“Well, dad, I wish you were
going along with us,” said Tom to his father
next morning. “You don’t know what
you’re going to miss. A fine trip of several
hundred miles through the air, seeing strange sights,
and experiencing new sensations.”
“Yes, I wish you would reconsider
your determination, and accompany us,” added
Mr. Damon. “I would enjoy your company.”
“There’s plenty of room.
We can carry six persons with ease,” said Mr.
Sharp.
Mr. Swift shook his head, and smiled.
“I have too much work to do
here at home,” he replied. “Perhaps
I may astonish you with something when you come back.
I have nearly perfected my latest invention.”
There was no combating such a resolution
as this, and Tom and the others considered the decision
of the aged inventor as final. The airship was
ready for the start, and every one had arisen earlier
than usual on this account. The bag of tools,
for which Tom had gone to town, were put in their
proper place, the last of the supplies were taken
abroad, final tests were made of the various apparatus,
the motor had been given a trial spin, disconnected
from the propellers, and then the balloonist announced
“Well, Tom and Mr. Damon, you
had better begin to think of starting. We’ve
had breakfast here, but there’s no telling where
we will eat dinner.”
“Bless my soul! Don’t
you talk that way!” exclaimed Mr. Damon.
“You make me exceedingly nervous. Why shouldn’t
we know where we are going to eat dinner?”
“Oh, I meant we couldn’t
tell over just what part of the United States we would
be when dinner time came,” explained the aeronaut.
“Oh, that’s different.
Bless my pocket knife, but I thought you meant we
might be dashed to pieces, and incapable of eating
any dinner.”
“Hardly,” remarked Mr.
Sharp. “The Red Cloud is not that kind of
an airship, I hope. But get aboard, if you please.”
Tom and Mr. Damon entered the car.
It was resting on the ground, on the small wheels
used to start the airship when the gas inflation method
was not used. In this case, however, it had been
decided to rise in the air by means of the powerful
vapor, and not to use the wings and planes until another
time. Consequently the ship was swaying slightly,
and tugging at the restraining cables.
As Tom and Mr. Damon entered the cabin
there drove into the Swift yard a dilapidated wagon,
drawn by a bony mule, and it did not need the addition
of a colored man’s voice, calling: “Whoa,
dar, Boomerang!” to tell Tom that his friend
Eradicate Sampson was on hand. As for Eradicate,
as soon as he saw the great airship, which he had never
before beheld fully rigged, all ready for a flight,
his eyes became big with wonder.
“Is dat yo’ flyin’ machine, Mistah
Swift?” he asked.
“That’s it, Rad,”
answered Tom. “Don’t you want to come
and take a ride with us?”
“Me? Good land a’
massy! No indeedy, Mistah Swift,” and the
whitewasher, who had descended from his wagon, edged
away, as if the airship might suddenly put out a pair
of hands and grab him. “No indeedy I doant!
I come t’ do a little whitewashin’ an’
when I do dat I’se gwine on mah way. But
dat’s a pow’ful fine ship; it suah am!”
“Better come and try a flight,
Rad,” added Mr. Damon. “I’ll
look after you.”
“No, sag, an’ I doan’t
take it kind ob yo’ all t’ tempt me dat
way, nuther,” spoke Eradicate. But, when
he saw that the craft was stationary, he ventured
to approach closer. Gingerly he put out one hand
and touched the framework of the wheels, just forward
of the cabin. The negro grasped the timber, and
lifted it slightly. To his astonishment the whole
front of the airship tilted up, for it was about ready
to fly, and a child might have lifted it, so buoyant
was it. But Eradicate did not know this.
Wonderingly he looked at the great bulk of the ship,
looming above him, then he glanced at his arm.
Once more, noting that the attention of his friends
was elsewhere, he lifted the craft. Then he cried
“Look yeah, Mistah Swift! Look yeah!
No wonder day calls me Sampson. I done lifted
dis monstrousness airship wif one hand, See, I kin
do it! I kin do it!”
Once more he raised the Red Cloud
slightly, and a delighted grin, not unmixed with a
look of awe, spread over his honest countenance.
“I suppose you’ll give
up whitewashing and join a circus as a strong man,
now,” observed Mr. Sharp, with a wink at his
companions.
“Days what I will!” announced
Eradicate proudly. “I neber knowed I was
dat strong, but ob course I allers knowed I had some
muscle. Golly, I must hab growed strong ober
night! Now, Boomerang, yo’ suah has got
t’ look out fo’ yo’ sef. No
mo’ ob yo’ cuttin’ up capers, or
I’ll jest lift you up, an’ sot yo’
down on yo’ back, I suah will,” and the
negro feeling of his biceps walked over to where the
mule stood, with its eyes closed.
“I guess you can cast off, Tom,”
called Mr. Sharp, as he entered .the car, having seen
that everything was all right. “We’ll
not go up very far at first, until Mr. Damon gets
used to the thin air.”
“Bless my soul, I believe I’m
getting nervous,” announced the eccentric man.
“Bless my liver, but I hope nothing happens.”
“Nothing will happen,”
Mr. Sharp assured him. “Just keep calm,
when it feels as if the bottom was dropping out of
everything and you’ll soon get over it.
Are you casting off those ropes, Tom? Is all clear?”
“All but the bow and stern lines.”
“You attend to the bow line,
and I’ll go to the stern,” and, going
over to the gas generator, Mr. Sharp started it so
as to force more vapor into the red aluminum container.
This had the effect of rendering the airship more
bouyant, and it tugged and strained harder than ever
at the ropes.
“Good-by, Tom,” called
Mr. Swift, reaching up to shake hands with his son.
“Drop me a line when you get a chance.”
“Oh, Tom, do be careful,”
implored Mrs. Baggert, her kind face showing her anxiety.
“May I kiss you good-by?”
“Of course,” answered
the young inventor, though the motherly housekeeper
had not done this since he was a little chap.
She had to stand on a soap box, which Eradicate brought
in order to reach Tom’s face, and, when she
had kissed him she said:
“Oh, I’m so worried!
I just know you’ll be killed, risking your lives
in that terrible airship!”
“Ha! Not a very cheerful
view to take, madam,” observed Mr. Damon.
“Don’t hold that view, I beg of you.
Bless my eyelashes, but you’ll see us coming
home, covered with glory and star dust.”
“I’m sure I hope so,”
answered Mrs. Baggert, laughing a little in spite
of herself.
The last ropes were cast off.
Good-bys were shouted as the airship shot into the
air, and Mr. Sharp started the motor, to warm it up
before the propellers were thrown into gear. The
twenty cylinders began exploding with a terrific racket,
as the muffler was open, and Tom, looking down, saw
Boomerang awaken with a jump. The mule was so
frightened that he started off on a dead run, swinging
the rickety, old wagon along behind him.
Eradicate Sampson, who had been feeling
his muscle since he discovered what he thought was
his marvelous strength, saw what was happening.
“Whoa, dar, Boomerang!”
he shouted. Then, as the tailboard of the wagon
swung past him, he reached out and grabbed it.
Perhaps he thought he could bring the runaway mule
up standing, but, if he did, he was grievously disappointed.
Boomerang pulled his master along the gravel walk,
and kept running in spite of Eradicate’s command
to “whoa, dar!”
It might have gone hard with him,
had not Garret Jackson, the engineer, running in front
of Boomerang, caught the animal. Eradicate picked
himself up, and gazed sadly at his arms. The navigators
of the air could not hear what he said, but what he
thought was evident to them.
Then, as Mr. Sharp deadened the explosions
of the powerful motor. Tom, looking at a gauge,
noted that their height was seven hundred feet.
“High enough!” called Mr. Sharp, and it
was time, for Mr. Damon, in spite of his resolution,
was getting pale.
The gas was shut off, the propellers
thrown into gear, and, with a rush the Red Cloud shot
toward the south, passing over the Swift homestead,
and high above the heads of the crowd that had gathered
to witness the start. The eventful voyage of
the air had begun.