THE AIR GLIDER
Mr. Damon continued to hammer away
at the window sash with the piece of driftwood.
There were splinters of the frame and jagged pieces
of glass sticking out, making it dangerous for the
exile to slip through.
“Come on! Come on!”
the eccentric man continued to call. “Bless
my safety valve! We’ll save you! Come
on!”
Mr. Petrofsky was leaping across the
room, just ahead of the one guard. The other
two were at the open door now, through which Tom could
be seen. Then the spies, realizing in an instant
that they had been deceived, made a dash after their
comrade, who had his hand on the tails of the exile’s
coat.
“Break away! Break loose!”
cried Mr. Damon, who, by this time had cleared the
window so a person could get through. “Don’t
let them hold you!”
“I don’t intend to!”
retorted Mr. Petrofsky, and he swerved suddenly, tearing
his coat, from the grasp of the guard.
In another instant the exile was at
the casement, and was being helped through by Mr.
Damon, and there was need of it, for the three guards
were there now, doing their best to keep their prisoner.
“Pull away! Pull away!” cried Mr.
Damon.
“We’ll help you!”
shouted Tom, who, now that his trick had worked, had
sped around to the other side of the hut.
“Don’t be afraid, we’re
with you!” exclaimed the detective, who was with
the young inventor.
“Grab him! Keep him!
Hold him!” fairly screamed the rearmost of the
three guards. “It is a plot of the Nihilists
to rescue him. Shoot him, comrades. He must
not get away!”
“Don’t you try any of
your shooting games, or I’ll take a hand in it!”
shouted the detective, and, at the same moment he drew
his revolver and fired harmlessly in the air.
“A bomb! A bomb!”, yelled the guards
in terror.
“Not yet, but there may be!”
murmured Tom. The firing of the shot produced
a good effect, for the three men who were trying to
detain Ivan Petrofsky at once fell back from the window
and gave him just the chance needed. He scrambled
through, with the aid of Mr. Damon, and before the
guards could again spring at him, which they did when
the echoes of the shot had died away. They had
realized, too late, that it was not a bomb, and that
there was no immediate danger for them.
“Come on!” cried Tom.
“Make for the airship! We’ve got to
get the start of them!”
Leading the way, he sprinted toward
the road that led to the place where the airship awaited
them. He was followed by Mr. Damon and the detective,
who had Mr. Petrofsky between them.
“Are you all right?” Tom
called back to the exile. “Are you hurt?
Can you run?”
“I’m all right,”
was the reassuring answer. “Go ahead; But
they’ll be right after us.”
“Maybe they’ll stop when
they see this,” remarked the detective significantly,
and he held his revolver so that the rays of the newly-risen
moon glinted on it.
“Here they come!” cried
Tom a moment later, as three figures, one after the
other, came around the corner of the house. They
had not taken the shorter route through the window,
as had Mr. Petrofsky, and this gained a little time
for our friends.
“Stop! Hold on!”
cried one of the guards in fairly good English.
“That is our prisoner.”
“Not any more!” the young
inventor yelled back. “He’s ours now.”
“Look out! They’re
going to shoot!” cried Mr. Damon. “Bless
my gunpowder! can’t you stop them some way or
other, Mr. Detective?”
“The only way is by firing first,”
answered Mr. Trivett, “and I don’t want
to hurt them. Guess I’ll fire in the air
again.”
He did, and the guards halted.
They seemed to be holding a consultation, as Tom learned
by glancing hastily back, and he caught the glisten
of some weapon. But if the three men had any
notion of firing they gave it up, and once more came
on running. Doubtless they had orders to get
their prisoner back to Russia alive, and did not want
to take any chances of hitting him.
“Leg it!” cried Tom. “Leg it!”
He was well ahead, and wanted the
others to catch up to him, but none of the men was
a good runner, and Mr. Petrofsky, by reason of being
rather heavily built, was worse than the other two,
so they had to accommodate their pace to his.
“I wonder if we can make it,”
mused Tom, as he realized that the airship was a good
distance off yet the guards, though quite a way in
the rear now were coming on fast. “It’s
going to be a close race,” thought the young
inventor. “I wish we’d brought the
airship a little nearer.”
It was indeed a race now, for the
guards, seeming to know that they would not be shot
at, were coming on more confidently, and were rapidly
lessening the distance that separated them from their
recent prisoner.
“We’ve got to go faster!” cried
Tom.
“Bless my shoe leather!” yelled Mr. Damon.
“I can’t go any faster.”
Still he did make the attempt, and
so did the exile and the detective. Little was
said now, for each of the parties was running a dogged
race, and in silence. They had gone possibly
half a mile, and the first advantage of Tom and his
friends was rapidly being lost, when suddenly there
sounded in the air above a curious throbbing noise.
“Bless my gasolene! What’s that?”
cried Mr. Damon.
“The airship! It’s
the airship!” yelled Tom, as he saw a great dark
shape slowly approaching. “Ned is bringing
her to met us.”
“Good!” cried the detective. “We
need it I’m about winded!”
“This way, Ned! This way!”
cried Tom, and, an instant later, they were in the
midst of a brilliant glow, for Ned had turned the current
into the great searchlight on the bow of the air craft,
and the beams were focused on our friends. Ned
could now see the refugees, and in a moment he sent
the graceful craft down, bringing it to a halt on the
ground near Tom.
“In with you!” cried the lad. “She’s
all ready to start up again!”
“Come on!” yelled Tom
to the others. “We’re all right now,
if you hustle!”
“Bless my pin cushion!” gasped Mr. Damon,
making a final spurt.
The three guards had halted in confusion
on seeing the big, black bulk of the airship, and
when they noted the gleaming of the searchlight they
must have realized that their chances were gone.
They made a rush, however, but it was too late.
Over the side of the craft scrambled Tom, Mr. Damon,
the detective and Ivan Petrofsky, and an instant later
Ned had sent it aloft. The race was over, and
the young inventor and his friends had won.
“You’re the stuff!”
cried Tom to Ned, as he went with his chum to the
pilot house to direct the progress of the airship.
“It’s lucky you came for us. We never
could have made the distance. We left the ship
too far off.”
“That’s what I thought
after you’d gone,” replied his chum.
“So I decided to come and meet you. I had
to go slowly so as not to pass you in the darkness.”
They were speeding off now, and Ned,
turning the beams of the great searchlight below them,
picked up the three guards who were gazing helplessly
aloft after their fast disappearing prisoner.
“You’re having your first
ride in an airship, Mr. Petrofsky,” remarked
Tom, when they had gone on for some little distance.
“How do you like it?”
“I’m so excited I hardly
know, but it’s quite a sensation. But how
in the world did you ever find me to rescue me?”
Then they told the story of their
search, and the unexpected clew from Russia.
In turn the exile told how he had been attacked at
the breakfast table one morning by the three spies—the
very men who had been shadowing him—and
taken away secretly, being drugged to prevent his
calling for help. He had been kept a close prisoner
in the lonely hut, and each day he had expected to
be taken back to serve out his sentence in Siberia.
“Another day would have been
too late,” he told Tom, when he had thanked
the young inventor over and over again, “for
the papers would have arrived, and the last obstacle
to taking me back to Russia would have been removed.
They dared not take me out of the United States without
official documents, and they would have been forged
ones, for they intended trumping up a criminal charge
against me, the political one not being strong enough
to allow them to extradite me.”
“Well I’m glad we got
you,” said Tom heartily. “We will
soon be ready to start for Siberia.”
“In this kind of a craft?”
“Yes, only much larger.
You’ll like it. I only hope my air glider
works.”
By putting on speed, Tom was able
to reach Shopton before midnight, and there was quite
an informal celebration in the Swift homestead over
the rescue of the exile. The detective, for whom
there was no further need, was paid off, and Mr. Petrofsky
was made a member of the household.
“You’d better stay here
until we are ready to start,” Tom said, “and
then we can keep an eye on you. We need you to
show us as nearly as possible where the platinum field
is.”
“All right,” agreed the
Russian with a laugh. “I’m sure I’ll
do all I can for you, and you are certainly treating
me very nicely after what I suffered from my captors.”
Tom resumed work on his air glider
the next day, and he had an additional helper, for
Mr. Petrofsky proved to be a good mechanic.
In brief, the air glider was like
an aeroplane save that it had no motor. It was
raised by a strong wind blowing against transverse
planes, and once aloft was held there by the force
of the air currents, just like a box kite is kept
up. To make it progress either with or against
the wind, there were horizontal and vertical rudders,
and sliding weights, by which the equilibrium could
be shifted so as to raise or lower it. While
it could not exactly move directly against the wind
it could progress in a direction contrary to which
the gale was blowing, somewhat as a sailing ship “tacks.”
And, as has been explained, the harder
the wind blew the better the air glider worked.
In fact unless there was a strong gale it would not
go up.
“But it will be just what is
needed out there in that part of Siberia,” declared
the exile, “for there the wind is never quiet.
Often it blows a regular hurricane.”
“That’s what we want!”
cried Tom. He had made several models of the air
glider, changing them as he found out his errors, and
at last he had hit on the right shape and size.
Midway of the big glider, on which
work was now well started, there was to be an enclosed
car for the carrying of passengers, their food and
supplies. Tom figured on carrying five or six.
For several weeks the work on the
air glider progressed rapidly, and it was nearing
completion. Meanwhile nothing more had been heard
or seen of the Russian spies.
“Well,” announced Tom
one night, after a day’s hard work, “we’ll
be ready for a trial now, just as soon as there comes
a good wind.”
“Is it all finished?” asked Ned.
“No, but enough for a trial spin. What
I want is a big wind now.”