SEARCHING for smugglers.
“Well, of all things!”
“Who in the world would think such a thing?”
“Andy going to start out with his airship again!”
“And going to sail it off the roof of his house!”
These were the alternate expressions
that came from Tom and Ned, as they stood gazing at
each other after the startling information given them
by Mr. Dillon, the carpenter.
“Do you really think he means
it?” asked Tom, after a pause, during which
they watched the retreating figure of the carpenter.
“Maybe he was fooling us.”
“No, Mr. Dillon seldom jokes,”
replied Ned, “and when he does, you can always
tell. He goes to our church, and I know he wouldn’t
deliberately tell an untruth. Oh. Andy’s
up to some game all right.”
“I thought he must be hanging
around here the way he has been, instead of being
home. But I admit I may have been wrong about
the police being after him. If he’d done
something wrong, he would hardly hire a man to work
on the house while he was hiding in it. I guess
he just wants to keep out of the way of everybody but
his own particular cronies. But I wonder what
he is up to, anyhow; getting his airship in shape
again?”
“Give it up, unless there’s
an aero meet on somewhere soon,” replied Ned.
“Maybe he’s going to try a race again.”
Tom shook his head.
“I’d have heard about
any aviation meets, if there were any scheduled,”
he replied. “I belong to the national association,
and they send out circulars whenever there are to
be races. None are on for this season. No,
Andy has some other game.”
“Well, I don’t know that it concerns us,”
spoke Ned.
“Not as long as he doesn’t
bother me,” answered the young inventor.
“Well, Ned, I suppose you’ll be over in
the morning and help me try out the noiseless airship?”
“Sure thing. Say, it was
queer, about that government agent, wasn’t it?
suspecting you of supplying airships to the smugglers?”
“Rather odd,” agreed Tom.
“He might much better suspect Andy Foger.”
“That’s so, and now that
we know Andy is rebuilding his old airship, maybe
we’d better tell him.”
“Tell who?”
“That government agent.
Tell him he’s wrong in thinking that Andy is
out of the game. We might send him word that we
just learned that Andy is getting active again.
He has as much right to suspect and question him,
as he had you.”
“Oh, I don’t know,”
began Tom slowly. He was not a vindicative youth,
nor, for that matter, was Ned. And Tom would not
go out of his way to give information about an enemy,
when it was not certain that the said enemy meant
anything wrong. “I don’t believe there’s
anything in it,” finished our hero. “Andy
may have a lot of time on his hands, and, for want
of something better to do, he’s fixing up his
aeroplane.”
“Look!” suddenly exclaimed
Ned. “There’s that agent now!
He’s going to the depot to get a train, I guess,”
and he pointed to the government man, who had so lately
interviewed Tom. “I’m going to speak
to him!” impulsively declared Ned.
“I wouldn’t,” objected
Tom, but his chum had already hastened on ahead, and
soon was seen talking excitedly to Mr. Whitford.
Tom sauntered up in time to hear the close of the
conversation.
“I’m much obliged to you
for your information,” said the custom officer.
“but I’m afraid, just as you say your chum
felt about it, that there’s nothing in it.
This Foger chap may have been bad in the past, but
I hardly think he’s in with the smugglers.
What I’m looking for is not a lad who has one
airship, but someone who is making a lot of them,
and supplying the men who are running goods over the
border. That’s the sort of game I’m
after, and if this Andy Foger only has one aeroplane
I hardly think he can be very dangerous.”
“Well, perhaps not,” admitted
Ned. “But I thought I’d tell you.”
“And I’m glad you did.
If you hear anything more. I’ll be glad
to have you let me know. Here’s my card,”
and thanking the boys for their interest Mr. Whitford
passed on.
Tom and Ned gave the noiseless airship
a test the next day. The craft, which was the
stanch Falcon, remodeled, was run out of the shed,
Koku the giant helping, while Mr. Swift stood looking
on, an interested spectator of what his son was about
to do. Eradicate, the old colored man, who was
driving his mule Boomerang, hitched to a wagon in
which he was carting away some refuse that had been
raked up in the garden, halted his outfit nearby.
“I say, Massa Tom!” he
called, as the young inventor passed near him, in
making a tour of the ship.
“Well, Rad, what is it?”
“Doan’t yo’-all
want fo’ ma an’ Boomerang t’ gib
yo’-all a tow? Mebby dat new-fangled contraption
yo’-all has done put on yo’ ship won’t
wuk, an’ mebby I’d better stick around
t’ pull yo’-all home.”
“No, Rad, I guess it will work
all right. If it doesn’t, and we get stuck
out a mile or two, I’ll send you a wireless message.”
“Doan’t do dat!”
begged the colored man. “I neber could read
dem wireless letters anyhow. Jest gib a shout,
an’ me an’ Boomerang will come a-runnin’.”
“All right, Rad, I will.
Now, Ned, is everything in shape?”
“I think so, Tom.”
“Koku, just put a little more
wind in those tires. But don’t pump as
hard as you did the other day,” Tom cautioned.
“What happened then?” asked Ned.
“Oh, Koku forgot that he had
so much muscle, and he kept on pumping air into the
bicycle wheel tires until he burst one. Go easy
this time, Koku.”
“I will, Mr. Tom,” and the giant took
the air pump.
“Is he going along?” asked
Ned, as he looked to see that all the guy wires and
stays were tight.
“I guess so,” replied
Tom. “He makes good ballast. I wish
Mr. Damon was here. If everything goes right
we may take a run over, and surprise him.”
In a little while the noiseless airship
was ready for the start. Tom, Ned and Koku climbed
in, and took their positions.
“Good luck!” Mr. Swift
called after them. Tom waved his hand to his
father, and the next moment his craft shot into the
air. Up and up it went, the great propeller blades
beating the air, but, save for a soft whirr, such
as would be made by the wings of a bird, there was
absolutely no sound.
“Hurrah!” cried Tom.
“She works! I’ve got a noiseless airship
at last!”
“Say, don’t yell at a
fellow so,” begged Ned, for Tom had been close
to his chum when he made his exulting remark.
“Yell! I wasn’t yelling,”
replied Tom. “Oh, I see what happened.
I’m so used to speaking loud on the other airships,
that make such a racket, that I didn’t realize
how quiet it was aboard the new Falcon. No wonder
I nearly made you deaf, Ned. I’ll be careful
after this,” and Tom lowered his voice to ordinary
tones. In fact it was as quiet aboard his new
craft, as if he and Ned had been walking in some grass-grown
country lane.
“She certainly is a success,”
agreed Ned. “You could creep up on some
other airship now, and those aboard would never know
you were coming.”
“I’ve been planning this
for a long time,” went on our hero, as he shifted
the steering gear, and sent the craft around in a long,
sweeping curve. “Now for Waterford and Mr.
Damon.”
They were soon above the town where
the odd man lived, and Tom, picking out Mr. Damon’s
house, situated as it was in the midst of extensive
grounds, headed for it.
“There he is, walking through
the garden,” exclaimed Ned, pointing to their
friend down below. “He hasn’t heard
us, as he would have done if we had come in any other
machine.”
“That’s so!” exclaimed
Tom. “I’m going to give him a sensation.
I’ll fly right over his head, and he won’t
know it until he sees us. I’ll come up
from behind.”
A moment later he put this little
trick into execution. Along swept the airship,
until, with a rush, it passed right over Mr. Damon’s
head. He never heard it. and was not aware of
what was happening until he saw the shadow it cast.
Then, jumping aside, as if he thought something was
about to fall on him, he cried:
“Bless my mosquito netting! What in the
world—”
Then he saw Tom and Ned in the airship,
which came gently to earth a few yards further on.
“Well of all things!”
cried Mr. Damon. “What are you up to now,
Tom Swift?”
“It’s my noiseless airship,”
explained our hero. “She doesn’t make
a sound. Get aboard, and have a ride.”
Mr. Damon looked toward the house.
“I guess my wife won’t
see me,” he said with a chuckle. “She’s
more than ever opposed to airships, Tom, since we
went on that trip taking moving pictures. But
I’ll take a chance.” And in he sprang,
when the two lads started up again. They made
quite a flight, and Tom found that his new motor exceeded
his expectations. True, it needed some adjustments,
but these could easily be made.
“Well, what are you going to
do with it, now that you have it?” asked Mr.
Damon, as Tom once more brought the machine around
to the odd man’s house, and stopped it.
“What’s it for?”
“Oh, I think I’ll find
a use for it,” replied the young inventor.
“Will you come back to Shopton with us?”
“No, I must stay here.
I have some letters to write. But I’ll run
over in a few days, and see you. Then I’ll
go on another trip, if you’ve got one planned.”
“I may have,” answered Tom with a laugh.
“Good-bye.”
He and Ned made a quick flight home,
and Tom at once started on making some changes in
the motor. He was engaged at this work the next
day, when he noticed a shadow pass across an open window.
He looked up to see Ned.
“Hello, Tom!” cried his
chum. “Have you heard the news?”
“No, what news? Has Andy
Foger fallen out of his airship?”
“No, but there are a whole lot
of Custom House detectives in town, looking for clews
to the smugglers.”
“Still at it, eh? Shopton
can’t seem to keep out of the limelight.
Has anything new turned up?”
“Yes. I just met Mr. Whitford.
He’s back on the case and he has several men
with him. They received word that some smuggled
goods came to Shopton, and were shipped out of here
again.”
“How, by airship?”
“No, by horse and wagon.
A lot of cases of valuable silks imported from England
to Canada, where the duty is light, were slipped over
the border somehow, in airships, it is thought.
Then they came here by freight, labeled as calico,
and when they reached this town they were taken away
in a wagon.”
“But how did they get here?”
“On the railroad, of course,
but the freight people had no reason to suspect them.”
“And where were they taken from the freight
station?”
“That’s what the customs
authorities want to find out. They think there’s
some secret place here, where the goods are stored
and reshipped. That’s why so many detectives
are here. They are after the smugglers hot-footed.”