CHAPTER VII
WARNINGS
For a moment or two Tom Swift did
not seem to comprehend what Ned had said. He
remained staring, first at his chum, who stood pointing,
and from him Tom’s gaze wandered to the top of
the door. It may have been, and probably was,
that Tom was thinking of other matters at that instant.
But Ned said again:
“Wouldn’t that do, Tom?
Check the recoil of the gun with whatever stuff is
in that arrangement!”
A sudden change came over Tom’s
face. It was lighted up with a gleam of understanding.
“By Jove, Ned, old man!”
he cried. “I believe you’ve struck
it! And to think that has been under my nose,
or, rather, over my head, all this while, and I never
thought of it. Hurray! That will solve the
problem!”
“Do you think it will?”
asked Ned, glad that he had contributed something,
if only an idea, to Tom’s aerial warship.
“I’m almost sure it will.
I’ll give it a trial right away.”
“What’s in that door-check?”
Ned asked. “I never stopped before to think
what useful things they are, though at the bank, with
the big, heavy doors, they are mighty useful.”
“They are a combination of springs
and hydrostatic valves,” began Tom.
“Good-night!” laughed
Ned. “Excuse the slang, Tom, but what in
the world is a hydrostatic valve?”
“A valve through which liquids
pass. In this door-check there may be a mixture
of water, alcohol and glycerine, the alcohol to prevent
freezing in cold weather, and the glycerine to give
body to the mixture so it will not flow through the
valves too freely.”
“And do you think you can put
something like that on your guns, so the recoil will
be taken up?” Ned wanted to know.
“I think so,” spoke Tom.
“I’m going to work on it right away, and
we’ll soon see how it will turn out It’s
mighty lucky you thought of that, for I sure was up
against it, as the boys say.”
“It just seemed to come to me,”
spoke Ned, “seeing how easily the door closed.”
“If the thing works I’ll
give you due credit for it,” promised Tom.
“Now, I’ve got to figure out how much force
a modified hydrostatic valve check like that will
take up, and how much recoil my biggest gun will have.”
“Then you’re going to
put several guns on the Mars?” asked Ned.
“Yes, four quick-firers, at
least, two on each side, and heavier guns at the bow
and stern, to throw explosive shells in a horizontal
or upward direction. For a downward direction
we won’t need any guns, we can simply drop the
bombs, or shells, from a release clutch.”
“Drop them on other air craft?” Ned wanted
to know.
“Well, if it’s necessary,
yes. Though I guess there won’t be much
chance of doing that to a rival aeroplane or dirigible.
But in flying over cities or forts, explosive bombs
can be dropped very nicely. For use in attacking
other air craft I am going to depend on my lateral
fire, from the guns mounted on either beam, and in
the bow and stern.”
“You speak as though you, yourself,
were going into a battle of the air,” said Ned.
“No, I don’t believe I’ll
go that far,” Tom replied. “Though,
if the government wants my craft, I may have to go
aloft and fire shots at targets for them to show them
how things work.
“Please don’t think that
I am in favor of war, Ned,” went on Tom earnestly.
“I hate it, and I wish the time would come when
all nations would disarm. But if the other countries
are laying themselves out to have aerial battleships,
it is time the United States did also. We must
not be left behind, especially in view of what is
taking place in Europe.”
“I suppose that’s right,”
agreed Ned. “Have you any of your guns
ready?”
“Yes, all but the mounting of
them on the supports aboard the Mars. I haven’t
dared do that yet, and fire them, until I provided
some means of taking up the recoil. Now I’m
going to get right to work on that problem.”
There was considerable detailed figuring
and computation work ahead of Tom Swift, and I will
not weary you by going into the details of higher
mathematics. Even Ned lost interest after the
start of the problem, though he was interested when
Tom took down the door-check and began measuring the
amount of force it would take up, computing it on
scales and spring balances.
Once this had been done, and Tom had
figured just how much force could be expected to be
taken up by a larger check, with stronger hydrostatic
valves, the young inventor explained:
“And now to see how much recoil
force my guns develop!”
“Are you really going to fire the guns?”
asked Ned.
“Surely,” answered Tom.
“That’s the only way to get at real results.
I’ll have the guns taken out and mounted in a
big field. Then we’ll fire them, and measure
the recoil.”
“Well, that may be some fun,”
spoke Ned, with a grin. “More fun than
all these figures,” and he looked at the mass
of details on Tom’s desk.
This was the second or third day after
the fire in the red shed, and in the interim Tom had
been busy making computations. These were about
finished. Meanwhile further investigation bad
been made of clues leading to the origin of the blaze
in the shed, but nothing had been learned.
A photo-telephone had been installed
near Eradicate’s quarters, in the hope that
the mysterious stranger might keep his promise, and
come to see about the mule. In that case something
would have been learned about him. But, as Tom
feared, the man did not appear.
Ned was much interested in the guns,
and, a little later, he helped Tom and Koku mount
them in a vacant lot. The giant’s strength
came in handy in handling the big parts.
Mr. Swift strolled past, as the guns
were being mounted for the preliminary test, and inquired
what his son was doing.
“It will never work, Tom, never!”
declared the aged inventor, when informed. “You
can’t take up those guns in your air craft,
and fire them with any degree of safety.”
“You wait, Dad,” laughed
Tom. “You haven’t yet seen how the
Newton hydrostatic recoil operates.”
Ned smiled with pleasure at this.
It took nearly a week to get all the
guns mounted, for some of them required considerable
work, and it was also necessary to attach gauges to
them to register the recoil and pressure. In the
meanwhile Tom had been in further communication with
government experts who were soon to call on him to
inspect the aerial warship, with a view to purchase.
“When are they coming?”
asked Ned, as he and Tom went out one morning to make
the first test of the guns.
“They will be here any day,
now. They didn’t set any definite date.
I suppose they want to take us unawares, to see that
I don’t ‘frame-up’ any game on them.
Well, I’ll be ready any time they come.
Now, Koku, bring along those shells, and don’t
drop any of them, for that new powder is freakish
stuff.”
“Me no drop any, Master,”
spoke the giant, as he lifted the boxes of explosives
in his strong arms.
The largest gun was loaded and aimed
at a distant hill, for Tom knew that if the recoil
apparatus would take care of the excess force of his
largest gun, the problem of the smaller ones would
be easy to solve.
“Here, Rad, where are you going?”
Tom asked, as he noticed the colored man walking away,
after having completed a task assigned to him.
“Where’s I gwine, Massa Tom?”
“Yes, Rad, that’s what I asked you.”
“I—I’se gwine
t’ feed mah mule, Boomerang,” said the
colored man slowly. “It’s his eatin’
time, jest now, Massa Tom.”
“Nonsense! It isn’t anywhere near
noon yet.”
“Yais, sab, Massa Tom, I knows
dat,” said Eradicate, as he carefully edged
away from the big gun, “but I’se done changed
de eatin’ hours ob dat mule. He had a little
touch ob indigestion de udder day, an’ I’se
feedin’ him diff’rent now. So I guess
as how yo’ll hab t’ ’scuse me now,
Massa Tom.”
“Oh, well, trot along,”
laughed the young inventor. “I guess we
won’t need you. Is everything all right
there, Koku?”
“All right, Master.”
“Now, Ned, if you’ll stand
here,” went on Tom, “and note the extreme
point to which the hand on the pressure gauge goes,
I’ll be obliged to you. Just jot it down
on this pad.”
“Here comes someone,”
remarked the bank clerk, as he saw that his pencil
was sharpened. He pointed to the field back of
them.
“It’s Mr. Damon,”
observed Tom. “We’ll wait until he
arrives. He’ll be interested in this.”
“Bless my collar button, Tom!
What’s going on?” asked the eccentric
man, as he came up. “Has war been declared?”
“Just practicing,” replied
the young inventor. “Getting ready to put
the armament on my aerial warship.”
“Well, as long as I’m
behind the guns I’m all right, I suppose?”
“Perfectly,” Tom replied.
“Now then, Ned, I think we’ll fire.”
There was a moment of inspection,
to see that nothing had been forgotten, and then the
big gun was discharged. There was a loud report,
not as heavy, though, as Ned had expected, but there
was no puff of smoke, for Tom was using smokeless
powder. Only a little flash of flame was observed.
“Catch the figure, Ned!” Tom cried.
“I have it!” was the answer. “Eighty
thousand!”
“Good! And I can build
a recoil check that will take up to one hundred and
twenty thousand pounds pressure. That ought to
be margin of safety enough. Now we’ll try
another shot.”
The echoes of the first had hardly
died away before the second gun was ready for the
test. That, too, was satisfactory, and then the
smaller ones were operated. These were not quite
so satisfactory, as the recoil developed was larger,
in proportion to their size, than Tom had figured.
“But I can easily put a larger
hydrostatic check on them,” he said. “Now,
we’ll fire by batteries, and see what the total
is.”
Then began a perfect bombardment of
the distant hillside, service charges being used v,
and explosive shells sent out so that dirt, stones
and gravel flew in all directions. Danger signs
and flags had been posted, and a cordon of Tom’s
men kept spectators away from the hill, so no one
would be in the danger zone.
The young inventor was busy making
some calculations after the last of the firing had
been completed. Koku was packing up the unfired
shells, and Mr. Damon was blessing his ear-drums, and
the pieces of cotton he had stuffed in to protect
them, when a tall, erect man was observed strolling
over the fields in the direction of the guns.
“Somebody’s coming, Tom,” warned
Ned.
“Yes, and a stranger, too,”
observed Tom. “I wonder if that can be
Eradicate’s Frenchman?”
But a look at the stranger’s
face disproved that surmise. He had a frank and
pleasant countenance, obviously American.
“I beg your pardon,” he
began, addressing everyone in general, “but
I am looking for Tom Swift. I was told he was
here.”
“I am Tom Swift,” replied our hero.
“Ah! Well, I am Lieutenant
Marbury, with whom you had some correspondence recently
about—”
“Oh, yes, Lieutenant Marbury,
of the United States Navy,” interrupted Tom.
“I’m glad to see you,” he went on,
holding out his hand. “We are just completing
some tests with the guns. You called, I presume,
in reference to my aerial warship?”
“That is it—yes.
Have you it ready for a trial flight?”
“Well, almost. It can be
made ready in a few hours. You see, I have been
delayed. There was a fire in the plant.”
“A fire!” exclaimed the
officer in surprise. “How was that?
We heard nothing of it in Washington.”
“No, I kept it rather quiet,”
Tom explained. “We had reason to suspect
that it was a fire purposely set, in a shed where I
kept a quantity of explosives.”
“Ha!” exclaimed Lieutenant
Marbury. “This fits in with what I have
heard. And did you not receive warning?”
he asked Tom.
“Warning? No. Of what?”
“Of foreign spies!” was
the unexpected answer. “I am sorry.
Some of our Secret Service men unearthed something
of a plot against you, and I presumed you had been
told to watch out. If you had, the fire might
not have occurred. There must have been some
error in Washington. But let me tell you now,
Tom Swift—be on your guard!”