A Desperate Chase
These moments were fraught with peril,
and not alone peril to the huge machine that Tom Swift
had built, but peril to those who remained in the
cab of the electric locomotive, as her forward trucks
struck the open switch.
There was a mighty jerk that brought
a shout from Ned Newton’s lips and a grunt from
Mr. Damon. Tom clung to his swivel-seat, staring
ahead.
The pilot of the electric locomotive
shot over on the siding; the forward trucks followed,
then the great drivers. The whole locomotive
swerved into the siding, but for several breathless
seconds Tom was not at all sure that the monster would
not jump the rails and head into the ditch!
Meanwhile his gaze measured the speed
of that flying figure in the Mackinaw as it scuttled
up the slope through the open grove of hard wood and
pine. He could not at first see Koku, but he
knew the giant was headed for the fugitive, whether
the latter proved to be Andy O’Malley or not.
Tom’s gaze flashed to what lay
ahead of the electric locomotive. As it seemed
to joggle back into balance, gain its uprightness,
as it were, the inventor saw the great, log-braced
bumper between the two rails at the end of the siding.
With what force would the locomotive hit that obstruction?
Until the trailers were over the switch
Tom dared not give her the brakes. To lock the
brake shoes upon the wheels might easily throw the
locomotive off the rails. But the instant he felt
the tail of the long locomotive swerve off the switch
he jabbed the compressed air lever and the wild shriek
of the brake shoes answered to his effort.
Then the bumper was but a few yards
ahead. The electric locomotive was bound to collide
with it. And under the speed at which it had
been running, now scarcely reduced by half, the collision
was apt to be a tragic happening!
Weeks of effort might be ruined in
that moment! If the crash was serious, thousands
of dollars might be lost! In truth, Tom Swift
apprehended the possibility of a disaster, the complete
results of which might put the test of his invention
forward for weeks—perhaps for months.
Nor could he do a thing to avert the
disaster. He had reversed and set the brakes
immediately after the last wheel of the trailer was
on the siding. Nothing more could he do as the
great electric locomotive bore down upon the solid
timber at the far end of this short track.
Those few seconds, as the locked wheels
slid toward the end of the siding, were about as hard
to bear as any experience the young inventor had ever
gone through. It was not so much the peril of
the accident, it was the possibility of what might
happen to the locomotive.
Within those few moments, however,
Tom considered more than the safety of his companions
and himself, and more than the peril of wreck to his
locomotive. He considered the schedule of the
trains on this division of the Hendrickton & Pas Alos
and remembered all those that might be within this
sector at this time.
If the locomotive smashed into the
bumper with force enough to wreck the structure, would
some approaching train on the westbound track not
be endangered?
The thought was parent to Tom’s
act before the collision occurred. With a single
swift motion he reached for the signaling apparatus
which he had established in connection with his wireless
telephone.
Just the moment before the head of
the locomotive rammed that seemingly immovable barrier
at the end of the siding there flashed into the air
from Tom’s annunciator the code word agreed
upon announcing a wreck, and the number of the sector
on which the electric locomotive was then running.
The next moment the crash occurred.
Tom had leaped up with a shout of
warning. “Hang on!” was his cry.
But when the locomotive had struck and rebounded Ned,
from far down the aisle of the locomotive, wanted
to know in a very peevish tone what he should have
hung on to?
“My elbows!” he groaned.
“I’ve skinned ’em, and my back has
got a twist in it like the Irishman thought he had
when he put on his overalls hind-side to. What’s
happened?”
“Bless my radiolite!”
growled Mr. Damon. “My watch crystal is
broken all to finders, if you want to know. Bless
my shock-absorbers! you won’t do this locomotive
a bit of good, Tom Swift, if you stop it so abruptly.”
“And that’s the surest
word you ever said” responded Tom, hurrying
to the door. “I don’t know what’s
broken, but we’re still on the rails. The
most immediate thing to learn, is the where-abouts
of the fellow who did this.”
“Who opened the switch?” cried Ned.
“I believe it was Andy O’Malley.
Come on, Ned! Koku is after him and I don’t
want him to tear O’Malley apart before I get
there.”
“O’Malley has got powerful
interests behind him, and it might go hard with Koku
if he injured the spy and some of these Westerners
caught him,” suggested Mr. Damon.
“They ought to thank Koku for
manhandling the fellow—if he does,”
said Ned.
“As a matter of fact,”
replied Tom, “Koku will merely hold to the fellow
until we get there. But my giant’s strength
is enormous, and he does not always know the strength
of his grasp. he might hurt the fellow. Come
on,” and Tom leaped from the doorway of the
electric locomotive.
Ned leaped down the ladder after his chum.
“Which way did they go?” he asked.
“Across the ditch and up the
hill,” said Tom. “Mr. Damon!”
he called back to that eccentric man, “will
you please remain there and watch the locomotive?”
“I certainly will. And
I’m armed, too,” shouted Mr. Damon.
“Don’t fear for this locomotive, Tom.
I am right on the job.”
Tom waved his hand in reply, leaped
the ditch, and started up through the wood. Ned
was close behind him, and the two young men ran as
hard as they could in the direction Tom had seen Andy
O’Malley, followed by the giant, running.
In places the earth was slippery with
pine needles, and the ground was elsewhere rough.
Therefore the chums did not make much speed in running
after the giant and his quarry. But Tom was sure
of the direction in which the two had disappeared,
and he and Ned kept doggedly on.
They went over the crest of the hill
and lost sight of the siding and the locomotive.
Here was a sharp descent into a gulch, and some rods
away, in the bottom of this gully, the young fellows
obtained their first sight of Koku. He was still
running with mighty strides and was evidently within
sight of the man he had set out after in such haste.
“Hey! Koku!” shouted Tom Swift.
The giant’s hearing was of the
keenest. He glanced back and raised his arm in
greeting. But he did not slacken his pace.
“He must see O’Malley, Tom,” cried
Ned Newton.
“I am sure he does. And
I want to get there about as soon as Koku grabs the
fellow,” panted Tom.
“He’ll maul O’Malley unmercifully,”
said Ned.
“I don’t want Koku to
injure him,” admitted Tom, and he increased
his own stride as he plunged down into the gully.
The young inventor distanced his chum
within the next few moments. Tom ran like a deer.
He reached the bottom of the gully and kept on after
Koku’s crashing footsteps. At every jump,
too, he began to shout to the giant:
“Koku! Hold him!”
The giant’s voice boomed back
through the heavy timber: “I catch him!
I hold him for Master! I break all um bones!
Wait till Koku catch him!”
“Hold him, Koku!” yelled
Tom again. “Be careful and don’t hurt
him till I get there!”
He could not see what the giant was
doing. The timber was thicker down here.
It might be that the giant would seize the man roughly.
His zeal in Tom’s cause was great, and, of course,
his strength was enormous.
Yet Tom did not want to call the giant
off the trail. Andy O’Malley must be captured
at this time. He had done enough, too much, indeed,
in attempting the ruin of Tom’s plans. Before
the matter went any further the young inventor was
determined that Montagne Lewis’ spy should be
put where he would be able to do no more harm.
But he did not want the man permanently
injured. He knew now that Koku was so wildly
excited that he might set upon O’Malley as he
would upon an enemy in his own country.
“Koku! Stop! Wait for me!” Tom
finally shouted.
Now the young inventor got no reply
from the giant. Had the latter got so far ahead
that he no longer heard his master’s command?
Tom pounded on, working his legs like
pistons, putting every last ounce of energy he possessed
into his effort. This was indeed a desperate
chase.