First Lensman E. E. Smith (superbooks4u txt) đ
- Author: E. E. Smith
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It took a couple of seconds for the shift-boss to break out and hook up his emergency battery-lamp; and three or four more seconds, and by dint of fists, feet, and a two-foot length of air-hose, to restore any degree of order. Four men were dead; but that wasnât too badâ âconsidering.
âUp there! Under the hanging wall!â he ordered, sharply. âThat wonât fallâ âunless the whole mountain slips. Now, how many of you jaspers have got your emergency kits on you? Twelveâ âout of twenty-sixâ âwhat brains! Put on your masks. You without âem can stay up hereâ âyouâll be safe for a whileâ âI hope.â
Then, presently: âThere, thatâs all for now. I guess.â He flashed his light downward. The massive steel members no longer writhed; the crushed and tortured timbers were still.
âThat rise may be open, it goes through solid rock, not waste. Iâll see. Wright, youâre all in one piece, arenât you?â
âI guess soâ âyes.â
âTake charge up here. Iâll go down to the drift. If the rise is open Iâll give you a flash. Send the ones with masks down, one at a time. Take a jolly-bar and bash the brains out of anybody who gets panicky again.â
Jones was not as brave as he sounded: mine disasters carry a terror which is uniquely and peculiarly poignant. Nevertheless he went down the rise, found it open, and signalled. Then, after issuing brief orders, he led the way along the dark and silent drift toward the Station; wondering profanely why the people on duty there had not done something with the wealth of emergency equipment always ready there. The party found some cave-ins, but nothing they could not dig through.
The Station was also silent and dark. Jones, flashing his headlamp upon the emergency panel, smashed the glass, wrenched the door open, and pushed buttons. Lights flashed on. Warning signals flared, bellowed and rang. The rotary air-pump began again its normal subdued, whickering whirr. But the water-pump! Shuddering, clanking, groaning, it was threatening to go out any secondâ âbut there wasnât a thing in the world Jones could do about itâ âyet.
The Station itself, so buttressed and pillared with alloy steel as to be little more compressible than an equal volume of solid rock, was unharmed; but in it nothing lived. Four men and a womanâ âthe nurseâ âwere stiffly motionless at their posts; apparently the leads to the Station had been blasted in such fashion that no warning whatever had been given. And smoke, billowing inward from the main tunnel, was growing thicker by the minute. Jones punched another button; a foot-thick barrier of asbestos, tungsten, and vitrified refractory slid smoothly across the tunnelâs opening. He considered briefly, pityingly, those who might be outside, but felt no urge to explore. If any lived, there were buttons on the other side of the fire-door.
The eddying smoke disappeared, the flaring lights winked out, air-horns and bells relapsed into silence. The shift-boss, now apparently the Superintendent of the whole Twelfth Level, removed his mask, found the Station walkie-talkie, and snapped a switch. He spoke, listened, spoke again then called a list of namesâ ânone of which brought any response.
âWright, and you five others,â picking out miners who could be depended upon to keep their heads, âtake these guns. Shoot if you have to, but not unless you have to. Have the muckers clear the drift, just enough to get through. Youâll find a shift-boss, with a crew of nineteen, up in Stope Sixty. Their rise is blocked. Theyâve got light and power again now, and good air, and theyâre working on it, but opening the rise from the top is a damned slow job. Wright, you throw a chippie into it from the bottom. You others, work back along the drift, clear to the last glory hole. Be sure that all the rises are openâ âcheck all the stopes and glory holesâ âtell everybody you find alive to report to me here.â ââ âŠâ
âAw, what good!â a man shrieked. âWeâre all goners anywayâ âI want water anââ ââ âŠâ
âShut up, fool!â There was a sound as of fist meeting flesh, the shriek was stilled. âPlenty of waterâ âtanks full of the stuff.â A grizzled miner turned to the self-appointed boss and twitched his headâ âtoward the laboring pump. âToo damn much water too soon, huh?â
âI wouldnât wonderâ âbut get busy!â
As his now orderly and purposeful men disappeared, Jones picked up his microphone and changed the setting of a dial.
âOn top, somebody,â he said crisply. âOn top.â ââ âŠâ
âOh, thereâs somebody alive down in Twelve, after all!â a girlâs voice screamed in his ear. âMr. Clancy! Mr. Edwards!â
âTo hell with Clancy, and Edwards, too,â Jones barked. âGimme the Chief Engineer and the Head Surveyor, and gimme âem fast.â
âClancy speaking, Station Twelve.â If Works Manager Clancy had heard that pointed remark, and he must have, he ignored it. âStanley and Emerson will be here in a moment. In the meantime, whoâs calling? I donât recognize your voice, and itâs been so long.â ââ âŠâ
âJones. Shift-boss, Stope Fifty Nine. I had a little trouble getting here to the Station.â
âWhat? Whereâs Pennoyer? And Riley? Andâ ââ âŠâ?â
âDead. Everybody. Gas or damp. No warning.â
âNot enough to turn on anythingâ ânot even the purifiers?â
âNothing.â
âWhere were you?â
âUp in the stope.â
âGood God!â That news, to Clancy, was informative enough.
âBut to hell with all that. What happened, and where?â
âA skip-load, and then a magazine, of high explosive, right at Station Sevenâ âitâs right at the main shaft, you know.â Jones did not know, since he had never been in that part of the mine, but he could see the picture. âMain shaft filled up to above Seven, and both emergency shafts blocked. Number One at Six, Number Two at Sevenâ âmust have been a faultâ âBut hereâs Chief Engineer Stanley.â The works manager, not too unwillingly, relinquished the microphone.
A miner came running up and Jones covered his mouthpiece. âHow about the glory holes?â
âPlugged solid, all four of âemâ âby the vibro, clear up to Eleven.â
âThanks.â Then, as soon as Stanleyâs
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