By Capt. S. P. Meek
The milling crowd in front of the
Capitol suddenly grew quiet. A tall portly figure
came out onto the porch of the building and stepped
before a microphone erected on the steps. A battery
of press cameras clicked. A newsreel photographer
ground away on his machine. Wild cheers rent the
air. The President held up his hand for silence.
As the cheering died away he spoke into the microphone.
“My countrymen,” he said,
“the Congress of the United States has met in
extraordinary session and is ready to cope with the
condition with which we are confronted. While
they deliberate as to the steps to be taken, it is
essential that you meet this danger, if it be a danger,
with the bravery and the calm front which has always
characterized the people of the United States in times
of trial and danger. You may rest assured ”
A slightly built, inconspicuous man
who had followed the President out onto the porch
was surveying the crowd intently. He turned and
spoke in an undertone to a second man who mysteriously
appeared from nowhere as the first man spoke.
He listened for a moment, nodded, and edged closer
to the President. The first man slipped unobtrusively
down the Capitol steps and mingled with the crowd.
“ that no steps will
be neglected which may prove of value,” went
on the President. “The greatest scientists
of the country have gathered in this city in conference
and they undoubtedly will soon find a simple and natural
explanation for what is happening. In the meantime ”
The President paused. From the
crowd in front of him came a sudden disturbance.
A man sprang free of the crowd and broke through the
restraining cordon of police. In his hand gleamed
an ugly blue steel automatic pistol. Quickly
he leveled it and fired. A puff of dust came
from the Capitol. The bullet had landed a few
inches from one of the lower windows, fifty feet from
where the President stood. He raised his weapon
for a second shot but it was never fired. The
man who had come down the Capitol steps sprang forward
like a cat and grasped the weapon. For a moment
the two men struggled, but only for a moment.
From the crowd, stunned for a moment by the sheer
audacity of the attack, came a roar of rage.
The police closed in about the struggling men but the
crowd rolled over them like a wave. The captor
shouted his identity and tried to display the gold
badge of the secret service but the mob was in no
state of mind to listen. The police were trampled
underfoot and the would-be assassin torn from the
hands of the secret service operative. Every
man in reach tried to strike a blow. The secret
service man was buffeted and thrown aside. Realizing
that the affair had been taken out of his hands, he
made his way to the rear of the Capitol where his
badge gained him ready passage through the cordon of
police. He entered the building and reappeared
in a few moments by the side of the President.
Two hours later he leaned forward
in his chair in Dr. Bird’s private laboratory
in the Bureau of Standards and spoke earnestly.
“Dr. Bird,” he said, “that
bullet was never meant for the President. That
man was after bigger game.”
The famous scientist nodded thoughtfully.
“Even a very rotten pistol shot
should have come closer to him,” he replied.
“He must have missed by a good forty feet.”
“He missed by a matter of inches.
Doctor, that bullet struck the Capitol only two inches
from a window. In that window was standing a man.
The bullet was intended for the occupant of that window.
I was directly behind him when he raised his weapon
for a second shot and I am sure of his aim. He
deliberately ignored the President and aimed again
at that window. That was when I tackled him.”
“Who was standing there, Carnes?”
“You were, Doctor.”
Dr. Bird whistled.
“Then you think that bullet was intended for
me?”
“I am sure of it, Doctor.
That fact proves one thing to me. You are right
in your idea that this whole affair is man-made and
not an accident of nature. The guiding intelligence
back of it fears you more than he fears anyone else
and he took this means to get rid of you unobtrusively.
Attention was focused on the President. Your death
would have been laid to accident. It was a clever
thought.”
“It does look that way, Carnes,”
said the doctor slowly. “If you are right,
this incident confirms my opinion. There is only
one man in the world clever enough to have disturbed
the orderly course of the seasons, and such a plan
for my assassination would appeal to his love of the
dramatic.”
“You mean ”
“Ivan Saranoff, of course.”
“We are pretty sure that he
hasn’t got back to the United States, Doctor.”
“You may be right but I am sure
of nothing where that man is concerned. However,
that fact has no bearing. He may be operating
from anywhere. His organization is still in the
United States.”
A knock sounded at the door.
In response to the doctor’s command a messenger
entered and presented a letter. Dr. Bird read
it and dropped it in a waste basket.
“Tell them that I am otherwise
engaged just now,” he said curtly. The
messenger withdrew. “It was just a summons
to another meeting of the council of scientists,”
he said to Carnes. “They’ll have to
get along without me. All they’ll do anyway
will be to read a lot of dispatches and wrangle about
data and the relative accuracy of their observations.
Herriott will lecture for hours on celestial mechanics
and propound some fool theory about a hidden body,
which doesn’t exist, and its possible influence,
which would be nil, on the inclination of the earth’s
axis. After wasting four hours without a single
constructive idea being put forward, they will gravely
conclude that the sun rose fifty-three seconds earlier
at the fortieth north parallel than it did yesterday
and correspondingly later at the fortieth south parallel.
I know that without wasting time.”
“Was it fifty-three seconds to-day, Doctor?”
“Yes. This is the twentieth
of July. The sun should have risen at 4:52, sixteen
minutes later than it rose on June twentieth and fifty-three
seconds later than it rose yesterday. Instead
it rose at 4:20, sixteen minutes earlier than
it did on June twentieth and fifty-three seconds earlier
than yesterday.”
“I don’t understand what
is causing it, Doctor. I have tried to follow
your published explanations, but they are a little
too deep for me.”
“As to the real underlying cause,
I am in grave doubts, Carnes, although I can make
a pretty shrewd guess. As to the reason for the
unnatural lengthening of the day, the explanation
is simplicity itself. As you doubtless know,
the earth revolves daily on its axis. At the same
time, it is moving in a great ellipse about the sun,
an ellipse which it takes it a year to cover.
If the axis of rotation of the earth were at right
angles to the plane of its orbit; in other words, if
the earth’s equator lay in the plane of the
earth’s movement about the sun, each day would
be of the same length and there would be no seasons.
Instead of this being the case, the axis of rotation
of the earth is tipped so that the angle between the
equator and the elliptic is 23-1/2 deg.”
“I seem to remember something
of the sort from my school days.”
“This angle of tilt may be assumed
to be constant, for I won’t bother with the
précessions, nutations and other minor movements
considered in accurate computations. As the earth
moves around the sun, this tilt gives rise to what
we call the sun’s declination. You can readily
see that at one time in the year, the north pole will
be at its nearest point to the sun, speaking in terms
of tilt and not in miles, while at another point on
the elliptic, it will be farthest from the sun and
the south pole nearest. There are two midway
points when the two poles are practically equidistant.”
“Then the days and nights should be of equal
length.”
“They are. These are the
periods of the équinoxes. The point at which
the sun is nearest to the south pole we call the winter
solstice, and the opposite point, the summer solstice.
The summer solstice is on June twenty-first.
At that time the declination of the sun is 23-1/2 deg.
north of the equatorial line. It starts to decrease
until, six months later, it reaches a minus declination
of 23-1/2 deg. and is that far south of the line.
The longest day in the northern hemisphere is naturally
June twenty-first.”
“And the shortest day when the
sun has the greatest minus declination.”
“Precisely, at the winter solstice.
Now to explain what is happening. The year went
normally until June twenty-first. That day was
of the correct length, about fourteen hours and fifty
minutes long. The twenty-second should have been
shorter. Instead, it was longer than the twenty-first.
Each day, instead of getting shorter as it should at
this time of year, is getting longer. We have
already gained some thirty-two minutes of sunlight
at this latitude. The explanation is that the
angle between the equator and the elliptic is no longer
23-1/2 deg. as it has been from time immemorial,
but it is greater. If the continuing tilt keeps
up long enough, the obliquity will be 90 deg.
When that happens, there will be perpetual midday
at the north pole and perpetual night at the south
pole. The whole northern hemisphere will be bathed
in a continuous flood of sunlight while the southern
hemisphere will be a region of cold and dark.
The condition of the earth will resemble that of Mercury
where the same face of the planet is continually facing
the sun.”
“I understand that all right,
but I am still in the dark as to what is causing this
increase of tilt.”
“No more than I am, old dear.
Herriott keeps babbling about a hidden body which
is drawing the earth from its normal axial rotation,
but the fool ignores the fact that a body of a size
sufficient to disturb the earth would throw every
motion of the solar system into a state of chaos.
Nothing of the sort has happened. Ergo, no external
force is causing it. I am positive that the force
which is doing the work is located on the earth itself.
Furthermore, unless my calculations are badly off,
this force is located on or very near the surface of
the earth at approximately the sixty-fifth degree
of north latitude.”
“How can you tell that, Doctor?”
“It would take me too long to
explain, Carnes. I will, however, qualify my
statement a little. Either a variable force is
being used or else a constant force located where
I have said. The sixty-fifth parallel is a long
line. The exact location and the nature of that
force, we have to find. If it be man-made, and
I’ll bet my bottom dollar that it is, we will
also have to destroy it. If we fail, we’ll
see this world plunged into such a riot of war and
bloodshed as has never before been known. It
will be literally a fight of mankind for a place in
the sun. Due to its favorable location in the
new position of the earth, it is more than probable
that Russia would emerge as the dominant power.”
“Undertaking to destroy a thing
that you don’t know the location of and of whose
existence you aren’t even sure is a pretty big
contract.”
“We’ve tackled bigger
ones, old dear. We have the President behind us.
I haven’t made much headway selling my idea
to that gang of old fossils who call themselves the
council of scientists, but I did to his nibs.
Just before that attempt at assassination, I had a
chin-chin with him. The fastest battle cruiser
in the Navy, the Denver, is to be placed at
my service. It will carry a big amphibian plane,
so be equipped to assemble and launch it. Bolton
will relieve you from the Presidential guard to-day.
We sail in the morning.”
“Where for, Doctor?”
“I feel sure that the force
is caused and controlled by men and I know of but
one man who has the genius and the will to do such
a thing. That man is Saranoff. Because he
must be concealed and work free from interruption,
I fancy he is working in his own country. Does
that answer your question?”
“It does. We sail for Russia.”
“Carnesy, old dear, at times
you have flashes of such scintillating brilliance
that I have hopes for the future of the secret service.
In time they may even show human intelligence.
Toddle along now and pay your fond farewells to the
bright lights of Washington. Meet me at the Pennsy
station at six. We’ll sail from New York
in the morning.”
With the famous scientist and his
assistant as passengers, the Denver steamed
at her best speed across the Atlantic. As soon
as New York harbor was cleared, Dr. Bird charted the
course. Captain Evans raised his eyebrows when
he saw the course laid out, but his orders had been
positive. Had Dr. Bird ordered him to steam at
full speed against the shore, he would have obeyed
without question.
The Denver avoided the usual
lanes of traffic and bore to the north of the summer
lane. Not a vessel was sighted in the eight days
which elapsed before the Faroe Islands came in sight
on the starboard bow. The Denver bore
still more to the north and skirted around North Cape
five days later. At Cape Kanin she headed south
into the White Sea. Surprisingly little ice was
encountered. When Captain Evans mentioned this,
Dr. Bird pointed out to him that it was August and
that the days were still lengthening. Once in
the White Sea, the Denver was made ready for
instant action. A huge amphibian plane was hoisted
in sections from the hold and mechanics started to
assemble it. Dr. Bird spent most of his time
working on some instruments he had assembled in the
radio room.
“This is an ultra-short wave
detector,” he explained to Carnes. “It
will receive vibrations to the lowest limit of waves
that we have ever been able to measure. The X-ray
is high on the scale and even the cosmic ray is far
above its lower limit of detection. We are hunting
for an electro-magnet, the largest and strangest electro-magnet
that has ever been constructed. Perhaps it would
be more accurate to say that we are seeking for a
generator of magnetic force. It does not generate
the ordinary magnetism which attracts iron and steel,
nor the special type of magnetism which we call gravity,
but something between the two. It attracts the
sun enough to disturb the tilt of the earth’s
axis, but not enough to pull the earth out of its
orbit. Such a device should give out a wave that
can be detected, if we get a receiver delicate enough
and operating on the right wave length.”
He spent hours improving and refining
the apparatus, but in the end he confessed himself
beaten.
“It’s no use, Carnes,”
he said the day after Cape Kanin faded from view to
the north. “Either the apparatus we are
seeking gives out no wave that we can detect or my
apparatus is faulty. Luckily we have other things
to guide us.”
“What are they, Doctor?”
“The facts that Saranoff must
have easy transportation and a source of power.
The first precludes him from locating his station far
from the sea-coast and the second indicates that it
will be near a river or other source of power.
The only Russian points on the sixty-fifth parallel
that are open to water transport are the Gulf of Anadyr,
north of Kamchatka, and the vicinity of Archangel.
I passed up Kamchatka because it would mean too long
a haul through unfriendly waters from Leningrad and
because there is not much water power. Archangel
is easy of access at this time of the year and it
has the Dwina river for power. That will be our
first line of search.”
“We will explore by plane, of course?”
“Certainly. We wouldn’t
get far on foot, especially as neither of us speaks
Russian. We’ll head south for another day
and then What’s that?”
He paused and listened. From
the distance came a dull drone of sound which brought
him to his feet with a start. He raced out onto
deck with Carnes at his heels. Far overhead in
the blue, a tiny speck of black hovered.
“We’re on the right trail,
Carnes,” he said grimly. The plane passed
over them. In huge circles it sank toward the
ground. Dr. Bird turned to Captain Evans.
Orders flew from the bridge and a detail of marines
rapidly stripped the covers from the two forward anti-aircraft
rifles.
“I dislike to fire on that craft
before it makes a hostile demonstration, Dr. Bird,”
demurred Captain Evans. “We are at peace
with Russia. My action in firing might precipitate
a war, or in any event, serious diplomatic misunderstandings.”
“Allow me to correct you, Captain
Evans, we are at war with Russia. The whole world
is at war with the man who has pulled the earth out
of her course. In any event, your orders are
positive and the responsibility is mine. Wait
until that plane gets within easy range and then shoot
it down. Do not fail to get it; it must not get
back to shore with word of our approach.”
Captain Evans bowed gravely.
Shells came up from the magazines and were piled by
the guns. From the fire control stations came
a monotonous calling of firing data. The guns
slowly changed direction as the plane descended.
Nearer and nearer it came, intent on positive identification
of the war vessel below it. It passed over the
Denver less than five thousand feet up.
As it passed it swung off to one side and began to
climb sharply. Dr. Bird glanced at the fighting
top of the cruiser and swore softly. From the
top the stars and stripes had been broken to the breeze.
“Fire at once!” he cried,
“and then court-martial the fool who broke out
that flag!”
The two three-inch rifles barked their
message of death into the sky. For agonizing
seconds nothing happened. The guns roared again.
Below and behind the fleeing plane, two puffs of white
smoke appeared in the sky. The staccato calls
of the observers came from the control station and
the guns roared again and again. Now above and
now below the Russian plane appeared the white puffs
that told of bursting shells, but the plane droned
on, unharmed.
“It’s away safely,”
groaned the doctor. “Now the fat is
in the fire. Saranoff will know in an hour that
we are coming. If we had a pursuit plane ready
to take off, we might catch him, but we haven’t.
Oh, well, there’s no use in crying over spilt
milk. How soon will that amphibian be ready to
take off?”
“In twenty minutes. Doctor,”
replied the Engineering Officer. “As soon
as we finish filling the tanks and test the motor,
she’ll be ready to ramble.”
“Hurry all you can. Hang
a half dozen hundred-pound bombs and a few twenty-fives
on the racks. Lower her over the side as soon
as she’s ready. Where’s Lieutenant
McCready?”
“Below, getting into his flying togs, Doctor.”
“Good enough. Come on,
Carnes, we’ll go below and put on our fur-lined
panties, too. We’ll probably need them.”
In half an hour the amphibian rose
from the water. Lieutenant McCready was at the
controls, with Carnes and the doctor at the bomb racks.
The plane rose in huge spirals until the altimeter
read four thousand feet. The pilot straightened
it out toward the south. The plane was alone in
the sky. For two hours it flew south and then
veered to the east, following the line of the Gulf
of Archangel. The town came in sight at last.
“Better drop down a couple of
thousand, Lieutenant,” said Dr. Bird into the
speaking tube. “We can’t see much
from this altitude.”
The plane swung around in a wide circle,
gradually losing altitude. Carnes and the doctor
hung over the side watching the ground below them.
As they watched a puff of smoke came from a low building
a mile from the edge of the town. Dr. Bird grabbed
the speaking tube.
“Bank, McCready!” he barked, “They’re
firing at us.”
The plane lurched sharply to one side.
From a point a few yards below them and almost directly
along their former line of flight, a burst of flame
appeared in the air. The plane lurched and reeled
as the blast of the explosion reached it. From
other points on the ground came other puffs.
“Get out of here,” shouted
Dr. Bird. “There must be a dozen guns firing
at us. One of them will have the range directly.”
From all around them came flashes
and the roar of explosions. The plane lurched
and yawed in a sickening fashion. Lieutenant McCready
fought heroically with the controls, trying to prevent
the sideslips which were costing him altitude.
Gradually the plane came under control and started
to climb. The shells burst nearer as the plane
took a straighter course and strove to fly out of
the danger zone. Dr. Bird looked at the air-speed
meter.
“A hundred and eighty,”
he shouted to Carnes. “We’ll be safely
out of range in a minute.”
The bursts were mostly behind them
now. Suddenly a blast of air struck them with
terrific force. Half a dozen holes appeared in
the fabric of the wings. A bit of high explosive
shell plowed a way through the after compartment and
wrecked the duplicate instrument board. In another
moment they were out of range. Lieutenant McCready
turned the nose of his plane toward the north.
“We came out of that well,”
cried Carnes. Dr. Bird dropped the speaking tube
which he had held pressed to his ear and smiled grimly
at the detective.
“I wish we had,” he replied.
“Our main gas tank is punctured.”
An expression of alarm crossed the detective’s
face.
“Is it injured badly?” he asked.
“I don’t know yet.
McCready says that the gauge is dropping pretty rapidly.
I’m going to go out and see what I can do.”
“Can’t I go, Doctor? I’m a
good deal lighter than you are.”
“You’re not as strong
or as agile, Carnes, and you haven’t the mechanical
ability to make the repair. Hand me that line.”
He fastened one end of a coil of manila
rope which Carnes handed him to his waist, while the
detective fastened the other end to one of the safety
belt hooks. With a word of farewell, he climbed
out of the cockpit and onto a wing. In the pocket
of his flying suit he carried a tool kit and repair
material. Carnes shuddered as the doctor’s
figure disappeared under the plane. He snubbed
the rope about a seat bracket and held it taut.
For ten minutes the strain continued. It slackened
at last, and the figure of the doctor reappeared on
the wing. Slowly he climbed into the cockpit.
“I’ve made a temporary
repair, Lieutenant,” he called into the speaking
tube, “and the leakage has stopped. How
much gas have we left?”
“Enough for about an hour of
flying, including the emergency tank.”
“Thunder! No chance to
get back to the Denver. Better head inland
and follow the course of the Dwina. If we can
locate the place we are looking for we may be able
to drop a few eggs on it before we are washed out.
In any event, it will be better to come down on land
than on water.”
McCready headed the plane south and
followed the winding ribbon below him which marked
the channel of the Dwina. He kept his altitude
well over eight thousand feet. For a few minutes
the plane roared along. Without warning the motor
sputtered once or twice and died.
“Gas finished?” asked Dr. Bird into the
speaking tube.
“No, there is plenty of gas
for another forty-five minutes. It acted like
a short in the wiring. Maybe another fragment
got us that we didn’t know about. I can
glide to a safe landing, Doctor. Which direction
shall I go?”
“It doesn’t matter,”
replied Dr. Bird as he looked over the side. “Wait
a minute, it does matter. See that long low building
down there with the projection like a tower on top?
I’ll bet a month’s pay that that is the
very place we’re looking for. Glide over
it and let’s have a look at it. If I am
convinced of it, I’ll drop a few eggs on it.”
“Right!”
McCready glided on a long slope toward
the suspected building. Dr. Bird kept his eye
glued to the bomb sight.
“It’s suspicious enough
for me to act,” he cried. “Drop one!”
Carnes pulled a lever and a hundred-pound
high explosive bomb detached itself from the plane
and fell toward the ground.
“Another!” cried the doctor.
A second messenger of death followed the first.
“Bank around and back over while we give them
the rest.”
“Right!”
The plane swung around in a wide circle.
“Volley!” cried the doctor.
Carnes pulled the master lever and the rest of the
bombs fell earthward.
“Now glide to the east, McCready, until you
are forced down.”
McCready banked the plane and started
on a long glide toward the east. Carnes and the
doctor watched the falling bombs. The doctor’s
aim had been perfect. The first bomb released
struck the building squarely while the other landed
only a few feet away. Instead of the puffs of
smoke which they had expected, the bombs had no effect.
The volley which Carnes had discharged fell full on
the building as harmlessly as had the two pilot shots.
“Were these bombs armed, Lieutenant?”
demanded the doctor.
“Yes, sir. I inspected
them myself before we took off and they were fused
and armed. They had always fused and should have
gone off, no matter in what position they landed.”
“Well, they didn’t.
That building is our goal all right. Saranoff
would naturally expect an air raid and he has perfected
some device which renders a bomb impotent before it
lands. How far from the building will you land?”
“A couple of miles, Doctor.”
“Get as far as you can.
If you can make that line of thicket ahead, we’ll
take to our heels and hope to hide in it.”
“I don’t think we’ll
have much luck, Doctor,” said Carnes.
“Why not?”
“Look behind.”
Dr. Bird looked back toward the building
they had tried to bomb. Across the country, a
truck loaded with armed men followed the course of
the plane. The plane was gaining slightly on
the truck but it was evident that the plane’s
occupants would have little chance of escaping on foot.
Dr. Bird gave a grim laugh.
“We’re cornered all right,”
he said. “If we did elude the men in that
truck, we would have a plane after us in no time.
You might as well turn back, McCready, and land fairly
near the building. We are sure to be captured
and our best chance is to have the plane near us.
They’ll probably patch it up and if we get a
chance to escape later, it may be a lifesaver.
At any rate, we’ve lost for the present.”
McCready turned the plane again to
the west. The truck halted at their new maneuver.
As the plane passed over, it turned and again followed
them. The ground was approaching rapidly.
With a final dip, McCready leveled off and made a
landing. The machine rolled to a stop about a
mile from the building. The truck was less than
three hundred yards away. It came up rapidly
and disgorged a dozen men armed with rifles who hurried
forward. In the lead was a tall, slight figure
who carried no gun. Dr. Bird stepped forward
to meet them.
“Do you understand English?” he asked.
An incomprehensible jargon of Russian
answered him. The men raised their rifles threateningly.
Dr. Bird turned back to his companions.
“Resistance is hopeless,”
he said. “Surrender gracefully and we’ll
see what comes of it.”
He faced the Russians and held one
hand high above his head. The Russian leader
stepped forward and confiscated the doctor’s
pistol. He repeated the process with Carnes and
McCready, frisking them thoroughly for concealed weapons.
At his command, six of the Russians stepped forward.
The Americans took their place in the midst of the
guard and were marched to the truck. The balance
of the Russians moved over to the American’s
plane. The truck rolled forward and approached
the low building. The projection which Dr. Bird
had noticed from the air proved to be a metal tube
projection from the roof, fully twenty feet in diameter
and fifty feet long.
“A projection tube of some sort,”
said the doctor, pointing. An excited command
came from the Russian in command. A rifle was
leveled threateningly at the doctor. He took
the hint and maintained silence while they climbed
down from the truck and approached the door of the
building.
It swung open as they approached.
As they entered a strong garlic-like smell was evident.
The hum of heavy machinery smote their ears.
They were led down a corridor to a
flight of steps. On the floor below they went
along another corridor to a heavy iron-studded door.
The guide unlocked it with a huge key and swung it
open. With a shrug of his shoulders, Dr. Bird
led the way into the cell. The door closed behind
them and they were left alone. Dr. Bird turned
to his companions.
“Be careful what you say,”
he whispered. “I am not at all convinced
that there is no one here who knows English and we
are probably spied upon. There is almost sure
to be a dictaphone somewhere in this room.
We don’t want to give them any more information
than we have to.”
Carnes and McCready nodded. Dr.
Bird spoke aloud of inconsequential matters while
they explored the cell. It was a room some twenty
feet square, fitted with three bunks on one side,
built into the wall like the berths on shipboard.
The room was lighted by a single electric light overhead.
A door opened into a lavatory equipped with running
water.
“We’re comfortable here,
at any rate,” said the doctor cheerfully.
“They evidently don’t mean to make us
suffer. I’d like to know why they took
the trouble to capture us, anyway. It would seem
to be more in line with their usual policy to have
shot us on sight. It must be that they want some
sort of information from us.”
Neither of his companions had a better
reason to offer and conversation languished.
For an hour they sat almost without speech. A
sound at the door brought them to their feet.
It opened and a Russian girl pushed in a cart laden
with food. She made no reply to the remarks which
Dr. Bird addressed to her but quickly and silently
put their food on the table. When she had completed
her task, she left the room without having spoken
a word.
“Beautiful, but dumb,” Dr. Bird remarked.
“Let’s eat.”
“Do you suppose that it’s
safe to eat this food, Doctor?” asked Carnes
in a whisper.
“I don’t know, and I don’t
care. If we’ve got to go out, we might as
well be poisoned as shot. If we refuse food, they
can poison us through our water. We couldn’t
refuse that for any length of time. I’m
hungry and I’m going to make a good meal.
What’s this stuff, bortsch?”
They soon received proof that they
were under observation. Hardly had they pushed
back their chairs at the completion of the meal than
the door opened and the Russian girl who had brought
their food removed the empty dishes. Silence
settled down over the cell. For another hour they
waited before the door opened again. A tall bearded
Russian entered with a younger man at his heels.
The bearded man dropped into a chair while his companion
sat at the table and opened a notebook.
“Stand up!” barked the Russian sternly.
Carnes and McCready rose to their
feet but Dr. Bird remained stretched out on a bed.
“What for?” he demanded languidly.
The Russian bristled with rage.
“When I speak to you, you shall
obey,” he said in curiously clipped English,
“else it will be the worse for you. Would
you rather be questioned while in the strelska
than while standing?”
“Not by a long shot,”
replied Dr. Bird promptly as he rose to his feet.
“Fire away, old fellow. I’ll talk.”
“What are your names?”
“I am Addison Sims of Seattle,”
replied Dr. Bird gravely, “and my friends are
Mr. Earle Liedermann and Mr. Bernarr Macfadden.
You may have read of us in the American magazines.”
“Their names,” said the
Russian to his clerk, “are Dr. Bird, of the
Bureau of Standards; Operative Carnes, of the United
States Secret Service; and Lieutenant McCready, of
the United States Navy. Dr. Bird, you will save
yourself trouble if you will answer my future questions
truthfully.”
“Then ask questions to which
I am not sure that you know the answer,” replied
the doctor dryly.
“What vessel brought you here?”
“The Denver.”
“What is her armament?”
“Consult the Navy list.
You will doubtless find a copy in your files.
It may be purchased from the Superintendent of Public
Documents at Washington.”
“What is your errand here?”
“To consult with Ivan Saranoff
and learn his future plans. If he means merely
to bestow on the northern hemisphere additional sunshine
and warmth, it is possible that the United States
will not oppose him. We would benefit equally
with Russia, you know. Possibly the northern
countries could form some sort of an alliance against
the southern hemisphere which is already threatening
war.”
“You chose a peculiar way of
showing your peaceable intentions. You shot down
our plane without warning and you dropped bombs on
us at first sight.”
“But they didn’t explode.”
“No, thanks to our ray operators.
Dr. Bird, I have no time to waste. Either you
will answer my questions fully and truthfully or I
will resort to torture.”
“You don’t dare.
You were merely bluffing when you mentioned the strelska.
If you tortured us, you would have to answer to Ivan
Saranoff on his return.”
“How did you know that he is ”
The Russian paused and bit his lip. “Shall
I tell him that you refuse to talk?”
“When he returns, you may tell
him that I will be glad to talk frankly with him.
I came to Russia for that purpose, but I will not talk
with one of his underlings. In the meanwhile,
we are having lovely weather for this time of year,
aren’t we?”
With a muttered curse the Russian
rose and left the room. Carnes turned to Dr.
Bird.
“How did you know that Saranoff was away?”
he demanded.
“I didn’t,” replied
Dr. Bird with a chuckle, “it was merely a shrewd
guess. We have twisted his tail so often that
I figured he could not resist the temptation to come
here and gloat a few gloats over us if he were here.
I know his ruthless methods in dealing with his subordinates
and I knew that they would never dare to resort to
torture in his absence. No, old dear, we are
safe until he returns. I hope he stays away a
long time.”
Four days passed monotonously.
Three times a day the Russian girl appeared with ample
meals. Despite their attempts to engage her in
conversation, not a word would she reply or give any
indication that she either heard or understood their
remarks. The bearded Russian appeared daily and
tried to question them, but Dr. Bird laughed at his
threats and reaffirmed his intention of talking to
no one but Saranoff.
“Your chance will soon come,”
replied the Russian with an evil leer on the fourth
day. “He will be here the day after to-morrow.
He will be able to make you talk.”
“If he’s telling the truth,
the jig’s about up,” said Dr. Bird when
the Russian had left. “I don’t fancy
that Saranoff will show us much mercy when he finds
out what we’ve attempted to do.”
“How would it be to overpower
our waitress and make a break?” asked McCready
in a guarded whisper.
“No good at all,” replied
the doctor decisively. “We wouldn’t
have a Chinaman’s chance. Our best bet
is to talk turkey to Saranoff. He may spare us
if I can make him believe that I am willing to work
for him. What a man he is! If we could turn
his genius into the right channels, he would be a
blessing to the world.”
He paused as the door swung open and
the Russian girl appeared with their food. She
placed the cart against the wall and suddenly turned
and faced them.
“Dr. Bird,” she said in
excellent English, “I am Feodrovna Androvitch.”
“I’m glad to know you,” said Dr.
Bird with a bow.
“Do you recognize my name?”
“I’m very sorry, my dear, but it simply
doesn’t register.”
“Do you remember Stefan Androvitch?”
A sudden light came into Dr. Bird’s face.
“Yes,” he exclaimed, “I
do. He used to work for me in the Bureau some
time ago. I had to let him go under peculiar circumstances.
Is he related to you?”
“He was my twin brother.
The peculiar circumstances you refer to were that
you caught him stealing platinum. Instead of turning
him over to the police, you asked him why he stole.
He told you his wife was dying for lack of things
that money would buy and he stole for her. You
allowed him to quit his position honorably and you
gave him money for his immediate needs. For that
act of mercy, I am here to reward you.”
“Bread cast upon the waters,”
murmured Carnes. The Russian girl turned on him
like a wildcat.
“Unless you wish to deprive
yourself and your companions of my help, you will
not quote the Bible, that sop thrown by the church
to their slaves, to me,” she said venomously.
“I am a woman of the proletariat!”
“Respect the lady’s anti-religious
prejudices, Carnesy, old dear,” said the doctor
with a smile. “How do you propose to aid
us, Miss Androvitch?”
“I will give you exactly what
you gave my brother, your freedom and money for your
immediate needs.”
“Thanks. But, er haven’t
you considered what your position here will be if
you aid us to escape? Saranoff doesn’t deal
kindly with traitors, I fancy.”
The girl spat on the floor.
“That swine!” she hissed,
“I would like to kill him. I would have
done so long ago had not the hope of the people rested
on his genius. When the people finally triumph,
I will feed his heart to my cat.”
“Nice, gentle, loving disposition,”
murmured the doctor. “All right, my dear,
we’re ready for anything. What’s the
first move?”
The girl whisked the covers from the
food cart and displayed three pistols and belts of
ammunition.
“Put these on,” she said,
“and take this food with you. I will take
you to a hiding place outside the walls where you
may safely stay for a few days. I will bring
you fresh supplies of food. As quickly as possible
I will arrange for you to escape from Russia.
When you have left Russia safely, my debt is paid
and you are again my enemies.”
“But, listen here,” said
Dr. Bird persuasively, “why don’t you come
with us? You know the object of our coming here.
We aim to destroy this plant and let the earth take
its normal tilt. You hate Saranoff, although I
don’t know why. If you’ll help us
to destroy him, we’ll guarantee you a welcome
in the United States and you can join your brother.
I’ll take him back into my laboratory.”
“My brother is dead,”
she said bitterly. “After he left you, he
fell into more evil times. His wife died and
he swore revenge upon the society which had murdered
her. An opportunity came to him to join Saranoff,
and he did so. Saranoff hated him and distrusted
him, although he was the soul of loyalty. As
a reward for his genius and aid to Saranoff in constructing
the black lamp, Saranoff abandoned him to you.
It was your men who killed him when you blew into nothingness
the helicopter he was piloting in your state of Maryland,
near Washington.”
“All the more reason why you
should revenge yourself upon Saranoff,” replied
the doctor. “We will give you a chance to
do so and aid you. We also give you an opportunity
to be received in a free country with honor.”
An expression of rage distorted the girl’s features.
“I am a woman of the proletariat!”
she cried. “I hate Ivan Saranoff for what
he has done but I am loyal to him. He alone will
force the bourgeoisie to their knees and establish
the rule of the people. I hate your country and
your government; yes, and I hate you. I aid you
because I must pay my just debts. Come, the way
is clear for your escape. Don’t ask how
I cleared it.”
“Come on,” said Dr. Bird
with a shrug of his shoulders. “There is
no arguing with convictions. She must act according
to her lights, even as we must act according to ours.
Grab your guns and let’s go.”
The three buckled on the weapons and
belts of ammunition and followed the girl from the
cell. Once outside she touched her lips for silence.
A door barred their way but she opened it with a key
which she withdrew from her dress. Outside the
door, a guard slumbered noisily. At a motion
from the girl, Carnes rolled him over on his face to
quiet his snoring. He moved and stirred, but
did not wake.
A few feet from the door the girl
paused and faced the wall. She manipulated a
hidden lever and a panel swung open in the wall.
She led the way silently into the dark. As the
panel closed behind her, a beam of light from an electric
torch stabbed the darkness. Down a sloping tunnel
they followed her for half a mile. The tunnel
turned at right angles and led upward. At length
they paused before another door. The girl opened
it and they stepped out into the night. As they
did so, a dull booming struck their ears. The
girl paused.
“The ship!” she cried.
“Your ship! It is attacking Fort Novadwinskaja.
The factory will be awake in a moment! Run for
your lives!”
Even as she spoke a pair of twinkling
lights appeared far down the tunnel through which
they had come. She turned as if to return down
the tunnel. Dr. Bird caught her about the waist
and clapped his hand over her mouth.
“Quick, Carnes, your belt,”
he cried. “Tie her up. She meant to
go down that tunnel and give her life to delay them
while we escaped. We’ll save her in spite
of herself.”
Carnes and McCready quickly bound
the struggling girl with their belts. They laid
her on the ground beside the door and watched the oncoming
lights.
“You two hold them back for
the present,” said the doctor. “I’m
going to take Feodrovna away a bit and argue gently
with her. If I can make her see the light, we
may accomplish our mission yet. If I can’t,
I’ll come back and help you.”
He picked up the girl in his arms
and disappeared into the darkness. Pistol in
hand, the two men watched the oncoming lights.
The men behind the lights could not be seen, but from
the sound of their footsteps it was evident that there
were quite a few of them.
“Had we better let them emerge
from the door and then get them?” whispered
Carnes.
“No. These heavy guns will
drive a bullet through three men at short range.
Level your gun down the tunnel and fire when I give
the word. Remember, every one is apt to shoot
high in the dark.”
The lights approached slowly.
When they were twenty-five yards away, Lieutenant
McCready spoke. The quiet was shattered by the
roar of two Luger pistols. Again and again the
guns barked. A volley of fire came from the tunnel,
but Carnes and the lieutenant were standing well away
from the opening and they escaped unharmed. Their
deadly fire poured into the shambles until they were
rewarded by the sound of retreating feet.
“So ends round one,” said
Carnes with a laugh. “I think we win on
points.”
“They won’t try a direct
attack again,” replied the lieutenant. “Look
out for a flank attack or from some new weapon.
I don’t like the way those bombs failed to explode
the other day.”
Dr. Bird appeared from the darkness.
“McCready,” he said in
a voice vibrant with excitement, “we’re
in luck. We have come out less than a hundred
yards from the point where our plane came down.
It is still there. If the Denver has approached
within shooting range, we will have enough gas to make
it. Try to get your motor going.”
“If it isn’t completely
washed out I’ll have it going in a few minutes,
Doctor,” cried the pilot. “I’m
going down the tunnel and get those flash-lights those
birds dropped when they pulled out. Where’s
the girl?”
“She’s back by the plane,”
said the doctor with a chuckle. “She is
a spit-fire, all right. I took her gag off and
she tried to bite me. I couldn’t get a
word of anything but abuse out of her. Go ahead
and get the lights and I’ll show you the plane.”
In a few minutes they stood before
the ship. It was apparently uninjured, but the
spark was dead. Carnes went back to the tunnel
mouth to guard against surprise while Dr. Bird and
McCready labored over the motor. Despite the
best of both of them, no spark could be coaxed from
the coil. As a last resort, Dr. Bird short-circuited
the cells with a screwdriver blade. No answering
spark came from the terminals.
“Dead as a mackerel,”
he remarked. “I guess that ends that hope.
Let’s get the machine guns out of her.
Well have another attack soon and they’ll be
more effective than our pistols.”
It was the work of a few minutes to
dismount the two Brownings from the plane. Carrying
the two guns, Dr. Bird joined Carnes while McCready
staggered along laden down with belts of ammunition.
“Do you remember that rocky
knoll we passed just before we landed?” asked
the lieutenant. “If we can get this stuff
there before we are attacked, we’ll have a much
better chance than we will in the open.”
“Good idea, Lieutenant.
Carnes, connect yourself to one of these guns.
I’ll fasten the other on my back and carry Feodrovna.
We can’t leave her here to Saranoff’s
tender mercies.”
Through the night the little cavalcade
made its way. The thunder of guns from Fort Novadwinskaja
kept up and the sky to the north was lighted by their
flashes. McCready’s bump of direction proved
to be a good one for the sought-for retreat was soon
located. As they deposited their burdens and
looked back, the lights of two trucks could be seen
approaching across the plain from the factory.
Hurriedly they mounted the machine gun. Dr. Bird
straightened up and listened carefully.
“The guns are sounding less
frequently,” he said. “Possibly the
Denver has had enough and is pulling out.”
“If I know Captain Evans as
well as I think I do, the Denver is not retreating,”
replied McCready grimly.
“I hope she’s hammering
the fort out of existence,” said the doctor.
“However, our main interest just now is on the
land front. Gunners to the fore. Carnes,
you aren’t so good at this, better let McCready
and me handle them.”
The trucks approached slowly.
Presently the American plane loomed up in the glare
of their headlights. A powerful searchlight mounted
on the leading truck swept the country. Discovery
was a matter of moments. Lieutenant McCready
trained his gun carefully and pressed the trigger.
A rattle of fire came from the Browning. A crash
was heard from the truck and the searchlight winked
out.
“Bull’s-eye!” cried Carnes exultantly.
“Down, you fool!” cried
the doctor as he swept the detective from his feet
and threw him down behind a rock. His action was
none too soon. A burst of machine gun fire came
from the trucks and a hail of bullets splattered on
the rocks a few yards from them. McCready crawled
back to his gun.
“Wait a minute, Lieutenant,”
counseled the doctor. “A burst of fire from
here will give them our location and probably do them
little damage. Wait until they try to rush us.”
They did not have long to wait.
A guttural shout came from a point a few yards away
and the sound of running feet came to their ears.
The rush was directed toward a point a few yards to
the left of where they crouched. Dr. Bird swung
his gun around. As the rush passed them, he released
his trigger. A volley of screams and oaths from
the plain answered the crackle of the Browning.
McCready’s gun joined in with a staccato burst
of fire. The attack could not live before that
rain of death. A few running feet were heard
from the darkness and a few groans. Presently
the roar of a motor came from the direction of the
parked trucks. It retreated into the distance
and all was quiet.
“Round two goes to us on a knock-down,”
said Carnes jubilantly. “What will they
do next, Doctor?”
“Probably nothing until daylight,
now that they know we have machine guns. I wish
that we could make that thicket, but it’s too
far to try. It’ll be daylight in an hour
or so.”
The night was normally short in Archangel
at that season of the year and the unnatural lengthening
of the day which Saranoff had accomplished made it
shorter still. In an hour red streamers in the
east announced the approach of daylight. Hardly
had they appeared than a dull drone of truck motors
came from the direction of the factory.
“Round three is about to commence,”
announced Carnes. “I wish that I could
do something.”
“You can as soon as our ammunition
runs out, which won’t be long,” replied
McCready. “It will be a matter of pistols
at close quarters.”
The trucks approached to within a
half mile and stopped. The distance was too great
to warrant wasting any of their scanty store of ammunition
at such long range. In the dim light they would
see the Russians working at the trucks. Presently
a flash came from the plain. A whining sound
filled the air. With a crash a three-inch shell
broke behind them.
“No fun,” remarked the
doctor. “We’ll have to get better
cover than this.”
A second shell whined through the
air and burst over their heads. A third burst
a few yards in front of them.
“They have us bracketed now,”
said McCready. “We’d better slide
back a piece before they start rapid fire.”
Dragging their prisoner with them,
the three men made their way to the reverse side of
the knoll. A short search revealed an overhanging
ledge under which they crouched in comparative safety
from anything but a direct hit above them.
“We’re all right here
except for the fact that they may rush us under cover
of the fire,” said the doctor. “One
man will have to keep watch all the time and it will
be a dangerous detail. I’ll take the first
hitch.”
“You will not!” exclaimed
Carnes emphatically. “I have done nothing
so far and I am the least important member of the
party. I’ll do the watching.”
“Let’s draw straws,”
suggested McCready. “I’m willing to
do that, but if it’s a matter of volunteering,
I refuse to yield to the civilian branches of the
government. The Navy has traditions to uphold,
you know.”
“McCready’s right,”
replied the doctor. “Get straws, Lieutenant,
and we’ll draw.”
McCready picked up three bits of grass and held them
out.
“The shortest goes on watch,”
he said. Carnes and the doctor drew, McCready
exhibited the remaining bit of grass. It was the
shortest of the three. He waited until the next
shell burst above them and then stepped out from the
shelter.
“I’ll relieve you in fifteen
minutes,” said Carnes as he left.
“Right.”
When the lieutenant had left, Dr.
Bird removed the gag from Feodrovna’s mouth
and tried to argue with her, but the Russian girl only
glared her hatred and refused to talk other than to
abuse him. With a sigh, the doctor gave over
his efforts and talked to Carnes. The time passed
slowly with a constant rain of shells on the knoll.
“It’s time for my relief,”
said Carnes at length. As he spoke the hail of
shells on the knoll ceased.
“What the dickens?” cried the doctor.
He and Carnes jumped from their shelter
and ran over the knoll. On the plain a few hundred
yards from them, a straggling line of Russians were
advancing with fixed bayonets. McCready was nowhere
in sight.
“Where the devil is McCready?”
cried the doctor. “He must have been killed.
Hello, one of the guns is gone, too. There’s
only a belt and a half of ammunition left. I’ll
try to break that attack up.”
He advanced to the gun and trained
it carefully. When he pressed the trigger a dull
click came from the gun.
“Misfire!” he cried.
He drew back the bolt and inserted a fresh cartridge.
Again the gun clicked harmlessly. Dr. Bird ejected
the shell and examined it. A deep indentation
appeared on the primer. Hurriedly he tried a
half dozen more cartridges but they refused to explode.
He turned a keen gaze toward the trucks. On the
ground was set a tube-like projector pointing toward
them. Dr. Bird swore softly and jerked his pistol
from its holster. The hammer clicked futilely
on a cartridge.
“Stymied!” he exclaimed.
“They have that portable ray mechanism, with
them, which disabled our bombs. It’s hand
to hand, Carnesy, old dear. I wonder where McCready
is.”
The Russians approached slowly, keeping
their lines straight. They were within two hundred
yards of the knoll. Suddenly from a point a hundred
yards to the left of the end of the land came a rattle
of fire. The attacking line dropped in a pile
of grotesque heaps.
“It’s McCready!”
shouted Carnes. A little ravine ran from the knoll
toward the trucks. Sitting in the ravine was the
lieutenant, playing a Browning machine gun on the
line of attackers. When there were no more of
them on their feet, he turned his gun on the trucks.
Panic seized the Russians and they made a rush for
their truck. Their leader leaped among them,
yelling furiously. They paused and turned to the
projector tube. Slowly they swung it around.
The lieutenant’s gun ceased firing.
As the Russians rushed the now silent
gun, Dr. Bird stepped to the gun on the knoll.
He trained it and pressed the trigger. A rattle
of fire came from it and two of the rushing figures
fell. The attack paused for an instant.
McCready had risen to his feet and was running up the
ravine with his gun under his arm.
“Good head!” cried Dr.
Bird, “Clever work! Watch the fun now.”
He ceased firing his gun. The
Russians wavered and then rushed the point from which
McCready had fired. The lieutenant allowed them
to get to within a short distance and then crumpled
the attack with another burst of fire from the flank.
With cries of alarm, the Russians turned and fled
toward their trucks. McCready ran along the ravine
until he was within fifty yards of the standing machines.
As the Russians approached, one of them stepped to
the truck crank. McCready’s pistol spoke
and he dropped. A second shared his fate.
With cries of despair, the Russians climbed into the
remaining truck whose motor was running. Rapidly
it drove away across the plain. McCready rose
from the ravine and ran toward the standing truck.
He started the motor and headed for the knoll.
“He’s got a truck,”
cried Carnes. “We can get away in it.”
“Where to?” demanded Dr.
Bird. “Archangel is between us and the
Denver.”
The truck came up.
“Come on, Doctor,” cried
McCready. “Hurry up. We’ll take
the battery out of this truck and get our plane going.”
“Oh, clever!” cried Dr.
Bird admiringly. “Load that gun while I
get Feodrovna, Carnesy. We’ll get away
safely yet.”
The truck rolled up to the plane and
stopped. While Carnes transferred the prisoner
and the guns to the plane, the lieutenant and Dr. Bird
ripped up the floor boards of the truck and exposed
the battery. It was a matter of moments to detach
it and carry it to the plane. It would not fit
in place but they anchored it in place with wire.
“You’d better hurry,”
cried Carnes. “Here come a couple more trucks
over the plain.”
“That’ll do, Doctor,”
said McCready. “Get on the prop and we’ll
see if the old puddle jumper will take off.”
Dr. Bird ran to the propeller.
“Ready!” he cried.
“Contact!” snapped McCready.
The plane motor roared into life.
The ship moved slowly forward as Dr. Bird climbed
on board. Toward the oncoming trucks they rushed
across the plain. A crash seemed imminent.
In the nick of time McCready pulled back on his joystick
and the plane rose gracefully into the air, clearing
the leading truck by inches. The truck halted
and hastily mounted a machine gun.
“Too late!” laughed the lieutenant.
“Now it’s our turn for some fun.”
He tapped the key of his radio transmitter.
In a few seconds he received an answer.
“They have reduced Fort Novadwinskaja,”
he reported to the rear cockpit, “but they don’t
know what to fire at next. Their largest guns
will reach the factory easily. Shall I start
some fireworks?”
“You may fire when ready, Gridly,” chuckled
Dr. Bird.
Again the lieutenant depressed his
key. From their altitude of four thousand feet,
they could see the Denver. From its forward
turret came a puff of smoke. There were a few
moments of pause and then a cloud of black rose from
the plain below them, half a mile from the factory.
McCready reported the position of the burst to the
ship. A second shell burst beyond the factory
and the third just in front of it.
“It’s a clear bracket,”
said McCready. “Now watch the gun.
I’ll give them a salvo.”
From the side of the Denver
came a cloud of black smoke as all of her turret guns
fired in unison. The aim was perfect. For
a few moments all was quiet and then the factory disappeared
in a smother of bursting high explosive shells.
Hardly had the shells landed than
a terrific sheet of lightning ripped across the sky.
The thunderclap which seemed to come simultaneously,
rocked the plane like a feather. Sheet after sheet
of lightning illuminated the sky while the roar of
thunder was continuous. Rain fell in solid sheets.
Even as they watched, it began to turn into snow.
The air grew bitterly cold.
“The solar magnet is wrecked,”
shouted the doctor, “and these storms are the
efforts of nature to return to normal.”
“If they get any worse, we’re doomed.”
“But in a good cause.”
Through the storm the plane raced.
Suddenly the motor died with sickening suddenness.
“Our haywire battery connections
are gone,” shouted McCready. “Say
your prayers.”
The wind tossed the plane about like
a feather. Rapidly it lost altitude. A building
loomed up before them. As a crash seemed imminent,
a gust of wind caught the plane and tossed it up into
the air again. For several minutes the ground
could not be seen through the rain. Suddenly
the plane hit an airpocket and dropped like a stone.
With a splash it fell into the sea. A rift came
for a moment in the curtain of rain.
“Look!” cried Carnes.
A hundred yards away, the Denver rode at anchor.
“I’m only sorry about
one thing,” said Carnes ten minutes later as
they changed to dry clothes aboard the battle cruiser,
“and that is that Saranoff wasn’t in the
factory when that salvo fell on it.”
“I’m glad he was away,”
replied Dr. Bird. “With him absent, we succeeded
in destroying it. If he had been there, our task
would have been more difficult and perhaps impossible.
I am an enemy of Saranoff’s, but I don’t
underrate his colossal genius.”