The new apparatus was set up, a machine
that almost filled the laboratory ... a giant, compact
mass of heavy, solidly built metal work, tied together
by beams of girderlike construction. It was meant
to stand up under the hammering of unimaginable power,
the stress of unknown spatial factors.
Slowly, carefully, Russell Page tapped
keys on the control board, setting up an equation.
Sucking thoughtfully at his pipe, he checked and rechecked
them.
Harry Wilson regarded him through squinted eyes.
“What the hell is going to happen now?”
he asked.
“We’ll have to wait and
see,” Russ answered. “We know what
we want to happen, what we hope will happen, but we
never can be sure. We are working with conditions
that are entirely new.”
Sitting beside a table littered with
papers, staring at the gigantic machine before him,
Gregory Manning said slowly: “That thing
simply has to adapt itself to spaceship drive.
There’s everything there that’s needed
for space propulsion. Unlimited power from a minimum
of fuel. Split-second efficiency. Entire
independence of any set condition, because the stuff
creates its own conditions.”
He slowly wagged his head.
“The secret is some place along
the line,” he declared. “I feel that
we must be getting close to it.”
Russ walked from the control board
to the table, picked up a sheaf of papers and leafed
through them. He selected a handful and shook
them in his fist.
“I thought I had it here,”
he said. “My math must have been wrong,
some factor that I didn’t include in the equation.”
“You’ll keep finding factors
for some time yet,” Greg prophesied.
“Repulsion would have been the
answer,” said Russ bitterly. “And
the Lord knows we have it. Plenty of it.”
“Too much,” observed Wilson,
smoke drooling from his nostrils.
“Not too much,” corrected
Greg. “Inefficient control. You jump
at conclusions, Wilson.”
“The math didn’t show
that progressive action,” said Russ. “It
showed repulsion, negative gravity that could be built
up until it would shoot the ship outside the Solar
System within an hour’s time. Faster than
light. We don’t know how many times faster.”
“Forget it,” advised Greg.
“The way it stands, it’s useless.
You get repulsion by progressive steps. A series
of squares with one constant factor. It wouldn’t
be any good for space travel. Imagine trying to
use it on a spaceship. You’d start with
a terrific jolt. The acceleration would fade
and just when you were recovering from the first jolt,
you’d get a second one and that second one would
iron you out. A spaceship couldn’t take
it, let alone a human body.”
“Maybe this will do it,” said Wilson hopefully.
“Maybe,” agreed Russ. “Anyhow
we’ll try it. Equation 578.”
“It might do the trick,”
said Greg. “It’s a new approach to
the gravity angle. The equation explains the
shifting of gravitational lines, the changing and
contortion of their direction. Twist gravity and
you have a perfect space drive. As good as negative
gravity. Better, perhaps, more easily controlled.
Would make for more delicate, precise handling.”
Russ laid down the sheaf of papers,
lit his pipe and walked to the apparatus.
“Here goes,” he said.
His hand went out to the power lever,
eased it in. With a roar the material energy
engine built within the apparatus surged into action,
sending a flow of power through the massive leads.
The thunder mounted in the room. The laboratory
seemed to shudder with the impact.
Wilson, watching intently, cried out,
a brief, choked-off cry. A wave of dizziness
engulfed him. The walls seemed to be falling in.
The room and the machine were blurring. Russ,
at the controls, seemed horribly disjointed.
Manning was a caricature of a man, a weird, strange
figure that moved and gestured in the mad room.
Wilson fought against the dizziness.
He tried to take a step and the floor seemed to leap
up and meet his outstretched foot, throwing him off
balance. His cigarette fell out of his mouth,
rolled along the floor.
Russ was shouting something, but the
words were distorted, loud one instant, rising over
the din of the apparatus, a mere whisper the next.
They made no sense.
There was a peculiar whistling in
the air, a sound such as he had never heard before.
It seemed to come from far away, a high, thin shriek
that was torture in one’s ears.
Giddy, seized with deathly nausea,
Wilson clawed his way across the floor, swung open
the laboratory door and stumbled outdoors. He
weaved across the lawn and clung to a sun dial, panting.
He looked back at the laboratory and
gasped in disbelief. All the trees were bent
toward the building, as if held by some mighty wind.
Their branches straining, every single leaf standing
at rigid attention, the trees were bending in toward
the structure. But there was no wind.
And then he noticed something else.
No matter where the trees stood, no matter in what
direction from the laboratory, they all bent inward
toward the building ... and the whining, thundering,
shrieking machine.
Inside the laboratory an empty bottle
crashed off a table and smashed into a thousand fragments.
The tinkling of the broken glass was a silvery, momentary
sound that protested against the blasting thrum of
power that shook the walls.
Manning fought along the floor to
Russ’s side. Russ roared in his ear:
“Gravitational control! Concentration of
gravitational lines!”
The papers on the desk started to
slide, slithering onto the floor, danced a crazy dervish
across the room. Liquids in the laboratory bottles
were climbing the sides of glass, instead of lying
at rest parallel with the floor. A chair skated,
bucking and tipping crazily, toward the door.
Russ jerked the power lever back to
zero. The power hum died. The liquids slid
back to their natural level, the chair tipped over
and lay still, papers fluttered gently downward.
The two men looked at one another
across the few feet of floor space between them.
Russ wiped beads of perspiration from his forehead
with his shirt sleeve. He sucked on his pipe,
but it was dead.
“Greg,” Russ said jubilantly,
“we have something better than anti-gravity!
We have something you might call positive gravity
... gravity that we can control. Your grandfather
nullified gravity. We’ve gone him one better.”
Greg gestured toward the machine.
“You created an attraction center. What
else?”
“But the center itself is not
actually an attracting force. The fourth dimension
is mixed up in this. We have a sort of fourth-dimensional
lens that concentrates the lines of any gravitational
force. Concentration in the fourth dimension
turns the force loose in three dimensions, but we
can take care of that by using mirrors of our anti-entropy.
We can arrange it so that it turns the force loose
in only one dimension.”
Greg was thoughtful for a moment.
“We can guide a ship by a series of lenses,”
he declared at last. “But here’s the
really important thing. That field concentrates
the forces of gravity already present. Those
forces exist throughout all of space. There are
gravitational lines everywhere. We can concentrate
them in any direction we want to. In reality,
we fall toward the body which originally caused the
force of gravitation, not to the concentration.”
Russ nodded. “That means
we can create a field immediately ahead of the ship.
The ship would fall into it constantly, with the concentration
moving on ahead. The field would tend to break
down in proportion to the strain imposed and a big
ship, especially when you are building up speed, would
tend to enlarge it, open it up. But the field
could be kept tight by supplying energy and we have
plenty of that ... far more than we’d ever need.
We supply the energy, but that’s only a small
part of it. The body emitting the gravitational
force supplies the fulcrum that moves us along.”
“It would operate beyond the
planets,” said Greg. “It would operate
equally well anywhere in space, for all of space is
filled with gravitational stress. We could use
gravitational bodies many light years away as the
driver of our ships.”
A half-wild light glowed momentarily in his eyes.
“Russ,” he said, “we’re going
to put space fields to work at last.”
He walked to the chair, picked it up and sat down
in it.
“We’ll start building
a ship,” he stated, “just as soon as we
know the mechanics of this gravity concentration and
control. Russ, we’ll build the greatest
ship, the fastest ship, the most powerful ship the
Solar System has ever known!”
“Damn,” said Russ, “that thing’s
slipped again.”
He glared at the offending nut.
“I’ll put a lock washer on it this time.”
Wilson stepped toward the control
board. From his perch on the apparatus, Russ
motioned him away.
“Never mind discharging the
field,” he said. “I can get around
it somehow.”
Wilson squinted at him. “This tooth is
near killing me.”
“Still got a toothache?” asked Russ.
“Never got a wink of sleep last night.”
“You better run down to Frisco
and have it yanked out,” suggested the scientist.
“Can’t have you laid up.”
“Yeah, that’s right,” agreed Wilson.
“Maybe I will. We got a lot to do.”
Russ reached out and clamped his wrench
on the nut, quickly backed it off and slipped on the
washer. Viciously he tightened it home. The
wrench stuck.
Gritting his teeth on the bit of his
pipe, Russ cursed soundlessly. He yanked savagely
at the wrench. It slipped from his hand, hung
for a minute on the nut and then plunged downward,
falling straight into the heart of the new force field
they had developed.
Russ froze and watched, his heart
in his throat, mad thoughts in his brain. In
a flash, as the wrench fell, he remembered that they
knew nothing about this field. All they knew
was that any matter introduced in it suddenly acquired
an acceleration in the dimension known as time, with
its normal constant of duration reduced to zero.
When that wrench struck the field,
it would cease to exist! But something else might
happen, too, something entirely unguessable.
The wrench fell only a few feet, but
it seemed to take long seconds as Russ watched, frozen
in fascination.
He saw it strike the hazy glow that
defined the limits of the field, saw it floating down,
as if its speed had been slowed by some dense medium.
In the instant that hazy glow intensified
a thousand times became a blinding sun-burst!
Russ ducked his head, shielded his eyes from the terrible
blast of light. A rending, shuddering thud seemed
to echo ... in space rather than in air ... and both
field and wrench were gone!
A moment passed, then another, and
there was the heavy, solid clanging thud of something
striking metal. This time the thud was not in
space, but a commonplace noise, as if someone had
dropped a tool on the floor above.
Russ turned around and stared at Wilson.
Wilson stared back, his mouth hanging open, the smoldering,
cigarette dangling from his mouth.
“Greg!” Russ shouted,
his cry shattering the silence in the laboratory.
A door burst open and Manning stepped
into the main laboratory room, a calculation pad in
one hand, a pencil in the other.
“What’s the matter?” he demanded.
“We have to find my wrench!”
“Your wrench?” Greg was puzzled.
“Can’t you get another?”
“I dropped it into the field.
Its time-dimension was reduced to zero. It became
an ’instantaneous wrench’.”
“Nothing new in that,” said Greg, unruffled.
“But there is,” persisted
Russ. “The field collapsed, you see.
Maybe the wrench was too big for it to handle.
And when the field collapsed the wrench gained a new
time-dimension. I heard it. We have to find
it.”
The three of them pounded up the stairs
to the room where Russ had heard the thump. There
was nothing on the floor. They searched the room
from end to end, then the other rooms. There
was no wrench.
At the end of an hour Greg went back
to the main laboratory, brought back a portable fluoroscope.
“Maybe this will do the trick,” he announced
bleakly.
It did. They found the wrench
inside the space between the walls!
Russ stared at the shadow in the fluoroscope
plate. Undeniably it was the shadow of the wrench.
“Fourth dimension,” he said. “Transported
in time.”
The muscles in Greg’s cheeks
were tensed, that old flame of excitement burning
in his eyes, but otherwise his face was the mask of
old, the calm, almost terrible mask that had faced
a thousand dangers.
“Power and time,” he corrected.
“If we can control it,” said Russ.
“Don’t worry. We
can control it. And when we can, it’s the
biggest thing we’ve got.”
Wilson licked his lips, dredged a cigarette out of
a pocket.
“If you don’t mind,”
he said, “I’ll hit for Frisco tonight.
This tooth of mine is getting worse.”
“Sure, can’t keep an aching
tooth,” agreed Russ, thinking of the wrench
while talking.
“Can I take your ship?” asked Wilson.
“Sure,” said Russ.
Back in the laboratory they rebuilt
the field, dropped little ball bearings in it.
The ball bearings disappeared. They found them
everywhere in the walls, in tables, in the
floor. Some, still existing in their new time-dimension,
hung in mid-air, invisible, intangible, but there.
Hours followed hours, with the sheet
of data growing. Math machines whirred and chuckled
and clicked. Wilson departed for San Francisco
with his aching tooth. The other two worked on.
By dawn they knew what they were doing. Out of
the chaos of happenstance they were finding rules of
order, certain formulas of behavior, equations of force.
The next day they tried heavier, more
complicated things and learned still more.
A radiogram, phoned from the nearest
spaceport, forty miles distant, informed them that
Wilson would not be back for a few days. His tooth
was worse than he had thought, required an operation
and treatment of the jaw.
“Hell,” said Russ, “just when he
could be so much help.”
With Wilson gone the two of them tackled
the controlling device, labored and swore over it.
But finally it was completed.
Slumped in chairs, utterly exhausted,
they looked proudly at it.
“With that,” said Russ,
“we can take an object and transport it any
place we want. Not only that, we can pick up any
object from an indefinite distance and bring it to
us.”
“What a thing for a lazy burglar,” Greg
observed sourly.
Worn out, they gulped sandwiches and scalding coffee,
tumbled into bed.
The outdoor camp meeting was in full
swing. The evangelist was in his top form.
The sinners’ bench was crowded. Then suddenly,
as the evangelist paused for a moment’s silence
before he drove home an important point, the music
came. Music from the air. Music from somewhere
in the sky. The soft, heavenly music of a hymn.
As if an angels’ chorus were singing in the
blue.
The evangelist froze, one arm pointing
upward, with index finger ready to sweep down and
emphasize his point. The sinners kneeling at the
bench were petrified. The congregation was astounded.
The hymn rolled on, punctuated, backgrounded
by deep celestial organ notes. The clear voice
of the choir swept high to a bell-like note.
“Behold!” shrieked the
evangelist. “Behold, a miracle! Angels
singing for us! Kneel! Kneel and pray!”
Nobody stood.
Andy McIntyre was drunk again.
In the piteous glare of mid-morning, he staggered
homeward from the poker party in the back of Steve
Abram’s harness shop. The light revealed
him to the scorn of the entire village.
At the corner of Elm and Third he
ran into a maple tree. Uncertainly he backed
away, intent on making another try. Suddenly the
tree spoke to him:
“Alcohol is the scourge of mankind.
It turns men into beasts. It robs them of their
brains, it shortens their lives ...”
Andy stared, unable to believe what
he heard. The tree, he had no doubt, was talking
to him personally.
The voice of the tree went on:
“... takes the bread out of the mouths of women
and children. Fosters crime. Weakens the
moral fiber of the nation.”
“Stop!” screamed Andy. “Stop,
I tell you!”
The tree stopped talking. All
he could hear was the whisper of wind among its autumn-tinted
leaves.
Suddenly running, Andy darted around
the corner, headed home.
“Begad,” he told himself,
“when trees start talkin’ to you it’s
time to lay off the bottle!”
In another town fifty miles distant
from the one in which the tree had talked to Andy
McIntyre, another miracle happened that same Sunday
morning.
Dozens of people heard the bronze
statue of the soldier in the courtyard speak.
The statue did not come to life. It stood as ever,
a solid piece of golden bronze, in spots turned black
and green by weather. But from its lips came
words ... words that burned themselves into the souls
of those who heard. Words that exhorted them
to defend the principles for which many men had died,
to grasp and hold high the torch of democracy and
liberty.
In somber bitterness, the statue called
Spencer Chambers the greatest threat to that liberty
and freedom. For, the statue said, Spencer Chambers
and Interplanetary Power were waging an economic war,
a bloodless one, but just as truly war as if there
were cannons firing and bombs exploding.
For a full five minutes the statue
spoke and the crowd, growing by the minute, stood
dumbfounded.
Then silence fell over the courtyard.
The statue stood as before, unmoving, its timeless
eyes staring out from under the ugly helmet, its hands
gripping the bayoneted rifle. A blue and white
pigeon fluttered softly down, alighted on the bayonet,
looked the crowd over and then flew to the courthouse
tower.
Back in the laboratory, Russ looked at Greg.
“That radio trick gives me an
idea,” he said. “If we can put a radio
in statues and trees without interfering with its
operation, why can’t we do the same thing with
a television set?”
Greg started. “Think of
the possibilities of that!” he burst out.
Within an hour a complete television
sending apparatus was placed within the field and
a receptor screen set up in the laboratory.
The two moved chairs in front of the
screen and sat down. Russ reached out and pulled
the switch of the field control. The screen came
to life, but it was only a gray blur.
“It’s traveling too fast,” said
Greg. “Slow it down.”
Russ retarded the lever. “When
that thing’s on full, it’s almost instantaneous.
It travels in a time dimension and any speed slower
than instantaneity is a modification of that force
field.”
On the screen swam a panorama of the
mountains, mile after mile of snow-capped peaks and
valleys ablaze with the flames of autumn foliage.
The mountains faded away. There was desert now
and then a city. Russ dropped the televisor set
lower, down into a street. For half an hour they
sat comfortably in their chairs and watched men and
women walking, witnessed one dog fight, cruised slowly
up and down, looking into windows of homes, window-shopping
in the business section.
“There’s just one thing
wrong,” said Greg. “We can see everything,
but we can’t hear a sound.”
“We can fix that,” Russ told him.
He lifted the televisor set from the
streets, brought it back across the desert and mountains
into the laboratory.
“We have two practical applications
now,” said Greg. “Space drive and
television spying. I don’t know which is
the best. Do you realize that with this television
trick there isn’t a thing that can be hidden
from us?”
“I believe we can go to Mars
or Mercury or anywhere we want to with this thing.
It doesn’t seem to have any particular limits.
It handles perfectly. You can move it a fraction
of an inch as easily as a hundred miles. And
it’s fast. Almost instantaneous. Not
quite, for even with our acceleration within time,
there is a slight lag.”
By evening they had an audio apparatus
incorporated in the set, had wired the screen for
sound.
“Let’s put this to practical
use,” suggested Greg. “There’s
a show at the New Mercury Theater in New York I’ve
been wanting to see. Let’s knock off work
and take in that show.”
“Now,” said Russ, “you
really have an idea. The ticket scalpers are
charging a fortune, and it won’t cost us a cent
to get in!”