"Great horned toads! What"s it up to?" Chow exclaimed.
"Seems like the energy"s trying to get out!" Bud guessed. "Something must be bothering it."
Tom shook his head incredulously. "No reason for that. The container was absolutely empty."
Chow suddenly gave a groan and slapped his forehead in dismay. "Brand my Big Dipper!" the cook said. "Mebbe Ole Think Box has gone loco! An" it could be my fault!"
CHAPTER XI
AN ELECTRICAL CHRISTENING
"What are you talking about, Chow?" Tom asked, turning to the old Westerner in amazement.
Chow related how he had dropped the bubble gum inside the robot"s head.
"Did I ruin the critter?" he asked fearfully.
Tom was thoughtful for a moment, frowning as they watched Ole Think Box continue its gyrations. The figure seemed to be calming down somewhat, although Tom could not be sure of this.
Suddenly his face brightened. A new thought had just struck the young inventor! To Chow"s amazement, Tom slapped the cook happily on the back.
"I think you"ve done me a favor, Chow!" he exclaimed.
"I have?" The old Texan stared at his young boss, as if not sure whether or not to believe him. "How come?"
"You saw how Ole Think Box reacted to the gum," Tom explained. "That shows the energy really is like a brain! It"s responsive and sensitive to conditions of its environment, especially when coming up against something new and unexpected."
"You mean they don"t have bubble gum on Planet X?" Chow asked with a grin.
Tom smiled as Bud said, "This means we should be able to communicate with it."
"And the brain will probably be able to communicate back to us!" Tom went on excitedly. "We may even be able to learn about Planet X!"
As he spoke, Ole Think Box"s whirling became slower and slower. Finally it came to rest close to the three humans.
"What do you suppose happened to the gum?" Bud asked. "Did he chew it all up?"
"It"s probably unchanged," Tom replied. "Our visitor is used to it now."
Chow was still wide-eyed with awe. He stared at the strange creature as if expecting it to snap at him in revenge for the gum.
"Don"t worry, old-timer. Think Box won"t bite," Bud teased. "With that gum spree, he"s just been initiated into our American tribal customs!"
The pilot grinned. "Hey! We haven"t given him a proper name."
"You"re right." Tom looked at his pal and chuckled. "Got any ideas?"
"Hmm. Let me see." Bud scowled and paced about with his hands clasped behind his back. "Firetop--John Q. Pyro--"
"But it ain"t on fire now," Chow pointed out.
"Maybe not, but he sure blazed a trail getting here," Bud argued.
Tom and Chow countered with several ideas of their own, but nothing seemed suitable until Bud suddenly stopped short and snapped his fingers.
"I have it! He"s a visitor from Planet X, so let"s call him _Exman!_"
Bud spelled it out.
"Perfect!" Tom was delighted and Chow agreed that it seemed "a right good monicker." The Texan insisted seriously that if the creature were going to be named, he should also have a proper christening.
"Why not?" Tom agreed, as both boys broke into laughter. Bud also liked the idea.
Chow had a troublesome afterthought. He shoved back his sombrero, squinted frowningly at the brain container, and scratched his bald head.
"For boat christenings and statues and what not, you break bottles on "em or cut ribbons or pull a sheet off "em," the cook said. "But how in tarnation do you christen a buckaroo from s.p.a.ce?"
"Nothing to it, Chow," Tom a.s.sured him. "We"ll do the job up nice and fancy with a display of electricity. But first let"s get Exman over to the lab."
The three loaded the energy container into the pickup truck which had brought it to the hillside spot. Then Tom drove back to Enterprises and they took Exman into his private laboratory.
Here Tom attached an electrode to each side of the star head. One electrode was safely grounded, the other connected to a Tesla coil.
Then, with all lights turned off in the laboratory, Tom threw a switch.
Instantly a dazzling arc of electricity sputtered through the darkness across the creature"s head! The eerie display lit up the room with such impressive effect that both Bud and Chow felt their spines tingle.
"I christen you Exman!" Tom intoned.
For several moments he allowed the fiery arc to continue playing about the star head. Then he opened the power switch and turned the room lights back on.
"Wow! Quite a ceremony!" Bud murmured.
"After a send-off like that, I"ll be expectin" the critter to do great things here on this lil ole planet Earth!" Chow declared fervently.
"You could be right," Tom said.
Worn out by the long wait for their visitor from Planet X and the excitement following his arrival, Chow finally went off to his own quarters at Enterprises for a well-earned sleep.
"Guess you and I had better get some shut-eye too, pal," Tom told Bud.
"And I think I won"t tell Dad until morning."
[Ill.u.s.tration (Tom, Bud and Chow celebrate building Exman)]
The two boys decided to bunk on cots in the small apartment adjoining Tom"s laboratory. Exman, meanwhile, was left locked in the laboratory with a tiny "night light" showing on him.
"Just a little ray of energy to keep him company," Tom explained with a chuckle.
Minutes later, the two boys were sound asleep. For a while, all was silent. Then the apartment"s telephone rang, shattering the stillness.