Undersea Fleet
Page 13
The blue-gleaming forest turned gray-black and whirled about me.
I could see the detail of overlapping scales on the armored neck of the saurian, the enormous black claws that tipped its great oarlike limbs.
The gigantic head came down through the torn strands of shining weed, and I thought I had come to my last port…
The grayness turned black. The blackness spun and roared around me.
I was unconscious, passed out cold.
16
Hermit of the Tonga Trench
I woke up with the memory of a dream—huge, hideous lizard things, through the sea, with strange mermaids riding their backs and directing them with goads.
Fantastic! But even more fantastic was that I woke up at all!
fantastic swimming I was lying on my back on a canvas cot, in a little metal-walled room. Someone had opened the helmet of my pressure suit, and fresh air was in my lungs!
I struggled up and looked about me.
Roger Fairfane lay on one side of me, Bob Eskow on the other. Both were still unconscious.
There was a pressure port in the wall of the room, and through it I could see a lock, filled with water under pressure. I could see something moving inside the lock—something that looked familiar, but strange at the same time.
It was both strange and familiar! The strange sea-girl, she was there! She had been no dream of oxygen starvation, but real flesh and blood, for now I saw her, pearl-eyed like the strange man named Joe Trencher…but with human worry and warm compassion on her face as she struggled to carry pressure-suited figures into the lock.
One—two—three! There were three of them, weakly stirring.
It was—it had to be—Gideon, Laddy and David. She had saved us all.
And behind her loomed the hulk of something strange and deadly—but she showed no fear. It was the gaping triangular face of the saurian.
As I watched, she turned about with an eel-like wriggle and slapped the monster familiarly on its horny nose. Not a blow in anger—but a caress, almost, as a rider might pat the muzzle of a faithful horse.
It was true, what David had said: The saurians were domesticated. The sea-creatures he called amphibians truly rode them, truly used them as beasts of burden.
The sea-girl left the saurian and swam inside. I saw her at the glowing dials of a control panel.
The great doors swung shut, closing out the huge, inquisitive saurian face. I saw the doors glow suddenly with edenite film.
Pumps began to labor and chug.
Floodlights came on.
In a moment the girl was standing on the wet floor of the lock, trying to tug at the pressure-suited figures of my friends toward the inner gate.
Bob Eskow twisted and turned and cried out sharply: “Diatom! Diatom to radiolarian. The molluscans are—”
He opened his eyes and gazed at me. For a moment he hardly recognized me.
Then he smiled. “I—I thought we were goners, Jim. Are you sure we’re here?”
I slapped his pressure-suited shoulder. “We’re here. This young lady and her friend, the dinosaur—they brought us to Craken’s dome!”
David was already standing, stripping off his pressure suit. He nodded gravely. “Thank Maeva.” He nodded to the girl, standing wide-eyed and silent, watching us. “If Maeva hadn’t come along—But Maeva and I have always been friends.”
The girl spoke. It was queer, hearing human speech from what I still couldn’t help thinking of as a mermaid! But her voice was soft and musical as she said: “Please, David. Don’t waste time. My people know you are here.” She glanced at the lock port anxiously, as though she was expecting it to burst open, with a horde of amphibians or flame-breathing saurians charging through. “As we brought you to the dome, Old Ironsides and I, I saw another saurian with a rider watching us. Let us go to your father—”
David said sharply: “She’s right. Come on!”
We were all of us conscious again. David and Gideon had never really passed out from the lack of oxygen, but they had been so weak that it was nearly the same thing. Without Maeva to help them, and the saurian she called “Old Ironsides” to bear them on its broad, scaly back, they would have been as dead as the rest of us.
Strange girl! Her skin was smooth and brown, her short-cut hair black. The pearly eyes, which on Joe Trencher had seemed empty and grim, on her seemed cool and gentle; they gave her face an expression of sadness, of wistfulness.
I thought that she was beautiful.
She was smiling at David, even in the urgency of that moment. I saw her hands flashing through a series of complicated motions—and realized that she was urging him on, to hurry to his father, in some sign language of the Deep that was more natural to her than speech.
Roger caught David’s shoulder roughly and hauled him aside. He hissed, so that Maeva couldn’t hear: “There aren’t any mermaids! What—what sort of monster is she?”
David said angrily: “Monster? She’s as human as you! She is one of the amphibians—like Joe Trencher, but one we can trust to be on our side. Her ancestors were the Polynesian islanders my father found trapped under the sea.”
“But—but she’s a fish, Craken! She breathes water! It isn’t human!”
David’s face stiffened, and for a moment I thought there might be trouble. He was furious.
But he calmed himself. Struggling for control—evidently this sea-girl meant something to him!—he said: “Come on! Let’s find my father!”
We raced through the dome, along slippery steel hills, past rooms that, in the glimpse we caught as we passed, seemed like ancient chambers from a Sultan’s palace, costly and beautiful and—falling into decay.
Fantastic place! A sub-sea dome is a fearfully expensive thing to construct—expensive not only of money, but of time and materials and human lives. There were hundreds upon hundreds of them scattered across the floors of the sea, true—but very few were those which were owned by a single man.
And to build one, as David Craken’s father had built this, in secrecy, with only the help of a few technicians sworn to silence and the manual labor of the amphibians and the saurians—it was incredible!
I counted five levels below the topmost bulge of the dome—five levels packed with living quarters and recreation areas, with shops and docks and storage space, with a monster nuclear reactor chuckling away as it made the power to run the dome and keep the sea’s might harmlessly away. There were rooms, a dozen of them or more, that looked like laboratories. We crossed through one that was lined with enormous vats, filled with the macerated remains of stalks of the strange, glowing weed that grew in the Trench outside. It was glowing only fitfully, fading almost into extinction here in the atmosphere; and the musty reek that rose from those vats nearly strangled poor Maeva—who was having a bad enough time out of the water anyway—and made the rest of us quicken our steps.
“Dad’s experiments,” David said briefly. “He’s been trying to find the secret of the weed. He’s tried everything—macerated them, dissolved them in acids, treated them with solvents, burned them, centrifuged them. Some day—” He glanced around at the benches of glassware, the bubbling beakers that reeked of acid, the racks of test tubes and distilling apparatus.
“Some day things will be different,” David finished in an altered tone. “But now we have no time for this. Come on!”
We came to the topmost chamber of all.
There was no sign of David’s father.
David said worriedly: “Maeva, I can’t understand it! Where can he be?”
The sea-girl said, in her voice which was soft and liquid and occasionally gasping for breath: “He isn’t well, David. He—he is not of the sea. Perhaps he is asleep.” She touched David gently with her hand—and I saw with a fresh shock that the fingers were ever so slightly webbed. “You must take him up to the surface, David,” she said, panting. “Or else I think he will die.”
“I have to find him first!” David said worriedly. He cast
about him, staring. We were in a room—once, it seemed, a luxurious salon. It was walled with books, thousands of them, stacked in shelves to the ceiling—titles of science and philosophy mixed helter-skelter with blood-and-thunder tales of danger and excitement. There were long, high shelves of portfolios of art works—left by David’s mother when she passed away, I supposed, for they were gray with dust.
The room was now cluttered with more of the same tangle of scientific equipment we had seen below, as though the man who owned the dome had no interest left in life but his scientific researches. There were unpacked crates of glassware and reagents, with labels that showed he had bought them in Marinia, consignment tags that were addressed to a hundred fictitious names, none to himself. There was a cobalt “bomb” encased in tons of lead. A new electric autoclave that he had found no space for below. A big hydraulic press that could create experimental pressures a hundred times higher than those in the Deep outside. Test tubes and hypodermic needles and half-emptied bottles that Craken had labeled in hieroglyphics of his own.
The windows were the strangest thing in the room. They were wide picture windows, draped and curtained tastefully.
And the view in them was—rolling landscapes!
Outside those windows, four miles down, one saw spruce trees and tall pines, green mountain meadows and grassy foothills, far-off peaks that were white with snow!
I stared at them incredulously. David glanced at me, then half-smiled. “Stereoscapes,” he said carelessly, his eyes roaming about, his mind far away. “They were formy mother. She came from Colorado, and always she longed for the dry land and the mountains of her home…”
Maeva’s voice came imploringly: “David! We must hurry.”
He said, worriedly, “I don’t know what to do, Maeva! I suppose the best thing is for us to fan out and search the dome. But—”
We never heard the end of that sentence.
There was a sudden scratching sound that seemed to permeate the dome. Then a blare of noise, from dozens of concealed loudspeakers.
The mechanical voice of an electric watchman roared: “Attention! Attention! The dome is under attack! Attention, attention! The dome is under attack!”
Roger said in a panicky voice: “David, let’s do something! Forget your father. The amphibians, they’re attacking and—”
But David wasn’t listening to him.
David was staring, across the room, toward a clutter of equipment and gear that nearly filled one corner.
“Dad!” he cried.
We all whirled.
There, in the corner, an old man, wasted and gaunt, was sitting up, propping himself on a cot. He had been out of sight behind the tangled junk that surrounded him.
The warning of the electronic watchman had waked him.
He was sitting up, calm as can be, his eyes remote but friendly, his expression unperturbed. He wore a little beard—once dapper, now scraggly and gray.
“Why, David,” he said. “I’ve been wondering where you were. How nice that you’ve brought some friends to visit us.
17
Craken of the Sea-Mount
We looked at him, and then at each other. The same thought was in all our minds, I could see it in the eyes of David and the sea-girl, reflected on the faces of the others.
Jason Craken’s mind was going.
He beamed at us pleasantly. “Welcome,” he said. “Welcome to you all.”
Once he had been a powerful man. I could see that, from the size of his bones and the lean muscles that he had left. But he was wasted now, and gaunt. His skin hung loose, and it was mottled with a queer greenish stain. His gray hair needed cutting, and the beard was a tangle. There was almost no trace left of the dandy my uncle had described.
He had been sleeping in his laboratory smock—once white, now wrinkled and stained. He glanced down at it and chuckled.
He said ruefully, “I was not expecting guests, as you. can see. I do apologize to you. I dislike greeting my son’s guests in so unkempt an array. But my experiments, gentlemen, my experiments take all too much of my time. One has not enough hours in the day for all the many—”
David stepped over to him. He said gravely, “Father. Why don’t you rest a bit? I’ll show the—the guests around the dome.”
And all this time the robot watchman was howling: Attention, attention, attention!
David signaled to us and we left the room quietly. In a moment he joined us. “He’ll be all right,” he said. “Now—let’s go to the conn room!”
The conn room was a tiny chamber at the base of the dome, ringed by televisor screens, where a picture of the sea-floor all about the dome was in mosiac patches.
There was nothing in sight.
David nodded worriedly. “Not yet,” he commented. “I thought not. The robot watchman—it is set to warn of approaching sub-sea vessels, but it has a considerable range. They won’t be in sight for a while yet.”
“They?” I demanded.
David shrugged. “I don’t know if there will be more than one. The Killer Whale, perhaps—but the amphibians had another sea-car that I know of, the one they took from me. How many besides that I don’t know.”
Gideon said softly, his brow furrowed: “Bad luck, I think. I’d hoped that they would believe we had all gone up with the Dolphin when the reactor exploded.”
The sea-girl shook her head. “I told you,” she reminded him, gasping. “We were seen. I—I am sorry, David, that I let them see me, but— “
“Maeva! Don’t apologize. You saved our lives!” David wrung her hand. He looked thoughtfully at the screens, then nodded.
“I’ve got to look after my father,” he said. “Jim, will you come with me? The rest of you—it would be better if you stayed here, kept an eye on the screens.”
Gideon nodded. “Fine,” he agreed, in his gentle voice. “Then—that’s a Mark XIX fire-control director I see there? And a turret gun, I suppose? Yes. Then we can fight them off, if need be, right from here. I’ve handled the Mark XIX before and—”
David interrupted him.
“I don’t think you can do much with this one,” he said.
Gideon looked at him thoughtfully. “And why not?” he asked after a moment.
David said: “It’s broken, Gideon. The amphibians destroyed the circuits when they rebelled against my father. If they do attack—we have no weapons to fight them with.”
We left them behind us, and I must say the heart was out of me. Nothing to fight with! Not even a sea-car to escape in, now!
But Gideon was already at work before we left the fire-control room, stripping down the circuit-junction mains, checking the ruined connections. It was very unlikely that he could repair the gun. But Gideon had done some very unlikely things before.
David’s father was asleep again when we came back to him. David woke him gently.
He rubbed his eyes and blinked at David.
This time there was none of that absent serenity with which he had greeted us before. He seemed to remember what was going on about him—and he seemed to be in despair.
“David,” he said. “David—”
He shook himself and stood up.
He stumbled weakly to a laboratory, filled a little glass beaker out of a bottle of colorless fluid and gulped it down.
He came back to us, smiling and walking more steadily.
“Sit down,” he said, “sit down.” He shoved piles of books off a couple of chairs. “I had given you up, David. It is good to see you.”
David Craken hurried to find another chair for the old man, but he ignored it. He sat down on the edge of the creaking cot and ran his hands through his thinning hair.
David said: “Dad, you’re sick!”
Jason Craken shrugged. “A few unfortunate reactions.” He glanced absently at the strange green blotches on his hands. “I suppose I’ve been my own guinea pig a few times too many. But I’m strong enough, David. Strong enough—as Joe Trencher will find—to take
back what belongs to me!”
His eyes were hollowed and bloodshot, yet strangely intense with a light that came from fever—or madness, I thought. He beckoned to us with his gnarled, lean hand.
David said: “Dad—we’re being attacked! Didn’t you know that? The robot warning came ten minutes ago.”
Jason Craken shook his head impatiently. He made a careless gesture, as though he was brushing the attackers away. “There have been many attacks,” he boomed, “but I am still here. And I will stay here while I live. And when I am gone—you shall stay after me, David.”
He stood up, swaying slightly, and walked over to the laboratory bench once more for another beaker of the colorless fluid. Whatever it was, it seemed to put new life into him. He said strongly: “Joe Trencher will learn! I’ll conquer him as we’ve conquered the saurians, David!” He came back and sat beside us, a scarecrow emperor with that rumpled cot for a throne. He turned to me. “Jim Eden,” he said, “I welcome you to Tonga Trench. I never thought I would need the help your uncle promised, so many years ago. But I never thought that Trencher and his people would turn against me!”
He seemed to be both raging with fury and morbidly depressed. “Trencher!” he spat. “I assure you, Jim Eden, that without my help the amphibians would still be living the life of animals! That was how I found them—trapped in their own submerged caves. If I were an egotist, I could say that I created them, and it would be near to the truth. Yet—they are ungrateful! They have turned against me! They and the saurians, I must crush them, show them who is the master—”
He broke off suddenly as his voice reached a crescendo. For a moment he sat there, staring at us wildly.
David went to him, patted him and soothed him, calmed him down. It was hard to tell there, for a moment, which was the parent and which the child.
But one thing I knew.
David Craken’s father was nearly mad!
Yet—he could talk as sanely as anyone in the world, between attacks of his raging obsession.