TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIR GLIDER
or
Seeking the Platinum
Treasure
By
VICTOR APPLETON
CONTENTS
I A Breakdown
II A Daring Project
III The Hand of the Czar
IV The Search
V A Clew from Russia
VI Rescuing Mr. Petrofsky
VII The Air Glider
VIII In a Great Gale
IIX The Spies
X Off in the Airship
XI A Storm at Sea
XII An Accident
XIII Seeking a Quarrel
XIV Hurried Flight
XV Pursued
XVI The Nihlists
XVII On to Siberia
XVIII In a Russian Prison
XIX Lost in a Salt Mine
XX The Escape
XXI The Rescue
XXII In the Hurricane
XXIII The Lost Mine
XXIV The Leaking Tanks
XXV Homeward Bound--Conclusion
TOM SWIFT AND HIS AIR GLIDER
CHAPTER I
A BREAKDOWN
"Well, Ned, are you
ready?"
"Oh, I suppose so,
Tom. As ready as I ever shall be."
"Why, Ned Newton,
you're not getting afraid; are you? And
after you've been on so many
trips with me?"
"No, it isn't exactly
that, Tom. I'd go in a minute if you
didn't have this new fangled
thing on your airship. But how
do you know how it's going
to work--or whether it will work
at all? We may come a
cropper."
"Bless my insurance
policy!" exclaimed a man who was
standing near the two lads
who were conversing. "You'd
better keep near the ground,
Tom."
"Oh, that's all right,
Mr. Damon," answered Tom Swift.
"There isn't any more
danger than there ever was, but I
guess Ned is nervous since
our trip to the underground city
of gold."
"I am not!"
indignantly exclaimed the other lad, with a
look at the young inventor.
"But you know yourself, Tom,
that putting this new
propeller on your airship, changing
the wing tips, and
re-gearing the motor has made an
altogether different sort of
a craft of it. You, yourself,
said it wasn't as reliable
as before, even though it does go
faster."
"Now look here,
Ned!" burst out Tom. "That was last week
that I said it wasn't
reliable. It is now, for I've tried it
out several times, and yet,
when I ask you to take a trip
with me, to act as
ballast--"
"Is that all you want
me for, Tom, to act as ballast? Then
you'd better take a bag of
sand--or Mr. Damon here!"
"Me? I guess not! Bless
my diamond ring! My wife hasn't
forgiven me for going off on
that last trip with you, Tom,
and I'm not going to take
any more right away. But I don't
blame Ned--"
"Say, look here!"
cried Tom, a little out of patience,
"you know me better
than that, Ned. Of course your more than
ballast--I want you to help
me manage the craft since I made
the changes on her. Now if
you don't want to come, why say
so, and I'll get Eradicate.
I don't believe he'll be afraid,
even if he--"
"Hold on dar now, Massa
Tom!" exclaimed an aged colored
man, who was an all around
helper at the Swift homestead,
"was yo' referencin' t'
me when yo' spoke?"
"Yes, Rad, I was saying
that if Ned wouldn't go up in the
airship with me you
would."
"Well, now, Masa Tom, I
shorely would laik t' 'blige yo',
I shore would. But de fack
ob de mattah am dat I has a mos'
particular job ob white
washin' t' do dish mornin', an' I
'spects I'd better be
gittin' at it. It's a mos' particiilar
job, an', only fo' dat, I'd
be mos' pleased t' go up in de
airship. But as it am, I
mus' ax yo' t' 'scuse me, I really
mus'," and the colored
man shuffled off at a faster gait
than he was in the habit of
using.
"Well, of all things!"
gasped Tom. "I believe you're all
afraid of the old airship,
just because I wade some changes
in her. I'll go up alone,
that's what I will."
"No, I'll go with
you," interposed Ned Newton who was
Tom's most particular chum.
"I only wanted to be sure it was
all right, that was
all."
"Well, if you've fully
made up your mind," went on the
young inventor, a little
mollified, "lend me a hand to get
her in shape for a run. I
expect to make faster time than I
ever did before, and I'm
going to head out Waterford way.
You'd better come along, Mr.
Damon, and I'll drop you off at
your house."
"Bless my feather
bed!" gasped the man. "Drop me off! I
like that, Tom Swift!"
"Oh, I didn't mean it
exactly that way," laughed Tom. "But
will you come."
"No, thanks, I'm going
home by trolley," and then as the
odd man went in the house to
speak to Tom's father, the two
lads busied themselves about
the airship.
This was a large aeroplane,
one of the largest Tom Swift
had ever constructed, and he
was a lad who had invented many
kinds of machinery besides
crafts for navigating the upper
regions. It was not as large
as his combined aeroplane and
dirigible balloon of which I
have told you in other books,
but it was of sufficient
size to carry three persons besides
other weight.
Tom had built it some years
before, and it had seemed good
enough then. Later he
constructed some of different models,
besides the big combination
affair, and he had gone on
several trips in that.
He and his chum Ned,
together with Eradicate Sampson, the
colored man, and Mr. Damon,
had been to a wonderful
underground city of gold in
Mexico, and it was soon after
their return from this
perilous trip that Tom had begun the
work of changing his old
aeroplane into a speedier craft.
This had occupied him most
of the Winter, and now that
Spring had come he had a
chance to try what a re-built
motor, changed propellers,
and different wing tips would do
for the machine.
The time had come for the
test and, as we have seen, Tom
had some difficulty in
persuading anyone to go along with
him? But Ned finally got
over his feeling of nervousness.
"Understand, Tom,"
spoke Ned, "it isn't because I don't
think you know how to work
an aeroplane that I hesitated.
I've been up in the air with
you enough times to know that
you're there with the goods,
but I don't believe even you
know what this machine is
going to do."
"I can pretty nearly
tell. I'm sure my theory is right."
"I don't doubt that.
But will it work out in practice?"
"She may not make all
the speed I hope she will, and I may
not be able to push her high
into the air quicker than I
used to before I made the
changes," admitted Tom, "but I'm
sure of one thing. She'll
fly, and she won't come down until
I'm ready to let her. So you
needn't worry about getting
hurt."
"All right--if you say
so. Now what do you want me to do,
Tom?"
"Go over the wire guys
and stays for the first thing.
There's going to be lots of
vibration, with the re-built
motor, and I want everything
tight."
"Aye, aye, sir!"
answered Ned with a laugh.
Then he set at his task,
tightening the small nuts, and
screwing up the
turn-buckles, while Tom busied himself over
the motor. There was some
small trouble with the carburetor
that needed eliminating
before it would feed properly.
"How about the
tires?" asked Ned, when he had finished the
wires.
"You might pump them
up. There, the motor is all right.
I'm going to try it now,
while you attend to the tires."
Ned had pumped up one of the
rubber circlets of the small
bicycle wheels on which the
aeroplane rested, and was
beginning on the second,
when a noise like a battery of
machine guns going off next
to his ear startled him so that
he jumped, tripped over a
stone and went down, the air pump
thumping him in the back.
"What in the world
happened, Tom?" he yelled, for he had
to use all his lung power to
be heard above that racket.
"Did it explode?"
"Explode nothing!"
shouted Tom. "That's the re-built motor
in action."
"In action! I should
say it was in action. Is it always
going to roar like
that?"
Indeed the motor was roaring
away, spitting fire and burnt
gases from the exhaust pipe,
and enveloping the aeroplane in
a whitish haze of choking
smoke.
No, I have the muffler cut
out, and that's why she barks
so. But she runs easier that
way, and I want to get her
smoothed out a bit.
"Whew! That
smoke!" gasped his chum. "Why don't you--whew-
-this is more than I can
stand," and holding his hands to
his smarting eyes, Ned,
gasping and choking, staggered away
to where the air was better.
"It is sort of
thick," admitted Tom. "But that's only
because she's getting too
much oil. She'll clear in a few
minutes. Stick around and
we'll go up."
Despite the choking vapor,
the young inventor stuck to his
task of regulating the
motor, and in a short while the smoke
became less, while the big
propeller blades whirled about
more evenly. Then Tom
adjusted the muffler, and most of the
noise stopped.
"Come on back, and
finish pumping up the tires," he
shouted to Ned. "I'm
going to stop her now, and then I'll
give her the pressure test,
and we'll take a trip."
Having cleared his eyes of
smoke, Ned came back to his
task, and this having been
finished, Tom attached a heavy
spring balance, or scales,
to the rope that held the airship
back from moving when her
propellers were whirling about.
"How much pressure do
you want?" asked Ned.
"I ought to get above
twelve hundred With the way the
motor is geared, but I'll go
up with ten. Watch the needle
for me."
It may be explained that
when aeroplanes are tested on the
earth the propellers are set
in motion. This of course would
send a craft whizzing over
the ground, eventually to rise in
the air, but for the fact
that a rope, attached to the
craft, and to some
stationary object, holds it back.
Now if this rope is hooked
to a spring balance, which in
turn is made fast to the
stationary object, the "thrust" of
the propellers will be
registered in pounds on the scale of
the balance. Anywhere from
five hundred to nine hundred
pounds of thrust will take a
monoplane or biplane up. But
Tom wanted more than this.
Once more the motor coughed
and spluttered, and the big
blades whirled about so fast
that they seemed like solid
pieces of wood. Tom stood on
the ground near the levers
which controlled the speed,
and Ned watched the scale.
"How much?" yelled
the young inventor.
"Eight hundred."
Tom turned on a little more
gasolene.
"How much?" he
cried again.
"Ten hundred. That'll
do!"
"No, I'm going to try
for more.
Again he advanced the spark
and gasolene levers, and the
comparatively frail craft
vibrated so that it seemed as if
she would fly apart.
"Now?" yelled Tom.
"Eleven hundred and
fifty!" cried Ned.
"Good! That'll do it.
She'll give more after she's been
running a while. We'll go
up."
Ned scrambled to his seat,
and Tom followed. He had an
arrangement so that he could
slip loose the retaining rope
from his perch whenever he
was ready.
Waiting until the motor had
run another minute, the young
inventor pulled the rope
that released them. Over the
smooth starting ground that
formed a part of the Swift
homestead darted the aeroplane.
Faster and faster she moved,
Ned gripping the sides of
his seat.
"Here we go!"
cried Tom, and the next instant they shot up
into the air.
Ned Newton had ridden many
times with his chum Tom, and
the sensation of gliding
through the upper regions was not
new to him. But this time
there was something different. The
propellers seemed to take
hold of the air with a firmer
grip. There was more power,
and certainly the speed was
terrific.
"We're going
fast!" yelled Ned into Tom's ear.
"That's right,"
agreed the young inventor. "She'll beat
anything but my Sky Racer,
and she'd do that if she was the
same size." Tom
referred to a very small aeroplane he had
made some time before. It
was like some big bird, and very
swift.
Up and onward went the
remodeled airship, faster and
faster, until, when several
miles had been covered, Ned
realized that the young
inventor had achieved another
triumph.
"It's great, Tom!
Great!" he yelled.
"Yes, I guess it will
do, Ned. I'm satisfied. If there was
an international meet now
I'd capture some of the prizes. As
it is--"
Tom stopped suddenly. His
voice which had been raised to
overcome the noise of even
the muffled motor, sounded
unnaturally loud, and no
wonder, for the engine had ceased
working!
"What's the
matter?" gasped Ned.
"I don't know--a
breakdown of some kind."
"Can you get it going
again?"
"I'm going to
try."
Tom was manipulating various
levers, but with no effect.
The aeroplane was shooting
downward with frightful rapidity.
"No use!"
exclaimed the young inventor. "Something has
broken."
"But We're falling,
Tom!"
"I know it. We've done
it before. I'm going to volplane to
earth."
This, it may be explained,
is gliding downward from a
height with the engine shut
off. Aeroplanists often do it,
and Tom was no novice at the
art.
They shot downward with less
speed now, for the young
inventor had thrown up his
headplanes to act as a sort of
brake. Then, a little later
they made a good landing in a
field near a small house, in
a rather lonely stretch of
country, about ten miles
from Shopton, where Tom lived.
"Now to see what the
trouble is," remarked our hero, as he
climbed out of his seat and
began looking over the engine.
He poked in among the
numerous cogs, wheels and levers, and
finally uttered an
exclamation.
"Find it?" asked
Ned.
"Yes, it's in the
magneto. All the platinum bearings and
contact surfaces have fused
and crystallized. I never saw
such poor platinum as I've
been getting lately, and I pay
the highest prices for it,
too. The trouble is that the
supply of platinum is giving
out, and they'll have to find a
substitute I guess."
"Can't we go home in
her?" asked Ned.
"I'm afraid not. I've
got to put in new platinum bearings
and contacts before she'll
spark. I only wish I could get
hold of some of the better
kind of metal."
The magneto of an aeroplane
performs a service similar to
one in an automobile. It
provides the spark that explodes
the charge of gas in the
cylinders, and platinum is a metal,
more valuable now than gold,
much used in the delicate parts
of the magneto.
"Well, I guess it's
walk for ours," said Ned ruefully.
"I'm afraid so,"
went on Tom. "If I only had some
platinum, I could--"
"Perhaps I could be of
service to you," suddenly spoke a
voice behind them, and
turning, the youths saw a tall,
bearded man, who had
evidently come from the lonely house.
"Did I hear you say you
needed some platinum?" he asked. He
spoke with a foreign accent,
and Tom at once put him down
for a Russian.
"Yes, I need some for
my magneto," began the young
inventor.
"If you will kindly
step up to my house, perhaps I can
give you what you
want," went on the man. "My name is Ivan
Petrofsky, and I have only
lately come to live here."
"I'm Tom Swift, of Shopton,
and this is my chum, Ned
Newton," replied the
young inventor, completing the
introductions. He was
wondering why the man, who seemed a
cultured gentleman, should
live in such a lonely place, and
he was wondering too how he
happened to have some platinum.
"Will that
answer?" asked Mr. Petrofsky, when they had
reached his house, and he
had handed Tom several strips of
the precious silverlike
metal.
"Do? I should say it
would! My, but that is the best
platinum I've seen in a long
while!" exclaimed Tom, who was
an expert judge of this
metal. "Where did you get it, if I
may ask?"
"It came from a lost
mine in Siberia," was the unexpected
answer.
"A lost mine?"
gasped Tom.
"In Siberia?"
added Ned.
Mr. Petrofsky slowly nodded
his head, and smiled, but
rather sadly.
"A lost mine," he
said slowly, "and if it could be found I
would be the happiest man on
earth for I would then be able
to locate and save my
brother, who is one of the Czar's
exiles," and he seemed
shaken by emotion.
Tom and Ned stood looking at
the bearded man, and then the
young inventor glanced at
the platinum strips in his hand
while a strange and daring
thought came to him.
CHAPTER II
A DARING PROJECT
While Tom and his chum are
in the house of the Russian,
who so strangely produced
the platinum just when it was most
needed, I am going to take
just a little time to tell you
something about the hero of
this story. Those who have read
the previous books of this
series need no introduction to
him, but in justice to my
new readers I must make a little
explanation.
Tom Swift was an inventor,
as was his father before him.
But Mr. Swift was getting
too old, now, to do much, though
he had a pet invention--that
of a gyroscope--on which he
worked from time to time.
Tom lived with his father in the
village of Shopton, in New
York state. His mother was dead,
but a housekeeper, named
Mrs. Baggert, looked after the
wants of the inventors,
young and old.
The first book of the series
was called "Tom Swift and His
Motor-Cycle," and in
that I related how Tom bought the
machine from a Mr. Wakefield
Damon, of Waterford, after the
odd gentleman had
unintentionally started to climb a tree
with it. That disgusted Mr.
Damon with motor-cycling, and
Tom had lots of fun on the
machine, and not a few daring
adventures.
He and Mr. Damon became firm
friends, and the oddity of
the gentleman--mainly that
of blessing everything he could
think of--was no objection
in Tom's mind. The young inventor
and Ned Newton went on many
trips together, Mr. Damon being
one of the party.
In Shopton lived Andy Foger,
a bullying sort of a chap,
who acted very meanly toward
Tom at times. Another resident
of the town was a Mr.
Nestor, but Tom was more interested in
his daughter Mary than in
the head of the household. Add
Eradicate Sampson, an
eccentric colored man who said he got
his name because he
"eradicated" dirt, and his mule,
Boomerang, and I think you
have met the principal characters
of these stories.
After Tom had much enjoyment
out of his motor-cycle, he
got a motor boat, and one of
his rivals on Lake Carlopa was
this same Andy Foger, but
our hero vanquished him. Then Tom
built an airship, which had
been the height of his ambition
for some years. He had a stirring
cruise in the Red Cloud,
and then, deserting the air
for the water, Tom and his
father built a submarine, in
which they went after sunken
treasure. In the book,
"Tom Swift and His Electric
Runabout," I told how,
in the speediest car on the road, Tom
saved his father's bank from
ruin, and in the book dealing
with Tom's wireless message
I related how he saved the
Castaways of Earthquake
Island.
When Tom went among the
diamond makers, at the request of
Mr. Barco Jenks, and
discovered the secret of phantom
mountain the lad fancied
that might be the end of his
adventures, but there were
more to follow. Going to the
caves of ice, his airship
was wrecked, but he and his
friends managed to get back
home, and then it was that the
young inventor perfected his
sky racer, in which he made the
quickest flight on record.
Most startling were his
adventures in elephant land
whither he went with his
electric rifle, and he was the
means of saving a
missionary, Mr. Illingway and his wife,
from the red pygmies.
Tom had not been home from
Africa long before he got a
letter from this missionary,
telling about an underground
City in Mexico that was said
to be filled with gold. Tom
went there, and in the book,
entitled, "Tom Swift in the
City of Gold," I
related his adventures.
How he and his friends were
followed by the Fogers, how
they eluded them, made their
way to the ruined temple in a
small dirigible balloon,
descended to the secret tunnel,
managed to turn aside the
underground river, and reach the
city of gold with its
wonderful gold statues--all this is
told in the volume.
Then, after pulling down, in
the centre of the underground
city, the big golden statue,
the door of rock descended, and
made our friends prisoners.
They almost died, but Andy Foger
and his father, in league
with some rascally Mexicans and a
tribe of head-hunters,
finally made their way to the tunnel,
and most unexpectedly,
released Tom and his friends.
There was a fight, but our
hero's party escaped with
considerable gold and safely
reached Shopton. Now, after a
winter spent in work, fixing
over an old aeroplane, we again
meet Tom.
"Would you mind telling
me something about where this
platinum comes from, and if
you can get any more of it?"
asked Tom, after a pause,
following the strange statement
made by the Russian.
"I will gladly tell you
the story," spoke Mr. Petrofsky,
"for I am much
interested in inventions, and I formerly did
something in that line
myself, and I have even made a small
aeroplane, so you see I know
the need of platinum in a high
power magneto."
"But where did you get
such pure metal?" asked Tom. "I
have never seen it's
equal."
"There is none like it
in all the world," went on the
Russian, "and perhaps
there never can be any more. I have
only a small supply. But in
Siberia --in the lost mine--
there is a large quantity of
it, as pure as this, needing
only a little refining.
"Can't we get some from
there?" asked the young inventor
eagerly. "I should
think the Russian government would mine
it, and export it."
"They would--if they
could find it," said Ivan Petrofsky
dryly, "but they
can't--no one can find it--and I have tried
very hard--so hard, in fact,
that it is the reason for my
coming to this country--that
and the desire to find and aid
my brother, who is a
Siberian exile."
"This is getting
interesting," remarked Ned to Tom in a
low voice, and the young
inventor nodded.
"My brother Peter, who
is younger than I by a few years,
and I, are the last of our
family," began Mr. Petrofsky,
motioning Tom and Ned to
take chairs. "We lived in St.
Petersburg, and early in
life, though we were of the
nobility, we took up the
cause of the common people."
"Nihilists?" asked
Ned eagerly, for he had read something
of these desperate men.
"No, and not
anarchists," said Mr. Petrofsky with a sad
smile. "Our party was
opposed to violence, and we depended
on education to aid our
cause. Then, too, we did all we
could in a quiet way to help
the poor. My brother and I
invented several life-saving
and labor-saving machines and
in this way we incurred the
enmity of the rich contractors
and government officials,
who made more money the more
people they could have
working for them, for they made the
people buy their food and
supplies from them.
"But my brother, and I
persisted, with the result that we
were both arrested, and,
with a number of others were sent
to Siberia.
"Of the horrors we
endured there I will say nothing.
However, you have probably
read much. In the country near
which we were quartered
there were many mines, some of salt
and some of sulphur. Oh, the
horrors of those mines! Many a
poor exile has been lost in
the windings of a salt mine,
there to die miserably. And
in the sulphur mines many die
also, not from being lost so
much as being overcome by
stifling gases. It is
terrible! And sometimes they are
purposely abandoned by their
guides, for the government
wants to get rid of certain
exiles.
"But you are interested
in platinum. One day my brother
and I who had been sent to
work in the salt mines, mistook a
turning and wandered on and
on for several miles, finally
losing our way. We had food
and water with us, or we would
have perished, and, as it
was, we nearly died before we
finally found our way out of
an abandoned opening.
"We came out in the
midst of a terrible snowstorm, and
wandered about almost
frozen. At last we were found by a
serf who, in his sled, took
us to his poor cottage. There we
were warmed and fed back to
life.
"We knew we would be
searched for, as naturally, our
absence would lead to the
suspicion that we had tried to
escape. So as soon as we
were able, we started back to the
town where we were
quartered. The serf wanted to take us in
his sled, but we knew he
might be suspected of having tried
to aid us to get away, and
he might be arrested. So we went
alone.
"As might have been
expected, we became lost again, and
wandered about for several
days. But we had enough food to
keep us alive. And it was
during this wandering that I came
upon the platinum mine. It
was down in a valley, in the
midst of a country densely
wooded and very desolate. There
was an outcropping of the
ore, and rather idly I put some of
it in my pockets. Then we
wandered on, and finally after
awful suffering in terrific
storms, were found by a
searching party and brought
back to the barracks."
"Did they think you had
escaped?" asked Tom.
"They did,"
replied the Russian, "and they punished us
severely for it, in spite of
our denials. In time I managed
secretly to smelt the
platinum ore, and I found I had some
of the purest metal I had
ever seen. I was wishing I could
find the mine, or tell some
of my friends about it, when one
of the officers discovered
the metal in my bed.
"He demanded to know
where I had gotten it, and knowing
that refusal would only make
it the worse for me I told him.
There was considerable
excitement, for the value of the
discovery was recognized,
and a search was at once made for
the mine.
"But, even with the aid
we were able to give, it could not
be located. Many expeditions
went out to hunt for it but
came back baffled. They
could not penetrate that wild
country."
"They should have used
an aeroplane," suggested Tom.
"They did,"
replied the Russian quickly, "but it was of no
use."
"Why not?" the
young inventor wanted to know.
"Because of the
terrific winds that almost continually
sweep over that part of
Siberia. They never seem to cease,
and there are treacherous
air currents and 'pockets' that
engulfed more than one
luckless aviator. Oh, you may be sure
the Russian government
spared no means of finding the lost
platinum mine, but they
could not locate it, or even get
near the place where they
supposed it to be.
"Then, perhaps thinking
that my brother and I were
concealing something, they
separated us. Where they sent him
I do not know, but I was
doomed to the sulphur mines. I was
heartbroken, and I scarcely
cared whether I lived or died.
But an opportunity of escape
came, and I took it. I wanted
to save my brother, but I
did not know where he was, and I
thought if I could make my
way to some civilized country, or
to free America, I might
later be able to save my brother.
"I went to England,
taking some of my precious platinum
with me, and stayed there
for two years. I learned your
language, but my efforts to
organize an expedition to search
for the lost mine, and for
my brother, failed. Then I came
here, and--well, I am still
trying."
"My! That is certainly
interesting!" exclaimed Ned, who
had been all attention
during the telling of the story.
"And you certainly had
a hard time," declared Tom. "I am
much obliged for this
platinum. Have you set a price on it?
It is worth much more than
the ordinary kind."
"The price is nothing
to you," replied the Russian, with a
smile. "I am only too
glad to help you fix your aeroplane.
Will it take long? I should
like to watch you."
"Come along,"
invited Tom. "I can soon have it going
again, and I'll give you a
ride, if you like."
"No, thank you, I'm
hardly up to that yet, though I may be
some day. The machine I made
never flew well and I had
several bad falls."
Tom and Ned worked rapidly
on the magneto, and soon had
replaced the defective bits
of platinum.
"If the Russians had
such a machine as this maybe they
could have gotten to that
mine," suggested Ned, who was very
proud of Tom's craft.
"It would be useless in
the terrific winds, I fear,"
answered Ivan Petrofsky.
"But now I care little for the
mine. It is my brother whom
I want to save. He must be in
some of the Siberian mines,
and if I had such a craft as
this I might be able to
rescue him."
Tom Swift dropped the file
he was using. A bright light
sparkled in his eyes. He
seemed strangely excited.
"Mr. Petrofsky!"
he cried, "would you let me have a try at
finding your brother, and
would you come with me?"
"Would I?" asked
the Russian eagerly. "I would be your
debtor for life, and I would
always pray for you, if you
could help me to save my
brother Peter."
"Then we'll have a try
at it!" cried Tom. "I've got a
different airship than
this--one in which I can travel three
thousand miles without
coming down. I haven't had any
excitement since I got back
from the city of gold. I'm going
to Russia to help you rescue
your brother from exile, and
I'm also going to have a try
for that lost platinum
treasure!"
"Thank heaven, there is
some hope for poor Peter at last,"
murmured Mr. Petrofsky
earnestly.
"You never can get to
the platinum mine," said Ned. The
winds will tear your airship
to pieces."
"Not the kind I'm going
to make," declared Tom. "It's
going to be an air glider,
that will fairly live on high
winds. Ho! for Siberia and
the platinum mines. Will you
come?"
"I don't know what you
mean by an air glider, Tom Swift,
but I'll go to help rescue
my brother," was the quick
answer, and then, with the
light of a daring resolve shining
in his eyes, the young
inventor proceeded to get his
aeroplane in shape for the
trip back to Shopton.
CHAPTER III
THE HAND OF THE CZAR
"Then you won't take a
ride with me to-day. asked the young
inventor, of the Russian, as
he completed the repairs to the
magneto. "I'd like to
have you meet my father, and a friend
of his, Mr. Damon. Most
likely he'll go to Siberia with us,
if his wife will let him.
I'd like to talk some plans over
with you."
"I shall certainly call
on you," answered Ivan Petrofsky,
"but," he added
with a smile, "I think I should prefer to
take my first ride in your
larger airship--the one that
doesn't come down so
often."
"Well, perhaps it is a
little easier on an amateur,"
admitted Tom. "If
you'll come over to our house at any time
I'll take you out in it, or
I'll call for you."
"I'll come over in a
few days," answered the escaped
exile. "Then I'll tell
you all I know of the locality where
the platinum mine is
located, and we can make our plans. In
the meanwhile don't say
anything about what I have told
you."
"Why?" asked Ned
quickly.
Mr. Petrofsky approached
closer to the lads, and in a low
voice said:
"I am not sure about
it, but of late I think I have been
shadowed. I have seen
strange men in the village near here
and they have eyed me rather
suspiciously. Then, too, I have
surprised several men around
my house. I live here all
alone, you know, and do most
of my own work, a woman coming
in occasionally to clean.
But I don't like these suspicious
characters hanging about.
"Who do you think they
are?" asked Tom
"I'm almost afraid to
think, but from my past experience I
think--nay, I fear--they may
be spies, or agents of the
Russian government"
"Spies!" cried
Ned.
"Hush. Not so
loud," cautioned Mr. Petrofsky. "They may
even now be in hiding,
especially since your aeroplane
landed so near my house.
They may see something suspicious
even in that."
"But why should the
Russian government set spies on you?"
asked Tom in a low voice.
"For two reasons. I am
an escaped exile, and I
am not a citizen of the
United States. Therefore
I may be sent back to the
sulphur mines. And
another reason is that they
may think I know the
secret of the platinum
treasure--the lost mine."
"Say this is getting
interesting!" exclaimed Tom. "If we
are going to have a brush
with some of the spies of the
Russian government so much
the better. I'm ready for 'em!"
"So am I!" added
Ned.
"You don't know
them," said Mr. Petrofsky, and he could
not repress a shudder.
"I hope they are not on my trail, but
if they are--" he
paused a moment, straightened himself up,
and looked like what he was,
a strong man-- "if they are let
them look out. I'd give my
life to save my brother from the
awful, living death to which
he is consigned!"
"And we're with
you!" cried Tom, offering the Russian his
hand. "We'll turn the
trick yet. Now don't forget to come
and see us. Come along, Ned.
If I'm going to build an air
glider I've got to get
busy." And waving farewells to their
new friend, the lads took
their places in the aeroplane and
were soon on their way to
Shopton.
"Well, what do you
think of it?" asked Ned of his chum, as
they sped along at a good
elevation, the engine going at
half speed to be less noisy
and make talking easier.
"Lots. I think we're in
for a good time." an exciting one,
anyhow, if what he says is
true. But what in the world is an
air glider, Tom?"
"It's the last word in
aeroplanes. You don't need a motor
to make it go."
"Don't need a
motor?"
"No, the wind does it
all. It's a sort of aeroplane, but
the motion comes from the
wind, acting on different planes,
and this is accomplished by
shifting weights. In it you can
stand still in a fierce
gale, if you like."
"How, by tying her fast
on the ground?"
"No, hovering in the
air. It's all done by getting the
proper balance. The harder
the wind blows the better the air
glider works, and that's why
I think it will be just the
thing for Siberia. I'm going
to get right at work on it, and
you'll help me; won't you?"
"I sure will. Say, is
platinum worth much?"
"Worth much? I should
say it was! It's got gold beat now,
and the available supply is
very small, and it's getting
more scarce. Russia has
several mines, and the metal is of
good quality. I've used some
Russian platinum, but the kind
Mr. Petrofsky gave me to-day
was better than the best I ever
had. If we can only find
that lost mine we'll be
millionaires all
right."
"That's what we thought
when we found the city of gold,
but the gold wasn't of as
fine a grade as we hoped."
"Well, nothing like
that can happen in this platinum deal.
It sure is rich ore that Mr.
Petrofsky and his brother
found. Poor fellow! To think
of being an exile in that awful
country, not knowing where
you may be sent next. No wonder
Mr. Petrofsky wants to
rescue him."
"That's right. Well,
here we are. I wonder what your
father will say when he
hears you're thinking of another
expedition, Tom?"
"Oh, he'll want me to
go when he hears about the exile."
"And I'm sure my folks
will let me go. How about Mr.
Damon?"
"I don't believe we can
hold him back. It will make a nice
party, just you and I, and
Mr. Damon and Mr. Petrofsky. That
will leave room for the
other Russian--if we can rescue
him," and with that Tom
shut off the engine and glided to
earth.
It may well be imagined that
Mr. Swift was surprised when
his son told him the latest
news, but he did not offer any
serious objection to the
young inventor going to Siberia.
"Only you must be
careful," he said. "Those Russian
officers are ugly when it
comes to trying to take away any
of their prisoners. And this
air glider--I don't exactly
know about that. It's a new
machine, and you want to be sure
it works before you trust
yourself to it."
"I will," promised
Tom. "Say, I've got plenty of work
ahead of me,--to get my big
airship in shape, and build the
glider. You'll have to help
me, dad."
"I will, son. Now tell
me more about this Mr. Petrofsky."
Which Tom did.
The days that followed were
indeed busy ones for Tom. The
young inventor made a model
air glider that sailed fairly
well, but he knew it would
have to work better to be
successful, and he bent all
his energies in that direction.
Meanwhile Mr. Damon had been
told of the prospective trip.
"Bless my bank book! Of
course I'll go," he said. "But
don't say anything about it
to my wife--that is, just yet.
I'll bring her around to it
gradually. She has always wanted
a diamond ring set in
platinum, and now I can get it for
her. I know she'll let me go
if I break it to her gently."
It may be mentioned here
that many valuable diamonds are
now set in platinum instead
of gold.
"I want to keep
busy," said Mr. Damon, so Tom set him, Ned
and Eradicate at the task of
getting the big airship in
shape for the trip. This air
craft has not figured in any of
my previous stories, but as
it is so nearly like the one
that was crushed in the
caves of ice, I will not give a
description of it here.
Those who care to may refer to the
book telling of Tom's trip
to the caves of ice for a
detailed account of the
craft.
Sufficient to say that this
latest airship, named the
Falcon, was the largest Tom
had ever built. It contained
much room, many comforts,
and could sail for several
thousand miles without
descending, except in case of
accident. It was a combined
dirigible balloon and aeroplane,
and could be used as either,
the necessary gas being made on
board. It was large enough
to enable the air glider to be
taken on it in sections.
It was about a week after
their first meeting with him,
that Ivan Petrofsky paid a
visit to the Swift home. He was
warmly welcomed by the aged
inventor and Mr. Damon, and,
closeted in the library of
the house, he proceeded to go
more into details of his own
and his brother's exile to
Siberia, and to tell about
the supposed location of the lost
platinum mine.
"I don't believe we can
start for several weeks yet," said
Tom, after some discussion.
"It will take me that long to
make the glider."
"And I, too, need a
little time," said the Russian. "I
will write to some friends
in St. Petersburg and perhaps
they can get some
information for us, as to where my brother
is.
"That will be
good," declared Mr. Damon. "Bless my icicle!
But the more I think of this
trip the better I like it!"
It was arranged that the
Russian should call again soon,
when the plans would be
nearer in shape, and in the
meanwhile he must learn all
he could from revolutionary
friends in Siberia.
It was a week after this,
during which Tom, Ned and the
others had been very busy,
that Tom decided to take a trip
to see their Russian friend.
They had not heard from him
since his visit, and Tom
wanted to learn something about the
strength of the Siberian
winds.
He and Ned went in one of
the small airships and soon they
were hovering over the
grounds surrounding the lonely house
where Ivan Petrofsky lived.
"He doesn't seem to be
at home," remarked Ned, as they
descended and approached the
dwelling.
"No, and it looks quite
deserted," agreed the young
inventor. "Say, all the
doors are open, too! He shouldn't
go away and leave his house
open like that--with the
valuable platinum
there."
"Maybe he's
asleep," suggested Ned.
They knocked on the opened
door, but there was no answer.
Then they went inside. To
their surprise the house was in
confusion. Furniture was
overturned, tables and chairs were
broken, and papers were
scattered about the room.
"There's been a fight
here!" cried Tom.
"That's right,"
agreed Ned. "Maybe he's been hurt--maybe
burglars came for the
platinum!"
"Come on!" cried
Tom, making a dash for the stairs. "We'll
see if he's here."
The house was small, and it
took but a moment to show that
Mr. Petrofsky was not there.
Upstairs, as below, was the
same confusion--the
overturned furniture and the papers
scattered about.
Tom stooped and picked up a
scrap that looked like a piece
torn from a letter. On top
was a seal--the black seal of
Russia--the imperial arms of
the Czar!
"Look!" cried Tom,
holding out the paper.
"What is it."
asked Ned.
"The hand of the
Czar!" answered his chum. "It has reached
out from Russia, and taken
Mr. Petrofsky away!"
CHAPTER IV
THE SEARCH
For a moment Ned could
scarcely understand what Tom meant.
It scarcely seemed possible
that such a thing could happen.
That some one in far-off
Russia--be it the Czar or one of
the secret police--could
operate from such a distance,
seeking out a man in an
obscure house in a little American
village, and snatching him
away.
"It isn't
possible!" declared Ned breathlessly.
"What difference does
that make?" asked Tom. "The thing
has happened, and you can't
get out of it. Look at all the
evidence--there's been a
fight, that's sure, and Mr.
Petrofsky is gone."
"But maybe he went away
of his own accord," insisted Ned,
who was sometimes hard to
convince.
"Nonsense! If a man
went away of his own accord would he
smash up his furniture,
leave his papers scattered all about
and go off leaving the doors
and windows open for any one to
walk in? I guess not."
"Well, maybe you're
right. But think of it! This isn't
Russia!"
"No, but he's a Russian
subject, and, by his own
confession an escaped exile.
If he was arrested in the usual
way he could be taken back,
and our government couldn't
interfere. He's been taken
back all right. Poor man! Think
of being doomed to those
sulphur mines again, and as he
escaped they'll probably
make it all the harder for him!"
"But I thought our
government wouldn't help other nations
to get back prisoners
convicted of political crimes,
suggested Ned. "That's
all Mr. Petrofsky was guilty of--
politics, trying to help the
poor in his own country. It's a
shame if our government
stands for anything like that!"
"That's just the
point!" exclaimed Tom. Probably the
spies, secret police, or
whoever the Russian agents were,
didn't ask any help from our
government. If they did there
might be a chance for him.
But likely they worked in secret.
They came here, sneaked in
on him, and took him away before
he could get help. Jove! If
he could only have gotten word
to me I'd have come in the
airship, and then there'd be a
different ending to
this."
"I guess you're right,
Tom. Well, that ends it I suppose."
"Ends what?"
"Our trip to the
platinum mine."
"Not a bit of it. I'm
going to have a hunt for it."
"But how can you when
Mr. Petrofsky can't go along to show
us the way? Besides, we
wanted to help rescue his brother,
and now we can't."
"Well, I'm going to
make a big try," declared the young
inventor firmly. "And
the first thing I'm going to do is to
get our friend out of the
clutches of the Russian police."
"You are? How?"
"I'm going to make a
search for him. Look here, Ned, he
must have been taken away
some time to-day--perhaps only a
few hours ago--and they
can't have gone far with him."
"How do you make that
out?" Ned wanted to know.
"Well, I guess I'm
detective enough for that," and Tom
smiled. "Look here, the
doors and windows are open. Now it
rained last night, and there
was quite a wind. If the
windows had been open in the
storm there'd be some traces of
moisture in the rooms. But
there isn't a drop. Consequently
the windows have been opened
since last night."
"Say, that's so!"
cried Ned admiringly.
"But that's not
all," went on Tom. "Here's a bottle of
milk on the table, and it's
fresh," which he proved by
tasting it. "Now that
was left by the milkman either late
last night or early this
morning. I don't believe it's over
twelve hours old."
"Well, what does this
mean?" asked Ned, who couldn't quite
follow Tom's line of
reasoning.
"To my mind it means
that the spies were here no later
than this morning. Look at
the table upset, the dishes on
the floor. Here's one with
oatmeal in it, and you know how
hard and firm cooked oatmeal
gets after it stands a bit.
This is quite fresh, and
soft, and--"
"And that means--"
interrupted Ned, who was in turn
interrupted by Tom, who
exclaimed:
"It means that Mr.
Petrofsky was at breakfast when they
burst in on him, and took
him away. They had hard work
overpowering him, I'll
wager, for he could put up a pretty
good fight. And the broken
furniture is evidence of that.
Then the spies, after tying
him up, or putting him in a
carriage, searched the house
for incriminating papers.
That's as plain as the nose
on your face. Then the police
agents, or whoever they
were, skipped out in a hurry, not
taking the trouble to close
the windows and doors."
"I believe it did
happen that way," agreed Ned, who
clearly saw what Tom meant.
"But what can we do? How can we
find him?"
"By getting on the
trail," answered his chum quickly.
"There may be more
clews in the house, and I'm sure there'll
be some out of doors, for
they must have left footprints or
the marks of carriage
wheels. We'll take a look, and then
we'll get right on the
search. I'm not going to let them
take Mr. Petrofsky to Russia
if I can help it. I want to get
after that platinum, and
he's the only one who can pilot us
anywhere near the place; and
besides, there's his brother
we've got to rescue. We'll
make a search for the exile."
"I'm with you!"
cried Ned. "Jove! Wouldn't it be great if
we could rescue him? They
can't have gotten very far with
him."
"I'm afraid they have
quite a start on us admitted Tom
with a dubious shake of his
head, "but as long as they're in
the United States we have a
chance. If ever they get him on
Russian soil it's all up
with him."
"Come on then!"
cried Ned. "Let's get busy. What's the
first thing to do?"
"Look for clews,"
replied Tom. "We'll begin at the top of
the house and work down.
It's lucky we came when we did, for
every minute counts."
Then the two plucky lads
began their search for the
kidnapped Russian exile. Had
those who took him away seen
the mere youths who thus
devoted themselves to the task,
they might have laughed in
contempt, but those who know Tom
Swift and his sturdy chum,
know that two more resourceful
and brave lads would be hard
to find.
CHAPTER V
A CLEW FROM RUSSIA
"Nothing much up
here," remarked Tom, when he and Ned had
gone all over the second
floor twice. "That scrap of paper,
which put me on to the fact
that some one from the Russian
government had been here, is
about all. They must have taken
all the documents Mr.
Petrofsky had."
"Maybe he didn't have
any," suggested Ned.
"If he was wise he'd
get rid of them when he knew he was
being shadowed, as he told
us. Perhaps that was why they
broke up the furniture,
searching for hidden papers, or they
may have done it out of
spite because they didn't find
anything. But we might as
well go downstairs and look
there."
But the first floor was
equally unproductive of clews,
save those already noted,
which showed, at least so Tom
believed, that Mr. Petrofsky
had been surprised and
overpowered while at
breakfast.
"Now for outside!"
cried the young inventor. "We'll see if
we can figure out how they
got him away."
There were plenty of marks
in the soft ground and turf,
which was still damp from
the night's rain, though it was
now afternoon.
Unfortunately, however, in approaching the
house after leaving the
aeroplane, Ned and Tom had not
thought to exercise caution,
and, not suspecting anything
wrong, they had stepped on a
number of footprints left by
the kidnappers.
But for all that, they saw
enough to convince them that
several men had been at the
lonely house, for there were
many marks of shoes. It was
out of the question, however, to
tell which were those of Mr.
Petrofsky and which those of
his captors.
"They might have
carried him out to a carriage they had in
waiting," suggested
Ned. "Let's go out to the front gate and
look in the road. They
hardly would bring the carriage up to
the door."
"Good idea,"
commented Tom, and they hurried to the main
thoroughfare that passed the
Russian's house.
"Here they are!"
cried Ned, Who was in the lead. "There's
been a carriage here as sure
as you're a foot high. and it's
a rubber-tired one
too."
"GOOD!" cried Tom
admiringly. "You're coming right along
in your detective training.
How do you make that out?"
"See here, where a
piece of rubber has been broken or cut
out of the tire. It makes a
peculiar mark in the dirt every
time the wheel goes
around."
"That's right, and it
will be a good thing to trace the
carriage by. Come on, we'll
keep right after it."
"Hold on a bit,"
suggested Ned, who, though not so quick
as Tom Swift, frequently
produced good results by his very
slowness. "Are you
going off and leave the airship here for
some one to walk off
with?"
"Guess they wouldn't
take it far," replied the young
inventor, "but I'd
better make it safe. I'll disconnect it
so they can't start it,
though if Andy Foger happens to come
along he might slash the planes
just out of spite. But I
guess he won't show
up."
Tom took a connecting pin
out of the electrical apparatus,
making it impossible to
start the aeroplane, and then,
wheeling it out of sight
behind a small barn, he and Ned
went back to the carriage
marks in the road.
"Hurry!" urged
Tom, as he started off in the direction of
the village of Hurdtown,
near where the cottage stood. "We
will ask people living along
the highway if they've seen a
carriage pass."
"But what makes you
think they went off that way?" asked
Ned. "I should think
they'd head away from the village, so
as not to be seen."
"No, I don't agree with
you. But wait, we'll look at the
marks. Maybe that will help
us."
Peering carefully at the
marks of horses' hoofs and the
wheel impressions, Tom
uttered a cry of discovery.
"I have it!" he
declared. "The carriage came from the
village, and kept right on
the other way. You're right, Ned.
They didn't go back to town.
"Are you sure?"
"Of course. You can see
for yourself; if the carriage had
turned around the track
would show, but it doesn't and, even
if they turned on the grass,
there'd be two lines of marks--
one coming out here and one
returning. As it is there is
only a single set--just as
if the carriage drove up here,
took on its load, and
continued on. This way, Ned."
They hurried down the road,
and soon came to a cluster of
farm houses. Inquiries
there, however, failed to bring
anything to light, for
either the occupants of the house had
failed to notice passing
vehicles, or there had been so many
that any particular carriage
was not recalled. And there
were now so many impressions
in the soft dirt of the
highway--so many wheel
tracks and hoof imprints--that it was
impossible to pick out those
of the carriage with the cut
rubber tire. "Well, I
guess it isn't of much use to go on
any farther," spoke
Ned, when they had traveled several
miles and had learned
nothing.
"We'll try one more
house, and then go back," agreed Tom.
"We'll tell dad about
what's happened, and see what he
says."
"Carriage?"
repeated an old farmer to whom they next put
the question. "Wa'al,
now, come t' think of it, I did see
one drivin' along here early
this morning. It had rubber
tires on too, for I
recollect remarkin' t' myself that it
didn't make much noise. Had
t' talk t' myself," he added in
explanation," 'cause
nobody else in the family was up,
'ceptin' th' dog."
"Did the carriage have
some Russians in it?" asked Tom
eagerly, "and was one a
big bearded man?"
"Wa'al, now you've got
me," admitted the farmer frankly.
"It was quite early you
see, and I didn't take no particular
notice. I got up early t' do
my milkin' 'cause I have t'
take it t' th' cheese
factory. That's th' reason nobody was
up but me. But I see this
carriage comin' down th' road, and
thinks I t' myself it was
pretty middlin' early fer anybody
t' be takin' a pleasure
ride. I 'lowed it were a pleasure
ride, 'cause it were one of
them hacks that folks don't
usually use 'ceptin' fer a
weddin', or a funeral, an' it
wa'n't no funeral."
"Then you can't tell us
anything more except that it
passed?" asked Ned.
"No, I couldn't see
inside, 'cause it was rather dark at
that hour, and then, too, I
noticed that they had th' window
shades down."
"That's
suspicious!" exclaimed Tom. "I believe they are
the fellows we re
after," and, without giving any
particulars he said that
they were looking for a friend who
might have been taken away
against his will.
"Could you tell where
they were going?" asked
Tom, scarcely hoping to get
an affirmative answer.
"Wa'al, th' man on th'
seat pulled up when he see me,"
spoke the farmer with
exasperating slowness, "an' asked me
how far it was t' th'
Waterville station, an' I told him."
"Why didn't you say so
at first?" asked Tom quickly. "Why
didn't you tell us they were
heading for the railroad?"
"You didn't ask
me," replied the farmer. "What difference
does it make."
"Every minute
counts!" exclaimed the young inventor. "We
want to keep right after
those fellows. Maybe the agent can
tell us where they bought
tickets to, and we can trace them
that way.
"Shouldn't
wonder," commented the farmer. There ain't many
trains out from Waterville
at that time of day, an' mighty
few passengers. Shouldn't
wonder but Jake Applesaner could
put ye on th' trail."
"Much obliged,"
called Tom. "Come on, Ned," and he started
back in the direction of the
house where the kidnapping had
taken place.
"That ain't th' way t'
'vaterville!" the farmer shouted
after them.
"I know it, we're going
to get our airship," answered Tom,
and then he heard the farmer
mutter.
"Plumb crazy! That's
what they be! Plumb crazy! Going
after their airship!
Shouldn't wonder but they was escaped
lunatics, and the other
fellers was keepers after 'em. Hu!
Wa'al, I've got my work to
do. 'Tain't none of my affair."
"Let him think what he
likes," commented Ned as he and his
chum hurried on. "We're
on the trail all right."
If Jake Applesauer, the
agent at the Waterville station,
was surprised at seeing two
youths drop down out of an
aeroplane, and begin
questioning him about some suspicious
strangers that had taken the
morning train, he did not show
it. Jake prided himself on
not being surprised at anything,
except once when he took a
counterfeit dollar in return for
a ticket, and had to make it
good to the company.
But, to the despair of Tom
and Ned, he could not help them
much. He had seen the party,
of course. They had driven up
in the hack, and one of the
men seemed to be sick, or hurt,
for his head was done up in
bandages, and the others had to
half carry him on the train.
"That was Mr. Petrofsky
all right," declared Ned.
"Sure," assented
Tom. "They must have hurt and drugged
him. But you can't tell us for
what station they bought
tickets, Mr.
Applesauer?"
"No, for they didn't
buy any. They must have had 'em, or
else they paid on the train.
One man drove off in the coach,
and that's all I know."
As Tom and Ned started back
to Shopton in the aeroplane
they discussed what could be
done next. A hard task lay
before them, and they
realized that.
"They could have gotten
off at any station between here
and New York, or even
changed to another railroad at the
junction," spoke Tom.
"It's going to be a hard job."
"Guess we'll have to
get some regular detectives on it,"
suggested Ned.
"And that's what I'll
do," declared the young inventor.
"They may be able to
locate Mr. Petrofsky before those spies
take him out of this
country. If they don't--it will be too
late. I'm going to talk to
dad about it, and if he agrees
I'll hire the best private
detectives."
Mr. Swift gave his consent
when Tom had told the story,
and, a day later, one of the
best detectives of a well known
agency called on Tom in
Shopton and assumed charge of the
case.
The early reports from the
detective were quite
reassuring. He got on the
trail of the men who had taken Mr.
Petrofsky away, and
confirmed the suspicion that they were
agents of the Russian
police. He trailed them as far as New
York, and there the clews
came to an end.
"Whether they are in
the big city, which might easily be,
or in some of the nearby
towns, will take some time to
learn," the detective
wrote, and Tom wired back telling him
to keep on searching.
But, as several weeks went
by, and no word came, even Tom
began to give up hope,
though he did not stop work on the
air glider, which was
nearing completion. And then, most
unexpectedly a clew came--a
clew from far-off Russia.
Tom got a letter one day--a
letter in a strange hand, the
stamp and postmark showing
that it had come from the land of
the Czar.
"What do you suppose it
contains?" asked Ned, who was with
his chum when the
communication was received.
"Haven't the least idea;
but I'll soon find out."
"Maybe it's from the
Russian police, telling you to keep
away from Siberia."
"Maybe," answered
Tom absently, for he was reading the
missive. "I say!"
he suddenly cried. "This is great! A clew
at last, and from St.
Petersburg! Listen to this, Ned!
"This letter is from
the head of one of the secret
societies over there, a
society that works against the
government. It says that Mr.
Petrofsky is being detained a
prisoner in a lonely hut on
the Atlantic sea coast, not far
from New York--Sandy Hook
the letter says--and here are the
very directions how to get
there!"
"No!" cried Ned,
in disbelief. "How in the world could
anybody in Russia know
that."
"It tells here,"
said Tom. "It's all explained. As soon as
the secret police got Mr.
Petrofsky they communicated with
the head officials in St.
Petersburg. You know nearly
everyone is a spy over
there, and the letter says that Mr.
Petrofsky's friends there
soon heard the news, and even about
the exact place where he is
being held."
"What are they holding
him for?" asked Ned.
"That's explained, too.
It seems they can't legally take
him back until certain
papers are received from his former
prison in Siberia, and those
are now on the way. His friends
write to me to hasten and
rescue him."
"But how did they ever
get your address?"
"That's easy, though
you wouldn't think so. It seems, so
the letter explains, that as
soon as Mr. Petrofsky got
acquainted with us he wrote
to friends in St. Petersburg,
giving my address, and
telling them, in case anything ever
happened to him, to notify
us. You see he suspected that
something might, after he
found he was being shadowed that
way.
"And it all worked out.
As soon as his friends heard that
he was caught, and learned
where he was being held, they
wrote to me. Hurrah, Ned! A
clew at last! Now to wire the
detective--no, hold on,
we'll go there and rescue him
ourselves! We'll go in the
airship, and pick up Detective
Trivett in New York."
"That's the stuff! I'm
with you!"
"Bless my suspender
buttons! So am I, whatever it is!"
cried Mr. Damon, entering
the room at that moment.
CHAPTER VI
RESCUING MR. PETROFSKY
"We ought to be
somewhere near the place now, Tom."
"I think we are, Ned.
But you know I'm not going too close
in this airship."
"Bless my silk
hat!" exclaimed Mr. Damon. "I hope we don't
have to walk very far in
such a deserted country as this,
Tom Swift."
"We'll have to walk a
little way, Mr. Damon," replied the
young inventor. "If I
go too close to the hut they'll see
the airship, and as those
spies probably know that Mr.
Petrofsky has been dealing
with me, They'd smell a rat at
once, and run away, taking
him with them, and we'd have all
our work to do over
again."
"That's right,"
agreed Detective Trivett, who was one of
the four in the airship that
was now hovering over the
Atlantic coast, about ten
miles below the summer resorts of
which Asbury Park was one.
It was only a few hours
after Tom had received the letter
from Russia informing him of
the whereabouts of the
kidnapped Russian, and he
had acted at once.
His father sanctioned the
plan of going to the rescue in
one of Tom's several
airships and, Mr. Damon, having been on
hand, at once agreed to go.
Of course Ned went along, and
they had picked up the
private detective in New York, where
he was vainly seeking a clew
to the whereabouts of Mr.
Petrofsky.
Now the young inventor and
his friends were hovering over
the sandy stretch of coast
that extends from Sandy Hook down
the Atlantic seaboard. They
were looking for a small fishing
hamlet on the outskirts of
which, so the Russian letter
stated, was situated the
lonely hut in which Mr. Petrofsky
was held a prisoner.
"Do you think you can
pick it out from a distance, Tom?"
asked Mr. Damon, as the
airship floated slowly along. It was
not the big one they
intended taking on their trip to
Siberia, but it was
sufficiently large to accommodate the
four and leave room for Mr.
Petrofsky, should they succeed
in rescuing him.
"I think so,"
answered the young inventor.
In the letter from Russia a
comparatively accurate
description of the
prisoner's hut had been given, and also
some details about his
guards. For there is little goes on
in political circles in the
realm of the Czar that is not
known either to the spies of
the government or those of the
opposition, and the latter
had furnished Tom with reliable
information.
"That looks like the
place," said Tom at length, when,
after peering steadily
through a powerful telescope, during
which time Ned steered the
ship, the young inventor "picked
up" a fishing
settlement. "There is the big fish house,
spoken of in the
letter," he went on, "and the Russians know
a lot about fish. That house
makes a good landmark. We'll go
down now, before they have a
chance to see us."
The others thought this a
good idea, and a little later
the airship sank to the
ground amid a lonely stretch of sand
dunes, about two miles from
the hamlet on the outskirts of
which the prison hut was
said to be located.
"Now," said Tom,
"we've got to decide on a plan of
Campaign. It won't do for
all of us to go to the hut and
make the rescue. Some one
has got to stay with the airship,
to be ready to start it off
as soon as we come back with Mr.
Petrofsky--if we do come.
"Then there's no use in
me staying here," spoke Detective
Trivett. "I don't know
enough even to turn on the gasolene."
"No, it's got to be Ned
or me," said the young inventor.
"I'll stay,"
volunteered Ned quickly, for though he would
very much have liked to be
in at the rescue, he realized
that his place was in the
airship, as Mr. Damon was not
sufficiently familiar with
the machinery to operate it.
Accordingly, after looking to
everything to see that it
was in working order, Tom
led the advance. It was just
getting dusk, and they
figured on getting to the hut after
dark.
"Have everything ready
for a quick start," Tom said to
Ned, "for we may come
back running."
"I will," was the
prompt answer, and then, getting their
bearings, the little party
set off.
They had to travel over a
stretch of sandy waste that ran
along the beach. Back in
shore were a few scattered
cottages, and not yet opened
for the summer, and on the
ocean side was the pounding
surf. The hut, as Tom recalled
the directions, lay just
beyond a group of stunted hemlock
trees that set a little way
hack from the ocean, on a bluff
overlooking the sea. It was
not near any other building.
Slowly, and avoiding going
any nearer the other houses
than they could help, the
little party made its way. They
had to depend on their own
judgement now, for the minor
details of the location of
the hut could not be given in the
letter from Russia. In fact
the spies themselves, in
writing to their head
officers about the matter, had not
described the location in
detail.
"That looks like it
over there," said Tom at last, when
they had gone about a mile
and a half, and saw a lonely hut
with a light burning in it.
Cautiously they approached
and, as they drew nearer, they
saw that the light came
through the window of a small hut.
"Looks like the
place," commented the detective.
"We'll have a
look," remarked Tom.
He crept up so he could
glance in the window, and no
sooner had he peered in,
than he motioned for the others to
approach.
Looking under a partly-drawn
curtain, Mr. Damon and Mr.
Trivett saw the Russian whom
they sought. He was seated at a
table, his head bowed on his
hands, and in the room were
three men. A rifle stood in
one corner, near one of the
guards.
"They're taking no
chances," whispered Mr. Damon.
"What
shall we do, Tom?"
"It's three to
three," replied the young inventor. "But if
we can get him away without
a fight, so much the better. I
think I have it. I'll go up
to the door, knock and make
quite a racket, and demand
admittance in the name of the
Czar. That will startle
them, and they may all three rush to
answer. Mr. Damon, you and
the detective will stay by the
window. As soon as you see
the men rush for the door, smash
in the window with a piece
of driftwood and call to Mr.
Petrofsky to jump out that
way. Then you can run with him
toward the airship, and I'll
follow. It may work."
"I don't see why it
wouldn't," declared the detective. "Go
ahead, Tom. We're
ready."
Looking in once more, to
make sure that the guards were
not aware of the presence of
the rescuing party, Tom went to
the front door of the hut.
It was a small building,
evidently one used by
fishermen.
Tom knocked loudly on the
portal, at the same time crying
out in a voice that he
strove to make as deep and menacing
as possible:
"Open! Open in the name
of the Czar!"
Looking through the window,
ready to act on the instant,
Mr. Damon and the detective
saw the three guards spring to
their feet. One remained
near Mr. Petrofsky, who also leaped
up.
"Now!" called the
detective to his companion. "Smash the
window!"
The next instant a big piece
of driftwood crashed through
the casement, just as the
two men were hurrying to the front
door to answer Tom's
summons.
"Mr. Petrofsky! This
way!" yelled Mr. Damon, sticking his
head in through the broken
sash. "Come out! We've come to
save you! Bless my putty
blower, but this is great! Come
on!"
For a moment the exile
stared at the head thrust through
the broken window, and he
listened to Tom's emphatic knocks
and demands. Then with a cry
of delight the Russian sprang
for the open casement, while
the guard that had remained
near him made a leap to
catch him, crying out:
"Betrayed! Betrayed!
It's the Nihilists! Look out, comrades!"
CHAPTER VII
THE AIR GLIDER
Mr. Damon continued to
hammer away at the window sash with
the piece of driftwood.
There were splinters of the frame
and jagged pieces of glass
sticking out, making it dangerous
for the exile to slip
through.
"Come on! Come
on!" the eccentric man continued to call.
"Bless my safety valve!
We'll save you! Come on!"
Mr. Petrofsky was leaping
across the room, just ahead of
the one guard. The other two
were at the open door now,
through which Tom could be
seen. Then the spies, realizing
in an instant that they had
been deceived, made a dash after
their comrade, who had his
hand on the tails of the exile's
coat.
"Break away! Break
loose!" cried Mr. Damon, who, by this
time had cleared the window
so a person could get through.
"Don't let them hold
you!"
"I don't intend
to!" retorted Mr. Petrofsky, and he
swerved suddenly, tearing
his coat, from the grasp of the
guard.
In another instant the exile
was at the casement, and was
being helped through by Mr.
Damon, and there was need of it,
for the three guards were
there now, doing their best to
keep their prisoner.
"Pull away! Pull
away!" cried Mr. Damon.
"We'll help you!"
shouted Tom, who, now that his trick had
worked, had sped around to
the other side of the hut.
"Don't be afraid, we're
with you!" exclaimed the
detective, who was with the
young inventor.
"Grab him! Keep him!
Hold him!" fairly screamed the
rearmost of the three
guards. "It is a plot of the Nihilists
to rescue him. Shoot him,
comrades. He must not get away!"
"Don't you try any of
your shooting games, or I'll take a
hand in it!" shouted
the detective, and, at the same moment
he drew his revolver and
fired harmlessly in the air.
"A bomb! A bomb!",
yelled the guards in terror.
"Not yet, but there may
be!" murmured Tom. The firing of
the shot produced a good
effect, for the three men who were
trying to detain Ivan
Petrofsky at once fell back from the
window and gave him just the
chance needed. He scrambled
through, with the aid of Mr.
Damon, and before the guards
could again spring at him,
which they did when the echoes of
the shot had died away. They
had realized, too late, that it
was not a bomb, and that
there was no immediate danger for
them.
"Come on!" cried
Tom. "Make for the airship! We've got to
get the start of them!"
Leading the way, he sprinted
toward the road that led to
the place where the airship
awaited them. He was followed by
Mr. Damon and the detective,
who had Mr. Petrofsky between
them.
"Are you all
right?" Tom called back to the exile. "Are
you hurt? Can you run?"
"I'm all right,"
was the reassuring answer. "Go ahead; But
they'll be right after
us."
"Maybe they'll stop
when they see this," remarked the
detective significantly, and
he held his revolver so that
the rays of the newly-risen
moon glinted on it.
"Here they come!"
cried Tom a moment later, as three
figures, one after the
other, came around the corner of the
house. They had not taken
the shorter route through the
window, as had Mr.
Petrofsky, and this gained a little time
for our friends.
"Stop! Hold on!"
cried one of the guards in fairly good
English. "That is our
prisoner."
"Not any more!"
the young inventor yelled back. "He's ours
now."
"Look out! They're
going to shoot!" cried Mr. Damon.
"Bless my gunpowder!
can't you stop them some way or other,
Mr. Detective?"
"The only way is by
firing first," answered Mr. Trivett,
"and I don't want to
hurt them. Guess I'll fire in the air
again."
He did, and the guards
halted. They seemed to be holding a
consultation, as Tom learned
by glancing hastily back, and
he caught the glisten of
some weapon. But if the three men
had any notion of firing
they gave it up, and once more came
on running. Doubtless they
had orders to get their prisoner
back to Russia alive, and
did not want to take any chances
of hitting him.
"Leg it!" cried
Tom. "Leg it!"
He was well ahead, and
wanted the others to catch up to
him, but none of the men was
a good runner, and Mr.
Petrofsky, by reason of
being rather heavily built, was
worse than the other two, so
they had to accommodate their
pace to his.
"I wonder if we can
make it," mused Tom, as he realized
that the airship was a good
distance off yet. the guards,
though quite a way in the
rear now were coming on fast.
"It's going to be a
close race," thought the young inventor.
"I wish we'd brought
the airship a little nearer."
It was indeed a race now,
for the guards, seeming to know
that they would not be shot
at, were coming on more
confidently, and were
rap-idly lessening the distance that
separated them from their
recent prisoner.
"We've got to go
faster!" cried Tom.
"Bless my shoe
leather!" yelled Mr. Damon. "I can't go any
faster."
Still he did make the
attempt, and so did the exile and
the detective. Little was
said now, for each of the parties
was running a dogged race,
and in silence. They had gone
possibly half a mile, and
the first advantage of Tom and his
friends was rapidly being
lost, when suddenly there sounded
in the air above a curious
throbbing noise.
"Bless my gasolene!
What's that?" cried Mr. Damon.
"The airship! It's the
airship!" yelled Tom, as he saw a
great dark shape slowly
approaching. "Ned is bringing her to
met us."
"Good!" cried the
detective. "We need it I'm about
winded!"
"This way, Ned! This
way!" cried Tom, and, an instant
later, they were in the
midst of a brilliant glow, for Ned
had turned the current into
the great searchlight on the bow
of the air craft, and the
beams were focused on our friends.
Ned could now see the
refugees, and in a moment he sent the
graceful craft down,
bringing it to a halt on the ground
near Tom.
"In with you!"
cried the lad. "She's all ready to start up
again!"
"Come on!" yelled
Tom to the others. "We're all right now,
if you hustle!"
"Bless my pin
cushion!" gasped Mr. Damon, making a final
spurt.
The three guards had halted
in confusion on seeing the
big, black bulk of the
airship, and when they noted the
gleaming of the searchlight
they must have realized that
their chances were gone.
They made a rush, however, but it
was too late. Over the side
of the craft scrambled Tom, Mr.
Damon, the detective and
Ivan Petrofsky, and an instant
later Ned had sent it aloft.
The race was over, and the
young inventor and his
friends had won.
"You're the
stuff!" cried Tom to Ned, as he went with his
chum to the pilot house to
direct the progress of the
airship. "It's lucky
you came for us. We never could have
made the distance. We left
the ship too far off."
"That's what I thought
after you'd gone," replied his
chum. "So I decided to
come and meet you. I had to go slowly
so as not to pass you in the
darkness."
They were speeding off now,
and Ned, turning the beams of
the great searchlight below
them, picked up the three guards
who were gazing helplessly
aloft after their fast
disappearing prisoner.
"You're having your
first ride in an airship, Mr.
Petrofsky," remarked
Tom, when they had gone on for some
little distance. "How
do you like it?"
"I'm so excited I
hardly know, but it's quite a sensation.
But how in the world did you
ever find me to rescue me?"
Then they told the story of
their search, and the
unexpected clew from Russia.
In turn the exile told how he
had been attacked at the
breakfast table one morning by the
three spies--the very men
who had been shadowing him--and
taken away secretly, being
drugged to prevent his calling
for help. He had been kept a
close prisoner in the lonely
hut, and each day he had
expected to be taken back to serve
out his sentence in Siberia.
"Another day would have
been too late," he told Tom, when
he had thanked the young
inventor over and over again, "for
the papers would have
arrived, and the last obstacle to
taking me back to Russia
would have been removed. They
dared not take me out of the
United States without official
documents, and they would
have been forged ones, for they
intended trumping up a
criminal charge against me, the
political one not being
strong enough to allow them to
extradite me."
"Well I'm glad we got
you," said Tom heartily. "We will
soon be ready to start for
Siberia."
"In this kind of a
craft?"
"Yes, only much larger.
You'll like it. I only hope my
air glider works."
By putting on speed, Tom was
able to reach Shopton before
midnight, and there was
quite an informal celebration in the
Swift homestead over the
rescue of the exile. The detective,
for whom there was no
further need, was paid off, and Mr.
Petrofsky was made a member
of the household.
"You'd better stay here
until we are ready to start," Tom
said, "and then we can
keep an eye on you. We need you to
show us as nearly as
possible where the platinum field is."
"All right,"
agreed the Russian with a laugh. "I'm sure
I'll do all I can for you,
and you are certainly treating me
very nicely after what I
suffered from my captors."
Tom resumed work on his air
glider the next day, and he
had an additional helper,
for Mr. Petrofsky proved to be a
good mechanic.
In brief, the air glider was
like an aeroplane save that
it had no motor. It was
raised by a strong wind blowing
against transverse planes,
and once aloft was held there by
the force of the air
currents, just like a box kite is kept
up. To make it progress
either with or against the wind,
there were horizontal and
vertical rudders, and sliding
weights, by which the
equilibrium could be shifted so as to
raise or lower it. While it
could not exactly move directly
against the wind it could
progress in a direction contrary
to which the gale was
blowing, somewhat as a sailing ship
"tacks."
And, as has been explained,
the harder the wind blew the
better the air glider
worked. In fact unless there was a
strong gale it would not go
up.
"But it will be just
what is needed out there in that part
of Siberia," declared
the exile, "for there the wind is
never quiet. Often it blows
a regular hurricane."
"That's what we
want!" cried Tom. He had made several
models of the air glider,
changing them as he found out his
errors, and at last he had
hit on the right shape and size.
Midway of the big glider, on
which work was now well
started, there was to be an
enclosed car for the carrying of
passengers, their food and
supplies. Tom figured on carrying
five or six.
For several weeks the work
on the air glider progressed
rapidly, and it was nearing
completion. Meanwhile nothing
more had been heard or seen
of the Russian spies.
"Well," announced
Tom one night, after a day's hard work,
"we'll be ready for a
trial now, just as soon as there comes
a good wind."
"Is it all
finished?" asked Ned.
"No, but enough for a
trial spin. What I want is a big wind now."
CHAPTER VIII
IN A GREAT GALE
There was a humming in the
air. The telegraph wires that
ran along on high poles past
the house of Tom Swift sung a
song like that of an Aeolian
harp. The very house seemed to tremble.
"Jove! This is a
wind!" cried Tom as he awakened on a
morning a few days after his
air glider was nearly
completed. "I never saw
it so strong. This ought to be just
what I want I must telephone
to Mr. Damon and to Ned."
He hustled into his clothes,
pausing now and then to look
out of his window and note
the effects of the gale. It was a
tremendous wind, as was
evidenced by the limbs of several
trees being broken off,
while in some cases frail trees
themselves had been snapped
in twain.
"Coffee ready, Mrs.
Baggert?" asked our hero as he went
downstairs. "I haven't
got time to eat much though."
In spite of his haste Tom
ate a good breakfast and then,
having telephoned to his two
friends, and receiving their
promises to come right over,
our hero went out to make a few
adjustments to his air
glider, to get it in shape for the
trial.
He was a little worried lest
the wind die out, but when he
got outside he noted with
satisfaction that the gale was
stronger than at first. In
fact it did considerable damage
in Shopton, as Tom learned
later.
It certainly was a strong
wind. An ordinary aeroplane
never could have sailed in
it, and Tom was doubtful of the
ability of even his big
airship to navigate in it. But he
was not going to try that.
"And maybe my air
glider won't work," he remarked to
himself as he was on his way
to the shed where it had been
constructed. "The
models went up all right, but maybe the
big one isn't proportioned
right. However, I'll soon see."
He was busy adjusting the balancing
weights when Ned
Newton came in.
"Great Scott!"
exclaimed the lad, as he labored to close
the shed door, "this is
a blow all right, Tom! Do you think
it's safe to go up?"
"I can't go up without
a gale, Ned."
"Well, I'd think twice
about it myself."
"Why, I counted on you
going up with me."
"Burr-r-r-r!" and
Ned pretended to shiver. "I haven't an
accident insurance policy
you know."
"You won't need it,
Ned. If we get up at all we'll be all
right. Catch hold there, and
shift that rear weight a little
forward on the rod. I expect
Mr. Damon soon."
The eccentric man came in a
little later, just as Tom and
Ned had finished adjusting
the mechanism.
"Bless my socks!"
cried Mr. Damon. "Do you really mean to
go up to-day, Tom?"
"I sure do! Why, aren't
you going with me?" and Tom winked
at Ned.
"Bless my--" began
Mr. Damon, and then, evidently
realizing that he was being
tested he exclaimed: "Well, I
will go, Tom! If the air
glider is any good it ought to hold
me. I will go up."
"Now, Ned, how about
you?" asked the young inventor.
"Well, I guess it's up
to me to come along. but I sure do
wish it was over with,"
and Ned glanced out of the window to
see if the gale was dying
out. But the wind was as high as
ever.
It was hard work getting the
air glider out of the shed,
and in position on top of a
hill, about a quarter of a mile
away, for Tom intended
"taking off" from the mound, as he
could not get a running
start without a motor. The wind,
however, he hoped, would
raise him and the strange craft.
In order to get it over the
ground without having it
capsize, or elevate before
they were ready for it, drag
ropes, attached to bags of
sand were used, and once these
were attached the four found
that they could not wheel the
air glider along on its
bicycle wheels.
"We'll have to get
Eradicate and his mule, I guess," said
Tom, after a vain endeavor
to make progress against the
wind. "When it's up in
the air it will be all right, but
until then I'll need help to
move it. Ned, call Rad, will
you?"
The colored man, with
Boomerang, his faithful mule, was
soon on hand. The animal was
hitched to the glider, and
pulled it toward the hill.
"Now to see what
happens," remarked Tom as he wheeled his
latest invention around
where the wind would take it as soon
as the restraining ropes
were cast off, for it was now held
in place by several heavy
cables fastened to stakes driven
in the ground.
Tom gave a last careful look
to the weights, planes and
rudders. He glanced at a
small anemometer or wind gage, on
the craft, and noted that it
registered sixty miles an hour.
"That ought to
do," he remarked. "Now who's going up with
me? Will you take a chance,
Mr. Petrofsky?"
"I'd rather not--at
first."
"Come on then, Ned and
Mr. Damon. Mr. Petrofsky and Rad
can cast off the
ropes."
The wind, if anything, was
stronger than ever. It was a
terrific gale, and just what
was needed. But how would the
air glider act? That was
what Tom wanted very much to know.
"Cast off!" he
cried to the Russian and Eradicate, and
they slipped the ropes.
The next moment, with a rush
and whizzing roar, the air
glider shot aloft on the
wings of the wind.
CHAPTER IX
THE SPIES
"We're certainly going
up!" yelled Ned, as he sat beside
Tom in the cabin of the air
glider.
"That's right!"
agreed the young inventor rather proudly,
as he grasped two levers,
one of which steered the craft,
the other being used to
shift the weights. "We're going up.
I was pretty sure of that.
The next thing is to see if it
will remain stationary in
the air, and answer the rudder."
"Bless my top
knot!" cried Mr. Damon. "You don't mean to
tell me you can stand still
in a gale of wind, Tom Swift."
"That's exactly what I
do mean. You can't do it in an
aeroplane, for that depends
on motion to keep itself up in
the air. But the glider is
different. That's one of its
specialties, remaining
still, and that's why it will be
valuable if we ever get to
Siberia. We can hover over a
certain spot in a gale of
wind, and search about below with
telescopes for a sign of the
lost platinum mine.
"How high are you going
up?" demanded Ned, for the air
glider was still mounting
upward on a slant. If you' ever
scaled a flat piece of tin,
or a stone, you'll remember how
it seems to slide up a hill
of air, when it was thrown at
the right angle. It was just
this way with the air glider--
it was mounting upward on a
slant.
"I'm going up a couple
of hundred feet at least," answered
Tom, "and higher if the
gale-strata is there. I want to give
it a good test while I'm at
it."
Ned looked down through a
heavy plate of glass in the
floor of the cabin, and
could see Mr. Petrofsky and
Eradicate looking up at
them.
"Bless my
handkerchief!" cried Mr. Damon, when his
attention had been called to
this. "It's just like an
airship."
"Except that we haven't
a bit of machinery on board," said
Tom. "These weights do
everything," and he shifted them
forward on the sliding rods,
with the effect that the air
glider dipped down with a
startling lurch.
"We're falling!"
cried Ned.
"Not a bit of it,"
answered Tom. "I only showed you how it
worked. By sliding the
weights back we go up."
He demonstrated this at
once, sending his craft sliding up
another hill of air, until
it reached an elevation of four
hundred feet, as evidenced
by the barograph.
"I guess this is high
enough," remarked Tom after a bit.
"Now to see if she'll
stand still."
Slowly he moved the weights
along, by means of the
compound levers, until the
air glider was on an "even keel"
so to speak. It was still
moving forward, with the wind now,
for Tom had warped his wing
tips.
"The thing to do,"
said the young inventor, "is to get it
exactly parallel with the
wind-strata, so that the gale will
blow through the two sets of
planes, just as the wind blows
through a box kite. Only we
have no string to hold us from
moving. We have to depend on
the equalization of friction on
the surfaces of the wings. I
wonder if I can do it."
It was a delicate operation,
and Tom had not had much
experience in that sort of
thing, for his other airships and
aeroplanes worked on an
entirely different principle. But he
moved the weights along,
inch by inch, and flexed the tips,
planes and rudders until
finally Ned, who was looking down
through the floor window,
cried out
"We're
stationary!"
"Good!" exclaimed
Tom. "Then it's a success."
"And we can go to
Siberia?" added Mr. Damon.
"Sure," assented
the young inventor. "And if we have luck
we'll rescue Mr. Petrofsky's
brother, and get a lot of
platinum that will be more
valuable than gold."
It would not be true to say
that the air glider was
absolutely stationary. There
was a slight forward motion,
due to the fact that it was
not yet perfected, and also
because Tom was not expert
enough in handling it.
The friction on the plane
surfaces was not equalized, and
the gale forced the craft
along slightly. But, compared to
the terrific power of the
wind, the air glider was
practically at a standstill,
and this was remarkable when
one considers the force of
the hurricane that was blowing
above below and through it.
For actually that was what
the hurricane was doing. It was
as if an immense box kite
was suspended in the air, without
a string to hold it from
moving, and as though a cabin was
placed amidships to hold
human beings.
"This sure is
great!" cried Ned. "Have you got her in
control, Tom?"
"I think so. I'll try
and see how she works."
By shifting the weights,
changing the balance, and warping
the wings, the young
inventor sent the craft higher up, made
it dip down almost to the
earth, and then swoop upward like
some great bird. Then he
turned it completely about and
though he developed no great
speed in this test made it
progress quarteringly
against the wind,
"It's almost
perfect," declared Tom. "A few touches and
she'll be all right."
"Is it all right?"
asked Ivan Petrofsky anxiously, as the
three left the cabin, and
Eradicate hitched his mule to the
glider to take it back to
the shed.
"I see where it can be
improved," he said, as they made
ready to descend. "I'll
soon have it in shape."
"Then we can go to
Siberia?"
"In less than a month.
The big airship needs some repairs,
and then we'll be off."
The Russian said nothing,
but he looked his thanks to Tom,
and the manner in which he
grasped the hand of our hero
showed his deep feelings.
The glider was given several
more trials, and each time it
worked better. Tom decided
to change some of the weights,
and he devoted all his time
to this alteration, while Ned,
Mr. Damon, and the others
labored to get the big airship in
shape for the long trip to
the land of the exiles.
So anxious was Tom to get
started, that he put in several
nights working on the glider.
Ned occasionally came over to
help him, while Mr. Damon
was on hand as often as his wife
would allow. Mr. Petrofsky
spent his nights writing to
friends in Russia, hoping to
get some clew as to the
whereabouts of his brother.
It was on one of these nights,
when Tom and Ned were
laboring hard, with
Eradicate to help them that an incident
occurred which worried them
all not a little. Tom was
adjusting some of the new
weights on the sliding rods, and
called to Ned:
"I say, old man, hand
me that big monkey wrench, will you.
I can't loosen this nut with
the small one. You'll find it
on the bench by that back
window."
As Ned went to get the tool
he looked from the casement.
He started, stood staring
through the glass for a moment
into the outer darkness, and
then cried out:
"Tom, we're being
watched! There are some spies outside!"
"What?" exclaimed
the young inventor "Where are they? Who
are they?"
"I don't know. Those
Russian police, maybe out front, and
maybe we can catch them!"
Grabbing up the big monkey
wrench, Ned made a dash for the
large sliding doors,
followed by Tom who had an iron bar,
and Eradicate with a small
pair of pliers.
"By golly!" cried
the colored man, "ef I gits 'em I'll
pinch dere noses off!"
CHAPTER X
OFF IN THE AIRSHIP
Going from the brightly
lighted shop into the darkness of
the night, illuminated as it
was only by the stars, neither
Tom, Ned, nor Eradicate,
could see anything at first. They
had to stand still for a
moment to accustom their eyes to
the gloom.
"Can you see
them?" cried Tom to his chum.
"No, but I can hear
them! Over this way!" yelled Ned, and
then, being able to dimly
make out objects, so he would not
run into them, he started
off, followed by the young
inventor.
Tom could hear several
persons running away now, but he
could see no one, and from
the sound he judged that the
spies, if such they were,
were hurrying across the fields
that surrounded the shop.
It was almost a hopeless
task to pursue them, but the two
lads were not the kind that
give up. They rushed forward,
hoping to be able to grapple
with those who had looked in
the shop window, but it was
not to be.
The sound of the retreating
footsteps became more and more
faint, until finally they
gave no clew to follow.
"Better stop,"
advised Tom. "No telling where we'll end up
if we keep on running.
Besides it might be dangerous."
"Dangerous; how?"
panted Ned.
"They might dodge
around, and wait for us behind some tree
or bush."
"An' ef dat Foger
feller am around he jest as soon as not
fetch one ob us a whack in
de head," commented Eradicate
grimly.
"Guess you're about
right," admitted Ned. "There isn't
much use keeping on. We'll
go back."
"What sort of fellows
were they?" asked Tom, when, after a
little further search, the
hunt was given up. "Could you see
them well, Ned?"
"Not very good. Just as
I went to get you that wrench I
noticed two faces looking in
the window. I must have taken
them by surprise, for they
dodged down in an instant. Then I
yelled, and they ran
off."
"Did you see Andy
Foger?"
"No, I didn't notice
him."
"Was either of them one
of the spies who had Mr. Petrofsky
in the hut?"
"I didn't see those
fellows very well, you remember, so I
couldn't say."
"That's so, but I'll
bet that's who they were."
"What do you think
they're after, Tom?"
"One of two things.
They either want to get our Russian
friend into their clutches
again, or they're after me--to
try to stop me from going to
Siberia."
"Do you think they'd go
to such length as that?"
"I'm almost sure they
would. Those Russian police are
wrong, of course, but they
think Mr. Petrofsky is an
Anarchist or something like
that, and they think they're
justified in doing anything
to get him back to the Siberian
mines. And once the Russian
government sets out to do a
thing it generally does
it--I'll give 'em credit for that."
"But how do you suppose
they know you're going to Russia?"
"Say, those fellows
have ways of getting information you
and I would never dream of.
Why, didn't you read the other
day how some fellow who was
supposed to be one of the worst
Anarchists ever, high up in
making bombs, plotting, and all
that sort of thing--turned
out to be a police spy? They get
their information that way.
I shouldn't be surprised but
what some of the very people
whom Mr. Petrofsky thinks are
his friends are spies, and
they send word to headquarters of
every move he makes."
"Why don't you warn
him?"
"He knows it as well as
I do. The trouble is you can't
tell who the spies are until
it's too late. I'm glad I'm not
mixed up in that sort of
thing. If I can get to Siberia,
help Mr. Petrofsky rescue
his brother, and get hold of some
of that platinum I'll be
satisfied. Then I won't go back to
the land of the Czar, once I
get away from there."
"That's right. Well,
let's go back and work on the
glider."
"And we'll have
Eradicate patrolling about the shop to make
sure we're not spied on
again."
"By golly! Ef I sees
any oh 'em, I suah will pinch 'em!"
cried the colored man, as he
clicked the pliers.
But there was no further
disturbance that night, and, when
Tom and Ned ceased work,
they had made good progress toward
finishing the air glider.
The big airship was almost
ready to be given a trial
flight, with her motors
tuned up to give more power, and as
soon as the Russian exile
had a little more definite
information as to the
possible whereabouts of his brother,
they could start.
In the days that followed
Tom and his friends worked hard.
The air glider was made as
nearly perfect as any machine is,
and in a fairly stiff gale,
that blew up about a week later,
Tom did some things in it
that made his friends open their
eyes. The young inventor had
it under nearly as good control
as he had his dirigible
balloons or aeroplanes.
The big airship, too, was
made ready for the long voyage,
extra large storage tanks
for gasolene being built in, as it
was doubtful if they could
get a supply in Siberia without
arranging for it in advance,
and this they did not want to
do. Besides there was the
long ocean flight to provide for.
"But if worst comes to
worst I can burn kerosene in my
motor," Tom explained,
for he had perfected an attachment to
this end. "You can get
kerosene almost anywhere in Russia."
At last word was received
from Russia, from some
Revolutionist friends of the
exile, stating that his brother
was supposed to be working
in a certain sulphur mine north
of the Iablonnoi mountains,
and half way between that range
and the city of Iakutsk.
"But it might be a salt
mine, just as well," said Mr.
Petrofsky, when he told the
boys the news. "Information
about the poor exiles is
hard to get"
"Well, we'll take a
chance!" cried Tom determinedly.
The preparations went on,
and by strict watchfulness none
of the spies secured
admission to the shop where the air
glider was being finished.
The big airship was gotten in
shape for the voyage, and
then, after a final trial of the
glider, it was taken apart
and put aboard the Falcon, ready
for use on the gale-swept
plains of Siberia.
The last of the stores,
provisions and supplies were put
in the big car of the
airship, a route had been carefully
mapped out, and Tom, after
saying good-bye to Mary Nestor,
his father, the housekeeper,
and Eradicate, took his place
in the pilot house of the
airship one pleasant morning at
the beginning of Summer.
"Don't you wish you
were going, Rad?" the young inventor
asked, for the colored man
had decided to stay at home.
"No indeedy, Massa
Tom," was the answer. "Dat's a mighty
cold country in Shebeara,
an' I laik warm wedder."
"Well, take care of
yourself and Boomerang," answered Tom
with a laugh. Then he pulled
the lever that sent a supply of
gas into the big bag, and
the ship began to rise.
"I guess we've given
those spies the slip," remarked Ned,
as they rose from the ground
calling good-byes to the
friends they left behind.
"I hope so,"
agreed Tom, but could he have seen two men,
of sinister looks, peering
at the slowly-moving airship from
the shelter of a glove of
trees, not far off, he might have
changed his opinion, and so
would Ned.
Then, as the airship
gathered momentum, it fairly sprang
into the air, and a moment
later, the big propellers began
revolving. They were off on
their long voyage to find the
lost platinum mine, and
rescue the exile of Siberia.
CHAPTER XI
A STORM AT SEA
Tom had the choice of two
routes in making his voyage to
far-off Siberia. He could
have crossed the United States,
sailed over the Pacific
ocean, and approached the land of
the Czar from the western
coast above Manchuria. But he
preferred to take the
Atlantic route, crossing Europe, and
so sailing over Russia
proper to get to his destination.
There were several reasons
for this.
The water voyage was
somewhat shorter, and this was an
important consideration when
there was no telling when he
might have an accident that
would compel him to descend. On
the Atlantic he knew there
would be more ships to render
assistance if it was needed,
although he hoped he would not
have to ask for it.
"Then, too," he
said to Ned, when they were discussing the
matter, "we will have a
chance to see some civilized
countries if we cross
Europe, and we may land near Paris."
"Paris!" cried
Ned. "What for?"
"To renew our supply of
gasolene, for one thing," replied
the young inventor.
"Not that we will be out when we arrive,
but if we take on more there
we may not have to get any in
Russia. Besides, they have a
very good quality in France, so
all told, I think the route
over Europe to be the best."
Ned agreed with him, and so
did Mr. Petrofsky. As for Mr.
Damon, he was so busy
getting his sleeping room in order,
and blessing everything he
could think of, that he did not
have time to talk much. So
the eastern route was decided on,
and as the big airship,
carrying our friends, their
supplies, and the wonderful
air glider rose higher and
higher, Tom gradually
brought her around so that the pointed
nose of the gas bag aimed
straight across the Atlantic.
They were over the ocean on
the second day out, for Tom
did not push the craft to
her limit of speed, now they had
time to consider matters at
their leisure, for they had been
rather hurried on leaving.
The machinery was working as
nearly to perfection as it
could be brought, and Tom,
after finding out that his craft
would answer equally well as
a dirigible balloon or an
aeroplane, let it sail along
as the latter.
"For," he said,
"we have a long trip ahead of us "and we
need to save all the
elevating gas we can save. If worst
comes to worst, and we can't
navigate as an aeroplane any
more, we can even drift
along as a dirigible. But while we
have the gasolene we might
as well make speed and be an
aeroplane."
The others agreed with him,
and so it was arranged. Tom,
when he had seen to it that
his craft was working well, let
Ned take charge and devoted
himself to seeing that all the
stores and supplies were in
order for quick use.
Of course, until they were
nearer the land of the Czar,
and that part of Siberia
where Mr. Petrofsky's brother was
held as an exile, they could
do little save make themselves
as comfortable as possible
in the airship. And this was not
hard to do.
Naturally, in a craft that
had to carry a heavy load, and
lift itself into the air, as
well as propel itself along,
not many things could be
taken. Every ounce counted. Still
our friends were not without
their comforts. There was a
well stocked kitchen, and
Mr. Damon insisted on installing
himself as cook. This had
been Eradicate's work but the
eccentric man knew how to do
almost everything from making
soup to roasting a chicken,
and he liked it. So he was
allowed free run of the
galley.
Tom and Ned spent much time
in the steering tower or
engine room, for, though all
of the machinery was automatic,
there was need of almost
constant attention, though there
was an arrangement whereby
in case of emergency, the airship
would steer herself in any
set direction for a certain
number of hours.
There were ample sleeping
quarters for six persons, a
living room and a dining
saloon. In short the Falcon was
much like Tom's Red Cloud,
only bigger and better. There was
even a phonograph on board
so that music, songs, and
recitations could be
enjoyed.
"Bless my napkin! but
this is great!" exclaimed Mr. Damon,
about noon of the second
day, when they had just finished
dinner and looked down
through the glass windows in the
bottom of the cabin at the
rolling ocean below them. "I
don't believe many persons
have such opportunities as we
have."
"I'm sure they do
not," added Mr. Petrofsky. "I can hardly
think it true, that I am on
my way back to Siberia to rescue
my dear brother."
"And such good weather
as we're having," spoke Ned. "I'm
glad we didn't start off in
a storm, for I don't exactly
like them when we're over
the water."
"We may get one
yet," said Tom. "I don't just like the way
the barometer is acting.
It's falling pretty fast."
"Bless my mercury
tube!" cried Mr. Damon. "I hope we have
no bad luck on this
trip."
"Oh, we can't help a
storm or two," answered Tom. "I guess
it won't do any harm to
prepare for it."
So everything was made snug,
and movable articles on the
small exposed deck of the
airship were lashed fast. Then, as
night settled down, our
friends gathered about in the
cheerful cabin, in the light
of the electric lamps, and
talked of what lay before
them.
As Mr. Damon could steer as
well as Tom or Ned, he shared
in the night watch. But Mr.
Petrofsky was not expert enough
to accept this
responsibility.
It was when Mr. Damon
finished his watch at midnight, and
called Tom, that he
remarked.
"Bless my umbrella,
Tom. But I don't like the looks of the
weather."
"Why, what's it
doing?"
"It isn't doing
anything, but it's clouding up and the
barometer is going
down."
"I was afraid we were
in for it," answered the young
inventor. "Well, we'll
have to take what comes."
The airship plunged on her
way, while her young pilot
looked at the various gages,
noting that to hold her way
against the wind that had
risen he would have to increase
the speed of the motor.
"I don't like it,"
murmured Tom, "I don't like it," and
he shook his head dubiously.
With a suddenness that was
almost terrifying, the storm
broke over the ocean about
three o'clock that morning. There
was a terrific clap of
thunder, a flash of lighting, and a
deluge of rain that fairly
made the staunch Falcon stagger,
high in the air as she was.
"Come on, Ned!"
cried Tom, as he pressed the electric
alarm bell connected with
his chum's berth. "I need you, and
Mr. Damon, too."
"What's the
matter?" cried Ned, awakened suddenly from a
sound sleep.
"We're in a bad
storm," answered Tom, "and I'll have to
have help. We need more gas,
to try and rise above it."
"Bless my hanging
lamp!" cried Mr. Damon, "I hope nothing
happens!"
And he jumped from his berth
as the Falcon plunged and
staggered through the storm
that was lashing the ocean below
her into white billow of
foam.
CHAPTER XII
AN ACCIDENT
For a few moments it seemed
as if the Falcon would surely
turn turtle and plunge into
the seething ocean. The storm
had burst with such
suddenness that Tom, who was piloting
his air craft, was taken
unawares. He had not been using
much power or the airship
would have been better able to
weather the blast that burst
with such fury over her. But as
it was, merely drifting
along, she was almost like a great
sheet of paper. Down she was
forced, until the high-flying
spray from the waves
actually wet the lower part of the car,
and Ned, looking through one
of the glass windows, saw, in
the darkness, the
phosphorescent gleam of the water so near
to them.
"Tom!" he cried in
alarm. "We're sinking!"
"Bless my bath sponge!
Don't say that!" gasped Mr. Damon.
"That's why I called
you," yelled the young inventor.
"We've got to rise
above the storm if possible. Go to the
gas machine, Ned, and turn
it on full strength. I'll speed
up the motor, and we may be
able to cut up that way. But get
the gas on as soon as you
can. The bag is only about half
full. Force in all you can!
"Mr. Damon, can you
take the wheel? It doesn't make any
difference which way we go
as long as you keep her before
the wind, and yank back the
elevating rudder as far as
she'll go! We must head
up."
"All right, Tom,"
answered the eccentric man, as he fairly
jumped to take the place of
the young inventor at the helm.
"Can I do
anything?" asked the Russian, as Tom raced for
the engine room, to speed
the motor up to the last notch.
"I guess not.
Everything is covered, unless you want to
help Mr. Damon. In this blow
it will be hard to work the
rudder levers."
"All right,"
replied Ivan Petrofsky, and then there came
another sickening roll of
the airship, that threatened to
turn her completely over.
"Lively!" yelled
Tom, clinging to various supports as he
made his way to the engine
room. "Lively, all hands, or
we'll be awash in another
minute!"
And indeed it seemed that
this might be so, for with the
wind forcing her down, and
the hungry waves leaping up, as
if to clutch her to
themselves, the Falcon was having
anything but an easy time of
it.
It was the work of but an
instant however, when Tom
reached the engine room, to
jerk the accelerator lever
toward him, and the motor
responded at once. With a low,
humming whine the wheels and
gears redoubled their speed,
and the great propellers
beat the air with fiercer strokes.
At the same time Tom heard
the hiss of the gas as it
rushed into the envelope
from the generating machine, as Ned
opened the release valve.
"Now we ought to go
up," the young inventor murmured, as
he anxiously watched the
barograph, and noted the position
of the swinging pendulum
which told of the roll and dip of
the air craft.
For a moment she hung in the
balance, neither the
increased speed of the
propellers, nor the force of the gas
having any seeming effect.
Mr. Damon and the Russian,
clinging to the rudder
levers, to avoid being dashed against
the sides of the pilot
house, held them as far back as they
could, to gain the full
power of the elevation planes. But
even this seemed to do no
good.
The power of the gale was
such, that, even with the motor
and gas machine working to
their limit, the Falcon only held
her own. She swept along,
barely missing the crests of the
giant waves.
"She's got to go up!
She's got to go up!" cried Tom
desperately, as if by very
will power he could send her
aloft. And then, when there
came a lull in the fierce
blowing of the wind, the
elevation rudder took hold, and
like a bird that sees the
danger below, and flies toward the
clouds, the airship shot up
suddenly.
"That's it!" cried
Tom in relief, as he noted the needle
of the barograph swinging
over, indicating an ever-
increasing height. "Now
we're safe."
They were not quite yet, but
at last the power of
machinery had prevailed over
that of the elements. Through
the pelting rain, and amid
the glare of the lightning, and
the thunder of heaven's
artillery, the airship forced her
way, up and up and up.
Setting the motor controller
to give the maximum power
until he released it, Tom
hastened to the gas-generating
apparatus. He found Ned
attending to it, so that it was now
working satisfactorily.
"How about it,
Tom?" cried his chum anxiously.
"All right now, Ned,
but it was a close shave! I thought
we were done for, platinum
mine, rescue of exiles, and all."
"So did I. Shall I keep
on with the gas?"
"Yes, until the
indicator shows that the bag is full. I'm
going to the pilot
house."
Running there, Tom found
that Mr. Damon and the Russian
had about all they could
manage. The young inventor helped
them and then, when the
Falcon was well started on her
upward course, Tom set the
automatic steering machine, and
they had a breathing spell.
To get above the sweep of
the blast was no easy task, for
the wind strata seemed to be
several miles high, and Tom
did not want to risk an
accident by going to such an
elevation. So, when having
gone up about a mile, he found a
comparatively calm area he
held to that, and the Falcon sped
along with the occupants
feeling fairly comfortable, for
there was no longer that
rolling and tumbling motion.
The storm kept up all night,
but the danger was
practically over, unless
something should happen to the
machinery, and Tom and Ned
kept careful watch to prevent
this. In the morning they
could look down on the storm-swept
ocean below them, and there
was a feeling of thankfulness in
their hearts that they were
not engulfed in it.
"This is a pretty hard
initiation for an amateur, remarked
Mr. Petrofsky. "I never
imagined I should be as brave as
this in an airship in a
storm."
"Oh, you can get used
to almost anything," commented Mr.
Damon.
It was three days before the
storm blew itself out and
then came pleasant weather,
during which the Falcon flew
rapidly along. Our friends
busied themselves about many
things, talked of what lay
before them, and made such plans
as they could.
It was the evening of the
fifth day, and they expected to
sight the coast of France in
the morning. Tom was in the
pilot house, setting the
course for the night run, and Ned
had gone to the engine room
to look after the oiling of the
motor.
Hardly had he reached the
compartment than there was a
loud report, a brilliant
flash of fire, and the machinery
stopped dead.
"What is it?"
cried Tom, as he came in on the run, for the
indicators in the pilot
house had told him something was
wrong.
"An accident!"
cried Ned. "A breakdown, Tom! What shall we
do?"
CHAPTER XIII
SEEKING A QUARREL
There was an ominous silence
in the engine room, following
the flash and the report.
The young inventor took in every
bit of machinery in a quick
glance, and he saw at once that
the main dynamo and magneto
had short-circuited, and gone
out of commission. Almost
instantly the airship began to
sink, for the propellers had
ceased revolving.
"Bless my
barograph!" cried Mr. Damon, appearing on the
scene. "We're sinking,
Tom!"
"It's all right,"
answered our hero calmly. "It's a bad
accident, and may delay us,
but there's no danger. Ned,
start up the gas
machine," for they were progressing as an
aeroplane then. "Start
that up, and we'll drift along as a
dirigible."
"Of course! Why didn't
I think of that!" exclaimed Ned,
somewhat provoked at his own
want of thought. The airship
was going down rapidly, but
it was the work of but a moment
to start the generator, and
then the earthward motion was
checked.
"We'll have to take our
chance of being blown to France,"
remarked Tom, as he went
over to look at the broken
electrical machinery.
"But we ought to fetch the coast by
morning with this wind.
Lucky it's blowing our way."
"Then you can't use the
propellers?" asked Mr. Petrofsky.
"No," replied Tom,
"but if we get to France I can easily
repair this break. It's the
platinum bearings again. I do
hope we'll locate that lost
mine, for I need a supply of
good reliable metal.
"Then we'll have to
land in France?" asked the Russian,
and he seemed a trifle
uneasy.
"Yes," answered
Tom. "Don't you want to?"
"Well, I was thinking
of our safety."
"Bless my silk
hat!" cried Mr. Damon. "Where is the danger
of landing there? I rather
hoped we could spend some time in
Paris."
"There is no particular
danger, unless it be comes known
that I am an escaped exile,
and that we are on our way to
Siberia to rescue another
one, and try to find the platinum
mine. Then we would be in
danger."
"But how are they to
know it?" asked Ned, who had come
back from the gas machine.
"France, especially in
Paris and the larger cities, is a
hot-bed of political
spies," answered Mr. Petrofsky. Russia
has many there on the secret
police, and while the objectors
to the Czar's government are
also there, they could do
little to help us."
"I guess they won't
find out about us unless we give it
away," was Tom's
opinion.
"I'm afraid they
will," was the reply of the Russian.
"Undoubtedly word has
been cabled by the spies who annoyed
us in Shopton, that we are
on our way over here. Of course
they can't tell where we
might land, but as soon as we do
land the news will be
flashed all over, and the word will
come back that we are enemies
of Russia. You can guess the
rest."
"Then let's go
somewhere else," suggested Mr. Damon.
"It would be the same
anywhere in Europe," replied Ivan
Petrofsky. "There are
spies in all the large centres."
"Well, I've got to go
to Paris, or some large city to get
the parts I need," said
Tom. "Unfortunately I didn't bring
any along for the dynamo and
magneto, as I should have done,
and I can't get the
necessary pieces in a small town. I'll
have to depend on some big
machine shop. But we might land
in some little-frequented
place, and I could go in to town
alone."
"That might
answer," spoke the Russian, and it was decided
to try that.
Meanwhile it was somewhat
doubtful whether they would
reach France, for they were
dependent on the wind. But it
seemed to be blowing
steadily in the desired direction, and
Tom noted with satisfaction
that their progress was
comparatively fast. He tried
to repair the broken machinery
but found that he could not,
though he spent much of the
night over it.
"Hurrah!" cried
Ned when morning came, and he had taken an
observation. "There's
some kind of land over there."
The wind freshened while
they were at breakfast and using
more gas so as to raise them
higher Tom directed the course
of his airship as best he
could. He wanted to get high
enough so that if they
passed over a city they would not be
observed.
At noon it could be seen
through the glass that they were
over the outskirts of some
large place, and after the
Russian had taken an
observation he exclaimed:
"The environs of Paris!
We must not land there!"
"We won't, if the wind
holds out," remarked Tom and this
good fortune came to them.
They succeeded in landing in a
field not far from a small
village, and though several
farmers wondered much as the
sight of the big airship, it
was thought by the
platinum-seekers that they would be
comparatively safe.
"Now to get the first
train for Paris and get the things I
need," exclaimed Tom.
He set to work taking off the broken
pieces that they might be
duplicated, and then, having
inquired at an inn for the
nearest railroad station, and
having hired a rig, the
young inventor set off.
"Can you speak
French?" asked Mr. Petrofsky. "If not I
might be of service, but if
I go to Paris I might be
"Never mind,"
interrupted Tom. "I guess I can parley enough
to get along with."
He had a small knowledge of
the tongue, and with that, and
knowing that English was
spoken in many places, he felt that
he could make out. And
indeed he had no trouble. He easily
found his way about the gay
capital, and located a machine
shop where a specialty was
made of parts for automobile and
airship motors. The
proprietor, knowing the broken pieces
belonged to an aeroplane,
questioned Tom about his craft but
the young inventor knew
better than to give any clew that
might make trouble, so he
returned evasive answers.
It was nearly night when he
got back to the place where he
had left the Falcon, and he
found a curious crowd of rustics
grouped about it.
"Has anything
happened?" he asked of his friends.
"No, everything is
quiet, I'm glad to say," replied Mr.
Petrofsky. "I don't
think our presence will create stir
enough so that the news of
it will reach the spies in Paris.
Still I will feel easier
when we're in the air again."
"It will take a day to
make the repairs," said Tom, "and
put in the new pieces of
platinum. But I'll work as fast as
I can."
He and Ned labored far into
the night, and were at it
again the next morning. Mr.
Damon and the Russian were of no
service for they did not
understand the machinery well
enough. It was while Tom was
outside the craft, filing a
piece of platinum in an
improvised vise, that a poorly-
clothed man sauntered up and
watched him curiously. Tom
glanced at him, and was at
once struck by a difference
between the man's attire and
his person.
For, though he was tattered
and torn, the man's face
showed a certain refinement,
and his hands were not those of
a farmer or laborer in which
character he obviously posed.
"Monsieur has a fine
airship there," he remarked to Tom.
"Oh, yes, it'll
do." Tom did not want to encourage
conversation.
"Doubtless from America
it comes?"
The man spoke English but
with an accent, and certain
peculiarities.
"Maybe so,"
replied the young inventor.
"Is it permit to
inspect the interior?"
"No, it isn't,"
came from Tom shortly. He had hurt his
finger with the file, and he
was not in the best of humor.
"Ah, there are secrets
then?" persisted the stranger.
"Yes!" said Tom
shortly. "I wish you wouldn't bother me.
I'm busy, can't you
see."
"Ah, does monsieur mean
that I have poor eyesight?"
The question was snapped out
so suddenly, and with such a
menacing tone that Tom
glanced up quickly. He was surprised
at the look in the man's
eyes.
"Just as you choose to
take it," was the cool answer. "I
don't know anything about
your eyes, but I know I've got
work to do."
"Monsieur is
insulting!" rasped out the seeming farmer.
"He is not polite. He
is not a Frenchman."
"Now that'll do!"
cried Tom, thoroughly aroused. "I don't
want to be too short with
you, but I've really got to get
this done. One side, if you
please," and having finished
what he was doing, he
started toward the airship.
Whether in his haste Tom did
not notice where he was
going, or whether the man
deliberately got in his way I
cannot say, but at any rate
they collided and the seeming
farmer went spinning to one
side, falling down.
"Monsieur has struck
me! I am insulted! You shall pay for
this!" he cried,
jumping to his feet, and making a rush for
our hero.
"All right. It was your
own fault for bothering me but if
you want anything I'll give
it to you!" cried Tom, striking
a position of defense.
The man was about to rush at
him, and there would have
been a fight in another
minute, had not Mr. Petrofsky,
stepping to the open window
of the pilot house, called out:
"Tom! Tom! Come here,
quick. Never mind him!"
Swinging away from the man,
the young inventor rushed
toward the airship. As he
entered the pilot house he noticed
that his late questioner was
racing off in the direction of
the village.
"What is it? What's the
matter?" he asked of the Russian.
"Is something more
wrong with the airship?"
"No, I just wanted to
get you away from that man.
"Oh, I could take care
of myself."
"I know that, but don't
you see what his game was? I
listened to him. He was
seeking a quarrel with you."
"A quarrel?"
"Yes. He is a police
spy. He wanted to get you into a
fight and then he and you
would be arrested by the local
authorities. They'd clap you
into jail, and hold us all
here. It's a game! They
suspect us, Tom! The Russian spies
have had some word of our
presence! We must get away as
quickly as we can!"
CHAPTER XIV
HURRIED FLIGHT
The announcement of Ivan
Petrofsky came to Tom with
startling suddenness. He
could say nothing for a moment, and
then, as he realized what it
meant, and as he recalled the
strange appearance and
actions of the man, he understood the
danger.
"Was he a spy?" he
asked.
"I'm almost sure he
was," came the answer. "He isn't one
of the villagers, that's
sure, and he isn't a tourist. No
one else would be in this
little out-of-the-way place but a
police official. He is in
disguise, that is certain."
"I believe so,"
agreed Tom. "But what was his game?"
"We are
suspected," replied the Russian. "I was afraid a
big airship couldn't land
anywhere, in France without it
becoming known. Word must
have been sent to Paris in the
night, and this spy came out
directly."
"But what will happen
now?"
"Didn't you see where
he headed for? The village. He has
gone to send word that his
trick failed. There will be more
spies soon, and we may be
detained or thrown into jail on
some pretext or other. They
may claim that we have no
license, or some such flimsy
thing as that. Anything to
detain us. They are after
me, of course, and I'm sorry that
I made you run such danger. Perhaps
I'd better leave you,
and--"
"No, you don't!"
cried Tom heartily. "We'll all hang
together or we'll hang
separately', as Benjamin Franklin or
some of those old chaps once
remarked. I'm not the kind to
desert a friend in the face
of danger."
"Bless my
revolver! I should say not!" cried
Mr. Damon.
"What's it all about?
Where's the danger?"
They told him as briefly as
possible, and Ned, who had
been working in the motor
room, was also informed.
"Well, what's to be
done?" asked Tom. "Had we better get
out our ammunition, or shall
I take out a French license."
"Neither would do any
good," answered the Russian. "I
appreciate your sticking by
me, and if you are resolved on
that the only thing to do is
to complete the repairs as soon
as possible and get away
from here."
"That's it!" cried
Ned. "A quick flight. We can get more
gasolene here, for lots of
autos pass along the road through
the village. I found that
out. Then we needn't stop until we
hit the trail for the mine
in Siberia!"
"Hush!" cautioned
the Russian. "You can't tell who may be
sneaking around to listen.
But we ought to leave as soon as
we can."
"And we will,"
said Tom. "I've got the magneto almost
fixed!"
"Let's get a hustle on
then!" urged Ned. "That fellow
meant business from his
looks. The nerve of him to try to
pick a quarrel that
way."
"I might have told by
his manner that something was
wrong," commented Tom,
"but I thought he was a fresh tramp
and I didn't take any pains
in answering him. But come on,
Ned, get busy."
They did, with such good
effect that by noon the machinery
was in running shape again,
and so far there had been no
evidence of the return of
the spy. Doubtless he was waiting
for instructions, and
something might happen any minute.
"Now, Ned, if you'll
see to having some gasolene brought
out here, and the tanks
filled, I'll tinker with the dynamo
and get that in running
shape," said Tom. "It only needs a
little adjustment of the
brushes. Then we'll be off."
Ned started for the village
where there was a gasolene
depot He fancied the
villagers regarded him rather
curiously, but he did not
stop to ask what it meant. Another
odd fact was that the usual
crowd of curious rustics about
the airship was missing. It
was as though they suspected
trouble might come, and they
did not want to he mixed up in
it.
Never, Ned thought, had he
seen a man so slow at getting
ready the supply of
gasolene. He was to take it out in a
wagon, but first he mislaid
the funnel, then the straining
cloth, and finally he
discovered a break in the harness that
needed mending.
"I believe he's doing
it on purpose to delay us," thought
the youth, "but it
won't do to say anything. Something is in
the wind." He helped
the man all he could, and urged him in
every way he knew, but the
fellow seemed to have grown
suddenly stupid, and
answered only in French, though
previously he had spoken
some English.
But at last Ned, by dint of
hard work, got him started,
and rode on the gasolene
wagon with him. Once at the
anchored airship, Tom and
the others filled the reserve
tanks themselves, though the
man tried to help. However he
did more harm than good,
spilling several gallons of the
fluid.
"Oh, get away, and let
us do it!" cried Tom at last. "I
know what you--"
"Easy!" cautioned
Mr. Petrofsky, with a warning look, and
Tom subsided.
Finally the tanks were full,
the man was paid, and he
started to drive away.
"Now to make a quick
flight!" cried Tom, as he took his
place in the pilot house,
while Ned went to the engine room.
"Full speed, Ned!"
"Yes, and we'll need
it, too," said the Russian.
"Why?" asked Tom.
"Look!" was the
answer, and Ivan Petrofsky pointed across
the field over which, headed
toward the airship, came the
man who had sought a quarrel
with Tom. And with the spy were
several policemen in
uniform, their short swords dangling at
their sides.
"They're after
us!" cried Mr. Damon. "Bless my chronometer
they're after us!"
"Start the motor, Ned!
Start the motor!" cried Tom, and a
moment later the hum of
machinery was heard, while the
police and the spy broke
into a run, shouting and waving
their hands.
CHAPTER XV
PURSUED
Slowly the airship arose,
almost too slowly to suit those
on board who anxiously
watched the oncoming officers. The
latter had drawn their short
swords, and at the sight of
them Mr. Damon cried out:
"Bless my football! If
they jab them into the gas bag,
Tom, we're done for!"
"They won't get the
chance," answered the young inventor,
and he spoke truly, for a
moment later, as the big
propellers took hold of the
air, the Falcon went up with a
rush, and was far beyond the
reach of the men. In a rage the
spy shook his fist at the
fast receding craft, and one of
the policemen drew his
revolver.
"They're going to fire!"
cried Ned.
"They can't do much
damage," answered Tom coolly. "A
bullet hole in the bag is
easily repaired, and anywhere else
it won't amount to
anything."
The officer was aiming his
revolver at the airship, now
high above his head, but
with a quick motion the spy pulled
down his companion's arm,
and they seemed to be disputing
among themselves.
"I wonder what that
means?" mused Mr. Damon.
"Probably they didn't
want to risk getting into trouble,"
replied the Russian.
"There are strict laws in France about
using firearms, and as yet
we are accused of no crime. We
are only suspected, and I
suppose the spy didn't want to get
into trouble. He is on
foreign ground, and there might be
international
complications."
"Then you really think
he was a spy?" asked Tom.
"No doubt of it, and
I'm afraid this is only the beginning
of our trouble."
"In what way?"
"Well, of course word
will be sent on ahead about us, and
every where we go they'll be
on the watch for us. They have
our movements pretty well
covered."
"We won't make a
descent until we get to Siberia," said
Tom, "and I guess there
it will be so lonesome that we won't
be troubled much."
"Perhaps,"
admitted the Russian, "but we will have to be
on our guard. Of course
keeping up in the air will be an
advantage but they
may--"
He stopped suddenly and
shrugged his shoulders.
"What were you going to
say?" inquired Ned.
"Oh, it's just
something that might happen, but it's too
remote a possibility to work
about. We're leaving those
fellows nicely behind,"
he added quickly, as though anxious
to change the subject
"Yes, at this rate
we'll soon be out of France," observed
Tom, as he speeded the ship
along still more. The young
inventor wondered what Mr.
Petrofsky had been going to say,
but soon after this, some of
the repaired machinery in the
motor room needed adjusting,
and the young inventor was kept
so busy that the matter
passed from his mind.
The dynamo and magneto were
doing much more efficient work
since Tom had put the new
platinum in, and the Falcon was
making better time than ever
before. They were flying at a
moderate height, and could
see wondering men, women and
children rush out from their
houses, to gaze aloft at the
strange sight. Paris was now
far behind, and that night they
were approaching the borders
of Prussia, as Mn Petrofsky
informed them, for he knew
every part of Europe.
The route, as laid down by
Tom and the Russian, would send
the airship skirting the
southern coast of the Baltic sea,
then north-west, to pass to
one side of St. Petersburg, and
then, after getting far
enough to the north, so as to avoid
the big cities, they would
head due east for Siberia.
"In that way I think
we'll avoid any danger from the
Russian police,"
remarked the exile.
For the next few days they
flew steadily on at no
remarkable speed, as the
extra effort used more gasolene
than Tom cared to expend in
the motor. He realized that he
would need all he had, and
he did not want to have to buy
any more until he was
homeward bound, for the purchase of it
would lead to questions, and
might cause their detention.
Mr. Damon gave his friends
good meals and they enjoyed
their trip very much, though
naturally there was some
anxiety about whether it
would have a successful conclusion.
"Well, if we don't find
the platinum mine we'll rescue
your brother, if there's a
possible chance!" exclaimed Tom
one day, as he sat in the
pilot house with the exile. "Jove!
it will be great to drop
down, pick him up, and fly away
with him before those
Cossacks, or whoever has him, know
what's up."
"I'm afraid we can't
make such a sensational rescue as
that," replied Mr.
Petrofsky. "We'll have to go at it
diplomatically. That's the
only way to get an exile out of
Siberia. We must get word to
him somehow, after we locate
him, that we are waiting to
help him, and then we can plan
for his escape. Poor Peter!
I do hope we can find him, for
if he is in the salt or
sulphur mines it is a living death!"
and he shuddered at the
memory of his own exile.
"How do you expect to
get definite information as to where
he might be?" asked
Tom.
"I think the only thing
to do is to get in touch with some
of the revolutionists,"
answered the Russian. "They have
ways and means of finding
out even state secrets. I think
our best plan will be to
land near some small town, when we
get to the edge of Siberia.
If we can conceal the airship,
so much the better. Then I
can disguise myself and go to the
village."
"Will it be safe?"
inquired the young inventor.
"I'll have to take that
chance. It's the only way, as I am
the only one in our party
who can speak Russian."
"That's right,"
admitted Tom with a laugh. "I'm afraid I
could never master that
tongue. It's as hard as Chinese."
"Not quite,"
replied his friend, "but it is not an easy
language for an
American."
They talked at some length,
and then Tom noticing, by one
of the automatic gages on
the wall of the pilot house, that
some of the machinery needed
attention, went to attend to
it.
He was rather surprised, on
emerging from the motor
compartment, to see Mr.
Damon standing on the open after
deck of the Falcon gazing
earnestly toward the rear.
"Star-gazing in the day
time?" asked Tom with a laugh.
"Bless my
individuality!" exclaimed the odd man. "How you
startled me, Tom! No, I'm
not looking at stars, but I've
been noticing a black speck
in the sky for some time, and I
was wondering whether it was
my eyesight, or whether it
really is something."
"Where is it?"
"Straight to the
rear," answered Mr. Damon, "and it seems
to be about a mile up. It's
been hanging in the same place
this ten minutes."
"Oh, I see," spoke
Tom, when the speck had been pointed
out to him. "It's there
all right, but I guess it's a bird,
an eagle perhaps. Wait, I'll
get a glass and we'll take a
look."
As he was taking the
telescope down from its rack in the
pilot house, Mr. Petrofsky
saw him.
"What's up?" asked
the Russian, and the youth told him.
"Must be a pretty big
bird to be seen at such a distance
as it is," remarked
Tom.
"Maybe it isn't a
bird," suggested Ivan Petrofsky. "I'll
take a look myself,"
and, showing something of alarm in his
manner, he followed Tom to
where Mr. Damon awaited them. Ned
also came out on deck.
Quickly adjusting the glass,
Tom focused it on the black
speck. It seemed to have
grown larger. Me peered at it
steadily for several
seconds.
"Is it a bird?"
asked Mr. Damon.
"Jove! It's another
airship--a big biplane!" cried Tom,
"and there seems to be
three men in her."
"An aeroplane!"
gasped Ned.
"Bless my deflecting
rudder!" cried Mr. Damon. "An airship
in this out-of-the-way
place?" for they were flying over a
desolate country.
"And they're coming
right after us," added Tom, as he
continued to gaze.
"I thought so,"
was the quiet comment of Mr. Petrofsky.
"That is what I started
to say a few days ago," he went on,
"when I stopped, as I
hardly believed it possible. I thought
they might possibly send an
aeroplane after us, as both the
French and Russian armies
have a number of fast ones. So
they are pursuing us. I'm
afraid my presence will bring you
no end of trouble."
"Let it come!"
cried Tom. "If they can catch up to us
they've got a good machine.
Come on, Ned, let's speed her
up, and make them take more
of our star dust."
"Wait a minute,"
advised the Russian, as he took the
telescope from Tom, and
viewed the ever-increasing speck
behind them. "Are you
sure of the speed of this craft?" he
asked a moment later.
"I never saw the one
yet I couldn't pull away from, even
after giving them a
start," answered the young inventor
proudly. "That is all
but my little sky racer. I could let
them get within speaking
distance, and then pull out like
the Congressional Limited
passing a slow freight."
"Then wait a few
minutes," suggested Mr. Petrofsky. "That
is an aeroplane all right,
but I can't make out from what
country. I'd like a better
view, and if it's safe we can
come closer."
"Oh, it's safe
enough," declared Tom. "I'll get things in
shape for a quick
move," and he hurried back to the machine
room, while the others took
turns looking at the on-coming
aeroplane. And it was coming
on rapidly, showing that it had
tremendous power, for it was
a very large one, carrying
three men.
"How do you suppose
they got on our track?" asked Ned.
"Oh, we must have been
reported from time to time, as we
flew over cities or
towns," replied Mr. Petrofsky. "You know
we're rather large, and can
be seen from a good distance.
Then too, the whole Russian
secret police force is at the
service of our
enemies."
"But we're not over
Russia yet," said Mr. Damon.
Ivan Petrofsky took the
telescope and peered down toward
the earth. They were not a
great way above it, and at that
moment they were passing a
small village.
"Can you tell where we
are?" asked the odd man.
"We are just over the
border of the land of the Czar," was
the quiet answer. "The
imperial flag is flying from a staff
in front of one of the
buildings down there. We are over
Russia."
"And here comes that
airship," called Ned suddenly.
They gazed back with alarm,
and saw that it was indeed so.
The big aeroplane had come
on wonderfully fast in the last
few minutes.
"Tom! Tom!" cried
his chum. "Better get ready to make a
sprint."
"I'm all ready,"
calmly answered our hero. "Shall I go
now?"
"If you can give us a
few seconds longer I may be able to
tell who is after us,"
remarked Mr. Petrofsky, turning his
telescope on the craft
behind them.
"I can let them get
almost up to us, and get away,"
replied Tom.
The Russian did not answer.
He was gazing earnestly at the
approaching aeroplane. A
moment later he took the glass down
from his eye.
"It's our spy
again," he said. "There are two others with
him. That is one of the
aeroplanes owned by the secret
police. They are stationed
all over Europe, ready for
instant service, and they're
on our trail."
The pursuing craft was so
near that the occupants could
easily be made out with the
naked eye, but it needed the
glass to distinguish their
features, and Mr. Petrofsky had
done this.
"Shall I speed
up?" cried Tom.
"Yes, get away as fast
as you can!" shouted the Russian.
"No telling what they
may do," and then, with a hum and a
roar the motor of the Falcon
increased its speed, and the
big airship shot ahead.
CHAPTER XVI
THE NIHILISTS
From the pursuing aircraft
came a series of sharp
explosions that fairly
rattled through the clear air.
"Look out for
bombs!" yelled Ned.
"Bless my safety
match!" cried Mr. Damon. "Are they
anarchists?"
"It's only their motor
hack-firing," cried Tom. "It's all
right, They're done for now,
well leave them behind."
He was a true prophet, for
with a continued rush and a
roar the airship of our
friends opened up a big gap between
her rear rudders and the
forward planes of the craft that
was chasing her. The three
men were working frantically to
get their motor in shape,
but it was a useless task
A little later, finding that
they were losing speed, the
three police agents, or
spies, whatever they might be, had
to volplane to earth and
there was no need for the Falcon to
maintain the terrific pace,
to which Tom had pushed her. The
pursuit was over.
"Well, we got out of
that luckily," remarked Ned, as he
looked down to where the
spies were making a landing. "I
guess they won't try that
trick again."
"I'm afraid they
will," predicted Mr. Petrofsky. "You
don't know these government
agents as I do. They never give
up. They'll fix their
engine, and get on our trail again."
"Then we'll make them
work for what they get," put in Tom,
who, having set the
automatic speed accelerator, had
rejoined his companions.
"We'll try a high flight and if
they can pick up a trail in
the air, and come up to us,
they're good ones!"
He ran to the pilot house,
and set the elevation rudder at
its limit. Meanwhile the
spies were working frantically over
their motor, trying to get
it is shape for the pursuit. But
soon they realized that this
was out of the question, for
the Falcon was far away,
every moment going higher and
higher, until she was lost
to sight beyond the clouds.
"I guess they'll have
their own troubles now," remarked
Ned. "We've seen the
last of them."
"Don't be too
sure," spoke the Russian. We may have them
after us again. We're over
the land of the Czar now, and
they'll have everything
their own way. They'll want to stop
me at any cost."
"Do you think they
suspect that we're after the platinum?"
asked Tom.
"They may, for they
know my brother and I were the only
ones who ever located it,
though unless I get in the exact
neighborhood I'd have
trouble myself picking it out. I
remember some of the
landmarks, but my brother is better at
that sort of work than I am.
But I think what they are
mostly afraid of is that I
have some designs on the life of,
say one of the Grand Dukes,
or some high official. But I am
totally opposed to violent
measures," went on Mr. Petrofsky.
"I believe in a
campaign of education, to gain for the down-
trodden people what are
their rights."
"Do you think they know
you are coming to rescue your
brother?" asked Tom.
"I don't believe so.
And I hope not, for once they
suspected that, they would
remove him to some place where I
never could locate
him."
Calmer feelings succeeded
the excitement caused by the
pursuit, and our friends,
speculating on the matter, came to
the conclusion that the
aeroplane must have started from
some Prussian town, as Mr.
Petrofsky said there were a
number of Russian secret
police in that country. The Falcon
was now speeding along at a
considerable height, and after
running for a number of
miles, sufficient to preclude the
possibility that they could
be picked up by the pursuing
aeroplane, Tom sent his
craft down, as the rarefied
atmosphere made breathing
difficult.
It was about three days
after the chase when, having
carefully studied the map
and made several observations
through the telescope of the
Country over which they were
traveling, that Ivan
Petrofsky said:
"If it can be managed,
Tom, I think we ought to go down
about here. There is a
Russian town not far away, and I know
a few friends there, There
is a large stretch of woodland,
and the airship can be
easily concealed there.
"All right,"
agreed the young inventor, "down we go, and I
hope you get the information
want."
Flying high so as to keep
out of the observation of the
inhabitants of the Russian
town, the young inventor sent his
craft in a circle about it,
and, having seen a clearing in
the forest, he made a
landing there, the Falcon having come
to rest a second time since
leaving Shopton, now several
thousand miles away.
"We'll hide here for a
few days," observed Tom, "and you
can spend as much time in
town as you like, Mr. Petrofsky,"
The Russian, disguising
himself by trimming his beard, and
putting on a pair of dark
spectacles, went to the village
that afternoon.
While he was gone Tom, Ned
and Mr. Damon busied themselves
about the airship, making a
few repairs that could not very
well be done while it was in
motion. As night came on, and
the exile did not return,
Tom began to get a little worried,
and he had some notion of
going to seek him, but he knew it
would not be safe.
"He'll come all
right," declared Ned, as they sat down to
supper. All about them was
an almost impenetrable forest,
cut here and there by paths
along which, as Mr. Petrofsky
had told them, the wood
cutters drove their wagons.
It was quite a surprise
therefor, when, as they were
leaving the table, a knock
was heard on the cabin door.
"Bless my electric
bell!" cried Mr. Damon. "Who can that
be?"
"Mr. Petrofsky of
course," answered Ned.
"He wouldn't
knock--he'd walk right in," spoke Tom, as he
went to the door. As he
opened it he saw several dark-
bearded men standing there,
and in their midst Mr.
Petrofsky.
For one moment our hero
feared that his friend had been
arrested and that the police
bad come to take the rest of
them into custody. But a
word from the exile reassured him.
"These are some of my
friends," said Mr. Petrofsky simply.
"They are Nihilists
which I am not, but--"
"Nihilists yes!
Always!" exclaimed one who spoke English.
"Death to the Czar and
the Grand Dukes! Annihilation to the
government!"
"Gently my friend,
gently," spoke Mr. Petrofsky. "I am
opposed to violence you
know." And then, while his new
friends gazed wonderingly at
the strange craft, he led them
inside. Tom and the others
were hardly able to comprehend
what was about to take
place.
CHAPTER XVII
ON TO SIBERIA
"Has anything
happened?" asked Tom. "Are we suspected?
Have they come to warn
us?"
"No, everything is all
right, so far," answered Ivan
Petrofsky. "I didn't
have the success I hoped for, and we
may have to wait here for a
few days to get news of my
brother. But these men have
been very kind to me," he went
on, "and they have ways
of getting information that I have
not. So they are going to
aid me."
"That's right!"
exclaimed the one who had first spoken.
"We will yet win you to
our cause, Brother Petrofsky. Death
to the Czar and the Grand
Dukes!"
"Never!" exclaimed
the exile firmly. "Peaceful measures
will succeed. But I am
grateful for what you can do for me.
They heard me describe your
wonderful airship," he explained
to Tom, "and wanted to
see for themselves."
The Nihilists were made
welcome after Mr. Petrofsky had
introduced them. They had
strange and almost unpronounceable
names for the ears of our
friends, and I will not trouble
you with them, save to say
that the one who spoke English
fairly well, and who was the
leader, was called Nicolas
Androwsky. There was much
jabbering in the Russian tongue,
when Mr. Petrofsky and Mr.
Androwsky took the others about
the craft, explaining how it
worked.
"I can't show you the
air glider," said Tom, who naturally
acted as guide, "as it
would take too long to put together,
and besides there is not
enough wind here to make it
operate."
"Then you need much
wind?" asked Nicolas Androwsky.
"The harder the gale
the better she flies," answered Tom
proudly.
"Bless my sand bag, but
that's right!" exclaimed Mr.
Damon, who, up to now had
not taken much part in the
conversation. He followed
the party about the airship,
keeping in the rear, and he
eyed the Nihilists as if he
thought that each one had
one or more dynamite bombs
concealed on his person.
"Ha!" exclaimed
Mr. Androwsky, turning suddenly to the odd
man. "Are you not one
of us? Do you not believe that this
terrible kingdom should be
destroyed--made as nothing, and a
new one built from its
ashes? Are you not one of us?" and
with a quick gesture he
reached into his pocket.
"No! No!"
exclaimed Mr. Damon, starting back. "Bless my
election ticket! No! Never
could I throw a bomb. Please
don't give me one." Mr.
Damon started to run away.
"A bomb!"
exclaimed the Nihilist, and then he drew from
his pocket some pamphlets
printed in Russian. "I have no
bombs. Here are some of the
tracts we distribute to convert
unbelievers to our
cause," he went on. "Read them and you
will understand what we are
striving for. They will convert
you, I am sure."
He went on, following the
rest of the party, while Mr.
Damon dropped back with Ned.
"Bless my gas
meter!" gasped the odd man, as he stared at
the queerly-printed
documents in his hand. "I thought he was
going to give me a bomb to
throw!"
"I don't blame
you," said Ned in a low voice. "They look
like desperate men, but
probably they have suffered many
hardships, and they think
their way of righting a wrong is
the only way. I suppose
you'll read those tracts," he added
with a smile.
"Hum! I'm afraid
not," answered Mr. Damon. "I might just
as well try to translate a
Chinese laundry check. But I'll
save 'em for
souvenirs," and he carefully put them in his
pocket, as if he feared they
might unexpectedly turn into a
bomb and blow up the
airship.
The tour of the craft was
completed and the Nihilists
returned to the comfortable
cabin where, much to their
surprise, they were served
with a little lunch, Mr. Damon
bustling proudly about from
the table to the galley, and
serving tea as nearly like
the Russians drink it as
possible.
"Well, you certainly
have a wonderful craft here--
wonderful," spoke Mr.
Androwsky. "If we had some of these in
our group now, we could
start from here, hover over the
palace of the Czar, or one
of the Grand Dukes, drop a bomb,
utterly destroy it, and come
back before any of the hated
police would be any the
wiser."
"I'm afraid I can't
lend it to you," said Tom, and he
could scarcely repress a
shudder at the terrible ideas of
the Nihilists.
"It would never
do," agreed Ivan Petrofsky. "The campaign
of education is the only
way."
There were gutteral
objections on the part of the other
Russians, and they turned to
more cheerful subjects of talk.
"What are your
plans?" asked Tom of the exile. "You say
you can get no trace here of
your brother?"
"No, he seems to have
totally disappeared from sight.
Usually we enemies of the
government can get some news of a
prisoner, but poor Peter is
either dead, or in some obscure
mine, which is hidden away
in the forests or mountains."
"Maybe he is in the
lost platinum mine," suggested Ned.
"No, that has not been
discovered," declared the exile,
"or my friends here
would have heard of it. That is still to
be found."
"And we'll do it, in
the air glider," declared Tom. "By
the way, Mr. Petrofsky,
would it not be a good plan to ask
your friends the location of
the place where the winds
constantly blow with such
force. It occurs to me that in
some such way we might
locate the mine."
"It would be of use if
there was only one place of the
gales," replied the
exile. "But Siberia has many such spots
in the mountain
fastnesses--places which, by the peculiar
formation of the land, have
constant eddys of air over them.
No, the only way is for us
to go as nearly as possible to
the place where my brother
and I were imprisoned, and search
there."
"But what is that you
said about us having to stay here,
to get some news of your
brother?" asked Tom.
"I had hoped to get
some information here,"
resumed Mr. Petrofsky,
"but my friends here
are without news. However,
they are going to
make inquiries, and we will
have to stay here
until they have an answer.
It will be safe, they
think, as there are not many
police in town, and
the local authorities are
not very efficient. So the
airship will remain here,
and, from time to time
I will go to the village,
disguised, and see if any
word has come."
"And we will bring you
news as soon as we get it,"
promised Mr. Androwsky.
"You are not exactly one of us, but
you are against the
government, and, therefor, a brother.
But you will be one of us in
time."
"Never," replied
the exile with a smile. "My only hope now
is to get my brother safely
away, and then we will go and
live in free America. But,
Tom, I hope I won't put you out
by delaying here."
"Not a bit of it. More
than half the object of our trip is
to rescue your brother. We
must do that first. Now as to
details," and they fell
to discussing plans. It was late
that night when the
Nihilists left the airship, first having
made a careful inspection to
see that they were not spied
upon. They promised at once
to set to work their secret
methods of getting
information.
For several days the airship
remained in the vicinity of
the Russian town. Our
friends were undisturbed by visitors,
as they were in a forest
where the villagers seldom came and
the nearest wood-road was
nearly half a mile off.
Every day either Mr. Petrofsky
went in to town to see the
Nihilists or some of them
came out to the Falcon, usually at
night.
"Well, have you any
word yet?" asked Tom, after about a
week had passed.
"Nothing yet,"
answered the exile, and his tone was a bit
hopeless. "But we have
not given up. All the most likely
places have been tried, but
he is not there. We have had
traces of him, but they are
not fresh ones. He seems to have
been moved from one mine to
another. Probably they feared I
would make an attempt to
rescue him. But I have not given
up. Me is somewhere in
Siberia."
"And we'll find
him!" cried Tom with enthusiasm.
For three days more they
lingered, and then, one night,
when they were just getting
ready to retire, there was a
knock on the cabin door. Mr.
Petrofsky had been to the
village that day, and had
received no news. He had only
returned about an hour
before.
"Some one's
knocking," announced Ned, as if there could be
any doubt of it.
"Bless my burglar
alarm!" gasped Mr. Damon.
"I'll see who it
is," volunteered Mr. Petrofsky, and Tom
looked toward the rack of
loaded rifles, for that day a man,
seemingly a wood cutter had
passed close to the airship, and
had hurried off as if he had
seen a ghost.
The knock was repeated. It
might be their friends, and it
might be--
But Mr. Petrofsky solved the
riddle by throwing back the
portal, and there stood the
Nihilist, Nicolas Androwsky.
"Is there anything the
matter?" asked the exile quickly.
"We have news,"
was the cautious answer, as the Nihilist
slipped in, and closed the
door behind him.
"News of my
brother?"
"Of your brother! He is
in a sulphur mine in the Altai
Mountains, near the city of
Abakansk."
"Where's that?"
asked Tom for he had forgotten most of his
Russian geography.
"The Altai Mountains
are a range about the middle of
Siberia," explained Mr.
Petrofsky. "They begin at the
Kirghiz Steppes, and run
west. It is a wild and desolate
place. I hope we can find
poor Peter alive."
"And this city of
Abakansk?" went on the young inventor.
"It is many miles from
here, but I can give you a good
map," said the
Nihilist. "Some of our friends are there," he
added with a half-growl.
"I wish we could rescue all of
them."
"We'd like to,"
spoke Tom. "But I fear it is impossible.
But now that we have a clew,
come on! Let's start at once!
It may be dangerous to stay
here. On to Siberia!"
CHAPTER XVIII
IN A RUSSIAN PRISON
The news they had waited for
had come at last. It might be
a false clew, but it was
something to work on, and Tom was
tired of inaction. Then,
too, even after they had started,
the prisoner might be moved
and they would have to trace him
again.
"But that is the latest
information we could get," said
Mr. Androwsky. "It came
through some of our Anarchist
friends, and I believe is
reliable. Can you soon make a
thousand miles in your
airship?"
"Yes," answered
Tom, "if I push her to the limit."
"Then do so,"
advised the Nihilist, "for there is need of
haste. In making inquiries
our friends might incur
suspicions and Peter
Petrofsky may be exiled to some other
place."
"Oh, we'll get
there," cried Tom. "Ned, see to the gas
machine. Mr. Damon, you can
help me in the pilot house."
"Here is a map of the
best route," said the Nihilist, as
he handed one to Mr. Petrofsky.
"It will take you there the
shortest way. But how can
you steer when high in the air?"
"By compass,"
explained Tom. "We'll get there, never fear,
and we're grateful for your
clew."
"I never can thank you
enough!" exclaimed the exile, as he
shook hands with Mr.
Androwsky,
The Nihilist left, after
announcing that, in the event of
the success of Tom and his
friends, and the rescue of the
exile from the sulphur mine,
it would probably become known
to them, as such news came
through the Revolutionary
channels, slowly but surely.
"Here we go!"
cried the young inventor gaily, as he turned
the starting lever in the
pilot house, and silently, in the
darkness of the night, the
Falcon shot upward. There was not
a light on board, for,
though small signal lamps had been
kept burning when the craft
was in the forest, to guide the
Nihilists to her, now that
she was up in the air, and in
motion, it was feared that
her presence would become known
to the authorities of the
town, so even these had been
extinguished.
"After we get well away
we can turn on the electrics,"
remarked Tom, "and if
they see us at a distance they may
take us for a meteor. But,
so close as this, they'd get wise
in a minute."
Mr. Damon, who had done all
that Tom needed in the
starting of the craft, went
to the forward port rail, and
idly looked down on the
black forest they were leaving. He
could just make out the
clearing where they had rested for
over a week, and he was
startled to see lights bobbing in
it.
"I say, Mr.
Petrofsky!" he called. "Did we leave any of
our lanterns behind
us?"
"I don't believe
so," answered the exile. "I'll ask Tom."
"Lanterns? No,"
answered the young inventor. "Before we
started I took down the only
one we had out. I'll take a
look."
Setting the automatic
steering apparatus, he joined Mr.
Damon and the Russian. The
lights were now dimly visible,
moving about in the forest
clearing.
"It's just as if they
were looking for something," said
Tom. "Can it be that
any of your Nihilist friends, Mr.
Petrofsky are--"
"Friends--no
friends--enemies!" cried the Russian. "I
understand now! We got away
just in time. Those are police
agents who are looking for
us! They must have received word
about our being there.
Androwsky and the others never carry
lights when they go about.
They know the country too well,
and then, too, it leads to
detection. No, those are police
spies. A few minutes later,
and we would have been
discovered."
"As it is we're right
over their heads, and they don't
know it," chuckled Tom.
The airship was moving silently
along before a good breeze,
the propellers not having been
started, and Tom let her
drift for several miles, as he did
not want to give the police
spies a clew by the noise of the
motor.
The twinkling lights in the
forest clearing disappeared
from sight, and the seekers
went on in the darkness.
"Well, we've got the
hardest part of our work yet ahead of
us," remarked Tom
several hours later when, the lights
having been set aglow, they
were gathered in the main cabin.
There was no danger of being
seen now, for they were quite
high.
"We've done pretty
well, so far," commented Ned. "I think
we will have easier work
rescuing Mr. Petrofsky's brother
than in locating the mine.
"I don't know about
that," answered the Russian. "It is
almost impossible to rescue
a person from Siberia. Of course
it is not going to be easy
to locate the lost mine, but as
for that we can keep on
searching, that is if the air glider
works, but there are so many
forces to fight against in
rescuing a prisoner.
They had a long journey
ahead of them, and not an easy
route to follow, but as the
days passed, and they came
nearer and nearer to their
goal, they became more and more
eager.
They were passing over a
desolate country, for they
avoided the vicinity of
large towns and cities.
"I wonder when we'll
strike Siberia?" mused Tom one
afternoon, as they sat on
the outer deck, enjoying the air.
"At this rate of
progress, very soon." answered the exile,
after glancing at the map.
"We should be at the foot of the
Ural mountains in a few
hours, and across them in the night.
Then we will be in
Siberia."
And he was right, for just
as supper was being served,
Ned, who had been making
observations with a telescope,
exclaimed:
"These must be the
Urals!"
Mr. Petrofsky seized the
glass.
"They are," he
announced. "We will cross between Orsk and
Iroitsk. A safe place. In
the morning we will be in Siberia
--the land of the
exiles."
And they were, morning
seeing them flying over a most
desolate stretch of
landscape. Onward they flew, covering
verst after verst of
loneliness.
"I'm going to put on a
little more speed," announced Tom,
after a visit to the
storeroom, where were kept the reserve
tanks of gasolene. "I've
got more fluid than I thought I
had, and as we're on the
ground now I want to hurry things.
I'm going to make better
time," and he yanked over the lever
of the accelerator, sending
the Falcon ahead at a rapid
rate.
All day this was kept up,
and they were just making an
observation to determine
their position, along toward supper
time, when there came the
sound of another explosion from
the motor room.
"Bless my safety
valve!" cried Mr. Damon. "Something has
gone wrong again."
Tom ran to the motor, and,
at the same time the Falcon
which was being used as an
aeroplane and not as a dirigible,
began to sink.
"We're going
down!" cried Ned.
"Well, you know what to
do." shouted his chum. "The gas
bag! Turn on the generator!"
Ned ran to it, but, in spite
of his quick action, the
craft continued to slide
downward.
"She won't work !"
he cried.
"Then the intake pipe
must be stopped!" answered the young
inventor. "Never mind,
I'll volplane to earth and we can
make repairs. That magneto
has gone out of business again."
"Don't land here!"
cried Ivan Petrofsky.
"Why not?"
"Because we are
approaching a large town--Owbinsk I think
it is-the police there will
be there to get us. Keep on to
the forest again!"
"I can't!" cried
Tom. "We've got to go down, police or no
police."
Running to the pilot house,
he guided the craft so that it
would safely volplane to
earth. They could all see that now
they were approaching a
fairly large town, and would
probably land on its
outskirts. Through the glass Ned could
make out people staring up
at the strange sight.
"They'll be ready to
receive us," he announced grimly.
"I hope they have no
dynamite bombs for us," murmured Mr.
Damon. "Bless my watch
chain! I must get rid of that
Nihilist literature I have
about me, or they'll take me for
one," and he tore up
the tracts, and scattered them in the
air.
Meanwhile the Falcon
continued to descend.
"Maybe I can make quick
repairs, and get away before they
realize who we are,"
said Tom, as he got ready for the
landing.
They came down in a big
field, and, almost before the
bicycle wheels had ceased
revolving, under the application
of the brakes, several men
came running toward them.
"Here they come!"
cried Mr. Damon.
"They are only
farmers," said the exile. He had donned his
dark glasses again, and
looked like anything but a Russian.
"Lively, Ned!"
cried Tom. "Let's see if we can't make
repairs and get off
again."
The two lads frantically
began work, and they soon had the
magneto in running order.
They could have gone up as an
aeroplane, leaving the
repairs to the gas bag to be made
later but, just as they were
ready to start, there came
galloping out a troop of
Cossack soldiers. Their commander
called something to them.
"What is he
saying?" cried Tom to Mr. Petrofsky.
"He is telling them to
surround us so that we can not get
a running start, such as we
need to go up. Evidently he
understands
aeroplanes."
"Well, I'm going to
have a try," declared the young
inventor.
He jumped to the pilot
house, yelling to Ned to start the
motor, but it was too late.
They were hemmed in by a cordon
of cavalry, and it would
have been madness to have rushed
the Falcon into them, for
she would have been wrecked, even
if Tom could have succeeded
in sending her through the
lines.
"I guess it's all up
with us," groaned Ned.
And it seemed to; for, a
moment later, an officer and
several aides galloped
forward, calling out something in
Russian.
"What is it?"
asked Tom.
"He says we are under
arrest," translated the exile.
"What for?"
demanded the young inventor.
Ivan Petrofsky shrugged his
shoulders.
"It is of little use to
ask--now," he answered. "It may be
we have violated some local
law, and can pay a fine and go,
or we may be taken for just
what we are, or foreign spies,
which we are not. It is best
to keep quiet, and go with
them."
"Go where?" cried
Tom.
"To prison, I
suppose," answered the exile. "Keep quiet,
and leave it to me. I will
do all I can. I don't believe
they will recognize me.
"Bless my search
warrant!" cried Mr. Damon. "In a Russian
prison! That is
terrible!"
A few minutes later,
expostulations having been useless,
our friends were led away
between guards who carried ugly
looking rifles, and who
looked more ugly and menacing
themselves. Then the doors
of the Russian prison of Owbinsk
closed on Tom and his
friends, while their airship was left
at the mercy of their
enemies.
CHAPTER XIX
LOST IN A SALT MINE
The blow had descended so
suddenly that it was paralyzing.
Tom and his friends did not
know what to do, but they saw
the wisdom of the course of
leaving everything to Ivan
Petrofsky. lie was a
Russian, and he knew the Russian police
ways--to his sorrow.
"I'm not afraid, said
Tom, when they had been locked in a
large prison room, evidently
set apart for the use of
political, rather than
criminal, offenders. "We're United
States citizens, and once
our counsel hears of this--as he
will--there'll be some merry
doings in Oskwaski, or whatever
they call this place. But I
am worried about what they may
do to the Falcon."
"Have no fears on that
score," said the Russian exile.
"They know the value of
a good airship, and they won't
destroy her."
"What will they do
then?" asked Tom.
"Keep her for their own
use, perhaps."
"Never!" cried
Tom. "I'll destroy her first!"
"If you get the
chance!" interposed the exile.
"But we're American
citizens!" cried Tom, "and--"
"You forget that I am not,"
interrupted Mr. Petrofsky. "I
can't claim the protection
of your flag, and that is why I
wish to remain unknown. We
must act quietly. The more
trouble we make, the more
important they will know us to be.
If we hope to accomplish
anything we must act cautiously."
"But my airship!"
cried Tom.
"They won't do anything
to that right away," declared the
Russian in a whisper for he
knew sometimes the police
listened to the talk of
prisoners. "I think, from what I
overheard when they arrested
us, that we either trespassed
on the grounds of some one
in authority, who had us taken in
out of spite, or they fear
we may be English or French
spies, seeking to find out
Russian secrets."
They were served with food
in their prison, but to all
inquiries made by Ivan
Petrofsky, evasive answers were
returned. He spoke in poor,
broken Russian, so that he would
not be taken for a native of
that country. Had he been, he
would have at once been in
great danger of being accused as
an escaped exile.
Finally a man who, the exile
whispered to his Companions,
was the local governor, came
to their prison. He eagerly
asked questions as to their
mission, and Mr. Petrofsky
answered them
diplomatically.
"I don't think he'll
make much out of what I told him,"
said the exile when the
governor had gone. "I let him think
we were scientists, or
pleasure seekers, airshipping for our
amusement. He tried to
tangle me up politically, but I knew
enough to keep out of such
traps."
"What's going to become
of us?" asked Ned.
"We will be detained a
few days--until they find out more
about us. Their spies are
busy, I have no doubt, and they
are telegraphing all over
Europe about us."
"What about my
airship?" asked Tom.
"I spoke of that,"
answered the exile. "I said you were a
well-known inventor of the
United States, and that if any
harm came to the craft the
Russian Government would not only
be held responsible, but
that the governor himself would be
liable, and I said that it
cost much money. That touched
him, for, in spite of their
power, these Russians are
miserably paid. He didn't
want to have to make good, and if
it developed that he had
made a mistake in arresting us, his
superiors would disclaim all
responsibility, and let him
shoulder the blame. Oh, all
is not lost yet, though I don't
like the looks of
things."
Indeed it began to seem
rather black for our friends, for,
that night they were taken
from the fairly comfortable,
large, prison room, and
confined in small stone cells down
in a basement. They were
separated, but as the cells
adjoined on a corridor they
could talk to each other. With
some coarse food, and a
little water, Tom and his friends
were left alone.
"Say I don't like
this!" cried our hero, after a pause.
"Me either,"
chimed in Ned.
"Bless my burglar
alarm!" exclaimed Mr. Damon. "It's an
awful disgrace! If my wife
ever heard of me being in jail--"
"She may never hear of
it!" interposed Tom.
"Bless my heart!"
cried the odd man. "Don't say such
things."
They discussed their plight
at length, but nothing could
be done, and they settled
themselves to uneasy slumber. For
two days they were thus
imprisoned, and all of Mr.
Petrofsky's demands that
they be given a fair trial, and
allowed to know the nature
of the charge against them, went
for naught. No one came to
see them but a villainous looking
guard, who brought them
their poor meals. The governor
ignored them, and Mr.
Petrofsky did not know what to think.
"Well, I'm getting sick
of this!" exclaimed Tom--I wish I
knew where my airship
was."
"I fancy it's in the
same place," replied the exile. "From
the way the governor acted I
think he'd be afraid to have it
moved. It might be damaged.
If I could only get word to some
of my Revolutionary friends it
might do some good, but I
guess I can't. We'll just
have to wait."
Another day passed, and
nothing happened. But that night,
when the guard came to bring
their suppers, something did
occur.
"Hello! we've got a new
one!" exclaimed Tom, as he noted
the man. "Not so bad
looking, either."
The man peered into his
cell, and said something in
Russian.
"Nothing doing,"
remarked the young inventor with a short
laugh. "Nixy on that
jabbering."
But, no sooner had the man's
words penetrated to the cell
of Ivan Petrofsky, that the
exile called out something. The
guard started, hastened to
that cell door, and for a few
seconds there was an excited
dialogue in Russian.
"Boys! Mr. Damon! We're
saved!" suddenly cried out Mr.
Petrofsky.
"Bless my door knob!
You don't say so!" gasped the odd
man. "How? Has the Czar
sent orders to release us."
"No, but somehow my
Revolutionary friends have heard about
my arrest, and they have
arranged for our release--secretly
of course. This guard is
affiliated with the Nihilist group
that got on the trail of my
brother. He bribed the other
guard to let him take his
place for to-night, and now
"Yes! What is it?"
cried Tom.
"He's going to open the
cell doors and let us out!"
"But how can we get
past the other guards, upstairs?"
asked Ned.
"We're not going that
way," explained Mr. Petrofsky.
"There is a secret exit
from this corridor, through a tunnel
that connects with a large
salt mine. Once we are in there
we can make our way out.
We'll soon be free."
"Ask him if he's heard
anything of my airship?" asked Tom.
Mr. Petrofsky put the
question rapidly in Russian and then
translated the answer.
"It's in the same
place."
"Hurray!" cried
Tom.
Working rapidly, the
Nihilist guard soon had the cell
doors open, for he had the
keys, and our friends stepped out
into the corridor.
"This way," called
Ivan Petrofsky, as he followed their
liberator, who spoke in
whispers. "He says he will lead us
to the salt mine, tell us
how to get out and then he must
make his own escape."
"Then he isn't coming
with us?" asked Ned.
"No, it would not he
safe. But he will tell us how to get
out. It seems that years ago
some prisoners escaped this
way, and the authorities
closed up the tunnel. But a cavein
of the salt mine opened a
way into it again."
They followed their queer
guide, who led them down the
corridor. He paused at the
end, and then, diving in behind a
pile of rubbish, he pulled
away some boards. A black
opening, barely large enough
for a man to walk in upright,
was disclosed.
"In there?" cried
Tom.
"In there,"
answered Mr. Petrofsky. He and the guard
murmured their good-byes,
and then, with a lighted candle
the faithful Nihilist had
provided, and with several others
in reserve, our friends
stepped into the blackness. They
could hear the board being
pulled back into place behind
them.
"Forward!" cried
the exile, and forward they went.
It was not a pleasant
journey, being through an uneven
tunnel in the darkness. Half
a mile later they emerged into
a large salt mine, that
seemed to be directly beneath the
town. Work in this part had
been abandoned long ago, all the
salt there was left being in
the shape of large pillars,
that supported the roof. It
sparkled dully in the candle
light.
"Now let me see if I
remember the turnings," murmured Mr.
Petrofsky. "He said to
keep on for half an hour, and we
would come out in a little
woods not far from where our
airship was anchored."
Twisting and turning, here
and there in the semi-darkness,
stumbling, and sometimes
falling over the uneven floor, the
little party went on.
"Did you say half an
hour?" asked Tom, after a while.
"Yes," replied the
Russian.
"We've been longer than
that," announced the young
inventor, after a look at
his watch. "It's over an hour."
"Bless my
timetable!" cried Mr. Damon.
"Are you sure?"
asked Mr. Petrofsky.
"Yes," answered
Tom in a low voice.
The Russian looked about
him, flashing the candle on
several turnings and
tunnels. Suddenly Ned uttered a cry.
"Why, we passed this
place a little while before!" he
said. "I remember this
pillar that looks like two men
wrestling!"
It was true. They all
remembered it when they saw it
again.
"Back in the same
place!" mused the Russian. "Then we have
doubled on our tracks. I'm
afraid we're lost!"
"Lost in a Russian salt
mine!" gasped Tom, and his words
sounded ominous in that
gloomy place.
CHAPTER XX
THE ESCAPE
For a space of several
seconds no one moved or spoke. In
the flickering light of the
candle they looked at one
another, and then at the
fantastic pillars of salt all about
them. Then Mr. Damon started
forward.
"Bless my trolley
car!" he exclaimed. "It isn't possible!
There must be some mistake.
If we'll keep on we'll come out
all right. You know your way
about, don't you, Mr.
Petrofsky?"
"I thought I did, from
what the guard told us. but it
seems I must have taken a
wrong turning."
"Then it's easily
remedied," suggested Tom "All we'll have
to do will be to go to the
place where we started, and begin
over again."
"Of course,"
agreed Ned, and they all seemed more
cheerful.
"And if we start out
once more, and get lost again, then
what?" asked Mr. Damon.
"Well, if worst comes
to worst, we can go, back in the
tunnel, go to our cells and
ask the guard to come with us
and show us the way went on
Tom.
"Never!" cried the
exile. "It would be the most dangerous
thing in the world to go
back to the prison. Our escape has
probably been discovered by
this time, and to return would
only be to put our heads in
the noose. We must keep on at
any cost!"
"But if we can't get
out," suggested Tom, "and if we
haven't anything to eat or
drink, we--"
He did not finish, but they
all knew what he meant.
"Oh, we'll get
out!" declared Ned, who was something of an
optimist. "You've been
in salt mines before, haven't you,
Mr. Petrofsky?"
"Yes, I was condemned
to one once, but it was not in this
part of the country, and it
was not an abandoned one. I
imagine this was only an
isolated mine, and that there are
no others near it, so when
they abandoned it, after all the
salt was taken out, most
people forgot about it. I remember
once a party of prisoners
were lost in a large salt mine,
and were missed for several
days."
"What happened to
them?" asked Tom.
"I don't like to talk
about it," replied the Russian with a
shudder.
"Bless my soul! Was it
as bad as that?" asked Mr. Damon.
"It was," replied
the exile. "But now let's see if we can
find our way back, and start
afresh. I'll be more careful
next time, and watch the
turns more closely."
But he did not get the
chance. They could not find the
tunnel whence they had
started. Turn after turn they took,
down passage after passage
sometimes in such small ones that
they almost had to crawl.
But it was of no use. They
could not find their way back
to the starting place, and
they could not find the opening
of the mine. They had used
two of the slow burning candles
and they had only half a
dozen or so left. When these were
gone--
But they did not like to
think of that, and stumbled on
and on. They did not talk
much, for they were too worried.
Finally Ned gasped:
"I'd give a good deal
for a drink of water."
"So would I,"
added his chum. "But what's the use of
wishing? If there was a
spring down here it would be salt
water. But I know what I
would do--if I could."
"What?" asked Mr.
Damon.
"Go back to the prison.
At least we wouldn't starve there,
and we'd have something to
drink. If they kept us we know we
could get
free--sometime."
"Perhaps never!"
exclaimed Ivan Petrofsky. "It is better
to keep on here, and, as for
me, I would rather die here
than go back to a Russian
prison. We must--we shall get
out!"
But it was idle talk.
Gradually they lost track of time as
they staggered on, and they
hardly knew whether a day had
passed or whether it was but
a few hours since they had been
lost.
Of their sufferings in that
salt mine I shall not go into
details. There are enough
unpleasant things in this world
without telling about that.
They must have wandered around
for at least a day and a
half, and in all that while they
had not a drop of water, and
not a thing to eat. Wait,
though, at last in their desperation
they did gnaw the
tallow candles, and that
served to keep them alive, and, in
a measure, alleviate their
awful sufferings from thirst.
Back and forth they
wandered, up and down in the galleries
of the old salt mine. They
were merely hoping against hope.
"It's worse than the
underground city of gold," said Ned
in hollow tones, as he
staggered on. "Worse--much worse."
His head was feeling light.
No one answered him.
It was, as they learned
later, just about two days after
the time when they entered
the mine that they managed to get
out. Forty-eight hours, most
of them of intense suffering.
They were burning their last
candle, and when that was out
they knew they would have
the horrors of darkness to fight
against, as well as those of
hunger and thirst.
But fate was kind to them.
How they managed to hit on the
right gallery they did not
know, but, as they made a turn
around an immense pillar of
salt Tom, who was walking weakly
in advance, suddenly
stopped.
"Look! Look!" he
whispered. "Another candle! Someone--
someone is searching for us!
We are saved!"
"It may be the
police!" said Ned.
"That is not a
candle," spoke the Russian in hollow tones
as he looked to where Tom
pointed, to a little glimmer of
light. "It is a star.
Friends, we are saved, and by
Providence! That is a star,
shining through the opening of
the mine. We are
saved!"
Eagerly they pressed
forward, and they had not gone far
before they knew that the
exile was right. They felt the
cool night wind on their hot
cheeks.
"Thank heaven!"
gasped Tom, as he pushed on.
A moment later, climbing
over the rusted rails on which
the mine cars had run with
their loads of salt, they
staggered into the open.
They were free--under the silent
stars!
"And now, if we can
only find the airship," said Tom
faintly, "we
can--"
"Look there!"
whispered Ned, pointing to a patch of deeper
blackness that the
surrounding night. "What's that."
"The Falcon!"
gasped Tom. He started toward her, for she
was but a short distance
from a little clump of trees into
which they had emerged from
the opening of the salt mine.
There, on the same little
plane where they had landed in her
was the airship. She had not
been moved.
"Wait!" cautioned
Ivan Petrofsky. "She may be guarded."
Hardly had he spoken than
there walked into the faint
starlight on the side of the
ship nearest them, a Cossack
soldier with his rifle over
his shoulder.
"We can't get
her!" gasped Ned.
"We've got to get
her!" declared Tom. "We'll die if we
don't!"
"But the guards!
They'll arrest us!" said the exile.
An instant later a second
soldier joined the first, and
they could be seen
conversing. They then resumed their
pacing around the anchored
craft. Evidently they were
waiting for the escaped
prisoners to come up when they would
give the alarm and apprehend
them.
"What can we do?"
asked Mr. Damon.
"I have a plan,"
said Tom weakly. "It's the only chance,
for we're not strong enough
to tackle them. Every time they
go around on the far side of
the airship we must creep
forward. When they come on
this side we'll lie down. I doubt
if they can see us. Once we
are on hoard we can cut the
ropes, and start off.
Everything is all ready for a start if
they haven't monkeyed with
her, and I don't think they have.
We've got room enough to run
along as an aeroplane and mount
upward. It's our only
hope."
The others agreed, and they
put the plan into operation.
When the Cossack guards were
out of sight the escaped
prisoners crawled forward,
and when the soldiers came into
view our friends waited in
silence.
It took several minutes of
alternate creeping and waiting
to do this, but it was
accomplished at last and unseen they
managed to slip aboard Then
it was the work of but a moment
to cut the restraining
ropes.
Silently Tom crept to the
motor room. He had to work in
absolute darkness, for the
gleam of a light would have
drawn the fire of the
guards. But the youth knew every inch
of his invention. The only
worriment was whether or not the
motor would start up after
the break-down, not having been
run since it was so hastily
repaired. Still he could only
try.
He looked out, and saw the
guards pacing back and forth.
They did not know that the
much-sought prisoners were within
a few feet of them.
Ned was in the pilot house.
He could see a clear field in
front of him.
Suddenly Tom pulled the
starting lever. There was a little
clicking, followed by
silence. Was the motor going to
revolve? It answered the
next moment with a whizz and a
roar.
"Here we go!"
cried the young inventor, as the big machine
shot forward on her flight.
"Now let them stop us!"
Forward she went until Ned,
knowing by the speed that she
had momentum enough, tilted
the elevation rudder, and up she
shot, while behind, on the
ground, wildly running to and
fro, and firing their
rifles, were the two amazed guards.
CHAPTER XXI
THE RESCUE
"Have we--have we time
to get a drink?" gasped Ned, when
the aeroplane, now on a
level keel, had been shooting
forward about three minutes.
Already it was beyond the reach
of the rifles.
"Yes, but take only a
little," cautioned Tom. "Oh! it
doesn't seem possible that
we are free!"
He switched on a few
interior lights, and by their glow
the faint and starving
platinum-seekers found water and
food. Their craft had,
apparently, not been touched in their
absence, and the machinery
ran well.
Cautiously they ate and
drank, feeling their strength come
back to them, and then they
removed the traces of their
terrible imprisonment, and
set about in ease and comfort,
talking of what they had
suffered.
Onward sped the aeroplane,
onward through the night, and
then Tom, having set the
automatic steering gear, all fell
into heavy slumbers that
lasted until far into the next day.
When the young inventor
awoke he looked below and could
see nothing--nothing but a
sea of mist.
"What's this?" he
cried. "Are we above the clouds, or in a
fog over some inland
sea?"
He was quite worried, until
Ivan Petrofsky informed him
that they were in the midst
of a dense fog, which was common
over that part of Siberia,
"But where are
we?" asked Ned.
"About over the
province of Irtutsk," was the answer. "We
are heading north," he
went on, as he looked at the compass,
"and I think about
right to land somewhere near where my
brother is confined in the
sulphur mine."
"That's so; we've got
to drop," said Tom. "I must get the
gas pipe repaired. I wish we
could see over what soft of a
place we were so as to know
whether it would be safe to
land. I wish the mist would
clear away."
It did, about noon, and they
noted that they were over a
desolate stretch of country,
in which it would be safe to
make a landing.
Bringing the aeroplane down
on as smooth a spot as he
could pick out, Tom and Ned
were soon at work clearing out
the clogged pipe of the gas
generator. They had to take it
out in the open air, as the
fumes were unpleasant, and it
was while working over it
that they saw a shadow thrown on
the ground in front of them.
Startled they looked up, to see
a burly Russian staring at
them.
The sudden appearance of a
man in that lonely spot, his
calm regard of the lads, his
stealthy approach, which had
made it possible for him to
be almost upon them before they
were aware of his presence,
all this made them suspicious of
danger. Tom gave a quick
glance about, however, and saw no
others--no Cossack soldiers,
and as he looked a second time
at the man he noted that he
was poorly dressed, that his
shoes were ragged, his whole
appearance denoting that he had
traveled far, and was weary
and ill.
"What do you make of
this, Ned?" asked Tom, in a low
voice.
"I don't know what to
make of it. He can't be an officer,
in that rig, and he has no
one with him. I guess we haven't
anything to be afraid of.
I'm going to ask him what he
wants."
Which Tom did in his
plainest English. At once the man
broke into a stream of
confused Russian, and he kept it up
until Tom held up his hand
for silence.
"I'm sorry, but I can't
understand you," said the young
inventor. "I'll call
some one who can, though," and, raising
his voice, he summoned Ivan
Petrofsky who, with Mr. Damon,
was inside the airship doing
some small repairs.
"There's a Russian out
here, Mr. Petrofsky," said Tom,
"and what he wants I
can't make out."
The exile was quickly on the
scene and, after a first
glance at the man, hurried
up to him, grasped him by the
hand and at once the two
were talking such a torrent of
hard-sounding words that Tom
and Ned looked at each other
helplessly, while Mr. Damon,
who had come out, exclaimed:
"Bless my dictionary!
they must know each other."
For several minutes the two
Russians kept up their rapid-
fire talk and then Mr.
Petrofsky, evidently realizing that
his friends must wonder at
it, turned to them and said:
"This is a very strange
thing. This man is an escaped
convict, as I once was. I
recognized him by certain signs as
soon as I saw him, though I
had never met him before. There
are certain marks by which a
Siberian exile can never be
forgotten," he added
significantly. "He made his escape from
the mines some time ago, and
has suffered great hardships
since. The revolutionists
help him when they can, but he has
to keep in concealment and
travels from town to town as best
he may. He has heard of our
airship, I suppose from
inquiries the revolutionists
have been making in our behalf,
and when he unexpectedly
came upon us just now he was not
frightened, as an ordinary
peasant would have been. But he
did not know I was
aboard."
"And does he know
you?" asked Tom. "Does he know you are
trying to rescue your
brother?"
"No, but I will tell
him."
There was another exchange
of the Russian language, and it
seemed to have a surprising
result. For, no sooner had Ivan
Petrofsky mentioned his
brother, than the other, whose name
was Alexis Borious seemed
greatly excited. Mr. Petrofsky was
equally so at the reply his
new acquaintance made, and
fairly shouted to Tom, Ned
and Mr. Damon.
"Friends, I have
unexpected good news! It is well that we
met this man or we would
have gone many miles out of our
way. My brother has been
moved to another mine since the
revolutionists located him
for me. He is in a lonely
district many miles from
here. This man was in the same mine
with him, until my brother
was transferred, and then Mr.
Borious escaped. We will
have to change our plans."
"And where are we to
head for now?" asked Tom.
"Near to the town of
Haskaski, where my poor brother is
working in a sulphur
mine!"
"Then let's get a move
on!" cried Tom with enthusiasm. "Do
you think this man will come
with us, Mr. Petrofsky, to help
in the rescue, and show us
the place?"
"He says he will,"
translated the exile, "though he is
much afraid of our strange
craft. Still he knows that to
trust himself to it is
better than being captured, and sent
back to the mines to starve
to death!"
"Good!" cried Tom.
"And if he wants to, and all goes well,
we'll take him out of Russia
with us. Now get busy, Ned, and
we'll have this machine in
shape again soon.
While Ivan Petrofsky took
his new friend inside, and
explained to him about the
workings of the Falcon, Tom and
Ned labored over the gas
machine with such good effect that
by night it was capable of
being used. Then they went
aloft, and making a change
in their route, as suggested by
Mr. Borious, they headed for
the desolate sulphur region.
For several days they sailed
on, and gradually a plan of
rescue was worked out.
According to the information of the
newcomer, the best way to
save Mr. Petrofsky's brother was
to make the attempt when the
prisoners were marched back
from the mines to the
barracks where they were confined.
"It will be dark
then," said Mr. Borious, "and if you can
hover in your airship near
at hand, and if Mr. Petrofsky can
call out to his brother to
run to him, we can take him up
with us and get away before
the guards know what we are
doing."
"But aren't the
prisoners chained?" asked Tom.
"No, they depend on
guards to prevent escapes."
"Then we'll try that
way," decided the young inventor.
On and on they sailed, the
Falcon working admirably. Verst
after verst was covered, and
finally, one morning, Mr.
Borious, who knew the
country well, from having once been a
prisoner there, said:
"We are now near the
place. If we go any closer we may be
observed. We had better
remain hidden in some grove of trees
so that at nightfall we can
go forth to the rescue."
"But how can we find it
after dark?" asked Ned.
"You can easily tell by
the lights in the barracks," was
the answer. "I can
stand in the pilot house to direct you,
for nearly all these exile
prisons are alike. The prisoners
will march in a long line
from the mine. Then for the
rescue."
It was tedious waiting that
day, but it had to be done,
and to Tom, who was anxious
to effect the rescue, and
proceed to the place of the
winds to try his air glider, it
seemed as if dusk would
never come as they remained in
concealment.
But night finally approached
and then the great airship
went silently aloft, ready
to hover over the prison ground.
Fortunately there was little
wind; and she could be used as
a balloon, thus avoiding the
noise of the motor.
"The next thing I do,
when I get home," remarked Tom, as
they drifted along.
"Will be to make a silent airship. I
think they would be very
useful."
With Mr. Borious in the
pilot house, to point out the way,
Tom steered through the
fast-gathering darkness. The Russian
had soon become used to the
airship, and was not at all
afraid.
"Can you go just where
you want to, as a balloon?" asked
the new guide.
"No, but almost,"
replied Tom. "At the last moment I've
got to take a chance and
start the motor to send us just
where we want to go. That's
why I think a silent airship
would be a great thing. You
could get up on the enemy before
he knew it."
"There are the prison
barracks," said the guide a little
later, his talk being
translated by Mr. Petrofsky. Below and
a little ahead of them could
been seen a cluster of lights.
"Yes, that looks like a
line of prisoners," remarked Ned,
who was peering through a
pair of night glasses.
"Where?" asked Tom
eagerly, and they were pointed out to
him. He took an observation,
and exclaimed:
"There they are, sure
enough. Now if your brother is only
among them, Mr. Petrofsky,
we'll soon have him on board."
"Heaven grant that he
may be there!" said the exile in a
low voice.
A moment later, the Falcon,
meanwhile having been allowed
to drift as close as
possible to the dimly-seen line of
prisoners, Tom set in motion
the great motor, the propeller
blades heating the air
fiercely.
At the sound there was a
shout on the ground below, but
before the excitement had
time to spread, or before any of
the guards could form a
notion of what was about to take
place, Tom had sent his
craft to earth on a sharp slant,
closer to the line of prisoners
than he had dared to hope.
Mr. Petrofsky sprang out on
deck, and in a loud voice
called in Russian:
"Peter! Peter! If you
are there, come here! Come quickly!
It is I, your brother Ivan
who speaks. I have come to save
you--save you in the
wonderful airship of Tom Swift! Come
quickly and we will take you
away! Peter Petrofsky!"
For a moment there was
silence, and then the sound of some
one running rapidly was
borne to the ears of the waiting
ones. It was followed, a
moment later, by angry shouts from
the guards.
"Quick! Quick,
Peter!" cried the brother, "over this way!"
For an instant only the
exile showed a single electric
flash light, that his
brother might see in which direction
to run. The echo of the
approaching footsteps came nearer,
the shouts of the guards
redoubled, and then came the sound
of many men running in
pursuit.
"Hurry, Peter,
hurry!" cried Mr. Petrofsky, and, as he
spoke in Russian the guards,
of course, understood.
Suddenly a rifle shot rang
out, but the weapon seemed to
have been fired in the air.
A moment later a dark figure
clambered aboard the
airship.
"Peter, is it
you?" cried Ivan Petrofsky, hoarsely.
"Yes, brother! But get
away quickly or the whole guard
will be swarming about
here!"
"Praise the dear Lord
you are saved!"
"Is it all right?"
cried Tom, who wanted to make sure they
were saving the right man.
"Yes! Yes, Tom! Go
quickly!" called Ivan Petrofsky, as he
folded his brother in his
arms. A moment later, with a roar,
the Falcon shot away from
the earth, while below sounded
angry cries, confused shouts
and many orders, for the guards
and their officers had never
known of such a daring rescue
as this.
CHAPTER XXII
IN THE HURRICANE
There was a volley of shots
from the prison guards, and
the flashes of the rifles
cut bright slivers of flame in the
darkness, but, so rapidly
did the airship go up, veering off
on a wide slant, under the
skillful guidance of Tom that the
shots did no harm.
"Bless my bullet
pouch!" cried Mr. Damon. "They must be
quite excited."
"Shouldn't
wonder," calmly observed Ned, as he went to
help his chum in managing
the airship. "But it won't do
them any good. We've got our
man."
"And right from under
their noses, too," added Ivan
Petrofsky exultingly.
"This rescue of an exile will go down
in the history of
Russia."
The two exile brothers were
gazing fondly at each other,
for now that the Falcon was
so high, Tom ventured to turn on
the lights.
A moment later the three
Russians were excitedly
conversing, while Tom and
Ned managed the craft, and Mr.
Damon, after listening a
moment to the rapid flow of the
strange language, which
quite fascinated him, hurried to the
galley to prepare a meal for
the rescued one, who had been
taken away before he had had
a chance to get his supper.
His wonder at his startling
and unexpected rescue man well
be imagined, but the joy at
being reunited to his brother
overshadowed everything for
the time being. But when he had
a chance to look about, and
see what a strange craft he was
in, his amazement knew no
bounds, and he was like a child.
He asked countless
questions, and Ivan Petrofsky and Mr.
Borious took turns in
answering them. And from now on, I
shall give the conversation
of the two new Russians just as
if they spoke English,
though of course it had to be
translated by Ivan
Petrofsky, Peter's brother.
If Peter was amazed at being
rescued in an airship, his
wonder grew when he was
served with a well-cooked meal,
while high in the air, and while
flying along at the rate of
fifty miles an hour. He
could not talk enough about it.
By degrees the story of how
Tom and his friends had
started for Russia was told,
and there was added the detail
of how Mr. Borious came to
be picked up.
"But brother Ivan, you
did not come all that distance to
rescue me; did you?"
asked Peter.
"Yes, partly, and
partly to find the platinum mine."
"What? The lost mine
that you and I stumbled upon in that
terrible storm?"
"That is the one,
Peter."
"Then, Tom Swift may as
well return. I doubt if we can
even locate the district
where it was, and if we did find
it, the winds blow so that
even this magnificent ship could
not weather the gales."
"I guess he doesn't
understand about my air glider," said
Tom with a smile, when this
was translated to him. "I wish I
had a chance to put it
together, and show him how it works."
"Oh, it will work all
right," replied Ned, who was very
proud of his friend's
inventive ability.
"Now, what is the next
thing to be done?" asked Tom, a
little later that evening,
when, supper having been served,
they were sitting in the
main cabin, talking over the events
of the past few days.
"I'd like to get on the track of that
platinum treasure."
"And we will do all in
our power to aid you." said Ivan
Petrofsky. "My brother
and I owe much to you--in fact Peter
owes you his life; do you
not?" and he turned to him.
"I do," was the
firm answer.
"Oh, nonsense!"
exclaimed Tom, who did not like to he
praised. "I didn't do
much."
"Much! You do not call
taking me away from that place--
that sulphur mine--that
horrible prison barrack with the
cruel guards--you do not
call that much? My, friend," spoke
the Russian solemnly,
"no one on earth has done so much for
me as you have, and if it is
the power of man to show you
where that lost mine is, my
brother and I will do so!"
"Agreed," spoke
Ivan quietly.
"Then what plans shall
we make?" asked Tom, after a little
more talk. "Are we to
go about indiscriminately, or is there
any possible way of getting
on the trail?"
"My brother and I will
try and decide on a definite
route," spoke Ivan
Petrofsky. "It is some time since I have
seen him, and longer since
we accidently found the mine
together, but we will
consult each other, and, if possible
make some sort of a
map."
This was done the next day,
the present maps aboard the
Falcon being consulted, and
the brothers comparing notes.
They began to lay out a
stretch of country in which it was
most likely the lost mine
lay. It took several days to do
this, for sometimes one
brother would forget some point, and
again the other would. But
at last they agreed on certain
facts.
"This is the nearest we
can come to it," said Ivan
Petrofsky to Tom. "The
lost platinum mine lies somewhere
between the city of Iakutsk
and the first range of the
Iablonnoi mountains. Those
are the northern and southern
boundaries. As for the
western one, it is most likely the
Lena river, and the eastern
one the Amaga river. So you see
you have quite a large stretch
of country to search, Tom
Swift."
"Yes, I should say I
had," agreed the young inventor. But
I have had harder tasks. Now
that I know where to head for
I'll get there as soon as
possible."
"And what will you do
when you arrive?" asked Ned.
"Fly about in the
Falcon, in ever-widening circles,
starting as near the centre
of that area as possible,"
replied Tom. "And as
soon as I run into a steady hurricane
I'll know that I'm at the
place of the big winds, and I'll
get out my glider, for I'll
be pretty sure to be near the
place."
"Bless my gas
meter!" cried Mr. Damon. "That's the talk!"
Tom put his plan into
operation at once, by heading the
nose of his craft for the
desolate region mapped out by the
Russian brothers.
The days that followed were
filled with weary searching.
It was like the time when
they had sought for the plain of
the great ruined Temple in
Mexico, that they might locate
the underground city of
gold. Only in this case they had no
such landmark as a great
Aztec ruin to guide them.
What they were seeking for
was something unseen, but which
could be felt--a mysterious
wind--a wind that might be
encountered any time, and
which might send the Falcon to the
earth a wreck.
The Russian brothers,
staggering about in the storm, had
seen the mine under
different conditions from what it would
be viewed now. Then it was
winter in Siberia. Now it was
summer, though it was not
very warm.
On and on sailed the Falcon.
The weather could not have
been better, but for once
Tom wanted bad weather. He wanted
a blow--the harder the
better--and all eyes anxiously
watched the anemometer, or
wind gage. But ever it revolved
lazily about in the gentle
breeze.
"Oh, for a
hurricane!" cried Tom.
He got his wish sooner than
he anticipated. It was about
two days after this, when
they were going about in a great
circle, about two hundred
miles from the imaginary centre of
the district in which the
mine lay, that, as Mr. Damon was
getting dinner a dish he was
carrying to the table was
suddenly whisked out of his
hand.
"I say, what's the
matter?" he cried. "Bless my--"
But he had no time to say
more. The airship fairly stood
on end, and then, turning
completely about, was rapidly
driven in the opposite
direction, though her propellers were
working rapidly.
"What's up?"
yelled Ned.
"We are
capsizing!" shouted Ivan Petrofsky, and indeed it
seemed so, for the airship
was being forced over.
"I guess we've struck
what we want!" cried Tom. "We're in
a hurricane all right! This
is the place of the big wind!
Now for my air glider, if I
can get the airship to earth
without being wrecked! Ned,
lend a hand! We've got our work
cut out for us now!"
CHAPTER XXIII
THE LOST MINE
For several moments it
seemed as if disaster would
overtake the little band of
platinum-hunters. In spite of
all that Tom and Ned could
do, the Falcon was whipped about
like a feather in the wind.
Sometimes she was pointing her
nose to the clouds, and
again earthward. Again she would be
whirling about in the grip
of the hurricane, like some
fantastic dancer, and again
she would roll dangerously. Had
she turned turtle it
probably would have been the last of
her and of all on board.
"Yank that deflecting
lever as far down as it will go!"
yelled Tom to his chum.
"I am. She won't go any
farther."
"All right, hold her
so. Mr. Damon, let all the gas out of
the bag. I want to be as
heavy as possible, and get to earth
as soon as we can."
"Bless my comb and
brush!" cried the odd man. "I don't
know what's going to become
of us."
"You will know, pretty
soon, if the gas isn't let out!"
retorted Tom grimly, and
then Mr. Damon hastened to the
generator compartment, and
opened the emergency outlet.
Finally, by crowding on all
the possible power, so that
the propellers and
deflecting rudders forced the craft down,
Tom was able to get out of
the grip of the hurricane, and
landed just beyond the zone
of it on the ground.
"Whew! That was a
narrow squeak!" cried Ned, as he got
out. "How'd you do it,
Tom?"
"I hardly know myself.
But it's evident that we're on the
right spot now."
"But the wind has
stopped blowing," said Mr. Damon. "It
was only a gust."
"It was the worst kind
of a gust I ever want to see,"
declared the young inventor.
"My air glider ought to work to
perfection in that. If you
think the wind has died out, Mr.
Damon, just walk in that
direction," and Tom pointed off to
the left.
"Bless my umbrella, I
will," was the reply and the odd man
started off. He had not gone
far, before he was seen to put
his hand to his cap. Still
he kept on.
"He's getting into the
blow-zone," said Tom in a low
voice.
The next moment Mr. Damon
was seen to stagger and fall,
while his cap was whisked
from his head, and sent high into
the air, almost instantly
disappearing from sight.
"Some wind that,"
murmured Ned, in rather awe-struck
tones.
"That's so,"
agreed his chum. "But we'd better help Mr.
Damon," for that
gentleman was slowly crawling back, not
caring to trust himself on
his feet, for the wind had
actually carried him down by
its force.
"Bless my
anemometer!" he gasped, when Tom and Ned had
given him a hand up.
"What happened?"
"It was the great
wind," explained Tom. "It blows only in
a certain zone, like a draft
down a chimney. It is like a
cyclone, only that goes in a
circle. This is a straight
wind, but the path of it
seems to be as sharply marked as a
trail through the forest. I
guess we're here all right. Does
this location look familiar
to you?" he asked of the Russian
brothers.
"I can't say that it
does," answered Ivan. "But then it
was winter when we were
here."
"And, another
thing," put in Peter. "That wind zone is
quite wide. The mine may be
in the middle, or near the other
edge."
"That's so,"
agreed Tom. "We'll soon see what we can do.
Come on, Ned, let's get the
air glider out and put her
together. She'll have a test
as is a test, now."
I shall not describe the
tedious work of re-assembling Tom
Swift's latest invention in
the air craft line--his glider.
Sufficient to say that it
was taken out from where it had
been stored in separate
pieces on board the Falcon, and put
together on the plain that
marked the beginning of the wind
zone.
It was a curious fact that
twenty feet away from the path
of the wind scarcely a
breeze could be felt, while to
advance a little way into it
meant that one would at once be
almost carried off his feet.
Tom tested the speed of it
one day with a special
anemometer, and found that
only a few hundred feet inside
the zone the wind blew
nearly one hundred miles an hour.
"What is it like
inside, I wonder?" asked Ned.
"It must be
terrific," was his chum's opinion.
"Dare you risk it,
Tom?"
"Of course. The harder
it blows the better the glider
works. In fact I can't make
much speed in a hundred-mile
wind for with us all on
board the craft will be heavy, and
you must remember that I
depend on the wind alone to give me
motion."
"What do you think
causes the wind to blow so peculiarly
here Tom?" went on Ned.
"Oh, it must be caused
by high mountain ranges on either
side, or the effects of heat
and cold, the air being
evaporated over a certain
area because of great heat, say a
volcano, or something like
that; though I don't know that
they have volcanoes here. That
creates a vacuum, and other
air rushes in to fill the
vacant space. That's all wind
is, anyhow, air rushing in
to fill a vacuum, or low pressure
zone, for you remember that
nature abhors a vacuum."
It took nearly a week to
assemble the Vulture, as Tom had
named his latest craft, from
the fact that it could hover in
the air motionless, like
that great bird. At last it was
completed and then, weights
being taken aboard to steady it,
all was ready for the test.
Tom would have liked to have
taken all his passengers in
the glider, for it would work
better then, but the three
Russians were timid, though they
promised to get aboard after
the trial.
The test came off early one
morning, Tom, Ned and Mr.
Damon being the only ones
aboard. Bags of sand represented
the others. The glider was
wheeled to the edge of the wind
zone and they took their
places in the car. It was hard
work. for the gale, that had
never ceased blowing for an
instant since they found its
zone, was very strong. But the
glider remained motionless
in it, for the wing planes, the
rudders, and equalizing
weights had been adjusted to make
the strain of the wind
neutral.
"All ready?" asked
Tom, when his chum and his friend were
in the enclosed car of the
glider.
"As ready as I ever
shall be," answered Ned.
"Bless my suspenders!
Let her go, Tom, and have it over
with!" cried the odd
man.
The young inventor pulled a
lever, and almost instantly
the glider darted forward. A
moment later it soared aloft,
and the three Russians
cheered. But their voices were lost
in the roar of the
hurricane, as Tom sent his craft higher
and higher.
It worked perfectly, and he
could direct it almost
anywhere. The wind acted as
the motive power, the bending
and warping wings, and the rudders
and weights controlling
its force.
"I'm going higher, and
see if I can remain stationary!"
yelled Tom in Ned's ear. His
chum only nodded. Mr. Damon was
seated on a bench, clinging
to the sides of it as if he
feared he would fall off.
Higher and higher went the
Vulture, ever higher, until,
all at once, Tom pulled on
another lever and she was still.
There she hung in the air,
the wind rushing through her
planes, but the glider
herself as still and quiet as though
she rested on the ground in
a calm. She hardly moved a foot
in either direction, and yet
the wind, as evidenced by the
anemometer was howling along
at a hundred and twenty miles
an hour!
"Success!" cried
Tom. "Success! Now we can lie stationary
in any spot, and spy out the
land through our telescope. Now
we will find the lost
platinum mine!"
"Well, I'm not
deaf," responded Ned with a smile, for Tom
had fairly yelled as he had
at the start, and there was no
need of this now, for though
the wind blew harder than ever
it was not opposed to any of
the weights or planes, and
there was only a gentle
humming sound as it rushed through
the open spaces of the queer
craft.
Tom gave his glider other
and more severe tests, and she
answered every one. Then he
came to earth.
"Now we'll begin the
search," he said, and preparations
were made to that end. The
Russians, now that they had seen
how well the craft worked,
were not afraid to trust
themselves in her.
As I have explained, there
was an enclosed car, capable of
holding six. In this were
stores, supplies and food
sufficient for several days.
Tom's plan was to leave the
airship anchored on the edge
of the wind zone, as a sort of
base of supplies or
headquarters. From there he intended to
go off from time to time in
the wind-swept area to look for
the lost mine.
There were weary days that
followed. Hour after hour was
spent in the air in the
glider, the whole party being
aboard. Observation after
observation was taken, sometimes a
certain strata of wind
enabling them to get close enough to
the earth to use their eyes,
while again they had to use the
telescopes. They covered a
wide section but as day after day
passed, and they were no
nearer their goal, even Tom
optimistic as he usually
was, began to have a tired and
discouraged look.
"Don't you see anything
like the place where you found the
mine?" he asked of the
exile brothers.
They could only shake their
heads. Indeed their task was
not easy, for to recognize
the place again was difficult.
More than a week passed.
They had been back and forth to
their base of supplies at
the airship, often staying away
over night, once remaining
aloft all through the dark hours
in the glider, in a fierce
gale which prevented a landing.
They ate and slept on board,
and seldom descended unless at
or near the place where they
had left the Falcon. Once they
completely crossed the zone
of wind, and came to a calm
place on the other side. It
was as wild and desolate as the
other edge.
Nearly two weeks had passed,
and Tom was almost ready to
give up and go back home. He
had at least accomplished part
of his desire, to rescue the
exile, and he had even done
better than originally
intended, for there was Mr. Borious
who bad also been saved, and
it was the intention of the
young inventor to take him
to the United States.
"But the platinum
treasure has me beat, I guess," said Tom
grimly. "We can't seem
to get a trace of it."
Night was coming on, and he
had half determined to head
back for the airship. Ivan
Petrofsky was peering anxiously
down at the desolate land,
over which they were gliding. He
and his brother took turns
at this.
They were not far above the
earth, but landmarks, such as
had to be depended on to
locate the mine, could not readily
be observed without the
glass. Mr. Damon, with a pair of
ordinary field glasses, was
doing all he could to pick out
likely spots, though it was
doubtful if he would know the
place if he saw it.
However, as chance willed
it, he was instrumental in
bringing the quest to a
close, and most unexpectedly. Peter
Petrofsky was relieving his
brother at the telescope, when
the odd man, who had not
taken his eyes from the field
glasses, suddenly uttered an
exclamation.
"Bless my tooth-brush!"
he cried. "That's a most desolate
place down there. A lot of
trees blown down around a lake
that looks as black as
ink."
"What's that!"
cried Ivan Petrofsky. "A lake as black as
ink? Where?"
"We just passed
it!" replied Mr. Damon.
"Then put back there,
as soon as you can, Tom!" called the
Russian. "I want to
look at that place."
With a long, graceful sweep
the young inventor sent the
glider back over the course.
Ivan Petrofsky glued his eyes
to the telescope. He picked
out the spot Mr. Damon had
referred to, and a moment
later cried:
"That's it! That's near
the lost platinum mine! "We've
found it again,
Tom--everybody! Don't you remember, Peter,"
he said turning to his
brother, "when we were lost in the
snow we crawled in among a tangle
of trees to get out of the
blast. There was a sheet of
white snow near them, and you
broke through into water. I
pulled you out. That must have
been a lake, though it was
lightly frozen over then. I
believe this is the lost
mine. Go down, Tom! Go down!"
"I certainly
will!" cried the youth, and pulling on the
descending lever he shunted
the glider to earth.
CHAPTER XXIV
THE LEAKING TANKS
Like a bird descending from
some dizzy height, the Vulture
landed close to the pool of
black water. It was a small lake
and the darkness must have
been caused by its depth, for
later when they took some
out in a glass it was as clear as
a crystal. Then, too, there
might have been black rocks on
the bottom.
"Can it he possible
that we are here at last?" cried Tom,
above the noise of the gale,
for the wind was blowing at a
terrific rate. But our
friends knew better now how to adjust
themselves to it, and the
lake was down in a valley, the
sides of which cut off the power
of the gale. As for the
glider it was only necessary
to equalize the balance and it
would remain stationary in
any wind.
"This is the place!
This is the place!" cried Ivan
Petrofsky. "Don't you
remember, Peter?"
"Indeed I do! I have
good cause to! This is where we found
the platinum!"
"Bless my soul!"
cried Mr. Damon. "Where is it, in the
lake?"
"The mine itself is
just beyond that barrier of broken and
twisted trees," replied
the elder Russian brother. "It is an
irregular opening in the
ground, as though once, centuries
ago, an ancient people tried
to get out the precious metal.
We will go to it at
once."
"But it is getting
late," objected Ned.
"No matter," said
Tom. "If we find any platinum we'll stay
here all night, and longer
if necessary to get a good
supply. This is better than
the city of gold, for we're in
the open."
"I should say we
were," observed Mr. Damon, as he bent to
the blast, which was strong,
sheltered even as they were.
"Will it be safe to remain
all night?" asked Mr. Borious,
with a glance about the
desolate country.
"We have plenty of
food," replied Tom, "and a good place
to stay, in the car of the
glider. I don't believe we'll be
attacked."
"No, not here,"
said the elder Petrofsky. "But we still
have to go back across
Siberia to escape."
"We'll do it!"
cried Tom. "Now for the platinum treasure!"
They went forward, and it
was no easy work. For the wind
still New with tremendous
force though nothing like what it
did higher up. And the
ground was uneven. They had to cling
to each other and it was
very evident that no airship, not
even the powerful Falcon,
could have reached the place. Only
an air glider would answer.
It took them half an hour to
get to the opening of the
ancient mine, and by that
time it was nearly dark. But Tom
had thought to bring
electric torches, such as he had used
in the underground city of
gold, and they dispelled the
gloom of the small cavern.
"Will you go in?"
asked Ivan Petrofsky, when they had come
to the place. He looked at
Tom.
"Go in? Of course I'll
go in!" cried our hero, stepping
forward. The others
followed. For some time they went on,
and saw no traces of the
precious metal. Then Ned uttered a
cry, as he saw some dull,
grayish particles imbedded in the
earth walls of the shaft.
"Look!" he cried.
Tom was at his chum's side
in a moment
"That's platinum!"
cried the young inventor. "And of the
very highest grade! But the
lumps are very small."
"There are larger ones
beyond," said the younger Russian
brother.
Forward they pressed, and a
moment later. coming around a
turn in the cavern where
some earth had fallen away,
evidently recently, Tom
could not repress a cry of joy. For
there, in plain sight, were
many large lumps of the valuable
metal, in as pure a state as
it is ever found. For it is
always mixed with other
metals or chemicals.
"Look at that!"
cried Tom. "Look at that! Lumps as large
as an egg!" and he dug
some out with a small pick he bad
brought along, and stuffed
them into his pocket.
"Bless my check
book!" cried Mr. Damon, "and that stuff is
as valuable as gold!"
"More so!" cried
Tom enthusiastically.
"Oh, here's a whopping
big one!" cried Ned. I'll bet it
weighs ten pounds."
"More than that!"
cried Tom, as he ran over and began
digging it out, and they
found later that it did. Platinum
is usually found in small
granules, but there are records of
chunks being found weighing
twenty pounds while others, the
size of pigeons' eggs, are
not uncommon.
"Say, this is
great!" yelled Ned, discovering another
large piece, and digging it
out.
"I am glad we could
lead you to it," said the elder
Russian brother. "It is
a small return for what you did for
us!"
"Nonsense!" cried
Tom. "These must be a king's ransom
here. Everybody dig it out!
Get all you can."
They were all busy, but the
light of the two torches Tom
had brought was not
sufficient for good and efficient work,
so after getting several
thousand dollars worth of the
precious metal, they decided
to postpone operations until
morning, and come with more
lights.
They were at the work soon
after breakfast, the night in
the air glider having passed
without incident. The treasure
of platinum proved even richer
than the Russians had
thought, and it was no
wonder the Imperial government had
tried so hard to locate it,
or get on the trail of those who
sought it.
"And it's all good
stuff!" cried Tom eagerly. "Not like
that low-grade gold of the
underground city. I can make my
own terms when I sell
this."
For three days our friends
dug and dug in that platinum
mine, so many years lost to
man, and when they got ready to
leave they had indeed a
king's ransom with them. But it was
to be equally divided. Tom
insisted on this, as his Russian
friends had been
instrumental in finding it. Toward the end
of the excavation large
pieces were scarce, and it was
evident that the mine was
what is called a "lode."
"Well, shall we go back
now?" asked Tom one day, after the
finish of their mining
operations. The work was
comparatively simple, as the
platinum lumps had merely to be
dug out of the sides of the
cave. But the loneliness and
dreariness of the place was
telling on them all.
"Can't we carry any
more?" asked Ned.
"We could, but it might
not be safe. I don't want to take
on too much weight, as my
glider isn't as stable as the
airship. But we have plenty
of the metal.
"Indeed we have,"
agreed Ivan Petrofsky. "Much of mine and
my brother's will go toward
helping relieve the sufferings
of the Siberian
exiles," he added.
"And mine, too,"
said Alexis Borious.
They started back early the
next morning in a more
terrific gale than in any
the glider had yet flown. But she
proved herself a stanch
craft, and soon they were at the
place where they had left
the airship. It was undisturbed.
Four days were spent in
taking apart the glider and
packing it on board the
Falcon. Then, with the platinum
safely stored away Tom, with
a last look at the desolate
land that had been so kind
to them, sent his craft on her
homeward way.
It was when they were near
the city of Pirtchina, on the
Obi river, that what might
have proved a disastrous accident
occurred. They were flying
along high, and at great speed,
for Tom wanted to make all
the distance he could, to get
out of Siberia the more
quickly. They had had a fair passage
so far, and were
congratulating themselves that they would
soon be in civilization again.
Suddenly, Mr. Damon, who had
been on the after deck,
taking observations through
a telescope, came running
forward, crying out:
"Tom! Tom! What is that
water dripping from the back part
of the airship?"
"Water?" exclaimed
Tom. "No water is dripping from there."
"Come and look,"
advised Mr. Damon.
The young inventor raced
back with him. He saw a thin,
white stream trickling down
from the lower part of the
craft. Tom sniffed the air
suspiciously.
"Gasolene! It's
gasolene!" he cried. "We must have a leak
in the supply tanks!"
He dashed toward the reserve
storeroom, and at that
moment, with a suddenness
that was startling, the motor
stopped and the Falcon
lurched toward the earth.
CHAPTER XXV
HOMEWARD BOUND--CONCLUSION
"All right!"
yelled Ned, as soon as he heard Tom's cry.
"I've got her under
control. We'll volplane down."
"Is it dangerous? Are
we in danger?" asked Peter Petrofsky
of his brother, in Russian.
"I guess there's no
danger, where Tom Swift's concerned,"
was the answer. "I have
not volplaned much, but it will be
all right I think."
And it was, for with Ned
Newton to guide the craft, while
Tom did his best to stop the
leak, the craft came gently to
earth on the outskirts of a
fairly large Siberian city.
Almost instantly the Falcon
was surrounded by a curious
throng.
"You had better keep
inside," said Ivan Petrofsky to his
brother and Mr. Borious.
"Descriptions of you are probably
out broadcast by now, but I
am still sufficiently disguised,
I think."
"But what is to be
done?" demanded the younger Russian
brother. "If the
gasolene is gone, how can we leave here?"
"Trust Tom Swift for
that," was the reply. "Keep out of
sight now, there is a large
crowd outside."
Tom came from the tank room.
There was a despondent look
on his face.
"It's all gone--every
drop," he said. "That's what made
the motor stop."
"What's gone?"
asked Mr. Damon.
"The gasolene. We
sprung a leak in the main tank, somehow,
and it all flowed out while
we were flying along."
"Haven't you any
more?"
"Not a bit. I was
drawing on the reserve tank, hoping to
get to civilization before I
needed more. But its too late
now. We will have to--"
"Bless my snow
shoes!" cried Mr. Damon. "Don't say we'll
have to stay here--in
Siberia! Don't say that. My wife--"
"No, we won't have to
stay here if we can get a supply of
kerosene," interrupted
Tom. "The motor will burn that. The
only trouble is that we may
be detained. The authorities
probably know us by this
time, and are on the watch."
"Then get it before
they know we are here," advised Ned.
"I'll try," said
Tom, and he at once conferred with the
elder Petrofsky. The latter
said he was sure kerosene could
be had in town, and, rather
than risk going in themselves,
they hired a wagoner who
agreed, for liberal pay, to go and
return with a quantity.
Until then there was nothing to do
but wait.
Meanwhile the crowd of
curiosity seekers grew. They
thronged around the airship,
some of them meddling with
various devices, until Tom
had to order them away with
gestures.
One particularly inquisitive
man insisted on pulling or
twisting everything, until
he happened to touch a couple of
live wires, giving himself
quite a shock, and then he ran
away howling. But still the
crowd increased, and at last Mr.
Petrofsky said:
"I don't like this,
Tom?"
"Why not?" They
were all inside the craft, looking out and
waiting for the return of
the man with the kerosene. The
leak in the tank had proved
to be a small one, and had
quickly been soldered. It
had been open a long time, which
accounted for the large
amount of gasolene escaping. "What
don't you like, Mr.
Petrofsky?"
"So many men
surrounding us. I believe some of them are
officers dressed in
civilians' clothes, and a Russian
officer never does that
unless he has some object."
"And you think the
object is--?"
"To capture us."
"If it was that,
wouldn't they have done it long ago--when
we first came down?"
"No, they are evidently
waiting for something perhaps for
some high official, without
whose orders they dare do
nothing. Russia is overrun
with officialdom."
And a little later Ivan
Petrofsky's suspicion proved true.
There arrived a man in
uniform, who spoke fairly good
English, and who politely
asked Tom if he would not delay
the start of the airship,
again, until the governor could
arrive from his country
place to see it.
"We know you are going
to leave us," said the Russian with
a smile, "for you have
sent for kerosene. But please wait."
"If your governor comes
soon we'll wait," replied Tom.
"But we are in a hurry.
I wish that kerosene fellow would
get a move on," he
murmured.
"Oh, he will doubtless
be here soon," said the officer.
"Might I be permitted
to come aboard and wait for my chief?"
"Sorry, but it's not
allowed," replied our hero, straining
his eyes down the road for a
sight of the wagoner. At last
he came, and Tom breathed
easier.
But the crowd was bigger,
and some of the men, though
poorly dressed, seemed to be
persons in authority. Tom had
no doubt but what there was
a plot afoot to detain him, and
arrest the exiles, and that
there were disguised soldiers in
the throng. But they could
not act without the governor's
orders, and he was probably
on his way with all haste.
"Lively now, get that
kerosene in the tanks!" cried Tom to
the man, motioning in lieu
of using Russian. The youth was
not going to meet the
governor if he could help it.
Now it was a curious thing,
but the more that wagoner and
his helpers seemed to try to
hurry, and pour the oil from
the cans into the
tank-opening of the airship, the slower
they worked. They got in
each others' way, dropped some
cans, spilled others, and in
general made such poor work at
it that Tom saw there was
something in the wind.
"Ned!" he
exclaimed, "they're doing all they can to detain
us. We've got to put that
oil in ourselves. Just as we did
the gasolene in France. It's
the same sort of a delay game."
"Right, Tom! I'm with
you."
"And I'll warn the
crowd back, by telling them we are
likely to blow up any
minute!" added Ivan Petrofsky, which
warning he shouted in
Russian a moment later.
Backward leaped the throng,
as though a bomb bad been
thrown into their midst,
even the supposed officers joining
in the retreat. The oil
wagon was now easy of access, and
Tom and Ned, with Mr. Damon
to aid them, hastened toward it.
Then the work of filling the
tanks went on in something like
good old, United States
fashion.
The last gallon of kerosene
had been put aboard, and Tom
and Ned with Mr. Damon, had
climbed on deck, when the gaily
uniformed officer, who had
requested the delay, came riding
up furiously.
"Hold! Hold! If you
please!" he cried. "The governor has
come. He wants to see
you."
"Too late!"
answered Tom. "Give him our best regards and
ask him to some to the
United States if he wants to see us.
Sorry we haven't cards
handy. Ned, take the pilot house, and
shoot her up sharp when you
get the signal. I'm going to run
the motor. I don't know just
how she'll behave on the
kerosene."
"You must remain!"
angrily cried the officer.
"The United States
doesn't take 'must' from anybody, from
the Czar down!" cried
Tom as he disappeared into the motor
room. The window was open,
and the youth turned on the power
the official cried again to
him:
"Halt! Here comes the
governor! I declared you arrested by
his orders, and in the name
of the Czar!"
"Nothing doing!"
yelled Tom, and then, looking from the
window, he saw approaching a
troop of Cossacks, in the midst
of whom rode a man in a
brilliant uniform--evidently the
governor.
"Stop! Stop!"
cried the official.
"Here we go, Ned!"
yelled Tom, and turning on more power
the Falcon arose swiftly,
before the very eyes of the angry
governor, and his staff of
Cossack soldiers.
Up and up she went, faster
and faster, the motors working
well on the kerosene. Higher
and higher. The governor and
his soldiers were directly
below her now.
"Stop! Stop! You must
stop. The Imperial governor orders
it!" yelled the
officer, evidently his Excellency's aide-de-
camp.
"We can't hear
you!" shouted Tom, waving his hand from the
motor room window, and then,
turning on still more power he
flew over the city, taking
his friends and the valuable
supply of platinum with him.
So surprised were the soldiers
that they did not fire a
shot, but had they done so it is
doubtful if much damage
could have been done.
"And now for
home!" cried Tom, and homeward hound the
Falcon was after a perilous
trip through two storms. But
she weathered them well.
In due season they reached Paris
again, and now, having no
reason for concealment, they
flew boldly down, to change
what remained of the
kerosene for gasolene, as the motor
worked better on that. The
secret police learned that the
exiles were aboard, but they
could do nothing, as the
offenses were political
ones, and so Tom kept his friends
safe.
Then they started on the
long voyage across the Atlantic,
and though they had one bad
experience in a storm over that
mighty ocean, they got
safely home to Shopton in due season.
There is little more to
tell. The platinum proved to be
even more valuable than Tom
had expected. He could have sold
it all for a large sum, but
he preferred to keep most of
what he had for his
inventive work, and he used considerable
of it in his machinery. Ned
disposed of his, selling Tom
some at a lower price than
market quotations, and the
Russians got a good price
for theirs, turning the money into
the fund to help their
fellow exiles. Mr. Damon also made a
good donation to the cause,
as did Tom and Ned.
Mr. Petrofsky and his
brother, with the other exile,
joined friends in New York,
and promised to come and see Tom
when they could.
"Well, I suppose you'll
take a long vacation now," said
Mary Nestor, to Tom, when he
called on her one evening to
present her a unique ring,
with the stones set in some of
the platinum he had dug in
the Siberian mine.
"Vacation? I have no
time for vacations!" said the young
inventor. "I'm soon
going to work on my silent airship, and
on some other things I have
in mind. I want more
adventures."
"Oh, you greedy
boy!" exclaimed Mary with a laugh.
And what adventures Tom had
next will be found in the next
book of this series, which
will be entitled, "Tom Swift in
Captivity; Or, a Daring
Escape by Airship."
Tom had several offers to
give exhibitions in his air
glider, from aviation
committees at various meets, but he
declined.
"I haven't time,"
he declared. "I'm too busy."
"You ought to
rest," his chum Ned advised him.
"'Bless my alarm
clock!' as Mr. Damon would say,"
exclaimed Tom. "The
best rest is new work," and then he
began sketching his ideas
for a silent motor craft, during
which we will take leave of
him for a while.
End.