UNDERSEA CITY Frederik Pohl and Jack Williamson Undersea City The Inside Drift "Cadet Eden, ten-hutV9 I stopped at the edge of the deepwater pool and stiffened to attention. I had been playing sea-tennis with Bob Eskow in the pool courts on a hot Saturday afternoon. I had come out to adjust my oxygen lung—I could see Eskow still in the water, gliding restlessly back and forth as he waited for me—and the Cadet Captain's sharp order caught me just about to dive back in. "Cadet Eden, as you were!" I relaxed slightly and turned. With the Cadet Captain was the O.O.D. He said, "Report to the Commandant's office at thirteen hundred hours, Cadet Eden. Now carry on." He returned my salute and walked off with the Cadet Captain. Bob Eskow poked his head out of the water, flipped back his mask and complained: "Come on, Jim, what's holding up the game?" Then he caught sight of the Cadet Captain and the O.O.D. He whistled. "What did they want?" "I don't know. I've got to report to the Commandant at thirteen hundred, that's all." Eskow climbed out and sprawled on the edge of the deepwater pool beside me. He said seriously, "Maybe it's what Danthorpe was talking about." "What's that?" 1 Eskow shook his head. "He just hints around. But it's something involving you and me—and him." "Forget it," I advised him, and sat down. I took off the mask of my lung and rechecked the bubble valve. It had been sticking. I had fixed it, but there is one thing you learn in the Sub-Sea Fleet and that is to make doubly sure that every piece of undersea equipment is working perfectly. The deeps don't give you a second chance. The Bermuda sun was hot on the back of my neck. We had marched a lot of miles under that sun, as cadets at the Sub-Sea Academy, but now we had lost the habit of it. We had been too long under deadly miles of black water, Bob Eskow and I. The sun was strange to us. Not that we minded the sun. In spite of all the inventions that are conquering the sea—spreading domed cities across that dark, drowned desert that is stranger than Mars—no invention can ever take the place of the clean smell of natural air and the freedom of the wide surface horizon. Not for the first few days, anyhow. Bob Eskow stood up. He looked around him at the bright green trees and the red-tiled roofs above the hot white beach; he looked out at the whitecaps flashing out on the surface of the sea; and he said what was in my mind. "It's worth all the pearls in the Tonga Trench just to be back." I knew how he felt. The deep sea gets into your blood. There's a strain and a danger that you can never forget. There's the dark shape of death, always there, waiting outside a film of shining edenite that is thinner than tissue, waiting for you to pull the wrong switch or touch the wrong valve so that it can get in. It can smash a city dome like a peanut under a truck, or slice a man to ribbons with a white jet of slashing brine— "Quit your daydreaming, you two!" We looked up. Another cadet was approaching us. I hadn't met him, but I knew his name: Harley Dan-thorpe. The one Bob Eskow had just mentioned. He was slender and a bit shorter than Bob. He wore his 2 sea-scarlet dress uniform with knife-edge creases; his hair slick down flat against his scalp. I didn't like the expression on his face as Bob introduced us; he seemed to be sneering, "Jim," said Bob, "Harley Danthorpe is a transfer student, from down deep." "And going back there," said Danthorpe. He flicked a speck of coral dust from his sleeve. "Along with you two," he mentioned. Bob and I looked at each other. "What are you talking about, Danthorpe? The fall term's about to begin—" Danthorpe shook his head. "We won't be here. The orders will be out this afternoon." I looked hard at him. "You aren't kidding us? How do you know?" He shrugged. "I've got the inside drift.** And something happened. ft happened to Bob as well as to me; I could feel it and I could see it in his eyes. I didn't like Danthorpe. I didn't know whether to believe him or not—but the rumor had done something to me. The dry tingle of the sun felt just as good as ever. The sky was still as blue and as high, and the island breeze was just as sweet. But suddenly I was ready to go down deep again. I asked: "Where to?" He stretched and glanced at me and at Bob, then turned and looked out over the sea. "Why Krakatoa Dome," he said. Bob said sharply: "Krakatoa?" "That's right," nodded Danthorpe. He looked at Bob curiously. For that matter, so did I; suddenly Bob's face had seemed to turn a degree paler. I said quickly, trying to divert Danthorpe's attention from whatever it was that was bothering Bob: "What are we supposed to be going to Krakatoa for?" Danthorpe shrugged. "I've got the inside drift, but not about that," he admitted. "All I know is that we're going." Krakatoa! I wanted to believe him. Right at that minute I wanted it more than anything in the world. Krakatoa Dome was one of the newest of the undersea cities. It stood near the brink of the Java Trough, south of the 3 famous volcanic island in the Sunda Strait, three miles down. I wanted to go there very much. But I couldn't believe that it was possible. I knew something about Krakatoa Dome. My Uncle Stewart Eden had spoken many times of the wealth around it, the sea-floor rotten with oil, pocketed with uranium and precious tin. But I had never heard that the Sub-Sea Fleet had a training station there. And what other reason could there be for detaching three cadets as the training year was about to begin? Danthorpe said, in a voice tinged with contempt, "What's the matter Eskow? You look worried." "Leave him alone," I said sharply. But Bob's expression had disturbed me too. His face had been pale with the pallor of the deeps, but he looked even paler now. Danthorpe squinted down at him. "Maybe you're afraid of—seaquakes," he said softly. Bob straightened up abruptly, glaring at him. I knew that Bob was under pressure. He had driven himself far too hard ever since his first moments in the Academy, oppressed by the grinding fear of washing out. I knew that our adventures in the Tonga Trench had drained his last reserves; yet I couldn't quite understand this now. Then he relaxed and looked away. "I guess that's so," he said, barely loud enough to be heard. "I guess I'm afraid of quakes." "Then Krakatoa Dome's no place for you! We've got plenty of them there!" Danthorpe was smirking smugly— as though he were actually boasting of the fact, as if the quakes were another valuable resource of the seabottom around Krakatoa, like the oil. "It's near the great geological fault, where the crust of the earth buckles down in the Java Trough. Ever hear of the great eruption of Krakatoa, back a hundred years and more ago? It made waves a hundred feet high—on the surface, of course. That was part of the instability of the area!" I interrupted him, really curious. "Danthorpe, what's so good about sub-seaquakes?" I couldn't help asking it. Earthquakes on dry land are bad enough, of course. But under the sea they can be a 4 thousand times worse. Even a minor quake can snap a transportation tube or turn the mad sea into the tunnels of a mine; even a very small one can shatter the delicate film of edenite armor for a second. And a second is all the deeps need to splinter a city dome. Danthorpe had a cocky grin. "Good? Why, they're the best part of it, Eden! Quakes scare the lubbers away!" He sounded really happy. "That leaves richer diggings for the man with the inside drift," he cried. "Take my Dad. He's making plenty, down in Krakatoa Dome. He isn't worried about sub-sea quakes!" Suddenly something registered in my mind. "Your dad?" I repeated. "Danthorpe? Then your father must be—" He nodded. "You've heard of him," he said proudly, "Sure you have! He bought in at the bottom level at Krakatoa Dome, when it wasn't anything but six edenite bubbles linked together and a hope for the future. And he's traded his way to the top! Every time there's a quake, prices go down—he buys—and he gets richer! He's got a seat on the Stock Exchange, and he's on the Dome Council. He's lived down deep so long that people call him Barnacle Ben—" Bob was getting more and more annoyed. He interrupted: "Barnacle Ben! If you ask me, that's a good name—he sounds like a parasite! If you want to talk about real pioneers—the inventors and explorers who really opened up the floor of the sea when the dry land got overcrowded—you ought to ask Jim about his uncle Stewart. Stewart Eden—the man who invented Edenite!" Danthorpe stopped short. He squinted at me sharply. "Old Stewart Eden is your uncle?" "That's right," I told him shortly. I don't like to boast about it—Uncle Stewart says that family is only important for the inspiration and help it gives you, not for what effect a famous relative may have on somebody else. But I won't deny that I am proud to be related to the man who made the whole sub-sea empire possible. There was a pause. Then, "My Dad could buy him out," Danthorpe said 5 challengingly, "and never miss the change." I didn't say a word, though he waited—that was part of what I had learned from my Uncle Stewart. Danthorpe squinted at Bob. "All right, Eskow," he said. "What about your folks?'* Bob's face hardened. 'Well, what about them?'* "Haven't you got a family? Give me the inside drift. Who are they? What do they amount to? Where do they live? What does your old man do?" "They're just—people," Bob said slowly. "My father makes a living." "Down deep?" challenged Danthorpe. "Or is he a lub- That was too much. I cut in. "Leave him alone, Danthorpe," I said. "Look. If there's any truth to this inside drift you came buzzing around with, the three of us are going to have to get along together. Let's start even! Forget about families—let's just concentrate on our job, whatever it's going to be." Danthorpe shrugged lazily. He pointed at Bob, who was staring out at the tiny white fin of a catboat, miles out on the smiling surface of the sea. "Better get him started on concentrating," Danthorpe advised. "Because, to tell you the truth, it looks to me as though he's the wrong man for Krakatoa! It isn't a place for anybody who's afraid of quakes!" Bob and I walked back to the barracks after Danthorpe had left. I could see that he was feeling low, and I tried to cheer him up. "After all," I told him, "we haven't got any special orders yet. Maybe we'll start the fall term with everybody else." He shook his head glumly. "I don't think so. What's that on the bulletin board?" A fourth-year orderly was smoothing an order slip on the adhesive board just inside our barracks. We read over his shoulder. It was for us, all right: The cadets named herein will report to the Commandant's Office at 1700 hours this date: Cadet Danthorpe, Harley Cadet Eden, James Cadet Eskow, Robert We looked at each other, A thought struck me. "I wonder if— But the O.O.D. said thirteen hundred hours. Remember? When he spotted me at the deepwater pool?" Bob shook his head. "I didn't hear him. I must've been underwater at the time." But the orderly turned sharply, saluted, and said in a brisk tone: "Sir! Cadet Tilden, Walter S., requests permission to address an upperclassman." It was a good example of proper form; I couldn't help admiring him—far better than I had been able to do when I first came to the Academy. I said: "Proceed, Cadet Tilden!" Staring into space, at full attention, his chin tucked so far back into his collar that he could hardly move his jaw to speak, he said: "Sir, Cadet Eden has two appointments. The one at thirteen hundred hours concerns the possible death of his uncle, Stewart Eden!" The Man Called Father Tide Etched in silver over the sea-coral portals of the Administration Building was the motto of the Academy: The Tides Don't Wait! But I did. I was ten minutes early for my appointment with the Commandant; but to the Commandant, 1300 hours meant exactly that, and not a minute before or after. I sat at attention in his anteroom, and wondered, without joy, just how nearly right the orderly had been in his guess about why the Commandant wanted to see me. My uncle Stewart Eden was my only near relative. His home was ten thousand miles away and three miles straight down, in the undersea nation of Marinia. He had been in ill health, that I knew. Perhaps his illness had grown worse, and— No. I closed my mind to that thought. In any case, the orderly had said "possible death," and that didn't sound like illness. I put aside the attempt to think and concentrated only on sitting there and waiting. Precisely at 1300 the Commandant appeared. He approached from the officers' mess, a towering, frowning giant of a man, powerful as the sea itself. Beside him was a neat little man in clerical black, trotting to keep up with the Commandant's great strides, talking very urgently. 8 "Tcn-hutl" barked the cadet sentry, presenting arms. I sprang to attention. The Commandant paused on his way into his private office, the tiny stranger behind him. "Cadet Eden," said the Commandant gravely. "You have a visitor. This is Father Jonah Tidesley, of the Society of Jesus. He has come a long way to see you." I remember shaking the little man's hand, but I don't remember much else except that I found myself with the Commandant and Father Tidesley, in the Commandant's private office. I remember noticing that the Commandant was full of a quiet respect for the priest; I remember him looking at me with a look that was disturbingly keen. They said that the Commandant was able to read the minds of cadets, and for a moment I thought it was true— Then I concentrated on what Father Tidesley was saying. "I knew your uncle, Jim," he said in a clear, warm voice. "Perhaps you've heard him speak of me. He usually called me Father Tide—everybody does." "I don't remember, sir," I said. "But I seldom see my uncle." He nodded cheerfully. He was an amiable little man, but his sea-blue eyes were as sharp as the Commandant's. He wasn't young. His face was round and plump, but his red cheeks were seamed like sea-coral. I couldn't guess his age—or his connection with my uncle, or what he wanted with me, for that matter. "Sit down, Jim," he beamed, "sit down." I glanced at the Commandant, who nodded. "I've heard about your adventure with the ^sea serpents, Jim," he went on. "Ah, that must have been quite an adventure! I've always longed to see the Tonga Trench. But it hasn't been possible, though perhaps some day— But you've done more than that, Jim. Oh, I know a great deal about you, boy, though we've never met." He went on and on. It was true; he surprised me. Not only because he knew so much of my own life—Uncle Stewart might well have told him that—but because he knew that other world so well, that world "down deep" which is stranger to most lubbers than the mountains of the moon. Lubber! It was the most foolish thought I had ever had—Father Tide a lubber! But I didn't know him well, not then. He talked for several minutes; I believe he was trying to put me at my ease, and he succeeded. But at last he opened a briefcase. "Jim," he said, "look at this." He took out a thick plastic envelope and spilled its contents on the desk before me. "Do you recognize these articles?" he asked me solemnly. I reached out and touched them. But it was hardly necessary. There was a worn silver ring, set with a milky Tonga pearl. There was a watch—a fine wrist chronometer in a plain case of stainless steel. There were coins and a few small bills—some of them American, the rest Marinian dollars. And there was a torn envelope. I didn't have to look at the address. I knew what it would be. It was for Mr. Stewart Eden, at his office in the undersea city of Thetis, Marinia. I recognized them at once. The address on the envelope was my own writing. The ring was my uncle's—the pearl a gift from his old friend Jason Craken. The watch was the one my father had given Uncle Stewart many a long year ago. I said, as calmly as I could: "They are my uncle's. Stewart Eden." Father Tide looked at me compassionately for a long, thoughtful moment. Then he gathered up the articles and began to replace them in the plastic wrapper. "I was afraid they were," he said softly. "Has something happened to Uncle Stewart?" I demanded. "I don't know, Jim. I was hoping you could tell me." "Tell you? But how could I? Where did you get these things?" Father Tide replaced the plastic envelope in his briefcase and looked at me across the desk. "I found them in a sea-car," he said softly. "Bear with me, Jim. Let me explain this my own way." 10 He got up and began to pace restlessly around the room. "Perhaps you know," he said in that warm, clear voice, "that our order has pioneered in vulcanology and seismology—that is, in the scientific study of volcanoes and earthquakes. I myself am something of a specialist in the undersea phenomena associated with these things.'* I nodded uneasily. "Two weeks ago," he went on, pausing by the window to look out at the bright Bermudan sea, "there was a sudden eruption in the Indian Ocean. It was entirely unexpected." That made me speak. "Unexpected? But—I mean, sir, isn't it true that these things can be forecast?" He whirled and nodded. "Yes, Jim! It is very nearly a science these days. But this one was not forecast. There was nothing to indicate any activity in that area—nothing at all. "But all the same the eruption occurred. I was at Krakatoa Dome when the waves from this disturbance were picked up by the seismographs there," he went on deliberately. "The epicenter was less than two thousand miles away. I set out at once to make observations on the spot. By the following night I was at the epicenter." Though what he was saying told me nothing about what had happened to my uncle, it increased my respect for Father Tide. I couldn't help being interested. He told me: "The surface of the sea was still agitated. Beneath, I found a new flow of lava and mud that had spread over dozens of square miles. The lava was still hot, and the explosions of steam were considerable, even though my own sea-car is designed for use in the vicinity of seaquakes. I don't suppose you know the area, but it is almost uninhabited. Fortunately! If there had been a city dome in the area, it would have been destroyed with enormous loss of life. Even so, I fear that there may be deaths that we shall never learn of. Miners, perhaps." "Sir," I said, pointing at the briefcase, "those things. You didn't find them there?" He nodded somberly. "I did. But please bear with me, Jim. I was cruising over the sea floor, near the edge of the field of hot lava. I was making scientific observations— 11 and also looking for survivors who might require my aid. My microsonar equipment had been half wrecked by the explosions, and of course the water was black with mud. "All the same, I picked up a sonar distress signal." "My uncle?" I demanded. "Was it his signal?" "I don't know, Jim," he said softly. "I recognized the signal at once as being from an automatic emergency transmitter. I was able to pinpoint it, and to follow it to its source, at the very edge of the lava flow. "There was a wrecked sea-car there, half buried under boulders and mud. "I signaled, but there was no answer. Since there was a chance of survivors, I got into edenite armor and went aboard the wreck." I gasped, "You did whaft But didn't you know how dangerous it was?" I caught the Commandant's eye on me and stopped; but that told me a lot about Father Tide. Know? Of course he had known; but it hadn't stopped him. He only said: "It was necessary. But I found no one. I believe the sea-car was struck by boulders thrown up in the eruption and disabled. The locks were open. All the scuba gear was gone." And that marked him as a true sea-man too, for no lubber would refer to Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus by its nickname, scuba. "So the people in the car were able to get out?" I said hopefully. He nodded. "Yes. But I am far from certain that they got away from the volcano." He gestured at his briefcase. "I found those things in the sea-car. Then I had to leave—barely in time. I was almost trapped in another flow of volcanic mud." I started, "What—" Then I had to gulp and start again. "What do you think happened to my uncle?" Father Tide's blue eyes were cold and keen—surprisingly; for I would have expected them to be warm with sympathy. "I was hoping you could tell me. Or at least—well, I was hoping that you would tell me that these things were not his property." 12 "They are. But I can't believe he was lost!" "He'll have my prayers," Father Tide assured me. "Though perhaps he would not ask for them." He sighed, and looked out again over the bright blue sea. "Unfortunately," he said, "being lost is not the most disturbing possibility for your uncle." I stared at him. "What are you talking about, sir?" "I am accustomed to dealing with death," he told me solemnly. "For that I feel well prepared. But this undersea volcano has presented me with other problems." He paused, without saying what the problems were, while his blue eyes searched my face. He asked suddenly: "Why was your uncle in the Indian Ocean?" "I can't say, sir. He was at home in Thetis Dome the last I knew." "How long ago?" he rapped out. "Why—two months, it must have been." "And what was he doing there?" "He was ill, Father Tide. I doubt that he was able to do much at all. He is in bad shape, and—" "I see," Father Tide interrupted. "In other words, he was desperate. Perhaps desperate enough to do—anything." "What are you suggesting?" I demanded. For thirty seconds, the little priest looked at me sadly. "This quake was not forecast," he said at last. "There is evidence that it was—artificial." I sat staring, bewildered; he had lost me completely. "I don't understand, sir," I admitted. "Only a trained seismologist can evaluate the evidence," he said in his warm, clear voice, as though I were in a classroom. "I admit, also, that no point on the surface of the earth is entirely free from the danger of an unpredictable quake. Yet forecasting should give some indication. And this eruption is only one in a series of several—relatively minor, all located in uninhabited sections—which seem to follow a certain pattern. "There have been six. They have become progressively more intense. The focus of the first was quite shallow; the 13 foci of those that came later have become progressively deeper." "So you think—" I broke off; the idea was almost too appalling to put into words. Father Tide nodded. "I suspect," he said clearly, "that someone is perfecting an unholy technique for creating artificial earthquakes." I swallowed. "And my uncle—" He nodded. "Yes, Jim. I fear that your uncle, if he be still alive, is somehow involved." 14 Fire Under the Sea Artificial seaquakes! And my uncle Stewart Eden charged with setting them off, by this strange priest who called himself Father Tide! It was too much for me to grasp. I was no longer worried; I was angry. He left me there in the Commandant's office, almost without another word. I stopped him as he was going out, asked for my uncle's belongings. He hesitated, glanced at the Commandant, then shook his head. "I'm sorry, Jim. Later they will doubtless be yours. But they are evidence. If it is necessary for the officers of the Sub-Sea Fleet to take over the private investigation I have begun, they will doubtless wish to examine them." And he would say no more. I suppose the Commandant dismissed me, but I don't remember it. The next thing I remember was standing in a pay-phone booth, trying to reach my uncle in Thetis Dome. It took forever for the long relay lines to clear ... and then, no answer. No answer from his home. No answer from his office. In desperation, I had him paged in the hotels and sea-car terminals—both him and his loyal aide, Gideon Park. But there was no answer. This much was true of what Father Tide had said: My uncle had disappeared from sight. 15 I stood staring into space. I had no idea wfiere I was. By and by the object I was looking at began to make sense to me. It was a huge map of the world on the Mercator Projection; the map that, as a first-year lubber at the Academy, I had tirelessly memorized for the glory and grandeur that it spelled out. It was a strange map, at least for dry-siders—for the continents themselves were featureless black, showing only the rivers and a few of the largest cities. But the oceans! They sparkled in brilliant luminous colors. Shades of blue and green to indicate the depths of the sea bottom. Wash overlays of crimson and orange to show the submarine mountain peaks and ranges. Brilliant gold for the cities; lines of webbed silver that showed the pipelines and vacuum tubeways that linked them; shaded tracing that showed the vast mineral deposits that lay on the ocean's bottom. There was incalculable wealth there! Enough to make a million millionaires! But dishonest men were wrecking what had so laboriously been built by the pioneers of the deeps, such as my uncle and my father. And yet, my uncle was one of those dishonest men, according to the man who called himself Father Tide. I came to with a start, shook myself and turned away from the great map of the deeps. I was in Dixon Hall, the Academy's exciting museum, where all the history of the sub-sea service was on display. I had no recollection of how I got there. And someone was calling my name. I said: "Oh. Hello. I—I didn't see you come in." It was Bob, with Harley Danthorpe. "You didn't see anything at all," Danthorpe rasped. "Can't you find a better place to daydream than a dump like this? We've been looking all over for you." I expected something from Bob at that point, for he was nearly as devoted to Dixon Hall and the living history it contained as I. But he was paying no attention. "Look!" he said, pointing. It was a tapered metal tube, four inches thick and about three feet long, mounted in a glass display case. The polished walls of it were glowing like edenite—the 16 fantastic armor that my uncle invented, the pressure film that turns the deadly pressure of the water back on itself, making it possible for men to plumb the deeps. But it was not edenite, or not of any sort that I had ever seen. For the glow of this was not the even shimmering green of submarine edenite armor. It was filled with little sparking points of colored fire that came and went like Christmas lights seen through the waving branches of a tree. It's a model mole!" cried Bob. "Look at the sign!" He pointed to the card in the case: Working Model of Mechanical Ortholytic Excavator Experimental craft of this type, now under test by the Sub-Sea Fleet, offer the promise of new opportunities to Academy graduates. With it explorations ^may be made at first hand of the strata beneath the sea bottom. **Beneath the sea bottom," I read aloud, wonderingly, "Do they mean actually underground?" Harley Danthorpe twanged: "If you want the inside drift on the mole, just ask me." He came up behind us, squinting at the shining model. "My dad has money in the basic patents," he bragged. "On the ortholytic drill. Get it? Mechanical—Ortho—Lytic—Excavator. M-O-L-E." He patted the case reassuringly. "Dad says it will slice through basalt rock like a bullet through butter. He says a time is coming when self-contained drilling machines will cruise through the rocks under the floor of the sea like submarines under the surface of the water. And he says the mole is going to earn millions for the man with the inside drift." "Great," said Bob, disgusted. "A thing like this, and all you can think of is how to make money out of it!" "What's wrong with money?" Danthorpe demanded hotly. "After all, if it wasn't—" "Wait a minute," I interrupted. "I remember hearing about this thing. They're having trouble with it, right? The model is fine, but the big machines have bugs." Danthorpe confessed, "Well, all atomic drills generate a 17 lot of heat—and the ortholytic drill cuts faster, but if makes more heat. And the earth's crust is already plenty hot, when you get a few miles down. They've got a terrific refrigeration problem." "At the least," Bob agreed. "But they'll lick it! And— Wow!" He stopped and pointed at the big clock on the wall, under the sign that read; The Tides Don't Wait. "Five minutes before seventeen hundred!" he cried. "Come on, we've got to get to the Commandant's office!" We stood at ramrod attention, while the Commandant came around his big desk and inspected us with critical eyes as cold as the polar seas. He said nothing about the scene in his office a few hours before. He didn't show by a look or a gesture that it had ever happened. For that I was grateful. He walked behind the desk again and sat down deliberately. "Gentlemen," he said, his voice as hard as his sea-scarred face, "you are nearing the end of a course of training. You have reached the stage when certain selected cadets are chosen for detached duty as a part of their training. On this occasion, I want to remind you of your enormous duties, and of your peculiar opportunities." Opportunities! It was a strange way for him to put it. I didn't say anything. I didn't even move. But I could hear Bob Eskow catch his breath beside me. The Commandant was lecturing. "The Sub-Sea Fleet," he was saying, "was originally designed to protect American interests under the sea. That was back before all the world's weapons were placed under the direct supervision of the U.N. We looked out for American cities, American mining claims, American shipping. That is still an important part of our duties. But the Sub-Sea Fleet has a broader mission now. "Our enemies down deep are seldom men in these days. In fact, the old institution of war was drowned in the deeps. There's room and wealth enough for everybody. 18 ase, far above the deep observatory, and headed for the mess hall. Bob disappeared for a moment, and when he rejoined Danthorpe and me, he seemed a little concerned. But I didn't think much about it—then. Harley Danthorpe spent the whole meal bragging about his father. The thought of seeing him—of coming back into his rightful environment, as he saw it, as Crown Prince of the kingdom of the sea that his father ruled— seemed to excite him. Bob was very subdued. After chow, Harley and I marched back to the barracks—I to make some practice readings for tomorrow's forecast, Harley to phone his father. I didn't see Bob for a while. Then I noticed that the microseismometer I was using 36 seemed out of true. These are precision instruments, and even for practice readings I wanted to use one that was working properly. I started out of our quarters—and nearly tripped over Bob. He was talking heatedly, in a low voice, to a man I had never seen before—a small, withered, almond-skinned man, perhaps a Chinese or a Malay. He was dressed like a civilian janitor. Bob had his hand out to the man—almost as though he were handing him something. And then he looked up and saw me. Abruptly his manner changed. "You," he cried. "What do you think you're up to? Where's my book?" The little janitor glanced at me, and then shrank away, "No, mister!" he squeaked. "No take book, mister!" "What's the matter?" I asked. Bob glowered. "This lubber's swiped my Koyetsu! Don't ask me why, but I want it back!" "Koyetsu?" He meant Koyetsu's book, Principles of Seismology; it was one of our texts. "But, Bob, didn't you loan it to Harley? I'm nearly sure I saw him with it?" "Harley?" Bob hesitated. Then he shrugged and growled: "All right, you. Get out of here!" The little janitor lifted his hands over his head, as if afraid that Bob meant to hit him, and ran down the passage and out of sight. I went back into the barracks—and there it was. Bob's book, in plain sight, on the shelf over Harley's bunk. I showed it to him. "Oh," he said. And then: "Oh, yes. I remember now." But he didn't look at me. "Guess I'll take a little rest," he said, and his voice was still disturbed. And he flung himself on his bunk without looking at me. It was very puzzling. I brooded about it all the way to the spare-parts department, where the microseismometer I wanted was kept. I found it, and then it occurred to me that I would need to check over the geosonde, since Lt. Tsuya wanted us to make a schematic diagram of it. Might as well kill two birds with one stone. The geosonde was stored in a moisture-proof box. I 37 found it and began to strip it, thinking about Bob and his odd behavior. And then I had no time to think of Bob. I opened the box; it was full, all right, but not with a geosonde. It contained a stack of lead weights from a gravity-reading instrument, packed with crumpled paper to keep them from rattling. The geosonde was gone! Lieutenant Tsuya hit the ceiling. "Very bad business, Eden!" he stormed, when I reported the loss the next morning. "Why didn't you come to me at once?" "Well, sir. I—" I hesitated. Why? Because I had been too concerned with Bob Eskow, in truth—but that wasn't a reason I was anxious to give, since I didn't want to discuss Bob's queer actions with the lieutenant. "No excuse, eh?" said Lieutenant Tsuya irritably. "Of course not! Well, the three of you stay right here and work on your forecasts. I'm going to initiate an investigation right now. We can't have Fleet property stolen!" Especially—he could have added, but didn't need to— when it relates to a classified project like quake forecasting. He left us and went to interview the station personnel. When he came back his face was like a sunset thundercloud. "I want to know what happened to that instrument," he told us. "I know that it was there two weeks ago, because I put it there myself." He looked around at us. "If any of you know who took it, speak up!" His eyes roved over our faces. "Have you seen anybody carrying anything away from the station?" I shook my head. And then I remembered. Bob, and the bent little janitor. Had Bob handed him something? It had looked like it. But I wasn't sure. I said nothing. *'AU right," grumbled Lieutenant Tsuya. "I'll have to report it to the Base Commandant; he'll take it from there. Now, let's see those forecasts." 38 Silently we filed before him and handed over our charts and synoptic diagrams, along with the detailed quake forecast we had each of us made, from our own readings and our own observations. Lieutenant Tsuya looked at them carefully, a frown on his bland face. He had his own forecast, of course, made as a part of the station's regular program; he was matching his—the official forecast of what Krakatoa Dome could expect in the way of earth movements, large and small, in the next twenty-four hours—against ours. And it was plain that he didn't like something he saw. He looked up at us over his dark-rimmed glasses. "Accurate forecasts," he reminded us, "depend on accurate observations." He dismissed Harley Danthorpe's work and mine with a curt: "Satisfactory." Then he turned to Bob. "Eskow," he said, "I do not follow your computations. You have predicted a Force Two quake at twenty-one hundred hours today. Is that correct?" "Yes, sir," said Bob stonily. "I see. There is no such prediction in the station's official forecast, Eskow. Neither is there one in Danthorpe's or in Eden's. How do you account for that." Bob said, without expression: "That's how I read it, sir. Focus twenty miles north-northwest of Krakatoa Dome. The thermal flow—" "I see," rapped Lieutenant Tsuya. "Your value for the thermal flow is taken nearly fifty per cent lower than any of the others. So that the strains will not be relieved, is that it?" "Yes, sir!" "But I cannot agree with your reading," the lieutenant went on thoughtfully. "Therefore, I'm afraid I cannot give you a passing grade on this forecast. Sorry, ^Eskow. Til have to cancel your pass." "But, sir!" Bob looked stunned. *'I mean—sir, Fve been counting on a pass!" "Disapproved, Eskow," said the lieutenant coldly. "Passes are your reward for satisfactory performance of duty. This forecast is not satisfactory." He nodded coldly. "Dismissed!" 39 Back at our quarters, Danthorpe and I showered and changed quickly into our sea-scarlet dress uniform, and headed for Yeoman Harris's desk to pick up our passes. Bob had disappeared while we were in the shower. I was as well pleased; I didn't like to walk out on him. And Danthorpe—why, nothing was troubling Harley Danthorpe. He was bubbling with plans and hopes. "Come on, Eden," he coaxed. "Come with me. Have dinner with my father. He'll show you what sub-sea cooking can be like! He's got a chef that— Come on, Eden!" Yeoman Harris looked up at him sourly. But the phone rang before he could speak. "Yes, sir!" he wheezed, and then waited. "Right, sir!" He hung up. "You two," he said, clearing his throat asthmatically. "Do you know where Cadet Eskow is?" "In the barracks, I guess," said Harley Danthorpe, "Come on, Harris. Let's have our passes." "Wait a minute," the yeoman grumbled. "That was Lieutenant Tsuya. He wants Eskow to report to Station K at twenty hundred hours for special duty. And he isn't in the barracks." Harley and I looked at each other. Not in the barracks? But he had to be in the barracks. . Harley said, "I wonder what the special duty is." I nodded. We both knew what the special duty was—it wasn't hard to figure out. Twenty hundred hours. An hour before the little quake that Bob had forecast. Obviously, the lieutenant was planning to have Bob on duty at the time the quake was supposed to occur—to show him that the forecast was wrong, in a way that Bob couldn't question. But Bob wasn't around. Yeoman Harris wheezed softly, "His pass is missing." He opened the drawer and showed us. "It was there. Then Lieutenant Tsuya canceled it, and I went to destroy it. But it was gone." I stared at the open drawer unbelievingly. Bob was behaving oddly—I remembered his behavior with the shriveled Chinese janitor, coming so close to the disappearance of the microseismometer. But he was my friend, 40 I couldn't imagine anything in Krakatoa Dome that would make him go AWOL to get there. "Better see if you can find him," wheezed Yeoman Harris. "Lieutenant Tsuya's a good officer, so long as you trim ship with him. But he won't stand for lubberly lack of discipline!" We took our passes and, without a word, hurried back to the barracks. Bob wasn't there. And his dress uniform was gone. "He's gone AWOL!" cried Harley Danthorpe. "Well, what do you know about that!" "Blow your tanks," I said sharply. "He's a good cadet. He wouldn't do anything like that." "Then where is he?" Harley demanded. That stopped me. There wasn't any answer to that. 41 Life on the Lid Harley said knowingly: "You haven't got the inside drift. Take my word for it, Bob's up in the dome right now, having himself a time." "I don't believe it," I said, but there seemed to be every chance that Harley was right. The guards checked our passes, and we took the elevator up to the dome itself. We walked out into Krakatoa Dome, into the throbbing of the pump rooms and the air circulators, past the locks where a sleek cargo sub-sea liner was nuzzling into the edenite pressure chamber. I said suddenly: "Let's look for him." Harley gloated: "Ha! So you admit—" Then he stopped. He looked at my face, shrugged, changed expression. And then, after a moment, he squinted at his watch. "Well," he said a little reluctantly, "I'll tell you how it is. I don't mind, but I've got a date for dinner with my folks in three hours. Are you coming along?" I said: "Help me look for Bob." He shrugged. "Oh, all right," he said at last. "Why not? But I'm not missing my father's chef's cooking! If we don't find him by nineteen hundred hours—that's it!" We stepped onto a circular slidewalk, and then off it again at a radial way that was moving toward the center of the dome. 42 "Most men off duty head for the tipper southeast octant," Harley said expertly. "That's the White Way, as we call it—where the shops and theaters and restaurants are. Now, you lubbers want to be careful on a slidewalk, because it'll pitch you off if you aren't braced for it. Watch the way I do it, Jim." *Tm not exactly a lubber," I protested. He shrugged. "Depends on your point of view," he said reasonably. "You've spent a couple weeks in a dome. I've spent my whole life here. I don't know what you are—to a lubber; but I know what you are to me." He grinned. "Come on," he said, "I'll give you the inside drift as we go." He led me toward another bank of elevators. "To begin with," he lectured, "Krakatoa Dome's a perfect hemisphere, except for the tube at the top, that goes to the qoating terminal on the surface. It's two thousand feet in diameter, and a thousand feet high—not counting the drainage pumps, the warehouse districts and so on, that are actually quarried out of the sea floor. And not counting Station K." "I see," I said, hardly listening. I was scanning every passing face, hoping to see Bob. "Those pumps are what keep out the sea. No quake is likely really to hurt the dome itself—it would take Force Eight at the least, probably Nine or even Ten. But even a smaller quake, if it hit just wrong, might fissure the rock underneath us, where there's no edenite film. Then— boom! The sea would come pounding in!" I glanced at him. He actually seemed to enjoy the prospect! "Don't let it get you, Jim," he said consolingly. "I mean, it's true that we're living on the lid of an active seismic zone. What of it? It's true that if the pumps went, and the basic rock split, we couldn't keep the sea out of the dome. But there's still a chance that we might survive, you know. Oh, not down at Station K—that would go, sure. But the dome itself, up here, is divided into octants, and each one can be sealed off in a second! "Of course," he said meditatively, "we might not have a second. "Especially," he added, "if anything happened to the 43 power supply, and the automatic octant barriers didn't go on!" I let him talk. Why not? He was trying to scare a lubber—but, no matter what he thought, I wasn't a lubber. I love the deeps too well to feel that they are an enemy! But then we were up a dozen decks, and I said: "That's enough, Harley. All right? I'd like to concentrate on looking for Bob." He grinned. "Got under your skin a little, eh?" he said amiably—and wrongly. "All right. Well, we're a long way from Zero Deck. This is the shopping area; let's take a look around." We came out onto a crowded street. It didn't look much different from any business street in a surface city— at first; until you noticed the Troyon tubes that give it light, set into the metal ceiling that hung forty feet overhead. We poked through the crowds around the tri-D theaters and the restaurants. There were plenty of people— civilians, crewmen from the sub-sea cargo and passenger vessels, uniformed men from the Fleet. I saw several cadets in sea-red dress uniforms, but none of them was Bob. We rode on a slidewalk along a circular street to the next radial, then hopped on a slide that took us back to the elevators. Harley gave his watch a calculating squint. "The dome has a hundred miles of streets," he said. "With the slide-walks moving at four miles an hour, you'll be about four working days searching the city—and then Eskow will probably be inside some building when you go by. Better give it up. Come on home with me." I said, "Let's try one more deck." We went up to the next deck. The slidewalk took us past rows of shooting galleries and pin-ball machines and novelty shops that sold little plastic models of the dome in mailing cartons. We saw a lot of men in uniform. But none of them was Bob. "That's all for me," Harley Danthorpe said. I shrugged. He said persuasively: "Why not ride up to 44 the next deck? That's where my family lives. You might as well look there as anywhere else." It seemed reasonable. We went up one deck more, and out a radial street that was crowded with expensive looking restaurants. We rode the slidewalk through the safety wall, into the residential octant where Danthorpe lived. The streets were wider there; strips of carefully manicured lawn were growing under the Troyon lights, beside the slidewalks. The apartment buildings glittered sleekly with wealth. The doors were guarded by expensive robot butlers. "Come in," said Harley Danthorpe hospitably. "Stay for dinner. My father's chef can—" "Thanks," I said, shaking my head. Danthorpe shrugged and left me. I rode on around through the next safety wall. It was a different part of the city entirely. I was in the financial district now, and it was after business hours, the streets empty tunnels of plate glass and stainless steel and granite. It wasn't a likely place to find Bob. I rode on, into the octant. This was a livelier section by far. It was the crowded residential section where the bulk of the dome's pppula-tion lived—not the lavish luxury homes of the Danthorpe family, but the clerks and factory workers, and the families of the Fleet and commercial sub-sea liner crews. It had no glitter, none at all. There were a few little shops on the deck, but the floors above were all apartments. Men in undershirts were reading newspapers on the balconies. Kids were shouting and running, noisily chasing after balls in the street; women in housecoats were calling after them. I couldn't think of a single reason why Bob might be here, either. I had just decided to stay on the circular slidewalk, continuing until it returned to the shopping district again, when—I saw Bob! He was talking to a man, a wrinkled little Chinese—the man I had seen at our barracks! I was on the point of rushing up to him, and then, 45 queerly, I stopped myself. Though I hated to admit it, it seemed that there was something going on here— something that involved my good friend Bob Eskow, in a way that I didn't like. I was no spy, no private detective to take pleasure in shadowing a man and catching him at some evil act. But here was something that I didn't understand, and I could not make myself step forward until I had a clue as to what was going on. And they were, in truth, behaving oddly. It was almost as though they were suspicious of being followed. They spoke briefly, then drifted apart. Bob knelt on the in-walk, fussing with his boots, looking covertly around. The little Chinese ambled a dozen yards away and fed a coin into a sea-chicle vending machine— and he, too, glanced around. I stayed out of sight. When they were borne nearly past the barrier wall