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With a crackle the atomic sun
burst upon
the
interior of the igloo |
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THE TOM
SWIFT INVENTION ADVENTURES
TOM SWIFT AND HIS ATOMIC
EARTH BLASTER
BY VICTOR APPLETON II |
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TOM SWIFT AND HIS
ATOMIC EARTH BLASTER |
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CHAPTER
1
A BLAST
FROM BELOW
“MAN, look at this earth blaster go to
town!” yelled Bud Barclay from the cab of a big tractor trailer.
Tom Swift, standing on the ground next to the vehicle’s wide
tractor-treads, looked up from his notebook in good-humored surprise.
“Bud — we haven’t started it yet.”
“Oh, I know. Just practicing.” He joined in his best pal’s laughter.
“I mean, hey, it’s a Tom Swift invention. It’ll work like a charm!”
The blond, rangy young scientist and his muscular, dark-haired pal were
testing Tom’s latest invention — an atomic-powered earth-digging machine,
nested in a cradle of cushioned brackets in the oversize truck bed. Tom
hoped to use his invention for road and bridge construction
work
and
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for drilling tunnels.
The young inventor had obtained permission from a farmer to dig on a
vacant section of partially wooded land adjacent to the right of way for a
water conduit. Tom had chosen this spot, a quarter of a mile off the highway
near Shopton, because its rocky formation would provide a better test than
the loamy ground of Swift Enterprises, where Tom and his father developed
the astonishing inventions that had brought worldwide fame to the Swift
family and the little town of Shopton, New York. Tom and Bud had spent the
first hour of their morning checking out the various controls and mechanisms
of the earth blaster to make certain it had not suffered from its
fifteen-minute road trip. Now it was time to test the device in action.
Bud raised the machine from the truck bed using a portable derrick
clamped to the body of the tractor-truck. He swiveled the derrick crane and
gently lowered the earth blaster to ground level, dipping its nose so that it rested upon the ground. The machine looked like a ten-foot torpedo and was comprised of three main parts. The main body of the gleaming steel
cylinder housed a compact atomic pile to power the implement. Extending
forward from the cylinder was a slightly narrower
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shaft, containing transmission gears to convey the
atom-powered strength of the device to its business end. This narrow “neck”
could be pivoted smoothly in any direction, as flexible as an earthworm. The
nose of the earth blaster was a tapering segment armed with a cluster of
twenty forward-thrusting spikes — the “teeth” of the ingenious machine — which
could chew into the hardest rock as they pulsed and vibrated at hypersonic
speed.
At Tom’s signal Bud gunned the electro-kinetic engines concealed
within the main chassis of the device. The grinding hum of the earth blaster
burst forth in an ear-shattering roar that rose to a high- pitched whine as
the penetrator vanes approached their prescribed vibratory rate. The nose of
the machine blurred into a haze of motion.
Bud let out the cables that attached the earth blaster to its crane,
and the machine bored into the ground. As Bud eased the big truck forward on
its treads, a clean furrow seemed to materialize around the blaster as if by
magic.
Bud gave a happy thumbs-up to his friend, who was jogging along next
to the cab. Tom’s atomic earth blaster was a success!
As the heavy truck rumbled along, the machine was dragged forward and
plowed a deep trench in
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the ground. A steady stream of dirt and rock, pulverized almost to dust,
spewed out of the rear of the main cylinder into a wide flexible hose which
whisked the suspended debris into a holding container in the truck bed.
After traveling along for a few dozen yards there was a moment of
hesitation, as if the blaster had encountered an obstacle in the ground.
Then with no more warning than that, Tom and Bud were jolted by a loud clash
of metal on metal. A split second later a geyser of water shot up one
hundred feet into the air!
Hastily Bud jammed the truck into reverse and backed away from the
drenching outburst, shutting down the earth blaster. But it was too late — the
damage was done!
“We’ve hit an aqueduct!” Tom shouted, as he drew up alongside. “Hand
me the cellphone!”
In stunned silence, Bud grabbed the portable unit off the cab shelf
behind him and tossed it down to Tom. Quickly Tom made contact with Swift
Enterprises.
“We’ve had an accident,” he explained to Munford Trent, the two
Swifts’ secretary. “The digging machine broke a conduit. Phone the water
company right away, and — also see if Hank Sterling can get a repair crew out
here pronto!”
“Will do, Tom,” Trent responded. “You boys
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all right?”
“For the moment,” Tom replied. He added wryly: “Ask me again after
we’ve had to face Mr. Greenup!”
Within minutes an emergency crew from the Enterprises plant had
arrived on the scene. It was headed by Hank Sterling, square-jawed chief
engineer for Swift Enterprises projects and general trouble shooter for the
outfit. A young man, only a handful of years older than Tom and Bud, he had
become a close friend.
By now, however, the geyser had stopped, indicating that the water
company had either shut off pressure at the pumps or closed a valve
some- where in the system.
As Tom pointed out the damage, other vehicles began to pull up at the
scene — two police cars, several fire trucks, and a number of private cars
containing curious townspeople who had glimpsed the column of water.
While Hank supervised the unloading of a section of replacement pipe
from the repair truck, Tom turned his attention to the police and firemen,
who were doing their best to keep the growing crowd in check.
“Think you can handle the situation?” asked the burly chief in charge
of the fire trucks.
“I’m quite sure we can,” Tom said. “Sorry
you
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had to call out all this fire
equipment.”
“Don’t worry about that,” replied the fire chief. “Makes for good
practice, and it’s safer that way.”
“Maybe you won’t find it so easy to handle Old Man Greenup,” remarked
a uniformed police sergeant. He jerked his thumb toward a long, black car
which had just pulled up. A man with iron-gray hair climb out of the car.
Frowning, he hurried toward them with decisive strides.
Bud jumped down from the truck cab. “Who’s he?” Bud asked in a low
voice.
“The president of the water company,” Tom said quietly, keeping his
eyes fixed on the newcomer. He knew he was in for trouble, and hoped he
could avoid involving his father and Swift Enterprises.
Greenup’s face was calm and composed, but streaked with angry red.
“Well, here’s the young man who’s responsible for this mess!” he
snapped at Tom.
“It was strictly an accident, Mr. Greenup,” explained Tom
respectfully. “I’m sorry if we caused any inconvenience, but it —”
“Inconvenience?” Greenup interrupted. “Is that what they call it out
at that big installation of yours — an inconvenience? That must be a
scientific term I never learned back in
college.”
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“Sir, if —”
“Do you realize that that was the principal transmission line you
burst? We had to stop the pumps and shut off water to the whole community!
Suppose a bad fire broke out — what would the fire department do for water?
And what about the Shopton Hospital — suppose they need water there?”
Sensing trouble, and grateful for it, the spectators crowded closer.
“I understand all that, sir,” Tom said, trying to keep his voice
steady. “I realize that an accident of this kind could lead to a mighty
serious situation. But our men will soon have the main repaired, and I can
promise you that Swift Enterprises will pay for any damage.”
Greenup nodded noncommittally. “How did it happen in the first place?”
“It was my new earth-digging machine,” explained Tom. “We accidentally
plowed into the water main.”
“I see. Just a little accident.” Greenup looked off into the distance.
“And you accidentally decided to dig around without concerning
yourself with our city water mains.” As his voice became quieter, it grew
even more menacing. “I know what you’re up to. I know what your company’s
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As for you, in my opinion you’re a public menace. Your father should be hailed into court for
not keeping you under better control!”
Bud Barclay shouldered his way forward. Tom saw that his friend was
about to blaze back angrily, and put a firm hand on Bud’s muscular arm.
“Listen — sir!” Bud exclaimed. “If it weren’t for the Swifts this town
would still be a way-station for watering horses!”
“Bud!” Tom warned in a quiet voice. “Mr. Greenup, please keep my
father out of this.” The man began to edge away. “If you think my inventions
haven’t benefited anyone, that’s your privilege.”
Greenup paused and looked back. “You’re right, young man. It is
my privilege.”
Hearing Greenup’s angry voice, Hank Sterling left the repair crew and
stepped over. “We’ll have your pipe fixed in half an hour,” he said.
Greenup snorted. “Oh? Fine. Our water situation is bad enough even
when we don’t have to cope with trouble like this! The water reserve was
already dangerously low. We need at least fifty percent more capacity,
especially during this dry spell of ours.”
Tom recalled that a town order recently had been
issued banning the sprinkling of lawns
during
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the peak hours of the day.
After a few more grumbling remarks, Mr. Greenup wandered off to
inspect the work of the repair crew. The men, stripped to the waist, were
dripping with sweat as they labored under the hot Autumn sun.
“Say, pal, I’m sorry I got you into all this,” Bud apologized, an
embarrassed look on his face.
“Forget it,” Tom replied. “Greenup’s been ticked at Swift Enterprises
for quite a while. He tried to make trouble for Dad at the last meeting of
the Town Council.”
Bud continued, “I don’t get what happened. I followed the map provided
by the water company as carefully as I could. You looked it over too — we
weren’t anywhere near where the conduits were marked!”
“Let’s go back and take a second look,” Tom suggested. The youths
turned back towards the earth blaster truck.
“I left the map behind —” Bud broke off abruptly, a concerned
expression on his face. “Hey, we’ve got a tourist!”
A man, whose face was unknown to Tom and Bud, had climbed up on the
tractor-treads and was panning the earth blaster from end to
end with what appeared to be a hand-held camera.
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Having evidently completed this task, he then climbed up further,
entering the cab. It seemed he wanted an unobstructed top-view image of the
machine.
“Hey there!” Tom called out mildly. He was not especially alarmed by
the fact that some townsperson wanted to photo-record his new invention,
only curious and slightly concerned for the man’s safety.
But the man’s response was anything but reassuring. He glanced
expressionlessly in Tom and Bud’s direction, then shinnied across the seat
of the cab and out the door on the far side.
“I think I want to talk to that guy,” Bud muttered. Before Tom could
comment he was off like a shot, loping around the truck with Tom at his
heels.
“Hightailed it into the woods,” exclaimed Bud in disgust. “I’d say
that counts as suspicious behavior.”
“Why don’t you go off left, and I’ll work my way up towards the
farmhouse,” suggested Tom in response. Bud nodded, and Tom plunged into the
thick underbrush that divided this unworked section of the farm from the
rest of it.
Between the scrubby fall-colored trees, among clumps of coarse grass,
Tom spied marks
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of heavy heelprints and crumpled stalks just
beginning to spring back, showing that they had been underfoot only moments
before. He followed the trail without any thought that danger might lie
ahead.
A minute later the young inventor came in sight of the man himself,
hunched over and scurrying through the trees in the general direction of the
road that served as a driveway to the farmhouse.
“Hey, you!” shouted Tom angrily. “What’s the big idea?”
The stranger looked up with a startled expression, then jerked himself
sideways. He made a dash for a densely wooded area, but Tom quickly caught
up with him and grabbed him by the coat collar.
As the tall stranger spun around, Tom saw that he was gaunt and
hollow-cheeked. His green eyes glittered with contempt and glaring
determination. One hand whipped inside his coat and came out again clutching
a snub-nosed blue-steel automatic of unusual design.
Tom was shocked at this reaction, but he had seen the move in time.
With his left hand he grabbed the man’s wrist. The stranger tried
desperately to wrench his gun hand free.
For a moment the two struggled furiously.
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Tom, though not so tall as his opponent, had
the wiry, muscular strength of a well-trained gymnast. He twisted the man’s
wrist further and further until he gasped in pain and dropped the weapon to
the ground.
“Now you’re going to tell me what this is all about!” Tom growled
angrily. “And then I’m —”
His words were choked off as he was grabbed from behind. Turning his
head, he glimpsed that his assailants were two rough-looking men.
Tom fought desperately, but resistance ended when each man held one of
his arms tightly.
“What’ll we do with him?” one of the captors asked, breathing hard
from the effort to hold the prisoner still. “Know who this is? It’s the
Swift boy himself.” The other man had clamped one hand over Tom’s mouth to
prevent his calling for help.
“Rope — in the auto,” panted the gunman in a deep voice touched with a
murky accent. “Hold him. We’ll tie him to that tree.”
A moment later he returned with the rope. Tom was shoved back against
the tree and lashed tightly to the trunk. As one of the men
knotted the rope, the other gagged the young
inventor with a ban- dana handkerchief.
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“Good! Now we get out of here!” said the man with the foreign accent. With his two
henchmen at his heels, he ran back into the woods. In seconds the sound of
an engine told Tom that the three men had made their escape.
In helpless fury, completely bemused by this strange and violent turn
of events, Tom struggled to free himself. But he was helpless!
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CHAPTER 2
AN EAR TO
THE
GROUND
TOM WRITHED and twisted to free himself from
his bonds. But instead of loosening the ropes, his desperate efforts only
made them cut more painfully into his arms.
Failing in this attempt, Tom concentrated on working the gag out of
his mouth. By pushing the bandanna with his tongue, he tried to force it out
from between his teeth. But again his efforts were futile.
Almost three-quarters of an hour after the young inventor had been
taken, he heard voices shouting his name. Then came the sound of snapping
twigs in the underbrush. A few moments later Tom’s heart pounded with relief
as Bud Barclay sprinted xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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toward him, followed by one of the
Enterprises repair crew.
“For the love of Mike!” Bud
exclaimed, as he ripped away the bandanna. “What happened to you?”
“Get these ropes off me first!” said Tom, who was filling his lungs
with deep breaths of fresh air.
The repair crewman pulled out a jackknife and handed it to Bud. “Here,
use this,” he said. “It cost ninety-four dollars! I’ll go tell the others
we’ve found him.”
As Bud cut the ropes he said, “You really got us nervous, genius boy!
At first I figured you were just trailing the guy all over the map, but
finally I decided it was time to trail you.”
“It’s a good thing you did. I was nearly choked.” By the time Bud
finished unwinding the rope from Tom’s legs and arms, others from Swift
En- terprises had come up through the brush, having parked a company jeep on
the nearby roadway. Among them were Hank Sterling and Harlan Ames, chief
security officer at Enterprises, who had driven out to investigate the
strange accident.
Tom quickly told them everything that had happened.
“That foreigner you saw, the one with the camera —” questioned Ames,
“what did he look xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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like?”
“He was very tall,” Tom said. “Must
have been well over six feet. And he was gaunt and lanky. But the queerest
thing about him was his eyes.”
“In what way?”
“They were light green, a weird shade — sinister-looking.” He looked
grim as he recalled the attack. “Boy, I’ll never forget the look he gave me
when I grabbed him by the collar!”
“Crazed?” asked Bud.
Tom shook his head. “Not exactly. Like a man on a mission who’d do
anything to reach the goal.”
Tom then described the two other assailants, remembering that one man
had a slight scar over his left eyebrow and that the other wore a fancy
stone-studded belt buckle.
Harlan Ames reached inside his coat and pulled out a small photo. “See
if you recognize this picture,” he said, handing it to Tom.
“That’s the guy I grabbed!” Tom exclaimed. “The ‘tourist’ with the
camera.” He glanced at Ames with a puzzled expression. “Who is he? And why
are you carrying his picture?”
“He’s a dangerous foreign agent,” said Ames. “This photograph was
circulated to all law-enforcement agencies by the FBI. He was
tagged in Barcelona for meeting with a suspected
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terrorist group that was under
surveillance, and then he was recognized entering the U.S. through Miami
about three weeks ago, but the trail went cold. They suspect Bronich of
trying to buy United States defense secrets for the Kranjovian govern- ment.”
“What kind of defense secrets?” Tom asked, concerned about this new
aspect of the mystery.
“Top atomic secrets,” Ames replied. “Space weapons under development
for Strategic Defense Initiative projects.”
Bud gave a low whistle. “Tom! No wonder this Bronich dude was so
anxious to get the low-down on your earth blaster!”
“I still don’t get it,” Tom demurred. “It’s true that the blaster is
powered by atomic energy. But there’s nothing very secret about that. Every
nation on earth knows how to construct an atomic pile by this time — even the
veranium type used in the earth blaster.”
“Maybe so,” agreed Ames, “but none of them knows how to harness atomic
energy in the form of an earth-digging machine like yours.”
“But think of what you’re saying, Harlan. This is just a glorified
rock drill, not a death-ray or missile,” Tom protested. “It’s not a weapon
that could be used for fighting a war.”
When Ames pointed out that the blaster
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might be adapted to military uses, Bud
added: “Besides, from what I’ve read about the Kranjovians, those rats would
steal the tin cup from a blind man if they figured it might help them!”
“And it’s not the first time we’ve come up against them,” Ames added
soberly.
Kranjovia, a collectivist dictatorship in north- eastern Europe
shouldering the Baltic Sea, had not emerged from the shadow of Soviet
communism despite the downfall and reform of their patrons to the east. The
government had been connected with a number of plots against America, as
well as the other nations of Europe. Within the preceding year, they had
been linked to a scheme to illegally exploit the uranium resources of the
South American country of Montaguaya, an intrigue foiled by Tom and his
Flying Lab.
“I guess you’re right,” Tom agreed in a troubled voice. “We have to
assume they have a reason to study my invention.”
“The question is, what are we going to do about it?” Bud pondered.
Tom thought for a moment but had no answer. “How about that break in
the water main? Is it repaired yet?”
“All fixed,” said Hank. “Old Greenup had
nothing more to gripe about, so he went back to
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town.”
“Thanks, Hank. You and your men return to the plant. The rest of us
will try to pick up a lead on Bronich and his two henchmen.”
Sterling gave a humorous salute and left. Tom, with the help of Bud
and Ames, trekked to the small farm road in a search for clues. But there
was nothing to see but a few drops of oil marking the spot where the getaway
vehicle must have stood waiting.
“I’d guess they had a fourth person ready in the car,” commented Ames.
“Tom, was there anything noteworthy about the camera Bronich was using?”
“No,” the young inventor replied. “Just a compact digital videocam.
It’s widely available — I’ve seen that model in catalogs.”
“Not much hope of catching them now,” muttered Bud. “They’re probably
miles away, and you never did actually see the car.”
“There is one more thing to look at, flyboy. Though it may have
nothin’ to do with nothin’, I’d still like to examine that map you were
using,” Tom said with half-hearted hope.
“The map from Shopton Water? How does that figure in?” asked the young
pilot.
“Maybe not at all,” was the response.
They returned to the truck-tractor and pulled
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out the map, which Bud had
downloaded from the company’s public website. Nothing was obviously amiss — except that it was, obviously,
inaccurate.
“Don’t worry,” Tom said grimly. “They won’t get away with this. I’ll
find Bronich and look him right in the eye. I’ll see his determination and
raise him one!”
The others shared grins, knowing that Tom’s words were no idle threat.
In the adventures that had become known as Tom Swift and His Flying Lab
and Tom Swift and His Rocket Ship, the youthful inventor had turned
the tables on other foreign agents seeking to harm the western world, and in
Tom Swift and His Jetmarine he had brought to justice a gang of
modern pirates and kidnappers. His most recent exploit, Tom Swift and His
Giant Robot, concerned outwitting a crazed scientist bent on capturing
Tom’s advanced robot and destroying his father’s atomic energy research plant in New
Mexico.
Tom drove the earth blaster back to Swift Enterprises, with Bud and
Ames as his escort.
“I’ll alert the FBI and the police right away,” the security chief
said to Bud as the gate, activated by the coded signal of an electronic
transponder, shut behind them.
With the new invention safely housed in the huge underground hangar that
doubled as Tom’s
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experimental laboratory
and workshop, the two boys took the plant’s moving walkway system, the
ridewalk, to the office Tom shared with his father in the high-rise
administrative building.
“This is a pretty alarming development, son,” said Damon Swift after
hearing the story in detail. “If this Ivor Bronich is involved with
professional terrorists, the threat could extend to many others beyond you
and I and Bud.”
Just then Munford Trent stuck his head in the office door. “Mr.
Swift — both of you — Lewis just called from the geophysics lab. The litho- sonde
readings are ready.”
“Have him transmit them to the digi-fax here in the office,” Mr. Swift
directed him. He turned back to Tom. “A little light reading for tonight at
home!”
“I’ve heard Tom mention the lithosonde experiments,” Bud remarked.
“But I never had a chance to ask genius boy for his usual dumbed- down
explanation — which is the only kind my brain can absorb!”
They shared a laugh and Tom said, “It’s pretty simple this time
around, pal.”
Damon Swift’s eyes twinkled as he added, “All we’re doing is listening
to rocks.”
“They say it’s good to keep your ear
to the ground,” Bud wisecracked. “What do you mean,
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listening to rocks?
Real rocks?”
“The deep, deep underground kind,” Tom said. “You’ve seen those
cutaway diagrams of the earth, haven’t you? The ones that show the different
layers of things?”
“Oh sure,” Bud replied.
“Ever wondered how they get that info?”
“Not especially. I suppose they drill a hole and drop in a camera.
Or — ask a gopher?”
“They use the shockwaves generated by earthquakes, or, sometimes, by
underground H- bomb tests,” Tom said. “The waves are reflected or distorted
as they travel through the earth, just like sonar.”
“Or like the sonograms they take in hospitals,” continued Mr. Swift.
“Got it,” Bud noted with a smile. “It’s like taking a sonogram of the
whole earth.”
“Exactly,” said Tom approvingly. “But those big waves are hard to
bring into focus. Our photos of the insides of Mother Earth are pretty
blurred. We only really know about the main layers — the thin outer crust we
walk around on, the thick mantle underneath that, and the core, which seems
to be divided into an outer core of liquid iron and what they call the inner
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compressed into solid
form despite the super-high temperatures.”
“Okay. So what’s this new ‘ear’ all about?”
“It really is all about listening,” replied Damon Swift. “We
pick up higher-frequency vibrations — sounds — generated within the depths of
the planet and use them to assemble a more detailed image, using computers.”
Bud looked puzzled. “Guess I’m missing something. What’s causing those
vibrations you’re listening to? Don’t tell me you’ve been setting off atomic
bombs under Shopton!”
“Believe it or not, the vibes are caused by the sun and the moon,” Tom
said. “As the earth turns, the sun and moon create tides in the solid parts
of the earth just as they do in the oceans — they’re just not as easy to
notice, because we ride on top of ’em. As the tides pass, the earth eases
back into place. But the uneven stresses produce the vibrational patterns
that our sensors pick up. That’s why we call the system a lithosonde, which
means rock-sound.”
Bud nodded sagely. “I knew that, of course. So now you’re going
to take the output home to have a look, Mr. Swift?”
“Precisely,” he replied.
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At home that evening, Tom ate a late meal by himself. The rest of the
family had finished dinner some time earlier, and Tom’s father
was engaged in studying the readings from the lithosonde.
Rather than sit alone in the dining room, Tom preferred to eat in the
big, cheerful kitchen of the Swift residence. As his dainty, attractive
mother served the food she had been keeping warm on the kitchen range, Tom’s
seventeen-year-old sister Sandra plied him with questions about the day’s
events.
“Does this mean your earth blaster is ruined?” the blond, blue-eyed
girl inquired anxiously. “Does taking videos count as spy-sabotage?”
“Not so far, sis,” said Tom. “It’s just another factor, since we have
no idea why they were doing it.”
“Maybe they plan to dig a big hole underneath the Pentagon,” Sandy
speculated whimsically.
“Then they made a good choice, because the blaster could do it!” Tom
came back. As he went on to explain the details of his invention, Mrs. Swift
smiled at her son proudly. Even though most of the time she did not follow
the technical aspects of Tom’s and his father’s
work — though she
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herself had a degree in molecular biology
— Anne Swift always listened attentively when they “talked shop” at home.
After supper Tom rejoined his father. Mr. Swift was seated in his
comfortable private den, a large room on the first floor of the house, which
opened onto a terrace through French doors.
“Any word yet from Harlan about that atomic spy?” Tom asked.
“Not yet. But the State Police and all sorts of alphabetical Federal
agencies have joined in the search, so it should be only a matter of time.”
“I sure would like to find out why that fellow Bronich wants the scoop
on the earth blaster!” Tom went on. “But anyway, Dad, how did the lithosonde
readings come out? Any sign of mon- sters at the earth’s core?”
“Not in the first batch of data,” chuckled Damon Swift. “But it’s
clear we’re getting a sharper picture of the earth’s interior than ever
before. Look over the readouts yourself if you want, Tom. You know how to
interpret them.”
At eighteen Tom had inherited the Swift family’s scientific genius and
resembled his father physically as well. Both had the same keen, deep-set
blue
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eyes, but Tom was the taller of the two.
“By the way,” remarked the elder inventor, “Uncle Jake is coming over
tonight. He wants to talk over plans for manufacturing your earth
blaster. He said he had some problems to take up concerning our jet
production, too — materials problems.”
A few minutes later they heard the sound of a car on the graveled side
drive.
“That must be Uncle Jake now!” Tom exclaimed, jumping up from his
chair. “I’ll go let him in.”
Jake Aturian was his father’s oldest and most loyal friend. He was
also the business manager and chief of operations of the Swift Construction
Company, which had expanded to nationwide importance under his guiding hand.
He, Damon Swift, and Hank Sterling’s deceased father had all struggled
together to make the Construction Company’s high-tech offshoot, Swift
Enterprises, into a renowned scientific installation.
Tom met Uncle Jake at the front door and led him back to Mr. Swift’s
den. The two old friends greeted each other warmly. When Uncle Jake was
seated in a comfortable chair, he turned to the younger Swift with a grin in
his eye. “I hear you had a slight brush with Mr. Greenup.”
Tom grimaced. “I just hope it doesn’t lead to trouble with the Town
Council.”
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“You let me worry about that,” Uncle Jake
replied, and added with a chuckle, “I’ve
handled that old curmudgeon before.”
“What is it he has against Dad and me anyway?” Tom asked. “He seemed
to be alluding to some- thing, but it wasn’t clear.”
Jake settled back, shaking his head. “It’s not clear to anybody,
Tom — maybe not to Herb Greenup himself. Over the last few years he’s gotten
kind of eccentric. At the last meeting he came up with this off-the-wall
charge that Enterprises was throwing its weight around un- fairly.”
“To what end?”
“He thinks we’re maneuvering to take advantage of the drought
situation to win a contract with the city to pump water in from the
Fennisville reservoir through Pine Hill,” Uncle Jake explained. “He thinks
we’re plotting to drum up public support by rolling out some sort of high-tech
approach to the problem.”
“Oh man!” Tom groaned. “Inventing the earth blaster just feeds his
paranoia.”
“That, and today’s accident. Just the same, this water problem is
getting serious,” said Mr. Swift. “If the water company doesn’t find an
answer pretty soon, we may have to curtail operations at the plant!”
The two older men discussed this situation
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and other production problems facing the
Swift Construction Company. Tom submitted an occasional remark, but directed
his attention to the lithosonde data.
“In my opinion,” remarked Jake Aturian, “the worst problem facing the
technological industries in this country is a threatened shortage of good
iron ore. Without ore, the world’s mills can’t produce steel. And that could
lead to a dangerous dependence on sources in some countries that don’t wish
us well.”
“What about the Ungava range up in Labrador?” asked Tom, not looking
up.
“Almost played out,” was the response. “Going the way of the Mesabi
ore strike.” He puffed thoughtfully on his pipe, then said, “Tom, since
you’ve got your earth-borer machine up and running, can’t you figure out a
new source of high-grade iron ore?”
The young inventor was staring intently off into space. It wasn’t the
first time that he had given thought to this particular problem.
“I don’t have to figure it out,” he said at last, almost dreamily. “I
can name you a source of pure iron right now, one that’s never been
tapped.”
“Where?”
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“The center of the earth.”
Uncle Jake’s eyebrows shot up in
surprise. “Impossible! No one could tap that!”
Tom disagreed. An amazing idea had just occurred to him.
“I think I could do it,” he said quietly.
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CHAPTER 3
DANGER
ALARM
TOM’S quietly confident statement amazed
Jake Aturian, but Tom’s father only smiled indulgently and shut his eyes. He
and his son had debated the issue before.
“Are you serious?” Uncle Jake asked.
“Very much so,” Tom replied.
“Serious about what?” put in a girl’s lively voice.
“Oh, come on in, Sandy. You too, Mom.” Sandy and Mrs. Swift had come
to join the others. Instantly Tom drew up a chair for his mother, while
Sandy perched on the arm of Mr. Swift’s chair.
“Tom was just telling us he has an idea for tapping pure iron from the
center of the earth,” Uncle Jake explained. “I must say it seems a little
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far-fetched, even from Tom.”
“Tom likes far-fetched ideas!” Sandy declared.
“That’s how he exercises.”
“That’s the truth, Sandy,” Tom said,
grinning.
“What is it you have in mind, dear?” Mrs. Swift inquired.
“Well, to begin with,” Tom said, “scientists are agreed that the
center of the earth is molten iron.
“The entire core of the earth is molten iron, isn’t it?” Uncle Jake
asked.
“No one knows for sure,” Tom replied. “However, based on slight
deformations in the shape of the earth and theories about earth’s magnetic
field, most scientists think the inner core is solid iron, with a layer of
molten liquid in between that and the earth’s mantle, as they call it.”
“You’re right,” Mr. Swift agreed thoughtfully. “That theory agrees
with most estimates of heat at the earth’s core.”
“Anyhow,” Tom went on, “it’s certain that if we burrow down far
enough, we’ll strike molten iron.”
“Goodness, it sounds as if you’d have to go miles down!” his mother
exclaimed.
Tom nodded. “That’s true. But there’s one place where I believe the
molten iron is much closer to the surface than anywhere else on earth.”
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“Where’s that?” Sandy asked. She was
listening eagerly, her chin cupped in her hands and her eyes wide with
interest.
“At the South Pole,” Tom replied.
There was a stir of surprise as the young inventor went on to explain
his reasons. “For one thing, it shows up in the ground temperature. You see, up in
the north polar regions, the soil is covered with a solid layer of
permafrost all year round. But down south, in the Antarctic, you find spots
that are warm and free from snow.”
“Those are pretty good arguments,” Mr. Swift conceded. “Your ‘theory’
is perfectly reasonable. But your mother is still right. Even at the South
Pole, that molten iron must be a couple thousand miles down from the
surface. And that would take a lot of digging, even for your atomic
earth blaster.”
“It would leave quite a pile of dirt to clean up, too, I’d think,”
put in Sandra with a laugh.
Mr. Swift pulled open the drawer in an ornate desk nearby. “Tom and I
hashed over his idea just last week, and I still have our figures. Let’s see
now. Suppose you dug a pit just three feet in diameter,” he continued. “For
every hundred miles you went down, you’d haul up enough dirt to cover an
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three times as high as the
Empire State Building!”
“Golly!” Sandy gasped, and her expression showed that for the first
time she felt some doubts about her brother’s plan.
But Tom had a solution. “We could get around that by using a more
advanced version of the earth blaster that I’ve been working on.”
“How?” Jake Aturian asked.
“Instead of using the atomic energy to power the penetrator vanes, we
could tap it for a sort of external atomic ‘blast furnace’, making it a
real earth-blaster. The process would release gaseous oxygen from the
vaporized rock. And the superheated gas in turn would billow up the shaft
and disperse. No dirt pile! And then the molten iron would shoot up to the
surface like an oil gusher.”
Mr. Swift tugged at his lower lip and nodded thoughtfully. Though he
dissented from Tom’s conclusion and thought the project infeasible, he was
proud of his son nevertheless. But Uncle Jake shook his head.
“Even if your general idea is sound, think of the tremendous expense
involved in setting up a mining operation in Antarctica. I’m afraid we could
never finance such a venture.”
“I’m sure that the government would help
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the cost,” said Tom. “Especially if we invite their scientists to go along on the expedition.”
“There’s another objection, Tom,” his father put in. “Suppose you did
strike that molten iron. You’d have every government that ever staked a
claim at the South Pole insisting the ore belonged to them too. Various
United Nations resolutions effectively internationalized the whole region,
you know.”
Frowning, Tom got up and paced around the room. “Well, Dad, that’s a
question the United States government would have to settle. But one thing
I’m sure of. No government that hasn’t staked a claim at the South Pole
should be allowed to interfere!”
“You mean like Kranjovia, for instance?” asked Sandy.
“Right!”
There was a long silence. It seemed even Jake Aturian and Damon Swift
were swept away by Tom’s bold vision. But then Mr. Swift shook his head, as
if returning to reality. “Sorry, Tom, I just don’t see how it could work. The heat, the
pressure at that depth — it’s impossible.”
Tom’s eyes took on a gleam. “You’d pretty much convinced me of that,
Dad. Until this eve- ning!”
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“What do you mean?” Mr. Swift asked, sur- prised.
Tom walked back to his chair and picked up the lithosonde readouts he
had been studying. “I saw it right away in the middle of all the other data.
According to this, there’s a narrow vein of molten iron that comes much
closer to the surface than anyone ever suspected!”
“Less than two thousand miles?”
“Less than two hundred!”
At that moment there was a loud buzz, accompanied by a whining,
growling sound, as though a pack of watchdogs had suddenly caught a scent of
danger. “The alarm system!” cried Sandy, jumping up from her chair. “Someone
must be trying to break into the house!”
“You and Mother stay here!” Tom declared.
With the two older men, he made a dash to check on all doors and
windows.
The entire house and grounds were surrounded by a magnetic detector
field originally devised by Tom’s great-grandfather, the first Tom Swift.
Any person entering this field disrupted its flux balance and automatically
set off the alarm system, unless provided with some kind of deactivator
mechanism.
The Swift family and their friends all wore
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little neutralizer coils in their wrist
watches for this purpose. But prowlers or unexpected visitors unknowingly
signaled their presence by touching off the alarm.
Tom flicked a switch near the front door and immediately the grounds
were flooded by the glare of powerful spotlights, arranged to cover every
bit of the property.
“This should flush out anybody hiding in the shrubbery,” Tom said. He
went outside by a side door, poking around the bushes with his father and
Uncle Jake. The young inventor found several sets of partial footprints on
the grass, but they faded out and led nowhere.
“Let’s use the bloodhounds,” Mr. Swift said. The two dogs, Caesar and
Brutus, were kept in kennels behind the garden. Straining at the leash under
Tom’s and his father’s control, they made a complete circuit of the house
and grounds.
But even the bloodhounds failed to locate the intruder. Puzzled and
uneasy, Tom and the two older men returned to the house. Mrs. Swift and
Sandra were waiting for them in the den.
“Who was it?” asked Sandra.
“I don’t know. He got away,” Tom replied in a worried tone of voice.
“Maybe just some kids.”
When they resumed their interrupted
conver-
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sation, Uncle Jake asked for
more details about Tom’s plan.
Suddenly Mrs. Swift gave a startled gasp. Someone was tapping on the
study window!
“Take it easy, Mumsy.” Tom was hoping to reassure her, but he himself
felt uneasy as he got up to open the Venetian blind and look out.
The window tapper was Bud Barclay!
Tom gave an inward sigh of relief. “Come around back to the terrace!”
he told Bud. “I’ll let you in through the French doors.”
“Hope I didn’t startle you folks,” said Bud, entering the room. “It
was awfully stupid of me, but I forgot that my wrist watch is broken and I’d
left it, with its neutralizer, at home. Thought I’d better show myself
before things went nuclear.”
“What!” Tom cried.
Bud looked at his friend in surprise. “For Pete’s sake, don’t get bent
out of shape — anyone can make a mistake!”
“You don’t understand,” Tom said. “The alarm system didn’t go off this
time!”
“Huh?” Bud stared. “You mean I didn’t set off the alarm, even though I
wasn’t wearing the coil?”
“That’s right,” said Tom. “And the funny thing is, the alarm did
go off about twenty minutes ago, but we couldn’t find anyone.”
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“We’d better investigate further,” Mr.
Swift said, rising.
Meanwhile Tom pulled open the concealed master control box for the
detector setup and was performing some diagnostic tests with it. “There’s
your answer,” he announced grimly. “The whole alarm system is dead!”
Everyone present exchanged glances that bespoke concern and anxiety.
What — or who — had wrecked the alarm system? Was it accidental, or a case of
deliberate sabotage? Was the Swift home about to be the target of a
terrorist attack?
The young inventor continued to run various diagnostic routines. In a
few minutes he had the answer. “It was sabotage, all right. Someone shorted
out the main dispersion solenoid. And in my opinion, it was done by a clever
technician — someone who knew exactly what he was doing!”
“Bronich!” exclaimed Bud.
Suddenly Uncle Jake stood up, his face turning pale. “Tom, if the
system is dead — he could have broken into the house. He could be hiding
inside right now!”
“Let’s not talk ourselves into a panic,” said Tom’s
mother with forced calmness. “You can make the rounds again with the
bloodhounds — just to play safe,” she said. “And this time, start
out
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inside the house!”
They split up into two teams. Tom and Bud covering the grounds again
with Caesar, while Mr. Swift and Uncle Jake searched the interior with
Brutus.
“Anything?” Tom asked his father when he reentered.
“Nothing,” Damon Swift replied. “And I’ve done a sweep for listening
devices, too.” Tom and his father quickly repaired the detector system.
A short time later Uncle Jake and Bud said goodnight and left. Soon
Tom’s mother and sister retired to their rooms upstairs. After they had
gone, Mr. Swift turned to his son. “I’m going to have a guard sent over from
the plant, at least for a night or two. And I’ll call Ames at home and give
him a full report.”
Finally, hours later, Tom and his father were able to snatch a few
hours’ uneasy sleep. But their first thoughts upon waking had the same theme
as their last thoughts upon falling asleep.
Could they defend family and friends against a determined agent like
the Kranjovian known as Ivor Bronich?
If only they could be sure!
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CHAPTER 4
DEADLY
REDLINE
OVER A LATE breakfast the next morning, Tom
and his father talked again about the possibility of a South Pole expedition
in search of iron. Overnight Damon Swift had come around to his son’s way of
thinking and was now excited about the possibility of Swift Enterprises
participation.
“I have to fly to Washington late today, anyhow,” Mr. Swift announced.
“While I’m there, I’ll sound out the authorities about govern- ment backing.”
“I sure hope you can sell them on the idea!” Tom said. “In the meantime,
I’ll get back to work on the earth blaster. I have some further ideas on
making a much more powerful machine to
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penetrate the earth’s crust.”
After breakfast father and son drove to Swift
Enterprises. Here, in a cluster of buildings and airstrips sprawled over a four-mile-square enclo- sure, their astounding dream would see
the light of day — if it proved to be possible at all!
Tom said goodbye to his father at the main gate and hurried to one of
his auxiliary laboratories, this one in a lab complex next to the main
administration building. To get in, he took an electronic key from his
pocket and beamed it at the lock. The coded signal was recognized and the
heavy door popped open into the wide hallway.
In a cradle in the middle of the clean, gleaming room was the
cylindrical form of the new-version earth blaster, which Tom had been
working on since the first version had been substantially finished. The
machine was mostly incomplete as of yet, and its power was drawn from thick
cables. The veranium atomic pile would not be installed until a further
point in its development.
Seated on a stool in front of his 30-foot workbench, Tom quickly
applied his thoughts to the job of altering and improving his original
blaster design. Where to begin?
The first hurdle was the problem of heat. Tom had decided to try
adapting the cooling system he had invented for his giant robot. This system
used a highly paramagnetic gas which was alternate-
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ly magnetized and demagnetized
at the same high rate as the characteristic emission frequency of radiant
heat waves. The gas was circulated through tubular interstices in the
robot’s “skin” to maintain its ideal working temperature of 96.4 degrees
Fahrenheit.
A similar system would be needed to protect the instruments in the
earth blaster from destruction. Similar — but far stronger. At only one
hundred miles down the blaster would already be coping with temperatures of
several thousand degrees — hot enough to shrivel a human being to ashes in
seconds!
But how could the robot’s system be made more effective? “We could
convert the excess thermal energy in the coolant directly to electricity by
a thermocouple arrangement,” mused Tom. He made some calculations and
sketches, and wrote notes to himself in his ever-present notebook.
“She’ll need a gyroscope, too.” He smiled at the thought of what might
happen if the machine ever veered off course. “It might burrow into some
other country’s territory and swipe their ore — and the Old Man Greenups of
the world wouldn’t care much for that!”
Two hours later, while Tom was busy with his
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design-simulator flatscreen working
out structural details of the new blaster
adaptations, he became aware of muffled voices in the hall outside the
laboratory door.
One voice was that of Bud Barclay, the other, as recognizable as
fingerprints, was Chow Winkler’s. Chow was a Texas-born former chuck-wagon
cook whom Tom and his father had virtually adopted as their personal chef
and good friend.
“I know yuh’re just yankin’ my lassoo, Buddy Boy,” Chow was saying.
“They’s no way y’can walk around in soft dirt without leavin’ footprints.”
“It’s true, Chow,” insisted Bud. Tom could imagine the look of
mischievous innocence on his friend’s face. “He’s got it all worked
out — special spy shoes that don’t leave a mark. They don’t even sink into
water!”
“Nngh, now I know yuh’re bluffin’ me,” the Texan replied. “I
may be past my prime — an’ fat — and a little bit bald —”
“You want me to stop you when I disagree?”
“Stupido, I ain’t!” Chow concluded smugly.
There was a knock, and Tom unlocked
the door remotely with the electri-key. A picture of offended dignity, the
roly-poly cook marched into the lab, Bud following. “Boss, this here cayute
is tryin’ to tell me —”
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“I heard, Chow,” said Tom. “But he’s
just passing along our cover story.”
Chow nodded suspiciously. “Cover story, huh?” He glanced skeptically
at Bud, then back at Tom. “I know what that is — whatcha tell folks when you
think you got a problem with spies, right?”
“That’s right,” Tom confirmed. “But since you’re our partner and pal,
I’ll tell you the real story.”
Chow was placated by the praise. “Okay, then!”
“We’re going to the South Pole pretty soon, to drill to the center of
the earth with my new in- vention, in search of iron. But we don’t want to let
it out to the public — it’s very hush-hush. There’s international diplomacy
involved.”
“I get it, Tom.” Chow nodded sagely. “Yep. South Pole. S’all covered
with ice, so’s you can’t leave footprints no-way anyway.”
Tom flashed an affectionate grin that was matched by Bud from behind
Chow’s broad back. “That’s good figgerin’, pard!”
Chow left, promising to return with a mid-morning snack. At the door
he glanced back at Bud. “That’ll learn ya, Bud,” he said. “Cain’t bluff a
bluffer.” He pushed the door shut behind him.
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“Nice save,
Skipper,” Bud said.
“Thought I’d stop by on my way to the control tower in case you needed my
advice on any new inventions.”
“Advice is always welcome, Isaac Newton,” chuckled the young inventor.
Bud strolled over to the earth blaster chassis and knocked on it.
“This the new baby?”
“That’s it — version two. Destination, the earth’s core!”
“Or thereabouts, huh.” Bud had been told of the audacious project.
“Looks like you’re changing the digging spikes.”
The cluster of twenty sharp spikes of various lengths which had
adorned the nose of the first model had been completely removed. Instead,
each of the two intake ports at the fore-end of the cylinder was bordered by
a pair of tapering vanes that shone like polished gold, with a fifth vane of
slightly greater length and thickness extending forward from the center of
the unit. A pair of conical cowlings now flared from the rear of the blaster
at the ends of the inner conduits.
“These its new teeth? They look like snail antennas, Tom
— and don’t
look very sharp.”
“Don’t have to be,” retorted the young inventor. “They’ll never touch
rock at all.”
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Bud gave his pal a half-smile. “Well, we ran
into ghost crows in New Mexico — now it’s
ghost teeth!”
Tom laughed and explained. “Those vanes are electrodes of a special
design. An electric current — more like an electrical fireball — will arc from
the big central electrode to each of the others around the perimeter.”
“Little lightning bolts, huh?”
“Yes, but continuous. And it’s going to be a little warm
— even warmer than
your California sunshine in summer, flyboy.”
“How warm?”
“In Fahrenheit, try 4800 degrees!”
Bud gulped. “Not sweater weather! But seriously, how can the machine
withstand heat like that?”
“I doubt it could, even with the new cooling system,” replied Tom.
“But that temperature is inside the electric arc-field. The arc itself won’t
even touch the metal hull, and it won’t be nearly as hot where it contacts
the electrodes.”
Bud nodded his understanding and asked, “So what did you mean about
never touching rock?”
Tom walked over to the blaster control panel and tapped it
absent-mindedly. “Bud, anything |
|
the arc-field touches — dirt, rock,
metal, any- thing — will be vaporized instantly. The tempe- rature is as great as that on the
surface of the sun! We’ll be melting our way down into the earth.”
“Man alive, that’s —”
“Bud! Don’t move! Not a muscle!”
The impact of Tom’s unexpected command brought Bud to a complete
stop, as if frozen in place. “Skipper, wha —”
“No!” hissed Tom in a forceful whisper.
“Don’t talk — and
don’t move!”
His heart beginning to pound, Bud waited immobilely for his friend
to explain.
Barely audible, Tom continued. “Just listen. If either of us moves,
we’re dead! You can’t even twitch or turn your head… It’s the electrodes on
the blaster. I’m looking right at the monitor dial — they’re powering up!
Must’ve been going on for several minutes now; it takes time. But they’ve
passed the redline, the danger indicator. I — I don’t see how it could have
happened…”
Tom’s tense voice trailed off for just a moment; his throat had gone
dry. Then he resumed the strained whispering. “Here’s the problem. This lab
has a special ventilation system to suppress
currents of air and maintain a constant tem-
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perature. It’s the only thing keeping us alive right now! Any disturbance
of the air — even a slight one caused by somebody
shifting an arm, say, or a loud noise — creates a moving pressure
dif- ferential. The electrodes will arc along that differential all the way
across the lab, and into any good conductors — like the human body. We’ll be
incinerated!”
Bud made a soft sound in his throat, as if he wanted to speak. “Go
ahead,” said Tom. “Softly, like me.”
“Okay,” whispered Bud in a strangled voice. “There’s a screwdriver on
the counter about three feet away. Maybe I could edge over to it at
snail-speed and toss it —”
Tom interrupted him. “I know what you’re thinking. But tossing a
screwdriver won’t divert the arcing effect away from us. It wouldn’t be
grounded. We’re not grounded very well on this floor, but the arc
will flash to the best conductors around, and we’re it! Besides,
there’s no time to sidle up to the counter: the electrodes are still
powering up. In a minute it won’t matter whe- ther we move or not!”
“Then I — I — maybe —”
At the corner of his eye Tom saw Bud’s xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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muscles clenching under his
t-shirt.
“Don’t!” Tom ordered sharply. “You’d be throwing your life
away, and it wouldn’t make any difference — whatever hits you gets me too. We’ve got to think; and one minute to go!”
Just then came the clop of boots and the sound of a twangy voice in
the lab building hallway. “Hey, George, Marty — in the mood for some fancy
early eatin’? Give ’em a try!”
“Chow!” breathed Bud in despair. “Tom — did you lock the door?”
“No.”
“Then when he opens it —”
“We’re cooked!” Tom finished. “Literally!”
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CHAPTER 5
ELEGANT SPIES
PERSPIRATION trickled down Tom’s face as he
thought harder — and faster — than he ever had in any moment of his life,
knowing that this could well be the last moment of his life!
He carefully shifted his gaze downward to the top of the workbench on
which the earth blaster controls had been mounted. The kill switch, which
would cut all power to the machine, was more than two feet distant. Too
far! But only a few inches separated the tips of his right-hand fingers
from a small battery-powered soldering iron in the shape of a thick colored
drafting pencil.
He sensed, somehow, that the soldering iron was the solution. His
subconscious had begun to work the problem through, the final result not yet
displayed to his mind’s eye. But he could already
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feel his muscles aching to move
toward the implement and switch it on.
His hand, trembling, inched through
the air as slowly as the rising mercury in a thermometer tube. He barely
heard Chow knocking on the lab door, so intent was he on his task; barely
heard the metallic click of the door latch as his fingers brushed the
activator button and he stabbed down hard. One chance! he said to
himself. The soldering iron took a second or two to heat up. If Chow were to
barge on in — !
But even before the seconds had elapsed, the tip of the iron had
begun to glow orange with heat. When Tom had pressed the button, he had
gently nudged the device forward along the workbench a half-inch or so,
forcing its tip against the fold in a blueprint. Now, almost instantly, a
single minute spark of flame puffed up from the paper.
What followed was a split second of chaos!
A spray of water jetted down from the overhead sprinklers. Before it
even reached the floor, the lab was rocked by blinding flashes of light and
a series of high-pitched cracks like the roaring of a machine gun. Chow,
beginning to open the lab door, flinched backwards with a shriek of alarm.
As if mesmerized, Tom saw bizarre fireworks erupting in midair, like
blazing snakes striking upward toward the ceiling. And at almost the
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same moment, a powerful force
thundered against his side and slammed him down to the lab floor. Bud had
tackled him like a training dummy!
“Down, boy!” gasped Bud next to Tom’s ear. The thudding of
Bud’s heart kept time with his own.
“The kill switch!” Tom choked. He wormed his way out from beneath his
friend’s heavy muscular bulk and felt blindly around the top of the bench.
Finally he found the kill switch and depressed it.
He and Bud sighed with relief. The lightning dis- play was over.
“Boss?” came Chow’s cautious voice. “What’re you boys doin’?
One o’ your experi- ments?”
Water still spraying down from the ceiling sprinklers, the two
drenched youths were grateful to be alive. The air was full of steam, smoke,
and the pungent odor of electrical fire. The sprinkler above the nose of the
earth blaster was blackened, smoking — and partially melted.
“Whataya mean, Chow?” panted Bud, struggling to his feet. “Nothing
going on in here!”
“Brand my bunsen burner!” exclaimed the rotund westerner. “All this
fuss made me drop my snack tray!”
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It was a half-minute after the explosive arc-burst before Tom, dazed
and shaken, managed to pick himself off the floor. His face stung and
smarted. Groggily, the young inventor brushed one hand across his cheek.
When he brought it away, it was streaked with blood.
“You brought me down pretty hard, Bud,” Tom murmured.
At that moment Hank Sterling burst into the lab, accompanied by
several plant workmen.
“Holy snark!” Hank exclaimed. “What’s going on in here?”
“You two young’uns all right?” Chow demanded anxiously.
“Still in one piece,” said Tom. “But I guess we could do with a little
cleaning up. Hank, m-maybe you could… tell maintenance… to s-shut off the
f-fire sprinklers...” Tom’s voice was weak and hesitant.
Both Tom and Bud had suffered slight burns from the flying droplets of
flash-melted metal, and their clothing was splattered with a wet sooty
mixture, but otherwise they were uninjured.
Damage to the laboratory was also slight. Other than the ruined
sprinkler system plus some broken test tubes and other minor chemical
equipment,
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little would need replacing. The
sturdy earth blaster had suffered no damage at all.
After leaving orders to have the debris cleaned up, Tom accompanied
Bud to the Swift Enter- prises infirmary, where their cuts were treated by the
company nurse. Then they adjourned to the spacious private office in the
main building which Tom shared with his father.
Tom’s half of the office displayed models of Tom’s most important
inventions, hand tooled by Arvid Hanson, chief modelmaker of Swift
En- terprises. Among them was a large, perfectly scaled model of his Flying
Lab the Sky Queen, a silver replica of Tom’s rocket ship resting on
its fins with its nose pointing skyward, and a copy of his jetmarine, the
Nemo, in blue plastic. The largest item in the collection was a model of
Tom’s giant robot.
Tom and Bud showered and changed in the bath connected to the office.
Over a tasty lunch of soup and sandwiches, which Chow brought them, the boys
recounted the horrific experience to Tom’s father and Hank Sterling. Tom was
able to explain the sequence of events.
“The safety sprinkler setup uses a purely optical detector,” he said.
“There’s no need for hot air or fumes to reach the sensor in the
ceiling — it
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‘sees’ the wavelength of fire and
opens the valves immediately.”
“It sure does!” Hank commented. “It’s gone off twice over in my shop
at just a tiny spark. Very irritating!”
“And so you allowed the spray of water to disturb the air,” prompted
Mr. Swift.
“Yep — but up above the electrodes. The discharge arc followed
the droplets back to their source.”
Sterling nodded. “From lesser to greater conductive density.”
“Right,” said the young inventor. “Now we’ve got one melted sprinkler
head, instead of two vaporized employees!”
Tom’s father looked thoughtful and uncharacteristically troubled. “We
never would have known what had happened,” he said slowly. “What caused the
accident, do you think?”
Tom had to smile. “Mr. Greenup does a whole routine when you say
‘accident’.”
“I don’t care about Greenup!” Damon Swift said sharply. “Was
this an accident? Or a terrorist act orchestrated by Bronich?”
“I guess I don’t know,” Tom admitted. “I can’t figure how the
electrode system could power up by itself like that.”
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|
“If it was sabotage, it just shows how
little the Kranjovians care about human life,” Bud declared grimly. “Not
that we didn’t know that already!”
Hank Sterling suggested that he examine the control circuits and try
to identify the source of the malfunction. Mr. Swift was just thanking Hank
when the office door opened and Harlan Ames strode into the room. “Big
news!” he exclaimed.
“What’s up?” Tom asked the security chief.
“Looks like they’ve nailed those two thugs working with Bronich
— the
ones who tied you up! The State Police caught two men today who answer the
description! Captain Rock wants you to identify them.”
“Now we’re getting somewhere!” Bud ex- claimed. “Let’s go, Tom.”
Twenty minutes later Police Captain Rock greeted them in his office in
downtown Shopton police headquarters. “Sit down and I’ll have the men
brought in. They were picked up breaking into a convenience mart that had
closed for lunch.”
Their wrists handcuffed, the two men entered the room with a husky
state trooper as guard.
“How about it, Tom?” said Captain Rock. “Are these the men?”
Tom got up from his chair and went
over to
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study the prisoners closely.
“No doubt about it,” he announced. “I can identify this fellow by the
small scar over his left eyebrow. And the other one was wearing the same
belt he has on now.” The belt was unmis- takable.
“Not too swift on the concept of disguising yourself, huh
guys?” Bud mocked.
“All right Bank, and you too Dutt,” Captain Rock said. “Start talking.
And you’d better make it as convincing as your police records!”
“Just put us in our cell, man,” mumbled Bank, the one with the scar.
Bud clenched his fists. “Maybe you two would like the same kind of a
going-over you gave my pal!”
“Take it easy, Bud,” Tom said, putting a restraining hand on his
friend’s shoulder. “It’s true they tied me up, but they didn’t try to
rough me up.”
The prisoners shot him a grateful glance as the young inventor
continued speaking.
“Look,” he said to them, “there’s no sense in taking the rap for
someone else. I’m fairly sure the whole thing wasn’t your idea, anyhow. So
why not tell us who put you up to it?”
“It was just some guy,” said Dutt with a
ner-
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vous glance at his crony.
“It’s too bad if you can’t help us. Because that gunman with the video
camera is a foreign agent. If you want to cover up for him, you may both end
up in prison on charges of treason and espionage — and aiding and abetting
terrorism!”
The prisoners looked at each other apprehensively, then back at Tom
and Captain Rock.
“What do you want to know?” growled Bank.
“Who hired you?” asked Tom.
“The dude you were just talkin’ about. He picked us up at a bar down
in Meadowview. Guess he knew we had records.”
“Where can we find him?”
The man shrugged. “Search me. He wouldn’t even tell us his name.” Bank
paused and shifted his weight uncomfortably. Dutt stared at the floor.
“Come on, speak up!” snapped Captain Rock. “We haven’t got all day!”
“Yeah? I thought this was your day job!” sneered Bank.
“Well, there is one thing I can tell you,” Dutt said. “I heard him
gabbin’ on a cellphone once. Most of the time he was jabberin’ away in some
foreign lingo I couldn’t understand. Like Russian
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er somethin’, you know?”
“That’s all you can tell us?” pressed Captain Rock.
“Look,” said Bank, “he said he was gonna rob a couple driller boys at
a construction site, that’s all. Never mentioned Swift-boy here. Said he
might need a little help if they got feisty, and we were s’posed to wait
outside the car and watch for him to come out through the bushes and wave if
he needed us. That’s the whole bit.”
Bud shook his head. “No it isn’t. How about the fourth guy, the one
driving the car?”
A wave of surprise passed across the men’s faces.
“How did —” Dutt began, but Bank cut him off.
“Let me. Okay, yeah, there was this one other guy. Never seen him
before and he never said a word. All he did was drive. Kind of a short,
dumpy middle-aged dude — nothin’ special.”
“Okay, take them back to their cells,” the police chief said to the
guard.
Bank was led through the door. Just before he exited the office, Dutt
turned to Tom.
“95 Western Drive,” he said in a terse whisper,
obviously not wanting Bank to hear xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
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him.
As soon as the prisoners
were led away, Captain Rock ordered two of his men to Western Drive.
“Wait a minute, Captain,” Tom said. “Two uniformed police in a squad
car might tip off the man we want. Let me take Bud here and Harlan Ames to
scout the place. We’ll report back to you.”
The captain agreed. “Harlan’s a good man. He’ll handle it well.”
Western Drive was a broad, spacious thoroughfare that wound through
Shopton and along the shore of Lake Carlopa. Tom and Bud met up with Ames a
block away from their destination.
“Mighty nice afternoon to get incinerated!” Bud joked, gazing at the
blue, sparkling lake waters as they walked along toward the address. “But
they say smoking’s hazardous to your health!”
Harlan Ames was watching the numbers of the houses and apartment
buildings. Suddenly he ex- claimed, “Look! There’s the place!”
Both boys gaped in astonishment. The building which bore the address
of 95 Western Drive was the Excelsis Club, a favorite haunt of wealthy
sportsmen and their wives! Its front faced the xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
street and the rear of the property
backed onto the lake shore.
“Now what would Bronich be doing in a place like this?” Bud exclaimed.
“Isn’t it a little rich for a spy’s blood?”
Harlan Ames smiled. “Must be one of those elegant, upper-crust-type
spies.”
“Let’s inquire inside,” Tom said. “At least we can find out if anyone
knows him.”
At that moment a man emerged from a cluster of cars in the club’s
private parking lot and headed toward a side door of the building. Just
before entering, he turned his head for a glance at the lake, and Tom caught
a brief glimpse of his face.
“That’s Bronich!” Tom hissed. “I’m sure of it!”
Tom made a dash for the side entrance. Bud and Ames followed.
The heavy door, marked PRIVATE, had already slammed shut by the time
they reached it. Tom and his friends pounded on it loudly and rattled the
handle but got no response. The three hurried back around the corner of the
building and ran up the flagged walk.
Under a striped awning, a towering doorman in a gold-braided uniform
stood guard at the entrance. As Ames and the boys tried to rush past him, he
stuck out his right arm to bar the way.
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“May I see your cards, please?”
“Hang it all,” Ames said impatiently, not quite in those words. “We
have no cards, but we’re here on very important business!”
The doorman assumed a frozen, supercilious expression.
“I am sorry, sir,” he replied firmly, “but my orders are to
admit no one to the Excelsis Club except regular members — in proper
attire!”
Fuming with impatience, Harlan Ames told the doorman who he and the
boys were, and de- manded to see the manager.
The doorman looked Tom up and down. “The famous Tom Swift, hmm? We’re
honored. As to the manager, he’s not available,” the man said icily.
“We’re trailing someone who’s wanted by the police!” Tom explained.
“He’s a dangerous foreign agent and we saw him enter this club through the
side door!”
“Sorry, sir, but I have my orders.” A smirk touched his lips. “Perhaps
one of your inventions could help you — Mr. Swift.”
At a nod from Tom, Bud and Ames followed the young inventor in a
search of some other xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
means of entrance to the club. “That
frozen-faced doorman!” raged Bud, as they circled the building. “We should’ve grabbed him by the
seat of his plush pants and tossed him in the lake!”
“Never mind him,” Tom said. “The important thing is to collar Bronich
before he can slip away again. Listen, I think I might be able to work my
way down to the side patio from the bridge over there. Harlan, maybe you
could work on gently persuading that uniformed goon that it’d be in
everybody’s best interest to cooperate.”
“A pleasure, Tom,” Ames nodded.
“I have an idea,” Bud said. “In back there’s a big overhang
— that part
of the building is up on stilts ’cause of the way the beach slopes. Bet
there’s a door or something underneath for access to the beach area!”
The three separated. Trying not to be noticed, Bud made his way to the
shoreline. He saw that there was a private bathing beach for club members
behind a fence — deserted for the moment.
Barclay, you’re on to something, Bud told himself. He made his
way into the deep shadow of the overhang — and stopped dead.
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Directly in front of him a door was propped open, with a flight of
steps leading upward!
Bud, said his inner voice, I think you just
made the club!
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CHAPTER 6
A CAP OF
GLASS
THE FLIGHT of steps opened at the top onto a
long windowless hallway of polished wood and indirect lighting. No one was
in sight. Bud made his way forward along the plush carpet until he came
alongside a pair of swinging doors. Opening one a crack, he could hear the
sound of showers running and locker doors slamming. Say, that’s right, he thought. The Excelsis Club has a
health spa, a gym, and a restaurant!
He pushed the door open further and edged his way inside
— only to
beat an immediate and red-faced retreat. “Sorry, ladies!” he murmured
through gritted teeth.
Further along, the hallway took a hard left. Beyond this was another
swinging double-door.
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|
Inside Bud found the men’s locker
room and men’s shower area. Though the locker room
seemed empty he heard a mutter of voices
near the showers and tried to creep closer without being seen. Quickly darting behind a row of
metal lockers, a wall mirror afforded Bud a glimpse of two towel-clad
men — one tall, one short — ambling toward the showers, talking softly. Bud recognized the taller man immediately— Bronich!
He realized he would have to get much closer to the pair. All the
lockers were unlocked when not in use, as members were expected to provide
their own locks. Bud quickly pulled off his clothes and stuffed them into a
vacant locker, whipping a towel off a shelf nearby and wrapping it about his
waist. As he passed the wall mirror, he paused. Hmm, he told himself,
flexing his muscles. A natural athlete! Then he cautiously entered
the shower area.
As he did so, two showers began to hiss somewhere ahead. The room was
large and L- shaped, divided into dozens of showers by chest- high tiled
partitions. Bud realized that the moment he stepped round the corner, he
would be in full view. Even if Spy Guy doesn’t recognize me, ten to one
they’ll both shut up in front of a stranger, he thought.
Suddenly he noticed a steam-cloaked glass door marked STEAM SAUNA,
leading into a xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
square cubicle with walls of redwood
planks with narrow spaces between them from which wisps of steam were rising. Entering, he made his way through the cloud of
steam and pressed his cheek against the wall nearest his quarries.
Over the sounds of the showers, Bud could hear the two men talking
back and forth in a guttural language he could not understand. He strained
to catch what he could of the foreign words.
“Must be Russian,” said a close-by voice, and Bud jumped. The
sauna was occupied!
“Oh, uh… guess so,” Bud murmured quietly to the man seated further
down. “Just curious.”
“Then again, we do have some Norwegian members,” the man continued.
“I’m — wait now, haven’t we met?”
Bud half-turned and groaned inwardly. His comrade-in-steam was Mr.
Greenup!
The young pilot brushed a lock of his dark hair down across his
forehead and hoarsened his voice. “No, no, but I was just leaving,” he
rasped, heading sideways toward the door and pushing through it.
He tiptoed toward the other section of the shower room. The showers
were still running, though he could no longer hear any conversation.
Well, he told himself, right now they’re both about as vulnerable as a person can be!
He
tensed his muscles and strode forward.
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|
The two shower stalls were empty! The showerheads had been left
running — probably to muffle the men’s stealthy escape.
Bud ran light-footedly back to the locker room, quickly looking down
each aisle in turn. Then, alerted by a slight noise, he turned and saw two
towel-draped figures, side by side, exiting the locker room into the
hallway. One was tall, the other short!
Bud hurdled a bench, sprinted across the concrete floor, and grabbed
both men’s towels from behind, trying to pull them back.
“Gentlemen!” Bud exclaimed, ripping the towels from around their
waists and spinning them both around to face him.
There were three gasps and a shocked pause. Then Bud choked out:
“Mr. Martinberry! How great to, um — see you!” The tall man was the head
librarian of the Shopton Public Library!
“Barclay, isn’t it?” responded Mr. Martin- berry, thoroughly perplexed
and thoroughly unclad. “Have you — that is —” He paused, staring at the towels
in Bud’s hand. “This is Mr. Byrnes. Tyler Byrnes.”
Byrnes gave a broad grin and stuck out a hand obviously accustomed to
glad-handing. “Howar- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx |
|
ya, Barclay. Ty Byrnes, Apex Real Estate. Say, you own or rent?”
“Rent!” Bud replied as he tossed the men their towels and backed away
toward the door.
“On our way to massage,” Byrnes continued. “Why don’t you
—”
“Nice. Pleasure. Bye!” Bud stammered, pushing past them and out into
the hallway.
On the floor above, Harlan Ames was engaged in vigorous conversation
with the manager of the Excelsis Club. Next to Ames stood Tom, who had found
access to the building through the terrace.
“Let’s all keep our voices down, please,” said the manager nervously.
“These are very serious matters.”
“You bet they’re ‘serious,’ you lump-nosed pencil pusher!” fumed Ames.
“We can have this club of yours shut down in a minute if —”
“Mr. Keiverlav,” Tom said, “we’re trying to be reasonable. This man
Bronich was seen entering your building by the side door just minutes ago.
You say you don’t recognize him?”
The man shook his head. “I can’t be expected to recognize all our
members by sight. Furthermore, he might be a guest — members can sign in
personal guests, you know.”
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|
Suddenly the man’s eyes widened. Tom and
Ames spun around.
“Bud!” Tom cried. “What — where —”
“Sir!” Keiverlav said coldly to Bud. “You must be properly
dressed to walk about on this floor!”
“Properly dressed?” Bud gave him a woozy grin. “Hey, this is
one of your own towels!” He pointed to the embroidered logo.
As the manager edged sideways and tried to block him from the sight of the curious
public, Bud related his adventures on the floor below. “So I guess I lost
’em,” he finished ruefully.
“Young man, you really must put some clothes on!” demanded
Keiverlav.
“Oh, yeah.” Bud winked at Tom. “Lemme see now. I know I put
them someplace…”
An hour later, after the police had searched the Club thoroughly and
Mr. Keiverlav had retired to his office in search of sedation, Tom, Bud, and
Ames sat on a bench in front of the building dis- cussing the strange affair
as Bud made notes in Tom’s notebook.
“This is the best I can do,” said Bud, handing the notebook to Tom.
“Those words sounded something like this, phonetically spelled. At
least that’s all I can remember.”
“Thanks, pal,” said Tom. “We didn’t find Bro-
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|
nich and his friend, but at least we’ve got this to play around with.”
“Well, I’m going to follow a few hunches back at Enterprises,” Harlan
Ames said, rising to his feet. “If you two know anybody who speaks Kranjov,
maybe you can make something out of all this.”
As Ames walked away, Tom frowned thoughtfully. “You know,
flyboy — weren’t we talking about somebody who spoke Kranjov a few weeks ago?
When we got back from New Mexico?”
“Say, that’s right!” Bud thought for a moment, then snapped his
fingers. “I remember! Bash was telling us about that woman she babysits for.
She was born in Kranjovia!”
Pakistan-born Bashalli Prandit was a close friend of Tom, Bud, and the
Swift family. She and Tom frequently double-dated with Bud and Sandy.
Without waiting the boys drove to The Glass Cat, the Shopton coffee
house where Bashalli worked. She brightened as they walked in.
“Ah, the scientific rover boys!” was Bash’s humorous greeting. “In the
mood for a Danish?”
“No,” Bud replied, “a Kranjovian!”
Tom briefly explained their need for a translator, xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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|
taking care not to go into detail about his project
or the threat against his family and
friends.
“Well, Mrs. Zalvonyov is very nice,” said Bashalli. “I imagine she’d
like to help you. Her story is quite dramatic, how she escaped from
Kranjovia with her son and little granddaughter. Let me telephone her.”
Mrs. Zalvonyov was agreeable. Within minutes Tom and Bud were ringing
for entrance at her rented house at the edge of town.
She proved to be a small, white-haired woman with a very determined
manner and a fairly dense accent. She ushered them into a parlor decorated
with photographs and memorabilia from her homeland, and bade them sit down
on a threadbare sofa. “All right now,” she said brusquely. “For me, what do
you have?”
Tom pulled out the notebook sheet of pho- netically-spelled words and
phrases and handed it to her. “We assume it’s in the Kranjov language,
ma’am. Bud had to spell it as it sounded, but we thought you might make
something of it.”
“It’s a conversation between two men,” Bud added. “I couldn’t remember
who said what, though.”
Mrs. Zalvonyov put on a pair of bifocals and examined the sheet,
squinting.
“This — non- xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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|
sense, gibberish!”
“I did the best I could,” responded
Bud in an apologetic tone.
“Not very good,” she said. “Like little Latvian boy in school trying
to learn, eh?”
“Is there anything at all that —” Tom began. But Mrs. Zalvonyov
interrupted him with a dismissive wave.
“I do not say there is nothing. Only that it is bad.” She studied the
paper closely for a minute, nodding now and then. “Okay, okay, now I tell
you what it means — at least in teeny bits.”
Tom gave an appreciative smile. “That would be a great help, ma’am.”
“Yaa, yaa. Okay, I think someone says ‘too cold is the water’ and
someone says ‘so you turn handle’ and someone says ‘be strong-trunk’ — that
is how we say, what? — get used to it. Our way of saying. So someone says
‘good wish, to have easy-handle for cold in weather.’ Then I think they are
making vulgar jokes. Blah-blah. Now, what? Something about — I think it’s a
man's name, Detar. Common name.” Mrs. Zalvonyov paused and looked up. “They do not
say it with formal politeness, but as if he is a friend. Yes?”
Tom nodded. “I understand.”
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“Not much more I can understand. Soap; say
hello; some foreign word
ek-sell…”
Bud looked embarrassed. “Great — Excelsis! I should have noticed.”
“Means nothing, eh-eh,” said their translator. “Last part here,
something about going under a cap of glass.”
“Is that a Kranjov idiom — an expression?” asked Tom.
“Not as I have ever heard,” Mrs. Zalvonyov replied. “Bu |