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Fantasy Fan, v. 1, issue 8, April 1934
Page 119
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April, 1934, THE FANTASY FAN 119 dial to get ready for the carrier wave. My next call wasn't due for another two minutes so I watched my friend without any particular purpose in mind. He reached a slow hand to his head and adjusted the phones on his ears a bit. Then both his hands dropped into position above the typewriter and I heard him say tonelessly, "Call-call-call--xxw2 call--" and then his voice clipped off like a voice in a broadcast clips off when a tube blows out. Watching him I saw first that toe of his stop swinging. Something important I thought to myself. But then I began to sit up tense. In the first place, Ross hadn't touched his keys; in the second place he leaned forward on the chair and dropped his leg to the floor. Now that may sound silly that I mention his leg dropping to the floor, but to a person that knew Ross as well as I did that is something. I had never seen it happen before. I sat up stiff as a board. He had just reached up his two hands to the phones and was pressing them closer to his ears like the message was faint. Now I knew something was up and I jumped from my chair. "What's got into you, Norm?" I said, getting in front of him. But he didn't seem to hear me or know I was there. He only pressed the earphones tighter. When I looked at his face, I was shocked. Only once before had I ever seen that rapt expression--when he got the call from London two years before at the end of that three-month war telling how the whole city had been gassed and bombed, leaving not one soul alive. I looked at the clock. It was a minute past the time for his regular call. I shook his shoulder. "Listen here, Norm," I yelled. "You've got to get that call or--" "Listen to this, Bob," he cut in, handing me the phones. I put them about my ears. All I heard was a faint voice. I pressed the phones close as Ross had done. Then I distinguished it. In strangely muffled tones, the voice came in, full of sharp hissing sounds and hard consonants. I could not understand a word. I tore off the phones. "You fool!" I cried. "What's the idea of listening to some foreign station? Look!"--I pointed to the clock--"You're over a minute late on your regular call!" Ross pointed to the wave-length dial. "See?" he said. "I've got it on the right wave. Eighteen point seven five meters." I stared a moment in bewilderment. Sure enough, it was where it should be. "Sure you want eighteen point seven five? Better check," I cried in a small panic, thinking of what Hegstrom would say. Ross gave me a withering glance which said without words, "Sure I want it? Did I ever lose my memory. "Well, I can't fuss around here," I said with hasty glance at the clock. "My call is due in about ten seconds." Before I took my call I cried to my friend. "Probably something wrong with the dial control. You better try and find your call on some other number." Then I snapped my button. The carrier wave was already coming in. I had caught my call just in time.
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April, 1934, THE FANTASY FAN 119 dial to get ready for the carrier wave. My next call wasn't due for another two minutes so I watched my friend without any particular purpose in mind. He reached a slow hand to his head and adjusted the phones on his ears a bit. Then both his hands dropped into position above the typewriter and I heard him say tonelessly, "Call-call-call--xxw2 call--" and then his voice clipped off like a voice in a broadcast clips off when a tube blows out. Watching him I saw first that toe of his stop swinging. Something important I thought to myself. But then I began to sit up tense. In the first place, Ross hadn't touched his keys; in the second place he leaned forward on the chair and dropped his leg to the floor. Now that may sound silly that I mention his leg dropping to the floor, but to a person that knew Ross as well as I did that is something. I had never seen it happen before. I sat up stiff as a board. He had just reached up his two hands to the phones and was pressing them closer to his ears like the message was faint. Now I knew something was up and I jumped from my chair. "What's got into you, Norm?" I said, getting in front of him. But he didn't seem to hear me or know I was there. He only pressed the earphones tighter. When I looked at his face, I was shocked. Only once before had I ever seen that rapt expression--when he got the call from London two years before at the end of that three-month war telling how the whole city had been gassed and bombed, leaving not one soul alive. I looked at the clock. It was a minute past the time for his regular call. I shook his shoulder. "Listen here, Norm," I yelled. "You've got to get that call or--" "Listen to this, Bob," he cut in, handing me the phones. I put them about my ears. All I heard was a faint voice. I pressed the phones close as Ross had done. Then I distinguished it. In strangely muffled tones, the voice came in, full of sharp hissing sounds and hard consonants. I could not understand a word. I tore off the phones. "You fool!" I cried. "What's the idea of listening to some foreign station? Look!"--I pointed to the clock--"You're over a minute late on your regular call!" Ross pointed to the wave-length dial. "See?" he said. "I've got it on the right wave. Eighteen point seven five meters." I stared a moment in bewilderment. Sure enough, it was where it should be. "Sure you want eighteen point seven five? Better check," I cried in a small panic, thinking of what Hegstrom would say. Ross gave me a withering glance which said without words, "Sure I want it? Did I ever lose my memory. "Well, I can't fuss around here," I said with hasty glance at the clock. "My call is due in about ten seconds." Before I took my call I cried to my friend. "Probably something wrong with the dial control. You better try and find your call on some other number." Then I snapped my button. The carrier wave was already coming in. I had caught my call just in time.
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