A DARING PROJECT
While Tom and his chum are in the
house of the Russian, who so strangely produced the
platinum just when it was most needed, I am going to
take just a little time to tell you something about
the hero of this story. Those who have read the
previous books of this series need no introduction
to him, but in justice to my new readers I must make
a little explanation.
Tom Swift was an inventor, as was
his father before him. But Mr. Swift was getting
too old, now, to do much, though he had a pet invention—that
of a gyroscope—on which he worked from time
to time. Tom lived with his father in the village
of Shopton, in New York state. His mother was
dead, but a housekeeper, named Mrs. Baggert, looked
after the wants of the inventors, young and old.
The first book of the series was called
“Tom Swift and His Motor-Cycle,” and in
that I related how Tom bought the machine from a Mr.
Wakefield Damon, of Waterford, after the odd gentleman
had unintentionally started to climb a tree with it.
That disgusted Mr. Damon with motor-cycling, and Tom
had lots of fun on the machine, and not a few daring
adventures.
He and Mr. Damon became firm friends,
and the oddity of the gentleman—mainly
that of blessing everything he could think of—was
no objection in Tom’s mind. The young inventor
and Ned Newton went on many trips together, Mr. Damon
being one of the party.
In Shopton lived Andy Foger, a bullying
sort of a chap, who acted very meanly toward Tom at
times. Another resident of the town was a Mr.
Nestor, but Tom was more interested in his daughter
Mary than in the head of the household. Add Eradicate
Sampson, an eccentric colored man who said he got
his name because he “eradicated” dirt,
and his mule, Boomerang, and I think you have met
the principal characters of these stories.
After Tom had much enjoyment out of
his motor-cycle, he got a motor boat, and one of his
rivals on Lake Carlopa was this same Andy Foger, but
our hero vanquished him. Then Tom built an airship,
which had been the height of his ambition for some
years. He had a stirring cruise in the Red Cloud,
and then, deserting the air for the water, Tom and
his father built a submarine, in which they went after
sunken treasure. In the book, “Tom Swift
and His Electric Runabout,” I told how, in the
speediest car on the road, Tom saved his father’s
bank from ruin, and in the book dealing with Tom’s
wireless message I related how he saved the Castaways
of Earthquake Island.
When Tom went among the diamond makers,
at the request of Mr. Barco Jenks, and discovered
the secret of phantom mountain the lad fancied that
might be the end of his adventures, but there were
more to follow. Going to the caves of ice, his
airship was wrecked, but he and his friends managed
to get back home, and then it was that the young inventor
perfected his sky racer, in which he made the quickest
flight on record.
Most startling were his adventures
in elephant land whither he went with his electric
rifle, and he was the means of saving a missionary,
Mr. Illingway and his wife, from the red pygmies.
Tom had not been home from Africa
long before he got a letter from this missionary,
telling about an underground City in Mexico that was
said to be filled with gold. Tom went there,
and in the book, entitled, “Tom Swift in the
City of Gold,” I related his adventures.
How he and his friends were followed
by the Fogers, how they eluded them, made their way
to the ruined temple in a small dirigible balloon,
descended to the secret tunnel, managed to turn aside
the underground river, and reach the city of gold
with its wonderful gold statues—all this
is told in the volume.
Then, after pulling down, in the centre
of the underground city, the big golden statue, the
door of rock descended, and made our friends prisoners.
They almost died, but Andy Foger and his father, in
league with some rascally Mexicans and a tribe of
head-hunters, finally made their way to the tunnel,
and most unexpectedly, released Tom and his friends.
There was a fight, but our hero’s
party escaped with considerable gold and safely reached
Shopton. Now, after a winter spent in work, fixing
over an old aeroplane, we again meet Tom.
“Would you mind telling me something
about where this platinum comes from, and if you can
get any more of it?” asked Tom, after a pause,
following the strange statement made by the Russian.
“I will gladly tell you the
story,” spoke Mr. Petrofsky, “for I am
much interested in inventions, and I formerly did
something in that line myself, and I have even made
a small aeroplane, so you see I know the need of platinum
in a high power magneto.”
“But where did you get such
pure metal?” asked Tom. “I have never
seen it’s equal.”
“There is none like it in all
the world,” went on the Russian, “and
perhaps there never can be any more. I have only
a small supply. But in Siberia—in
the lost mine—there is a large quantity
of it, as pure as this, needing only a little refining.
“Can’t we get some from
there?” asked the young inventor eagerly.
“I should think the Russian government would
mine it, and export it.”
“They would—if they
could find it,” said Ivan Petrofsky dryly, “but
they can’t—no one can find it—and
I have tried very hard—so hard, in fact,
that it is the reason for my coming to this country—that
and the desire to find and aid my brother, who is
a Siberian exile.”
“This is getting interesting,”
remarked Ned to Tom in a low voice, and the young
inventor nodded.
“My brother Peter, who is younger
than I by a few years, and I, are the last of our
family,” began Mr. Petrofsky, motioning Tom and
Ned to take chairs. “We lived in St. Petersburg,
and early in life, though we were of the nobility,
we took up the cause of the common people.”
“Nihilists?” asked Ned
eagerly, for he had read something of these desperate
men.
“No, and not anarchists,”
said Mr. Petrofsky with a sad smile. “Our
party was opposed to violence, and we depended on education
to aid our cause. Then, too, we did all we could
in a quiet way to help the poor. My brother and
I invented several life-saving and labor-saving machines
and in this way we incurred the enmity of the rich
contractors and government officials, who made more
money the more people they could have working for
them, for they made the people buy their food and
supplies from them.
“But my brother, and I persisted,
with the result that we were both arrested, and, with
a number of others were sent to Siberia.
“Of the horrors we endured there
I will say nothing. However, you have probably
read much. In the country near which we were quartered
there were many mines, some of salt and some of sulphur.
Oh, the horrors of those mines! Many a poor exile
has been lost in the windings of a salt mine, there
to die miserably. And in the sulphur mines many
die also, not from being lost so much as being overcome
by stifling gases. It is terrible! And sometimes
they are purposely abandoned by their guides, for
the government wants to get rid of certain exiles.
“But you are interested in platinum.
One day my brother and I who had been sent to work
in the salt mines, mistook a turning and wandered on
and on for several miles, finally losing our way.
We had food and water with us, or we would have perished,
and, as it was, we nearly died before we finally found
our way out of an abandoned opening.
“We came out in the midst of
a terrible snowstorm, and wandered about almost frozen.
At last we were found by a serf who, in his sled, took
us to his poor cottage. There we were warmed
and fed back to life.
“We knew we would be searched
for, as naturally, our absence would lead to the suspicion
that we had tried to escape. So as soon as we
were able, we started back to the town where we were
quartered. The serf wanted to take us in his
sled, but we knew he might be suspected of having
tried to aid us to get away, and he might be arrested.
So we went alone.
“As might have been expected,
we became lost again, and wandered about for several
days. But we had enough food to keep us alive.
And it was during this wandering that I came upon
the platinum mine. It was down in a valley, in
the midst of a country densely wooded and very desolate.
There was an outcropping of the ore, and rather idly
I put some of it in my pockets. Then we wandered
on, and finally after awful suffering in terrific
storms, were found by a searching party and brought
back to the barracks.”
“Did they think you had escaped?” asked
Tom.
“They did,” replied the
Russian, “and they punished us severely for it,
in spite of our denials. In time I managed secretly
to smelt the platinum ore, and I found I had some
of the purest metal I had ever seen. I was wishing
I could find the mine, or tell some of my friends
about it, when one of the officers discovered the metal
in my bed.
“He demanded to know where I
had gotten it, and knowing that refusal would only
make it the worse for me I told him. There was
considerable excitement, for the value of the discovery
was recognized, and a search was at once made for
the mine.
“But, even with the aid we were
able to give, it could not be located. Many expeditions
went out to hunt for it but came back baffled.
They could not penetrate that wild country.”
“They should have used an aeroplane,”
suggested Tom.
“They did,” replied the Russian quickly,
“but it was of no use.”
“Why not?” the young inventor wanted to
know.
“Because of the terrific winds
that almost continually sweep over that part of Siberia.
They never seem to cease, and there are treacherous
air currents and ‘pockets’ that engulfed
more than one luckless aviator. Oh, you may be
sure the Russian government spared no means of finding
the lost platinum mine, but they could not locate
it, or even get near the place where they supposed
it to be.
“Then, perhaps thinking that
my brother and I were concealing something, they separated
us. Where they sent him I do not know, but I was
doomed to the sulphur mines. I was heartbroken,
and I scarcely cared whether I lived or died.
But an opportunity of escape came, and I took it.
I wanted to save my brother, but I did not know where
he was, and I thought if I could make my way to some
civilized country, or to free America, I might later
be able to save my brother.
“I went to England, taking some
of my precious platinum with me, and stayed there
for two years. I learned your language, but my
efforts to organize an expedition to search for the
lost mine, and for my brother, failed. Then I
came here, and—well, I am still trying.”
“My! That is certainly
interesting!” exclaimed Ned, who had been all
attention during the telling of the story.
“And you certainly had a hard
time,” declared Tom. “I am much obliged
for this platinum. Have you set a price on it?
It is worth much more than the ordinary kind.”
“The price is nothing to you,”
replied the Russian, with a smile. “I am
only too glad to help you fix your aeroplane.
Will it take long? I should like to watch you.”
“Come along,” invited
Tom. “I can soon have it going again, and
I’ll give you a ride, if you like.”
“No, thank you, I’m hardly
up to that yet, though I may be some day. The
machine I made never flew well and I had several bad
falls.”
Tom and Ned worked rapidly on the
magneto, and soon had replaced the defective bits
of platinum.
“If the Russians had such a
machine as this maybe they could have gotten to that
mine,” suggested Ned, who was very proud of Tom’s
craft.
“It would be useless in the
terrific winds, I fear,” answered Ivan Petrofsky.
“But now I care little for the mine. It
is my brother whom I want to save. He must be
in some of the Siberian mines, and if I had such a
craft as this I might be able to rescue him.”
Tom Swift dropped the file he was
using. A bright light sparkled in his eyes.
He seemed strangely excited.
“Mr. Petrofsky!” he cried,
“would you let me have a try at finding your
brother, and would you come with me?”
“Would I?” asked the Russian
eagerly. “I would be your debtor for life,
and I would always pray for you, if you could help
me to save my brother Peter.”
“Then we’ll have a try
at it!” cried Tom. “I’ve got
a different airship than this—one in which
I can travel three thousand miles without coming down.
I haven’t had any excitement since I got back
from the city of gold. I’m going to Russia
to help you rescue your brother from exile, and I’m
also going to have a try for that lost platinum treasure!”
“Thank heaven, there is some
hope for poor Peter at last,” murmured Mr. Petrofsky
earnestly.
“You never can get to the platinum
mine,” said Ned. The winds will tear your
airship to pieces.”
“Not the kind I’m going
to make,” declared Tom. “It’s
going to be an air glider, that will fairly live on
high winds. Ho! for Siberia and the platinum
mines. Will you come?”
“I don’t know what you
mean by an air glider, Tom Swift, but I’ll go
to help rescue my brother,” was the quick answer,
and then, with the light of a daring resolve shining
in his eyes, the young inventor proceeded to get his
aeroplane in shape for the trip back to Shopton.