Down below, the aeronauts could see
the crowd, led by the police, scurrying to and fro.
Many individuals beside the officers appeared to be
holding weapons, and, from the puffs of smoke that
spurted out, it was evident that more shots were being
fired. But the bullets could do no harm, and
the Red Cloud, under the force of the rapidly revolving
propellers, was soon beyond the center of the city.
“Well, if that isn’t the
limit!” cried Tom. “They must have
taken us for a German war balloon, about to drop explosives
on them.”
“Bless my liver!” ejaculated
Mr. Damon, “I believe you’re right.
Eh, Mr. Sharp?”
The veteran balloonist took a careful
look over the craft before replying. Then he
spoke:
“It couldn’t be that,”
and he shook his head, as if puzzled. “They
would know no foreign airship would try any trick like
that. Beside, if by some remote possibility they
did imagine it, there would be soldiers shooting at
us, instead of the police. As it was, the whole
population seemed anxious to bring us down.”
“And they nearly did,”
added Mr. Damon. “If they had shot a few
holes in the gas bag where would we be?”
“Right in the air,” answered
the balloonist. “It would take several
volleys of bullets to damage our aluminum container.
It is in sections and when one, or even five compartments,
for that matter, are pierced, there is enough gas
in the others to sustain us. So they could not
have damaged us much, even if they had shot a lot of
holes in us. Even without the gas container we
can keep afloat by constantly moving, for the planes
will serve their purpose. Of course they could
damage us, and maybe put some of our machinery out
of business, and that would be a serious thing.
But what puzzles me is why they fired at us at all.”
“It couldn’t be out of
pure mischief; could it?” asked the young inventor.
“Hardly. If we were in
a savage country I could understand the natives firing
at some such object as this airship, but the people
of that city must have known what our craft was.
They probably have read something about it in the
news papers, and to deliberately fire on us, with
the chance of disabling us, seems worse than barbarous.”
“Well, we won’t give ’em
another opportunity,” commented Mr. Damon.
“No, indeed, not this city,
but who knows but what the example may spread?
We may be fired at the next town we sail over.”
“Then steer clear of the towns,” advised
Tom.
“Impossible. We must pass
over some, but I’d like to solve this mystery.”
The day passed without further incident,
though they did not go low enough down over any city
to drop any messages. It was decided that it
would not be safe.
“We’ll take a chance at
night,” suggested Tom, and that evening, approaching
a good-sized town in the dusk, several of the weighted
envelopes were dropped overboard. Doubtless persons
walking along the street, who were startled by hearing
something fall with a “thud” at their
feet, were much startled to look up and see, dimly,
a great, ghostly shape moving in the air. But
there was no shooting, and, eventually, some of the
messages reached Mr. Swift, in Shopton. But he
could not answer them for the airship kept on the move.
The night was spent floating in the
air, with the engine stopped, and the Red Cloud floating
lazily this way and that as the gentle winds shifted,
for it was calm. The “anchorage” if
such it may be called, was above a sparsely settled
part of the country, and if the lights of the airship
were seen from below, the farmers doubtless took them
for some new stars or, possibly, a comet.
“Now then for a fast, straight
run!” cried Tom, after breakfast had been served,
and the big motor, with its twenty cylinders, started.
“We’ll be able to make the turn to-day,
and then make for home, won’t we, Mr. Sharp?”
“Well, we could do it, Tom,”
was the answer, “but I like this mode of traveling
so that I think I’ll lengthen the voyage.
Instead of turning at Atlanta, what do you say to
making for Key West, and then starting back?
That will be something of a trip. The Red Cloud
is behaving much better than I hoped she would.”
“I’m willing to go further if Mr. Damon
is.”
“Oh, bless my shoe strings,
I’m game!” exclaimed the eccentric man.
“I always did want to go to Key West, anyhow.”
The craft was speeding along at a
fast clip, and dinner that day was served about three
miles in the air. Then, desiring to test the
gliding abilities of the airship, it was sent down
on a long slant, with the propellers stationary, the
shifting planes and rudders alone guiding it.
As the craft fairly slid down out
of the sky, like a sled on a bank of fleecy snow,
Tom, who was peering ahead, with his hand on the steering
wheel, cried out “I say! It looks as if
we were going to run into a thunder storm!”
“How’s that?” inquired
Mr. Sharp, poking his head from the motor compartment.
“He says there’s a big
storm ahead,” repeated Mr. Damon, “and
I guess he’s right. I see a big bank of
dark clouds, and there is a roaring in the air.”
Mr. Sharp, who had been making some
adjustments to the motor went forward to take a look.
The Red Cloud was swiftly gliding downward on a slant,
straight toward a dark mass of vapor, that seemed to
be rolling first one way, and then another, while
as Mr. Damon had said, there was a low rumbling proceeding
from it.
“That doesn’t seem to
be a thunder storm,” spoke the balloonist, with
a puzzled air.
They all regarded the dark mass of
vapor intently for a few seconds. Tom had brought
the airship to a more level keel, and it was now spinning
along under its own momentum, like a flat piece of
tin, scaled by some lead. But it was headed for
the clouds, if such they were, though losing speed
by degrees.
“I’ll have to start the
motor!” exclaimed Mr. Sharp. “We don’t
want to run into a storm, if we can help it, though
I don’t ever remember seeing a thunder disturbance
like that.”
“Whew! It’s getting
warm,” suddenly announced the youth, and he let
go of the steering wheel for a moment, while he took
off his coat.
“That’s what it is,”
agreed Mr. Damon, who also divested himself of his
garments. “Bless my spark plug, but it’s
like a July day. No wonder there’s a thunderstorm
ahead.”
Then Mr. Sharp uttered a cry.
“That’s no storm!” he fairly shouted.
“It’s a big forest fire! That’s
smoke we see! We must get out of this. Turn
around Tom, while I start the engine. We must
rise above it!”
He fairly leaped for the motor, and
Tom and Mr. Damon could hear him turning the levers
and wheels, ready to start. But before the explosions
came something happened. There was a sound as
of some great, siren whistle blowing, and then, with
a howl of the on rushing air, the Red Cloud, the propellers
of which hung motionless on their shafts, was fairly
sucked forward toward the fire, as the current sucks
a boat over a water fall.
“Start the motor! Start
the motor, Mr. Sharp!” cried Tom.
“I’m trying to, but something seems to
be the matter.”
“We’re being drawn right
over the fire!” yelled Mr. Damon. “It’s
getting hotter every minute! Can’t you do
something?”
“You take the wheel,”
called the balloonist to Mr. Damon. “Steer
around, just as if it was an auto when we start the
engine. Tom, come here and give me a hand.
The motor has jammed!”
The young inventor sprang to obey.
Mr. Damon, his face showing some of the fear he felt,
grasped the steering wheel. The airship was now
about a quarter of a mile high, but instead of resting
motionless in the air, sustained by the gas in the
container, she was being pulled forward, right toward
the heart of the mass of black vapor, which it could
now be seen was streaked with bright tongues of flame.
“What’s making us go ahead,
if the motor isn’t going?” asked Tom, as
he bent over the machine, at which the aeronaut was
laboring.
“Suction-draught from the fire!”
explained Mr. Sharp. “Heated air rises
and leaves a vacuum. The cold air rushes in.
It’s carrying us with it. We’ll be
right in the fire in a few minutes, if we can’t
get started with this motor! I don’t see
what ails it.”
“Can’t we steer to one side, as it is?”
“No. We’re right
in a powerful current of air, and steering won’t
do any good, until we have some motion of our own.
Turn the gasolene lever on a little more, and see
if you can get a spark.”
Tom did so, but no explosion resulted.
The twenty cylinders of the big engine remained mute.
The airship, meanwhile, was gathering speed, sucked
onward and downward as it was by the draught from the
fire. The roaring was plainer now, and the crackling
of the flames could be heard plainly. The heat,
too, grew more, intense.
Frantically Tom and Mr. Sharp labored
over the motor. With the perverseness usual to
gas engines, it had refused to work at a critical
moment.
“What shall I do?” cried
Mr. Damon from his position in the pilot house.
“We seem to be heading right for the midst of
it?”
“Slant the elevation rudder,”
called Tom. “Send the ship up. It will
be cooler the higher we go. Maybe we can float
over it!”
“You’d better go out there,”
advised Mr. Sharp. “I’ll keep at this
motor. Go up as high as you can. Turn on
more gas. That will elevate us, but maybe not
quick enough. The gas doesn’t generate well
in great heat. I’m afraid we’re in
for it,” he added grimly.
Tom sprang to relieve Mr. Damon.
The heat was now intense. Nearer and nearer came
the Red Cloud to the blazing forest, which seemed to
cover several square miles. Great masses of smoke,
with huge pieces of charred and blazing wood carried
up by the great draught, circled around the ship.
The Red Cloud was being pulled into the midst of the
fire by the strong suction. Tom yanked over the
elevation rudder, and the nose of the craft pointed
upward. But it still moved downward, and, a moment
later the travelers of the air felt as if they were
over a fiery furnace.