Victor and Scott. âIf youâd like to have a seat, I think I can explain everything.â
Franklin led Skip to a stool and sat him down. âI know from your son that you are a man of good character. I feel we can trust you with our secret.â
âSecret?â said Skip. âWhatâs this all about, Mr. Benjamin?â
Franklin sat down on a stool and pulled it close. âPerhaps that is a good place to start. You see, my name is not Mr. Benjamin. Rather, it is Mr. Franklin . . . â
With Victor and Scottâs help, Franklin brought Skip Weaver up to speed on the Modern Order of Prometheus, the Great Emergency, the Wright brothers, and the lightning net.
âYou guys have to understand,â Skip said apologetically, âthis is a lot to take in. Why exactly am I here again?â
âYouâre here, Dad,â said Scott, âbecause we need to make lightning, and only you know how to do it.â
Skip shook his head. âI told you, buddyâit canât be done.â
âNot exactly,â said Franklin. âYou told us it could be done, but you didnât know how. Weâre hoping that maybe, with all of us working together, we can solve that second part.â
âThe big problem is the heat,â said Skip. âYouâd need a tremendous amount of power to generate it.â
Franklin gestured to several large machines behind him. âAs it happens, generating power is something we know how to do. And as for heat, perhaps youâve heard of the Franklin stove?â
âSure, but what does that have to do withââ He suddenly remembered who he was talking to. âOh, right. But even if you could generate the heat, youâd need to aim it upward, almost like a cannon.â
THE FRANKLIN STOVE
âYouâre talking about focused heat projection,â said Victor. âBen, isnât that how the Hyperion coiling system works?â He pointed to a large spring leading into the ground at the rear of the laboratory.
âIt is,â said Franklin. âWhen lightning strikes the antenna on the roof, excess heat is dissipated down into the earth through those coils.â
âLike a radiator,â said Scott.
âExactly,â said Victor. âNow, what if we could redirect that coil upward? If we had a big enough charge, it would generate an enormous amount of heat. Iâve been down here during a thunderstorm, and the temperature in the room rises a good twenty degrees every time the Hyperion coil kicks in.â
âOkay,â said Skip, âbut donât you have this backward? Your coil there generates heat when lightning strikes. But you guys want to make lightning with the coil. How are you going to heat it up in the first place?â
âWe could plug it in,â offered Scott. âOr use lots and lots of batteries.â
âOr,â said Franklin, pointing to the large metal orb hanging from the ceiling, âwe could use just one big battery.â
Hours later, the plan was finally starting to take shape. Skip stood at the chalkboard, going over the details.
âThe timing on this whole thing is going to be critical,â he said. âAs soon as the Wright brothers are in view, weâll need to fire the Hyperion coil. That should heat the air directly above us. When the air rises high enough, it will cool and form ice crystals in the cloud tops, generating electricity. Weâll have to ionize the kite net right away in order to draw the lightning down.â
âWhat if there isnât any wind?â Scott asked. âHow will we get the net in the air?â
âShouldnât be a problem,â Skip explained. âAll that heat should create a massive, localized front. Weâll be generating our own wind.â
Victor couldnât believe it. He was actually impressed with Skip Weaver.
âA million things could go wrong, and it will be enormously
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