"Guess he"s going to give the motors a good try-out," observed Tom. "I think I"ll go back to the engine room. You may remain here, if you like, and you"ll probably see--"
A cry from Mr. Damon interrupted him.
"Bless my rubber boots, Tom! Look!" cried the eccentric man. "We"re going to ram a mud bank!"
As he spoke they all became aware of a solid black ma.s.s looming in front of the bull"s-eye window. An instant later the submarine came to a jarring stop, as if she had struck some soft, yielding substance.
There was a confused shouting throughout the craft, the noise of machinery, a trembling and vibration, and then ominous quiet.
CHAPTER IX
READY TO START
Characteristic it was of Tom Swift to act calmly in times of stress and danger, and he ran true to form now. Only for an instant did he show any sign of perturbation. Then with calmness and deliberation the young inventor quickly did a number of things to the controls within his reach.
First of all he signaled to the engine room that he was going to take charge of the boat. This meant that the navigator in the conning tower was to keep his hands off the various levers and wheel-valves. It was possible to operate the M. N. 1 from three positions, but Tom wanted no triplicate handling of his craft now.
Almost the instant Tom signaled that he would take charge back came flashing the electrical signal from the conning tower that his orders were understood. The next thing that those aboard the craft became aware of was a tremor that seemed to run through the whole under-sea ship. The quiet had changed to a subdued humming, and the ominous lack of motion was succeeded by violent vibration.
"Backing her up, Tom?" asked Ned, in a low voice.
"Trying to," was the answer. "But I"m afraid her nose has gone in pretty deep. I"ve reversed the propellers."
For perhaps a minute this vibration continued, showing that the powerful electric motors were turning over the twin propellers at the blunt stern of the craft. But she did not change her position.
With a touch of his hand, and still almost as cool as the proverbial cuc.u.mber (though why they should be cool it is hard to say), Tom stopped the motors. Once again the craft was quiet, but now, instead of the occupants being able to see clearly from the thick, gla.s.s windows in the forward cabin, the water showed muddy and murky in the glare of the underwater searchlight.
"Bless my postage stamps, Tom! what has happened?" exclaimed Mr. Damon.
"Has a giant squid attacked us, as one did some time ago, and is he roiling up the water?"
"No, it isn"t a squid, Mr. Damon," replied the young inventor easily; "though the water does look as if a squid had spilled a lot of his ink in it. This is just the effect of mud stirred up by our propellers.
There may be more of it."
Ned looked toward Mr. Hardley to see how he was taking it. The seeker after gold apparently had good control of his nerves, or else he was ignorant of what was going on. For he asked, casually enough:
"Have we stopped?"
"We have," answered Tom. "I thought I"d give you a view of the scenery."
Perhaps he spoke sarcastically, but, if he did, Mr. Damon"s friend did not seem to be aware of it. Coolly enough he replied:
"Well, if this is a fair sample of underwater scenery I prefer something up above, though I appreciate that this may be needful."
"We"ll soon be traveling along," announced Tom. "Koku," he added to the giant, who had been calmly sitting during the excitement, "go to the engine room and help with the big levers."
"Yes, Master," was the answer. Koku had implicit faith in Tom.
Waiting a moment for his faithful servant to reach the post a.s.signed to him, Tom again signaled to his helpers and then quickly turned a wheel which produced startling results. For all within the submarine suddenly slid forward across the cabin floor.
"Bless my hammock hooks, Tom! are you standing her on her head?" cried Mr. Damon.
"That"s exactly what I"m doing," was the answer. "I"ve started to empty one of the after ballast tanks, and that, naturally, raises the stern while the nose is held down."
The submarine was indeed in a peculiar position. She was on a slant in the water, her nose held fast in the soft mud bank, and it was Tom"s idea that by making the stern buoyant it might help to pull her free.
To this end he also gave what a.s.sistance the propellers were capable of adding by starting the motors again, so that the craft once more trembled and vibrated.
But it all seemed to no purpose. Aside from the slanting position, there was no change in the M. N. 1. Ned, looking out into the murky water, which had cleared slightly, saw that the craft was still held fast. And then, for the first time, Mr. Hardley seemed to become aware that something serious was the matter. Up to now he seemed to think that all that had occurred was done for the purpose of testing the newly outfitted underseas boat.
"Is there anything wrong?" he asked sharply of Tom. "Why are we in this position, and why don"t we go on out to the open ocean and make a test at considerable depth? We"ll have to go down deeper than this if we find the Pandora!"
"I suppose so," agreed Tom. "But we have had an accident, and--"
"An accident!" interrupted the gold-seeker, and then Ned saw him turn pale. "Do you mean to say this is not part of the test?"
"We have run into a mud bank," said Tom. "The steersman must have become confused, or else, since we last used the submarine, there has been a shift of the mud banks in this river and one exists where there was none before. At any rate, we ran our nose deep into it, and here we are--stuck!"
"Can"t we get loose--go up to the surface?" demanded Mr. Hardley.
"I"m trying to bring that about," announced Tom calmly. "So far her engines haven"t been able to pull her loose."
"But Great Scott, man, we can"t stay here!" cried the now excited adventurer. "We"ll be drowned like rats in a trap! Let me out! Isn"t there some way? I"ll be shot through a torpedo tube, if necessary! I must get out! I can"t stay here to be drowned! I have too much at stake!"
"Now wait a minute!" calmly advised Tom Swift. "You haven"t any more at stake than the rest of us. None of us wants to be drowned, and there is only a remote possibility that we shall be. I haven"t played all my cards yet. We can live on this boat for a week, if need be."
"You mean under water as we are now?" asked Mr. Hardley.
"Yes. I always keep the boat provisioned and with plenty of air and water for a long stay, if need be," replied Tom. "And I did not overlook the fact that we might have an accident on the trial trip."
"I don"t see how you let an accident happen before we even got started," complained the gold-seeker. "I should think your steersman would have been more careful."
"He is very careful," explained Tom. "But we have not used the craft for some time, and, meanwhile, there have been changes in the river, due, I suppose, to heavy tides. But we may get out of the grip of the mud bank soon."
"And if we don"t, what then?" asked Mr. Hardley.
"Then there is always the torpedo tube," said Tom calmly. "And we are not very deep down. I think I can save you all."
"I certainly hope so!" was the fretful comment of the adventurer. "I have too much at stake to be drowned like a rat in a trap! You must send me up first if it becomes necessary to use the tube."
Tom did not answer. But as he looked out of the observation windows to see if possible the conformation of the mud bank, the young inventor whispered to Ned one word. And that word was:
"Yellow!"
"You said it!" was Ned"s whispered rejoinder.