ANDY FOGER LEARNS SOMETHING
Once Tom Swift made up his mind to
do a thing, he did not waste time in setting about
it. He had decided to go to giant land, and that
was all there was to it. His father talked with
him about the matter, pointed out the dangers, and
suggested that, as the young inventor had had many
adventures in the last few years, and had made considerable
money from the discovery of the city of gold, and the
platinum mines, the prize offered for a giant was not
much of an inducement.
“But it isn’t that so
much, dad,” explained Tom. “There’s
that poor circus man, maybe suffering in the centre
of South America. I want to find him, if I can,
or get some news that he died a natural death, and
is decently buried.”
“You never can do it, Tom.”
“Well dad, I’m going to
make a big try!” he returned; and that settled
it as far as Tom was concerned.
For several days after the visit of
Mr. Preston Tom was busy making plans for his trip
to South America. He wanted to lay out a regular
schedule before proceeding. Ned Newton had had
hard work to persuade his folks to let him go, but
they finally consented, and as for Mr. Damon, his
plan was simple.
Without mentioning giants at all,
he took Mr. Preston home with him, and the circus
man’s tale of his assistant lost in the wilds
of South America was too much for Mrs. Damon.
“Go? Of course you’ll
go!” she said to her husband. “I demand
that you go, and I want you to find that poor man
and rescue him. If you could rescue the exiles
from uncivilized Siberia I’m sure you can get
a man out of a civilized country.”
Mr. Damon did not stop to point out
that South America was far less civilized, in some
ways, than was Russia. He just kept still, and
made his preparations to go. Mr. Preston was a
distant relative of the odd man, and that was how
he had happened to meet him and hear the story which
was destined to play such an important part in the
life of Tom Swift.
“Do you think we’ll have
much trouble after we get to South America, and strike
into the interior?” asked Mr. Damon one afternoon,
when he and Mr. Preston were helping Tom in the delicate
work of packing the wing planes of the Lark.
“No, South America isn’t
a bad country to travel in,” replied the circus
man. “The natives are fairly friendly, and
with a well-organized party, and plenty of money,
which I shall see that you have, you ought to get
along swimmingly. Only one thing bothers me.”
“What’s that?” asked Tom quickly.
“That’s my rival, Waydell.
He’s sure to make trouble if he gets on your
trail.”
“Have you heard from him?”
“No, and that’s what makes
me all the more suspicious. If he’d come
out and fight me in the open it wouldn’t be so
bad. But this underhand business gets on my nerves.
I don’t know what he’s up to.”
“Maybe he isn’t up to
anything,” suggested Ned. “He may
not even know you are going to make another try for
the giants.”
“Oh, yes, he does,” replied
the circus man. “He didn’t succeed
in beating me when poor Jake was after them, for the
simple reason that it was a snap case, and even I
didn’t know that Poddington was trying for the
giants until he had started. But Waydell was soon
after him, and he knows that when I once set out for
a freak or a certain kind of animal I keep on until
I get it. So he has probably already figured
out that I’m making new plans to get a giant.”
“But how will he know that I am going?”
inquired Tom.
“I don’t know how he will
know, but he will. We circus men have queer ways
of finding out things. I shouldn’t be a
bit surprised but what he was already plotting and
scheming to send an expedition on my trail, to take
advantage of anything you may learn.”
“Well, we’ll try and fool
him, the same as we did the Mexicans when we hunted
for the city of gold,” spoke Tom; and then putting
aside that worry, he and the others labored hard to
get matters in shape for a departure to South America.
“I suppose Eradicate is going,”
remarked Ned, in the intervals of packing the aeroplane.
“Well, I’ve hinted it
to him,” replied Tom, “but I haven’t
asked him outright. He said he wouldn’t
mind going to a hot country though. Here he comes
now. Guess I’ll see how he takes it.”
The colored man shuffled up with a
hammer and nails, for he had been putting covers on
packing boxes.
“Then you are coming with us
to South America; aren’t you, Rad?” asked
Tom, winking at Ned.
“Souf America? Am dat de
hot country yo’-all was referencin’ to?”
asked Eradicate.
“That’s it, Rad.
It’s nice and warm there. All you have to
do is to lie under a tree and cocoanuts will drop
off into your mouth.”
“Cocoanuts in mah mouf, Massa
Tom! ‘Scuse me! I doan’t want
t’ go to no sich country as dat. Cocoanuts
in mah mouf! Why I ain’t got but a few
teef left, an’ a cocoanut droppin’ offen
a tree would shorely knock dem teef out, shorely!”
“Oh, Rad, I didn’t mean
cocoanuts! I meant oranges and bananas—
they’re soft,” and Tom glanced quickly
at Ned, for he saw that he had made a mistake.
“Oh, well, den dat’s diffunt,
Massa Tom. I jes lubs oranges an’ bananas,
an’ ef yo’-all is shore dat I’ll
find some, why, I’ll come along.”
“Find ’em? Of course you will!”
cried Ned.
“And cocoanuts, too,”
added Tom. “Only, Rad, I meant to say that
the monkeys would throw the cocoanuts down to you
from the trees. That breaks the hard shells you
see, and all you have to do is to take out the meat,
and drink the milk. Then the monkeys throw you
down a palm leaf fan to cool yourself off, while you’re
eating it. Oh, I tell you, Rad, South America
is the place to go to have a good time.”
“I believe you, Massa Tom. When do we-all
start?”
“Pretty soon now.”
“An’ what all am yo’ gwine arter,
Massa Tom?”
The young inventor thought a moment.
In times past he had not hesitated to confide in his
colored helper, but of late years Eradicate had become
somewhat childish, and he talked more than was necessary.
Tom wondered whether it would be safe to trust the
giant secret to him. After a moment’s thought
he realized that it would not be. But, at the
same time, he knew that if he did not give some kind
of an answer Eradicate would become suspicious, and
that would be worse. The colored helper had been
with Tom on too many trips not to know that his master
never went without some object.
“Well, Rad, we’re after
big game this time,” Tom said. “I
don’t know what it will be that we’ll
get, whether animals or plants, and—”
“Oh, I knows, Massa Tom.
Yo’-all means dem orchard plants that lib on
air—dem big orchard plants.”
Eradicate meant orchids, of which many rare and beautiful
kinds are found in South America.
“Yes, Rad, I guess we will get
some big orchids,” agreed Tom.
“An’ I shorely will help
climb de trees arter ’em. Or maybe we kin
git de monkeys to frow em down, same as dey will de
cocoanuts.”
“Maybe, Rad. Well, now
go ahead and nail up the rest of these boxes.
We want to get started as soon as we can,” and
the colored man got busy, murmuring from time to time
something about oranges and bananas and cocoanuts.
Everyone was occupied in getting matters
in shape for the trip to South America, even Mr. Swift
laying aside his work on his pet invention—a
gyroscope—while he helped his son.
And had Tom not been quite so engrossed with his preparations
he might have gone about town more, in which case
he would have learned something that might have saved
him and the others considerable trouble and no little
danger. And this fact was that Andy Foger had
been in Shopton several times lately.
After the trouble which the red-haired
bully and his father caused Tom and his friends on
their trip to the city of gold, Mr. Foger moved away
from Shopton. He had lost his fortune and had
to begin all over again. The Foger homestead
was closed up, and Andy ceased to be a fixture of
the town, for which Tom and Ned were very glad.
But of late Andy had been seen in
Shopton several times, and it was noticed that, on
one or two occasions, he had a man with him—a
man who seemed to have plenty of money—a
man with an air about him not unlike that of Mr. Preston.
A man with what newspaper men would have called a
circus or theatrical “air.”
This man had visited Shopton soon
after Mr. Preston made the giant proposition to Tom,
and before meeting Andy Foger had made special inquiries
about Tom Swift.
“Who are the people who have
a hard feeling against this young inventor in town?”
the man had asked of several persons.
“Tom Swift has more friends
than enemies,” was the general reply.
“Oh, surely he must have some
enemies,” the man insisted. “He’s
been running his aeroplanes and autos around town
a long time, and surely there must be some one who
has a grudge against him. I suppose he has lots
of friends, but who are his enemies?”
Then he learned about Andy Foger,
and, hearing that Andy now lived in a nearby town,
the man had at once gone there. It was not long
before he reappeared—and the red-haired
bully was with him.
“And you haven’t learned
anything yet, Andy?” asked this mysterious man
one afternoon, when he met his tool in a quiet resort
in Shopton.
“Nothing yet, Mr. Waydell.
But give me a little more time.”
“Time! You’ve had
more time now than you need. When I agreed to
pay you for finding out what part of South America
Tom Swift would head for to get some sort of a freak
or animal for Preston’s circus I thought you’d
make good quicker than this.”
“So did I. But you see Tom is
suspicious of me, and so is his chum, Ned Newton.
I can’t go to them, and if I’m seen sneaking
around the house or shop, after what happened last,
I’ll be driven off.”
“Well, it’s up to you.
I paid you to get the information and I expect you
to do it. Why don’t you tackle that old
colored man whom, I understand, works for him?
He ought to be simple enough to give the game away.”
“Eradicate? I will!
I never thought of that I’ll get that information
for you, Mr. Waydell, in a few days.”
“You’d better, if you want to keep that
money.”
The two plotters parted, and that
very afternoon gave Andy the chance he wanted.
He met Eradicate on his way to the village where he
was going after something Tom needed.
“Hello, Rad!” called Andy
with a show of good feeling. “I haven’t
seen you in some time. I suppose you’re
getting too old to travel around with Tom any more?”
“Gittin’ too old!”
exclaimed the colored man indignantly, for that was
his sore point. “What yo’-all mean,
Andy Foger? I ain’t gittin’ old,
an’ neider am Boomerang.”
“Oh, I thought you were, as
you haven’t been on any trips lately.”
“I ain’t, hey? Well
I’s gwine on one right soon, let me tell you
dat, Andy Foger!”
“No! Is that so? Glad
to hear it. Up to the North Pole I suppose?”
“No, sah; not much! No
cold country for this coon! I’s gwine where
it’s nice an ‘warm, an’ where de
cocoanuts fall in yo’ mouf—I mean
where de bananas an’ oranges fall in you mouf,
an’ de monkeys frow down cocoanuts an’
palm leaf fans to yo’!”
“Where’s that, Rad?”
asked Andy, and he tried to make his voice sound indifferent,
as though the matter did not interest him.
“South America, dat’s
where it am, an’ I’s gwine wif Massa Tom.
We’s gwine t’ git a monstrous big orchard
plant.”
“Oh, yes; I’ve heard about
them. Well, I hope you get all the oranges and
bananas you want. South America, eh? I suppose
along the Amazon river, where they have crocodiles
forty feet long, that are always hungry.”
“No, sah! No crockermiles
fo’ me! We ain’t goin’ neah
de Amerzon riber at all. We’s gwine away
down in de middle part of South America. It’s
a place suffin laik Gomeonaway—or Goonaway,
or suffin’ laik dat.”
“Oh, yes; I know where you mean!”
and Andy could hardly conceal the note of triumph
in his voice. He had the very information he wanted
from the simple colored man. “Yes, I guess
there are no crocodiles there, and plenty of monkeys
and cocoanuts. Well, I hope you have a good time,”
and Andy hurried away to seek out the rival circus
man.