Spawn of the Comet - LightNovelsOnl.com
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What I have done in the present instance is merely to speed up a process nature already had under way, inasmuch as we are dealing with a radio-active substance."
"But what has happened to the by-product of the reaction?"
"Your guess is as good as mine. I have not had time to study that phase of it. Heat, mainly, was produced. Possibly a few atoms of helium. But the substance is gone. That is our chief concern just now."
It was only after abandoning chemical means and turning to physics that he had met with success, he said. Cathode rays had finally proved the key to the riddle.
"But do you think this thing will work on a big scale?" asked Jim regarding that fragile tube doubtfully.
Professor Wentworth hesitated before replying.
"I do not know," he admitted, "but I intend to find out--to-night."
Jim looked at him in amazement. "To-night?"
"Yes. Or rather, the experiment will be at dawn. If successful, this continent at least will be rid of the menace."
Jim's amazement turned to incredulity and a sudden fear gripped him.
Had the strain of the past few weeks unbalanced the professor's mind?
"But surely you can't hope to wipe them out with one tube. Why, it would take hundreds."
"No, only one. You see, I am going to place the tube in the center of the circle and direct its rays outward toward the circ.u.mference in a swinging radius."
Whereupon, for a moment, Jim's fear seemed confirmed.
"But, good G.o.d!" he exclaimed. "It couldn't possibly be that powerful, could it?"
"I think it can be made to be," was Professor Wentworth's grave a.s.surance. "The greatest power we know in the universe is radiant energy, which reaches us from the sun and the stars, traveling at the speed of light."
"Like light rays, these heat rays can be focused, directed; and the beta rays of the cathode, traveling at the same velocity, can be made to ride these rays of radiant heat much as electric power rides radio waves. The giant, in short, can be made, to carry the dwarf, with his deadly little weapon. That, at least, is the theory I am acting on."
This somewhat allayed Jim's fears--fears that vanished when the professor went on to explain somewhat the working of his mechanism.
"But how are you going to get the thing out there?" he asked, picturing with a shudder the center of the flaming h.e.l.l.
"I imagine the War Department will provide me with a volunteer plane and pilot for the purpose," was the calm reply.
"And you will go?"
"Yes, I will go."
Jim debated, but not for long.
"Well, you needn't trouble the War Department. Here's your volunteer pilot! The plane's outside. When do we start?"
"But, my dear young man!" objected the professor. "I cannot permit you to make this sacrifice. It is suicide, sheer suicide."
"Is my life any more precious than yours, or that of some volunteer Army pilot?" Jim asked him.
"But there is Joan. If I fail--she must depend on you."
"If you fail, Professor, Joan won't need me or anyone, for long. No, I go. So let's chuck the argument and get ready."
"Oh, Jimmy!" sobbed Joan. "Jimmy!"
But her eyes, as they met his mistily, were lit with a proud splendor.
Two hours later, Jim Carter's little auto-plane lifted into the night, and, with that precious tube mounted above the cabin, winged swiftly westward.
As on his former foray into that fiery realm, Jimmy timed his flight to arrive over the eastern edge of the Arizona desert just before dawn. Somewhere in that great sandy waste, they felt, there would be a place to set the plane down and get the ray going.
Professor Wentworth had broadcast the particulars of his tube to his scientific colleagues wherever humanity still remained, and the eyes of the world were on this flight. If successful, swift planes would bear similar tubes to the centers of the devastated regions elsewhere, and sweep outward with their deadly rays. The earth would be rid of this fiery invader. If it were not successful....
Jim preferred not to think of that, as he drove on into the night.
Crossing the Missouri River at dark and deserted Kansas City, they soon saw the eastern arc of that deadly orange circle loom on the horizon. To get over it safely, Jim rose to twenty thousand feet, but even there the heat, as they sped across the frontier into enemy territory, was terrific.
Anxiously he watched his revs and prayed for his motor to hold up. If it stopped now, they were cooked!
The st.u.r.dy engine purred on with scarcely a flutter, however, and soon they were behind the lines, in a region pitted with the smoldering fires of towns and cities.
It made them shudder, it presented such an appalling panorama of ruin.
But at the same time, it strengthened their hope. For very few flares of orange gleamed now among the red. The main forces of the invader were at the front. That meant there should be a safe place to land somewhere.
An hour later, some miles beyond that weird gla.s.s citadel that had been their objective, they found a wide stretch of empty desert, and there Jim brought the little plane down to a faultless landing, just as dawn was lightening the east.
Stepping out, he drew a deep breath of relief. For had he crashed, or smashed that fragile tube, all would have been in vain.
"Well, here we are!" he exclaimed, grimly cheerful, as Professor Wentworth stepped out after him. "Now let's--"
Then he broke off, horrified, as he saw another figure follow the professor from the cabin.
"Joan!" he gasped.
"Present!" she replied.
"But, my daughter!" the professor's voice broke in. "My dear child!" A sob shook him. "Why, why, this is--"
"Please don't let's talk about it!" she begged, giving his arm a little pat. "I'm here and it can't be helped now. I was only afraid you'd find me before it was too late and take me back."
Then, edging over to Jim and slipping her arm in his, she murmured: