"I do know," Steve agreed. "All right. I"ll try again. Each contestant that looks good to the program people gets a thorough quizzing on the chosen subject before being accepted. That"s to find out if they"re really experts. How are you going to handle it?"
Rick hadn"t known about that. He pondered for a moment. "That means we"d have to prepare a hidden transmitter, too, so we could help out during the examination. It could be done. The contestants could wear the gadget strapped to their legs, under their skirts or trousers."
Steve was enjoying Rick"s ready responses. His eyes twinkled. "You"d have to use very limited range on your Megabuck Mob transmitter, and a very high frequency. Otherwise, the Federal Communications Commission would pick you up, use a direction finder, and move in on your operation. They might locate you, anyway, even on low power and ultra-high frequency. How are you going to lick that?"
Rick held up his hands in surrender. "I"m not. I can"t take a chance of getting the federal government into the act. Gosh, I"d have the FCC, the FBI, and maybe a dozen others on my trail. I quit. The Megabuck Mob is hereby dissolved."
Steve looked disappointed. "And I was hoping your plan was foolproof.
I was about to buy stock in the Mob." The amus.e.m.e.nt in his eyes belied the words.
Hartson Brant laughed. "I"m glad you"re the one that stuck a pin in his bubble, Steve. The way Barby bakes cakes, I"m not sure Rick could ever break one to get the file out."
Steve chuckled. "The records are full of foolproof get-rich-quick schemes like this one. And the jails are full of halfway criminal geniuses, too. But don"t overlook the advantages of an eat-proof cake.
It might come in handy to throw at the guards during the getaway."
The young people laughed, too, then Barby sobered suddenly. "Rick, could you really put one of those things in my hair?"
He had an image of the gadget in his mind, and he knew it would work.
"Sure, Sis. Why?"
"An idea I want to talk to you about later." She turned to Steve and asked anxiously, "You do know Rick was only fooling, don"t you, Steve?
He wouldn"t steal anything from anyone, honestly."
Steve nodded. "I do, Barby. I won"t throw him in jail this time. I might need him."
"Is that what you"re here for?" she asked.
"I need you all," Steve said. He motioned to chairs. "Let"s sit down.
Can Mrs. Brant join us?"
Hartson Brant went to get her while the young people started to deluge Steve with questions. He held up a hand in protest. "Wait until the whole family"s here, please."
In a moment Mrs. Brant had joined them and greeted Steve cordially.
Then the young agent got serious.
"I was only partly joking when I said I wanted to take over Spindrift.
I really do, in a way. Here"s why. We"ve had a team of scientists working on a project that"s of the greatest importance to national defense. There were four in the team, all topnotchers. Hartson, I"m sure you"ll know some, if not all of them, by reputation."
Steve removed the ammunition clip from his submachine gun and sighted through the barrel, then let the bolt ram home with a sharp click. "It was my job to guard the project. As you know, I had to go to the Virgin Islands, but I left one of my best men in charge, and he did his job thoroughly. I"m satisfied about that. No unknown person has been near the project office. And no unknowns have been in close contact with any of the team. Yet, two of them are in the hospital."
"Sick or wounded?" Scotty asked.
"Neither, really. We don"t know what"s wrong. Their minds suddenly ceased to function."
Hartson Brant leaned forward. "You mean they"re unconscious?"
Steve shook his head. "Not in the usual sense. It"s as though all their thoughts and memories had suddenly been scrambled. Did you ever see a teletype machine in operation, particularly one that suddenly went haywire?"
Rick had. "The news machine did that over at the Whiteside _Morning Record_. It was typing out clear copy, then suddenly there wasn"t anything but gibberish."
"That"s it," Steve agreed. "And it"s the best a.n.a.logy I can think of for what happened to the two scientists. When a teletype goes haywire, one moment everything is clear and perfect, the next everything is scrambled. All the letters are there but they no longer make words.
The scientists talk words--common, everyday words--but the words don"t make thoughts or sentences. Just sounds."
"How awful," Mrs. Brant murmured. Barby looked horrified.
Rick searched his memory for anything similar he had ever read about or heard of, but there was nothing. From the expressions on their faces, his father and Scotty were equally puzzled.
"Well, even though I have absolutely no evidence of foul play, I decided not to take chances," Steve went on. "I got one of the scientists to go along with my plan. He shares my concern, simply on the basis that no known disease would affect human beings in this way, and two scientists of the same team being stricken with an unknown ailment is too much coincidence."
"He"s wise," Hartson Brant agreed.
"He also has a family. The other scientist does not. He"s a crusty old bachelor who thinks the whole thing is nonsense and insists on staying right where he is."
"How do we fit in?" Scotty asked. "You said you needed all of us."
"That"s right. I want to relocate the project at Spindrift."
"Using the co-operative scientist as the basis for a new staff?" Rick inquired.
"Yes. We went through some of the most complicated maneuvers you ever saw to got him out of Washington with his family. I"m certain his movements cannot be traced. So his presence here will be a complete secret. But it isn"t just the scientist. I"m also asking you to take in his family, consisting of his wife and daughter."
"Of course we will," Mrs. Brant said warmly.
Steve turned to Barby. "I think you"ll enjoy it, because the girl is just your age, and she"s a very friendly and pleasant young lady."
Barby looked pleased and excited. "What"s her name?"
"Janice. Janice Miller."
"Is the scientist Dr. Walter Miller by any chance?" Hartson Brant asked quickly.
"Exactly right. Do you know him?"
"Not personally. We"ve never met, but a few years ago we carried on a very extensive correspondence on the subject of energy levels in nuclear isomers."
Steve grinned. "I won"t pretend to know what you"re talking about. But I"m glad you"ll have something in common. Will you and your staff join him to make up a new project team?"
"I think we can," Hartson Brant said thoughtfully. "Some of us can put aside what we"re doing. I"ll have to know a little more about the project, of course."
The federal agent nodded. "Dr. Miller can give you the details personally."
Rick expressed a thought that had been on his mind. "We"re sort of isolated here, but we"re certainly not cut off from the world. Our friends visit us, and we go to the mainland almost every day. How do we explain who these people are? I"m sure you don"t want their names to get out."
"I"ll give you a cover story. Their name is Morrison. You met them through Dr. Ernst while you were in the Virgin Islands. They were very hospitable, and you"re simply returning their hospitality. They know the Islands well from vacations spent there, so no one will trip them up on details."
"How about details of our trip?" Scotty asked.
"They"ve been briefed thoroughly, by me. You can check them and fill in any missing details."