Triumph (12 page)

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Authors: Philip Wylie

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BOOK: Triumph
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Ben asked, "Where does the thing end, this side? Wine cellars, still?"

Farr shook his head. "It was easier to reach it by the elevator shaft. The tunnel ends up where I said there was a passage around the middle psi door."

All four went together.

It took them half an hour, in the furnace heat, to loosen toggles that held the first of three small steel portals. The second responded readily to its motorized controls and opened like a bank vault. The third had to be cut free with oxyacetylene torches operated in turns by the heat-blanched, frantic men. When at last a chunk of steel large enough to admit a man fell, red-hot, into the darkness beyond, a great blast of superheated air poured upon them. They raced for the elevator and sent it downward at full speed to keep from being baked alive.

But even as the jagged metal had crushed in, they had heard a far-off sound of pounding, clearer, now, than the rock-carried tinking audible below. On the way down Farr gasped, "Have to hose it."

Ben said, swiftly, "And fill it with superheated steam? That tunnel's like a volcano throat!"

"Somebody"--George muttered when they reached the Hall, carrying into it a wave of heated air--"is trying to bust through at the far end. You hear the sound? No signals now, though. Guess they heard us!"

"How long is it?" Kit asked.

"Thousand yards--give or take fifty." Vance wiped sweat and grime from his naked chest.

Ben spoke. "What's at the far end?"

"False door--steel this side, brick the far side--to match the cellar wall. It's in a sub-cellar below a trunk room, off a furnace room. If it's Angelica, and if she's trying to smash through, that means the motorized gear isn't working. Be a job, but a person with a sledge and muscles could batter through--given time."

"We gotta try," Kit said fiercely. "Suppose, though, it's a whole lot of people that got through what's happened
there,
and that your girl friend"--he did not notice the term he had used--"told 'em about this place?"

"Possible," Farr admitted. "In which case--!"

None of the others--stripped like Farr, as sweat-drenched and grime-smeared--

said a word. Pete Williams then joined the group and was told the main facts.

Farr realized it was up to him to deal with Kit's question. He drew a shaky breath.

"In other words, if, by some wild luck, a
mob
is still alive out there, we can't let them in because our
own
chances depend on keeping the group down to fifteen, or sixteen, maximum."

"That means," George said quietly, "up to six more or so we
could
take 'em--"

"--providing, always, we can get to them. And get them back."

"I say," George went on calmly, "we try. If there's a crowd, we take the youngest five or six. Assuming we can figure a way. If there's too many people--well--somebody can be all set at this end. We've got machine guns enough for a small army."

Ben felt his body tremble. Pete murmured, "God!" Kit said, "Somebody's got to see how far they can make it down that shaft." He turned to Farr. "Got any flameproof gear?"

The tycoon nodded. "Of course. For fires, down here. Gear for exploration outside, too. We've got an assortment of things. Asbestos suits. Radiation-resistant suits.

Combinations, with interior oxygen supply. But before a man got a quarter of the way down that hell--!"

"I'll take a shot," Kit said.

Thirty minutes later Kit, in a cumbersome, Martian-like costume, tottered back toward a narrow landing on the stairway that bypassed the middle psi doors. The four men had been waiting there in air that was tolerable because it then came in a gush through a thick hose attached by George to distant pumps. They saw the figure vaguely as it neared, flashlight still gripped by a massively-gloved hand. Kit staggered and, as he reached the others, collapsed. Ben and George dragged him out of the tunnel. Took off the quartz face plate. Kit was panting mightily and managed, as the air hose hit his face, to say a few words. "They got their end open, I guess. Heard 'em.
Yelling.
One word.

'Help!' maybe. But no man'll ever make it that far."

Ben had been thinking. He turned to George. "You produce Dry Ice here, for storage lockers, right? Got any dollies? Trucks?"

"Yeah. To move stuff. Electric."

"Okay." He helped remove Kit's finger-searing cover of asbestos and synthetic fiber and went on: "Then we'll load a truck with Dry Ice. Build a sheet-asbestos face for it. That way it'll fill the place with vapor, but also more or less bathe a guy, running behind it, with cold CO2, Give him a chance."

They carried Kit to the steel floor of the elevator and went down with him.

Farr said to Ben as they re-emerged, "That's nuts! Dry Ice'd steam away before a man had run five hundred yards behind it. His sides and back would still probably be roasted by hot air sucked in behind him."

Kit, his naked body red, his face and arms burned badly, looked up from the floor where Farr was already salving the worst of his agonizing scalds. "Don't even go in there, Ben! It's hot as the center of hell!"

"I'm a half-miler," Ben said. It wasn't true.

What was true was that Ben had perceived himself at last faced with a kind of challenge about which he had always wondered: a test of physical courage that relied, not on scientific skill for protection, but on plain guts. The test from which no fellow scientist or Navy Chief or anyone would save you if you flunked. And he knew that, panicky as he felt, queasy of belly and shaky of muscle, he was going to try. He had hitherto often speculated on how he would react to such peril as other men held to be the supreme test.

The peril of combat, of death by means unknown or not possible to anticipate. Grimly, he now thought he would soon have the answer.

When George Hyama said, "Better I do it," Ben merely shook his head. "I'll get into another asbestos job, and you get me all the Dry Ice you can load in crates on a truck. I'll tie a rope--no, it'd burn through--some kind of wire around my waist. If I flop, I'll flop on the truck and you can haul me back."

"Frozen solid on your belly side?" Farr asked. "Okay. We'll put some kind of insulation over the Dry Ice. Steel wool, say."

With much fast labor they put that scheme into effect. The door was wracked open. At the head of the stairs where the melted-steel-hot tunnel opened up, with pumped air pressing back its temperatures, Ben, in the fire-fighter's suit, aimed the contraption he'd suggested at the blackness ahead. The Dry Ice had already started to fill the small narrow landing with steam. Ben said, before Farr screwed on the face plate of the suit, "If I make it, I'll yank the wire three times. Any series of yanks--or any single, weak yank--

will mean, pull me back. If I find anybody I--! Anyone here know Morse?"

"Me," George said.

"Sure!" Ben smiled feebly. "I guess I can remember it well enough. I'll use it, on the line, to give further data." Then he went.

They stood amid the hosed-in air, peering down the tunnel. Carbon-dioxide

"steam" now swirled upward, toward heavy baffles in this bypass, so they could see Ben's light for a while and hear the wheels of his impromptu conveyance as they clattered on the smooth floor of the tunnel. Vapor erupted from the great, white lumps of Dry Ice loaded on the cart under a mat of steel wool. Erupted and enfolded him. Aluminum wire was paid out in shining loops as the scientist moved away, going as fast as his clumsy clothing, his power-driven cart, and the light wire permitted.

In the hole--a foot higher than his head, level, and perfectly smooth-Ben faintly felt icy touches of the vaporized CO2 He also felt, in other, random places, fingers of superheated air. He flinched from both extremes and tried, against his will at times, to run, so as to keep his flesh clear of places in his suit that grew unendurably hot and then, occasionally, almost as balefully cold. He was gasping. His lungs seemed to be burning.

He knew he was getting a rich mixture of oxygen from his helmet but even so he felt he'd soon have to stop.

This was like certain nightmare moments he'd experienced in underwater demolition training, when the instructor had ordered some "simulated" accident that obliged the deep-down swimmer to hold his breath till his head seemed about to explode and his vision grew crimson, while, meticulously, he went through, one by one, the intricate procedures that, if he could hold out, would finally restore air to his lungs.

This was worse, however. Because then, a Navy Chief would grab a man who passed out cold.

He'd gone the distance, surely, he told himself; but vapor obscured the view through a thick glass window in the shield set up on the truck-front.

He was in torment. It would feel like this if you were burned at the stake, he thought, panically! The Dry Ice was about spent. His light wobbled on the endless stone path as he ran on, on, on. Then, appallingly, the improvised vehicle hit some irregularity in the floor, bucked, and he lost his flashlight. It hit the stone, smashed, went out. Ben shut his eyes in sheer horror. Stopped. Felt the added heat caused by stopping. Realized he would never be hauled that long way back, alive. Realized he would begin to be deeply burned in many places, and, soon, from head to foot--in a matter of ten or fifteen seconds. Opened his eyes. Felt his heart leap.

Straight ahead through the last cool wisps and not far away, light glowed dully.

His brilliant flashlight had prevented him from seeing it sooner. He raced forward again.

He could make out, in twenty strides, an irregular, large hole at the tunnel end, its broken edges framing a feeble gleam. He stopped the cart there, leaped it, and dove through the hole, barely catching his balance beyond it.

The place was large and shapeless--a cave. A ladder led to an evidently closed trap door overhead and a lantern hung from a rung. On the
floor,
apparently insensible, lay a man, a woman, and two children. With feverish but awkward effort he unscrewed the face plate. Pulled off a great glove. Felt, with his bared hand, the intense hotness of this vast chamber. Touched the motionless figures. Their hearts beat. Threadily.

Now he looked swiftly up at the irregular roof. It seemed to have buckled downward in places. A few broken stalactites had fallen from it. Next he grasped at the radiation counter tied to his asbestos suit. He could, he knew, already have received, in this cavern, a lethal dose of radiation. He carried the gadget to the wan light. Stared with unbelief at its dial: nine roentgens. Then guessed that the ten-story? twelve? fifteen?, anyhow, the entire apartment house might lie, as protective rubble, above this spot.

The air could barely be breathed. He put his face plate on again. He reefed in the aluminum line till it came tight enough so he could signal his success. Then, knowing George held the far end, he began a series of short and longer yanks to represent dots and dashes. He could not be sure he remembered the correct dot-dash symbol for every letter.

He merely hoped that if any letters were wrong he could send enough correctly so the gaps would be filled by guesses.

What he "telegraphed" back was:

"Two children. Woman. Man. Unconscious. Alive. Air here hot and exhausted.

Radiation level okay. Can you fix hose on my line that I can haul through and get some fresh air here?"

Back came tuggings he had trouble deciphering:

"Wilco. Had already brought up and rigged air conduit. Start hauling. More wire on hose, for sending next message."

Ben thought by the time he'd hauled the ever-more-resistant hose three-quarters of the distance, he couldn't make the last stretch. He was soaked now with sweat. His breath came raw into his lungs and went out in sobs. He gained another hundred yards. Then he couldn't budge the line an inch. Desperately, gasping, he looked about. Under the hole broken through stonework, near a pushed-back door, were tools they'd used. Including a crowbar. Ben grabbed it, twisted the aluminum wire around its lower end, braced the point of the bar against the wall, and began levering the line. Foot by foot, with relative ease now, his lever brought it toward him until, at last, he grabbed the end: copper tubing! But almost anything else, he realized, would have melted. He took off his face plate and thrust the air-pouring end of tubing into his suit. Coolness coursed over his body.

A minute later he arranged the hissing tube on the floor and pulled the heads of the four unconscious people near it. He could see them breathing the air, slowly, but breathing it. He signaled back a second time, to report those acts. He added, "They seem okay. Heat rather than exhaustion of oxygen probably cause of their passing out. No bad burns, I think. How can we get them your side?"

That problem required time for its solution.

But Farr and George Hyama finally hit upon a method.

In two hours they had readied another battery-propelled cart, one that could tow forward, and push backward, an enclosed "cabin" in which oxygen bottles furnished an atmosphere and around which Dry Ice-cooled and double-walled top, sides, end, and bottom made possible the transit of the long tunnel, even though the rock it penetrated still remained so hot that the air in its middle stood at a temperature above that of boiling water.

By the time that conveyance, and information as to its operation, reached Ben, the two children were crying, the woman was sitting up, being sick, and the man--a dark-eyed, swarthy, piratical-looking person--was fully conscious and trying to help. Ben, by then, knew the man was named Al; the two children--ten or twelve, he believed--Dorothy and Dick; and the woman, Angelica. And that was all he knew: it hurt their throats to talk.

He sent the two youngsters, screaming with fear, in the first load. The second carried Angelica. The man went next.

When Ben finally opened the improvised heat lock of the automative vehicle, and ripped off his heavy, ruined fire suit, he lay down and fainted. He did not remember anything of the fairly fast trip back. He was dimly aware of being heaved out of something by somebody and vaguely conscious of surprise as the elevator sank. He could see, and he was breathing fairly well, when they carried him tenderly into the Hall.

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