THE RESCUE
“Jump! Jump!” cried
Mr. Swift, leaping to his feet and motioning to the
man on the trapeze of the balloon. But it is
doubtful whether or not the performer heard him.
Certainly he could not see the frantic motions of
the inventor. “Why doesn’t he jump?”
Mr. Swift went on piteously to the two lads.
“He’ll surely be burned to death if he
hangs on there!”
“It’s too far to leap!”
exclaimed Tom. “He’s a good way up
in the air, though it looks like only a short distance.
He would be killed if he dropped now.”
“He ought to have a parachute,”
added Ned. “Most of those men do when
they go up in a balloon. Why doesn’t he
come down in that? I wonder how the balloon took
fire?”
“Maybe he hasn’t a parachute,”
suggested Tom, while he slowed down the motor-boat
still more so as to remain very nearly under the blazing
balloon.
“Yes, he has!” cried Ned.
“See, it’s hanging to one side of the
big bag. He ought to cut loose. He could
save himself then. Why doesn’t he?”
The balloon was slowly twisting about,
gradually settling to the surface of the lake, but
all the while the flames were becoming fiercer and
the black clouds of smoke increased in size.
“There, see the parachute!” went on Ned.
The twisting of the bag had brought
into view the parachute or big, umbrella-shaped bag,
which would have enabled the man to safely drop to
the surface of the lake. Without it he would
have hit the water with such force that he would have
been killed as surely as if he had struck the solid
earth. But the boys and Mr. Swift also saw something
else, and this was that the balloon was on fire on
the same side where the parachute was suspended.
“Look! Look!” shouted
Tom, bringing his boat to a stop. “That’s
why he can’t jump! He can’t reach
the parachute!”
By this time the balloon had settled
so low that the actions of the man could be plainly
seen. That he was in great agony of fear, as
well as in great pain from the terrific heat over his
head was evident. He shifted about on the trapeze
bar, now hanging by one hand, so as to bring his body
a little farther below the blazing end of the bag,
then, when one arm tired, he would hang by the other.
If the balloon would only come down more quickly it
would get to within such a short distance of the water
that the man could safely make the drop. But the
immense canvas bag was settling so slowly, for it
was still very buoyant, that considerable time must
elapse before it would be near enough to the water
to make it safe for the unfortunate man to let go
the trapeze.
“Oh, if we could only do something!”
cried Tom. “We have to remain here helpless
and watch him burn to death. It’s awful!”
The three in the boat continued to
gaze upward. They could see the man making frantic
efforts to reach his parachute from time to time.
Once, as a little current of air blew the flames and
smoke to one side, he thought he had a chance.
Up on the trapeze bar he pulled himself and then
edged along it in an endeavor to grasp the ring of
the parachute. Once he almost had hold of that
and also the cord, which ran to a knife blade.
This cord, being pulled, would sever the rope that
bound it to the balloon, and he would be comparatively
safe, so he might drop to the lake. But, just
as he was about to grasp the ring and cord the smoke
came swirling down on him and the hungry flames seemed
to put out their fiery tongues to devour him.
He had to slide back and once more hung by his hands.
“I thought he was saved then,”
whispered Tom, and even the whisper sounded loud in
the silence.
Several men came running along the
shore of the lake now. They saw the occupants
in the arrow and cried out:
“Why don’t you save him? Go to his
rescue!”
“What can we do?” asked
Ned quietly of his two friends, but he did not trouble
to answer the men on shore, who probably did not know
what they were saying.
The motor-boat had drifted from a
spot under the unfortunate balloonist, and at a word
from his father the young inventor started the engine
and steered the craft back directly under the blazing
bag again.
“If he does drop, perhaps we
may be able to pick him up,” said Mr. Swift.
“I wish we could save him!”
A cry from Ned startled Tom and his
father, and their eyes, that had momentarily been
directed away from the burning bag high in the air,
were again turned toward it.
“The balloon is falling apart!”
exclaimed Ned. “It’s all up with
him now!”
Indeed it did seem so, for pieces
of the burning canvas, blazing and smoking, were falling
in a shower from the part of the bag already consumed,
and the fiery particles were fairly raining down on
the man. But he still had his wits about him,
though his perilous position was enough to make any
one lose his mind, and he swung from side to side
on the bar, shifting skillfully with his hands and
dodging the larger particles of blazing canvas.
When some small sparks fell on his clothing he beat
them out with one hand, while with the other he clung
to the trapeze.
There was scarcely any wind or the
man’s plight might have been more bearable,
for the current of air would have carried the smoke
and fire to one side. As it was, most of the
smoke and flames went straight up, save now and then,
when a draught created by the heat would swirl the
black clouds down on the performer, hiding him from
sight for a second or two. A breeze would have
carried the sparks away instead of letting them fall
on him.
Nearer and nearer to the surface of
the lake sank the balloon. By this time the
crowd on the bank had increased and there were excited
opinions as to what was best to do. But the trouble
was that little could be done. If the man could
hold out until he got near enough to the water to
let go he might yet be saved, but this would not be
for some time at the present rate the balloon was
falling. The performer realized this, and, as
the fire was getting hotter, he made another desperate
attempt to reach the parachute. It was unavailing
and he had to drop back, hanging below the slender
bar.
Suddenly there came a puff of wind,
fanning the faces of those in the motor-boat, and
they looked intently to observe if there was any current
as high as was the balloonist. They saw the big
bag sway to one side and the flames broke out more
fiercely as they caught the draught. The balloon
moved slowly down the lake.
“Keep after it, Tom!”
urged his father. “We may be able to save
him!”
The lad increased the speed of his
engine and Ned, who was at the wheel, gave it a little
twist. Then, with a suddenness that was startling,
the blazing canvas airship began to settle swiftly
toward the water. It had lost much of its buoyancy.
“Now he can jump! He’s
near enough to the water now!” cried Tom.
But a new danger arose. True,
the balloon was rapidly approaching the surface of
the lake and in a few seconds more would be within
such a short distance that a leap would not be fatal.
But the burning bag was coming straight down and
scarcely would the man be in the water ere the fiery
canvas mass would be on top of him.
In such an event he would either be
burned to death or so held down that drowning must
quickly follow.
“If there was only wind enough
to carry the balloon beyond him after he jumped he
could do it safely!” cried Ned.
Tom said nothing. He was measuring,
with, his eye, the distance the balloon had yet to
go and also the distance away the motor-boat was
from where it would probably land.
“He can do it!” exclaimed the young inventor.
“How?” asked his father.
For answer Tom caught up a newspaper
he had purchased at the hotel that morning.
Rolling it quickly into a cone, so that it formed a
rough megaphone, he put the smaller end to his mouth,
and, pointing the larger opening at the balloonist,
he called out:
“Drop into the lake! We’ll
pick you up before the bag falls on you! Jump!
Let go now!”
The balloonist heard and understood.
So did Ned and Mr. Swift. Tom’s quick
wit had found a way to save the man.
Faster and faster the blazing bag
settled toward the surface of the water. It
was now merely a mushroom-shaped piece of burning
and smoking canvas, yet it was supporting the man almost
as a parachute would have done.
With one look upward to the burning
mass above him and a glance downward to the lake,
the aeronaut let go his hold. Like a shot he
came down, holding his body rigid and straight as a
stick, for he knew how to fall into water, did that
balloonist.
Tom Swift was ready for him.
No sooner had the lad called his directions through
the megaphone than the young inventor had speeded
up his engine to the top notch.
“Steer so as to pick him up!”
Tom cried to Ned, who was at the wheel. “Pass
by him on a curve, and, as soon as I grab him, put
the wheel over so as to get out from under the balloon.”
It was a risky thing to do, but our
hero had it all planned out. He made a loop of
the boat’s painter, and, hurrying to the bow,
leaned over as far as he could, holding the rope in
readiness. His idea was to have the balloonist
grab the strands and be pulled out of danger by the
speedy motor-boat, for the blazing canvas would cover
such an extent of water that the man could not have
swum out of the danger zone in time.
Down shot the balloonist and down
more slowly settled the collapsed bag, yet not so
slowly that there was any time to spare. It needed
only a few seconds to drop over the performer, to burn
and smother him.
Into the water splashed the man, disappearing
from sight as when a stick is dropped in, point first.
Ned was alert and steered the boat to the side in
which the man’s face was, for he concluded that
the aeronaut would strike out in that direction when
he came up. The arrow was now directly
under the blazing balloon and cries of fear from the
watchers on shore urged upon Tom and his companions
the danger of their position. But they had to
take some risk to rescue the man.
“There he is!” cried Mr.
Swift, who was on the watch, leaning over the side
of the boat. Tom and Ned saw him at the same
instant. Ned shifted his wheel and the young
inventor bent over, holding out the rope for the man
to grasp. He saw it and struck out toward the
arrow. But there was no need for him to
go far. An instant more and the speeding motor-boat
shot past him. He grabbed the rope and Tom,
aided by Mr. Swift, began to lift him out of the water.
“Quick! To one side, Ned!”
yelled Tom, for the heat of the descending mass of
burning canvas struck him like a furnace blast.
Ned needed no urging. With a
swirl of the screw the arrow shot herself out
of the way, carrying the aeronaut with her. A
moment later the burning balloon, or what there was
left of it, settled down into the lake, hissing angrily
as the fire was quenched by the water and completely
covering the spot where, but a few seconds before,
the man had been swimming. He had been saved
in the nick of time.