"Curtis Steele - Operator 5 - 3407 - The Melting Death" - читать интересную книгу автора (Steele Curtis)Originally published in the July 1934 issue of Operator #5TM
________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Copyright у 1934 Popular Publications, Inc. Copyright (c) renewed 1962 and assigned to Argosy Communications, Inc. All rights reserved. Licensed to Vintage New Media Operator #5 is a trademark of Argosy Communications, Inc. By Curtis Steele Out of the blue it struck-that dread, mysterious force, dealing death, destruction and misery to millions. America found herself stripped of her strongest defenses as battleships, huge guns, skyscrapers, factories and transportation systems crumbled to dust before the voracious flame. No one could tell where it came from; where it would next strike; no one was safe from its hot, devouring maw. An entire nation stood crippled, paralyzed by panic as Operator 5, alone, fought to save America from the red ruin loosed upon it. ____________________________________________________________________________________ CHAPTER ONE Span of Doom THE gigantic suspension bridge, spanning the turbid waters of the Mississippi and linking together two important states, was about to be dedicated to the people. For four years hundreds of men had labored to erect the tremendous structure. Millions of man-hours of work had gone into its construction. the United States had combined to make of it a monument of enduring utility and beauty. The world had watched its gigantic masonry-encased piers rise into the sky above the water, and the weaving of the huge spider-web of cables, until at last it stood, a miracle in stone and steel. It was a breath-taking sight, this gargantuan span, glistening black and white in the clear sunlight of a Spring day. Its interweaving strands of steel shone clean and new, its roadbed of unblemished concrete lay a white stretch beneath the catenary curves of the thick suspension cables. No traffic had yet passed across it, but the hour of its opening to the public was now at hand. On the far-reaching ramps, which fanned out across both banks of the Mississippi, thousands of automobiles were driven into line, each loaded with passengers, all eager for the honor of being among the first to cross the beautiful span. Far beneath it, numberless boats were shuttling back and forth in the water. The attention of a million people was turned to the cleared space on the bridge midway over the river. |
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