A SEARCHLIGHT IS NEEDED
For a few moments after the custom
officer had made his appeal, Tom Swift did not reply.
His thoughts were busy with many things. Somehow,
it seemed of late, there had been many demands on him,
demands that had been hard and trying.
In the past he had not hesitated,
but in those cases friendship, as well as a desire
for adventures, had urged him. Now he thought
he had had his fill of adventures.
“Well?” asked Mr. Whitford,
gently. “What’s your answer, Tom?
Don’t you think this is a sort of duty-call
to you?”
“A duty-call?” repeated the young inventor.
“Yes. Of course I realize
that it isn’t like a soldier’s call to
battle, but Uncle Sam needs you just the same.
When there is a war the soldiers are called on to
repel an enemy. Now the smugglers are just as
much an enemy of the United States, in a certain way,
as an armed invader would be.”
“One strikes at the life and
liberty of the people, while the smugglers try to
cheat Uncle Sam out of money that is due him.
I’m not going to enter into a discussion as
to the right of the government to impose duties.
People have their own opinion as to that. But,
as long as the law says certain duties are to be collected,
it is the duty of every citizen, not only to pay those
dues, but to help collect them. That’s what
I’m asking you to do, Tom.”
“I don’t want to get prosy,
or deliver a lecture on the work of the custom house,
Tom, but, honestly, I think it is a duty you owe to
your country to help catch these smugglers. I
admit I’m at the end of my rope. This last
clew has failed. The Fogers seem to be innocent
of wrong doing. We need your help, Tom.”
“But I don’t see how I can help you.”
“Of course you can! You’re
an expert with airships. The smugglers are using
airships, of that I’m sure. You tell me
you have just perfected a noiseless aircraft.
That will be just the thing. You can hover on
the border, near the line dividing New York State from
Canada, or near the St. Lawrence, which is the natural
division for a certain distance, and when you see
an airship coming along you can slip up in your noiseless
one, overhaul it, and make them submit to a search.”
“But I won’t have any
authority to do that,” objected Tom, who really
did not care for the commission.
“Oh, I’ll see that you
get the proper authority all right,” said Mr.
Whitford significantly. “I made you a temporary
deputy to-night, but if you’ll undertake this
work, to catch the smugglers in their airships, you
will be made a regular custom official.”
“Yes, but supposing I can’t
catch them?” interposed our hero. “They
may have very fast airships, and—”
“I guess you’ll catch
’em all right!” put in Ned, who was at
his chum’s side as they walked along a quiet
Shopton street in the darkness. “There’s
not an aeroplane going that can beat yours, Tom.”
“Well, perhaps I could
get them,” admitted the young inventor.
“But—”
“Then you’ll undertake
this work for Uncle Sam?” interrupted Mr. Whitford
eagerly. “Come, Tom, I know you will.”
“I’m not so sure of that,”
spoke Tom. “It isn’t going to be as
easy as you think. There are many difficulties
in the way. In the first place the smuggling
may be done over such a wide area that it would need
a whole fleet of airships to capture even one of the
others, for they might choose a most unfrequented
place to cross the border.”
“Oh, we would be in communication
with you,” said the agent. “We can
come pretty near telling where the contrabrand goods
will be shipped from, but the trouble is, after we
get our tips, we can’t get to the place before
they have flown away. But with your airship, you
could catch them, after we sent you, say a wireless
message, about where to look for them. So that’s
no objection. You have a wireless outfit on your
airships, haven’t you, Tom?”
“Yes, that part is all right.”
“Then you can’t have any more objections,
Tom.”
“Well, there are some.
For instance you say most of this smuggling is done
at night.”
“Practically all of it, yes.”
“Well, it isn’t going
to be easy to pick out a contraband airship in the
dark, and chase it. But I’ll tell you what
I’ll do, Mr. Whitford, I feel as if I had sort
of ‘fallen down’ on this clew business,
as the newspaper men say, and I owe it to you to make
good in some way.”
“That’s what I want—not
that I think you haven’t done all you could,”
interposed the agent.
“Well, if I can figure out some
way, by which I think I can come anywhere near catching
these smugglers, I’ll undertake the work!”
exclaimed Tom. “I’ll do it as a duty
to Uncle Sam, and I don’t want any reward except
my expenses. It’s going to cost considerable,
but—”
“Don’t mind the expense!”
interrupted Mr. Whitford. “Uncle Sam will
stand that. Why, the government is losing thousands
of dollars every week. It’s a big leak,
and must be stopped, and you’re the one to stop
it, Tom.”
“Well, I’ll try.
I’ll see you in a couple of days, and let you
know if I have formed any plan. Now come on,
Ned. I’m tired and want to get to bed.”
“So do I,” added the agent.
“I’ll call on you day after to-morrow,
Tom, and I expect you to get right on the job,”
he added with a laugh.
“Have you any idea what you
are going to do, Tom?” asked his chum, as they
turned toward their houses.
“Not exactly. If I go I’ll
use my noiseless airship. That will come in handy.
But this night business rather stumps me. I don’t
quite see my way to get around that. Of course
I could use an ordinary searchlight, but that doesn’t
give a bright enough beam, or carry far enough.
It’s going to be quite a problem and I’ve
got to think it over.”
“Queer about the Fogers; wasn’t it, Tom?”
“Yes, I didn’t think they were going to
let us in.”
“There’s something going
on there, in spite of the fact that they were willing
for an inspection to be made,” went on Ned.
“I agree with you. I thought
it was funny the way Mr. Foger acted about not wanting
the men to go down in the cellar.”
“So did I, and yet when they
got down there they didn’t find anything.”
“That’s so. Well,
maybe we’re on the wrong track, after all.
But I’m going to keep my eyes open. I don’t
see what Andy wants with an airship platform on the
roof of his house. The ground is good enough
to start from and land on.”
“I should think so, too.
But then Andy always did like to show off, and do
things different from anybody else. Maybe it’s
that way now.”
“Perhaps,” agreed Tom.
“Well, here’s your house, Ned. Come
over in the morning,” and, with a good-night,
our hero left his chum, proceeding on toward his own
home.
“Why, Koku, haven’t you
gone to bed yet?” asked the young inventor,
as, mounting the side steps, he saw his giant servant
sitting there on a bench he had made especially for
his own use, as ordinary chairs were not substantial
enough. “What is the matter?”
“Nothing happen yet,”
spoke Koku significantly, “but maybe he come
pretty soon, and then I get him.”
“Get who, Koku?” asked Tom, with quick
suspicion.
“I do not know, but Eradicate
say he hear someone sneaking around his chicken coop,
and I think maybe it be same man who was here once
before.”
“Oh, you mean the rivals, who
were trying to get my moving picture camera?”
“That’s what!” exclaimed Koku.
“Hum!” mused Tom.
“I must be on the look-out. I’ll tell
you what I’ll do, Koku. I’ll set
my automatic camera to take the moving pictures of
any one who tries to get in my shop, or in the chicken
coop. I’ll also set the burglar alarm.
But you may also stay on the watch, and if anything
happens—”
“If anything happens, I will
un-happen him!” exclaimed the giant, brandishing
a big club he had beside him.
“All right,” laughed Tom.
“I’m sleepy, and I’m going to bed,
but I’ll set the automatic camera, and fix it
with fuse flashlights, so they will go off if the
locks are even touched.”
This Tom did, fixing up the wizard
camera, which I have told you about in the book bearing
that title. It would take moving pictures automatically,
once Tom had set the mechanism to unreel the films
back of the shutter and lens. The lights would
instantly flash, when the electrical connections on
the door locks were tampered with, and the pictures
would be taken.
Then Tom set the burglar alarm, and,
before going to bed he focused a searchlight, from
one of his airships, on the shed and chicken coop,
fastening it outside his room window.
“There!” he exclaimed,
as he got ready to turn in, not having awakened the
rest of the household, “when the burglar alarm
goes off, if it does, it will also start the searchlight,
and I’ll get a view of who the chicken thief
is. I’ll also get some pictures.”
Then, thinking over the events of
the evening, and wondering if he would succeed in
his fight with the smugglers, providing he undertook
it, Tom fell asleep.
It must have been some time after
midnight that he was awakened by the violent ringing
of a bell at his ear. At first he thought it was
the call to breakfast, and he leaped from bed crying
out:
“Yes, Mrs. Baggert, I’m coming!”
A moment later he realized what it was.
“The burglar alarm!” he
cried. “Koku, are you there? Someone
is trying to get into the chicken coop!” for
a glance at the automatic indicator, in connection
with the alarm, had shown Tom that the henhouse, and
not his shop, had been the object of attack.
“I here!” cried Koku, “I got him!”
A series of startled cries bore eloquent testimony
to this.
“I’m coming!” cried
Tom. And then he saw a wonderful sight. The
whole garden, his shop, the henhouse and all the surrounding
territory was lighted up with a radiance almost like
daylight. The beams of illumination came from
the searchlight Tom had fixed outside his window,
but never before had the lantern given such a glow.
“That’s wonderful!”
cried Tom, as he ran to examine it. “What
has happened? I never had such a powerful beam
before. There must be something that I have stumbled
on by accident. Say, that is a light all right!
Why it goes for miles and miles, and I never projected
a beam as far as this before.”
As Tom looked into a circle of violet-colored
glass set in the side cf the small searchlight, to
see what had caused the extraordinary glow, he could
observe nothing out of the ordinary. The violet
glass was to protect the eyes from the glare.
“It must be that, by accident,
I made some new connection at the dynamo,” murmured
Tom.
“Hi! Lemme go! Lemme
go, Massa giant! I ain’t done nuffin’!”
yelled a voice.
“I got you!” cried Koku.
“It’s an ordinary chicken
thief this time I guess,” said Tom. “But
this light—this great searchlight—”
Then a sudden thought came to him.
“By Jove!” he cried.
“If I can find out the secret of how I happened
to project such a beam, it will be the very thing to
focus on the smugglers from my noiseless airship!
That’s what I need—a searchlight
such as never before has been made—a terrifically
powerful one. And I’ve got it, if I can
only find out just how it happened. I’ve
got to look before the current dies out.”
Leaving the brilliant beams on in
full blast, Tom ran down the stairs to get to his
shop, from which the electrical power came.