A DOWNWARD GLIDE
They sat in the cabin of the airship,
staring helplessly at each other. Occasionally
Tom rose to attend to one of the machines, or Mr.
Fenwick did the same. Occasionally, Mr. Damon
uttered a remark. Then there was silence, broken
only by the howl of the gale.
It seemed impossible for the WHIZZER
to travel any faster, yet when Tom glanced at the
speed gage he noted, with a feeling of surprise, akin
to horror, that they were making close to one hundred
and fifty miles an hour. Only an aeroplane could
have done it, and then only when urged on by a terrific
wind which added to the speed produced by the propellers.
The whole craft swayed and trembled,
partly from the vibration of the electrical machinery,
and partly from the awful wind. Mr. Fenwick came
close to Tom, and exclaimed:
“Do you think it would be any
use to try once more to go above or below the path
of the storm?”
Tom’s first impulse was to say
that it would be useless, but he recollected that
the craft belonged to Fenwick, and surely that gentleman
had a right to make a suggestion. The young inventor
nodded.
“We’ll try to go up,”
he said. “If that doesn’t work, I’ll
see if I can force her down. It will be hard
work, though. The wind is too stiff.”
Tom shifted the levers and rudders.
His eyes were on the barograph— that delicate
instrument, the trembling hand of which registered
their height. Tom had tilted the deflection rudder
to send them up, but as he watched the needle he saw
it stationary. They were not ascending, though
the great airship was straining to mount to an upper
current where there might be calm.
It was useless, however, and Tom,
seeing the futility of it, shifted the rudder to send
them downward. This was more easily accomplished,
but it was a change for the worse, since, the nearer
to the ocean they went, the fiercer blew the wind.
“Back! Go back up higher!” cried
Mr. Damon,
“We can’t!” yelled Tom. “We’ve
got to stay here now!”
“Oh, but this is awful!”
exclaimed Mr. Fenwick. “We can never stand
this!”
The airship swaged more than ever,
and the occupants were tossed about in the cabin,
from side to side. Indeed, it did seem that human
beings never could come alive cut of that fearful ordeal.
As Tom looked from one of the windows
of the cabin, he noted a pale, grayish sort of light
outside. At first he could not understand what
it was, then, as he observed the sickly gleams of the
incandescent electric lamps, he knew that the hour
of dawn was at hand.
“See!” he exclaimed to
his companions, pointing to the window. “Morning
is coming.”
“Morning!” gasped Mr.
Damon. “Is the night over? Now, perhaps
we shall get rid of the storm.”
“I’m afraid not,”
answered Tom, as he noted the anemometer and felt
the shudderings of the WHIZZER as she careened on through
the gale. “It hasn’t blown out yet!”
The pale light increased. The
electrics seemed to dim and fade. Tom looked
to the engines. Some of the apparatus was in need
of oil, and he supplied it. When he came back
to the main cabin, where stood Mr. Damon and Mr. Fenwick,
it was much lighter outside.
“Less than a day since we left
Philadelphia,” murmured the owner of the WHIZZER,
as he glanced at a distance indicator, “yet we
have come nearly sixteen hundred miles. We certainly
did travel top speed. I wonder where we are?”
“Still over the ocean,”
replied Mr. Damon, as he looked down at the heaving
billows rolling amid crests of foam far below them.
“Though what part of it would be hard to say.
We’ll have to reckon out our position when it
gets calmer.”
Tom came from the engine room.
His face wore a troubled look, and he said, addressing
the older inventor:
“Mr. Fenwick, I wish you’d
come and look at the gas generating apparatus.
It doesn’t seem to be working properly.”
“Anything wrong?” asked Mr. Damon, suspiciously.
“I hope not,” replied
Tom, with all the confidence he could muster.
“It may need adjusting. I am not so familiar
with it as I am with the one on the Red cloud.
The gas seems to be escaping from the bag, and we
may have to descend, for some distance.”
“But the aeroplanes will keep us up,”
said Mr. Daman.
“Yes—they will,”
and Tom hesitated. “That is, unless something
happens to them. They are rather frail to stand
alone the brunt of the gale, and I wish—”
Tom did not complete the sentence.
Instead, he paused suddenly and seemed to be intently
listening.
From without there came a rending,
tearing, crashing sound. The airship quivered
from end to end, and seemed to make a sudden dive
downward. Then it appeared to recover, and once
more glided forward.
Tom, followed by Mr. Fenwick, made
a rush for the compartment where the machine was installed.
They had no sooner reached it than there sounded an
explosion, and the airship recoiled as if it had hit
a stone wall.
“Bless my shaving brush!
What’s that?” cried Mr. Damon. “Has
anything happened?”
“I’m rather afraid there
has,” answered Tom, solemnly. “It
sounded as though the gas bag went up. And I’m
worried over the strength of the planes. We must
make an investigation!”
“We’re falling!”
almost screamed Mr. Fenwick, as he glanced at the
barograph, the delicate needle of which was swinging
to and fro, registering different altitudes.
“Bless my feather bed!
So we are!” shouted Mr. Damon. “Let’s
jump, and avoid being caught under the airship!”
He darted for a large window, opening
from the main cabin, and was endeavoring to raise
it when Tom caught his hand.
“What are you trying to do,” asked the
lad, hoarsely.
“Save my life! I want to
get out of this as soon as I can. I’m going
to jump!”
“Don’t think of it!
You’d be instantly killed. We’re too
high for a jump, even into the ocean.”
“The ocean! Oh, is that
still below us? Is there any chance of being
saved? What can be done?” Mr. Damon hesitated.
“We must first find out how
badly we are damaged,” said Tom, quietly.
“We must keep our heads, and be calm, no matter
what happens. I need your help, Mr. Damon.”
This served to recall the rather excited
man to his senses. He came back to the centre
of the cabin, which was no easy task, for the floor
of it was tilted at first one angle, and then another.
He stood at Tom’s side.
“What can I do to help you?”
he asked. Mr. Fenwick was darting here and there,
examining the different machines. None of them
seemed to be damaged.
“If you will look and see what
has happened to our main wing planes, I will see how
much gas we have left in the bag,” suggested
Tom. “Then we can decide what is best to
be done. We are still quite high, and it will
take some time to complete our fall, as, even if everything
is gone, the material of the bag will act as a sort
of parachute.”
Mr. Damon darted to a window in the
rear of the cabin, where he could obtain a glimpse
of the main wing planes. He gave a cry of terror
and astonishment.
“Two of the planes are gone!”
he reported. “They are torn and are hanging
loose.”
“I feared as much,” retorted
Tom, quietly, “The gale was too much for them.”
“What of the lifting gas?” asked Mr. Fenwick,
quickly.
“It has nearly all flowed out of the retaining
bag.”
“Then we must make more at once.
I will start the generating machine.”
He darted toward it.
“It will be useless,” spoke Tom, quietly.
“Why?”
“Because there is no bag left
to hold it. The silk and rubber envelope has
been torn to pieces by the gale. The wind is even
stronger than it was last night.”
“Then what’s to be done?”
demanded Mr. Damon, with a return of his alarmed and
nervous manner. “Bless my fingernails!
What’s to be done?”
For an instant Tom did not answer.
It was constantly getting lighter, though there was
no sun, for it was obscured by scudding clouds.
The young inventor looked critically at the various
gages and indicators.
“Is—is there any
chance for us?” asked Mr. Fenwick, quietly.
“I think so,” answered
Tom, with a hopeful smile. “We have about
two thousand feet to descend, for we have fallen nearly
that distance since the accident.”
“Two thousand feet to fall!”
gasped Mr. Damon. “We can never do it and
live!”
“I think so,” spoke Tom.
“Bless my gizzard! How?” fairly exploded
Mr. Damon.
“By vol-planing down!”
“But, even if we do, we will
fall into the ocean!” cried Mr. Fenwick.
“We will be drowned!”
“No,” and Tom spoke more
quietly than before. “We are over a large
island.” he went on, “and I propose to
let the disabled airship vol-plane down to it.
That is our only chance.”
“Over an island!” cried
Mr. Damon. He looked down through the floor observation
window. Tom had spoken truly. At that moment
they were over a large island, which had suddenly
loomed up in the wild and desolate waste of the ocean.
They had reached its vicinity just in time.
Tom stepped to the steering and rudder
levers, and took charge. He was going to attempt
a most difficult feat—that of guiding a
disabled airship back to earth in the midst of a hurricane,
and landing her on an unknown island. Could he
do it?
There was but one answer. He
must try. It was the only chance of saving their
lives, and a slim one at best
Down shot the damaged WHIZZER like
some giant bird with broken wings, but Tom Swift was
in charge, and it seemed as if the craft knew it,
as she began that earthward glide.