Peril, The Mother of Invention
Tom Swift’s first thought was
one of thankfulness. Thankfulness that he did
not have a drag of fifty or sixty steel gondolas or
the like to add their weight to the down-pull.
The locomotive’s own weight of approximately
two hundred and seventy tons was enough.
For when the inventor pushed Ned aside
and tried to handle the controllers properly, he found
them unmanageable. There was not a chance of
freeing them and getting power on the brakes.
The Hercules 0001 was hacking down the mountain side
with a speed that was momentarily increasing, and
without a chance of retarding it!
The young inventor at that moment
of peril, knew no more what to do to avert disaster
than Ned Newton himself.
It flashed across his mind, however,
that others beside themselves were in peril because
of this accident. The fast express from the East
that should pass Half Way at four-thirteen, might
already be climbing the hill from Hammon. Hammon,
at the foot of the grade, was twenty-five miles away.
Nor was the track straight.
If the operator at Half Way did not
see the runaway locomotive and telephone the danger
to the foot of the grade, when the Hercules 0001 came
tearing down the track it might ram something in the
Hammon yard, if it did not actually collide with the
approaching westbound express.
Such an emergency as this is likely
either to numb the brains of those entangled in the
peril or excite them to increased activity. Ned
Newton was apparently stunned by the catastrophe.
Tom’s brain never worked more clearly.
He seized the siren lever and set
it at full, so that the blast called up continuous
echoes in the forest as the locomotive plunged down
the incline. He ran to the door again, on the
side where Half Way station lay, and hung out to signal
the operator who had so recently given him right of
way on this stretch of mountain road.
“We’re going to smash!
We’re going to smash!” groaned Ned Newton.
Tom read these words on his chum’s
lips, rather than heard them, for the roar of the
descending locomotive drowned every other sound.
Tom waved an encouraging hand, but did not reply audibly.
Meanwhile his brain was working as
fast as ever it had. He had instantly comprehended
all the danger of the situation. But in addition
he appreciated the fact that such an accident as this
might happen at any time to this or any other locomotive
he might build.
Automatic brakes were all right.
If there had been a good drag of cars behind the Hercules
0001, on which the compressed air brakes might have
been set, the present manifest peril might have been
obliterated. The brakes on the cars would have
stopped the whole train.
But to halt this huge monster when
alone, on the grade, was another matter. Once
the locomotive brake lever was jammed, as in this
case, there was no help for the huge machine.
It had to ride to the foot of the grade—if
it did not chance to hit something on the way!
And with this realization of both
the imminent peril and the need of averting it, to
Tom’s active brain came the germ of an idea
that he determined to put into force, if he lived through
this accident, on each and every electric locomotive
that he might in the future build.
This monster, flying faster and faster
down the mountain side, was a menace to everything
in its track. There might be almost anything
in the way of rolling stock on the section between
Half Way and Hammon at the foot of the grade.
If this thunderbolt of wood and steel collided with
any other train, with the force and weight gathered
by its plunge down the mountain, it would drive through
such obstruction like a projectile from Tom’s
own big cannon.
Tom realized this fact. He knew
that whatever object the Hercules 0001 might strike,
that object would be shattered and scattered all about
the right of way. What might happen to the runaway
was another matter. But the inventor believed
that the electric locomotive would be less injured
than anything with which it came into collision.
At any rate, thought of the peril
to himself and his invention had secondary consideration
in Tom Swift’s mind. It was what the monster
which he could not control might do to other rolling
stock of the H. & P. A. that rasped the young fellow’s
mind.
The grade above Half Way had few curves.
Tom soon caught the first glimpse of the station.
Would the operator hear the roar of the descending
runaway and understand what had happened?
He leaned far out from the open doorway
and waved his cap madly. He began to shout a
warning, although he saw not a soul about the station
and knew very well that his voice was completely drowned
by the voice of the siren and the drumming of the
great wheels.
Suddenly the tousled head of the operator
popped out of his window. He saw the coming locomotive,
the drivers smoking!
To be a good railroad man one has
to have his wits about him. To be a good operator
at a backwoods station one has to have two sets of
wits—one set to tell what to do in an emergency,
the other to listen and apprehend the voice of the
sounder.
This Half Way man was good. He
knew better than to try the telegraph instrument.
He grabbed the telephone receiver and jiggled the
hook up and down on the standard while the Hercules
0001 roared past the station.
It did not need Tom’s frantically
waving cap to warn him what had happened. And
he remembered clearly the fact of the expected westbound
flyer.
“Hammon? Get me? This
is Half Way. That derned electric hog has sprung
something and is coming down, lickity-split!
“Yes! Clear your yard!
Where’s Number Twenty-eight? Good!
Side her, or she’ll be ditched. Get me?”
The voice at the other end of the
wire exploded into indignant vituperation. Then
silence. The Half Way operator had done his best—his
all. He ran out upon the platform. The electric
locomotive had disappeared behind the woods, but the
roar of its wheels and the shrill voice of its siren
echoed back along the line.
The sound faded into insignificance.
The operator went back into his hut and stayed close
by the telephone instrument for the next ten minutes
to learn the worst.
If the operator’s nerves were
tense, what about those of Tom Swift and his chum?
Ned staggered to the door and clung to Tom’s
arm. He shrilled into the latter’s ear:
“Shall we jump?”
“I don’t see any soft
spots,” returned Tom, grimly. “There
aren’t any life nets along this line.”
Ned Newton was frightened, and with
good reason. But if his chum was equally terrified
he did not show it. He continued to lean from
the open door to peer down the grade as the Hercules
0001 drove on.
Around curve after curve they flew.
It entered Ned’s tortured mind that if his chum
had wanted speed, he was getting it now! He realized
that two miles a minute was a mere bagatelle to the
pace now accomplished by the runaway locomotive.