“By Jove, Tom, here they come!”
“From over by that drinking pool?”
“Yes, just as the spies said
they would. Wow, what a crowd of the black beggars
there are! And some of ’em have regular
guns, too. But most of ’em have clubs,
bows and arrows, blow guns, or spears.”
Tom and Ned were standing on the forward
part of the airship, which was moving slowly along,
over an open plateau, in the jungle where the native
battle was about to take place. Our friends had
left the town where the missionaries lived, and had
hovered over the jungle, until they saw signs of the
coming struggle. They had seen nothing of their
English rivals since coming away, but had no doubt
but that the Britishers were somewhere in the neighborhood.
The two forces of black men, who had
gone to war over a dispute about some cattle, approached
each other. There was the beating of tom-toms,
and skin drums, and many weird shouts. From their
vantage point in the air, Tom and his companions had
an excellent view. The Wizard Camera was loaded
with a long reel of film, and ready for action.
“Bless my handkerchief!”
cried Mr. Damon, as he looked down on the forces that
were about to clash. “I never saw anything
like this before!”
“I either,” admitted Tom.
“But, if things go right, I’m going to
get some dandy films!”
Nearer and nearer the rival forces
advanced. At first they had stared, and shouted
in wonder at the sight of the airship, hovering above
them, but their anger soon drew their attention to
the fighting at hand, and, after useless gestures toward
the craft of the air, and after some of them had vainly
fired their guns or arrows at it, they paid no more
attention, but rushed on with their shouts and cries
and amid the beating of their rude drums.
“I think I’ll begin to
take pictures now,” said Tom, as Ned, in charge
of the ship, sent it about in a circle, giving a general
view of the rival forces. “I’ll show
a scene of the two crowds getting ready for business,
and, later on, when they’re actually giving
each other cats and dogs, I’ll get all the pictures
possible.”
The camera was started while, safe
in the a those on the Flyer watched what went on below
them.
Suddenly the forward squads of the
two small armies of blacks met. With wild, weird
yells they rushed at each other. The air was
filled with flying arrows and spears. The sound
of the old-fashioned muzzle-loading guns could he
heard, and clouds of smoke arose. Tilting his
camera, and arranging the newly attached reflecting
mirrors so as to give the effect as if a spectator
was looking at the battle from in front, instead of
from above, Tom Swift took picture after picture.
The fight was now on. With yells
of rage and defiance the Africans came together, giving
blow for blow. It was a wild melee, and those
on the airship looked on fascinated, though greatly
wishing that such horrors could be stopped.
“How about it, Tom?” cried Ned.
“Everything going good!
I don’t like this business, but now I’m
in it I’m going to stick. Put me down a
little lower,” answered the young inventor.
“All right. I say Tom, look over there.”
“Where?”
“By that lightning-struck gum
tree. See those two men, and some sort of a machine
they’ve got stuck up on stilts? See it?”
“Sure. Those are the two
Englishmen—my rivals! They’re
taking pictures, too!”
And then, with a crash and roar, with
wild shouts and yells, with volley after volley of
firearms, clouds of smoke and flights of arrows and
spears, the native battle was in full swing, while
the young inventor, sailing above it in his airship,
reeled off view after view of the strange sight.