Rapidly the airship ascended, and,
when it was high over the town of Shopton, Tom headed
the craft due west. Looking down he tried to
descry Mary Nestor, in her carriage, but the trees
were in the way, their interlocking branches hiding
the girl. Tom did see crowds of other persons,
though, thronging the streets of Shopton, for, though
the young inventor had made many flights, there was
always a novelty about them, that brought out the
curious.
“A good start, Tom Swift,”
complimented Mr. Parker. “Is it always
as easy as this?”
“Starting always is,”
was the answer, “though, as the Irishman said,
coming down isn’t sometimes quite so comfortable.”
“Bless my gizzard! That’s
so,” cried the eccentric Mr. Damon. “Can
we vol-plane to earth in the Red Cloud, Tom?”
“Yes, but not as easily as in
the Butterfly. However I hope we will not have
to. Now, Mr. Damon, if you will just take charge
of the steering apparatus for a minute, I want to
go aft.”
“What for?”
“I wish to see if everything
is all right. I can’t imagine why Eradicate
was making those queer motions.”
Mr. Damon, who knew how to operate
the Red Cloud, was soon guiding her on the course,
while Tom made his way to the rear compartments, through
the motor room, where the stores of supplies and food
were kept. He made a careful examination, looking
from an after window, and even going out on a small,
open platform, but could discover nothing wrong.
“I guess Rad was just capering
about without any special object,” mused Tom,
but it was not long after this that they learned to
their dismay, that the colored man had had a method
in his madness.
On his way back through the motor
room Tom looked to the machinery, and adjusted some
of the auxiliary oil feeders. The various pieces
of apparatus were working well, though the engine
had not yet been speeded up to its limit. Tom
wanted it to “warm-up” first.
“Everything all right?”
asked Mr. Damon, as Tom rejoined them in the pilot
house, which was just forward of the living room in
the main cabin.
“Yes, I can’t imagine
what made Rad act that way. But I’ll set
the automatic steering gear now, Mr. Damon, and then
you will be relieved.”
Mr. Jenks was gazing off toward the
west—to where he hoped to discover the
secret of Phantom Mountain.
“How do you like it?” asked Tom.
“It’s great,” replied
the diamond man. “I’ve never been
in an airship before, and it’s different than
what I expected; but it’s great! It’s
the only craft that will serve our purpose among the
towering mountain peaks, where the diamond makers are
hidden. I hope we can find them.”
In a little while the Red Cloud was
skimming along at faster speed, guided by the automatic
rudders, so that no one was needed in the pilot house,
since there was no danger of collisions. Airships
are not quite numerous enough for that, yet, though
they may soon become so.
Tom and the others devoted several
hours to arranging their staterooms and bunks, and
getting their clothing stowed away, and when this
was done Mr. Parker and Mr. Jenks sat gazing off into
space.
“It’s hard to realize
that we are really in an airship,” observed
the diamond man. “At first I thought I would
be frightened, but I’m not a bit. It doesn’t
seem as if anything could happen.”
“Something is likely to happen
soon,” said Mr. Parker, suddenly, as he gazed
at some weather instruments on the cabin wall.
“Bless my soul! Don’t
say that!” cried Mr. Damon. “What
is it?”
“I think, from my observations,
that we will soon have a hurricane,” said the
scientific man. “There is every indication
of it”’; and he seemed quite delighted at the
prospect of his prediction coming true.
“A hurricane!” cried Mr.
Damon. “I hope it isn’t like the one
that blew us to Earthquake Island.”
“Oh, I think there will be no
danger,” spoke Tom. “If it comes
on to blow we will ascend or descend out of the path
of the storm. This craft is not like the ill-fated
Whizzer. I can more easily handle the Red Cloud;
even in a bad storm.”
“I’m glad to hear that,”
remarked Mr. Jenks. “It would be too bad
to be wrecked before we got to Phantom Mountain.”
“Well, I predict that we will
have a bad storm,” insisted Mr. Parker, and
Tom could not help wishing that the scientist would
keep his gloomy forebodings to himself.
However the storm had not developed
up to noon, when Tom, with Mr. Damon’s help,
served a fine meal in the dining-room. In the
afternoon the speed of the ship was increased, and
by night they had covered several hundred miles.
Through the darkness the Red Cloud kept on, making
good time. Tom got up, occasionally, to look
to the machinery, but it was all automatically controlled,
and an alarm bell would sound in his stateroom when
anything went wrong.
“Bless my napkin!” exclaimed
Mr. Damon the next morning, as they sat down to a
breakfast of fruit, ham and eggs and fragrant coffee,
“this is living as well as in a hotel, and yet
we are—how far are we above the earth,
Tom?” he asked, turning to the young inventor.
“About two miles now. I
just sent her up, as I thought I detected that storm
Mr. Parker spoke of.”
“I told you it would come,”
declared the scientist, and there was a small hurricane
below them that morning, but only the lower edge of
it caught the Red Cloud, and when Tom sent her up still
higher she found a comparatively quiet zone, where
she slid along at good speed.
That afternoon Tom busied himself
about some wires and a number of complicated pieces
of apparatus which were in one corner of the main
cabin.
“What are you doing now?”
asked Mr. Jenks, who had been talking with Mr. Parker,
and showing that scientist some of the manufactured
diamonds.
“Getting our wireless apparatus
in shape,” answered the lad. “I should
have done it before, but I had so much to do that I
couldn’t get at it. I’m going to send
off some messages. Dad will want to know how
we are doing.”
As he worked away, he also made up
his mind to send another message, in care of his father,
for there was a receiving station in the Swift home.
And to whom this message was addressed Tom did not
say, but we fancy some of our readers can guess.
Finally, after several hours of work,
the wireless was in shape to send and receive messages.
Tom pulled over the lever, and a crackling sound was
heard, as the electricity leaped from the transmitters
into space. Then he clamped the receiver on his
ear.
“All ready,” he announced.
“Has anybody any messages they wish sent?”
For, with the courtesy of a true host he was ready
to serve his guests before he forwarded his own wireless
notes.
“Just tell my wife that I’m
enjoying myself,” requested Mr. Damon.
“Bless my footstool! But this is great!
We’re off the earth yet, connected with it.”
Mr. Jenks had no one to whom he wanted
to send any word, but Mr. Parker wish to wire to a
fellow scientist the result of some observations made
in the upper air.
Tom noted all the messages down, and
then, when all was in readiness he began to call his
home station. He knew that either his father
or Mr. Jackson, the engineer, could receive the wireless.
But, no sooner had the young inventor
sent off the first few dots and dashes representing
“S. I.”—his home station
call—than he started and a look of surprise
came over his face.
“They’re calling us!” he exclaimed.
“Who is?” asked Mr. Jenks.
“My house—my father.
He—he’s been trying to get us ever
since we started, but I didn’t have the wireless
in shape to receive messages. Oh, I hope it’s
not too late!”
“Too late! Bless my soul,
too late for what?” gasped Mr. Damon, somewhat
alarmed by Tom’s manner.
The lad did not answer at once.
He was intently listening to a series of dots and
dashes that clicked in the telephone receiver clamped
to his left ear. On his face there was a look
of worriment.
“Father has just sent me a message,”
he said. “It’s a warning flashed
through space! He’s been trying to get it
to me since yesterday!”
“What is it?” asked Mr. Jenks, rising
from his seat.
“The mysterious man is aboard
the airship—hidden away!” cried Tom.
“That’s what Eradicate was trying to call
to our attention as we started off. Eradicate
saw his face at a rear window, and tried to warn us!
The mysterious man is a stowaway on board!”