It was a great relief to Tom, to find
that there was no danger from an earth tremor.
Now that he had made up his mind to go in search of
the diamond makers, he wanted nothing to interfere
with it. Lest the feelings of Mr. Parker might
be hurt by the mistake he had made, the young inventor
cautioned Eradicate not to say anything more about
the matter.
“‘Deed an’ I won’t,”
the colored man promised. “I’se only
too glad dere wa’n’t no earthquake, dat’s
what I is.”
As for Mr. Parker, he did not appear
much put out by his error in predicting.
“I am sure that what I heard
was a tremor, due to some distant earthquake shock,”
he said. “The mule’s kicking was only
a coincidence.”
And Tom let him have his way about
it. The week was drawing to a close, and the
Red Cloud was nearly in shape for the voyage.
At almost the last minute Tom found that he needed
some electrical apparatus for the airship, and as
he had to go to Chester for it, he decided he would
make the trip in his monoplane, and, while in the
city, would also get the diamond pin he was having
made for Mary Nestor.
He started off early one morning,
in the swift little craft Butterfly, and soon had
reached Chester. The diamond brooch was ready
for him.
“It is one of the most beautiful
stones we have ever set,” the diamond merchant
told him. “Don’t forget, if you find
any more, Mr. Swift, to let us have a chance to bid
on them.”
“I may,” Tom promised,
rather indefinitely. Then, having purchased his
electrical supplies, he made a quick trip to Shopton,
stopping on the way to call on Miss Nestor.
“Why Tom, I’m delighted
to see you!” cried the girl, blushing prettily.
“Did you come for some apple turnovers?”
and she laughed, as she referred to a call Tom had
once paid, when a new cook had been engaged, and when
the pastry formed a feature of the meal.
“No turnovers this time,”
said the young inventor. “I came to wish
you many happy returns of the day.”
“Oh, you remembered my birthday! How nice
of you!”
“And here is something else,”
added our hero, rather awkwardly, as he handed her
the diamond pin.
“Oh, Tom! This for me!
Oh, it’s too lovely—it’s far
too much!”
“It isn’t half enough!”
he declared, warmly. “Oh, what a large
diamond!” Mary cried as she saw the sparkling
stone. “I never saw one so large and beautiful!”
“It’s just as easy to
make them large as small,” explained Tom.
“Make them?” she looked the surprise she
felt.
“Yes, I’m about to start
for the place where diamonds are made.”
“Oh, Tom! But isn’t
it dangerous? I mean won’t you have to go
to some far country—like Africa—to
get to where diamonds are made?”
“Well, we are going on quite
a trip, but not as far as that. And as for the
danger—well, we’ll have to take what
comes,” and he told her something of the proposed
quest.
“Oh, it sounds—sounds
scary!” Mary exclaimed, when she had heard of
Mr. Jenks’ experience. Do be careful, Tom!”
“I will,” he promised,
and, somehow he was glad that she had cautioned him
thus—and in such tones as she had used.
For Mary Nestor was a girl that any young chap would
have been glad to have manifest an interest in him.
“Well, I guess I’ll have
to say good-by,” spoke Tom, at length.
“We expect to start in a couple of days, and
I may not get another chance to see you.”
“Oh, I—I hope you
come back safely,” faltered Mary, and then she
held out her hand, and Tom—well, it’s
none of our affair what Tom did after that, except
to say that he hurried out, fairly jumped into his
monoplane, and completed the trip home.
As the Red Cloud has been fully described
in the volume entitled “Tom Swift and His Airship,”
we will not go into details about it now. Sufficient
to say that it was a combination of a biplane and
dirigible balloon. It could be used either as
one or the other, and the gas-bag feature was of value
when the wind was too great to allow the use of the
planes, or when the motive power, for some reason
stopped. In that event the airship could remain
suspended far above the clouds if necessary. There
was provision for manufacturing the gas on board.
The Red Cloud was fitted up to accommodate
about ten persons, though it was seldom that this
number was carried. Two persons could successfully
operate the machinery. There were sleeping berths,
and in the main cabin a sitting-room, a dining-room,
and a kitchen. There was also the motor compartment,
and a steering tower, from which the engines could
be controlled.
It was in this craft that the seekers
after the diamond makers proposed undertaking the
trip. Mr. Damon came on from his home in Waterfield
about two days before the date set to leave, and Mr.
Jenks, had, three days before this, taken up his abode
at the Swift home. Mr. Parker, as has been stated,
was already there, and he had put in his time making
a number of scientific observations, though he had
made no more predictions.
Nothing more had been seen of the
mysterious man who had warned Tom, and the young inventor
and Mr. Jenks began to hope that they had thrown their
enemies off the track.
“Though I don’t imagine
they’ll give up altogether,” said Mr.
Jenks. “They’re too desperate for
that. We’ll have trouble with them yet.”
“Well, it can’t be helped,”
decided Tom. “We’ll try and be ready
for it, when it comes,” and then, dismissing
the matter from his mind, he busied himself about
the airship.
The food and supplies had all been
put aboard, and they expected to start the next morning.
In order to make sure that any stones which they might
succeed in getting from the diamond makers were real
gems, a set of testing apparatus was taken along.
Mr. Parker had had some experience in this line, and,
in spite of the fact that he might make direful predictions,
Tom was rather glad, after all, that the scientist
was going to accompany them.
“But what is worrying me,”
said Mr. Damon, “is what we are going to do
after we get to Phantom Mountain. What are your
plans, Mr. Jenks? Will you go in, and demand your
share of the diamond-making business?”
“I have a right to it, as I
invested a large sum in it, and I am entitled to more
than a half-share. But, of course, I can’t
say what I’ll do until I get there. We may
have to act very secretly.”
“I’m inclined to think
we will,” said Tom. “My plan would
be to gain access to the cave, if possible, and watch
them at work. We might be able to discover the
secret of making diamonds, and, after all, that’s
what you want, isn’t it, Mr. Jenks?”
“Yes, I paid my money for the
secret, and I ought to have it. If I can get
it quietly, so much the better. If not, I’ll
fight for my rights!” and he looked very determined.
“Bless my powder horn!”
cried Mr. Damon. “That’s the way to
talk! And so we’re to go cruising about
in the air, looking for a mountain shaped like a man’s
head.”
“That’s it,” a greed
Mr. Jenks, “and when we find it we will be near
Phantom Mountain, and the diamond makers.”
The final details were completed that
night. The last of the supplies had been put
aboard, the larder was well stocked, the diamond testing
apparatus was stored safely away, and all that remained
was for the adventurers to board the Red Cloud in the
morning, and soar away.
That night Tom was uneasy. Several
times he got up, and looked toward the shed where
the airship was stored. He could not rid himself
of the idea that the men to whose interest it was that
the diamond-making secret remain undiscovered, might
attempt to wreck the airship before the start.
Consequently both Eradicate Sampson and Engineer Jackson
were on guard. Tom looked from his window, to
the shed where the Red Cloud was housed. He saw
nothing to cause him any uneasiness.
“I guess I’m just nervous,”
he mused. “But, all the same, I’ll
be glad when we’ve started.”
They were all up early the next morning,
Mr. Damon beginning the day by blessing the sunrise,
and many other things that struck his fancy.
The airship was wheeled out of the shed, and Tom gave
her a final inspection.
“It’s all right,” he declared.
“All aboard!”
“Now, do be careful,”
begged Mr. Swift. “Don’t take too
many chances, Tom.”
“I’ll not.”
The adventurers were in the forward
part of the ship, and Tom had taken his place at the
wheels and levers in the pilot house. As he was
about to start the motor he looked toward the road,
and saw a horse and carriage. In the vehicle
was a girlish figure, at the sight of which Tom blushed
and smiled. He waved his hand.
“I came to wish you good luck!”
cried Mary Nestor, for it was she in the carriage.
“Thanks!” cried Tom, leaning
from the window of the pilot house. “It
was good of you to get up so early.”
“Oh. I’m always up early,”
she informed him.
“Look out that the motor doesn’t
scare your horse,” Tom warned her.
“Old Dobbin doesn’t mind
anything,” was her answer. “I’ll
see that he doesn’t run away with me, as long
as you’re not on earth to rescue me. Good-by,
Tom!”
“Good-by!” he called,
and then he pulled the lever that set in motion the
motor, and whirled the great propellers about.
They whizzed around with a roar, and the Red Cloud,
shivering and trembling with the vibration, rose in
the air like some great bird.
“We’re off for the West
and Phantom Mountain!” called Tom to his companions.
As the airship soared upward, Eradicate
Sampson ran forward from where he had been standing
near his mule Boomerang. He waved his hands,
and shouted something.
“Bless my hatband! What
does he want?” asked Mr. Damon, watching him
curiously.
“It sounds as if he were calling
to us to come back,” spoke Mr. Parker.
“It’s too late now,”
decided Tom. “Maybe he forgot to tell us
good-by,” but, he felt a vague wonder at Eradicate’s
odd motions; for the colored man was pointing toward
the stern of the airship, as if there was something
wrong there. But the Red Cloud soared on.