IN A GREAT GALE
There was a humming in the air.
The telegraph wires that ran along on high poles past
the house of Tom Swift sung a song like that of an
Aeolian harp. The very house seemed to tremble.
“Jove! This is a wind!”
cried Tom as he awakened on a morning a few days after
his air glider was nearly completed. “I
never saw it so strong. This ought to be just
what I want I must telephone to Mr. Damon and to Ned.”
He hustled into his clothes, pausing
now and then to look out of his window and note the
effects of the gale. It was a tremendous wind,
as was evidenced by the limbs of several trees being
broken off, while in some cases frail trees themselves
had been snapped in twain.
“Coffee ready, Mrs. Baggert?”
asked our hero as he went downstairs. “I
haven’t got time to eat much though.”
In spite of his haste Tom ate a good
breakfast and then, having telephoned to his two friends,
and receiving their promises to come right over, our
hero went out to make a few adjustments to his air
glider, to get it in shape for the trial.
He was a little worried lest the wind
die out, but when he got outside he noted with satisfaction
that the gale was stronger than at first. In
fact it did considerable damage in Shopton, as Tom
learned later.
It certainly was a strong wind.
An ordinary aeroplane never could have sailed in it,
and Tom was doubtful of the ability of even his big
airship to navigate in it. But he was not going
to try that.
“And maybe my air glider won’t
work,” he remarked to himself as he was on his
way to the shed where it had been constructed.
“The models went up all right, but maybe the
big one isn’t proportioned right. However,
I’ll soon see.”
He was busy adjusting the balancing
weights when Ned Newton came in.
“Great Scott!” exclaimed
the lad, as he labored to close the shed door, “this
is a blow all right, Tom! Do you think it’s
safe to go up?”
“I can’t go up without a gale, Ned.”
“Well, I’d think twice about it myself.”
“Why, I counted on you going up with me.”
“Burr-r-r-r!” and Ned
pretended to shiver. “I haven’t an
accident insurance policy you know.”
“You won’t need it, Ned.
If we get up at all we’ll be all right.
Catch hold there, and shift that rear weight a little
forward on the rod. I expect Mr. Damon soon.”
The eccentric man came in a little
later, just as Tom and Ned had finished adjusting
the mechanism.
“Bless my socks!” cried
Mr. Damon. “Do you really mean to go up
to-day, Tom?”
“I sure do! Why, aren’t
you going with me?” and Tom winked at Ned.
“Bless my—”
began Mr. Damon, and then, evidently realizing that
he was being tested he exclaimed: “Well,
I will go, Tom! If the air glider is any good
it ought to hold me. I will go up.”
“Now, Ned, how about you?” asked the young
inventor.
“Well, I guess it’s up
to me to come along, but I sure do wish it was over
with,” and Ned glanced out of the window to see
if the gale was dying out. But the wind was as
high as ever.
It was hard work getting the air glider
out of the shed, and in position on top of a hill,
about a quarter of a mile away, for Tom intended “taking
off” from the mound, as he could not get a running
start without a motor. The wind, however, he
hoped, would raise him and the strange craft.
In order to get it over the ground
without having it capsize, or elevate before they
were ready for it, drag ropes, attached to bags of
sand were used, and once these were attached the four
found that they could not wheel the air glider along
on its bicycle wheels.
“We’ll have to get Eradicate
and his mule, I guess,” said Tom, after a vain
endeavor to make progress against the wind. “When
it’s up in the air it will be all right, but
until then I’ll need help to move it. Ned,
call Rad, will you?”
The colored man, with Boomerang, his
faithful mule, was soon on hand. The animal was
hitched to the glider, and pulled it toward the hill.
“Now to see what happens,”
remarked Tom as he wheeled his latest invention around
where the wind would take it as soon as the restraining
ropes were cast off, for it was now held in place by
several heavy cables fastened to stakes driven in
the ground.
Tom gave a last careful look to the
weights, planes and rudders. He glanced at a
small anemometer or wind gage, on the craft, and noted
that it registered sixty miles an hour.
“That ought to do,” he
remarked. “Now who’s going up with
me? Will you take a chance, Mr. Petrofsky?”
“I’d rather not—at first.”
“Come on then, Ned and Mr. Damon.
Mr. Petrofsky and Rad can cast off the ropes.”
The wind, if anything, was stronger
than ever. It was a terrific gale, and just what
was needed. But how would the air glider act?
That was what Tom wanted very much to know.
“Cast off!” he cried to
the Russian and Eradicate, and they slipped the ropes.
The next moment, with a rush and whizzing
roar, the air glider shot aloft on the wings of the
wind.