ATTACKED BY A WHALE
Surprise at Mr. Anderson’s announcement
held Tom silent for a moment. That the gentleman
whom he had been the means of rescuing, among others,
from Earthquake Island, should be met with so unexpectedly,
was quite a coincidence, but when it developed that
he was bound to the same part of the African continent
as were Tom and his friends, and when he said he hoped
to rescue some missionaries from the very red pygmies
so feared by the old elephant hunter—this
was enough to startle any one.
“I see that my announcement
has astonished you,” said Mr. Anderson, as he
noted the look of surprise on the face of the young
inventor.
“It certainly has! Why,
that’s where we are bound for, in my new airship.
Come down into our cabin, Mr. Anderson, and tell us
all about it. Is your wife with you?”
“No, it is too dangerous a journey
on which to take her. I have little hope of succeeding,
for it is now some time since the unfortunate missionaries
were captured, but I am going to do my best, and organize
a relief expedition when I get to Africa.”
Tom said nothing at that moment, but
he made up his mind that if it was at all possible
he would lend his aid, that of his airship, and also
get his friends to assist Mr. Anderson. They went
below to a special cabin that had been reserved for
Tom’s party, and there, as the ship slowly passed
down New York Bay, Mr. Anderson told his story.
“I mentioned to you, when we
were on Earthquake Island,” he said to Tom,
“that I had been in Africa, and had done some
hunting. That is not my calling, as it is that
of your friend, Mr. Durban, but I know the country
pretty well. However, I have not been there in
some time.”
“My wife and I are connected
with a church in New York that, several years ago,
raised a fund and sent two missionaries, Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Illingway, to the heart of Africa. They
built up a little mission there, and for a time all
went well, and they did good work among the natives.”
“They are established in a tribe
of friendly black men, of simple nature, and, while
the natives did not become Christianized to any remarkable
extent, yet they were kind to the missionaries.
Mr. and Mrs. Illingway used frequently to write to
members of our church, telling of their work.
They also mentioned the fact that adjoining the country
of the friendly blacks there was a tribe of fierce
little red men,—red because of hair of that
color all over their bodies.”
“That’s right,”
agreed Mr. Durban, shaking his head solemnly.
“They’re red imps, too!”
“Mr. Illingway often mentioned
in his letters,” went on Mr. Anderson, “that
there were frequent fights between the pygmies and
the race of blacks, but the latter had no great fear
of their small enemies. However, it seems that
they did not take proper precautions, for not long
ago there was a great battle, the blacks were attacked
by a large force of the red pygmies, who overwhelmed
them by numbers, and finally routed them, taking possession
of their country.”
“What became of the missionaries?” asked
Ned Newton.
“I’ll tell you,”
said Mr. Anderson. “For a long time we heard
nothing, beyond the mere news of the fight, which we
read of in the papers. The church people were
very anxious about the fate of Mr. and Mrs. Illingway,
and were talking of sending a special messenger to
inquire about them, when a cablegram came from the
headquarters of the society in London.”
“It seems that one of the black
natives, named Tomba, who was a sort of house servant
to Mr. and Mrs. Illingway, escaped the general massacre,
in which all his friends were killed. He made
his way through the jungle to a white settlement,
and told his story, relating how the two missionaries
had been carried away captive by the pygmies.”
“A terrible fate,” commented Mr. Durban.
“Yes, they might better be dead,
from all the accounts we can hear,” went on
Mr. Anderson.
“Bless my Sunday hat! Don’t
say that!” exclaimed Mr. Damon. “Maybe
we can save them, Mr. Anderson.”
“That is what I am going to
try to do, though it may be too late. As soon
as definite news was received, our church held a meeting,
raised a fund, and decided to send me off to find Mr.
and Mrs. Illingway, if alive, or give them decent
burial, if I could locate their bones. The reason
they selected me was because I had been in Africa,
and knew the country.”
“I made hurried arrangements,
packed up, said good-by to my wife, and here I am.
But to think of meeting you, Tom Swift! And to
hear that you are also going to Africa. I wish
I could command an airship for the rescue. It
might be more easily accomplished!”
“That’s just what I was
going to propose!” exclaimed Tom. “We
are going to the land of the red pygmies, and while
I have promised to help Mr. Durban in getting ivory,
and while I want to try my electric rifle on big game,
still we can do both, I think. You can depend
on us, Mr. Anderson, and if the Black Hawk can be of
any service to you in the rescue, count us in!”
“Gosh!” cried the former
castaway of Earthquake Island. “This is
the best piece of luck I could have! Now tell
me all about your plans.” which Tom and the
others did, listening in turn, to further details
about the missionaries.
Just how they would go to work to
effect the rescue, or how they could locate the particular
tribe of little red men who had Mr. and Mrs. Illingway,
they did not know.
“We may be able to get hold
of this Tomba,” said Mr. Durban. “If
not I guess between Mr. Anderson and myself we can
get on the trail, somehow. I’m anxious
to get to the coast, see the airship put together
again, and start for the interior.”
“So am I,” declared Tom,
as he got out his electric rifle, and began to put
it together, for he wanted to show Mr. Anderson how
it worked.
They had a pleasant and uneventful
voyage for two weeks. The weather was good, and,
to tell the truth, it was rather monotonous for Torn
and the others, who were eager to get into activity
again. Then came a storm, which, while it was
not dangerous, yet gave them plenty to think and talk
about for three days. Then came more calm weather,
when the Soudalar plowed along over gently heaving
billows.
They were about a week from their
port of destination, which vas Majumba, on the African
coast, when, one afternoon, as Tom and the others
were in their cabin, they heard a series of shouts
on deck, and the sound of many feet running to and
fro.
“Something has happened!”
exclaimed the young inventor.
Tom raced for the companionway, and
was soon on deck, followed by Mr. Durban and the others.
They saw a crowd of sailors and passengers leaning
over the port rail.
“What’s the matter?”
asked Tom, of the second mate, who was just passing.
“Fight between a killer and
a whale,” was the reply. “The captain
has ordered the ship to lay-to so it can be watched.”
Tom made his way to the rail.
About a quarter of a mile away there could be observed
a great commotion in the ocean. Great bodies
seemed to be threshing about, beating the water to
foam, and, with the foam could be seen bright blood
mingled. Occasionally two jets of water, as from
some small fountain, would shoot upward.
“He’s blowing hard!”
exclaimed one of the sailors. “I guess he’s
about done for!”
“Which one?” asked Tom.
“The whale,” was the reply.
“The killer has the best of the big fellow,”
and the sailor quickly explained how the smaller killer
fish, by the peculiarity of its attack, and its great
ferocity, often bested its larger antagonist.
The battle was now at its height,
and Tom and the others were interested spectators.
At times neither of the big creatures could be seen,
because of the smother of foam in which they rolled
and threshed about. The whale endeavored to sound,
or go to the bottom, but the killer stuck to him relentlessly.
Suddenly, however, as Tom looked,
the whale, by a stroke of his broad tail, momentarily
stunned his antagonist. Instantly realizing that
he was free the great creature, which was about ninety
feet long, darted away, swimming on the surface of
the water, for he needed to get all the air possible.
Quickly acquiring momentum, the whale
came on like a locomotive, spouting at intervals,
the vapor from the blowholes looking not unlike steam
from some submarine boat.
“He looks to be heading this
way,” remarked Mr. Durban to Tom.
“He is,” agreed the young
inventor, “but I guess he’ll dive before
he gets here. He only wants to get away from the
killer. Look, the other one is swimming this
way, too!”
“Bless my harpoon, but he sure
is!” called Mr. Damon. “They’ll
renew the fight near here.”
But he was mistaken, for the killer,
after coming a little distance after the whale, suddenly
turned, hesitated for a moment, and then disappeared
in the depths of the ocean.
The whale, however, continued to come
on, speeding through the water with powerful strokes.
There was an uneasy movement among some of the passengers.
“Suppose he strikes the ship,” suggested
one woman.
“Nonsense! He couldn’t,” said
her husband.
“The old man had better get
under way, just the same,” remarked a sailor
near Tom, as he looked up at the bridge where the captain
was standing.
The “old man,” or commander,
evidently thought the same thing, for, after a glance
at the oncoming leviathan, which was still headed
directly for the vessel, he shoved the lever of the
telegraph signal over to “full speed ahead.”
Hardly had he done so than the whale sank from sight.
“Oh, I’m so glad!”
exclaimed the woman who had first spoken of the possibility
of the whale hitting the ship, “I am afraid of
those terrible creatures.”
“They’re as harmless as
a cow, unless they get angry,” said her husband.
Slowly the great ship began to move
through the water. Tom and his friends were about
to go back to their cabin, for they thought the excitement
over, when, as the young inventor turned from the rail,
he felt a vibration throughout the whole length of
the steamer, as if it had hit on a sand-bar.
Instantly there was a jangling of
bells in the engine room, and the Soudalar lost headway.
“What’s the matter?” asked several
persons.
They were answered a moment later,
for the big whale, even though grievously wounded
in his fight with the killer, had risen not a hundred
feet away from the ship, and was coming toward it with
the speed of an express train.
“Bless my blubber!” cried
Mr. Damon. “We must have hit the whale,
or it hit us under the water and now it’s going
to attack us!”
He had no more than gotten the words
out of his mouth ere the great creature of the deep
came on full tilt at the vessel, struck it a terrific
blow which made it tremble from stem to stern, and
careen violently.
There was a chorus of frightened cries,
sailors rushed to and fro, the engine-room bells rang
violently, and the captain and mates shouted hoarse
orders.
“Here he comes again!”
yelled Mr. Durban, as he hurried to the side of the
ship. “The whale takes us for an enemy,
I guess. and he’s going to ram us again!”
“And if he does it many times,
he’ll start the plates and cause a leak that
won’t be stopped in a hurry!” cried a sailor
as he rushed past Tom.
The young inventor looked at the oncoming
monster for a moment, and then started on the run
for his cabin.
“Here! Where are you going?”
cried Mr. Damon, but Tom did not answer.