THE EARTHQUAKE
“Tom, we’re having a problem
with the gyro-stabilizer,” said Mark Faber,
gray-haired president of the Faber Electronics Company.
“Hope you can find out what’s wrong.”
The eighteen-year-old inventor accepted
the challenge with a smile. “I’ll
be glad to try, sir,” he replied.
Bud Barclay, a dark-haired young flier
and Tom Swift Jr.’s closest friend, chuckled.
“If anyone can get the bugs out of your new invention,
genius boy here will do it!”
The two boys followed Mr. Faber and
his engineers to a wooden building which was tightly
guarded. Inside, a secret rocket-telemetering
device was mounted on its test stand.
“As you know, Tom,” Mr.
Faber began, “the usual conditions of rocket
flight will be—”
He broke off with a gasp of astonishment
as the whole building suddenly began to shake.
“Good grief!” Bud exclaimed.
“This isn’t part of your testing routine,
is it?”
His question was drowned out by cries
of alarm and the sound of cracking glass. The
walls and roof were shuddering and creaking, and the
concrete floor was heaving under their feet.
[Illustration (earthquake in the lab)]
“Look out! The test stand’s breaking
loose!” Tom warned.
Mr. Faber and two of his men tried
frantically to brace the heavy test stand which held
the telemetering device. Another engineer rushed
toward the door to see what was happening outside.
Before he reached it, another shock knocked all of
them off their feet.
Electronic equipment cascaded from
the wall shelves, and a heavy-duty chain hoist came
loose from its overhead track, plunging to the floor
with a terrifying crash.
“An earthquake!” Tom gasped.
Bud, meanwhile, clawed a handhold
on a wire screen enclosing an air compressor and pulled
himself to his feet. But the next moment a third,
more violent tremor rocked the building, knocking him
over. “The roof! It’s caving
in!” he heard someone scream.
As his eyes flashed upward in panic,
Bud caught a brief glimpse of the ponderous test stand
with the priceless telemeter tilting to one side.
An instant later it crashed over, pinning Mark Faber
beneath it!
Bud threw up his arms to protect himself,
but too late! A falling beam caught him on the
back of the head and the young flier blacked out.
For minutes, no one stirred among
the wreckage. Then Tom, who had been stunned
by some falling debris, raised himself to a sitting
position.
“Good night!” Tom’s
eyes focused in horror on the wreckage enveloped by
still-billowing dust.
The sky was visible through several
gaping holes in the roof, which was sagging dangerously
on its supporting trusses. Only two thirds of
the walls were still standing.
Suddenly Tom stiffened in fear.
“Bud!” The young inventor had just noticed
his friend lying pinned beneath a heavy beam nearby.
Was he still breathing?
Disregarding his own injuries, Tom
hastily freed himself from the debris and groped his
way to Bud’s side. With a desperate heave,
he shoved the beam away, then cradled Bud’s
head in his arm. His friend’s eyelids flickered.
“Are you all right?” Tom asked fearfully.
The answer came in a groan. “O-oh!...
Wow!... What hit me?”
“You got conked by a falling
timber. Or grazed, at least,” Tom added
thankfully. “If that beam had landed square
on your noggin, even a rock-head like you couldn’t
have survived!”
Bud managed to grin. “We
grow ’em tough out in California where I come
from!” he joked.
Somewhat shakily, Bud got to his feet
with Tom’s assistance. Both boys were heartsick
as they surveyed the damaged laboratory, wondering
where to begin rescue operations.
“It was a quake,” Bud
stated grimly. He had heard about the great San
Francisco earthquake from his grandfather, and had
no doubt about the nature of the tremors.
Just then Tom glimpsed a body protruding
from under the wreckage of the telemetering device.
“Mr. Faber!” he gasped.
The two boys scrambled through the
clutter of debris toward the spot where the test stand
had been erected. Bud seized a slender, steel
I beam and managed to pry up the wreckage while Tom
carefully extricated Mr. Faber.
The scientist seemed to be badly injured.
“We’d better not try to move him,”
Tom decided. “We’ll get an ambulance.”
Of the four other company engineers,
two were now stirring and partly conscious. The
boys found a first-aid cabinet and gave what help they
could to them and the other two men. Then Tom
taped a bandage on Bud’s scalp wound.
“Let’s see if we can find
a telephone and call the local hospital,” Tom
said.
“Right!” Bud responded.
They picked their way through the
wreckage and emerged on a scene of frightful destruction.
The main plant building of Faber Electronics had been
partially demolished by the quake. Power lines
were down and an outlying storage shed was ablaze.
Dazed and panic-stricken survivors were wandering
around aimlessly or rushing about to assist the injured.
“Good thing the main shift of
workers knocked off before this happened,” Bud
observed with a shudder. “There would’ve
been a lot more casualties.”
“Look!” Tom pointed to
a huge crevasse. “Right where we landed
our Whirling Duck!”
The boys exchanged rueful glances
as they realized that the craft which had brought
them to Faber Electronics—one of Tom’s
unique helijets—had been swallowed up in
the gaping chasm.
“No use fussing about it now,”
Tom said. “Come on, Bud! Let’s
see about getting help for Mr. Faber!”
Despite the chaotic confusion, the
boys managed to locate the plant superintendent—a
harried, middle-aged man named Simkins—who
was doing his best to restore order. Simkins,
who had not been injured, informed them that electricians
were rigging an emergency telephone line in order
to get through to the nearby town of Harkness.
“Mr. Faber is badly injured,”
Tom said. “Why not send a car? It’s
only a few miles away, isn’t it?”
“I’ll send the plant nurse
to him,” Simkins said. “As for going
to town, take a look at the parking lot.”
He pointed with a jerk of his thumb. The cars
on the lot had been smashed into junk by bricks from
a collapsing wall of one of the buildings. “And
the only truck we had available was in that burning
shed,” the superintendent added bitterly.
“Tough break,” Tom sympathized.
“Anyhow, we want to help. Got a job for
us?”
Simkins was only too glad to put Tom’s
quick mind and keen technical know-how to use.
Within minutes, Tom was in charge of clearing away
rubble and extricating anyone who might be trapped
inside the buildings. Bud organized a fire-fighting
crew to keep the blaze in the shed from spreading.
The telephone line was soon repaired
and a steady stream of rescue vehicles began arriving
from Harkness—fire trucks, three ambulances,
and private cars driven by volunteers.
Two hours later there was nothing
more Tom and Bud could do at the disaster scene and
they hitched a ride into Harkness. The town had
suffered some damage, though only slight compared to
the destruction at the plant.
“The center of the quake was
right under Faber Electronics,” Tom remarked.
From a pay telephone, he called Swift
Enterprises in Shopton. This was the experimental
station where he and his father developed their many
amazing inventions. Tom asked the operator to
send a helicopter immediately to pick them up.
He also called home and spoke to his sister, Sandra.
“What a relief!” Sandy
gasped. “We heard a bulletin about the quake
over the radio!”
“Don’t worry, Sis.
Tell Mother and Dad that we’re okay,” Tom
said. “We’ll be home in a jiffy—with
big appetites!”
The helicopter arrived within twenty
minutes at the place Tom had named. After landing
at Enterprises, the boys drove to the pleasant, tree-shaded
Swift home on the outskirts of town.
Mrs. Swift, a slender, petite woman,
tried not to show concern when she saw the boys, bruised
and disheveled. “I’m so thankful you’re
both safe!” she murmured.
Blond, blue-eyed Sandy, who was a
year younger than Tom, had invited her friend Phyllis
Newton to the house for dinner. Phyl, a pretty,
dark-haired girl, was the daughter of Mr. Swift’s
long-time friend and business associate, “Uncle
Ned” Newton. The two girls were as much
upset as Tom’s mother.
Tom laughed. “We’re
not stretcher cases,” he said. “Why,
one of the ambulance doctors checked us out.”
Bud groaned. “Why did you
have to go and spoil it?” he complained jokingly.
“I was all set for Sandy’s cool soothing
touch on my fevered brow!”
Mr. Swift came into the living room
just then and told Tom how worried Mrs. Swift and
Sandy had been. “I tried to assure them
that you and Bud can take care of yourselves in any
crisis.” He smiled guiltily as he added,
“But I must admit I was more than a little concerned
myself.”
As Tom grinned, the resemblance between
him and his father was very evident. Both had
the same clean-cut features and deep-set blue eyes,
although Tom Jr. was lankier and taller.
After the two boys had showered and
changed their clothes, Mrs. Swift served them a delicious,
hot meal. While they ate, Mr. Swift managed after
some difficulty to get a call through to the Harkness
Hospital. His face was grave as he hung up.
“Mark Faber is not expected
to live,” the elder inventor reported. “A
pity. He’s a great scientist.”
Tom nodded unhappily. Sandy,
to take her brother’s mind off the disaster,
said, “Dad, tell Tom and Bud about the visitor
who’s coming.”
“A visitor?” Tom looked at his father.
“From another planet,” Mr. Swift revealed.
Both boys were amazed and excited.
“Wow!” Bud gasped. “Male or
female? Human or animal?”
Mr. Swift’s eyes twinkled.
“None of those,” he replied as the boys
stared, mystified.