The s.p.a.ce Mystery
There was an air of excitement at the project when the boys arrived there the following morning. Everyone was busy on equipment, or studying Sanborn tracings. Winston and Kerama were working a slide rule while Farid read figures.
The boys waited until Winston gave a number, which Kerama marked on the pad he carried. Then the scientist looked up and gave the boys a big grin.
"Happy New Year both of you! Interesting news this morning. Take a look at these."
They were teletype sheets. Rick saw that a machine was now in one corner of the control room, where technicians had finished installing it during the night.
He and Scotty read the messages. Translated from the cryptic notations and abbreviations used by the astronomers, it added up to confirmation of the Egyptian findings by both Jodrell Bank and Green Bank. Both reported that they had also located a source of apparently modulated hydrogen impulses. Both gave the same co-ordinates in s.p.a.ce, in terms of ascension and declination, the way astronomers locate the position of heavenly bodies. Both stated that the finding was remarkable and requested all available data from Sahara Wells, and both announced their intention of concentrating on the object while it was in "view" of their radio telescopes.
Rick looked at Winston, his eyes shining. "Boy! We"re on to something big. What"s the next step?"
"Next is a precise fix and distance computations by all stations. At the same time, we want two kinds of recordings. We"ll continue making Sanborn tapes, but we also want audio-tape recordings."
"You want to actually hear this thing?" Scotty asked. This was unusual, since the radio telescopes ordinarily recorded the incoming signals in trace form on Sanborn strips.
"We don"t want to overlook any possibility," Dr. Kerama said. "This is without precedent, and we are not sure how to proceed. Dr. Farid has set up an amplifier on the output circuit, in parallel with the normal system, and he has brought in a pair of tape recorders we borrowed from the government radio station. It may be that listening to this signal will give us clues that our eyes miss when we examine the tracings."
Winston added, "That"s your job. I intended to keep you here together, a half day at a time. But this is too important for such considerations, and we haven"t a large enough Egyptian staff to handle everything. So I"d like to work you in shifts."
"That"s okay," Rick a.s.sured him. "When do we start?"
"The object comes up on our horizon shortly after one. Suppose you start then. The first shift can work until five, and the second from five to eleven. One of the Egyptian technicians will take over then until we lose the source below the horizon again."
Hakim Farid took the boys to the tape setup he had established and explained it to them. It was simple enough. The output signal from the receivers was fed into a regular tape-recording circuit. The tapes themselves were on huge reels good for about four hours of recording. It would only be necessary to watch the volume control and to see that all was running smoothly. Changing tapes was only a matter of slapping a new reel into place, dropping the tape into the recording head, and threading it into the empty reel.
"How will we work it?" Scotty asked, while they rechecked the setup and tried out the tape motors.
Rick frowned. "It kind of throws a monkey wrench into our plan, doesn"t it?" He and Scotty had worked out a way to recover the Egyptian cat, again with Scotty distracting the guard.
"One of us will have to get it alone," Scotty said.
Rick watched the tape run through and searched his mind for a method.
There was only one way he could think of that would get the guard out of the way. "Looks as if that third kitten is going to have a home," he said finally. "I"ll wrap it in an old newspaper, then pretend to find it under something. I"ll hand it to the guard. With luck, he"ll get so excited he"ll run for his boss, thinking someone has tried to steal a museum exhibit. Then I"ll snaffle kitty off the shelf and hike out."
Scotty rubbed his chin. "Could work," he said finally. "Unless the guard insists that you go with him."
"No speak Arabic," Rick said. "I won"t understand. Let"s hope the guard speaks no English."
"Well, if anything goes wrong, Moustafa will just have to wait. So I"ll take the first shift and you go get puss. That means I"ll be waiting for ol" Kemel alone tonight at the hotel."
"Looks that way."
There seemed to be no solution except to turn the cat over. Bartouki had approved, and the cat was his. Much as the boys hated to let go of an unsolved mystery, there wasn"t any other way.
Ha.s.san drove Rick back into town, with the boy sitting in back. He would have preferred to be in the front seat with the dragoman, but the taxi meter took up too much room.
The guide parked directly in front of the museum and asked, "I go with you?"
"Not this time, Ha.s.san. I won"t be long." If Rick"s trick was to work, no translator should be at hand.
He paid his piastres at the entrance and walked into the huge entrance hall, very conscious of the kitten in his pocket. It was wrapped in a week-old copy of a newspaper recovered from the debris around the new barracks.
When he reached the second floor he acted like a casual museum visitor, taking his time, and working from exhibit to exhibit. But his mind was not on the wonders of ancient Egypt. It wasn"t much use to think about the cat, either. All the ground had been covered many times. Instead, he spent the time speculating on the meaning of the mysterious signal from s.p.a.ce. Admittedly, he didn"t have much knowledge of astrophysics or radio astronomy. But he had never heard of any natural phenomenon in s.p.a.ce that emitted pulsed signals in random fashion. Some stars pulsed, like the Cepheid variables, but in an orderly way.
A half hour of speculation led him nowhere so far as the s.p.a.ce mystery was concerned, but it did bring him slowly to the museum area that interested him. He nodded politely at the guard, and continued his examination of exhibits, moving finally into the little room where the cat was hidden. Soon he was close enough to see that the Egyptian cat and its antique friend were still in place. He continued on around the room until he came to a gla.s.sed-in case that held some rare alabaster figures. Directly before the gla.s.s case was a stone jar. It was big enough to hold the kitten.
Rick got ready. His coat was unb.u.t.toned. He put a hand in the outside pocket, ready to swing the coat out so his other hand could remove the kitten from the inside game pocket with one swoop. He watched the guard, using the gla.s.s-case front as a mirror.
The guard bent his head to light a cigarette, and Rick moved. By the time the cigarette was going well, the kitten was in the jar and Rick was looking at the figures in the case again. He waited patiently, and tried identifying the figures so he would seem to be genuinely interested.
The figure with the stylized jackal head was Anubis, the G.o.d of death.
The hawk-headed one must be Horus. The female figure would be Isis. The one with the solar disc over his head was probably Amon-Re. The rest he couldn"t identify at all. He wondered if one of them was Bubaste, the cat G.o.ddess. It would be appropriate.
He drew back a little, first checking to see if the guard was watching, then he bent down and looked into the jar. He put a hand in and brought out the newspaper. He turned it over and hefted it. Then he started to unwrap it.
The guard was at his side in a flash, watching. The reddish form of the cat came into view and the guard s.n.a.t.c.hed it from his hands. Rick turned to him with a look of bewilderment.
The guard unwrapped the kitten completely and held it up, then he turned swiftly and hurried out.
Rick was across the room in two bounds. He grabbed the Egyptian cat and tucked it into his inner pocket, then he closed his coat without b.u.t.toning it and hurried after the guard.
The guard hadn"t gone far. Rick found him with another guard, gesticulating and waving the cat. Apparently the other guard was an officer, because he had tabs on his shoulder.
The guard with the cat saw Rick and beckoned to him. He walked over, trying to keep his expression interested but unconcerned.
The officer spoke English, but not well. "He say you get this?"
"I see in big jar. Vase. Stone. In newspaper. Someone leave?" Rick did his best to make his reply simple enough for understanding. He apparently succeeded.
"Think someone try steal. Bad."
"Very bad," Rick agreed, straight-faced. "Hope you find. Steal from museum no good."
"No good," the officer agreed.
"Good-by," Rick said. He held his breath waiting for the reaction.
Both guards gave him a half-salute, the courteous gesture he had seen often in Cairo. He bowed and walked toward the stairs.
Not until he was outside did he breathe freely. The cat was a comforting weight in his pocket as he got into Ha.s.san"s car. He wondered what the museum officials would think about the kitten. A moment"s examination by one of the archaeologists would show that it was of concrete, and new concrete at that. Maybe it would just end up at the _Lost and Found_ desk, if they had one.
"Let"s go back to the project, Ha.s.san," he directed. Scotty would want to know if he had been successful. Then he could go to the Mena House and have a late lunch while Scotty recorded signals.
If only he didn"t have to give the Egyptian cat to Moustafa--until the mystery was solved. He grinned at his own thought. The cat was no good to him, was it? His only interest was solving the mystery. Why did so many people want it?