For a Breath of Air
They could hardly realize it, yet
the depth-gage told the story. It registered
a distance below the surface of the ocean of five
thousand seven hundred feet—a little over
a mile. The Advance had actually come to rest
on the bottom of the Atlantic.
“Hurrah!” cried Tom.
“Let’s get on the diving suits, dad, and
walk about on land under water for a change.”
“No,” said Mr. Swift soberly.
“We will hardly have time for that now.
Besides, the suits are not yet fitted with the automatic
air-tanks, and we can’t use them. There
are still some things to do before we start on our
treasure cruise. But I want to see how the plates
are standing this pressure.”
The Advance was made with a triple
hull, the spaces between the layers of plates being
filled with a secret material, capable of withstanding
enormous pressure, as were also the plates themselves.
Mr. Swift, aided by Mr. Jackson and Captain Weston,
made a thorough examination, and found that not a
drop of water had leaked in, nor was there the least
sign that any of the plates had given way under the
terrific strain.
“She’s as tight as a drum,
if you will allow me to make that comparison,”
remarked Captain Weston modestly. “I couldn’t
ask for a dryer ship.”
“Well, let’s take a look
around by means the searchlight and the observation
windows, and then we’ll go back,” suggested
Mr. Swift. “It will take about two days
to get the stores and provisions aboard and rig up
the diving suits; then we will start for the sunken
treasure.”
There were several powerful searchlights
on the Advance, so arranged that the bow, stern or
either side could be illuminated independently.
There were also observation windows near each light.
In turn the powerful rays were cast
first at the bow and then aft. In the gleams
could be seen the sandy bed of the ocean, covered
with shells of various kinds. Great crabs walked
around on their long, jointed legs, and Tom saw some
lobsters that would have brought joy to the heart of
a fisherman.
“Look at the big fish!”
cried Mr. Damon suddenly, and he pointed to some dark,
shadowy forms that swam up to the glass windows, evidently
puzzled by the light.
“Porpoises,” declared
Captain Weston briefly, “a whole school of them.”
The fish seemed suddenly to multiply,
and soon those in the submarine felt curious tremors
running through the whole craft.
“The fish are rubbing up against
it,” cried Tom. “They must think
we came down here to allow them to scratch their backs
on the steel plates.”
For some time they remained on the
bottom, watching the wonderful sight of the fishes
that swam all about them.
“Well, I think we may as well
rise,” announced Mr. Swift, after they had been
on the bottom about an hour, moving here and there.
“We didn’t bring any provisions, and I’m
getting hungry, though I don’t know how the
others of you feel about it.”
“Bless my dinner-plate, I could
eat, too!” cried Mr. Damon. “Go up,
by all means. We’ll get enough of under-water
travel once we start for the treasure.”
“Send her up, Tom,” called
his father. “I Want to make a few notes
on some needed changes and improvements.”
Tom entered the lower pilot house,
and turned the valve that opened the tanks. He
also pulled the lever that started the pumps, so that
the water ballast would be more quickly emptied, as
that would render the submarine buoyant, and she would
quickly shoot to the surface. To the surprise
of the lad, however, there followed no outrushing
of the water. The Advance remained stationary
on the ocean bed. Mr. Swift looked up from his
notes.
“Didn’t you hear me ask
you to send her up, Tom?” he inquired mildly.
“I did, dad, but something seems
to be the matter,” was the reply.
“Matter? What do you mean?”
and the aged inventor hastened to where his son and
Captain Weston were at the wheels, valves and levers.
“Why, the tanks won’t
empty, and the pumps don’t seem to work.”
“Let me try,” suggested
Mr. Swift, and he pulled the various handles.
There was no corresponding action of the machinery.
“That’s odd,” he
remarked in a curious voice “Perhaps something
has gone wrong with the connections. Go look in
the engine-room, and ask Mr. Sharp if everything is
all right there.”
Tom made a quick trip, returning to
report that the dynamos, motors and gas engine were
running perfectly.
“Try to work the tank levers
and pumps from the conning tower,” suggested
Captain Weston. “Sometimes I’ve known
the steam steering gear to play tricks like that.”
Tom hurried up the circular stairway
into the tower. He pulled the levers and shifted
the valves and wheels there. But there was no
emptying of the water tanks. The weight and pressure
of water in them still held the submarine on the bottom
of the sea, more than a mile from the surface.
The pumps in the engine-room were working at top speed,
but there was evidently something wrong in the connections.
Mr. Swift quickly came to this conclusion.
“We must repair it at once,”
he said. “Tom, come to the engine-room.
You and I, with Mr. Jackson and Mr. Sharp, will soon
have it in shape again.”
“Is there any danger?”
asked Mr. Damon in a perturbed voice. “Bless
my soul, it’s unlucky to have an accident on
our trial trip.”
“Oh, we must expect accidents,”
declared Mr. Swift with a smile. “This
is nothing.”
But it proved to be more difficult
than he had imagined to re-establish the connection
between the pumps and the tanks. The valves,
too, had clogged or jammed, and as the pressure outside
the ship was so great, the water would not run out
of itself. It must be forced.
For an hour or more the inventor,
his son and the others, worked away. They could
accomplish nothing. Tom looked anxiously at his
parent when the latter paused in his efforts.
“Don’t worry,” advised
the aged inventor. “It’s got to come
right sooner or later.”
Just then Mr. Damon, who had been
wandering about the ship, entered the engine-room.
“Do you know,” he said,
“you ought to open a window, or something.”
“Why, what’s the matter?”
asked Tom quickly, looking to see if the odd man was
joking.
“Well, of course I don’t
exactly mean a window,” explained Mr. Damon,
“but we need fresh air.”
“Fresh air!” There was
a startled note in Mr. Swift’s voice as he repeated
the words.
“Yes, I can hardly breathe in
the living-room, and it’s not much better here.”
“Why, there ought to be plenty
of fresh air,” went on the inventor. “It
is renewed automatically.”
Tom jumped up and looked at an indicator.
He uttered a startled cry.
“The air hasn’t been changed
in the last hour!” he exclaimed. “It
is bad. There’s not enough oxygen in it.
I notice it, now that I’ve stopped working.
The gage indicates it, too. The automatic air-changer
must have stopped working. I’ll fix it.”
He hurried to the machine which was
depended on to supply fresh air to the submarine.
“Why, the air tanks are empty!”
the young inventor cried. “We haven’t
any more air except what is in the ship now!”
“And we’re rapidly breathing
that up,” added Captain Weston solemnly.
“Can’t you make more?”
cried Mr. Damon. “I thought you said you
could make oxygen aboard the ship.”
“We can,” answered Mr.
Swift, “but I did not bring along a supply of
the necessary chemicals. I did not think we would
be submerged long enough for that. But there should
have been enough in the reserve tank to last several
days. How about it, Tom?”
“It’s all leaked out,
or else it wasn’t filled,” was the despairing
answer. “All the air we have is what’s
in the ship, and we can’t make more.”
The treasure-seekers looked at each
other. It was an awful situation.
“Then the only thing to do is
to fix the machinery and rise to the surface,”
said Mr. Sharp simply. “We can have all
the air we want, then.”
“Yes, but the machinery doesn’t
seem possible of being fixed,” spoke Tom in
a low voice.
“We must do it!” cried his father.
They set to work again with fierce
energy, laboring for their very lives. They all
knew that they could not long remain in the ship without
oxygen. Nor could they desert it to go to the
surface, for the moment they left the protection of
the thick steel sides the terrible pressure of the
water would kill them. Nor were the diving suits
available. They must stay in the craft and die
a miserable death-unless the machinery could be repaired
and the Advance sent to the surface. The emergency
expanding lifting tank was not yet in working order.
More frantically they toiled, trying
every device that was suggested to the mechanical
minds of Tom, his father, Mr. Sharp or Mr. Jackson,
to make the pumps work. But something was wrong.
More and more foul grew the air. They were fairly
gasping now. It was difficult to breathe, to
say nothing of working, in that atmosphere. The
thought of their terrible position was in the minds
of all.
“Oh, for one breath of fresh
air!” cried Mr. Damon, who seemed to suffer
more than any of the others. Grim death was hovering
around them, imprisoned as they were on the ocean’s
bed, over a mile from the surface.