“Well, Tom, how is it going?”
asked a voice at the door of the shop where the young
inventor was working. He looked up quickly to
behold Mr. Nestor, father of Mary, in which young lady,
as I have said, Tom was much interested. “How
is the moving picture camera coming on?”
“Pretty good, Mr. Nestor.
Come in. I guess Koku knew you all right.
I told him to let in any of my friends, but I have
to keep him there on guard.”
“So I understand. They
nearly got in the other night, but I hear that your
camera caught them.”
“Yes, that proved that the machine
is a success, even if we didn’t succeed in arresting
the men.”
“Did you try?”
“Yes, I sent copies of the film,
showing Turbot and Eckert trying to break into my
shop, to Mr. Period, and he had enlarged photographs
made, and went to the police. They said it was
rather flimsy evidence on which to arrest anybody,
and so they didn’t act. However, we sent
copies of the pictures to Turbot and Eckert themselves,
so they know that we know they were here, and I guess
they’ll steer clear of me after this.”
“I guess so, Tom,” agreed
Mr. Nestor with a laugh. “But what about
the chicken thief?”
“Oh, Eradicate attended to his
second cousin. He went to see him, showed him
a print from the film, and gave him to understand
that he’d be blown up with dynamite, or kicked
by Boomerang, if he ever came around here again, and
so Samuel ’Rastus Washington Jackson Johnson
will be careful about visiting strange chicken coops,
after this.”
“I believe you, Tom. But
how is the camera coming on?”
“Very well. I am making
a few changes in it, and I expect to get my biggest
airship in readiness for the trip in about a week,
and then I’ll try taking pictures from her.
But I understand that you are interested in Mr. Period’s
business, Mr. Nestor?”
“Yes, I own some stock in the
company, and, Tom, that’s what I came over to
see you about. I need a vacation. Mary and
her mother are going away this Spring for a long visit,
and I was wondering if you couldn’t take me
with you on the trips you will make to get moving
pictures for our concern.”
“Of. course I can, Mr. Nestor.
“I’ll be glad to do it.”
“And there is another thing,
Tom,” went on Mr. Nestor, soberly. “I’ve
got a good deal of my fortune tied up in this moving
picture affair. I want to see you win out—I
don’t want our rivals to get ahead of us.”
“They shan’t get ahead of us.”
“You see, Tom, it’s this
way. There is a bitter fight on between our concern
and that controlled by our rivals. Each is trying
to get the business of a large chain of moving picture
theatres throughout the United States. These theatre
men are watching us both, and the contracts for next
season will go to the concern showing the best line
of films. If our rivals get ahead of us—well,
it will just about ruin our company,—and
about ruin me too, I guess.”
“I shall do my very best,” answered our
hero.
“Is Mr. Damon going along?”
“Well, I have just written to
ask him. I sent the letter yesterday.
“Doesn’t he know what you contemplate?”
“Not exactly. You see when
he came, that time I was overcome by the fumes from
the acids, everything was so upset that I didn’t
get a chance to tell him. He’s been away
on business ever since, but returned yesterday.
I certainly hope that he goes with us. Ned Newton
is coming, and with you, and Koku and myself, it will
be a nicer party.”
“Then you are going to take Koku?”
“I think I will. I’m
a little worried about what these rival moving picture
men might do, and if I get into trouble with them,
my giant helper would come in very useful, to pick
one up and throw him over a tree top, for instance.”
“Indeed, yes,” agreed
Mr. Nestor, with a laugh. “But I hope nothing
like that happens.”
“Nothing like that happens?”
suddenly asked a voice. “Bless my bookcase!
but there always seems to be something going on here.
What’s up now, Tom Swift?”
“Nothing much, Mr. Damon,”
replied our hero, as he recognized his odd friend.
“We were just talking about moving pictures,
Mr. Damon, and about you. Did you get my letter?”
“I did, Tom.”
“And are you going with us?”
“Tom, did you ever know me to
refuse an invitation from you? I guess not!
Of course I’m going. But, for mercy sakes,
don’t tell my wife! She mustn’t know
about it until the last minute, and then she’ll
be so surprised, when I tell her, that she won’t
think of objecting. Don’t let her know.”
Tom laughed, and promised, and then
the three began talking of the prospective trip.
After a bit Ned Newton joined the party.
Tom showed the two men how his new
camera worked. He had made several improvements
on it since the first pictures were taken, and now
it was almost perfect. Mr. Period had been out
to see it work, and said it was just the apparatus
needed.
“You can get films with that
machine,” he said, “that will be better
than any pictures ever thrown on a screen. My
fortune will be made, Tom, and yours too, if you can
only get pictures that are out of the ordinary.
There will be some hair-raising work, I expect, but
you can do it.”
“I’ll try,” spoke Tom. “I
have—”
“Hold on! I know what you
are going to say,” interrupted Mr. Period.
“You are going to say that you’ve gone
through some strenuous times already. I know
you have, but you’re going to have more soon.
I think I’ll send you to India first.”
“To India!” exclaimed
Tom, for Mr. Period had spoken of that as if it was
but a journey downtown.
“Yes, India. I want a picture
of an elephant drive, and if you can get pictures
of the big beasts in a stampede, so much the better.
Then, too, the Durbar is on now, and that will make
a good film. How soon can you start for Calcutta?”
“Well, I’ve got to overhaul
the airship,” said Tom. “That will
take about three weeks. The camera is practically
finished. I can leave in a month, I guess.”
“Good. We’ll have
fine weather by that time. Are you going all
the way by your airship?”
“No, I think it will be best
to take that apart, ship it by steamer, and go that
way ourselves. I can put the airship together
in India, and then use it to get to any other part
of Europe, Asia or Africa you happen to want pictures
from.”
“Good! Well, get to work
now, and I’ll see you again.”
In the days that followed, Tom and
Ned were kept busy. There was considerable to
do on the airship, in the way of overhauling it.
This craft was Tom’s largest, and was almost
like the one in which he had gone to the caves of
ice, where it was wrecked. It had been, however,
much improved.
The craft was a sort of combined dirigible
balloon, and aeroplane, and could be used as either.
There was a machine on board for generating gas, to
use in the balloon part of it, and the ship, which
was named the Flyer, could carry several persons.
“Bless my shoe laces!”
cried Mr. Damon one day as he looked at Koku.
“If we take him along in the airship, will we
be able to float, Tom?”
“Oh, yes. The airship is
plenty big enough. Besides, we are not going
to take along a very large party, and the camera is
not heavy. Oh, we’ll be all right.
I suppose you’ll be on hand to-morrow, Mr.
Damon?”
“To-morrow? What for?”
“We’re going to take the
picture machine up in the airship, and get some photos
from the sky. I expect to make some films from
high in the air, as well as some in the regular way,
on the ground, and I want a little practice.
Come around about two o’clock, and we’ll
have a trial flight.”
“All right. I will.
But don’t let my wife know I’m going up
in an airship again. She’s read of so many
accidents lately, that she’s nervous about having
me take a trip.”
“Oh, I won’t tell,”
promised Tom with a laugh, and he worked away harder
than ever, for there were many little details to perfect.
The weather was now getting warm, as there was an early
spring, and it was pleasant out of doors.
The moving picture camera was gotten
in readiness. Extra rolls of films were on hand,
and the big airship, in which they were to go up,
for their first test of taking pictures from high in
the air, had been wheeled out of the shed.
“Are you going up very far?”
asked Mr. Nestor of Tom, and the young inventor thought
that Mary’s father was a trifle nervous.
He had not made many flights, and then only a little
way above the ground, with Tom.
“Not very high,” replied
our hero. “You see I want to get pictures
that will be large, and if I’m too far away I
can’t do it.”
“Glad to hear it, replied Mr.
Nestor, with a note of relief in his voice. “Though
I suppose to fall a thousand feet isn’t much
different from falling a hundred when you consider
the results.”
“Not much,” admitted Tom frankly.
“Bless my feather bed!”
cried Mr. Damon. “Please don’t talk
of falling, when we’re going up in an airship.
It makes me nervous.”
“We’ll not fall!” declared Tom confidently.
Mr. Period sent his regrets, that
he could not be present at the trial, stating in his
letter that he was the busiest man in the world, and
that his time was worth about a dollar a minute just
at present. He, however, wished Tom all success.
Tom’s first effort was to sail along, with the
lens of the camera pointed straight toward the earth.
He would thus get, if successful, a picture that,
when thrown on the screen, would give the spectators
the idea that they were looking down from a moving
balloon. For that reason Tom was not going to
fly very high, as he wanted to get all the details
possible.
“All aboard!” cried the
young inventor, when he had seen to it that his airship
was in readiness for a flight. The camera had
been put aboard, and the lens pointed toward earth
through a hole in the main cabin floor. All who
were expected to make the trip with Tom were on hand,
Koku taking the place of Eradicate this time, as the
colored man was too aged and feeble to go along.
“All ready?” asked Ned,
who stood in the steering tower, with his hand on
the starting lever, while Tom was at the camera to
see that it worked properly.
“All ready,” answered
the young inventor, and, an instant later, they shot
upward, as the big propellers whizzed around.
Tom at once started the camera to
taking pictures rapidly, as he wanted the future audience
to get a perfect idea of how it looked to go up in
a balloon, leaving the earth behind. Then as
the Flyer moved swiftly over woods and fields, Tom
moved the lens from side to side, to get different
views.
“Say! This is great!”
cried Mr. Nestor, to whom air-riding was much of a
novelty. “Are you getting good pictures,
Tom?”
“I can’t tell until we
develop them. But the machine seems to be working
all right. I’m going to sail back now, and
get some views of our own house from up above.”
They had sailed around the town of
Shopton, to the neighboring villages, over woods and
fields. Now they were approaching Shopton again.
“Bless my heart!” suddenly
exclaimed Mr. Damon, who was looking toward the earth,
as they neared Tom’s house.
“What is it?” asked our
hero, glancing up from the picture machine, the registering
dial of which he was examining.
“Look there! At your shop,
Tom! There seems to be a lot of smoke coming
from it!”
They were almost over Tom’s
shop now, and, as Mr. Damon had said, there was considerable
smoke rolling above it.
“I guess Eradicate is burning
up papers and trash,” was Ned’s opinion.
Tom looked to where the camera pointed,
he was right over his shop now, and could see a dense
vapor issuing from the door.
That isn’t Eradicate!”
cried the young inventor. “My shop is on
fire! I’ve got to make a quick drop, and
save it! There are a lot of valuable models,
and machines in there! Send us down, Ned, as
fast as she’ll go!”