Part 24 (2/2)
Quest could find no words. With Philip's head he nodded meekly. Just then the car stopped and the chauffeur threw open the door.
Dr. Nukharin flew high despite the ma.s.ses of c.u.mulus cloud which frequently reduced visibility to zero. He had merely to follow the rim of the lake to his destination, and an occasional glimpse of the water was sufficient to hold him on his course.
In the back seat hunched Philip, his body crumbling under the weight of Quest's despair. For hours the latter had gone on vaguely, hoping somehow to thwart this horrible transaction that was rus.h.i.+ng the world to its doom, thinking he might grow strong enough to wrench himself free and so liberate Philip from the dominance of his conscienceless brother. Even though such a move should leave his own will forever separate from his body, he was ready and anxious to make the sacrifice.
Suddenly the crash of the motor ceased and Nukharin banked the s.h.i.+p up in a spiral glide. Quest had never been in the air before, and the long whirl down into the darkness on this devil's errand was to him as eery as a ride to perdition in a white-hot projectile.
His mind seemed to trail out in a great nebular helix behind the descending s.h.i.+p. He felt that he had suddenly crossed some cosmic meridian into a new plane of existence, where he was changed to a gas, yet continued capable of thought. But even here his obsession remained the same. Keane Clason-trickster, traitor, arch-criminal-must be destroyed!
”I'll get him!” vowed Quest in words that were no less real for being soundless. ”I'll trail him to the end of s.p.a.ce and bring him to account!”
Then wheels touched earth and the cold, bare facts of his destiny rushed in on him with redoubled force. He felt the nearness of his Control seconds before he perceived him through the eyes of Philip. With a sensation like a stab he realized that now he must speak, play his part, be any bloodless hypocrite that Keane Clason chose to make him. The silent order surged down the conduits promptly enough; he responded as an automaton obeys the pressure of a b.u.t.ton.
”Well, Doctor,” chuckled Philip with a cunning leer, ”here's the magic tower, just as I promised you. We'll run it up in a jiffy. This test is going to be so vivid and conclusive that not even a hard-headed skeptic like you can raise a question.”
”You misunderstand me,” returned Nukharin in an injured tone. ”So far as I am concerned this procedure is only a formality, but it is none the less necessary. Suppose that I should spend a hundred million of my government's money and the purchase prove worthless? You may guess that my folly would cost me dear.”
Keane Clason was waiting on the platform of a giant truck, the motor of which was idling. All the apparatus was in readiness except that the three demountable sections of the tower had yet to be run up into position.
”One of the beauties of the D. P.,” said Philip gleefully to the Doctor, while Keane smiled slyly to himself, ”is that this pint-size dynamo provides all the current needed for the test. We pick the power for our radio right out of the air by means of a wave trap and mensurator invented by this bright little brother of mine,” and he clapped Keane patronizingly on the back.
”Yes, ah-Dr. Nukharin,” ventured Keane timidly, and at that moment Quest experienced the raging red hatred that causes men to murder. ”Philip has promised me that you will employ this device only as a threat to hold the ambitions of the larger powers in check.”
”Of course, of course!” replied the Doctor heartily. ”But now let's have the test. Even at night I'm not too fond of these open-air performances.”
The height of the tower as they ran the upper sections into place was forty feet. When all connections had been inspected, first by Keane, then by Philip, the former led Nukharin aloft.
As the climax of his plot approached, Keane's excitement bordered on a cataleptic state, hints of which came confusedly through the conduits to Quest. With a peculiar satisfaction he felt that Keane was suffering. The inventor's jaws became rigid, as though his blood had changed to liquid air and frozen him, and he had difficulty in controlling the movements of his arms.
Now he was afraid! Genuinely afraid, this time. Quest caught the impulse too clearly to doubt its meaning. This was no sham! Keane was doubting his own machine, fearing that in the crisis some element in the finely calculated mechanism might fail to operate, thus cheating him of the blood-money on which his heart was set. Then he was speaking, and even Nukharin noticed the tremor in his voice:
”These nine tubes, which look like a row of gun barrels, are molded from silicon paste. Each shoots a beam of invisible light and a radio dart of precisely the same wave length. The destructive effect depends chiefly upon this exactness of synchronization.”
”A question occurs to me,” said the Doctor: ”will others be able to manipulate the machine as successfully as you can?”
”It's fool-proof,” chattered Keane, almost losing control of his voice, ”absolutely fool-proof. Surely you have scientists in your country who can follow written directions! Nothing more is necessary.”
”Very well,” shrugged Nukharin. ”I only want to be sure that no unforeseen difficulties may arise in an emergency.”
”See this range-setter?” continued Keane. ”The thread on the vertical shaft enables us not only to limit the range by angling the beams into the ground, but it can also be disengaged and the Projector revolved in a flat circle for maximum ranges.”
”And is there no danger of the machine going wrong-of destroying itself and us?” suggested Nukharin.
”None whatever, Doctor. There is no explosive force and no great electrical voltage involved. As long as we stand back of the muzzles we have nothing to fear.
”Now look. I have set the micrometer at three hundred yards, which will just about cover the stretch between ourselves and the lake. I will cut a swath for you-and every bush, every blade of gra.s.s, every insect in this swath will be withered to ash in the twinkling of an eye. The destruction will be absolute.”
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