On the Ocean Bed
Lower and lower sank the submarine.
There was a swirling and foaming of the water as she
went down, caused by the air bubbles which the craft
carried with her in her descent. Only the top
of the conning tower was out of water now, the ocean
having closed over the deck and the rounded back of
the boat. Had any one been watching they would
have imagined that an accident was taking place.
In the pilot house, with its thick
glass windows, Tom, his father and Captain Weston
looked over the surface of the ocean, which every
minute was coming nearer and nearer to them.
“We’ll be all under in
a few seconds,” spoke Tom in a solemn voice,
as he listened to the water hissing into the tanks.
“Yes, and then we can see what
sort of progress we will make,” added Mr. Swift.
“Everything is going fine, though,” he
went on cheerfully. “I believe I have a
good boat.”
“There is no doubt of it in
my mind,” remarked Captain Weston, and Tom felt
a little disappointed that the sailor did not shout
out some such expression as “Shiver my timbers!”
or “Keel-haul the main braces, there, you lubber!”
But Captain Weston was not that kind of a sailor, though
his usually quiet demeanor could be quickly dropped
on necessity, as Tom learned later.
A few minutes more and the waters
closed over the top of the conning tower. The
Advance was completely submerged. Through the
thick glass windows of the pilot house the occupants
looked out into the greenish water that swirled about
them; but it could not enter. Then, as the boat
went lower, the light from above gradually died out,
and the semi-darkness gave place to gloom.
“Turn on the electrics and the
searchlight, Tom,” directed his father.
There was the click of a switch, and
the conning tower was flooded with light. But
as this had the effect of preventing the three from
peering out into the water, just as one in a lighted
room cannot look out into the night, Tom shut them
off and switched on the great searchlight. This
projected its powerful beams straight ahead and there,
under the ocean, was a pathway of illumination for
the treasure-seekers.
“Fine!” cried Captain
Weston, with more enthusiasm than he had yet manifested.
“That’s great, if you don’t mind
me mentioning it. How deep are we?”
Tom glanced at a gage on the side
of the pilot tower.
“Only about sixty feet,” he answered.
“Then don’t go any deeper!”
cried the captain hastily. “I know these
waters around here, and that’s about all the
depth you’ve got. You’ll be on the
bottom in a minute.”
“I intend to get on the bottom
after a while,” said Mr. Swift, “but not
here. I want to try for a greater distance under
water before I come to rest on the ocean’s bed.
But I think we are deep enough for a test. Tom,
close the tank intake pipes and we’ll see how
the Advance will progress when fully submerged.”
The hissing stopped, and then, wishing
to see how the motors and other machinery would work,
the aged inventor and his son, accompanied by Captain
Weston, descended from the conning tower, by means
of an inner stairway, to the interior of the ship.
The submarine could be steered and managed from below
or above. She was now floating about sixty-five
feet below the surface of the bay.
“Well, how do you like it?”
asked Tom of Mr. Damon, as he saw his friend in an
easy chair in the living-room or main cabin of the
craft, looking out of one of the plate-glass windows
on the side.
“Bless my spectacles, it’s
the most wonderful thing I ever dreamed of!”
cried the queer character, as he peered at the mass
of water before him. “To think that I’m
away down under the surface, and yet as dry as a bone.
Bless my necktie, but it’s great! What
are we going to do now?”
“Go forward,” replied the young inventor.
“Perhaps I had better make an
observation,” suggested Captain Weston, taking
his telescope from under his arm, where he had carried
it since entering the craft, and opening it.
“We may run afoul of something, if you don’t
mind me mentioning such a disagreeable subject.”
Then, as he thought of the impossibility of using
his glass under water, he closed it.
“I shall have little use for
this here, I’m afraid,” he remarked with
a smile. “Well, there’s some consolation.
We’re not likely to meet many ships in this part
of the ocean. Other vessels are fond enough of
remaining on the surface. I fancy we shall have
the depths to ourselves, unless we meet a Government
submarine, and they are hardly able to go as deep
as we can. No, I guess we won’t run into
anything and I can put this glass away.”
“Unless we run into Berg and
his crowd,” suggested Tom in a low voice.
“Ha! ha!” laughed Captain
Weston, for he did not want Mr. Swift to worry over
the unscrupulous agent. “No, I don’t
believe we’ll meet them, Tom. I guess Berg
is trying to work out the longitude and latitude I
gave him. I wish I could see his face when he
realizes that he’s been deceived by that fake
map.”
“Well, I hope he doesn’t
discover it too soon and trail us,” went on
the lad. “But they’re going to start
the machinery now. I suppose you and I had better
take charge of the steering of the craft. Dad
will want to be in the engine-room.”
“All right,” replied the
captain, and he moved forward with the lad to a small
compartment, shut off from the living-room, that served
as a pilot house when the conning tower was not used.
The same levers, wheels and valves were there as up
above, and the submarine could be managed as well
from there as from the other place.
“Is everything all right?”
asked Mr Swift as he went into the engine-room, where
Garret Jackson and Mr. Sharp were busy with oil cans.
“Everything,” replied
the balloonist. “Are you going to start
now?”
“Yes, we’re deep enough
for a speed trial. We’ll go out to sea,
however, and try for a lower depth record, as soon
as there’s enough water. Start the engine.”
A moment later the powerful electric
currents were flowing into the forward and aft plates,
and the Advance began to gather way, forging through
the water.
“Straight ahead, out to sea,
Tom,” called his father to him.
“Aye, aye, sir,” responded the youth.
“Ha! Quite seaman-like,
if you don’t mind a reference to it,”
commented Captain Weston with a smile. “Mind
your helm, boy, for you don’t want to poke her
nose into a mud bank, or run up on a shoal.”
“Suppose you steer?” suggested
the lad. “I’d rather take lessons
for a while.”
“All right. Perhaps it
will be safer. I know these waters from the top,
though I can’t say as much for the bottom.
However, I know where the shoals are.”
The powerful searchlight was turned,
so as to send its beams along the path which the submarine
was to follow, and then, as she gathered speed, she
shot ahead, gliding through the waters like a fish.
Mr. Damon divided his time between
the forward pilot-room, the living-apartment, and
the place where Mr. Swift, Garret Jackson and Mr.
Sharp were working over the engines. Every few
minutes he would bless some part of himself, his clothing,
or the ship. Finally the old man settled down
to look through the plate-glass windows in the main
apartment.
On and on went the submarine.
She behaved perfectly, and was under excellent control.
Some times Tom, at the request of his father, would
send her toward the surface by means of the deflecting
rudder. Then she would dive to the bottom again.
Once, as a test, she was sent obliquely to the surface,
her tower just emerging, and then she darted downward
again, like a porpoise that had come up to roll over,
and suddenly concluded to seek the depths. In
fact, had any one seen the maneuver they would have
imagined the craft was a big fish disporting itself.
Captain Weston remained at Tom’s
side, giving him instructions, and watching the compass
in order to direct the steering so as to avoid collisions.
For an hour or more the craft was sent almost straight
ahead at medium speed. Then Mr. Swift, joining
his son and the captain, remarked:
“How about depth of water here,
Captain Weston?”
“You’ve got more than a mile.”
“Good! Then I’m going
down to the bottom of the sea! Tom, fill the
tanks still more.
“Aye, aye, sir,” answered
the lad gaily. “Now for a new experience!”
“And use the deflecting rudder,
also,” advised his father. “That
will hasten matters.”
Five minutes later there was a slight
jar noticeable.
“Bless my soul! What’s
that?” cried Mr. Damon. “Have we
hit something?”
“Yes,” answered Tom with a smile.
“What, for gracious sake?”
“The bottom of the sea. We’re on
the bed of the ocean.”