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diff --git a/40254-0.txt b/40254-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..362242e --- /dev/null +++ b/40254-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,5199 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40254 *** + +BERT WILSON'S TWIN CYLINDER RACER + +by + +J. W. DUFFIELD + +Author of "Bert Wilson at the Wheel," +"Wireless Operator," "Fadeaway Ball," +"Marathon Winner," "At Panama." + + + + + + + +Copyright, 1914, By +Sully And Kleinteich + +All rights reserved. + +Published and Printed, 1924, by +Western Printing & Lithographing Company +Racine, Wisconsin +Printed in U. S. A. + + + + +CONTENTS + + + CHAPTER PAGE + I. THE RUNAWAY LOCOMOTIVE 1 + II. THE "BLUE STREAK" 13 + III. FROM COAST TO COAST 28 + IV. A FLYING START 41 + V. THE DESERTED HUT 53 + VI. THE BROKEN DAM 65 + VII. A KENTUCKY FEUD 82 + VIII. THE FORGED TELEGRAM 97 + IX. IN DEADLY PERIL 104 + X. A DAY OF DISASTER 118 + XI. THE FLAMING FOREST 129 + XII. RACING AN AIRSHIP 137 + XIII. AN UNSEEN LISTENER 145 + XIV. THE OUTLAW PLOT 154 + XV. A MURDEROUS GRIP 163 + XVI. DESPERATE CHANCES 175 + XVII. THE WONDERFUL CITY 188 + XVIII. A WINNING FIGHT 199 + + + + +BERT WILSON'S TWIN CYLINDER RACER + + + + +CHAPTER I + +THE RUNAWAY LOCOMOTIVE + + +"Stop her. Stop her. She's running wild!" + +The cry ended almost in a shriek that rang high above the murmur of +voices at the railroad station. + +It was a bright sunny morning early in June. The usual crowd of rustics +had gathered at the depot to see the train come in and depart. A few +commercial travelers were consulting time tables and attending to the +disposition of their baggage. Gay laughter and hasty farewells arose +from a bevy of girls and the young men who had assembled to see them +off. The conductor, watch in hand, stood ready to give the signal, +and the black porters were already gathering up the folding steps +preparatory to boarding the train. The bells were ringing and the +whistle had given its preliminary toot, when all were startled at the +sight of the station agent, who issued wild-eyed from his office and ran +on the track, frantically waving his hands and shouting at the top of +his voice. + +As the startled passengers and trainmen followed the direction of his +look, they saw what had occasioned the wild commotion, and, for a +moment, their hearts stood still. + +A big Mogul engine that had been shunted to a side track was moving down +the line, slowly at first but gathering speed with every passing second. +Neither engineer nor fireman could be seen in the cab. It was evident +that they had left before the power was completely shut off, or that +some sudden jar had started the mechanism. Even while the frightened +spectators watched as though under a spell, the pace grew swifter. Some +of the men lounging about the roundhouse made a hurried rush for it, +with a faint hope of getting aboard and shutting off steam. One of these +made a desperate grab at the rear end of the tender, but was flung in a +ditch alongside the track, where he rolled over and over. It was too +late to stop her. Amid a tempest of yells and a tumult of excitement she +gathered way and sped down the line. + +The station master wrung his hands and tore his hair in desperation. For +the moment he was crazed with fright. + +A clear eyed young fellow, tall, stalwart, muscular, had been chatting +with a party of friends on the road beside the platform. While he +talked, his hand rested on the handle-bars of a motorcycle at which he +glanced at intervals with a look of pride that was almost affection. It +was a superb machine, evidently of the latest type, and in its graceful +lines suggested in some vague way a resemblance to its owner. Both +looked like thoroughbreds. + +At the Babel of cries that rent the air the young motorcyclist looked up +and his nostrils dilated with sudden purpose. At a glance he took in the +situation--the running men, the panic cries, the runaway engine. Then he +came plunging through the crowd and grasped the dazed agent by the +shoulder. + +"Come, wake up," he cried. "Do something. Telegraph to the next +station." + +The man looked up dully. Terror had benumbed his faculties. He was +clearly not the man for a sudden emergency. + +"No use," he moaned. "The next station is thirteen miles away. And it's +a single track," he wailed, "and No. 56 is due in twenty minutes. If +she's on time she's already left there. They'll meet head-on--O God!" + +"Quick," the newcomer commanded, as he fairly dragged him into the +office. "There's the key. Get busy. Call up the next station and see if +you can stop 56." + +But as he saw the aimless, paralyzed way in which the agent fumbled at +the key, he thrust him aside and took his place. He was an expert +telegrapher, and his fingers fairly flew as he called up the operator +at Corridon. + +"Engine running wild," he called. "Stop 56 and sidetrack the runaway." + +A moment of breathless suspense and the answer came in sharp, staccato +clicks that betrayed the agitation of the man at the other end. + +"56 just left. Rounding the curve half a mile away. Making up time, too. +For heaven's sake, do something." + +"Do something." What bitter irony! What could be done? Death was at the +throttle of that mad runaway rushing down the line. + +But the young fellow was of the never say die kind, and always at his +best when danger threatened. He thought with the rapidity of lightning. +Then he clutched the station agent, who sat with his head bowed on his +hands, a picture of abject misery. + +"Is there a switch between here and Corridon?" he demanded fiercely. + +"N-no," muttered the stupefied man. "That is, there is one at the old +stone quarry, but----" + +The remainder of the sentence fell on empty air. Like a flash, the youth +who had so cavalierly taken matters in his own hands was out of the +room. He ploughed through the huddled group of passengers and trainmen, +and flung himself into the saddle of the waiting motorcycle. A roar as +he threw in the clutch, a quick scattering of those in front, and the +machine, like a living thing, darted down the road that lay beside the +track. + +The wind sang in his ears and the path fell away behind him as he +crouched low over the fork so that his body might offer as little +resistance as possible. And, as he rushed along, his active mind was +thinking--thinking-- + +He knew the surrounding country like an open book. There was scarcely a +lane that he had not threaded, and as for the highways, he had gone over +them again and again. Now, as in a panorama, he saw every turn and bend, +every height and hollow of the road that lay before him. In sheer +delight of living he had ridden it before; now he must do it to keep +others from dying. + +The old stone quarry was a familiar landmark. More than once, he and +other fellows from the College interested in geology had come over there +to hunt fossils. At an earlier date, it had been a buzzing hive of +activity, and a side track had been laid by the railroad company +in order to load the stone more easily. But of late it had proved +unprofitable to work the quarry, and nothing now remained but the +abandoned shacks of the workmen and some broken tools and machinery, +rusting in the grass that had grown up around them. He remembered that +the siding ran for about twenty rods and ended at bumpers set within a +few feet of the wall of rock. + +For two or three miles, the road he was traveling ran almost parallel to +the railroad. At times, a shoulder of the path hid the rails from sight, +and at one place he had to make quite a wide detour before he again came +close to the right of way. The switch at the quarry was seven miles from +the town, and, though he hoped to make it in less than that many +minutes, it seemed as though he would never reach it. To his agonized +mind he appeared to be merely crawling. In reality he was flying. + +For he was riding now as he had never ridden before. Human life was at +stake--perhaps hundreds of lives. He pictured the long line of cars full +of passengers--for 56 was the road's finest train, and almost always +filled to capacity--coming toward him without a thought of danger. +Some would be reading, others gazing out of the windows, still others +laughing and talking. But everywhere would be confidence, ease of +mind, an eager looking for the journey's end without the slightest +apprehension. And all this time, death was grimly bearing down upon them +in one of his most fearful forms. + +He shuddered as in his mind's eye he saw the two monster locomotives +leaping at each other like enraged giants. He had seen a wreck once and +had fervently prayed that he might never see another. And as that scene +now came before him, he bent lower over the bars and let out every ounce +of speed that the machine possessed. + +It was leaping now, only touching the high places. Had he been a less +skilful rider he would have been hurled from the saddle. Discretion was +thrown to the winds. It was no time to measure possibilities or look out +for his personal safety. He had to take chances. His siren warned all +comers to give him the road. A team was hauled up on its haunches by the +frightened driver; an automobile drew so hastily to one side that two +wheels went into the ditch. He caught a glimpse of startled faces at +doors and windows as he passed. Like a meteor he flashed by, all his +heart and soul wrapped up in the thought of rescue. + +Now he had overtaken the locomotive and was running parallel to it. The +Mogul swayed and lurched as it tore along with all steam up on its +mission of destruction. Steadily the rider drew up on even terms, with +less than twenty feet separating the tracks from the high road. Then the +motorcycle swept into the lead and increased it with every bound. + +Only two miles more to the quarry! His heart exulted as he realized that +he would get there first. But the margin would be fearfully close. The +switch might prove rusty and refuse to work. Some part of it might be +out of gear. For years it had been utterly abandoned. What a bitter +jest of fate if, after reaching it ahead of the locomotive, he should +have to stand helplessly by and see it dash past on its errand of +slaughter. + +Then, too, a third factor entered into the problem. There was No. 56. +She was a limited express and famous for her speed. The operator at +Corridon had said that on this stretch of road, supposed to be clear, +she would make up time. If she reached and passed the switch before the +runaway, no power on earth could prevent a frightful disaster. And just +then, while this fear was tugging at his heart, a faint whistle in the +distance drove all the color from his face. 56 was coming! + +He dared not take his eyes from the road in front, but he knew from the +lessened noise behind him that he was increasing his lead. And then as +he swept around a slight curve in the road, the abandoned quarry came +into view. There were the empty shacks, the deserted platform and, a few +rods further on, the switch. + +He raced to the tracks and threw himself from the machine, almost +falling headlong from the momentum, although he had turned off the +power. Then he grasped the lever and tried to throw the switch. + +It groaned and creaked, but, although it protested, it yielded to the +powerful young muscles that would not be denied. But, when it had moved +two-thirds of the way it balked, and, despite his frenzied attempts, +refused to budge another inch. And now the runaway engine was coming +close, rumbling and roaring hideously, while round the curve, a scant +quarter of a mile away, appeared the smokestack of No. 56. + +Looking wildly about for the obstacle, he saw that a stone had been +wedged into the frog. He tried to remove it, but the turning of the +switch had jammed it against the rail. Straightening up, he swung +the lever far enough back to release the stone. He worked as if in +a nightmare. Fifty feet away, the Mogul was bearing down like a +fire-breathing demon. With one swift movement he threw the stone aside; +with the next he bowed his back over the lever until it felt as though +it would break. Then the rusted rails groaned into place; with an +infernal din and uproar the runaway took the switch. Scarcely had it +cleared the track when 56 thundered past, its wheels sending out streams +of sparks as the brakes ground against them. + +The Mogul struck the bumpers with terrific force, tore them away and +leaped headlong against the wall of the quarry. There was a crash that +could be heard for miles, and the wrecked locomotive reared into the air +and then rolled over on its side, enveloped in smoke and hissing steam. + +As soon as the long train of 56 could be stopped, the throttle was +reversed and it came gliding back to the switch. The engineer and +fireman sprang from their cab, conductor and trainmen came running up, +and the passengers swarmed from the cars. + +There was a tumult of excited questionings, as they gathered round the +young fellow who stood there, panting with the strain of his tremendous +efforts. Now that he had succeeded in the forlorn hope that he had +undertaken, he was beginning to feel the reaction. He responded briefly +and modestly to the questions that were showered upon him, and, as +the full meaning of their narrow escape from death burst upon them, +passengers and trainmen alike were loud in their praise of his presence +of mind and thanks for their deliverance. They were for making him a +hero, but he shrank from this and would have none of it. + +"Don't thank me," he laughed. "It was this that made it possible;" and +he patted the handlebars of the motorcycle. "She certainly did herself +proud this day." + +"She surely is a dandy," smiled the conductor, "but you must admit that +you had a _little_ to do with it. We'll never forget what you have done +for us to-day. But now we must be starting. We'll put the machine in the +baggage car, and you come in here with me." + +A blast of the whistle and No. 56 had resumed its interrupted journey. + +A ringing cheer burst from the anxious crowds that surged about the +platform as the great train, puffing and snorting, came into the +station. The agent, white as a ghost, could not believe his eyes. + +"Thank God," he cried. "I thought it was all over. I've telegraphed for +the wrecking crew, and all the doctors in town have been called to go +along. How on earth did you escape? Where is the Mogul?" + +"You'll find that down in the quarry smashed to bits," answered the +conductor. "You'll need the wrecking train for that, all right, but you +can call off the doctors. We would have needed plenty of them--and +undertakers too--if it hadn't been for this young man. He threw the +switch without a second to spare." + +The station agent grasped the rider's hand and stammered and stuttered, +as he tried to pour out his thanks. But just then a flying wedge of +college boys came through the crowd and, grabbing the reluctant hero, +hoisted him to their shoulders. + +"Wilson." "Bert Wilson." "O, you Bert." "O, you speed boy," they yelled. +The enthusiastic lookers on took up the shout and it was a long time +before Bert, blushing and embarrassed, could free himself from his +boisterous admirers. + +"O, cut it out, fellows," he protested. "It was all in the day's work." + +"Sure," assented Tom Henderson, "but _such_ a day's work." + +"And such a worker," added Dick Trent. + +"Three times three and a tiger for Bert Wilson," roared a stentorian +voice. The answer came in a tempest of cheers, and, as the train pulled +out, the last sound that came to the waving passengers was the lusty +chorus: + + "For he's a jolly good fellow, + Which nobody can deny." + + + + +CHAPTER II + +THE "BLUE STREAK" + + +"Isn't it a beauty?" exclaimed Bert, as, a few days later, he swept up +to a waiting group of friends and leaped from the saddle. + +There was a unanimous assent as the boys crowded around the motorcycle, +looking at it almost with the rapt intentness of worshippers at a +shrine. + +"It's a dandy, all right," declared Dick, with an enthusiasm equal to +Bert's own. "You skimmed along that last stretch of road like a bird." + +"It's about the speediest and niftiest thing on the planet," chimed in +Tom. "You'd give an airship all it wanted to do to keep up with you." + +"Easy, easy there," laughed Bert. "I wouldn't go as far as that. But on +'terra cotta,' as Mrs. Partington calls it, there are mighty few things +that will make me take their dust." And he patted the machine with as +much affection as if it could feel and respond to the touch. + +"About how fast can that streak of greased lightning travel, any way?" +asked Drake. "What's the record for a motorcycle?" + +"The best so far is a mile in thirty-six and four-fifths seconds," was +the answer. "That's at the rate of ninety-eight miles an hour." + +"Some traveling," murmured Dick. + +"Of course," went on Bert, "that was for a sprint. But even over long +distances some great records have been hung up. In England last year a +motorcycle made 300 miles in 280 minutes. I don't think the fastest +express train in the world has ever beaten that." + +"Gee," said Tom, "I'd hate to be in the path of a cannon ball like that. +It would be the 'sweet by and by' for yours truly." + +"It might possibly muss you up some," grinned Bert. "It's a case of 'the +quick or the dead' when you amble across the path of a twin-cylinder." + +"I should think," remarked Drake, "that it would shake the daylights out +of you to travel at the speed you were going just now along that last +bit of road." + +"A few years ago it would have," admitted Bert. "The way they bumped +along was a sure cure for dyspepsia. But with this saddle I could ride +all day and scarcely feel a jar. Why, look at this cradle spring frame," +he went on enthusiastically; "it has the same flat leaf springs that +they use in the finest kind of automobiles. You wouldn't believe that +there are over 250 inches of supple, highly tempered springs between the +saddle and the road. It's as elastic and flexible as a bamboo cane. +Each spring has double scrolls that come into action one after another +whenever you have a jolt. Then, too, there are rubber bumpers to take +the recoil. Why, it's like a parlor car on a limited express. No fellow +sitting back in a Pullman has anything on me." + +"You're a pampered son of luxury, all right," mocked Tom. "We children +of toil take off our hats to you." + +Bert made a playful pass at him and went on: + +"As to power, it would take the strength of seven horses to match it. +The engine has a piston displacement of 61 inches. And yet you can +control that tremendous power so far as to slow down to three miles an +hour. Not that I often get down to that, though. Fifty or sixty suit me +better." + +"You ought to name it 'Pegasus,' after the flying horse," suggested +Hinsdale. + +"Old Pegasus would have his work cut out for him if he tried to show me +the way," smiled Bert. "Still I don't claim to beat anything that goes +through the air. But when you get down to solid earth, I'd back this +daisy of mine to hold its own." + +"The old Red Scout might make you hustle some," suggested Tom. + +"Yes," admitted Bert, "she certainly was a hummer. Do you remember the +time she ran away from the Gray Ghost? Speed was her middle name that +day." + +"It was, for fair," agreed Dick, "but perhaps she went still faster when +we scudded up the track that day, with the express thundering behind." + +"Our hearts went faster, anyway," declared Tom. "Gee, but that was a +narrow squeak. It makes me shiver now when I think of it." + +"Same here," echoed Bert, little dreaming that before long, on the +splendid machine whose handlebars he held, he would graze the very +garments of death. + +Happily, however, the future was hidden, and for the moment the little +group were absorbed in the mechanical wonders of the motorcycle that +loomed large in the road before them. It stood for the last word in +up-to-date construction. The inventive genius of the twentieth century +had spent itself on every contrivance that would add to its speed, +strength and beauty. It was a poem in bronze and steel and rubber. From +the extremity of the handlebars in front to the rim of its rear wheel, +not the tiniest thing had been overlooked or left undone that could +add to its perfection. Fork and cams and springs and valves and +carburetor--all were of the finest material and the most careful +workmanship. + +"It seemed an awful lot to pay, when I heard that it cost you over three +hundred bucks," said Tom, "but after looking it over, I guess you got +your money's worth." + +"The value's there, all right," asserted Bert confidently. "I wouldn't +take that amount of money for the fun I've had already. And what I'm +going to have"--he made a comprehensive wave of the hand--"it simply +can't be reckoned in cold coin." + +"It's getting to be a mighty popular way of traveling," said Dick. "I +saw it stated somewhere that a quarter of a million are in use and that +the output is increasing all the time." + +"Yes," added Drake, "they certainly cover a wide field. Ministers, +doctors, rural mail carriers, gas, electric and telephone companies are +using them more and more. In the great pastures of the West, the herders +use them in making their rounds and looking after the sheep. All the +police departments in the big cities employ a lot of them, and in about +every foreign army there is a motorcycle corps. You've surely got lots +of company, old man." + +"Yes, and we're only the vanguard. The time is coming when they'll be +used as widely as the bicycle in its palmiest days." + +"A bicycle wouldn't have done you much good the other day, in that wild +ride down to the switch," grinned Drake. "By the way, Bert, the press +associations got hold of that, and now the whole country's humming with +it." + +"Well," said Bert, anxious to change the subject, "if she'll only do as +well in the race from coast to coast, I won't have any kick coming." + +"How about that contest anyway?" queried Hinsdale. "Have you really +decided to go into it?" + +"Sure thing," answered Bert. "I don't see why I shouldn't. Commencement +will be over by the eighth, and the race doesn't start until the tenth. +That will give me plenty of time to get into shape. As a matter of +fact, I'm almost fit now, and Reddy is training me for two hours every +afternoon. I've almost got down to my best weight already, and I'm going +to take the rest off so slowly that I'll be in the pink of condition +when the race begins. Reddy knows me like a book and he says he never +saw me in better form." + +"Of course," he went on thoughtfully, "the game is new to me and I'm not +at all sure of winning. But I think I have a chance. I'd like to win for +the honor of it and because I hate to lose. And then, too, that purse of +ten thousand dollars looks awfully good to me." + +The race to which the boys referred had been for some time past a +subject of eager interest, and had provoked much discussion in sporting +and college circles. The idea had been developing since the preceding +winter from a chance remark as to the time it would take a motorcycle to +go from the Atlantic to the Pacific. A guess had been hazarded that it +could be done in twenty days. This had been disputed, and, as an outcome +of the discussion, a general race had been projected to settle the +question. The Good Roads Association of America, in conjunction with a +number of motorcycle manufacturers, had offered a purse of five thousand +dollars for the competitor who made the journey in the shortest time. If +that time came within twenty days, an additional two thousand dollars +was to be given to the winner. + +One other element entered into the problem. The San Francisco Exposition, +designed to celebrate the opening of the Panama Canal, would be in full +swing at the time the survivors of the race reached the coast. One of the +great features of the Fair was to be an international carnival of sports. +There were to be contests in cavalry riding, in fencing, in auto racing, +and the pick of the world were expected to compete. But of special +interest to Bert was the international motorcycle race, which for the +first time was to be held in America. Two years before, it had taken +place in Paris and, a year later, in London. But this year it was +America's turn, and because of the immense crowds expected at the +Exposition, San Francisco had been chosen as the city to stage the event. +There was to be a first prize of three thousand dollars and lesser purses +for those that came in second and third. If, by any chance, the winner +of the long distance race should break the twenty day limit and also win +the final race at the Fair, his total reward would amount to ten thousand +dollars. + +With such a possibility in prospect, it was not surprising that Bert +should be strongly tempted to enter the race. He was a natural athlete, +and in his college course so far had stood head and shoulders above his +competitors. As pitcher on the 'Varsity team, he had cinched the pennant +by his superb twirling in a most exciting series of diamond battles. He +had been chosen as a contender on the American Olympic team, and had +carried off the Marathon after a heart-breaking race, in which every +ounce of speed and stamina had been tried to the utmost. In an auto race +between rival campers, his hand at the wheel had guided the Red Scout +to victory over the Gray Ghost, its redoubtable antagonist. He was a +splendid physical machine of brawn and sinew and nerve and muscle. +Outdoor life, vigorous exercise and clean living, combined with his +natural gifts, made him a competitor to be feared and respected in any +contest that he chose to enter. + +But his lithe, supple body was not his only, or indeed, his chief asset. +What made him preƫminent was his quick mind and indomitable will, of +which his body was only the servant. His courage and audacity were +superb. Again and again he had been confronted with accidents and +discouragements that would have caused a weaker fellow to quit and blame +the result on fate. He had won the deciding game in the baseball race, +after his comrades had virtually thrown it away. In the Marathon, it was +with bruised and bleeding feet that he overtook his antagonist at the +very tape. The harder bad luck tried to down him, the more fiercely he +rose in rebellion. And it was this bulldog grip, this unshaken tenacity, +this "never know when you are beaten" spirit that put him in a class by +himself and made him the idol of his comrades. They had seen him so +often snatch victory from the very jaws of defeat, that they were +prepared to back him to the limit. Win or lose, they knew that he would +do his best, and, if defeated, go down fighting. + +With such a character and record back of him, his enthusiastic friends +were inclined to think that it was "all over but the shouting." Bert, +however, had no such delusion. If it had been simply a matter of muscle +or swiftness or courage, he would have felt more confident of the +outcome. But here the "human equation" was not the only thing involved. +The quality and strength of the machine he rode would be a very +prominent and perhaps a deciding factor. He felt sure that he was in +such prime physical condition that he could endure the gruelling grind. +But would his machine be equal to the task? The most dashing horseman +would have to halt, if his steed foundered beneath him. The most daring +aviator would have to descend to earth, if his motor stopped. So Bert, +no matter how strong and plucky, must fail, if his machine should go +back on him. + +For there could be no substitute. This was one of the conditions of the +race. He must finish, if at all, on the same machine with which he +started. The contestants were permitted to make repairs to any extent. +Tires, forks, springs and any other parts could be replaced, and, at +intervals along the route, supplies could be held in readiness, in +addition to those that the rider carried. But essentially the identical +machine must be used throughout the race. In the event of a hopeless +smashup, the luckless rider was, of course, out for good. The racer and +the machine were thus indispensable to each other. Neither could win if +the other balked. They were like the two blades of a shears--strong when +together but useless when separated. + +To guard as much as possible against defects, Bert had been especially +careful in selecting his motorcycle. He had the eye for a machine that a +gipsy has for a horse. Among a host of others, he had chosen one that +appealed to him as the acme of what a motorcycle should be. It was +a seven horse power, twin cylinder racer, with every appliance and +improvement known at the time it left the factory. + +The brakes, for instance, were more powerful than those fitted to any +previous type. It could be operated by a foot lever on the right side of +the machine and also by a grip lever in the left handlebar. The double +action was caused by the expansion and contraction of two bands inside +and outside a brake drum. + +Then, too, there was a foot-starting device that was a marvel of +simplicity. A single downward pressure of the foot, and the racer +started off at once. + +An improved rear hub also aroused Bert's enthusiasm, because of its +extra large size and the fact that it ran on ball bearings that were +absolutely frictionless. In both the front and rear hubs there was a +knock-out axle, so that the wheels could be removed without interfering +with the adjustment of the bearings. + +In fact, the more Bert studied what had become his most precious +possession the more convinced he grew that he had secured a "gem of the +first water." And now that the first stiffness had worn off, the machine +was "running like a watch." + +The ignition was perfect, the transmission left nothing to be desired, +and the most critical inspection could find no fault with any detail of +the steel charger that was to carry him and his fortunes to victory or +defeat. + +"What are you going to christen it, Bert?" asked Tom. "Cut out the +Pegasus stuff and tell it to us straight." + +"On the level, I think I'll call it the 'Blue Streak,'" answered Bert. +"That's the way it covers the ground, as a rule, and I hope it will be +prophetic. Besides, blue is our college color and it ought to bring me +luck. That's the color I wore when we took the Grays and Maroons into +camp, and I had it at my belt when I collared Dorner in the Stadium. +Everything goes in threes, you know, and this will be the third time I'm +out to win since I was a Freshie." + +"Bully for you, old top," exclaimed Drake, with a rousing thump on the +shoulder. "The fellows will be tickled to death to know that the good +old blue is showing the way across country. And when we hear that you've +come in first, there'll be a yell that you'll hear way off in Frisco." + +"Don't count your chickens too soon, my boy," cautioned Bert; but his +heart was warmed and elated by the confidence his comrades had in him, +and he vowed to himself that he would justify it, if it were humanly +possible. + +"To judge from the names already entered, it's going to be a weird color +scheme," laughed Dick. "There's the Yellow Dragon and the Red Devil and +the Brown Antelope and the White Cloud and the Black Knight; and +there'll probably be others before the list is full." + +"Gee," chortled Tom, "if a hobo should see them coming all at once, he'd +think that he had them again, sure." + +"Yes," agreed Bert, "it would certainly be a crazy quilt effect, if they +should all come along together. But there are so many different routes +that, ten to one, we won't catch sight of each other after the bunch +scatters at the start." + +"How about the route?" asked Martin. "I should think that would be one +of the most important things to take into account." + +"So it would, if it were left to me. But it isn't. You see, one of the +great objects of the Good Roads Association is to plan a great national +highway from coast to coast. They want to get all the facts about every +possible route, so that they'll have something to go on, when they put +it up to the different States to get legislation on their pet hobby. +This race they think will be of great importance for this purpose, +because it won't be based on theory but on actual experience. +So they have mapped out a large number of possible lines to be +followed--northern, central and southern,--and when they've got them all +marked out, lots will be drawn and the fellows will have to follow the +route that chance gives them. Of course, they can't be exactly alike in +the matter of distance. But it will be as fair for one as the other, +and, all things considered, they'll average up about alike. I expect to +get a letter any day now, giving the special trip that luck has picked +out for me. + +"Of course," he went on, "it isn't all absolutely cut and dried. They +don't mark out every highway and byway that you must travel, on pain of +being disqualified. But you're given a chain of important towns and +great centers that you must hit one after the other on your trip across +the continent. As long as you do that, you are left to your own judgment +as to the best and quickest way of getting there." + +"How about any crooked work?" put in Axtell. "Is there any chance of +that?" + +"I'm not worrying much about that," answered Bert. "To be sure, where so +much is at stake, there's always a chance of some one trying to turn +a trick. But I don't see where they could 'put it over.' At every +important place there'll be timers and checkers to keep tally on the +riders. The machines are all registered and numbered and so carefully +described that, in case of a smashup, a fellow couldn't slip in another +one without being found out at the next stopping place. Then, too, if +they tried to get a lift on a train, there would have to be too many in +the secret. Besides, in all the names I've seen so far of the racers, +there's only one that might possibly stoop to anything of that kind. +His name is Hayward, and from what I've heard he's been mixed up with +one or two shady deals. There have only been whispers and suspicions, +however, and they've never been able actually to prove anything against +him. So he is still nominally in good standing and eligible to ride. It +may be all conjecture anyway. He probably wouldn't cheat if he could, +and couldn't if he would." + +"No," said Dick, "it certainly seems as though the best man and the best +machine ought to win." + +"I understand that the race is to start from New York," remarked Drake. + +"Yes," answered Bert, preparing to mount the machine, "from one of the +beaches near the city. It's to be actually from ocean to ocean. The rear +wheel is to be wet in the Atlantic. Then the fight is on in earnest and +only ends when the front wheel is dipped in the Pacific." + +"'Twill be some race," remarked Martin. + +"You'll have to travel like the wind," warned Hinsdale. + +"Yes," laughed Bert, as he threw in the clutch, "to make it in twenty +days, I'll have to go like a blue streak." + + + + +CHAPTER III + +FROM COAST TO COAST + + +The next few days flew by with magical swiftness. There were a thousand +things to be done, and Bert found himself wishing that each day had a +hundred hours instead of twenty-four. The term examinations were on, and +he buckled down to them manfully. He had never neglected his class work +in favor of athletic sports and his standing had always been high. He +worked as hard as he played, and in both study and games was up in the +front rank. + +But when these ordeals were over and he had passed triumphantly, every +spare moment was devoted to the coming race. He put into his preparation +all his heart and soul. And in this, he was ably aided and abetted by +Reddy, the college trainer. + +"Reddy," as he was called from the flaming mop of hair that adorned his +far from classic brow, was a character. For many years he had been in +complete control of the football, baseball and general track teams of +the college. He had formerly been a crack second baseman in a major +league, but an injured ankle had forced his withdrawal from the active +playing ranks. He had a shrewd, though uneducated, mind, and his +knowledge of sports and ability as a trainer had made him famous in the +athletic world. His dry wit and genial disposition made him a great +favorite with the boys, though he ruled with an iron hand when +discipline was needed. + +He was especially proud and fond of Bert for two reasons. In the first +place, his trainers' soul rejoiced in having such a superb physical +specimen to develop into a winner. He had so often been called upon to +"make bricks without straw," that he exulted in this splendid material +ready to his hand. And when his faith had been justified by the great +victories that Bert had won, Reddy felt that it was, in part, his own +personal triumph. + +Then, too, Bert had never shirked or broken training. His sense of honor +was high and fine, and he kept as rigidly to his work in the trainer's +absence as in his presence. Reddy had never had to put detectives on his +track or search him out in the poolrooms and saloons of the town. He was +true to himself, true to his team, true to his college, and could always +be counted on to be in first-class condition. + +So that, although this was not a college event, Reddy took a keen +personal interest in the coming contest. Every afternoon, he held the +watch while Bert circled the track, and he personally superintended the +bath and rubdown, after the test was over. He knew the exact weight at +which his charge was most effective, and he took off the superfluous +flesh just fast enough not to weaken him. And his Irish blue eyes +twinkled with satisfaction, as he noted that just now he had never seen +him in better shape for the task that lay before him. + +"Ye'll do," he said, with an air of finality, two days before the race, +as he snapped his split-second chronometer, after a whirlwind sprint. +"I'll not tell ye jist the time ye made for that last five miles, as I +don't want ye to get the swelled head. But, my word for it, ye're on +edge, and I don't want ye to touch that machine again until ye face the +starter. Ye're down fine enough and I don't want ye to go stale before +the race begins. I've left jist enough beef on ye to give ye a wee bit +of a margin to work off. The rest is solid bone and muscle, and, if the +machine is as good as yerself, ye'll get to the coast first with +something to spare." + +"Well," said Bert warmly, "it will be your victory as well as mine if I +do. You're my 'one best bet' when it comes to getting into form. I +wouldn't have had half a chance to pull off any of the stunts I have, if +it hadn't been for you." + +But Reddy tossed this lightly aside. + +"Not a bit of it," he protested, "'tis yersilf has done the work, and +yersilf should get the credit. And ye've done it too in the face of +accident and hard luck. This time I'm hoping that luck will be on yer +side. And to make sure," he grinned, "I'm going to give yer a sprig of +four-leaved shamrock that came to me from the folks at home, last +seventeenth of March. 'Twill not be hurting ye any to have it along with +yer." + +"Sure thing," laughed Bert. "I'll slip it in the tool box and carry it +every foot of the way." + +And as Reddy had groomed Bert, so Bert groomed his machine. Every nut +and bolt, valve and spring was gone over again and again, until even his +critical judgment was satisfied. It was to carry not only his fortune +but perhaps his life, and he did not rest until he was convinced that +nothing could add to its perfection. It had become almost a part of +himself, and it was with a feeling of reluctance that at last he had it +carefully crated and sent on to the starting point, to await his coming +forty-eight hours later. + +That evening, as he returned from the post office, he met Tom and Dick +at the foot of the steps leading to their dormitory. He waved at them an +open letter that he had been reading. + +"It's from the Committee," he explained. "It gives the route and final +instructions. Come up to the rooms and we'll go over it together." + +A bond of friendship, far from common, united these three comrades--the +"Three Guardsmen," as they were jokingly called, because they were so +constantly together. They had first met at a summer camp, some years +before, and a strong similarity of character and tastes had drawn them +to each other at once. From that time on, it had been "one for three and +three for one." + +Full to the brim as they were of high spirits and love of adventure, +they often got into scrapes from which it required all their nerve and +ingenuity to emerge with a whole skin. Their supreme confidence in +themselves often led them to take chances from which older and wiser +heads would have shrunk. And the various exploits in which they had +indulged had taught each how fully and absolutely he might rely on the +others. On more than one occasion, death itself had been among the +possibilities, but even that supreme test had been met without +flinching. + +Only a few months before, when, on their journey through Mexico, Dick +had fallen into the hands of El Tigre, the dreaded leader of guerillas, +Bert and Tom had taken the trail at once, and after a most exciting +chase, had rescued him from the bandit's clutches. During a trip to the +Adirondacks, Tom had been bitten by a rattler and would have perished, +had it not been for Bert's quickness of mind and swiftness of foot. And +Bert himself never expected to come closer to death than that day on the +San Francisco wharf, when Dick had grasped the knife hand of the Malay +running amuck, just as it was upraised to strike. + +Any man or any danger that threatened one would have to count on +tackling three. Each knew that in a pinch the others would stick at +nothing in the effort to back him up. And this conviction, growing +stronger with every new experience, had cemented their friendship beyond +all possibility of breaking. + +Their early ties had ripened and broadened under the influence of their +college life. Dick had entered a year before the other two, and it was +this that had moved them to choose the same Alma Mater. Dick and Tom +were studying to be civil engineers, while Bert was more strongly drawn +toward the field of electricity and wireless telegraphy. Their keen +intelligence had won them high honors in scholarship, and their brawn +and muscle had achieved an enviable distinction in athletics. On the +pennant winning team of the year before, Bert's brilliant pitching had +been ably supported by the star work of Tom at third, while Dick, beside +being the champion slugger of the team, had held down first base like a +veteran. All were immensely popular with the student body in general, +not only for their prowess, but because of the qualities of mind and +heart that would have singled them out anywhere as splendid specimens of +young American manhood. + +Bert and Dick roomed together, while Tom's quarters were on the floor +below. Now, as it was nearer, they all piled into Tom's sitting-room, +eager to discuss the contents of the official letter. + +"Here it is," said Bert, as he tossed it over to the others. "You see, I +have the southern route." + +"O, thunder," groaned Tom, "the toughest of the lot. You'll fairly melt +down there at this time of year." + +"It _is_ rough," said Dick. "The roads there are something fierce. The +northern or central route would have been ten times better." + +"Yes," agreed Bert, "it certainly is a handicap. If I'd been left to +choose, myself, I wouldn't have dreamed of going that way. Still, it's +all a matter of lot, and I've got no kick coming. Somebody would have +had to draw it, and I might as well be the victim as any one else." + +"Spoken like a sport, all right," grumbled Tom. "But it makes me sore at +fate. You'll need something more than Reddy's shamrock to make up for +it." + +"You might hunt me up the hind foot of a rabbit, shot by a cross-eyed +coon in a graveyard, in the 'dark of the moon,' if you want to make sure +of my winning," jested Bert. "But, seriously, fellows, I'm not going to +let that rattle me a little bit. It may be harder, but if I do come in +first, there'll be all the more credit in winning. As for the heat, +I'll make my own breeze as I go along, and I'll take my chances on the +roads." + +"Well, I suppose there's no use growling," admitted Tom, grudgingly. "At +any rate, we'll see a section of the country we've never seen before." + +"_We_," cried Bert. "What do you mean by that?" + +"Just what I say," answered Tom, looking a little guiltily at Dick. + +"What," yelled Bert, leaping to his feet. "Are you two rascals going +along?" + +"Surest thing you know," said Dick, calmly. "Did you think for a minute +that Tom and I would miss the fun of seeing you scoot across the +continent and win that ten thousand dollars? Not on your life. We were +going to surprise you, but since this dub has let the cat out of the +bag, we might as well own up. There's nothing to do, now that we know +the route but to go out and get the tickets." + +"Well, you're a pair of bricks," gasped Bert. "The finest pals a fellow +ever had. That's the best news I've had 'since Hector was a pup.' I +didn't know that I'd see a friend's face from the start to the finish. +Talk about shamrocks and rabbit's feet! This news has got them skinned +to death. It won't be any trick at all to toss off a few hundred miles, +if I can figure on seeing you fellows when I turn in for the night. +Say, fellows, I can't put it into words, but you know how I feel." + +"Pure selfishness on our part," said Dick, airily, to mask his own deep +feeling. "We want to see the San Francisco Fair, and figured that we'd +never have a better chance." + +"Yes," mocked Bert, delightedly, "I size up that selfishness all right. +But now let's study the route and figure out the schedule. Then you gay +deceivers can get through tickets with stopover privileges, and I'll +know just where to find you along the way." + +"You see," explained Tom, "we figured that we could get into the big +towns ahead of you and act as a sort of base of supplies. You can keep +tab on the way the 'Blue Streak' is running, and if anything goes +wrong--if a tire bursts or a fork breaks or you have engine trouble--you +can wire ahead and we'll have everything ready for you to make a +lightning change the minute you heave in sight. Of course, you may have +to do some temporary patching and tinkering along the way, but in really +big things we may come in handy. But now let's cut out the hallelujahs +and get down to brass tacks." + +Which they did to such good effect that before they turned in for the +night, they had outlined a plan that covered every probable contingency. +Of course there was no such precision possible as in the case of a +railroad schedule. A hundred things might happen to cause a change here, +a delay there, but, between certain elastic limits, the route and time +were carefully worked out. If they should have to revise it, as they +doubtless would, the telegraph and long distance telephone could be +depended on to help them out. + +Starting from New York, Bert figured that the first leg of the journey +would take him as far as Philadelphia. This, of course, would not be +typical of the regular distance he would have to cover each day, in +order to beat the time record. But the race was not to start until noon, +so that a half day was all that would be left the riders. And that half +day would be slower than the average, because they would have to thread +the streets of the greater city with all its hindrances and speed +regulations, and would have bridges and ferries to cross before they +could fairly let themselves out. Of course this would not count for a +day in the timing, as they would be allowed a half day at the end of the +journey to make up for it. In other words, the day ran from noon to +noon, instead of from midnight to midnight. + +From Philadelphia the route would lead to Baltimore and Washington. Then +he proposed to strike down through West Virginia and into the famous +Blue Grass region of Kentucky and thence swing down toward Little Rock, +Arkansas, which would mark the extreme southern point of the journey. +After that, he would be going almost directly west, with a slight trend +to the north. He would cut through Oklahoma on a direct horizontal, and +then for a short time traverse the upper part of Texas. Leaving the Lone +Star State, he would strike in succession Santa FƩ, New Mexico, and +Flagstaff, Arizona. Then, at last, he would be in California, getting a +glimpse of the sea at Santa Barbara, and then sweeping up the valley to +San Francisco. + +The record he had to beat was twenty days. He planned to do it in +fifteen. That is, he was confident that as far as mere time were +concerned, he could reel off enough miles every day to take him over the +route within that limit. But that was assuming that everything went +smoothly, and, in a trip of this length, he knew that such an assumption +was absurd. He gave himself three days for accidents and delays. This, +added to the fifteen of actual running time, would still give him a +comfortable margin of forty-eight hours. But, on the average, despite +accident or breakdown, wind or rain, sickness or health, mistaken roads +or dangerous spills, flood or freshet or tempest, he must make from two +to three hundred miles every day. Not only he must be in shape to do it, +but the "Blue Streak" also. There were two machines that had to take +all the chances of wear and tear and mishap--the physical machine above +the saddle, and the steel and rubber machine below it. + +He wanted to make the most of the good roads that he would have at the +very beginning of the trip. The first three days would be the best ones, +as far as this feature was concerned. The Eastern and Northern States +were far ahead of the rest of the country in this respect. Their wealth +and population, as well as the vastly greater number of motor vehicles +in use, had early turned their attention to the value and necessity of +the best kind of roads that money could buy and science invent. After he +left Louisville, the going would be harder. While, at places, there +would be magnificent turnpikes along the main arteries of travel, these +would be more than counterbalanced by roads where clay and sand +predominated. But, to make up for this, would be the fact that for long +distances the roads would be clearer and the speed regulations less +stringent. And, on these stretches, Bert promised himself to "hit it up" +hard enough to compensate for the inferior quality of the road. It was +"all in the game," and, in the long run, things would about even up. + +"It's a good deal of a lottery, when all is said and done," was the way +he summed it up, as they rose from the maps and papers spread out before +them; "I may get knocked out on the first day, and then again I may +turn up smiling at the finish." + +"Of course," assented Tom, "there's no telling what may happen before +the race is over. But I have a hunch that in this lottery you are going +to draw the capital prize." + +"Well," laughed Bert, "if you're as good a prophet as you are a pal, I'd +be sure of it." + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +A FLYING START + + +The day of the race dawned bright and clear. There was just enough +breeze to temper the heat of the sun, but not enough to interfere with +the riders. There had been no rain since three days before, and the +roads, while a little dusty, were firm and fast. Everything bespoke +ideal conditions for the event that, it was hoped, would hang up new +records in one of the most modern of sports. + +The three friends had left college the day before, and had taken up +their quarters at one of the hotels near the beach. They were full of +health and hope and enthusiasm. The work of the college year was over, +and they felt like colts kicking up their heels in a pasture. Dick and +Tom were looking forward to the trip across the continent and the +wonders of the great Exposition. This of itself would have been enough +to account for their exuberance, but there was the added excitement of +watching the progress of the great race, and, in a sense, taking part in +it. And, with all the optimism of youth, they did not let themselves +feel the shadow of a doubt that their comrade would come in triumphant. + +And Bert, although somewhat sobered by the weight of responsibility that +rested upon him, was almost as jubilant as they. He was a born fighter, +and his spirits always rose on the eve of a contest. He was "tuned to +the hour." The muscles of his arms and legs glided like snakes beneath +the white skin, his color was good, his eyes shone, and he had never in +all his many contests felt in better physical trim. + +Early in the morning, he had hurried to the garage to which the "Blue +Streak" had been consigned, and was delighted to find that it had made +the journey without a scratch. No one but himself was permitted to give +it the final grooming. He personally filled the tank, looked to the oil, +and went over every nut and bolt and valve. Then he sprang into the +saddle and took a five-mile spin around the neighboring race track. And +even his exacting criticism could find no shadow of defect. The "Blue +Streak," like its master, was in perfect condition. + +"Well, old boy," said Bert, as he patted the beautiful machine, after +the test, "we're going to be pretty close companions for the next few +weeks, and you've got a big job cut out for you. But I believe you're +game for it, and if your rider is as good as you are, I won't have +anything left to ask." + +As the hour drew near, a great crowd assembled to see the start. +The contest had stirred up a vast amount of interest among motor +enthusiasts, and many of the motorcycle clubs were represented by big +delegations. One or two of the entries had dropped out at the last +moment, and there were ten contestants who faced the starter. Each had +his coterie of friends and well wishers who had gathered to give him a +rousing send off. But none were greeted so uproariously as Bert, who had +a reception that "warmed the cockles of his heart." Undergraduates of +the old college flocked around him, and these were reinforced by +hundreds of alumni, living in or near the city, who scented one more +victory for the blue colors that they loved so dearly. They swarmed +about him, grasped his hand and thumped him on the back, until if he had +been in poorer condition, he would have been black and blue. It was with +difficulty that he could tear himself away from the multitude whose +enthusiasm outran their discretion. But many a day thereafter, in +loneliness and peril and the shadow of death, the memory of that +boisterous farewell was an inspiration. The last hands he clasped were +those of Tom and Dick and Reddy, whose face was as red as his hair from +excitement. + +"Good luck, me bye," he called. Then in a whisper, "Ye haven't forgot +the shamrock?" + +"You bet I haven't," laughed Bert, and lifting the cover of his tool +box, he showed it lying on top. Whereat, Reddy heaved a sigh of relief, +and fell back satisfied. + +And now everything was ready for the start. The wheels had been dipped +in the Atlantic, whose surf curled up to meet them, as though to whisper +a message to its sister ocean. Then all the riders, standing by their +machines, were drawn up in line on the boulevard that came down almost +to the beach. The conditions of the race were read aloud and all of the +racers with uplifted hand swore to observe them. A letter from the Mayor +of New York to the Mayor of San Francisco was delivered to each +contestant. Only the one who reached there first was to deliver his. +The others would be of value as souvenirs of perhaps a gallant but +unsuccessful struggle. + +Then there was a moment's silence, while the excitement grew tense. The +starter lifted his pistol and glanced along the waiting line. There came +a flash, a sharp report, and before the echoes died away the riders were +in the saddle. A tremendous roar from the exhausts made the crowd shrink +back, and it scattered as the great machines leaped forward. It was like +the bursting of a rainbow. Blue and red and black and white darted +forward in flying streaks of color, spreading out like the sticks of a +gigantic fan. Before the startled spectators could catch their breath, +the racers were vanishing from sight up the boulevard. The dash from +coast to coast had begun. + +For the five mile ride along the parkway there was no need of observing +the speed regulations. The road had been kept clear of all other +vehicles, and policemen placed along the route kept the crowds to the +paths on either side. The "motor cops," who were personally interested +in that race, that involved their own pet machine, waved greetings as +they passed. + +In a few minutes they had left this atmosphere of friendliness and +enthusiasm, and were getting into the stream of the city's traffic. From +now on, there was need of constant vigilance. The riders began to +separate, each steering through the street that they figured would bring +them most quickly and easily to the bridges that spanned the river. By +the time Bert had crossed the old Brooklyn Bridge, he had lost sight of +all his competitors. By different roads, from now on, they would fly +toward the common goal, so many thousand miles distant. The spectacular +features were in the past. Now each one, alone and unaided, was to "work +out his own salvation." + +But there was no sinking of the heart, as Bert, after crossing the +bridge and winding through the packed streets of lower New York, stood +on the ferry boat and watched the irregular sky line of the great city. +What would happen to him before he saw it again, it was fortunate that +he could not guess. But just now, his heart beat high with the delight +of struggle and achievement. He had his chance. And he was determined to +make that chance a certainty. + +He was the first one off the boat when it swung into its slip, and as +soon as he got beyond the business quarter of Jersey City, he began to +"eat up" the space across the meadows. He was flying when he reached +Newark, where he again had to let up in his pace for a few minutes. But +luck was with him and gave him an unexpected pace maker, just as he drew +into the open spaces beyond the city limits. + +The broad road ran right alongside the railroad track, and just as +Bert let out a link and got into his stride, a limited express came +thundering along at a high rate of speed. The racing instinct woke in +Bert and he let his machine out until it was traveling like the wind. +For a mile or two they went along like a team, neither seeming able to +lose the other. + +The passengers, gazing listlessly out of the windows, gradually woke up +to the fact that this tiny machine was actually racing with their train. +At first they were amused at the seeming impudence, but as mile after +mile passed, with the "Blue Streak" holding its own, they became +excited. The sportsman spirit that seems characteristic of America was +aroused, and all the windows on that side of the train were filled with +crowding faces. It was like a pygmy daring a giant, a tugboat +challenging the _Imperator_. + +The engineer, at first looking languidly at the impertinent racer, made +no special effort to increase his speed. But when Bert hung to his flank +and refused to be shaken off, he turned and said something to his +fireman. The latter shoveled desperately, the engineer let out his +throttle, and the great train lunged forward. + +But Bert, too, had something "up his sleeve." He had been keeping well +within his limit, and he knew the speed of which his gallant mount was +capable. A mile ahead he could see where the road crossed the track. +With a quick twist of the wrist, he threw in the highest speed and +had to grip his handlebars hard to keep his seat as his iron steed +responded. He flashed on ahead, fairly scorching up the road, and dashed +across the track fifty feet ahead of the onrushing locomotive. Then, as +the passengers rushed over to the other side of the cars, he waved his +cap to them, shook it defiantly at the discomfited engineer and fireman, +and disappeared around the bend of the road. Then he gradually slackened +his pace, though still maintaining a high rate of speed. + +Bert was hilarious. It was his first race, so far, and he had come out +ahead. He took it as an omen. + +"Some race, old scout," he confided joyously to his mount. "You +certainly lived up to your name that time." And he laughed aloud, as he +remembered the look on the faces in the cab. + +The race had been a capital thing, not only for the many miles he had +covered, but because of the added confidence that had been infused into +his veins by the successful outcome. He had "ridden rings" around his +redoubtable opponent, and his heart was full of elation. + +As he neared Trenton, he stopped at a garage to replenish his gasoline. +He had plenty left to finish out the stretch that he had mapped out for +that day's work, but he was taking no chances, and always felt better +when he knew that his tank was full. + +A tall young fellow had preceded him on the same errand, and was just +about to mount his wheel when Bert entered. There was something familiar +about him and Bert cudgeled his brains to remember where he had met him. +The stranger seemed equally puzzled. Then a sudden gleam of memory +lighted up his face, and he came toward Bert with outstretched hand. + +"Beg pardon," he said. "But isn't your name Wilson--Bert Wilson, the +college pitcher?" + +"Yes," answered Bert, taking the hand held out to him, "and you--sure I +know," he exclaimed, as recognition flashed upon him--"you're Gunther of +the Maroons. I couldn't place you for a minute." + +"You placed me all right in that last game, when you struck me out in +the ninth inning," grinned Gunther. "Do you remember?" + +Did Bert remember? Could he ever forget? Again the scene came before +him as though it were yesterday. He saw the diamond gleaming in the +afternoon sun, the stands packed with twenty-five thousand howling +maniacs. It was the final game of the season, and the pennant hung upon +the outcome. Two men were out when Gunther came to the bat. He was the +heaviest slugger of the league, and the home crowd was begging him to +"kill the ball." Bert had outguessed him on the first strike, and +snapped one over by surprise on the second. Then, on the third, he had +cut loose that mighty "fadeaway" of his. For forty feet it had gone on a +line--hesitated--swerved sharply down and in, and, evading Gunther's +despairing swing, plumped into the catcher's mitt. And the howl that +went up--and the mighty swoop of the fellows on the field--and the wild +enthusiasm over Bert--and the bonfires--and the snake dances! Did he +remember? + +"You certainly had me buffaloed that day, all right," went on Gunther. +"It isn't often that I hit a foot above a ball, but that fadeaway of +yours had me going. I simply couldn't gauge it. It's a teaser, for +fair. You were the whole team that day." + +"We had the luck, that's all," protested Bert. "The breaks of the game +were with us." + +"It wasn't luck," said Gunther, generously; "you simply outplayed us. +But we did make you work to win," he added, with a reminiscent smile. + +By this time, the tank had been replenished, and he was recalled from +his "fanning bee" by the necessity of resuming his trip. Gunther had +heard of the contest and had seen Bert's name among the competitors, but +had not associated it with the Wilson of baseball fame. + +"You can't get away from the game," he joked, referring to the ten +contestants. "I see that you are still playing against a 'nine.' If that +pun isn't bad enough, I'll go you one better--or worse--and bet that +you'll bowl them over like ninepins." + +"Thanks, old man," responded Bert. "I hope I'll make a 'strike.' But now +I'll have to skip and cut out the merry jesting. Jump on your wheel and +set the pace for me for the next ten miles or so." + +"Swell chance of my making pace for that crackerjack you have there," +said Gunther, looking admiringly at the "Blue Streak," "but I'll try to +keep alongside, anyway." + +He had a surprisingly good machine and doubled Bert's dare by riding +twenty miles or more, before he finally hauled up and, with a warm +handgrip, said goodby. + +"Two pleasant things to-day," mused Bert, as he sped on, referring to +the popular theory that events, good or bad, come in threes. "I guess +the third will be in meeting good old Tom and Dick, when I swing into +the City of Brotherly Love." + +And pleasant it certainly was, when, after reporting to the checkers and +timers at the club headquarters, and putting up his motorcycle, he +turned toward the hotel where his chums awaited him with a royal +welcome. + +"You've surely got off to a flying start, old top," said Tom. "I hadn't +any idea that you'd hit this burg so soon. We've just fairly got in +ourselves. But before anything else, let's wrap ourselves about some +eats. Are you hungry?" + +"Am I hungry?" echoed Bert. "Is a wolf hungry? Is a hawk hungry? Is a +cormorant--say, lead me to it." + +And at the bountiful table to which they straightway adjourned, Bert +proved that none of the natural history specimens he had mentioned "had +anything on him." Nor did his friends lag far behind, and it is doubtful +if three happier and fuller young fellows could have been found in +Philadelphia, as, afterward, they discussed the events of the day. They +were especially interested in Bert's meeting with Gunther, as they +themselves had taken part in that famous game. Dick's mighty work with +the stick on that occasion and Tom's great steal home from third were +matters of baseball history. + +Then Bert mentioned the railroad episode. + +"You ought to have seen the way I beat a train, fellows," he gloated. +"My, but it took some tall speeding." + +"Beat a train?" questioned Tom, incredulously. + +"What was it--a freight?" bantered Dick. + +"Freight nothing," retorted Bert, a little nettled. "A limited express, +if you ask me." + +"Near Newark, did you say?" queried Tom. + +"I didn't say," was Bert's rejoinder, "but as it happened, it was just +outside of Newark." + +"Beat a limited express," murmured Dick, shaking his head. "Tom, I'm +afraid Bert's stringing us." + +"Imposing on our innocence, it seems to me," assented Tom, gloomily. +"The next thing, he'll be telling us that he made a daredevil dash +across the track in front of the locomotive." + +"And waved his cap at the passengers," mourned Dick. + +"And shook it at the engineer," added Tom. + +"Say," began Bert, "what----" But the sight of his bewildered face was +too much, and they burst into a roar. + +"You poor boob," sputtered Tom, as soon as he could speak. "We were on +that train." + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE DESERTED HUT + + +Bert's first thought, when he opened his eyes the next morning, was of +the weather. This was destined to be the chief object of anxiety all +through the trip. As long as it kept reasonably dry and clear, one big +element of danger and delay could be left out of his calculations. The +lowering of the sky meant the lowering of his hopes. + +As he rushed to the window and drew aside the curtain, he was relieved +to see that the sun was rising. To be sure, there was a slight haze +around it that might portend rain later on. But for the present, at +least, the roads were good. If rain were on the way, all the more reason +why he should do some tall "hustling" while the going was fair. + +His sleep had been restful and refreshing, and he hummed gaily to +himself, as he rushed through his ablutions. He stowed away a hasty but +ample breakfast, and then after a hearty farewell to his chums, hurried +around to the garage where his machine was stored. + +He was surprised to find a large gathering of motorcycle enthusiasts on +hand. The news had spread abroad that one of the contestants in the +great race had reached the city the night before, and delegations from +the many clubs had gathered to give him a send-off and accompany him for +a few miles out of town. Bert greeted them warmly, and, after assuring +himself that the "Blue Streak" was in first-class condition, leaped into +the saddle and started out at the head of the procession. + +First one and then the other would make the pace, sprinting for a short +distance for all that he was worth, and then dropping back into the +ruck. But Bert "saw their bluff and went them one better," and no matter +how hard they "hit it up," he was always within striking distance of +their rear wheel. One by one they gave it up, and by the time that +thirty miles had been covered, Bert found himself riding on alone. He +had welcomed the visitors, because of the goodwill that they had shown +and the pace that they had made. Their company made the miles less long +and furnished him a mental tonic. Yet he was glad, when, with nothing to +distract him, he could bend all his energies to the task before him and +put the "Blue Streak" to the top of its speed. + +For he wanted to make this day a record breaker in the matter of miles +covered. The roads were superb, and it behooved him to make the most of +them, with a view to having some surplus of time on hand, when he +struck the slower stretches further on. + +There was plenty about him to enlist his thoughts, had he allowed them +to wander. He was on historic ground, and every foot was rich in +Revolutionary memories. Here had Washington with his ragged and +barefooted and hungry armies defied all the power of Great Britain. +Mifflin and Greene and Lafayette and "Light Horse Harry Lee" had here +done deeds of daring that electrified the world. And, before night, he +expected to be on the scene of that greater and sadder struggle, where +Grant and Lee had flung their giant armies at each other and drenched +the soil with fraternal blood. But, although Bert was an ardent patriot, +and, at any other time, nothing would have more strongly appealed to +him, now he was utterly engrossed in the colossal task set before him. +This, in fact, was the one great quality that had won him so many +victories in the athletic world--the ability of shutting out every +thing else for the time being, and concentrating all his strength and +attention on the task that lay at hand. + +Now, he was fairly flying. Mile after mile swept away behind him, as he +gave the "Blue Streak" its head and let it show him what it could do. +The "speed lust" ran riot in his veins. As he neared the different +villages, on his route, he was forced to slacken speed to some extent. +It would never do to be arrested for breaking the speed limit. He +foresaw all the heart-breaking delay, the officious constable, the +dilatory country justice of the peace, the crowd of gaping rustics, the +possible jail detention. He was amply supplied with money to meet any +possible fine--but imprisonment was another matter, that might be +fraught with the direst consequences. So, although he inwardly raged at +the necessity, he curbed his natural impulse, and slowed up at crossings +and country towns. But when again he found himself out in the open, he +amply reimbursed himself for "crawling," as he called it, through the +towns. It is doubtful whether the startled townspeople would have called +it "crawling." But everything in this world is comparative, and where +they would have thought themselves flying at twenty miles an hour, Bert +felt that he was creeping at forty. + +Few faster things had ever flashed like a streak of light along the +country roads. Horses, grazing in the adjoining pastures, after one wild +glance, tossed up their heels and fled madly across the fields. Even the +cows, placidly chewing their cud, were roused from their bovine calm and +struggled to their feet. Chickens, squawking wildly, ran across the +road, and although Bert tried his best to avoid them, more than one paid +the penalty for miscalculating his speed. Dogs started fiercely in +pursuit, and then disgustedly gave it up and crept away with their tail +between their legs. And all the time the speedometer kept creeping +rapidly up and up, until, within two hours after the start, he had wiped +a hundred miles off his schedule. + +Just once he had stopped in his mad flight, to get a glass of milk at a +farmhouse. He was in the Pennsylvania Dutch district, the richest and +thriftiest farming country in the world. All about him were opulent +acres and waving fields of corn and big red barns crammed to bursting. +They were worthy, sober people, rather prone to regard every new +invention as a snare of the Devil, and the farmer's wife was inclined +to look askance at the panting machine that Bert bestrode. But his +friendly, genial face thawed her prejudice and reserve, and she +smilingly refused the money that he had offered for the rich creamy milk +she brought from one of the shining pans in her dairy. + +By ten o'clock, he had passed through Baltimore, and, before noon, he +was riding over the splendid roads of the nation's capitol. Here, +despite the temptation to spend an hour or two, he only paused long +enough to take a hearty meal and check his time. He thrust aside the +well-meant invitations that were pressed upon him at the club, and by +two o'clock had left Washington behind him and was riding like a fiend +toward West Virginia. He wanted if possible to reach Charleston before +night closed in. If he could do this, he would be very well content to +dismount and call it a day's work. + +But now old Nature took a hand. All through the morning, the haze had +been thickening, and now black clouds, big with threats of rain, were +climbing up the sky. The wind, too, was rising and came soughing along +in fitful gusts. Every moment now was precious, and Bert bent low, as he +coaxed his machine to do its utmost. + +And it responded beautifully. Like Sheridan's horse on the road to +Winchester, it seemed to feel the mood of its rider. It was working like +a charm. Mile after mile sped away beneath the wheels that passed light +as a ghost over the broad path beneath. Even when it had to tackle +hills, it never hesitated or faltered, but went up one slope almost as +fast as it went down another. + +And the hills were growing more frequent. Up to this time the roads had +been almost as level as a floor. But now, Bert was approaching the +foothills of the Blue Ridge, and not until he struck the lowlands of +Arkansas, would he be out of the shadow of the mountains, which, while +they added immensely to the sublimity of the scenery, were no friends to +any one trying to make a record for speed. + +Still, this did not worry Bert. He expected to get the "lean" as well as +the "fat." The North American continent had not been framed to meet his +convenience, and he had to take it as it came. All that especially +bothered him was that threatening sky and those frowning clouds that +steadily grew blacker. + +His eyes and thoughts had been so steadily fixed upon the heavens, that +he had scarcely realized the change in the surrounding country. But now +he woke up to the fact that his environment was entirely different from +that of the morning. Then he had been in a rich farming country, the +"garden of the Lord;" now he was in the barren coal regions of West +Virginia. Beautiful mansions had given place to tiny cabins; prosperous +towns to mountain hamlets. The farms were stony and poorly cultivated. +Great coal breakers stood out against the landscape like gaunt +skeletons. The automobiles that had crowded the eastern roads were here +conspicuous by their absence. The faces of those he passed on the road +were pinched and careworn. He was seeing life on one of its threadbare +levels. + +But his musings on the inequalities of life were rudely interrupted by a +drop of rain that splashed on his face. It was coming, then. But perhaps +it would only prove a shower. That would not deter him. In fact he would +welcome it, as it would serve to lay the dust. But if it developed into +a steady downpour, he would have to seek shelter. It would only be +foolhardy to plough through the mud with his tires skidding and +threatening an ugly fall that might mean a broken leg or arm. + +Faster and faster the drops came down, and faster and faster the "Blue +Streak" scorched along the road, as though to grasp every possible +advantage, before the elements had their way. Gradually the roads lost +their white, dusty appearance and grew yellow in the waning light. Bert +could feel a perceptible slowing up as the mud began to grip the wheel. +Still he kept on, holding like a miser to every precious mile that meant +so much to him. + +Soon, however, he realized that "the game was up." The rain was coming +down now in torrents, and he was wet to the skin. And with the rain came +darkness so thick as "almost to be felt." Then a flash of lightning rent +the sky, and a terrific crash of thunder warned him that the storm was +on in earnest. + +He looked about him for some place of shelter. But there was nothing in +sight, not even one of the little cabins, of whose hospitality he would +so gladly have availed himself. The lightning came so fast now that the +sky was aflame with it, and the thunder was continuous and deafening. He +did not dare to seek shelter under the trees, and, in the open, the +steel and iron of his motorcycle might easily attract a lightning +stroke. + +As he looked about him in perplexity, a peculiarly blinding flash showed +him a little shack at the top of the hill he had been climbing when the +storm had broken. It was only a few rods ahead of him, and, with a +feeling of immense relief and thankfulness, he made for it. There was no +light coming from it, and he did not know whether it was inhabited or +abandoned. But, in either case, it was shelter from the fierceness of +the storm, and that was enough. + +Leading the wheel from which he had dismounted, he climbed the +intervening space and rapped at the door. He waited an instant and then +knocked again. Still there was no answer and after pausing a moment, he +pushed open the door, that had no latch and yielded to his touch, as he +stepped inside. + +At first, coming from the outer air, he could only make out the outlines +of the single room, of which the cabin seemed to consist. He called out, +but there was no response. Then he rummaged in his tool box, and got out +a bit of candle that he had provided for an emergency. From a waterproof +pouch in his khaki suit, he produced a match and lighted the candle. +Then, as the flickering light grew into a steady flame, he was able to +take stock of his surroundings. + +As he had surmised on his entrance, there was only a single room. The +floor was of dirt, and the shack had been simply slung together in the +rudest kind of a way. There was a small table of unplaned boards and a +stool, from which one of the three legs was missing. A bunk in the +corner and a tattered blanket completed the entire outfit of the +temporary shelter in which Bert had so unexpectedly found himself. + +It might have been a cabin formerly dwelt in by one of the "poor whites" +of the mountains, or possibly a hunter's shack that served at intervals +for a temporary camp. At all events, it was shelter, and, in his present +wet and desperate condition, Bert was not inclined to "look a gift horse +in the mouth." + +"It isn't exactly the Waldorf-Astoria," he thought to himself, as he +brought his motorcycle in out of the pounding rain, "but it surely looks +mighty good to me just now." + +There was a rude fireplace at one side and some wood and kindling left +by the previous occupant, and it was only a few moments before a cheery +blaze gave an air of comfort to the small interior. After the fire was +well started, Bert took his wet garments one by one and dried them +before the fire. In a little while he was snug and dry, and inclined +to look philosophically on the day that had had such an unlooked for +ending. He even chuckled, as he looked at the speedometer and found that +it registered over two hundred and fifty miles. He at least was nearly +up to his schedule, in spite of the rain, and to-morrow was "a new day." + +"It might easily have been worse," he thought. "Suppose it had rained +that way this morning, instead of holding off as long as it did. I've +cleared the Eastern States, at any rate, and am at last 'down South.'" + +As a precaution, when he stopped at Washington, he had secured a few +sandwiches and a can of sardines. These he put out on the rough table, +and, as hunger is always "the best sauce," he enjoyed it hugely. There +wasn't a crumb left, when at last he leaned back contentedly and +stretched his legs before the fire. + +"Like Robinson Crusoe, I'm master of all I survey," he mused. "Not that +my kingdom is a very extensive one," as he looked about the little room, +that he could have covered with one jump. + +The rain still kept on with unabated fury, but the harder it poured, the +more cozy the shack seemed by contrast. + +"Guess you and I will have to bunk it out together, old chap," he said, +addressing his faithful wheel. "Well, I might easily find myself in +worse company. You're a good old pal, if there ever was one." + +He took from his kit some oiled rags and together with some old gunny +sacking that he found in a corner, started to clean the machine. The +mud with which it was caked made this a work of time, as well as a +"labor of love," and two hours wore away before he had concluded. But it +was a thorough job, and, by the time he was through, the "Blue Streak" +was as bright and shining as when it faced the starter at noon on the +day before. + +While he was at work, Bert at times seemed to hear something that +sounded like the roar and dash of waves. But he dismissed this as +absurd. It was probably the splashing of the water, as it ran down the +gullies at the side of the road. He was far above the level of lake or +pond, and there was nothing on his map to indicate the presence of any +considerable body of water in that locality. Once he went to the door, a +little uneasily. But in the pitch darkness, all he could see was the +lights of a little town, far down the valley. He told himself that he +was dreaming, and, after promising himself an early start on the +following morning, he stretched himself out on the little bunk in the +corner, and in a few minutes had fallen into a deep and refreshing +sleep. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +THE BROKEN DAM + + +How long he slept he did not know, but, while the cabin was still +shrouded in darkness, he woke suddenly and sat upright, as though in +response to a voice that called. + +He looked about him, unable at first to realize where he was. Then, as +he reached out his hand, it came in contact with the motorcycle, which +he had stood at the head of the bunk. His sleepy brain cleared, and the +events of the day before--the storm--the deserted cabin--came back to +him. He struck a match and glanced at his watch. It was a little after +four, and, promising himself that he would not go to sleep again, he +blew out the light and lay back in his bunk, planning out the ride for +the day so near at hand. + +But try as he would, he could not concentrate his mind on the subject in +hand. Why had he awakened so suddenly? It was wholly apart from his +ordinary habit. Usually he slept like a log, and, like a healthy animal, +came slowly out of sleep. But this time it had been with a jump. He told +himself that it was probably due to his unusual surroundings, and +again tried to pin himself down to his schedule. But a vague sense of +uneasiness would not vanish at his bidding. He felt as though some +monstrous danger was threatening. Something direful and evil was in the +air. In vain he called himself an "old woman," and laughed, a little +uncertainly, at his fears. The subtle threat persisted. + +He had never had a strong premonition of danger that had not been +justified. He was high strung and sensitively organized, and warnings +that would leave unstirred a duller mind rang in his consciousness like +an alarm bell. He recalled how, at Panama, not long ago, he had been +impressed by the same feeling of coming peril, when the plot to destroy +the canal was rapidly coming to a head. It had been justified then. Why +should he not trust it now? + +He hesitated no longer. He hastily threw aside the old tattered blanket, +hurried himself into his clothes and went to the door of the cabin. + +The rain had ceased, although the water was still running in streams in +the ditches that lined the road. Darkness yet held sway, but, in the +East, he could see the gray fingers of the dawn. In the dimness, he +looked about him, and, as his eyes became accustomed to the surroundings, +he saw, at a little distance, the outlines of a great structure that lay +level with the plateau on which the cabin stood. + +With a few quick strides, he crossed the intervening space until he +stood on the brink of a gigantic dam. Then he knew what was meant by the +splashing and gurgling he had heard the night before. + +Stretched out in front of him was an angry waste of swirling waters. +It was yellow and turbid from the clay brought down by the mountain +torrents that acted as feeders to the lake. Great tree trunks, tossed in +the boiling waters, had been jammed against the edge, increasing the +pressure, already great. Over the brink a cataract was falling, that +grew in volume with each passing moment. Through crevices in the lower +part of the structure, other streams were trickling. + +To Bert, as with whitening face he looked upon the scene, it was evident +that the dam was in danger of collapse. There had been very heavy rains +in the preceding May, and the lake had been filled to capacity. The storm +of the night before had probably developed into a cloudburst farther up +in the mountains, and the floods that came down in consequence were +putting it to a strain that had not been counted upon when the dam was +built. It was none too strong originally--Bert could see masses of rubble +that had been inserted in the structure in place of solid stone--and +now the innocent were in danger of paying a fearful price for the +carelessness or criminality of the builders. + +It had become much lighter now, and, as he looked down at the valley +below, he could dimly make out the outlines of the houses in the town. +Human beings were sleeping there, serene and confident, men, women and +children, babes in their mothers' arms. And he alone knew of the +terrible monster that at this moment was threatening to leap upon and +destroy them. + +He turned again to the dam. The crevices were wider now. A perfect +torrent was pouring over the brink. Even while he looked, there was a +great bulge in the central part, and a deluge burst through. Two of the +capstones yielded and fell, with a noise that was drowned by the still +greater roar of the unleashed waters. There was no longer any doubt. The +dam was giving way! + +With a sickening fear at his heart, he turned and raced for the cabin. A +louder roar behind him added wings to his feet. He burst open the door, +dragged out the "Blue Streak," and in another moment was in the saddle +and riding for dear life down the valley. + +The mud was deep and at a curve of the road, his rear tire skidded and +threw him, bruised and bleeding, a dozen feet in advance. But he felt +nothing, thought of nothing but the unconscious sleepers who must be +warned. Stumbling and shaken, he resumed his seat, and tore along the +mountain road like the wind. + +At the scattered farmhouses along the way, lights could be seen in the +windows. Here and there, he passed farmers already at work in the +fields. He blew his horn and yelled at these and pointed behind him. +They cast one startled glance up the valley and then rushed to their +houses. + +He did not dare to look behind him, but he could hear a sullen roar that +momentarily grew louder. He knew that the monster had broken its bonds +and was abroad seeking for prey. He let out the last ounce of power that +he possessed as he raced on to the sleeping town. He had ridden fast +before, but never as he was riding now. + +As he neared the town, he pulled wide open the siren that he only used +on extraordinary occasions. It wailed out in a wild, weird shriek that +spoke of panic, danger, death. There was no mistaking the meaning of +that call. + +Now he was in the outskirts, and frightened faces appeared at the +windows while half-dressed men ran out of the doors. He waved his hand, +and shouted at the top of his lungs: + +"The dam has broken. Run for your lives!" + +The roar had now swelled into thunder. The flood was coming with fearful +velocity. No more need of his siren. That hideous growl of the tumbling +waters carried its own warning. + +The path on which Bert had been riding wound along the side of the hill +to the east of the town. Corresponding slopes lay on the other side. +The dwellers on the sides of the hills were comparatively safe. It was +unlikely that the water would reach them, or, at any rate, they could +climb still higher up and escape, even if their houses were washed away. +But there was no hope for the buildings in the valley itself. They were +right in the path of the onrushing flood and would be swept away like so +many houses of cards. Nothing could resist that pitiless torrent now +less than a mile away. + +Bert leaped from his wheel and dragged it into a thicket at the side of +the path. He cast a swift look up the valley. A great foaming wall of +yellow water, forty feet high, bearing on its crest gigantic tree trunks +and the debris of houses it had picked up in its path, was bearing down +on the town with the swiftness of an avalanche. + +The houses were emptying now and the streets were full of frantic +people, fleeing for their lives. Bert heard the hoarse shouts of the +men, the screams of the women, the wailing of little children roused +suddenly from sleep. From every door they poured forth, making desperate +efforts to reach the higher ground. The air resounded with the shrieks +of those driven almost mad by sudden terror. + +Into that pandemonium Bert plunged with the energy of despair. The time +was fearfully short and the tumult of the coming flood was like the +thunder of Niagara. He met a mother with a babe in her arms and two +crying children holding to her skirts. He grabbed the little ones up and +with a tousled little head under each arm placed them in safety. A +crippled boy, hobbling painfully along on crutches, felt himself +suddenly lifted from the ground and hurried to the hillside. He was +here, there and everywhere, guiding, pointing, encouraging. And then, +just as he was stooping to lift up a woman who had fainted, the flood +was upon him! + +It struck the doomed town with the force of a thunderbolt. Frame houses +were picked up and carried along like straws. Brick structures were +smashed into fragments. It was a weltering chaos of horror and +destruction. + +When that mountainous mass of water crashed down upon him, Bert for a +moment lost consciousness. It was like the impact of a gigantic hammer. +There was an interval of blackness, while the water first beat him down +and then lifted him up. He had a horrible strangling sensation, and +then, after what seemed ages of agony, he found himself on the surface, +striking out blindly in that churning mass of water that carried him +along as though in a mill race. He had never before realized the +tremendous power of water. He was a mere chip tossed hither and thither +upon the waves. His head was dizzy from the awful shock of the first +impact, there was a ringing in his ears, and the spray dashing into his +eyes obscured his sight. Almost mechanically, he moved his hands and +feet enough to keep his head above the surface. Gradually his mind +became clearer, and he could do some connected thinking. + +At any rate, he was alive. That was the main thing. Although sore and +bruised, he did not think that any of his bones were broken. He was an +expert swimmer, and knew that if he kept his senses he would not drown. +His most imminent danger lay in being struck by a tree trunk or jammed +between the houses that were grinding each other to pieces. If this +should happen, his life would be snuffed out like a candle. + +Even at that moment of frightful peril, one thing filled his heart with +gladness. He felt sure that almost all the townspeople had escaped. Here +and there, he could see some one struggling like himself in the yeasty +surges, or clinging to some floating object. Once the body of a man was +carried past within a few feet of him. His last conscious glance before +the flood overwhelmed him had shown him a number who had not yet reached +the higher ground. These had been caught up with him, and some no doubt +had perished. But he thanked God that hundreds, through his warning, had +found shelter on the hillsides. Their property had been swept away, but +they had retained their most precious possession. + +The loss in animal life was heavy. Bert groaned, as he saw the bodies of +cows and horses and dogs tossed about in the raging waters. Not far off, +a horse was swimming and gallantly trying to keep his head above water. +His fear-distended eyes fell on Bert, and he whinnied, as though asking +for help. But just then a great log was driven against him, and with a +scream that was almost human he went under. + +And now Bert noted that the force of the flood was abating. It had +reached the lowest part of the valley, and, ahead of him, the ground +began to rise. With every foot of that ascent the torrent would lose +its impetus, until finally it would reach its limit. + +But there a new danger threatened. There would be a tremendous backwash +as the current receded, and in the meeting of the two opposing forces a +terrific whirlpool would be generated, in which nothing human could +live. In some way he must reach the shore before the flood turned back. + +There was not an instant to lose, and he acted with characteristic +decision. The torrent was slackening, and he no longer felt so helpless +in its grasp. He could not swim at right angles to it and thus approach +the shore directly, but must try gradually to pull to the left, in a +long diagonal sweep. Inch by inch, he drew away from the center of the +stream and slowly neared the bank. Twice he had to dive, to avoid tree +trunks that dashed over the spot where he had been a moment before. Once +he barely escaped being caught between two houses. But his quick eye and +quicker mind stood him in good stead, at this hour of his greatest need. +His lungs were laboring ready to burst and his muscles were strained +almost to the breaking point. But his long powerful strokes brought him +steadily nearer to the eastern bank and he steered straight for a huge +tree, that stood on the edge of the rushing waters. He missed it by a +foot, but was just able to grasp a trailing branch as he was swept +beneath it. A desperate clutch, a quick swing upward and the ravening +waters had been cheated of a victim. Slowly he made his way over the +bough to the trunk of the tree, and fell, rather than dropped, to the +ground. Utterly exhausted, he crumpled into a heap and lay there +gasping. + +He had escaped death by the narrowest of margins. Even while he lay +there, bereft of strength and worn out with struggle, the flood reached +its limit, paused a moment and then rushed back. The receding current +met the other still advancing. Like giant wrestlers, they locked in a +fierce embrace, and the waves shot up for thirty feet. Great logs flew +out of the waves and fell back with a resounding crash. Had Bert been +in the center of that seething maelstrom, nothing could have saved him +from instant death. + +But he was safe. He had gone into the very jaws of death and come out +alive. Spent and wrenched and bruised he was, and weary beyond all +telling. Each arm and leg felt as though it weighed a ton. But he had +never incurred pain or danger in a worthier cause, and he rejoiced at +the chance that had impelled him to take up his quarters in the deserted +hut the night before. The rain had assuredly been a "blessing in +disguise," bitterly as he had regretted it at the time. + +A full hour elapsed before he was able to get on his feet. Had it +not been for his splendid physical condition, he would have utterly +collapsed under the strain. But soon his heart resumed its normal +rhythm, the blood coursed more strongly through his veins, and he +struggled up from his recumbent posture and began to take note of his +surroundings. + +How far he had been carried in that wild ride, he had no means of +knowing. But he judged that he must be fully six miles from the site of +the town. There had been several turnings in the valley and from where +he stood looking back, he could not see more than a mile before a bend +in the road cut off his view. But the stream itself was sufficient guide +as he retraced his steps, and he knew that all too soon he would reach +the sad and stricken crowd that would be camped on the banks, bewailing +the calamity that had come upon them with the swiftness of a lightning +stroke. + +He looked at his watch. It had stopped at ten minutes to five, probably +just at the second that the mountain of water swooped down upon him. He +threw a glance at the sun which was only a little above the horizon, and +concluded that it was not much more than six o'clock. Scarcely more than +an hour had passed, but it seemed to him as though ages had elapsed +since the moment when he had been startled by that first premonition of +danger. + +How lucky that he had heeded it! Had he obeyed his first impulse and +disregarded it, he would have been compelled to stand by, a helpless +spectator, and see a whole community wiped out of existence. And the +bitter memory of that neglected opportunity would have cast its shadow +over him as long as he lived. + +His thoughts went now to the gallant machine that had carried him so +swiftly to the work of rescue. Good old "Blue Streak!" Once more it had +proved a tried and trusty comrade, responding to every call he made upon +it. How quickly the miles would fall away behind him if he only bestrode +it now. + +The wish had scarcely been formed before a substitute appeared. He heard +the sound of wheels, and a team came up behind him. The man who was +driving told Bert to jump in, and whipped up his horses as he hurried on +to the scene of the disaster. + +Soon they came upon the homeless throng, huddled upon the slope that +overlooked what had been home. Some were weeping and running about, half +crazed with anguish. Others were dry-eyed and dumb, moving as though in +a dream, their minds paralyzed by the shock. They needed everything, +food and tents and medicines and doctors and nurses. The telegraph +and telephone service was out of commission and the offices had been +swept away. The outside world knew nothing, as yet, of the frightful +visitation that had come to the little town, nestling in the West +Virginia hills. + +Bert's resolution was taken on the instant. There was nothing more +that he could do here. Little, in fact, could be done until the flood +subsided, and there were plenty of hands only too willing to dull their +heartache in work that would keep them from brooding too much on the +disaster. But no horse could get to the world without as quickly as he +on his motorcycle. He waited only long enough to learn the shortest +route to the next town of any size. Then he rushed to the thicket on the +hillside where he had left his wheel, and was rejoiced to find it safe. +Fortunately, it had been beyond the high water mark of the flood. He +dragged it out, mounted, and, with one last look at the waters that had +so nearly been his grave, threw in the clutch and started up the valley. + +The sun was much higher now and the roads, while still muddy, were +rapidly drying out. He cleared the summit of the hills and could see far +off the buildings and spires of the town he sought. Like a meteor, he +shot down the slope, and in a few minutes was the center of an excited +group in the telegraph office, to which he at once repaired. Soon the +wires were humming, and within a short time the entire country, from +Maine to California, was stirred to the depths by the news of the +calamity. Doctors and supplies were rushed from the points nearest to +the stricken town and from Washington the Federal Government sent a +squad of Red Cross nurses and a detachment of troops to take charge of +the work of rescue and reconstruction. + +Only one thing was omitted from Bert's graphic recital of the story. He +said not a word of his wild ride in the early dawn. Others, later on, +when they had regained something of composure and could recall events +preceding the catastrophe, remembered a rider rushing along the country +roads and calling upon them to flee for their lives. They told of the +siren, shrieking like a soul in pain, that had roused them from their +sleep with its dreadful warning. The reporters, avid of sensation, +listened eagerly, and embroidered upon the story some fanciful +embellishments of their own. They did their utmost to discover the name +of the rider who had come racing through the mists of that early +morning, but failed. The only one who could tell the truth about it +never did. Except to a few of his intimates, and that under the pledge +of secrecy, Bert locked the story in his own breast and threw away the +key. It was enough for him that he had been able at a critical juncture +to do, and do successfully, the work that stood ready to his hand. The +deed carried its own compensation, and he rejoiced that he was able to +keep it from public view. But, somewhere in West Virginia, a crippled +boy remembered him gratefully, and two little youngsters were taught to +mention a nameless stranger in their prayers. + +And now that nothing was left to do in behalf of others, Bert's thoughts +reverted to his own affairs. The day was still young, despite the events +that had been crowded into it. Up to this moment he had not thought of +food, but now he was conscious that he was ravenously hungry. As soon +as he could shake himself loose from the crowd that had listened +breathlessly to his story, he went to the hotel and ordered an abundant +breakfast. When he had finished, he was once more his normal self. He +replenished his gasoline supply, consulted his map, jumped into the +saddle and was off. Before long he reached the road that he had been +traveling the previous day; and, bending low over the handlebars, he +called upon the "Blue Streak" to make up for lost time. + +The scenery flew past as in a panorama. Up hill and down he went at +railroad speed, only slackened within the limits of a town. In this +thinly settled country, these were few and far between, and he chuckled +as he saw his speedometer swiftly climbing. The roads were drying out, +and, though still a little heavy, had lost their clinging quality. In a +few hours, he flashed into Charleston, where his ears were greeted by +the cries of the newsboys, calling out the extras issued on account of +the flood. Staying only long enough to report his time and get a meal, +he resumed his trip, and, before night, had left the worst part of the +hills behind him and had crossed the border line into Kentucky, the land +of swift horses and fair women, of Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone, the +"dark and bloody ground" of the Revolution. + +It was a tired rider who almost fell from his saddle that night, after +having covered three hundred miles. A fierce determination had buoyed +him up and the most daring kind of rough riding had carried him through. +Now the reaction had set in. An immense weariness weighed him down and +every separate muscle had its own distinctive ache. But his mind was at +peace. He had fought a good fight. A supreme emergency had challenged +him, and he had met it squarely. And no twinges of conscience for duty +unperformed came to disturb the sleep of utter exhaustion into which he +fell as soon as his head touched the pillow. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +A KENTUCKY FEUD + + +The following morning he arose early, his abounding vitality having +enabled him to recuperate entirely from the exciting events of the +day before. He was soon in the saddle, bowling along at a good clip +through the "Blue Grass" State. He found widely varied road conditions +confronting him. At times he would strike short stretches of "pike" that +afforded fairly good going. As a rule, however, the roads were sandy, +and consequently, very bad for motorcycle travel. + +At times, the sand was so deep that he felt lucky if he averaged fifteen +or twenty miles an hour. Often the only way he could get along at all +was to ride in one of the ruts worn by the wheels of carriages and +buggies. These were usually very deep, so deep, in fact, that with both +wheels in them the footboards barely cleared the surface of the road. Of +course, this made riding very dangerous, as the slightest turn of the +front wheel meant a bad fall. + +It was only by skilful balancing that Bert managed to make any progress +at all. As every one knows, a bicycle or motorcycle is kept erect by +moving the front wheel to one side or the other, thus maintaining the +proper center of gravity. Riding in a rut, however, this method became +impracticable, so Bert was forced to keep his equilibrium by swaying his +body from side to side, as necessity dictated. + +He found that the faster he traveled through these ruts the easier it +was to keep his balance. Of course, if he had a tumble going at that +speed he was much more apt to be badly hurt, but he had no time to think +of that. If he didn't go fast, he couldn't win the race, and to him that +was reason enough to "hit it up" regardless of possible consequences. + +Sometimes he met a carriage, and then there was nothing for it but to +dismount and wait for it to pass, that is, if he thought the driver had +not seen him. But if he was on a long stretch of road and the driver had +ample time to get out of the way,--well, there was no stopping then. The +driver, seeing a blue streak approaching him at close to a mile a minute +clip would hastily draw to one side of the road and then descend and +hold his horse's head; and usually none too soon. There would come a +rattle and roar, and Bert would be a speck in the distance, leaving a +cloud of dust to settle slowly behind him. + +The driver, after quieting his horse--all the horses in this part of the +country were unused to motor vehicles of any kind--would resume his +journey, muttering curses on them "pesky gasoline critters." But taken +altogether, Bert found his first day in Kentucky one of the most +strenuous he had ever experienced. + +Night found him in a rather unlooked for situation. He was a little +ahead of his schedule, and he had reached the town at which he had +planned to stay several hours short of sundown. + +"No use losing three or four precious hours of daylight," he thought. "I +might as well push forward and take a chance of getting shelter at some +village along the way." + +This he did, following directions given him in the town in which he had +originally intended to stay. As usual, however, the directions proved to +be wrong, and the village failed to materialize. To add to his troubles +as darkness came on, he took a wrong fork in the road, and before long +found himself in a road that was absolutely impassable on account of +sand. + +"Well," thought he, "it begins to look like a night in the open for me, +and that won't be much fun. I want to get a good night's sleep to-night. +Heaven knows I need it." + +But when he had just about resigned himself to this, he was relieved to +see a light spring up, some distance away. "That's good," he thought, +"I'll see if all I've heard about Kentucky hospitality is fact or just +mere talk." + +Accordingly he started the motor and threw in the clutch on low speed. +He made no attempt to mount, however, but contented himself with walking +beside the machine, guiding it through the deep sand. + +He had no need to announce his arrival. The unmuffled exhaust did that +for him. As he approached the cabin from which the light emanated, he +could see the whole family grouped on the doorstep, peering into the +night, for by now it was quite dark. + +The head of the house was a little in advance of the others, and as Bert +and the "Blue Streak" approached the door he stepped forward. + +"Wall, stranger, what kind of a contraption do you-all reckon to have +thar?" he drawled, gazing curiously at the palpitating motorcycle. + +Bert shut off the motor before he replied. + +"Why," he said, "that's my motorcycle, and it's one of the best friends +I have. I took the wrong road a way back, I guess, and I was just going +to camp out over night, when I saw the light from your window. If you +can put me up for the night you'll be doing me a big favor." + +"Not another word, son," replied the big mountaineer, "come right in an' +set down. You look nigh dead beat." + +"I am about all in," confessed Bert. "I'll leave my machine right here, +I guess." + +"Shore, shore," said the big Kentuckian, "I reckin thar ain't nobuddy +within a hundred miles hereabouts that could make off with the blamed +machine ef he had a mind to. Hosses is considerable more common in these +parts. The pump's around the side of the house ef you 'low to wash up," +he continued, as an afterthought. + +"All right, thanks," replied Bert, "I'll be with you in no time." +He disappeared in the direction indicated, and soon returned, much +refreshed by a thorough sousing under the pump. + +As he entered the cabin, a tired-looking but motherly woman bustled +forward. "Jest you set over there to the right of paw," she said, +indicating Bert's place at the table, "an' make yourself comfortable. +We ain't got much to offer you, but sech as it is, you'r welcome." + +There was not much variety to the viands, it must be confessed, but +there was plenty of "corn pone" and bacon, and rich milk with which to +wash it down. After his strenuous day in the open he ate ravenously. The +mountaineer uttered hardly a word during the meal, and indeed none of +the family seemed very talkative. + +The children, of whom there were six, gazed round-eyed at the unexpected +guest, and seemed, if one were to judge from their looks, to regard him +as a being from another world. + +After the meal was dispatched, the mountaineer produced a blackened old +pipe, and, filling it from a shabby leather pouch, lit it. "Do you +smoke, son?" he asked, holding the pouch out to Bert, "ef you do, help +yourself." + +"No, thanks," said Bert, declining the hospitable offer with a smile. + +"Don't smoke, eh?" commented the other. "Wall, ye'd ought to. There's a +heap of comfort in baccy, let me tell you." + +"I don't doubt it," replied Bert, "but I've been in training so long for +one thing or another that I've never had a chance to form the habit. +Everybody that smokes seems to get a lot of fun out of it though, so I +suppose it must be a great pleasure." + +"It shore is," affirmed the big Kentuckian. "But it's hot in here. What +do you say we light out and take a squint at that machine of yourn? I +ain't never got a good look at one close up. They're ginerally travelin' +too fast to make out details," with a grin. + +"Well, they're not the slowest things in the world, that's certain," +laughed Bert, "but come ahead out and I'll be glad to explain it to +you." + +They went outside together, the Kentuckian carrying a lantern, and +followed by the children, who gazed wide-eyed at the strange machine. +Bert explained the simpler points of the mechanism to the mountaineer, +who seemed much interested. + +"I kin see it's a mighty neat contraption," he admitted, at length. "But +I'd rether ride quietlike behind a good bit o' hoss flesh. You can't +make me believe that thet machine has got the strength o' seven hosses +in it, nohow. It ain't reasonable." + +Bert saw that he might argue for a week, and still fail to shake the +obstinacy of his host, so he wisely forbore to make the attempt. Instead +he guided the conversation around to the conditions and pursuits of the +surrounding country, and here the Kentuckian was on firm ground. He +discoursed on local politics with considerable shrewdness and good +sense, and proved himself well up on such topics. + +They talked on this subject quite a while, and then the conversation in +some way shifted to the feuds a few years back that had aroused such +widespread criticism. "Although I haven't seen any sign of them since +I've been in Kentucky," confessed Bert, with a smile. + +"No," said his host, with a ruminative look in his eyes, "they're dyin' +out, an' a good thing it is fer the country, too. They never did do the +least mite o' good, an' they often did a sight o' harm. + +"Why, it warn't such a long time back that the Judsons an' the Berkeleys +were at it hammer an' tongs, right in this country roundabout. One was +layin' fer 'tother all the time, an' the folks thet wasn't in the fracas +was afraid to go huntin' even, fer fear o' bein' picked off by mistake. +They wasn't none too particular about makin' sure o' their man, neither, +before they pulled trigger. They'd shoot fust, an' ef they found they'd +bagged the wrong man they might be peeved, but thet's all. More'n once +I've had a close shave myself." + +"But what started the feud in the first place?" asked Bert. "It must +have been a pretty big thing to have set people to shooting each other +up like that, I should think." + +"Not so's you could notice it," was the answer. "Blamed ef I rightly +remember just what it was. Seems to me, now I come to think of it, that +ole Seth Judson an' Adam Berkeley got mixed up in the fust place over +cuttin' down a tree thet was smack on the line 'atween their farms. Ole +Seth he swore he'd cut thet tree down, an' Adam he 'lowed as how it +would be a mighty unhealthy thing fer any man as how even took a chip +out of it. + +"Wall, a couple o' days later Adam went to town on one errand or +another, and when he got back the cussed ole tree had been cut down an' +carted away. When Adam saw nothin' but the stump left, he never said a +word, good or bad, but turned around and went back to his house an' got +his gun. He tracks over to Seth Judson's house an' calls him by name. +Seth, he walks out large as life, an' Adam pumps a bullet clean through +his heart. Them two men had been friends off an' on fer over thirty +year, an' I allow thet ef Adam hed took time to think an' cool off a +little, he'd never a' done what he did. + +"Howsomever, there's no bringin' the dead back to life, an' Adam tromps +off home, leavin' Seth lyin' there on his front porch. + +"'Twasn't more'n a week later, I reckon, when we all heard thet Seth's +son, Jed, had up an' killed Adam, shootin' at him from behind a fence. + +"Waal, thet's the way it started, an' it seemed as though it war never +goin' to end. Young Adam, he 'lowed as how no man could shoot his daddy +an' live, so he laid fer Jed as he was goin' to the village, an' shot +him 'atween the eyes as neat as could be. Then the younger sons, thet +were still not much more than boys, as you might say, they took to lyin' +in wait fer each other in the woods an' behind fences. Pretty soon their +relatives took to backin' them up, and jined in on their own account. O' +course, most o' the folks hereabouts is related to one another in some +way. + +"I wasn't a native o' these parts myself, an' so managed to keep clear o' +the trouble. It was a hard thing for me to set by an' see my neighbors +killin' each other off like a passel o' mad dogs, though, an' all the +more because I knew there wasn't any real call fer it in the first place. + +"Howsumever, they've stopped fightin' now, an' it's none too soon, +nuther. Another year, an' I reckon there wouldn't a been a Berkeley +or a Judson left alive in the hull State." + +The farmer stopped speaking, and gazed reflectively into the night. + +"But what put an end to it finally," inquired Bert, who had listened to +this narrative with absorbed interest. + +"Waal, there was considerable romance consarned in it, as you might +say," said his host. "Young Buck Judson, he met one o' ole Berkeley's +daughters somewhere, an' those two young fools hed to go an' fall in +love with each other. O' course, their families were dead sot agin' it, +but nothin' would do the critters short o' gettin' hitched up, an' at +last they talked their families into a peace meetin', as you might say. +All the neighbors was invited, an' o' course we-all went. An', believe +me, those people reminded me of a room full o' tom cats, all wantin' to +start a shindy, but all hatin' to be the fust to begin. + +"But all we-'uns thet wanted to stop such goin's on did our best to keep +peace in the family. To make a long story short, everythin' went off +quiet an' easy like, an' Buck an' his gal was hitched up all proper. +The hard feelin' gradually calmed down, an' now the two families is +tolerable good friends, considerin' everything. But that cost a heap of +more or less valable lives while it lasted, I can tell you." + +After a short pause, he continued, "But there was some turrible strong +feelin's on both sides while it lasted, son. Why, people was afraid to +get 'atween a light an' a winder, for fear of a bullet comin' through +and puttin' a sudden an' onpleasant end to them. Ole Sam Judson, as how +always had a streak o' yaller in him at the best o' times, got so at +last thet he wouldn't stir out o' the house without he toted his little +gran'darter, Mary, along with him. O' course, he figured thet with the +baby in his arms nobuddy'd take a chanst on wingin' him and mebbe +killin' the kid, an' he was right. He never even got scratched the hull +time. An' I could tell you a hundred other things o' the same kind, only +you'd probably get tired listenin' to them." + +"It certainly was a bad state of things," said Bert at last, after a +thoughtful silence, "but couldn't the authorities do something to stop +such wholesale killing?" + +"Not much," replied the mountaineer, "it would 'a taken every constable +in Kentucky to cover this part o' the country, an' even then I reckon +there wouldn't 'a been anywhere near enough. They must 'a realized +that," he added drily, "'cause they didn't try very hard, leastways, +not as fur as I could see." + +"I'm glad it's over now, at any rate," commented Bert. "A needless waste +of life like that is a terrible thing." + +"It shore is," agreed his host, and puffed meditatively at his pipe. At +last he knocked the ashes from it and rose to his feet. + +"It's gettin' late, son," he said, "an' I reckon you-all must be might +tuckered out after a day on that there fire spoutin' motorbike o' yourn. +The ole lady's got a bunk fixed up fer you, I reckon, an' you can turn +in any time you feel like it." + +"I am tired out, for a fact," acknowledged Bert, "and I don't care how +soon I tumble in." + +"Come along, then," said Anderson, as his host was named, "come on +inside, an' we'll put you up." + +So saying, he entered the cabin, followed by Bert. + +Mrs. Anderson had fixed a bed for him in a little loft over the main +room, reached by a ladder. After bidding his host and hostess good +night, Bert climbed the rungs and ten minutes later was sleeping +soundly. + +When he was awakened by a call from the farmer, he jumped up much +refreshed, and, dressing quickly, descended the ladder to the living +room, where the entire family was already assembled. After exchanging +greetings, he took his place at the table and made a substantial meal +from plain but hearty fare. + +This over, he bade a cordial farewell to the kind farmer and his +wife, who refused pointblank to accept the slightest payment for the +hospitality they had extended him. Bert thanked them again and again, +and then shook hands and left them, first being told of a short cut that +would save him several miles and land him on a good road. + +The good old "Blue Streak" was in fine shape, and after a few minor +adjustments he started the motor. The whole family had followed him out, +and were grouped in an interested semicircle about him. At last he was +ready to start, and threw one leg over the saddle. + +"Good-bye," he called, waving his hand, "and thanks once more." + +"Good-bye, good luck," they cried in chorus, and Bert moved off slowly, +on low gear. + +At first the going was atrocious, and he was forced to pick his way with +great caution. The road steadily improved, however, and in a short time +a sudden turn brought him out on an exceptionally good turnpike, the one +of which his host of the night before had told him. + +"All right," he thought to himself, "here goes to make speed while the +road lasts," and he grinned at this paraphrase of a well-worn saying. +He opened up more and more, and his motor took up its familiar +deep-toned road song. Mile after mile raced back from the spinning +wheels. The indicator on the speedometer reached the fifty mark, and +stayed there hour after hour. At times the road ran more to sand, but +then he simply opened the throttle a trifle wider, and kept to the same +speed. + +The air was like wine, and riding was a keen pleasure. The trees and +bushes waving in the early morning breeze--the beautiful green country +spread out on every side--the steady, exhilarating speed--all made +life seem a very fine thing indeed, and Bert sang snatches of wild, +meaningless songs as he flew along. For three hours he never slackened +speed, and then only pulled up in a fair-sized town to replenish his oil +and gasoline. Then he was off again. The road became worse after he had +gone ten or fifteen miles, but still he contrived to make fair time, and +about noon he rode into Louisville. + +His arrival there was eagerly awaited, and he was warmly received at the +local agency. While his machine was being cleaned and oiled, he took the +opportunity of reporting to the proper authorities. Upon his return the +"Blue Streak" was turned over to him, shining and polished, and he once +more took the road. Several motorcyclists accompanied him to the +outskirts of the city. He experienced varying road conditions, and was +twice delayed by punctures. But the rattling work of the early morning +made up for the afternoon's delays, and dusk found him two hundred and +eighty miles nearer the goal of his ambition. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +THE FORGED TELEGRAM + + +Bert's stay in Louisville was brief, and all the more so, because +neither Tom nor Dick was there to meet him, as they had planned. Bert +took it for granted that something out of the ordinary had happened, +however, and bore his disappointment as philosophically as he could. + +"No doubt they've been delayed," he thought, "and will meet me in the +next town. That will be a spur to me to go faster so that I can see them +sooner." + +He had a refreshing sleep, and was up early, resolved to make a +profitable day of it. After he had eaten breakfast, he paid his bill, +and was just going out the door when the clerk stopped him. "Just a +minute, sir," he said. "Here's a telegram for you. I almost forgot to +give it to you." + +"When did it come?" asked Bert, as he took the yellow envelope and +prepared to open it. + +"Oh, just about an hour ago," replied the clerk, "no bad news I hope?" + +This question was occasioned no doubt by the expression of Bert's face. +"Come quick," the telegram read, "Tom very sick; may die. We are in +Maysville. Dick." + +Bert's voice shook as he addressed the hotel clerk. "One of my friends +is very sick," he said. "He's in Maysville. How long will it take me to +get there?" + +"Well, it's a matter of close on two hundred miles," replied the clerk, +in a sympathetic voice, "but the roads are fair, and you can make pretty +fast time with that machine of yours." + +Bert whipped out his map of Kentucky, and the clerk pointed out to him +the little dot marked Maysville. + +"All right, thanks," said Bert, briefly, "good-bye." + +"Good-bye," said the other, "I hope your friend isn't as bad as you +fear." + +But before he finished speaking Bert was on the "Blue Streak," and was +flying down the street. In a moment his mind had grasped every angle of +the catastrophe. If he went to Tom, it would very likely mean the loss +of the race, for a matter of four hundred miles out of his road would be +a fearful handicap. But what was the race compared to dear old Tom, +Tom, who at this very moment might be calling for him? Every other +consideration wiped from his mind, Bert leaned over and fairly flew +along the dusty road. Fences, trees, houses, streaked past him, and +still he rode faster and faster, recklessly, taking chances that he +would have shunned had he been bound on any other errand. He shot around +sharp bends in the road at breakneck speed, sometimes escaping running +into the ditch by a margin of an inch or so. Fast as the "Blue Streak" +was, it was all too slow to keep pace with his feverish impatience, and +Bert fumed at the long miles that lay between him and his friend. + +Now a steep hill loomed up in front of him, and he rushed it at breakneck +speed. Slowly the motorcycle lost speed under the awful drag of the steep +ascent, and at last Bert was forced to change to low gear. The "Blue +Streak" toiled upward, and at last reached the top. A wonderful view lay +spread out before him, but Bert had no eye just now for the beauties of +nature. All he saw was a road that dipped and curved below him until it +was lost in the green shades of a valley. Bert saw he would have no need +of his motor in making that descent, so threw out the clutch and coasted. +Faster and faster he flew, gaining speed with every revolution of the +wheels. With the engine stopped, the motorcycle swept along in absolute +silence, save for the slight hissing noise made by the contact of the +tires with the road. The speed augmented until he was traveling almost +with the speed of a cannon ball. At this speed, brakes were useless, even +had he been inclined to use them, which he was not. Two-thirds of the +way down he flashed past a wagon, that was negotiating the descent with +one wheel chained, so steep was it. Had the slightest thing gone wrong +then; had a nut worked loose, a tire punctured, a chain broken or jumped +the sprockets, Bert would have been hurled through the air like a stone +from a catapult. Fortunately for him, everything held, and now he was +nearing the bottom of the hill. Ten seconds later, and he was sweeping up +the opposite slope at a speed that it seemed could never slacken. But +gradually gravitation slowed him down to a safer pace, and at last he +slipped in the clutch and started the motor. In the wild descent his cap +had flown off, but he hardly noticed it. + +"I'll soon be there at this rate," he thought, glancing at the +speedometer. "I've come over a hundred and fifty miles now, so Maysville +can't be much further." And, indeed, less than an hour's additional +riding brought him to the town of that name. + +He went immediately to the hotel at which his friends were supposed to +be. But when he stated his object to the hotel clerk, the latter gazed +at him blankly. "There are no parties of that name stopping here," he +said. "I guess you have the wrong address, young man." Bert showed him +the telegram, but the clerk only shook his head. "There's something +wrong somewhere," he said; "suppose you see Bently, the telegrapher. He +could probably give you a description of the person that sent the +telegram, anyway." + +"Thanks, I will," said Bert, and hastened out. A dim idea of the true +state of affairs was beginning to form in his brain, but it hardly +seemed possible his suspicions could be true. He soon reached the +telegraph office, and accosted the operator. + +"Can you tell me," he asked, "who sent that telegram early this +morning?" + +The station agent glanced at the telegram, and replied: "Why, I can't +give you a very good description of the man, for I didn't take special +notice of him. He was a young man of medium build, though, with light +hair, and now I come to think of it, he wore goggles. Seems to me I +heard some one say he was riding a motorcycle in some cross country +race, but that I can't vouch for." + +"I think I know who he was, all right," said Bert, "and I'm much obliged +to you." + +"Don't mention it," returned the other, and turned again to his work. + +Bert walked out of the station with clenched fists and blazing eyes. +"It's Hayward who sent that telegram," he muttered, between clenched +teeth. "I'd stake my soul on it. But I'll win this race in spite of that +crook and his tricks. And anyway," he thought, with his eyes softening, +"old Tom _isn't_ sick after all, and that's almost enough to make me +forgive Hayward. I feel as though I had just awakened from an awful +nightmare." + +It was characteristic of Bert that his anger and chagrin at being +tricked in this dastardly way were swallowed up in his relief at finding +the report of his friend's illness false. + +Bert consulted his map, and found that by taking a different route +than that by which he had come he could save quite some distance, and +started out again, after filling the "Blue Streak's" tanks with oil and +gasoline, with the grim resolve to have revenge for the despicable trick +that had been played on him, by snatching from Hayward the prize that he +was willing to stoop to such depths to gain. + +Up hill and down he flew, around curves, over bridges that shook and +rattled at the impact of racing man and machine. Steadily the mileage +indicator slipped around, as league after league rolled backward, and +Bert exulted as he watched it. "We'll make it ahead of everybody else or +die in the attempt, won't we, old fellow?" he said, apostrophizing the +"Blue Streak." "Nobody's going to play a trick like that on us and get +away with it, are they?" + +Only once on the return trip did he stop, and then only long enough to +snatch a little food. Then he was off again like the wind, and as dusk +began to fall rode into Louisville. As he entered the hotel, after +leaving his machine in a garage, Dick and Tom swooped down upon him. +"What's up?" they demanded, both in the same breath, "who sent that +telegram, do you know?" + +"I think I know," replied Bert. "I haven't a doubt in the world that it +was sent by Hayward. You remember that we heard he was more or less +crooked, and now we know it." + +"I wish I could lay my hands on him," exclaimed Dick, with flashing +eyes. "I'd make him regret the day he was born. Just you wait till the +next time I come across him, that's all." + +"If I see him first there won't be anything left for you," said Tom. "Of +all the dirty, underhanded tricks I ever heard of, that is the limit." + +"Well, I won't contradict you," said Bert, grimly, "but all he'll ever +gain out of it will be a sound thrashing. Don't you believe for a minute +that it's going to help him win this race. I'll ride day and night until +I've made up for this lost time." + +And ride he did, crowding three days' mileage into two, until at last he +felt that he had recovered the time lost in answering the call of the +forged telegram. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +IN DEADLY PERIL + + +It was after he reached the Western deserts that Bert experienced the +hardest going. The roads, if mere trails could be dignified by that +name, were unspeakably bad, and time and again he was forced to ride on +the railroad embankment, between the tracks. Of course, progress in this +manner was necessarily slow, and again and again Bert had occasion to +feel grateful for the wonderful springing system of his mount. Without +some such aid, he felt his task would be well nigh hopeless. + +As it was, he had to let a little air out of the tires, to reduce the +shocks caused by contact with the rough ballast and uneven ties. In some +places, where the roadbed was exceptionally well ballasted he was able +to open up a little, but such stretches were few and far between. In +places he was forced to dismount because of drainage culverts running +under the tracks. When this happened he would lift the "Blue Streak" up +on a rail and trundle it over. It was back-breaking work, and tested +even his courage and endurance to the utmost. + +His oil and gasoline supply ran low, but by great good fortune he was +able to secure almost a gallon of gasoline from an agent at a lonely +little station, and about a quart of very inferior lubricating oil. But +he comforted himself with the thought that "half a loaf is better than +none" and went on. After a while he noticed that a passable looking road +skirted the railroad to the left, and he resolved to try it. + +Accordingly, he scrambled down the steep embankment, the "Blue Streak" +half rolling and half sliding down with him. He arrived safely at the +bottom, and a minute later was on the road. It proved to be fairly good +at first, but became more and more sandy, and at last Bert was brought +to a standstill. + +"I guess I'm through for to-day," he reflected, and gazed anxiously in +every direction for any sign of human habitation. His searching gaze met +nothing but empty sky and empty desert, however, and he drew a sigh of +resignation. "I guess there's nothing for it but to camp out here and +make the best of things," he thought, and set about unstrapping his +impedimenta from the luggage carrier. + +His preparations for the night were soon made. He smoothed out a patch +of sand and spread his thick army blanket over it. "Now that that's +done," he thought, "I'll just have a bite to eat, and turn in. This +isn't half bad, after all. It's a lot better than some of the hotels +I've put up at on this trip, and the ventilation is perfect." + +He always carried a substantial lunch with him, to guard against +emergencies, and of this he now partook heartily. When he had finished, +he busied himself in cleaning and thoroughly inspecting his faithful +mount, and found it in fine condition, even after such a strenuous day. +"No need to worry about your not delivering the goods, is there, old +boy?" he said, affectionately. "As long as you stick to the job, we'll +pull through all right." + +By the time he had completed his inspection and made some adjustments it +was almost dark, and Bert rolled himself in his blanket and was soon +sleeping soundly. + +Meantime Tom and Dick were awaiting him at Boyd, a small town in +Northern Texas. When he failed to arrive, they decided that some +unforeseen event had delayed him, and were not much worried. +Nevertheless, they were not quite easy about him, and Tom made a +proposition that met with instant approbation from Dick. + +"Why wouldn't it be a good idea," Tom proposed, "to hire an automobile +early to-morrow morning and meet him outside the town on his way in? It +will break up the trip a little for him, and then, in case he's had a +breakdown we can help him out." + +"Fine!" agreed Dick, enthusiastically, "let's go out right now and make +arrangements with the garage keeper so we'll be sure to get the machine +in the morning. We might as well be on the safe side." + +They immediately sallied out to put this plan in execution. They +experienced no difficulty in making the necessary arrangements. They +paid the proprietor of the garage a deposit, and so secured the use of a +fast, two-seated runabout for the following morning. + +Before they left Dick asked the proprietor at what time the place was +open. "Oh, it's always open," he replied, "come and get the car any time +you want it. It's all the same to me, so long as it's paid for." + +"All right, we'll take you at your word," they promised, and returned to +the hotel. + +"We'll get a good early start," planned Tom, "we ought to leave the +garage before six o'clock if we expect to meet Bert in time." + +"We'll do just that," agreed Dick, "and maybe I won't be glad to set +eyes on the old reprobate again." + +"I, too," said Tom, "he'll be a sight for sore eyes." + +"That's what," agreed Dick, "but if we're going to get started at that +unearthly hour, we'd better turn in early to-night." + +This proposition being self-evident, it met with no opposition, and +shortly afterward they retired, leaving an early call at the office. + +They were awakened punctually the next morning, and tumbled hastily into +their clothes. They did not even stop for breakfast, arguing "that there +would be plenty of time for that later on." In a very short time they +presented themselves at the garage, and the party in charge, following +instructions left with him by the owner of the place, turned the +automobile over to them. + +Dick took the wheel, and they were soon spinning rapidly through the +quiet streets of the town. Once outside the limits, Dick "cracked on +speed," and they went along at a fast clip. They passed right by the +place where Bert had encamped at a distance of several miles, and before +long came to a village, where they inquired if Bert had been through. +No, the villagers said, he had not been through there, but they had +heard that a motorcyclist had been seen riding on the railroad +embankment, and there could be little doubt that the rider was Bert. + +"You must have passed him somewhere," concluded one of their informants, +an old native whose tanned and weather-beaten face was seamed by a +thousand wrinkles. "P'raps he stuck to the railroad tracks clean +through, an' is in Boyd by this time." + +But Dick shook his head. "If he'd followed the tracks right along he'd +probably have reached town last night," he said, with an anxious look in +his eyes. "I'm afraid he's left the track for one reason or another, +and lost his way." + +"Is there any road near the track that he might have used?" queried Tom. + +"No, there ain't," replied the veteran, "leastways, nothin' except the +old Holloway trail, and you can't rightly call that a road. It's most +wiped out now, an' jest leads plumb to nowhere." + +"Just the same," exclaimed Dick, excitedly, "that's just what has +happened." He explained hurriedly the race and its object, and ended by +entreating the old plainsman to guide them to the road he had spoken of. + +"Waal, all right," exclaimed the old man, after a moment of hesitation, +"I'll go ye. But whareabouts in that gasoline buggy o' yourn am I goin' +to sit? Thar don't seem to be much room to spare." + +"You sit here," exclaimed Tom, jumping out. "I'll sit on the floor and +hold on somehow. Let her go, Dick." + +Before the plainsman had fairly settled himself in the seat Dick had let +in the clutch, and the car started away with a jerk, Dick steering +according to directions given him by the old man as they went along. +They plowed through the sand at a breakneck pace, Tom hanging on for +dear life. Soon they came in sight of the railroad embankment, and Dick +slowed down slightly. Their guide waved his arm to the right, and Dick +wrenched the wheel around, causing the machine to skid wildly in the +yielding sand. Their guide hung on desperately, but was heard to mutter +something about "stickin' to hosses after this." Soon they reached the +road that Bert had traversed the night before, and there, sure enough, +were the marks of motorcycle tires. Their guide gave a whoop. "We're +close on his trail now," he yelled, "give this tarnation machine a touch +o' the spurs, young feller." + +Dick followed out the spirit of this admonition, at any rate, and after +ten minutes of furious driving they caught sight of the "Blue Streak." A +little further, and they could make out Bert's recumbent form, +apparently asleep. + +"Well," exclaimed Tom, heaving a sigh of relief as Dick reduced speed, +"we've had all our worry for nothing, I guess." + +But the old plainsman was peering out from under his horny palm. "It's +almighty queer," he muttered under his breath. "That young chap must be +an all-fired heavy sleeper to sleep in broad daylight like that. Let's +get out an' walk the rest o' the way," he continued, aloud. + +Dick looked at him curiously, but did as he proposed, and brought the +car to a standstill. They all got out, and Tom and Dick were going to +make a dash for the sleeper, but their guide held them back. "Easy boys, +easy," he cautioned. "There's somethin' wrong here, an' I've an idee I +know what it is, too." + +"That's whatever!" he exclaimed, when they had advanced cautiously a few +steps further. "They's a bunch o' scorpions has crawled up on him durin' +the night to keep warm, an' if he moves an eyelash they'll sting him, +sure. An' ef they do----" he stopped significantly, and the two friends +of the threatened man paled as they realized the full horror of the +situation. + +Here was their friend menaced by a hideous death, and they found +themselves powerless to help him. They were within a hundred feet of +him, but to all intents and purposes they might as well have been a +hundred miles distant. The first attempt on their part to help him would +only precipitate the very tragedy that they sought to avoid. + +Bert lay in the shadow cast by the "Blue Streak," over which he had +thrown a blanket to protect it from wind-blown sand. The hideous +creatures would not leave him until the sun drove them into hiding, and +Bert might wake at any moment. What to do they knew not. They racked +their brains desperately for some plan of action, but could think of +none. + +It was the old frontiersman who came to their rescue. "Ef I only had a +bit o' lookin' glass," he muttered, looking aimlessly about him, "I +might do somethin'. But they probably ain't no sech thing nearer than +ten miles." + +"If that would do any good I can get you one," exclaimed Tom, seized +with an inspiration. He raced back to the auto, and, seizing a wrench, +attacked the mirror attached to the dash for the purpose of reflecting +objects coming in back of the car. He had it off in less time than it +takes to tell, and ran back, waving it over his head. "Here you are!" he +exclaimed, thrusting it into the hands of the guide. "But I don't see +what good that will do." + +"Never you mind, son," said the old man, snatching the mirror from him. +"Jest you watch my smoke." + +He took up a position on the other side of Bert, and manipulated the +mirror so that a bright beam of sunlight fell on the recumbent form. Its +effect was soon apparent. The poisonous insects stirred uneasily, trying +to avoid the glare that they hated. Finding that there was no escaping +it, they at last commenced to crawl down in search of a more shady +resting place. + +One by one they made off, the flashing ray of light hastening the +departure of the laggards. Watching breathlessly, Dick and Tom waited +for the last noxious insect to crawl sluggishly down onto the blanket +and then off into the sand. Even after the last one had been dislodged, +the prairieman played the reflected sunlight over Bert until there was +no longer cause for apprehension. + +"All right, young fellers," he said at last. "I cal'late you can wake +your friend up now without takin' any long chances." + +Dick and Tom were about to avail themselves of this permission, but +found that there was no need. As they started forward the "sleeper" sat +up, and then scrambled to his feet. + +His comrades uttered a simultaneous expression of surprise, and Dick +exclaimed, "Of all the lucky old reprobates that ever lived, Bert, +you're certainly the luckiest, without exception. If you had waked up +ten minutes sooner, you would----" + +"Waked up your grandmother," interrupted Bert. "Why, I've been awake +over an hour. I was awake when you got here, but I was afraid to move +for fear of having one of those things bite me--ugh!" and a great +shudder of disgust passed over him, "that was a waking nightmare in +earnest. I feel as weak as a rag. Look at that!" and he held out his +hand. It was trembling like a leaf. + +"Waal, I'll be jiggered," exclaimed the Westerner, in an admiring voice, +"you've sure got nerve, young feller, and no mistake. It ain't everybody +as could hold hisself the way you did with them blamed critters crawlin' +all over him. It took nerve, it shore did." + +"Probably you'd have done the same thing if you'd been in my place," +observed Bert, with a friendly smile. + +"Waal, mebbe I would an' mebbe I wouldn't," replied the old man, +evidently much gratified by this little compliment, "although I don't +say as how I haven't had one or two close shaves in my time, mind ye." + +"Well, at any rate, I guess I owe my life to you, and, of course, to +my pals here," said Bert, "and all I can say is, that I'm more than +grateful." + +"That's all right, young feller," replied the plainsman, with a +deprecatory wave of his hand, "you can thank me best by not sayin' a +word about it. You'd have done the same fer me ef you'd had the chance." + +Bert said no more, but shook hands all around, and then prepared to +start on. "You fellows lead the way," he said, "and I'll follow. My +appetite is beginning to come back with a rush." + +"Ye'd better follow the road we come by back a piece," advised their +guide, "ye'll soon come to the main road leadin' into Boyd, and you +oughtn't to have any further trouble." + +"That listens all right," observed Bert, and Dick and Tom were of the +same mind. Accordingly, they lost no time in packing up Bert's luggage, +and soon had it stored neatly on the carrier. Then Dick pointed the +nose of the automobile in the direction their guide had advised, Bert +following at a little distance to give the dust raised by the passage +of the automobile time to settle. In a short time they reached the road +of which the guide had spoken, and they spun along merrily. + +They made a slight detour to set down the old frontiersman, who had +rendered them such invaluable assistance. They parted from him with +great regret and many expressions of gratitude. He stood in the sandy +road waving his hat after them until his figure became indistinct in the +distance. + +"There was a friend in need, if there ever was one," said Tom, and Dick +was of the same opinion. + +After awhile the road broadened out somewhat, and Bert ranged up +alongside the automobile. He closed the muffler of his machine, and as +it glided along with scarcely a sound he and his friends conversed +without the slightest difficulty. In this way the distance seemed +nothing at all, and in due time they drew into Boyd. + +Bert left the "Blue Streak" at the garage, and went with Tom and Dick to +their hotel. They were all ravenously hungry, and the ravages they +caused among the eatables filled the waiters with astonishment. At last +they had finished, and then proceeded to discuss their future movements. + +"I've managed to keep pretty well to schedule so far," he told them, +"and some of the worst going is over. But, believe me, I wouldn't want +to repeat some of the experiences I've had. Take this morning, for +instance." + +"No, I shouldn't think you would," said Dick. "But tell us about a few. +It won't do you any harm to rest up an hour or two now, and we're crazy +to hear some of your adventures. Reel off a few, like a good fellow." + +Bert gave them a brief review of his recent movements, and they listened +with the greatest interest. Some of the incidents were very amusing, but +they elicited less laughter than they usually would, for the nerves of +all three had not yet fully recovered from the shock they had received +that morning. + +"Well," said Bert at last, rising, "I'm sorry, fellows, but I'm afraid +I'll have to be moving. Get hold of that auto again, why don't you, and +go with me a little way. You can do that all right, can't you?" + +"Sure," exclaimed Dick. "Bet your sweet life we can," chimed in Tom, and +so it was settled. + +The three comrades proceeded directly to the garage, and had no +difficulty in hiring the car that had already served them so well that +morning. Bert ran the "Blue Streak" out onto the sunlit road, and, +running beside it, shot on the spark. The motor started immediately, and +he gave a flying leap into the saddle. + +Dick and Tom were close behind, and tried to catch up with him. But Bert +would not have it so. As soon as they began to get close he would shoot +ahead, and although they had a speedy car, they realized that they stood +no chance against such a motorcycle as the "Blue Streak." + +Laughingly they gave over the attempt, and Bert dropped back until they +were abreast of him. + +"No chance, fellows," he called gaily. "The old 'Blue Streak' and I +don't take the dust of any mere automobile." + +They exchanged jokes and friendly insults until they had gone much +further than they realized, and were forced to turn back. + +They stopped before parting and shook hands. + +"So long, old fellow," said Dick. "We'll be waiting to meet you at +Oklahoma." + +"Good-bye," said Bert, wringing their hands, "see you later," and, +leaping on the "Blue Streak," was soon lost to sight in a cloud of +dust. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +A DAY OF DISASTER + + +After he left his companions, Bert made good speed for a time, +and hummed along smoothly. At first all went well, and Bert was +congratulating himself on his good progress, when suddenly his engine +commenced racing wildly. In an instant Bert had shut off power, and came +to a stop as soon as possible. Then he dismounted, and commenced a hasty +examination. The first thought that flashed across his mind was that the +clutch had given way in some manner, thus allowing the motor to slip. +The clutch proved to be in perfect condition, however, but a short +further search revealed the cause of the trouble. + +The nut that held the engine driving sprocket on the shaft had worked +loose and dropped off. Of course, the key that prevented the sprocket +from slipping on the shaft had dropped out soon afterward, thus allowing +the shaft to revolve without transmitting the slightest power. + +"Well," thought Bert, "I'm in a pretty fix now, for fair. Here I am +thirty miles from the nearest town and provided with a permanent free +engine. It rather looks as though I were up against it for fair." + +He made a careful search among his spare parts, but met with only +partial success. He found a nut that fitted the shaft fairly well, but +nothing he could substitute for the key. + +"Perhaps if I walk back a way I'll find it," he thought, and accordingly +he walked slowly back the way he had come, carefully scanning every foot +of the path. He realized that the likelihood of finding it was very +slim, but there was always the chance, so he hunted carefully. His +efforts met with no success, and at last he was forced to admit to +himself the hopelessness of the search. + +"But I've got to do something," he thought, "since I haven't got the +part, I'll have to try and make one, that's all." He reflected a few +moments, and then, seized with an idea, once more looked through the +tool bag. He selected the smallest of his screwdrivers and a file, and +began to file away at the screwdriver about half an inch from the end, +intending to use it in place of the lost key. But the steel of which it +was composed was very hard, and he found it a harder task than he had +anticipated. + +At last, by dint of patient filing until his fingers ached, he cut +through the obstinate metal and finally held the precious bit of steel +between his fingers. + +"By Jove!" he exclaimed, mopping his streaming face, "that was an awful +job, but the end justifies the means. I wouldn't swap this little bit +of steel now for ten times its weight in gold." + +He tried it in the slot on the engine shaft, and found it a fairly tight +fit. "Eureka!" he exclaimed aloud, "that's bending circumstances to suit +your will, or I don't know what is." + +He quickly screwed on the holding nut, and once more was ready to start. +"Come along now, old fellow," he said, apostrophizing the "Blue Streak," +"we've got to do double work now to make up for this delay. Speed's the +word from now on." + +Misfortune after misfortune overtook him, however, and he was delayed +again and again. It almost seemed as though fate repented of having +saved him from a horrible death that morning, and was resolved to make +up for her leniency by imposing unusual hardships on the devoted +motorcyclist. + +He had not gone more than ten miles from where he had made the new shaft +key when the long driving chain snapped. Of course, he had extra links +with him, and repaired it quickly, but even then much valuable time was +lost. Then, he had hardly started again before a weak place in the front +tire gave way with a report like that of a pistol shot, and he was +forced to put in a new tube and a repair patch. + +This done, he chugged on some time without further mishap, and was just +beginning to believe that his troubles were over, when suddenly he was +apprised by the hard jarring of the back wheel that the tire on it had +gone flat. This meant another half hour's delay, and Bert began to feel +that he was "hoodooed" in earnest. + +"I wonder what will happen next," he thought, as he started off, after +remedying the last misfortune. "Hard luck seems to be keeping me +company, and that isn't the best kind of a road companion to have." + +But for the present his fears remained unrealized, and as the road +continued fairly good he raced along, mounting up the miles on his +speedometer in a very satisfactory fashion. He made good time, and only +stopped when the pangs of hunger warned him that it was lunch time. + +Tom and Dick had taken care to see that he was provided with plenty of +wholesome "grub," and had personally supervised the putting up of the +lunch by the good-natured hotel chef. + +"They certainly made a good job of it," thought he appreciatively, as he +partook of delicious fried chicken sandwiches and crisp brown crullers. +He washed down the meal with a long pull from his canteen, and then, +after allowing himself a few minutes of hard-earned rest, was off again +toward the goal that now began to seem less distant than it had before. + +But the "jinx" had not yet deserted him, as he was soon to discover. As +he was bowling along at a pace well over thirty miles an hour, he +suddenly turned a sharp bend in the road and ran squarely into a deep +bed of sand. Before he could slow down appreciably, he was in it--and, a +second later, was in it literally. All his skill and strength could not +keep the machine from skidding, and he experienced a bone-racking fall. + +In a second he had picked himself up, and ran to where the "Blue Streak" +was lying, its motor still plugging away and the rear wheel sending +showers of sand into the air. Bert shut off the power and proceeded to +take stock of damages. The footboard on the right had struck through the +sand to the hard gravel below and had broken one of its supports. This +weakened it so much that Bert found it would not bear his weight. + +There was nothing for him to do but repair the damage as best he could, +and at length he managed to make a temporary repair with a spool of +copper wire and a pair of pliers. + +"This is getting serious," thought Bert ruefully, as he finished the +job. "I'll never get anywhere if this keeps up long. But perhaps it's +better to have everything come at once and get it over with. I might as +well look at the bright side of it, anyway." + +He started off finally, and now it seemed that at last he was to go +forward without interruption. But unfortunately, he was to find that +this view of the case was altogether too sanguine. The road grew +continually worse, and it became impossible to make even average speed. +In places it was very sandy, too, and this hindered him a good deal. + +His trusty mount stood the bumping and wrenching it received without the +slightest sign of weakening, and Bert was grateful indeed for the +staunch construction that made its present satisfactory performance +possible. + +The road was deeply rutted, and it was only by the most careful managing +that he steered clear of the depressions. But nothing could stop him, +and he plugged doggedly on. The "Blue Streak" slipped and skidded, and +tried to "lie down and roll over," as he described it afterward, and the +strain on his wrists and arms was tremendous. If the handlebars had once +gotten out of his control they would have zigzagged wildly and the +result would have been a bad fall. This Bert did his best to avoid, as +he was already bruised by the spills he had been through. + +At times he was forced to stop and rest a few minutes, and he always +made use of these breathing spells to let the old oil out of his motor +and pump in a fresh supply. Then when he resumed his journey the motor +would be like a different piece of mechanism. It almost seemed as though +it, too, became weary at times and benefited by a brief rest. Probably +every experienced motorist has noticed this, and many theories have been +advanced in explanation, but none of them seem very satisfactory. Bert +by this time was beginning to feel the effects of the strain he had +endured all through the day. He plowed slowly through the clinging sand, +traveling most of the time on low gear. This was not the best thing in +the world for his engine, and every once in a while he was forced to +stop and let it cool. With the engine turning over so fast he had to use +an excessive supply of oil, and at length was warned, by the sucking +sound of the oil pump, that the tank was empty. + +Fortunately, however, before he left Boyd he had secured an extra half +gallon can of lubricating oil, which he had strapped on the luggage +carrier. "And it's a mighty lucky thing I did, too," he thought, +"otherwise I'd be stalled for good, with the prospect of a long tramp to +the nearest town. But now I can still beat the game." + +He unstrapped the can, and emptied its contents into the oil tank. "That +ought to last me until I reach some place where I can get more," he +thought, throwing the empty can away. "Here goes to buck this sand like +a rotary plow going through a snow bank." + +He gave the motor a couple of pump fulls of oil, and started it going. +Slipping in the clutch, he moved forward with the grim resolve to take +long chances for the sake of gaining ground. Gradually he opened the +throttle, and when he had attained a good speed, changed to high gear. +The "Blue Streak" gained momentum and charged ahead, throwing showers of +sand into the air. Every muscle tense, Bert held the motorcycle on the +trail, despite the strong inclination it evinced to go off on little +exploring expeditions of its own. He reeled off mile after mile at a +good clip, and began to feel better. + +"This might be a lot worse," thought Bert, "if nothing happens now, +I'll have made pretty fair progress by supper time." Consulting his +speedometer he found that he had covered something over a hundred and +twenty miles so far, which, considering all the delays he had been +subjected to, and the bad roads, was very fair progress. + +But even as this thought was passing through his mind, the front wheel +caught in a hollow, the handlebars were wrenched from his hands with a +force that almost broke his wrists, and he was flying through the air. +He landed with a crash, and for a few moments, dazzling lights glittered +before his eyes. Gradually these cleared away, and he sat up, feeling +very dizzy and sick. + +As his head cleared, he staggered to his feet, and looked around for his +motorcycle. There it lay, at some distance, half buried in the sand. He +went over to it, and, after scooping some of the sand away, succeeded +by a great effort in pulling it upright. + +"I guess my part of the race is finished right here," he thought, with a +sinking heart. "Something _must_ have been badly broken in a fall like +that. It's a wonder I wasn't killed myself." + +He set the "Blue Streak" up on its stand, and cranked the engine. It +gave a few spasmodic explosions, but then stopped. "I knew it," he +exclaimed aloud, with a feeling nearly akin to despair. But his +indomitable spirit was not yet ready to give up hope, and he commenced a +careful examination of his mount. + +The handlebars were slewed around until they stood at right angles to +the machine. But this was a minor thing, and with the aid of a wrench he +soon set matters right. The main thing was to locate the cause of the +motor refusing to run, and he set himself to solve the problem, as he +had so many others in the course of this most eventful and unlucky day. + +He tested the magneto spark by kicking the motor over energetically, +and holding the conduction cable a quarter of an inch or so from the +cylinders. A hot blue spark jumped snapping across the gap, and Bert +drew a sigh of relief. Provided the magneto were all right, he felt that +he might get started again after all. + +"The trouble must be in the carburetor," he concluded, and forthwith +proceeded to dissect that highly important part of his equipment. His +suspicions proved well founded. The carburetor was packed with sand, +which had worked up into the spray plug and completely blocked the fine +grooves cut in it. + +"That's easy," thought Bert. "I'll just wash this out in a little less +than no time, and then I hope everything will be all right." + +He washed gasoline through the carburetor, and cleaned the spray plug +till not a vestige of sand remained. He then quickly assembled the +instrument and connected it up with the induction pipes. Flooding +the carburetor with gasoline, he gave the engine a quick turn over. +Immediately it started off with a roar, and Bert threw the wrench he had +been using into the air, and deftly caught it again. + +"Hurrah!" he cried, "now, old boy, we'll try it again." + +He still felt rather dizzy, but the sun was getting low, and he knew he +would have to "go some" to reach the next town before dark. He hastily +put his tools away, and in a short time was speeding along again, +nothing daunted by the accident. Presently the road improved, a sure +sign that he was approaching a settlement. Soon he could make out the +low houses of the little prairie town before him and he increased his +speed, "splitting the air" like a comet. + +He reached the village without further trouble, and was soon solacing +himself for the strenuous day he had gone through with the best dinner +the resources of the town could provide. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +THE FLAMING FOREST + + +Early on the morning of the eighth day of the trip, Bert crossed +the line into Oklahoma. He found little difference in the roads he +encountered, most of them being of a very poor description. But by this +time he was used to all sorts of going, and could listen without +laughing, when one of the natives, in a fit of enthusiasm, would speak +of some atrocious path as a "highway." + +Of course, in isolated instances some village or town had inaugurated a +"good roads" movement, and then Bert found nothing to complain of. But +as a rule the roads were inferior, and he found fast travel practically +impossible. + +He rode steadily, however, and by noon had made fairly good progress. He +now found himself in a thickly wooded country, and rode mile after mile +in a deep shade that was very grateful after some of the blistering +hours in the open he had been forced to undergo. There was a brisk +breeze blowing, and the leaves rustled pleasantly, allowing slender +shafts of sunlight to flicker through them as they swayed and whispered. + +Bert drew in great breaths of the fragrant air, redolent of a thousand +woody odors, and wished that the whole of his journey lay through such +pleasant places. After a while he came to a beautiful little glen +through which ran a sparkling brook. + +"Just the place to eat lunch," thought Bert, and quickly brought the +"Blue Streak" to a standstill. Dismounting, he unpacked his lunch box, +and, sitting down on a broad, flat-topped rock at the edge of the +stream, ate contentedly. + +"This place is a regular little Garden of Eden," he mused. "There must +be fish in that stream. If I only had a hook and line along, I'll wager +I'd get some sport out of it." Then another thought struck him. "By +Jove!" he exclaimed aloud, "a swim would feel mighty good now, and there +must be a place deep enough for one somewhere around here. I'm going on +an exploring expedition, anyway." + +Sure enough, around a slight bend in the stream he discovered a pool +that almost looked as though it had been made to order. A gigantic tree +had fallen across the stream, forming a natural dam. The clear water ran +over and under it with a tinkling, splashing sound, and Bert gave a +shout of joy. + +"Here goes for a glorious swim," he cried, and, undressing hastily, +plunged in. The water was icy cold, and for a moment the shock of it +took away his breath and made his heart stand still. But in a few +seconds the reaction came, and he splashed around, and even managed to +swim a few strokes in the deepest part. + +"This is great," he thought. "I wouldn't have missed it for worlds. It's +too bad the old 'Blue Streak' can't enjoy it with me." He smiled as this +absurd thought crossed his mind, but little knew how much of prophecy +there was in it. + +When he felt thoroughly refreshed, he climbed out to the bank, and +quickly slipped into his clothes. "I can dry out as I go along," he +thought, with a grin. "Somebody evidently forgot to hang bath towels on +these trees. Very careless of them, _I_ think." + +He hurried back to where he had left the motorcycle, and soon was once +more purring along the woodland track. He had traveled something less +than an hour, when he began to notice a thin blue haze in the air, and +at the same time to smell a pungent smoke. His first thought was that he +was near some settler's cabin, but as he rode on he could see no sign of +human habitation, and the green forest stretched away on both sides of +the road without any break that might denote a trail. + +But the smoke kept getting heavier every second, and suddenly the truth +smote him like a blow in the face. "A forest fire," he thought, "a +forest fire! and here I am, in the heart of these woods, with absolutely +no way of escape, that I can see." Even as these thoughts flashed +through his mind, a rabbit dashed out onto the road, so mad with terror +that it almost ran under the wheels of the motorcycle. + +Bert brought his machine to a standstill with a jerk, the back tire +skidding as he jammed on his brake. A thousand plans raced through his +head, only to be rejected as soon as formed. Of them all only one +offered the slightest hope of escape. + +"The brook," he thought, "if I can only get back there I'll have a +chance to pull through. If the fire beats me to it--well, there will be +one less contestant in this race, that's all." + +He lifted the motorcycle bodily from the ground, in his excitement and +dire need, handling it as easily as he would a bicycle, pointing it back +the way he had so lately come. Then, with a shove and a leap he was off +on a wild ride, with life itself as the prize. + +He flew swiftly along the narrow trail, careless of ruts and obstructions +that he had avoided with the greatest care but a short time before. The +smoke grew thick and choking, reddening his eyes, irritating his lungs. +It was only by the greatest good fortune that he avoided a collision with +the panic-stricken animals that dashed across the road in great numbers, +disappearing among the underbrush on the other side. Now he could hear a +distant roaring and crackling, and great waves of heat billowed down upon +him. He clenched his teeth, and opened the throttle to the utmost. The +woods streaked away on both sides, and soon he saw that he was nearing +his goal. + +But the fire was traveling fast as well as he, and he could see it +leaping through the tops of the trees at no great distance. The heat +scorched and burned him, and the motorcycle felt hot to the touch. But, +after what seemed an interminable time, he reached the brook, which now +offered the last chance of safety. + +Scarcely checking his speed, Bert swung off the road. His machine +skidded wildly, but the tires gripped in time, and Bert steered for the +deep pool in which he had bathed less than two hours ago. The "Blue +Streak" crashed through the underbrush, beating down all opposition by +its terrific momentum, the powerful motor forcing it forward like a +battering ram. Bert gripped the tank with his knees, and held on grimly, +checking his mount at last at the brink of the pool. + +By now, the heat was almost intolerable, but there was still something +left for him to do before he could plunge into the cool water. Way back +in his camping days he had learned the best way of fighting a forest +fire, and now he put his knowledge to account. He applied a light to the +grass and underbrush bordering the pool, and a thin line of flame began +creeping to meet the furious conflagration dashing through the trees. +This would leave a narrow belt of charred land around the pool that +would hold the fire at a little distance, at least. + +This done, Bert seized the handlebars of his motorcycle, and hauled it +into the pool after him, until it was partly immersed. + +"That's the best I can do for you, old friend," he said. "I guess the +fire can't reach you there, at any rate." + +Then he waded in until he reached the deepest part of the pool, and +waited for the advance of the devouring element. + +He had plenty of company, as rabbits, foxes, and numerous other wild +creatures continually plunged into the water, their eyes wide with +terror, and all thoughts of age-old enmities wiped from their minds. + +The heat grew more intense every moment, and Bert felt the skin on his +face blistering. He took a long breath, and ducked his head completely +under water. He kept it there until it seemed as though his lungs would +burst for lack of air, and then lifted it to take another breath. In +those few seconds the fire had made tremendous strides, and now met the +backfire that Bert had started. He had only time to take a hasty glimpse +of all this, and then was forced to duck under again. Every breath he +drew was hot as the blast of a furnace, and seemed fairly to scorch his +lungs. + +The fire burned for a few minutes with no appreciable lessening of its +fury, but then, deprived of fuel, gradually passed by on each side of +the pool. Its terrific roaring slowly died away in the distance, and the +unbearable heat abated somewhat, although smoke still hung in a heavy +pall over the blackened ground. + +At last Bert found he could venture from the water with safety, and +accordingly did so. At the same time the wild creatures who had sought +refuge in the same place bethought themselves of engagements elsewhere, +and scampered off. + +Bert hauled the "Blue Streak" out of the water, and found it practically +unharmed. Some of the enamel had blistered, but Bert paid little +attention to this, so long as the machine was still in running order. He +had taken care not to let the water touch the magneto, and so was able +to start immediately. + +As he rode over the blackened trail, Bert could not help comparing the +scene of desolation that now met his eye with the beautiful appearance +the woods had presented so short a time before. In places the ground +still smoked and smouldered, and in others trees burned like giant +torches. + +But Bert realized that he had had a narrow escape from death, and this +thought kept him from dwelling too long on the devastated landscape. +After two or three hours' riding, he passed the fire belt, and once +more entered a flourishing forest. He made steady progress, and before +nightfall reached a fair-sized town. Most of the able-bodied men had not +returned from fighting the fire, and at first the few who were left +would hardly believe Bert's account of his escape. But a look at the +blistered enamel on the motorcycle convinced them, and they united in +congratulating him on his good fortune. As one grizzled old fellow +remarked, "Thar ain't many folks as can say they've come through a +forest fire as easy as you did, son. Thar generally ain't much o' them +left to tell the story." + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +RACING AN AIRSHIP + + +It was a hot, oppressive day when Bert set out from Ralston. But he had +had a restful sleep, and felt in fine trim for anything. He had eaten a +hearty breakfast, and this no doubt added to his feeling of buoyancy and +satisfaction with life in general. In addition, his mount was acting +beautifully, purring along with the deep-throated exhaust that tells its +own story of fine adjustments and perfect carburetion. + +The country through which he traveled was very flat, and for mile after +mile he glided easily along, encountering no obstructions worthy of the +name. The road was smooth, and, contrary to the general run of roads +in this section, comparatively free from sand and dust. The fresh, +invigorating air added to his feeling of exhilaration, and he was +tempted to "open 'er up" and do a little speeding. + +He had about decided to do so, when suddenly he became conscious of +hearing some noise not proceeding from his machine. + +At first he thought it must be an automobile coming up back of him, but, +as he glanced over his shoulder, he could see no sign of one, although +the road stretched out for miles without a break. + +Instantly his mind grasped the significance of the sound. + +"It must be an aeroplane," he thought, and, glancing upward, was not +much surprised to see one outlined against the clear blue of the sky. + +"Well, well," thought Bert, "this is an unexpected pleasure. I didn't +know there was an aeroplane within two hundred miles of here." + +The aeroplane, which proved to be of the biplane type, was evidently +descending. At first, Bert had stopped to get a good look at it, but +then, feeling that he had no time to lose, had remounted and resumed his +journey. + +But as he went along, he knew that the 'plane was still descending +because of the increasing noise of its exhaust. In the same way he could +tell that the machine was overtaking him, but at first the thought of +trying to beat it never entered his head. Even in all his varied and +exciting adventures he had never had a brush with such an adversary. + +In an incredibly short time, however, the aeroplane was directly over +his head, and he glanced upward. As he did so, the aviator leaned +forward slightly, and waved his gloved hand. Bert waved in reply, and +then the airman made a gesture which Bert interpreted, and rightly, as +being a challenge. + +Needless to say, our hero was not one to decline such an invitation, and +accordingly he opened his throttle a little. Instantly his exhaust +changed from its deep grumble to a harsh bark, and his machine leaped +forward. + +In answer to this, the aviator fed more gas to _his_ motor, and his +graceful machine soared forward in advance of Bert and the "Blue +Streak." + +"Oho!" thought Bert, "this will never do," and he gave his powerful +machine more throttle, at the same time advancing the spark to the +limit. That last fraction of an inch of spark sent his machine surging +ahead like some wild thing let loose, and he leaned far down to escape +the terrific resistance caused by the wind. The road streamed away +behind him, and he had a thrill of exultation as he felt his machine +leap forward in response to the slightest touch of the throttle. + +His adversary in the air was not to be easily outdistanced, however, and +he kept up with Bert, refusing to be shaken off. + +Bert felt that now was the time to take the lead, if possible, and +accordingly he opened the throttle almost to the limit, although he +still held something in reserve. + +The powerful motor responded nobly, and the machine skimmed over the +sun-baked road at a terrific pace. The bird-man did his best to squeeze +a little more speed out of his whirling motor, but was unable to cope +with the rushing, roaring little speck down below him. At last he was +forced to a realization of this, and abruptly cut down his speed. + +Bert continued his headlong flight for a short time, but finding that +the aeroplane did not pass him, concluded that it must have fallen +behind. Accordingly, he slackened his own speed, but very gradually, for +he was too wise to risk disaster by slowing down too suddenly. + +Soon his speed had abated sufficiently to allow the use of the brakes, +and he brought his machine to a standstill. Lifting it onto its stand, +he pushed his goggles up on his forehead, and looked around for his late +rival. + +He made out the aeroplane at no great distance, and could see that it +was making preparations to land. When the aviator reached a point almost +over Bert's head, he shut off his engine entirely, and, describing a +great spiral, landed gently on the ground not a hundred yards from where +Bert and the "Blue Streak" were standing. + +Bert immediately ran toward him, and the aviator stepped stiffly from +his seat and held out his hand. + +"You've got a mighty fast machine there, comrade," he said, with a grin, +as Bert shook hands with him. "I thought my 'plane was pretty good, but +I guess your motor bike is better." + +"Well, it isn't so bad, perhaps," replied Bert, unable no matter how +hard he tried, to keep a little note of pride out of his voice. "I +manage to get a little action out of it once in a while." + +"I should say you did," agreed his late rival, "but what are you doing +way out here a thousand miles from nowhere, more or less?" + +"I might ask the same question of you," replied Bert, with a smile, "but +as you beat me to it, I'll answer yours first." + +Bert then proceeded to outline briefly the contest in which he was +engaged, but, before he had gone far, his companion interrupted him. + +"Oh, I know all about that!" he exclaimed. "And so you're one of the +chaps in the transcontinental race, are you? Well, you haven't got so +much further to go, considering the distance you've covered already." + +"No, I guess the worst of it is over," agreed Bert, "although I've been +told that there are some very bad roads ahead of me." + +"You're right, there are," replied the aviator, "and that's where I have +an advantage over you. I don't have to worry over road conditions." + +Bert saw that he was a little chagrined over his defeat, and so forebore +to argue the merits of motorcycle versus airship. + +"Just the same," he thought to himself, "I'm a whole lot more likely to +get where I want to go than he is." + +Then he and his new-found companion fell into a discussion regarding +various types of motors, and inspected each other's machines with +interest. By the time this was over it was high noon, and Bert proposed +that they eat lunch together. + +The aviator agreed heartily to this, and accordingly they unpacked their +lunches and, sitting in the shade of one of the aeroplane wings, made a +hearty meal. + +When the last crumb had been disposed of, they shook hands with +expressions of mutual regard, and the aviator was very cordial in +wishing Bert all kinds of success in the contest. Then they said +good-bye, and resumed their respective journeys. Bert watched the +airship ascend in great spirals, until it was a mere speck in the +distance, winging rapidly eastward. + +Before starting, Bert looked over his machine carefully, in order to +assure himself that nothing had been loosened by the vibration caused by +the high speed. Everything seemed in perfect shape, and in less time +than it takes to tell he was "eating up space" in a fashion that +promised to land him speedily at his destination. + +But before he had gone many miles, he found the road, which up to now +had been exceptionally good, becoming more and more sandy, and he was +forced to go slowly and pick his way very carefully. As the sand grew +deeper his machine evinced a very decided tendency to skid, and he was +forced to exert all his strength to keep the front wheel pointed +straight ahead. + +Soon he shifted to low gear, and crawled forward at a pace little faster +than a brisk walk. He now had reason, as indeed he had a score of times +so far, to bless the foresight that had led him to purchase a two-speed +machine. Without this, he felt that the accomplishment of his task would +be well-nigh hopeless. + +The heat became more and more oppressive, and the alkali dust on his +face smarted and blistered. At intervals he would dismount, take a drink +from his canteen, and give his motor a chance to cool off. + +Then he would start on again, resolved to reach the next town before +nightfall. What with the many interruptions and the slow pace, however, +darkness overtook him while yet he was more than ten miles from his +destination. + +Dismounting, he lighted his lamp, and once more took up the forward +flight. The air, from being excessively hot, now became quite the +opposite, and he felt chilled to the bone. He kept doggedly on, +nevertheless, and at last his perseverance was rewarded by his catching +a glimpse of the lights of the town for which he was bound. At the same +time the road became much better, and he covered the intervening mile or +two at good speed. + +The town was not a large one, but it could afford a square meal and a +good bed, and that was all that Bert asked for. He had a hard time to +tear himself away from the other guests, who were very much interested +in his adventures, and plied him with innumerable questions. + +At last he managed to say good-night, and fifteen minutes afterward was +sunk in the deep, dreamless sleep of utter but healthy exhaustion. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +AN UNSEEN LISTENER + + +Bert was lost. There was no use blinking the fact. For two hours past +this feeling had been growing stronger, and now it had deepened into a +conviction. + +It was an unusual and disconcerting experience for him. His sense of +location was very keen and acute, and, even without a compass, he had +been able almost instinctively to distinguish the cardinal points. But +just now he was deprived of the help of that trusty counselor. He had +been compelled to dismount, a little while since, to make some trifling +adjustment. Some time later, when the sun had disappeared under a cloud, +he felt in the pocket where he usually carried his compass, and was +dismayed to find it empty. He must have lost it in bending over the +machine. He could replace it when he reached the next large town, but +just at present he missed it sorely. For an hour now, the sun had been +invisible, and although he felt confident he was traveling due West, he +would have given a good deal for absolute assurance of that fact. + +If he had been following some broad highway, he would not so much have +cared, as he would have been sure before long to reach some settlement +where he could again get his bearings. But there had been a number of +trails, none of them well-defined, and he had chosen one that grew +fainter and fainter as he progressed until it had faded away into the +mass of the prairie. In bright sunlight, he might have still been able +to trace it, but, in the dun haze and gathering dusk, it was no longer +visible. + +Although the country was mostly a level plain, it was interspersed here +and there with bits of woodland and rocky buttes, rising in places to a +height of two hundred feet. One of these Bert descried in the distance, +and, putting on more power, he neared it rapidly. If he had to spend the +night in the open, which seemed very probable now, he wanted to have the +cheer and comfort of a fire, and there was no material for that in +the treeless plain. At the edge of the wood he could get boughs and +branches. By the aid of the spirit lamp that he carried in his kit, he +could make a pot of coffee to supplement the sandwiches he had with him. + +By the time he had reached the woods it had grown wholly dark. He jumped +from the saddle, leaned the "Blue Streak" against a tree, and commenced +to gather twigs and branches. He soon had enough for his purpose, and +was just about to apply a match, when he caught the twinkle of a light, +farther up the wooded slope. He looked closely and could see the +outlines of a cabin from which the light was streaming. + +The discovery was both a surprise and a delight. Here was human +companionship, and an opportunity to know just where he was and how he +could best reach the nearest town. He thought it was probably the hut of +some sheepherder or cattleman, and he had no doubt of a warm welcome. +Apart from the hospitality that is proverbial on the Western plains, the +occupant of that lonely cabin would be just as glad as himself to have a +companion for the night. He thrust his matchbox back in its waterproof +pouch, and, taking his machine by the handlebars, began to trundle it up +the slope. + +His first impulse was to blow the horn of his motorcycle, as a cheery +announcement that a stranger was coming. But as he reached out his hand, +some unseen power seemed to hold him back. There seemed to be no reason +for the caution, but that subtle "sixth sense," that experience had +taught Bert to rely upon, asserted itself. On such occasions he had +learned not to argue, but to obey. He did so now, and, instead of going +directly to the cabin as he had planned at first, made a wide circle and +came up behind. He left the motorcycle fifty feet away, and then with +infinite care drew near the cabin. + +It was a rude structure of logs, and mud had been used to close up the +chinks. There was no window on that side, but in several places the +dried mud had fallen away, and the light shone through the crevices. +Bert glued his eye to the largest of these openings and looked in. + +A smoky lamp stood on a rough pine table, before which a man was seated +on a nail keg. His face was partly turned away, and, at the moment Bert +saw him, he was applying his lips to a half-filled whiskey bottle. He +took an enormous dram and then slammed the bottle down on the table and +drew his sleeve across his mouth. + +Around his waist was a cartridge belt, and two ugly-looking revolvers +peeped from his holsters. A bowie knife lay on the table beside the +lamp. The outlook was not reassuring, and Bert blessed the caution that +had impelled him to "hasten slowly" in approaching the cabin. + +He blessed it again when the man with an oath and a snarl picked up a +handbill that had dropped on the floor. In doing so, he exposed his full +face to view, and Bert thought that he had seldom seen one so wholly +villainous. + +The ferret-like eyes, set close together, as they looked out from +beneath bushy brows, glinted with ferocity. Although comparatively +young, dissipation and reckless living had stamped their impress on +every feature. His outthrust jaw bespoke a bulldog courage and +determination. Brute was written largely all over him. An ugly scar +across his temple told of the zip of a bullet or the crease of a knife. +It was the face of a desperado who would stop at nothing, however +murderous or cruel, to gain his ends. + +As the light fell upon the paper, Bert saw that it was headed by the +word "REWARD" in staring capitals. Then came a picture that corresponded +closely to the face of the man who was reading. Large print followed, of +which Bert could see enough to grasp the meaning. It was an offer of +five thousand dollars reward for the capture, alive or dead, of "Billy +the Kid," who had held up a stage at Valley Gulch two weeks before, and, +after killing the driver and one of the passengers who had resisted, had +made his escape with the contents of the express company's pouch. + +Billy the Kid! The newspapers had been full of the robbery at the time +it was committed, and columns had been published narrating his exploits. +He was wanted for thefts and murders covering a series of years. Posses +were out for him in all directions, but he seemed to bear a charmed life +and had successfully evaded capture. An almost superstitious fear +attached to his name, and he was cited as an illustrious example of the +"Devil taking care of his own." + +"Dead or alive," muttered the outlaw with an ugly sneer. "It will have +to be dead, then. They'll never get me alive." + +Bert was in a ticklish situation. The slightest move on his part might +betray his presence to this sullen bandit, to whom human life was +nothing. He slipped his hand behind him and was comforted by the feel of +his revolver. It was a Colt .45, fully loaded, and he knew how to use +it. In that fight with the pirates off the Chinese coast it had done +good service. He knew that, at need, he could rely upon it now. He took +it from his hip pocket and put it in his breast, with the handle +protruding so that he could grasp it instantly. + +Just then the gallop of horses smote upon his ears. The outlaw heard it, +too, and jumped to his feet. He blew out the light and snatched up his +weapons. The hoof beats drew nearer and a halloo rang out that was +evidently a preconcerted signal. With an oath of relief the desperado +relighted the lamp and went to the door. + +"It's time you came," he ripped out savagely. "What kept you so long?" + +"Couldn't help it, Cap," protested a man who entered the cabin, closely +followed by four others. "Manuel had to hang around the telegraph office +till the message came from Red Pete. The minute it came, we beat it +lickety split and almost killed our hosses getting here." + +The leader snatched the held out telegram and read it eagerly while the +five men, of the same desperate type as their captain, stood around +ready to jump at his bidding. It was clear that they feared and cringed +to him. His brute force and superior cunning combined with his evil +reputation held them in complete subjection. + +The telegram was brief and seemingly innocent: + +"Mary leaves at ten. Meet her with carriage. Pleasant visit." + +He drew from his pocket a scrap of paper, evidently containing a key to +the message. He compared it with the telegram, and a light of unholy +glee came into his eyes. + +"It's all right, boys," he said, his fierce demeanor softening somewhat. +"The Overland Limited will be at the water tank near Dorsey at three +o'clock. There'll be forty thousand in the express messenger's safe. +It's up to us to make a rich haul and a quick getaway. Now listen to +me," and with the swift decision that marks the born leader and that +went far to explain his ascendancy over his men, he sketched out the +plan of the coming robbery. + +"You, Mike and Manuel, will attend to the engineer and fireman. First +get their hands up over their heads. Then keep them covered and make +them uncouple the engine and express car from the rest of the train and +run up the track a half a mile or so. I'll see to the express messenger +myself. He'll open that safe or I'll blow his head off and then break +open the safe with dynamite. Joe and Bob and Ed will stay by the train +and keep shooting off their guns, to cow the passengers and trainmen +while we get in our work. We won't have time to go through the cars, as +it will be too near daylight, and we'll have to do some hard riding +while it's dark. I hate to let the passengers' coin and jewelry go, but +we'll get enough from the express car to make up for that. Let your +horses rest till twelve and then we'll saddle up and get to the water +tank by two. Now you fellows know what you've got to do, and God help +the man who makes a bad break. He'll have to reckon with me," and he +laid his hand significantly on the handle of his knife. + +There was an uneasy grin on the part of the men, and then they fell to +discussing the details of the plan, while the bottle passed freely from +hand to hand. + +Bert, who had listened breathlessly to the daring plot, was doing some +rapid thinking. He had not the slightest idea where the water tank was +located. It might be east, west, north or south, as far as he knew. +But what he did know was that it behooved him to get away from that +dangerous locality at the earliest possible moment. His life would not +have been worth much if he had been discovered before they had discussed +the robbery. Now that he was in possession of the details, it would be +worth absolutely nothing. A killing more or less made no difference to +these abandoned outlaws, and they would have shot him with as little +concern as they would a prairie dog. + +Then, too, the alarm ought to be given at once. By riding into the +night, he would have a chance of reaching some town and getting into +touch with the railroad authorities, by wire or phone. Or he might run +across some one familiar with the country who could guide him. Anything +was better than inaction. Theft and murder were in the air, and every +passing moment made them more probable. He might break his neck, collide +with a rock or a tree, ride over a precipice in the dark. But he had to +take a chance. Danger had never yet turned him from the path of duty. It +should not daunt him now. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +THE OUTLAW PLOT + + +Slowly, carefully, hardly venturing to breathe, he backed away from the +cabin. He got outside the zone of light and felt for his motorcycle. +With the utmost caution not to touch the horn or siren, he guided it in +a wide semicircle down the slope. One of the horses whinnied as he +passed and an outlaw appeared at the door. After listening for a moment, +while Bert stood like a stone image in his track, the man, evidently +satisfied, turned and went inside. + +Then Bert moved on again by inches until he reached the edge of the +woods. From there he knew that the faint click made by the valves in +starting could not possibly be heard from above. He drew a long breath +and for the first time turned his gaze toward the sky. He was rejoiced +to find that the clouds had vanished and that the deep blue was sown +with stars. He needed no compass now. There was the gleaming Polar Star +by which he had often guided his course as unerringly as by the sun. He +paused a moment to get a direction due west. Then he leaped into the +saddle and was off. + +Not until he was sure that he was beyond the sight of any possible +watcher from the cabin, did he dismount and light his lamp. Then with +the confidence that came from the light streaming far ahead of him, he +threw in the clutch and let his machine out to the limit. + +He had ridden perhaps twenty miles, looking anxiously about for the +lights of a town, when at some distance he saw the flames from a +campfire in the lee of a bluff far away to his right. He could see a +group of men, some moving about, others stretched out near the fire +apparently asleep. Mindful of his previous experience, he put out his +light and glided toward them like a shrouded ghost. + +Stopping outside the circle of light, where he could study the scene at +his leisure, he counted a dozen men. They were strapping fellows, rough +in dress and appearance, but with honest, fearless faces. One of them +wore a badge that stamped him as an official of some kind, and he was +evidently in command of the party. Bert hesitated no longer, but, +mounting, rode slowly into the firelight. + +There was a gasp of wonder at his appearance, and the men who were still +awake sprang to their feet with their hands on their pistol butts. A +second glance, however, as Bert waved his hand in friendly fashion, +disarmed them and they came hastily forward. + +"Well, stranger," said the man with the badge, "you came in on us rather +sudden like and we was plumb surprised for a minute. You seem to be all +right though, and that machine of yours is certainly some beaut. We're +more used to riding four-legged things, though. We don't ask anything +about a man's business out here unless we happen to have some particular +business with him," and he touched his star. "So you can tell us nothing +or as much as you like. As to me I ain't got any secrets as to whom I +am. I'm the sheriff of Wentworth County and this here is my posse." + +"Just the man I'd rather see at this minute than any one else in the +world," exclaimed Bert, delightedly. And then, in words that tumbled +over one another in their haste, he told them who he was, how he had +been lost on the prairie and of his adventure near the cabin of "Billy +the Kid." + +At the mention of that notorious name the sheriff fairly jumped. "What!" +he shouted. "Billy the Kid and his gang? They're the fellows we're out +for now. Here, boys," he yelled, "get busy. We're on a fresh trail and +we'll bag the hull bunch before daylight." + +Instantly the camp was alive with excitement. Horses were untethered and +saddled, and within five minutes the posse was ready to start. Bert had +given hurriedly the details of the plot and the sheriff's campaign was +quickly planned. He knew every foot of the surrounding country and he +headed his troop straight as the crow flies for Dorsey, the little town, +beyond which lay the tank where the Limited would slow down to take +water. His line of march was shorter than that of the outlaws, and +besides, they had not planned to leave the cabin before midnight. +He could count on getting there first and having time to make his +dispositions for the round-up of the gang. + +"Well, son," he said, with a warm grip of the hand, when they were ready +to start, "I sure owe you a lot for this tip. This country's going to +sleep a heap sight better when they know these fellows have dangled from +the end of a rope. But how about you, now? I'll send one of my men along +with you to Lonsdale, if you like. That's fifteen mile west of here and +on the line of road you're traveling." + +"No, thanks," replied Bert promptly, "I'm going with you, if you'll have +me." + +"Going with us," echoed the sheriff in surprise. "Of course, I'm glad to +have you. But that gang is 'bad medicine' and there's goin' to be some +shooting. You ain't got no call to mix in, 'cept of your own free will." + +"Sure, I know," said Bert. "I'm going along." + +"Son," exclaimed the sheriff, extending his hand, "put her thar. I'm +proud to know you. You're the real stuff, all wool and a yard wide. Come +along." + +A word of command and they clattered off, Bert keeping alongside of the +leader. He was thrilling with excitement. The primitive emotions had him +in their grip. A little while before, he had been in the conventional +world of law and order and civilization. Now, he was seeing life "in the +raw." A battle was imminent, and here he was riding to the battlefield +over the prairies at midnight under the silent stars. The blood coursed +violently through his veins and his heart beat high with passion for the +fight. That he himself was running the risk of wounding and death was +only an added stimulus. For the moment he was a "cave man," like his +ancestors in the morning of the world, stealing forth from their lair +for a raid against their enemies. Later on, when cooler, he would +analyze and wonder at these emotions. But now, he yielded to them, and +the time seemed long before the little cavalcade swept through the +sleeping town of Dorsey, and then, at a more slow and careful pace, made +their way to the water tank below the station. + +As they came nearer, they dismounted and led their horses to a clump of +trees on the eastern side of the tank and a half a mile away. Two men +were left in charge, with orders to strap the horses' jaws together, so +that they could not neigh and thus betray their masters. It was figured +that the outlaws would approach from the west, and the members of the +posse disposed themselves in a wide semicircle, so that, at a given +signal, they could surround and overpower the robbers. If possible, they +were to capture them alive so that they could answer to justice for +their crimes. But, alive or dead, they were to "get" them. And as Bert +looked on the stern, determined faces of his companions, he had no doubt +of the outcome of the struggle. + +After they had taken their places, lying flat on the ground with such +shelter as a bush or cactus plant afforded, there was a considerable +wait that was more trying to the nerves than actual fighting. Bert and +the sheriff were close together, but, except for an occasional whisper, +neither spoke. They were busy with their thoughts and intent on the +approaching fray. + +Perhaps an hour had elapsed before they heard the distant tramp of +horses. Soon they could see half a dozen men approaching, their figures +dimly outlined in the starlight. The grip of the watchers tightened on +their pistol butts as they strained their eyes to get a better view of +their quarry. + +Then silence fell again. A half hour went by. Suddenly a faint whistle +was heard in the distance, the ground began to tremble and a great +headlight swung into view, far up the track. It was the road's crack +train, the Overland Limited. The moment was at hand. + +With a terrific rumbling and clanking and ringing of bells, the +ponderous train slowed down at the tank. The fireman was already on the +tender, ready to slew over the pipe that would bring a cataract of +water down into the reservoir. Just as he reached for it, there was a +fusillade of shots. Two masked men covered the startled engineer and +fireman with their revolvers and ordered them to hold up their hands. +Another hammered at the door of the express car and commanded the +messenger to open, on pain of instant death. Farther down the train +other shots rang out and windows were shattered by bullets to warn +passengers to stay inside. + +But just then came a diversion. With a yell and a rush the sheriff and +his men swept down upon the astonished outlaws, firing as they came. The +bandits were caught like rats in a trap. They were the center of a ring +of flame, but they fought back savagely. There were cries and curses, as +men emptied their revolvers and then clinched in deadly struggle. The +bandit leader, leaving the express car, plunged headlong into the fight, +battling like a fiend. When his revolver was empty he flung it into the +sheriff's face and made a break for his horse. But Bert was too quick +for him, and tackled him, just as he had put one foot in the stirrup +and was swinging the other over his mount. With a mighty wrench he +dragged him from the saddle. The "Kid" uttered a fearful oath and +reached for his knife. Bert's hands closed around his throat and they +went to the ground rolling over and over like two panthers. + +At gun or knife play the outlaw would have been the victor. But in this +hand-to-hand struggle, Bert was easily his master. His tremendous +strength, reinforced by clean living and athletic training, soon +triumphed over the rum-soaked body of the "Kid." But the latter's +ferocity was appalling, and Bert had to choke him almost into +unconsciousness, before his muscles relaxed and he lay there limp and +gasping. + +As Bert rose, breathless but victorious, he saw that the fight was over. +Two of the outlaws were dead and another fatally wounded. The other two +were in the hands of their captors, and the sheriff coming up, snapped +handcuffs on the "Kid" and jerked him to his feet. + +Passengers and trainmen came pouring from the cars, and there was a +Babel of excited questionings. The conductor, full of relief and +gratitude at his train's escape from looting, offered to carry the party +to the next town on the line. But the sheriff elected to take his +prisoners across country to the county seat, and after another exchange +of congratulations, the train moved on. + +Then the triumphant posse, with one of its members severely, another +slightly wounded, took up their homeward trip. They had made one of the +most important captures in the history of the State, and the next day +the country would be ringing with their praises. They were naturally +jubilant, and the sheriff urged Bert earnestly to come with them as the +real hero of the roundup. But he stoutly refused and the only favor he +would accept was the loan of a guide to take him over to Lonsdale. + +"Well," said the sheriff at last reluctantly, "I suppose you know your +own business best, but I shore am sorry to say good-bye. You've made an +awful hit with me, son. That was a lovely scrap you put up with the +'Kid,' and I've never seen a prettier bit of rough housing. I hope you +win your race and I believe you will. Anybody that can put one over on +'Billy the Kid' can pretty near get anything he goes after. If ever +you're looking for work," he joked, "come out to Wentworth County and +I'll make you assistant sheriff. Perhaps, though, you'd better not," and +his eyes twinkled, "cause it wouldn't be long before you'd have my +job." + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +A MURDEROUS GRIP + + +Bert was having his first glimpse of the sea since he started on his +trip. He was weary of the land which he had traversed so swiftly and +steadily for two weeks past. The impression stamped upon his brain was +that of an endless ribbon of road, between whose edges his motorcycle +had sped along, until he seemed like a living embodiment of perpetual +motion. That ribbon had commenced to unwind at the eastern end of the +continent, and there were still a good many miles to be reeled off +before the race was ended. But now, as he sat on the veranda of the +beach hotel facing the sea whose surf broke on the sands a hundred feet +away, he could feel his weariness dropping away like a cast-off garment. +The tang of the ocean was a tonic that filled him with new life, and his +nostrils dilated as they drew in great draughts of the salt air. + +"Ponce de Leon was wrong when he looked for the elixir of life in a +fountain," he thought to himself. "He should have sought for it in the +sea." + +Before him stretched the mighty Pacific, its crested waves glittering in +the sun. Fishing vessels and coasting craft flashed their white sails +near the shore, while, far out on the horizon, he could see the trail +of smoke that followed in the wake of a liner. Great billows burst into +spray on the beach, and the diapason of the surf reverberated in his +ears like rich organ music. He drank it all in thirstily, as though +storing up inspiration for the completion of his task. + +A man sitting near by looked at him with a quizzical smile, frankly +interested by Bert's absorption in the scene before him. With easy +good-fellowship, he remarked: + +"You seem to be getting a lot of pleasure out of the view." + +"I am," replied Bert promptly; "I can't get enough of it." + +"There are plenty of people who have got enough of it," he observed +drily, "your humble servant among the number." + +Bert scented a story, but repressed any sign of curiosity. + +"It's the infinite variety that appeals to me," he said. "The sea is +full of wonders." + +"And tragedies," supplemented the other. + +He settled back in his chair and lighted a fresh cigar. As he struck +the match, Bert noticed that his right hand was horribly scarred and +disfigured. It looked as though it had been drawn through a harrow whose +teeth had bitten deep. Great livid weals crossed each other on the back, +and two of the fingers were gone. And Bert noted that, although his +face and frame indicated that he was not more than thirty years old, his +hair was snowy white. + +"Of course, that's true," said Bert, reverting to the stranger's last +remark; "storms and shipwrecks and typhoons and tidal waves are things +that have to be reckoned with." + +"Yes," was the reply, "but I wasn't thinking especially of these. +They're common enough and terrible enough. What I had in mind was the +individual tragedies that are happening all the time, and of which not +one in a hundred ever hears." + +"Do you see this hair of mine?" he asked, removing his hat. "One day at +noon it was as dark as yours. At three o'clock on that same day it was +like this." + +He paused a moment, as though battling with some fearful recollection. + +"I don't know how familiar you may be with the Pacific," he resumed, +"but on this coast there is every variety of monster that you can find +in any other ocean, and usually of a fiercer and larger type. Nowhere do +you find such man-eating sharks or such malignant devil-fish. The sharks +don't come near enough to the shore to bother us much. But it's safe to +say that within half a mile from here, there are gigantic squids, with +tentacles from twelve to twenty feet long. More than one luckless +swimmer, venturing out too far, has been dragged down by them, and there +are instances where they have picked a man out of a fishing boat. If +those tentacles ever get you in their murderous grip, it's all over with +you. + +"Then, too, we have what is called the 'smotherer,' something like a +monstrous ray, that spreads itself out over its prey and forces it down +in the mud at the bottom, until it is smothered to death. It's a terror +to divers, and they fear it more than they do the shark. + +"But these perils are well known and can be guarded against. If I'd got +into any trouble with them, it would probably have been largely my own +fault. But it is the 'unexpected that happens,' and the thing that +marked me for life was something not much bigger than my fist. + +"Have you ever seen an abalone? No? Well, it's a kind of shellfish +that's common on this coast. It has one shell and that a very beautiful +one, so that it is in considerable demand. The inside of it is like +mother of pearl and there are little swellings on it called 'blisters,' +that gleam with all the colors of the rainbow. It's a favorite sport +here to get up 'abalone parties,' just as you fellows in the East go +crabbing. Only, instead of getting after them with a net, we use a +crowbar. Queer kind of fishing, isn't it?" + +"I should say it was," smiled Bert. + +"Well, you see, it's this way. The body of the abalone is a mass of +muscle that has tremendous strength. It is so powerful, that the natives +of the South Sea Islands use the abalones to catch sharks with. Fact. +They fasten a chain to the abalone, and it swims out and attaches itself +to the under side of a shark. Then they pull it in, and no matter how +hard the shark struggles and threshes about, it has to come. The abalone +would be torn to pieces before it would let go. It's the bulldog of the +shellfish tribe, and a harpoon wouldn't hold the shark more securely. + +"On the coast, here, they fasten themselves to the rocks, and as these +are usually covered at high tide, you have to hunt them when the tide is +low. You wade out among the rocks until you catch sight of an abalone. +Then you insert the crowbar between the shell and the rock. Only the +enormous leverage this gives enables you to pry it off. The strongest +man on earth couldn't pull it away with his bare hands. + +"Usually, we went in parties, and there was a good deal of rivalry as to +who would get the largest and finest shells. I forgot to say that, +besides the shells themselves, once in a while you can find a pearl of +considerable value and great beauty. This occurs so seldom, however, +that it is always a red-letter day when you have such a bit of luck. + +"One day, a friend had arranged to go abalone hunting with me, but just +as we were getting ready to start out, a telegram called him away from +town, on important business. It would have been the luckiest thing that +ever happened to me if I had got a telegram too. We were both much +disappointed, as on that day we were going to try a new place, where we +had a 'hunch' that we would make a good haul. + +"The weather was so fine and I had my mind so set upon the trip, that I +determined to go it alone. The tide that day would be at low water mark +at about twelve o'clock. I threw a lunch together, got out my bag and +crowbar and started. + +"A tramp of a couple of miles down the beach brought me to the place we +had in mind. It was a desolate stretch of shore, with no houses in sight +except an occasional fisherman's shack, and the crowds that frequented +the other beaches had left this severely alone. It was this, added to +the fact that an unusual number of rocks was visible at low tide, that +had made us fix on it as a promising location. + +"The day was bright and clear and the sea had never appeared so +beautiful. Looked to me, I imagine, a good deal as it did to you just +now. It has never seemed beautiful to me since. + +"The tide was on the ebb, but had not yet run out fully, and I had to +wait perhaps half an hour before the rocks were uncovered enough to +permit me to see the abalones in their hiding places. I spent the time +lying lazily on the sand with half shut eyelids, and basking in the +inexpressible charm of sea and sky. I never dreamed of the horror the +scene would inspire in me a little later on. There was a long swell but +little surf that day, and there was nothing cruel in the way the waves +danced in the sunlight and came gliding up, with an air that was almost +caressing, to where I lay stretched out at perfect peace with myself and +the world. + +"Soon the ebb had reached its limit and there was that momentary +hesitation before the tide, as though it had forgotten something and +were coming back for it, began to flow in. Now was the time, if I wanted +to fill the sack that I had brought along with me to hold my spoil. I +remember chuckling to myself, as I looked around and saw that there was +not a soul in sight. If this should prove the rich hunting ground I +believed it to be, I would have first choice of the finest specimens. + +"I slung the bag over my shoulder and holding the crowbar in my left +hand, began to make my way out to the rocks. I had stripped off my outer +clothing, and was in the swimming suit that I wore underneath. The water +was deliciously refreshing, after the sun bath I had been enjoying, and +I went leisurely along until I came to where the rocks were thickest. +The slope was very gradual, and, by the time I got among them, I was +some distance from the shore. Then I became alert and alive, and +buckled down to my work. + +"My friend and I had made no mistake. The rocks were full of abalones +and my bag was soon filling rapidly. I exulted in the thought of the +virgin field that we too would exploit together. + +"But, although the shells were numerous and unusually fine in their +markings, I could not find any that contained a pearl. That was the one +thing necessary to make my day a perfect success. I began to hustle now, +as the tide was beginning to come in strongly, and before long the +rising waters would cover the rocks. + +"Suddenly, I saw under the green surface a large abalone with its shell +gaping widely. And my heart gave a jubilant leap as I saw a large pearl +just within the edge of the shell. How I came to do such a fool thing I +don't know, but, with a shout, I reached out my hand to grasp it. I +slipped as I did so, and, in trying to steady myself, the crowbar flew +out of my left hand and fell several feet away. And just then the shell +began to tighten. I tried to withdraw my hand, but it was too late. That +closing shell held it against the rock as though in an iron clamp. + +"A sweat broke out all over me and icy chills chased themselves up and +down my spine. I pulled with all my might, but the shell, as though in +mockery, closed tighter. The feeling of that clammy mass of gristle and +muscle against the flesh filled me with a sick loathing that, for the +moment, overbore the pain of my crushed hand. So, I imagine, a man might +feel in the slimy folds of a boa constrictor. + +"Instinctively, I raised my other hand, as if to insert the crowbar. +Then I realized that it had fallen from my hand. I could see where it +lay between two rocks, not six feet away. Six feet! It might as well +have been six miles. + +"I was trapped. The full horror of my situation burst upon me. I was +alone, held fast by that powerful shell that recognized me as an enemy +and would never relax of its own accord. _And the tide was coming in._ + +"In a fury of rage and terror, I struck at the abalone with my left hand +while with all my strength I tried to tear away my right. But I could +have as soon succeeded in pulling it from beneath a triphammer. There +were gaping rents in the flesh opened by my struggles and I could see my +blood mingling with the green water. + +"You have heard of bears and lynxes caught in traps who have chewed at +their imprisoned leg until they left it behind them and hobbled away, +maimed and bleeding, but free. I swear to you that I would have done the +same with that hand of mine, if I had been able. + +"I thought of a woodsman whom I knew, who had been caught by a falling +tree that had crushed his foot. He knew that if he stayed there that +night, the wolves would get him. His axe was within reach and he +deliberately chopped off his foot. I didn't have even that chance. I was +in my bathing suit and my knife was in the clothes left on the shore. + +"And all this time the cruel, treacherous sea was coming in and the tide +was mounting higher and higher. It purled about me softly, gently, like +a cat playing with a mouse. I beat at it angrily with my left hand and +it seemed to laugh. It felt sure of me and could afford to be indulgent. +It was already above my waist and my knowledge of the coast told me that +when it reached the flood it would be ten feet deep at the place where I +stood. + +"I looked wildly around, in the hope of seeing some one on the shore. +But it was absolutely deserted. A little while before, I had been +gloating over the fact that I was alone and could have a monopoly of the +hunting. Now I would have given all I had in the world for the sight of +a human face. I shouted until I was hoarse, but no one came. Far out at +sea, I could glimpse dimly the sails of a vessel. I waved my free hand +desperately, but I knew at the time that it was futile. I was a mere +speck to any one on board, and even if they trained strong glasses on me +they would have thought it nothing but the frolicsome antics of a +bather. + +"Now the water was up to my armpits. The thought came to me that if I +should keep perfectly quiet, the abalone might think his danger gone and +loosen his grip. But, though I nearly went crazy with the terrible +strain of keeping still, when every impulse was to leap and yell, the +cunning creature never relaxed that murderous clutch. + +"Then I lost all control of myself. It wasn't the thought of death +itself. I could, I think, have steeled myself to that. But it was the +horrible mode of death. To be young and strong and twenty, and to die +there, slowly and inexorably, while six feet away was a certain means of +rescue! + +"The water had reached my neck. My overstrung nerves gave way. I tugged +wildly at my bleeding hand. I raved and wept. I think I must have grown +delirious. I dimly remember babbling to the iron bar that I could see +lying there so serenely in the transparent water. I coaxed it, wheedled +it, cajoled it, begged it to come to me, and, when it refused, I cursed +it. The waves were breaking over me and I was choking. The spray was in +my eyes and ears. I thought I heard a shouting, the sound of oars. Then +a great blackness settled down upon me and I knew nothing more. + +"When next I came to consciousness, I was in a hospital, where I had +been for two months with brain fever. They had had to take off two +fingers, and barely saved the rest of the hand. They wouldn't let me see +a mirror until they had prepared me for the change in my appearance. + +"I learned then the story of my rescue. A party had come around a bend +of the shore when I was at my last gasp. They caught sight of my hand +just above the water. They made for me at once and tried to pull me into +the boat. Then they saw my plight, and, with a marlinspike, pried the +abalone loose. They tell me that my bleeding fingers had stiffened +around the pearl, and they could scarcely get it away from me. They +asked me afterward if I cared to see it, but I hated it so bitterly that +I refused to look at it. It had been bought at too high a price. + +"And now," he concluded, "do you wonder that I dread that sleek and +crawling monster that I call the sea?" + +Bert drew a long breath. + +"No," he said, and there was a world of sympathy and understanding in +his tone, "I don't." + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +DESPERATE CHANCES + + +Bert's stay at the pleasant seaside hotel was limited to a few hours +only, but he gained incalculable refreshment from the short rest. It was +with regret that he could not spend more time there that he took leave +of the proprietor, and repaired to the motorcycle store where he had +left the "Blue Streak" to have some very necessary work done on it. The +engine had not been overhauled since starting from New York, and the +cylinders were badly incrusted with carbon. He had left directions for +this to be scraped out, and when he reached the shop expected to find +his machine waiting for him in first-class condition. What was his +chagrin therefore, when, on entering the place, the first thing he saw +was the "Blue Streak" in a dismantled condition, parts of it strewn all +over the floor. + +He hunted up the proprietor, and indignantly asked him why the machine +was not ready according to promise. + +"I'm very sorry," the man told him, "but as one of the mechanics was +scraping the front cylinder it dropped on the floor, and when he picked +it up he found it was split. So we can't do anything with the machine +until we get a new cylinder." + +"But haven't you got a machine in the place you could take a cylinder +from, and put it on my machine?" asked Bert. "I can't afford to be held +up here for a day while you send away for a new part." + +"There isn't a machine in the place that would have a cylinder to fit +yours," said the proprietor; "if it had been a rear cylinder, it would +have been easy enough to give you another, because we could take one off +a one-cylinder machine that would fit. But, as it happens, I haven't a +twin cylinder machine in the place." + +"But how long will it take to get the new one here?" asked Bert. + +"About half a day, I should say," replied the other. + +"Half a day!" echoed Bert, and his heart sank. "Why, if I lose that much +time here it probably means that I'll lose the race. Do you realize +that?" + +"I don't see what we can do about it," replied the proprietor, shrugging +his shoulders. "I'll get the cylinder for you the first minute I can, +but that's the best I can do." + +Bert saw that there was no use arguing the matter. He walked out of +the place without another word, but with a great bitterness in his +heart. All his days of heartbreaking riding--the hardships he had +undergone--the obstacles he had faced and overcome--all these things +were in a fair way of being set at nought because of the carelessness +of a stupid mechanician. The thought almost drove him frantic, and he +hurried along the pavement, scarcely noticing where he was going. At +last he collected his thoughts somewhat and pulled himself together. +Looking about him, he saw that he was not far from the postoffice, and +it occurred to him that there might be a letter for him from Tom or +Dick. + +With this thought in mind he entered the postoffice, in one corner of +which there was also a telegraph station. + +Walking up to the window, he inquired if there was any mail for Bert +Wilson. + +"No," said the functionary behind the grating, "but there's a telegram +just come in for a party of that name. Bill!" he called, to the +telegraph operator, "here's Mr. Wilson now, him that you just got the +telegram for." + +"Oh, all right," replied the operator, "here you are, sir. I was just +going to send it up to your hotel." + +"Much obliged," said Bert, and tore open the yellow envelope. + +"Ride fast," it read, "have just heard Hayward is within three hundred +miles of San Francisco. Hurry." + +The slip of yellow paper dropped from Bert's nerveless fingers. Three +hundred miles away. Why, Bert was as far from San Francisco as that +himself, with mountainous roads still before him, and his machine out of +commission! + +If he could only do something, anything, that would be a relief. But he +was absolutely helpless in the grasp of an unforeseen calamity, and all +he could do was to pray desperately for the speedy arrival of the new +cylinder. + +He hastened back to the repair shop, and found that in his absence +everything, with, of course, the exception of the front cylinder, had +been put together. "We've done all we can," the proprietor assured him. +"A few minutes ago I called up the agents in Clyde and they said that +their man was on the way with it. So it ought to get here early this +afternoon." + +"Well," declared Bert grimly, "I'm not going to stir out of this place +till it does come, let me tell you." + +He waited with what patience he could muster, and at last, a little +before two o'clock, the long-awaited cylinder arrived. With feverish +haste Bert fastened it to the motor base himself, too impatient to let +anybody else do it. Besides, he was resolved to take no chances of +having _this_ cylinder damaged. Ten minutes later the last nut had been +tightened, and the "Blue Streak" was wheeled out into the street. Now +that the heartbreaking waiting was over, Bert felt capable of anything. +As he vaulted into the saddle, he made a compact with himself. "If my +machine holds out," he resolved, "I will not sleep again until I reach +San Francisco;" and when Bert made a resolution, he kept it. + +He scorched through the streets of the town regardless, for the time +being, of local speed ordinances. In a few minutes he was out on +the open road, and then,--well, the "Blue Streak" justified all the +encomiums he had ever heaped upon it. Up hill and down he sped, riding +low over the handlebars, man and machine one flying, space-devouring +unit. The day drew into dusk, dusk changed to darkness, and Bert +dismounted long enough to light his lamp and was off again, streaking +over the smooth road like a flying comet. At times he slowed down as he +approached curves, but was off again like the wind when he had rounded +them. Sometimes steep hills confronted him, but the speeding motorcycle +took them by storm, and topped their summits almost before gravity could +act to slacken his headlong speed. Then the descent on the other side +would be a wild, dizzy rush, when at time the speedometer needle reached +the ninety mark. + +But the country became more mountainous after a while, and Bert +encountered hills that even the "Blue Streak" was forced to negotiate on +low speed. This ate up gasoline, and about midnight Bert, on stopping a +moment to examine his fuel supply, found that it was almost exhausted. +Fortunately, however, about a mile further on he reached a wayside +garage. He knocked repeatedly, but received no answer. + +"Just the same, I've got to have gasoline," thought Bert, and acted +accordingly. With a screwdriver he pried open a window, and, filling a +can from a barrel, returned to his machine and filled the tank. Then he +replaced the can, and left the price of the gasoline in a prominent +place. + +"Needs must when the devil drives," he thought, "and I simply had to +have that juice." + +And now he was once more flying through the night, the brilliant rays +from his lamp dancing and flickering on the road ahead, and at times +striking prismatic colors from rocky walls as the road passed through +some cut. Mile after mile passed back under the flying rider and +machine, but still they kept on with no sign of slackening. Gradually +dawn broke, misty and gray at first, but then brightening and expanding +until the glorious light of full day bathed the hills in splendor. And +then, as Bert looked up and around, slowing down so that he could the +better drink in the glorious scene, he beheld, at a great distance, the +roofs and towers of a great city, and knew that it was San Francisco, +the golden city of the West. Sixteen days since he left New York and +the goal toward which he had struggled so bravely was at hand! + +But even now there was no time to be lost. At this moment, Hayward might +also be approaching the city, and Bert was too wise to risk failure now +with the prize so nearly within his grasp. He started on again, his mind +in a whirl, and all thought of fatigue and exhaustion banished. The road +was bordered by signs indicating the right direction, and in less than +an hour Bert was riding through the suburbs of San Francisco. + +Bert's entrance into the city was signalized by a display of the wildest +enthusiasm on the part of a big crowd that had turned out to meet the +winner. The details of the thrilling transcontinental race in which he +had been engaged had received their due share of space in the big +dailies, and his adventures and those of the other contestants had been +closely followed by every one possessing a drop of red blood in his +veins. + +Bert was totally unprepared for such a reception, however, and it took +him by surprise. He had been through many adventures and had encountered +many obstacles, but had pulled through by dint of indomitable will and +pluck. But, as he afterward confessed to Tom and Dick, he now felt for +the first time like running away. But he soon abandoned this idea, and +chugged slowly along until at last he was forced by the press of people +about him to stop. + +When he dismounted he was deluged by a flood of congratulations and good +wishes, and was besieged by a small army of newspaper men, each anxious +to get Bert's own account of the race. It was some time before he could +proceed, but at last he started on, surrounded by a contingent of +motorcycles, ridden by members of local clubs. They went slowly along, +until in due time they reached the city hall. Bert was ushered into the +presence of the mayor, who received him with great cordiality, and after +a few words read the letters Bert handed him. + +"Well, Mr. Wilson," he said, when he had mastered their contents, "I am +certainly glad to know you, and I only wish you were a native of this +State. We need a few more young men of your sort." + +"I'm much obliged for your good opinion, your Honor, I'm sure," replied +Bert, and after answering many questions regarding his trip, took his +departure. + +Returning to the street, he mounted his machine, and, still accompanied +by the friendly motorcyclists, proceeded to the hotel at which he had +arranged to stop during his stay in San Francisco. Of course, Tom and +Dick were there to meet him, and hearty were the greetings the three +comrades exchanged. + +"It hardly seems possible that I've won at last," said Bert. "I wasn't +sure that Hayward hadn't beaten me in, until I heard the crowds +cheering." + +"Oh, you won, all right," Dick assured him, "but you didn't have much +time to spare. I just heard somebody say that Hayward got in not five +minutes ago. I'll bet he nearly went crazy when he heard that you'd +beaten him in spite of his crooked work." + +"Well, when I learned what kind of a fellow he was, I just _had_ to beat +him," said Bert, with a smile. + +Dick and Tom took charge of his machine, and stored it safely in the +local agency, where it was immediately hoisted into the show window and +excited much attention. + +By the time they returned to the hotel, Bert had answered the questions +of a number of newspaper men, taken a much-needed bath, and dressed. + +In his well-fitting clothes, that set off his manly figure, he looked a +very different person from the dusty, travel-stained young fellow he had +been but a short time before, and he was delighted to feel that for a +little while he was "out of uniform." + +But Tom and Dick immediately collared him, and, as he professed himself +"fresh as a daisy," took him out to see some of the town. They had not +gone far before they were recognized by one of the riders who had formed +Bert's "Bodyguard" during his ride to the mayor's office. He introduced +himself as John Meyers. Nothing less than their immediately paying a +visit to his club would satisfy him, they found, so at last they gave in +and told him to "lead on." + +The other laughingly complied. "It isn't far from here," he assured +them, "and if you like our looks we'll be glad to have you stay to +dinner. After that, if you're not too fagged, a few of us will be glad +to take you around and show you the sights. We're all proud of it, and +we want visitors to see it." + +"That programme listens good," replied Bert, "and we're 'on,' as far as +the dinner goes. After that, though, I think I'll be about ready to turn +in. I was riding all last night, and I feel like sleeping without +interruption for the next week." + +"Well, that's just as you say," agreed Meyers, "but here we are now. +Pretty nifty building, don't you think?" + +It was indeed a handsome house into which he presently ushered them, and +they soon saw that its interior did not belie its outward appearance. +The rooms were large, and furnished comfortably and in good taste. + +In the front room several fine looking young fellows were engaged in a +laughing conversation. They broke off when they caught sight of Meyers +and the three strangers with him. Introductions were soon made, and the +three comrades found themselves made thoroughly at home. + +Of course, the chief topic of conversation was Bert's journey, and he +answered questions until he was tired. + +"Here, fellows," said Meyers, perceiving this, "I think we've +cross-examined Wilson enough for the present. Anyway, dinner's ready, +and we'll see if you can eat as well as you can ride." + +"Lead me to it," exclaimed Bert, "I'm as hungry as a wolf." + +They were soon seated around a table on which was set forth a substantial +meal, and it is almost needless to say that they all did it ample +justice. + +During the meal the chief topic of discussion, next to Bert's +record-breaking feat, was the forthcoming race at the big saucer track, +in which riders from all over the world were to compete. + +Bert listened with great attention, for it was of the most vital +importance to him to know as much as possible of the track on which he +was scheduled to pit his skill and courage against the best and most +experienced motorcyclists of the globe. Of course, he would be given +ample time to practice and learn the tricks of the big saucer for +himself, but his experience of life so far had taught him not to +neglect even the slightest bit of knowledge that might make for success. + +In due course of time the meal was despatched, and they returned to the +lounging room. A couple of pleasant hours were spent in conversation and +joking, and swapping tales of eventful rides under every conceivable +condition of sunshine and storm. + +At last Bert rose, and said, "Well, boys, I've certainly enjoyed my +visit, but I'm afraid I'll have to make a break"--consulting his watch. +"I've had a mighty hard time of it lately, and I'm about all in." + +He shook hands all around, and with many expressions of friendship from +the club members and amid hearty invitations to call again, Bert and his +companions took their departure. + +"I suppose you'll begin practicing at the track pretty soon now, won't +you, Bert?" asked Tom, as they turned their steps toward the hotel. + +"You suppose right, old timer," said Bert, slapping him affectionately +on the shoulder, "to-morrow, or maybe the day after, I'll get down to +business. I want to know that track as well as I know the back yard at +home before the day of the race." + +"You can't know too much about it, that's certain," said Dick, soberly. +"You haven't had much practice in that sort of racing, Bert, and I'm +almost afraid to have you try it." + +"Nonsense," laughed Bert, "why, I'll be safer there than I would be +dodging autos on Broadway, back in little old New York. Don't worry +about me. I'll put the jody sign on all of them, provided, of course, +that my machine doesn't take it into its head,--or into its gasoline +tank--to blow up, or something else along the same line." + +"Heaven forbid," ejaculated Dick, piously, "but I guess we'd better +change the subject. It isn't a very cheerful one at best." + +"You're right, it isn't," agreed Bert, "but those club fellows gave me +some good tips regarding the track. They seem to know what they're +talking about." + +"They're a great crowd," said Tom, enthusiastically, "and they know how +to do things up right, too. They certainly gave us a fine dinner." + +"No doubt about it," concurred Bert, "but it's made me feel mighty +sleepy. I haven't slept in so long that I'm afraid I've forgotten how." + +"Well, here we are at the hotel, anyway," laughed Dick, "so you'll soon +have the chance to find out." + +After a little more conversation they parted and went to their rooms. + +The last thing Bert heard as he dropped off to sleep was the strident +cry of a newsboy. "Wuxtra! Wuxtra! All about Wilson winning the +transcontinental race. Wuxtra! Wuxtra!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +THE WONDERFUL CITY + + +"And now for the Exposition," cried Bert, as after a solid sleep and an +equally solid breakfast they reached their rooms and looked out over the +city glittering in the morning sun. + +"For your Exposition," corrected Tom. "Yes," he went on, as he noted +Bert's look of surprise, "that's exactly what I mean. For if it hadn't +been for you, when you discovered the plot to blow up the Panama Canal, +there would have been no Exposition at all, or, at any rate, a very +different one from this. The bands would have been playing the 'Dead +March in Saul,' instead of 'Hail Columbia' and the 'Star-Spangled +Banner.'" + +Nor was Tom far from the truth. Before the minds of the boys came up +that night in Panama, when Bert, crouching low beneath the window of the +Japanese conspirators, had overheard the plot to destroy the great +Canal. They saw again the struggle in the library; the fight for life in +the sinking boat in the Caribbean Sea; the rescue by the submarine and +the cutting of the wires that led to the mined gate of the Gatun Locks. +Had it not been for Bert's quick wit and audacity, the carefully-planned +plot of the Japanese Government to keep the larger part of the American +fleet on the Atlantic side, while they themselves made a dash for the +Pacific slope, might easily have succeeded, and, at the very moment the +boys were speaking, the whole country west of the Rocky Mountains might +have been fast in the grip of the Japanese armies. But the discovery +of the plot had been its undoing. The matter had been hushed up for +official reasons, and only a very few knew how nearly the two nations +had been locked in a life and death struggle for the control of the +Western ocean. + +And now the peril was over. Never again would the United States be +caught napping. War indeed might come--it probably would, some time--but +America's control of the coast was assured. At Colon on the Atlantic +side and Panama at the Pacific end, impregnable forts and artillery bade +defiance to all the fleets of East or West. Great navies on either side +would be kept in easy reach in case of attack, and the combined land and +sea forces would be invincible against any combination likely to be +brought against them. + +And it was this great achievement of American enterprise--the opening of +the Canal--that the Exposition, now in full swing, was intended to +celebrate. Its official designation was the "Panama-Pacific International +Exposition." And it was fitting that it should be held at San Francisco, +the Queen City of the West, because it was of preƫminent importance to +the Pacific slope. + +For this silver strip of water, fifty miles long, that stretched between +the Atlantic and Pacific, brought the West nine thousand miles nearer to +Europe by water than it had been before. The long journey round the +Horn, fraught with danger and taking months of time, would henceforth +be unnecessary. It gave an all-water route that saved enormously in +freights, and enabled shipments to be made without breaking bulk. It +diverted a vast amount of traffic that had hitherto gone through the +Suez Canal. It gave a tremendous impetus to the American merchant marine +and challenged the right of Great Britain longer to "rule the waves." +And, by enabling the entire naval strength of the country to be +assembled quickly in case of need, it assured the West against the +"yellow peril" that loomed up on the other side of the sea. + +But, above and apart from the local interests involved, was the +patriotic rejoicing in which all the nation shared. The American Eagle +felt that it had a right to scream over the great achievement. For great +it certainly was--one of the most marvelous in the history of the world. +The dream of four hundred years had become a realized fact. Others had +tried and failed. France with her scientific genius and unlimited +resources had thrown up her hands in despair. Then America had taken +it up and carried it through to a glorious conclusion. Four hundred +millions of dollars had been expended on the colossal work. But this +was not the most important item. What the country was proud of was +the pluck, the ingenuity, the determination, that in the face of all +kinds of dangers--dangers of flood, of pestilence, of earthquakes, of +avalanche--had met them all in a way to win the plaudits of mankind. + +In the case of the boys, this pride was, of course, intensified by the +fact that they had visited the country and seen its wonders at first +hand. From Colon to Panama, from the Gatun Dam to the Miraflores Locks, +they had gone over every foot of ground and water. Its gates, its cuts, +its spillways, its tractions--all of these had grown familiar by actual +inspection. Add to this the exulting consciousness that they had been +concerned in its salvation, when threatened by their country's foes, and +it can readily be imagined how eager they were to see all the wonders of +the Exposition that was to celebrate its completion. + +"It's got to be a pretty big thing to satisfy my expectations," said +Dick, as they neared the grounds. + +"Well," remarked Bert, "I've never seen a world's fair, but, from what +I've heard, this goes ahead of all of them. Even the Chicago Fair, they +say, can't hold a candle to it. A fellow was telling me----" + +But just then, as they turned a curve, they came in full view of the +grounds, and stopped short with a gasp of admiration. + +It was a magnificent picture--a splendid gem, with the California land +and sky as its setting. + +A glorious city had sprung up as though by the waving of an enchanter's +wand. On every side rose towers, spires, minarets and golden domes. The +prosaic, every-day world had vanished, and, in its place had come a +dream city such as might have been inspired by the pages of the "Arabian +Nights." It almost seemed as though a caravan laden with silks and +spices of the East might be expected at any moment to thread the courts +and colonnades, or a regiment of Janissaries, with folded fez and waving +scimitars, spur their horses along the road. The very names of the +buildings were redolent of romance. There was the "Court of the Four +Seasons," the "Court of the Sun and Stars," the "Tower of Jewels" and +the "Hall of Abundance." And the illusion was heightened by the glorious +sunshine and balmy air that makes San Francisco the Paradise of the +Western Continent. + +The Exposition grounds, covering a vast extent of space, had been chosen +with marvelous taste and judgment and a keen eye for the picturesque. +The finest talent to be found anywhere had been expended on the +location, the approaches and the grouping of the buildings, so as to +form a harmonious combination of grace and fitness and beauty. It was a +triumph of architecture and landscape gardening. Nature and art had been +wedded and the result was bewildering and overpowering. It had never +been approached by any Exposition in the world's history. + +The site was a level space surrounded on east, west and south by sloping +hills. Standing on these heights, one looked down as upon a vast +amphitheater. On the north it faced the waters of San Francisco Bay, the +waves gleaming in the sun and the sea lions playing about the rocks of +the Golden Gate. Across the Bay could be seen towering mountains, their +summits alternately shrouded in a tenuous haze and glistening in golden +glory. + +On the harbor side was an esplanade, eighteen hundred feet long and +three hundred feet wide, adorned with marble statues and gorgeous +foliage and plashing fountains. Opening directly from this was the main +group of palaces--fitly so called--devoted to the more important objects +of the Fair. These were clustered about the great Court of the Sun and +Stars. Around the Court stood over one hundred pillars, each surmounted +by a colossal figure representing some particular star. Upon a huge +column stood a globe, symbol of the Sun, and about the column itself was +a spiral ascent, typifying the climbing hopes and aspirations of the +human race. Nearby rose the splendid Tower of Jewels, four hundred and +fifty feet in height, its blazing dome reflecting back the rays of +the sun, while jewels set in the walls--agate, beryl, garnet and +chrysolite--bathed the interior in luminous splendor. + +The Court of the Four Seasons was designed to show the conquest of man +over the forces of nature. The Hall of Abundance overflowed with the +rich products brought from the four corners of the earth. The East and +West were typified by two groups, one showing the customs of the Orient +and the other exhibiting the progress made by Western civilization. +Between them stood a prairie schooner, emblem of the resistless tide of +immigration toward the setting sun. + + "Westward the course of empire takes its way, + The first four acts already past; + A fifth shall close the drama and the day, + Time's noblest offspring is its last," + +murmured Dick, yielding to his chronic habit of quotation. + +Besides the central group of palaces devoted to machinery, invention, +transportation and the fine arts, there were two other sections. One held +the buildings of the various States and the official headquarters of +foreign nations. The other was given over to the amusement concessions, +consisting of hundreds of pavilions that catered to the pleasures of the +visitors. Then, too, there was a great arena for open air sports and +competitions. Scattered everywhere were sunken lakes and rippling +cascades and verdant terraces, so arranged that at every turn the eye was +charmed by some new delight. + +But the transcendent beauty of the Fair when viewed by day yielded the +palm to the glory of the night. As the dusk fell, thousands upon +thousands of lights, like so many twinkling jewels, sprang into being. +The splendor flashed on tree and building, spire and minaret, arch and +dome, until the whole vast Exposition became a crystal dream. Great +searchlights from the bay played on jets of steam rising high in the +sky, in a perfect riot of changing color. The lagoons and fountains and +cascades sent back the shimmering reflections multiplied a thousand +fold. And beneath the witchery of those changing lights, one might well +imagine himself transported to some realm of mystery and romance a +thousand leagues from the Western Hemisphere and the twentieth century. + +But, although the boys felt and yielded to the potent spell that the +Exposition cast on those that came within its gates, they none the less +devoted themselves to the wonders shown in the great buildings set apart +for machinery and inventions. All of them were planning their life work +on scientific and engineering lines, and they were keen for the new +discoveries and appliances that were seen on every hand in almost +endless profusion. Wireless telegraphy, aeroplanes, submarine and motor +engines--these were the magnets that drew them irresistibly. Although +they had prided themselves on keeping pretty well up to date along these +lines, they were astonished to see how many things came to them now with +the force of a revelation. + +Before the models of the submarines they stood for a long time, as they +took in every detail of the plan and construction. And with Bert's +admiration was mingled a sense of gratitude. One of these it was that +had picked him up when he was battling with the waves and hope had +almost vanished. Even now, he could see the saucy little vessel as it +poked its nose into the entrance of the Canal and darted here and there +like a ferret, sniffing the danger that it came just in time to prevent. +He remembered the fascination of that memorable trip, as he stood at the +porthole and saw the wonders of the sea, illumined by its powerful +searchlight. But that had simply whetted his appetite, and he was hungry +for further experiences. Somewhere among his ancestors there must have +been Viking blood, and the haunting mystery of the sea had always called +to him. + +"Some day, perhaps"--he thought to himself, and then as he saw the +amused expression on his companions' faces, he realized that he had +spoken out loud. + +"What's the matter, Alexander?" chaffed Tom. "Weeping for more worlds to +conquer?" + +"He isn't satisfied with the victories won on the earth," mocked Dick. +"He wants the sea, too. You're a glutton for adventure, Bert." + +"Yes," laughed Tom, "he won't be happy till he gets it." + +"Oh, cut it out," retorted Bert, a little sheepishly. "Since when did +you fellows set up to be mind readers?" + +But they _were_ mind readers and prophets, too, though none of them knew +it at the time. + +"There's still one other field to be explored," went on Dick, teasingly, +"and that's the air." + +"Well," remarked Tom, "if Bert's going to try that, too, he'd better +get busy pretty soon. They're going ahead so fast there, that before +long there won't be anything new left to do. When fellows can turn +somersaults in the air and fly along on their backs, like that +Frenchman, Peguod, they're certainly getting a strangle hold on old +mother Nature. The way things are moving now, a man will soon be as safe +in an airship as a baby in his cradle. Look at this Bleriot monoplane;" +and they were soon plunged deep in the study of the various types of +flying craft. + +In another department, one thing gave Bert unlimited satisfaction. +Among all the motorcycles, native and foreign, before which he lingered +longer than anywhere else, he saw nothing that excelled his own. His +heart swelled with pride and confidence, as he realized that none of his +competitors in the coming struggle would have a better machine beneath +him than the "Blue Streak." He could drop any worry on that score. If he +failed to come in first, he himself must shoulder the blame. + +And when at last, tired but happy, they turned their backs on the +dazzling scene and were on their way back to the hotel, their talk +naturally fell on the topic that was uppermost in their minds. + +"How are you feeling, Bert?" asked Tom. "Are you fit?" + +"I feel like a two-year-old," was the answer. "I'm hard as nails and +right at the top of my form. I'll have no excuses to offer." + +"You won't need any," said Dick confidently. "Leave those to the +losers." + +"One never can tell," mused Bert. "There are some crack riders in that +bunch. But I'm going to do my level best, not only for my own sake, but +so that the foreigners can't crow over us. I'd hate to see America +lose." + +"She can't," asserted Tom. "Not on the Fourth of July!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +A WINNING FIGHT + + +The big motordome was gayly decorated with flags and bunting, in honor +of the Fourth, and there was just enough breeze stirring to give them +motion. A big military band played patriotic and popular airs, and, as +the spectators filed into their seats in a never-ending procession, they +felt already the first stirrings of an excitement that was to make of +this a night to be remembered throughout a lifetime. + +An hour before the time scheduled for the race to begin every seat in +grandstand and bleachers was taken, and people were fighting for a place +in the grassy infield. Very soon, even that was packed with as many +spectators as the managers felt could be disposed of with safety. They +were kept within bounds by a stout rope fence stretched between posts. +At last every available foot of space was occupied, and the gates were +closed. Thousands were turned away even then, although there were over +sixty thousand souls within the stadium. + +The motordome had been constructed to hold an immense crowd, but its +designers had never anticipated anything like this. So great was the +interest in the event, that most of those who could not gain admittance +camped down near the gates to get bulletins of the progress of the race, +as soon as possible. + +It was an ideal night for such an event. The air was soft and charged +with a thousand balmy odors. The band crashed out its stirring music, +and made the blood of the most sluggish leap and glow. Suddenly the arc +lights suspended at short intervals over the track blazed out, making +the whole place as light as day. + +Then, as every detail of the track was plainly revealed, thousands +drew a deep breath and shuddered. The track was banked at an angle of +approximately thirty-eight degrees, with three laps to the mile. It +seemed impossible to many that anything on wheels could cling to the +precipitous slope, that appeared to offer insecure footing even for a +fly. + +Near the bottom, a white band was painted around the entire +circumference, marking the actual one-third of a mile. At the bottom of +the track there was a level stretch, perhaps four feet wide, and beyond +that the smooth turf, bordered at a little distance by a dense mass of +spectators confined within the rope fence. Above the track tier after +tier of seats arose. + +Opposite the finish line, the starter's and judge's pavilion was built. +Here all the riders and machines that were to take part were assembled, +and it presented a scene of the utmost bustle and activity. Tom and Dick +were there, anxiously waiting for Bert to emerge from his dressing room, +and meanwhile inspecting every nut and bolt on the "Blue Streak." +Despite the recent changes made in it, the faithful motorcycle was still +the same staunch, dependable machine it had always been, but with even +greater speed capabilities than it had possessed before. + +Of course, there were many who claimed that Bert could never have a +chance of winning without a specially built racer, and he had been urged +a score of times to use such a mount. But he had refused without the +slightest hesitation. + +"Why," he always said, "I know what the old 'Blue Streak' will do, just +as well as I know what I am capable of. I know every whim and humor of +it, and just how to get the last ounce of power out of it. I've tested +it a thousand times. I know it will stand up to any work I put it to, +and I'd no more think of changing machines now than I would of trying a +new system of training two days before I was to enter a running race. +No, thanks, I guess I'll stick to the old 'Blue Streak.'" + +Dick and Tom were still busy with oil can and wrench when Bert emerged +from his dressing-room. He was dressed in a blue jersey, with an +American flag embroidered on breast and back. His head was encased in a +thick leather helmet, and a pair of heavy-glassed goggles were pushed up +on his forehead. + +He strode quickly over to where his chums were working on his mount, and +they shook hands heartily. "Well!" he exclaimed gaily, "how is the old +'bus' to-night? Everything O.K., I hope?" + +"It sure is," replied Dick. "Tom and I have gone over every inch of it, +and it seems in apple-pie order. We filled your oil tank up with oil +that we tested ourselves, and we know that it's all right. We're not +taking any chances." + +"That's fine," exclaimed Bert, "there's nothing more important than good +oil. We don't want any frozen bearings to-night, of all nights." + +"Not much!" agreed Tom, "but it must be pretty nearly time for the +start. It's after eight now." + +Even as he spoke, a gong tapped, and a deep silence descended on the +stadium. Excitement, tense and breathless, gripped every heart. + +A burly figure carrying a megaphone mounted a small platform erected +in the center of the field, and in stentorian tones announced the +conditions of the race. + +Seven riders, representing America, France, England, Italy, and Belgium, +were to compete for a distance of one hundred miles. The race was to +begin from a flying start, which was to be announced by the report of a +pistol. The time of each race was to be shown by an illuminated clock +near the judge's stand. + +The man with the megaphone had hardly ceased speaking when the roar of +several motorcycle exhausts broke forth from the starting platform and +the band crashed into a stirring march. + +Then a motorcycle appeared, towing a racer. Slowly it gathered headway, +and at last the rider of the racing machine threw in the spark. The +motor coughed once or twice, and then took hold. With a mighty roar his +machine shot ahead, gathering speed with every revolution, and passing +the towing motorcycle as though it were standing still. + +In quick succession now, machine after machine appeared. It was Bert's +turn to start, and, pulling his goggles down over his eyes, he leaped +astride the waiting "Blue Streak." + +"Go it, old man!" shouted Dick and Tom, each giving him a resounding +buffet on the shoulder, "show 'em what you're made of." + +"Leave it to me," yelled Bert, for already the towing motorcycle was +towing him and the "Blue Streak" out onto the track. They went at a +snail's pace at first, but quickly gathered momentum. + +As he came into view of the gathered multitude, a shout went up that +made the concrete structure tremble. This was repeated twice and then +the spectators settled back, waiting for the start. + +When he felt he was going fast enough, Bert, by a twist of the right +grip, lowered the exhaust valves, and the next second he felt the old +"Blue Streak" surge forward as though discharged from a cannon. It +required a speed of fifty miles an hour even to mount the embankment, +but before he had gone two hundred yards he had attained it. He turned +the front wheel to the slope, and his machine mounted it like a bird. + +Never had he sensed such gigantic power under him, and he felt exalted +to the skies. He forgot everything in the mad delirium of speed; +tremendous, maddening speed. Every time he opened the throttle a trifle +more he could feel it increase. Eagerly, resistlessly, his mount tore +and raged forward, whistling through the air with the speed of an arrow. +In a few seconds he was abreast of the riders who had started first, and +who were jockeying for a good position. There was little time for +manoeuvring, however, for now the riders were fairly well bunched, and +the starter's pistol cracked. The race had started! + +And now Bert found himself competing with the crack racers of the world. +Each was mounted on the best machine the genius of his countrymen could +produce, and each was grimly resolved to win. The "Blue Streak" and its +rider were indeed in fast company, and were destined to be put to a +test such as seldom occurs in even such strenuous racing as this. + +Bert was riding high on the track at the start, and he resolved to make +use of this position to gain the lead. He opened the throttle wide, and +the "Blue Streak" responded nobly. So great was the force of the forward +spurt that his hands were almost wrenched from the handlebars. He held +on, however, and at the end of the second lap was even with the leader, +a Frenchman. + +Bert turned his front wheel down the slope, and swooped toward the +bottom of the track with a sickening lurch. A vast sigh of horror went +up from the closely packed stands. But at the last second, when within a +foot of the bottom of the incline, Bert started up again, and with a +speed increased by the downward rush shot up to the white band. + +He hugged this closely, and reeled off mile after mile at a speed of +close to a hundred miles an hour. Leaning down until his body touched +the top frame bar, he coaxed ever a little more speed from the +fire-spitting mechanism beneath him. + +But the Frenchman hung on doggedly, not ten feet behind, and a few feet +further back the English entrant tore along. In this order they passed +the fifty-mile mark, and the spectators were standing now, yelling and +shouting. The rest of the field had been unable to hold the terrific +pace, and had dropped behind. The Belgian entrant had been forced to +drop out altogether, on account of engine trouble. + +The leaders swept on and gradually drew up on the three lagging riders. +A quarter of a lap--half a lap--three-quarters of a lap--and amid a +deafening roar of shouting from the spectators Bert swept past them. He +had gained a lap on them! + +The English and French entries were still close up, however, both +hanging on within three yards of Bert's rear wheel. They reeled off mile +after mile, hardly changing their positions by a foot. Suddenly there +was a loud report that sounded even above the roar of the exhausts, and +a second later Bert fell to the rear. His front tire had punctured, and +it was only by the exercise of all his skill and strength that he had +averted a horrible accident. + +"It's all over. It's all over," groaned Tom. "He's out of the race now. +He hasn't got a chance." + +Dick said nothing, but his face was the color of chalk. He dashed for +the supply tent, and emerged carrying a front wheel with an inflated +tire already on it, just as Bert pulled up in front of them and leaped +from his mount. His eyes were sunken, with dark rings under them, but +his mouth was set and stern as death. + +"On with it, Dick, on with it," he said, in a low, suppressed voice. +"Let's have that wrench, Tom. Hold up the front fork, will you?" + +He worked frantically, and in less than forty seconds had substituted +the new wheel carrying the inflated tire in place of the old. + +Flinging down the wrench, he sprang into the saddle, and with willing +strength Dick and Tom rushed him and his machine out onto the track, +pushing with all the might of their sinewy young bodies. At the first +possible moment Bert shot on the power, and the engine, still hot, +started instantly. In a second he was off in wild pursuit of the flying +leaders. + +As he mounted the track, he was seen to lean down and fumble with the +air shutter on the carburetor. Apparently this had little effect, but +to Bert it made all the difference in the world. The motor had had +tremendous strength before, but now it seemed almost doubled. The whole +machine quivered and shook under the mighty impact of the pistons, and +the hum of the flywheels rose to a high whine. Violet flames shot from +the exhaust in an endless stream. + +The track streamed back from the whirling wheels like a rushing river. +It seemed to be leaping eagerly to meet him. The lights and shadows +flickered away from him, and the grotesque shadow cast by his machine +weaved rapidly back and forth as he passed under the sizzling arc +lights. + +The spectators were a yelling mob of temporary maniacs by this time. The +Frenchman and Englishman had passed the eighty-mile mark, and Bert was +still a lap and a half behind. He was riding like a fiend, coaxing, +nursing his machine, manipulating the controls so as to wring the last +ounce of energy from the tortured mass of metal he bestrode. + +Slowly, but with deadly persistence, he closed the gap between him and +the leaders. Amidst a veritable pandemonium from the crazed spectators +he passed them, but still had one lap to make up in fifteen miles. +Shortly after passing them, he was close on the three remaining +competitors, who were hanging on in the desperate hope of winning should +some accident befall the leaders. + +Suddenly, without any warning, something--nobody ever learned what--went +wrong. They became a confused, tangled mass of blazing machine and +crumpled humanity. Bert was not twenty feet behind them, and men turned +white and sick and women fainted. It seemed inevitable that he would +plow into them traveling at that terrific pace, and add one more life to +the toll of the disaster. + +Bert's mind acted like a flash. He was far down on the track, and could +not possibly gain a position above the wreckage, and so skirt it in +that way. Nor did he have time to pass beneath it, for men and machines +were sliding diagonally down the steep embankment. + +With a muttered prayer, he accepted the last chance fate had seen fit to +leave him. He shot off the track completely, and whirled his machine +onto the turf skirting it. + +The grass was smooth, but, at Bert's tremendous speed, small obstacles +seemed like mountains. The "Blue Streak" quivered and bounded, at times +leaping clear off the ground, as it struck some uneven place. For what +seemed an age, but was in reality only a few seconds, Bert kept on this, +and then steered for the track again. If his machine mounted the little +ridge formed by the beginning of the track proper, all might yet be +well, if not--well, he refused to even think of that. + +The front wheel hit the obstruction, and, a fraction of a second later, +the rear wheel struck. The machine leaped clear into the air, sideways. +Bert stiffened the muscles of his wrists until they were as hard as +steel, to withstand the shock of landing. The handlebars were almost +wrenched from his control, but not quite, and once more he was tearing +around with scarcely diminished speed. + +By great good fortune, the riders involved in the accident had not been +hurt seriously, although their machines were total wrecks, and they +hobbled painfully toward the hospital tent, assisted by spectators who +had rushed to their aid. + +Bert was now less than half a lap behind the flying leaders, but he had +only four miles in which to make it up. At intervals now he leaned down +and pumped extra oil into the engine. This added a trifle of extra +power, and as he rushed madly along the "Blue Streak" lived up to its +name nobly. At the beginning of the last mile he was only about three +lengths behind. The vast crowd was on its feet now, shouting, yelling, +tossing hats, gesticulating. They were worked up to a pitch of frenzy +absolutely indescribable. + +As Bert crept grimly up, nearer and nearer, the place became a veritable +Bedlam. Now the racers had entered the last lap; only a third of a mile +to go, and Bert was still a length behind. The exhaust of the racing +motorcycles united in one hoarse, bellowing roar, that seemed to shake +the very earth. + +Then--Bert reached down, and with the finish line but a short hundred +yards ahead, opened wide the air shutter on the carburetor. His machine +seemed to almost leave the track, and then, tearing forward, passed the +Frenchman, who was leading. As he crossed the finish line, Bert was +ahead by the length of a wheel! + +The uproar that burst forth then defied all description. As Bert, after +making a circuit of the track, finally brought the "Blue Streak" to a +standstill, a seething mob rushed toward him, waving hats and flags, and +shouting frantically and joyfully. + +Bert had no mind to get in their well-meaning clutches, however, so he +and his two friends made a rush for his dressing room, and reached it +safely. The crowd, being unable to locate its hero, and too excited to +make a methodical search for him, worked off its exuberance by much +shouting and shaking of hands between perfect strangers, and gradually +dispersed. + +Meanwhile Tom and Dick, with strong emotion that they made no effort to +conceal, wrung his hand again and again. + +"You rode the greatest motorcycle race this old world ever saw, old +friend," said Dick at last, "but Tom and I are never going to let you go +in another. The world would be too empty for us without you." + + * * * * * + +In the sheaf of telegrams of congratulations handed to Bert next morning +was one from Reddy. It was characteristic: + +"Shamrock. Glory be. I knew you'd put it over. Keep in good shape for +football." + +"He talks as if I were already on the team," commented Bert; "I may not +make it, after all." + +"Swell chance of your missing it," scoffed Tom. + +"Everybody knows you're slated for full-back." + +To another message, Drake's name was signed: + +"Hurrah for the blue. Be back for football in the Fall." + +"A decided football flavor in your telegrams to-day," grinned Dick. + +"Well," said Bert, "win or lose, I'll be there with both feet." + +"You'd better have both of them with you, for a fact," drawled Tom. "You +couldn't do much without them." + +And when a few months later, the football season opened, Bert's promise +was fulfilled. How swift those feet of his proved to be in getting down +the field, how mighty in kicking a goal, how powerful in every stirring +feature of the glorious game, will be told in + +"BERT WILSON ON THE GRIDIRON." + + + + + * * * * * + + + + +Transcriber's note: + +--Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_). + +--Punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were corrected without + comment. + +--Variations of Blue Streak were made consistent ('Blue Streak' + within quoted speech and "Blue Streak" in all other cases). + +--Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved. + +--Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved. + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40254 *** |
