TRYING THE NEW GUN
While Tom Swift is thus absorbed in
thinking about a chance to hunt elephants, we will
take the opportunity to tell you a little more about
him, and then go on with the story.
Many of you already know the young
inventor, but those who do not may be interested it
hearing that he is a young American lad, full of grit
and ginger, who lives with his aged father in the town
of Shopton, in New York State. Our hero was first
introduced to the public in the book, “Tom Swift
and His Motorcycle.”
In that volume it was related how
Tom bought a motor-cycle from a Mr. Wakefield Damon,
of Waterford. Mr. Damon was an eccentric individual,
who was continually blessing himself, some one else,
or something belonging to him. His motor-cycle
tried to climb a tree with him, and that was why he
sold it to Tom. The two thus became acquainted,
and their friendship grew from year to year.
After many adventures on his motor-cycle
Tom got a motor-boat, and had some exciting times
in that. One of the things he and his father
and his chum, Ned Newton, did, was to rescue, from
a burning balloon that had fallen into Lake Carlopa,
an aeronaut named John Sharp. Later Tom and Mr.
Sharp built an airship called the Red Cloud, and with
Mr. Damon and some others had a series of remarkable
fights.
In the Red Cloud they got on the track
of some bank robbers, and captured them, thus foiling
the plans of Andy Foger, a town bully, and one of
Tom’s enemies, and putting to confusion the plot
of Mr. Foger, Andy’s father.
After many adventures in the air Tom
and his friends, in a submarine boat, invented by
Mr. Swift, went under the ocean for sunken treasure
and secured a large part of it.
It was not long after this that Tom
conceived the idea of a powerful electric car, which
proved, to be the speediest of the road, and in it
he won a great race, and saved from ruin a bank in
which his father and Mr. Damon were interested.
The sixth book of the series, entitled
“Tom Swift and His Wireless Message,”
tells how, in testing a new electric airship, which
a friend of Mr. Damon’s had invented, Tom, the
inventor and Mr. Damon were lost on an island in the
middle of the ocean. There they found some castaways,
among whom were Mr. and Mrs. Nestor, parents of Mary
Nestor of Shopton, a girl of whom Tom was quite fond.
Tom Swift, after his arrival home,
went on an expedition among a gang of men known as
the “Diamond Makers” who were hidden in
the Rocky Mountains. He was accompanied by Mr.
Barcoe Jenks, one of the castaways of Earthquake Island.
They found the diamond makers, and had some surprising
adventures, barely escaping with their lives.
This did not daunt Tom, however, and
he once more started off on an expedition in his airship
the Red Cloud to Alaska, amid the caves of ice.
He was searching for a valley of gold, and though he
and his friends found it, they came to grief.
The Fogers, father and son, tried to steal the gold
from them, and, failing in that, incited the Eskimos
against our friends. There was a battle, but the
forces of nature were even more to be dreaded than
the terrible savages.
The ice cave, in which the Red Cloud
was stored, collapsed, crushing the gallant craft,
and burying it out of sight forever under thousand
of tons of the frozen bergs.
After a desperate journey Tom and
his friends reached civilization, with a large supply
of gold. Tom regretted very much the destruction
of the airship, but he at once set to work on another—a
monoplane this time, instead of a combined aeroplane
and dirigible balloon. This new craft he called
the Humming Bird and it was a “sky racer”
of terrific speed. In it, as we have said, Tom
brought a specialist to operate on his father, when,
because of a broken railroad bridge, the physician
could not otherwise have gotten to Shopton. He
and Tom traveled through the air at the rate of over
one hundred miles an hour. Later, Tom took part
in a big race for a ten-thousand-dollar prize, and
won, defeating Andy Foger, and a number of well-known
“bird-men” who used biplanes and monoplanes
of a more or less familiar type.
The government became interested in
Tom’s craft, the Humming Bird, and, as told
in the ninth book of this series, Tom Swift and His
Sky Racer, they secured some rights in the invention.
And now Tom, who had done nothing
for several months following the great race—that
is, nothing save to work on his new rifle—Tom,
we say, sighed for new adventures.
“Well, Tom, what is on your
mind?” asked his father at the supper table
that evening. “What is worrying you?”
“Nothing is worrying me, Dad.”
“You are thinking of something.
I can see that. Are you afraid your electric
rifle won’t work as well as you hope, when Ned
comes over to try it?”
“No, it isn’t that, Dad.
But I may as well tell you, I guess. I’ve
been reading in the paper about a big elephant hunt
in Africa, and I—”
“That’s enough, Tom!
You needn’t say any more,” interrupted
Mr. Swift. “I can see which way the wind
is blowing. You want to go to Africa with your
new rifle.”
“Well, Dad, not exactly—that is—”
“Now, Tom, you needn’t
deny it,” and Mr. Swift laughed. “Well,
I don’t blame you a bit. You have been
rather idle of late.”
“I would like to go, Dad,”
admitted the young inventor, “only I’d
never think of it while you weren’t well.”
“Don’t worry about me,
Tom. Of course I will be lonesome while you are
gone, but don’t let that stand in the way.
If you want to go to Africa, you may start to-morrow,
and take your new rifle with you.”
“The rifle part would be all
right, Dad, but if I went I’d want to take an
airship along, and it will take me some little time
to finish the Black Hawk, as I have named my new craft.”
“Well, there’s no special
hurry, is there?” asked Mr. Swift. “The
elephants in Africa are likely to stay there for some
time. If you want to go, why don’t you
get right to work on the Black Hawk and make the trip?
I’d like to go myself.”
“I wish you would, Dad,” exclaimed Tom
eagerly.
“No, son, I couldn’t think
of it. I want to stay here and get well.
Then I am going to resume work on my wireless motor.
Perhaps I’ll have it finished when you come
back from Africa with an airship load of elephants’
tusks.”
“Perhaps,” admitted the
young inventor. “Well, Dad, I’ll think
of it. But now I’m going after my rifle,
and—”
Tom was interrupted by a ring of the
front-door bell, and Mrs. Baggert, the housekeeper,
who was almost like a mother to the youth, went to
answer it.
“It’s Ned Newton, I guess,”
murmured Tom, and, a little later, his chum entered
the room.
“Oh, I guess I’m early,”
said Ned. “Haven’t you had supper
yet, Tom’”
“Yes, we’re just finished.
Come on out and we’ll try the gun.”
“And practice shooting elephants,”
added Mr. Swift with a laugh, as he mentioned to Ned
the latest idea of Tom.
“Say! That would he great!”
cried the bank clerk. “I wish I could go!”
“Come along!” invited
Tom cordially. “We’ll have more fun
than we did in the caves of ice,” for Ned had
gone on the voyage to Alaska.
The two youths went out to the shed
where the rifle gallery had been built. The new
electric weapon was out there, and Eradicate Sampson,
the colored man, who was a sort of servant and man-of-all-work
about the Swift household, had set up the scarecrow
figure at the end of the gallery.
“Now we’ll try some shots,”
said Tom, as he took the gun out of the case.
“Just turn on a few more lights, will you, Mr.
Jackson,” and the engineer, who was employed
by Tom and his father to aid them in their inventive
work, did as requested.
The gallery was now brilliantly illuminated,
with the reflectors throwing the beams on the big
stuffed figure, which, save for a face, looked very
much like a human being, standing at the end of the
gallery.
“I don’t suppose you want
to go down there and hold it, while I shoot at it;
do you, Rad?” asked Tom jokingly, as he prepared
the electric rifle for use.
“No indeedy, I don’t!”
cried Eradicate. “Yo’-all will hab
t’ scuse me, Massa Tom. I think I’ll
be goin’ now.”
“What’s your hurry?”
asked Ned, as he saw the colored man hastily preparing
to leave the improvised gallery.
“I spects I’d better fro’
down some mo’ straw fo’ a bed fo’
my mule Boomerang!” exclaimed Eradicate, as
he hastily slid out of the door, and shut it after
him.
“Rad is nervous,” remarked
Tom. “He doesn’t like this gun.
Well, it certainly does great execution.”
“How does it work’”
asked Ned, as he looked at the curious gun. The
electric weapon was not unlike an ordinary heavy rifle
in appearance save that the barrel was a little longer,
and the stock larger in every way. There were
also a number of wheels, levers, gears and gages on
the stock.
“It works by electricity,” explained Tom.
“That is, the force comes from
a powerful current of stored electricity.”
“Oh, then you have storage batteries in the
stock?”
“Not exactly. There are
no batteries, but the current is a sort of wireless
kind. It is stored in a cylinder, just as compressed
air or gases are stored, and can be released as I
need it.”
“And when it’s all gone, what do you do?”
“Make more power by means of a small dynamo.”
“And does it shoot lead bullets?”
“Not at all. There are no bullets used.”
“Then how does it kill?”
“By means of a concentrated
charge of electricity which is shot from the barrel
with great force. You can’t see it, yet
it is there. It’s just as if you concentrated
a charge of electricity of five thousand volts into
a small globule the size of a bullet. That flies
through space, strikes the object aimed at and—well,
we’ll see what it does in a minute. Mr.
Jackson, just put that steel plate up in front of
the scarecrow; will you?”
The engineer proceeded to put into
place a section of steel armor-plate before the stuffed
figure.
“You don’t mean to say
you’re going to shoot through that, do you?”
asked Ned in surprise.
“Surely. The electric bullets
will pierce anything. They’ll go through
a brick wall as easily as the x-rays do. That’s
one valuable feature of my rifle. You don’t
have to see the object you aim at. In fact you
can fire through a house, and kill something on the
other side.”
“I should think that would be dangerous.”
“It would be, only I can calculate
exactly, by means of an automatic arrangement, just
how far the charge of electricity will go. It
stops short just at the limit of the range, and is
not effective beyond that. Otherwise, if I did
not limit it and if I fired at the scarecrow, through
the piece of steel, and the bullet hit the figure,
it would go on, passing through whatever else was in
the way, until its power was lost. I use the
term ‘bullet,’ though as I said, it isn’t
properly one.”
“By Jove, Tom, it certainly is a dangerous weapon!”
“Yes, the range-limit idea is
a new one. That’s what I’ve been
working on lately. There are other features of
the gun which I’ll explain later, particularly
the power it has to shoot out luminous bars of light.
But now we’ll see what it will do to the image.”
Tom took his place at the end of the
range, and began to adjust some valves and levers.
In spite of the fact that the gun was larger than
an ordinary rifle, it was not as heavy as the United
States Army weapon.
Tom aimed at the armor-plate, and,
by means of an arrangement on the rifle, he could
tell exactly when he was pointing at the scarecrow,
even though he could not see it.
“Here she goes!” he suddenly exclaimed.
Ned watched his chum. The young
inventor pressed a small button at the side of the
rifle barrel, about where the trigger should have
been. There was no sound, no smoke, no flame and
not the slightest jar.
Yet as Ned watched he saw the steel
plate move slightly. The next instant the scarecrow
figure seemed to fly all to pieces. There was
a shower of straw, rags and old clothes, which fell
in a shapeless heap at the end of the range.
“Say. I guess you did for
that fellow, all right!” exclaimed Ned.
“It looks so,” admitted
Tom, with a note of pride in his voice. “Now
we’ll try another test.”
As he laid aside his rifle in order
to help Mr. Jackson shift the steel plate there was
a series of yells outside the shed.
“What’s that?” asked Tom, in some
alarm.
“Sounds like some one calling,” answered
Ned.
“It is,” agreed Mr. Jackson.
“Perhaps Eradicate’s mule has gotten loose.
I guess we’d better—”
He did not finish, for the shouts
increased in volume, and Tom and Ned could hear some
one yelling:
“I’ll have the law on
you for this! I’ll have you arrested, Tom
Swift! What do you mean by trying to kill me?
Where are you? Don’t try to hide away,
now. You were trying to shoot me, and I’m
not going to have it!”
Some one pounded on the door of the shed.
“It’s Barney Moker!”
exclaimed Tom. “I wonder what can have
happened?”