PAGE 2
The Demon Engine
by
“The laboratory is next door,” she said, as she let the car slide ahead a few feet more. “Mr. Tresham’s office is in the Bank Building. I’ve had to go there so often since father died that I stopped through force of habit, I suppose.”
Mindful of Kennedy’s admiration for Freud, his theory of forgetting occurred to me. Was there any significance in the mistake? Had the unconscious blunder betrayed something which perhaps she herself consciously did not realize? Was it Tresham, after all, whom she really admired and wanted to see?
Creighton’s workshop was in an old two-story brick building, evidently awaiting only the development of the neighborhood before it was torn down. Meanwhile the two buildings were in marked contrast. Which of them typified Creighton? Was he hopelessly out of date, or really ahead of his time? I must confess to having had a lively curiosity to meet the inventor.
The entrance to the laboratory from the street was through a large door into a room in which was a carpenter’s bench. On one side were some powerful winches and a large assortment of tools. In the back of the room a big door led to another room on the ground floor to the rear.
“Mr. Creighton’s is upstairs,” remarked Miss Laidlaw, turning past the locked door and going up a worn flight of steps.
“Whose shop is that?” asked Kennedy, indicating the door.
“I don’t know who rents these rooms down here,” she replied.
Up the stairway we went to the second floor. On the top landing stood some old machinery. In a little room on one side was a big desk, as well as books, instruments, and drawings of all sorts. Opposite this room was another little room, with many bits of expensive machinery on shelves and tables. Back of these two, and up a step, was a large room, the full width of the building, the workshop of the inventor, into which she led us.
“I’ve brought a couple of friends of mine who may be interested in the vibrodyne motor,” Miss Laidlaw introduced us.
“Very pleased to meet you, gentlemen,” Creighton returned. “Before we get through, I think you’ll agree with me that you never dreamed of anything more wonderful than this motor of mine.”
He was a large, powerfully built man, with a huge head, square jaw with heavy side whiskers, and eyes that moved restlessly under a shock of iron-gray hair. Whether it was the actual size of his head or his bushy hair, one got the impression that his cranium housed a superabundant supply of brains.
Every action was nervous and quick. Even his speech was rapid, as though his ideas outstripped his tongue. He impressed one as absorbed in this thing which he said frankly had been his life study, every nerve strained to make it succeed and convince people.
“Just what is this force you call vibrodyne?” asked Craig, gazing about at the curious litter of paraphernalia in the shop.
“Of course, I’m willing to admit,” began Creighton quickly, in the tone of a man who was used to showing his machine to skeptical strangers but must be allowed to explain it in his own way, “that never before by any mechanical, electrical, thermal, or other means has a self-moving motor been made.”
He paused apparently to let us grasp the significance of what he was about to say. “But, is it impossible, as some of the old scientists have proved to their own satisfaction it must be?” he went on, warming up to his subject. “May there not be molecular, atomic, even ionic forces of which we have not dreamed? You have only to go back a few years and study radioactivity, for instance, to see how ideas may change.
“Today,” he added emphatically, “the conservation of energy, in the old sense at least, has been overthrown. Gentlemen, all the old laws must be modified by my discovery of vibrodyne. I loose new new forces–I create energy!”