<h3><SPAN name="THE_INVISIBLE_FORCE" id="THE_INVISIBLE_FORCE">THE INVISIBLE FORCE.</SPAN></h3>
<h4>A Story of What Might Happen in the Days to Come, when Underground London is
Tunnelled in all Directions for Electric Railways, if an Explosion Should Take Place
in One of the Tubes.</h4>
<h4>I.</h4>
<p>It seemed as if London had solved one of
her great problems at last. The communication
difficulty was at an end. The first-class
ticket-holders no longer struggled to and
from business with fourteen fellow-sufferers
in a third-class carriage. There were no
longer any particularly favoured suburbs, nor
were there isolated localities where it took as
long getting to the City as an express train
takes between London and Swindon. The
pleasing paradox of a man living at Brighton
because it was nearer to his business than
Surbiton had ceased to exist. The tubes
had done away with all that.</p>
<p>There were at least a dozen hollow cases
running under London in all directions.
They were cool and well ventilated, the carriages
were brilliantly lighted, the various
loops were properly equipped and managed.</p>
<p>All day long the shining funnels and bright
platforms were filled with passengers.
Towards midnight the traffic grew less, and
by half-past one o'clock the last train had
departed. The all-night service was not
yet.</p>
<p>It was perfectly quiet now along the gleaming
core that lay buried under Bond Street
and St. James's Street, forming the loop
running below the Thames close by Westminster
Bridge Road and thence to the
crowded Newington and Walworth districts.
Here a portion of the roof was under repair.</p>
<p>The core was brilliantly lighted; there was
no suggestion of fog or gloom. The general
use of electricity had disposed of a good deal
of London's murkiness; electric motors were
applied now to most manufactories and work-shops.
There was just as much gas consumed
as ever, but it was principally used for
heating and culinary purposes. Electric
radiators and cookers had not yet reached the
multitude; that was a matter of time.</p>
<p>In the flare of the blue arc lights a dozen
men were working on the dome of the core.
Something had gone wrong with a water-main
overhead, the concrete beyond the
steel belt had cracked, and the moisture had
corroded the steel plates, so that a long
strip of the metal skin had been peeled
away, and the friable concrete had fallen on
the rails. It had brought part of the crown
with it, so that a maze of large and small
pipes was exposed to view.</p>
<p>"They look like the reeds of an organ,"
a raw engineer's apprentice remarked to the
foreman. "What are they?"</p>
<p>"Gas mains, water, electric light, telephone,
goodness knows what," the foreman
replied. "They branch off here, you see."</p>
<p>"Fun to cut them," the apprentice grinned.</p>
<p>The foreman nodded absently. He had
once been a mischievous boy, too. The job
before him looked a bigger thing than he had
expected. It would have to be patched up
till a strong gang could be turned on to the
work. The raw apprentice was still gazing
at the knot of pipes. What fun it would be
to cut that water-main and flood the tunnels!</p>
<p>In an hour the scaffolding was done and
the <i>débris</i> cleared away. To-morrow night
a gang of men would come and make the
concrete good and restore the steel rim to
the dome. The tube was deserted. It
looked like a polished, hollow needle, lighted
here and there by points of dazzling light.</p>
<p>It was so quiet and deserted that the
falling of a big stone reverberated along the
tube with a hollow sound. There was a
crack, and a section of piping gave way
slightly and pressed down upon one of the
electric mains. A tangled skein of telephone
wires followed. Under the strain the electric
cable parted and snapped. There was a
long, sliding, blue flame, and instantly the
tube was in darkness. A short circuit had
been established somewhere. Not that it
mattered, for traffic was absolutely suspended
now, and would not be resumed again before
daylight. Of course, there were the work-men's
very early trains, and the Covent
Garden market trains, but they did not
run over this section of the line. The
whole darkness reeked with the whiff of
burning indiarubber. The moments passed
on drowsily.</p>
<p>Along one side of Bond Street the big
lamps were out. All the lights on one main
switch had gone. But it was past one
o'clock now, and the thing mattered little.
These accidents occurred sometimes in the
best regulated districts, and the defect would
be made good in the morning.</p>
<p>It was a little awkward, though, for a great
State ball was in progress at Buckingham
Palace. Supper was over, the magnificent
apartments were brilliant with light dresses
and gay uniforms. The shimmer and fret
of diamonds flashed back to lights dimmer
than themselves. There was a slide of feet
over the polished floors. Then, as if some
unseen force had cut the bottom of creation,
light and gaiety ceased to be, and darkness
fell like a curtain.</p>
<p>There were a few cries of alarm from the
swift suddenness of it. To eyes accustomed
to that brilliant glow the gloom was Egyptian.
It seemed as if some great catastrophe had
happened. But common-sense reasserted
itself, and the brilliant gathering knew that
the electric light had failed.</p>
<p>There were quick commands, and spots of
yellow flame sprang out here and there in the
great desert of the night. How faint and
feeble, and yellow and flaring, the lights
looked! The electrician down below was
puzzled, for, so far as he could see, the fuses
in the meters were intact. There was no
short circuit so far as the Palace was concerned.
In all probability there had been an
accident at the generating stations; in a few
minutes the mischief would be repaired.</p>
<p>But time passed, and there was no welcome
return of the flood of crystal light.</p>
<p>"It is a case for all the candles," the Lord
Chamberlain remarked; "fortunately the old
chandeliers are all fitted. Light the candles."</p>
<p>It was a queer, grotesque scene, with all
that wealth of diamonds and glitter of uniforms
and gloss of satins, under the dim suggestion
of the candles. And yet it was
enjoyable from the very novelty of it. Nothing
could be more appropriate for the minuet
that was in progress.</p>
<p>"I feel like one of my own ancestors," a
noble lord remarked. "When they hit upon
that class of candle I expect they imagined
that the last possibility in the way of lighting
had been accomplished. Is it the same outside,
Sir George?"</p>
<p>Sir George Egerton laughed. He was
fresh from the gardens.</p>
<p>"It's patchwork," he said. "So far as I
can judge, London appears to be lighted in
sections. I expect there is a pretty bad breakdown.
My dear chap, do you mean to say
that clock is right?"</p>
<p>"Half-past four, sure enough, and mild for
the time of year. Did you notice a kind of
rumbling under—Merciful Heavens, what is
that?"</p>
<h4>II.</h4>
<p>There was a sudden splitting crack as if a
thousand rifles had been discharged in the
ballroom. The floor rose on one side to a
perilous angle, considering the slippery nature
of its surface. Such a shower of white flakes
fell from the ceiling that dark dresses and
naval uniforms looked as if their wearers had
been out in a snowstorm.</p>
<p>Cracks and fissures started in the walls
with pantomimic effect, on all sides could be
heard the rattle and splinter of falling glass.
A voice suddenly uprose in a piercing scream,
a yell proclaimed that one of the great crystal
chandeliers was falling. There was a rush
and a rustle of skirts, and a quick vision of
white, beautiful faces, and with a crash the
great pendant came to the floor.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/chandelier_falls.jpg" width-obs="400" alt="" /> <div class="caption">A yell proclaimed that one of the great crystal chandeliers was falling.</div>
</div>
<p>The whole world seemed to be oscillating
under frightened feet, the palace was humming
and thrumming like a harpstring. The panic
was so great, the whole mysterious tragedy so
sudden, that the bravest there had to battle for
their wits. Save for a few solitary branches of
candles, the big room was in darkness.</p>
<p>There were fifteen hundred of England's
bravest, and fairest, and best, huddled together
in what might be a hideous deathchamber for
all they knew to the contrary. Women were
clinging in terror to the men, the fine lines of
class distinction were broken down. All were
poor humanity now in the presence of a
common danger.</p>
<p>In a little time the earth ceased to sway and
rock, the danger was passing. A little colour
was creeping back to the white faces again.
Men and women were conscious that they
could hear the beating of their own hearts.
Nobody broke the silence yet, for speech
seemed to be out of place.</p>
<p>"An earthquake," somebody said at
length. "An earthquake, beyond doubt, and
a pretty bad one at that. That accounts for
the failure of the electric light. There will
be some bad accidents if the gas mains are
disturbed."</p>
<p>The earth grew steady underfoot again, the
white flakes ceased to fall. Amongst the men
the spirit of adventure was rising; the idea of
standing quietly there and doing nothing was
out of the question.</p>
<p>Anyway, there could be no further thought
of pleasure that night. There were many
mothers there, and their uppermost thought
was for home. Never, perhaps, in the history
of royalty had there been so informal a
breaking up of a great function. The King
and Queen had retired some little time before—a
kindly and thoughtful act under the circumstances.
The women were cloaking and
shawling hurriedly; they crowded out in
search of their carriages with no more order
than would have been obtained outside a
theatre.</p>
<p>But there were remarkably few carriages in
waiting. An idiotic footman who had lost his
head in the sudden calamity sobbed out the
information that Oxford Street and Bond
Street were impassable, and that houses were
down in all directions. No vehicles could
come that way; the road was destroyed. As
to the rest, the man knew nothing; he was
frightened out of his life.</p>
<p>There was nothing for it but to walk. It
wanted two good hours yet before dawn, but
thousands of people seemed to be abroad.
For a space of a mile or more there was not
a light to be seen. Round Buckingham
Palace the atmosphere reeked with a fine
irritating dust, and was rendered foul and
poisonous by the fumes of coal gas. There
must have been a fearful leakage somewhere.</p>
<p>Nobody seemed to know what was the
matter, and everybody was asking everybody
else. And in the darkness it was very hard
to locate the disaster. Generally, it was
admitted that London had been visited by a
dreadful earthquake. Never were the daylight
hours awaited more eagerly.</p>
<p>"The crack of doom," Sir George Egerton
remarked to his companion, Lord Barcombe.</p>
<p>They were feeling their way across the
park in the direction of the Mall.</p>
<p>"It's like a shuddering romance that I
read a little time since. But I must know
something about it before I go to bed. Let's
try St. James's Street—if there's any St.
James's Street left."</p>
<p>"All right," Lord Barcombe agreed, "I
hope the clubs are safe. Is it wise to strike
a match with all this gas reeking in the
air?"</p>
<p>"Anything's better than the gas," Sir
George said tersely.</p>
<p>The vesta flared out in a narrow, purple
circle. Beyond it was a glimpse of a seat
with two or three people huddled on it.
They were outcasts and companions in the
grip of misfortune, but they were all awake
now.</p>
<p>"Can any of you say what's happened?"
Lord Barcombe asked.</p>
<p>"The world's come to an end, sir, I believe,"
was the broken reply. "You may
say what you like, but it was a tremendous
explosion. I saw a light like all the world
ablaze over to the north, and then all the
lights went out, and I've been waiting for the
last trump to sound ever since."</p>
<p>"Then you didn't investigate?" Lord Barcombe
asked.</p>
<p>"Not me, sir. I seem to have struck a bit
of solid earth where I am. And then it
rained stones and pieces of brick and
vestiges of creation. There's the half of a
boiler close to you that dropped out of the
sky. You stay where you are, sir."</p>
<p>But the two young men pushed on. They
reached what appeared to be St. James's
Street at length, but only by stumbling and
climbing over heaps of <i>débris</i>.</p>
<p>The roadway was one mass of broken
masonry. The fronts of some of the clubs
had been stripped off as if a titanic knife had
sliced them. It was like looking into one of
the upholsterers' smart shops, where they
display rooms completely furnished. There
were gaps here and there where houses had
collapsed altogether. Seeing that the road
had ceased to exist, it
seemed impossible that
an earthquake could
have done this thing.
A great light flickered
and roared a little way
down the road. At an
angle a gas main was
tilted up like the spout
of a teapot, upheaved
and snapped from its
twin pipes. This had
caught fire in some way,
so that for a hundred
yards or so each way
the thoroughfare was
illuminated by a huge
flare lamp.</p>
<p>It was a thrilling sight
focussed in that blue
glare. It looked as if
London had been utterly
destroyed by a siege—as
if thousands of well-aimed
shells had exploded.
Houses looked
like tattered banners of
brick and mortar.
Heavy articles of furniture
had been hurled
into the street; on the
other hand, little gimcrack ornaments still
stood on tiny brackets.</p>
<p>A scared-looking policeman came staggering
along.</p>
<p>"My man," Lord Barcombe cried, "what
has happened?"</p>
<p>The officer pulled himself together and
touched his helmet.</p>
<p>"It's dreadful, sir," he sobbed. "There
has been an accident in the tubes; and they
have been blown all to pieces."</p>
<h4>III.</h4>
<p>The constable, for the moment, had utterly
lost his nerve. He stood there in the great
flaring roar of the gas mains with a dazed
expression that was pitiful.</p>
<p>"Can you tell us anything about it?" Lord
Barcombe asked.</p>
<p>"I was in Piccadilly," was the reply.
"Everything was perfectly quiet, and so far
as I could see not a soul was in sight. Then
I heard a funny rushing
sound, just like the
tear of an express train
through a big, empty
station. Yes, it was for
all the world like a
ghostly express train that
you could hear and not
see. It came nearer and
nearer; the whole earth
trembled just as if the
train had gone mad in
Piccadilly. It rushed
past me down St.
James's Street,
and after that
there was an
awful smash and
a bang, and I was
lying on my back
in the middle of
the road. All the
lights that remained
went out,
and for a minute
or two I was <i>in</i>
that railway collision.
Then, when
I got my senses
back, I blundered
down here because
of that big flaring light there; and I
can't tell you, gentlemen, any more, except
that the tube has blown up."</p>
<p>Of that fact there was no question. There
were piles of <i>débris</i> thrown high in one part,
and a long deep depression in another like a
ruined dyke. A little further on the steel core
of the tube lay bare with rugged holes ripped
in it.</p>
<p>"Some ghastly electric catastrophe," Sir
George Egerton murmured.</p>
<p>It was getting light by this time, and it was
possible to form some idea of the magnitude
of the disaster. Some of the clubs in St.
James's Street still appeared to be intact, but
others had suffered terribly. The heaps of
tumbled masonry were powdered and glittering
with broken glass and a few walls hung
perilously over the pavement. And still the
gas main roared on until the flame grew from
purple to violet, and to straw colour before
the coming dawn. If this same thing had
happened all along the network of tubes,
London would be more or less a hideous
ruin.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/explosion_raises_road.jpg" width-obs="400" alt="" /> <div class="caption">The explosion had had a straight run here, for the road had been raised like
some gigantic zigzag molehill.</div>
</div>
<p>For the better part of Piccadilly things were
brighter. Evidently the explosion had had a
straight run here, for the road had been raised
like some mighty zigzag molehill for many
yards. The wood pavement scattered all over
the place suggested a gigantic box of child's
bricks strewn over a nursery floor. The tube
had been forced up, its outer envelope of concrete
broken so that the now twisted steel core
might have been a black snake crawling
down Piccadilly. Doubtless the expanding
air had met with some obstacle in the tube
under St. James's Street, hence the terrible
force of the explosion there.</p>
<p>There was quite a large crowd in Oxford
Street. The whole roadway was wet; the
gutters ran with the water from the broken
pipes. The air was full of the odour of gas.
All the clocks in the streets seemed to have
gone mad. Lord Barcombe glanced at his
own watch, to find that it was racing
furiously.</p>
<p>"By Jove!" he whispered excitedly,
"we're in danger here. The air is full of
electricity. I went over some works once,
and neglected to leave my watch behind me,
and it played me the same prank. It affects
the mainspring, you know."</p>
<p>There were great ropes and coils of electric
wire of high voltage cropping out of the
ground here and there; coils attached to
huge accumulators, and discharging murderous
current freely. A dog, picking his
way across the sopping street, trod on one of
the wires, and instantly all that remained of
the dog was what looked like a twisted bit of
burnt skin and bone. It appealed to Sir
George Egerton's imagination strongly.</p>
<p>"Poor little brute!" he murmured. "It
might have happened to you or me. Don't
you know that a force that only gives a man
a bad shock when he is standing on dry
ground often kills him when the surface is
wet? I wonder if we can get some indiarubber
gloves and galoshes hereabouts.
After that gruesome sight, I shall be afraid to
put one foot before the other."</p>
<p>Indeed, the precaution was a necessary one.
A horse attached to a cab came creeping
over the blocked streets; the animal slipped
on a grating connected with the ventilation of
the drains, and a fraction of a second later
there was no horse in existence. The driver
sat on his perch, white and scared.</p>
<p>"The galoshes," Lord Barcombe said
hoarsely. "Don't you move till we come
back again, my man. And everybody keep
out of the roadway."</p>
<p>The cry ran along that the roadway meant
instant death. The cabman sat there gibbering
with terror. A little way further down
was a rubber warehouse, with a fine selection
of waders' and electricians' gloves in the
window. With a fragment of concrete Sir
George smashed in the window, and took
what he and Lord Barcombe required.
They knew that they would be quite safe
now.</p>
<p>More dead than alive the cabman climbed
down from his seat and was carried to the
pavement on Lord Barcombe's shoulder. The
left side of his face was all drawn up and
puckered, the left arm was useless.</p>
<p>"Apoplexy from the fright," Sir George
suggested.</p>
<p>"Not a bit of it," Lord Barcombe
exclaimed, "It's a severe electric shock.
Hold up."</p>
<p>Gradually the man's face and arm ceased to
twitch.</p>
<p>"If that's being struck by lightning," he
said, "I don't want another dose. It was
as if something had caught hold of me and
frozen my heart in my body. I couldn't do a
thing. And look at my coat."</p>
<p>All up the left side the coat was singed so
that at a touch the whole cloth fell to pieces.
It was a strange instance of the freakishness
of the invisible force. A great fear fell on
those who saw. This intangible, unseen
danger, with its awful swiftness, was worse
than the worst that could be seen.</p>
<p>"Let's get home," Lord Barcombe
suggested. "It's getting on my nerves. It's
dreadful when all the terror is left to the
imagination."</p>
<h4>IV.</h4>
<p>Meanwhile no time was lost in getting to
the root of the mischief.</p>
<p>The danger could not be averted by switching
off the power altogether at the various
electrical stations of the metropolis. At
intervals along the tubes were immense
accumulators which for the present could not
be touched. It was these accumulators that
rendered the streets such a ghastly peril.</p>
<p>It was the electrical expert to the County
Council—Alton Rossiter—who first got on
the track of the disaster. More than once
before, the contact between gas and electricity
had produced minor troubles of this kind.
Gas that had escaped into man-holes and
drains had been fired from the sparks caused
by a short-circuit current wire. For some
time, even as far back as 1895, instances of
this kind had been recorded.</p>
<p>But how could the gas have leaked into
the tube, seeing that it was a steel core with a
solid bedding of concrete beyond? Unless
an accident had happened when the tube was
under repair, this seemed impossible.</p>
<p>The manager of the associated tubes was
quite ready to afford every information to
Mr. Rossiter. The core had corroded in
Bond Street in consequence of a settling of
the earth caused by a leaky water-main. The
night before, this had been located and the
steel skin stripped off for the necessary
repairs.</p>
<p>Mr. Alton Rossiter cut the speaker short.</p>
<p>"Will you come to Bond Street with me,
Mr. Fergusson?" he said; "we may be able
to get into the tunnel there."</p>
<p>Fergusson was quite ready. The damage
in Bond Street was not so great, though the
lift shaft was filled with <i>débris</i>, and it became
necessary to cut a way into the station before
the funnel was reached.</p>
<p>For a couple of hundred yards the tube
was intact; beyond that point the fumes of
gas were overpowering. A long strip of steel
hung from the roof. Just where it was, a
round, clean hole in the roadway rendered it
possible to work and breathe there in spite of
the gas fumes.</p>
<p>"We shall have to manage as best we
can," Rossiter muttered. "For a little time,
at any rate, the gas of London must be cut off
entirely. With broken mains all over the
place the supply is positively dangerous.
Look here."</p>
<p>He pointed to the spot where the gas main
had trended down and where a short-circuit
wire had fused it. Here was the whole secret
in a nutshell. A roaring gas main had
poured a dense volume into the tube for
hours; mixed with the air it had become one
of the most powerful and deadly of explosives.</p>
<p>"What time does your first train start?"
Rossiter asked.</p>
<p>"For the early markets, four o'clock,"
Fergusson replied. "In other words, we
switch on the current from the accumulator
stations at twenty minutes to four."</p>
<p>"And this is one of your generating
stations?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Of course I see exactly what you
are driving at. Practically the whole circuit
of tubes was more or less charged with a
fearful admixture of gas and air. As soon
as the current was switched on a spark
exploded the charge. I fear, I very much
fear, that you are right. If we can only find
the man in charge here! But that would be
nothing else than a miracle."</p>
<p>All the same the operator in charge of the
switches was close by. Fortunately for him
the play of the current in the tube had
carried the gases towards St. James's Street.
The explosion had lifted him out of his box,
and for a time he lay stunned. Dazed and
confused, he had climbed to the street and
staggered into the shop of a chemist who was
just closing the door upon a customer who
had rung him up for a prescription.</p>
<p>But he could say very little. There had
been an explosion directly he pulled down
the first of the switches, and his memory
was a blank after that.</p>
<p>Anyway, the cause of the disaster was
found. To prevent further catastrophe
notice was immediately given to the various
gas companies to cut off the supplies at once.
In a little time the whole disastrous length
of the tube was free from that danger.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>By the afternoon a committee had gone
over the whole route. At the first blush it
looked as if London had been half ruined.
It was impossible yet to estimate the full
extent of the damage. In St. James's Street
alone the loss was pretty certain to run
into millions.</p>
<p>Down in Whitehall and Parliament Street,
and by Westminster Bridge, the damage was
terrible. Here sharp curves and angles had
checked the rush of expanding air with the
most dire results. Huge holes and ruts had
been made in the earth, and houses had come
down bodily.</p>
<p>Most of the people out in the streets by
this time were properly equipped in indiarubber
shoes and gloves. It touched the
imagination strongly to know that between a
man and hideous death was a thin sheet of
rubber no thicker than a shilling. It was like
walking over the crust of a slumbering
volcano; like skating at top speed over very
thin ice.</p>
<p>Towards the evening a thrilling whisper
ran round. From Deptford two early specials
had started to convey an annual excursion of
five hundred men and their wives to Paddington,
whence they were going to Windsor.
It seemed impossible, incredible, that these
could have been overlooked; but by five
o'clock the dreadful truth was established.
Those two specials had started; but what
oblivion they had found—how lingering,
swift, or merciful, nobody could tell.</p>
<h4>V.</h4>
<p>There was a new horror. The story of
those early special trains gave the final terror
to the situation. Probably they had been
blown to eternity. There was just one chance
in a million that anybody had escaped. All
the same, something would have to be done
to put the matter at rest.</p>
<p>Nobody knew what to do; everybody had
lost their heads for the moment. It seemed
hopeless from the very start. Naturally, the
man that everybody looked to at the moment
was Fergusson of the associated tubes. With
him was Alton Rossiter, representing the
County Council.</p>
<p>"But how to make a start?" the latter
asked.</p>
<p>"We will start from Deptford," said Fergusson.
"We must first ascertain the exact
time that the train left Deptford, and the
precise moment when the first explosion took
place. Mind you, I believe there was a
series of explosions. You see, there is
always a fair amount of air in the tubes.
When the inflowing gas met the cross currents
of air, it would be diverted, or pocketed,
so to speak. We should have a big pocket
of the explosive, followed by a clear space.
When the switches were turned on there
would be sparks here and there all along the
tubes. This means that practically simultaneously
the mines would be fired; fired so
quickly that the series of reports would sound
like one big bang. That this must be so can
be seen by the state of some of the streets. In
some spots the tube has been wrenched
bodily from the earth as easily as if it had
been a gaspipe. And then, again, you have
streets that do not show the slightest
damage. You must agree with me that my
theory is a correct one."</p>
<p>"I do. But what are you driving at?"</p>
<p>"Well, I am afraid that my theory is a
very forlorn one, but I give it for what it is
worth. It's just possible, faintly possible,
that those trains ran into a portion of the
tube where there was no explosion at all.
There were explosions behind them and in
front of them, and of course the machinery
would have been rendered useless instantly,
so that the trains may be trapped with no
ingress or outlet. I'm not in the least
sanguine of finding anything, but the aftermath
of a fearful tragedy. Anyway, our duty
is pretty plainly before us—we must go to
Deptford. Come along."</p>
<p>The journey to Deptford was no easy one.
There were so many streets up that locomotion
was a difficult matter. And where the
streets were damaged there was danger. It
was possible to use cycles, seeing that the
rubber tires formed non-conductors, and
indiarubber gloves and shoes allowed extra
protection. But the mere suggestion of a
spill was thrilling. It might
mean the tearing of a glove
or the loss of a shoe, and
then—well, that did not
bear thinking about.</p>
<p>"I never before properly
appreciated the feelings of
the man that Blondin used
to carry on his back."
Rossiter said as the pair
pushed steadily through
Bermondsey, "but I can
understand his emotions
now."</p>
<p>The roads, even where
there was no danger, were
empty. A man or woman
would venture timidly out
and look longingly to the
other side of the road and
then give up the idea of
moving altogether. As a
matter of fact there was
more of it safe than otherwise,
but the risks were too
awful.</p>
<h4>VI.</h4>
<p>Meanwhile something
like an organised attempt
was being made to grapple
with the evil. Days must, of necessity, elapse
before a proper estimate of the damage could
be made, to say nothing of the loss of life.</p>
<p>Nothing very great could be accomplished,
however, until the huge accumulators had
been cleared and the deadly current switched
off. So far as the London area proper was
concerned, Holborn Viaduct was the point to
aim at. In big vaults there, underground,
were some of the largest accumulators in the
world. These would have to be rendered
harmless at any cost.</p>
<p>But the work was none so easy, seeing that
the tube here was crushed and twisted, and all
about it was a knot of high-pressure cables
deadly to the touch. There was enough
power here running to waste to destroy a city.
There were spaces that it was impossible to
cross; and unfortunately the danger could
not be seen. There was no warning, no
chance of escape for the too hardy adventurer;
he would just have stepped an inch
beyond the region of safety, and there would
have been an end of him. No wonder that
the willing workers hesitated.</p>
<p>There was nothing for it but the blasting of
the tube. True, this might be attended with
danger to such surrounding buildings as had
weathered the storm, but it was the desperate
hour for desperate remedies. A big charge
of dynamite rent a long slit in the exposed
length of tube, and a workman taking his life
in his hands entered the opening. There
were few spectators watching. It was too
gruesome and horrible to stand there with
the feeling that a slip either way might
mean sudden death.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/workman_in_indiarubber.jpg" width-obs="425" alt="" /> <div class="caption">The workman, swathed from head to foot in indiarubber, disappeared
from sight.</div>
</div>
<p>The workman, swathed from head to foot
in indiarubber, disappeared from sight. It
seemed a long time before he returned, so
long that his companions gave him up for
lost. Those strong able men who were ready
to face any ordinary danger looked at one
another askance. Fire, or flood, or gas, they
would have endured, for under those circumstances
the danger was tangible. But here
was something that appealed horribly to the
imagination. And such a death! The
instantaneous fusion of the body to a dry
charcoal crumb!</p>
<p>But presently a grimed head looked out of
the funnel. The face was white behind the
dust, but set and firm. The pioneer called
for lights.</p>
<p>So far he had been successful. He had
found the accumulators buried under a heap
of refuse. They were built into solid concrete
below the level of the tube, so that they had
not suffered to any appreciable extent.</p>
<p>There was no longer any holding back.
The party swung along the tube with lanterns,
and candles flaring, they reached the vault
where the great accumulators were situated.
Under the piled rails and fragments of
splintered wood, the shining marble switchboard
could be seen.</p>
<p>But to get to it was quite another matter.
Once this was accomplished, one of the
greatest dangers and horrors that paralysed
labour would be removed. It was too much
to expect that the average labourer would toil
willingly, or even toil at all when the moving
of an inch might mean instant destruction.
And it was such a little thing to do after all.
A child could have accomplished it; the
pressure of a finger or two, the tiny action
that disconnects a wire from the live power,
and the danger would be no more, and
the automatic accumulators rendered harmless.</p>
<p>But here were a few men, at any rate, who
did not mean to be defeated. They toiled on
willingly, and yet with the utmost caution:
for the knots of cable wire under their feet
and over their heads were like brambles in the
forest. If one of these had given way, all of
them might be destroyed. It was the kind of
work that causes the scalp to rise and the
heart to beat and the body to perspire even on
the coldest day. Now and then a cable
upheld by some <i>débris</i> would slip; there
would be a sudden cry, and the workmen
would skip back, breathing heavily.</p>
<p>It was like working a mine filled with
rattlesnakes asleep; but gradually the mass of
matter was cleared away and the switchboard
disclosed. A few light touches, and a large
area of London was free from a terrible
danger. It was possible now to handle the
big cables with impunity, for they were perfectly
harmless.</p>
<p>There was no word spoken for a long
time. The men were trembling with the
reaction. One of them produced a large
flask of brandy and handed it round. Not
till they had all drunk did the leader of the
expedition speak.</p>
<p>"How many years since yesterday morning?"
he asked.</p>
<p>"Makes one feel like an old man," another
muttered.</p>
<p>They climbed presently into the street
again, for there was nothing to be done here
for the present. A few adventurous spectators
heard the news that the streets
were free from danger once more. The
tidings spread in the marvellous way that
such rumour carries, and in a little time the
streets were packed with people.</p>
<h4>VII.</h4>
<p>When the two cyclists came to Deptford,
they found that comparatively little damage
had been done to the station there, beyond
that the offices and platforms had been
wrecked. A wounded man was found, who
described how a mighty hurricane had roared
down the tube ten minutes after the excursion
trains had departed. Fergusson made
a rapid calculation from the figures that the
man supplied.</p>
<p>"The trains must have been near to Park
Road Station," he said, "when the explosion
occurred. There is just a chance that they
may have run into a space free from gas, and
that the explosion passed them altogether.
Let us make for Park Road Station without
delay, and we must try to pick up some
volunteers as we go along."</p>
<p>When they arrived at the scene they found
that a big crowd had gathered. A rumour
had spread that feeble voices had been heard
down one of the ventilation gratings, calling
for help. Fergusson and Rossiter reached
the spot with difficulty.</p>
<p>"Get our fellows together," whispered
Fergusson. "We can work now with impunity;
and if any of those poor people down
below are alive, we shall have them out in
half-an-hour. If we only had some lights!
Beg, borrow, or steal all the lanterns you can
get."</p>
<p>The nearest police-station solved that
problem fast enough. A small
gang of special experts moved
upon Park Road Station whilst
the mob was still struggling
about the ventilation shaft, and
in a little time
the entrance
was forced.</p>
<p>The station
was a veritable
wreck; but for
two hundred
yards the tunnel
was clear
before them.
Then came a
jammed wall of
timber, the end
of a railway
carriage standing
on end. The timbers
were twisted, huge baulks
of wood were bent like a
bow. A way was soon
made through the <i>débris</i>,
and Fergusson yelled
aloud.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/a_man_appears.jpg" width-obs="400" alt="" /> <div class="caption">Out of the velvety darkness of the tube a man staggered into the lane of light.</div>
</div>
<p>To his delight a hoarse
voice answered him. He
yelled again and waved
his lantern. Out of the
velvety darkness of the tube a man staggered
into the lane of light made by the lantern.
He was a typical, thick-set workman, in his
best clothes.</p>
<p>"So you've found us at last," he said dully.</p>
<p>He appeared to be past all emotions.
His eyes showed no gratitude, no delight.
The horrors of the dark hours had numbed
his senses.</p>
<p>"Is—is it very bad?" asked Rossiter.</p>
<p>"Many were killed," the new comer said
in the same wooden voice. "But the others
are sitting in the carriages waiting for the end
to come. The lights in the carriages helped
us a bit, but after the first hour they went out.
Then one or two of us went up the line till it
seemed to rise and twist as if it was going to
climb into the sky, and by that we guessed
that there had been a big explosion of some
kind. So we tried the other way, and that
was all blocked up with timber; and we
knew then. The electricity was about, and—well,
it wasn't a pretty
sight, so we went back to
the trains. When the lights
went out we
were all mad
for a time, and—and—"</p>
<p>The speaker's
lips quivered
and shook—he
burst into a
torrent of tears.
Rossiter patted
him on the
back approvingly.
Those
tears probably
staved off stark
insanity. The
light of the
lanterns went
swinging on
ahead now, and
the trains began
to pour out their
freight of half-dead
people.
There were
some with
children, who
huddled back fearfully in their corners and
refused to face the destruction which they
were sure lay before them. They were all
white and trembling, with quivering lips and
eyes that twitched strangely. Heaven only
knows how long an eternity those hours of
darkness had seemed.</p>
<p>They were all out at last, and were gently
led to blessed light again. There were
doctors on the spot by this time with
nourishing food and stimulants. For the
most part, the women sat down and cried,
quietly hugging their children to their breasts.
Some of the men were crying in the same dull
way, but a few were violent. The dark horror
of it had driven them mad for the time. But
there was a darker side to it; of the pleasure-seekers
the dead were numbered at more
than half.</p>
<p>But there was one man here and there who
had kept his head throughout the crisis. A
cheerful-looking sailor gave the best account
of the adventure.</p>
<p>"Not that there is much to say," he remarked.
"We got on just as usual for the
first ten minutes or so, the train running
smoothly and plenty of light. Then all at
once we came to a sudden stop that sent us
flying across the carriage. We seemed to
have gone headlong into the stiffest tempest
I ever met. You could hear the wind go
roaring past the carriages, and then it stopped
as soon as it had begun.</p>
<p>"The rattle of broken glass was like
musketry. The first thing I saw when I got
out was the dead body of the engine-driver
with the stoker close by. It was just the same
with the train in front. Afterwards, I tried to
find a way out, but couldn't. There was a
man with me who trod on some of them
cables as you call 'em, and the next instant
there was no man—but I don't want to talk of
that."</p>
<p>"It means months upon months," Fergusson
said sadly.</p>
<p>"Not months—years," Rossiter replied.
"Yet I dare say that in the long run we shall
benefit by the calamity, great communities do.
As to calculating the damage, my imagination
only goes as far as fifty millions, and then
stops. And yet if anybody had suggested this to
me yesterday morning, I should have laughed."</p>
<p>"It would have seemed impossible."</p>
<p>"Absolutely impossible. And yet now
that it has come about, how easy and natural
it all seems! Come, let us get to work and
try to forget."</p>
<hr class="chap" />
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