The Tom Swift Megapack

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The Tom Swift Megapack Page 7

by Victor Appleton


  “I shouldn’t think you’d find anything to shoot this time of year,” remarked Tom.

  “I don’t expect to,” answered the hunter, who had introduced himself as Theodore Duncan. “But I have just purchased a new gun, and I wanted to try it. I expect to do considerable hunting this fall, and so I’m getting ready for it.”

  “Do you live near here?”

  “Well, about ten miles away, on the other side of Lake Carlopa, but I am fond of long walks in the woods. If you ever get to Waterford I wish you’d come and see me, Mr. Swift. I have heard of your father.”

  “I will, Mr. Duncan; but if I don’t get something to repair my machine with I’m not likely to get anywhere right away.”

  “Well, I wish I could help you, but I haven’t the least ingenuity when it comes to machinery. Now if I could help you track down that tramp—”

  “Oh, no, thank you, I’d rather not have anything more to do with him.”

  “If I caught sight of him now,” resumed the hunter, “I fancy I could make him halt, and, perhaps, give you back the wire. I’m a pretty good shot, even if this is a new gun. I’ve been practicing at improvised targets all day.”

  “No; the less I have to do with him, the better I shall like it,” answered Tom, “though I’m much obliged to you. I’ll manage somehow until I get to Pompville.”

  He started off again, the hunter disappearing in the woods, whence the sound of his gun was again heard.

  “He’s a queer chap,” murmured Tom, “but I like him. Perhaps I may see him when I go to Waterford, if I ever do.”

  Tom was destined to see the hunter again, at no distant time, and under strange circumstances. But now the lad’s whole attention was taken up with the difficulty in which he found himself. Vainly musing on what object the tramp could have had in breaking off the wire, the young inventor trudged on.

  “I guess he was one of the gang after dad’s invention,” thought Tom, “and he must have wanted to hinder me from getting to Albany, though why I can’t imagine.” With a dubious shake of his head Tom proceeded. It was hard work pushing the heavy machine through the sand, and he was puffing before he had gone very, far.

  “I certainly am up against it,” he murmured. “But if I can get a bit of wire in Pompville I’ll be all right. If I can’t—”

  Just then Tom saw something which caused him to utter an exclamation of delight.

  “That’s the very thing!” he cried. “Why didn’t I think of it before?”

  Leaving his motor-cycle standing against a tree Tom hurried to a fence that separated the road from a field. The fence was a barbedwire one, and in a moment Tom had found a broken strand.

  “Guess no one will care if I take a piece of this,” he reasoned. “It will answer until I can get more. I’ll have it in place in a jiffy!”

  It did not take long to get his pliers from his toolbag and snip off a piece of the wire. Untwisting it he took out the sharp barbs, and then was ready to attach it to the binding posts of the battery box and the spark plug.

  “Hold on, though!” he exclaimed as he paused in the work. “It’s got to be insulated, or it will vibrate against the metal of the machine and short circuit. I have it! My handkerchief! I s’pose Mrs. Baggert will kick at tearing up a good one, but I can’t help it.”

  Tom took a spare handkerchief from the bundle in which he had a few belongings carried with the idea of spending the night at an Albany hotel, and he was soon wrapping strips of linen around the wire, tying them with pieces of string.

  “There!” he exclaimed at length. “That’s insulated good enough, I guess. Now to fasten it on and start.”

  The young inventor, who was quick with tools, soon had the improvised wire in place. He tested the spark and found that it was almost as good as when the regular copper conductor was in place. Then, having taken a spare bit of the barbed-wire along in case of another emergency, he jumped on the motor-cycle, pedaled it until sufficient speed was attained, and turned on the power.

  “That’s the stuff!” he cried as the welcome explosions sounded. “I guess I’ve fooled Happy Harry! I’ll get to Albany pretty nearly on time, anyhow. But that tramp surely had me worried for a while.”

  He rode into Pompville, and on inquiring in a plumbing shop managed to get a bit of copper wire that answered better than did the galvanized piece from the fence. The readjustment was quickly made, and he was on his way again. As it was getting close to noon he stopped near a little spring outside of Pompville and ate a sandwich, washing it down with the cold water. Then he started for Centreford.

  As he was coming into the city he heard an automobile behind him. He steered to one side of the road to give the big car plenty of room to pass, but it did not come on as speedily as he thought it would. He looked back and saw that it was going to stop near him. Accordingly he shut off the power of his machine.

  “Is this the road to Centreford?” asked one of the travelers in the auto.

  “Straight ahead,” answered the lad.

  At the sound of his voice one of the men in the big touring car leaned forward and whispered something to one on the front seat. The second man nodded, and looked closely at Tom. The youth, in turn, stared at the men. He could not distinguish their faces, as they had on auto goggles.

  “How many miles is it?” asked the man who had whispered, and at the sound of his voice Tom felt a vague sense that he had heard it before.

  “Three,” answered the young inventor, and once more he saw the men whisper among themselves.

  “Thanks,” spoke the driver of the car, and he threw in the gears. As the big machine darted ahead the goggles which one of the men wore slipped off. Tom had a glimpse of his face.

  “Anson Morse!” he exclaimed. “If that isn’t the man who was sneaking around dad’s motor shop he’s his twin brother! I wonder if those aren’t the men who are after the patent model? I must be on my guard!” and Tom, watching the car fade out of sight on the road ahead of him, slowly started his motor-cycle. He was much puzzled and alarmed.

  CHAPTER XIII

  CAUGHT IN A STORM

  The more Tom tried to reason out the cause of the men’s actions, the more he dwelt upon his encounter with the tramp, and the harder he endeavored to seek a solution of the queer puzzle, the more complicated it seemed. He rode on until he saw in a valley below him the buildings of the town of Centreford, and, with a view of them, a new idea came into his mind.

  “I’ll go get a good dinner,” he decided, “and perhaps that will help me to think more clearly. That’s what dad always does when he’s puzzling over an invention.” He was soon seated in a restaurant, where he ate a substantial dinner. “I’m just going to stop puzzling over this matter,” he decided. “I’ll push an to Albany and tell the lawyer, Mr. Crawford. Perhaps he can advise me.”

  Once this decision was made Tom felt better.

  “That’s just what I needed,” he thought; “some one to shift the responsibility upon. I’ll let the lawyers do the worrying. That’s what they’re paid for. Now for Albany, and I hope I don’t have to stop, except for supper, until I get there. I’ve got to do some night riding, but I’ve got a powerful lamp, and the roads from now on are good.”

  Tom was soon on his way again. The highway leading to Albany was a hard, macadam one, and he fairly flew along the level stretches.

  “This is making good time,” he thought. “I won’t be so very late, after all; that is, if nothing delays me.”

  The young inventor looked up into the sky. The sun, which had been shining brightly all day, was now hidden behind a mass of hazy clouds, for which the rider was duly grateful, as it was becoming quite warm.

  “It’s more like summer than I thought,” said Tom to himself. “I shouldn’t be surprised if we got rain tomorrow.”

  Another look at the sky confirmed him in this belief, and he had not gone on many miles farther when his opinion was suddenly changed. This was brought about by a dull rumble in the west
, and Tom noticed that a bank of low-lying clouds had formed, the black, inky masses of vapor being whirled upward as if by some powerful blast.

  “Guess my storm is going to arrive ahead of time,” he said. “I’d better look for shelter.”

  With a suddenness that characterizes summer showers, the whole sky became overcast. The thunder increased, and the flashes of lightning became more frequent and dazzling. A wind sprang up and blew clouds of dust in Tom’s face.

  “It certainly is going to be a thunder storm,” he admitted. “I’m bound to be delayed now, for the roads will be mucky. Well, there’s no help for it. If I get to Albany before midnight I’ll he doing well.”

  A few drops of rain splashed on his hands, and as he looked up to note the state of the sky others fell in his face. They were big drops, and where they splashed on the road they formed little globules of mud.

  “I’ll head for that big tree,” thought Tom “It will give me some shelter. I’ll wait there—” His words were interrupted by a deafening crash of thunder which followed close after a blinding flash. “No tree for mine!” murmured Tom. “I forgot that they’re dangerous in a storm. I wonder where I can stay?”

  He turned on all the power possible and sprinted ahead. Around a curve in the road he went, leaning over to preserve his balance, and just as the rain came pelting down in a torrent he saw just ahead of him a white church on the lonely country road. To one side was a long shed, where the farmers were in the habit of leaving their teams when they came to service.

  “Just the thing!” cried the boy; “and just in time!”

  He turned his motor-cycle into the yard surrounding the church, and a moment later had come to a stop beneath the shed. It was broad and long, furnishing a good protection against the storm, which had now burst in all its fury.

  Tom was not very wet, and looking to see that the model, which was partly of wood, had suffered no damage, the lad gave his attention to his machine.

  “Seems to be all right,” he murmured. “I’ll just oil her up while I’m waiting. This can’t last long; it’s raining too hard.”

  He busied himself over the motor-cycle, adjusting a nut that had been rattled loose, and putting some oil on the bearings. The rain kept up steadily, and when he had completed his attentions to his machine Tom looked out from under the protection of the shed.

  “It certainly is coming down for keeps,” he murmured. “This trip is a regular hoodoo so far. Hope I have it better coming back.”

  As he looked down the road he espied an automobile coming through the mist of rain. It was an open car, and as he saw the three men in it huddled up under the insufficient protection of some blankets, Tom said:

  “They’d ought to come in here. There’s lots of room. Maybe they don’t see it. I’ll call to them.”

  The car was almost opposite the shed which was dose to the roadside. Tom was about to call when one of the men in the auto looked up. He saw the shelter and spoke to the chauffeur. The latter was preparing to steer up into the shed when the two men on the rear seat caught sight of Tom.

  “Why, that’s the same car that passed me a while ago,” said the young inventor half aloud. “The one that contained those men whom I suspected might be after dad’s patent. I hope they—”

  He did not finish his sentence, for at that instant the chauffeur quickly swung the machine around and headed it back into the road. Clearly the men were not going to take advantage of the shelter of the shed.

  “That’s mighty strange,” murmured Tom. “They certainly saw me, and as soon as they did they turned away. Can they be afraid of me?”

  He went to the edge of the shelter and peered out. The auto had disappeared down the road behind a veil of rain, and, shaking his head over the strange occurrence, Tom went back to where he had left his motor-cycle.

  “Things are getting more and more muddled,” he said. “I’m sure those were the same men, and yet—”

  He shrugged his shoulders. The puzzle was getting beyond him.

  CHAPTER XIV

  ATTACKED FROM BEHIND

  Steadily the rain came down, the wind driving it under the shed until Tom was hard put to find a place where the drops would not reach him. He withdrew into a far corner, taking his motor-cycle with him, and then, sitting on a block of wood, under the rough mangers where the horses were fed while the farmers attended church, the lad thought over the situation. He could make little of it, and the more he tried the worse it seemed to become. He looked out across the wet landscape.

  “I wonder if this is ever going to stop?” he mused. “It looks as if it was in for an all-day pour, yet we ought only to have a summer shower by rights.”

  “But then I guess what I think about it won’t influence the weather man a bit. I might as well make myself comfortable, for I can’t do anything. Let’s see. If I get to Fordham by six o’clock I ought to be able to make Albany by nine, as it’s only forty miles. I’ll get supper in Fordham, and push on. That is, I will if the rain stops.”

  That was the most necessary matter to have happen first, and Tom arising from his seat strolled over to the front of the shed to look out.

  “I believe it is getting lighter in the west,” he told himself. “Yes, the clouds are lifting. It’s going to clear. It’s only a summer shower, after all.”

  But just as he said that there came a sudden squall of wind and rain, fiercer than any which had preceded. Tom was driven back to his seat on the log. It was quite chilly now, and he noticed that near where he sat there was a big opening in the rear of the shed, where a couple of boards were off.

  “This must be a draughty place in winter,” he observed. “If I could find a drier spot I’d sit there, but this seems to be the best,” and he remained there, musing on many things. Suddenly in the midst of his thoughts he imagined he heard the sound of an automobile approaching. “I wonder if those men are coming back here?” he exclaimed. “If they are—”

  The youth again arose, and went to the front of the shed. He could see nothing, and came back to escape the rain. There was no doubt but that the shower would soon be over, and looking at his watch, Tom began to calculate when he might arrive in Albany.

  He was busy trying to figure out the best plan to pursue, and was hardly conscious of his surroundings. Seated on the log, with his back to the opening in the shed, the young inventor could not see a figure stealthily creeping up through the wet grass. Nor could he see an automobile, which had come to a stop back of the horse shelter—an automobile containing two rain-soaked men, who were anxiously watching the one stealing through the grass.

  Tom put his watch back into his pocket and looked out into the storm. It was almost over. The sun was trying to shine through the clouds, and only a few drops were falling. The youth stretched with a yawn, for he was tired of sitting still. At the moment when he raised his arms to relieve his muscles something was thrust through the opening behind him. It was a long club, and an instant later it descended on the lad’s head. He went down in a heap, limp and motionless.

  Through the opening leaped a man. He bent over Tom, looked anxiously at him, and then, stepping to the place where the boards were off the shed, he motioned to the men in the automobile.

  They hurried from the machine, and were soon beside their companion.

  “I knocked him out, all right,” observed the man who had reached through and dealt Tom the blow with the club.

  “Knocked him out! I should say you did, Featherton!” exclaimed one who appeared better dressed than the others. “Have you killed him?”

  “No; but I wish you wouldn’t mention my name, Mr. Appleson. I—I don’t like—”

  “Nonsense, Featherton. No one can hear us. But I’m afraid you’ve done for the chap. I didn’t want him harmed.”

  “Oh, I guess Featherton knows how to do it, Appleson,” commented the third man. “He’s had experience that way, eh, Featherton?”

  “Yes, Mr. Morse; but if you please I wish you wouldn�
��t mention—”

  “All right, Featherton, I know what you mean,” rejoined the man addressed as Morse. “Now let’s see if we have drawn a blank or not. I think he has with him the very thing we want,”

  “Doesn’t seem to be about his person,” observed Appleson, as he carefully felt about the clothing of the unfortunate Tom.

  “Very likely not. It’s too bulky. But there’s his motor-cycle over there. It looks as if what we wanted was on the back of the saddle. Jove, Featherton, but I think he’s coming to!”

  Tom stirred uneasily and moved his arms, while a moan came from between his parted lips.

  “I’ve got some stuff that will fix him!” exclaimed the man addressed as Featherton, and who had been operating the automobile. He took something from his pocket and leaned over Tom. In a moment the young inventor was still again.

  “Quick now, see if it’s there,” directed Morse, and Appleson hurried over to the machine.

  “Here it is!” he called. “I’ll take it to our car, and we can get away.”

  “Are you going to leave him here like this?” asked Morse.

  “Yes; why not?”

  “Because some one might have seen him come in here, and also remember that we, too, came in this direction.”

  “What would you do?”

  “Take him down the road a way and leave him. We can find some shed near a farmhouse where he and his machine will be out of sight until we get far enough away. Besides, I don’t like to leave him so far from help, unconscious as he is.”

  “Oh, you’re getting chicken-hearted,” said Appleson with a sneer. “However, have your way about it. I wonder what has become of Jake Burke? He was to meet us in Centreford, but he did not show up.”

  “Oh, I shouldn’t be surprised if he had trouble in that tramp rig he insisted on adopting. I told him he was running a risk, but he said he had masqueraded as a tramp before.”

  “So he has. He’s pretty good at it. Now, Simpson, if you will—”

  “Not Simpson! I thought you agreed to call me Featherton,” interrupted the chauffeur, turning to Morse and Appleson.

  “Oh, so we did. I forgot that this lad met us one day, and heard me call you Simpson,” admitted Morse. “Well, Featherton it shall be. But we haven’t much time. It’s stopped raining, and the roads will soon be well traveled. We must get away, and if we are to take the lad and his machine to some secluded place, we’d better be at it. No use waiting for Burke. He can look out after himself. Anyhow, we have the model now, and there’s no use in him hanging around Swift’s shop, as he intended to do, waiting for a chance to sneak in after it. Appleson, if you and Simpson—I mean Featherton—will carry young Swift, I’ll shove his wheel along to the auto, and we can put it and him in.”

 

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