Out of the cabin of the now stationary
airship hurried the three travelers; out into the
pelting rain, which was lashed into their faces by
the strong wind. Tom was the first to emerge.
“We’re on something solid!”
he cried, stamping his feet. “A rock, I
guess.”
“Gracious, I hope we’re
not on a rock in the midst of a river!” exclaimed
Mr. Damon. “Bless my soul, though!
The water does seem to be running around my ankles.”
“There’s enough rain to
make water run almost up to our necks,” called
Mr. Sharp, above the noise of the storm. “Tom,
can you make out where we are?”
“Not exactly. Is the ship all right?”
“I can’t see very well,
but there appears to be a hole in the gas container.
A big one, too, or we wouldn’t have fallen so
quickly.”
The plight of the travelers of the
air was anything but enviable. They were wet
through, for it needed only a few minutes exposure
to the pelting storm to bring this about. They
could not tell, in the midst of the darkness, where
they were, and they almost feared to move for fear
they might be on top of some rock or precipice, over
which they might tumble if they took a false step.
“Let’s get back inside
the ship,” proposed Mr. Damon. “It’s
warm and dry there, at all events. Bless my umbrella,
I don’t know when I’ve been so wet!”
“I’m not going in until
I find out where we are,” declared Tom.
“Wait a minute, and I’ll go in and get
an electric flash lantern. That will show us,”
for the lightning had ceased with the great crash that
seemed to have wrecked the Red Cloud. The rain
still kept up, however, and there was a distant muttering
of thunder, while it was so black that had not the
lights in the cabin of the airship been faintly glowing
they could hardly have found the craft had they moved
ten feet away from it.
Tom soon returned with the portable
electric lamp, operated by dry batteries. He
flashed it on the surface of where they were standing,
and uttered an exclamation.
“We’re on a roof!” he cried.
“A roof?” repeated Mr. Damon.
“Yes; the roof of some large
building, and what you thought was a river is the
rain water running off it. See!”
The young inventor held the light
down so his companions could observe the surface of
that upon which the airship rested. There was
no doubt of it. They were on top of a large building.
“If we’re on a roof we
must be in the midst of a city,” objected Mr.
Damon. “But I can’t see any lights
around, and we would see them if we were in a city,
you know.”
“Maybe the storm put the lights
out of business,” suggested Mr. Sharp.
“That often occurs.”
“I know one way we can find
out for certain,” went on Tom.
“How?”
“Start up our search lamp, and
play it all around. We can’t make sure
how large this roof is in the dark, and it’s
risky trying to trace the edges by walking around.”
“Yes, and it would be risky
to start our searchlight going,” objected Mr.
Sharp. “People would see it, and there’d
be a crowd up here in less than no time, storm or
no storm. No, we’ve got to keep dark until
I can see what’s the matter. We must leave
here before daylight.”
“Suppose we can’t?”
asked Mr. Damon. “The crowds will be sure
to see us then, anyhow.”
“I am pretty sure we can get
away,” was the opinion of the balloonist.
“Even if our gas container is so damaged that
it will not sustain us, we are still an aeroplane,
and this roof being flat will make a good place to
start from. No, we can leave as soon as this storm
lets up a little.”
“Then I’m going to have
a look and find out what sort of a building this is,”
declared Tom, and, while Mr. Sharp began a survey,
as well as he could in the dark, of the airship, the
young inventor proceeded cautiously to ascertain the
extent of the roof.
The rain was not coming down quite
so hard now, and Tom found it easier to see.
Mr. Damon, finding he could do nothing to help, went
back into the cabin, blessing himself and his various
possessions at the queer predicament in which they
found themselves.
Flashing his light every few seconds,
Tom walked on until he came to one edge of the roof.
It was very large, as he could judge by the time it
took him to traverse it. There was a low parapet
at the edge. He peered over, and an expanse of
dark wall met his eyes.
“Must have come to one side,”
he reasoned. “I want to get to the front.
Then, maybe, I can see a sign that will tell me what
I want to know.”
The lad turned to the left, and, presently
came to another parapet. It was higher, and ornamented
with terra-cotta bricks. This, evidently, was
the front. As Tom peered over the edge of the
little raised ledge, there flashed out below him hundreds
of electric lights. The city illuminating plant
was being repaired. Then Tom saw flashing below
him one of those large signs made of incandescent
lights. It was in front of the building, and
as soon as our hero saw the words he knew where the
airship had landed. For what he read, as he leaned
over, was this:
MIDDLEVILLE ARCADE
Tom gave a cry.
“What’s the matter?” called Mr.
Sharp.
“I’ve discovered something,”
answered Tom, hurrying up to his friend. “We’re
on top of the Middleville Arcade building.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means that we’re not
so very far from home, and in the midst of a fairly
large city. But it means more than that.”
“What?” demanded the balloonist,
struck by an air of excitement about the lad, for,
as Tom stood in the subdued glow of the lights from
one of the airship’s cabin windows, all the
others having been darkened as the storm slackened,
his, eyes shone brightly.
“This is the building where
Anson Morse, one of the gang that robbed dad, once
had an office,” went on Tom eagerly. “That
was brought out at the trial. And it’s
the place where they used to do some of their conspiring.
Maybe some of the crowd are here now laying low.”
“Well, if they are, we don’t
want anything to do with that gang,” said Mr.
Sharp. “We can’t arrest them.
Besides I’ve found out that our ship is all
right, after all. We can proceed as soon as we
like. There is only a small leak in the gas container.
It was the generator machine that was put out of business
by the lightning, and I’ve repaired it.”
“I want to see if I can get
any trace of the rascals. Maybe I could learn
something from the janitor of the Arcade about them.
The janitor is probably here.”
“But why do you want to get
any information about that gang?”
“Because,” answered Tom,
and, as Mr. Damon at that moment started to come from
the cabin of the airship, the lad leaped forward and
whispered the remainder of the sentence into the ear
of the balloonist.
“You don’t mean it!”
exclaimed Mr. Sharp, in a tense whisper. Tom
nodded vigorously.
“But how can you enter the building?”
asked the other. “You can’t drop
over the edge.”
“Down the scuttle,” answered
Tom. “There must be one on the roof, for
they have to come up here at times. We can force
the lock, if necessary. I want to enter the building
and see where Morse had his office.”
“All right. Go ahead.
I’ll engage Mr. Damon here so he won’t
follow you. It will be great news for him.
Go ahead.”
Under pretense of wanting the help
of the eccentric man in completing the repairs he
had started, Mr. Sharp took Mr. Damon back into the
cabin. Tom, getting a big screwdriver from an
outside toolbox, approached the scuttle on the roof.
He could see it looming up in the semidarkness, a
sort of box, covering a stairway that led down into
the building. The door was locked, but Tom forced
it, and felt justified. A few minutes later,
cautiously flashing his light, almost like a burglar
he thought, he was prowling around the corridors of
the office structure.
Was it deserted? That was what
he wanted to know. He knew the office Morse had
formerly occupied was two floors from the top.
Tom descended the staircase, trying to think up some
excuse to offer, in case he met the watchman or janitor.
But he encountered no one. As he reached the
floor where he knew Morse and his gang were wont to
assemble, he paused and listened. At first he
heard nothing, then, as the sound of the storm became
less he fancied he heard the murmur of voices.
“Suppose it should be some of them?” whispered
Tom.
He went forward, pausing at almost
every other step to listen. The voices became
louder. Tom was now nearly at the office, where
Morse had once had his quarters. Now he could
see it, and his heart gave a great thump as he noticed
that the place was lighted. The lad could read
the name on the door. “Industrial Development
Company.” That was the name of a fake concern
headed by Morse. As our hero looked he saw the
shadows of two men thrown on the ground glass.
“Some one’s in there!”
he whispered to himself. He could now hear the
voices much plainer. They came from the room,
but the lad could not distinguish them as belonging
to any of the gang with whom he had come in contact,
and who had escaped from jail.
The low murmur went on for several seconds.
The listener could make out no words.
Suddenly the low, even mumble was broken. Some
one cried out “There’s got to be a divvy
soon. There’s no use letting Morse hold
that whole seventy-five thousand any longer.
I’m going to get what’s coming to me, or-”
“Hush!” some one else cried. “Be
quiet!”
“No, I won’t! I want
my share. I’ve waited long enough.
If I don’t get what’s coming to me inside
of a week, I’ll go to Shagmon myself and make
Morse whack up. I helped on the job, and I want
my money!”
“Will you be quiet?” pleaded
another, and, at that instant Tom heard some one’s
hand on the knob. The door opened a crack, letting
out a pencil of light. The men were evidently
coming out. The young inventor did not wait to
hear more. He had a clue now, and, running on
tiptoes, he made his way to the staircase and out
of the scuttle on the roof.