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| author | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-02-20 07:22:16 -0800 |
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| committer | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-02-20 07:22:16 -0800 |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7b82bc --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +*.txt text eol=lf +*.htm text eol=lf +*.html text eol=lf +*.md text eol=lf diff --git a/75427-0.txt b/75427-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3013bc5 --- /dev/null +++ b/75427-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,802 @@ + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75427 *** + + + + + + The Incredible Slingshot Bombs + + By ROBERT MOORE WILLIAMS + + It was only a slingshot, but it hurled more + death than a thousand-pound bomb. Where did + Tommy Sonofagun get those deadly pellets? + + [Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from + Amazing Stories May 1942. + Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that + the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.] + + +[Illustration: Tommy Sonofagun drew back the sling and let fly with a +pellet.] + + +"You go over to the other ridge," the sheriff said to the two deputies. +"If he tries to get out that way, stop him. But remember, we want him +alive, _if we can get him that way_." + +I only half heard what the sheriff said. My attention was fully +occupied by the dogs down in Ten Mile Valley below us. I couldn't see +them but I could hear them bugling down there in the cedar thickets. +Baying slowly and mournfully, they were searching for the lost trail. A +creek ran down the middle of the valley. Probably Tommy Sonofagun had +crossed the creek and thrown the bloodhounds off his trail. Tommy might +be a moron but he had enough animal cunning to lose a pack of hounds +that were after him. + +His name wasn't really Tommy Sonofagun. It was Tommy Britten, but the +loafers around Brock's Tavern had taught him to say that his name was +Tommy Sonofagun. _They_ thought this was funny. + +The sheriff and I watched the two deputies tramp down into Ten Mile +Valley, but we lost sight of them before they reached the farther +ridge. The steel towers of an electric high-line ran along this ridge +for a couple of miles, then dipped down and crossed the valley. The +transmission line carried current from the big dam about twenty miles +to the north. When the war first started, there was some fear that +enemy agents might sabotage this high-line and the sheriff had spent +most of his time out in the hills guarding it. + +The sheriff was a big, raw-boned mountaineer by the name of Tim +Hoskins. He wore store clothes like they were overalls, he was long and +lank, and if you took one look at him, you had the instant impression +he had just enough sense to come in out of the rain, and no more. If +you took a second look and noticed the slow cautious way he talked and +the slow but damned sure way he moved, and especially if you looked at +his eyes, which never faltered from the gaze of any man, you would be +likely to decide you were damned glad you lived in a country where they +had sheriffs like this. + +"What do you make of it, sheriff?" I asked. + +He was carrying his left arm in a bloody sling. Before he answered he +adjusted the sling so his arm hung a little easier. Then he shook his +head. "I don't know, Ben. I just don't know." + +I'm Ben Hopper, and for the past four years I've been owner and +publisher of the Summit Press. I'm also editor of this paper, +advertising manager, circulation manager, business manager, proof +reader, and copy boy. The Press is strictly a one man country paper, +but it prints the news, which was why I was out here in the hills. +There was news out here. Maybe it was mighty big news, too. + + * * * * * + +I was going to ask some more questions but the clatter of an +over-worked motor interrupted me and I turned in time to see a car +banging up the gravel road toward us. It was a gray Ford coupe and I +needed only one glance to recognize it and to know who was driving it. +Ellen Briscoe. Uncle Sam sent her out here to try to teach the people +on the hill farms how to keep from starving to death. The Relief Lady, +the mountaineers called her. She was coming up the hill road like she +didn't know there was any such thing as tire rationing. Steam popped +out of the radiator as the car reached us. She was out of it almost +before it stopped rolling. + +"Hello, Ben," she said to me. + +"Ellen, you got no business being here," I protested. + +She ignored me. She had business wherever she wanted to be, which was +anywhere anybody was in trouble. "Sheriff, what's this all about?" she +demanded. + +Hoskins scraped a toe against the rocky ground. "I--I don't know for +sure, Miss Ellen," he said. + +"I heard about it in Summit," she said. "And I came right up here. They +told me in Summit that you had organized a posse and gone after Tommy. +Sheriff, what has Tommy done?" + +Those were the words she used. The tone of her voice said more than the +words. + +The sheriff wore out a lot of shoe leather before he answered. "Sim +Brock swore out a warrant," he said at last. "I don't have any choice +about serving it." + +"Sim Brock swore out a warrant, did he?" Fire flashed from her eyes. +"Don't you know those loafers down at the roadhouse Brock runs are +always teasing Tommy?" + +"I know, Miss Ellen," the sheriff said uncomfortably. + +"Were they teasing him and did he strike at one of them? Is that why +you've got this posse after Tommy?" + +"No," the sheriff said. "They might have been teasing him before it +happened but I don't know that they were. The warrant charged Tommy +with blowing up Brock's barn." + +"Blowing up his barn!" + +"That was the way Brock swore out the warrant." + +"And you believed Sim Brock?" Ellen demanded. "Don't you know he's a +liar and a no-good scoundrel. Don't you know that nobody can believe +anything Brock says?" + +"Yes," the sheriff slowly said. "But the barn was blown up. I went to +look. I didn't put any faith in what Brock said, but the warrant had +been sworn out and I had to act. So I went looking for Tommy--" + +"With a gun in your hand, I suppose?" she said sharply. + + * * * * * + +He looked at her then, just glanced up, but his gaze didn't falter. +"You know better than that, Miss Ellen," he said. + +She flushed. Her temper had been running away with her and she knew it. +"I'm sorry," she said. "What happened?" + +"I didn't have much trouble finding Tommy," the sheriff explained. "He +was crossing a field when I spotted him. I stopped my car and walked +toward him--_and he took a shot at me_." + +Down in this country you may do a little private feuding with your +neighbors but there is one thing you don't do. You don't shoot at the +sheriff. + +"He shot at you!" Ellen gasped. "Where did he get a gun?" + +"He didn't have a gun." + +Ellen's face showed confusion. "Then how did he shoot at you?" she +demanded. + +"With that slingshot he always carries," the sheriff said. + +Tommy's favorite weapon, in fact his only weapon, was a rubber +slingshot. A pocket full of pebbles and a sling was all he needed to be +happy. + +"Sheriff," Ellen's voice was hot again. "Just because he shot at you +with a sling is no reason why you should call out a posse and run him +down like a mad dog?" + +"No," the sheriff admitted. "Especially since he didn't hit me." + +"He didn't hit you! And you--" + +"He hit my car," the sheriff said. + +Ellen's face blazed with anger. "So what? A few more nicks in that +rattle-trap of yours won't make any difference." + +"No, Miss Ellen," the sheriff said, his voice dry and tense. "Not any +more." + +"Not any more! _What are you talking about?_" + +"Not any car any more," the sheriff said. "It blew up." + +"Blew up!" the girl gasped. + +"Sky high," the sheriff said. "Chunks of the motor landed a quarter of +a mile away. Piece of hot metal hit me--" He looked down at the bloody +sling holding his arm. "That's where I got this." + +I had already seen what was left of his car, which was mostly a hole +in the ground. A case of dynamite wouldn't have blown it into smaller +pieces. + +"I got two reasons for wanting to catch Tommy," the sheriff continued. +"First, I got a warrant that says I must arrest him. Second, I want to +look at those pebbles he's shooting out of that slingshot." + + * * * * * + +You can damned well bet he wanted to look at those pebbles! So did I. +If a pebble small enough to be shot out of a sling could blow up a car, +it was a mighty powerful and mighty important chunk of rock. Think how +big an explosion a pebble as big as a baseball would make! Think how +many baseballs could be carried in a bomber! + +_What was Tommy Sonofagun shooting in his sling?_ + +"I just can't believe it," Ellen said, when she had recovered from her +surprise. "Tommy didn't cause those explosions. Your car just happened +to blow up at that moment. Tommy didn't do it. He couldn't have done +it. It's--it's impossible." + +The sheriff didn't argue with her and neither did I. We were both +watching what was happening down in Ten Mile Valley. Those bloodhounds, +after being baffled for a long time, had suddenly hit a hot trail. + +Then Tommy appeared. He dashed across a glade in the cedar thickets, +running half bent over like some ungainly animal. He was so far away he +was just a little black dot but I saw him look back over his shoulder +at the dogs. + +They were right behind him. I heard them break into an excited bugling +as they saw their prey and started running by sight instead of by scent. + +Tommy frantically ran into the cedars. + +The dogs raced across the glade after him. There were four of them, +running in a bunch, and giving tongue as they ran. + +_They vanished in a puff of white light._ + +It happened almost too fast for the mind to grasp it. One second four +bloodhounds were running across the glade, the next second there was an +intense puff of light, the third second the whole glade seemed to take +wings and fly up into the air, the fourth second-- + +_Boom!_ + +The sound of the explosion reached us. A ball of smoke leaped upward +and the cedar trees bent over in a blast of air. In the silence that +followed came the faint clatter of stones falling back to the ground. +There wasn't another bark from those dogs. There weren't any dogs left +to do any barking. + + * * * * * + +The sheriff's face turned a pasty gray. I believe from the bottom of my +heart that he is scared of nothing, that he doesn't know the meaning +of fear, but when that explosion came his face turned gray. He glanced +once at Ellen as if he was asking her if this confirmed the wisdom of +his decision to send a posse after Tommy Sonofagun. So far as I was +concerned, it did. Then he started walking away. + +"Where are we going?" I called after him. + +"Down there," he said, nodding toward the glade where the explosion had +taken place. "I reckon maybe I better get Tommy, if I can." + +Ellen and I stayed on top of the ridge and watched. Ellen hadn't spoken +a word since the explosion but from the way she was holding on to my +arm, I knew how scared she was. I could feel her tremble. + +The sheriff vanished among the cedars down below but I knew he was +down there somewhere stalking Tommy Sonofagun. I also knew that other +deputies were moving up from below while still another group had +probably cut across the valley up above. A grim trap was closing. + +"What can it possibly mean?" Ellen whispered. + +"It means you had better go home," I answered. + +She wouldn't go. She was the Relief Lady and Tommy was somebody who +might need help. + +It was already late in the afternoon. We stayed there on top of the +ridge while darkness fell and waited for--anything. I shivered every +time I thought of the explosion that had killed those four dogs. A hand +grenade would not have caused so much destruction. There wasn't any +chance of coincidence either. Those dogs had been after Tommy and he +had destroyed them. + +"Ben," said Ellen suddenly. "We've got to find Tommy." + +"Huh?" Even the idea startled me. + +"We've got to find him before the posse does. Those men are scared and +they won't take any chances with him. Even the sheriff is scared. If +they find Tommy and he tries to run--and that's what he will try to +do--they'll shoot him. Ben, we've got to find him first, to save his +life." + +It took some time for this to sink in. And when it did sink in, I +didn't like it. I tried to laugh it off. "A fine chance we have of +finding him when this posse can't." + +"I can find him. I know where he is." + +"What?" + +"He has a cave about a mile from here. Every time he gets in trouble he +runs there and hides. That's where he was going when those dogs almost +caught him, to his cave. If we go there, we're almost certain to find +him." + +"And get ourselves blown into mince-meat like those dogs!" I protested. + +"He won't--do anything to me. He knows me. I'm his friend." + +"Nuts, baby. We're not going." + +"All right," she said defiantly. "I'll go alone." She started walking +away. + +"All right," I groaned. "I'll go with you. But you're taking an unfair +advantage of me, and I know it." + + * * * * * + +The cave was in a ravine that led off from Ten Mile Valley. By the time +we reached the place the moon was up but there wasn't much light down +in the bottom of the ravine. Clumps of cedars grew everywhere, making +dark blotches behind which anything might be lurking. A darker blotch +was the mouth of the cave. + +"T--Tommy," Ellen called. + +There was no answer. I stood there in the darkness and wished to hell I +was back in my office setting this story in type. Ellen was clinging to +me so hard she was about to pull my arm off. + +A shadow seemed to move in the mouth of the cave. + +"Tommy," Ellen said quickly. "Don't be afraid. We've brought you some +candy, Tommy. Don't you want some candy?" + +Silence. A wind went whispering through the cedars, setting my teeth to +chattering. + +"We have some candy, Tommy?" + +There was a tiny creak, as of somebody shifting his weight. It came +from the cave. I did not in the least doubt but that Tommy Sonofagun +was standing there looking out at us, slingshot in hand, trying to make +up his poor mind if we were after him. At this moment my memory chose +to remind me of what had happened to those bloodhounds. They had been +after him too. Anything that was after him he would shoot at. + +Cold sweat was dripping from under my arms and running down my body. + +"Why don't you come down and get the candy we brought you?" Ellen asked. + +"Scared," a dull, choked voice said from the mouth of the cave. + +Tommy was there all right. He was watching us. He wanted candy. But he +was scared. + +He wasn't a tenth as scared as I was! Dillinger with a pistol would not +have been near as dangerous as this half man who lurked in the cave +mouth. You could talk to Dillinger. He wouldn't shoot without a reason. +You could talk to Tommy but he wouldn't understand. + +"You needn't be scared," Ellen said. "We won't hurt you. Don't you +remember all the candy I've brought you? Don't you remember that new +pair of overalls I brought you last month? Weren't they fine overalls, +Tommy?" + +"Uh-huh. Nice. Wearin' 'em now." He didn't sound quite so hostile. + +"Come and get the candy," Ellen said, opening her purse. + + * * * * * + +It took her five minutes to get him down out of that cave. Those were +five minutes of hell for me. Ellen's voice showed no trace of concern, +no fear, no worry. Listening to her, you would have thought she hadn't +a care in the world. Only the way she was holding on to my arm showed +me how scared she was. + +"Here," she said, handing him a candy bar. + +He ate it, paper cover, tin foil, and all. He didn't look at me. He saw +me all right but he didn't trust me so he didn't glance in my direction. + +"How did you make the big noises?" Ellen quietly asked. + +"Huh? Big noises?" + +He sounded scared again. I took a firm grip on a lungful of air and +prepared to hold on to it. + +"The big booms," Ellen said. "You know, like firecrackers, only lots +louder. They sure were fine noises." + +"You like 'em, huh? Want hear more big noises, huh? Fourth of July +noises, huh?" + +My eyes had become accustomed to the darkness and I saw him lift his +arms and stretch his slingshot rubbers. "Want more noises, huh?" he +asked proudly. + +"Not now, Tommy," Ellen said quickly, a sudden catch in her voice. "Let +me see one of the firecrackers that make the big noises." + +"Huh?" He lowered his arms but he held the sling ready. His grunt was +full of suspicion. + +"I'll give you another candy bar for one of your firecrackers," Ellen +said quickly. She opened her purse and I heard the rattle of waxed +paper. "I'll trade you a candy bar for a firecracker. You want another +candy bar, don't you, Tommy? Remember how good that last candy bar was?" + +He remembered all right. His eyes never left the bar of chocolate she +was holding toward him. + +I went right on holding my breath. + +"Okay," he said suddenly. "Trade." He took something out of the pocket +of his sling, dropped it in Ellen's hand, grabbed the candy bar, and +started eating. + +"Flashlight," Ellen whispered to me. To Tommy she said, "We're going +to turn on a flashlight so we can look at the firecracker. It's a good +candy bar, isn't it, Tommy?" + +My hands were shaking so badly I could barely hold the light. Ellen was +holding the firecracker in the palm of her hand. I took one look at it, +and I didn't believe my eyes. + +It was about the size of a big pea. It wasn't as big as a grape. It +looked like a small round pebble. + +This was the bomb that had caused those terrific explosions! + +"Is this what made the big noises?" Ellen asked. + +"Sure," Tommy said, stopping eating long enough to talk. "Make big +boom. Want more? Got plenty." He reached into a pocket of his overalls +and brought out a handful. "Good shootin' rocks," he said. + + * * * * * + +I just didn't believe it. There are mental limits beyond which the mind +refuses to function. It was impossible to think that such a tiny pellet +could cause so much destruction. + +I took Tommy's sling, put the pellet in the pocket, stretched the +rubbers as far as they would go, and released them. I had to see with +my own eyes, I had to know, I had to be sure. + +I damned well found out! Although the explosion took place at least +seventy-five yards away, it blew me off my feet. A great bulge of flame +leaped into the sky and the heavens roared with the thunder of the +sound. + +Tommy jumped up and down in excitement. "Big noise! Goody, goody! Want +more booms?" + +"N--nnn--no," I stuttered, picking myself up from the ground. + +"Ben, you idiot!" Ellen snapped. "The sheriff will hear that. No, +Tommy, no more booms right now. Where did you get those firecrackers, +Tommy? Where did you get them?" + +Firecrackers, hell! Those things were the mightiest explosive bombs for +their weight ever used on earth! In violence they backed TNT right off +the map. Nitroglycerin was not a tenth as powerful. If a pellet that +weighed a fraction of an ounce could cause such an explosion, how big +an explosion would a hundred-pound bomb make? + +One bomber could sneak in out of the clouds and smash a city! + +One bomb would do the job! + +_Where had Tommy Sonofagun gotten those round pebbles that exploded +with such violence?_ + +"Candy?" he said questioningly. "More candy?" + +"I'll give you a barrel of candy if you will show us where you got +these things!" I said. I was scared sick. I was remembering Pearl +Harbor, the _Prince of Wales_, and the _Repulse_. Had bombs such as +these sent those two gallant ships to the bottom? + +If this had happened, how had similar bombs gotten here to the heart +of America? Where were these round pebbles coming from? Obviously +Tommy had found them somewhere, but _where_? Who had made them? + +"A barrel of candy!" Tommy gasped. "G--gosh!" + + * * * * * + +Grabbing his slingshot from the ground where I had dropped it, he +started off, motioning us to follow him. Stumbling, following him as +best we could, he led us straight to one of the transmission line +towers! + +"It was attempted sabotage!" I gasped. "Somebody tried to blow up the +high-line but their bombs didn't explode. Tommy found their explosives!" + +This was a reasonable guess. If one of these big steel towers went +down, a lot of defense industries that were dependent upon the juice +flowing through the cables overhead, would have to shut down. + +"Got 'em right here," Tommy said. + +He shambled toward the legs of the tower, which formed an arch +overhead. He was holding one of Ellen's hands and I was holding the +other. We were strung out in a line. I could hear current singing in +the transmission line as he went under the arch formed by the legs of +the tower. It was a high, thin, wailing sound, and it meant that juice +was leaking somewhere. + +He stepped through the arch, and vanished. + +Ellen, following a step behind him, vanished. + +I took another step, which brought me under the arch, _and the tower +vanished_! + +One second it was there over my head, a steel lattice climbing skyward. +The next second, no tower. + +No sky, no stars, no moon. No hillside, no high-line, no night. + +My tongue took a running jump and dived down into my throat to hide. + +"Wh--wh--wh--what the hell--" I heard my own voice say. + +I was in what looked like a big building. On one side was a lot of +hooded machinery that was clicking softly to itself. I had the fleeting +impression that this machinery was largely automatic in operation, that +raw materials were being fed in from some source overhead and finished +articles were rolling out into a large hopper. A soft blue light came +from the walls of the building, which seemed to be windowless. + +Ellen was standing right in front of me. The only movement about her +was a flutter of her eye-lids. She seemed to be frozen stiff. + +I was pretty well frozen myself. What the devil had happened to us? +where were we? + + * * * * * + +Mad thoughts were bouncing up and down inside my brain. I had the +impression I had gone insane. + +Tommy wasn't scared. He didn't seem to mind what had happened. +Something that would scare a man with sense to the verge of hysterics +had no effect on him. He understood almost nothing about the world in +which he lived and consequently anything was possible to him. There +are times when being a moron has its advantages. This was one of those +times. This building did not astonish Tommy, nor was he perturbed about +the miraculous way in which we had entered it. + +He ran over to the hopper in front of the big machine, thrust both +hands into it, and came running back to us, his hands held out in front +of him. + +"Firecrackers!" he said exultantly. + +He had a double handful of the round explosive pellets. The machine was +manufacturing them. They were being made right here in this windowless +building, in Ten Mile Valley. + +This was where Tommy had got those incredible bombs. Somehow he had +stumbled into this hidden place. + +He looked expectantly up at me. + +"Gimme bar'l of candy?" he said hopefully. + +My tongue was still hiding down in my throat as if it was determined +to have no part in the lies it knew I was going to tell. "S--sure," I +stuttered. "I'll get the candy for you as soon as we get back to town. +But Tommy, where are we?" + +That was the question! Where were we? + +"Huh?" said Tommy. Then he added, in explanation, "We're here!" + +Hell, I knew that! What I wanted to know was where _here_ was. I tried +another tack. "Where did this building, all these machines, where did +they come from?" + +He shrugged. The question was over his head. "Find 'em here," he said. +He looked hopefully at me. "Candy for Tommy Sonofagun?" + +His little mind ran on one track. The building was here, the machines +were here, facts to be accepted without question, just like the hills +and the rain. He had found them here. That was all he knew about them. + +"Let's get out of this place," I said to Ellen. There was a dazed, +glazed expression in her eyes. Her mind had refused to accept the +evidence of her eyes and she had stopped thinking. + +In my mind was pure panic. Never in my life had I wanted to run so +badly. The only thing that interested me was to get out of this place, +fast! I was starting to do just that when a voice stopped me. + +"Here's that thief again," the voice said. At least that was what I +thought it said. The words were English but they weren't like the +English I know. The accent was all wrong and they were run together in +a sing-songy effect. I turned to see who had spoken. + + * * * * * + +Two men were standing in a door at the far end of the building. +Apparently they had just entered. Dressed in glittering clothes, stern +faced, they didn't look like any people I wanted to meet. I grabbed +Ellen and started to run. + +"Alt!" the command came. + +I wasn't doing any halting. I was out of my mind from sheer fright. My +sole interest lay in getting out of that place. I was so confused I +didn't realize I didn't know how to get out and I did the only thing +possible, which was to turn and run. + +As it worked out, this was exactly the right thing to do. A split +second after I started to run, the building vanished. + +I was back at the high-line tower, not under it but beside it, with the +night and the stars and the moon around me, and the high-pitched whine +of leaking current in my ears. I was back where I had started from and +no building full of automatic machinery was in sight. + +"W--what's the matter?" Tommy gibbered beside me. He sensed how scared +I was and this scared him. + +Ellen had quietly fainted. I threw her over my shoulder. + +"Run!" I shouted at Tommy. + +With him at my heels, I started making tracks away from there. + +"Alt!" came a high-pitched command from behind me. + +A streak of light drove through the night, passed within a foot of my +head. It seemed to set the darkness on fire. The two men had taken a +shot at us. + +This was all Tommy needed to convince him that something was really +after him. He was already scared and when that streak of light went +past us, he went crazy. Crouching and turning, he stretched the rubbers +of that slingshot. + +"Don't shoot!" I screamed at him. + +It was too late. The rubbers blurred as he released the sling. + +Looking back I caught a glimpse of the two men. It was the same two +all right. They were standing beside the tower. Looking completely +bewildered, they were making no effort to stop us. + +Then the pellet hit them. + +_Blooie!_ + + * * * * * + +The blast hurled me forward but I managed to keep my feet and keep +running. Fire spouted skyward, there was a crack of breaking steel. + +The tower was falling. The explosion had knocked the legs out from +under it and it was falling. + +Somewhere over my head was a thrumming snap. I knew what it meant. The +copper high-line cables, strained by the falling tower, were about to +break. There were sixty-six thousand volts of electricity in those +twanging cables. + +With Ellen in my arms I dived into a ravine. As I hit and rolled the +night was cataclysmic with bursting flame. Arcs like bright flashes of +lightning leaped against the sky as the cables parted. The live ends +hit the ground and writhed like giant snakes spewing fifteen-feet-long +streams of molten fire. There was juice in those cables, plenty of +juice, and it was running wild. + +Somewhere, somebody screamed. Tommy! He was screaming. As if his scream +was a signal, the whole earth seemed to gather itself together and +hunch upward in one violent explosive blast. It knocked me cold. As I +blacked out, I saw a great spout of flame leaping toward the stars and +I remember thinking that the whole vault of heaven was on fire. Then +something seemed to hit me on the head and I quit thinking. + + * * * * * + +When I regained consciousness I was in a hospital and a nurse was +bending over me. As soon as I opened my eyes, she went dashing out of +the room, to return with a doctor. He poked and pried at me and finally +said that he thought I would live. From the way I felt, this was more +than I expected. + +The doctor had no more than left until there was a violent argument at +the door. The nurse was telling someone that I couldn't have company +and somebody else was saying I was going to have company, or else. Then +Ellen was bending over me. "Ben, are you badly hurt?" + +I told her what the doctor had said and the relief that flooded her +face almost made me feel romantic. She had a big patch of adhesive tape +on her face and a lot of scratches and bruises but she was able to walk. + +"Ben, what happened?" she asked. "Those two men, that building, those +machines--" + +"And those atomic bombs!" I said. + +"What? Atomic bombs? I don't understand. What were those men doing, +Ben?" + +"Sabotage," I said firmly. + +"But it couldn't have been sabotage," she protested. "If they had +wanted to blow up the high-line, they could have done it without any +trouble. And that building and the high-line tower existed in the same +place. Ben, it couldn't have been attempted sabotage. There must be +some other explanation. I've thought and I've thought and I don't see +the answer." + +"Just the same, it was sabotage," I said. "That's the way I am going to +write the story." + +"You will be lying, Ben," said a voice from the doorway. I looked up. +It was the sheriff. He came walking into the room. His arm was still in +a sling and his face looked grayer than ever. + +"How did you get here?" I stuttered. + +"I found you and brought you in," he said. "The two of you." He pulled +up a chair and sat down in a manner that indicated he planned to stay a +while. "Now tell me the truth, you two," he said. "Tell me just exactly +what happened, the way it happened." + +"You will call us liars," I protested. + +"That may be," he admitted. "But I want to hear it just the same." + + * * * * * + +So we told him. He sat there and listened without a sign of expression +on his face. For all the emotion he showed, he might have been made out +of wood. + +"What do you make of it, Ben," he said at last, when we had finished. + +"Sabotage," I said. + +"What do you really think, Ben?" he came back. + +"Well," I said slowly. "There was a slight leakage of current down that +particular tower. I think this leakage and the particular way in which +it took place accidentally combined to make us the first time travelers +in human history!" + +Ellen gasped at that but the sheriff didn't blink an eye. + +"Go on," he said. + +"I think that building exists in the future," I said. "I think it will +exist some day and that it exists now and if we could cross time we +could see it. Those men spoke a strange kind of English. That points +to the future. They were making atomic bombs. We don't know how to +make atomic bombs now but we will know how to do it, in the future. I +think that building we entered was an arsenal of the future that will +be built in Ten Mile Valley in some coming century. You asked me what I +think and I've told you," I defiantly finished. "If you don't like it, +you can think up your own explanation." + +He didn't budge. "Tommy?" he said, his voice a question. + +"Tommy accidentally blundered through the arch made by the legs of the +tower. He found a machine making tiny atomic bombs. He didn't know +they were bombs. He thought they were fine pebbles to shoot in his +slingshot. And that's what he used them for. They exploded on contact. +Maybe they were designed to be dropped from an airplane, hundreds at a +time. Maybe they were to be used in interplanetary war. I don't know +why they were being made. All I know is that an idiot found them, and +thought they would be fine things to shoot in a sling. Incidentally, +what happened to Tommy?" + +I had forgotten all about Tommy Sonofagun. + +"We found pieces of him," the sheriff sighed. "He had a pocketful of +those pebbles when the falling cables hit him. They all exploded at +once." + +Poor Tommy Sonofagun. He would never get his barrel of candy. + +Decisively the sheriff got to his feet. He stopped at the door and +looked back. "You are right, Ben," he said. "It was attempted sabotage." + +And that's the way it went down in the official records, that's the way +I wrote the story for my paper. The public would be willing to believe +in sabotage. But would they be willing to believe in time travel? + +Not this century! + + + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75427 *** diff --git a/75427-h/75427-h.htm b/75427-h/75427-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..cebc029 --- /dev/null +++ b/75427-h/75427-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,894 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html> +<html lang="en"> +<head> + <meta charset="UTF-8"> + <title> + The Incredible Slingshot Bombs | Project Gutenberg + </title> + <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover"> + <style> + +body { + margin-left: 10%; + margin-right: 10%; +} + + h1,h2 { + text-align: center; /* all headings centered */ + clear: both; +} + +p { + margin-top: .51em; + text-align: justify; + margin-bottom: .49em; +} + +hr { + width: 33%; + margin-top: 2em; + margin-bottom: 2em; + margin-left: 33.5%; + margin-right: 33.5%; + clear: both; +} + +hr.tb {width: 45%; margin-left: 27.5%; margin-right: 27.5%;} +hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;} +@media print { hr.chap {display: none; visibility: hidden;} } +hr.full {width: 95%; margin-left: 2.5%; margin-right: 2.5%;} +div.chapter {page-break-before: always;} +h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;} + +x-ebookmaker-drop {display: none;} + +.center {text-align: center;} + +.right {text-align: right;} + +.smcap { font-variant:small-caps; } + +/* Images */ +.figcenter { + margin: auto; + text-align: center; + page-break-inside: avoid; + max-width: 100%; +} + +.caption p +{ + text-align: center; + text-indent: 0; + margin: 0.25em 0; + font-weight: bold; +} + +div.titlepage { + text-align: center; + page-break-before: always; + page-break-after: always; +} + +div.titlepage p { + text-align: center; + text-indent: 0em; + font-weight: bold; + line-height: 1.5; + margin-top: 3em; +} + +.ph1 { text-align: center; text-indent: 0em; } +.ph1 { font-size: x-large; margin: .83em auto; } + + </style> +</head> +<body> +<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75427 ***</div> + +<div class="titlepage"> + +<h1>The Incredible Slingshot Bombs</h1> + +<p class="ph1">By ROBERT MOORE WILLIAMS</p> + +<p>It was only a slingshot, but it hurled more<br> +death than a thousand-pound bomb. Where did<br> +Tommy Sonofagun get those deadly pellets?</p> + +<p>[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from<br> +Amazing Stories May 1942.<br> +Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that<br> +the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]</p> + +</div> + +<hr class="chap"> + +<div class="figcenter"> + <img src="images/illus.jpg" alt=""> + <div class="caption"> + <p>Tommy Sonofagun drew back the sling and let fly with a pellet.</p> + </div> +</div> + +<hr class="chap"> + +<p>"You go over to the other ridge," the sheriff said to the two deputies. +"If he tries to get out that way, stop him. But remember, we want him +alive, <i>if we can get him that way</i>."</p> + +<p>I only half heard what the sheriff said. My attention was fully +occupied by the dogs down in Ten Mile Valley below us. I couldn't see +them but I could hear them bugling down there in the cedar thickets. +Baying slowly and mournfully, they were searching for the lost trail. A +creek ran down the middle of the valley. Probably Tommy Sonofagun had +crossed the creek and thrown the bloodhounds off his trail. Tommy might +be a moron but he had enough animal cunning to lose a pack of hounds +that were after him.</p> + +<p>His name wasn't really Tommy Sonofagun. It was Tommy Britten, but the +loafers around Brock's Tavern had taught him to say that his name was +Tommy Sonofagun. <i>They</i> thought this was funny.</p> + +<p>The sheriff and I watched the two deputies tramp down into Ten Mile +Valley, but we lost sight of them before they reached the farther +ridge. The steel towers of an electric high-line ran along this ridge +for a couple of miles, then dipped down and crossed the valley. The +transmission line carried current from the big dam about twenty miles +to the north. When the war first started, there was some fear that +enemy agents might sabotage this high-line and the sheriff had spent +most of his time out in the hills guarding it.</p> + +<p>The sheriff was a big, raw-boned mountaineer by the name of Tim +Hoskins. He wore store clothes like they were overalls, he was long and +lank, and if you took one look at him, you had the instant impression +he had just enough sense to come in out of the rain, and no more. If +you took a second look and noticed the slow cautious way he talked and +the slow but damned sure way he moved, and especially if you looked at +his eyes, which never faltered from the gaze of any man, you would be +likely to decide you were damned glad you lived in a country where they +had sheriffs like this.</p> + +<p>"What do you make of it, sheriff?" I asked.</p> + +<p>He was carrying his left arm in a bloody sling. Before he answered he +adjusted the sling so his arm hung a little easier. Then he shook his +head. "I don't know, Ben. I just don't know."</p> + +<p>I'm Ben Hopper, and for the past four years I've been owner and +publisher of the Summit Press. I'm also editor of this paper, +advertising manager, circulation manager, business manager, proof +reader, and copy boy. The Press is strictly a one man country paper, +but it prints the news, which was why I was out here in the hills. +There was news out here. Maybe it was mighty big news, too.</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>I was going to ask some more questions but the clatter of an +over-worked motor interrupted me and I turned in time to see a car +banging up the gravel road toward us. It was a gray Ford coupe and I +needed only one glance to recognize it and to know who was driving it. +Ellen Briscoe. Uncle Sam sent her out here to try to teach the people +on the hill farms how to keep from starving to death. The Relief Lady, +the mountaineers called her. She was coming up the hill road like she +didn't know there was any such thing as tire rationing. Steam popped +out of the radiator as the car reached us. She was out of it almost +before it stopped rolling.</p> + +<p>"Hello, Ben," she said to me.</p> + +<p>"Ellen, you got no business being here," I protested.</p> + +<p>She ignored me. She had business wherever she wanted to be, which was +anywhere anybody was in trouble. "Sheriff, what's this all about?" she +demanded.</p> + +<p>Hoskins scraped a toe against the rocky ground. "I—I don't know for +sure, Miss Ellen," he said.</p> + +<p>"I heard about it in Summit," she said. "And I came right up here. They +told me in Summit that you had organized a posse and gone after Tommy. +Sheriff, what has Tommy done?"</p> + +<p>Those were the words she used. The tone of her voice said more than the +words.</p> + +<p>The sheriff wore out a lot of shoe leather before he answered. "Sim +Brock swore out a warrant," he said at last. "I don't have any choice +about serving it."</p> + +<p>"Sim Brock swore out a warrant, did he?" Fire flashed from her eyes. +"Don't you know those loafers down at the roadhouse Brock runs are +always teasing Tommy?"</p> + +<p>"I know, Miss Ellen," the sheriff said uncomfortably.</p> + +<p>"Were they teasing him and did he strike at one of them? Is that why +you've got this posse after Tommy?"</p> + +<p>"No," the sheriff said. "They might have been teasing him before it +happened but I don't know that they were. The warrant charged Tommy +with blowing up Brock's barn."</p> + +<p>"Blowing up his barn!"</p> + +<p>"That was the way Brock swore out the warrant."</p> + +<p>"And you believed Sim Brock?" Ellen demanded. "Don't you know he's a +liar and a no-good scoundrel. Don't you know that nobody can believe +anything Brock says?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," the sheriff slowly said. "But the barn was blown up. I went to +look. I didn't put any faith in what Brock said, but the warrant had +been sworn out and I had to act. So I went looking for Tommy—"</p> + +<p>"With a gun in your hand, I suppose?" she said sharply.</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>He looked at her then, just glanced up, but his gaze didn't falter. +"You know better than that, Miss Ellen," he said.</p> + +<p>She flushed. Her temper had been running away with her and she knew it. +"I'm sorry," she said. "What happened?"</p> + +<p>"I didn't have much trouble finding Tommy," the sheriff explained. "He +was crossing a field when I spotted him. I stopped my car and walked +toward him—<i>and he took a shot at me</i>."</p> + +<p>Down in this country you may do a little private feuding with your +neighbors but there is one thing you don't do. You don't shoot at the +sheriff.</p> + +<p>"He shot at you!" Ellen gasped. "Where did he get a gun?"</p> + +<p>"He didn't have a gun."</p> + +<p>Ellen's face showed confusion. "Then how did he shoot at you?" she +demanded.</p> + +<p>"With that slingshot he always carries," the sheriff said.</p> + +<p>Tommy's favorite weapon, in fact his only weapon, was a rubber +slingshot. A pocket full of pebbles and a sling was all he needed to be +happy.</p> + +<p>"Sheriff," Ellen's voice was hot again. "Just because he shot at you +with a sling is no reason why you should call out a posse and run him +down like a mad dog?"</p> + +<p>"No," the sheriff admitted. "Especially since he didn't hit me."</p> + +<p>"He didn't hit you! And you—"</p> + +<p>"He hit my car," the sheriff said.</p> + +<p>Ellen's face blazed with anger. "So what? A few more nicks in that +rattle-trap of yours won't make any difference."</p> + +<p>"No, Miss Ellen," the sheriff said, his voice dry and tense. "Not any +more."</p> + +<p>"Not any more! <i>What are you talking about?</i>"</p> + +<p>"Not any car any more," the sheriff said. "It blew up."</p> + +<p>"Blew up!" the girl gasped.</p> + +<p>"Sky high," the sheriff said. "Chunks of the motor landed a quarter of +a mile away. Piece of hot metal hit me—" He looked down at the bloody +sling holding his arm. "That's where I got this."</p> + +<p>I had already seen what was left of his car, which was mostly a hole +in the ground. A case of dynamite wouldn't have blown it into smaller +pieces.</p> + +<p>"I got two reasons for wanting to catch Tommy," the sheriff continued. +"First, I got a warrant that says I must arrest him. Second, I want to +look at those pebbles he's shooting out of that slingshot."</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>You can damned well bet he wanted to look at those pebbles! So did I. +If a pebble small enough to be shot out of a sling could blow up a car, +it was a mighty powerful and mighty important chunk of rock. Think how +big an explosion a pebble as big as a baseball would make! Think how +many baseballs could be carried in a bomber!</p> + +<p><i>What was Tommy Sonofagun shooting in his sling?</i></p> + +<p>"I just can't believe it," Ellen said, when she had recovered from her +surprise. "Tommy didn't cause those explosions. Your car just happened +to blow up at that moment. Tommy didn't do it. He couldn't have done +it. It's—it's impossible."</p> + +<p>The sheriff didn't argue with her and neither did I. We were both +watching what was happening down in Ten Mile Valley. Those bloodhounds, +after being baffled for a long time, had suddenly hit a hot trail.</p> + +<p>Then Tommy appeared. He dashed across a glade in the cedar thickets, +running half bent over like some ungainly animal. He was so far away he +was just a little black dot but I saw him look back over his shoulder +at the dogs.</p> + +<p>They were right behind him. I heard them break into an excited bugling +as they saw their prey and started running by sight instead of by scent.</p> + +<p>Tommy frantically ran into the cedars.</p> + +<p>The dogs raced across the glade after him. There were four of them, +running in a bunch, and giving tongue as they ran.</p> + +<p><i>They vanished in a puff of white light.</i></p> + +<p>It happened almost too fast for the mind to grasp it. One second four +bloodhounds were running across the glade, the next second there was an +intense puff of light, the third second the whole glade seemed to take +wings and fly up into the air, the fourth second—</p> + +<p><i>Boom!</i></p> + +<p>The sound of the explosion reached us. A ball of smoke leaped upward +and the cedar trees bent over in a blast of air. In the silence that +followed came the faint clatter of stones falling back to the ground. +There wasn't another bark from those dogs. There weren't any dogs left +to do any barking.</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>The sheriff's face turned a pasty gray. I believe from the bottom of my +heart that he is scared of nothing, that he doesn't know the meaning +of fear, but when that explosion came his face turned gray. He glanced +once at Ellen as if he was asking her if this confirmed the wisdom of +his decision to send a posse after Tommy Sonofagun. So far as I was +concerned, it did. Then he started walking away.</p> + +<p>"Where are we going?" I called after him.</p> + +<p>"Down there," he said, nodding toward the glade where the explosion had +taken place. "I reckon maybe I better get Tommy, if I can."</p> + +<p>Ellen and I stayed on top of the ridge and watched. Ellen hadn't spoken +a word since the explosion but from the way she was holding on to my +arm, I knew how scared she was. I could feel her tremble.</p> + +<p>The sheriff vanished among the cedars down below but I knew he was +down there somewhere stalking Tommy Sonofagun. I also knew that other +deputies were moving up from below while still another group had +probably cut across the valley up above. A grim trap was closing.</p> + +<p>"What can it possibly mean?" Ellen whispered.</p> + +<p>"It means you had better go home," I answered.</p> + +<p>She wouldn't go. She was the Relief Lady and Tommy was somebody who +might need help.</p> + +<p>It was already late in the afternoon. We stayed there on top of the +ridge while darkness fell and waited for—anything. I shivered every +time I thought of the explosion that had killed those four dogs. A hand +grenade would not have caused so much destruction. There wasn't any +chance of coincidence either. Those dogs had been after Tommy and he +had destroyed them.</p> + +<p>"Ben," said Ellen suddenly. "We've got to find Tommy."</p> + +<p>"Huh?" Even the idea startled me.</p> + +<p>"We've got to find him before the posse does. Those men are scared and +they won't take any chances with him. Even the sheriff is scared. If +they find Tommy and he tries to run—and that's what he will try to +do—they'll shoot him. Ben, we've got to find him first, to save his +life."</p> + +<p>It took some time for this to sink in. And when it did sink in, I +didn't like it. I tried to laugh it off. "A fine chance we have of +finding him when this posse can't."</p> + +<p>"I can find him. I know where he is."</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"He has a cave about a mile from here. Every time he gets in trouble he +runs there and hides. That's where he was going when those dogs almost +caught him, to his cave. If we go there, we're almost certain to find +him."</p> + +<p>"And get ourselves blown into mince-meat like those dogs!" I protested.</p> + +<p>"He won't—do anything to me. He knows me. I'm his friend."</p> + +<p>"Nuts, baby. We're not going."</p> + +<p>"All right," she said defiantly. "I'll go alone." She started walking +away.</p> + +<p>"All right," I groaned. "I'll go with you. But you're taking an unfair +advantage of me, and I know it."</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>The cave was in a ravine that led off from Ten Mile Valley. By the time +we reached the place the moon was up but there wasn't much light down +in the bottom of the ravine. Clumps of cedars grew everywhere, making +dark blotches behind which anything might be lurking. A darker blotch +was the mouth of the cave.</p> + +<p>"T—Tommy," Ellen called.</p> + +<p>There was no answer. I stood there in the darkness and wished to hell I +was back in my office setting this story in type. Ellen was clinging to +me so hard she was about to pull my arm off.</p> + +<p>A shadow seemed to move in the mouth of the cave.</p> + +<p>"Tommy," Ellen said quickly. "Don't be afraid. We've brought you some +candy, Tommy. Don't you want some candy?"</p> + +<p>Silence. A wind went whispering through the cedars, setting my teeth to +chattering.</p> + +<p>"We have some candy, Tommy?"</p> + +<p>There was a tiny creak, as of somebody shifting his weight. It came +from the cave. I did not in the least doubt but that Tommy Sonofagun +was standing there looking out at us, slingshot in hand, trying to make +up his poor mind if we were after him. At this moment my memory chose +to remind me of what had happened to those bloodhounds. They had been +after him too. Anything that was after him he would shoot at.</p> + +<p>Cold sweat was dripping from under my arms and running down my body.</p> + +<p>"Why don't you come down and get the candy we brought you?" Ellen asked.</p> + +<p>"Scared," a dull, choked voice said from the mouth of the cave.</p> + +<p>Tommy was there all right. He was watching us. He wanted candy. But he +was scared.</p> + +<p>He wasn't a tenth as scared as I was! Dillinger with a pistol would not +have been near as dangerous as this half man who lurked in the cave +mouth. You could talk to Dillinger. He wouldn't shoot without a reason. +You could talk to Tommy but he wouldn't understand.</p> + +<p>"You needn't be scared," Ellen said. "We won't hurt you. Don't you +remember all the candy I've brought you? Don't you remember that new +pair of overalls I brought you last month? Weren't they fine overalls, +Tommy?"</p> + +<p>"Uh-huh. Nice. Wearin' 'em now." He didn't sound quite so hostile.</p> + +<p>"Come and get the candy," Ellen said, opening her purse.</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>It took her five minutes to get him down out of that cave. Those were +five minutes of hell for me. Ellen's voice showed no trace of concern, +no fear, no worry. Listening to her, you would have thought she hadn't +a care in the world. Only the way she was holding on to my arm showed +me how scared she was.</p> + +<p>"Here," she said, handing him a candy bar.</p> + +<p>He ate it, paper cover, tin foil, and all. He didn't look at me. He saw +me all right but he didn't trust me so he didn't glance in my direction.</p> + +<p>"How did you make the big noises?" Ellen quietly asked.</p> + +<p>"Huh? Big noises?"</p> + +<p>He sounded scared again. I took a firm grip on a lungful of air and +prepared to hold on to it.</p> + +<p>"The big booms," Ellen said. "You know, like firecrackers, only lots +louder. They sure were fine noises."</p> + +<p>"You like 'em, huh? Want hear more big noises, huh? Fourth of July +noises, huh?"</p> + +<p>My eyes had become accustomed to the darkness and I saw him lift his +arms and stretch his slingshot rubbers. "Want more noises, huh?" he +asked proudly.</p> + +<p>"Not now, Tommy," Ellen said quickly, a sudden catch in her voice. "Let +me see one of the firecrackers that make the big noises."</p> + +<p>"Huh?" He lowered his arms but he held the sling ready. His grunt was +full of suspicion.</p> + +<p>"I'll give you another candy bar for one of your firecrackers," Ellen +said quickly. She opened her purse and I heard the rattle of waxed +paper. "I'll trade you a candy bar for a firecracker. You want another +candy bar, don't you, Tommy? Remember how good that last candy bar was?"</p> + +<p>He remembered all right. His eyes never left the bar of chocolate she +was holding toward him.</p> + +<p>I went right on holding my breath.</p> + +<p>"Okay," he said suddenly. "Trade." He took something out of the pocket +of his sling, dropped it in Ellen's hand, grabbed the candy bar, and +started eating.</p> + +<p>"Flashlight," Ellen whispered to me. To Tommy she said, "We're going +to turn on a flashlight so we can look at the firecracker. It's a good +candy bar, isn't it, Tommy?"</p> + +<p>My hands were shaking so badly I could barely hold the light. Ellen was +holding the firecracker in the palm of her hand. I took one look at it, +and I didn't believe my eyes.</p> + +<p>It was about the size of a big pea. It wasn't as big as a grape. It +looked like a small round pebble.</p> + +<p>This was the bomb that had caused those terrific explosions!</p> + +<p>"Is this what made the big noises?" Ellen asked.</p> + +<p>"Sure," Tommy said, stopping eating long enough to talk. "Make big +boom. Want more? Got plenty." He reached into a pocket of his overalls +and brought out a handful. "Good shootin' rocks," he said.</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>I just didn't believe it. There are mental limits beyond which the mind +refuses to function. It was impossible to think that such a tiny pellet +could cause so much destruction.</p> + +<p>I took Tommy's sling, put the pellet in the pocket, stretched the +rubbers as far as they would go, and released them. I had to see with +my own eyes, I had to know, I had to be sure.</p> + +<p>I damned well found out! Although the explosion took place at least +seventy-five yards away, it blew me off my feet. A great bulge of flame +leaped into the sky and the heavens roared with the thunder of the +sound.</p> + +<p>Tommy jumped up and down in excitement. "Big noise! Goody, goody! Want +more booms?"</p> + +<p>"N—nnn—no," I stuttered, picking myself up from the ground.</p> + +<p>"Ben, you idiot!" Ellen snapped. "The sheriff will hear that. No, +Tommy, no more booms right now. Where did you get those firecrackers, +Tommy? Where did you get them?"</p> + +<p>Firecrackers, hell! Those things were the mightiest explosive bombs for +their weight ever used on earth! In violence they backed TNT right off +the map. Nitroglycerin was not a tenth as powerful. If a pellet that +weighed a fraction of an ounce could cause such an explosion, how big +an explosion would a hundred-pound bomb make?</p> + +<p>One bomber could sneak in out of the clouds and smash a city!</p> + +<p>One bomb would do the job!</p> + +<p><i>Where had Tommy Sonofagun gotten those round pebbles that exploded +with such violence?</i></p> + +<p>"Candy?" he said questioningly. "More candy?"</p> + +<p>"I'll give you a barrel of candy if you will show us where you got +these things!" I said. I was scared sick. I was remembering Pearl +Harbor, the <i>Prince of Wales</i>, and the <i>Repulse</i>. Had bombs such as +these sent those two gallant ships to the bottom?</p> + +<p>If this had happened, how had similar bombs gotten here to the heart +of America? Where were these round pebbles coming from? Obviously +Tommy had found them somewhere, but <i>where</i>? Who had made them?</p> + +<p>"A barrel of candy!" Tommy gasped. "G—gosh!"</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>Grabbing his slingshot from the ground where I had dropped it, he +started off, motioning us to follow him. Stumbling, following him as +best we could, he led us straight to one of the transmission line +towers!</p> + +<p>"It was attempted sabotage!" I gasped. "Somebody tried to blow up the +high-line but their bombs didn't explode. Tommy found their explosives!"</p> + +<p>This was a reasonable guess. If one of these big steel towers went +down, a lot of defense industries that were dependent upon the juice +flowing through the cables overhead, would have to shut down.</p> + +<p>"Got 'em right here," Tommy said.</p> + +<p>He shambled toward the legs of the tower, which formed an arch +overhead. He was holding one of Ellen's hands and I was holding the +other. We were strung out in a line. I could hear current singing in +the transmission line as he went under the arch formed by the legs of +the tower. It was a high, thin, wailing sound, and it meant that juice +was leaking somewhere.</p> + +<p>He stepped through the arch, and vanished.</p> + +<p>Ellen, following a step behind him, vanished.</p> + +<p>I took another step, which brought me under the arch, <i>and the tower +vanished</i>!</p> + +<p>One second it was there over my head, a steel lattice climbing skyward. +The next second, no tower.</p> + +<p>No sky, no stars, no moon. No hillside, no high-line, no night.</p> + +<p>My tongue took a running jump and dived down into my throat to hide.</p> + +<p>"Wh—wh—wh—what the hell—" I heard my own voice say.</p> + +<p>I was in what looked like a big building. On one side was a lot of +hooded machinery that was clicking softly to itself. I had the fleeting +impression that this machinery was largely automatic in operation, that +raw materials were being fed in from some source overhead and finished +articles were rolling out into a large hopper. A soft blue light came +from the walls of the building, which seemed to be windowless.</p> + +<p>Ellen was standing right in front of me. The only movement about her +was a flutter of her eye-lids. She seemed to be frozen stiff.</p> + +<p>I was pretty well frozen myself. What the devil had happened to us? +where were we?</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>Mad thoughts were bouncing up and down inside my brain. I had the +impression I had gone insane.</p> + +<p>Tommy wasn't scared. He didn't seem to mind what had happened. +Something that would scare a man with sense to the verge of hysterics +had no effect on him. He understood almost nothing about the world in +which he lived and consequently anything was possible to him. There +are times when being a moron has its advantages. This was one of those +times. This building did not astonish Tommy, nor was he perturbed about +the miraculous way in which we had entered it.</p> + +<p>He ran over to the hopper in front of the big machine, thrust both +hands into it, and came running back to us, his hands held out in front +of him.</p> + +<p>"Firecrackers!" he said exultantly.</p> + +<p>He had a double handful of the round explosive pellets. The machine was +manufacturing them. They were being made right here in this windowless +building, in Ten Mile Valley.</p> + +<p>This was where Tommy had got those incredible bombs. Somehow he had +stumbled into this hidden place.</p> + +<p>He looked expectantly up at me.</p> + +<p>"Gimme bar'l of candy?" he said hopefully.</p> + +<p>My tongue was still hiding down in my throat as if it was determined +to have no part in the lies it knew I was going to tell. "S—sure," I +stuttered. "I'll get the candy for you as soon as we get back to town. +But Tommy, where are we?"</p> + +<p>That was the question! Where were we?</p> + +<p>"Huh?" said Tommy. Then he added, in explanation, "We're here!"</p> + +<p>Hell, I knew that! What I wanted to know was where <i>here</i> was. I tried +another tack. "Where did this building, all these machines, where did +they come from?"</p> + +<p>He shrugged. The question was over his head. "Find 'em here," he said. +He looked hopefully at me. "Candy for Tommy Sonofagun?"</p> + +<p>His little mind ran on one track. The building was here, the machines +were here, facts to be accepted without question, just like the hills +and the rain. He had found them here. That was all he knew about them.</p> + +<p>"Let's get out of this place," I said to Ellen. There was a dazed, +glazed expression in her eyes. Her mind had refused to accept the +evidence of her eyes and she had stopped thinking.</p> + +<p>In my mind was pure panic. Never in my life had I wanted to run so +badly. The only thing that interested me was to get out of this place, +fast! I was starting to do just that when a voice stopped me.</p> + +<p>"Here's that thief again," the voice said. At least that was what I +thought it said. The words were English but they weren't like the +English I know. The accent was all wrong and they were run together in +a sing-songy effect. I turned to see who had spoken.</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>Two men were standing in a door at the far end of the building. +Apparently they had just entered. Dressed in glittering clothes, stern +faced, they didn't look like any people I wanted to meet. I grabbed +Ellen and started to run.</p> + +<p>"Alt!" the command came.</p> + +<p>I wasn't doing any halting. I was out of my mind from sheer fright. My +sole interest lay in getting out of that place. I was so confused I +didn't realize I didn't know how to get out and I did the only thing +possible, which was to turn and run.</p> + +<p>As it worked out, this was exactly the right thing to do. A split +second after I started to run, the building vanished.</p> + +<p>I was back at the high-line tower, not under it but beside it, with the +night and the stars and the moon around me, and the high-pitched whine +of leaking current in my ears. I was back where I had started from and +no building full of automatic machinery was in sight.</p> + +<p>"W—what's the matter?" Tommy gibbered beside me. He sensed how scared +I was and this scared him.</p> + +<p>Ellen had quietly fainted. I threw her over my shoulder.</p> + +<p>"Run!" I shouted at Tommy.</p> + +<p>With him at my heels, I started making tracks away from there.</p> + +<p>"Alt!" came a high-pitched command from behind me.</p> + +<p>A streak of light drove through the night, passed within a foot of my +head. It seemed to set the darkness on fire. The two men had taken a +shot at us.</p> + +<p>This was all Tommy needed to convince him that something was really +after him. He was already scared and when that streak of light went +past us, he went crazy. Crouching and turning, he stretched the rubbers +of that slingshot.</p> + +<p>"Don't shoot!" I screamed at him.</p> + +<p>It was too late. The rubbers blurred as he released the sling.</p> + +<p>Looking back I caught a glimpse of the two men. It was the same two +all right. They were standing beside the tower. Looking completely +bewildered, they were making no effort to stop us.</p> + +<p>Then the pellet hit them.</p> + +<p><i>Blooie!</i></p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>The blast hurled me forward but I managed to keep my feet and keep +running. Fire spouted skyward, there was a crack of breaking steel.</p> + +<p>The tower was falling. The explosion had knocked the legs out from +under it and it was falling.</p> + +<p>Somewhere over my head was a thrumming snap. I knew what it meant. The +copper high-line cables, strained by the falling tower, were about to +break. There were sixty-six thousand volts of electricity in those +twanging cables.</p> + +<p>With Ellen in my arms I dived into a ravine. As I hit and rolled the +night was cataclysmic with bursting flame. Arcs like bright flashes of +lightning leaped against the sky as the cables parted. The live ends +hit the ground and writhed like giant snakes spewing fifteen-feet-long +streams of molten fire. There was juice in those cables, plenty of +juice, and it was running wild.</p> + +<p>Somewhere, somebody screamed. Tommy! He was screaming. As if his scream +was a signal, the whole earth seemed to gather itself together and +hunch upward in one violent explosive blast. It knocked me cold. As I +blacked out, I saw a great spout of flame leaping toward the stars and +I remember thinking that the whole vault of heaven was on fire. Then +something seemed to hit me on the head and I quit thinking.</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>When I regained consciousness I was in a hospital and a nurse was +bending over me. As soon as I opened my eyes, she went dashing out of +the room, to return with a doctor. He poked and pried at me and finally +said that he thought I would live. From the way I felt, this was more +than I expected.</p> + +<p>The doctor had no more than left until there was a violent argument at +the door. The nurse was telling someone that I couldn't have company +and somebody else was saying I was going to have company, or else. Then +Ellen was bending over me. "Ben, are you badly hurt?"</p> + +<p>I told her what the doctor had said and the relief that flooded her +face almost made me feel romantic. She had a big patch of adhesive tape +on her face and a lot of scratches and bruises but she was able to walk.</p> + +<p>"Ben, what happened?" she asked. "Those two men, that building, those +machines—"</p> + +<p>"And those atomic bombs!" I said.</p> + +<p>"What? Atomic bombs? I don't understand. What were those men doing, +Ben?"</p> + +<p>"Sabotage," I said firmly.</p> + +<p>"But it couldn't have been sabotage," she protested. "If they had +wanted to blow up the high-line, they could have done it without any +trouble. And that building and the high-line tower existed in the same +place. Ben, it couldn't have been attempted sabotage. There must be +some other explanation. I've thought and I've thought and I don't see +the answer."</p> + +<p>"Just the same, it was sabotage," I said. "That's the way I am going to +write the story."</p> + +<p>"You will be lying, Ben," said a voice from the doorway. I looked up. +It was the sheriff. He came walking into the room. His arm was still in +a sling and his face looked grayer than ever.</p> + +<p>"How did you get here?" I stuttered.</p> + +<p>"I found you and brought you in," he said. "The two of you." He pulled +up a chair and sat down in a manner that indicated he planned to stay a +while. "Now tell me the truth, you two," he said. "Tell me just exactly +what happened, the way it happened."</p> + +<p>"You will call us liars," I protested.</p> + +<p>"That may be," he admitted. "But I want to hear it just the same."</p> + +<hr class="tb"> + +<p>So we told him. He sat there and listened without a sign of expression +on his face. For all the emotion he showed, he might have been made out +of wood.</p> + +<p>"What do you make of it, Ben," he said at last, when we had finished.</p> + +<p>"Sabotage," I said.</p> + +<p>"What do you really think, Ben?" he came back.</p> + +<p>"Well," I said slowly. "There was a slight leakage of current down that +particular tower. I think this leakage and the particular way in which +it took place accidentally combined to make us the first time travelers +in human history!"</p> + +<p>Ellen gasped at that but the sheriff didn't blink an eye.</p> + +<p>"Go on," he said.</p> + +<p>"I think that building exists in the future," I said. "I think it will +exist some day and that it exists now and if we could cross time we +could see it. Those men spoke a strange kind of English. That points +to the future. They were making atomic bombs. We don't know how to +make atomic bombs now but we will know how to do it, in the future. I +think that building we entered was an arsenal of the future that will +be built in Ten Mile Valley in some coming century. You asked me what I +think and I've told you," I defiantly finished. "If you don't like it, +you can think up your own explanation."</p> + +<p>He didn't budge. "Tommy?" he said, his voice a question.</p> + +<p>"Tommy accidentally blundered through the arch made by the legs of the +tower. He found a machine making tiny atomic bombs. He didn't know +they were bombs. He thought they were fine pebbles to shoot in his +slingshot. And that's what he used them for. They exploded on contact. +Maybe they were designed to be dropped from an airplane, hundreds at a +time. Maybe they were to be used in interplanetary war. I don't know +why they were being made. All I know is that an idiot found them, and +thought they would be fine things to shoot in a sling. Incidentally, +what happened to Tommy?"</p> + +<p>I had forgotten all about Tommy Sonofagun.</p> + +<p>"We found pieces of him," the sheriff sighed. "He had a pocketful of +those pebbles when the falling cables hit him. They all exploded at +once."</p> + +<p>Poor Tommy Sonofagun. He would never get his barrel of candy.</p> + +<p>Decisively the sheriff got to his feet. He stopped at the door and +looked back. "You are right, Ben," he said. "It was attempted sabotage."</p> + +<p>And that's the way it went down in the official records, that's the way +I wrote the story for my paper. The public would be willing to believe +in sabotage. But would they be willing to believe in time travel?</p> + +<p>Not this century! +</p> +<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75427 ***</div> +</body> +</html> + diff --git a/75427-h/images/cover.jpg b/75427-h/images/cover.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c6625d0 --- /dev/null +++ b/75427-h/images/cover.jpg diff --git a/75427-h/images/illus.jpg b/75427-h/images/illus.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ffff93c --- /dev/null +++ b/75427-h/images/illus.jpg diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. 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