THE LOST MINE
For several moments it seemed as if
disaster would overtake the little band of platinum-hunters.
In spite of all that Tom and Ned could do, the Falcon
was whipped about like a feather in the wind.
Sometimes she was pointing her nose to the clouds,
and again earthward. Again she would be whirling
about in the grip of the hurricane, like some fantastic
dancer, and again she would roll dangerously.
Had she turned turtle it probably would have been
the last of her and of all on board.
“Yank that deflecting lever
as far down as it will go!” yelled Tom to his
chum.
“I am. She won’t go any farther.”
“All right, hold her so.
Mr. Damon, let all the gas out of the bag. I
want to be as heavy as possible, and get to earth as
soon as we can.”
“Bless my comb and brush!”
cried the odd man. “I don’t know what’s
going to become of us.”
“You will know, pretty soon,
if the gas isn’t let out!” retorted Tom
grimly, and then Mr. Damon hastened to the generator
compartment, and opened the emergency outlet.
Finally, by crowding on all the possible
power, so that the propellers and deflecting rudders
forced the craft down, Tom was able to get out of
the grip of the hurricane, and landed just beyond the
zone of it on the ground.
“Whew! That was a narrow
squeak!” cried Ned, as he got out. “How’d
you do it, Tom?”
“I hardly know myself.
But it’s evident that we’re on the right
spot now.”
“But the wind has stopped blowing,”
said Mr. Damon. “It was only a gust.”
“It was the worst kind of a
gust I ever want to see,” declared the young
inventor. “My air glider ought to work to
perfection in that. If you think the wind has
died out, Mr. Damon, just walk in that direction,”
and Tom pointed off to the left.
“Bless my umbrella, I will,”
was the reply and the odd man started off. He
had not gone far, before he was seen to put his hand
to his cap. Still he kept on.
“He’s getting into the
blow-zone,” said Tom in a low voice.
The next moment Mr. Damon was seen
to stagger and fall, while his cap was whisked from
his head, and sent high into the air, almost instantly
disappearing from sight.
“Some wind that,” murmured
Ned, in rather awe-struck tones.
“That’s so,” agreed
his chum. “But we’d better help Mr.
Damon,” for that gentleman was slowly crawling
back, not caring to trust himself on his feet, for
the wind had actually carried him down by its force.
“Bless my anemometer!”
he gasped, when Tom and Ned had given him a hand up.
“What happened?”
“It was the great wind,”
explained Tom. “It blows only in a certain
zone, like a draft down a chimney. It is like
a cyclone, only that goes in a circle. This is
a straight wind, but the path of it seems to be as
sharply marked as a trail through the forest.
I guess we’re here all right. Does this
location look familiar to you?” he asked of the
Russian brothers.
“I can’t say that it does,”
answered Ivan. “But then it was winter when
we were here.”
“And, another thing,”
put in Peter. “That wind zone is quite wide.
The mine may be in the middle, or near the other edge.”
“That’s so,” agreed
Tom. “We’ll soon see what we can do.
Come on, Ned, let’s get the air glider out and
put her together. She’ll have a test as
is a test, now.”
I shall not describe the tedious work
of re-assembling Tom Swift’s latest invention
in the air craft line—his glider. Sufficient
to say that it was taken out from where it had been
stored in separate pieces on board the Falcon, and
put together on the plain that marked the beginning
of the wind zone.
It was a curious fact that twenty
feet away from the path of the wind scarcely a breeze
could be felt, while to advance a little way into it
meant that one would at once be almost carried off
his feet.
Tom tested the speed of it one day
with a special anemometer, and found that only a few
hundred feet inside the zone the wind blew nearly one
hundred miles an hour.
“What is it like inside, I wonder?” asked
Ned.
“It must be terrific,” was his chum’s
opinion.
“Dare you risk it, Tom?”
“Of course. The harder
it blows the better the glider works. In fact
I can’t make much speed in a hundred-mile wind
for with us all on board the craft will be heavy,
and you must remember that I depend on the wind alone
to give me motion.”
“What do you think causes the
wind to blow so peculiarly here Tom?” went on
Ned.
“Oh, it must be caused by high
mountain ranges on either side, or the effects of
heat and cold, the air being evaporated over a certain
area because of great heat, say a volcano, or something
like that; though I don’t know that they have
volcanoes here. That creates a vacuum, and other
air rushes in to fill the vacant space. That’s
all wind is, anyhow, air rushing in to fill a vacuum,
or low pressure zone, for you remember that nature
abhors a vacuum.”
It took nearly a week to assemble
the Vulture, as Tom had named his latest craft, from
the fact that it could hover in the air motionless,
like that great bird. At last it was completed
and then, weights being taken aboard to steady it,
all was ready for the test. Tom would have liked
to have taken all his passengers in the glider, for
it would work better then, but the three Russians
were timid, though they promised to get aboard after
the trial.
The test came off early one morning,
Tom, Ned and Mr. Damon being the only ones aboard.
Bags of sand represented the others. The glider
was wheeled to the edge of the wind zone and they
took their places in the car. It was hard work
for the gale, that had never ceased blowing for an
instant since they found its zone, was very strong.
But the glider remained motionless in it, for the
wing planes, the rudders, and equalizing weights had
been adjusted to make the strain of the wind neutral.
“All ready?” asked Tom,
when his chum and his friend were in the enclosed
car of the glider.
“As ready as I ever shall be,” answered
Ned.
“Bless my suspenders! Let
her go, Tom, and have it over with!” cried the
odd man.
The young inventor pulled a lever,
and almost instantly the glider darted forward.
A moment later it soared aloft, and the three Russians
cheered. But their voices were lost in the roar
of the hurricane, as Tom sent his craft higher and
higher.
It worked perfectly, and he could
direct it almost anywhere. The wind acted as
the motive power, the bending and warping wings, and
the rudders and weights controlling its force.
“I’m going higher, and
see if I can remain stationary!” yelled Tom in
Ned’s ear. His chum only nodded. Mr.
Damon was seated on a bench, clinging to the sides
of it as if he feared he would fall off.
Higher and higher went the Vulture,
ever higher, until, all at once, Tom pulled on another
lever and she was still. There she hung in the
air, the wind rushing through her planes, but the
glider herself as still and quiet as though she rested
on the ground in a calm. She hardly moved a foot
in either direction, and yet the wind, as evidenced
by the anemometer was howling along at a hundred and
twenty miles an hour!
“Success!” cried Tom.
“Success! Now we can lie stationary in any
spot, and spy out the land through our telescope.
Now we will find the lost platinum mine!”
“Well, I’m not deaf,”
responded Ned with a smile, for Tom had fairly yelled
as he had at the start, and there was no need of this
now, for though the wind blew harder than ever it
was not opposed to any of the weights or planes, and
there was only a gentle humming sound as it rushed
through the open spaces of the queer craft.
Tom gave his glider other and more
severe tests, and she answered every one. Then
he came to earth.
“Now we’ll begin the search,”
he said, and preparations were made to that end.
The Russians, now that they had seen how well the craft
worked, were not afraid to trust themselves in her.
As I have explained, there was an
enclosed car, capable of holding six. In this
were stores, supplies and food sufficient for several
days. Tom’s plan was to leave the airship
anchored on the edge of the wind zone, as a sort of
base of supplies or headquarters. From there he
intended to go off from time to time in the wind-swept
area to look for the lost mine.
There were weary days that followed.
Hour after hour was spent in the air in the glider,
the whole party being aboard. Observation after
observation was taken, sometimes a certain strata of
wind enabling them to get close enough to the earth
to use their eyes, while again they had to use the
telescopes. They covered a wide section but as
day after day passed, and they were no nearer their
goal, even Tom optimistic as he usually was, began
to have a tired and discouraged look.
“Don’t you see anything
like the place where you found the mine?” he
asked of the exile brothers.
They could only shake their heads.
Indeed their task was not easy, for to recognize the
place again was difficult.
More than a week passed. They
had been back and forth to their base of supplies
at the airship, often staying away over night, once
remaining aloft all through the dark hours in the
glider, in a fierce gale which prevented a landing.
They ate and slept on board, and seldom descended
unless at or near the place where they had left the
Falcon. Once they completely crossed the zone
of wind, and came to a calm place on the other side.
It was as wild and desolate as the other edge.
Nearly two weeks had passed, and Tom
was almost ready to give up and go back home.
He had at least accomplished part of his desire, to
rescue the exile, and he had even done better than
originally intended, for there was Mr. Borious who
bad also been saved, and it was the intention of the
young inventor to take him to the United States.
“But the platinum treasure has
me beat, I guess,” said Tom grimly. “We
can’t seem to get a trace of it.”
Night was coming on, and he had half
determined to head back for the airship. Ivan
Petrofsky was peering anxiously down at the desolate
land, over which they were gliding. He and his
brother took turns at this.
They were not far above the earth,
but landmarks, such as had to be depended on to locate
the mine, could not readily be observed without the
glass. Mr. Damon, with a pair of ordinary field
glasses, was doing all he could to pick out likely
spots, though it was doubtful if he would know the
place if he saw it.
However, as chance willed it, he was
instrumental in bringing the quest to a close, and
most unexpectedly. Peter Petrofsky was relieving
his brother at the telescope, when the odd man, who
had not taken his eyes from the field glasses, suddenly
uttered an exclamation.
“Bless my tooth-brush!”
he cried. “That’s a most desolate
place down there. A lot of trees blown down around
a lake that looks as black as ink.”
“What’s that!” cried
Ivan Petrofsky. “A lake as black as ink?
Where?”
“We just passed it!” replied Mr. Damon.
“Then put back there, as soon
as you can, Tom!” called the Russian. “I
want to look at that place.”
With a long, graceful sweep the young
inventor sent the glider back over the course.
Ivan Petrofsky glued his eyes to the telescope.
He picked out the spot Mr. Damon had referred to,
and a moment later cried:
“That’s it! That’s
near the lost platinum mine! We’ve found
it again, Tom—everybody! Don’t
you remember, Peter,” he said turning to his
brother, “when we were lost in the snow we crawled
in among a tangle of trees to get out of the blast.
There was a sheet of white snow near them, and you
broke through into water. I pulled you out.
That must have been a lake, though it was lightly
frozen over then. I believe this is the lost
mine. Go down, Tom! Go down!”
“I certainly will!” cried
the youth, and pulling on the descending lever he
shunted the glider to earth.