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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
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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
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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
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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 Ven |