercold liquid form.
The megascope console signaled that the beam terminus had
established a position near the Green Orb. “Of course, near in
this case means a distance of a few thousand miles. Let’s get a good
look, then swoop in.” Tom worked the dials of the console as the
greenish disk appeared in the center of the screen.
Again it struck Tom how eerie and half-real the Green Orb seemed to
the eye. Its pale green hue was again extraordinarily faint and gloomy,
its curving edges strangely elusive.
“No sign of that turbulence effect you mentioned,” Hank remarked.
“Let’s see if we can get inside the ‘green curtain’,” Tom said with
excited determination. He caused the viewpoint to move forward quickly,
and the disk swelled up with a jump to fill the screen.
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|
Suddenly, instantly,
the image wavered and sparkled. “Good night, I guess you spoke too soon,
Hank,” Tom groaned. The Orb was again lighting up before their eyes!
From this closer point of view, it was clear that whatever the body of
the Orb was made of, it was in a state of agitation.
They watched in bemused silence for several minutes, not advancing
the imaging point any further. “I’m no astronomer,” noted Grimsey,
squinting at the screen, “but I’ve surely never run across a planetary
sight like that. The gaseous envelope seems to be granular,
composed of little clouds or motes.” The small, glowing elements seemed
to be swirling about wildly.
Tom nodded at the monitor screen. “The effect must be
magneto-hydro-dynamic in nature — clumps of cold plasma, which can form
itself into twisted strands.” He indicated a bank of waggling meters on
the control panel. “The megascope is fighting to hold off decoherence in
the quantum matrix at the beam terminal. And yet,” he went on in a
mystified tone, “the space station reported no emissions in any part of
the spectrum, nothing that could xxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
cause decoherence.”
Suddenly the high-definition viewscreen flared a brilliant
neon-green — and went black.
“Oh no,” Tom moaned. “It’s happened again — complete system
failure!”
Hank and Dr. Grimsey keenly scrutinized the meter readouts. “The
limiters and contra-surgers contained it this time,” Hank reported, “but
it’s the same thing as before. Some kind of powerful energy pulse
flooding through the transmitter rings and shorting out the
anti-inverse-square-wave generator.”
“A mind-blower of a name!” Grimsey commented. “The megascope is
completely knocked dead, I’m afraid. Shall we commence repair?”
Tom shook his head. “Don’t worry about it now. We need to get at the
source. I’m sure we’re all thinking the same thing as to the cause of
this.”
“Pretty obvious,” declared Hank Sterling. “It’s the Orb!”
“My former employer has some little saying about causes and
consequences,” mused Dr. Grimsey. “Judging by the consequence, I would
say the asteroid, or cloud — whatever it is — xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
has issues with being probed.”
“I’ll say!” Tom agreed. “The megascope conveys its image data
instantaneously once the terminus is established, so we saw the glow
effect and the turbulence in real time. Then some seconds later
the ‘recoil’ pulse wrecked the scope.”
Sterling nodded. “Which implies it came back to Earth from space
along the microwave tube.”
“A reaction set off by the presence of the beam terminal — the mere
presence.” The young inventor’s blue eyes glinted at the trace of
a scientific mystery. “As we all know, the megascope conveyor beam stops
at the terminus. It gets cut off by fractal phase inversion and never
touches the object under observation.”
“And so one must ask, how could this celestial body react to
something that has no contact with it in the first place?” wondered
Grimsey. “As if, somehow, it is reacting to our purpose, not the
actuality.”
“No point speculating, fellows,” Tom replied. “Let’s set aside these
Earth-based in- strumental studies and pay a visit to the Orb!”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Hank responded
excitedly, “In the Chal- lenger?”
“What else?” Tom laughed. “Starting with you and I, we can put
together a crew in no time. Bud’s due back from his delivery flight in a
couple hours, and Chow’s always rarin’ to go.” The youth explained to
Dr. Grimsey that Chow Winkler, a crusty, colorful former chuck wagon
cook, was a welcome member of most Swift expeditions. “He’s our
executive chef, but he’s had plenty of space-flight experience. Which —
er — reminds me, Dr. Grimsey...”
The man smiled through his bush of beard. “Oh yes, I know. I’m not
quite ‘space worthy’ as of yet. But I’m content to keep my feet on the
ground.”
Bud and Chow were thrilled to hear of the new expedition. “Brand my
comet belt!” whooped the rotund westerner. “Fer all the blame trouble we
get into out there, it’s all sure a sight t’ see! Don’t mind losin’ some
o’ my personal gravity, neither,” he added, with a thump somewhere near
his deeply buried waist- line.
“What exactly do you plan to do, genius boy?” inquired Bud. “Will we
be landing on the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Orb?”
“It doesn’t look like there’s anything to land on,” replied
Tom. “It’s just some kind of thin, nebulous mass without a solid surface
— it may even be hard to see when we’re up close, like a mist.”
The youthful astronaut explained that the Challenger would fly
past the object at a distance of a few hundred miles, staying clear of
its hazy perimeter and making observations at long range. “I’m going to
install some sampling devices and test instruments on a couple of the
Donkeys and send them out from the ship’s vehicular hangar. They’ll pass
right through the body of the Orb, taking readings along the way, and
then they’ll rendezvous with the ship further along.” The Repelatron
Donkeys were small mobile platforms designed for personnel transport
outside the spaceship. Tom had re- cently constructed a set of new ones
with enhanced remote control features.
Enterprises’ three-decker Flying Lab, the famous Sky Queen,
roared southward toward Fearing Island at dawn the next morning. Her
yawning passengers included Hank Sterling and another veteran of space
travel, Bill Bennings.
“So it’s just the five of us, then?” asked Bill.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Tom responded, “One
more. Dad suggested I take along Aciema Musa, who’s part of the visiting
astrophysics team doing a research study at Fearing right now. I met her
the other week.”
“Aster-physics, huh?” Chow looked dubious. “Guess that sounds
like sumpin’ to do with space, anyhow.”
Hank laughed. “Cowpoke, those folks study all kinds of wild and
woolly phenomena, from neutron stars to cosmology — the creation of the
universe!”
“She’s an expert on magneto-hydro-dynamics,” Tom added. “She’s
studied Alfven wave propagation in interstellar plasmas. It might have a
lot to do with the Green Orb.”
“Take yer word on thet one,” declared Chow. “But son, I’ll
tell ya one thing. From what you said, that there Orb doesn’t care to
give away her secrets — and she jest might fight like a dang wildcat to
keep ’em! I hope we’re all up to it.”
“So do I, pardner,” said Tom quietly. He wondered: And what
happens if we aren’t?
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
CHAPTER 5
PHANTOMS IN FLIGHT
ON THE invisible stilts of its repulsion-force thrust system, the
great spacecraft rode its encircling rail-rings through a pastel sky at
6:11 AM.
“Shall I call you Captain Swift, Tom?” asked Aciema Musa.
Tom looked up from the element-scanning readouts on the main panel.
“Maybe — if we sell the TV series,” he laughed. “But till then, I’m just
Tom.”
“How long before we arrive at the Orb?”
“At our constant 1-G acceleration — we won’t start decelerating
until we’ve completed xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
the flyby — it’ll be an eight
hour jump, approximately.”
“What! Eight hours in space? How’ll we pass the time?” Bud gibed
from the copilot’s seat.
“Never thought about that,” muttered Chow, standing behind
them, gazing out at the brilliant stars through the control deck’s pair
of rectangular picture-window viewports. “Eight hours. Time fer two
snacks and a gosh-honest lunch!”
As the cook clomped off to take the interdeck elevator to his
galley, Tom told Bud and Aciema: “Actually, Hank and I have a great way
to wile away the time — composing a message to transmit to the Space
Friends. Maybe we can get some answers from the scientists even before
we try probing through that green glow.”
“Early word sounds like a great idea,” Bud agreed with
nervous enthusiasm. Tom knew his best friend was recalling a recent
incident, in which a warning from the extraterrestrials had prevented
the Challenger’s destruction by an undetectable threat.
“I also have some work to do,” said Aciema. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“I’m interested in
determining in advance what sort of readings we might
expect if the object really does turn out to be a plasma phe- nomenon.
It’ll help us in sorting through the readings.”
“Then good luck to both of us!”
Tom joined Hank Sterling in the communications compartment down
below and set to work on the difficult problem of for- mulating a clear
message in the mathematical symbols of the space beings. “Even with a
copy of your Space Dictionary in the computer, it’s never less than a
big challenge,” Hank declared.
“Sure is,” Tom nodded. “For all the times we’ve done this, there’s
always a new wrinkle. Any misunderstandings can really throw off the
message and make the answer useless.”
“If they answer — which they don’t always.”
Hours fled as they labored, with Tom occasionally checking with Bud
in the control cabin above them. Finally Tom said: “We might as well go
with this version.”
He had written a translation of the outgoing message below the
cluster of weird symbols and hieroglyphs.
|
|
TOM SWIFT TO SPACE
FRIENDS . WE ARE TRA- VELING IN OUR VEHICLE TO OBJECT THAT HAS ENTERED THE
SOLAR SYSTEM.
Here Tom inserted various parameters indicating the orbit of the
Green Orb, its size, and the hue of its emitted light in terms of
frequency.
DO YOU HAVE INFORMATION REGARDING THE NATURE OF THIS OBJECT THAT
WOULD ASSIST OUR OBSERVATIONS?
“Oughta work, Skipper,” Hank stated.
Tom transmitted the code string through the imaging oscilloscope
and out into the void over the Challenger’s powerful deep-space
antenna. A lengthy wait followed. “We may not get an answer until we’ve
already passed the Orb,” Tom grumbled. “Maybe not until we get back
home.”
Yet a few minutes later an answer arrived from
the depths of space — an answer
that answered nothing.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
TO TOM SWIFT . WE ARE
FRIENDS . WE HAVE NO DATA ON THE PHENOMENON SPECIFIED.
“Hmph! Some help they are!” complained Hank.
“‘No data’, ” Tom repeated musingly. “I wonder...” He had the
receiving system print out the original, untranslated symbols
transmitted by the alien beings and pored over them intently.
Hank asked, “Looking for something, Tom?”
“Not exactly.” The young inventor looked up at the engineer. “I just
wondered to what extent the Dictionary was translating an especially
ambiguous symbol-set. Maybe it’s me, but the way the translation puts it
almost suggests they have no knowledge at all of the Green Orb.”
“You mean nada? They might not even know it exists?”
Hank snorted. “Those guys are on top of just about everything going on
in space.”
“True. But the Orb is a very strange sort of object. Dad and I think
the Space Friends conceptualize the physical world in a very different
way from humans — and their modes xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
of sense perception seem
entirely different as well.”
“Well — you’re right,” conceded the square-jawed engineer. “They
understand light in terms of geometrical relationships and
electromagnetic frequencies. But they don’t seem to grasp what a
picture is.”
“Images are basic to us, to our sort of brains, but a different
species may not — ”
Suddenly Tom and Hank were startled from their chairs by a shrill
cry from the corridor.
“Yeeeoww! Help! Fire!”
Bolting into the corridor they found Chow in a state of
quivering panic. “Terrible! Oh my prairie stars! The whole blame
galley’s goin’ up!”
Tom grabbed his older friend’s thick arm, trying to calm him.
“Chow! — your galley? But — ” Tom had noticed immediately that
there was no hint of smoke in the air, nor had the au- tomatic alarms gone
off.
Chow shook off Tom’s hand roughly. “I’m tellin’ you, it’s all
burnin’ like a torch! Th’ micro oven, th’ induction stovetop, the
ceiling up above — fire ever’place y’ look!”
Hank had taken a few steps down the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
passage, which brought him
in sight of the open galley door and the compartment beyond. He paused,
then glanced back with a puzzled ex- pression. “What fire, Chow? I don’t
see any- thing.”
“You gone gosht-durn blind?” The ex-Texan stomped past Hank,
waving an arm. But then his barreling bulk slowed to a stop.
“See, cowpoke? Everything’s fine,” said Hank in a soothing tone.
“Something scare you?”
Chow was bewildered. “I — but I — ”
“Tell us what you saw,” urged Tom gently.
“Wh-what I saw?” Chow rubbed a hand across his bulging eyes. “I
guess — I guess I saw somethin’ that wasn’t rightly there, that’s what!
I ’as mixin’ up lunch on the counter, and when I turned back toward the
oven, there was fire everywhere, all over the place. Figgered I ’as
gonna be burnt up like a marshmeller on a stick!”
Tom asked if Chow had felt any heat, or smelled any smoke. “Wa-aal —
now that you mention it, son — no. Guess not. But it shor did look
lively enough.”
“I’ll bet it did,” Tom nodded. “In space our xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
senses can play tricks on
us.”
But Chow looked scornful. “I wudden in space, I ’as in my
galley. Think whatcher want. If it wasn’t fire, it shor was a
reezernable fact-simulee!”
As the bulky man clomped away, Tom and Hank exchanged shrugging
glances.
Hank returned to the communications room. Tom remained in the
corridor and used the ship intercom to connect to Bill Bennings, who was
busy in the vehicular hangar making final preparations for the launch of
the Repelatron Donkey probes. “It’s going fine down here, Tom,” he
reported. “The things’ll run like watches, if... I haven’t made any
mistakes.”
There was something in Bill’s tone that prompted the young inventor
to ask if he’d run into any problems. “No, no. I was just a little
distracted. Queasy stomach. Came on all of a sudden.”
“We have meds in the infirmary if you need any.”
“Sure, I know. But it’s just a little irritating. I drove out to
Lakewillow a couple nights back and had some Hungarian food — guess it
didn’t set too well.”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
A half-idea seemed to
be tugging the sleeve of Tom Swift’s agile mind. But — what? “Bill, if
you don’t mind telling me... Did you see something down there? Or
thought you did?”
The silence seemed too long. “Sometimes I pay for my adventurous
eating. I guess eve- rything connects up in the body. Doesn’t it? You feel
something, you see something...”
“What did you see?”
“It was nothing, Tom. I’ll be okay.”
Tom walked toward the elevator, his steps dragging. Whatever
Bennings had glimpsed was far from nothing. Tom could tell that
it had startled him — even frightened him. And in the end Bill had
decided, as Chow had, that it hadn’t been real. Chow... Bill... How
come I can’t think of whatever it is I’m thinking about? he
wondered.
In the Challenger’s small crew lounge the Shoptonian found
Aciema Musa standing at a viewport, staring out moodily at the stars.
Seeing Tom, she nodded and said, “You do a lot of mathematical
calculation in your inventing work, don’t you?”
Tom smiled. “I let other people — and our computers — handle the
math whenever I can xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
get away with it. I guess
I’m more an ‘idea man,’ if you see what I mean.”
“Oh, of course,” she nodded. “Concepts and intuition. You think in
pictures, not numbers.”
“Why do you ask? Did you run into a problem?”
“Not a problem. Not precisely.”
“Tell me, won’t you?”
She turned at looked at him for a moment, her expression thoughtful.
“All right. If you want.
“Tom, some kinds of complex problems are handled like what they call
double-entry bookkeeping. You might have two or more distinct series of
partial solutions running, and you don’t know until quite a ways down
the road whether you’ve taken a wrong turn somewhere. Pardon the
poetry.”
“I see what you mean.”
“I was doing that sort of complex figuring — MHD is like that.
Whenever I start I have a kind of dread in my stomach that I’ll struggle
all the way to the end just to discover I made a mistake near the
beginning. Sometimes you can worry so much about the possibility of
error that your distraction causes the very thing you xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
were worried about.”
“I know. Is that what happened?”
Brow creased, Aciema looked away. “I reached the end, and my
‘accounts’ didn’t ‘balance.’ There it was on the monitor, the unwanted
number, blinking at me. I’ve just spent the last half-hour trying like
the dickens to find the false step. I just plain couldn’t see any
mistake, anywhere.”
“Sometimes that’s the way a problem is,” Tom said ruefully. “You
just can’t see it — not while you’re fretting over it, anyway. I
think problems must evolve chameleon powers for survival!”
“No, you don’t understand,” the astrophysicist bluntly pronounced.
“The pro- blem is, there was no problem!”
The youth stared. “You’re right. I don’t understand.”
“I must’ve looked at the set of resultants a hundred times while
backtracking. There’s no doubt in my mind, none, that my final figures
didn’t correlate. But when I checked the last time, they did!”
“Okay, but maybe one of the things you tried in recalculating —
”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“I didn’t
recalculate,” she said quietly. “I was only trying to find where
I’d gone wrong. Once that happens, reworking the figures is trivial. I
made no changes. But the final numbers suddenly weren’t the numbers I’d
been seeing all along. It was driving me nuts. All that time, I felt
like I just wanted to zoom back home and crawl into bed.” She turned
back to the viewport. “And that’s what’s on my mind, Tom.”
He joined her at the viewport, silent. Numbers that weren’t
there, Tom said in his mind. A fire that wasn’t there. A
fleck of dull green was visible in the far distance. And — the little
orb that isn’t there.
Suddenly worried, Tom called up to Bud. “Everything okay up
there, flyboy?”
“Sure.”
“Would you do an eyeball check on the air sensors and the
circulators?”
Bud reported in a moment that all seemed normal. “Something going
on?”
“Yes,” Tom replied. “What, I don’t know. But at least it’s not some
problem with the air.”
The young space pilot elevatored to the control deck and stood
beside his friend. Bud xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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glanced up at him
curiously. “All the times you tell me about your inventions — and now
you’re clamming up on me.”
Tom laughed. “Let me com Hank first. Maybe we’ll have even more to
talk about.”
The young inventor asked Hank if he had had any unusual experiences
since they had parted.
“Unusual, Skipper? Like what happened to Chow?”
“Anything that struck you as a bit off.”
“I suppose what happened a few minutes ago counts as ‘off,’ even if
it didn’t amount to anything. I was working at the translation computer.
I guess my attention wandered a little — all those darn words and
numbers can make a guy feel drowsy.”
“Did you nod off?”
“I didn’t think so. Maybe I did, for just a second. I thought I
saw...” Tom waited. “It was as if I’d glimpsed something out of the
corner of my eye.”
“Something that bothered you.” It was not a question.
“Yes. It did. It was the face of my son. It couldn’t have lasted
more than a tick, but that’s how I remember it.”
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“Did it — he — say
anything?”
“No. But something about the expression was... sad. More than that,
actually. It’s hard to talk about it, but it seemed as if he were
reacting to something awful that had happened.”
Tom ventured a guess, gently. “Such as the loss of his father?”
“That’s how it struck me. All I could think of, for a moment, was
how badly I needed to be back there to comfort him. But it’s no big
deal, really. All in a split second, like something you barely glimpse
that memory reconstructs. When I looked hard, there was nothing there.”
Hank hesitated. “Which, of course, is just like it was with Chow’s
galley fire.”
Tom switched off the intercom, sucking in and letting out tense
breath. “That’s everyone, except you and me, Bud. We’re seeing things —
not just random things, but things with personal meaning. It’s as if — ”
Looking over, he broke off the thought. Bud was sitting in his
contoured chair, rigid and white-faced. The black-haired youth was
staring hard, not at his friend, but forward, out the huge, broad
viewpane.
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He spoke in a rasp.
“T-Tom...”
Tom followed Bud’s gaze. His throat went dry. “I see it.”
“See... what?”
“Her.”
She was a little girl, perhaps eight, perhaps nine. Very petite. Her
long hair was a dullish blond. She wore a blousy top over faded jeans.
She was looking at Tom.
From the other side of the Tomaquartz pane.
“Sh-she doesn’t have a spacesuit,” Bud whispered. “She’s just
floating out there.”
“No,” murmured Tom, his heart thudding. “Not floating — standing!
Standing on empty space.”
The little girl was gazing intently, desperately, into Tom’s eyes.
Her expression was pleading. Her lips were moving.
And she was gone.
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CHAPTER 6
SPHERE OF INFLUENCE
THE BOYS’ fearful gazes met only blackness and stars — and a spark
of green.
Bud could barely squeeze the words out. “We couldn’t have — ”
“We did!” Tom brusquely declared. “We both saw her. I read her lips,
Bud, just as I did before.”
“With the ghost. So — ”
“She was repeating it over and over. ‘Tom, don’t be scared. Don’t
go away. Hurry.’ ”
“Right,” said Bud, abruptly sarcastic. “Because the time is near.
Jetz! Why can’t they manage to come right out and say what’s
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on their minds?”
“They?” Tom dropped down into the chair next to Bud. “They who?”
Bud snorted, casting a look that went with it. “Uh-huh. ‘They
who?’ Isn’t it obvious what’s going on? There are people on the
Green Orb — and they’re messin’ with our minds!”
Without much conviction, Tom shook his head. “Nothing’s obvious,
flyboy. There’s nothing there for people to be on. The Orb isn’t
a solid body. It’s barely anything at all — most- ly light, as far
as we can tell.”
“Fine. Then what’s happening to us? — by sheer coincidence as we get
nearer that big glowing nothing out there!”
“I don’t know what’s happening to us. But I’m sure it started before
this, back home.”
“You mean the pirate ghost?”
“More than that. I told you about my phantom phone call. We’re not
just seeing things.”
Bud’s fortitude made a comeback. “And we’re not turning tail.”
“Absolutely not.” Tom added with a grim chuckle: “I’d sooner let my
crewcut grow out than give up now!”
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Another hour passed.
There were no further weird incidents.
The small crew gathered on the control deck. A feeling of tension
gripped everyone when the Green Orb finally came into view as a
something, not just a vague spot of light. And yet there was no
great difference. Its diffuse, yellowish-green halo gave it the look of
a soft ball of cotton batting, dim and hard to see even against the
velvet black of space. Minute by minute, the mysterious object loomed
larger.
“Time to launch the Donkeys, if we’re sticking to the plan. Are we,
Skipper?” Hank asked.
Tom nodded his head. “No change.”
He conned the flight dials and swiveled the central cabin-cube of
the Challenger on its upper and lower pivots, squarely facing
their target. Then he took control of the two Repelatron Donkeys and
opened the wide hatchway of the vehicular hangar. In seconds the small,
disk-shaped platforms darted past the viewport and on into space,
becoming silhou- ettes against the glow of the Orb, then vanishing specks.
A minute passed.
Another.
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“Are we close enough for any readings?” asked Aciema Musa.
“We should be,” Tom stated. “But we’re not getting anything more
than before. Even the LRGM — the gravity-variance mapper — is drawing a
blank.”
“Say now,” Chow burst out suddenly. “There’s sure somethin’
going on out there.”
It was the same violent disturbance as before. Though the visible
disk was still too small with distance to show any agitation, the Orb
had lit up with an intense glow. As it increased, the compartment shone
with its greenish brilliance!
“Wh-what in tarnation’s goin’ on?” Chow gulped.
Aciema asked Tom: “Could it be an effect of our repelatron beams?”
“The trons aren’t aimed at the Orb — we can’t get a telespectrometer
reading to calibrate them. I’ve been using other bodies for thrust and
steering.”
Bud looked nervous as the light painted a greenish pallor over his
face. “Then what’s making it light up?”
“I think it’s reacting to the Repelatron Donkeys.”
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“But you just said — ”
“Not to the repelatrons on the Donkeys, Bud. The Orb is
reacting to their presence. The same sort of thing happened when
we sent the megascope terminal close to it. But the Challenger is
well insulated against any sort of energy discharge it might toss our
way,” Tom added reassuringly.
Throughout the flight Tom had kept contact with his father in
Shopton by means of the Private-Ear Radio. Now he began to PER back a
report of the flyby maneuver and the launch of the two instrument
probes. “And you say the instruments are still failing to detect
anything?” asked Mr. Swift.
“Just the glow, Dad. At least we’ll be able to profile the luminance
figures as they increase.”
“Perhaps you’ll be able to get something more when the probes pass
through the corona into the body of the Orb. Such as it is.”
“Hope so. Penetration in four minutes.”
Tom broke contact, turning his keen eyes toward the board readouts.
Absorbed, Tom failed to notice his crewmates’ silence.
Suddenly movement caught Tom’s eye. Bud slumped forward against the
instrument panel, xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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inert. The copilot was
unconscious — dead to the world!
“Bud! — Help him, Hank!” Tom looked around frantically and
gasped in dismay. Chow had sunk to the floor, where Aciema Musa lay
already. Hank and Bill Bennings were leaning against the bulkhead, eyes
closed, on the verge of collapse — and even as Tom watched, they slid
down to the deck.
Tom switched the quantum cartridge of the PER to connect to mission
control on Fearing Island. “Tom to base! Something’s happening to the
crew!” he radioed desperately. “D-don’t know what’s wrong...
They... they’ve passed
out!... And I...”
Tom’s eyes felt heavy, leaden. An overpowering drowsiness enveloped
him. He fought to stay awake, then suddenly sagged in the pilot’s seat!
Silent and helpless, the Challenger hurtled toward the Green
Orb!
At the tracking center on Fearing Island, flight chief Amos Quezada
and his crew waited tensely. “Base to Tom! Come in, please! Fearing
calling Challenger! Can you read us?” Again and again Quezada
spoke into his xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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headset mike.
The tracking technicians sat at their monitoring consoles in anxious
suspense. “Tom must have blacked out, too!” an aide murmured to Quezada.
“He must have. Switch the PER cartridge, Leo. I need to bring Damon
Swift into this.”
Tom’s father received the word from Fearing Island with perplexed
dread. “How is this possible, Amos? Do you still have the ship on deep
tracking?”
“We sure do,” was the response. “Of course we can’t make anything of
that Orb momma on radar. But going by the last figures from the
outpost’s telescopes, they should be making their flyby right now.”
“What’s the separation?”
“About three hundred miles at the near point.”
Mr. Swift turned to the broad-shouldered young man sitting across
from him in the Swifts’ office. Arvid Hanson was Enterprises’ ingenious
maker of design models and prototypes. The talented engineer and
technician had often joined Tom’s expeditions. “Arv, this is a very
serious situation.”
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“They’ve blacked out,
but it seems the ship is still all right.”
“That’s not the issue,” declared the elder scientist. “They were
maintaining constant 1-G acceleration since leaving Earth orbit. Tom
didn’t plan on turnover until further along, after passing the Orb. The
Challenger’s guidance computer would continue with the
instructions in place, automatically reorienting the repelatron
radiators to continue the specified acceleration.”
“Then she’ll — ”
Damon Swift’s expression was dark with fear. “She’ll keep piling on
velocity. The spaceship will exit the solar system before we have a
chance to get up there for a rescue!”
Hanson nodded sharply. “A rescue with what? We don’t
have any craft that could catch her now — not to mention later!”
Mr. Swift rubbed his eyes. “We can’t give up. They may regain
consciousness. But if not — !” An idea struck, suddenly. “Hanson, do you
know of any way we could establish some sort of long-range control of
the ship? Override the board?”
“No way I know. Man, we can’t even see xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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what’s happening until the
megascope is up and running again. And yet...”
“Something?”
“There’s another possibility!”
Meanwhile, a deathlike silence reigned in the Challenger’s
flight compartment. The near pass behind it, the ship retreated
soundlessly from the Green Orb with no living hand at the controls.
Minutes later, Tom stirred in his pilot’s seat. He felt as if a
whining dentist’s drill were at work in his brain, piercing through
thick layers of fog. The drill changed to a buzz saw, then to a wildly
shrieking banshee as fire trucks raced toward him, sirens wide open.
Wh-what kind of fire is that? he wondered. It’s green! A
giant alarm clock exploded and kept on shrilling insanely.
Tom jolted awake with a painful effort. “Those crazy noises!” he
mumbled weakly. Then he realized the sounds were coming over the
Private-Ear Radio — high-pitched squeals, buzzing, and raucous beeps!
Struggling upright, Tom grabbed the mike. “Challenger to
base!” he exclaimed hoarsely. “Can you read me?” xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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Amos Quezada’s
relieved voice had cheering in the background. “Challenger, we
read you — loud and clear! Are you all right, Skipper? Status nom?”
“I — I guess so... My head’s cottony. But what was that racket on
the PER? Someone jamming our frequency? — no, that’s impossible.”
Tom could hear Quezada chuckle. “I’ll take creds for this one. We
were just trying to shake you awake with sound, every wild mix the techs
could come up with. So — you blacked out? What about the others aboard —
are they okay, too?”
Tom glanced around. His five crewmates were moving groggily. They
seemed to be
fighting to regain consciousness as if they, too, had been roused
by the piercing radio noises. But their heavy-lidded eyes looked ready
to close again.
Tom shook himself as he felt the same drowsiness as before dulling
his brain. “Over for now, Fearing,” he mumbled into the micro- phone.
“Some k-kind of influence is coming from the Orb. We’d b-better clear
out of here p-p-pronto!” xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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Lead-fingered, Tom
fumbled at the controls, desperate to set a course back to base. But his
eyes widened in disbelief as they focused on the locator-calculator, the
Spacelane Brain. “What in the cosmos — ! We’re already starting to
loop back!”
Another bizarre mystery! Had the Orb somehow grabbed hold of the
ship? Or had Tom made the changes himself — and forgotten, just as Pete
Langley had blanked out his telephone call?
Brain still fogged, the young space captain reversed repelatron
thrust and corrected course. Then he sagged against his seat belt as the
Challenger veered from its trajectory, now slowing with a 1-G
deceleration. The Orb had again become a distant speck, but it would
be hours before the Challenger’s arc began to point them
Earthward.
Unknowing, Tom fell back into a semiconscious state. Twenty minutes
later the astronaut team began to fully revive — Tom and Bud first, then
Hank Sterling, Bennings, Aciema, and finally Chow.
“What did — what did it do to us?” Bud wanted to know.
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“Something made us
pass out,” Tom replied. “We were in a state of induced sleep.”
Still heaped on the deck, Chow Winkler gazed up at Aciema Musa, who
was nursing a bruise on her arm. “Sorry, ma’am. Didn’t know where I ’as
fallin’ to. Does it hurt?”
“No,” she replied. “Then again, the feeling hasn’t started coming
back.”
Tom checked the rest of the crew. All were now fully revived, and
injuries from their unexpected collapses seemed minor. “We’re heading
back to base,” Tom reported to Fearing. “There was an unexplained
deviation from trajectory, but I have the ship under control now.”
“Not unexplained to me, Challenger,” came Quezada’s
rejoinder. “Call it human muscle power at work!”
“But Amos — how in the world did you get her to start course
reversal?”
“Well now, Tom, I’d suggest to take a closer look at your board —
and send that question Arv Hanson’s way!”
Over the PER link Arv reported with a laugh, “Oh, I was a clever
little engineer. We needed to try slowing you before you went zooming
off xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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toward Andromeda, but we
couldn’t change the settings on the big repelatrons. And suddenly I
remembered the Donkeys.”
“The two I launched?” asked Tom — who suddenly remembered that he
needed to rendezvous with them to recover whatever samples they had
taken from the Orb.
“No, Skipper, the four remaining ones locked in their cradles in the
vehicular hangar.” Hanson reminded Tom that the new Donkeys had been
designed for remote-control operation as needed. “We used the magnifying
antenna here at Enterprises to send them a sequence of instructions —
basically to swivel their radiators every which way until each one
locked onto Venus. I had transmitted the spectronic frequency data; all
they needed was to detect a push back.”
“And you used that to slow and steer the ship?”
“The position of Venus was approximately right. Four
mini-repelatrons against all those big ones, still firin’ away — kind of
an unequal tug-of-war.”
“A tug-of-war in reverse! But it was enough to make a difference.”
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Mr. Swift cut in.
“Ultimately, we could have forced you into a circle. But it would have
taken days.”
“It was a great plan,” Tom said. “Now I’ll retrieve the two probes —
see you tomorrow, back home.”
There were further surprises in store. “We can’t find the probes,”
Hank reported. “I’ve been scanning the general area their programmed
trajectories should have taken them to. But there’s nothing there.”
“What about the signals from the instru- ments?”
“Dead silent, Tom.”
“Could they have crashed into the Orb?” Bud speculated. “Maybe it’s
not as empty inside that glow as you thought!”
Tom didn’t answer his friend, but turned to the control board and
made some adjustments. After a moment he said: “We are getting
some signal. But it’s pulsating rapidly.”
“What do you mean?” asked Hank.
“Look at the oscilloscope. A fraction of a second of signal — then a
much longer interruption. Aciema, could some sort of MHD effect cause
periodic blanking like that?”
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“If so, I’m not
familiar with it. Still, an electromagnetic interaction could explain
why the Donkeys are so far off course.”
But the answer was less dramatic — yet strange.
“Good night!” gaped
Bud as he stared into the depths through the viewport. “Look at ’em go!”
“Spinnin’ like blame space lariats,” was Chow’s description.
“Tumbling head over heels,” Tom said. “Why is why we couldn’t get a
steady signal from them.”
Mused Aciema, “I know of nothing that could cause a phenomenon like
this, Tom. And you say they’re almost at right angles to their planned
trajectories?”
“It’s like they bounced off some kind of force field, don’t you
think?” Bud speculated.
Tom grinned at the notion. “You mean something along the lines of,
‘Raise the shields — enemy Donkeys approaching’ ?” The young
inventor waggled his head. “At the speed they were moving, hitting some
kind of barrier wouldn’t have bounced them, it would have smashed them
to transistors. It looks to me like they were deflected by a powerful,
concen- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
trated force — almost
refracted, like light through a prism.”
“If the force was unequally distributed, it would cause torque,”
observed Hank. “Rotation or tumbling, in other words.”
Careful pushes from the Challenger’s repelatrons slowed the
tumble of the probes and allowed Tom to regain remote control of their
propulsion units. He was finally able to maneuver them into their
cradles in the hangar-hold.
The great ship had many hours of outward travel yet ahead as it
decelerated, and then the inbound leg of the journey, on which they
stayed well away from the Green Orb. There were no further strange
incidents, and at last Tom was back in Shopton, in bed. He fell asleep
quickly, and his sleep was deep. In the morning he was certain he had
dreamed — yet could remember nothing of them.
“Have you any idea what caused you to black out, Tom?” inquired his
mother at breakfast.
“Just a guess, Mom, but I’d say there’s something about the Orb’s
electromagnetic emanations when it gets ‘agitated’ that induces
unconsciousness,” Tom said.
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“Uh-huh — a
self-defense instinct at work!” was Sandy’s quick opinion. “I’ll bet the
Jolly Green Orb is a big green space brain!”
“Maybe, sweetheart,” said Mr. Swift with a smile. “But there’s no
need to take a flying leap toward a science-fiction scenario. A more
reasonable hypothesis is that this is a purely natural reaction to the
near-approach of energy sources, such as the megascope beams or the
slight secondary resonance produced by the linear fields of the
repelatrons.”
“And there’s nothing mysterious about electromagnetic brain
stimulation, Sandy,” Tom elaborated. “Brain researchers have found it’s
possible to put people to sleep by electrically stimulating the basal
forebrain — and doctors have used electrical anesthesia, too.”
“Exactly,” said Damon Swift. “We ourselves have dealt with it, you
know — the pulsator weapon that we confronted when you were developing
your jetmarine, son. The protective device you invented then might also
protect you from this effect.”
“I’m anxious to look over the recordings from the Donkeys,” Tom
stated, “and whatever their samplers captured. That’ll answer a lot of xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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questions. And then maybe
I can get back to work!”
Sandy looked at her older brother in surprise. “Poking around in
this Orb thing isn’t work?”
“I believe he means his current invention,” smiled Damon Swift. “The
3-D telejector.”
“And,” Tom said abruptly, “it may turn out that the telejector
project will be important to the other one — to making sense out of the
Green Orb!”
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CHAPTER 7
DOPPELGANGER
“I’M AFRAID I don’t understand, Dear,” responded Mrs. Swift. “How
could they be connected?”
“It just sort’ve came to me, Mom, all of a sudden,” Tom said
thoughtfully. “Maybe I’m off base, but...
“We’ve been treating the Orb as a normal solid object — like an
asteroid or a gas cloud. Yet after the flyby it looks less like that
than ever. I’m wondering if it might be some kind of light
phenomenon!”
“Some kind of projection?” asked Mr. Swift, puzzled.
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“No, not exactly. It
still may not be anything deliberate, involving someone’s technology —
it could be something purely natural that the universe turns out now and
then. But it could have the properties of an image, not an
ordinary physical object. If that’s true, the only way to gain detailed
data about it might be to use a camera system to capture a full 3-D
range of wavefront information — and reproduce it for study in the same
form.”
“But Tomonomo,” Sandy objected, “can you get close enough to take
3-D pictures like that without getting knocked out?”
“I won’t have to, if my idea pans out,” was the cryptic reply.
Inquiry fell silent. The Swift family respected Tom’s usual wish to let
his inner intuitions cook before pouring out their product.
At Enterprises Tom spent time studying the data captured by the
Repelatron Donkeys during their interrupted probe — time wasted, as it
developed. “Good night,” he groaned in Hank Sterling’s direction. “All
that effort for nothing!”
Hank gave a rueful nod. “Nothing in the sampling reservoirs but a
nice vacuum.”
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“And no recorded
readings from the instruments. Whatever affected our conscious- ness, it
wasn’t an electromagnetic pulsation effect after all.”
“Well, I guess we do know one thing, Tom,” the engineer
pointed out. “It’s easy to tell exactly when the Donkeys started
tumbling, and where they were.”
“True. It happened just at the outer fringes of the halo — the part
we can detect optically, at any rate. And that’s something.”
“Yeah — really something!”
Unable to proceed further with the mystery, Tom turned to another.
In his electronics lab, he resumed his postponed work with his 3-D
telejector. Arvid Hanson’s assistant Linda Ming assisted him. “So Arv’s
taking a sick day? Doesn’t happen too often.”
“Oh, you know these Swedes,” she replied. “Hardy stock. He woke up
with a head cold, he said.” She took a curious look at the electronics
equipment on Tom’s workbench. “But this is the sorta thing that would
perk him up, I’ll bet.”
“Me too.”
Since before the fateful night at the Gullbracken House that seemed
to have begun xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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the recent series of
peculiar events, the young inventor had been trying to solve some
difficult problems with his telejector by exploring a new approach. The
experimental version, crudely assembled, took the form of three parallel
columns of metal rings, the array mounted as a unit over a swivel-base.
“These look like micro-mini versions of your megascope antenna,” Linda
remarked.
“The new telejector uses some of the principles of the megascope,
but in reverse,” confirmed the blond-haired youth. “In the megascope,
the distant beam terminal registers the light waves passing through it
and reproduces the wavefronts at the other end, here on Earth, for
viewing on the screen. The notion behind the this improved telejector is
to create a remote emitter-point that generates light,
replicating the wavefront forms — called Fourier patterns — as a
hologram does. As the point sweeps back and forth a thousand times a
second, the luminous patterns are ‘painted’ in space, and the eye
interprets the output as a three-dimensional image.”
“And there’s your 3-D TV program,” she nodded. “An invisible
hologram!”
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“By eliminating the
need for a cloud of absorptive droplets to act as my screen, the system
becomes a great deal more practical for standard use,” added Tom as he
labored over a circuit. “But theory is one thing, Linda — practice is
another. I need your help on some of the miniaturization angles.”
“That’s what I’m paid for, chief.” As she assisted him, she asked
further questions. “One thing you haven’t mentioned. Won’t you need some
sort of special TV camera to pick up the lightwave information in the
first place?”
“Sure will — and it’s already testing out fine. Look.”
Tom pointed. For the first time Linda noticed a small box mounted on
the lab wall. Attached to the front of the chassis was a vertical
cylinder covered like a gemstone with regular facets set at various
angles. “I’ve mounted a half-dozen of my holoceivers at different places
on the walls. You need inputs from several directions for the system to
work.”
“Makes sense. They don’t look much like TV cameras.”
“They work on a different principle,” he explained. “Like the
megascope, they use a xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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vector-resolving quantum
matrix to ‘read’ the wavefronts. But I don’t extend it out into space.
The holoceivers work with the photons that enter the isolator prism —
the cylindrical lens, if you want to think of it that way.”
Tom and Linda worked for hours to make the new system produce a
bright enough output to be visible in normal light. Repeated tests
showed exciting progress, realistic 3-D images seeming to float in
midair in front of the triple antennas.
Amidst their concerted work, Chow and his lunch cart had been sent
away twice. But the third attempt by Tom and Linda was sternly rebuffed.
“Not another word!” he huffed. “It’s more’n halfway t’ dinner, an’ you
two kin take time fer a simple sandwich an’ some fixins.”
Tom smiled and wiped his brow. “Guess you’re right, pardner.” He
gave Linda Ming a sly nod, and she also smiled. Chow’s visit had been
anticipated — and prepared for.
Chow handed off the sandwiches and ladeled out some rich potato
salad as well. As he turned and began to clomp off, Linda suddenly
called out:
“Whoa now, Texan! Is that another ghost?”
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Chow whirled with big
eyes. “Hunh? Where?”
Linda and Tom were pointing upward — above the cook’s head! He
rolled back his shoulders and looked up. With a fearful gulp he
staggered backwards and nearly stumbled over his Texas boots.
A ghostlike figure was suspended a few feet above Chow!
It took a moment for Chow’s prairie eyes to make sense of what
he was seeing. “B-b-brand my ec-ec-ecter-plazzum! The blame thing’s
upside down — walkin’ on th’ ceilin’!”
The eerie figure was big and round and semi-transparent. Though its
feet were out of view, it did seem to be walking, without a sound. “It —
it don’t have a head!” whispered Chow.
“No — it doesn’t have hair,” Tom corrected him. “You’re
seeing the top of his head.”
The figure stretched out an arm. In his hand was a phantom sandwich!
“Now wait a blame second!” Chow snapped. “I never heard o’ food
havin’ ghosts.” He lowered his gaze to Tom and Linda. His eyes were full
of suspicion. “Yep, another one o’ them tricks. That there’s me,
iddnit!”
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His watchers had
dissolved into laughter. “In the flesh — er, kind of,” chortled Tom. “We
recorded you with my 3-D camera system when you came in, and that’s the
playback.”
“How do you like seeing the top of your head in 3-D?” asked Linda
joshingly. “I think it’s very manly, cowboy.”
“Ya do? — aaah, more jokin’!” But he laughed too.
The phone bleeped with an internal call.
“Hi Doc,” Tom said into the receiver.
“Tom, I thought I should let you know of something,” said Doc
Simpson, a strain in his voice. “Maybe it’s nothing, but — it has to do
with Arv Hanson.”
“Arv?”
Linda Ming looked over in surprise as Tom repeated the name.
“He called me about an hour ago from home — told me he was running a
high fever. I’ve called him twice in the last few minutes. He doesn’t
answer!”
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CHAPTER 8
WEIRD WARNINGS
TOM was instantly concerned — Doc Simpson was not the type to panic.
But with a glance at Linda Ming, he responded calmly. “Couldn’t he have
just stepped out? — maybe to the drug- store?”
“I called his drugstore just now, Tom. The druggist is a friend of
mine. He knows Hanson very well, but says he hasn’t been by today.
Look,” Doc went on, “I don’t mean to alarm you. When Arv first told me
his symptoms this morning, it sounded rather more severe than a
headcold, but I didn’t think too much of it — he’s a healthy guy. But
now — ”
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“Okay,” Tom said. “No
harm in checking it out. Keep calling him, won’t you? Bud’s in Shopton
this afternoon — I’ll ask him to drop by.”
“That’d be wise, I think.”
Bud promised to stop by Hanson’s small lakeside home. After a tense
wait, Tom’s cell- phone beeped.
“He didn’t answer the front door, but his car was in the driveway,
so I went around back,” Bud reported.
“The back door was unlocked?”
“It is now. Pal, he was lying on his sofa, too weak to speak
— he could barely move! Drenched in sweat!”
Tom gasped in quiet dismay. “He should go to an emergency room,
Bud!”
“I’ve already called an ambulance. I think I hear the siren now.”
Bud assured Tom that he would follow Arv to the local hospital, Shopton
Memorial, and call back when he had an update.
“Call Doc,” Tom urged. “He may want to speak to the attending
physician.”
Too concerned to resume work, Tom head- ed for his office in the
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promising to call Linda
and Chow as soon as he received word on Arv’s condition.
Word arrived in half a long hour. “He seems to be doing fine now,”
Doc reported. “They tell me the fever is under control, heart and pulse
rate strong. He’s pretty weak, but I talked to him for a minute.”
“Do you know what he came down with?”
“I’m afraid not. You know, people develop these mysterious fever
spikes every now and then, and by the time we medics get into it there
isn’t much left to see. We call it things like ‘24 hour flu’.
Translation: who knows? There are all sorts of viruses drifting
around our crowded world, Skipper. Most are harmless, fortunately, but
the body still has to deal with them.”
Tom was relieved, but asked: “Do you think he’s contagious?”
“Like I said — who knows? But as a doctor I can’t justify any
isolation measures at this point. Bed rest, obviously, until he’s back
to his robust Swedish self. I’ll take a look at his lab results and
bloodwork.”
Tom spoke to his father, who was passing through on the way to a
meeting, then tried to collect his thoughts. “I guess writing up the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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telejector test data will
clear my mind,” he muttered to himself.
His accessed his personal scientific journal on his personal
computer. As always, he did so with a slight twinge of anticipation. And
sometimes, as on this occasion, the twinge was rewarded.
YOU GUESSED IT
ITS GOOD OLD ME
CHECK YOUR HOME VOICEMAIL
FOR AN IMPORTANT LETTER
Tom didn’t bother puzzling over the non sequitur. The cryptic
comments had a familiar tone. On several occasions Tom had communicated
in this way with a severely secret agency of the U.S. government which
he had come to refer to as Collections. On matters of world affairs and
espionage activity — no longer the sole province of governments — they
seemed to know a great deal that few had a right or reason to know. And
that included how to cut in on Tom’s protected and encrypted computer
system.
“Back from vacation?” Tom typed, hoping xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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his sarcasm came through
clearly. “We could have used your help in dealing with the sunk- en
tanker.”
SEEMS YOU DID OKAY
ON YOUR OWN
STILL BREATHING I TRUST
I HAVE INFO FOR YOU
“About the Green Orb?”
SORRY
WE DONT DO ORBS
THIS IS ABOUT THAT TANKER
Tom was intrigued but wary. The recent foundering of a supertanker,
the Centurion, had prompted Tom to use his aquatomic tracker to
seek its subocean location. It developed that the ship had been
converted to a hidden underwater base run by a European scientist named
Vaxilis who was attempting to extract a valuable substance from the sea
bottom. Captured, Tom and Bud had managed to escape the base. Later Tom
had been informed by the CIA that the ship had been flooded, drowning
Vaxilis and his followers to the last man.
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That had seemed the
final word. Could there be more? “Is Vaxilis alive?” he typed.
NO
STILL DEAD
AH BUT WAIT
WASNT THERE SOMETHING
ABOUT HIS MAKING A
LAST MINUTE SWITCH
TO A NEW PATRON?
“I reported to John Thurston what he said. Vaxilis thought he’d
found a better deal than Kranjovia was offering.”
BETRAY A FINE DICTATORSHIP
LIKE KRANJOVIA?
WHAT A JERK
“How about telling me what you have?”
THE NEW IMPROVED PATRON
SNAKEMAN
Tom felt a choking sensation as he typed, fingers trembling. The
snakeman! “Li Ching is dead!”
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YOU FORGOT THE
QUESTION MARK
THIS ONE IS NOT STILL DEAD
Comrade-General Li Ching, an expatriot Chinese national, had become
known to the world intelligence community as the Black Cobra. A
chillingly conscience-free master strategist who traded in technological
secrets, he had pursued Tom murderously, and had nearly exterminated the
scientific community on tiny Nestria. “How could he have escaped the
disintegration of his spacecraft?”
THE BIG BLOWUP WAS FAKED
NICE SPECIAL EFFECTS
THURSTONS MEN FOUND EVIDENCE
IN THE TANKER THAT VAXILIS
WAS UPGRADING VILLAINS
WHICH IS WHY
A KRANJOVIAN PATRIOT ABOARD
SCUTTLED THE WHOLE THING
“Thurston didn’t tell us.”
COURSE NOT
ALREADY EMBARRASSED
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GETTING HELP FROM A
KID
LOOKS BAD AT BUDGET TIME
“Why are you telling me this now?”
IS THAT A CUE?
The young inventor knew what would come next — the catchphrase that
had given Collections, and Tom’s contact the Taxman — their colorful
monikers.
YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK
There would be nothing more from the Taxman. Not that day.
Apparently Tom was to check his home voicemail for an important
letter. “Makes no sense,” he told himself; “which fits in well with
everything else!”
Only a few trusted individuals had been given the youth’s
residential number. It rarely held any unexpected news. But this time —
it did. “Hi, Tom — recognize my voice? This is Eldrich Oldmother, still
using the name, yep. Look, I picked up a little something over my
higher- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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plane mental radio.
I think you’ll be interested, my friend. Seven tonight, that burger
joint on the lake’s recreation pier. Should be safe enough for a quick
meet. In’n out, eh?”
Tom clicked off his handset. It’s a wonder I ever have time to do
any inventing, he thought wryly. I’ll have to ask Pete Langley
how he handles it.
At 7:10 the young inventor was sitting at a woodless table,
sharing french fries with a gray-haired man who had once been well known
as a prophet. “Man, am I ever glad we folded the church,” declared
Oldmother. “The old head’s a lot clearer without that Informatics
stuff.”
“Clear enough to pick up one of your psychic messages, I take it.”
“Naturally. Once you’re up on the higher plane, you’re attuned to
the universe for life. Nowadays, though,” he went on soberly, “it’s not
such a good thing, being known as a psychic. That’s one of our subjects
here, my friend.”
Tom’s eyebrows arrowed up. “What do you mean?”
“You don’t read Mind-Body-Spirit Times? Big article last
week.”
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“My subscription’s
lapsed.”
“Bad timing. This could have to do with both of us, Tom — if what I
found on my bedside notepad this morning is the warning I think it is.”
“A warning?” Tom regarded the man skeptically. Though Oldmother had
proven himself a source of accurate information during Tom’s exploit
with the visitor from Planet X, Tom had never been entirely sure how to
regard the ex-prophet’s claims of psychic powers.
Oldmother leaned forward over the table. “It’s a warning to me, and
to you as well — I sense it. It consisted of a single letter.
Q!”
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CHAPTER 9
A PHANTOM AND A PHONY
TOM found himself smiling into the gravely serious face of Eldrich
Oldmother. “I guess that explains a mysterious message I received this
afternoon from my own unearthly contact — about a ‘letter’
waiting for me. So what’s ‘Q’ supposed to signify?”
Oldmother shrugged eloquently and took a moment to examine a fry.
“Crinkle cut, Tom. A metaphor for life.
“You remember how it works, don’t you? I don’t read minds or foresee
the future. It’s a kind of subliminal clairvoyance, bubbling up out of
my subconscious depths in symbolic form. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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I wrote it on the
pad in my sleep. That’s why I have that notebook next to the bed at all
times. I don’t know what would happen if my pen went dry.”
“I’d suggest getting a roller-ball marker,” commented the young
inventor dryly. “So is ‘Q’ the first letter of a word? What starts with
Q? Quantum? Quark? Quip?”
“You’d take this more seriously if you knew what’s been happening,”
Oldmother retorted brusquely. “A lot of people with The Gift think that
green weenie up in the sky is a sign from high beings.”
“End times, maybe?”
“Scoff scoff. Now try this on: for months now, well known psychic
types the world over have gone missing!”
Now Tom was more serious. “Are you saying they’ve been
kidnapped, sir?”
“I’m telling you, no one knows where they are. No ransom demands, so
signs of violent abduction. Not even a UFO sighting. But it’s happened
in France, England, Romania, Russia, Thailand — and four guys have
disappeared here in the U.S.!”
“The police — ”
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The man looked
contemptuous. “Right. The police. ‘I’d like to report a missing
mind- reader, officer.’ They’d tell me to consult a Ouija board.
“Like I said, there are no signs of a crime. Far as I know, spouses
and friends haven’t raised much fuss yet. Most of these people are loner
types. They meditate, go off in the woods — vision-quest stuff. But you
can see why I’m a little nervous, Tom. I’m a biggie.”
“That’s true, Mr. Oldmother,” Tom agreed. “But what does this have
to do with me — and ‘Q’? It’s a symbol used in electronics and pressure
dynamics, but I don’t see any con- nection to either of us.”
The older man rubbed hand over fist. “I can’t explain how these
brain-signals of mine work. But as I looked at that letter on the paper,
it was as if I half-remembered something. Whatever it stands for, it’s
about something that has power. I was being warned to watch my
backside, and I had the impression you were also a target in some way.”
“I’ve run up against some other odd incidents lately,” admitted Tom
thoughtfully. “Some of them happened in space, near the Green Orb xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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— which is a pretty eerie
object in itself. But other things have happened here on Earth.” He
smiled slightly. “Even a sort of ghost.”
“Don’t expect me to tie it all together. I’m just the
telephone, you know, not the answer machine. But after I drive off
tonight I plan to spend a few months way out of sight. Until this
thing stops.” He added bluntly: “Maybe you should do the same, Tom.”
As Tom drove home, he thought: maybe I should. Knowing all
along that he wouldn’t.
Late the following morning the Swifts’ receptionist and secretary,
Munford Trent, flustered his way into the office a few steps behind an
unexpected visitor who evidently cared little about being expected.
“Morning, Swiftosphere,” said Peter Langley with tight- faced courtesy.
“Tom, he just — ”
“It’s all right, Trent,” said the young inventor, rising from his
office chair. “Pete’s always welcome here at Enterprises.”
“Very flattering,” pronounced the Other Young Inventor as he dropped
into a chair. “Back atcha. But don’t wear out the invite. Come see me in
person.”
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Tom nodded, puzzled.
“Er — sure.”
“And if you have jokes to play, make ’em funny, not irritating. Best
to keep ’em light on the jerk factor. Agreed?”
“Absolutely. Now tell me what we’re talking about, Pete.”
The young man leaned back, frowning. “I’m just saying direct to your
50’s-retro crewcut, don’t rub in the 3-D TV thing. You’re ahead
of me — fine, acknowledged. Over and out. Remind me too much and I might
get the im- pression you’re distracting me deliberato. To keep me
from catching up? Consequence, cause. Easy bacon.”
Tom kept his gaze level. His voice became cool. “I’ve pretty much
had it with having to guess what people are talking about. Tell me
what’s on your mind, or go play somewhere else.”
Langley nodded. “Clarity. That’s a good thing. Okay. My subject of
reference: your 3-D stunt at Wicko around, oh, two hours back.”
“I don’t know anything about it.”
“No?” The inventor stared at his younger counterpart, then shrugged.
“Eyeballs say: maybe you don’t. Hard to believe, though. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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Everybody in the industry
knows you’re near to coming up with a free-floating hologram projector.
And as you know, so’m I. What should I think when I see a demonstration
in my office?”
Tom began to grasp the situation. “You saw a projected image?”
“A very striking image — you!”
How much should Tom tell his visitor? “Pete, over the last week,
I’ve seen things like that too. I don’t know what’s causing them or
what’s behind them. If you don’t mind telling me — what exactly did you
see?”
Langley seemed to accept what Tom was saying. He spoke less
confrontively, more thoughtfully. “I looked up from my notes and saw Tom
Swift standing on the other side of the office in all his blue-striped
glory. You were staring a hole in my forehead. Then you raised an arm
and pointed up at the ceiling. And then, hey, he’s gone!”
“No sound?”
“No. Funny expression on your face.”
The image of the apparition outside the Challenger’s viewport
rose in Tom’s mind’s eye. “A pleading expression?”
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“You could call it
that. Pleading and pointing. Opera soaperama. Amy — uh, Miz Foger —
thinks we should look at it as something... what’s that word?
Actionable. Because it might suggest Edmund Grimsey’s been passing
along a few techno secrets lifted from his work on my holophotowave TV
system.
“But if you say you had nothing to do with it...” He stood up with a
shrug. “Glad we had time to chat. One young inventor to another.”
As Langley turned to leave, Tom’s words followed him out: “Best
regards to Miss Foger.”
“Yeah.”
After reflecting for a time, Tom stepped next door into Harlan
Ames’s office. The security chief listened intently as Tom described
this latest infestation of phantoms. “Couldn’t it be someone in
Langley’s own work force playing a prank? With his own gizmo, maybe?”
“If so, some employee has made progress Pete himself doesn’t know
about. And listen to this, Harlan.” He recounted his fast-food conclave
with Eldrich Oldmother.
“I see,” nodded the former Secret Service man. “More of that ESP
stuff — or maybe Oldmother and Langley share the same mental xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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disorder.”
“But as you know, I’ve seen these things too,” Tom pointed out. “And
what about the disappearance of all those psychics? Have you run across
any reports of that?”
Ames gave one of his rare chuckles. “Yes indeed — in a little squib
on the Interpol website under the heading, Humor in The News! But
I’ll see what I can dig out for you, boss.”
“Thanks. You know... there’s a name that ought to get a mention at
this point.”
“The abruptly undead Li Ching.” He gave Tom a sober look. “Have you
considered that your ‘Taxman’ contact might be fabricating the story? We
both know these supersecret types have multiple agendas going on at the
same time. They’re not above misleading us deli- berately.”
The suggestion was disturbing, but Tom could not disregard it. Was
he being used? For what?
Tom worked through the afternoon in his lab, trying to improve the
new telejector with the help of Dr. Grimsey and Hank Sterling. He
decided not to mention to Grimsey the in- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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nuendos against him by
Langley and Amelia Foger.
Ignoring the clock, Tom worked on after his assistants had left him
alone. It was almost six o’clock when Bud Barclay came bursting into the
laboratory, wearing a white shirt, sport coat, and slacks. “Hey, genius
boy! Don’t tell me you forgot our double date?”
Tom looked at Bud blankly, then gave a sheepish grin. “Well, now
that you mention it...”
Bud shot his chum a humorously stern look. “I understand. I mean it
has been half a day since I called you about it. Oh well,”
he went on, “at least it’s the late show.”
The young inventor washed and changed clothes in the one-room
apartment adjoining his main lab, which Tom had learned to keep
well-stocked with “emergency garb” of all kinds.
The boys picked up Sandy and Bashalli and drove to the Colonial Inn
Dinner Theatre for dinner. The girls and Bud blithely refused to tell
Tom precisely what form the evening’s enter- tainment would take.
“Perhaps not as creepy as that phony ghost you inflicted upon us the
other night,” declared Bash. “Yet there is a
common theme.”
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“But as I said before,” Sandy added with a giggle, “Tom should find
it very appropriate, with that oversized Swift brain of his.”
They entered through an unmarked rear entrance. After an
over-lengthy encounter with the customary microscopic dinner, printed
pro- grams were distributed to the tables. They proclaimed gaudily:
Enter the mystic world of
LUNARIO
mind-reader extraordinaire!
“A mind reader!” Tom chuckled as he turned the pages. “I can’t
get away from all this ‘psychic phenomena’.”
Bud winked. “Listen, if the Great Lunario expects to read Tom
Swift’s mind, he’d better know calculus and computer language!”
“He’s good!” Sandy insisted. “He’s been on TV!”
“Real TV?” asked Tom.
“Cable TV,” Bashalli responded. “Local. But that doesn’t mean he
isn’t good.”
Soon after the disappearance of the rolling salad bar the
houselights dimmed, the live xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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house orchestra started to
play, and the curtains parted in a puff of
backlit fog.
To tinkling Oriental music, the Amazing Lunario came on stage. He
wore elegant evening clothes and a silk turban studded with a large
emerald.
“A turban! My! I feel as though I were transported home to
Pakistan,” remarked Bash dryly. To Tom the green-glowing gem had
other associations.
An attractive young woman in a long, gold-sequined gown accompanied
Lunario, assisting as he performed several feats of stage magic. Then he
invited two persons from the audience to blindfold him. A black felt pad
was laid over his eyes and tightly bound in place with a scarf.
“My assistant will now pass out cards on which to write any question
you wish to ask me,” Lunario announced. “Please raise your hand and she
will give you a card and an envelope. Place the card inside and seal it,
and Myzeella will collect them in a wicker basket. You will kindly note
that at no time will she open the envelopes or even touch them. We don’t
want to confuse the etheric vibrations.”
The filled basket was brought forward. As his assistant held the
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his eye level, Lunario
fumblingly plucked out an envelope and tore it open.
Withdrawing the card but not lowering it, he pressed it against his
forehead and held it there for a moment. “No clear image. The first few
are like that, friends. I have to get warmed up a bit.” He tossed the
first card, and the next two, on to the top of the small bare table that
had been set in front of the blindfolded performer.
He plucked out another. “Now we’ll get some results,” Sandy
whispered cryptically.
Lunario held the next card. “Something — yes, something! A question
from... is it Olive? No — Olivia! Please stand, won’t you?”
A woman stood. “I recognize her,” said Bashalli. “A real person.
Always a sweet roll with her latte, at the coffeehouse.”
“Your question involves... a trip! A vacation? Yes! — to Fort
Lauderdale. It will all work out, Olivia. Your sister-in-law has
forgiven you.”
The woman squealed. “He’s right! It’s all true — that was my
question!”
From that point forward, every card taken up yielded a relevant
answer, confirmed by the audience members who had written the cards.
“Okay, how’s he doing it?” muttered Bud. “I know some of those people
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working with him to trick
us.”
Tom shrugged, eyes twinkling. “Well, maybe he really is
psychic. I should talk to him about the things that have been happening
lately.” Or warn him! his mind insisted on adding.
“Don’t tell me you brainy boys haven’t figured out the gimmick!”
jibed Sandy in a smug whisper.
“And you have?” asked Bud skeptically.
“All you have to do is open your eyes and see, Buddo,”
she replied. “I had it worked out from the moment he set up that little
table.” Speaking softly Sandy called Bud’s attention to the fact that
the first unproductive cards had been tossed down onto the tabletop.
“We’re supposed to think he’s ‘psyching’ the card he’s holding up. But
he isn’t! He’s looking down his nose at the previous card, which
is face up on the table.”
Bud gave her a puzzled look. “Oh? So how can he see it at all
through all that stuff covering his face?”
“You can almost always wrinkle up your cheek muscles enough to open
up a gap at the bottom of the blindfold to peek through. If you tie it
tight, it’s even easier to work it around.”
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“Sandra, you are most
clever!” said Bashalli. “You’ve spoiled my enjoyment of the magic act,
but still I commend you.”
Bud grumbled, “It’s those mystery stories she reads.”
The four had been speaking in polite whispers, but their table was
near the stage. Finishing the act and removing his blindfold, the
turbaned performer turned their way. “Ah! I believe our famous young
inventor, Tom Swift, is in our audience!” Lunario exclaimed.
There was a burst of applause and Tom had to take a reluctant bow.
Then Lunario offered to read his mind, having had his assistant
blindfold him again. Tom good-naturedly wrote a question and enclosed in
an envelope as in- structed.
Whatever trick Lunario might have had in mind was never performed.
He stood silently, unmoving, with Tom’s card held up in his hand. As the
moments passed, the waiting audience began to mutter.
“What’s he waiting for?” Bud whispered.
Tom half-rose from his chair, concerned. “Something’s wrong.”
Suddenly the mind reader took a small step xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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forward, then another. The
card fluttered down from his limp fingers. “What — what is it?” He tore
the blindfold off and stared out blankly over the audience. Blankly —
but Tom could see confusion and fear in the man’s eyes!
He took another step forward. His face contorted in a spasm of
terror as he croaked, “No! Oh, no! Tom, Tom Swift, you are our hope!
Don’t let them stop you, or all will end!”
Lunario stepped off into space and fell from the stage!
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CHAPTER 10
RESCUE PLEA?
THE audience gasped as Lunario thudded limply to the floor. In a
moment the theater was in an uproar. Tom hesitated for an instant, then
dashed down the aisle to the stage, with Bud following.
“Joe! Oh my!” choked Myzeella. She looked up and called out:
“Is there a — I’m not kidding! — doctor in the house?”
A man stood up from his table and waved an arm. “Are you a doctor,
mister?” the woman called.
“Yes, ma’am. I’m an orthodontist.”
Myzeella frowned. “You can just sit yourself xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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down again!”
As Tom and Bud knelt by Lunario, who appeared stunned, the lights
were lowered and a spotlight swept across the stage. The theater
manager, white-faced and anxious, came hurrying from the wings.
“P-p-please be calm, ladies and gentlemen!” he exclaimed. “Lunario’s
fine, just a little exhausted tonight. We’ll let him take a nap in his
room. If you’ll all remain seated, we’ll go on with the next act!”
The boys heard the voice of Bashalli Prandit. “After this, there’s a
next act?”
“An orthodontist!” muttered Myzeella from the stage. “What
kinda stupid burg is this?”
The orchestra began playing as Tom and Bud helped carry Lunario to
his dressing room, guided by the manager. The performer seemed to be
recovering his strength and senses and was able to walk unaided through
the door.
“Nothing serious, apparently,” the manager said, hoping it was true.
As Lunario lay down on a cot, Tom grasped his wrist. “He seems to
have undergone a nervous shock, but his pulse is returning to normal,”
reported the young inventor.
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Bud asked, “How’re his
teeth?”
A few moments later, Lunario was sitting up when a knock was heard
at the door. Outside stood Sandy and Bashalli, who had come backstage to
join the boys.
“Is he all right?” Sandy asked anxiously, glancing at the figure on
the cot.
“I think so,” Tom murmured. “But he hasn’t said anything.”
Lunario motioned for some water from the cooler by the wall. After
sipping a bit of it, he stared at Tom. “I still can’t understand it,”
the performer muttered.
“You mean, what happened on stage?” Tom asked.
Lunario nodded and frowned. “You — you’re Swift, aren’t you? I’m
feeling a little — ”
“I’m Tom Swift, sir.” The scientist-inventor introduced his friends,
and said gently: “I don’t want to pressure you, Mr. — ”
“My name’s Joe Mulver.”
“What you said out there was directed at me personally, Mr. Mulver,
and I have the feeling it wasn’t part of your act.”
The man nodded. “I’m going to tell you the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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truth,” he said. “I’m sure
you realize I’m not any kind of psychic. I’m an entertainer. My
mind-reading act is a stunt. All for fun. I’ve been on television, you
know.”
“Local cable television,” Bashalli noted.
“Yeah, well... As a matter of fact, I’ve taken ESP tests — that is,
tests for extrasensory perception — at a university parapsychology lab
and I’ve scored unusually high. So perhaps I am somewhat psychic.
However, my mind reading depends on the usual trickery.”
“I understand,” Tom said. “Please go on. What happened to you may be
more important than you realize.”
Lunario frowned again and rubbed his forehead. “The strange thing
is, when I started to answer your question out there, I — all I can say
is, I suddenly began to receive some kind of message. I had a
terribly strong, overwhelming impression of an outside force threatening
you — that’s what frightened me. Believe me, I think your life is really
in danger!”
“I see.” Tom stared at Lunario thoughtfully. “You said something a
little more specific, though. Do you remember?”
The man seemed to search through a jumbled xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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memory. “I remember
looking out at the audience, and they — they weren’t there. I was
surround by a sort of light or glow. It was all I could see.”
Tom thought he could guess more than Lunario could say. “A greenish
glow?”
“Why — yes. Green. But swirling around me, surging violently like
water in a rapids. And I heard a sound, too.”
“What did it sound like, Mr. Lunario?” Sandy asked breathlessly.
“Was it a voice?”
“Oh, no, not a voice,” he replied. “Just a sort of high, buzzing
tone. It reminded me of the sound you hear coming from those big
electric transformers. But as to why I said what I said, I’m afraid I
don’t know. It barely felt like it was me saying it!”
Tom nodded. “We’ll let you rest now. But thanks.”
“Great show!” Bud said.
Sandy and Bash both looked worried as they left the dinner theater
with the boys. “Gullyjeep! I don’t like this!” Sandy murmured. “You
don’t suppose his warning could be true?”
“Fat chance,” Bud scoffed. “I’ll bet the whole thing was
just a dumb publicity
gag. Ten to one xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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there’ll be a write-up in
the Bulletin tomorrow and a big interview with Lunario!”
Bashalli asked quietly, “What do you think, Tom?”
The young inventor shrugged. “I can’t help feeling Lunario was on
the level. But that’s just a hunch. We know he’s a phony as a psychic
mind reader. Maybe he’s just a guy orbiting toward a breakdown.
Still...”
“Still,” said Bashalli, “we all saw Captain Peg Leg.”
“Plus a little space girl,” Bud conceded.
He and Tom exchanged meaningful glances. They hadn’t yet mentioned
what Tom had been told by the Taxman — that the deadly snakeman, Li
Ching, might still be at large. But how could the Black Cobra produce
such bizarre effects?
And Lunario had said — green.
Bud drove Tom and the girls home, dropping Bashalli off on the way.
At the Swift residence, as Sandy headed for the front door, the
black-haired Californian laid a hand on his pal’s arm. “Tom, I can’t
guess how the Cobra might be tied in with the Orb and what happened in
space. But don’t you think what Eldrich Old- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
mother told you might
be the big answer?”
“You mean what he wrote down — Q?”
Bud shook his head. “No, that’s in the ‘can’t guess’ file too. I’m
thinking about the bit where all those mental wonders are disappearing.”
“That struck me, too,” Tom responded. “It wasn’t so long ago that Li
Ching was involved in the similar disappearance of some world scientists
and engineers.”
“And they turned up on the Nestria operation — his asteroid
pirates!”
“Yup.”
Bud’s voice became lower with intensity. “So listen — what if those
kidnapped psychics are trying to send us messages? Lunario’s not the
only one to hint that you’re being begged to do something before it’s
too late. ‘The end is near’ sure sounds to me like the BC is
threatening some lives!”
The young inventor agreed that Bud’s theory made good sense. “And
yet other things don’t fit the theory very well. What about the tie-in
with the Orb?”
“Well... okay... maybe it works like radar. They’re bouncing their
thought-waves off the Orb and back to you!”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Tom grinned
affectionately but persisted with his skepticism. “Some of those images
the Challenger crew experienced are more about scaring people
away than urging them forward; or at least producing a discouraging
or disturbing frame of mind. And what’s with all the weirdness connected
to Pete Langley?”
“Genius boy, it’s hard enough for me to come up with any
theory,” snorted Bud wryly. “If they have to be air-tight, I’m outta
here!”
With daylight Tom resumed his work on his 3-D telejector, assisted
by Hank and Dr. Grim- sey.
A test showed promise, but also brought up Tom’s customary
inventorly impatience.
“Well, it’s visible. It’s three-dimensional. It
moves.” He eyed the floating scene — an aircraft taxiing for a takeoff —
with a critical frown. “But when we shift it over in front of the
lighted wall — ”
“Too transparent,” Hank nodded. “It never really occurred to me that
a big part of our ability to see something on a TV screen is that the
set itself is blocking the light coming your way from behind it.”
Dr. Grimsey held up a small component that xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
he had just removed from a
well-padded, well-sealed plastic container. “But Tom’s already suggested
a solution. Shall we introduce the triamplicon into the phase
refractor?”
“It may make the difference,” Tom said.
In minutes Tom switched on the telejector once more. The moving
scene leapt to light, definitely stronger and more vivid. Yet there was
a new difficulty. “Good gosh, we’ve gained at one end and lost at the
other!” Hank groaned. The projected image had lost detail and much of
its 3-D quality.
“Interference fringes.” Tom gazed at the image through his own veil
of discouragement. “I was counting on the triamplicon approach to
resolve the problem. If that doesn’t work, we may have to go back all
the way to — ”
A single shout from Hank — “Tom!” — announced the sharp
slap-bang of an explosion and a burst of light. The three were
knocked back painfully. The telejector’s base console had blown
apart!
“Hank! Edmund! Are you alright?” gasped Tom.
Grimsey’s lean hand was pale as ivory as he rubbed his eyes. “That —
that wasn’t supposed xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
to happen!”
“Yeah, I’ll say it wasn’t,” grated Sterling. “I’m okay, Tom.”
Tom fanned away the smudge of smoke hanging about the telejector,
wincing at the pungent smell. “Look where the dial-cover blew off,” he
pointed. “Right over where we inserted the triamplicon.”
“But it’s just a set of microinscribed circuit chips, boss,” Hank
objected. “It doesn’t have any sort of mechanical function, no moving
parts. What could possibly cause it to ex- plode?”
“It may have retained chemical traces from its manufacturing
process. The high-energy environment at that point in the machine may
have set off a reaction,” suggested Dr. Grimsey listlessly. “Brings a
person down, though, doesn’t it?”
Tom was already using insulated grippers to remove the component.
“Melted like wax!” he pronounced, holding it up for the others to see.
“I’ll analyze it with the Swift Spectroscope — the rest of the on-hand
stock of components, too.”
Hank Sterling caught something in his young xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
boss’s voice. “Thinking it
might not be an accident?”
“That’s something we’ve learned never to rule out,” replied
Tom grimly. “The container was airtight, but it’s possible
someone made a substitution at the front end.”
“At least we’re uninjured,” Grimsey said.
Tom and Hank were not easily consoled. “Now we have to spend time
rebuilding the telejector prototype,” Hank noted, “which was full of so
much cobbled-together stuff it’ll be a lot harder than fixing the
megascope.”
“And,” Tom added ruefully, “for all that, the megascope still can’t
do the job.” He sighed, thinking. “Well, Arv Hanson’s back at work
today. He and Linda Ming can certainly work separately on some of the
modular sections.”
“How’s he feeling?” Hank asked.
“Completely recovered. Good news there, anyway.”
Tom walked over to Arv’s “shop” and discussed the new assignments.
Heading back to the electronics lab on the ridewalk, he took a call from
Security.
“Can you come to my office first?” Harlan Ames asked tensely.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“A security problem?”
“More a medical
problem, Tom,” he replied; “but one with serious security implications.
Eight of our spaceflight workers on Fearing have come down with that
same strange fever Arv had!”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
CHAPTER 11
JENNIFER DECEMBER
“DR. CARMAN at Fearing called Simpson about it, and Doc called me,”
explained Ames as Tom sat listening tensely in the security office.
“Arv’s illness was brief and evidently had no lasting effects, but — ”
“But why is it happening?” finished Tom. “And why these
particular people at the Fearing base — plus Arv Hanson?” He looked
again at the list of scrawled names Harlan Ames had handed him. “I know
nearly all of these names. They’re mostly astronauts from the
Enterprises spaceflight team.”
“Why them. That’s the big question. You xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
don’t suppose it could be
something brought back from space?”
“An extraterrestrial bug of some kind? That’s pretty inventive,
Harlan.”
The lean chief of security half-chuckled. “I don’t mean that,
exactly. But remember what happened on Nestria a while back. Doc thinks
some sort of common, harmless germ — maybe the common cold — mutated
under the unusual conditions and caused the debilitating illness Chow
and the others came down with. And Fearing receives incoming flights
from Little Luna and the space outpost.”
“Maybe.” Tom considered the matter. “And we may be dealing with a
lengthy incubation period, and varying degrees of natural immunity.
“But still, I know that several of these people arrived at the
island — in planes, not spacecraft! — within the last two days. They all
went symptomatic at the same time. Even if they were unusually
susceptible...”
“Right,” nodded Ames. “If they were all exposed to something,
it was on Fearing, and within the last 48 hours — less, actually — but
there have been no incoming flights from the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
outpost or Little Luna for
more than a week. My first-off-the-cuff analysis doesn’t make for a
comfortable fit. And that, boss, is why I did some fast talking
to Amos Quezada before calling you over.”
“Something else?”
“Let’s just say there’s a time coincidence. Mid-day yesterday, there
was an incident at one of the test blockhouses. One of the rocket
engines — I think Quezada said an H-91, if that means something to you —
developed a problem and had to be shut down. No real damage; but Tom,
every one of those eight workers was present in the hangar. At that
time they were all the closest people to the engine, the whole
bunch of them!”
“Seems significant, all right! Do you know anything about the engine
problem?” The young inventor half-expected Ames to refer to an explosion
— like the mysterious explosion of the telejector console only minutes
before.
But Ames had a different account. “Quezada refers to it as a
fuel-choke. Some rumbling, some smoke, not much more than that. There
was never any danger.”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“Yes... it can happen at the switchover from the lower to
higher-velocity cycle in the engine. Fairly common.”
“Which leaves us with the question.”
Question — another word beginning with Q! “The fever pretty
much knocks you for a loop,” Tom said, “but all in all, I gather it’s
harmless.”
“Seems to be. If this is your pal the Cobra pulling some kind of
stunt, it’s falling pretty flat, I’d say.”
Tom nodded, but added, “True — so far. But it may not be over,
Harlan.”
“If there’s anything to it in the first place.”
A close analysis of the melted triamplicon was inconclusive, but
Tom’s investigation of the stored stock of parts that might be used in
the telejector’s development drew a clear negative. “We can go ahead, I
guess,” Tom informed his team. “What happened may have been a fluke.
But,” he added wryly, “be prepared to duck!”
Later in the day, when Tom’s presence was unnecessary in the lab, he
was able to arrange a meeting that required a quick flight to East
Haven, Connecticut. He invited Bud to join him and pilot the Pigeon
Special that would carry them. “So now, what does this professor do, xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
exactly?” inquired Bud.
“Something that could give us a lead on those missing brainiacs?”
“Dr. Rogo is a well-known neuro-physiologist who has an interest in
the question of whether people who report ‘psychic’ experiences have
something distinctive about their brains,” explained his chum.
“You just shocked me, genius boy. I didn’t know there was
such a thing as a ‘well-known neurophysiologist’!”
The Swift commercial aircraft were known for their ability to land
safely in small spaces, and Tom had received permission to make use of a
vacant parking lot adjacent to his des- tination, East Haven College of
Medicine and Neurology. Dr. Stanton Rogo, a man not yet thirty, met the
boys in the large lab room adjoining his office. “Great to meet you,” he
said with a warm smile as he shook hands with Tom. “And don’t worry. I
won’t let it get around that a hard-headed scientist has a secret
interest in matters paranormal.”
Tom laughed. “I’m more a soft-headed tinkerer than a hard-headed
scientist! As for ESP and psychic phenomena — I’ve seen too many strange
things to be anything less than xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
curious.”
Bud asked Rogo if he had heard anything about the rash of
disappearances. “Yes, though I hadn’t given it much thought until Tom
mentioned it over the phone,” he replied. “Two of the persons thought to
be missing were tested here at my lab over the last few years.”
“By any chance, have you also tested a man named Joe Mulver?” Tom
asked.
Rogo looked surprised. “Don’t tell me Mulver’s missing too! I did
test him here, as a matter of fact.”
Tom described the incident with Mulver — The Great Lunario. “He
mentioned having been tested for ESP.”
“My tests here are more extensive than that,” declared Dr. Rogo,
gesturing at his panoply of equipment. “I’m not a professional
para- psychologist. My main interest is the fact — the alleged and
yet-unproven fact — that certain sorts of people are prone to have
personal experiences that seem to them ‘mystical’ or psychic. Some see
spirits of the dead, some see UFO’s or report being abducted by alien
visitors, some have what they regard as flashes of foresight or
precognition.”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“Sounds like they
might be watching a little too much TV,” Bud remarked.
Bud regretted his comment as Rogo frowned at him. “I’m used to
having my work here dismissed. Yet the possibility of finding some
physical factor in the cortex leading to all this is too important to
dismiss.”
“Er — just mouthing off, doctor,” Bud said hastily. “Have you found
anything?”
“Some hints in the EEG charts and the stereoptical-tachystiscope
studies.”
“I’m not familiar with that term, sir,” said Tom. “Medical
investigations are pretty remote from what I do.”
Rogo nodded. “Think of it as taking a detailed MRI of the
functioning brain at intervals — a few seconds apart, say. A physical
change, perhaps related to an ESP event, might have occurred; but the
neural structures are far too complex and detailed for the human eye to
note such a minute variation.
“But now imagine presenting both snapshots to the eye in rapid
succession, carefully aligned by computer.”
“Oh, I see,” Tom responded. “Even a tiny change would call attention
to itself in the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
visual field.”
“It jumps out at you. And in that way I’ve identified some physical
changes that might correlate with the subjective reports.”
Bud spoke up. “If I’m not too much in the doghouse for being a jerk
— do you ever test people to see if there might actually be
some- thing to their mind reading and so on? Is there a way to tell who’s
really psychic?”
“I should probably give the standard answer: that science in general
hasn’t confirmed that such powers have any existence beyond
misinterpretations, coincidences, and test artefacts,” replied Dr. Rogo
with a smile. “But between us — I have seen some performances by
my subjects that are hard to account for. In fact...”
The researcher strode over to a counter and picked up a small device
resembling a CD headset. “This is a transponder array for an expensive
instrument called a DEM-CS.”
Tom knew of it. “A Directed Electro-Magnetic Cortical Stimulator.
Bud, it uses fo- cused electromagnetic pulses, from multiple directions,
to selectively stimulate very small regions of brain cells. Surgeons
have known for xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
decades that inducing weak
currents in key parts of the brain can cause some pretty impressive
effects — overwhelming emotion, hallucinations, even something like
‘memory playback’ that’s as vivid as the original expe- rience.”
“A neurosurgeon, Penfield, discovered the phenomenon in the 1940’s,”
Rogo added. “When I’ve tested some promising individuals using the
system they’ve reported strange- feeling, mystical states. There seems to
be a significant improvement on standard tests for ESP during such
episodes.”
“But is it as good as holding hands at a seance?” Bud wisecracked,
wishing too late that he had thought twice before cracking.
Tom and Dr. Rogo spoke for some time about his studies and his many
subjects, and Tom was allowed to review some of Rogo’s files. “Mulver
showed signs of a capacity, and the other two who have gone missing were
quite phenomenal.”
“It’s a correlation, maybe a clue,” Tom mused. “But I take it you
have no thought as to what might have happened to the missing two, or
who might be after them for some reason?”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“Sorry, no.”
As Tom and Bud prepared to leave, the young inventor found his eyes
dwelling upon the DEM-CS machine. “Sir... I don’t suppose...”
Stanton Rogo chuckled. “Everyone wants to try the machine on
for size! Think you might have a psychic gift?”
Bud answered for his pal. “Tom Swift has intuition like fish have
fins! That’s kinda psy- chic, isn’t it, in a way?”
“All right, then. It’s quite harmless, com- pletely noninvasive.”
Sitting in a padded chair with a headrest, Tom waited as Rogo put
the transponder headset in place and directed Tom’s eyes to a video
screen in front of him. “Try to concentrate on watching the shifting
light patterns. I’ll be monitoring some of your basic physiological
outputs as we zoom-in on what- ever ESP cells you might have under that
crewcut of yours. Relax.”
The test commenced. Rogo slowly adjusted the dials on the device.
“Getting some reaction now,” he muttered presently. “You can close your
eyes.”
Bud was watching Tom’s face worriedly. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“Tom, do you see anything?”
“I... maybe... but I can’t tell if it’s seeing or hearing or just —
thinking.”
“All normal,” stated Rogo. “The brain’s perceptual modes don’t
always match up with the standard five senses. Say whatever you like,
Tom. Don’t worry about making sense.”
Tom licked his dry lips. “Funny feeling. I’m so high above
everything it’s all small, far away. Shapes... many people
talking, but what are they saying? Over there... a metal dinner plate on
its rim... the ocean... somebody said ‘the second edge’... Ow!
Cutting into my wrists!... What did you say?...” Tom paused as if
listening intently. “December?... aaah!”
The last was a startling yelp! “Tom! Are you all — ”
Dr. Rogo spoke over Bud. “It’s all right. Don’t shake your head,
Tom. Lay back. Can you specify what you’re experiencing?”
Tom seemed to have great difficulty answering. “You all seem far
away. Is that the sun? It’s huge, in the middle of... a green
sunset!... swirling, boiling. What are those things? Someone is
talking to me, but I can’t make out the words. I... I
don’t... take me xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
out!”
The scientist clicked off his machine and pulled the headset off his
subject. “Your reactions are typical. Hard to remember after it’s over,
isn’t it? Short-term memory doesn’t capture it very well, as in dreams.”
Tom leaned forward and rubbed his eyes. Then, seeing the expression
on Bud’s face, he gave his friend’s arm a squeeze. “I’m okay. Heart’s
thudding.”
“What was it like?” Bud asked.
“I don’t know how to put it into words, flyboy. Half the time it
didn’t seem to be me who was experiencing it — and don’t ask me
what that means!”
Dr. Rogo muttered, “Displacement of ego. What we like to call
‘myself’ is really a big collection of interactive ‘selves’ working
co- operatively, it seems. This process provides a truer point of view.”
Tom raised a rueful eyebrow. “So am I psychic, Dr. Rogo?”
“All I can tell you is, your pattern of phy- siological reactions was
similar to those I’ve seen in subjects who did well on the ESP tests.
Come back any time you have a few weeks xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
free, and we’ll go into
it!”
As the boys walked back to the Pigeon Special, Tom seemed weighed
down with thoughts that he couldn’t share, and Bud refrained from
probing. But as they neared the plane, Tom said suddenly, “Do we know
somebody named Jennifer December?”
“Well, I don’t,” Bud shrugged.
“That name — strange name, isn’t it? — is sort’ve stuck in my mind.”
“You must have heard it during the test.”
“Yes, I think so.”
“Doesn’t mean anything to you, hmm?”
Tom shook his head slowly — and doubtfully. “I can’t say what the
name means or who it is. But it’s like something you know that’s on the
tip of your tongue.”
Bud grinned. “Stuff like that bugs me. I’ll try to dig it out for an
hour — then when I let it go, out she pops!”
Tom took the pilot’s seat. They were high up and bound for Shopton
in minutes. Bud knew his friend was struggling with something. He
couldn’t let go!
Finally the young inventor picked up the thread. “I think I have an
appointment with her, xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Bud.”
“With the mysterious Jennifer?”
“If I don’t keep it, something terrible will happen. Jennifer
December...” Tom half-turned in his seat. “And I know who she is
now. She’s the little girl we saw in space — on the way to the Green
Orb!”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
CHAPTER 12
SKULKING BY NIGHT
IF TOM expected Bud to be surprised, it was Tom who received the
surprise. “I guessed it,” the gray-eyed youth said mildly. “Don’t know
why, exactly.”
“At some point,” Tom reflected, “I felt like I was on — inside —
the Orb. I was looking out through the green stuff at the sun. But
the sun was swollen and somehow... distorted. It filled the whole
sky; yet it didn’t hurt to look straight at it.”
“Were you afraid, pal?”
“I felt overpowering, intense emotions. Fear? I — I don’t know. As
if there were two xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
emotions at the same time,
one awful and one...” Tom glanced aside toward Bud. “Joy- ful!”
Bud looked ruefully perplexed. “Maybe the answer’s to find this
Jennifer kid. Or is she just another pink elephant, like what the others
saw in space?”
Back at Swift Enterprises, the young inventor worked for a time on
the telejector repair job. But the name Jennifer December continued to
bob about in his mind, and at one point it nudged a hunch into view.
“Tom!” said the surprised voice at the other end of the phone.
“Leave something behind?”
“No, Dr. Rogo. Sorry to interrupt you twice in one day.”
“It’s no problem at all. What can I do for you?”
Briefly and undramatically — to the extent that such was even
possible — Tom sum- marized his recent visionary episodes. “It just
occurred to me. These incidents have some kind of psychic connection to
one another, it seems, and — it’ll sound more psychotic than
psychic, but have you ever had a little girl as one of your test
subjects?”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
The short silence in
response was amazed! “Might you be referring to Jennifer December?”
“Good gosh, then you do know of her!”
“Yes, I surely do. I tested her last summer, along with some other
residents of Bylands Residence School. It’s a private orphanage up in
northern Maine. The staff physician, Lorna Darvey, is an old friend.”
“Would you mind describing the girl, sir?”
“Very petite. Basically dark features, but her hair was blond as I
recall. She was seven years old at that time.”
Tom nodded to himself. The description matched! “Did she do well in
the tests?”
“Unusually well,” Rogo answered. “The only reason I don’t call her
one of my ‘superstars’ is that she couldn’t stay long enough to complete
the test protocol. But where on Earth did you run across her name?”
“It came to me, somehow, during your DEM-CS procedure.”
“And her appearance too, evidently.”
“Let’s just say I connected her name to an image in one of the
vision-episodes. I’m sure it’s the girl you just described!”
Bemused and intrigued, Dr. Rogo provided xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Tom with the telephone
number of the orphanage. When the youth clicked off after ex- pressing his
gratitude, he felt at last that he had made some progress!
Early next morning the telephone rang in Bud Barclay’s Shopton
apartment. “Hey, genius boy! What’s up?”
“How’d you like to go with me down to Fearing this morning, pal?”
“Checking up on that mini-epidemic?”
Tom explained that Harlan Ames had directed his assistant, Phil
Radnor, to fly down to look into the matter. “Harlan thinks it could
have security implications, and there are some angles I’d like to probe
myself, so I offered to fly Rad down in the cycloplane.”
“Well sure, Tom,” responded Bud excitedly. “Er — no breakfast? The
SwiftStorm doesn’t have a galley like the Sky Queen,
y’know.”
“Come on! We’ll reach the Fearing mess hall long before your
stomach starts eating muscle.”
“Guess you’re right.”
“Just come right on out to the airfield when you get to
Enterprises.”
“I have to drive?” Bud chuckled. “What’s the world coming to?
You couldn’t just stop xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
here for me in the cyclo?”
“And have your neighbors flood the Shopton PD with flying saucer
reports?”
“They are a little excitable,” conceded Tom’s chum.
In less than an hour Tom’s ultrasonic cycloplane was streaking
southward toward the coast of Georgia, outracing sound as it balanced on
its whirling lift-cylinders. “So this Jennifer kid is a real person,
eh?” remarked Phil Radnor. “And you think she’s trying to get in touch
with you? Mentally, yet?”
In the pilot’s seat, but with the craft’s cybertron brain
controlling the flight, Tom replied. “That’s the impression I get —
whether it’s coming from her directly, or from someone else concerning
her.”
“I getcha, Tom,” said Bud. “That image in space might have been
symbolic, not the little lady’s genuine astral body or whatever they
call it.”
“All these images may just be byproducts of some force that
reaches directly into our unconscious minds,” Tom elaborated
thought- fully. “Someone’s trying to get across a concept, a kind of
living idea, which is so xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
charged with emotion that
it erupts out into the open, so to speak. But human sensitivity is
mostly in the area of the visual sense, and so our brains’ basement
gives these ‘signals’ the form of visible images — dresses them up, you
could say.”
“But several of you have seen the same thing,” Radnor objected. “In
my book, that means it’s real, not some kind of mental hal- lucination.”
Tom smiled. “Good point, Rad. But I don’t mean they’re
hallucinations — not exactly. Think of it as an artificial reality,
a temporary construction that can only last for a few seconds. If one
person is a better ‘receiver’ than the others around, he could act as a
kind of repeating relay, causing others to see what he’s seeing.”
“Wellllp,” joked Bud, “if it reached through my thick skull,
it’s mighty powerful stuff! But it’s sure no surprise that what Tom
tunes in on would get passed along to me — or other simpatico types like
Sandy and Bashalli.”
After a supersonic jaunt the SwiftStorm landed, smoothly and
vertically, on the Fearing Island airfield. The three breakfasted with
Amos xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Quezada, Dr. Carman,
and the head of island security, Mace Vendiablo.
“The eight victims have followed the same course as Arvid Hanson,”
reported Dr. Carman. “They’re all completly recovered, with no lasting
effects as far as I can tell.”
“And no one else here has contracted it?” asked Tom.
“Not so far,” the medic replied. “The whole situation is most
peculiar, gentlemen. It’s not overly unexpected that we haven’t
identified the specific infectious agent for such short-lived cases. But
I’m struck by the fact that Simpson and I have been unable to find
reports of this illness anywhere else. The CDC knows nothing about it;
neither do the many parallel agencies overseas.”
“Speaking of peculiarities,” interjected Phil Radnor, “my instincts
are tweaked by the fact that all eight of these good folks happened to
be standing near a rocket engine during a live test procedure. Were any
of them actually participating in the test?”
“They would have no reason to be,” Tom said.
“They’re not engineering specialists or tech- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
nicians. They’re
astronauts, mostly — rocket jockeys, like we used to say,” noted
Quezada.
Tom picked up on a word. “You said, mostly?”
Mace Vendiablo answered. “Boss, I started pulling the info together
right on the spot. Seven of the victims are space vets. The other is a
member of the visiting research project that Aciema Musa is working on —
a junior physicist named Herb Nelson. If you’re thinking he was behind
the engine problem, don’t forget that he was a victim too.”
Bud spoke between crunches of granola. “Seems to me nobody’s said
yet why they were all there.”
Amos Quezada gave a shrug.
“That big barn of ours isn’t used for
hazardous testing. As Tom knows, these are just routine procedures we do
on a regular schedule to detect wear-and-tear problems before they get
serious. I may have given you the impression that the engine was
fired-up and blazing, but actually it didn’t even have fuel in it, just
a dummy fluid that paints a nice picture on our detectors. It’s not
unusual for employees on break to wander in out of the sun just to xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
watch.”
“Interesting,” declared Radnor with a note of skepticism. “And is it
usual for these looky-loos to be hanging out nearer to the engine than
the guys actually running the test?”
“Look, Radnor, I hope you’re not implying that I haven’t been doing
my job!” Vendiablo bristled. “I asked all the questions. Those guys
happened to be standing there posing for a joke photo, that’s all.”
Tom looked down at the table, but everyone could hear a sharp tone
in his voice. “By any chance, was it this man Nelson who suggested
taking the photo?”
The Fearing staffers exchanged glances. “By any chance — yes.
He held the camera, in fact,” said Vendiablo. He added hotly: “So what’s
your point? The man’s had a background check. The Feds require it. You
know that.”
Sensing a retort on the way, Tom responded before Radnor could.
“We’re not implying anything, Mace. There may be nothing at all behind
all this.”
Bud snorted. “Right. That’d be a first!”
With a fixed smile on his face, Phil Radnor half-rose. “I think
Mace and I will spend the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
rest of this sunny morning
doing some digging.”
As they left the mess hall Bud asked Tom what he planned to do next.
“I think I’ll visit some of the guys who came down with our mystery
ailment — and that includes Herb Nel- son.”
The two walked out into the balmy morning air and began to cross the
airfield, itself crossed by the long shadows of waiting rockets. Before
they had taken ten steps, a voice called out to them.
“Excuse me — Mr.
Swift?”
Tom and Bud turned. A young base employee was approaching them. “Um
— sorry to bother you like this, but I thought I recognized you,” he
said to Tom, hesitantly.
The young inventor stuck out his hand. “Tom Swift!”
“My name’s Neil Forman,” said the man as he shook hands. “I — well,
they said you were visiting because of what happened — how those guys
all got sick after the accident during the engine test. And I — ”
The two from Shopton exchanged glances. Tom asked, “Do you know
something about that, Neil?”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
The worker glanced
about furtively, as if afraid to be seen — or heard. “I suppose I should
have told Mr. Vendiablo about it.”
“Why didn’t you?”
“They say he can be a little... testy. I like my job here, Mr.
Swift. I don’t want to risk it by having one of the big shots get on my
case for spreading rumors or something. But they say you’re a pretty
nice guy.”
“That rumor happens to be true,” Bud declared firmly. “And he
really loves putting puzzle pieces together. So spit ’er on out, pal!”
Forman nodded. “I usually work the night shift, and I take a break
around one AM. I go outside and smoke. Guess I’m not proud of not bein’
able to quit, ’cause I kind of stick to the shadows.
“Starting a couple weeks back or so, I started noticing a guy
walking from the living quarters along the edge of the airfield, next to
the wooded area. I figured he was just some other late worker out for a
stroll. But he did it every night, same time, same thing. I never saw
him coming back, either.”
“Where did he go, exactly?” inquired Tom.
“He always left the field at the same point xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
and headed off between the
trees. I assumed there was a path there.”
Forman pointed, and Bud muttered: “Then he was heading toward the
shore, looks like.”
“Yeah, he was. You see, I — er — ”
Tom smiled. “Followed him?”
“I was curious.”
“Go on, Neil.”
“One night I took my break closer to where he walked, but kept
myself out of sight. When he walked past I waited a few moments, then
started following behind, in the shadow of the trees. You can hear the
ocean just about any- where on Fearing, so I figured he wouldn’t hear me
tailin’ him.
“So he turns off onto this little footpath. Just dirt, you know? But
it goes zigzag, and I lost sight of him quickly.
“The path comes out right near the water, big rocks all over the
place. I look around — so where is he? Now I was majorly curious.
I spent a while skulking around, thinking I’d see him. Man, I just
had to know what he was up to!”
“I know the feeling,” remarked the young inventor dryly, with a wink
at Bud.
“All of a sudden I hear splashing. I look out xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
toward the ocean and
there’s this black thing sort’ve bobbing around out there. I made out
pretty quick that it was the head and shoulders of a guy in one of those
frogman suits! He ducked down under the water — and that’s the last I
saw of him.”
“A frogman,” Bud repeated. “Jetz, he could’ve been sneaking back and
forth between the island and a boat — maybe even the mainland!”
Tom’s response was skeptical. “We’re pretty well guarded here on
Fearing. You’ve got the radar mini-drones circling overhead at all
times, and an automatic-alarm sonarscope system keeping watch for
underwater intruders.”
“I don’t know about the sonar stuff,” the worker replied. “But as
far as the patrolscope radar, employees all have those anti-alarm
amulets, like the three of us are wearing.”
“True. Are you absolutely sure the man you saw walking was an
employee?”
“Oh yeah, absolutely.” Forman cleared his throat. “And I know his
name, too. Herb Nelson!”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
CHAPTER 13
THE FRIGHTENED FROGMAN
THE CONFIRMATION of Nelson’s involve- ment — in something! —
was disturbing. “Good night, the whole project group could be some sort
of cover operation,” Tom mur- mured.
“I can’t believe Aciema Musa is in on it,” Bud objected. “Neil, are
you pretty sure the frogman was the same as the guy you fol- lowed?”
Forman shrugged. “No — that’s why I held back saying anything. I
never did see the swimmer come back out of the water. I had to get back
to my shift. But I’ll tell you this, Nelson still goes out for his
little stroll every xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
night.”
Tom rubbed his chin for a moment, taking it all in and holding back
a sigh of bemused frustration. “It may sound a little lame to say, We
shouldn’t be hasty — but we shouldn’t be. Innuendos hurt
people. We’re not going to start off making any accusations against
Nelson or Aciema, or anyone. It’s all conjecture. But you did us a good
turn by telling us your story, Neil. It’s all very — interesting.”
“I know it’s more than that, Mr. Swift,” said the worker. “Whoever
that frogman was, he was breakin’ every security rule in the book!”
“You’re right,” Tom replied. “And now we have to catch him at it.”
After midnight, the moon slivered and still low, a black shape stood
among the rocks on the Fearing Island shore, shedding his outer clothes
and concealing them carefully. He pulled on his frogman togs and scuba
gear and slipped under the easy surf.
In the waters, a half-mile distant, another dark shape hovered like
a lurking predator. “Still nothing on the scope,” muttered Tom Swift.
“As expected,” Bud observed. “Even our xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
porpoise-squeak sonar
can’t pick him up.”
Tom nodded. “Which means he’s using sophisticated antidetection gear
— the same kind we’ve run into before. But it won’t defeat the tracker.”
The youths were submerged in a compact sea vehicle of Tom’s
invention, called the SnooperSub. The name was apt: the sub was
equipped with a remarkable snooping system, Tom’s aquatomic tracker,
which would allow the young inventor to follow the trail of distinctive
molecular traces left in the water by any object passing through it.
Touching the controls, Tom said quietly, “Let’s close in a little. The
currents are running a little slow today — we’ll have to hunt down the
ones with the atoms.”
The Snoop’s silent propulsion setup inched them forward, yard
by yard, in the presumed direction of the surreptitious diver. Picking
up no traces, Tom accelerated. “There! Got some- thing.”
“What kind of something, Skipper?”
“Metals, plastic, synth-rubber — some oils from human skin. Nelson
must be the nervous type. He was sweating when he pulled on his xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
suit.”
“Yeah,” snorted Bud. “I don’t blame him.”
The craft followed the undersea trail, its bright searchlight
visible through the viewport, but invisible outside. Presently Tom said,
“The traces are getting stronger. We’re getting closer, and I think he’s
swimming more slowly, too.”
“Must be near to wherever he’s heading.”
Five minutes later Bud hissed, “Tom, there he is!”
A diver was crossing the aqualamp beam, legs thrashing!
“Unless his tech is a lot higher than ours, he won’t know we’re
here,” Tom pronounced.
“Now?”
“Now we follow like cautious sea hounds, flyboy.”
The frogman continued for another few minutes, then arced downward
toward the seafloor. He crouched low, and suddenly a square shape rose
into view — the lid of a container.
“Looks like we found the treasure!”
Bud exclaimed. “Satisfied?”
“Yup!”
The young inventor spoke into a microphone, and pulses of sound,
disguised as fish-talk, xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
alerted others lurking
nearby that it was time to move. A minute later, Tom said: “Okay! Let’s
pin him.”
With the flick of a switch, the invisible beam turned visible,
startlingly brilliant.
His shadow trailing off into the far dimness, the frogman froze in
shock, then whirled about, thrashing his legs frantically. “Too late,
Herb-o,” grinned Bud. “Here come the trawler boys with the big nets.”
A squadron of six Fearing security personnel in Swift diversuits
converged on the hapless frogman, sped along like living torpedoes by
the jet drives on their backs. They orbited the obviously frightened
sub-man at a fifty-foot distance, gesturing for him to make for the
surface — where, Tom and Bud knew, an armed motor launch awaited him.
The man abruptly flipped backwards, flailing his arms wildly. “Good
grief, the guy’s freaking out!” Bud laughed. “Total panic!”
But Tom frowned. “No — look at that plume of — ” He broke off and
studied the readout on the aquatomic tracker’s control panel. “It’s
blood!”
The man was now floating like a shred of xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
limp seaweed. Two of the
Fearing team grabbed his arms to pull him to the surface, while the
others approached the chestlike container half-buried in the bottom.
It was an hour later, back on the island, when the boys were briefed
by Mace Vendiablo. “It was Nelson all right. Dead in the water.”
“How?” asked Tom somberly.
In reply the security man held up a long, straight object, narrow as
a finger.
“What is it?” Bud asked. “A harpoon?”
“Well, it might as well be — it harpooned him!” snorted Vendiablo.
“Went right through that fancy plastic stuff he was wearing. Went
halfway through him, matter of fact.”
Tom examined the object curiously, noting its needle-point and
cluster of fishlike tail fins at the rear. “Look here,” he said. “This
deep groove runs the whole length of the main shaft, wrapping around in
a tight spiral.” Tom glanced up. “I’m taking this over to the lab. I’d
like to scan it with a TeleTec and some other in- struments.”
Soon Tom returned with his own report. “It’s not a harpoon,” he told
the small group, which now included Amos Quezada and Phil Radnor. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“It’s a kind of
super-miniaturized electronic torpedo. Basically an underwater spy
satel- lite!”
“What!” snapped Radnor. “That dinky thing’s been spying on us?”
“I’d say so. And not just this one. There may be a whole fleet of
these things out there, circling Fearing under the surface just like our
own drones circle us up above.” Tom explained that the device had its
own battery power source and some kind of unconventional
re- ceiver-transmitter. “The part of the shaft between the nose section
and the tail is a freely rotating sleeve surrounding a rigid central
strut. It’s ingenious!”
“Well don’t fall in love with it, Tom!” Bud gibed.
“But it’s an amazing example of micro-technology! Transverse
magnetic induction makes the sleeve ‘float’ above the central shaft and
drives it into a rapid motion — something like those high-speed maglev
trains they’ve developed. The outer groove acts as a kind of
longitudinal prop-screw, and the system counteracts torque directly by
locking the excess angular momentum in the suspension field. I doped out
that it can receive remote- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
control signals, which
modify its onboard ‘guidance computer’, and it can transmit back
whatever it’s designed to record as it orbits around Fearing.”
“To someone on the mainland?” asked Bud.
“No. One of the divers stopped by the lab and told me that the
hidden container had data-storage equipment inside, along with other
equipment. My guess is that the drones transmit whatever they have in
very brief low-power bursts as they pass close to the chest in their
course, receiving any new instructions in the same way. It’d be too
localized for our sensor instruments to pick up.
“Nelson must’ve been going out nightly to pick up the recorded data
and slip-in any new control instructions. But tonight it played out
differently. ‘They’ must have been monitoring the situation remotely,
somehow. When they saw that their operative was on the verge of capture,
they risked transmitting an override code long-range, with new
instructions.”
Radnor finished the thought. “Instructions to turn on their master
and make for the middle of his chest, top speed.”
Bud shot Tom a wry glance.
“Guess the guy had good reason to be xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
frightened!” The young copilot noticed that his friend had turned pale.
“All nice and neat,” stated Quezada. “Now tell me why we couldn’t
detect these ‘satellites’ on sonar — or the frogman himself.”
“Because of this.” Tom withdrew a small shred of dark-gray material
from his pocket. “It was torn off by the projectile as it ripped into
him, and the diver gave it to me to look at.”
“Reflects light in a funny way,” Mace ob- served.
“Real funny!” Bud retorted. “Tom and I have seen it before.”
“It has a coating of Li Ching’s anti-energy crystals,” said Tom. “It
absorbs and partially refracts nearly every form of energy, including
radar, sonar, and light! Under the right con- ditions it can cause objects
to become blurred and distorted to the eye — hard to see.”
“Then it’s confirmed,” Mace added in grim tones. “Your Black Cobra
is involved in this, just as Ames and Radnor told me.”
Tom nodded, wiping a hand across his forehead. Bud noticed its
quiver.
“Him, or at least his organization. But we don’t know what he’s
after. He must’ve used xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Herb Nelson to cause the
rocket engine problem, and the blowup somehow... somehow caused...
uh...”
Tom hesitated in midsentence. “Bit by one of your on-the-fly ideas,
Tom?” asked Phil Rad- nor.
“No!” Bud gasped. “He’s going to — ”
Crumpling backwards, knees giving way, Tom tumbled toward the floor!
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
CHAPTER 14
FEVER-SPIKED!
“JETZ!” Bud lunged forward and caught his friend in his powerful
arms before head met floor.
Tom’s eyes fluttered. “Th-thanks — Bud — I...”
“You’re burning up,” Bud said gently, lower- ing him to the carpet.
“Lie down flat.”
“I’ll get Carman!” said Amos Quezada.
Tom coughed. “I f-felt it... coming on for hours, but — I d-didn’t
want to foul things up — ”
Bud knelt by him. “It’s the fever, isn’t it.”
“I think so. My muscles... I’m so weak all of a sudden...”
“Don’t talk, Tom.”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
After a quick examination on the spot, Dr. Carman had Tom moved to
the base infirmary, where he spent a limp and restless night, but one
marked by steady improvement hour by hour. By midmorning he was able to
sit up for a breakfast in bed.
“I feel pretty good,” he told Bud. “Thanks for taking care of my
jutting brow last night. I need it to shade my deep-set blue eyes,
y’know.”
“Instinct. I treated it like a football,” joked the athletic youth.
He motioned toward a spiral-bound pad of paper next to Tom’s tray.
“What’s that? Getting psychic symbols like Old- mother?”
Tom laughed. “Maybe I am — in my own way!” He handed the notebook to
his chum, who held it one way, then another. Bud finally gave up after a
complete turnabout.
“You sure you’re not loopy, genius boy? To me this looks more like a
scribble than the latest product of the mind of Thomas Edison Swift!”
The crude sketch showed a set of polyhedral structures, open
frameworks constructed of what Tom explained were tubular struts. The
polyhedrons appeared to be connected on gimbaled joints to a compact
central body, xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
which was solid. “The
struts that make up the frameworks are actually extensible ‘arms’ which
are jointed together. The sketch shows ’em folded and tucked-up, but
they can be unfolded straight.”
“Hmm! Reminds me of that paper-folding art the Japanese make,
origami. That, and modern sculpture — which I can’t make anything of
either!”
Tom laughed again. “If you want another analogy, think of it as a
cluster of huddled-up legs, like you’d find on a grasshopper or a
mantis.”
“However I think of it — what’s it for? Something tells me
it’s not art for your living room.”
“It’s how I plan to get past the Green Orb’s defenses to find out
what’s really going on in there.”
Bud dropped down into a big chair. “Right. What does it do, jump
the wall?”
With a grin and a burst of fresh energy, Tom explained that the
framework would have Tom’s 3-D wavefront holoceivers attached to each
joint of the many legs. “The structure is so completely reconfigurable
and expandable that xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
we’ll be able to collect
light waves from many different angles, which is what we need to do for
the telejector to produce a detailed 3-D image.”
“Good grief! You’re not saying this deal is gonna be big enough to
reach all the way around the Orb!”
“No, it’ll only be a few yards across — much smaller when it’s all
folded up tight, of course. But there’ll be six of them approaching from
all four sides, and above and below, equally spaced.”
“Okay, now I see. It’s a space probe — a flock! Will you launch
these guys directly from Earth?”
Tom shook his head, explaining that he wanted to build the delicate
structures in the stressless environment of zero-G. “My plan is to have
them all constructed up on the space outpost, and launch them from there
toward the Orb on a special carrier vehicle.”
“Will they stay outside the Orb taking pictures? Or will they — ”
“If all goes well, they’ll ‘boldly go’ right into the unknown world
like Viking explorers! I’m determined to get a 3-D view of the inside of xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
our green friend.”
Bud grinned, happy to see his pal back to his normal vigorous self.
“Let’s hope the TV show doesn’t put us to sleep this time.”
Presently Dr. Carman came to examine his charge. “You’re ready to
leave, Tom,” he pronounced. “I wouldn’t operate any heavy machinery for
a while, though.”
“Doctor, you’re talking to the one person on Earth least likely to
take that advice,” Bud wise- cracked.
“And now that you’re doing better,” Carman went on soberly, “I need
to tell you about a call I took late last night from Simpson.”
Tom’s nod interrupted him. “About Hank Sterling and Dr. Grimsey?”
The medic’s eyebrows lifted. “Someone told you?”
Bud held up his hands. “Wasn’t me!”
“I figured it out myself,” said the young inventor with a degree of
wry grimness. “When did they come down with it?”
“They went symptomatic last night, just as you did. Their fevers
spiked around 3 AM; now they’re both pretty much over it.”
Tom turned to his boggling friend. “Now that xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
we know it takes a couple
days or so to incubate, I knew I couldn’t have picked up the infection
here on Fearing. So I mentally backtracked.”
“Jetz!” Bud exclaimed. “The telejector blowup the other day — like
the incident with the rocket motor!”
“That’s right,” said Tom. “And Hank and Grimsey were present. We
were all exposed to something.”
Dr. Carman regarded Tom thoughtfully. “Yet these two machine
failures have nothing in common, as I understand it. The rocket business
wasn’t any kind of explosion.”
“But it was a venting of heated gases and smoke into the air,” was
Tom’s reply. “Same thing when the telejector blew. I think the bursts
must have sprayed out particulates of some sort — maybe something like
spores or pollen, with something riding on them that got into our
lungs.”
“To what end?” the physician asked. “The effects were inconvenient
but ultimately minor.”
“And besides, what about Arv Hanson?” Bud objected. “He didn’t have
anything go blooey on him.”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Tom could only shrug as he turned toward his pile of clothes. “If
you’re saying that a lot doesn’t fit — I agree. Rad and Mace tell me
they’re pretty sure Aciema and the other project people weren’t involved
in whatever Herb Nelson was up to. He was a last-minute addition to the
team when another member became — ” Tom paused significantly.
“Sick!”
“But Nelson was infected himself.”
“Which is smart,” retorted Tom. “It threw off suspicion. And
besides, as you said, Doc- tor, the fever is harmless.”
Bud flew Tom back to Shopton in the cycloplane, leaving Radnor
behind on the island to continue his investigations. “What we have so
far,” mused Bud, “is too much plot and not enough resolution, pal.
Snakeman and company skulk around finding ways to get Enterprises
employees infected with some 24-hour bug. Psychic celebrities get
kidnapped — unless they’re all off chanting their mantras someplace.
Somebody pretends to be Pete Langley to Tom Swift, and pretends to be
Tom Swift to Pete Langley, and pretends to be a peg-legged ghost; plus a
little girl wants you xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
to go see her, and a phony
mindreader wants you not to do something, and way out there in
space is this green thing that isn’t really there, but it puts you to
sleep. Why, why, why? What do we do now, huh?”
“Well, you could add another ‘why’,” suggested the
scientist-inventor dryly.
Bud laughed. “Yeah. I know you say ‘the outcome is the reason,’
Skipper. But right now I don’t think we’ve got much of a handle on
either one.”
“I know. It’s enough to make me switch to Langley’s version — ‘the
consequence is the cause’!”
Back at Enterprises Tom made a quick visit to Doc Simpson to verify
that Hank, Arv, and Grimsey were well, continuing his rounds with visits
to his father, Harlan Ames, and finally to the lab where the telejector
was being repaired. Tom asked Dr. Grimsey, “I saw you unseal the
container the triamplicon came in, but was there anything unusual about
it that you recall? There’s reason to think it might have been gimmicked
to explode and spread whatever it is that infected us.”
Between bushy beard and haystack hair, the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
telecommunications
engineer turned white. “Hey-mama! You think this was deliberate? But why
would I be — ” He glanced at Hank Sterling. “Why would any of us
be targeted?”
Hank observed, “I don’t know about you and me, Edmund, but our boss
here sits right on a permanent bullseye.”
Grimsey had no further information, and Tom returned to his office,
sitting down at his desk. Using the number provided by Dr. Rogo, he was
soon in touch with Bylands Residence School and Lorna Darvey. “Stan Rogo
told me to expect your call, Tom,” she said. “I under- stand you’re
interested in one of our charges, Jennifer December.”
Tom provided a measured, toned-down account of his reasons. “I was
amazed that she really existed, and had been tested as having some ESP
abilities.”
“That she does,” confirmed Dr. Darvey. “I’m hardly an expert, but
she converted me from skeptic to — well, maybe not a believer, but
someone with questions.”
“Does she show her abilities there at the orphanage?”
“Oh yes. No major miracles, but she often xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
seems to know in advance
things that happen, and I’d swear she’s taken peeks into my mind. But
the strangest thing...”
“Don’t worry, ma’am — I’m expecting it to be very strange!”
“It is,” said the physician. “I think Jennifer can create dreams.”
“You mean she can consciously control what she dreams about?”
Darvey took a deep breath, as if afraid how her story might sound to
a scientist. “No, I mean she can control what other people dream
about!” There was a long moment with no response from Tom. “I know.
Sounds like something from the movies, doesn’t it?”
Tom chuckled. “Well... yes. But she doesn’t use it malevolently —
does she?”
“Oh my, thank the Lord, no! And she isn’t a ‘firestarter’ either,”
the woman laughed. “But many times she’s mentioned to various staff
members striking images that we recall from dreams of the preceding
night. And she’ll say, Oh, I sent that to you, wasn’t it funny?
or such things. But she’ll describe it and comment before it’s
been mentioned!”
After further discussion, Tom admitted that xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
he still lacked a clear
picture of what Jennifer was able to do — and how she accomplished it.
“Then why not come up to Maine and visit her? She’s a very sweet,
pleasant little dear. She’s not really able to explain what she does,
but perhaps we haven’t been asking the right questions.”
“I’ll do that,” Tom promised. “Tomorrow afternoon?”
“We’ll expect you.”
“Ma’am — I think Jennifer December is already expecting me!”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
CHAPTER 15
DREAM TV
TOM and Bud rented a car at the city airport where they landed the
Pigeon Special. “Genius boy, you’ve got to get into the notion of
traveling around in your atomicar,” Bud re- marked. “I mean, the Silent
Streak can fly, not to mention tooling along the road without
stopping for gas.”
&n sp;“Uh-huh. I shouldn’t mind the traffic jams as the other drivers do
doubletakes?”
“Chum,” said Bud, “you worry too much.”
Bylands orphanage was small but modern and pleasant, nestled among
low, rolling hills. In Lorna Darvey’s office, the youths were given the
brief history of Miss Jennifer Decem- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
ber. She had been taken to
Bylands as a toddler, after her parents had lost their lives in an auto
accident. Her only close relative, an elderly great-aunt, was unable to
take her, but wealthy enough to provide for her board and care. “She
goes to public school in town,” explained Dr. Darvey, “and there have
been no problems or incidents. Just a bright, ordinary little girl.”
“Who can transmit TV programs into people’s heads,” noted Bud.
Tom asked, “Are these ‘dreams’ she takes credit for in the form of
stories?”
The physician shook her head slightly. “I wouldn’t characterize them
that way. It’s more a matter of intrusive images, sometimes little
scenes that you see, as you might look at the picture on a postcard.
I’ve been given such things as a fox in an overcoat, a flying chocolate
cake, and a bright blue rose.”
“Has anyone ever reported seeing images like that when they’re not
asleep?”
“You mean just floating around in the daylight? No, Tom.”
The Shopton visitors were taken outside to meet the girl of the
hour, who was at play in a xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
sandbox. The perfect image
of the little space girl, she stood up and
shook Tom’s hand grave- ly, seeming to pay no attention to Dr. Darvey’s
introduction. “I know who you are, mister.”
“You can call me Tom.”
“Uh-huh. And that’s Bud. He’s your friend.”
“His bestest friend,” commented Bud.
Tom asked the girl, in a gentle way, how she knew of him. “Did you
see me on TV?”
“Uh-huh. On the night TV.”
“Late night news shows?”
“Uh-uh. The TV in your head, when you go to sleep.”
Lorna Darvey interjected, “That’s what she calls her dreams.”
“Ever’body has it,” said Jennifer. “But most people don’t tune it
in. A few people do. I meet them in the TV and we play. That’s how I met
you and Bud.”
Tom sucked in his breath and glanced at Bud, whose gray eyes were
wide. “Do you remember when you met us, Jenny?”
“Uh-uh. Jennifer! It was last week. You were in the window,
where all the stars are. You talked to me.”
“What did I say?”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“Dream things. You’re
not s’posed to repeat ’em.”
“Who says?”
“No-buddy. You can’t, cause there’s no real words,
just things you see and feel. But both of you were skeered.”
Tom grinned. “We sure were! We never met a little girl up where the
stars are.”
“Some of the dream TV goes up there, right past the moon. I even
play with — ” She stopped herself abruptly. “I can’t tell you about
them. They don’t want me to.”
“Oh, that’s okay,” Tom said. “Have you seen that big green place out
there? The one Bud and I were going to?”
She nodded excitedly. “Uh-huh! It’s all funny. There’s all those
people!”
“People!” Bud blurted out. “See, Tom, it’s just like I — ”
Tom shushed him with a look. “Jennifer, who are they? What do they
want? Do they want you to tell me something?”
She shrugged, in the eloquent way children can shrug. “I dunno.”
“You can tell me. I’ll keep it a secret.”
She looked at him soberly. “It’s bad to tell xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
lies, Tom. You already
know you’re gonna tell other people.”
The young inventor reddened slightly. “Yes, I — I know. But, see...
People could be hurt if you don’t tell me. It’s really really
important.”
She suddenly plopped down at the edge of the sandbox, which was
bordered by a red- wood bench. “The dream people think so too, but I don’t
know how to tell you. They get so sad. When I saw you in the
window, I tried to tell you, but I couldn’t!”
The last was said with tears in it. Dr. Darvey knelt down and held
Jennifer’s hand reas- suringly. “Would you like to go back to playing,
honey?”
She didn’t answer, but hunkered down in the sand and began to draw
with her finger. “Look what I can do, Tom.”
The girl drew a big fat circle, then added a squiggle to it. Tom and
Bud exchanged startled glances, and Tom asked in a faint voice: “What —
what is that, Jennifer? It looks like — ”
“It’s not a ‘Q’ letter, Tom,” she declared firmly. “I gave it
to my friend the old mother man, but when he got woked up he thought
it wrong. See, look.” Her pointing finger traced xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
out the circle. “That’s
the green balloon, where the people live. That’s why it’s round. This
little tail...” She indicated the squiggle-mark. “That’s the snake
coming up to bite it.”
“The... snake?” Bud repeated.
“You a’ready know, Bud,” Jennifer stated reprovingly. “Tom knows
too.”
“Jennifer — why does the snake want to bite the Orb? The green
thing?” inquired Tom.
“I dunno. It’s not real biting. It’s more like when you have
telephone wires, except it’s for the dream TVs. There are lots of ’em,
cause he has a buncha my friends with him. He’s trying to make them tell
him about the green balloon people.”
Tom murmured quietly, “Li is using the kidnapped psychics to
communicate with the Green Orb.”
“I knew you knew it.”
“I’ll bet you did.”
Jennifer searched the young inventor’s eyes intently. “It’s okay to
say die, Tom. The green balloon people are all going to die if
you don’t go to them. That’s what they want me to tell you.”
Tom crouched down to her level. “Jennifer, I’ve
seen strange pictures, and so have other xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
people. Did you — ”
“Oh, you mean the pirate, and the man with the towel on his head,
and when you were in the chair.”
“Did you make those pictures yourself?”
“Nuh-uh. Umm, not zackly. See, it’s the balloon people. They
told me to tell you what they want you to do, and they made me strong so
I could do it, just sometimes. But I can’t just think it up, like I do
on the night TV. I just...”
The girl hesitated, perplexed.
“When there’s
pictures in people’s heads, I can push ’em out in front. But for some
people, like the towel-head man — they’re like my friends, the ones with
the snake man. I just tap them, and they can see what the balloon
people want to show them.”
“Hey, Jennifer,” Bud interjected, “could you make us see something
right now?”
She waggled her head at Bud. “Not now. The balloon people aren’t
making me strong now.”
“But the next time they do it, do you think you could ‘tap’ me?”
asked Tom. “It’d be cool if I could talk to the balloon people myself.”
Jennifer December looked at the crewcutted youth for a long moment.
“Uh-uh. Nope. You xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
got turned off, like a
buncha your friends.”
Tom frowned. “How do you mean?”
“It was what the snake man did. Oh — you named him the Black Cobra!
He made you sick, so your nightlight would go out.”
“Yes. That’s exactly what he did!”
“He wants to be the only one who can talk to the people in the green
balloon. Tom,” she added very gravely, “he’s real bad.”
“Real real bad, Jennifer.”
The little girl had begun to fidget, and Dr. Darvey called a halt to
the visit. But as the three turned to walk away after their goodbyes,
she called out, “Tom, she’ll say no, but then she’ll say yes.” Then she
turned back to the sandbox, dismissing them.
“I don’t know what she means by that,” said Lorna Darvey
apologetically. “I don’t know what any of it means, really. But has this
helped you, Tom?”
“Very much, ma’am.”
On the way back to the airport, Bud asked if the plot now had been
given more resolution. “It sure has, flyboy,” Tom answered excitedly.
“Evidently Comrade-General Li has known about the Orb for some time,
somehow, and he xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
learned that the only way
to communicate with its inhabitants is mentally.”
“By telepathy, hunh.”
“Well — it doesn’t seem to be exactly what most people mean by that
word. It seems to work by using the mind’s own store of visual images to
bring up feelings that communicate the essential message. Sometimes it
stops there, as when Pete Langley’s thoughts about me — which were
pretty negatively charged, I’d say! — pulled in Jennifer’s ‘signal’ and
made him see my image.”
“With a pleading expression.”
“Which was as much of the message as got through. But when we all
saw old Pegleg, for example, more came through, what I lip-read. The
‘ghost’ was at the top of all our minds, so we all saw it together.”
Bud nodded sagely. “Sorta like on the tip of your tongue, but higher
up!”
“Right.”
“Okay, Tom, the jigsaw puzzle is making a picture,” Bud agreed. “An
arm, a little sky, half a tree, Abe Lincoln’s nose. But still — what
about that phantom phone call you got? How come Chow and the others on
the Challen- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
ger saw
images that basically meant buzz off? — scarecrow stuff. Not the
message I’d send if I wanted somebody to come help me!”
“I don’t know,” conceded the young inventor. “Those other images
were frightening, or disturbing in some other way, and they did seem to
communicate the idea that we should go home and not approach the
Orb. I won- dered if it might be coming from the Cobra’s captive group at
his instigation — but why didn’t it happen on Earth, but in space as we
got near the Orb?
“Anyway, now we know one thing more,” he continued. “The purpose of
that fever-contagion has something to do with ensuring that none of the
people likely to comprise an Enterprises space team has the capacity to
communicate with the ‘Orb-ites’ directly — and that includes me, along
with anybody else who’s unlucky enough to be in the ‘hot zone’. He can’t
tag everyone — he didn’t infect you yet, pal — but he’s
sure working at it!”
Bud absorbed the matter quietly. But as the two sat in the Pigeon
Special awaiting departure permission, he turned to his friend and
asked, xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“What do you want to do,
Tom? I know you — even better than Jennifer December does. You’ll try to
rescue those Orbites, whatever it is that’s threatening them. But how?
Nobody really knows what anybody’s talking about!”
“You’re right,” stated the young inventor. “And that’s why my Video
Vikings have to storm the Green Orb before — ”
“Before the Cobra strikes?”
“Before the end that’s near — is here!”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
CHAPTER 16
TWO BROKEN LINKS
“IT SEEMS you were right all along, son,” nodded Damon Swift. “All
our instrumental studies suggest that, in some bizarre and barely
conceivable way, the Green Orb is a three-dimensional form of light,
a kind of self-sustaining image that can only be made subject to science
by means of a device like your tele- jector.”
Tom whistled slightly. “I never would have dreamed that this
invention, mostly meant for entertainment, would turn out to be a real
scientific instrument — like a microscope or a telescope.”
“Nor did anyone dream there could be such xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
a thing as the Orb. Much
less that this image- object could be inhabited!”
Returning to Enterprises, Tom had immediately sought out his father
and given a full account of his encounter with Jennifer De- cember. The
elder scientist had in turn apprised Tom of some recent findings
concerning the eerie space intruder.
“The matter seems indisputable,”
continued Mr. Swift. “We applied the decryption algo- rithms, the ones you
used in cracking that ‘Drowning Roman’ code, to the raw optical data
from the outpost telescopes. Sure enough, out popped features that our
usual enhancement techniques missed completely.”
“Jennifer calls it a balloon,” Tom mused. “That’s a pretty good
description of an object that’s basically a spherical surface with no
measurable thickness and nothing inside.”
“Just the vacuum of space, completely empty. All the work is done by
the surface of the ‘shell,’ absorbing all but a tiny fraction of the
ambient light and emitting — nothing! Where is the energy going? What is
it being transformed into?”
“The inhabitants, the Orbites, must be utili- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
zing it somehow,” Tom
noted thoughtfully. “We may not be able to detect them, but I believe
Jennifer when she says they’re in the ‘balloon’ somewhere.”
Mr. Swift leaned forward across his desk. “And I’m sure of
something too, Tom. The Green Orb is using some form of energy to alter
its movements through space.”
Among the new findings was something intriguing and somewhat
ominous. Since its original sighting, the space object had deviated from
its course. At first the variations were relatively small — though
sufficient to have thrown off the megascope’s beam settings. But within
the last few hours the Orb had begun to swerve alarmingly and
unpredictably from one heading to another.
“I know what people are worried about,” Tom responded. “If the Orb
were to turn toward Earth, it could constitute some kind of danger.”
“All the more reason for your video probe to proceed, Tom.”
Leaving the administration tower, Tom began to cross the plant
grounds on a ridewalk as he headed toward the lab where the telejector
was being worked on. Seeing a familiar figure, he xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
hailed him and waved him
over. “Come join me on the ridewalk, Dr. Grimsey.”
The older man did so. He seemed somewhat subdued. “I’m a bit...
preoccupied with this fever business, Tom,” he said. “I’m not one of
your space-travel team. Yet I was one of the ones infected deliberately
by this Li Ching.”
“Yes. I understand your worry,” Tom responded. “But while we’re out
here by ourselves, let’s be honest, shall we?”
The man seemed to pale under the Shopton sun. “Honest? But — what do
you mean?”
“I’ve figured it out, Doctor,” Tom went on. “Maybe I’m wrong. Let me
run it by you, though. I decided to use the triamplicon to fix the
telejector’s problem — its apparent problem. I recall now that it
was you who first mentioned that approach. It was you who got the
component, and you who took it out of its container, which appeared
to be sealed. But perhaps it wasn’t.
“When the chassis blew, you said something like, That wasn’t
supposed to happen. Hank and I didn’t think much of it. But Doctor —
”
“It wasn’t supposed to happen,” said Grimsey slowly, in a
strained, husky voice. “The doctored component would only have pro- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
duced a ‘mysterious’ system anomaly that might have
taken days, even weeks, to work out. It was never suggested that there
would be an explosion, much less that the smoke from it would spread
some sort of infectious agent.”
“Are you working for Li Ching, Dr. Grim- sey?”
The man sighed deeply, looking off into the distance. “Certainly
not! Yet I suppose it isn’t certain, is it. It seems I’ve been
duped into doing his work.”
Tom thought for a moment. “Then, much as I hate to think it — I
gather Peter Langley was behind your actions.”
But Grimsey shook his head. “No. I’m sure he knew nothing about it.
He’s a good lad, basically, though not likeable. Shortly after it became
known that I was leaving Wickliffe for Enterprises,” he continued, “I
received the first of several telephone calls from a man who said he was
a major stockholder in the corporation. He refused to give his name, but
claimed to be concerned that if the Enterprises 3-D system came on the
market before Langley’s version — well, it would affect his financial
interest.”
“There’s the motive,
then.”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“As you’ve surely guessed, he offered me a great deal of money, with
a substantial down-payment. All I had to do was foul your telejector
enough to cause you to install the triamplicon he mailed me. He said he
only wanted to impede you, to delay the release of the machine for just
a little while.”
“And no one would ever know,” Tom stated.
“As they say — no harm, no foul.”
“The Black Cobra’s preferred style is to use and manipulate others,
sir. You’re just his latest tool. But thank you for confirming my
hypothe- sis.”
Grimsey was silent for long moments. “I wanted to work here. I was
sincere about that. And now... I suppose it’s a police matter.”
Tom shrugged. “I don’t know what Dad and I will decide to do, Dr.
Grimsey. We prize loyalty here. We need to be able to trust our
workforce — and I think we repay that trust- worthiness.
“Yet there’ve been
several occasions where we’ve been willing to set aside a person’s
mistakes. The Cobra has no tolerance for human weakness and
imperfection. We do.”
The young inventor alerted Harlan Ames, xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
and a security guard
escorted Dr. Grimsey off the grounds — but with a hint of hope from Tom
as to his future at Enterprises.
After several stops and necessary conversations, Tom finally arrived
at the lab, where Hank, Arv, and Linda Ming has succeeded in restoring
the telejector to operation.
He told them the latest startling developments. “So Grimsey was in
on it, hmm?” said Arv. “Seems like any little thing can be disaster on
the way. I finally remembered that a couple days before I got sick, I
had what I thought was a minor problem with my air conditioner, in my
car, on the way in to work. The vent blew out a puff of hot, dusty air,
right in my face.”
“And so you got sick,” Linda declared. “Somebody must have got to
your car when it was parked at home.”
“Maybe the same guy who called Grimsey,” Tom noted. “Li Ching’s
current ‘area rep’.”
They worked for hours on the problem of making the telejector image
visible in the light, or in front of an illuminated background. “We’re
making progress, boss,” Hank Sterling told xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Tom, who nodded.
Toward evening, after his helpers had left for the day, Chow brought
in a tray of supper. As Tom ate hungrily, the stout Texan produced a
postmarked envelope from the pocket of his gaudy red cowboy shirt.
“Got a letter here I’d like you to read, boss. It’s from a
sheepherdin’ friend o’ mine over in west Texas, name o’ Pedro Uzcudun.
Knew him years back, when I worked on th’ Horton spread.”
“Uzcudun? Is that a Basque name?” Tom asked.
“Yup, that’s right.” Chow explained that the Basques were so
skillful at tending sheep that many came to the United States from their
homeland in the Pyrenees Mountains between Spain and France to take jobs
as sheep herders in the Western states.
As he ate Tom skimmed through the opening of the letter, then read
it again with care. Wondering why the westerner had brought it to him,
his forehead wrinkled with interest as he read:
Hoyo, Chow-Poke!
The reason I am writing to you now, xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
amigo, is
because you are working at Swift Enterprises. Something most strange has
been happening to me. You know I spend many lonely nights with my flock
up in the hills. Well now, lately, I have begun to get messages and
visions in my mind about Tom Swift. It is almost as if they are coming
from the stars up above. I am sure I am not crazy, but people will think
so if I tell them. They already think I am, eh, amigo? I am worried.
Maybe it has something to do with radio. I have heard of that. Please
ask Tom Swift if he can explain.
Your friend from old times, Pedro
Chow looked somewhat embarrassed. “Mebbe it’s jest plumb
foolishness,” the cook said, “but I figgered I ought to show it to you.”
Tom rubbed his jaw thoughtfully. “What sort of a guy is this
Uzcudun, Chow? Is he a sensible person?”
Chow nodded vigorously. “Yep, he is, Tom. I don’t cotton much to
sheepmen, but Uzzy’s as nice an’ level-headed an hombre as I ever met.
“But y’see now, people jest don’t much take to what they cain’t make
out. See what I mean, boss? Uzzy kin sometimes read th’ signs an’ see xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
things. People come to ’im
fer advice. That’s what has ’em spooked out there.”
Tom frowned. “In that case, it may not be foolish after all.”
“Then you think he ain’t tetched?”
“Chow, I may be tetched in the head myself, but this could be like
what other people have been seeing — me and Bud, and you too, when you
saw that fire.”
“That there psycho stuff? Brain pictures?”
Tom smiled. “He could have extrasensory abilities like the little
girl I told you about, Jennifer. But because he’s older and has lived
with it longer, he may have a better handle on it. He might be better
able to control it.”
“Say! Mebbe so.”
“It sounds as though he might be ‘plugged in’ to the Orb — one of
those who started receiving impressions early, when the Orb hadn’t yet
been detected visually. Pardner, someone like your friend might be a
help to us, a link to communicating with these ‘green balloon people’
directly!” said the youth ex- citedly. “Thanks for showing this to me.”
Chow nodded, but looked downcast. “Yer welcome, son, but that ain’t
why I did it. I got xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
that letter a few days
back. Ever since, I been tryin’ to call him. He don’t answer! That ain’t
like him no-how!”
Tom’s face went dark with concern. “You say Pedro has a local
reputation for being a psychic. If the Cobra found out about that — ”
“Ye-ahh, boss, that’s jest whut I ’as chewin’ over! What if
that there snakeman took him, like th’ others?”
Tom tapped his long fingers on the supper tray, nervously. “There’s
a man we’ve worked with before, an FBI agent in the Albuquerque office.
I’ll ask Harlan Ames to get in touch with him concerning this.” He
thought for a moment. “Maybe there’s something else, too. That
researcher in East Haven, Dr. Rogo, has col- lected a great deal of
information about people showing these special talents, from all across
the country. He showed me some of his files. It’s possible your friend
is one of the ones he has a file on. There might be information in it
that could help us locate him, things you might not know.”
The ex-Texan brightened. “That there’s a fine idee! Never did know
much about ol’ Uzzy’s family — mebbe he’s got one ’r another out xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
there with him. But —
we gotta wait till t’morrow, I’d guess.”
Tom stood suddenly. “No need to. Dr. Rogo said he usually works late
in his office at the college. I’ll call right now. I’d planned getting
in touch with him again anyway. I realized those files of his might
contain some clues as to how the Cobra has been able to track down the
psychics he’s kidnapped.”
He dialed the phone number. There were six rings, then the click of
the call being transferred automatically. “East Haven College, main
switchboard. May I help you?”
“Yes, ma’am. I was trying to reach Dr. Stanton Rogo. He’s not
picking up.”
“I shouldn’t wonder. You didn’t hear?”
A chill surged through Tom. “About what?”
“There was a break-in sometime last night, while he was working
late, I guess. His office was trashed, and somebody set fire to it! They
say there’s nothing much left.”
“What! — but what about Dr. Rogo?”
“Well, sir, you should really be talking to the police, or maybe the
Dean’s office. I just know they can’t find a trace of him anywhere!”
When Tom hung up, he explained the situ- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
ation to Chow. “Looks
to me like Comrade-General Li plans to wipe out every possible source of
information that might be a help to getting into contact with the
Orbites!”
“The jim-danged sidewinder!”
“He sure is, pardner. We had two links almost in our hands — your
friend Pedro, and Dr. Rogo and his files. And now,” he concluded
bitterly, “both links are broken.”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
CHAPTER 17
THE VIKING INVASION
NEITHER the police of East Haven, Connecticut, nor the FBI of the
southwest, turned up any information on the disap- pearances of Pedro
Uzcudun and Stanton Rogo. “Rogo’s paper files are nothing but ash,”
Harlan Ames reported to Tom and his father. “And all his computer files,
including those he was storing on his server, have been deleted.”
“Anyone in those files could be in danger,” muttered Damon Swift.
“We can’t even tell the authorities whom to protect.”
“But we do know that one of them is Jennifer December,”
declared Tom. Ames promised to contact law enforcement to arrange for
Jennifer xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
and the orphanage to be
protected round the clock.
While the outpost in space was constructing Tom’s Video Viking 3-D
TV probes according to the designs Tom had transmitted, the young
inventor plunges back into perfecting the tele- jector.
“Tom, is it really important to the Orb probe to be able to project
a vivid, stand-alone output?” Linda inquired. “It seems like gravy to
me, no offense.”
Tom replied tersely, “It could be crucial. If the thing has taken a
notion to approach the earth, knowing everything possible about its
nature and structure may be vital. Creating a better 3-D image to study
is like an information enhancement technique: it gives us a richer range
of data to play with.”
“Sure. You don’t want a dirty microscope slide.”
“No. And — er — besides,” he added with sudden sheepishness, “I
have to give my brain something to chew on!”
After days of work and many dead ends, the results of their labors
were clear — and suspended in mid-air! “Gosh, genius boy, that’s xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
just incredible!” exulted
Bud, eyeing the vivid test images of downtown Shopton and the
countryside surrounding. As the scene switched to an elevated view of
Lake Carlopa, caught by holoceivers mounted on one of Tom’s Workchopper
helicraft, Bud almost shaded his eyes from the sparkling vividness.
“Quick, where’re my shades?”
“And this is a ‘live’ telecast, flyboy,” Tom noted happily. “The
same sort of thing we’ll get from the Vikings — I hope!”
Sam Barker, formerly renowned for his role as the Peg-Legged Ghost,
had been invited to join the group observing the telejector test. “So
how did you do it, Tom? — blank out the background glare, I mean. Would
I understand it?”
Bud laughed. “Tom may not have ESP, but he has a real gift for
explanations!”
Tom joined in the laughter before replying, gleeful with success.
“I’ve learned to explain just enough but not too much. Actually,
thinking about the Green Orb and the way it seems to be absorbing light
energy sparked off a few ideas. I’ve added a sort of extra overlay to
the 360-degree layer of projected holograms. You xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
could say the second
layer acts like a hologram in reverse, scattering and de-tuning the
light that passes through it, making it invisible to the eye and
producing what amounts to a dulled, blank background for the main
image.”
“Okay, but why doesn’t it affect the image you want?”
“Because I’ve added some coded phase-tuning to the projected image,
which filters right through the damping layer.”
“That’s — ”
Bud finished for Sam. “I think ‘incredible’ sums it up, pal.”
Next came an even more important test. The six Video Vikings had now
been assembled and tested at the space outpost. Transmissions from their
holoceivers produced amazingly sharp, realistic images of the rotating
space base, glittering in stark sunlight, and the outpost’s personnel.
“Good night!” Bud chuckled, “Even up close — man, I feel like I could
reach over and shake Ken Horton’s hand!” Horton was the man in charge of
outpost operations.
Grinning, Tom gestured. “Try it.”
Bud walked forward, hand outstretched. The xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
hand thrust right into
Horton’s image, disappearing from view within it as the damping layer
blotted it out. “Weird feeling — don’t think I’ve ever reached into
somebody’s body before!” He stepped back and turned toward his friend.
“This is great, but — aren’t you afraid the Orb will just slough-off the
Vikings, like it did the Repelatron Donkey probes?”
“Well, it’s an experiment. It may be the Orbites are
especially sensitive to induction effects, which means they might have a
strong reaction to metal — as if to an allergy. Believe it or
not, the Vikings are constructed entirely out of nonmetallic substances,
even down to the wires in the circuits. T’weren’t easy, friend. But it
might give us a chance.”
Tom called in his father and other key personnel to witness the
success of his invention. “We’re about ready to fly down to Fearing,” he
remarked.
Bud looked surprised. “Fearing? Why not just watch the show here in
the lab?”
“Because several scientists with the expertise we need to analyze
the results are down there already — part of Aciema Musa’s research xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
group,” explained the
scientist-inventor. “They have special instruments there too, already
set up and waiting.”
“Guess we’re in a hurry.”
“A big hurry, Bud. The Orb’s latest lane-change will bring it
close to Earth — closer than the Moon, in fact, though angled above the
South Pole.”
“Is it official — the Green One is on a collision course?”
“So far it seems to be heading toward the inner solar system.” Then
Tom added worriedly: “But no one knows what it will do next.”
Tom and Bud flew to Fearing Island by Swift Construction Company
jetrocopter the next day, where they contacted the outpost by
Private-Ear Radio. “We launched the ‘longboat’ seven minutes ago, Tom,”
Ken Horton con- firmed. “On its way to the Orb on repelatron power.”
“How are the Vikings holding up?”
“Telemetry nominal from all six.”
When Tom clicked off the communicator unit, Bud asked, “You say it
won’t be until tomorrow night when they start the probe?”
“Longer than that, actually.” Tom explained that
the Video Vikings’ unmanned carrier ve- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
hicle was accelerating at a much lower rate than the
Challenger’s customary 1-G acceleration.
“I wanted to keep down
the G-stresses to forestall any warping of the structures — those
delicate grasshopper-legs of theirs.” He told Bud that the actual probe
operation would begin just before dawn.
The boys could not sleep that long night. Tom arose hourly to check
with the commu- nications center on the outpost, tensely verifying that
the space-longboat was pro- ceeding smoothly on its planned course to the
weird image-object.
Finally, at four AM, Tom alerted the study-project team that the
space encounter was imminent. They assembled their arrays of instruments
on a pair of flatbed trucks and slowly rumbled out onto the Fearing
airfield, not far from the looming Challenger.
Tom unloaded his own equipment. The improved 3-D telejector, with
its triple antennae of gold-metal ring columns, had been mounted atop a
wide base set on casters. Tom rolled it into position fifty feet from
the trucks, angling the antenna array slightly upward.
Bud glanced back at the watching scientists. xxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“You don’t want the image closer to their
setup?”
Tom shook his head. “Not right away, at least. The Orb is itself an
‘image,’ more or less. For all we know, the replica image here on
Fearing might actually replicate some of its powers! Safer if everyone
stands back a little.”
“Except for Tom and Bud.”
“Except for Tom and Bud.”
Day had begun to break through and touch the Atlantic with its cool,
colored fire. The two looked skyward. The speck of greenish light was
still tiny, faint and hazy among the southward stars; but by now the
whole Earth had seen it — and wondered.
“Confirmation, chief. The Video Vikings have been ejected from the
carrier,” PERed Horton. “The longboat is veering away as planned.”
“Good. Ballistic trajectories from here on. We’ll do everything we
can not to startle our big friend into a fit of temper!”
Bud nudged Tom and pointed. Up on the elevated vehicular stage of
the Challenger, which projected like a front porch from the
central cabin, a number of workers had gath- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
ered to take in the astounding 3-D telecast from space.
They waited tensely, minute by crawling minute. “All right,”
muttered Tom. “Time for the fan-out maneuver. It’s showtime.” He
switched on the telejector, using the remote controller in his hand, and
the two stepped back uncon- sciously.
“Signal acquisition!” whispered Tom Swift. “Now — let’s see!”
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|
CHAPTER 18
A WORLD OF ITS OWN
BEFORE the boggling eyes of dozens of startled Earthlings, an eerie
sight, like none ever seen, blinked into view!
Awed, almost frightened, Bud ran a nervous hand through his black
hair. Tom stood and stared, heart thudding.
The Green Orb floated low over the Fearing Island airfield, a globe
of yellow-green that only faintly reflected the light of the sun. The
Video Vikings, still hundreds of miles distant, were fanning out to
assume their various positions around the object, but the computer wove
their six points of view — and the separate inputs from their many
holoceivers — into a single xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
form,
startlingly real.
“Tom,” Bud gulped, “I — I think it’s starting to get mad.”
The image was now large enough, and detailed enough, to show the
strange churning and writhing of the Orb’s visible, immaterial surface.
Separated sparkles and glows began to multiply and join together across
and around the spherical form.
“So much for a gentle invasion,” Tom said wryly. “It knows
the Vikings are there.”
“Pal — it may know we are here!”
The Orb swelled as the Vikings drew steadily nearer, and its details
became sharper. Now the watchers could see clearly that what seemed to
be, from a distance, a featureless haze was composed of thousands of
small specks or motes, swirling about one another in furious motion.
“Can you tell what those little things are, Tom?”
“Not so far. That’s why we’re probing.”
The flatbeds had begun to circle the 3-D projection, taking
instrumental readings from all sides. Not far away, a crane boom swung
up high for a top view.
The luminous globe grew larger still. Tom xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
knew the six Vikings were
carefully maneuvering into their assigned positions, guided by tiny
ion-drive thrusters. “We have configuration,” reported Ken Horton.
“Vikings are in position. Descent program on your word, Fearing.”
“That’s go, outpost,” Tom said as calmly as possible. He turned to
Bud. “This is it. Now we find out what that sphere is made of, besides
light.”
The boys had the dizzy feeling of watching through a great window,
the viewport of a spaceship descending into the murky atmosphere of an
unknown world. Adjusting the telejector settings, Tom allowed the lower
parts of the expanding sphere to disappear beneath the tarmac. Only an
ever-flattening horizon pro- truded into view, a curving band of
lumin- escence boiling with silent energy.
“Ohhhh!”
The crowd of watchers shouted as one.
The image of the Green Orb shattered into a myriad of whirling,
writhing fragments!
For a moment the projection was replaced by a weirdly twisting
flicker, a surreal tangle of stars.
Then it vanished.
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|
“Tom!” gaped Bud. “What
did
— what in the — ”
“I switched it off,” Tom grated, plucking the PER from his belt.
“Outpost, what is the status of the — ”
“Signal breakup, Fearing. Total loss of targeting. In other words,
Tom,” Horton went on, “the Vikings have flipped out.”
“Are you getting anything?”
“We still have locator tone from all six, but no coherent 3-D image
data. I’d say it’s the same thing that happened to the Donkeys — they’ve
gone tumbling off in all directions.”
“Good gosh!” rasped the young inventor in bitter disappointment.
“Nothing can break through that green shell!”
Bud put a hand on his pal’s arm. “The welcome mat says No
Visitors, I guess. But that’s never stopped a salesman yet, genius
boy.”
The team dispersed with their equipment, hoping they had managed to
scope out some useful data from the initial phase of the probe. Tom
packed the telejector away, downhearted. “Humans are knocked out if they
approach the Orb, and drones are just batted away. Whatever it is, it doesn’t want
Earth to ap- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
proach it. But it sure doesn’t mind approaching Earth! Bud,
the sort of power used to affect the Vikings could easily overwhelm the
world’s defenses!”
“And you don’t know what it is — the Orb, or the force it uses.”
“There’s no sign of electromagnetism or nuclear radiation, or the
sort of spectronic wave field we use in the repelatrons.” Tom hesitated.
“I guess I should face another possibility, which I’ve been dismissing.
Bud, the Orb may be a kind of black hole!”
Bud gulped. “Like the micro-sized black hole we nicked in the
Star Spear? Jetz, it just about tore us to pieces!”
“We’d have no protection against it,” Tom nodded. “But in some ways
the reaction of the automated probes, and the way the Orb seems to use
light, suggests what’s called gra- vitational lensing — local
distortions of the fabric of spacetime connected to intense
gra- vitational stresses. And yet...” The young inventor seemed to be
resisting his own theory. “We detect no gravitational anomalies — no
G- field at all!”
“Only light,” Bud pronounced. “But light that xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
packs a punch!”
Within hours the science team began to issue reports based upon
their various instrumental observations. Aciema Musa sought Tom out and
told him, “Tom, your telejector gave us just what we needed, right up to
the moment of — ”
“Of failure,” said the young inventor.
“But a good deal of success before that point. My own assessment is
that there’s really something to your hypothesis, the gravity-lensing
idea. But the forces involved are intensely localized — to a degree no
one thought pos- sible.”
“Then we couldn’t detect the G-forces because they don’t radiate far
enough into space.”
She smiled. There was excitement in her eyes. “They don’t radiate
at all, Tom! We’ve made a very minute, unorthodox interpretation of
the optical data, the 3-D wave patterns, and the only conclusion that
makes sense is that the Green Orb is a self-contained two-dimen- sional
object!”
Tom drew in his breath. He knew he had an involuntary expression
on his frank face that bespoke skepticism. “But it’s not two di- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
mensional, Aciema. If
nothing else, the 3-D telejector image showed that. It’s a sphere.”
Musa gave a nod. “Of course. But look, exactly what do we mean when
we say something is a three-dimensional object?” She picked up a piece
of paper from a nearby desk and drew a line on it. “The idealized,
abstract line that this visible line stands for is treated as having
only length, not thickness — it’s one-dimensional, true?” She drew a
simple circle next to it. “A circle is a two-dimensional figure, we say.
But if you think about it, every part of a circle is just a line,
isn’t it?”
“Well — you’re right. It can be regarded as an infinite number of
infinitely small line segments, connected together.”
“Every part, down to the smallest, is one-dimensional. Yet somehow
the bunch of them acquires the property of being two-dimensional! In
that special sense, you could say that a circle is a one-dimensional
object that extends into a two-dimensional space.”
Intrigued, Tom murmured, “Yes, I see.”
“Tom, I think the Orb is similar. What we think of as its surface is
really a curved two-dimensional plane with no measurable thick- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
ness whatsoever,
limited in extent but having no internal boundaries, that penetrates our
own 3-D space — cuts into it. The Orbites are not living inside the
sphere, they’re embedded in its surface!”
The youth gasped at the thought. “Good night, a ‘balloon’ of
twisted space — its own separate space that barely touches ours!”
“Physical objects of our sort would just slide sideways as they
tried to enter it. They’d whirl away on their own momentum.”
“Yet these inhabitants can make themselves aware of our realm,”
declared Tom, “and communicate with it psychically, mind to mind —
probably the only kind of long range interaction possible!”
The astounding picture of the Orb’s sideways world haunted the young
inventor. What would happen if such an object were to enter the
atmosphere, or touch the solid body of the 3-D world of man? The
interface forces could unravel the material substance of the planet, he
thought desperately, setting off a chain reaction that nothing could
stop!
Tom called Shopton by PER, then sought out Bud. “Get ready for a
supersonic trip back to xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
Maine, flyboy!”
“To the orphanage?”
“Yup, to Bylands. All our cards have been taken by the Black Cobra —
except one.”
“Jennifer December.”
“We need to bring her here to Fearing, and take her into space with
us to the Orb! The Orbites’ extrasensory powers seem to be limited by
distance, to some degree. But if we can bring Jennifer near the ‘skin’
of the ‘balloon’, she may be able to put us into contact with whoever,
whatever, is in charge up there.”
Bud’s brow crinkled above his gray eyes. “Tom, I don’t think it’ll
be easy, getting permission to take an untrained little girl on a space
trip to — to whatever Mr. Green-genes is.”
“Easy?” Tom snorted. “It’s just short of impossible! But if we don’t
succeed, the outcome that’s our reason for trying could be
a cataclysm for this innocent little world of ours!”
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|
CHAPTER 19
HIGH LEVEL THREAT
TOM SWIFT had a proven talent for doing the impossible.
It was Bud who piloted the jetrocopter to Maine and back again.
“Saying No at first was just common sense,” said Lorna Darvey,
quiet but resigned.
Bud grinned. “But then you said Yes, just as Miss Mental here
predicted.”
Jennifer giggled. “I knew she would. I guess I sorta
threw a tantrum.”
“That’s not why I changed my mind, sweetheart,” Dr. Darvey
continued. “It wasn’t even to ‘save the world’. I don’t understand any
of what Tom Swift told me. But I know they xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
took my friend Stanton
Rogo away, and I know they won’t stop until they take you,
Jennifer. Take you — or — ”
“It’s okay to say die, Docky-Dee,” stated Jennifer firmly.
“Ever’body dies.”
“That’s right,” Bud commented. “But maybe this way ever’body
won’t have to die at the same time.”
Darvey sighed despondently, looking out and down at green
landscapes. “Let’s see, what am I guilty of? Let me count the ways!
Child abduction, child endangerment, violation of medical ethics... if I
had told my superiors, it would have been insubordination, too. What’s
going to happen to me?”
“Well,” said the black-haired pilot, “maybe we’ll all be heroes.”
“You’re an accessory,” the physician pointed out; “you and Tom. But
they’ll let you off easy, because you’re so young.”
“It’ll be okay, Docky-Dee,” said Jennifer December. But she had to
add one reluctant word. “Maybe.”
The jetrocopter landed them at Harrietts Bluff, the Georgia town
nearest by air to Fearing Island. Tom met them at the small airfield
with xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
a car.
“We’re putting you two up in the Ash- mueller Hotel under assumed names,” Tom explained. “New
and safe, and you’ll be comfortable overnight.. We’ll fly you across to
Fearing tomorrow afternoon. The ship takes off at 5 PM.” He glanced in
the mirror at the little figure in the back seat. “What do you think,
Jennifer? Scared? I’m always a little scared when I — ”
“No you’re not,” she interrupted.
“No,” he admitted, chagrined. “Guess I’m not — always.”
As the car approached town, Bud suddenly cried in a choked
voice, “J-J — Tom, stop!”
Tom screeched on the brakes. “What?”
“To your left. Up!”
Tom looked. His eyes widened. “No! It — it can’t be!”
“The Orb!” Bud whispered.
A green disk, slightly luminous in the light of sunset, was
moving in the clear sky against the early stars!
Tom threw open his door and ducked out, face white. “It can’t
have gotten so near the Earth since I left the island! We have to leave
for — ”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“You’re silly!” giggled Jennifer. “Look at it!”
The Orb had turned as it bobbled. Something black appeared on its
rim and slowly moved inward.
GREEN ORB DINER
sky-high service — down-home cookin’
“Mighty smart businessman,” Tom muttered sheepishly as he got back
in the car. “Squeezing some advertising out of current events.”
“I want to go there,” said Jennifer.
“Maybe tomorrow, before we leave.”
After checking Jennifer and Dr. Darvey into the hotel, the boys
returned to the airfield and jetted the few-minute trip to Fearing
Island.
“I know you’ve thought this all through, Skipper,” Bud said quietly;
“putting Jennifer through... whatever’s going to happen out there. And I
know you wouldn’t do it for anything less than the biggest stakes of
all.”
“Then you know everything, flyboy.”
The next morning, as Tom oversaw pre- parations for the flight, a
phone bleat interrupted him.
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|
|
“Tom,
this is Dr. Darvey.”
“Lorna! Has something happened? Is Jennifer — ”
“She’s very upset and wants to speak with you. I think, perhaps, you
ought to hear her.”
“Of course.”
Jennifer’s voice was trembling and faint. “T-Tom? I had dreams!”
“The dream TV?”
“Uh-huh. My friends, the ones that the snake man took — we played
and they told me things.”
“What things? Bad things?”
“The bad men are here, the snake’s men!”
Tom’s heart felt leaden. “There? In town?”
“Uh-huh. There are two of ’em, someplace up high, in a room. They
keep looking out the window, and they can see where the hotel door is —
this hotel!”
“Great...! — Jennifer, can you tell exactly where they are, what
building they’re in, or what floor?”
“Uh-uh, I can’t! I can’t remember it all. Tom, I’m scared! So’s
Docky-Dee!”
The young inventor was scared too — and was very sure Jennifer knew
it. Yet it felt better xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
to try to stay in control.
“Do you know — remember — what these men plan to do, what they want?”
“Like what they did with my night friends. They’re s’posed to kidnap
me and take me to the snake man.”
“We’ll call the police. We’ll get protection for you immediately,
and Bud and I — ”
“No!” she cried out in fear. “You can’t do it like that! They have
guns, and — ‘put her down’ means kill me, doesn’t it, Tom? If
they can’t get me, they’ll shoot me when I go out, and anybody with me.
And if I stay inside, I — there was fire all over! My friends showed
me!”
Tom took in a deep breath. “Jennifer, I’m going to tell Dr. Darvey a
few things to do. We’ll get you both out safely, I promise.”
It was nearing eleven when the man in the window stiffened and
clenched his hand on the high-powered rifle lolling in his arms. “Here’s
someone coming out the door, V. Look.”
The other man, the man in the suit, came close and peered down four
stories and half a block to the left. Two figures had exited the door of
the Ashmueller Hotel, a woman and a little girl. They seemed to be
headed toward a xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
car that had just parked a
ways down the street, closer to the two men. “Yes, F. So I see.”
“Looks just like them!”
“It does indeed.”
“Slipping through our fingers! So — ”
He began to raise the rifle. V.’s hand stopped him. “No.”
“But he said if we can’t take her, we — ”
“Ah now, you see but you do not observe, young man. Do
you not smell something of a trick? Should we open fire, what then? We
give away our position, hmm? Might there not be police watching? These
people have shown they can know things before they happen. Or are you a
natural skeptic, dear F.?”
“So they just drive off to Tom Swift. Is that it? You’re okay with
that? He won’t be!”
“Nor is he tolerant of failure. That car may drive as it will, but
our quarry is nowhere near it. The boy’s machine is a projector of
illusions. Was it not you yourself who remarked a delivery of bulky
cabinetry not long ago, two men with hats and overalls? Even at the time
there was a thought in my head — ”
“They’re getting into the car!”
“ — that perhaps this was the beginning of a xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
ploy, as they term
it, involving Swift and Barclay and the image machine. Now then, train
the binoculars on the car window. Do you see the girl’s pretty head?”
The gunman looked. “No.”
“Or the woman’s?”
“Only the driver. But still they — ”
“Now now, why walk openly down the sidewalk if the intent is to duck
out of sight in the car? No, we are to believe they are innocent of the
knowledge of our existence, eh? But I do believe, F., that what we have
seen is merely another of those marvelous 3-D picture shows, the
projection beam blocked by the metal of the car. And so. We shall not be
drawn in. We shall not fire.”
“Instead?”
“We will take our silenced revolvers and walk calmly to the front
desk of the lovely Hotel Ashmueller, where we shall use our guns to
request such information as we need. And then up to a certain door, and
inside. One will leave with us. Three shall not.”
The hotel room was found to be on the second floor, on the side
facing the boulevard. “Predictable,” noted the man called V. “How xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
else could they project
the images into the street?”
The man knocked politely on the door, then used the key the
terrified desk clerk had been compelled to provide.
The door swung open. “Hello? Little Miss Jennifer? Young Swift and
perpetual entourage? Surely no point in hiding.” The room was small,
neat, and empty, four walls and no hiding places.
F. checked the bathroom. “Not here, either. How about — ” He
gestured toward the door of the room closet.
“Well, let us see.” V. raised the revolver and brutally slammed a
round through the door, a series of chuggy sounds behind the silencer.
“Perhaps I make a poor babysitter, eh?” He strode over and slid the door
open. There was nothing inside but rocking, rustling hangers. “Hmm.”
“Dagnab, dag nab, V.! They slipped by us.”
“Nonsense. Kindly remain respectful. I do not care to be dissed
by an American.”
Tom Swift did not speak, nor did the others — Bud, Lorna, and
Jennifer — dare to draw even a breath as they stood frozen, pressed flat xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
against the wall. Next to
them stood Tom’s telejector, turned to face the door to the room, a pair
of holoceivers on either side, on tripods. What the telejector had
created, one second before the door had opened, one second after the
knock, was another wall of the room. And so the hotel room had the
appearance of four walls and no people. But two of those walls were
duplicates, with four terrified people standing statue-like behind the
less-real one of them.
The men left, delicately pulling the door closed. The footsteps
receded.
Tom grabbed his cell phone. “They didn’t take the bait — they’re
here in the hotel! You’d better move in now, officer,” Tom said.
“They’re going back down. I don’t know what they might do to the clerk.”
“Right,” said the policeman on the other end. “We started regrouping
when your pictures didn’t draw any fire.”
The two letters of the alphabet were smoothly apprehended, the desk
clerk freed from his handcuffs and his broom closet. Upstairs Tom dried
the tears of a brave, terri- fied little girl.
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|
“I’m surprised you
don’t have to dry me off, pal!” Bud gulped. “When they knocked —
!”
“Thank heavens you were able to swivel your machine and use it,”
breathed Dr. Darvey. “That man, the way he just shot through that closet
door — we could easily have been hiding there!”
“Tom’s a mighty quick thinker,” Bud semi-chuckled, no humor in it.
“But next time, man! Don’t cut it so close!”
“It was even closer than you think, I’m afraid,” replied the young
inventor. “I didn’t have any prepared vid-recording of the room, and no
time to make one. We were running off a live feed from the holoceivers!
If they had taken a few steps further in our direction — ”
“They didn’t notice that the chest of drawers had been doubled, but
they sure would have noticed running into themselves!”
On the way to the airfield, Tom kept his promise to Jennifer and
stopped for lunch at the newly-named Green Orb Diner, with its
high- flying tethered balloon. “You can see ’er all the way inta
Florida,” noted the waitress proudly.
As they ate a light lunch, Tom asked Jennifer if the “dream TV” had
revealed any more about xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
the Orbites — their
physical form, their motives.
“Uh-uh, sor-ree,” she said. “I mean... I see ’em, just like they see
each other, but when I wake up I can’t remember, zackly. Just that there
are the really sad ones who talk to me — it’s sorta like talking,
but more like seeing — and the others. The others aren’t sad. It’s like
— I dunno — ”
“They’re joyous,” Tom declared. “I felt it too, when I used
Dr. Rogo’s machine. But why are they coming to Earth?”
The girl shrugged. “Oh, I dunno. Just because it’s — like when you
see something in a store window and you want to look at it. It’s just on
the way. See?”
“The way to where?”
“I dunno. When they try to look through the green balloon,
everything’s funny.”
Bud lowered his sandwich to ask, “Are there a lot of ’em? Is it like
a spaceship, with a crew of explorers? Or maybe — whoa! — colo- nists?”
Jennifer’s brow became all-frown. “Nuh-uh. That’s just on TV — the
real kind. There’s lots an’ lots, more than I know the number for.”
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|
“Tom,” said Lorna
Darvey, “you mentioned a humming sound.”
Tom nodded. “That’s what ‘Lunario’ said. He thought it was like an
electrical transformer or similar device. I’ve wondered if the Orb might
be something automatic, like a robot drone.”
But the little girl gave a vigorous shake of her head. “No! Machines
an’ stuff, like my game computer, are just lumps. They’re like
light- bulbs when you turn ’em off. They’re not in the dream TV. And it’s
not humming. That’s not the idea. It’s buzzing. You don’t really
hear it — you just think the picture that way, cause it’s
the only way you can. But what it’s s’posed to be, is buzzing.”
“Do you mean like a timer, Jennifer?” asked Darvey. “Or maybe a
doorbell?”
“No! I can almost say it...” Suddenly her face brightened and she
reached a hand across the table, to touch a jar with her dainty finger.
“There! That’s it.”
Bud was ruefully puzzled. “Okay. The Orb is like a jar that buzzes.”
Tom was staring, the stare of a growing idea. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
He picked up the little
jar, a jar of honey, and spoke in hushed tones that
silenced the table.
“The Green Orb isn’t an asteroid, or a comet, or a plasma cloud. It
isn’t a black hole. It isn’t a spaceship.” He turned the glass jar so
Bud could see the label — and the picture on it. Bees!
“It’s a swarm!”
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|
CHAPTER 20
SEEING IS BELIEVING
IT TOOK Lorna Darvey a moment to find her voice, though only half a
moment for Jennifer to give a happy nod. “Then you’re saying — Tom,
what are you saying? This object in space is a swarm of bees?”
“Space bees!” Bud repeated, grinning at the thought.
“They’re not zackly bees,” cautioned Jen- nifer. “Now I can remember
them better. They don’t look like anything we know, but if you wanna
talk about them, they’re more like moths.”
“Good gosh!” Tom breathed. “I get it! The swarm is making for the
Sun!”
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|
Jennifer
nodded. “Uh-huh. Like when moths fly to a porch light.”
“But I thought these were intelligent beings,” Lorna objected,
bewildered.
“There’s all kinds of intelligence, ma’am,” Bud pointed out. “Me,
for example.”
“The Orbites could have a very sophisticated intelligence,” Tom
stated, working it out. “But they’re not disembodied minds. They have
bodies of some sort, and they think of the world around them according
to the way their bodies process and organize their sense-perceptions,
the ‘category-labels’ that come with the pack- age. It’s the same with us.
“For the Orbites, heading toward the brightest object in view could
be as obvious and natural as — as ‘one plus one is two’. It might not
even occur to them to ask why.”
Dr. Darvey had begun to grasp the notion. “I see — like the
unquestionable axioms that a logic problem starts off with.”
“Logic and Barclay don’t always go together,” Bud declared. “I get
what you’re saying, though. Thinking has to start some- where, and if you
spend your time fighting the beginning, you’ll never get to the end!”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“Bud’s a good
explainer, too,” Tom chuckled affectionately. “Anyway, it seems we have
to talk the Orbites out of their present course, somehow. They seem
divided — I suppose its the ‘sad ones’ who are dominating the swarm.
Maybe they’re heading toward the Sun because — ”
“The term is Goodbye cruel world!” his chum said.
“You’re wrong!” Jennifer exclaimed. “It’s the op’sit. The happy ones
are almost all of ’em, and they’re the ones that drive. Cause
you’re talking about it, I can ’member now — the sad ones are sad cause
they don’t wanna go!”
They finished lunch — purchasing a jar of honey — and traveled
on, the telejector appa- ratus packed away in the car’s big trunk.
At Fearing Island, Tom oversaw the loading of his invention aboard
the Challenger, having it set up on the flight deck. “What’s it
for, Skipper?” asked Hank Sterling. “Entertainment for our
mini-passenger?”
“It’s still true that the Orb is more like an image than an object —
at least, ‘object’ in the sense we usually understand,” answered the
young spaceman.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
“I have
the feeling the telejector’s image- making capability could help us
communicate with it. With them! Call it one of my intuitions,
Hank.”
“Tom, we’ve all learned to trust them.”
Tom also had to answer an objection from his best friend. “Whattaya
you mean, you invited that jerk Pete Langley to Fearing!”
The young inventor added a sheepish grin to his reply. “Not for the
space trip, Bud. Dad and I agreed to invite a number of prominent
members of the experimental science community here, to personally
receive whatever data we collect upon our return. Pete’s obnoxious and
competitive, I agree. But he’s not a bad guy. And he is a good
scientist-inventor.”
Bud bought it reluctantly. “If he shows up in a striped
tee, I swear,
I’ll punch him out!”
At last loading was completed, all passengers in place — Tom and
Bud, Hank and Arv, a veteran astronaut named Bert Everett, and Lorna
Darvey and her charge. Chow Winkler, left behind in Shopton, had
protested his exclusion, but Tom provided a compelling reason. “Pardner,
I’ve had that fever, and you xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
know about Hank and Arv.
Bert was one of the ones who had it here. You see, in this cir- cumstance
Li Ching’s plot backfired. Because of the fever, or maybe the antigens
it built up in our bodies, we’re immune to the Orb’s psychic effects. We
shouldn’t see any of those ‘keep away’ visions this time — and we
shouldn’t get knocked out as we approach.”
“Ye-ahh,” Chow had conceded grumpily. “An’ you gotta have the lady
doctor an’ the little kid. Okay.” The cook didn’t bother to challenge
Tom’s inclusion of Bud.
The Challenger lifted off precisely on time. Dr. Darvey and
Jennifer December were fearful, awed, and thrilled all in one, and the
feelings lasted unabated through the flight to the Orb — a briefer
flight than the previous one, as the weird intruder was now much nearer
the earth.
“We’re at the thousand-mile mark, Tom,” Bert called out.
“Reporting as your ‘test canary’,” Bud wise- cracked, “I feel fine. No
visions — nothin’.”
“I’m sorry I skeered you when I made my picture outside the
big window,” said Jennifer xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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to Bud, very earnest.
“S’okay, sweetie. Keeps my blood moving.”
“Continue the approach,” Tom directed.
Dr. Darvey asked Jennifer if she were detecting anything from their
destination now that the ship had drawn near. “A little, kind of. They
all wonder what’s going on, an’ they can feel that they can’t use
their pictures like before, to scare you. I’m trying to tell them not to
be afraid.”
Presently the Green Orb loomed huge, strangely dim and ghostly
compared to the stark brilliance of Earth and Moon, or the distant white
fire of the Sun. “Can’t go into orbit,” remarked Hank Sterling. “No
gravity.”
“And the repelatrons can’t get a fix on it either,” Tom muttered.
Arv asked, “Then just how are you planning to maintain
position?”
“Hey, easiest thing in space. We use a half-dozen celestial bodies
to slow us to a dead stop — and just hang around!”
The Challenger was brought to a halt some hundred miles above
the margins of the sphere, its hazy corona. Now that they knew what they
were seeing, it was obvious that the darting xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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“motes” comprising the
granular surface were indeed individual entities, swarming about
violently within the flat confines of their strange world like living
beings in a state of alarm. “It’s amazing we can see them at all,” Tom
mur- mured. “We’re looking at them at an extreme angle, from three
dimensions into two — and the light we see by is going through a
curlicue course like — ”
“Like the tail on a Q,” was Bud’s wry con- clusion.
“Ohh!” Darvey cried out suddenly. “Some- thing’s happened to — ”
Jennifer was standing rigidly, her face pale as she stared at the
green expanse outside the viewport. “I — I’m okay,” the little girl
whispered. “This is how it’s s’posed to be. They’re makin’ me strong.
“It can’t be! It is not real!”
The last was in a little girl’s voice — yet not the voice of a
little girl.
“What is it? Why is it happening? It is part of the lesser light.
We can no longer push it from our thoughts. I fear, I fear.”
Tom spoke gently into Jennifer’s ear. “Tell them: Don’t be
afraid. Can you understand xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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me?”
“The delusion is strong. It seems to speak to us. Yet it is not
one with us.”
“I am called Tom Swift. We inhabit the — the lesser light you
are approaching.”
There was a long, tense pause. A thought crossed Tom’s mind —
“They’re calling somebody to the phone!”
“Yes. I know you. I know what you are. What you think comes in a
different way. But with every thought, I know more and un- derstand.”
“I mean no harm to you.”
“You are from the shadow. You have no reality. I understand
because you have entered within. But you are not one with us. The lesser
light has disturbed me. I will not allow!”
Jennifer suddenly shrieked and fell backward, as if in pain. Dr.
Darvey held her. “It’s hurting her! We’ve got to stop this!”
“N-no, Docky-Dee,” half-sobbed the little girl. “I’ll be okay. We
can’t stop. My night friends — they’re helping me now. The snake doesn’t
know. They’re helping me with words...” She looked up at Tom. “The green xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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balloon people think this is in
their, like... imagination! They only believe what all of them can see, at the same time. Out
here where we are — it’s like we’re behind them. They call it the
shadow, and they think it’s all made up. But — Tom — what’s new-roses?”
Tom knelt to look in her eyes. “I think your friends gave you that
word — neurosis! It’s something that makes you think and do things that
you really don’t want to do. Is that what the Orbites think I am — all
of us?”
“Just somethin’ made up — but they can’t stop thinking it.
“Why do we think this now? As I feared, the lesser light is
madness. Only the Great Light is the true path for us.”
“Jetz!” Bud muttered. “Is it a ‘me’ or a ‘we’? Talk about a
split personality!”
“It has its own fears. It puts me aside with joy-thoughts over
its dread.”
“That’s my — my friend you hear,” Tom said to Jennifer and the
Orb. “He is another one of us. We are not like you. We are each
separate.”
“My name is Legion, for I am many.”
The quote startled Tom, but then he reasoned
that it derived from the little girl’s own mind, or xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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perhaps the psychic
captives that now were assisting her.
“I am not like you, Tom-Swift-One. With us, what one knows, all
know. What one sees, all see,” the Orb-being resumed.
“There is a division within you.”
“You are a part of the division within me. I see it now. Because
I am of two minds, the fearful part speaks to me as if it were real. But
what is separate cannot be real. You are from the shadow.”
“I can prove to you that I am real, that the lesser light —
where we live — is also real,” Tom pronounced as calmly as he could.
“Will you wait?”
“What else is there, but to wait?”
Jennifer stirred, herself again for the moment. Dr. Darvey held her
comfortingly.
“I guess now I know where my intuition came from,” Tom murmured. He
directed that the telejector be moved out on the vehicular stage and
linked to the ship’s tremendous power circuits, its triple antenna aimed
square at the Orb. Then he stood in a bright worklight between the
holoceiver array, which remained on the command deck.
Tom directed Bert to rotate the Challenger xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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to a new orientation, and Arv
Hanson to re-angle the telejector antenna. Then he turned to Jennifer.
“Jennifer, I don’t know if you can make him understand, but somehow the
part of the swarm near us has to move aside to allow the telejector
beams to reach into the center of the sphere. Do you — ”
“S-Skipper!” called out Bud in raw astonishment. “It knows! — it’s
doing it already!”
A dark circular aperture, like something unrolling, was opening
beneath them!
Tom glanced at the others. “The Orbites look inward, toward
the center and toward each other, always. They spend their lives looking
at one another. I guess that’s the way they’re made. They can only see
the brightest exterior lights that penetrate — anything else is taken to
be transient thought, imagination.”
“Uh-huh!” exclaimed Jennifer firmly. “For them, ever’thing else is
just a mind-eye picture. They don’t believe it!”
“Now we’ll give them something to believe!”
Tom actuated the telejector. Jennifer — those who spoke through
Jennifer — cried out in shock.
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“I see it! It is
real!”
The creatures were seeing, each and all, a solid looking figure,
a gigantic form that they had somehow sensed but had never grasped
amidst their fear and skepticism.
“What you see now is how I appear to
myself,” explained the young inventor. “I am using a — a method to
produce this image for you. So you’ll believe.”
“Help me in my unbelief! Then the unbelievable thing is so indeed
— you of the lesser light are as real as we.”
“Yes. You’re a small part of a world much bigger than you ever
thought. We are out here. There may be others of your kind, too — but
separate.”
“Separate! Now that we see you, I begin to understand. I have
great fear, Tom-Swift-One, and yet if it is real, it is part of the true
path.”
“Will you tell me — ”
“I will tell you.”
“Why do you approach the great light, which we call our Sun?”
“That is not a Why. How could it be otherwise? The end is near,
the purpose of xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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time. To go there is to be completed. Is it not so with
you? Unthinkable!”
“But some of
you — ”
“I will conquer my fears.”
“But — it’s a waste of — ” Tom stopped himself. How well did he
know the truth of what he was trying to say? “There is something else.
You are coming near to the lesser light...”
“In all our journey to the Great Light, which we thought would be
endless, I have known nothing like it — another light. We were guilty of
wondering if the Great Light were really all, really the only true path.
It was a new idea, a thought to consider. I was fascinated by it. It
tempted us and forced itself upon me, and yet I was ashamed to think
such a thing. It was dangerous and I tried to push it aside in every way
we knew. Yet because it was dangerous and new, it was also...”
Jennifer broke in after a moment: “They means it’s fun to think about,
Tom. Like a horror movie or a thrill ride. You don’t want to, zackly,
but you kinda do.”
“I understand,” Tom said. “But for you to come close may harm us. It
could — prevent us from reaching our own purpose. Do you see?”
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“Yes, as you show us these things of the shadow, now we see in
the light, with my own eyes. I will move away. I was uncertain; my
course became uneven and hesitant, because I had blinded ourself to a disturbing truth, that
to reach the good end, the joyous completion, is also dreadful. We could
not think as one. A part was sad and unwilling; they called out to you,
Tom-Swift-One. I could not see what I myself was doing, for it was not
before me in the light, but behind. All is different now. You have shown
me the true path. You have given me the unknown, and I now see that to
accept it is not to lose what we had already. Our faith is restored. All
is well.”
Bud leaned over to whisper in Tom’s ear — which made the image
before the Orb’s million eyes morph unexpectedly and grotesquely as one
became two — and Tom nodded.
“Mm, you need to know this too... because
we are separate, there can be many true paths for us. There is one who’s
following a path that — well, I don’t think it could really be true for
anyone!”
“I see now. That one is the twinge, the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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ache that promises its
own end but never ceases. You think of that one as — we see the picture.
The idea that tempts, that tries always to speak to us from the shadow.
We would not give in to his temptations, yet they
could not be silenced. I must be strong and not deviate — I have left
the path too much. I will have no more of him.
“It is done. I have an appointment to keep. But I will think of you
as I go. — Tom,” said Jennifer weakly, easing back into Lorna
Darvey’s comforting arms, “that’s all they want to say.”
“It’s already begun to change course,” noted Hank at the instrument
panel. “I’m sure its new heading will be straight for the Sun.”
Tom sought out a chair, almost panting with the concealed strain of
what he had been through. “I — I guess maybe I’m one of the ‘sad ones’,
too,” he mused. “Taking a death dive into the Sun seems wrong.”
“Pal, that’s one thing that’s out of your hands!” Bud
admonished quietly.
The Challenger returned. Bud groaned at the first sight to
meet his eyes upon touching the ground. “There he is,” he grumbled to
Tom. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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“And look who’s with him.”
The young inventor strode up to greet Peter Langley and Amelia
Foger, who both responded with polite coolness.
Tom had finished making a brief statement to the
assembled crowd of scientists when Amelia drew him aside, obviously not wanting to be seen
by Langley. “Pardon me for the moment of intrigue, Tom. Something I’d
like to mention.”
“You’re suing me?”
She smiled. “So amusing. No, just this. It might be construed to be
a violation of professional ethics, this little private conversation —
but really, no law was broken by my client, no liability incurred.”
“About the telephone stuff?”
“You figured it out.”
Tom nodded. “Eventually. The Orb created images, because that’s how
it thinks. It couldn’t make a telephone beep, or fake a call — much less
divert a call and answer it.”
“It was just a prank, Tom,” she said. “Pete’s a little too
competitive for his own good. It gave his ego a real boost, interrupting
your neatly logical day with his own ‘mystery’. Masculine xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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power, I
suppose — after you snagged Grimsey. He’ll never admit it, but I felt
like telling you. No need to let these things fester and blow up in his
face. Whatever else I am to that kid,” she added, “I suppose I’m a bit
of a mother.”
“Mm-hmm. ‘Consequence,
cause’, Amy.”
“Excuse me?”
Tom didn’t answer, but walked away with a cryptic smile. He
resolved to give himself a week or two to enjoy life on mysterious Earth,
before throwing himself into the invention already making its own
picture in his mind, his Polar-Ray Dynasphere.
Lorna Darvey and Jennifer sought him out. “It all worked out
marvelously, Tom, thanks to you and your telejector. But I have to
wonder what will happen to me now, given my involvement. I’m afraid it
will have a bad effect on — ”
“Docky-Dee wants to adopt me,” broke in Jennifer.
Tom grinned broadly. “That’s wonderful! Believe me, we’ll do
whatever we can to ex- plain the importance of what you both did.”
“It means a great deal to me,” said Lorna.
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“Oh, it’ll be okay,” Jennifer reassured her. “I know they’ll give
in. They’ll get real tired of bad dreams!”
There was one final bit of a sequel, some days later at Swift
Enterprises, and the news came from Tom’s father. “Son, a couple things. Ames tells me the European
authorities have found and freed the captive psychics, including Rogo
and Chow’s friend, from a sanitarium in the Swiss Alps. As usual, in the
tedious way these things go, the Black Cobra eluded cap- ture.
“And also you’ll be interested in this,” Mr. Swift went on. “As you
know, the outpost telescopes have continued to watch the Green Orb on
its way to the Sun. They just reported that they’ve detected something
jetting out of it, a sort of plume of glowing material. It’s heading off
into interstellar space at an enormous rate of speed.”
The news from space pleased the young inventor immensely. “I’d say a
little part of the Orb has a mind of its own.”
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