Wakefield Damon glanced at Mr. Swift.
The inventor was oblivious to his surroundings, and
was busy figuring away on some paper. He seemed
even to have forgotten the presence of the eccentric
autoist.
“I don’t want father to
hear about the men,” went on Tom, in a low tone.
“If he hears that Happy Harry and his confederates
are in this vicinity, he’ll worry, and that
doesn’t agree with him. But are you sure
the men you saw are the same ones who stole the turbine
model?”
“Very certain,” replied
Mr. Damon. “I had a good view of them as
I came from the bank, and I was surprised to see them,
until I remembered that they were out of jail.”
“But why do you think they pursued you?”
“Bless my eyes! I can’t
say. Perhaps they weren’t after me at all.
I may have imagined it, but they certainly hurried
off in their auto as soon as I left the bank, after
leaving my money there. I’m glad I deposited
it before I saw them. I was so nervous, as it
was, that I couldn’t steer straight. It’s
too bad, the way I’ve damaged your house.”
“That doesn’t matter.
But how about the trip in the airship? I hope
you meant it when you said you would go.”
“Of course I did. I’ve
never traveled in the air, but it can’t be much
worse than my experience with my motor-cycle and the
auto. At least I can’t run up any stoop,
can I?” and Mr. Damon looked at Mr. Sharp.
“No,” replied the aeronaut,
as he scratched his head, “I guess you’ll
be safe on that score. But I hope you won’t
get nervous when we reach a great height.”
“Oh, no. I’ll just
calm myself with the reflection that I can’t
die but once,” and with this philosophical reflection
Mr. Damon went back to look at the auto, which certainly
looked odd, stuck up on the veranda.
“Well, you’d better make
arrangements to go with us then,” went on Tom.
“Meanwhile I’ll see to getting your car
down. You’ll want to send it home, I suppose?”
“No, not if you’ll keep
it for me. The fact is that all my folks are
away, and will be for some time. I don’t
have to go home to notify them, and it’s a good
thing, as my wife is very nervous, and might object,
if she heard about the airship. I’ll just
stay here, if you’ve no objection, until the
Red Cloud sails, if sails is the proper term.”
” ‘Sails’ will do very
well,” answered Mr. Sharp. “But, Tom,
let’s see if you and I can’t get that
car down. Perhaps Mr. Damon would like to go
in the house and talk to your father,” for Mr.
Swift had left the piazza.
The eccentric individual was glad
enough not to be on hand when his car was eased down
from the veranda and disappeared into the house.
Tom and Mr. Sharp, with the aid of Garret Jackson,
then released the auto from its position. They
had to take down the rest of the broken railing, and
their task was easy enough. The machine was stored
in a disused shed, and Mr. Damon had no further concern
until it was time to undertake the trip through the
air.
“It will fool those men if I
mysteriously disappear,” he said, with a smile.
“Bless my hat band, but they’ll wonder
what became of me. We’ll just slip off
in the Red Cloud, and they’ll never be the wiser.”
“I don’t know about that,”
commented Tom. “I fancy they are keeping
pretty close watch in this vicinity, and I don’t
like it. I’m afraid they are up to some
mischief. I should think the bank authorities
would have them locked upon suspicion. I think
I’ll telephone Ned about it.”
He did so, and his chum, in turn,
notified the bank watchman. But the next day
it was reported that no sign of the men had been seen,
and, later it was learned that an auto, answering
the description of the one they were in, had been
seen going south, many miles from Shopton.
The work of preparing the Red Cloud
for the long trip was all but completed. It had
been placed back in the shed while a few more adjustments
were made to the machinery.
“Bless my eyelashes!”
exclaimed Mr. Damon, a few days before the one set
for the start, “but I haven’t asked where
we are bound for. Where are we going, anyhow,
Mr. Sharp?”
“We’re going to try and
reach Atlanta, Georgia,” replied the balloonist.
“That will make a fairly long trip, and the winds
at this season are favorable in that direction.”
“That suits me all right,”
declared Mr. Damon. “I’m all ready
and anxious to start.”
It was decided to give the airship
a few more trials around Shopton before setting out,
to see how it behaved with the car heavier loaded
than usual. With this in view a trip was made
to Rocksmond, with Mr. Swift, Mr. Damon and Ned, in
addition to Mr. Sharp and Tom, on board. Then,
at Tom’s somewhat blushing request, a stop was
made near the Seminary, and, when the pupils came
trooping out, the young inventor asked Miss Nestor
if she didn’t want to take a little flight.
She consented, and with two pretty companions climbed
rather hesitatingly into the car. No great height
was attained, but the girls were fully satisfied and,
after their first alarm really enjoyed the spin in
the air, with Tom proudly presiding at the steering
wheel, which Mr. Sharp relinquished to the lad, for
he understood Tom’s feelings.
Three days later all was in readiness
for the trip to Atlanta. Mr. Swift was earnestly
invited to undertake it, both Tom and Mr. Sharp urging
him, but the veteran inventor said he must stay at
home, and work on his submarine plans.
The evening before the start, when
the aeronaut and Tom were giving a final inspection
to the craft in the big shed, Mr. Sharp exclaimed “I
declare Tom, I believe you’ll have to take a
run into town.”
“What for?”
“Why to get that kit of special
tools I ordered, which we might need to make repairs.
There are some long-handled wrenches, some spare levers,
and a couple of braces and bits. Harrison, the
hardware dealer, ordered them for me from New York,
and they were to be ready this afternoon, but I forgot
them. Take an empty valise with you, and you
can carry them on your motorcycle. I’m sorry
to have forgotten it, but-”
“That’s all right, Mr.
Sharp, I’d just as soon go as not. It will
make the time pass more quickly. I’ll start
right off.”
An hour later, having received the
tools, which made quite a bundle, the lad put them
in the valise, and started back toward home. As
he swung around the corner on which the bank was located-the
same bank in which Ned Newton worked-one of the valves
on the motor-cycle began to leak. Tom dismounted
to adjust it, and had completed the work, being about
to ride on, when down the street came Andy Foger and
Sam Snedecker. They started at the sight of our
hero.
“There he is now!” exclaimed
Sam, as if he and the red-haired bully had been speaking
of the young inventor.
“Let’s lick him!”
proposed Andy. “Now’s our chance to
get even for throwing that paint and soot on us.”
Tom heard their words. He was
not afraid of both the lads, for, though each one
matched him in size and strength, Tom knew they were
cowards.
“If you’re looking for
anything I guess I can accommodate you,” he
said, coolly.
“Come on, Andy,” urged
Sam. But, somehow Andy hung back. Perhaps
he didn’t like the way Tom squared off.
The young inventor had let down the rear brace of
his motor-cycle, and was not obliged to hold it, so
he had both hands free.
“We ought to lick him good and
proper,” growled the squint-eyed lad.
“Well, why don’t you?” invited Tom.
He moved to one side, so as not to
be hampered by his wheel. As he did so he knocked
from the handle bars the valise of tools. They
fell with a clatter and a thud to the pavement, and
the satchel came open. It was under a gas lamp,
and the glitter of the long-handled wrenches and other
implements caught the eyes of Andy and his crony.
“Huh! If we fought you,
maybe you’d use some of them on us,” sneered
Andy, glad of an excuse not to fight.
Tom quickly picked up his valise,
shutting it, but he was aware of the close scrutiny
of the two vindictive lads.
“I don’t fight with such
things,” he said, somewhat annoyed, and he hung
the tools back on the handle bars.
“What you doing around the bank
at this hour?” asked Sam, as if to change the
subject. “First thing you know the watchman
will order you to move on. He might think you
were a suspicious character.”
“The same to you,” retorted
Tom, “but I’m going to ride on now, unless
you want to have a further argument with me.”
“You’d better be careful
how you hang around a bank,” added Andy.
“The police are on the lookout here. There’s
been some mysterious men seen about.”
Tom did not care to go into that,
and, seeing that the two bullies had lost all desire
to attack him, he put up the brace and mounted his
wheel.
“Good-by,” he called to
Andy and Sam, as he rode off, the tools rattling and
jingling in the valise, but it was a sarcastic farewell,
and the two cronies did not reply.
“I hope I didn’t damage
any of the tools when I let them fall that time,”
mused the young inventor. “My, the way Sam
and Andy stared at them it would make it seem as if
I had a lot of weapons in the bag! They certainly
took good note of them.”
The time was to come, and very shortly,
when Andy’s and Sam’s observation of the
tools was to prove disastrous for our hero. As
Tom turned the corner he looked back, and saw, still
standing in front of the bank, the two cronies.