THE ROGUE ELEPHANT—CONCLUSION
Early the next day the airship was
again afloat. The night, what little of darkness
remained after the rescue, had been spent in the clearing
in the dense jungle. Some slight repairs had been
made to the craft, and it was once more in readiness
to be used in battle against the relentless savages.
“We can’t wait for darkness,”
declared Tom. “In the first place there
isn’t time, and again, we don’t know in
what part of the village the other captives are.
We’ll have to hunt around.”
“And that means going right
down into the midst of the imps and fighting them
hand to hand,” said Ned.
“That’s what it means,”
assented Tom grimly, “but I guess the powder
bombs will help some.”
Before starting they had prepared
a number of improvised bombs, filled with powder,
which could be set off by percussion. It was the
plan to drop these down from the airship, into the
midst of the savages. When the bomb struck the
ground, or even on the bodies of the red dwarfs, it
would explode. It was hoped that these would so
dismay the little men that they would desert the village,
and leave the way clear for a search to be made for
the other captives.
On rushed the Black Hawk. There
was to be no concealment this time, and Tom did not
care how much noise the motors made. Accordingly
he turned on full seed.
It was not long before the big plain
was again sighted. Everything was in readiness,
and the bombs were at hand to be dropped overboard.
Tom counted on the natives gathering together in great
masses as soon as they sighted the airship, and this
would give him the opportunity wanted.
But something different transpired.
No sooner was the craft above the village, than from
all the huts came pouring out the little red men.
But they did not gather together—at least
just then. They ran about excitedly, and it could
be seen that they were bringing from the huts the
rude household utensils in which they did their primitive
cooking. The women had their babies, and some,
not so encumbered, carried rolls of grass matting.
The men had all their weapons.
“Bless my wagon wheel!”
cried Mr. Damon. “What’s going on?”
“It looks like moving day,” suggested
Ned Newton.
“That’s just what it is!”
declared Mr. Durban. “They are going to
migrate. Evidently they have had enough of us,
and they’re going to get out of the neighborhood
before we get a chance to do any more damage.
They’re moving, but where are the white captives?”
He was answered a moment later, for
a crowd of the dwarfs rushing to a certain hut, came
out leading two persons by means of bark ropes tied
about their necks. It was too far off to enable
Tom or the others to recognize them, but they could
tell by the clothing that they were white captives.
“We’ve got to save them!”
exclaimed the young inventor.
“How?” asked Mr. Damon.
And, indeed, it did seem a puzzle for, even as Tom
looked, the whole tribe of red imps took up the march
into the jungle, dragging the white persons with them.
The captives looked up, saw the airship, and made
frantic motions for help. It was too far off,
yet, to hear their voices. But the distance was
lessening every moment, for Tom had speeded the motor
to the highest pitch.
“What are you going to do?” demanded Ned.
“I’ll show you,”
answered his chum. “Take some of those bombs,
and be ready to drop them overboard when I give the
word.”
“But we may kill those white people,”
objected Ned.
“Not the way I’m going
to work it. You drop them when I give the word.”
Tom steered the airship toward the
head of the throng of blacks. The captives were
in the rear, and the van of the strange procession
was near the edge of the jungle now. Once the
red dwarfs got into the tangle of underbrush they
could never be found, and their captives would die
a miserable death.
“We’ve got to stop them,”
murmured Tom. “Are you ready, Ned?”
“Ready!”
“Then drop the bombs!”
Ned dropped them. A sharp explosion
was heard, and the head of the procession was blown
apart and thrown into confusion. The throng halted.
“Drop more!” cried Tom,
sending the ship about in a circle, and hovering it
over the middle of the press of savages.
More of the deadly tombs exploded.
The pygmies were running about wildly. Tom, who
was closely watching the rear of the cavalcade, suddenly
called out:
“Now’s our chance!
They’ve let their captives go, and are running
into the jungle. We must swoop down, and get the
prisoners!”
It was no sooner said than the nose
of the Black Hawk was pointed downward. Onward
it flew, the two captives wildly waving their hands
to the rescuers. There was no more danger from
the red savages. They had been thrown into panic
and confusion, and wore rapidly disappearing into
the forest. The terrible weapons of the whites
had been too much for them.
“Quick! Get on board!”
called Tom, as he brought the machinery to a stop.
The airship now rested on the ground, close to the
former captives. “Get in here!” shouted
the young inventor. “They may change their
minds and come back.”
The two white persons ran toward the
Black Hawk. Then one of them— the
smaller—halted and cried out:
“Why, it’s Tom Swift!”
Tom turned and glanced at the speaker.
A look of astonishment spread over his face.
“Andy Foger—here!” gasped Tom.
“How in the world—?”
“I dink besser as ve git on
der board, und dalk aftervard!” exclaimed Andy’s
companion, who spoke with a strong German accent.
“I like not dose red little mans.”
In another minute the two rescued
ones were safe on Tom Swift’s airship, and it
had arisen high enough to be out of all danger.
“How in the world did you ever
get here?” asked Tom of the lad who had so often
been his enemy.
“I’ll tell you soon,”
spoke Andy, “but first, Tom, I want to ask your
forgiveness for all I’ve done to you, and to
thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for saving
us. I thought we were going to be killed by those
dwarfs; didn’t you, Herr Landbacher?”
“Sure I did. But ve are
all right now. Dis machine is efen besser as
mine vot vos lost. Is dere anyt’ing to eats,
on board, if you vill excuse me for being so bolt
as to ask?”
“Plenty to eat,” said
Tom, laughing, “and while you eat you can tell
us your story. And as for you, Andy, I hope we’ll
be friends from now on,” and Tom held out his
hand.
There was not much to tell that the
reader has not already guessed. Andy and the
German, as has been explained, went abroad to give
airship flights. They were in the lower part of
Egypt, and a sudden gale drove them into Africa.
For a long time they sailed on, and
then their fuel gave out, and they had to descend
into the jungle. They managed to fall in with
some friendly blacks, who treated them well. The
airship was useless without gasolene, and it was abandoned.
Andy and the German inventor were
planning to walk to some white settlement, when the
tribe they were with was attacked by the red dwarfs
and vanquished. Andy and his friend were taken
prisoners, and carried to the very village where the
missionaries were, just before the latter’s
rescue.
Then came the fight, and the saving
of Andy and the German, almost at the last minute.
“Well, you certainly had nearly
as many adventures as we did,” said Tom.
“But I guess they’re over now.”
But they were not. For several
days the airship sailed on over the jungles without
making a descent. Mr. and Mrs. Illingway wished
to be landed at a white settlement where they had
other missionary friends. Tom would go with them.
This was done, and Tom and the others spent some time
in this place, receiving so many kinds of thanks that
they had to protest.
Andy and Herr Landbacher asked to
be taken back to the coast, where they could get a
steamer to America. Andy was a very different
lad now, and not the bully of old.
“Well, hadn’t we better
be thinking of getting back home?” asked Tom
one day.
“Not until we get some more
ivory,” declared Mr. Durban. “I think
we’ll have to have another elephant hunt.”
They did, about a week later, and
got some magnificent tusks. Tom’s electric
rifle did great work, to the wonder of Andy and Mr.
Landbacher, who had never before seen such a curious
weapon. They also did some night hunting.
“But we haven’t got that
pair of extra large tusks that I want,” said
the old hunter, as he looked at the store of ivory
accumulated after the last hunt. “I want
those, and then I’ll be satisfied. There
is one section of the country that we have not touched
as yet, and I’d like to visit that.”
“Then let’s go,”
proposed Tom, so, good-bys having been said to the
missionaries, who sent greetings to their friends in
America, and to the church people who had arranged
for their rescue, the airship was once more sent to
the deepest part of a certain jungle, where Mr. Durban
hoped to get what he wanted.
They had another big hunt, but none
of the elephants had any remarkable tusks, and the
hunter was about to give up in despair, and call the
expedition over, when one afternoon, as they were
sailing along high enough to merely clear the tops
of the trees, Tom heard a great crashing down below.
“There’s something there,”
he called to Mr. Durban. “Perhaps a small
herd of elephants. Shall we go down?”
Before Mr. Durban could answer there
came into view, in a small clearing, an elephant of
such size, and with such an enormous pair of tusks,
that the young inventor and the old hunter could not
repress cries of astonishment.
“There’s your beast!”
said Tom. “I’ll go down and you can
pot him,” and, as he spoke, Tom stopped the
propellers, so that the ship hung motionless in the
air above where the gigantic brute was.
Suddenly, as though possessed by a
fit of rage, the elephant rushed at a good-sized tree
and began butting it with his head. Then, winding
his trunk around it he pulled it up by the roots, and
began trampling on it out of a paroxysm of anger.
“A rogue elephant!” exclaimed
Mr. Durban. “Don’t go down if you
value your life, or the safety of the airship.
If we attacked that brute on the ground, we would
be the hunted instead of the hunters. That’s
a rogue elephant of the worst kind, and he’s
at the height of his rage.”
This was indeed so, for the beast
was tearing about the clearing like mad, breaking
off trees, and uprooting them in sheer vantonness.
Tom knew what a “rogue” elephant was.
It is a beazt that goes away from the herd, and lives
solitary and alone, attacking every living thing that
comes in his way. It is a species of masness,
a disease which attacks elephants and sometimes passes
away. More often the afflicted creature gives
battle to everything and every animal he meets until
he is killed or carried off by his malady. It
was sueh an elephant that Tom now saw, and he realized
what the hunter said about attacking one, as he saw
the brute’s mad rushes.
“Well, if it’s dangerous
to attack him on the ground, we’ll kill him
from up above,” said the young inventor.
“Here is the electric rifle, Mr. Durban.
I’ll let you have the honor of getting those
tusks. My! But they’re whoppers!
Better use almost a full charge. Don’t
take any chances on merely wounding him, and having
him rush off to the jungle.”
“I won’t,” said
the old hunter, and he adjusted the electric rifle
which Tom handed him.
As the great beast was tearing around,
trumpeting shrilly and breaking off trees Mr. Durban
fired. The creature sank down, instantly killed,
and was out of his misery, for often it is great pain
which makes an otherwise peaceable elephant become
a “rogue.”
“He’s done for,”
said Ned. “I guess you have the tusks you
want now, Mr. Durban.”
“I think so,” agreed the
hunter, and when the airship was sent down, and the
ivory cut out, it was found that the tusks were even
larger than they had supposed. “It is a
prize worth having,” said Mr. Durban. “I’m
sure my customer will think so, too. Now I’m
ready to head for the coast.”
Tom Swift went to the engine room,
while the last big tusks were being stored away with
the other ivory. Several parts of the motor needed
oiling, and Ned was assisting in this work.
“Going to start soon?”
asked Mr. Durban, appearing in the doorway.
“Yes; why?” inquired Tom,
who noted an anxious note in the voice of the hunter.
“Well, I don’t like staying
longer in this jungle than I can help. It’s
not healthy in the first place, and then it’s
a wild and desolate place, where all sorts of wild
beasts are lurking, and where wandering hands of natives
may appear at any time.”
“You don’t mean that the
red pygmies will come back; do you?” asked Ned.
“There’s no telling,”
replied Mr. Durban with a shrug of his shoulders.
“Only, as long as we’ve got what we’re
after, I’d start off as soon as possible.”
“Yes, don’t run any chances
with those little red men,” begged Andy Foger,
who had given himself up for lost when he and his companion
fell into their hands.
“Radder vould I be mit cannibals
dan dose little imps!” spoke the German fervently.
“We’ll start at once,”
declared Tom. “Are you all aboard, and is
everything loaded into the airship?”
“Everything. I guess.” answered Mr.
Anderson.
Tom looked to the motor, saw that
it was in working order, and shoved over the lever
of the gas machine to begin the generating of the
lifting vapor. To his surprise there was no corresponding
hiss that told of the gas rushing into the bag.
“That’s odd,” he
remarked. “Ned, see if anything is wrong
with that machine. I’ll pull the lever
again.”
The bank clerk stood beside the apparatus,
while Tom worked the handle, but whatever was the
matter with it was too intricate or complicated for
Ned to solve.
“I can’t see what ails
it,” he called to his chum. “You better
have a peep.”
“All right, I’ll look if you work the
handle.”
The passengers on the airship, which
now rested in a little clearing in the dense jungle,
gathered at the engine room door, looking at Tom and
Ned as they worked over the machine.
“Bless my pulley wheel!”
exclaimed Mr. Damon “I hope nothing has gone
wrong.”
“Well something has!”
declared the young inventor in a muffled voice, for
he was down on his hands and knees peering under the
gas apparatus. “One of the compression
cylinders has cracked,” he added dubiously.
“It must have snapped when we landed this last
time. I came down too heavily.”
“What does that mean?”
asked Mr. Durban, who did not know much about machinery.
“It means that I’ve got
to put a new cylinder in,” went on Tom.
“It’s quite a job, too, but we can’t
make gas without it!”
“Well, can’t you do it
just as well up in the air as down here?” asked
Mr. Durban. “Make an ascension, Tom, and
do the repairs up above, where we’ve got good
air, and where—”
He paused suddenly, and seemed to be listening.
“What is it?” asked the
young inventor quickly. There was no need to
answer, for, from the jungle without, came the dull
booming of the war drums of some natives.
“That’s what I was afraid
of!” cried the old elephant hunter, catching
up his gun. “Some black scout has seen us
and is summoning his tribesmen. Hurry, Tom, send
up the ship, and we’ll take care of the savages.”
“But I can’t send her up!”
cried Tom.
“You can’t? Why not?”
“Because the gas machine won’t
work until I put in a new cylinder, and that will
take at least a half a day.”
“Go up as an aeroplane then!”
cried Mr. Damon. “Bless my monkey wrench,
Tom, you’ve often done it before.”
For answer Tom waved his hand toward
the thick jungle all about them.
“We haven’t room to get
a running start of ten feet.” he said, “and
without a start the airship can never rise as a mere
aeroplane. The only way we can get up from the
jungle is like a balloon, and without the gas—”
He paused significantly. The
sound of the war drums became louder, and to it was
added a weird singing chant.
“The natives!” cried Mr.
Anderson. “They’re coming right this
way! We must fight them off if they attack us!”
“Where’s the electric
rifle?” asked Ned. “Get that out,
Tom!”
“Wait!” suggested Mr.
Durban. “This is serious! It looks
as if they were going to attack us, and they have
us at a disadvantage. Our only safety is in flight,
but as Tom says we can’t go up until the gas
machine is fixed, he will have to attend to that part
of it while we keep off the black men. Tom, we
can’t spare you to fight this time! You
repair the ship as soon as you can, and we’ll
guard her from the natives. And you’ve
got to work lively!”
“I will!” cried the young
inventor. “It’s luck we have a spare
cylinder!”
Suddenly there was a louder shout
in the jungle and it was followed by a riot of sound.
War drums were beaten, tom-toms clashed and the natives
howled.
“Here they are!” cried Mr. Anderson.
“Bless my suspenders!” shouted Mr. Damon.
“Where is my gun?”
“Here, you take mine, and I’ll
use the electric rifle,” answered the elephant
hunter. As he spoke there was a hissing sound
in the air and a flight of spears passed over the
airship.
The defenders slipped outside, while
Tom, with Ned to help him, worked feverishly to repair
the break. They were in a serious strait, for
with the airship practically helpless they were at
the mercy of the natives. And as Tom glanced
momentarily from the window, he saw scores of black,
half-naked forms slipping in and out among the trees
and trailing vines.
Soon the rifles of his friends began
to crack, and the yells of the natives were changed
to howls of anguish. The electric weapon, though
it made no noise, did great execution.
“I only hope they don’t
puncture the gas bag,” murmured Tom. as he began
taking the generating machine apart so as to get out
the cracked cylinder.
“If they do, it’s all up with us,”
murmured Ned.
After their first rush, finding that
the white men were on the alert, the blacks withdrew
some distance, where their spears and arrows were
not so effective. Our friends, including Andy
Foger, and the German, kept up a hot fire whenever
a skulking black form could be seen.
But, though the danger from the spears
and arrows was less, a new peril presented itself.
This was from the blow guns. The curious weapons
shot small arrows, tipped with tufts of a cottony substance
in place of feathers, and could be sent for a long
distance. The barbs were not strong enough to
pierce the tough fabric of the gas bag, as a spear
or arrow would have done, but there was more danger
from them to our friends who were on deck.
“Those barbs may be poisoned,”
said Mr. Durban, “and in case any one is wounded,
the wound, though it be but a scratch, must be treated
with antiseptics. I have some.”
This course was followed, the elephant
hunter being wounded twice, and Andy Foger and Mr.
Damon once each. There was not a native to be
seen now, for they were hiding behind the trees of
the jungle, but every now and then a blowgun barb
would whizz out of the forest.
Finally Mr. Durban suggested that
they erect improvised shelters, behind which they
could stand with their rifle, and breastworks were
made out of packing boxes. Then our friends were
comparatively safe. But they had to be on the
alert, and it was nervous work, for they could not
tell what minute the blacks would rush from the jungle,
and, in spite of the fire from the electric rifle and
other guns, overwhelm the ship.
It was very trying to Tom and Ned,
for they had to work hard and rapidly in the close
engine room. The sweat dripped down off them,
but they kept at it. It was three hours before
the broken cylinder was removed, and it was no light
task to put in the other, for the valves had to be
made very tight to prevent leakage.
The two lads stopped to get something
to eat, while the guards kept sharp watch against
a surprise. At intervals came a flight of barbs,
and occasionally a black form could be seen, when it
was instantly fired at. Several times the barbaric
noise of the tom-toms and war drums, with which the
shouts of the natives mingled, broke out deafeningly.
“Think you can repair it by
night?” asked Mr. Durban anxiously of Tom.
“I hope so,” was the response.
“Because if we have to stay
here after dark—well, I don’t want
to do it if I can help it,” finished the hunter.
Neither did the young inventor, and
he redoubled his efforts to make the repairs.
It was getting dark when the last belt was in place,
and it was high time, too, for the natives were getting
bolder, creeping up through the forest to within shooting
distance with their arrows and spears.
“There!” cried Tom at
length. “Now we’ll see if she works!”
Once more he pulled the starting lever, and this time
there was the welcome hiss of the gas.
“Hurrah!” cried Ned.
The young inventor turned the machine
on at full power. In a few minutes the Black
Hawk trembled through her length.
“She’s going up!
Bless my balloon basket! She’s going up!”
cried Mr. Damon.
The natives must have suspected that
something unusual was going on, for they made a sudden
rush, yelling and beating their drums. Mr. Durban
and the others hurried out on deck and fired at them,
but there vas little more need. With a bound
the airship left the earth, being rapidly carried
up by the gas. The blacks sent a final shower
of spears after her, but only one was effective, slightly
wounding the German. Then Tom started the motor,
the propellers whizzed, and the Black Hawk was once
more under way, just as night settled over the jungle,
and upon the horde of black and howling savages that
rushed around, maddened over the escape of their intended
victims.
No further accidents marred the trip to the coast, which was reached
in due time, and very glad our friends were to be away from the
jungle and the land of the red pygmies.
A division was made of the ivory, and Tom’s share was large enough
to provide him with a substantial amount. Ned and Mr. Damon were
also given a goodly sum from the sale of the tusks. The big ones,
from the “rogue,” were shipped to the man who had commissioned Mr.
Durban to secure them for him.
“Well, now for home,” said Tom, when the airship had been taken
apart for shipment. “I guess you’ll be glad to get back to the
United States, won’t you, friends?”
“That’s what,” agreed Andy Foger. “I think I’m done with airships.
Ugh! When I think of those red dwarfs I can’t sleep nights!”
“Yah, dot iss so!” agreed the German.
“Well, I’m going to settle down for a time,” declared Tom. “I’ve had
enough adventures for a while, but those in elephant land—”
“They certainly put it all over the things that happen to some
people!” interrupted Ned with a laugh.
“Bless my fish-line, that’s so!” agreed Mr. Damon.
But Tom Swift was not done with adventures, and what farther
happened to him may be learned by reading the next volume of this
series, which will be entitled, “Tom Swift in the City of Gold; or,
Marvelous Adventures Underground.”
They all made a safe and pleasant voyage home, and as news of the
rescue of the missionaries had been cabled to America, Tom and his
friends were met, as they left the steamer, by a crowd of newspaper
reporters, who got a good story of the battle with the red pygmies,
though Tom was inclined to make light of his part in the affair.
“Now for Shopton, home, Dad, Eradicate Sampson and his mule!”
exclaimed Tom, as they boarded a train in New York.
“And somebody else, too, I guess; eh?” asked Ned of his chum,
with a laugh.
“That’s none of your affair!” declared Tom, as he blushed,
and then he, too, joined in the merriment.
And now, for a time, we will say good-by to the young inventor
and his friends.