PURSUED
Slowly the airship arose, almost too
slowly to suit those on board who anxiously watched
the oncoming officers. The latter had drawn their
short swords, and at the sight of them Mr. Damon cried
out:
“Bless my football! If
they jab them into the gas bag, Tom, we’re done
for!”
“They won’t get the chance,”
answered the young inventor, and he spoke truly, for
a moment later, as the big propellers took hold of
the air, the Falcon went up with a rush, and was far
beyond the reach of the men. In a rage the spy
shook his fist at the fast receding craft, and one
of the policemen drew his revolver.
“They’re going to fire!” cried Ned.
“They can’t do much damage,”
answered Tom coolly. “A bullet hole in the
bag is easily repaired, and anywhere else it won’t
amount to anything.”
The officer was aiming his revolver
at the airship, now high above his head, but with
a quick motion the spy pulled down his companion’s
arm, and they seemed to be disputing among themselves.
“I wonder what that means?” mused Mr.
Damon.
“Probably they didn’t
want to risk getting into trouble,” replied the
Russian. “There are strict laws in France
about using firearms, and as yet we are accused of
no crime. We are only suspected, and I suppose
the spy didn’t want to get into trouble.
He is on foreign ground, and there might be international
complications.”
“Then you really think he was a spy?”
asked Tom.
“No doubt of it, and I’m
afraid this is only the beginning of our trouble.”
“In what way?”
“Well, of course word will be
sent on ahead about us, and every where we go they’ll
be on the watch for us. They have our movements
pretty well covered.”
“We won’t make a descent
until we get to Siberia,” said Tom, “and
I guess there it will be so lonesome that we won’t
be troubled much.”
“Perhaps,” admitted the
Russian, “but we will have to be on our guard.
Of course keeping up in the air will be an advantage
but they may—”
He stopped suddenly and shrugged his shoulders.
“What were you going to say?” inquired
Ned.
“Oh, it’s just something
that might happen, but it’s too remote a possibility
to work about. We’re leaving those fellows
nicely behind,” he added quickly, as though
anxious to change the subject.
“Yes, at this rate we’ll
soon be out of France,” observed Tom, as he
speeded the ship along still more. The young inventor
wondered what Mr. Petrofsky had been going to say,
but soon after this, some of the repaired machinery
in the motor room needed adjusting, and the young
inventor was kept so busy that the matter passed from
his mind.
The dynamo and magneto were doing
much more efficient work since Tom had put the new
platinum in, and the Falcon was making better time
than ever before. They were flying at a moderate
height, and could see wondering men, women and children
rush out from their houses, to gaze aloft at the strange
sight. Paris was now far behind, and that night
they were approaching the borders of Prussia, as Mn
Petrofsky informed them, for he knew every part of
Europe.
The route, as laid down by Tom and
the Russian, would send the airship skirting the southern
coast of the Baltic sea, then north-west, to pass
to one side of St. Petersburg, and then, after getting
far enough to the north, so as to avoid the big cities,
they would head due east for Siberia.
“In that way I think we’ll
avoid any danger from the Russian police,” remarked
the exile.
For the next few days they flew steadily
on at no remarkable speed, as the extra effort used
more gasolene than Tom cared to expend in the motor.
He realized that he would need all he had, and he did
not want to have to buy any more until he was homeward
bound, for the purchase of it would lead to questions,
and might cause their detention.
Mr. Damon gave his friends good meals
and they enjoyed their trip very much, though naturally
there was some anxiety about whether it would have
a successful conclusion.
“Well, if we don’t find
the platinum mine we’ll rescue your brother,
if there’s a possible chance!” exclaimed
Tom one day, as he sat in the pilot house with the
exile. “Jove! it will be great to drop down,
pick him up, and fly away with him before those Cossacks,
or whoever has him, know what’s up.”
“I’m afraid we can’t
make such a sensational rescue as that,” replied
Mr. Petrofsky. “We’ll have to go at
it diplomatically. That’s the only way
to get an exile out of Siberia. We must get word
to him somehow, after we locate him, that we are waiting
to help him, and then we can plan for his escape.
Poor Peter! I do hope we can find him, for if
he is in the salt or sulphur mines it is a living
death!” and he shuddered at the memory of his
own exile.
“How do you expect to get definite
information as to where he might be?” asked
Tom.
“I think the only thing to do
is to get in touch with some of the revolutionists,”
answered the Russian. “They have ways and
means of finding out even state secrets. I think
our best plan will be to land near some small town,
when we get to the edge of Siberia. If we can
conceal the airship, so much the better. Then
I can disguise myself and go to the village.”
“Will it be safe?” inquired the young
inventor.
“I’ll have to take that
chance. It’s the only way, as I am the only
one in our party who can speak Russian.”
“That’s right,”
admitted Tom with a laugh. “I’m afraid
I could never master that tongue. It’s
as hard as Chinese.”
“Not quite,” replied his
friend, “but it is not an easy language for an
American.”
They talked at some length, and then
Tom noticing, by one of the automatic gages on the
wall of the pilot house, that some of the machinery
needed attention, went to attend to it.
He was rather surprised, on emerging
from the motor compartment, to see Mr. Damon standing
on the open after deck of the Falcon gazing earnestly
toward the rear.
“Star-gazing in the day time?” asked Tom
with a laugh.
“Bless my individuality!”
exclaimed the odd man. “How you startled
me, Tom! No, I’m not looking at stars,
but I’ve been noticing a black speck in the
sky for some time, and I was wondering whether it was
my eyesight, or whether it really is something.”
“Where is it?”
“Straight to the rear,”
answered Mr. Damon, “and it seems to be about
a mile up. It’s been hanging in the same
place this ten minutes.”
“Oh, I see,” spoke Tom,
when the speck had been pointed out to him. “It’s
there all right, but I guess it’s a bird, an
eagle perhaps. Wait, I’ll get a glass and
we’ll take a look.”
As he was taking the telescope down
from its rack in the pilot house, Mr. Petrofsky saw
him.
“What’s up?” asked the Russian,
and the youth told him.
“Must be a pretty big bird to
be seen at such a distance as it is,” remarked
Tom.
“Maybe it isn’t a bird,”
suggested Ivan Petrofsky. “I’ll take
a look myself,” and, showing something of alarm
in his manner, he followed Tom to where Mr. Damon
awaited them. Ned also came out on deck.
Quickly adjusting the glass, Tom focused
it on the black speck. It seemed to have grown
larger. Me peered at it steadily for several
seconds.
“Is it a bird?” asked Mr. Damon.
“Jove! It’s another
airship—a big biplane!” cried Tom,
“and there seems to be three men in her.”
“An aeroplane!” gasped Ned.
“Bless my deflecting rudder!”
cried Mr. Damon. “An airship in this out-of-the-way
place?” for they were flying over a desolate
country.
“And they’re coming right
after us,” added Tom, as he continued to gaze.
“I thought so,” was the
quiet comment of Mr. Petrofsky. “That is
what I started to say a few days ago,” he went
on, “when I stopped, as I hardly believed it
possible. I thought they might possibly send an
aeroplane after us, as both the French and Russian
armies have a number of fast ones. So they are
pursuing us. I’m afraid my presence will
bring you no end of trouble.”
“Let it come!” cried Tom.
“If they can catch up to us they’ve got
a good machine. Come on, Ned, let’s speed
her up, and make them take more of our star dust.”
“Wait a minute,” advised
the Russian, as he took the telescope from Tom, and
viewed the ever-increasing speck behind them.
“Are you sure of the speed of this craft?”
he asked a moment later.
“I never saw the one yet I couldn’t
pull away from, even after giving them a start,”
answered the young inventor proudly. “That
is all but my little sky racer. I could let them
get within speaking distance, and then pull out like
the Congressional Limited passing a slow freight.”
“Then wait a few minutes,”
suggested Mr. Petrofsky. “That is an aeroplane
all right, but I can’t make out from what country.
I’d like a better view, and if it’s safe
we can come closer.”
“Oh, it’s safe enough,”
declared Tom. “I’ll get things in
shape for a quick move,” and he hurried back
to the machine room, while the others took turns looking
at the oncoming aeroplane. And it was coming on
rapidly, showing that it had tremendous power, for
it was a very large one, carrying three men.
“How do you suppose they got on our track?”
asked Ned.
“Oh, we must have been reported
from time to time, as we flew over cities or towns,”
replied Mr. Petrofsky. “You know we’re
rather large, and can be seen from a good distance.
Then too, the whole Russian secret police force is
at the service of our enemies.”
“But we’re not over Russia yet,”
said Mr. Damon.
Ivan Petrofsky took the telescope
and peered down toward the earth. They were not
a great way above it, and at that moment they were
passing a small village.
“Can you tell where we are?” asked the
odd man.
“We are just over the border
of the land of the Czar,” was the quiet answer.
“The imperial flag is flying from a staff in
front of one of the buildings down there. We
are over Russia.”
“And here comes that airship,” called
Ned suddenly.
They gazed back with alarm, and saw
that it was indeed so. The big aeroplane had
come on wonderfully fast in the last few minutes.
“Tom! Tom!” cried
his chum. “Better get ready to make a sprint.”
“I’m all ready,”
calmly answered our hero. “Shall I go now?”
“If you can give us a few seconds
longer I may be able to tell who is after us,”
remarked Mr. Petrofsky, turning his telescope on the
craft behind them.
“I can let them get almost up
to us, and get away,” replied Tom.
The Russian did not answer. He
was gazing earnestly at the approaching aeroplane.
A moment later he took the glass down from his eye.
“It’s our spy again,”
he said. “There are two others with him.
That is one of the aeroplanes owned by the secret
police. They are stationed all over Europe, ready
for instant service, and they’re on our trail.”
The pursuing craft was so near that
the occupants could easily be made out with the naked
eye, but it needed the glass to distinguish their
features, and Mr. Petrofsky had done this.
“Shall I speed up?” cried Tom.
“Yes, get away as fast as you
can!” shouted the Russian. “No telling
what they may do,” and then, with a hum and a
roar the motor of the Falcon increased its speed,
and the big airship shot ahead.