TOM KNOCKS OUT ANDY
“Do you want me to come in and
help you?” asked the young inventor, of Miss
Nestor.
“Do you know anything about
hiring a cook?” she inquired, with an arch smile.
“I’m afraid I don’t,” the
lad was obliged to confess.
“Then I’m a little doubtful
of your ability to help me. But I’m ever
so much obliged to you. I’ll see if I can
engage one. The cook who just left went away
because I asked her to make some apple turnovers.
Some of the girls who are coming are very fond of them.”
“So am I,” spoke Tom, with a smile.
“Are you, indeed? Then,
if the cook I hope to get now will make them, I’ll
invite you over to have some, and—also meet
my friends.”
“I’d rather come when
just you, and the turnovers and the cook are there,”
declared Tom, boldly, and Mary, with a blush, made
ready to leave the electric car.
“Thank you,” she said, in a low voice.
“If I can’t help you select
a cook,” went on Tom, “at least let me
call and take you home when you have engaged one.”
“Oh, it will be too much trouble,”
protested Miss Nestor.
“Not at all. I have only
to send a message, and get some piano wire, and then
I’ll call back here for you. I’ll
take you and the new cook back home flying.”
“All right, but don’t
fly so fast. The cook may get frightened, and
leave before she has a chance to make an apple turnover.”
“I’ll go slower.
I’ll be back in fifteen minutes,” called
Tom, as he swung the car out away from the curb, while
Mary Nestor went into the intelligence office.
Tom wrote and sent this message to
Mr. Hostner Fenwick, of Philadelphia:
“Will come on to-morrow in my
aeroplane, and aid you all I can. Will not promise
to make your electric airship fly, though. Father
sends regards.”
“Just rush that, please,”
he said to the telegraph agent, and the latter, after
reading it over, remarked:
“It’ll rush itself, I
reckon, being all about airships, and things like
that,” and he laughed as Tom paid him.
Selecting several sizes of piano wire
of great strength, to use as extra guy-braces on the
Butterflv, Tom re-entered his electric car, and hastened
back to the intelligence office, where he had left
his friend. He saw her standing at the front
door, and before he could alight, and go to her, Miss
Nestor came cut to meet him.
“Oh, Tom!” she exclaimed,
with a little tragic gesture, “what do you think?”
“I don’t know,”
he answered good-naturedly. “Does the new
cook refuse to come unless you do away with apple
turnovers?”
“No, it isn’t that.
I have engaged a real treasure, I’m sure, but
as soon as I mentioned that you would take us home
in the electric automobile, she flatly refused to
come. She said walking was the only way she would
go. She hasn’t been in this country long.
But the worst of it is that a rich woman has just
telephoned in for a cook, and if I don’t get
this one away, the rich lady may induce her to come
to her house, and I’ll be without one! Oh,
what shall I do?” and poor Mary looked quite
distressed.
“Humph! So she’s
afraid of electric autos; eh?” mused Tom.
“That’s queer. Leave it to me, Mary,
and perhaps I can fix it. You want to get her
away from here in a hurry; don’t you?”
“Yes, because servants are so
scarce, that they are engaged almost as soon as they
register at the intelligence office. I know the
one I have hired is suspicious of me, since I have
mentioned your car, and she’ll surely go with
Mrs. Duy Puyster when she comes. I’m sorry
I spoke of the automobile.”
“Well, don’t worry.
It’s partly my fault, and perhaps I can make
amends. I’ll talk to the new cook,”
decided the young inventor.
“Oh, Tom, I don’t believe
it will do any good. She won’t come, and
all my girl friends will arrive shortly.”
Miss Nestor was quite distressed.
“Leave it to me,” suggested
the lad, with an assumed confidence he did not feel.
He left the car, and walked toward the office.
Entering it, with Miss Nestor in his wake, he saw a
pleasant-faced Irish girl, sitting on a bench, with
a bundle beside her.
“And so you don’t want to ride in an auto?”
began Tom.
“No, an’ it’s no
use of the likes of you askin’ me, either,”
answered the girl, but not impudently. “I
am afeered of thim things, an’ I won’t
work in a family that owns one.”
“But we don’t own one,” said Mary.
The girl only sniffed.
“It is the very latest means
of traveling,” Tom went on, “and there
is absolutely no danger. I will drive slowly.”
“No!” snapped the new cook.
Tom was rather at his wits’
ends. At that moment the telephone rang, and
Tom and Mary, listening, could hear the proprietress
of the intelligence office talking to Mrs. Duy Puyster
over the wire.
“We must get her away soon,”
whispered Mary, with a nod at the Irish girl, “or
we’ll lose her.”
Tom was thinking rapidly, but no plan
seemed to come to him. A moment later one of
the assistants of the office led out from a rear room
another Irish girl,—who, it seems, had just
engaged herself to work in the country.
“Good-by, Bridget,” said
this girl, to the one Mary Nestor had hired.
“I’m off now. The carriage has just
come for me. I’m goin’ away in style.”
“Good luck, Sarah,” wished Bridget.
Tom looked out of the window.
A dilapidated farm wagon, drawn by two rusty-looking
horses, just drawing up at the curb.
“There is your employer, Sarah,”
said the proprietress of the office. “You
will have a nice ride to the country and I hope you
will like the place.”
A typical country farmer alighted
from the wagon, leaving a woman, evidently his wife,
or the seat. He called out:
“I’ll git th’ servant-gal,
‘Mandy, an’ we’ll drive right out
hum. Then you won’t have such hard work
any more.”
“An’ so that’s the
style you was tellin’ me of; eh, Sarah?”
asked the cook whom Miss Nestor had engaged.
“That’s queer style, Sarah.”
Sarah was blushing from shame and
mortification. Tom was quick to seize the advantage
thus offered.
“Bridget, if you appreciate
style,” he said, “you will come in the
automobile. I have one of the very latest models,
and it is very safe. But perhaps you prefer a
farm wagon.”
“Indade an’ I don’t!”
was the ready response. “I’ll go wid
you now if only to show Sarah Malloy thot I have more
style than her! She was boastin’ of the
fine place she had, an’ th’ illigant carriage
that was comin’ t’ take her to the counthry.
If that’s it I want none of it! I’ll
go wid you an’ th’ young gintleman.
Style indade!” and, gathering up her bundle
she followed Tom and Mary to the waiting auto.
They entered it and started off, just
as Mrs. Duy Puyster drove up in her elegantly appointed
carriage, while Sarah, with tears of mortification
in her eyes, climbed up beside the farmer and his
wife.
“You saved the day for me, Tom,”
whispered Miss Nestor, as the young inventor increased
the speed of his car. “It was only just
in time.”
“Don’t forget the apple turnovers,”
he whispered back.
Once she had made the plunge, the
new cook seemed to lose her fears of the auto, and
enjoyed the ride. In a short time she had been
safely delivered at Miss Nestor’s home, while
that young lady repeated her thanks to Tom, and renewed
her invitation for him to come and sample the apple
turnovers, which Tom promised faithfully to do, saying
he would call on his return from Philadelphia.
Musing on the amusing feature of his
trip, Tom was urging his auto along at moderate speed,
when, as he turned down a country road, leading to
his home, he saw, coming toward him, a carriage, drawn
by a slow-moving, white horse, and containing a solitary
figure.
“Why, that looks like Andy Foger,”
spoke Tom, half aloud. “I wonder what he’s
doing out driving? His auto must be out of commission.
But that’s not strange, considering the way
he abuses the machine. It’s in the repair
shop half the time.”
He slowed down still more, for he
did not know but that Andy’s horse might be
skittish. He need have no fears, however, for
the animal did not seem to have much more life than
did Eradicate’s mule, Boomerang.
As Tom came nearer the carriage, he
was surprised to see Andy deliberately swing his horse
across the road, blocking the highway by means of
the carriage and steed.
“Well, Andy Foger, what does
that mean?” cried Tom, indignantly, as he brought
his car to a sudden stop. “Why do you block
the road?”
“Because I want to,” snarled
the bully, taking out a notebook and pencil, and pretending
to make some notes about the property in front of
which he had halted. “I’m in the real
estate business now,” went on Andy, “and
I’m getting descriptions of the property I’m
going to sell. Guess I’ve got a right to
stop in the road if I want to!”
“But not to block it up,”
retorted Tom. “That’s against the
law. Pull over and let me pass!”
“Suppose I don’t do it?”
“Then I’ll make you!”
“Huh! I’d like to
see you try it!” snapped Andy. “If
you make trouble for me, it will be the worse for
you.”
“If you pull to one side, so
I can pass, there’ll be no trouble,” said
Tom, seeing that Andy wished to pick a quarrel.
“Well, I’m not going to
pull aside until I finish putting down this description,”
and the bully continued to write with tantalizing
slowness.
“Look here!” exclaimed
Tom Swift, with sudden energy. “I’m
not going to stand for this! Either you pull
to one side and let me pass, or—”
“Well, what will you do?” demanded the
bully.
“I’ll shove you to one side, and you can
take the consequences!”
“You won’t dare to!”
“I won’t, eh? Just you watch.”
Tom threw forward the lever of his
car. There was a hum of the motor, and the electric
moved ahead. Andy had continued to write in the
book, but at this sound he glanced up.
“Don’t you dare to bunk
into me!” yelled Andy. “If you do
I’ll sue you for damages!”
“Get out of the way, or I’ll
shove you off the road!” threatened Tom, calmly.
“I’ll not go until I get ready.”
“Oh, yes you will,” responded
our hero quietly. He sent his car ahead slowly
but surely. It was within a few feet of the carriage
containing Andy. The bully had dropped his notebook,
and was shaking his fist at Tom.
As for the young inventor he had his
plans made. He saw that the horse was a quiet,
sleepy one, that would not run away, no matter what
happened, and Tom only intended to gently push the
carriage to one side, and pass on.
The front of his auto came up against
the other vehicle.
“Here, you stop!” cried Andy, savagely.
“It’s too late now,” answered Tom,
grimly.
Andy reached for the horsewhip.
Tom put on a little more power, and the carriage began
to slide across the road, but the old horse never
opened his eyes.
“Take that!” cried Andy,
raising his whip, with the intention of slashing Tom
across the face, for the front of the auto was open.
But the blow never fell, for, the next instant, the
carriage gave a lurch as one of the wheels slid against
a stone, and, as Andy was standing up, and leaning
forward, he was pitched head first out into the road.
“By Jove! I hope I haven’t
hurt him!” gasped Tom, as he leaped from his
auto, which he had brought to a stop.
The young inventor bent over the bully.
There was a little cut on Andy’s forehead, and
his face was white. He had been most effectually
knocked out entirely by his own meanness and fault,
but, none the less, Tom was frightened. He raised
up Andy’s head on his arm, and brushed back
his hair. Andy was unconscious.