<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII</h2>
<h3>The Trial Voyage</h3>
<p>The great steel forgings which were to form the
framework of the Skylark finally arrived and
were hauled into the testing shed. There, behind
closed doors, Crane inspected every square inch of the
massive members with a lens, but could find nothing
wrong. Still unsatisfied, he fitted up an electrical testing
apparatus in order to search out flaws which might
be hidden beneath the surface. This device revealed
flaws in every piece, and after thoroughly testing each
one and mapping out the imperfections he turned to
Seaton with a grave face.</p>
<p>"Worse than useless, every one of them. They are
barely strong enough to stand shipment. They figured
that we would go slowly until we were well out of the
atmosphere, then put on power—then something would
give way and we would never come back."</p>
<p>"That's about the right dope, I guess. But now
what'll we do? We can't cancel without letting them
know we're onto them, and we certainly can't use this
stuff."</p>
<p>"No, but we will go ahead and build this ship, anyway,
so that they will think that we are going ahead
with it. At the same time we will build another one,
about four times this size, in absolute secrecy, and...."</p>
<p>"What d'you mean, absolute secrecy? How can you
keep steel castings and forgings of that size secret
from Steel?"</p>
<p>"I know a chap who owns and operates a small steel
plant, so insignificant, relatively, that he has not yet
been bought out or frozen out by Steel. I was able
to do him a small favor once, and I am sure that he
will be glad to return it. We will not be able to oversee
the work, that is a drawback. We can get MacDougall
to do it for us, however, and with him doing the work
we can rest assured that there will be nothing off color.
Even Steel couldn't buy <i>him</i>."</p>
<p>"MacDougall! The man who installed the Intercontinental
plant? He wouldn't touch a little job like
this with a pole!"</p>
<p>"I think he would. He and I are rather friendly,
and after I tell him all about it he will be glad to take
it. It means building the first interplanetary vessel,
you know."</p>
<p>"Wouldn't Steel follow him up if he should go to
work on a mysterious project? He's too big to hide."</p>
<p>"No. He will go camping—he often does. I have
gone with him several times when we were completely
out of touch with civilization for two months at a time.
Now, about the ship we want. Have you any ideas?"</p>
<p>"It will cost more than our entire capital."</p>
<p>"That is easily arranged. We do not care how much
it costs."</p>
<p>Seaton began to object to drawing so heavily upon
the resources of his friend, but was promptly silenced.</p>
<p>"I told you when we started," Crane said flatly, "that
your solution and your idea are worth far more than
half a million. In fact, they are worth more than
everything I have. No more talk of the money end of
it, Dick."</p>
<p>"All right. We'll build a regular go-getter. Four
times the size—she'll be a bear-cat, <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note: The original read 'Mat'.">Mart</ins>. I'm glad
this one is on the fritz. She'll carry a two-hundred-pound
bar—Zowie! Watch our smoke! And say, why
wouldn't it be a good idea to build an attractor—a thing
like an object-compass, but mounting a ten-pound bar
instead of a needle, so that if they chase us in space
we can reach out and grab 'em? We might mount a
machine-gun in each quadrant, shooting X-plosive bullets,
through pressure gaskets in the walls. We should
have something for defense—I don't like the possibility
of having that gang of pirates after us, and nothing
to fight back with except thought-waves."</p>
<p>"Right. We will do both those things. But we
should make the power-plant big enough to avert any
possible contingency—say four hundred pounds—and
we should have everything in duplicate, from power-plant
to push-buttons."</p>
<p>"I don't think that's necessary, Mart. Don't you
think that's carrying caution to extremes?"</p>
<p>"Possibly—but I would rather be a live coward than
a dead hero, wouldn't you?"</p>
<p>"You chirped it, old scout, I sure would. I never
did like the looks of that old guy with the scythe, and
I would hate to let DuQuesne feel that he had slipped
something over on me at my own game. Besides, I've
developed a lot of caution myself, lately. Double she
is, with a skin of four-foot Norwegian armor. Let's
get busy!"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>They made the necessary alteration in the plans,
and in a few days work was begun upon the huge
steel shell in the little mountain steel-plant. The work
was done under the constant supervision of the great
MacDougall, by men who had been in his employ for<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_414" id="Page_414"></SPAN></span>
years and who were all above suspicion. While it was
being built Seaton and Crane employed a force of men
and went ahead with the construction of the space-car
in the testing shed. While they did not openly slight
the work nearly all their time was spent in the house,
perfecting the many essential things which were to
go into the real Skylark. There was the attractor, for
which they had to perfect a special sighting apparatus
so that it could act in any direction, and yet would
not focus upon the ship itself nor anything it contained.
There were many other things.</p>
<p>It was in this work that the strikingly different temperaments
and abilities of the two men were most
clearly revealed. Seaton strode up and down the room,
puffing great volumes of smoke from his hot and reeking
briar, suggesting methods and ideas, his keen mind
finding the way over, around, or through the apparently
insuperable obstacles which beset their path.
Crane, seated calmly at the drafting-table, occasionally
inhaling a mouthful of smoke from one of his specially-made
cigarettes, mercilessly tore Seaton's suggestions
to shreds—pointing out their weaknesses, proving his
points with his cold, incisive reasoning and his slide-rule
calculations of factors, stresses, and strains.
Seaton in turn would find a remedy for every defect,
and finally, the idea complete and perfect, Crane would
impale it upon the point of his drafting pencil and
spread it in every detail upon the paper before him,
while Seaton's active mind leaped to the next problem.</p>
<p>Not being vitally interested in the thing being built
in the shed, they did not know that to the flawed members
were being attached faulty plates, by imperfect
welding. Even if they had been interested they could
not have found the poor workmanship by any ordinary
inspection, for it was being done by a picked crew of
experts picked by Perkins. But to make things even,
Perkins' crew did not know that the peculiar instruments
installed by Seaton and Crane, of which their
foreman took many photographs, were not real instruments,
and were made only nearly enough like them to
pass inspection. They were utterly useless, in design
and function far different from the real instruments
intended for the Skylark.</p>
<p>Finally, the last dummy instrument was installed in
the worthless space-car, which the friends referred
to between themselves as "The Cripple," a name which
Seaton soon changed to "Old Crip." The construction
crew was dismissed after Crane had let the foreman
overhear a talk between Seaton and himself in which
they decided not to start for a few days as they had
some final experiments to make. Prescott reported
that Steel had relaxed its vigilance and was apparently
waiting for the first flight. About the same time word
was received from MacDougall that the real Skylark
was ready for the finishing touches. A huge triplane
descended upon Crane Field and was loaded to its
capacity with strange looking equipment. When it
left Seaton and Crane went with it, "to make the final
tests before the first flight," leaving a heavy guard over
the house and the testing shed.</p>
<p>A few nights later, in inky blackness, a huge shape
descended rapidly in front of the shed, whose ponderous
doors opened to receive it and closed quickly after
it. The Skylark moved lightly and easily as a wafted
feather, betraying its thousands of tons of weight only
by the hole it made in the hard-beaten earth of the
floor as it settled to rest. Opening one of the heavy
doors, Seaton and Crane sprang out into the darkness.</p>
<p>Dorothy and her father, who had been informed
that the Skylark was to be brought home that night,
were waiting. Seaton caught up his sweetheart in one
mighty arm and extended his hand past her to Vaneman,
who seized it in both his own. Upon the young
man's face was the look of a victorious king returning
from conquest. For a few minutes disconnected exclamations
were all that any of the party could utter.
Then Seaton, loosening slightly his bear's hold upon
Dorothy, spoke.</p>
<p>"She flies!" he cried exultantly. "She flies, dearest,
like a ray of light for speed and like a bit of thistledown
for lightness. We've been around the moon!"</p>
<p>"Around the moon!" cried the two amazed visitors.
"So soon?" asked Vaneman. "When did you start?"</p>
<p>"Almost an hour ago," replied Crane readily; he
had already taken out his watch. His voice was calm,
his face quiet, but to those who knew him best a deeper
resonance in his voice and a deeper blue sparkle in his
eyes betrayed his emotion. Both inventors were moved
more than they could have told by their achievement,
by the complete success of the great space-cruiser upon
which they had labored for months with all the power
of their marvelous intellects. Seaton stood now at the
summit of his pride. No recognition by the masses,
no applause by the multitudes, no praise even from
the upper ten of his own profession could equal for
him the silent adulation of the two before him. Dorothy's
exquisite face was glorified as she looked at her
lover. Her eyes wonderful as they told him how
high he stood above all others in her world, how much
she loved him. Seeing that look; that sweet face, more
beautiful than ever in this, his hour of triumph; that
perfect, adorable body, Seaton forgot the others and
a more profound exaltation than that brought by his
flight filled his being—humble thankfulness that he was
the man to receive the untold treasure of her great
giving.</p>
<p>"Every bit of mechanism we had occasion to use
worked perfectly," Crane stated proudly. "We did
not find it necessary to change any of our apparatus
and we hope to make a longer flight soon. The hour
we took on this trip might easily have been only a few
minutes, for the Lark did not even begin to pick up
speed."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Shiro looked at Crane with an air of utter devotion
and bowed until his head approached the floor.</p>
<p>"Sir," he said in his stilted English. "Honorable
Skylark shall be marvelous wonder. If permitting, I
shall luxuriate in preparing suitable refreshment."</p>
<p>The permission granted, he trotted away into the
house, and the travelers invited their visitors to inspect
the new craft. Crane and the older man climbed
through the circular doorway, which was at an elevation
of several feet above the ground. Seaton and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_415" id="Page_415"></SPAN></span>
Dorothy exchanged a brief but enthusiastic caress before
he lifted her lightly up to the opening and followed
her up a short flight of stairs. Although she knew what
to expect, from her lover's descriptions and from her
own knowledge of "Old Crip," which she had seen
many times, she caught her breath in amazement as
she stood up and looked about the brilliantly-lighted
interior of the great sky-rover. It was a sight such
as had never before been seen upon earth.</p>
<div class="center"><div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/003.png" width-obs="430" height-obs="600" alt="Inside the Skylark." title="Inside the Skylark." /> <span class="caption">In the exact center of the huge shell was a spherical network of enormous steel beams. Inside this structure could be seen a similar network which, mounted upon universal bearings, was free to revolve in any direction.</span></div>
</div>
<p>She saw a spherical shell of hardened steel armor-plate,
fully forty feet in diameter; though its true shape
was not readily apparent from the inside, as it was
divided into several compartments by horizontal floors
or decks. In the exact center of the huge shell was
a spherical network of enormous steel beams. Inside
this structure could be seen a similar network which,
mounted upon universal bearings, was free to revolve
in any direction. This inner network was filled with
machinery, surrounding a shining copper cylinder.
From the outer network radiated six mighty supporting
columns. These, branching as they neared the hull
of the vessel, supported the power-plant and steering
apparatus in the center and so strengthened the shell
that the whole structure was nearly as strong as a solid
steel ball. She noticed that the floor, perhaps eight
feet below the center, was heavily upholstered in leather
and did not seem solid; and that the same was true of
the dozen or more seats—she could not call them chairs—which
were built in various places. She gazed with
interest at the two instrument boards, upon which
flashed tiny lights and the highly-polished plate glass,
condensite, and metal of many instruments, the use of
which she could not guess.</p>
<p>After a few minutes of silence both visitors began
to ask questions, and Seaton showed them the principal
features of the novel craft. Crane accompanied
them in silence, enjoying their pleasure, glorying in
the mighty vessel. Seaton called attention to the great
size and strength of the lateral supporting columns,
one of which was immediately above their heads, and
then led them over to the vertical column which pierced
the middle of the floor. Enormous as the lateral had
seemed, it appeared puny in comparison with this
monster of fabricated steel. Seaton explained that
the two verticals were many times stronger than the
four laterals, as the center of gravity of the ship had
been made lower than its geometrical center, so that
the apparent motion of the vessel and therefore the
power of the bar, would usually be merely vertical.
Resting one hand caressingly upon the huge column,
he exultantly explained that these members were "the
last word in strength, made up of many separate I-beams
and angles of the strongest known special steel,
latticed and braced until no conceivable force could
make them yield a millimeter."</p>
<p>"But why such strength?" asked the lawyer doubtfully.
"This column alone would hold up Brooklyn
Bridge."</p>
<p>"To hold down the power-plant, so that the bar won't
tear through the ship when we cut her loose," replied
Seaton. "Have you any idea how fast this bird can
fly?"</p>
<p>"Well, I have heard you speak of traveling with the
velocity of light, but that is overdrawn, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"Not very much. Our figures show that with this
four-hundred-pound bar"—pointing to the copper
cylinder in the exact center of the inner sphere—"we
could develop not only the velocity of light, but an
acceleration equal to that velocity, were it not for the
increase in mass at high velocities, as shown by Einstein
and others. We can't go very fast near the earth, of
course, as the friction of the air would melt the whole
works in a few minutes. Until we get out of the
atmosphere our speed will be limited by the ability of
steel to withstand melting by the friction of the air to
somewhere in the neighborhood of four or five thousand
miles per hour, but out in space we can develop any
speed we wish, up to that of light as a limit."</p>
<p>"I studied physics a little in my youth. Wouldn't
the mere force of such an acceleration as you mention
flatten you on the floor and hold you there? And any
sudden jar would certainly kill you."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>"There can't be any sudden jar. This is a special
floor, you notice. It is mounted on long, extremely
heavy springs, to take up any possible jar.
Also, whenever we are putting on power we won't try
to stand up, our legs would crimple up like strings.
We will ride securely strapped into those special seats,
which are mounted the same as the floor, only a whole
lot more so. As to the acceleration...."</p>
<p>"That word means picking up speed, doesn't it?"
interrupted Dorothy.</p>
<p>"The rate of picking up speed," corrected Seaton.
"That is, if you were going forty miles per hour one
minute, and fifty the next minute, your acceleration
would be ten miles per hour per minute. See? It's
acceleration that makes you feel funny when you start
up or down in an elevator."</p>
<p>"Then riding in this thing will be like starting up in
an elevator so that your heart sinks into your boots
and you can't breathe?"</p>
<p>"Yes, only worse. We will pick up speed faster and
keep on doing it...."</p>
<p>"Seriously," interrupted the lawyer, "do you think
that the human body can stand any such acceleration
as that?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. We are going to find out, by starting
out slowly and increasing our acceleration to as
much as we can stand."</p>
<p>"I see," Vaneman replied. "But how are you going
to steer her? How do you keep permanent reference
points, since there are no directions in space?"</p>
<p>"That was our hardest problem," explained Seaton,
"but Martin solved it perfectly. See the power-plant
up there? Notice those big supporting rings and bearings?
Well, the power-plant is entirely separate from
the ship, as it is inside that inner sphere, about which
the outer sphere and the ship itself are free to revolve
in any direction. No matter how much the ship rolls
and pitches, as she is bound to do every time we come
near enough to any star or planet to be influenced by
its gravitation, the bar stays where it is pointed. Those
six big jackets in the outer sphere, on the six sides of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_416" id="Page_416"></SPAN></span>
the bar, cover six pairs of gyroscope wheels, weighing
several tons each, turning at a terrific speed in a vacuum.
The gyroscopes keep the whole outer sphere in exactly
the same position as long as they are kept turning, and
afford us not only permanent planes of reference, but
also a solid foundation in those planes which can be
used in pointing the bar. The bar can be turned
instantly to any direction whatever by special electrical
instruments on the boards. You see, the outer sphere
stays immovably fixed in that position, with the bar at
liberty to turn in any direction inside it, and the ship
at liberty to do the same thing outside it.</p>
<p>"Now we will show you where we sleep," Seaton
continued. "We have eight rooms, four below and
four above," leading the way to a narrow, steep steel
stairway and down into a very narrow hall, from either
side of which two doors opened. "This is my room, the
adjoining one is Mart's. Shiro sleeps across the hall.
The rest of the rooms are for our guests on future
trips."</p>
<p>Sliding back the door, he switched on the light and
revealed a small but fully-appointed bedroom, completely
furnished with everything necessary, yet everything
condensed into the least possible space. The
floor, like the one above, was of cushioned leather supported
by springs. The bed was a modification of the
special seats already referred to. Opening another
sliding door, he showed them an equally complete and
equally compact bathroom.</p>
<p>"You see, we have all the comforts of home. This
bathroom, however, is practical only when we have
some force downward, either gravitation or our own
acceleration. The same reasoning accounts for the
hand-rails you see everywhere on board. Drifting in
space, you know, there is no weight, and you can't
walk; you must pull yourself around. If you tried to
take a step you would bounce up and hit the ceiling,
and stay there. That is why the ceilings are so well
padded. And if you tried to wash your face you would
throw water all over the place, and it would float around
in the air instead of falling to the floor. As long as
we can walk we can use the bathroom—if I should
want to wash my face while we are drifting, I just
press this button here, and the pilot will put on enough
acceleration to make the correct use of water possible.
There are a lot of surprising things about a trip into
space."</p>
<p>"I don't doubt it a bit, and I'm simply wild to go for
a ride with you. When will you take me, Dicky?"
asked Dorothy eagerly.</p>
<p>"Very soon, Dottie. As soon as we get her in perfect
running condition. You shall be the first to ride with
us, I promise you."</p>
<p>"Where do you cook and eat? How do you see out?
How about the air and water supply? How do you
keep warm, or cool, as the case may be?" asked the
girl's father, as though he were cross-examining a
witness.</p>
<p>"Shiro has a galley on the main floor, and tables
fold up into the wall of the main compartment. The
passengers see out by sliding back steel panels, which
normally cover the windows. The pilot can see in any
direction from his seat at the instrument-board, by
means of special instruments, something like periscopes.
The windows are made of optical glass similar to that
used in the largest telescopes. They are nearly as thick
as the hull and have a compressive resistance almost
equal to that of armor steel. Although so thick, they are
crystal clear, and a speck of dust on the outer surface
is easily seen. We have water enough in tanks to
last us three months, or indefinitely if we should have
to be careful, as we can automatically distill and purify
all our waste water, recovering absolutely pure H<sub>2</sub>O.
We have compressed air, also in tanks, but we need
very little, as the air is constantly being purified. Also,
we have oxygen-generating apparatus aboard, in case
we should run short. As to keeping warm, we have
electric heating coils, run by the practically inexhaustible
power of a small metal bar. If we get too near the
sun and get too warm, we have a refrigerating machine
to cool us off. Anything else?"</p>
<p>"You'd better give up, Dad," laughingly advised his
daughter. "You've thought of everything, haven't you,
Dick?"</p>
<p>"Mart has, I think. This is all his doing, you know.
I wouldn't have thought of a tenth of it, myself."</p>
<p>"I must remind you young folks," said the older
man, glancing at his watch, "that it is very late and
high time for Dottie and me to be going home. We
would like to stay and see the rest of it, but you know
we must be away from here before daylight."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>As they went into the house Vaneman asked:</p>
<p>"What does the other side of the moon look
like? I have always been curious about it."</p>
<p>"We were not able to see much," replied Crane "It
was too dark and we did not take the time to explore
it, but from what we could see by means of our searchlights
it is very much like this side—the most barren
and desolate place imaginable. After we go to Mars,
we intend to explore the moon thoroughly."</p>
<p>"Mars, then, is your first goal? When do you intend
to start?"</p>
<p>"We haven't decided definitely. Probably in a day
or two. Everything is ready now."</p>
<p>As the Vanemans had come out in the street car,
in order to attract as little attention as possible, Seaton
volunteered to take them home in one of Crane's cars.
As they bade Crane goodnight after enjoying Shiro's
"suitable refreshment" the lawyer took the chauffeur's
seat, motioning his daughter and Seaton into the closed
body of the car. As soon as they had started Dorothy
turned in the embrace of her lover's arm.</p>
<p>"Dick," she said fiercely. "I would have been worried
sick if I had known that you were way off there."</p>
<p>"I knew it, sweetheart. That's why I didn't tell you
we were going. We both knew the Skylark was perfectly
safe, but I knew that you would worry about
our first trip. Now that we have been to the moon you
won't be uneasy when we go to Mars, will you, dear?"</p>
<p>"I can't help it, boy. I will be afraid that something
terrible has happened, every minute. Won't you take
me with you? Then, if anything happens, it will happen
to both of us, and that is as it should be. You<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_417" id="Page_417"></SPAN></span>
know that I wouldn't want to keep on living if anything
<i>should</i> happen to you."</p>
<p>He put both arms around her as his reply, and
pressed his cheek to hers.</p>
<p>"Dorothy sweetheart, I know exactly how you feel.
I feel the same way myself. I'm awfully sorry, dear,
but I can't do it. I know the machine is safe, but I've
got to prove it to everybody else before I take you on
a long trip with me. Your father will agree with me
that you ought not to go, on the first trip or two, anyway.
And besides, what would Madam Grundy say?"</p>
<p>"Well, there <i>is</i> a way...." she began, and he felt
her face turn hot.</p>
<p>His arms tightened around her and his breath came
fast.</p>
<p>"I know it, sweetheart, and I would like nothing
better in the world than to be married today and take
our honeymoon in the Skylark, but I can't do it. After
we come back from the first long trip we will be married
just as soon as you say ready, and after that we
will always be together wherever I go. But I can't
take even the millionth part of a chance with anything
as valuable as you are—you see that, don't you, Dottie?"</p>
<p>"I suppose so," she returned disconsolately, "but
you'll make it a short trip, for my sake? I know I
won't rest a minute until you get back."</p>
<p>"I promise you that we won't be gone more than
four days. Then for the greatest honeymoon that ever
was," and they clung together in the dark body of the
car, each busy with solemn and beautiful thoughts of
the happiness to come.</p>
<p>They soon reached their destination. As they entered
the house Dorothy made one more attempt.</p>
<p>"Dad, Dick is just too perfectly mean. He says he
won't take me on the first trip. If you were going out
there wouldn't mother want to go along too?"</p>
<p>After listening to Seaton he gave his decision.</p>
<p>"Dick is right, Kitten. He must make the long trip
first. Then, after the machine is proved reliable, you
may go with him. I can think of no better way of
spending a honeymoon—it will be a new one, at least.
And you needn't worry about the boys getting back
safely. I might not trust either of them alone, but
together they are invincible. Good-night, children. I
wish you success, Dick," as he turned away.</p>
<p>Seaton took a lover's leave of Dorothy, and went
into the lawyer's study, taking an envelope from his
pocket.</p>
<p>"Mr. Vaneman," he said in a low voice, "we think
the Steel crowd is still camping on our trail. We are
ready for them, with a lot of stuff that they never heard
of, but in case anything goes wrong, Martin has written
between the lines of this legal form, in invisible ink
A-36, exactly how to get possession of all our notes and
plans, so that the company can go ahead with everything.
With those directions any chemist can find and
use the stuff safely. Please put this envelope in the
safest place you can think of, and then forget it unless
they get both Crane and me. There's about one chance
in a million of their doing that, but Mart doesn't gamble
on even that chance."</p>
<p>"He is right, Dick. I believe that you can outwit
them in any situation, but I will keep this paper where
no one except myself can ever see it, nevertheless.
Good-night, son, and good luck."</p>
<p>"The same to you, sir, and thank you. Good-night."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_528" id="Page_528"></SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />