Where was Koku?
Tom reached up swiftly and pushed
over the lever that locked the two window sashes.
In doing this he set his own patent burglar alarm.
If that lever was turned back again, or broken, the
buzzers would be set ringing all over the house, and
in Koku’s room over the garage.
He did not believe that the marauder
on the roof of the porch could have seen the flash
of his shirt-sleeved arm. But he took no chance
of being observed from outside by rising to his feet.
On his hands and knees he crept away
from the window, and out of the bathroom. Once
there, he stood up, grabbed the portfolio, and without
coat or vest and as he was, dashed out of the bedroom.
He had been positive that nobody but himself was astir
in the big house, and he was right.
He did not punch the light button
when he entered the library. He knew where to
put his hand upon an electric torch in the table drawer,
and he gained possession of this.
Then he went to the safe and twirled
the knob and watched the indicator find the four numbers
which were the “open sesame” to the burglar
and fire-proof door.
He flung the portfolio into the inner
compartment, closed both doors, and twirled the combination-knob.
Then Tom tiptoed to the foot of the front stairs to
listen. He could hear no sound from above.
He did not want his father to be startled,
if the enemy did break in; and he knew that old Rad,
awakened out of a sound sleep, would be worse than
useless at such a time.
After all, the giant, Koku, was his
main dependence under these circumstances. Tom
crept to the outer door, opened it carefully, and
slipped out, letting the spring lock click behind him.
For the first time he realized that he was in his
shirt and trousers and wore only felt slippers on
his feet.
But he was locked out now. He
had no key. He must run the risk of the fine
rain and the chill of the night air.
He stepped. off the end of the porch
and ran around the house. It was to the roof
of the rear porch that the marauder had climbed.
But peer as he might from down in the yard, Tom could
see no moving figure up there near the bathroom window.
It was pitch dark against the wall of the house.
He turned to glance up at the window
of the sleeping room over the garage where Koku was
supposed to spend the night. But Tom knew the
giant was seldom there during the dark hours.
He was as much of a night-prowler as a wildcat or
an owl.
There was no light there in any case.
But Koku did not use a light much. He could see
in the dark, like a wild animal. Tom did not
want to call him. If he must have Koku’s
help, he would have to climb the stairs to his bedside.
The giant always aroused as wide awake as at noonday.
But while the young inventor hesitated
a sudden, but muffled, snap—the breaking
of metal—sounded. Tom knew instantly
the direction from which the sound came.
Although he could see nothing up there
at the bathroom window because of the rain and the
deep shadow, he knew that the snapping sound meant
the severing of the window lock that he had so recently
closed. Some instrument had been forced under
the bottom of the lower sash and pressure enough been
brought to bear to break the thin steel lever.
On the heels of this sound came another.
A muffled buzzing somewhere in the house—again!
again! And then, startlingly clear from the room
over the garage, the burglar alarm went off in Koku’s
chamber.
“It’s all off now!”
gasped Tom, and he ran to the foot of the honeysuckle
ladder up which he knew the enemy had climbed to get
to the roof of the porch. “If he comes down
I’ll have him!” muttered Tom, staring
up into the mist and gloom.
“Fo’ de lawsy’s
sake! ‘Tain’t mawnin’, is it?”
Rad’s sleepy voice was heard to announce.
“No, it’s da’k as—”
And the voice trailed off into silence.
“Tom! Tom!” the young
fellow heard his aroused father shouting.
Tom knew that his father was in no
danger. In fact Mr. Swift’s voice did not
even betray apprehension. It was. to the garage
Tom looked for an explosion. But none came.
If Koku was up there the prolonged
buzzing of the alarm did not awake him. Therefore
he could not be there. Tom realized that if the
burglar was to be taken the whole affair fell upon
his shoulders.
“And I’ve got my hands
full, if it is the fellow with the big feet that we
saw on the Waterfield Road the other day,” muttered
the young inventor.
Nothing stirred on the porch roof.
Moment after moment slipped by. Tom began to
grow more than amazed. He was worried. What
would happen next?
His father had not cried out again.
Stepping around to the end of the roofed porch, Tom
saw a light in Mr. Swift’s room. Rad had
evidently gone to sleep again. It would take more
than an intermittent buzzer to rouse fully that colored
man.
“When old Morpheus has a strangle
hold on Rad, Gabriel’s trump would scarcely
awaken him,” Tom muttered.
What had become of the enemy?
If it was an ordinary burglar he would have feared
the electric alarm instantly. The buzzers were
still working. But there was no sign of the man
who had set them off at the bathroom window.
Suddenly Tom heard a door slam.
It was from the front of the house. Had his father
come downstairs to look around and see what the matter
was?
The young fellow started around the
house on a run. He heard heavy bootsoles spurning
the gravel of the path to the front gate. He
arrived at the far corner of the house in time to see
a man dash through the gateway and run down the street,
disappearing finally into the fast-driving rain.
“Fooled me! He went in
and right through and down the stairs! Out the
front door!” gasped Tom. “Did he get
anything? I wonder!”
He sprang up to the front porch and
tried the door. It was locked again, of course.
Should he ring the bell and get Rad or his father
down to the door?
And then, of a sudden, the principal
mystery of all this affair bit into Tom Swift’s
mind. The burglar had made his escape. He
could relieve his father’s anxiety later.
It was his own puzzlement of mind that he first wished
to ease.
Where was Koku?
Even had the giant been circling the
stockade around the shops he surely must have come
up to the home premises by this time. His keen
ears could not fail to hear the buzzers. They
were still going and would go until the switch was
turned.
If the giant was in his room—Tom
turned suddenly and started on a run for the rear
premises. He still carried the hand-lamp and
it lit his way into the garage door and up the narrow
stairway. He shot the round beam of the lamp into
Koku’s room.
He had been obliged to have an iron
bedstead made to order for the giant. It stood
against one wall of the room. The buzzer was
snarling like a huge bumblebee above the head of the
couch. Below it sprawled the giant, eyes tightly
closed and mouth slightly ajar. From the lips
of Koku were emitted sounds worthy of Rad Sampson
in his deepest slumbers!
“Asleep?” gasped Tom,
stepping cat-like into the room.
And then he was suddenly aware of
a sickish, heavy odor in the chamber. The window
had been closed. But it was something more than
stale air that Tom smelled.
A folded cloth lay on the floor beside
the couch. The young fellow saw at once that
it had been originally placed over the giant’s
face, but had slid off. And lucky for Koku that
it had been dislodged!
“Chloroform!” muttered
Tom. “He’s drugged. It is no
wonder he did not hear the burglar alarm.”
In any event, the incident made one
deep impression on Tom’s mind. The spies
who he believed were working for the Hendrickton &
Western Railroad and its owner, Montagne Lewis, were
desperate men. Tom could not believe that the
fellow with the big feet was alone in Shopton and
was unaided in his attempts to find out what Tom was
doing.
This attempt to burglarize the house
betrayed the caliber of the enemy. In chloroforming
Koku he had taken the risk of murdering the giant.
Only the fact that the pad of saturated cloth had
fallen off Koku’s face had, perhaps, saved the
man from suffocation.
Tom did not tell the giant when he
aroused what the matter with him was. Koku was
ill enough! He was wrenched by interior spasms
that seemed almost to tear his huge body to pieces.
“What done got into dat big
lump o’ bone an’ grizzle?” demanded
Eradicate. “He looks like, he swallowed
a volcano, and it just got to wo’kin’
right. My lawsy!”
“He is a sick man, all right,”
admitted Tom. “Looks like he wouldn’t
try to stab me to deaf wid no spear no mo’,”
went on Rad, inclined to approve of Koku’s sufferings.
“If he died you’d be mighty
sorry, old man,” declared Tom, sternly.
“Sho’ would. Be a
mighty hard job to bury him,” was the callous
response.
Just the same, the crotchety old colored
man began to hop around in lively fashion with hot
water, and later with coffee and other stimulants;
and he nursed Koku all day as though he were a big
baby.
Koku, who had never been ill before
in his life, was inclined to lay the trouble to an
evil genius of some kind. Perhaps, in spite of
his half-civilized state, he was still a devil-worshiper.
At any rate, he had a vital respect for the forces
of evil.
Naturally he considered this unknown
and unexpected misery he suffered the result of malignant
influences of some kind. Tom did not want him
to suspect that the man with the big feet had any
possible part in the mystery. Had Koku suspected
this, and had he got his hands on the spy, the latter
could never have been successfully used in that sort
of work again. In all probability he would have
said that he had had enough.
Meanwhile Tom made a point of considering
each step he took alone thereafter with particular
care. He had a bodyguard— usually
the giant after the latter had recovered—between
the works and the house. He did not bring home
any more the schedules or drawings connected with
the electric locomotive that he proposed to have built
and to test inside the stockade of the Swift Construction
Company.
He even put a private detective to
work on the matter of finding a man named Andy O’Malley
who might be lurking around Shopton. He had a
pretty clear description of the fellow, for he had
not only seen him once, face to face by daylight, but
Tom had written to the president of the H. & P. A.
and had got from that gentleman a clear picture in
words of the spy whom Mr. Bartholomew believed was
working in the interests of Montagne Lewis.
“If O’Malley appears in
Shopton, look out. He is a bad character.
He is not only a notorious gunman, with several warrants
out for him in these parts, but he is a cruel and
desperate man in any event. The minute you mark
him, have him arrested and telegraph me. We’ll
get him extradited and put him through for ten years
or more right in this county.” The private
investigator, however, as the weeks went by, could
not find any man who filled O’Malley’s
description.
Meanwhile Tom Swift had got what he
called “a lead” and was working day and
night upon the invention that he believed might make
even the Jandel people respectful, if not a bit envious.
First of all Tom had arranged to have
built all around inside the stockade a track of rails
heavy enough to stand the wear and tear of the heaviest
locomotive built. Meanwhile the various parts
of his locomotive were being built in several shops,
but would be shipped to the Swift Construction Company
and assembled in Tom’s try-out shed.
Great secrecy was of course maintained.
Aside from the fact that the new invention had something
to do with electric motive power, nobody about the
shops could say what the new industry portended.
Save, of course, the Swifts themselves, Ned Newton,
and Mr. Damon, who was the Swifts’ closest friend
and sometimes had furnished additional capital for
Tom’s experiments.
There was a thing that Mr. Damon furnished
Tom at this time that proved in the end to be of much
importance. Before Tom had seized upon this idea
of his eccentric friend, and had made proper use of
it, something happened that came near to wrecking
utterly Tom’s invention and completely putting
an end to Tom himself as an inventor.