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+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Undersea Tube, by L. Taylor Hansen
+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Undersea Tube, by L. Taylor Hansen
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Undersea Tube
+
+Author: L. Taylor Hansen
+
+Illustrator: Hans Waldemar Wessolowski
+
+Release Date: December 25, 2008 [EBook #27609]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNDERSEA TUBE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="figright">
+<img src="images/001.png" width="434" height="500" alt="" title="" /></div>
+
+<h1>The <big>Undersea Tube</big></h1>
+
+<h2><small>BY L. TAYLOR HANSEN</small></h2>
+
+<div class="bk1"><b><big>Classic Reprint from<br />AMAZING STORIES, Nov., 1929</big></b><br />
+<i><small>Copyright, 1929, by E. P. Incorporated</small></i></div>
+
+<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">If</span> my friend the engineer had
+not told me the Tube was dangerous,
+I would not have bought
+a ticket on that fatal night, and
+the world would never have
+learned the story of the Golden
+Cavern and the City of the Dead.
+Having therefore, according to
+universal custom, first made my
+report as the sole survivor of the
+much-discussed Undersea Tube
+disaster to the International
+Committee for the Investigation
+of Disasters, I am now ready to
+outline that story for the world.
+Naturally I am aware of the
+many wild tales and rumors that
+have been circulated ever since
+the accident, but I must ask my
+readers to bear with me while I
+attempt to briefly sketch, not
+only the tremendous difficulties
+to be overcome by the engineers,
+but also the wind-propulsion theory
+which was made use of in
+this undertaking; because it is
+only by understanding something
+of these two phases of the Tube's
+engineering problems that one
+can understand the accident and
+its subsequent revelations.</p>
+
+<p>It will be recalled by those
+who have not allowed their view
+of modern history to become too
+hazy, that the close of the twentieth
+century saw a dream of
+the engineering world at last realized&mdash;the
+completion of the
+long-heralded undersea railroad.
+It will also be recalled that the
+engineers in charge of this stupendous
+undertaking were greatly
+encouraged by the signal success
+of the first tube under the
+English Channel, joining England
+and France by rail. However,
+it was from the second tube
+across the Channel and the tube
+connecting Montreal to New
+York, as well as the one connecting
+New York and Chicago, that
+they obtained some of their then
+radical ideas concerning the use
+of wind power for propulsion.
+Therefore, before the Undersea
+Tube had been completed, the engineers
+in charge had decided to
+make use of the new method in
+the world's longest tunnel, and
+upon that decision work was immediately
+commenced upon the
+blue-prints for the great air
+pumps that were to rise at the
+two ends&mdash;Liverpool and New
+York. However, I will touch upon
+the theory of wind-propulsion
+later and after the manner in
+which it was explained to me.</p>
+
+<p>It will be recalled that after
+great ceremonies, the Tube was
+begun simultaneously at the two
+terminating cities and proceeded
+through solid rock&mdash;low enough
+below the ocean floor to overcome
+the terrible pressure of the body
+of water over it, and yet close
+enough to the sea to overcome
+the intensity of subterranean
+heat. Needless to say, it was an
+extremely hazardous undertaking,
+despite the very careful surveys
+that had been made, for the
+little parties of workmen could
+never tell when they would strike
+a crack or an unexpected crevice
+that would let down upon them
+with a terrible rush, the waters
+of the Atlantic. But hazard is
+adventure, and as the two little
+groups of laborers dug toward
+each other, the eyes of the press
+followed them with more persistent
+interest than it has ever followed
+the daily toil of any man or
+group of men, either before or
+since.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Once</span> the world was startled
+by the "extree-ee&mdash;" announcing
+that the English group
+had broken into an extinct volcano,
+whose upper end had apparently
+been sealed ages before, for
+it contained not water but air&mdash;curiously
+close and choking perhaps,
+but at least it was not the
+watery deluge of death. And then
+came the great discovery. No one
+who lived through that time will
+forget the thrill that quickened
+the pulse of mankind when the
+American group digging through
+a seam of old lava under what
+scientists call the "ancient
+ridge," broke into a sealed cavern
+which gleamed in the probing
+flashlights of the workers
+like the scintillating points of a
+thousand diamonds. But when
+they found the jeweled casket,
+through whose glass top they
+peered curiously down upon the
+white body of a beautiful woman,
+partly draped in the ripples of
+her heavy, red hair, the world
+gasped and wondered. As every
+school child knows, the casket
+was opened by curious scientists,
+who flocked into the tube from
+the length of the world, but at
+the first exposure to the air, the
+strange liquid that had protected
+the body vanished, leaving in the
+casket not the white figure, but
+only a crumbling mass of grey
+dust. But the questions that the
+finding of the cave had raised remained
+unanswered.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/002.png" width="600" height="231" alt="" title="" /></div>
+
+<p>Who was this woman? How
+did she get into the sealed cavern?
+If she had been the court
+favorite of that mythical kingdom,
+now sunk beneath the
+waves, and had been disposed
+of in court intrigue, why would
+her murderers have buried her
+in such a casket? How had she
+been killed? An unknown poison?
+Perhaps she had been a
+favorite slave of the monarch.
+This view gained many converts
+among the archaeologists who
+argued that from all the evidence
+we have available, the
+race carrying the Iberian or
+Proto-Egyptian culture, long
+thought to have been the true
+refugees from sinking Atlantis,
+were a slight dark-haired race.
+Therefore this woman must
+have been a captive. Geologists,
+analyzing the lava, announced
+that it had hardened in air and
+not in water, while anthropologists
+classed the skull of the
+woman as essentially more modern
+than either the Neanderthal
+or Cro-Magnon types. But the
+engineers, secretly fuming at the
+delay, finally managed to fill up
+the cave and press on with their
+drills.</p>
+
+<p>Then following the arguments
+that still flourished in the press,
+came a tiny little news article
+and the first message to carry
+concern to the hearts of the engineers.
+The sea had begun to
+trickle in through one slight
+crack. Perhaps it was only because
+the crevice was located on
+the English side of the now famous
+"ancient ridge" that the
+article brought forth any notice
+at all. But for the engineers it
+meant the first warning of possibly
+ultimate disaster. They
+could not seal the crack, and
+pumps were brought into play.
+However, as a month wore on,
+the crack did not appear to
+widen to any material extent
+and the danger cry of a few
+pessimists was forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, it will be remembered,
+that sounders listening in
+the rocks heard the drillers of
+the other party, and then with
+wild enthusiasm the work was
+pushed on to completion. The
+long Tube had been dug. Now it
+only remained for the sides at
+the junction to be enlarged and
+encased with cast iron, while
+the work of setting up the great
+machines designed to drive the
+pellet trains through, was also
+pushed on to its ultimate end.
+Man had essayed the greatest
+feat of engineering ever undertaken
+in the history of the
+planet, and had won. A period of
+wild celebration greeted the first
+human beings to cross each direction
+below the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Did the volume of water increase
+that was carried daily
+out of the Tube and dumped
+from the two stations? If it did,
+the incident was ignored by the
+press. Instead, the fact that
+some "cranks" persisted in calling
+man's latest toy unsafe, only
+attracted more travel. The Undersea
+Tube functioned on regular
+schedule for three years, became
+the usual method of ocean
+transit.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">This</span> was the state of matters,
+when on the fourth of March
+last, our textile company ordered
+me to France to straighten
+out some orders with the France
+house, the situation being such
+that they preferred to send a
+man. Why they did not use radio-vision
+I do not care to state,
+as this is my company's business.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, upon entering my
+apartment, I was in the midst of
+packing when the television
+phone called me. The jovial features
+of "Dutch" Higgins, my
+one-time college room-mate and
+now one of the much-maligned
+engineers of the Undersea Tube,
+smiled back at me from the disk.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you? I thought we
+had a sort of dinner engagement
+at my apartment, Bob."</p>
+
+<p>"By gollies I forgot, Dutch.
+I'll be right over&mdash;before it gets
+cold."</p>
+
+<p>Then immediately I turned
+the knob to the Municipal Aerial-car
+yards, and ordered my
+motor, as I grabbed my hat and
+hurried to the roof. In due time,
+of course, I sprang the big surprise
+of the evening, adding:</p>
+
+<p>"And, of course, I'm going by
+the Tube, I feel sort of a half-partnership
+in it because you
+were one of the designers."</p>
+
+<p>A curious half-pained look
+crossed his face. We had finished
+our meal, and were smoking with
+pushed-back chairs. He finished
+filling his pipe, and scowled.</p>
+
+<p>"Well? Why don't you say
+something? Thought you'd be&mdash;well,
+sort of pleased."</p>
+
+<p>He struck his automatic lighter
+and drew in a long puff of
+smoke before answering.</p>
+
+<p>"Wish you'd take another
+route, Bob."</p>
+
+<p>"Take another route?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. If you want it straight,
+the Tube is not safe."</p>
+
+<p>"You are joking."</p>
+
+<p>But as I looked into his cold,
+thoughtful blue eyes, I knew he
+had never been more serious.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish that you would go by
+the Trans-Atlantic Air Liners.
+They are just as fast."</p>
+
+<p>"But you used to be so enthusiastic
+about the Tube, Dutch!
+Why I remember when it was
+being drilled that you would call
+me up at all kinds of wild hours
+to tell me the latest bits of news."</p>
+
+<p>He nodded slowly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that was in the days before
+the crack."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you expected to take care
+of possible leaks, you know," I
+countered.</p>
+
+<p>"But this crack opened after
+the tunnel had been dug past it,
+and lately it has opened more."</p>
+
+<p>"Are the other engineers
+alarmed?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. We are easily taking care
+of the extra water and again
+the opening seems to remain at
+a stationary width as it has for
+the past three years. But we cannot
+caulk it."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you going to publish
+these views?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. I made out a minority report.
+I can do no more."</p>
+
+<p>"Dutch, you are becoming
+over-cautious. First sign of old
+age."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," with the old smile.</p>
+
+<p>"But after all it is now more
+than three years since we have
+had a talk on the Tube. After it
+began to function as well as the
+Air-Express you sort of lost interest
+in it."</p>
+
+<p>"And the world did too."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly&mdash;but the public
+ever was a fickle mistress. Who
+said that before me?"</p>
+
+<p>He laughed and blew out a
+long puff of smoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Everyone, Bob."</p>
+
+<p>"But as to the Tube, if I
+cross under the sea, I would want
+to be as well informed on the
+road as I was three years ago.
+Now in the meantime, you have
+dropped interest in the long tunnel
+while I have become more interested
+in textiles&mdash;with the result
+that I have forgotten all I
+ever did know&mdash;which compared
+to your grasp of the details, was
+little enough."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">But</span> his face showed none of
+the old-time animation on
+the subject. What a different
+man, I mused to myself, from
+that enthusiastic engineering
+student that I used to come upon
+dreaming over his blue-prints.
+He was considered "half-cracked"
+in those days when he
+would enthuse over his undersea
+railroad, but his animated face
+was lit with inspiration. Now
+the light was gone.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Dutch, how about it?
+Aren't you going to make me
+that brief little sketch of the
+length plan and cross-section of
+the Tube? I remember your
+sketch of it in college, and it
+tends to confuse me with the
+real changes that were made
+necessary when the wind-propulsion
+method was adopted."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, old timer. You remember
+that the Tube was widened
+at the sides in order that we
+could make two circular tubes
+side by side&mdash;one going each
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"I had forgotten that they
+were circular."</p>
+
+<p>"That is because of the pressure.
+A circle presents the best
+resistance," and picking an odd
+envelope from his pocket, he
+made the following sketch and
+passed it to me.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/003.png" width="300" height="218" alt="CROSS-SECTION OF TUBE" title="" /></div>
+
+<p>I nodded as I recognized the
+cross-section.</p>
+
+<p>"Now the plan of the thing is
+like this," he added, putting aside
+his pipe and pulling a sheet of
+paper from the corner of his
+desk.</p>
+
+<p>Rapidly, with all his old accuracy,
+he sketched the main plan
+and leaned over as he handed it
+to me.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/004.png" width="300" height="276" alt="PLAN OF UNDER-SEA TUBE" title="" /></div>
+
+<p>"You see," he explained, picking
+up his pipe again, "both
+pumps work at one time&mdash;in fact,
+I should say all four, because
+this plan is duplicated on the
+English side. On both ends then,
+a train is gently pushed in by an
+electric locomotive. A car at a
+time goes through the gate so
+that there is a cushion of air
+between each car. The same
+thing happens at Liverpool.
+Now, when the due train comes
+out of the suction tube, it goes
+on out the gate, but the air behind
+it travels right on around
+and comes in behind the train
+that is leaving."</p>
+
+<p>"But how are you assured that
+it will not stall somewhere?"</p>
+
+<p>"It won't be likely to with
+pressure pumps going behind it
+and suction pumps pulling from
+in front. We can always put extra
+power on if necessary. Thus
+far the road has worked perfectly."</p>
+
+<p>"How much power do you
+need to send it through, under
+normal conditions?"</p>
+
+<p>"Our trains have been averaging
+about fifty tons, and for
+that weight we have found that
+a pound pressure is quite sufficient.
+Now, taking the tunnel's
+length as four thousand miles
+(of course it is not that long,
+but round figures are most convenient)
+and the tube width
+eleven and one quarter feet each
+and working this out we have
+3,020,000 cubic feet of free air
+per minute or 2,904,000 cubic
+feet of compressed air, which
+would use about 70,000 horse
+power on the air compressor."</p>
+
+<p>"But isn't the speed rather
+dizzy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not any more dizzy, Bob,
+than those old fashioned money-carrying
+machines that the department
+stores used to use&mdash;that
+is in comparison to size.
+The average speed is about 360
+feet a second. Of course, the
+train is allowed to slow down
+toward the end of its run, even
+before it hits the braking machinery
+beyond the gate."</p>
+
+<p>"But how much pressure did
+you say would be put on the
+back of the diaphragm&mdash;I remember
+that each car has a flat
+disc on the back that fits fairly
+tightly to the tube ..."</p>
+
+<p>"The pressure on the back is
+less than seven tons. However,
+the disc does not fit tight. There
+are several leaks. For instance,
+the cars are as you know, run on
+the principle of the monorail
+with a guiding rail on each side.
+The grooves for the rails with
+their three rollers are in each
+car. There is a slight leakage of
+air here."</p>
+
+<p>"You used the turbo type of
+blower, didn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Had to because of the noise.
+We put some silencing devices
+on that and yet we could not
+kill all of the racket. However a
+new invention has come up that
+we will make use of soon now."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">"But</span> I can't understand,
+Dutch, why you seemed so
+put out when I announced my
+intention of going to Europe via
+the Tube. Why, I can remember
+the day when that would have
+tickled you to death."</p>
+
+<p>"You followed the digging of
+the Tube, didn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"You remember the volcano
+and lava seams?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I do not believe that
+the crack was a pressure crevice.
+If it had been, we were far
+enough below the ocean floor to
+have partly relieved the situation
+by the unusually solid building
+of the Tube. The tremendous
+shell of this new type of specially
+hardened metal&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And the rich concrete that
+was used as filling! That was
+one job no one slipped up on. I
+remember how you watched it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yet the crack has widened,
+Bob, since the Tube was completed."</p>
+
+<p>"How can you be certain?"</p>
+
+<p>"By the amount of water coming
+through the drain pipes."</p>
+
+<p>"But you said that once more
+it was stationary."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and that is the very
+thing that proves, I believe, the
+nature of the crack."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't follow you."</p>
+
+<p>"Why it isn't a crack at all,
+Bob. It is an earthquake fault."</p>
+
+<p>"Good heavens, you don't
+mean&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do. I mean that the
+next time the land slips our little
+tube will be twisted up like
+a piece of string, or crushed like
+an eggshell. That always was a
+rocky bit of land. I thought in
+going that far north, though,
+that we had missed the main
+line of activity; I mean the disturbances
+that had once wiped
+out a whole nation, if your scientists
+are correct."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you mean that it is
+only a matter of time?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and I have been informed
+by one expert that the
+old volcanic activity is not dead
+either."</p>
+
+<p>"So that is what has stolen
+away your laugh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well I am one of the engineers&mdash;and
+they won't suspend the
+service."</p>
+
+<p>"Fate has played an ugly trick
+on you, Dutch, and through your
+own dreams too. However, you
+have made me decide to go by the
+Tube."</p>
+
+<p>He took his pipe out of his
+mouth and stared at me.</p>
+
+<p>"Sooner or later the Tube will
+be through, and I have never
+been across. Nothing risked&mdash;a
+dull life. Mine has been altogether
+too dull. I am now most
+certainly going by the Tube."</p>
+
+<p>A bit of the old fire lit up his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Same old Bob," he grunted as
+I rose, and then he grasped my
+hand with a grin.</p>
+
+<p>"Good luck, my boy, on your
+journey, and may old Vulcan be
+out on a vacation when you pass
+his door."</p>
+
+<p>Thus we said good-by. I did
+not know then that I would never
+see him again&mdash;that he also took
+the train that night in order to
+make one last plea to the International
+Committee, and so laid
+down his life with the passengers
+for whom he had pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>It was with many conflicting
+thoughts, however, that I hurried
+to the great Terminus that fatal
+night, where after being ticketed,
+photographed and tabulated by
+an efficient army of clerks, I found
+myself in due time, being ushered
+to my car of the train.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">For</span> the benefit of those who
+have never ridden upon the
+famous "Flier," I could describe
+the cars no better than to say
+that coming upon them by night
+as I did, they looked like a gigantic,
+shiny worm, of strange
+shape, through whose tiny port-holes
+of heavy glass in the sides,
+glowed its luminous vitals.</p>
+
+<p>I was pompously shown to the
+front car, which very much resembled
+a tremendous cartridge&mdash;as
+did all of the other segments
+of this great glow-worm.</p>
+
+<p>Having dismissed the porter
+with a tip and the suspicion that
+my having the front car was the
+work of my friend, who was willing
+to give me my money's worth
+of thrill, and that the porter was
+aware of this, I stowed away my
+bags and started to get ready for
+bed. I had no sooner taken off
+my coat than the door was opened
+and an old fellow with a mass of
+silver hair peered in at me.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, sir, but I
+understand you have engaged
+this car alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"I can get no other accommodations
+tonight. You have an extra
+berth here and I must get to
+Paris tomorrow. I will pay you
+well&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Take it. I was beginning to
+feel lonesome, anyway."</p>
+
+<p>He bowed gravely and ordered
+the porter to bring in his things.
+I decided he was a musician.
+Only artists go in for such lovely
+hair. But he undressed in dignified
+silence, not casting so much
+as another glance in my direction,
+while on my part I also forgot
+his presence when, looking
+through the port-hole, I realized
+that the train had begun to move.
+Soon the drone of the propelling
+engines began to make itself
+heard. Then the train began to
+dip down and the steel sides of
+the entrance became too high for
+me to see over. My friend of the
+silver hair had already turned off
+the light, and now I knew by the
+darkness that we had entered the
+Tube. For some time I lay awake
+thinking of "Dutch" and the
+ultimate failure of his life's
+dream, as he had outlined it to
+me, and then I sank into a deep,
+dreamless sleep.</p>
+
+<p>I was awakened by a terrible
+shock that hurled me up against
+the side of the compartment. A
+dull, red glow poured through the
+port-hole, lighting up the interior
+with a weird, bloody reflection.
+I crept painfully up to the
+port-hole and looked out. The
+strangest sight that man has
+ever looked upon met my eyes.
+The side of the wall had blown
+out into a gigantic cavern, and
+with it the rest of the cars had
+rolled down the bluff a tangled,
+twisted mass of steel. My car
+had almost passed by, and now it
+still stuck in the tube, even
+though the last port-hole through
+which I peered seemed to be suspended
+in air. But it was not the
+wrecked cars from which rose
+such wails of despair and agony
+that held my attention, but the
+cavern itself. For it was not really
+a cave, but a vast underground
+city whose wide, marble streets
+stretched away to an inferno of
+flame and lava. By the terrible
+light was lit up a great white
+palace with its gold-tipped
+scrolls, and closer to me, the golden
+temple of the Sun, with its
+tiers of lustrous yellow stairs&mdash;stairs
+worn by the feet of many
+generations.</p>
+
+<p>Above the stairs towered the
+great statue of a man on horseback.
+He was dressed in a sort of
+tunic, and in his uplifted arm he
+carried a scroll as if for the people
+to read. His face was turned
+toward me, and I marveled even
+in that wild moment that the
+unknown sculptor could have
+caught such an expression of appeal.
+I can see the high intellectual
+brow as if it were before me
+at this moment&mdash;the level, sympathetic
+eyes and the firm chin.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Then</span> something moving
+caught my eyes, and I swear I
+saw a child&mdash;a living child coming
+from the burning city&mdash;running
+madly, breathlessly from a
+wave of glowing lava that threatened
+to engulf him at any moment.
+In spite of all the ridicule
+that has been showered upon me,
+I still declare that the child did
+not come from the wreckage and
+that he wore a tunic similar to
+the one of the statue and not the
+torn bit of a nightgown or sheet.</p>
+
+<p>He was some distance from
+me, but I could plainly see his
+expression of wild distraction as
+he began to climb those gleaming
+stairs. Strangely lustrous in
+the weird light, was that worn
+stairway of gold&mdash;gold, the ancient
+metal of the Sun. With the
+slowness of one about to faint he
+dragged himself up, while his
+breath seemed to be torn from his
+throat in agonizing gasps. Behind
+him, the glowing liquid
+splashed against the steps and
+the yellow metal of the Sun began
+to drip into its fiery cauldron.</p>
+
+<p>The child reached the leg of
+the horse and clung there.</p>
+
+<p>... Then suddenly the whole
+scene began to shake as if I had
+been looking at a mirage, while
+just behind my car I had a flashing
+glimpse in that lurid light of
+an emerald-green deluge bursting
+in like a dark sky of solid water,
+and in that split-second before
+a crushing blow upon my
+back, even through that tangle of
+bedclothes, knocked me into unconsciousness,
+I seemed to hear
+again the hopeless note in the
+voice of my friend as he said:</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;an earthquake fault."</p>
+
+<p>After what seemed to me aeons
+of strange, buzzing noises and
+peculiar lights, I at last made
+out the objects around me as
+those of a hospital. Men with serious
+faces were watching me. I
+have since been told that I babbled
+incoherently about "saving
+the little fellow" and other equally
+incomprehensible murmurings.
+From them I learned that
+the train the other way was
+washed out, a tangled mass of
+wreckage just like my car, both
+terminus stations wrecked utterly,
+and no one found alive except
+myself. So, although I am to be
+a hopeless cripple, yet I am not
+sorry that the skill and untiring
+patience of the great English
+surgeon, Dr. Thompson, managed
+to nurse back the feeble
+spark of my life through all those
+weeks that I hung on the borderland;
+for if he had not, the world
+never would have known.</p>
+
+<p>As it is, I wonder over the
+events of that night as if it had
+not been an experience at all&mdash;but
+a wild weird dream. Even the
+gentleman with the mass of silver
+hair is a mystery, for he was
+never identified, and yet in my
+mind's recesses I can still hear
+his cultured voice asking about
+the extra berth, and mentioning
+his pressing mission to Paris.
+And somehow, he gives the last
+touch of strangeness to the
+events of that fatal night, and in
+my mind, he becomes a part of it
+no less than the child on the
+stairs, the burning inferno that
+lit the background, and the great
+statue of that unknown hero who
+held out his scroll for a moment
+in that lurid light, like a symbol
+from the sunken City of the
+Dead.</p>
+
+<div class="bk1"><b>THE END</b></div>
+
+<div class="trn"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b>
+This etext was first published in <i>Amazing Stories</i> November 1929
+and was produced from <i>Amazing Stories</i> May 1961.
+Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
+copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
+typographical errors have been corrected without note.</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Undersea Tube, by L. Taylor Hansen
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Undersea Tube, by L. Taylor Hansen
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Undersea Tube
+
+Author: L. Taylor Hansen
+
+Illustrator: Hans Waldemar Wessolowski
+
+Release Date: December 25, 2008 [EBook #27609]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNDERSEA TUBE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Undersea Tube
+
+BY L. TAYLOR HANSEN
+
+
+Classic Reprint from AMAZING STORIES, Nov., 1929
+
+Copyright, 1929, by E. P. Incorporated
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+If my friend the engineer had not told me the Tube was dangerous, I
+would not have bought a ticket on that fatal night, and the world would
+never have learned the story of the Golden Cavern and the City of the
+Dead. Having therefore, according to universal custom, first made my
+report as the sole survivor of the much-discussed Undersea Tube disaster
+to the International Committee for the Investigation of Disasters, I am
+now ready to outline that story for the world. Naturally I am aware of
+the many wild tales and rumors that have been circulated ever since the
+accident, but I must ask my readers to bear with me while I attempt to
+briefly sketch, not only the tremendous difficulties to be overcome by
+the engineers, but also the wind-propulsion theory which was made use of
+in this undertaking; because it is only by understanding something of
+these two phases of the Tube's engineering problems that one can
+understand the accident and its subsequent revelations.
+
+It will be recalled by those who have not allowed their view of modern
+history to become too hazy, that the close of the twentieth century saw
+a dream of the engineering world at last realized--the completion of the
+long-heralded undersea railroad. It will also be recalled that the
+engineers in charge of this stupendous undertaking were greatly
+encouraged by the signal success of the first tube under the English
+Channel, joining England and France by rail. However, it was from the
+second tube across the Channel and the tube connecting Montreal to New
+York, as well as the one connecting New York and Chicago, that they
+obtained some of their then radical ideas concerning the use of wind
+power for propulsion. Therefore, before the Undersea Tube had been
+completed, the engineers in charge had decided to make use of the new
+method in the world's longest tunnel, and upon that decision work was
+immediately commenced upon the blue-prints for the great air pumps that
+were to rise at the two ends--Liverpool and New York. However, I will
+touch upon the theory of wind-propulsion later and after the manner in
+which it was explained to me.
+
+It will be recalled that after great ceremonies, the Tube was begun
+simultaneously at the two terminating cities and proceeded through solid
+rock--low enough below the ocean floor to overcome the terrible pressure
+of the body of water over it, and yet close enough to the sea to
+overcome the intensity of subterranean heat. Needless to say, it was an
+extremely hazardous undertaking, despite the very careful surveys that
+had been made, for the little parties of workmen could never tell when
+they would strike a crack or an unexpected crevice that would let down
+upon them with a terrible rush, the waters of the Atlantic. But hazard
+is adventure, and as the two little groups of laborers dug toward each
+other, the eyes of the press followed them with more persistent interest
+than it has ever followed the daily toil of any man or group of men,
+either before or since.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Once the world was startled by the "extree-ee--" announcing that the
+English group had broken into an extinct volcano, whose upper end had
+apparently been sealed ages before, for it contained not water but
+air--curiously close and choking perhaps, but at least it was not the
+watery deluge of death. And then came the great discovery. No one who
+lived through that time will forget the thrill that quickened the pulse
+of mankind when the American group digging through a seam of old lava
+under what scientists call the "ancient ridge," broke into a sealed
+cavern which gleamed in the probing flashlights of the workers like the
+scintillating points of a thousand diamonds. But when they found the
+jeweled casket, through whose glass top they peered curiously down upon
+the white body of a beautiful woman, partly draped in the ripples of her
+heavy, red hair, the world gasped and wondered. As every school child
+knows, the casket was opened by curious scientists, who flocked into the
+tube from the length of the world, but at the first exposure to the air,
+the strange liquid that had protected the body vanished, leaving in the
+casket not the white figure, but only a crumbling mass of grey dust. But
+the questions that the finding of the cave had raised remained
+unanswered.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Who was this woman? How did she get into the sealed cavern? If she had
+been the court favorite of that mythical kingdom, now sunk beneath the
+waves, and had been disposed of in court intrigue, why would her
+murderers have buried her in such a casket? How had she been killed? An
+unknown poison? Perhaps she had been a favorite slave of the monarch.
+This view gained many converts among the archaeologists who argued that
+from all the evidence we have available, the race carrying the Iberian
+or Proto-Egyptian culture, long thought to have been the true refugees
+from sinking Atlantis, were a slight dark-haired race. Therefore this
+woman must have been a captive. Geologists, analyzing the lava,
+announced that it had hardened in air and not in water, while
+anthropologists classed the skull of the woman as essentially more
+modern than either the Neanderthal or Cro-Magnon types. But the
+engineers, secretly fuming at the delay, finally managed to fill up the
+cave and press on with their drills.
+
+Then following the arguments that still flourished in the press, came a
+tiny little news article and the first message to carry concern to the
+hearts of the engineers. The sea had begun to trickle in through one
+slight crack. Perhaps it was only because the crevice was located on the
+English side of the now famous "ancient ridge" that the article brought
+forth any notice at all. But for the engineers it meant the first
+warning of possibly ultimate disaster. They could not seal the crack,
+and pumps were brought into play. However, as a month wore on, the crack
+did not appear to widen to any material extent and the danger cry of a
+few pessimists was forgotten.
+
+Finally, it will be remembered, that sounders listening in the rocks
+heard the drillers of the other party, and then with wild enthusiasm the
+work was pushed on to completion. The long Tube had been dug. Now it
+only remained for the sides at the junction to be enlarged and encased
+with cast iron, while the work of setting up the great machines designed
+to drive the pellet trains through, was also pushed on to its ultimate
+end. Man had essayed the greatest feat of engineering ever undertaken in
+the history of the planet, and had won. A period of wild celebration
+greeted the first human beings to cross each direction below the sea.
+
+Did the volume of water increase that was carried daily out of the Tube
+and dumped from the two stations? If it did, the incident was ignored by
+the press. Instead, the fact that some "cranks" persisted in calling
+man's latest toy unsafe, only attracted more travel. The Undersea Tube
+functioned on regular schedule for three years, became the usual method
+of ocean transit.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This was the state of matters, when on the fourth of March last, our
+textile company ordered me to France to straighten out some orders with
+the France house, the situation being such that they preferred to send a
+man. Why they did not use radio-vision I do not care to state, as this
+is my company's business.
+
+Therefore, upon entering my apartment, I was in the midst of packing
+when the television phone called me. The jovial features of "Dutch"
+Higgins, my one-time college room-mate and now one of the much-maligned
+engineers of the Undersea Tube, smiled back at me from the disk.
+
+"Where are you? I thought we had a sort of dinner engagement at my
+apartment, Bob."
+
+"By gollies I forgot, Dutch. I'll be right over--before it gets cold."
+
+Then immediately I turned the knob to the Municipal Aerial-car yards,
+and ordered my motor, as I grabbed my hat and hurried to the roof. In
+due time, of course, I sprang the big surprise of the evening, adding:
+
+"And, of course, I'm going by the Tube, I feel sort of a
+half-partnership in it because you were one of the designers."
+
+A curious half-pained look crossed his face. We had finished our meal,
+and were smoking with pushed-back chairs. He finished filling his pipe,
+and scowled.
+
+"Well? Why don't you say something? Thought you'd be--well, sort of
+pleased."
+
+He struck his automatic lighter and drew in a long puff of smoke before
+answering.
+
+"Wish you'd take another route, Bob."
+
+"Take another route?"
+
+"Yes. If you want it straight, the Tube is not safe."
+
+"You are joking."
+
+But as I looked into his cold, thoughtful blue eyes, I knew he had never
+been more serious.
+
+"I wish that you would go by the Trans-Atlantic Air Liners. They are
+just as fast."
+
+"But you used to be so enthusiastic about the Tube, Dutch! Why I
+remember when it was being drilled that you would call me up at all
+kinds of wild hours to tell me the latest bits of news."
+
+He nodded slowly.
+
+"Yes, that was in the days before the crack."
+
+"Yet you expected to take care of possible leaks, you know," I
+countered.
+
+"But this crack opened after the tunnel had been dug past it, and lately
+it has opened more."
+
+"Are the other engineers alarmed?"
+
+"No. We are easily taking care of the extra water and again the opening
+seems to remain at a stationary width as it has for the past three
+years. But we cannot caulk it."
+
+"Are you going to publish these views?"
+
+"No. I made out a minority report. I can do no more."
+
+"Dutch, you are becoming over-cautious. First sign of old age."
+
+"Perhaps," with the old smile.
+
+"But after all it is now more than three years since we have had a talk
+on the Tube. After it began to function as well as the Air-Express you
+sort of lost interest in it."
+
+"And the world did too."
+
+"Certainly--but the public ever was a fickle mistress. Who said that
+before me?"
+
+He laughed and blew out a long puff of smoke.
+
+"Everyone, Bob."
+
+"But as to the Tube, if I cross under the sea, I would want to be as
+well informed on the road as I was three years ago. Now in the meantime,
+you have dropped interest in the long tunnel while I have become more
+interested in textiles--with the result that I have forgotten all I ever
+did know--which compared to your grasp of the details, was little
+enough."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But his face showed none of the old-time animation on the subject. What
+a different man, I mused to myself, from that enthusiastic engineering
+student that I used to come upon dreaming over his blue-prints. He was
+considered "half-cracked" in those days when he would enthuse over his
+undersea railroad, but his animated face was lit with inspiration. Now
+the light was gone.
+
+"Well, Dutch, how about it? Aren't you going to make me that brief
+little sketch of the length plan and cross-section of the Tube? I
+remember your sketch of it in college, and it tends to confuse me with
+the real changes that were made necessary when the wind-propulsion
+method was adopted."
+
+"All right, old timer. You remember that the Tube was widened at the
+sides in order that we could make two circular tubes side by side--one
+going each way."
+
+"I had forgotten that they were circular."
+
+"That is because of the pressure. A circle presents the best
+resistance," and picking an odd envelope from his pocket, he made the
+following sketch and passed it to me.
+
+[Illustration:--CROSS-SECTION OF TUBE--]
+
+I nodded as I recognized the cross-section.
+
+"Now the plan of the thing is like this," he added, putting aside his
+pipe and pulling a sheet of paper from the corner of his desk.
+
+Rapidly, with all his old accuracy, he sketched the main plan and leaned
+over as he handed it to me.
+
+[Illustration:--PLAN OF UNDER-SEA TUBE--]
+
+"You see," he explained, picking up his pipe again, "both pumps work at
+one time--in fact, I should say all four, because this plan is
+duplicated on the English side. On both ends then, a train is gently
+pushed in by an electric locomotive. A car at a time goes through the
+gate so that there is a cushion of air between each car. The same thing
+happens at Liverpool. Now, when the due train comes out of the suction
+tube, it goes on out the gate, but the air behind it travels right on
+around and comes in behind the train that is leaving."
+
+"But how are you assured that it will not stall somewhere?"
+
+"It won't be likely to with pressure pumps going behind it and suction
+pumps pulling from in front. We can always put extra power on if
+necessary. Thus far the road has worked perfectly."
+
+"How much power do you need to send it through, under normal
+conditions?"
+
+"Our trains have been averaging about fifty tons, and for that weight we
+have found that a pound pressure is quite sufficient. Now, taking the
+tunnel's length as four thousand miles (of course it is not that long,
+but round figures are most convenient) and the tube width eleven and one
+quarter feet each and working this out we have 3,020,000 cubic feet of
+free air per minute or 2,904,000 cubic feet of compressed air, which
+would use about 70,000 horse power on the air compressor."
+
+"But isn't the speed rather dizzy?"
+
+"Not any more dizzy, Bob, than those old fashioned money-carrying
+machines that the department stores used to use--that is in comparison
+to size. The average speed is about 360 feet a second. Of course, the
+train is allowed to slow down toward the end of its run, even before it
+hits the braking machinery beyond the gate."
+
+"But how much pressure did you say would be put on the back of the
+diaphragm--I remember that each car has a flat disc on the back that
+fits fairly tightly to the tube ..."
+
+"The pressure on the back is less than seven tons. However, the disc
+does not fit tight. There are several leaks. For instance, the cars are
+as you know, run on the principle of the monorail with a guiding rail on
+each side. The grooves for the rails with their three rollers are in
+each car. There is a slight leakage of air here."
+
+"You used the turbo type of blower, didn't you?"
+
+"Had to because of the noise. We put some silencing devices on that and
+yet we could not kill all of the racket. However a new invention has
+come up that we will make use of soon now."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"But I can't understand, Dutch, why you seemed so put out when I
+announced my intention of going to Europe via the Tube. Why, I can
+remember the day when that would have tickled you to death."
+
+"You followed the digging of the Tube, didn't you?"
+
+"Yes, of course."
+
+"You remember the volcano and lava seams?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, I do not believe that the crack was a pressure crevice. If it had
+been, we were far enough below the ocean floor to have partly relieved
+the situation by the unusually solid building of the Tube. The
+tremendous shell of this new type of specially hardened metal--"
+
+"And the rich concrete that was used as filling! That was one job no one
+slipped up on. I remember how you watched it--"
+
+"Yet the crack has widened, Bob, since the Tube was completed."
+
+"How can you be certain?"
+
+"By the amount of water coming through the drain pipes."
+
+"But you said that once more it was stationary."
+
+"Yes, and that is the very thing that proves, I believe, the nature of
+the crack."
+
+"I don't follow you."
+
+"Why it isn't a crack at all, Bob. It is an earthquake fault."
+
+"Good heavens, you don't mean--"
+
+"Yes, I do. I mean that the next time the land slips our little tube
+will be twisted up like a piece of string, or crushed like an eggshell.
+That always was a rocky bit of land. I thought in going that far north,
+though, that we had missed the main line of activity; I mean the
+disturbances that had once wiped out a whole nation, if your scientists
+are correct."
+
+"Then you mean that it is only a matter of time?"
+
+"Yes, and I have been informed by one expert that the old volcanic
+activity is not dead either."
+
+"So that is what has stolen away your laugh?"
+
+"Well I am one of the engineers--and they won't suspend the service."
+
+"Fate has played an ugly trick on you, Dutch, and through your own
+dreams too. However, you have made me decide to go by the Tube."
+
+He took his pipe out of his mouth and stared at me.
+
+"Sooner or later the Tube will be through, and I have never been across.
+Nothing risked--a dull life. Mine has been altogether too dull. I am now
+most certainly going by the Tube."
+
+A bit of the old fire lit up his eyes.
+
+"Same old Bob," he grunted as I rose, and then he grasped my hand with a
+grin.
+
+"Good luck, my boy, on your journey, and may old Vulcan be out on a
+vacation when you pass his door."
+
+Thus we said good-by. I did not know then that I would never see him
+again--that he also took the train that night in order to make one last
+plea to the International Committee, and so laid down his life with the
+passengers for whom he had pleaded.
+
+It was with many conflicting thoughts, however, that I hurried to the
+great Terminus that fatal night, where after being ticketed,
+photographed and tabulated by an efficient army of clerks, I found
+myself in due time, being ushered to my car of the train.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For the benefit of those who have never ridden upon the famous "Flier,"
+I could describe the cars no better than to say that coming upon them by
+night as I did, they looked like a gigantic, shiny worm, of strange
+shape, through whose tiny port-holes of heavy glass in the sides, glowed
+its luminous vitals.
+
+I was pompously shown to the front car, which very much resembled a
+tremendous cartridge--as did all of the other segments of this great
+glow-worm.
+
+Having dismissed the porter with a tip and the suspicion that my having
+the front car was the work of my friend, who was willing to give me my
+money's worth of thrill, and that the porter was aware of this, I stowed
+away my bags and started to get ready for bed. I had no sooner taken off
+my coat than the door was opened and an old fellow with a mass of silver
+hair peered in at me.
+
+"I beg your pardon, sir, but I understand you have engaged this car
+alone?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I can get no other accommodations tonight. You have an extra berth
+here and I must get to Paris tomorrow. I will pay you well--"
+
+I smiled.
+
+"Take it. I was beginning to feel lonesome, anyway."
+
+He bowed gravely and ordered the porter to bring in his things. I
+decided he was a musician. Only artists go in for such lovely hair. But
+he undressed in dignified silence, not casting so much as another glance
+in my direction, while on my part I also forgot his presence when,
+looking through the port-hole, I realized that the train had begun to
+move. Soon the drone of the propelling engines began to make itself
+heard. Then the train began to dip down and the steel sides of the
+entrance became too high for me to see over. My friend of the silver
+hair had already turned off the light, and now I knew by the darkness
+that we had entered the Tube. For some time I lay awake thinking of
+"Dutch" and the ultimate failure of his life's dream, as he had outlined
+it to me, and then I sank into a deep, dreamless sleep.
+
+I was awakened by a terrible shock that hurled me up against the side of
+the compartment. A dull, red glow poured through the port-hole, lighting
+up the interior with a weird, bloody reflection. I crept painfully up to
+the port-hole and looked out. The strangest sight that man has ever
+looked upon met my eyes. The side of the wall had blown out into a
+gigantic cavern, and with it the rest of the cars had rolled down the
+bluff a tangled, twisted mass of steel. My car had almost passed by, and
+now it still stuck in the tube, even though the last port-hole through
+which I peered seemed to be suspended in air. But it was not the wrecked
+cars from which rose such wails of despair and agony that held my
+attention, but the cavern itself. For it was not really a cave, but a
+vast underground city whose wide, marble streets stretched away to an
+inferno of flame and lava. By the terrible light was lit up a great
+white palace with its gold-tipped scrolls, and closer to me, the golden
+temple of the Sun, with its tiers of lustrous yellow stairs--stairs worn
+by the feet of many generations.
+
+Above the stairs towered the great statue of a man on horseback. He was
+dressed in a sort of tunic, and in his uplifted arm he carried a scroll
+as if for the people to read. His face was turned toward me, and I
+marveled even in that wild moment that the unknown sculptor could have
+caught such an expression of appeal. I can see the high intellectual
+brow as if it were before me at this moment--the level, sympathetic eyes
+and the firm chin.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then something moving caught my eyes, and I swear I saw a child--a
+living child coming from the burning city--running madly, breathlessly
+from a wave of glowing lava that threatened to engulf him at any moment.
+In spite of all the ridicule that has been showered upon me, I still
+declare that the child did not come from the wreckage and that he wore a
+tunic similar to the one of the statue and not the torn bit of a
+nightgown or sheet.
+
+He was some distance from me, but I could plainly see his expression of
+wild distraction as he began to climb those gleaming stairs. Strangely
+lustrous in the weird light, was that worn stairway of gold--gold, the
+ancient metal of the Sun. With the slowness of one about to faint he
+dragged himself up, while his breath seemed to be torn from his throat
+in agonizing gasps. Behind him, the glowing liquid splashed against the
+steps and the yellow metal of the Sun began to drip into its fiery
+cauldron.
+
+The child reached the leg of the horse and clung there.
+
+... Then suddenly the whole scene began to shake as if I had been
+looking at a mirage, while just behind my car I had a flashing glimpse
+in that lurid light of an emerald-green deluge bursting in like a dark
+sky of solid water, and in that split-second before a crushing blow upon
+my back, even through that tangle of bedclothes, knocked me into
+unconsciousness, I seemed to hear again the hopeless note in the voice
+of my friend as he said:
+
+"--an earthquake fault."
+
+After what seemed to me aeons of strange, buzzing noises and peculiar
+lights, I at last made out the objects around me as those of a hospital.
+Men with serious faces were watching me. I have since been told that I
+babbled incoherently about "saving the little fellow" and other equally
+incomprehensible murmurings. From them I learned that the train the
+other way was washed out, a tangled mass of wreckage just like my car,
+both terminus stations wrecked utterly, and no one found alive except
+myself. So, although I am to be a hopeless cripple, yet I am not sorry
+that the skill and untiring patience of the great English surgeon, Dr.
+Thompson, managed to nurse back the feeble spark of my life through all
+those weeks that I hung on the borderland; for if he had not, the world
+never would have known.
+
+As it is, I wonder over the events of that night as if it had not been
+an experience at all--but a wild weird dream. Even the gentleman with
+the mass of silver hair is a mystery, for he was never identified, and
+yet in my mind's recesses I can still hear his cultured voice asking
+about the extra berth, and mentioning his pressing mission to Paris. And
+somehow, he gives the last touch of strangeness to the events of that
+fatal night, and in my mind, he becomes a part of it no less than the
+child on the stairs, the burning inferno that lit the background, and
+the great statue of that unknown hero who held out his scroll for a
+moment in that lurid light, like a symbol from the sunken City of the
+Dead.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ This etext was first published in _Amazing Stories_ November 1929
+ and was produced from _Amazing Stories_ May 1961. Extensive research
+ did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this
+ publication was renewed. Minor spelling and typographical errors
+ have been corrected without note.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Undersea Tube, by L. Taylor Hansen
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNDERSEA TUBE ***
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