The Great Race
“Well,” remarked Mr. Sharp,
when Tom and Mr. Damon had called on him, to state
that Andy Foger’s machine was now on the grounds,
and demanding to be allowed to view it, to see if
it was an infringement on the one entered by the young
inventor, “I’ll do the best I can for you.
I’ll lay the case before the committee.
It will meet at once, and I’ll let you know
what they say.”
“Understand,” said Tom,
“I don’t want to interfere unless I am
convinced that Andy is trying an underhand trick.
My plans are missing, and I think he took them.
If his machine is made after those plans, it is, obviously,
a steal, and I want him ruled out of the meet.”
“And so he shall be!”
exclaimed Mr. Sharp. “Get the evidence against
him, and we’ll act quickly enough.”
The committee met in about an hour,
and considered the case. Meanwhile, Tom and Mr.
Damon strolled past the tent with its flaring sign.
There was a man on guard, but Andy was not in sight.
Then Tom was sent for, and Mr. Sharp
told him what conclusion had been arrived at.
It was this:
“Under the rules of the meet,”
said the balloonist, “we had to guarantee privacy
to all the contestants until such time as they choose
to exhibit their machines. That is, they need
not bring them out until just before the races,”
he added. “This is not a handicap affair,
and the speediest machine, or the one that goes to
the greatest height, according to which class it enters,
will win. In consequence we cannot force any contestant
to declare what kind of a machine he will use until
he gets ready.
“Some are going to use the familiar
type of biplanes and, as you can see, there is no
secret about them. They are trying them out now.”
This was so, for several machines of this type were
either in the air, circling about, or were being run
over the ground.
“But others,” continued
Mr. Sharp, “will not even take the committee
into their confidence until just before the race.
They want to keep their craft a secret. We can’t
compel them to do otherwise. I’m sorry,
Tom, but the only thing I see for you to do is to wait
until the last minute. Then, if you find Andy
has infringed on your machine, lodge a protest—that
is unless you can get evidence against him before that
time.”
Tom well knew the uselessness of the
latter plan. He and Mr. Damon had tried several
times to get a glimpse of the craft Andy had made,
but without success. As to the other alternative—that
of waiting until the last moment—Tom feared
that, too, would be futile.
“For,” he reasoned, “just
before the race there will be a lot of confusion,
officials will be here and there, scattered over the
ground, they will be hard to find, and it will be
almost useless to protest then. Andy will enter
the race, and there is a possibility that he may win.
Almost any one could with a machine like the Humming-Bird.
It’s the machine almost as much as the operator,
in a case like this.”
“But you can protest after the
race,” suggested Mr. Damon.
“That would be little good,
in case Andy beat me. The public would say I
was a sorehead, and jealous. No, I’ve either
got to stop Andy before the race, or not at all.
I will try to think of a plan.”
Tom did think of several, but abandoned
them one after the other. He tried to get a glimpse
inside the tent where the Foger aeroplane Was housed,
but it was too closely guarded. Andy himself was
not much in evidence, and Tom only had fleeting glimpses
of the bully.
Meanwhile he and Mr. Damon, together
with their machinist, were kept busy. As Tom’s
craft was fully protected by patents now, he had no
hesitation in taking it out, and it was given several
severe tests around the aerial course. It did
even better than Tom expected of it, and he had great
hopes.
Always, though, there were two things
that worried him. One was his father’s
illness, and the other the uneasiness he felt as to
what Andy Foger might do. As to the former, the
wireless reports indicated that Mr. Swift was doing
as well as could be expected, but his improvement
was not rapid. Regarding the latter worry, Tom
saw no way of getting rid of it.
“I’ve just got to wait, that’s all,”
he thought.
The day before the opening of the
meet, Tom and Mr. Damon had given the Humming-Bird
a grueling tryout. They had taken her high up—so
high that no prying eyes could time them, and there
Tom had opened the motor for all the power in it.
They had flashed through space at the rate of one
hundred and twenty miles an hour.
“If we can only do that in the
race, the ten thousand dollars is mine!” exulted
Tom, as he slanted the nose of the aeroplane toward
the earth.
The day of the race dawned clear and
beautiful. Tom was up early, for there remained
many little things to do to get his craft in final
trim for the contest. Then, too, he wanted to
be ready to act promptly as soon as Andy’s machine
was wheeled out, and he also wanted to get a message
from home.
The wireless arrived soon after breakfast,
and did not contain very cheering news.
“Your father not so well,”
Mr. Jackson sent. “Poor night, but doctor
thinks day will show improvement. Don’t
worry.”
“Don’t worry! I wonder
who could help it,” mused poor Tom. “Well,
I’ll hope for the best,” and he wired
back to tell the engineer in Shopton to keep in touch
with him, and to flash the messages to the Humming-Bird
in the air, after the big race started.
“Now I’ll go out and see
if I can catch a glimpse of what that sneak Andy has
to pit against me,” said Tom.
The Foger tent was tightly closed,
and Tom turned back to his own place, having arranged
with a messenger to come and let him know as soon as
Andy’s craft was wheeled out.
All about was a scene of great activity.
The grand stands were filled, and a big crowd stood
about the field anxiously waiting for the first sight
of the “bird-men” in their wonderful machines.
Now and then the band blared out, and cheers arose
as one after another the frail craft were wheeled
to the starting place.
Men in queer leather costumes darted
here and there-they were the aviators who were soon
to risk life and limb for glory and gold. Most
of them were nervously smoking cigarettes. The
air was filled with guttural German or nasal French,
while now and then the staccato Russian was heard,
and occasionally the liquid tones of a Japanese.
For men of many nations were competing for the prizes.
The majority of the machines were
monoplanes and biplanes though one triplane was entered,
and there were several “freaks” as the
biplane and monoplane men called them—craft
of the helicopter, or the wheel type. There was
also one Witzig Liore Dutilleul biplane, with three
planes behind.
Tom was familiar with most of these
types, but occasionally he saw a new one that excited
his curiosity. However, he was more interested
in what Andy Foger would turn out. Andy’s
machine had not been tried, and Tom wondered how he
dared risk flying in it, without at least a preliminary
tryout. But Andy, and those with him, were evidently
full of confidence.
News of the suspicions of Tom, and
what he intended to do in case these suspicions proved
true, had gotten around, and there was quite a crowd
about his own tent, and another throng around that
of Andy.
Tom and Mr. Damon had wheeled the
Humming-Bird out of her canvas “nest.”.
There was a cheer as the crowd caught sight of the
trim little craft. The young inventor, the eccentric
man, and the machinist were busy going over every
part.
Meanwhile the meet had been officially
opened, and it was announced that the preliminary
event would be some air evolutions at no great height,
and for no particular prize. Several biplanes
and monoplanes took part in this. It was very
interesting, but the big ten-thousand-dollar race,
over a distance of a hundred miles was the principal
feature of the meet, and all waited anxiously for
this.
The opening stunts passed off successfully,
save that a German operator in a Bleriot came to grief,
crashing down to the ground, wrecking his machine,
and breaking an arm. But he only laughed at that,
and coolly demanded another cigarette, as he crawled
out of the tangle of wires, planes and the motor.
After this there was an exhibition
flight by a French aviator in a Curtis biplane, who
raced against one in a Baby Wright. It was a dead
heat, according to the judges. Then came a flight
for height; and while no records were broken, the
crowd was well satisfied.
“Get ready for the hundred-mile
ten-thousand-dollar-prize race!” shouted the
announcer, through his megaphone.
Tom’s heart gave a bound.
There were seven entrants in this contest besides
Tom and Andy Foger, and as announced by the starter
they were as follows:
/$
CONTESTANT machine
Von Bergen…..............Wright Biplane
Alameda…...........Antoinette Monoplane
Perique…..............Bleriot Monoplane
Loi Tong….......Santos-Dumont Monoplane
Wendell….................Curtis Biplane
De Tromp…................Farman Biplane
Lascalle…..........Demoiselle Monoplane
Andy Foger…..............—-—-—
Tom Swift….......Humming-Bird Monoplane
$/
“What is the style of the Foger
machine?” yelled some one in the crowd, as the
announcer lowered his megaphone.
“It has not been announced,”
was the reply. “It will at once be wheeled
out though, in accordance with the conditions of the
race.”
There was a craning of necks, and
an uneasy movement in the crowd, for Tom’s story
was now generally known.
“Get ready to make your protest,”
advised Mr. Damon to the young inventor. “I’ll
stay by the machine here until you come back.
Bless my radiator! I hope you beat him!”
“I will, if it’s possible!”
murmured Tom, with a grim tightening of his lips.
There was a movement about Andy’s
tent, whence, for the last half hour had come spasmodic
noises that indicated the trying-out of the motor.
The flaps were pulled back and a curious machine was
wheeled into view. Tom rushed over toward it,
intent on getting the first view. Would it prove
to be a copy of his speedy Humming-Bird?
Eagerly he looked, but a curious sight
met his eyes. The machine was totally unlike
any he had expected to see. It was large, and
to his mind rather clumsy, but it looked powerful.
Then, as he took in the details, he knew that it was
the same one that had flown over his house that night—it
was the one from which the fire bomb had been dropped.
He pushed his way through the crowd.
He saw Andy standing near the curious biplane, which
type of air craft it nearest resembled, though it
had some monoplane features. On the side was painted
the name:
/$
Slugger
$/
Andy caught sight of Tom Swift.
“I’m going to beat you!”
the bully boasted, and I haven’t a machine like
yours, after all. You were wrong.”
“So I see,” stammered
Tom, hardly knowing what to think. “What
did you do with my plans then?”
“I never had them!”
Andy turned away, and began to assist
the men he had hired to help him. Like all the
others, his machine had two seats, for in this race
each operator must carry a passenger.
Tom turned away, both glad and sorry,—glad
that his rival was not to race him in a duplicate
of the Humming-Bird, but sorry that he had as yet
no track of the strangely missing plans.
“I wonder where they can be?” mused the
young inventor.
Then came the firing of the preliminary
gun. Tom rushed back to where Mr. Damon stood
waiting for him.
There was a last lock at the Humming-Bird.
She was fit to race any machine on the ground.
Mr. Damon took his place. Tom started the propeller.
The other contestants were in their seats with their
passengers. Their assistants stood ready to shove
them off. The explosions of so many motors in
action were deafening.
“How much thrust?” cried Tom to his machinist.
“Twenty-two hundred pounds!”
“Good!”
The report of the starting-gun could
not be heard. But the smoke of it leaped into
the air. It was the signal to go.
Tom’s voice would not have carried
five feet. He waved his hands as a signal.
His helper thrust the Humming-Bird forward. Over
the smooth ground it rushed. Tom looked eagerly
ahead. On a line with him were the other machines,
including Andy Foger’s Slugger.
Tom pulled a lever. He felt his
craft soar upward. The other machines also pointed
their noses into the air.
The big race for the ten-thousand-dollar
prize was under way!