ANOTHER TREMOR!
Tom was appalled at this new danger.
Shoving his drawing board back into its wall slot,
the young inventor hurried to his desk and made a number
of telephone calls.
Within minutes, a group of five of
his most trusted associates had assembled in Tom’s
office. First to arrive were Bud Barclay, Ames,
and George Dilling, the Swifts’ communications
chief. They were joined moments later by Hank
Sterling, the square-jawed chief engineer and trouble
shooter of Enterprises, and Arvid Hanson.
Hanson, a hulking six-footer, made
all the delicate scale models of Tom Jr.’s and
Tom Sr.’s inventions. He was not only an
expert craftsman, but, like all the Swifts’
key men, a trained aircraft and space pilot as well.
“What’s up, skipper?” Bud asked.
“I guess you might call this a council of war,”
Tom replied.
He divulged his fears that Brungarian
scientists might hijack the brain energy to be sent
from Planet X, home of the Swifts’ unknown space
friends.
“Bud, you recall Mother’s
remark last night about the danger that this energy
may prove overwhelmingly powerful,” Tom went
on. “Well, just suppose that our Brungarian
pals fit it out in robot form, then turn it loose
against us or our friends in other countries.”
Bud gave an awed whistle. “Boy,
a thing like that might make even a powerful missile
look like a toy!”
Even if the brain energy proved too
small to be harnessed for destructive purposes, Tom
went on, it might turn out to possess superintelligence.
Gifted with all the scientific know-how of the space
people, it might be made to reveal those secrets to
the Brungarians.
“They might learn from it how
to construct weapons or space craft powerful enough
to conquer the free world!” Tom ended.
His listeners were grim-faced at the thought.
“I’d say that’s
a far worse danger than any chance of their coming
up with a robot monster,” Ames said.
“Ditto!” Hanson agreed.
“I think so too,” Tom
replied. “In any case, it’s up to
us to make sure the Brungarians don’t switch
that energy off course before it lands here.”
“Think their scientists are
capable of such a stunt?” George Dilling inquired.
Tom shrugged. “They’re
certainly far advanced in the fields of rocket guidance
and telemetry. But actually we just don’t
know.”
Hank Sterling glanced hopefully at
the young inventor. “Got any ideas, skipper?”
he asked.
Tom drummed a pencil on the table
thoughtfully before replying. “Maybe our
best bet is first to find out all we can about the
lines of research on which they’re concentrating.
That might be the tip-off.”
After a thorough discussion, it was
decided that Ames and Dilling would fly to Washington
at once and talk to the FBI and Central Intelligence.
Their job would be to garner and piece together every
scrap of information on Brungarian scientists’
accomplishments.
“Let us know as soon as you
get a general picture,” Tom said.
Ames and Dilling promised to do so,
and the meeting broke up.
Feeling somewhat reassured now that
a definite plan of action had been decided upon, Tom
resumed work on his sketches. Although both the
problem and the solution were still hazy in his mind,
a few ideas began to take shape.
A radio antenna would certainly be
needed, to receive or transmit signals at a distance.
And repelatron units would give the brain a way to
exert force when it wanted to act. These were
devices which Tom had invented to produce a repulsion-force
ray. He had used the principle in both air and
space flight.
A power plant might also be needed
to generate additional energy in case the brain’s
own energy was very small. Lastly, there would
have to be a control system for use either by the
brain itself or by its human operators.
After an hour of work at top speed,
Tom was rather pleased with one rough sketch.
He was mulling over the idea when Chow Winkler and
Bud Barclay wandered into the office. Both were
impressed when Tom explained the sketch.
Chow stared at it, goggle-eyed at
the thought of such a contraption “coming to
life.” “So that’s the Ole Think
Box, eh?” he muttered.
Tom laughed. “Good name, Chow!”
All three were startled as a voice
suddenly broke in over the wall intercom. It
was the operator on duty at the plant’s communication
center.
“Turn on your TV, skipper,”
the operator suggested. “We’ve just
had a news bulletin that an earthquake tremor has
been felt over in Medfield. There’s a big
plant there that makes rocket nose cones. A mobile
TV crew’s been rushed to the scene in a helicopter
and they’re trying to pick up the action with
a television camera.”
“Good night! Another quake?” Bud
gasped.
Tom had already rushed to the videophone.
Flicking it on, he switched to a commercial channel.
Soon a picture appeared on the screen. It was
a panoramic shot of a landscape, evidently viewed
from a hovering aircraft, with a large industrial
plant just below.
A TV commentator’s voice was
reporting developments. “Few visible signs
of a tremor,” he said. “As you can
see, the rocket-plant personnel and the people of
Medfield are making desperate attempts to evacuate.
Fortunately, most of them have already left the immediate
area.”
A few cars and trucks could still
be seen speeding along the ribbonlike roads within
view of the hovering television camera.
“Oh—oh!” The
commentator’s voice broke in again. “Notice
that tall stack just over the plant—see
how it’s starting to tremble!... It’s
beginning to crumble!... This must be it!”
Suddenly the whole scene seemed to
explode. Plant buildings collapsed like toy houses
built of cards, while at the same time huge rocks and
trees were uprooted as a yawning crack opened in the
ground below.
The three watchers in Tom’s
office stared in horrified dismay. But a moment
later the picture on the TV screen became jerky and
distorted, then faded out completely.
After a brief interval, a studio announcer
came on. “The relay transmitter must have
been knocked out by the quake. We return you now
to our regularly scheduled program, but will keep you
informed as bulletins come in.”
“Great balls o’ fire!”
Chow gulped as Tom turned off the set. “I
sure hope all o’ those poor folks in cars got
away safe!”
Tom rushed to a wall shelf and pulled
out a book on geology. He leafed quickly to a
section dealing with known earthquake faults and the
distribution of quakes. When he looked up at the
others, his face was grim.
“What’s wrong, skipper?” Bud asked
tensely.
“That quake,” Tom replied,
“wasn’t in a patterned zone any more than
the Faber one was!”
Chow’s jaw dropped open in a
comic look of dismay. “You mean this here
ole earth we live on is gettin’ all busted up
an’ twisted around inside?”
“I wish I knew, Chow!”
Tom paced worriedly about the office. “It
just seems queer to me that both of those quakes should
have destroyed vital defense factories!”
On a sudden impulse, Tom snatched
up the telephone. His two companions listened
as he put through a call to the FBI in Washington.
Within moments, a friend at the Bureau, Wes Norris,
came on the line.
“Look, Wes,” Tom said,
“is there any chance this quake that just happened
at Medfield and the earlier one at Faber Electronics
might have been caused by underground H-bomb blasts?”
“As a matter of fact, we’re
checking on that very possibility,” Norris replied.
“In other words, sabotage. Things are pretty
hot around here since that news on Medfield came in,
so I can’t talk much right now, Tom. But
I can tell you this,” Wes concluded, “we
are investigating, and I do mean thoroughly!”
Bud and Chow were shocked when Tom
reported his conversation with the FBI agent.
“Brand my rattlesnake stew!”
Chow exploded. “Any ornery varmint that’d
cause an earthquake ought to be strung up like a hoss
thief!”
“I agree, Chow,” Tom said.
“But how do we find out for sure?”
After closing time at the plant, Bud
drove home with Tom. Both Mrs. Swift and Sandy
were upset as the boys discussed the situation.
“Tom, if this was deliberate,”
Mrs. Swift pointed out, “Enterprises may be
next on the enemy’s list!”
Tom did his best to allay his mother’s
fears, but inwardly he himself felt apprehensive.
Any large-scale sabotage plot would be almost certain
to include Swift Enterprises, America’s most
daring and advanced research center.
When his mother went upstairs to her
room, Tom suggested to Bud that they drive to the
nearby State Police post. Here he confided his
fears to Captain Rock, an old friend of the Swifts.
“You have some request in mind?” Captain
Rock inquired.
“How about making a search for
any signs of suspicious digging or underground activity
in the vicinity of Shopton?” Tom said. “There
would have to be an excavation of some sort in order
to set off an underground blast.”
Captain Rock mulled over Tom’s
suggestion. “Sounds like a big job, but
I’m afraid you’re right, Tom. We can’t
risk a similar disaster here.”
“We’d better move fast,
too,” Bud put in. “Those two quakes
so far came only a day apart!”
Rock picked up the telephone and barked
out orders. Within half an hour, several carloads
of troopers were covering the outlying roads that
converged on Shopton. Firemen and Chief Slater’s
town police force were also pressed into action.
They would search every cellar in town for signs of
recent digging.
Bud rode in one police car and Tom
in another as a house-to-house search was conducted
along the highway that ran past Enterprises.
At one weather-beaten house, where
Bud stopped with a state trooper, an old man came
to the door.
“What you fellers prowlin’ around for?”
he asked.
“Bomb emergency,” the
trooper said laconically. “We have orders
to search every house cellar for underground openings.”
Grumbling, the old man let them enter.
He followed them down a rickety stairway. A moment
later Bud stumbled and gave a yell. The trooper
swung around just in time to see Bud drop from view!