“Here, Tom! Come back!
Where are you going?” cried aged Mr. Swift,
as his son started toward the window.
“I’m going to see what’s
up, and who it is that Koku is chasing,” replied
the young inventor.
As he spoke he opened the window,
which went all the way down to the floor. He
stepped out on a small balcony, put his hand on the
railing, and was about to leap over. Back of him
was his father, Mr. Period and Ned.
“Come back! You may get
hurt!” urged Mr. Swift. He had aged rapidly
in the last few months, and had been obliged to give
up most of his inventive work. Naturally, he
was very nervous about his son.
“Don’t worry, dad; replied
the youth. “I’m not in much danger
when Koku is around.”
“That’s right, agreed
the moving picture man. “I’d sooner
have that giant look after me than half a dozen policemen.”
The noise had now grown fainter, but
the sound of the pursuit could still be heard.
Koku was shouting in his hearty tones, and there was
the noise of breaking twigs as the chase wound in and
out of the garden shrubbery.
Tom paused a moment, to let his eyes
get somewhat used to the darkness. There was
a crescent moon, that gave a little light, and the
snow on the ground made it possible to notice objects
fairly well.
“See anything?” asked
Ned, as he joined his chum on the balcony.
“No, but I’m going to
have a closer look. Here goes!” and Tom
leaped to the ground.
“I’m with you,” added Ned, as he
followed.
Then came another voice, shouting:
“Dat’s de way! Catch
him! I’se comm’, I is! Ef we
gits him we’ll tie him up, an’ let Boomerang
walk on him!”
“Here comes Eradicate,”
announced Tom, with a look back toward his chum, and
a moment later the aged colored man, who had evidently
started on the chase with Koku, but who had been left
far behind, swung totteringly around the corner of
the house.
“Did ye cotch him, Massa Tom?”
asked Eradicate. “Did ye cotch de raskil?”
“Not yet, Rad. But Koku
is after him. Who was he, and what did he do?”
“Didn’t do nuffin yit,
Massa Tom, ’case as how he didn’t git no
chance,” replied the colored man, as he hurried
along as rapidly as he could beside the two youths.
“Koku and I was too quick for him. Koku
an’ me was a-sittin’ in my shack, sort
of talkin’ togedder, when we hears a racket
neah de chicken house. I’se mighty partial
t’ de chickens, an’ I didn’t want
nobody t’ ’sturb ‘em. Koku
was jes’ de same, an’ when we hears dat
noise, up we jumps, an’ gits t’ chasm.’
He runned dis way, an’ us was arter him, but
land lub yo’, ole Eradicate ain’t so spry
as he uster be an’ Koku an’ de chicken
thief got ahead ob me. Leastwise he ain’t
no chicken thief yit, ’case as how he didn’t
git in de coop, but he meant t’ be one, jes’
de same.”
“Are you sure he was after the
chickens?” asked Tom, with quick suspicion in
his mind, for, several times of late, unscrupulous
persons had tried to enter his shop, to get knowledge
of his valuable inventions before they were patented.
“Course he were arter de chickens,”
replied Eradicate. “But he didn’t
git none.”
“Come on, Ned!” cried
Tom, breaking into a run. “I want to catch
whoever this was. Did you see him, Rad?”
“Only jes’ had a glimpse ob his back.”
“Well, you go back to the house
and tell father and Mr. Period about it. Ned
and I will go on with Koku. I hope to get the
fellow.”
“Why, Tom?” asked his chum.
“Because I think he was after
bigger game than chickens. My noiseless motor,
for the new airship, is nearly complete, and it may
have been some one trying to get that. I received
an offer from a concern the other day, who wished
to purchase it, and, when I refused to sell, they
seemed rather put out.”
The two lads raced on, while Eradicate
tottered back to the house, where he found Mr. Swift
and the picture man awaiting him.
“I guess he got away,”
remarked Ned, after he and his chum had covered nearly
the length of the big garden.
“I’m afraid so,”
agreed Tom. “I can’t hear Koku any
more. Still, I’m not going to give up.”
Pantingly they ran on, and, a little
later, they met the big man coming back.
“Did he get away?” asked Tom.
“Yes, Mr. Tom, he scaped me all right.”
“Escaped you mean, Koku. Well, never mind.
You did your best.”
“I would like to have hold of
him,” spoke the giant, as he stretched out his
big arms.
“Did you know who he was?” inquired Ned.
“No, I couldn’t see his
face,” and he gave the same description of the
affair as had Eradicate.
“Was it a full grown man, or
some one about my size?” Tom wanted to know.
“A man,” replied the giant.
“Why do you ask that?”
inquired Ned, as the big fellow went on to resume
his talk with Eradicate, and the two chums turned to
go into the house, after the fruitless chase.
“Because, I thought it might
be Andy Foger,” was Tom’s reply.
“It would be just like him, but if it was a man,
it couldn’t be him. Andy’s rather
short.”
“Besides, he doesn’t live here any more,”
said Ned.
“I know, but I heard Sam Snedecker,
who used to be pretty thick with him, saying the other
day that he expected a visit from Andy. I hope
he doesn’t come back to Shopton, even for a day,
for he always tries to make trouble for me. Well,
let’s go in, and tell ’em all about our
chase after a chicken thief.”
“And so he got away?”
remarked Mr. Swift, when Tom had completed his story.
“Yes,” answered the young
inventor, as he closed, and locked, the low library
window, for there was a chilly breeze blowing.
“I think I will have to rig up the burglar alarm
on my shop again. I don’t want to take
any chances.”
“Do you remember what we were
talking about, when that interruption came?”
asked Mr. Period, after a pause. “You were
saying, Tom, that you had made up your mind, and that
was as far as you got. What is your answer to
my offer?”
“Well,” spoke the lad
slowly, and with a smile, “I think I will—”
“Now don’t say ‘no’”;
interrupted the picture man. “If you are
going to say ‘no’ take five minutes more,
or even ten, and think it over carefully. I want
you—”
“I wasn’t going to say
‘no,’” replied Tom. “I
have decided to accept your offer, and I’ll
get right at work on the electrical camera, and see
what I can do in the way of getting moving pictures
for you.”
“You will? Say, that’s
great! That’s fine! I knew you would
accept, but I was the least bit afraid you might not,
without more urging.”
“Of course,” began Tom, “it will
take—”
“Not another word. Just
wait a minute,” interrupted Mr. Period in his
breezy fashion. “Take this.”
He quickly filled out a check and handed it to Tom.
“Now sign this contract, which
merely says that you will do your best to get pictures
for me, and that you won’t do it for any other
concern, and everything will be all right. Sign
there,” he added, pointing to a dotted line,
and thrusting a fountain pen into Tom’s hand.
The lad read over the agreement, which was fair enough,
and signed it, and Ned affixed his name as a witness.
“Now when can you go?” asked Mr. Period
eagerly.
“Not before Spring, I’m
afraid,” replied Torn. “I have first
to make the camera, and then my airship needs overhauling
if I am to go on such long trips as will be necessary
in case I am to get views of wild beasts in the jungle.”
“Well, make it as soon as you
can,” begged Mr. Period. “I can have
the films early next Fall then, and they will be in
season for the Winter runs at the theatres. Now,
I’m the busiest man in the world, and I believe
I have lost five hundred dollars by coming here to-night.
Still, I don’t regret it. I’m going
back now, and I’ll expect to hear from you when
you are ready to start. There’s my address.
Good-bye,” and thrusting a card into Tom’s
hand he hurried out of the room.
“Won’t you stop all night?”
called Mr. Swift after him.
“Sorry. I’d like
to but can’t. Got a big contract I must
close in New York to-morrow morning. I’ve
ordered a special train to be at the Shopton station
in half an hour, and I must catch that. Good
night!” and Mr. Period hurried away.
“Say, he’s a hustler all right!”
exclaimed Ned.
“Yes, and I’ve got to
hustle if I invent that camera,” added Tom.
“It’s got to be a specially fast one, and
one that can take pictures from a long distance.
Electricity is the thing to use, I guess.”
“Then you are really going off
on this trip. Tom?” asked his father, rather
wistfully.
“I’m afraid I am,”
replied his son. “I thought I could stay
at home for a while, but it seems not.”
“I was in hopes you could give
me a little time to help me on my gyroscope invention,”
went on the aged man. “But I suppose it
will keep until you come back. It is nearly finished.”
“Yes, and I don’t like
stopping work on my noiseless motor,” spoke
Tom. “But that will have to wait, too.”
“Do you know where you are going?” inquired
Ned.
“Well, I’ll have to do
considerable traveling I suppose to get all the films
he wants. But once I’m started I’ll
like it I guess. Of course you’re coming,
Ned.”
“I hope so.”
“Of course you are!” insisted
Tom, as if that settled it. “And I’m
sure Mr. Damon will go also. I haven’t seen
him in some time. I hope he isn’t ill.”
Tom started work on his Wizard Camera,
as he called it, the next day—that is he
began drawing the designs, and planning how to construct
it. Ned helped him, and Koku was on hand in case
he was needed, but there was little he could do, as
yet. Tom made an inspection of his shop the morning
after the chicken thief scare, but nothing seemed
to have been disturbed.
A week passed, and Tom had all the
plans drawn for the camera. He had made several
experiments with different forms of electricity for
operating the mechanism, and had decided on a small,
but very powerful, storage battery to move the film,
and take the pictures.
This storage battery, which would
be inside the camera, would operate it automatically.
That is, the camera could be set up any place, in
the jungle, or on the desert, it could be left alone,
and would take pictures without any one being near
it. Tom planned to have it operate at a certain
set time, and stop at a certain time, and he could
set the dials to make this time any moment of the
day or night. For there was to be a powerful light
in connection with the camera, in order that night
views might be taken. Besides being automatic
the camera could be worked by hand.
When it was not necessary to have
the camera operate by the storage battery, it could
be connected to wires and worked by an ordinary set
of batteries, or by a dynamo. This was for use
on the airship, where there was a big electrical machine.
I shall tell you more about the camera as the story
proceeds.
One afternoon Tom was alone in the
shop, for he had sent Koku on an errand, and Eradicate
was off in a distant part of the grounds, doing some
whitewashing, which was his specialty. Ned had
not come over, and Mr. Swift, having gone to see some
friends, and Mrs. Baggert being at the store, Tom,
at this particular time, was rather isolated.
He was conducting some delicate electrical
experiments, and to keep the measuring instruments
steady he had closed all the windows and doors of
his shop. The young inventor was working at a
bench in one corner, and near him, standing upright,
was a heavy shaft of iron, part of his submarine,
wrapped in burlap, and padded, to keep it from rusting.
“Now,” said Tom to himself,
as he mixed two kinds of acid in a jar, to produce
a new sort of electrical current, “I will see
if this is any better than the first way in which
I did it.”
He was careful about pouring out the
powerful stuff, but, in spite of this, he spilled
a drop on his finger. It burned like fire, and,
instinctively, he jerked his hand back.
The next instant there was a series
of happenings. Tom’s elbow came in contact
with another jar of acid, knocking it over, and spilling
it into the retort where he had been mixing the first
two liquids. There was a hissing sound, as the
acids combined, and a thick, white vapor arose, puffing
into Tom’s face, and making him gasp.
He staggered back, brushed against
the heavy iron shaft in the corner, and it fell sideways
against him, knocking him to the floor, and dropping
across his thighs. The padding on it saved him
from broken bones, but the shaft was so heavy, that
after it was on him, Tom could not move. He was
held fast on the floor of his shop, unable to use
his legs, and prevented from getting up.
For a moment Tom was stunned, and then he called:
“Help! Help! Eradicate! Koku!
Help!”
He waited a moment, but there was only a silence.
And then Tom smelled a strange odor—an
odor of a choking gas that seemed to smother him.
“It’s the acids!”
he cried. “They’re generating gas!
And I’m held fast here! The place is closed
up tight, and I can’t move! Help!
Help!”
But there was no one at hand to aid
Tom, and every moment the fumes of the gas became
stronger. Desperately the youth struggled to
rid himself of the weight of the shaft, but he could
not. And then he felt his senses leaving him,
for the powerful gas was making him unconscious.