“Look out for my rival!”
“You’ll go in an airship
of course; won’t you, Tom?” asked Mr.
Damon, when they had pulled their chairs up around
a library table, and Mr. Preston had taken some papers
from his pocket.
“An airship? No, I don’t
believe I shall,” replied the young inventor.
“In the first place, I’m a bit tired of
scooting through the air so much, though it isn’t
to be denied that it’s the quickest way of going.
But in South America there are so many jungles that
it will be hard to find a level starting ground for
a take-off, after we land. Of course we could
go up as a balloon, but this expedition is going to
be different from any we were ever on before.”
“How so?” asked Ned.
“Well, in the first place we’ve
got to start at one end of a trail, and make careful
inquiries all along the way. It isn’t like
when we went for the city of gold. There we had
to look for a certain ruined temple, which was the
landmark. When we went after the platinum in
Siberia we had to look for the place of the high winds,
so I could use my air glider. But now we’re
trying to locate a man who traveled on foot through
the jungles, and if we went in an airship we might
just miss the connecting link.”
“So, I think the best way will
be to do just as Mr. Poddington did— travel
on foot or by horses and mules, and go slowly, making
inquiries from time to time. Then we may
get to giant land, we may find him.”
“I don’t hope for all
that,” said the circus man, “but if you
can only get some news of him it will be a relief.
If he died peaceably it would be better than to be
a captive among some of those savage tribes.
It’s been a year now since I heard the last of
him. But I agree with Tom that an airship won’t
be much good in the jungle. You might take along
a small one, if you could pack it, to scare the natives
with. In fact it might be a good thing to show
to the giants, if you find them.”
“That is my idea,” declared
Tom. “I’ll take the Lark with me.
That’s a mighty powerful machine for its size,
and it can be taken apart in sections. It will
carry three on a pinch, and I have had five in her
with two auxiliary seats. I’ll take the
Lark, and she may come in handy.”
“When can you start?” asked Mr. Preston.
“As soon as we can fit out an
expedition,” answered Tom. “It oughtn’t
to take long. I don’t have to build an air
glider this time. It won’t take long to
take the Lark apart. I haven’t finished
work on my noiseless airship yet, but that can wait.
Yes, we’ll be ready as soon as you want us to
start, Mr. Preston.”
“It can’t be too soon
for me. I’ll deposit a certain sum in the
bank to your credit, Tom, and you can draw on it for
expenses. I’ll pay any amount to get word
of poor Jake, to say nothing of having a giant for
my circus. Now as to ways of getting there.
Have you a large map of South America?”
Tom had one, and he and the others
were pouring over it when Tom’s father came
into the room.
“Well, well!” he exclaimed.
“What’s this? What are you up to now,
Tom, my boy? Mrs. Baggert said you took down the
South American map. What’s up?”
“Lots, dad? I’m going after giants
this time!”
“Giants, Tom? Are you joking?”
“Not a bit of it, Mr. Swift,”
answered Mr. Damon. “Bless my check book!
I believe if some one wanted the moon Tom Swift would
try to get it for them.”
Then Mr. Swift noticed the stranger
present, and was introduced to the circus man.
“Is it really true, Tom,”
asked the aged inventor, when the story had been related,
“are you going to have a try for giant land?”
“That’s what I am, dad,
and I wish you were going along.”
“No, Tom, I’m getting
too old for that. But I did hope you’d stay
home for a while, and help me work on my gyroscope
invention. It is almost completed.”
“I will help you, dad, as soon
as I get back with a giant or two. Who knows?
maybe I’ll get one myself.”
“What would you do with one?” asked Ned
with a laugh.
“Have him help Eradicate,”
answered the young inventor. “Rad is getting
pretty old, and he needs an assistant.”
“But are these giants black?” asked Mr.
Swift.
“That’s a point I don’t
know,” answered the circus man frankly.
“Jake didn’t say in his letter. They
may be black, white or midway between. That’s
what Tom has got to find out for us.”
“And I’ll do it!”
exclaimed our hero. “Now let’s see.
I suppose the best plan would be to take a ship right
to the Rio de la Plata, landing say at Buenos Ayres
or Montevideo, and then organize an expedition to
strike into the interior.”
“Why don’t you do just
as Mr. Poddington did?” asked Ned, “start
from the Amazon and work south?”
“It would take too long,”
declared Tom. “We know that the giants are
somewhere in the northern part of Argentina, or in
Paraguay or Uruguay. Or they may be on the other
side of the Uruguay river in Brazil. It’s
quite a stretch of territory, and we’ve got to
take our time exploring it. That’s why
I don’t want to waste time working down from
the Amazon. We’ll go right to Buenos Ayres,
I think.”
“That’s what I’d
do,” advised the old circus man. “Now
I can give you some points on what to take, and how
to act when you get there. The South Americans
are a queer people—very nice when treated
right, but very bad if not,” and then he told
some of his experiences as a circus man in South America,
for he had traveled there.
“I’d go again, if my business
didn’t keep me here,” he concluded, “for
I’d ask nothing better than to hunt for giant
land, or try to rescue poor Jake. But I can’t.
I’m depending on you, Tom Swift.”
“What’s that? Giant
land?” exclaimed Mrs. Baggert, the motherly
housekeeper, as she came in to announce that dinner
was ready. “You don’t mean to tell
me, Tom, that you’re going off again?”
“That’s what I am, Mrs.
Baggert. You’d better put me up a few sandwiches,
for I don’t know when I’ll be back,”
and Tom winked at his chum.
“Oh, of all things I ever heard
in all my born days!” cried the housekeeper,
throwing up her hands. “Will you ever settle
down, Tom Swift?”
“Maybe he will when Miss Mary
Nestor is ready to settle down too,” said Ned
mischievously, referring to a girl of whom Tom was
very fond.
“Say, I’ll fix you for
that!” cried our hero, as he made an unsuccessful
grab for Ned. “But, Mrs. Baggert, can you
put on a couple of extra plates? Mr. Damon and
Mr. Preston will stay to lunch.”
“Not if it’s going to
put you out, Tom,” objected the circus man.
“I can go to the hotel, and—”
“No, indeed!” exclaimed
Mrs. Baggert graciously, for she prided herself on
her housekeeping arrangements, and she used to say
that unexpected company never “flustrated”
her. Soon the little party was seated around
the table, where the talk went from grave to gay, the
subject of the giants being uppermost.
Mr. Preston told many funny stories
of his circus days, and some of them had the spice
of danger in them, for he had been all over the world,
either as a performer or as the owner of amusement
enterprises.
“Now, the next question to be
settled,” said the old circus man, when they
were once more gathered in the library, “is how
many are going?”
“I am, for one!” exclaimed
Ned quickly. “I’m sure my folks will
let me. Especially as we aren’t going to
use an airship, but will travel just as ordinary folks
do.”
“Except in case of emergency,”
explained Tom. “We’ll have the Lark
to use if we need her.”
“Oh, of course,” agreed
Ned. “How about you, Mr. Damon? Will
you go?”
The odd man looked around the room
before replying, as though he feared someone might
be listening on the sly.
“Go on, Andy Foger isn’t
here,” invited Tom with a laugh.
“I’ll go—if
I can pursuade my wife to let me,” said the odd
man in a whisper, as if, even then, the good lady
might overhear him. “I’m not going
to say anything about giants. I’ll tell
her we are going to rescue a poor fellow from—er—well
from the natives of South America, and I’m sure
she’ll consent. Of course I’ll go.”
“That’s three,”
remarked Tom. “I think I can get Eradicate
to go. He doesn’t like airships, and when
he knows we’re not going in one it will please
him. Then he likes it hot, and I guess South America
is about as warm as they come. I am almost sure
we can count on Rad.”
“That will make a nice party,”
commented the circus man. “Now I’ll
make out a list of the supplies you’d better
take, and tell you what to do about getting native
helpers, and so on,” and with that he plunged
into the midst of details that took up most of the
remainder of the day.
“Well, then I guess that settles
most everything,” remarked Tom, several hours
later. “I’ll begin at once to take
the Lark apart for shipment, and begin ordering the
things we need.”
“Oh, there’s one thing
I almost forgot about,” said Mr. Preston suddenly.
“Queer, how I should overlook that, too.
I don’t suppose you mind a fight or two; do
you?” he asked, looking sharply at Tom.
“Well, it all depends.
We’ve had several fights on other expeditions,
though I can’t say that I like ’em,”
replied the young inventor. “Why do you
ask?”
“Because you may have one—or
several,” was the answer of the circus man.
“You’ll have to beware of my rival.”
“Your rival?”
“Yes, the bitterest foe I have
is a rival circus man named Wayland Waydell.
He, or some of his men, are always camping on my trail
when I send out after a new consignment of wild animals,
and I shouldn’t be a bit surprised but what
he’d try to get ahead of me on the giant game.”
“But how does he know you want giants?”
asked Tom.
“Because news of circus expeditions
always leaks out somehow or other. I’m
sure Waydell will learn that you are acting for me,
and so I warn you in time. In fact, he tried
to get ahead of me when I sent Jake Poddington out
over a year ago, and I always had my suspicions that
he had a hand in Jake’s disappearance, but maybe
I’m wrong. So that’s what I mean
when I say beware of Wayland Waydell, Tom.”
“I will!” exclaimed Tom.
“He’ll have to get up early to get ahead
of us.” But Tom little knew the man against
whom he was to pit himself in the search for giants.