Miss Nestor Calls
“What’s de mattah?
Shall I come in? Am anybody hurted?” yelled
Eradicate Sampson as he pounded on the rear door of
the aeroplane shed. “Let me in, Massa Tom!”
“All right! Wait a minute!
I’m coming!” called Mr. Jackson. He
tried to peer through the darkness, to where a huddled
heap indicated the presence of Tom. Then he thought
of the electric lights, which were run by a storage
battery when the dynamo was shut down, and a moment
later the engineer had switched on the incandescents,
filling the big shed with radiance.
“Tom, are you badly hurt?” gasped Mr.
Jackson.
There was no answer, for Tom was unconscious.
“Let me in! Let me git
at dat robber wif mah club!” cried the colored
man eagerly.
Knowing that he would need help in
carrying Tom to the house, Mr. Jackson hurried to
the back door. He had a key to it, and it was
quicker to open it than to send Eradicate away around
the shed to the front portals.
“Whar am he?” gasped the
faithful darky, as he took a firmer grasp of his club
and looked around the place. “Let me git
mah hands on him! I’ll feed him t’
Boomerang, when I gits froo wif him!”
“He’s gone,” said
the engineer. “Help me look after Tom.
I’m afraid he’s badly hurt.”
They hastened to the unconscious lad.
On one side of his head was a bad cut, which was bleeding
freely.
“Oh! he’s daid! I know he’s
daid!” wailed Eradicate.
“Not a bit of it. He isn’t
dead, but he may die, if we don’t get him into
the house, and have a doctor here soon,” said
Mr. Jackson sternly. “Catch hold of him,
Rad, and, mind, don’t carry on, and get excited,
and scare Mr. Swift. Just pretend it isn’t
very bad, or we’ll have two patents on our hands
instead of only Tom.”
They managed to get the youth into
the house, and, contrary to their fears, Mr. Swift
was not nearly so nervous as they had expected.
Calmly he took charge of matters, and even telephoned
for Dr. Gladby himself, while Mr. Jackson and Eradicate
undressed Tom and got him to bed. Mrs. Baggert
busied herself heating water and getting things in
readiness for the doctor, who had promised to come
at once.
Tom was just regaining consciousness
when the physician came in, having driven over at
top speed.
“What—what happened?
Did the Humming Bird fall?” asked Tom in a whisper,
putting his hand to his head.
“No, something fell on you,
I guess,” said the doctor, who had been hurriedly
told of the circumstances. “But don’t
worry, Tom. You’ll be all right in a few
days. You got a bad cut on the head, but the skull
isn’t fractured, I’m glad to say.
Here, now, just drink this,” and he gave Tom
some medicine he had mixed in a glass.
The cut was soon dressed, and Tom
felt much better, though weak and a trifle dizzy.
“Did he hit me with the hatchet?” he asked
Mr. Jackson.
“I couldn’t tell,”
was the engineer’s reply, “it all happened
so quickly. In another instant I’d have
bowled him over, instead of him landing on you, but
I just missed him. He either used the hatchet,
or some blunt instrument.”
“Well, don’t talk about
it now,” urged the doctor. “I want
Tom to get quiet and go to sleep. We’ll
be much better in the morning, but I must forbid any
aeroplane flights.” And he shook his finger
at Tom in warning. “You’ll have to
lie quiet for several days,” he added.
“All right,” agreed the
young inventor weakly, and then he dozed off, for
the physician had given him a quieting medicine.
“Haven’t you any idea
who it was?” asked Dr. Gladby of Mr. Jackson,
as he prepared to leave.
“Not the slightest. It
was no one Tom or I had ever seen before. But
whoever it was, he intended to destroy the Humming-Bird,
that was evident!”
“The scoundrel! I’m
glad you foiled him in time; but it’s too bad
about Tom. However, we’ll soon have him
all right again.”
“I knows who done it!”
broke in Eradicate, who was a sort of privileged character
about the Swift home.
“Who?” asked Mr. Jackson.
“It were dat Andy Foger.
Leastways, he send dat man heah t’ make mincemeat
oh de Hummin’-Bird. I’s positib ’bout
dat, so I am!” And Eradicate grinned triumphantly.
“Well, perhaps Andy did have
a hand in it,” admitted Mr. Swift, but we have
no proof of it, I can’t see what his object would
be in wanting to destroy Tom’s new craft.”
“Pure meanness. Afraid
that Tom will beat him in the race,” suggested
Mr. Jackson.
“It’s too big a risk to
take,” went on the aged inventor. “I’m
inclined to think it might be one of the gang of men
who made the diamonds in the cave in the mountains.
They might have sent a spy on East, and he might try
to damage the aeroplane to be revenged for what Tom
and Mr. Jenks did to them.”
“It’s possible,”
agreed the engineer. “Well, we’ll
wait until Tom can talk, and we’ll go over it
with him.”
“Not until he is stronger, though,”
stipulated the physician as he went away. “Don’t
excite Tom for a few days.”
The young inventor was much better
the following day, and when Dr. Gladby called he said
Tom could sit up for a little while. Two days
later Tom was well enough to be talked to, and his
father and Mr. Jackson went over all the details of
the matter. Mr. Damon, who had returned home,
came to see his friend as soon as he heard of his plight,
and was also a member of the consulting party.
“Bless my dictionary!”
exclaimed the eccentric man. “I wish I had
been here to take a hand in it. But, Tom, do
you believe it was one of the diamond-making gang?”
“I hardly think so,” was
the reply. “They would take some other means
of revenge than by destroying my new aeroplane.
I’m inclined to think it was some one who is
in with Andy Foger.”
“Then we’ll hire detectives,
and locate him and them,” declared Mr. Damon,
blessing several things in succession.
Tom, however, did not like that plan,
and it was decided to do nothing right away.
In another few days Tom was able to be up, though he
was still a semi-invalid, not venturing out of the
house.
It was one afternoon, when, rather
tired of his confinement, he was wishing he could
resume work on his air craft, that Mrs. Baggert came
in, and said:
“Some one to see you, Tom.”
“Is it Mr. Damon?”
“No, it’s a lady. She—”
“Oh, Tom! How are you?”
cried a girlish voice, and Mary Nestor walked into
the room, holding out both hands to the young inventor.
Tom, with a blush, arose hastily.
“No! no! Sit still!”
commanded the girl. “Oh! I’m
so sorry to hear about your accident! In fact,
I only heard this morning. We’ve been away,
mamma and I, and we just got back. Tell me all
about it, that is, if you feel able. But don’t
exert yourself. Oh! I wish I had hold of
that man!”
And Miss Nestor clenched her two pretty
little hands and set her white, even teeth grimly
together, as though she would do most desperate things
indeed.
“I wish you did, too!”
exclaimed Tom. “That is, so you could hold
him until I had a chance at him. But I’m
all right now. It was very good of you to call.
How are you, and how are your folks?”
“Very well. But I came
to hear about you. Tell me,” and she looked
anxiously at Tom, while Mrs. Baggert discreetly withdrew
to the adjoining room, and made a great noise, rattling
papers and moving chairs about.
Thereupon Tom told what had happened,
while Mary Nestor listened interestedly and with expressions
of fear at times.
“But if Andy had anything to
do with it,” concluded Tom, “I can’t
understand what his object is. Andy is acting
very strangely lately. We can’t locate
him, nor find out where he is building his airship.
That’s what I want to know; but Mr. Damon and
I, after a lot of trouble, only found his aeroplane
shed empty.”
“And you want to find out where
Andy Foger is building his aeroplane which he has
entered in the big race?” asked Miss Nestor.
“That’s what I’d
like to know,” declared Tom earnestly. “Only
we can’t seem to do it. No one knows.”
“Why don’t you write to
Mr. Sharp, or some one of the aviation meet committee?”
asked the girl simply. “They would know,
for you say Andy made his formal entry with them,
and the rules require him to tell from what city and
State he will enter his craft. Write to the committee,
Tom.”
For a moment the young inventor stared
at her. Then he banged his fist down on the arm
of his chair.
“By Jove, Mary! That’s
the very thing!” he cried. “I wonder
why I never thought of that, instead of fiddling around
in disguises, and things like that? I wonder
why I never thought of that plan?”
“Perhaps because it was so simple,”
she answered, with a pretty blush.
“I guess that’s it,”
agreed Tom. “It takes a woman to jump across
a bridge to a conclusion every time. I’ll
write to Mr. Sharp at once.”