A NARROW ESCAPE
“That’s the way to do
it! Whoop her up, Andy! Shove the spark lever
over, and turn on more gasolene! We’ll make
a record this trip.”
Two lads in the tonneau of a touring
car, that was whirling along a country road, leaned
forward to speak to the one at the steering wheel.
The latter was a red-haired youth, with somewhat squinty
eyes, and not a very pleasant face, but his companions
seemed to regard him with much favor. Perhaps
it was because they were riding in his automobile.
“Whoop her up, Andy!”
added the lad on the seat beside the driver.
“This is immense!”
“I rather thought you’d
like it,” remarked Andy Foger, as he turned
the car to avoid a stone in the road. “I’ll
make things hum around Shopton!”
“You have made them hum already,
Andy,” commented the lad beside him. “My
ears are ringing. Wow! There goes my cap!”
As the boy spoke, the breeze, created
by the speed at which the car was traveling, lifted
off his cap, and sent it whirling to the rear.
Andy Foger turned for an instant’s
glance behind. Then he opened the throttle still
wider, and exclaimed:
“Let it go, Sam. We can
get another. I want to see what time I can make
to Mansburg! I want to break a record, if I can.”
“Look out, or you’ll break
something else!” cried a lad on the rear seat.
“There’s a fellow on a bicycle just ahead
of us. Take care, Andy!”
“Let him look out for himself,”
retorted Foger, as he bent lower over the steering
wheel, for the car was now going at a terrific rate.
The youth on the bicycle was riding slowly along, and
did not see the approaching automobile until it was
nearly upon him. Then, with a mean grin, Andy
Foger pressed the rubber bulb of the horn with sudden
energy, sending out a series of alarming blasts.
“It’s Tom Swift!”
cried Sam Snedecker. “Look out, or you’ll
run him down!”
“Let him keep out of my way,” retorted
Andy savagely.
The youth on the wheel, with a sudden
spurt of speed, tried to cross the highway. He
did manage to do it, but by such a narrow margin that
in very terror Andy Foger shut off the power, jammed
down the brakes and steered to one side. So suddenly
was he obliged to swerve over that the ponderous machine
skidded and went into the ditch at the side of the
road, where it brought up, tilting to one side.
Tom Swift, his face rather pale from
his narrow escape, leaped from his bicycle, and stood
regarding the automobile. As for the occupants
of that machine, from Andy Foger, the owner, to the
three cronies who were riding with him, they all looked
very much astonished.
“Are we—is it damaged
any, Andy?” asked Sam Snedecker.
“I hope not,” growled
Andy. “If my car’s hurt it’s
Tom Swift’s fault!”
He leaped from his seat and made a
hurried inspection of the machine. He found nothing
the matter, though it was more from good luck than
good management. Then Andy turned and looked savagely
at Tom Swift. The latter, standing his wheel
up against the fence, walked forward.
“What do you mean by getting
in the way like that?” demanded Andy with a
scowl. “Don’t you see that you nearly
upset me?”
“Well, I like your nerve, Andy
Foger!” cried Tom. “What do you mean
by nearly running me down? Why didn’t you
sound your horn? You automobilists take too much
for granted! You were going faster than the legal
rate, anyhow!”
“I was, eh?” sneered Andy.
“Yes, you were, and you know
it. I’m the one to make a kick, not you.
You came pretty near hitting me. Me getting in
your way! I guess I’ve got some rights
on the road!”
“Aw, go on!” growled Andy,
for he could think of nothing else to say. “Bicycles
are a back number, anyhow.”
“It isn’t so very long
ago that you had one,” retorted Tom. “First
you fellows know, you’ll be pulled in for speeding.”
“I guess we had better go slower,
Andy,” advised Sam in a low voice. “I
don’t want to be arrested.”
“Leave this to me,” retorted
Andy. “I’m running this tour.
The next time you get in my way I’ll run you
down!” he threatened Tom. “Come on,
fellows, we’re late now, and can’t make
a record run, all on account of him,” and Andy
got back into the car, followed by his cronies, who
had hurriedly alighted after their thrilling stop.
“If you try anything like this
again you’ll wish you hadn’t,” declared
Tom, and he watched the automobile party ride off.
“Oh, forget it!” snapped
back Andy, and he laughed, his companions joining.
Tom Swift said nothing in reply.
Slowly he remounted his wheel and rode off, but his
thoughts toward Andy Foger were not very pleasant
ones. Andy was the son of a wealthy man of the
town, and his good fortune in the matter of money
seemed to have spoiled him, for he was a bully and
a coward. Several times he and Tom Swift had
clashed, for Andy was overbearing. But this was
the first time Andy had shown such a vindictive spirit.
“He thinks he can run over everything
since he got his new auto,” commented Tom aloud
as he rode on. “He’ll have a smash-up
some day, if he isn’t careful. He’s
too fond of speeding. I wonder where he and his
crowd are going?”
Musing over his narrow escape Tom
rode on, and was soon at his home, where he lived
with his widowed father, Barton Swift, a wealthy inventor,
and the latter’s housekeeper, Mrs. Baggert.
Approaching a machine shop, one of several built near
his house by Mr. Swift, in which he conducted experiments
and constructed apparatus. Tom was met by his
parent.
“What’s the matter, Tom?”
asked Mr. Swift. “You look as if something
had happened.”
“Something very nearly did,”
answered the youth, and related his experience on
the road.
“Humph,” remarked the
inventor; “your little pleasure-jaunt might
have ended disastrously. I suppose Andy and his
chums are off on their trip. I remember Mr. Foger
speaking to me about it the other day. He said
Andy and some companions were going on a tour, to be
gone a week or more. Well, I’m glad it was
no worse. But have you anything special to do,
Tom?”
“No; I was just riding for pleasure,
and if you want me to do anything, I’m ready.”
“Then I wish you’d take
this letter to Mansburg for me. I want it registered,
and I don’t wish to mail it in the Shopton post-office.
It’s too important, for it’s about a valuable
invention.”
“The new turbine motor, dad?”
“That’s it. And on
your way I wish you’d stop in Merton’s
machine shop and get some bolts he’s making
for me.”
“I will. Is that the letter?”
and Tom extended his hand for a missive his father
held.
“Yes. Please be careful
of it. It’s to my lawyers in Washington
regarding the final steps in getting a patent for the
turbine. That’s why I’m so particular
about not wanting it mailed here. Several times
before I have posted letters here, only to have the
information contained in them leak out before my attorneys
received them. I do not want that to happen in
this case. Another thing; don’t speak about
my new invention in Merton’s shop when you stop
for the bolts.”
“Why, do you think he gave out
information concerning your work?”
“Well, not exactly. He
might not mean to, but he told me the other day that
some strangers were making inquiries of him, about
whether he ever did any work for me.”
“What did he tell them?”
“He said that he occasionally
did, but that most of my inventive work was done in
my own shops, here. He wanted to know why the
men were asking such questions, and one of them said
they expected to open a machine shop soon, and wanted
to ascertain if they might figure on getting any of
my trade. But I don’t believe that was
their object.”
“What do you think it was?”
“I don’t know, exactly,
but I was somewhat alarmed when I heard this from
Merton. So I am going to take no risks. That’s
why I send this letter to Mansburg. Don’t
lose it, and don’t forget about the bolts.
Here is a blue-print of them, so you can see if they
come up to the specifications.”
Tom rode off on his wheel, and was
soon spinning down the road.
“I wonder if I’ll meet
Andy Foger and his cronies again?” he thought.
“Not very likely to, I guess, if they’re
off on a tour. Well, I’m just as well satisfied.
He and I always seem to get into trouble when we meet.”
Tom was not destined to meet Andy again that day,
but the time was to come when the red-haired bully
was to cause Tom Swift no little trouble, and get
him into danger besides. So Tom rode along, thinking
over what his father had said to him about the letter
he carried.
Mr. Barton Swift was a natural inventor.
From a boy he had been interested in things mechanical,
and one of his first efforts had been to arrange a
system of pulleys, belts and gears so that the windmill
would operate the churn in the old farmhouse where
he was born. The fact that the mill went so fast
that it broke the churn all to pieces did not discourage
him, and he at once set to work, changing the gears.
His father had to buy a new churn, but the young inventor
made his plan work on the second trial, and thereafter
his mother found butter-making easy.
From then on Barton Swift lived in
a world of inventions. People used to say he
would never amount to anything, that inventors never
did, but Mr. Swift proved them all wrong by amassing
a considerable fortune out of his many patents.
He grew up, married and had one son, Tom. Mrs.
Barton died when Tom was three years old, and since
then he had lived with his father and a succession
of nurses and housekeepers. The last woman to
have charge of the household was a Mrs. Baggert, a
motherly widow, and she succeeded so well, and Tom
and his father formed such an attachment for her, that
she was regarded as a fixture, and had now been in
charge ten years.
Mr. Swift and his son lived in a handsome
house on the outskirts of the village of Shopton,
in New York State. The village was near a large
body of water, which I shall call Lake Carlopa, and
there Tom and his father used to spend many pleasant
days boating, for Tom and the inventor were better
chums than many boys are, and they were often seen
together in a craft rowing about, or fishing.
Of course Tom had some boy friends, but he went with
his father more often than he did with them.
Though many of Mr. Swift’s inventions
paid him well, he was constantly seeking to perfect
others. To this end he had built near his home
several machine shops, with engines, lathes and apparatus
for various kinds of work. Tom, too, had the inventive
fever in his veins, and had planned some useful implements
and small machines.
Along the pleasant country roads on
a fine day in April rode Tom Swift on his way to Mansburg
to register the letter. As he descended a little
hill he saw, some distance away, but coming toward
him, a great cloud of dust.
“Somebody must be driving a
herd of cattle along the road,” thought Tom.
“I hope they don’t get in my way, or, rather,
I hope I don’t get in theirs. Guess I’d
better keep to one side, yet there isn’t any
too much room.”
The dust-cloud came nearer. It
was so dense that whoever or whatever was making it
could not he distinguished.
“Must be a lot of cattle in
that bunch,” mused the young inventor, “but
I shouldn’t think they’d trot them so on
a warm day like this. Maybe they’re stampeded.
If they are I’ve got to look out.”
This idea caused him some alarm.
He tried to peer through the dust-cloud,
but could not. Nearer and nearer it came.
Tom kept on, taking care to get as far to the side
of the road as he could. Then from the midst of
the enveloping mass came the sound of a steady “chug-chug.”
“It’s a motor-cycle!”
exclaimed Tom. “He must have his muffler
wide open, and that’s kicking up as much dust
as the wheels do. Whew! But whoever’s
on it will look like a clay image at the end of the
line!”
Now that he knew it was a fellow-cyclist
who was raising such a disturbance, Tom turned more
toward the middle of the road. As yet he had
not had a sight of the rider, but the explosions of
the motor were louder. Suddenly, when the first
advancing particles of dust reached him, almost making
him sneeze, Tom caught sight of the rider. He
was a man of middle age, and he was clinging to the
handle-bars of the machine. The motor was going
at full speed.
Tom quickly turned to one side, to
avoid the worst of the dust. The motor-cyclist
glanced at the youth, but this act nearly proved disastrous
for him. He took his eyes from the road ahead
for just a moment, and he did not see a large stone
directly in his path. His front wheel hit it,
and the heavy machine, which he could not control
very well, skidded over toward the lad on the bicycle.
The motor-cyclist bounced up in the air from the saddle,
and nearly lost his hold on the handle-bars.
“Look out!” cried Tom. “You’ll
smash into me!”
“I’m—I’m—try—ing—not—to!”
were the words that were rattled out of the middle-aged
man.
Tom gave his wheel a desperate twist
to get out of the way. The motor-cyclist tried
to do the same, but the machine he was on appeared
to want matters its own way. He came straight
for Tom, and a disastrous collision might have resulted
had not another stone been in the way. The front
wheel hit this, and was swerved to one side.
The motor-cycle flashed past Tom, just grazing his
wheel, and then was lost to sight beyond in a cloud
of dust that seemed to follow it like a halo.
“Why don’t you learn to
ride before you come out on the road!” cried
Tom somewhat angrily.
Like an echo from the dust-cloud came
floating back these words:
“I’m—try—ing—to!”
Then the sound of the explosions became fainter.
“Well, he’s got lots to
learn yet!” exclaimed Tom. “That’s
twice to-day I’ve nearly been run down.
I expect I’d better look out for the third time.
They say that’s always fatal,” and the
lad leaped from his wheel. “Wonder if he
bent any of my spokes?” the young inventor continued
as he inspected his bicycle.