After making two circuits of the track
at moderate speed, Tom turned on more power, deciding
to see how the machine would behave on the turns,
going at a fast speed. As it happened he forged
ahead just as the big red car was coming up behind
him. The driver of it took this for a challenge
and threw his controller handle forward.
“Come on!” he cried to
our hero, when even with him.
Tom did not want to decline the invitation,
and the impromptu race was under way. Soon the
green car came rushing up, and for two miles the three
kept almost in line. It was evident that neither
the green nor the red car drivers wanted to “open
out,” until they saw Tom do so.
He was willing to oblige them, and
suddenly increased his speed. They did the same,
and went ahead of him. Then Tom turned on a little
more juice and got the lead, but the two men were
right after him, and they see-sawed like this for two
more miles. Then, with a cry the man in the red
car, with a sudden burst of speed, left Tom and the
green car behind. The green car was soon up to
its rival, but Tom decided he would not spurt.
The lad and his friends spent the
early part of the night in making a final inspection
of the machinery, finding it in good order. Then,
with his head filled with visions of the race on the
morrow Tom went to bed. He had made inquiries,
by telephone, of the friends of Miss Nestor, and learned
that she had not arrived. Tom felt a distinct
sense of disappointment.
The day of the race could not have
been better. It was ideal weather, and conditions
at the track were just right. Tom was up early,
and went over every inch of his car with a nervous
dread that he might find something the matter.
The final details of the race were
completed, and the entrants given their numbers and
places. Tom drew a good position, not the best,
but he had no reason to complain. Half an hour
before the start he again telephoned to see if Miss
Nestor had arrived, but she had not, and it was with
rather gloomy thoughts that the lad entered his car,
in which Mr. Sharp had already taken his place.
Mr. Damon went to the grandstand to watch the race.
“I wanted Mary to see me win,”
thought our hero, for he had grimly set his mind on
coming in ahead.
There was a great crowd in the grandstand
and scattered about the big track, which took in a
large extent of territory. In spite of its size—five
miles around—it seemed solidly packed
for the entire length with autos, containing gay parties
who had come to see the electric contest. There
was a band playing gay airs, as Tom guided his machine
through the entrance gate, and onto the track.
The judges made their final inspection.
There were twenty cars entered, but it was obvious
that some of them would not last long, as their battery
capacity was not large enough. Their owners might
have relied on recharging, but how they could do this
under the usual slow system, and hope to win, Tom could
not see. He hoped to run the entire distance
on the single charge, but, if by some accident part
of his current should leak away, his battery could
be charged in a short time, by means of his new system,
to run for a considerable distance, or he could install
a new one already charged, for he had two sets on
hand. Tom glanced over the cars of his competitors.
They were to be sent away in batches, the affair being
a handicap one, with time allowance for the smaller
powered cars. Tom noted that his car and the red
and the green ones were in the same bunch. Tom’s
car was purple.
“Are you all ready?” asked
the starter of the first group of races.
“Ready,” was the low-voiced response.
“Crack!” went the pistol,
and there followed the hum of the motors as the current
set the mechanism to work. Forward went the cars,
amid the crash of the band and the cheers of the crowd.
The big race was under way.
“Do you feel nervous, Tom?” asked Mr.
Sharp.
“Not a bit,” replied the lad.
Around and around the track flew the
speedy electrics. It was evident that the holding
of a meet solely for cars of this character had brought
out many new ideas that would be to the benefit of
the industry. Some cars were “freaks”
and others, like Tom’s, showed a distinct advance
over previous styles of construction.
A five-hundred mile race around a
track is rather a monotonous affair, except for what
happens, and things very soon began to happen at this
race.
As Tom had expected, several of the
machines were forced to withdraw. Tire troubles
beset some, and others found that they were hopelessly
out of it because of low power, or lack of battery
capacity.
Tom determined not to let the red
or the green car gain any advantage over him, and
so he watched those two vehicles narrowly. On
the other hand, the red and the green electrics were
evidently afraid of one another and of Tom.
They all three kept pretty much together
for the first thirty miles. By this time the
race had settled down into a steady grind. There
was some excitement when the steering gear of one
car broke, and it crashed Into the fence, injuring
the driver, but the race went on.
The young inventor was holding his
own with his two chief rivals, and was feeling rather
proud of his car, when there came from it a report
like a pistol shot.
“Blow out!” yelled Tom
desperately, steering to one of the several repair
stations on the inner side of the track. “Be
ready with the extra wheel, Mr. Sharp!”
“Right you are!” cried
the balloonist. The car was scarcely stopped
when he had leaped out, and had the lifting jack under
the left rear wheel, where the tire had gone to the
bad. He and Tom labored like Trojans to take
off the wheel, and put on the other. They lost
five minutes, and when they got under way again the
red and the green cars were three quarters of a lap
ahead.
“You’ve got to catch them!” declared
Sharp firmly.
But the red and the green car drivers
saw their advantage, and were determined to hold it.
Tom could not catch them without going his limit,
and he did not want to do this just yet. However,
he had his opportunity when about two hundred miles
had been covered. Both the red and the green
cars had tire troubles, but the red one was delayed
scarcely two minutes as there was a corps of mechanics
on hand to take off the defective wheel and put on
another. Still Tom regained his lost ground, and
once more the race between those three cars was even.
In the rear of Tom’s car Mr.
Sharp was mending the blown-out tire, though there
was still one spare wheel on reserve. Tom, in
front, peered eagerly at the track. Nearly side
by side raced the red and the green cars, the latter
somewhat to the rear.
It was at the three hundred and fiftieth
mile that Tom had another blow-out. This time
it took a little longer to change the wheel, and the
red and green cars gained a full lap on him. The
track was now so dusty that it was difficult to see
the contesting cars. Many had dropped out, and
more were on the verge of giving up.
With the odds against him, Tom started
in to regain the lost ground. Narrowly he watched
his electric power. Slowly he saw it dropping.
Would he have enough left to finish out the race?
He feared not. The hours were passing. Still
there was a hundred miles yet to go twenty circuits
of the track. Some of the spectators were getting
weary and leaving. The band played spasmodically.
Suddenly Tom saw the red car shoot
to one side of the track, toward a charging station;
The green car followed.
“That’s our cue!”
cried the young inventor “We need a little more
‘juice’ and now is the time to get it.”
The lad ran to the shed where his
charging wires were, and they were connected in a
trice. He allowed twenty-five minutes for the
charging, as he knew with his improved battery he could
get enough current in that time to finish the contest.
Before the red and green car drivers had finished
installing new batteries, for they could not recharge
as quickly as could our hero, Tom was on the track
again. But, in a little while, his two rivals
were after him.
It was now a spectacular race.
Around and around swept the three big cars. All
the others were practically out of it. The crowd
became lively airs. Mile after mile was reeled
off. The day was passing. Tired and covered
with dust from the track, Tom still sat at the steering
wheel.
“Two laps more!” cried
Mr. Sharp, as the starter’s pistol gave this
warning. “Can you get away from ’em,
Tom?”
The red and the green cars were following
closely. The young inventor looked back and nodded.
He turned on more power, almost to the limit—that
he was saving for the final spurt. But after
him still came the two big cars. Suddenly the
red car shot ahead, just as the last lap was beginning.
The green tried to follow, but there was a flash of
fire, a loud report, and Tom knew a fuse had blown
out. There was no time for his rival to put in
a new one. The race was now between Tom and the
red car. Could the lad catch and pass it?
They were now only a mile from the
finish. The red car was three lengths ahead.
With a quick motion Tom turned on the last bit of
power. There seemed to come a roar from his Motor
and his car shot ahead. It was on even terms
with the red car when what Tom had been fearing for
the last five minutes happened: his fuse blew
out.
“Too bad! It’s all up with us!”
cried Mr. Sharp.
“No!” cried Tom in a ringing
voice. “I’ve got an emergency fuse
ready!” He snapped a switch in place, putting
into commission another fuse. The motor that
had lost speed began to pick it up again. Tom
had pulled back the controller handle, but he now
shoved it forward again, notch by notch, until it was
at the limit. He had fallen back from the red
car, and the occupants of that, with a yell of triumph,
prepared to cross the line a winner.
But, like a race horse that nerves
himself for the last desperate spurt, Tom’s
machine fairly leaped ahead. With his hands gripping
the rim of the steering wheel, until it seemed that
the bones of his fingers would protrude, Tom sent his
car straight for the finishing tape. There was
a yell from the spectators. Men were standing
up, waving their hats and shouting. Women were
fairly screaming. Mr. Damon was blessing everything
within sight. Mr. Sharp, in his excitement, was
pushing on the back of the front seats as if to shove
the car ahead.
Then, as the pistol announced the
close of the race, Tom’s car, with what seemed
a mighty leap, like a hunter clearing a ditch, forged
ahead, and crossed the line a length in advance of
the red car. Tom Swift had Won.
Amid the cheers of the crowd the lad
slowed up, and, at the direction of the judges, wheeled
back to the stand, to receive the prize. A certified
check for three thousand dollars was handed him, and
he received the congratulations of the racing officials.
The driver of the red car also generously praised him.
“You won fair and square,”
he said, shaking hands with Tom.
The young inventor and his friends
drove their car to their shed. As Tom was descending,
weary and begrimed with dust he heard a voice asking:
“Mayn’t I congratulate you also?”
He wheeled around, to confront Mary
Nestor, immaculate in a summer gown.
“Why—why,”
he stammered. “I—I thought you
didn’t come.”
“Oh, yes I did,” she answered,
laughing. “I wouldn’t have missed
it for anything. I arrived late, but I saw the
whole race. Wasn’t it glorious. I’m
so glad you won!” Tom was too, now, but he
shrank back when Miss Nestor held out both daintily
gloved hands to him. His hands were covered with
oil and dirt.
“As if I cared for my gloves!”
she cried, and she took possession of his hands, a
proceeding to which Tom was nothing loath. “Are
you going to race any more?” she asked, as he
walked along by her side, away from the gathering
crowd.
“I don’t know,”
he replied. “My car is speedier than I thought
it was. Perhaps I may enter it in other contests.”
But what Tom Swift did later on will
be told in another volume, to be called, “Tom
Swift and His Wireless Message; or, The Castaways
of Earthquake Island”—a strange tale
of ship-wreck and mystery.
The run back home was made without
incident, save for a broken chain, easily repaired,
the day following the race, and Tom later received
a number of invitations to give exhibitions of speed.
Several automobile manufacturers wanted to secure the
rights to his machine, but he said he desired to consider
the matter before acting. He did not forget his
promise to Mrs. Baggert, regarding the diamond earrings,
and bought her the finest pair he could find.
“Come on, Mr. Sharp,”
proposed Tom, a week or so after the big race, “let’s
go for a spin in the airship. I want to see how
it feels to be among the clouds once more,”
and they were soon soaring aloft.
The new bank, started by Mr. Foger,
did not flourish long. It closed its doors in
less than six months, but the old institution was
stronger than ever. Mr. Berg disappeared, and
Tom never learned whether the agent really was the
man he had chased, and whose watch charm he tore loose,
though he always had his suspicions. Nor did
it ever develop who crossed the electric wires, so
that Tom was so nearly fatally shocked. Andy Foger
disliked our hero more than ever, and on several occasions
caused him not a little trouble, but Tom was able
to look after himself.
THE END