Harl Vincent was the pen name of Harold Vincent Schoepflin
(born New York City, 19 October 1893; died Los Angeles, 5 May 1968), a
mechanical engineer employed by Westinghouse who specialized in the installation
of large electrical apparatus. He was an early reader of Hugo Gernsback's
original science fiction magazine,
Amazing Stories,
and it wasn't long before he decided to try his hand at writing science fiction.
He proved to have a talent for writing readable prose, and his first published
story, "The Golden Girl of Munan", appeared in the June 1928 issue of
Amazing. Some beginning writers find that when they've succeeded in making
a professional sale, the writing bug goes away. For Vincent, it had the opposite
effect. He found himself writing story after story, and succeeded in placing
them in the science fiction magazines. Altogether, he published 54 stories
between 1928 and 1935, and another 20 between 1938 and 1942, making him one of
the most prolific writers of the era. However, by the time science fiction began
to move beyond the pulp magazines after World War II, Vincent had dropped out of
the field. Apart from the occasional early story published in an anthology, the
only fiction to see book publication under Vincent's name was the 1966 novel
The Doomsday Planet.
But with the rise of the internet, and the accident of old stories falling into
the public domain, Vincent's fiction is starting to see the light of day again.
His story "Creatures of Vibration" from the January 1932 issue of Astounding
Stories was uploaded into Project Gutenberg on July 26, 2007, and can be
found here. And since the
March 1931 issue of Astounding, containing Vincent's story "Terrors
Unseen", has fallen into my hands, I've taken it upon myself to resurrect this
story as well (in a multipart format suitable for the blog medium). I now
present, for the first time since its original publication 77 years ago, part 1
of "Terrors Unseen".
Terrors Unseen
by Harl Vincent
Something about the lonely figure of the girl caused Edward Vail to bring his
car to a sudden stop at the side of the road. When first he had glimpsed her off
there on that narrow strip of rockbound coast he was mildly surprised, for it
was a desolate spot and seldom frequented by bathers so late in the season. Now
he was aroused to startled attention by the unnatural posture of the slender
body that had just been erect and outlined sharply against the graying September
sky. He switched off the ignition and sprang to the ground.
Bent backward and twisted into the attitude of a contortionist, the little
figure in the crimson bathing suit was a thing at which to marvel. No human
being could maintain that position without falling, yet the girl did not fall to
the jagged stones that lay beneath her. She was rigid, straining. Then suddenly
her arm waved wildly and she screamed, a wild gasping cry that died in her
throat on a note of despairing terror. It seemed that she struggled furiously
with an unseen power for one horrible instant. Then the tortured body lurched
violently and collapsed in a pitiful quivering heap among the stones.
Eddie Vail was running now, miraculously picking his way over the treacherous
footing. The girl had fainted, no doubt of that, and something was seriously
wrong with her.
A mysterious mechanical something whizzed past; something that buzzed like a
thousand hornets and slithered over the rocks in a series of metallic clanks.
Then it was gone -- or so it seemed in the confusion of Eddie's mind; but he had
seen nothing. Probably a fantasy of his overworked brain, or only the surf
breaking against the sea wall. He turned his attention to the girl.
* * *
She was moaning and tossing her head, returning painfully to consciousness. He
straightened her limbs and placed his folding coat under the restless head,
noting with alarm that vicious red welts marred the whiteness of her arms and
shoulders. It was as if she had been beaten cruelly; those marks could never
have resulted from her fall. Poor kid. Subject to fits of some sort, he
presumed. She was a good looker too, and no mistake. He smoothed back the
rumpled mass of golden hair and studied her features. They were vaguely
familiar.
Then she opened her eyes. Stark terror looked out from their ultramarine depths,
and her lips quivered as if she were about to cry. He raised her to a more
comfortable position and supported her with an encircling arm. She did cry a
little, like a frightened child. Then, with startling abruptness, she sprang to
her feet.
"Where is it?" she demanded.
"Where's what?" Eddie was on his feet, peering in all directions. He remembered
the queer sounds he had heard or imagined.
"I -- I don't know." The girl passed a trembling hand before her eyes as if to
wipe away some terrifying vision. "Perhaps it's my imagination, but I felt -- it
was just as real -- one of father's iron monsters. Beating me; bending me. I'd
have snapped in a moment. But nothing was there. I -- I'm afraid . . . ."
Eddie caught her as she swayed on her feet. "There now," he said soothingly,
"you're all right, Miss Shelton. It's gone now, whatever it was." Iron monsters!
In a flash it had come to him tht this girl he held in his arms was Lina
Shelton, daughter of the robot wizard. No wonder she was afflicted with
hallucinations! But those bruises were real, as was the forcible twisting of her
lithe young body. And he had heard something.
* * *
"You know me?" The girl was calmer now and faced him with a surprised look.
"Yes, Miss Shelton. At least I recognize you from the pictures. Society page,
you know. And I'm Edward Vail -- Eddie for short -- on vacation and at your
service."
The girl smiled wanly. "You know of father's break with Universal Electric? Of
his private experiments?"
"I heard of the scrap and how he walked out on the outfit, but nothing further."
Eddie thought grimly of how nearly he had come to losing his own job when David
Shelton broke relations with his employers. He had been too enthusiastic in
support of some of the older man's claims.
"It's been terrible," the girl whispered. She clung nervously to his arm as he
picked his way back to the road. "The loneliness, and all. No servants will stay
out here now, and father spends all his time in the laboratory. Then -- this
fear of the mechanical men -- they haunt me. I -- I guess they've got me a
little goofy."
Eddie laughed reassuringly. "Perhaps," he suggested, "you will let me help you.
Your father, I believe, will remember me, and I'll be very glad to --"
"No, no!" The girl seemed frightened at the thought. "I'm sure he wouldn't
welcome you. He's changed greatly of late and is suspicious of everyone, even
keeping things from me. But it's awfully nice of you to offer your assistance,
and you've been a perfect peach to take care of me this way. I -- I'd better go
now."
They had reached the road and Eddie looked uncertainly at his roadster. He hated
to thik of leaving the girl in this lonely spot. She was obviously in a state of
extreme nervous tension and, to him, seemed pathetically helpless and afraid.
"That the house?" he asked, pointing in the direction of the gloomy old mansion
whose dilapidated gables were barely visible over the tree tops.
"Yes." The girl shivered and drew closer to him.
The ensuing silence was broken by the slam of a door. His car! Eddie looked
toward it in amazement; he was hearing things again. The springs sagged on the
driver's side as under the weight of a very heavy occupant, but the seat was
empty. Then came the whine of the starter and the motor purred into life. The
gears clashed sickeningly and the car was jerked into the road with a violence
that should have stripped the differential. He pulled the girl aside just as it
roared past and disappeared around the bend in a cloud of dust. The sound of the
exhaust died away rapidly and left them staring into each other's eyes in awed
silence.
2
This is the second installment of "Terrors Unseen", a 1931
science fiction story by Harl Vincent, a prolific writers of the 1930s who has
since fallen into obscurity. Since the story is now in the public domain, I have
taken it upon myself to reprint it here on my blog, so that it will not be lost
to posterity once the last copy of the March 1931 issue of Astounding
Stories crumbles into dust. The first installment of the story can be found
here. And now, on with the show . . .
* * *
David Shelton was prowling around in the shrubbery when they approached the
house -- a furtive, unkempt creature whom Eddie would hardly have recognized. He
straightened up and peered at his daughter's companion with obvious disapproval.
"Lina," he said severely, "I've told you we want no visitors."
"Yes, Dad, I know, but Mr. Vail's car was stolen out in front and there is no
way for him to go on. We must look after him."
"His car -- stolen? Who stole it?" David Shelton drew close and glared
suspiciously at his unwelcome visitor.
"One of your monsters, I think," she replied shakily, "though we could see
nothing. And the same thing attacked me and beat me. Look at my bruises!"
Shelton was examining the marks, and his fingers trembled as he touched his
daughter's shoulder. He looked piteously into her eyes. "Are you sure, Lina?
Sure? Did you see it?"
"No, no. But I felt and heard -- the iron arms and the clamps and the buzzing.
Oh, it was horrible!" The girl's voice rose hysterically.
"Oh, Lord! What have I done?" groaned Shelton. "It's true, then. Lina, listen:
I've succeeded in making them invisible, and one got away this morning. But I
thought -- I thought --" He looked at Eddie, remembering his presence suddenly.
"But I'm talking too much. It seems to me I remember having seen you before,
young man."
"You have, sir," Eddie stated. "In the research laboratory of Universal
Electric. I work with Borden."
"They've sent you to find me?" Shelton stiffened perceptibly.
"Indeed, not, sir. I'm on vacation and was merely passing by when I saw your
daughter in danger, a danger I still do not understand."
"Yes, and he helped me to the road," Lina interposed, "and then lost his car at
the hands of --"
"Silence!" her father thundered. But his eyes fell before the fire that
instantly flashed in those of the girl.
"Now, you listen to me!" she returned angrily. "I've stayed on here with you
until I'm nearly crazy with your everlasting puttering and experimenting --
hearing your uncanny machines walking around in the middle of the night --
seeing impossible sights -- then, this thing I couldn't see but could feel. And
you've gotten into such a state that you'll go crazy yourself, if you continue.
Something's got to be done, I tell you. I can't stand it!"
* * *
Her voice broke on a choked sob.
"But, Lina --"
"Don't but me, Father. I mean it. Mr. Vail discovered your hideout quite by
accident and he's been very nice to me. I tell you he means no harm and I want
him to stay. If you're not decent to him, if you send him away, I swear I'll go
too. I will -- I will!"
Shelton's eyes misted and something of the hardness left his expression. A look
of haunting fear took its place and he stared pleadingly at Eddie.
"Br-r! I'm cold!" Lina exclaimed irrelevantly. "And -- I believe I'm going to
cry." She turned away and raced for the shelter of the gloomy old house without
another word.
Eddie turned inquiring eyes on his unwilling host.
"Just like her mother before her," Shelton muttered softly. Then he faced the
younger man squarely and his shoulders staightened. "Mr. Vail," he said
sheepishly, "I've been a fool and I ask your pardon. But Lina doesn't know.
There's something tremendous behind all this, something that's gotten beyond me.
I'll send her away for her own safety, but I must stay on. If -- if only there
was someone I could trust --"
"You can trust me, sir," Eddie stated simply.
The older man paced the ground nervously, and Eddie could see that he was under
a most severe mental strain. Several times he halted in his tracks and peered
anxiously at his guest. Then he seemed to make a sudden decision.
"Vail," he said sharply, "I need help badly. I want you to stay, if you will.
You swear you'll not reveal what I am about to show you?"
"I swear it, sir."
"You'll not report to Universal?"
"Never."
* * *
They surveyed each other appraisingly. Eddie was mystified by the happenings of
the day and was curious to learn more concerning these mythical invisible
creations. It was inconceivable that the scientist had spoken truly of his
accomplishment. Yet, he had done some marvelous things with Universal and, maybe
-- well, anyway, there was the girl.
"Come with me," Shelton was saying: "I believe you're a square shooter, Vail."
He was leading the way along the gravel path at the side of the house. Before
them loomed the squat brick building that was the laboratory.
The door crashed open before Shelton's hand had reached the knob, and one of
those buzzing, unseen monstrosities rushed clanking by, knocking the scientist
from his feet in its passage. Ponderous, speeding footsteps crunched the gravel
of the path, and then, with a wild thrashing of the underbrush alongside, the
thing was gone.
Eddie bent over the prostrate man and saw that he was unconscious. A thin
trickle of blood ran from a cut in the side of his head.
"Lina! Lina!" called Eddie frantically. For the first time in his life he was
genuinely frightened.
3
This is the third installment of "Terrors Unseen", a 1931
science fiction story by Harl Vincent, a prolific writers of the 1930s who has
since fallen into obscurity. Since the story is now in the public domain, I have
taken it upon myself to reprint it here on my blog, so that it will not be lost
to posterity once the last copy of the March 1931 issue of Astounding
Stories crumbles into dust. The first two installments of the story can be
found
here and
here. And now, on with the show . . .
* * *
He half carried, half dragged the limp body through the door of the laboratory
and propped it in a chair. It required but a moment for him to see that
Shelton's injury was inconsequential. He had only been stunned and already
showed signs of recovering.
"What is it, Mr. Vail? What's happened?" came the voice of Lina Shelton
breathlessly. She was framed in the doorway, dressed now and panting from her
exertions in responding to his call. "Oh, it's father," she wailed, dropping to
her knees at his side. "He's been hurt. Badly, too."
"No, not badly, Miss Shelton. He'll be around in a minute. I'm sorry to have
excited you, but when I called I feared it was worse than it is." He was washing
the blood from her father's small wound as he spoke.
She took the basin from his hand, spilling some of the water in her eagerness.
"Here, let me have that cloth," she demanded.
Eddie admired her as her deft fingers took up the task. She was as exquisite in
a simple sport outfit as she had been in her bathing suit.
The scientist opened his eyes after a moment. Remembrance came at once and he
sat erect in the chair, staring.
"Lina!" he exclaimed, grasping her hand conclusively. "You're here, thank God! I
dreamed -- oh, it was horrible -- I dreamed they had you." He clung to her
closely.
"They," she murmurred inquiringly.
"Yes. Two of them are loose now. It's danger for you, my dear. You must leave at
once. No, no -- I can't let you out of my sight until they are captured or
destroyed." He rose to his feet in his agitation and shook his head to clear it.
He looked pleadingly at Eddie as if expecting him to offer a solution of the
difficulty.
"Vail!" he exploded, then, pointing a shaking forefinger at an elaborate
short-wave radio transmitter which occupied a corner of the large room, "I ask
you to bear witness. That is the source of energy for these creations of mine
and it's shut down. How on earth can they keep going? I ask you."
"Perhaps someone else, sir," Eddie suggested doubtfully. "Have you any enemies
who might be able to duplicate the impulses of that apparatus?"
"Bah! Enemies, yes -- with Universal -- but none who could duplicate the
complicated fequencies I use. My secrets are my own. I've never even put them on
paper."
* * *
Eddie was examining the intricate apparatus. "You knew of the first one's
escape, didn't you?" he asked. "How did it happen?"
Shelton again became the enthusiastic scientist. "Here," he said, "I'll show you
and you can judge for yourself." He strode to the gleaming figure of a
seven-foot robot of startlingly human-like appearance.
Lina let forth an exclamation of repugnance and fear.
"No, Mr. Shelton," Eddie objected. "The same thing will occur again. Then there
will be three."
"We'll fix that, my boy." The scientist was removing cover plates from the hip
joins of the mechanical man. "I'll disconnect the cables that feed the
locomotors. He can't walk then."
Eddie was still doubtful but dared offer no further objection, especially since
Lina Shelton was watching in wide-eyed silence. He examined the monster and saw
that it was quite similar in outside appearance to those supplied by Universal
for heavy manual labor, excepting that this one was armed as were those used for
prison guards. There were the same articulated limbs and the various clamps and
hooks for lifting and heavy hauling; the tentacles for grasping; machine guns
front and back. Under the helical headpiece that was the antenna this robot
seemed to have two eyes -- a new feature -- but closer examination showed these
to be the twin lenses of a stereoscopic motion picture camera. This robot, then,
could see. Or at least it could record what the lenses saw for its masters.
"There," Shelton grunted when he had finished his tinkering, "he's paralyzed
from the waist down. Let this one try and get away from us."
"Guns aren't loaded, are they?" Eddie asked.
"Lord, no! Never have any of them loaded. That would be a fool stunt."
Shelton had pulled the starting handle of a motor-generator and its rising whine
accompanied his words.
* * *
The vacuum tubes of the transmitter glowed into life and the scientist
manipulated the controls rapidly. Lina was watching the robot with fascinated
awe. Its arms moved in obedience to the controls, tentacles waved and coiled;
the humming of its internal mechanisms filled the room. The locomotion controls
had no effect as the scientist had predicted. Eddie drew a sigh of relief.
"Now, Vail, watch," Shelton exulted. "I'll show you what I was doing with the
first one." He closed a switch that lighted aother bank of vacuum tubes behind
the control panel.
"You can make this one invisible?" Eddie asked incredulously.
"Certainly -- from the waist up. This ought to be good."
"Mind telling me the principle?"
"Not at all -- now. I've your promise of secrecy. It's a simple matter, Vail,
really. Just a problem of wave motions -- light. Invisible light; the
ultra-violet, you know. My robots are built of specially alloyed metals which
permit great freedom of molecular vibration. The insulating materials and even
the glass of the camera lenses are possessed of the same property. Get it? I
merely set up a wave motion in the atoms of the material that is in synchronism
with the frequency of ultra-violet light, which is invisible to the human eye.
All visible colors are absorbed, or more accurately, none are reflected
excepting the ultra-violet. Perfect transparency is obtained since there is
neither refraction nor diffraction of the visible colors. And there you are!"
Eddie stared at the upper half of the robot and saw that it was changing color
as Shelton tuned the transmitted wave. Then suddenly it was gone. The entire
upper portion of the mechanism had vanished; had just snuffed out like the flame
of a candle. He could see down into the tops of the thing's hollow legs. Shelton
laughed at him as he stretched forth his hand and hesitatingly felt for the
invisible mid-section and upper body. It was there all right, unyielding and
cold, that metal body. But no trace of it was visible to the eye. He drew back
his fingers as if they had touched a hot stove. The thing was positively
uncanny.
"Dad! Turn it off -- please," Lina begged. "It's getting on my nerves. Please!"
Obligingly, Shelton pulled the switch. "Now you'll see," he said to Eddie,
"whether the same thing happens. Watch."
* * *
Mistily at first, the outlines of the monster's torso and arms came into view,
semi-transparent but clouding rapidly to opacity. Then it glinted with the
barely visible violent, a solid once more, rigid and motionless. It was a
lifeless mechanism, for the source of its energy had been cut off. Eddie had an
almost irresistible impulse to pinch himself.
Then he gasped audiibly, as did Shelton, for the thing snuffed out of sight
again without warning, and the hum of its many motors resumed. There came a
terrific clanking as it waved arms and tentacles and violently thrashed with its
upper body. But the visible portion, its legs, remained rooted to the floor of
the laboratory. Lucky it was that the scientist had disconnected those wires;
lucky too that the machine guns were empty of ammunition.
"There now -- see?" Shelton's voice rose excitedly. "It's been no fault of mine.
The power is off but it moves -- it moves. What on earth do you suppose --"
Eddie's shout interrupted him. He had seen something at the window: a face
pressed against the pane and contorted with unutterable malice. Then it was
gone. With the shout of warning still in his throat, Eddie bounded through the
door in pursuit of the intruder. Lina's cry of recognition followed him into the
twilight. "Carlos!" she had called.
He saw a stocky figure slink around the corner of the laboratory and make for
the underbrush beyond. In a flash he was after him. No, he thought grimly,
Shelton hadn't any enemy clever enough to duplicate his transmitter! The hell he
didn't! Who the devil was this fellow Carlos anyway? He tore savagely at the
impeding branches as he plunged deeper and deeper into the thicket.
4
This is the fourth installment of "Terrors Unseen", a 1931
science fiction story by Harl Vincent, a prolific writers of the 1930s who has
since fallen into obscurity. Since the story is now in the public domain, I have
taken it upon myself to reprint it here on my blog, so that it will not be lost
to posterity when the last copy of the March 1931 issue of Astounding
Stories crumbles into dust. The first three installments of the story can
be found
here,
here, and
here. And now, on with the show . . .
* * *
It was a fruitless chase and Eddie soon retraced his steps to the laboratory.
Swell mess he'd gotten himself into! His car was gone: probably wrapped around a
tree by this time. And here was a situation that spelled real danger, a thing
with which Shelton was utterly unable to cope. As a matter of fact, he was so
impractical -- such a visionary cuss, after the fashioin of all geniuses -- that
he'd never be convinced of the seriousness of the matter until it was too late.
What to do? The girl was a corker, though, and game as they made 'em. Just the
sort a fellow could tie to . . . .
Lina's firm clear voice came to him through the open door of the laboratory.
"Dad," she was saying, "why don't you give it up? Let's go back to New York
where it is safe for you and for me. Let the things go and forget about them.
What do they amount to, after all? We've plenty of money and you alredy have
earned enough fame to last the rest of your life. Come on now -- please -- for
me."
"What do they amount to?" Shelton reiterated, his voice rising querulously. "Lina,
it's the most tremendous thing I've ever done. Think for a moment of what my
robots could accomplish in the next war. And there'll be a next war as sure as
you're alive. Think of it! No sending of our young manhood into the bloody
fields of battle; no manning of our air fleets with the cream of our youth; no
bloodshed on our side whatsoever. Instead, these robots will fight the war.
They'll fight other robots too, no doubt, but the property of invisibility will
be an invincible weapon. It will be a war that will end war once and for all.
You can't --"
"Nonsense, father," the girl returned sharply. "You've let your enthusiasm run
away with your judgment. See what's happened already? -- someone's figured it
out before you've even perfected the thing. An enemy of our country could do the
same in wartime. Maybe it's a foreign spy who has done what's been done to-day."
* * *
Eddie walked into the laboratory. "Couldn't find him," he announced briefly.
"No difference," said Shelton. "He doesn't count in this. We called to you when
you rushed out, but couldn't make you hear."
"Who is he?" Eddie asked shortly. What he had overheard made him more than ever
impatient with the older man. So clever and yet so dense, Shelton was.
Lina avoided his gaze.
"Only Carlos -- Carlos Savarino," said Shelton, carelessly, "a Chilean, I think.
He worked for me for two months during the summer and I fired him for getting
fresh with Lina. Good mechanic, but dumb as an ox. Had to tell him every little
detail when he was doing something in the shop. I'd have saved time if I'd done
it myself."
The girl looked at Eddie squarely now. She was flushing hotly. "And I
horsewhipped him," she added.
"Yes," Shelton laughed; "it was rich. He sneaked away like a whipped puppy, and
this is the first time we've seen him since."
Eddie whistled. "And you think he doesn't count in this?" he asked.
"Of course not. Too dumb, I tell you. Doesn't know the first principles of
science. He thinks the only wave motion is that of the ocean." Shelton chuckled
over his own jest.
"I wouldn't be too sure," Eddie snapped. "And I want to tell you something, Mr.
Shelton. Through no fault of my own, I heard some of your conversation with Li
-- with your daughter, before I returned here. I was puzzled over your reasons
for working so absorbedly on this thing, but now I know them and I think you're
wasting your time and keeping your duaghter in needless danger."
"You dare talk to me like this!" Shelton roared.
"I do, sir, and you'll thank me later," Eddie returned the older man's glare
with one equally savage.
Lina's gurgle of laughter broke the tension. "He's right, Dad, and you know it,"
she interposed. "Let him finish."
Eddie needed no such encouragement, though it warmed his heart. And Shelton
listened respectfully when he continued, "I'm into this now, sir, and I intend
to see it through to the end. I'll keep your secret, too, though I doubt if
it'll ever be of much value to you. Know what I think? I think this Carlos is a
damn clever fellow instead of the ass you took him to be. He probably just
pretended he was ignorant of science. Why shouldn't he? That way he got a
liberal education from you in the very things he wated to find out. Since you
tied the can to him he's had plenty of chances to build a duplicate of your
control apparatus -- with the aid of some foreign government, no doubt -- and
now they've stolen two of your machines to complete the job. Your secret already
is out and in the very hands you've tried to keep it from."
* * *
Shelton paled visibly as Eddie talked. "But -- but how --" he stammered.
"How should I know how they did it?' the younger man countered. "Here -- let's
take a look around. I'll bet they've left their trail right here in this room."
He walked from one end of the laboratory to the other, peering into corners and
under work benches as he passed. Shelton trailed him like a shadow, squinting
through the square lenses of his spectacles.
They carefully avoided the partially invisible robot, for the humming of its
upper motors continued and clanking sounds occasionally issued from the unseen
upper portion. The enemies of David Shelton were still at work on their hidden
controls.
"Here -- what's this?" Eddie exclaimed suddenly, pointing out a glinting object
in a dark corner of the laboratory.
Shelton examined it closely, looking over his shoulder. The object he had
located seemed to be a mounted and hooded lens, a highly polished glass of about
two inches diameter with its mounting attached rigidly to the wall.
"Never saw that before," Shelton stated with conviction. "And -- why -- it looks
like an objective such as those used in the latest automatic television
transmitters."
"Just what it is," Eddie grunted. He picked up a pinch bar from a nearby tool
rack and drove its end through the glass as he spoke the words.
A violent wrench tore the thing loose and broke away a section of the thin
plastered wall. There, in the cleverly concealed cavity behind, was revealed the
mechanism of the radio "eye." Somewhere, someone had been watching their every
move. And abruptly the thrashings of the robot ceased and its upper portion
again became visible.
5
This is the fifth installment of "Terrors Unseen", a 1931
science fiction story by Harl Vincent, a prolific writers of the 1930s who has
since fallen into obscurity. Since the story is now in the public domain, I have
taken it upon myself to reprint it here on my blog, so that it will not be lost
to posterity when the last copy of the March 1931 issue of Astounding Stories
crumbles into dust. The first four installments of the story can be found
here,
here,
here, and
here. And now, on with the show . . .
* * *
"Well," said David Shelton. "Well! Looks as if you're right, young man. I'm
astonished." His watery eyes looked sheepishly over the rims of his glasses.
Lina watched their every move. She seemed to sense the seriousness of the
situation far more than did her father.
Then the lights went out. It had darkened to night outside and the blackness and
silence in the laboratory was like that of a tomb.
"They've cut the wires," Eddie whispered hoarsely. "Got any weapons here,
Shelton?"
"Yes. A couple of automatics. I'll get them." The scientist was no coward,
anyway. His whispered words came calmly through the silence.
Eddie heard him shuffle a few steps and fumble with a drawer of the desk. In a
moment the cold hard butt of a pistol was thrust into his hand. It had a
comforting feel.
"Stay here with Lina," he commanded. "I'll go out and see if I can find them.
This looks nasty to me."
"No," came the girl's voice. "I'm going too."
"You are not," Eddie hissed. "You'll stay here or I'll know the reason. It's
dark as a pocket outside and my eyes are as good as theirs. I'll get 'em if
they're around here. You hear me?"
"Yes," she whispered meekly.
Edward Vail, only that morning headed for rest and quiet, was now out in the
night, stalking an unknown and vicious enemy. And -- for what? As he asked
himself the question, the smile of Lina seemed to answer him from the blackness.
Cherchez la femme! He was getting dotty as he neared his thirties.
Maybe it was the hard work that had affected his mind.
* * *
The black hulk of the old house loomed against the scarcely less dark sky. There
was no moon, and in only one tiny portion of the heavens were the stars visible.
Mighty few of them at that. The swish-swish of the surf came to his ears
faintly. Or was it someone creeping along the wall of the house? He held his
breath and waited.
They wouldn't use the robots at night. Couldn't follow their movements in the
teleview, if such an attachment had been built into their control transmitter.
No, the devils would be here in person.
A muttered Teutonic curse sounded close at hand. That wouldn't be Carlos. God!
Were the heinies mixed up in this thing? Just like 'em to be swiping a new war
machine; but hadn't they gotten enough in 1944? Without warning he was
catapulted from his feet by the impact of a heavy body. He struck the ground so
violently that the pistol was jarred from his hand. Disarmed before the fight
had started!
Then he was rolling over and over, battling desperately with an assailant who
was much larger and heavier than himself. He was dazed and weakened from his
initial dive to the hard ground. All rules of boxing and wrestling were
forgotten. Biting, kicking, gouging, all were the same to this silent and
powerful antagonist. It was catch-as-catch-can in the darkness, and mostly the
other fellow could and did. He had a grip like the clamp of a robot. Trying to
dig out one of his eyes? Eddie saw stars -- and lashed out with all his might,
his flying fists playing a tattoo on the other's ribs. Short arm jabs that
brought grunts of agony from his big assailant. Try to blind him, would he?
Eddie somehow managed to get on top; his clutching fingers found the other's
collar. Then he let loose with terrific rights and lefts that smacked home to
head and face. Those outlanders don't like the good old American fist, and Eddie
had room to bring them in from way back, now. The fellow had ceased struggling
and Eddie's hands were getting slippery. Blood! Must be, for the stuff was warm
and sticky. He rested for a moment, breathing heavily. The other was quiet
beneath him -- knocked cold. He staggered to his feat triumphantly; wondered how
many more of them there were.
* * *
He looked around in the darkness, straining his eyes in vain to pierce its thick
veil. There was a glimmer of light over there, through a window. The laboratory!
The light flickered a second and vanished. A cold fear gripped him and he
stumbled through the grounds blindly, finally colliding painfully with the brick
wall. He felt his way toward the door, or where he thought it should be.
He dared not call out for fear the others would hear. Where was that
damned door? He rested again and listened. Not a sound was to be heard from
within or without. he clawed his way frantically along the unsympathetic wall.
It was a mile wide, that laboratory of Shelton's Ah -- at last! Weakly, he
staggered within.
"Lina!" he whispered. "Lina! Shelton!"
There was no reply. He fumbled for a match. Funny how slowly his mind worked . .
. thoughts coming jerkily like a sound film running at quarter speed . . .
fingers shaking so he could scarcely strike a light. The flare showed the
laboratory empty of human beings . . . Lina gone . . . that crazy robot . . .
quiet now, and visible . . . but grinning at him . . . then darkness . . . .
6
This is the sixth installment of "Terrors Unseen", a 1931
science fiction story by Harl Vincent, a prolific writers of the 1930s who has
since fallen into obscurity. Since the story is now in the public domain, I have
taken it upon myself to reprint it here on my blog, so that it will not be lost
to posterity when the last copy of the March 1931 issue of Astounding
Stories crumbles into dust. The first five installments of the story can be
found
here,
here,
here,
here, and
here. And now, on with the show . . .
* * *
What a headache! Eddie rolled over and groaned. Astounded by the hardness of his
bed and the stiffness of his joints, he roused to instant wakefulness; sat up
and stared. Where the devil was he? The laboratory -- Shelton's -- Lina. He
jumped to his feet. Dawn was breaking and its first faint radiance lighted the
robot with eery shifting colors. He berated himself: he'd passed out.
He dashed through the door and made a wild circuit of the grounds. Empty! No --
there was his automatic, where it had fallen. Blood stains on the grass showed
where the encounter had taken place last night. Must have smashed the Dutchman's
nose. But he was gone. Everybody was gone. He rushed into the house and from
room to room, upstairs and down. The place was deserted.
This was something to think about. Not an automobile around, no neighbors, not
even a telephone. When Shelton went into seclusion, he did it thoroughly. Eddie
returned to the laboratory and hunched himself in the scientist's chair. Maybe
he could think better here.
They had Shelton and his daughter, all right. Kidnaped them. There was probably
some detail of his discovery they couldn't dope out, and had decided to force
him into telling them. The devils would use Lina's safety as a threat to force
him into anything. Horrible, that thought. And Carlos already had made advances
to her.
Startled by a sharp click, he turned around. The robot was whirring into life.
Fast workers, whoever Shelton's enemies were, and up early! He found the pinch
bar with which he had wrecked the television apparatus and, with a few mighty
blows, destroyed the antenna and headpiece of the mechanical man. They'd not
pull off any devilment with this one, anyway.
A wave meter on one of the benches attracted his attention and he twirled its
knob. It gave a strong indication at one and a half meters. The wave length of
their control transmitter! If only he could find -- but there it was: a
direction finder. Hastily, he lighted its tubes and tuned to the frequency shown
by the meter. He rotated the loop over the compass dial and carefully noted the
maximum and minimum signals. He had a line on the transmitter! And it must be
close by, for the intensity of the carrier wave was tremendous.
* * *
Slipping the automatic into his pocket, he left the laboratory and struck out
through the underbrush in the direction Carlos had taken the day before.
Fighting his way through the tangled shrubbery, he kept his eyes constantly on
the needle of the magnetic compass he had wrenched from the direction finder. It
was tough going through the thicket, and just as bad across a swampy clearing
where he was mired to the knees before he got across. Up the hill and into the
woods he forged, keeping doggedly to the direction he had determined. This was
rough country, less than a hundred miles from New York but uncultivated and
unsettled excepting for the few summer places along the shore. He'd heard that
these backwoods were infested with rum-runners and hijackers, a cutthroat gang.
There was a cabin off there through the trees, almost on the line he was
following. Must be what he was looking for. He advanced cautiously, creeping
stealthily from tree to tree.
Voices came to his ears, and the throb of a motor-generator. It was the place,
all right. He crept closer, and, circling the house, saw that an almost
impassable road led to it from the rear. A heavy limousine was parked there in
the trees, and another car, a yellow roadster -- his own. A feeling of grim
satisfaction was quickly dispelled by the sound of a familiar humming. Within a
foot of his car, it seemed to be, and instinctively he ducked.
Click! A powerful clamp had fastened itself to his wrist. One of Shelton's
invisible robots! He struck blindly at the unseen monster and was rewarded by a
shooting pain up his wrist as one of his knuckles was driven backward by the
impact with the hard metal. Bands of writhing metal encompassed his body,
pinning his arms to his side and lifting him bodily from the ground. There he
hung, kicking and struggling in mid-air, supported by nothing he could see. He
closed his eyes and felt of the thing that held him. Cold, hard metal it was --
implacable and unyielding.
Clank, clank. The monster was walking with long, jerky strides. The pressure
against his ribs brought a gasp of agony from his lips. Each jarring step was an
individual and excruciating torture. His breath was cut off by the relentless
constriction of one of the tentacles which now encircled his neck. It wouldn't
be long now.
* * *
Then, when everything had turned black and he had given up hope, he was dumped
unceremoniously on the hard floor of the cabin. A harsh laugh greeted him as he
struggled weakly to his knees.
"Thought you could put one over on Al Cadorna, did you?" a voice rasped.
The room spun round as he tried to regain his feet. A mist swam before his eyes.
Al Cadorna! The most picturesque figure in gangland. Credited with a dozen
killings and with ill-gotten wealth untold, this leader of the underworld openly
boasted that the police had never gotten anything on him. And they hadn't. So it
was a criminal who had laid hands on Shelton's robots, not a foreign spy. Worse
and worse. He thought of what they might be able to do with these invisible
mechanical things: make gunmen out of them; safe blowers; house breakers. Why,
society would be at their mercy; banks defenceless; the mints, even --
"Stand up on your pins, you worm! Let's have a look at you!" The muzzle of an
automatic was thrust in his abdomen, prodding insistently. Things stabilized in
the room and he looked up into the cruelest face he had ever seen, and
recognizable from the many pictures which had appeared in the yellow press.
Eddie took in the surroundings at a glance. He was in a low-ceilinged room that
was almost unfurnished. In one corner there was a replica of Shelton's robot
control, teleview disc and all. Carlos had just pulled the switch and the robot
was taking visible form. The man who prodded him with the automatic was Cadorna,
no doubt of that. His evil leer and yellow eyes marked him at once. The other
occupant of the room was a big square-built man with a patch over one eye and
stips of adhesive tape across his nose -- his antagonist of the night before.
Must have sneaked off after he came to; it was safer to send one of the robots
after the verdammt Amerikaner. Eddie restrained a chuckle at the
thought.
"Nothing to laugh at, kid!" Cadorna snarled. "You're goin' for a nice long ride
pretty quick. Know that?"
Eddie's head was clearing rapidly, but he pretended to sway on his feet. Lina
and her father were not in sight. If only he could spar for a little time.
"What's the idea?" he asked. "Haven't you guys got enough?"
"That's our business. We know what we're doin', and when you butted in you just
signed your own papers. Dead men don't talk, you know, kid!"
7This is the seventh installment of "Terrors Unseen", a 1931
science fiction story by Harl Vincent, a prolific writers of the 1930s who has
since fallen into obscurity. Since the story is now in the public domain, I have
taken it upon myself to reprint it here on my blog, so that it will not be lost
to posterity when the last copy of the March 1931 issue of Astounding
Stories crumbles into dust. The first six installments of the story can be
found
here,
here,
here,
here,
here, and
here. And now, on with the show . . .
* * *
There was a door at the other side of the room. If only he could see whether
Lina was in there; whether she was alive.
"Tie him up, Gus!" Cadorna kept the pistol pressed into the pit of Eddie's
stomach as he gave the order. "Hands and feet -- and make it a good job, you
wiener."
Eddie shouted then, "Lina!" Resistance was useless, but it would give him some
satisfaction to know she still lived even though Cadorna pulled that trigger in
the next instant. No reply came from beyond that door.
"So!" Cadorna grinned maliciously. "Another victim! Carlos first, then you, and
now -- Al Cadorna. If you're worrying about her, kid, you needn't. She'll be
perfectly safe with me."
Eddie's roar of rage shook the rafters. Heedless of the consequences, he brought
his knee up suddenly and violently. Cadorna sank to the floor with a groan, his
pistol clattering harmlessly on the rough planks. In a flash Eddie retrieved it,
dropping behind the prostrate form of the stricken gangster. Gus had fired and
missed. Now he dared not shoot for fear of hitting his chief. Eddie's gun spat
fire and the big German clapped his hands over his heart, his good eye widening
in surprise. Then he reeled and pitched forward on his face. A feminine cry
sounded from the adjoining room and Eddie's heart skipped a beat when he heard
it.
Carlos was padding across the floor, trying to get into a position where he
could fire without endangering Cadorna. Eddie swung his pistol around and pulled
the trigger. A miss! He fired again, but too late. Fingers of steel had gripped
his wrist and the king of gangland rolled over on him, twisting the gun from his
hand. Clubbed now, the pistol was raised high over that distorted, malicious
face. Eddie tried to twist away from under the blow as it started its downward
swing, then a thousand steam hammers hit him all at once and . . . blackness . .
. .
* * *
Something was pounding insistently at the doors of his consciousness. He must
pull himself together! They'd left him for dead and he was -- almost. But voices
as loud and raucous as those would waken the dead. He groaned with pain when he
attempted to move his head.
"That's for you, you rat." It was Cadorna's voice. "Try to take my woman, will
you?"
The pounding resolved itself into the angry barking of an automatic. Someone
squealed with mortal agony. Eddie opened his eyes cautiously and saw that the
room was full of people. The pungent odor of burned powder assailed his
nostrils. There was Cadorna and Carlos, Shelton and Lina. An undersized, dapper
youth stood over the body of the big German, his hands outstretched before his
horro-stricken face. A moment he stood thus, like a statue. Then his knees gave
way beneath him and he crumpled into a grotesque heap beside the man who had
been called Gus. Such was the manner of Cadorna's dealing with those who
displeased him.
The door to the adjoining room was open. Lina and her father had been kept in
there, with the little thug their guard. Evidently Cadorna had caught him trying
to force his attentions on the girl. Good thing he'd killed him.
Lina was sobbing and the sound brought increased agony to the helpless Eddie. He
lay still where they had placed him, beside the table which supported the robot
control apparatus. His cheek was against the floor and he saw that a little pool
of blood was forming there, blood drawn by the butt of Cadorna's pistol when it
contacted with his skull. He was bound hand and foot. They hadn't thought him
dead, after all. Keeping him for that ride and a watery grave. Couldn't afford
to leave his body around where it might be found.
"What are you going to do with us?" Shelton was asking, his voice bravely
defiant. Game old sport at that, he was.
"Don't fret over your daughter. Al Cadorna's her protector now, and she'll be
taken care of better'n she's ever been. But you -- that's somethin' else again.
First off, you're goin' to give Carlos the dope on these trick metals in your
machines. He couldn't analyse 'em, or whatever you call it. Then you're goin' to
have a nice long ride with your friend over there."
"You'll go to the chair for this, Cadorna. And I'll never tell you the secret of
the alloys."
"Tell him, Dad," Lina was crying. "He'll let us go if you do."
"The hell I will, girlie. What I said, goes. We'll make him talk first, too,"
Cadorna snarled.
"Never!" Shelton shouted.
* * *
Lina had seen Eddie and, with a little cry, she bounded across the room. Carlos
was after her like a panther.
"Hands off that dame!" Cadorna yelled. "Let her cry over the boy friend if she
wants to. Won't do her any good. You get busy and set one of the tin soldiers
goin'. Make the old buzzard talk."
Carlos muttered sullenly as he started the motor-generator. Give him a chance
and he'd knife Cadorna in the back -- for Lina.
The girl was kneeling at Eddie's side now, examining his bleeding scalp. He
opened one eye and gazed at her solemnly, pursing his lips in a warning to
silence. She caught her breath and nodded in understanding.
Cadorna was shouting like a madman. "Keep the damn thing so I can see it, you
spig! They make me bughouse when you blink 'em off. Besides, I don't trust you."
The bold Cadorna was afraid of something he couldn't see! An idea flashed across
Eddie's quickening mind. But he was helpless -- bound so tightly that the cords
cut his wrists.
One of the robots was clanking across the room. Lina looked up in momentary
terror and Eddie saw her eyes stray over the table top where Carlos was working.
"Want to grab the old one?" the Chilean called.
"Yes. Pick him up and squeeze him till his ribs crack. He'll talk."
Lina let a little moan escape her lips. Eddie was watching as the iron monster
approached the scientist and flung its tentacles around his madly struggling
form. Lina was fussing with him, trying to turn him over. Cadorna's back was to
them, his face thrust into that of Shelton, who was fighting desperately to
avoid the crushing grip of the robot.
"Give him a squeeze, Carlos."
8
This is the eighth installment of "Terrors Unseen", a 1931
science fiction story by Harl Vincent, a prolific writers of the 1930s who has
since fallen into obscurity. Since the story is now in the public domain, I have
taken it upon myself to reprint it here on my blog, so that it will not be lost
to posterity when the last copy of the March 1931 issue of Astounding Stories
crumbles into dust. The first seven installments of the story can be found
here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
here, and
here. And now, on with the show . . .
* * *
Shelton's yell brought another low moan from the girl's set lips. She was
working furiously at Eddie's bonds. Lord, she had a knife! Good girl! Must have
found it on the table. His hands were free and he wriggled his fingers to bring
them to life. Then his feet. He was able to move. Lina whispered in his ear.
"All right?" she asked anxiously.
"Yes," he whispered. Somehow their lips touched and Eddie felt his heart pound
at his temples. New life came to him with a rush of exaltation.
Shelton was crying out in pain and Lina sprang to her feet. "You beast!" she
shouted at Cadorna. "Let him go."
Then she was across the room, tearing at the unyielding metal bands that
pinioned her father and slowly crushed him. Cadorna laughed mirthlessly.
"Tell him to give me the dope," he retorted. "Then I'll let him go -- for a
while."
Shelton's head hung on his chest, rolling weakly from side to side. Eddie
doubted whether he could speak if he wished to. The Chilean was working at the
controls, increasing the tension of those terrible tentacles. Eddie roused
himself to his knees, watching Cadorna narrowly. He fingered the knife Lina had
used in freeing him. No, he couldn't use that. The Chilean would cry out and
queer everything. He laid it on the floor, within easy reach.
Cadorna was cursing now, first Shelton and then the girl. His rage was maniacal.
"Another notch!" he bellowed.
Eddie rose silently and clamped his fingers on the Chilean's windpipe. Lina's
eyes widened as she saw. She did everything in her power to keep Cadorna's
attention occupied as Eddie sunk those fingers into Carlos' throat. The
Chilean's eyes popped from his head as he struggled furiously to tear away the
steel-sinewed hand that had stopped off his breath. Death was staring him in the
face, and he could not cry out. His strength left suddenly as the fingers dug in
deeper, and Eddie shook him as he would a rat. In a surprisingly short time he
had slumped to the floor, and not until his squirmings ceased did Eddie loose
that awful grip.
"Another notch, you spiggoty!"
* * *
Eddie bent over the controls. Lina's pleadings mingled with the curses of
Cadorna. She was cajoling now -- telling the brute she'd go with him gladly if
only he'd free her father; promising anything, everything, in the desperate
attempt to keep him from discovering that his last henchman was out of the
picture. But her words served only to spur Eddie to swifter action. He twirled
the knobs of the duel control. The second robot was fading from view. He'd give
Cadorna a dose of the thing he really feared. He heased off a little on the
other control, releasing the pressure on poor Shelton's ribs as much as he
dared.
The position indicator of the second robot moved slightly as Eddie started the
invisible monster toward the yelling gangster. He watched the screen closely. It
was quite a trick, at that, controlling these things you couldn't see. All you
had to go by were these sketchy representations in the teleview; tiny flecks of
light that outlined the various movable members of the robot.
"Eddie!" Lina screamed suddenly. "Look out!"
But he had seen Cadorna wheel around as he watched his image on the screen. At
that moment a tentacle was writhing its way around his thick neck. A bullet
whistled past Eddie's ear and buried itself harmlessly in the wall.
Then from the blasphemous mouth of the king of gangland there came a shriek of
awful fear. The tightening tentacle shut it off in a choking gurgle. Cadorna was
captured at last -- by a monster he could not see, a monster that struck terror
to his cravel soul.
It was the work of but a moment to free David Shelton from the grip of the other
robot. The tortured man tottered into Lina's arms for support.
Eddie played with Cadorna now, releasing the grip from his throat and pinioning
his arms instead. With rapid fingers he manipulated the controls until the
screaming gangster was raised high in the air by the unseen arms of the robot.
"Another notch, Al," he chortled.
Cadorna yelled anew as the clamps tightened, "For God's sake, kid, quit it! Let
me down. I'll do anything you say."
"Yeah?" Eddie moved one of the rheostat knobs a trifle.
The prince of racketeers was whimpering now, like a baby. The sharp snap of a
rib punctured his outcries.
"Another notch," said Eddie grimly.
But the king of the underworld had fainted.
9
This is the ninth and last installment of "Terrors Unseen", a
1931 science fiction story by Harl Vincent, a prolific writers of the 1930s who
has since fallen into obscurity. Since the story is now in the public domain, I
have taken it upon myself to reprint it here on my blog, so that it will not be
lost to posterity when the last copy of the March 1931 issue of Astounding
Stories crumbles into dust. The first eight installments of the story can
be found
here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
here,
here, and
here. And now, on with the show . . .
* * *
An hour later Eddie Vail surveyed the scene complacently. Lina had washed the
blood from his head and face and bandaged his wound. Luckily, Cadorna's blow had
been a glancing one. The girl was fussing over her father, now, and the
scientist was on the point of resenting her attentions; swore he could take care
of himself; he wasn't a baby. Carlos and his chief were trussed up like mummies,
and had been snarling at each other ever since the Chilean recovered his senses,
each blaming the other for their predicament. The robots stood motionless by the
wall.
This would be a big haul for the police. Plenty of evidence to send Cadorna to
the chair now. The murder of Butch Collins, the undersized thug, had been
witnessed by three of them. No, four: Carlos would squeal. He was that kind.
There would be rejoicing in the underworld, too, for Cadorna had many enemies.
They'd be killing each other off in droves, though, for the leaders of rival
gangs would be battling for his place.
"Guess we'll have to dump them in the limousine," he remarked to Shelton. "Drive
them to the nearest town and turn them over to the authorities."
"Yes. Then they can come back for the bodies of the other two." Shelton grimaced
as he contemplated the sprawled figures.
"What about your robots?" Eddie asked.
"Why, I'll go ahead with my original plans, of course." The scientist looked
surprised.
"Dad!" Lina turned beseeching eyes on Eddie and his heart performed amazingly as
he looked into their depths.
"And why not?" asked her father dolefully. "They'll insure the peace of the
world. They'll --"
"Listen, Mr. Shelton," Eddie interrupted. "If you think a little you'll realize
that they'll do no such thing. Has any new and terrible engine of destruction
ever accomplished that result? No -- the enemy always finds a way of combating
the new weapon and of devising another still more terrible. You've discovered a
marvelous thing, but its value is quite problematical."
"How can they ever combat a thing they cannot see?"
"Easily. Why, I could devise a teleview attachment in two days tht would make
them visible. Photo-electric cells are capable of detecting ultra-violet light
as you well know. Radium glows under its rays. Why not coat a teleview screen
with some radio-active material?"
* * *
Shelton frowned thoughtfully. "You're right, Vail," he said, after a moment of
silence; "absolutely right. It was only a dream."
With dragging feet he walked to the transmitter, his expression grim in the
realization of failure. He started the motor-generator with a gesture of
finality.
"What are you going to do?" Eddie asked fearfully.
"Watch me! At least I can demonstrate another phase of the basic principle I
have discovered."
The motors of both robots whirred.
"Don't!" Cadorna wailed. "For God's sake, don't blink 'em out!"
Carlos cursed his chief for a coward.
Shelton was talking rapidly as he manipulated the controls. Instead of building
up the wave motion to the frequency of invisible light he was reducing it. Past
the other end of the spectrum and into the infra-red. The heat ray! Both
monsters were changing color as he marched them through the door and into the
open. But now they glowed with a visible red that rapidly intensified to the
dazzling whiteness of intense heat. Cadorna babbled in superstitious terror.
Then, in an instant, both mechanisms were reduced to shapeless blobs of molten
metal. Lina clapped her hands gleefully.
Shelton looked up with enthusiasm once more shining in his face. "Vail, my boy,"
he said, "we can find some use for that in industry. Let the next war take care
of itself."
"You bet!" Eddie was lost in contemplation of the girl -- the flush of pleasure
that came at her father's words; the shining eyes.
"Then you'll leave the old place down here?" she asked eagerly.
"Yes, as soon as we get rid of these crooks and the other robot. Vail is to
spend the rest of his vacation with us, too -- if he will."
Would he? Eddie gazed at the girl in rapt admiration and with an inward thrill
over his astounding good fortune. Her eyes dropped before the intensity of his
and her flush heightened.
David Shelton ws wiping his glasses and peering at them with an understanding
smile. Good sport, Shelton -- and in some ways as wise as they made them. Eddie
waited breathlessly for the girl to speak.
"Oh, that's wonderful, Dad," she approved; "And I'm sure that Mr. Vail will
agree."
She turned those glorious eyes on Eddie once more, and her inquiring smile spoke
volumes. He opened his mouth to accept the invitation but the words would not
come. He could only nod his head vigorously like an abashed schoolboy.
Some vacation!
THE END