THE GIANT ATOM (Sci-Fi Adventure Novel). Malcolm Jameson
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу THE GIANT ATOM (Sci-Fi Adventure Novel) - Malcolm Jameson страница
Malcolm Jameson
THE GIANT ATOM
(Sci-Fi Adventure Novel)
Published by
Books
- Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -
2017 OK Publishing
ISBN 978-80-272-2024-3
Table of Contents
CHAPTER III. The House of Dread
CHAPTER IV. The Fat Falls into the Fire
CHAPTER IX. Thrown to the Wolves
CHAPTER XI. The Army Tries — and Misses
CHAPTER XIII. A Weird Proposition
CHAPTER XVII. The Affair at the Farmhouse
CHAPTER I
Ace in the Hole
The old quarry was an almost circular hole, a pit fully one hundred feet deep and with hewn walls that rose perpendicularly from the floor of the man-made crater. For a secret workshop the place had been ideally chosen. It lay high up in barren and sparsely wooded foothills in a section too poor to support so much as a rabbit. People rarely came there any more, now that the quarry was closed. There was no inducement — not even for game.
Which made the purring presence of the sleek automobile all the more inexplicable. But Steve Bennion knew perfectly well what he was doing. This old quarry some fifty miles up in the hills from the Bennion Research Laboratory belonged to him. He had spent a lot of solitary time up here, working privately on a project which he was exhibiting today for the first time.
Parking the car, Bennion assisted his lone companion out of the seat and led the way to the sheer edge of the cliff. He pointed downward toward the center of the abandoned quarry at what looked from here like a bronzed Easter egg resting on a giant ice-skate, within a stockade.
"There she is, Kitty," he said simply. "Inside that circle of dilapidated fencing. I screwed the last bolt home and made the final electrical connection yesterday. I wanted you to see her first."
Bennion's companion, a tall and unusually pretty girl, as deeply bronzed as he was; stared downward with widening brown eyes.
"Steve!" she exclaimed. "Not the completed space ship! You kept it secret while you worked on it?"
Steve Bennion smiled a trifle ruefully. "That's right," he admitted. "Now if we can just keep Bennion Research going for the few months necessary to perfect an atomic fuel — we'll be rich and famous in spite of General Atomics, Incorporated. At long last we can let the wedding bells ring out."
A shadow crossed the girl's face. She quickly tried to hide it as she moved closer, letting her arm rest against him.
"It's — it's wonderful, Steve," she murmured. "But I'm really afraid. You shouldn't have taken the entire last week off from your research work for Magnesium Metals. The bank has been calling up every day about that finance note."
"Oh, that," responded Bennion in quick relief. "They'll renew again. And as soon as we finish this job for Magnesium Metals we'll pay it off. Let's go down into the pit, Kitty. I can't rest until you've seen the first practical use for Anrad."
"How do we get down? Fly?" the girl asked, indicating the sheer drop.
Bennion laughed and stepped over to the car. From the baggage locker he took a boatswain's chair and a heavy coil of line. He led the way along the quarry edge to an old but sturdy derrick. In former days the derrick had been used to haul up the products of the quarry. Of late Bennion had used it to send down the plates and parts for the experimental space ship he had designed and built.
At the derrick he quickly rigged the bos'un's chair to the boom and rove his line through the end sheave.
"Ready," he cried. "Hop in, Kitty. Shut your eyes and have faith."
Aided by her employer and fiancé Katherine Pennell got into the seat for her descent into the quarry, but she didn't shut her eyes. She wasn't the eye-shutting kind.