ON EARTHQUAKE ISLAND
Mingled feelings possessed the three
adventurers within the airship. Mr. Damon and
Mr. Fenwick had crowded to the window, as Tom spoke,
to get a glimpse of the unknown island toward which
they were shooting. They could see it more plainly
now, from the forward casement, as well as from the
one in the bottom of the craft. A long, narrow,
rugged piece of land it was, in the midst of the heaving
ocean, for the storm still raged and lashed the waves
to foam.
“Can you make it?” asked Mr. Damon, in
a low voice.
“I think so,” answered Tom, more cheerfully.
“Shall I shut down the motor?” inquired
the older inventor.
“Yes, you might as well.
We don’t need the propellers now, and I may
be better able to make the glide without them.”
The buzzing and purring electrical
apparatus was shut down. Silence reigned in the
airship, but the wind still howled outside. As
Tom had hoped, the ship became a little more steady
with the stopping of the big curved blades, though
had the craft been undamaged they would have served
to keep her on an even keel.
With skillful hand he so tilted the
elevating planes that, after a swift downward glide,
the head of the WHIZZER would be thrown up, so to
speak, and she would sail along in a plane parallel
to the island. This had the effect of checking
her momentum, just as the aviator checks the downward
rush of his monoplane or biplane when he is making
a landing.
Tom repeated this maneuver several
times, until a glance at his barograph showed that
they had but a scant sixty feet to go. There
was time but for one more upward throwing of the WHIZZER’s
nose, and Tom held to that position as long as possible.
They could now make out the topography of the island
plainly, for it was much lighter. Tom saw a stretch
of sandy beach, and steered for that.
Downward shot the airship, inert and
lifeless. It was not like gliding his little
butterfly to earth after a flight, but Tom hoped
he could make it. They were now within ten feet
of the earth, skimming forward. Tom tried another
upward tilt, but the forward planes would not respond.
They could get no grip on the air.
With a crash that could have been
heard some distance the WHIZZER settled to the sand.
It ran along a slight distance, and then, as the bicycle
wheels collapsed under the pressure, the airship seemed
to go together in a shapeless mass.
At the first impact with the earth,
Tom had leaped away from the steering wheel and levers,
for he did not want to be crushed against them.
Mr. Damon and Mr. Fenwick, in pursuance of a plan adopted
when they found that they were falling, had piled
a lot of seat cushions around them. They had
also provided some as buffers for Tom, and our hero,
at the instant of the crash, had thrown himself behind
and upon them.
It seemed as if the whole ship went
to pieces. The top of the main cabin crashed
down, as the side supports gave way, but, fortunately,
there were strong main braces, and the roof did not
fall completely upon our friends.
The whole bottom of the craft was
forced upward and had it not been for the protecting
cushions, there might have been serious injuries for
all concerned. As it was they were badly bruised
and shaken up.
After the first crash, and succeeding
it an instant later, there came a second smash, followed
by a slight explosion, and a shower of sparks could
be seen in the engine room.
“That’s the electrical
apparatus smashing through the floor!” called
Tom. “Come, let’s get out of here
before the gasolene sets anything on fire. Are
you all right, Mr. Damon, and you, Mr. Fenwick?”
“Yes, I guess so,” answered
the inventor. “Oh, what a terrible crash!
My airship is ruined!”
“You may be glad we are alive,”
said Mr. Damon. “Bless my top knot, I feel—”
He did not finish the sentence.
At that moment a piece of wood, broken from the ceiling,
where it had hung by a strip of canvas came crashing
down, and hit Mr. Damon on the head.
The eccentric man toppled over on
his pile of cushions, from which he was arising when
he was struck.
“Oh, is he killed?” gasped Mr. Fenwick.
“I hope not!” cried Tom.
“We must get him out of here, at all events.
There may be a fire.”
They both sprang to Mr. Damon’s
aid, and succeeded in lifting him out. There
was no difficulty in emerging from the airship as there
were big, broken gaps, on all sides of what was left
of the cabin. Once in the outer air Mr. Damon
revived, and opened his eyes.
“Much hurt?” asked Tom, feeling of his
friend’s head.
“No—no, I—I
guess not,” was the slow answer. “I
was stunned for a moment. I’m all right
now. Nothing broken, I guess,” and his hand
went to his head.
“No, nothing broken,”
added Tom, cheerfully, “but you’ve got
a lump there as big as an ostrich egg. Can you
walk?”
“Oh, I’m all right. Bless my stars,
what a wreck!”
Mr. Damon looked at the remains of
the airship. It certainly was a wreck! The
bent and twisted planes were wrapped about the afterpart,
the gas bag was but a shred, the frame was splintered
and twisted, and the under part, where the starting
wheels were placed, resembled a lot of broken bicycles.
The cabin looked like a shack that had sustained an
explosion of dynamite.
“It’s a wonder we came
out alive,” said Mr. Fenwick, in a low voice.
“Indeed it is,” agreed
Tom, as he came back with a tin can full of sea water,
with which to bathe Mr. Damon’s head. The
lad had picked up the can from where it had rolled
from the wreck, and they had landed right on the beach.
“It doesn’t seem to blow
so hard,” observed Mr. Damon, as he was tenderly
sopping his head with a handkerchief wet in the salt
water.
“No, the wind is dying out,
but it happened too late to do us any good,”
remarked Tom, sorrowfully. “Though if it
hadn’t blown us this far, we might have come
to grief over the ocean, and be floundering in that,
instead of on dry land.”
“That’s so,” agreed
Mr. Fenwick, who was carefully feeling of some bruises
on his legs. “I wonder where we are, anyhow?”
“I haven’t the least idea,”
responded Tom. “It’s an island, but
which one, or where it is I don’t know.
We were blown nearly two thousand miles, I judge.”
He walked over and surveyed the wreck.
Now that the excitement was over he was beginning
to be aware of numerous bruises and contusions, His
legs felt rather queer, and on rolling up his trousers
he found there was a deep cut in the right shin, just
below his knee. It was bleeding, but he bandaged
it with a spare handkerchief, and walked on.
Peering about, he saw that nearly
the whole of the machinery in the engine room, including
most of the electrical apparatus, had fallen bodily
through the floor, and now rested on the sand.
“That looks to be in pretty
good shape.” mused Tom, “but it’s
a question whether it will ever be any good to us.
We can’t rebuild the airship here, that’s
certain.”
He walked about the wreck, and then
returned to his friends. Mr. Damon was more like
himself, and Mr. Fenwick had discovered that he had
only minor bruises.
“Bless my coffee cup!”
exclaimed Mr. Damon. “I declare, I feel
hungry. I wonder if there’s anything left
to eat in the wreck?”
“Plenty,” spoke Tom, cheerfully.
“I’ll get it out. I can eat a sandwich
or too myself, and perhaps I can set up the gasolene
stove, and cook something.”
As the young inventor was returning
to the wreck, he was halted halfway by a curious trembling
feeling. At first he thought it was a weakness
of his legs, caused by his cut, but a moment later
he realized with a curious, sickening sensation that
it was the ground—the island itself—that
was shaking and trembling.
The lad turned back. Mr. Damon
and Mr. Fenwick were staring after him with fear showing
on their faces.
“What was that?” cried the inventor.
“Bless my gizzard! Did
you feel that, Tom?” cried Mr. Damon. “The
whole place is shaking!”
Indeed, there was a stronger tremor
now, and it was accompanied by a low, rumbling sound,
like distant thunder. The adventurers were swaying
to and fro.
Suddenly they were tossed to the ground
by a swaying motion, and not far off a great crack
opened in the earth. The roaring, rumbling sound
increased in volume.
“An earthquake! It’s
an earthquake!” cried Tom. “We’re
in the midst of an earthquake!”