Anxious Days
Peering on all sides as he dashed
along the gravel walk, hoping to catch a glimpse of
the unknown intruder in the garden or shrubbery, Tom
sprinted on at top speed. Now and then he paused
to listen, but no sound came to him to tell of some
one in retreat before him. There was only Silence.
“Mighty queer,” mused
the youth. “Whoever it was, he couldn’t
have had more than a minute start of me—no,
not even half a minute—and yet they’ve
disappeared as completely as though the ground had
opened and let them down; and the worst of it is,
that they’ve taken my plans with them!”
He turned about and retraced his steps,
making a careful search. He saw no one, until,
turning a corner, a little later, he met Eradicate
Sampson.
“You haven’t seen any
strangers around here just now, have you, Rad?”
asked Tom anxiously.
“No, indeedy, I hasn’t,
Massa Tom. What fo’ kind ob a stranger was
him?”
“That’s just what I don’t
know. Rad. But some one sneaked into the
library lust now and took some of my plans while my
father dozed off. I jumped out after him as soon
as I could, but he has disappeared.”
“Maybe it were th’ man
who done stowed hisself away on yo’ airship,
de time yo’ all went after de diamonds,”
suggested the colored man.
“No, it couldn’t have
been him. If it was anybody, it was Andy Foger,
or some of his crowd. You didn’t see Andy,
did you, Rad?”
“No, indeedy; but if I do, I
suah will turn mah mule, Boomerang, loose on him,
an’ he won’t take any mo’ plans—not
right off, Massa Tom.”
“No, I guess not. Well,
I must get back to dad, or he’ll worry.
Keep your eyes open, Rad, and if you see Andy Foger,
or any one else, around here, let me know. Just
sing out for all you’re worth.”
“Shall I call out, Massa Tom,
ef I sees dat blessin’ man?”
“You mean Mr. Damon?”
“Dat’s de one. De
gen’man what’s allers a-blessin’
ob hisself or his shoelaces, or suffin laik dat.
Shall I sing out ef I sees him?”
“Well, no; not exactly, Rad.
Just show Mr. Damon up to the house. I’d
be glad to see him again, though I don’t fancy
he’ll call. He’s off on a little
trip, and won’t be back for a week. But
watch out, Rad.” And with that Tom turned
toward the house, shaking his head over the puzzle
of the missing plans.
“Did you find any one?”
asked his father eagerly as the young inventor entered
the library.
“No,” was the gloomy answer.
“There wasn’t a sign of any one.”
Tom went over to the window and looked
about for clues. There was none that he could
see, and a further examination of the ground under
the window disclosed nothing. There was gravel
beneath the casement, and this was not the best medium
for retaining footprints. Nor were the gravel
walks any better.
“Not a sign of any one,”
murmured Tom. “Are you sure you didn’t
hear any noise, dad, when you dozed off?”
“Not a sound, Tom. In fact,
it’s rather unusual for me to go to sleep like
that, but I suppose it’s because of my illness.
But I couldn’t have been asleep long—not
more than two minutes.”
“That’s what I think.
Yet in that time someone, who must have been on the
watch, managed to get in here and take my plans for
the new sky racer. I don’t see how they
got the wire screen open from the outside, though.
It fastens with a strong hook.”
“And was the screen open?” asked Mr. Swift
“Yes, it was unhooked.
Either they pushed a wire in through the mesh, caught
it under the hook, and pulled it up from the outside,
or else the screen was opened from the inside.”
“I don’t believe they
could get inside to open the screen without some of
us seeing them,” spoke the older inventor.
“More likely, Tom, it wasn’t hooked, and
they found it an easy matter to simply pull it open.”
“That’s possible.
I’ll ask Mrs. Baggert if the screen was unhooked.”
But the housekeeper could not be certain
on that point, and so that part of the investigation
amounted to nothing.
“It’s too bad!”
exclaimed Mr. Swift. “It’s my fault,
for dozing off that way.”
“No, indeed, it isn’t!” declared
Tom stoutly.
“Is the loss a serious one?”
asked his father. “Have you no copy of the
plans?”
“Yes, I have a rough draft from
which I made the completed drawings, and I can easily
make another set. But that isn’t what worries
me—the mere loss of the plans.”
“What is it, then, Tom?”
“The fact that whoever took
them must know what they are the plans for a sky racer
that is to take part in the big meet. I have worked
it out on a new principle, and it is not yet patented.
Whoever stole my plans can make the same kind of a
sky racer that I intended to construct, and so stand
as good a chance to win the prize of ten thousand dollars
as I will.”
“That certainly is too bad,
Tom. I never thought of that. Do you suspect
any one?”
“No one, unless it’s Andy
Foger. He’s mean enough to do a thing like
that, but I didn’t think he’d have the
nerve. However, I’ll see if I can learn
anything about him. He may have been sneaking
around, and if he has my plans he’d ask nothing
better than to make a sky racer and beat me.”
“Oh, Tom, I’m so sorry!”
exclaimed Mr. Swift “I—I feel very
bad about it!”
“There, never mind!” spoke
the lad, seeing that his father was looking ill again.
“Don’t think any more about it, dad.
I’ll get back those plans. Come, now.
It’s time for your medicine, and then you must
lie down.” For the aged inventor was looking
tired and weak.
Wearily he let Tom lead him to his
room, and after seeing that the invalid was comfortable
Tom called up Dr. Gladby, to have him come and see
Mr. Swift. The doctor said his patient had been
overdoing himself a little, and must rest more if
he was to completely recover.
Learning that his father was no worse,
Tom set off to find Andy Foger.
“I can’t rest until I
know whether or not he has my plans,” he said
to himself. “I don’t want to make
a speedy aeroplane, and find out at the last minute
that Andy, or some of his cronies, have duplicated
it.”
But Tom got little satisfaction from
Andy Foger. When that bully was accused of having
been around Tom’s house he denied it, and though
the young inventor did not actually accuse him of
taking the plans, he hinted at it. Andy muttered
many indignant negatives, and called on some of his
cronies to witness that at the time the plans were
taken he and they were some distance from the Swift
home.
So Tom was baffled; and though he
did not believe the red-haired lad’s denial,
there was no way in which he could prove to the contrary.
“If he didn’t take the plans, who did?”
mused Tom.
As the young inventor turned away
after cross-questioning Andy, the bully called out:
“You’ll never win that ten thousand dollars!”
“What do you know about that?” demanded
Tom quickly.
“Oh, I know,” sneered
Andy. “There’ll be bigger and better
aeroplanes in that meet than you can make, and you’ll
never win the prize.”
“I suppose you heard about the
affair by sneaking around under our windows, and listening,”
said Tom.
“Never mind how I know it, but I do,”
retorted the bully.
“Well, I’ll tell you one
thing,” said Tom calmly. “If you come
around again it won’t be healthy for you.
Look out for live wires, if you try to do the listening
act any more, Andy!” And with that ominous warning
Tom turned away.
“What do you suppose he means,
Andy?” asked Pete Bailey, one of Andy’s
cronies.
“It means he’s got electrical
wires strung around his place,” declared Sam
Snedecker, “and that we’ll be shocked if
we go up there. I’m not going!”
“Me, either,” added Pete, and Andy laughed
uneasily.
Tom heard what they said, and in the
next few days he made himself busy by putting some
heavy wires in and about the grounds where they would
show best. But the wires carried no current, and
were only displayed to impress a sense of fear on
Andy and his cronies, which purpose they served well.
But it was like locking the stable
door after the horse had been stolen, for with all
the precautions he could take Tom could not get back
his plans, and he spent many anxious days seeking
them. They seemed to have completely disappeared,
however, and the young inventor decided there was
nothing else to do but to draw new ones.
He set to work on them, and in the
meanwhile tried to learn whether or not Andy had the
missing plans. He sought this information by stealth,
and was aided by his chum, Ned Newton. But all
to no purpose. Not the slightest trace or clue
was discovered.