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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53302 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53302)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boy Inventor's Wireless Triumph, by
-Richard Bonner and Charles L. Wrenn
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Boy Inventor's Wireless Triumph
-
-Author: Richard Bonner
-
-Illustrator: Charles L. Wrenn
-
-Release Date: October 17, 2016 [EBook #53302]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY INVENTOR'S WIRELESS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Frank
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Each clasped the gas-gun ready for instant use.]
-
-
-
-
- The Boy Inventor’s Wireless Triumph
-
- By
- RICHARD BONNER
-
- WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
- CHARLES L. WRENN
-
- M. A. DONOHUE & COMPANY
- CHICAGO NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- Copyright 1929
- by
- M. A. Donohue & Company
-
- Made in the U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- CHAPTER I—THE WIRELESS AT LONE ISLAND
- CHAPTER II—THE MYSTERIOUS X. Y. Z.
- CHAPTER III—THE CIPHER CODE
- CHAPTER IV—A MARINE GAME OF BLIND-MAN’S BUFF
- CHAPTER V—A SHOT IN THE NIGHT
- CHAPTER VI—NED BANGS’ STORY
- CHAPTER VII—THE THREE COLORED GEMS
- CHAPTER VIII—ON BOARD “THE TARANTULA”
- CHAPTER IX—THE CHADWICK GAS GUNS
- CHAPTER X—DRAWING A RASCAL’S FANGS
- CHAPTER XI—THE “FLYING ROAD RACER”
- CHAPTER XII—HERRERA IS NOT CAUGHT NAPPING
- CHAPTER XIII—A DARING PLAN
- CHAPTER XIV—A MESSAGE FROM THE AIR
- CHAPTER XV—A DASH ALOFT
- CHAPTER XVI—INTO THE ENEMY’S CAMP
- CHAPTER XVII—“DAD!—IT’S JACK!”
- CHAPTER XVIII—HEMMED IN BY FLAMES
- CHAPTER XIX—“STAND BY FOR A ROPE!”
- CHAPTER XX—A RESCUE BY AIRSHIP
- CHAPTER XXI—ALOFT IN THE STORM
- CHAPTER XXII—A VOYAGE OF TERROR
- CHAPTER XXIII—THE BOY INVENTORS SOLVE A PROBLEM
- CHAPTER XXIV—AN APPEAL FOR HELP
- CHAPTER XXV—“IT’S DEATH TO REMAIN HERE!”
- CHAPTER XXVI—AN ASTOUNDING DISCOVERY
-
-
-
-
- The Boy Inventor’s Wireless Triumph
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I—THE WIRELESS AT LONE ISLAND
-
-
-The book Jack Chadwick had been reading,—a volume dealing with some
-rather dry experimental work,—slipped from his fingers and fell with a
-crash on the floor of the veranda. At the sudden interruption to the
-sleepy, breathless calm of Lone Island on a July noon, his cousin Tom
-Jesson, sixteen, and more than a year Jack’s junior, looked up from the
-steamer chair in which he, too, was extended, with one of his quiet
-smiles.
-
-Suspending his task of wrapping some new condenser plates with
-glittering tin-foil, he gazed about him. In front of the bungalow was a
-strip of dazzling white sand,—the beach. Beyond shimmered the
-cobalt-blue waters of the Gulf of Mexico. At a small wharf lay a
-capable-looking motor cruiser, painted white and about forty-five feet
-in length. She had been moored thus for the past seven days—ever since
-Jack and his cousin and their colored attendant, Jupe, had landed on the
-island after an uneventful passage from Galveston.
-
-“Dozed off,” chuckled Tom, regarding Jack as the latter’s eyelids closed
-drowsily; “well, I don’t know that I blame him. Waiting on Lone Island
-with nothing to do but read, eat and sleep, does get monotonous after a
-week of it.”
-
-Suddenly a gong, affixed to the freshly painted wall above their heads,
-broke forth in a wild, insistent clamor.
-
-“Clang! C-l-a-n-g! Clang! Clang!—Clang! Clang!”
-
-The effect on Tom was electrical.
-
-“L-I in the Continental Code!” he exclaimed springing to his feet.
-“Hurray, Jack, old boy! Wake up! It’s our call at last!”
-
-Jack Chadwick galvanized from his nap into vibrant action with hardly
-less suddenness than had marked Tom’s arousing. Three times the gong,
-connected by an ingenious arrangement of Jack’s with his detector, beat
-out brazenly the call of Lone Island. Then came the signature:
-
-“S-K.”
-
-“Whoop! It really is the _Sea King_ at last!” exclaimed Jack, his blue
-eyes dancing. The lees of sleep had cleared from them as if by magic.
-
-“Race you to the wireless station, Tom!” he shot out, jumping from the
-veranda without bothering about the steps.
-
-“You’re on!” was the instant response. Like a flash Tom was at his side.
-
-The few dozen yards between the bungalow and the shed of raw,
-resinous-smelling pine lumber that housed the wireless was covered in
-less time than it takes to tell it. Panting from their dash through the
-heavy sand the two lads flung themselves, shoulder to shoulder, at the
-door.
-
-“Dead heat!” laughingly proclaimed Jack, as he opened the portal and
-hastened to the array of shining instruments which occupied most of the
-space within.
-
-All this time, behind them, the bell had kept up its insistent tocsin.
-With a quick movement Jack “threw” a “knife-blade” switch. Instantly the
-resonant drone of a dynamo filled the small sun-heated shack. Bending
-forward. Jack depressed the sending key.
-
-Flash! C-r-a-s-h!
-
-A wriggling snake of blue flame leaped, like a live thing, between the
-polished sparking points.
-
-Alternately pressing and releasing his key. Jack sent an answer to the
-message. With nimble fingers he directed the powerful electric impulses,
-which were winging into space from the lofty aerials stretched between
-their masts above the shed.
-
-While he did this with one hand, with the other he deftly adjusted the
-bright metal head band with its twin receivers that fitted over each
-ear. This accomplished, he drew toward him a pencil and a pad of paper.
-
-“L-I! L-I! L-I!”
-
-Crackling and squealing the powerful spark volleyed across the gap, and
-rushing into the aerials went flashing hundreds of miles through the
-ether.
-
-Then came a pause. Tom, his hand on Jack’s shoulder, leaned eagerly
-forward and over him, watching for the first words of the message from
-space to be written on the pad.
-
-All at once Jack began to write. His fingers flew fast in response to
-the flood of dots and dashes that came beating against his ear drums,
-transmitted by the sensitive diaphragms of the receivers.
-
-To an untrained ear the soft tappings would have sounded as vague and
-undefined as the footsteps of a fly on a sheet of sensitive matter. But
-to Jack, the whisperings winging their way in three hundred meter waves
-through space were as clear as a story read aloud.
-
-As he wrote, shoving his pencil over the sheets as fast as he could, Tom
-began to gasp.
-
-“Great ginger-snaps!” he choked out, and then, “Well, we were sighing
-for action, and it looks as if we’ll get it in big, juicy chunks before
-we’re much older.”
-
-While the message, destined to have such an important effect on their
-immediate future, is still pulsing through the air, we will take the
-opportunity to place the reader in closer touch, so to speak, with our
-two lads. Jack Chadwick, then, was the only son of Professor Chester
-Chadwick, an inventor, whose various discoveries in many mechanical
-fields had resulted in gaining him a handsome fortune. Jack’s mother had
-died when he was a tiny lad, and, as he was an only son, he had been
-brought up in constant association with his father. Almost as soon as he
-had mastered his earliest lessons Jack was familiar with his parent’s
-laboratory and workshop, and Mr. Chadwick, delighted at the interest the
-boy displayed in science, had made him a close companion.
-
-When Jack was twelve years old a new interest entered his life. His
-cousin, Tom Jesson, came to live with them at Mr. Chadwick’s handsome
-home on the outskirts of Boston. Tom was the son of Jasper Jesson, the
-noted traveler, and, like Jack, he was motherless. Mr. Jesson had, some
-time before, accepted a commission from a scientific institute to travel
-and collect antiquities in the then little-known territory of Yucatan.
-From this expedition he did not return within the year allotted him to
-complete his researches.
-
-Time went on and no word came from him, and at length he was given up
-for lost even by the most hopeful of his friends. And thus it was that
-his son Tom, then ten years old, came to High Towers, Mr. Chadwick’s
-estate, even then known as the home of a famous inventor.
-
-And so Jack and Tom had practically grown up together in close
-association and with kindred interests.
-
-To two lads of inventive mind, no more delightful field for their
-experiments could have been imagined than High Towers. A park of some
-fifty or sixty acres surrounded the house, which, among other features
-of a country estate, possessed a small lake. On this sheet of water Jack
-and Tom tried out models of a dozen different kinds of craft before they
-were fourteen. Professor Chadwick gave them practically “the run” of his
-workshops and experimental sheds, besides instructing them in scientific
-investigations.
-
-Among other things, the lads had constructed a complete miniature
-railroad on the grounds, and had also built gliders of various types.
-But their most recent “craze” had been wireless telegraphy. With a dozen
-lads of their own age they had formed a “Wireless Club,” which met at
-High Towers every month. But, with the summer vacation, the members of
-the body had scattered, leaving only Jack and Tom to carry on the work.
-As Professor Chadwick stinted his son in nothing pertaining to his
-chosen pursuits, the two lads had assembled as complete an amateur
-station as could be found in the country.
-
-In addition to the latest instruments and appliances, their natural
-ingenuity had enabled them to invent several additional features, some
-of them patentable,—as, for instance, the call-bell which tapped out the
-mysterious summons to the island station.
-
-Which brings us back to Lone Island and to an explanation of how the two
-lads and Jupe, their faithful colored attendant, happened to be
-quartered on this low-lying, sandy, rather desolate patch of land off
-the coast of Texas, not far from the mouth of the Rio Grande. The islet
-belonged to Professor Chadwick, being part of an estate which had been
-owned by his wife, the daughter of a Texas cattle man. The lads had
-already camped there a winter, and knew the vicinity well.
-
-About two months before this story opens, Professor Chadwick had left
-home, bound, so he informed the lads, on a biological investigation
-cruise among the Florida Keys and the West Indies. The lads had heard
-nothing more of him, or of his steam yacht, the _Sea King_, with the
-exception of a letter from Key West, and another from the island of
-Jamaica, stating that all was going well.
-
-Imagine their bewildered astonishment and excitement therefore, when,
-two weeks before, a brief letter came to High Towers telling them to
-proceed, with Jupe, to Galveston, where the motor cruiser _Vagrant_
-would be awaiting them. Their instructions continued to inform them that
-they were to equip the _Vagrant_ with wireless, and also purchase a
-portable bungalow and shed, with which to establish a wireless station
-on Lone Island. The letter, signed by Professor Chadwick, closed in his
-customary abrupt manner, without vouchsafing any explanation of his
-orders.
-
-But Jack and Tom hardly needed any. The letter opened up before them a
-delightful vista of fun and adventure.
-
-“Just fancy, a wireless island all to ourselves!” Jack had exclaimed as
-the boys joined hands in a wild war dance of delight. They had pleasant
-recollections of former jolly days in camp on the Gulf.
-
-The letter enclosed a liberal draft on Professor Chadwick’s bank, and
-within forty-eight hours after receiving the missive which was to mean
-so much to them, the two cousins and chums, with the faithful Jupe
-attending them like a black shadow, were off for Galveston. On arrival
-there they went to the boatyard mentioned in the Professor’s letter,
-where they found the _Vagrant_,—the smart craft already mentioned as
-lying at the Lone Island wharf,—already equipped for sea, awaiting them.
-
-To install a wireless plant on board did not take long. The most
-difficult part of their task lay in finding a suitable mast for the
-support of the aerials. Jack solved this problem by constructing a
-telescopic staff of steel tubing which, when not in use, could be
-lowered to a height of twelve feet. In use it could be raised to an
-altitude of sixty feet, giving a very fair radius of scope.
-
-The materials for the wireless on the island, like those for the
-floating plant, had been brought from Boston. But the portable shack and
-bungalow were purchased in Galveston.
-
-The Professor’s letter had instructed the lads to wait on the island for
-a message by wireless. Now it had come; come, too, with a startling
-suddenness that might be likened to a jolt. Tom, watching Jack’s fingers
-with burning eyes, finally saw this message inscribed on the receiving
-pad:
-
-“Lone Island Station.—Proceed with all speed to Long. 96° W. by Lat. 27°
-N. Urgent. We are in dire peril.—Bangs, operator _Sea King_.”
-
-The patter of the electric waves against the receivers ceased. No
-further word came, and Jack, after a brief interval, took off the
-headpiece and laid it down beside him on the table. For an instant the
-message, so utterly, wildly different from any they had expected, almost
-deprived him of speech.
-
-Now his faculties rushed back, but he did not speak. Instead, he
-grounded the aerials by throwing the switch, and leaped to his feet with
-such impulsiveness that the stool on which he had been sitting went
-careering to the floor.
-
-“Come on, Tom,” he cried, darting for the door.
-
-As he ran he stuffed the message into the pocket of his linen jacket.
-Tom shot out of the shack after him.
-
-“You’d better lock——” he began.
-
-“Send Jupe to do it,” was the backward flung rejoinder, as Jack sprinted
-for the bungalow, “we’ve got to get grub on board and fill the water
-tanks within fifteen minutes.”
-
-“And then what?”
-
-“To sea—at top speed! The best the _Vagrant_ can do will be none too
-quick! They need us out there,” he flung his arm seaward in an embracing
-gesture, “need us mighty bad, and it’s up to us to make a record run to
-the rescue.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II—THE MYSTERIOUS X. Y. Z.
-
-
-“They said nothing as to what was the matter?”
-
-Tom propounded the question ten minutes later as the two lads busied
-themselves in the after cabin of the _Vagrant_, stowing provisions
-hastily. “No, not a word. If only I could have got in communication with
-them again I might——”
-
-At this point a very black, very round, very good-natured negro
-countenance appeared in the companion way above them.
-
-“Ah’se done locked up, Marse Tom. Anyfing else yo’ all might be
-requirmentin’ ob?”
-
-“No, Jupe. I guess we’re about ready for a start. Let’s see,” and Jack
-rapidly ran over a mental list of what they had on board.
-
-“Yes, we’ve got everything. The water tanks are full, plenty of
-gasolene,—it’s a good thing we brought that extra stock from
-Galveston,—grub, O. K., and—better get forward and start the motor up,
-Tom.”
-
-Tom needed no second bidding. He shot up the companion way three steps
-at a time, almost upsetting Jupe, who stood at the summit on deck. He
-scurried to a hatchway forward of amidships and dived below. A hasty
-glance over the forty horse-power, four-cylindered, four-cycle engine
-showed him that everything was in working order. An adjustment of the
-force-feed lubricator, a swift examination of the magneto, a few turns
-of the starting apparatus, and a rhythmic series of explosions as the
-crank shaft began to revolve, and the _Vagrant_ was ready, so far as her
-machinery was concerned, to begin her dash across the Gulf.
-
-In the meantime, Jupe had been hustled ashore by Jack, who had taken up
-his position at the wheel, and in a very few seconds the lines that held
-the motor cruiser to the wharf were cast off. Jupe made a flying leap
-aboard as the tide swung the _Vagrant_ from her resting place.
-
-At the same instant Jack jerked the bell pull, which signaled Tom in the
-engine-room below to throw in the clutch, and as the propeller began to
-revolve the _Vagrant_ backed slowly out. In a few minutes Jack rang in
-the “Go-ahead” signal, and swinging the doughty little craft in a short
-semicircle, the young captain headed her almost due S. E.
-
-Tom emerged on deck wiping his hands on a bit of waste.
-
-“Everything all right below?” inquired Jack as his cousin took up a
-position beside him.
-
-“Running like a dollar watch,” was the response.
-
-“How much speed can we get?”
-
-“Well, twelve knots is her registered gait, but I might coax a bit more
-out of her.”
-
-“Try and get all you can.”
-
-“I will. What time do you think we ought to reach the vicinity of the
-_Sea King_?”
-
-“It’s a trifle over a hundred miles to the spot at which she gave her
-bearings,” was the response, with a glance at the chart which lay
-exposed in the uncovered case in front of the wheel. “It’s now just one
-o’clock. Say, about midnight.”
-
-“Phew! You propose to pick up a yacht, whose location you know only
-vaguely, in the _dark_?”
-
-“Not so dark, either. There’ll be a moon at ten-thirty. Anyhow, if we
-keep right on this course we’re bound to come within a few miles of the
-given bearings.”
-
-“I guess that’s so. Well, I’m off below to watch the engines.”
-
-“Better start the dynamo and get some ‘juice’ into the storage
-batteries. I mean to try the wireless again before long.”
-
-Tom nodded, and vanished below once more. Jupe came forward from the
-stern, where he had been coiling lines and generally setting things to
-rights.
-
-“Marse Tom,” he said, with some hesitation, “is dere any objection to
-informationing me concerning de percise objec’ ob dis here
-penguination?”
-
-“Why, no, Jupe,” rejoined Jack, with a smile at the old negro’s
-remarkable choice of what he himself would have called “highfaluting”
-words, “the _Sea King_, with my father on board, as you know, is in some
-sort of trouble, and we are going to the rescue as fast as we can.”
-
-“How you find out dat, Marse Jack?” asked the old man, with a tinge of
-suspicion in his voice.
-
-“By wireless, Jupe.”
-
-“What!” in a tone of frank unbelief, “yo’ all mean ter tell me dat dat
-birdcage rigamarole ob yo’s done tell yo’ all dat?”
-
-“That’s right, Jupe.”
-
-“Sho’ now! Yo’ ain’t foolin’ de ole man, Marse Jack? Dat conjo’ wire
-done tell yo’ all dat?”
-
-“Of course. I should have thought that you’d seen enough of it at High
-Towers to know what it could do.”
-
-“Humph!” the old negro scratched his head in a puzzled way, “yo mean
-dose eccentrical wabes, as yo’ call ’em, done come all de way frum Marse
-Chadwick’s boat to de island?”
-
-“Just what I do, Jupe. It’s the same thing as chucking a stone in a
-pond. You know how the waves and ripples spread out and out in circles
-that get bigger and bigger?”
-
-“Ya’as, sah.”
-
-“Well, it’s the same thing in wireless. Instead of a pond you’ve got the
-air, or the atmosphere; instead of a stone, you’ve got an electric
-impulse from the antenna.”
-
-“An’ when dat eccentric ’pulse go ’way from dose—dose—aunties, it jes’
-spread and spread like de ripples on a pond?”
-
-“Yes. The waves spread till they strike another wireless apparatus ‘in
-tune’ with them.”
-
-“An’ yo’ birdcage fiddle was tuned to de same pitch as de _Sea King’s_?”
-
-“That’s right, Jupe. You’re catching on fast We both use three hundred
-meter waves. That was agreed upon. Thus, you see, our station caught the
-message from the disabled yacht.”
-
-“Humph! But s’pose dere was some odder station dat had its fiddle tuned
-de percise same way?”
-
-“Why, then they’d have caught the message, too.”
-
-“An’ dey’d know, too, dat de po’ _Sea King_ done busted?”
-
-“I suppose so,—yes. But why do you ask?”
-
-“Fo’ jes dis reason, Marse Jack,—if any ob dem ole wreckers dat used ter
-hang about dese parts got dat message, maybe dey gwine ter go out dere,
-too.”
-
-“I guess not, Jupe. I never heard of any such rascals who had a wireless
-equipment.”
-
-“Den how ’bout dat po’ful mysterious X. Y. Z. I done heard yo’ an’ Marse
-Tom talkin’ ’bout at supper de odder night?”
-
-“Oh, X. Y. Z.!” exclaimed Jack with a laugh; “well, he _is_ a mystery
-for a fact. Some amateur on shore or some place, I suppose, who just
-happened to get tangled up with our slaves when we were practicing.”
-
-The “X. Y. Z.” referred to had made himself manifest three days before,
-while Jack and Tom were conducting some experiments with their sending
-apparatus. In the midst of their work a confused sound had broken in
-upon them, and Jack, on tuning his apparatus to catch the “stranger”
-waves, had intercepted an apparently meaningless message signed X. Y. Z.
-The message consisted of a jumble of numerals which, the two lads had
-little difficulty in deciding, was a code of some sort. The catching of
-such messages being common enough in the north, they gave the matter
-little more thought and, in fact, till Jupe mentioned it. Jack had not
-recollected the occurrence at all. Now, however, as Jupe moved off
-forward to complete his work, he caught himself wondering who X. Y. Z.
-might be. He wished that they had taken down the intercepted message and
-devoted some of their leisure time to deciphering it; but the urgent
-business now in hand soon drove such thoughts out of the young
-navigator’s head.
-
-Tom reappeared on deck, the inevitable bit of waste in his hands.
-
-“I’ve adjusted the magneto,” he announced, “and I guess we’re turning
-over a bit faster than ordinary.”
-
-“Good for you,” nodded Jack approvingly, “every minute counts on a job
-like this.”
-
-At every turn of the shaft Jack’s heart was bounding with keen anxiety.
-The same might be said of Tom’s condition. The very vagueness of the
-message from the air, fraught as it was with the sense of disaster,
-added to their mystification and eagerness to reach the scene.
-
-But mingled with all this, as the two lads stood side by side on the
-miniature bridge of their speedy little cruiser, was a fierce sort of
-pleasure as they sped through the rolling swells of the gulf, hurling
-white masses of foam aside from the sharp “cutwater.”
-
-Behind them the coast line lay like a dim gray scarf stretched along the
-blue horizon. The keen, ozone-laden wind struck their faces with an
-invigorating tang. It was great, glorious, exciting to be out here on
-the broad bosom of the gulf, guiding a speedy motor craft toward unknown
-adventures. The zest of achievement, the glory of grappling with
-obstacles as yet unseen and hardly guessed at, ran hot in both boys’
-veins. Fast as the _Vagrant_ was, she seemed to them to crawl, and yet,
-thanks to Tom’s skill as an engineer, she was reeling off her thirteen
-knots with the regularity of a sleeping infant’s breathing.
-
-“Jupe!” called Jack presently, “come aft and spell me at the wheel for a
-while. I’m going to send a few questions into the air,” he added to Tom.
-
-“Good. We’ve got plenty of ‘juice.’ Shall I go below and send up the
-mast?”
-
-“Yes. Better run it up to its full height. It won’t hurt in this light
-breeze, and I want all the radius I can get.”
-
-“Right you are.”
-
-Tom descended once more. The base of the telescoping aerial mast was in
-the forepart of the engine-room. A hand winch operated it much in the
-same manner that a fire department’s extension ladders are sent aloft.
-It did not take Tom long to extend the slender, yet pliant and strong
-steel spar heavenward to its fullest length.
-
-At its truck, or summit, was a pulley, through which halyards attached
-to the aerials had been rove. Jack had gotten these out while Tom had
-been busy below, and in a remarkably short time the slender antenna, or
-aerials, were strung from mast tip to deck. There were four separate
-wires of stranded phosphor bronze attached to wooden spreads, and
-properly insulated. From them a wire led back to the instruments
-attached to a table in the forepart of the cabin.
-
-The aerials being up Jack, after satisfying himself that everything was
-shipshape, made for the cabin. Seating himself at the wireless table he
-sent a signal crashing out into space.
-
-“S-K! S-K! S-K!”
-
-Then, after a pause:—
-
-“L-I.”
-
-There followed a period of listenings with the receiving switch over and
-the “watch-case” receivers closely clamped to the young operator’s ears.
-But no answer came.
-
-A worried look crept over Jack’s countenance. This silence was ominous.
-Once more he manipulated the key with nimble fingers. The spark
-squealing and crackling shot bluely hither and thither.
-
-But to the electrical appeals sent broadcast into the atmosphere, space
-vouchsafed no answer.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III—THE CIPHER CODE
-
-
-A sudden break in the rhythmic pulse of the engine reached Tom’s alert
-ears at this instant. Without speaking he hastened from the cabin to the
-engine-room, using, for this purpose, a door cut in the forward
-bulkhead. He found that one of the cylinders was missing fire and traced
-the trouble to a badly sooted plug.
-
-While he was adjusting the trouble Jack stuck to his key. He would pound
-out his “S-K” call furiously for an interval, and then listen intently
-for even the faintest indication of a response. The lad tried various
-adjustments, of the potentiometer, which regulates the voltage and
-current supplied to the detector, and operated his receiving tuning coil
-in various ways. But though he tried for wave lengths from two hundred
-meters up to fifteen hundred, not a whisper came out of the void of
-silence about them.
-
-“I’ll call once more,” said the lad to himself in a determined voice,
-“it’s our duty to do all we can and keep at it all the time. Of course,
-if the _Sea King_ has met with a really serious disaster her wireless
-may be out of order and—Hullo! Here’s something coming now!”
-
-Something was coming, sure enough!
-
-As Jack clamped the receivers to his ears a hail of dots and dashes beat
-against his organs of hearing. Somebody was transmitting a message at a
-furious rate. Expert as the lad was, it was all he could do to make head
-or tail of it. His pencil fairly flew over the recording pad, and when
-he got through he had nothing for his pains but a sheet covered with
-figures, and again that annoyingly mysterious signature X. Y. Z.
-
-Tom had returned to the cabin while Jack’s pencil was scurrying across
-the paper. He leaned over, the other lad’s shoulder and watched
-intently. When Jack stopped and affixed the signature X. Y. Z., he
-looked up at his cousin wonderingly.
-
-“It’s X. Y. Z. again. He was sending like blue blazes, too. What do you
-make of it?”
-
-“Blessed if I know. Using his cipher again, too, isn’t he? Say, Jack!
-See here,—X. Y. Z.,—whoever he is,—is within our radius right now—at
-this instant. Call him, and see if you can find out who or what he is
-and where his station is. If the _Sea King_ is badly off he may be of
-great assistance to us.”
-
-Jack switched his current over for sending out a call. With a puzzled
-frown on his face he adopted Tom’s suggestion.
-
-“X-Y-Z! X-Y-Z! X-Y-Z!” he flashed out, and then added the signature
-“L-I.”
-
-“Now to see if we get any result,” he said, adjusting the receivers to
-his ears and throwing the switch for the detection of a reply. He had
-not long to wait.
-
-“L-I! L-I! L-I!—X-Y-Z!” came billowing through the ether, “what do you
-want?”
-
-“We are proceeding to rescue of disabled yacht _Sea King_,” flashed back
-Jack. “Where are you? Can we rely on you for help?”
-
-A long silence followed. Then the Continental code began to throb and
-beat in the receivers, once more.
-
-But it was another question that came.
-
-“Where is yacht _Sea King_?”
-
-Jack flashed the bearings as he had received them earlier in the day,
-and then repeated his former question. But no reply came. For an instant
-the lad thought he had got out of tune with the wireless mystery, but
-although he ran the gamut of the tuning coil, nothing more came. For all
-that was further heard of him, X. Y. Z. might have been as intangible as
-the atmosphere out of which he had projected his questions.
-
-For half an hour or more Jack persisted in his endeavors to reach X. Y.
-Z. again, but finally gave it up as a bad job. Grounding his current, he
-laid down his head band and swung in his chair.
-
-“Lost him?” inquired Tom.
-
-“I’d rather say that he lost us,” responded Jack, “it must have been a
-deliberate cut-out. One second he was coming strong and then—silence.
-How do you figure it, Tom?”
-
-“I don’t attempt to. I give it up, unless X. Y. Z. is some sort of a
-wireless lunatic.”
-
-Jack gave a rather mirthless laugh.
-
-“Hardly. Or, if so, I begin to fear there is some method in his madness.
-You notice that he only seemed to want to find out the exact position of
-the _Sea King_?”
-
-He indicated the writing pad on which the entire conversation was
-recorded, as was the young inventor’s wont.
-
-Tom nodded.
-
-“I see that plain enough. I am inclined to think. Jack, that you made a
-big mistake in giving that chap the location of the _Sea King_.”
-
-“You do? Why?”
-
-But as he spoke there came into Jack’s mind an uncomfortable
-recollection of what Jupe had said about wreckers.
-
-“I don’t know just why,” was Tom’s frank response; “didn’t you ever have
-a feeling that somehow something you had done had been,—quite
-unintentionally,—a bad blunder?”
-
-“I know what you mean. I wish to goodness we knew who this X. Y. Z.
-was,—or is.”
-
-“Easy to find out.”
-
-“Easy to find out!” echoed Jack with a fine note of scorn, “about as
-easy as—as——”
-
-“Translating that cipher,” broke in Tom. “If we can read it we may have
-a good clew to Mister X. Y. Z. and his doings.”
-
-Jack laughed aloud.
-
-“Yes, ‘if,’” he said mockingly, “and if——”
-
-“I think I can do it,” said Tom quietly.
-
-“You do! Well, tackle it at once, then. I’m kind of worried, I don’t
-mind telling you, about that chap and his questions.”
-
-Tom picked up the sheet of paper with the numbers inscribed on it in a
-seemingly hopeless jumble.
-
-“I’ll take it to the engine-room with me and try to work it out and keep
-an eye on the motor at the same time. I like tackling propositions of
-this kind.”
-
-“Yes, you always were a nutcracker at school; but I fancy you’ll find
-that the toughest yet.”
-
-“I’m not so sure about that. Ciphers divide themselves up into groups
-pretty well, and I’ve half an idea that this is a very common one.
-Suppose you take a look at Jupe and take the wheel while he gets
-supper.”
-
-“By ginger, I’d forgotten all about that till this moment.”
-
-Jack glanced up at the clock affixed to the bulkhead.
-
-“Almost five o’clock. Time has flown certainly. Well, good luck, Tom,
-with that mess of figures, and if you find out anything from them about
-X. Y. Z. you’re entitled to a big hunk of credit on a silver platter.”
-
-Jupe, so Jack found, had kept the _Vagrant_ on her course to a hair’s
-breadth. The old fellow had been a sailor in his younger days, and the
-waters they were now traversing were not unfamiliar to him. He hailed
-the news that he was to get supper with pleasure, however.
-
-“Ah’ll cook yo’ boys as fine a meal as yo’ ebber sat down to,” he
-promised, as with a broad grin he surrendered the wheel and made aft to
-the galley, which was a small room forward of the cabin and between it
-and the engine-room.
-
-It was an hour later that Tom appeared on deck with a knitted brow, and
-several sheets of paper covered closely with cabalistic figuring.
-
-“Well?” said Jack.
-
-“Well, I’ve worked it out, and——”
-
-“You know who X. Y. Z. is, I hope?”
-
-“Why, no,” was the response in a puzzled tone, “I don’t know who he is,
-but I’ve learned considerable of what he is,—and I don’t much like it.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV—A MARINE GAME OF BLIND-MAN’S BUFF
-
-
-Jupe’s summons to supper ended the talk for the time being, and the two
-lads went below to eat a hearty meal while the colored man took a spell
-at the wheel. After supper they emerged on deck again, and as Jack took
-the helm Tom drew up a camp stool beside him, and seating himself,
-spread the figure-covered sheet of paper out on the chart case. He then
-switched on the shaded light, which caused a soft glow to reveal the
-cabalistic scribbling clearly.
-
-“Now then,” he began, “in figuring out a cipher of this sort the first
-thing to do is to note what figure appears most frequently. Having
-ascertained this, it is safe to assume that such a figure stands for the
-most frequently occurring letter in the language,—always provided, of
-course, the message is in English.”
-
-“Well?” interrogated Jack.
-
-“We know that the most frequently used vowel in English is _E_. And, by
-the way, this translation proved fairly easy, because the transmitter of
-the message made a gap between each of his groups of figures, showing
-that each collection stood for a separate word.”
-
-“I noticed that,—go ahead.”
-
-“I was trying to show you something of the method; but I guess you’ve
-about grasped it. In figuring out the cipher I made groups of all the
-numerals occurring in your transcript of the message, and found that the
-number ‘five’ appeared most often. I assumed, then, that it stood for H.
-Working in this way, I found that the first word of the message was
-_The_. That _Th_ stuck for some time, till I saw that the figures
-‘twenty-five’ had been used to express the phonetic sound of _Th_.
-
-“This gave me a valuable clew. I wrote down _The_ and then passed on to
-the next words. Figuring as before, I assigned the number ‘three,’ which
-appeared alone, to the letter _C_. I was puzzled for a minute. ‘_The C_’
-didn’t seem to mean a whole lot, but I let it go and passed on to the
-next word. Using my system I spelled out _King_, and then, of course, I
-realized that the _C_ was a phonetic rendering for the first part of the
-yacht _Sea King’s_ name.”
-
-“Great guns!” gasped Jack, “then they are interested in dad’s craft
-and——”
-
-“Wait a while; let me get the rest of it off my chest. I’m not going to
-tire your patience out by going through every step. I’ve told you enough
-to show you my method. As I got further combinations it became more and
-more simple till I finally had this message figured out:
-
-“‘The _Sea King_ is disabled. Trying to get bearings from you know who.
-_Vagrant_ left Lone Island this P. M. going to rescue. You had better
-make all speed or they will beat you out. Am proceeding. X. Y. Z.’”
-
-Jack’s lips emitted an amazed whistle.
-
-“What sort of a maze have we blundered into?” he exclaimed. “This X. Y.
-Z., who is he? Who was he talking to? What are they after?”
-
-“All of which questions will be answered by the time we arrive at the
-scene of the wreck, I imagine,” quoth Tom with a dry intonation; “in the
-meantime, it looks as if we are ‘it’ in this marine game of blind-man’s
-buff.”
-
-“That’s the name for it, all right,” assented Jack, peering at his
-compass card. “Tom, old lad, I’ve a presentiment that we are going to
-blunder into something that will call for every bit of ingenuity and
-courage we possess.”
-
-“And in the meantime,” said Tom, “it’s up to me to keep that motor
-turning over as she never turned before.”
-
-“Um,—well, beyond knowing that X. Y. Z. is a dangerous factor, or
-seemingly so,” mused Jack, “we are about as far off as ever from knowing
-just where he fits into the problem.”
-
-The night wore on, and still the _Vagrant_ churned her way steadily
-across the dark waters of the gulf under the brilliant white stars of
-the southern sky. The phosphorescence slid by her in fiery green streaks
-as she cut her way along, and from time to time Tom emerged from below
-and “spelled” his cousin, and comrade, at the wheel. At ten o’clock Jupe
-served coffee and biscuits on the bridge, and shortly thereafter Jack
-had another try with the wireless. But space, as before, was mute as the
-Sphinx. From out of the darkness came no whisper as to the nature of the
-enigma into which the situation, evolved by that first message from the
-air, had developed itself.
-
-Eleven o’clock came, and both boys commenced to strain their eyes into
-the velvety blackness ahead.
-
-“We ought to be picking something up before long,” observed Jack,
-“unless—unless——”
-
-His voice shook a bit. Between this lad and his father there was a deep
-bond of affection. Their close association had riveted the lad’s love
-for his parent even more strongly than is the case with most boys. As
-they neared the location where the yacht ought to be discovered, a
-feeling of painful suspense clutched coldly at his heart. Nor was Tom’s
-agitation much less. But the younger lad was more accustomed to suppress
-his feelings than Jack. He stood by his cousin’s side with tightly
-closed lips, as the _Vagrant_ throbbed onward, but through his brain,
-like fires in a blast furnace, a constant succession of anxious thoughts
-flashed and agitated.
-
-“Unless what. Jack?” said Tom at length.
-
-“Unless—gracious, Tom, suppose—suppose that the _Sea King_ has——”
-
-There was no need for him to conclude the sentence. Tom knew well enough
-what the other dreaded. The ominous silence after that first message,
-the lack of any signals from the disabled craft whose vicinity they must
-be close to now if she were still afloat—all these things induced a
-gloomy presentiment of evil which Tom, no more than Jack, was able to
-shake off.
-
-“It isn’t possible that she has proceeded?” mused Tom.
-
-“Not likely. As I understood that message the location was given us so
-that we could make direct for her. If she had been capable of proceeding
-under her own steam, surely she would have made for Lone Island.”
-
-“If only we knew something of the object of Uncle Chester’s mission, we
-might form a clearer idea of what has happened out here,” ventured Tom.
-“One thing is certain, the _Sea King_ hasn’t struck a rock——”
-
-Jack laughed mirthlessly.
-
-“There isn’t a reef or a shoal within a hundred miles of her bearings,
-as given to us,” he said; “that’s what makes the whole thing such a
-baffling puzzle. Her boilers and machinery were new. I don’t see what
-can have happened to them, and surely if the accident had been of that
-nature, the despatch would have said so. It’s just the vagueness of the
-whole thing that worries me.”
-
-“Complicated by Mister X. Y. Z., whoever he may be,” supplemented Tom.
-“Do you know, Jack, I’ve got a hunch that we, are destined to see that
-individual before very long?”
-
-A sudden yell from Jupe, who was at the bow keeping a keen lookout
-according to instructions, cut the night.
-
-“Marse Jack! Marse Tom! Look! Look dere, yondah!”
-
-There was no need for Jupe to explain himself. Dead ahead, and directly
-on the _Vagrant’s_ course, a bright streamer of flame slashed the sky
-like a scimitar of fire.
-
-“A rocket!” exploded Jack.
-
-As he uttered the exclamation the skyward end of the flaming ribbon
-burst into a diadem of brilliant scarlet stars.
-
-“Here, take the wheel,” choked out Jack, seizing Tom by the shoulder and
-shoving him into the helmsman’s place.
-
-With nimble fingers he unlaced the canvas covering of the _Vagrant’s_
-searchlight, snapped the switch on with a tiny sputter of green sparks.
-and the next instant a pencil of white light was sweeping the darkness
-ahead.
-
-Back and forth it swept and suddenly steadied. As it did so the boys
-uttered a simultaneous exclamation of amazement. Into the field of light
-had suddenly swung, not the expected outlines of the _Sea King_, but the
-form of a low craft without masts or funnels, rushing, at what appeared
-to be terrific speed, toward the northeast.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V—A SHOT IN THE NIGHT
-
-
-“Jove!” burst from Jack’s lips, “what on earth is this fresh
-complication?”
-
-He had hardly spoken before there came a crash of glass close to his
-hand, and something flew whistling by him. At the same instant the
-searchlight was extinguished, and from seaward, where they had last seen
-the speeding craft, came a dull “B-o-o-m!”
-
-“Knocked that searchlight into smithereens,” was Tom’s exclamation as
-old Jupe, with an alarmed cry, came running forward at the sound of the
-screaming projectile and the splintering glass.
-
-“At any rate,” was Jack’s grim retort, “they’ve shown us their hands.
-Tom, old chap, this thing is going to be bigger than we thought.”
-
-“You think then——”
-
-“That we are not the only persons interested in the _Sea King_. If I
-don’t make a big mistake, that shot was a message from our friend X. Y.
-Z.”
-
-“It looks like it,” admitted Tom; “oh, if we could only glimpse the _Sea
-King_!”
-
-“The rocket cattle from her. I’m sure of it. She must have mistaken the
-lights of that marine raceabout for our signals.”
-
-“Let’s try an answering rocket,” suggested Tom.
-
-“Won’t do any harm. Jupe, quit shivering like a jellyfish and get the
-rockets out. Two will be enough. Tom, you rig the tube.”
-
-The firing apparatus, a cylinder of galvanized iron, was speedily rigged
-in place, and by that time Jupe, whose face was an ashen gray tinge,
-reappeared with the rockets, two powerful signaling instruments, two
-feet or more in length.
-
-“All right, Tom, touch them off,” came from Jack, as the younger lad
-proclaimed that all was ready.
-
-There was the sputter of a match, a burst of yellow flame and then,
-almost instantly, a roar and a shriek as the first of the signals shot
-aloft, trailing a long tail of golden fire. At two hundred feet it
-exploded in a shower of blue stars. Almost simultaneously, it seemed,
-another cluster of red stars were spattered over the sky.
-
-“Hurray! That’s the _Sea King_, sure enough!” cried Jack; “see, they’ve
-answered us. Crowd her as much as you can, Tom, it’s a race for all
-we’re worth now.”
-
-“I can get a bit more speed, but it means overheating the engines,”
-warned Tom.
-
-“Never mind that. Put us alongside the _Sea King_ ahead of that other
-chap, and I don’t care if you blow the engines up,” was the curt
-rejoinder.
-
-Tom shrugged his shoulders as he went below, but a few seconds later the
-dial hand of the patent log crept up a notch.
-
-“Fourteen knots!” exclaimed Jack, with a note of satisfaction, “we’ll
-beat her out yet.”
-
-All at once, from out of the obscurity, a grim possibility materialized.
-Rushing straight for the _Vagrant_ came a sharp bow, with a wave of
-white phosphorescent foam curling away from it on each side as it
-cleaved the swells.
-
-“Great guns! They’re trying to ram us!” gasped out Jack as he sensed the
-meaning of this new peril.
-
-He seized up the speaking tube and bellowed down to Tom with all the
-force of his lungs.
-
-“Back! Back her for our lives!”
-
-Round spun the spokes of the wheel fast as a revolving squirrel’s cage.
-The _Vagrant’s_ forward way was checked, but not wholly. To Jack’s
-horror it seemed impossible that the other vessel could fail in her
-evident object of ramming the smaller craft.
-
-Less than a few score of feet separated them now. He could hear the hiss
-of the other craft’s cutwater as it rushed down on them.
-
-“Golly to goodness, Marse Jack, dey sink us fo’ sho’,” wailed Jupe,
-dropping to his knees in terror on the bridge.
-
-Jack vouchsafed no reply. But the next instant he felt like giving a
-shout of joy. The backward revolving propeller of the _Vagrant_ was
-“biting” the water. The motor craft’s forward impulse was checked. She
-hesitated, stopped, and slowly her bow began to swing. It was not a
-second too soon. As the _Vagrant_ swung off, the other craft tore by at
-a vicious speed, and Jack saw that her bow was shaped like a
-man-of-war’s “ram.” So closely did she race across the _Vagrant’s_ bow
-that he could see dim figures on her bridge, and could catch a torrent
-of maledictions, as those in command of the strange vessel saw that
-their evident purpose had been frustrated.
-
-At the pace she was going. Jack realized that it would be some moments
-before she could be put on another tack for a fresh onslaught.
-
-“Ahead! Come ahead!” he shouted down the tube, and the propeller of the
-_Vagrant_ began to churn in a forward direction once more. The lads’
-craft forged forward, crossing the troubled wake of the vindictive
-stranger.
-
-“Glory be!” breathed old Jupe fervently; “ah could heah de angels’ harps
-dat time, Marse Jack.”
-
-“I don’t know that I wasn’t in the same mental condition myself,”
-rejoined Jack, with a nervous laugh. His hands shook and his heart beat
-thickly. The escape had been narrow enough to unnerve older and more
-experienced persons than this boyish captain.
-
-“Ahoy!” came a sudden voice out of the darkness ahead, “what craft’s
-that?”
-
-“The _Vagrant_!” hailed back Jack, with a glad ring in his tones; “is
-that the _Sky King_?”
-
-“Aye! aye! Thank heaven, you’ve come—in time,” was the answering hail
-from the yacht.
-
-A moment later, against the stars. Jack could trace the spidery outlines
-of the larger vessel’s spars and wireless aerials and rigging.
-
-“This is Jack Chadwick,” he shouted, not giving a thought to the
-stranger craft now, but in a torment of anxiety to know what it all
-portended, “is my father on board?”
-
-There was a pause. Across the water there came a confused murmur of
-voices, but what they said was not audible.
-
-“_Sea King_, ahoy!” hailed Jack impatiently, “is my father on board and
-well?”
-
-“Your father is well, we hope, but he’s not on board,” came back the
-reply in somewhat hesitating tones.
-
-“Not on board!” stammered Jack, feeling for an instant as if he had been
-struck a heavy blow, “then where is he?”
-
-“Come alongside. Master Jack,” was the response, “there’s a lot to be
-told.”
-
-The black hulk of the _Sea King_ was plainly visible now, and Jack,
-steering carefully, with one hand on the engine-room signaling device,
-skillfully maneuvered the _Vagrant_ alongside of the bigger craft. As he
-did so an accommodation ladder was lowered, and several heads appeared
-along the yacht’s rail.
-
-“Stop her,” chimed the signal.
-
-Then came the order to reverse and then “stop” once more. Jupe, with a
-line in his hand, leaped for the accommodation ladder. Tom, emerging on
-deck, took in the situation in a glance and made for the stern. He
-hurled another line, which was caught from above. In as short a time as
-it takes to tell it, the _Vagrant_ was snugly moored alongside her
-larger consort.
-
-Jack, with his head in a whirl, stepped from the bridge. Tom was at his
-side in an instant.
-
-“Is all well with Uncle Chester?” he demanded impatiently. “Is he on
-board?”
-
-“No, he isn’t,” came the staggering reply, in a voice that was half a
-sob. It was a bolt from the blue that had assailed the lad, and who will
-blame him for being utterly unnerved by the blow fate had just dealt
-him.
-
-Tom was silent for an instant. Tidings that stun have a way of sinking
-in slowly. Then, as the two lads stood at the foot of the ladder, he
-flung his arm around Jack’s shoulder, and from his gritted teeth came
-speech:
-
-“If harm has come to him. Jack, those who have caused it will have to
-pay—_and pay big!_”
-
-And so the two lads ascended the ladder to the _Sea King’s_ deck,
-followed by the awe-struck Jupe.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI—NED BANGS’ STORY
-
-
-It was Ned Bang’s, the boyish wireless operator of the _Sea King_, who
-met them at the head of the ladder. Behind him pressed a ring of curious
-faces, the bronzed countenances of seamen. Some incandescents had been
-switched on as the newcomers gained the deck, and in the yellow light
-Jack saw that all the faces that gazed into his bore the unmistakable
-stamp of agitation.
-
-Bangs, besides being the wireless operator of the _Sea King_, was
-something more. He had been a pupil of Professor Chadwick’s and a school
-fellow of Jack’s, and was quite a scientific adept along the lines he
-had chosen to follow.
-
-But Jack and Tom exchanged merely hasty words of greeting with the
-youngster who stood facing them, pallid-faced under his coat of tan and
-shaken evidently by some recent shock.
-
-“What is it, Ned? What has happened?” demanded Jack eagerly, as soon as
-the boys had clasped hands. “Where is father? Why are you out here
-alone?”
-
-“It’s—it’s a long story. Jack,” half-stammered Ned. “I—I’m afraid that
-we who are here on board don’t show up to very good advantage in it. But
-you must be the judge of that. Shall we go below, where we can talk?”
-
-There was a reticence, a hesitancy in his tones that irritated Jack,
-overwrought as he already was.
-
-“I asked you a question, Ned,” he said in sharp tones, very unlike his
-usual affable ones, “where is my father?”
-
-“I saw him last near Yucatan,” burst forth Ned miserably.
-
-The reply was so utterly unexpected that it fairly took Jack and Tom off
-their feet. Ned had not seen fit to supplement his statement, but stood
-there with that same shamefaced expression playing over his visage.
-
-“And you—you left him behind there?” broke out Jack, guessing part of
-the truth.
-
-“We couldn’t help it,” wailed Ned wretchedly. “Wait till I tell you
-about it.”
-
-Jack’s head swam. Behind the vague words he sensed a tragedy of some
-sort in that mysterious country which had already, so it was thought,
-claimed the life of Tom’s father, Mr. Jesson.
-
-“How did the _Sea King_ come to be off Yucatan?” inquired Jack, “her
-course, as laid out, was far to the east of that country.”
-
-“I know that,” replied Ned; “but a gale blew us off our reckonings, and
-into as strange and terrible a series of adventures as you ever heard of
-in the wildest fiction.”
-
-“Tell us about it,” demanded Tom crisply, cutting short Ned’s rather
-hysterical outburst. “Come below, into the cabin. It is important that
-we should know everything as soon as possible.”
-
-“This way,” said Ned, stepping toward the stern.
-
-But Jack paused.
-
-“An attempt was made to ram the _Vagrant_ to-night,” he said, “by a
-queer, but extremely speedy craft. Do you know anything about her, Ned?”
-
-“Do I know anything about her?”
-
-A quaver of indignation injected itself into Ned’s voice.
-
-“Well, I should say so,” he went on; “that’s the vessel of that
-scoundrel Herrera, the cousin of the governor of Yucatan, which, as you
-know, is at present a province of Mexico, but, so far as civilization is
-concerned, parts of it might as well be in the wilds of Africa.”
-
-Tom had been fidgeting excitedly. The name of Yucatan had called up a
-swarming crowd of memories of his father, the long missing explorer.
-
-“Had my uncle’s visit to Yucatan anything to do with my father’s
-disappearance?” he asked.
-
-“Everything,” was the rejoinder, in steadier tones than Ned Bangs had
-yet assumed. The presence of the self-possessed cousins, and their
-infectious manner of quiet ability, had braced the unstrung lad up
-wonderfully.
-
-“It was to rescue your father from——”
-
-“Then he is alive?” burst in Tom, aglow at the wonderful news.
-
-“So there is every reason to suppose,” was Ned’s reply.
-
-Without giving him time to say more, the cousins, having ordered the
-crew to keep a keen lookout for the speedy “ram” craft and notify them
-instantly of its appearance, half dragged Ned below, and shoved him into
-a chair in the comfortably furnished main cabin of the _Sea King_.
-
-“Now then,” said Jack, “tell us everything, Ned, from the beginning. But
-first you are reasonably certain that both my father and my uncle are
-alive?”
-
-“There is practically no doubt of that,” was Ned’s response.
-
-“Then fire away,” ordered Tom, seating himself beside Jack, opposite the
-still badly shaken Ned Bangs.
-
-“We left New York at the time you know,” commenced Ned, “and cruised for
-some time in the West Indies, your father. Jack, making stacks of
-observations and records. We met many interesting adventures, but I’m
-not going to detail all those now. But, although your father seemed to
-be immersed in his scientific observations, there were several things
-unexplained about the _Sea King’s_ equipment.
-
-“In a sort of well amidships was stored the aero-auto with which you had
-been experimenting before he left High Towers.”
-
-Jack nodded. He knew the wonderful craft had been placed aboard, but had
-understood it had been taken along for private demonstration purposes.
-
-“You mean the air and land craft driven by the gas generated from
-radolite crystals?” he asked. “The Flying Road Racer, as we called it.”
-
-“Yes,” rejoined Ned, “I guess that’s it. But I reckon you know more
-about that than I do since you invented it. Anyhow, the aero-auto, as
-Professor Chadwick called it, was installed in this well, or pit,
-amidships, which had evidently been prepared for its reception in
-advance.”
-
-“And it’s still there?” inquired Tom sharply.
-
-“Still there. Whatever Professor Chadwick intended to use it for, he had
-no opportunity to try it out before—before what I’m going to tell you
-occurred. Then, too, I noticed that several chests containing articles
-whose nature was a mystery to me were stored in a sort of lazaretto
-under the cabin floor. Whatever their contents, they were evidently too
-precious for Professor Chadwick to let them out of his sight.”
-
-“Wait a second,” interrupted Tom, “I want to take a look outside.”
-
-In a moment he was back, anti dropped into his place with an “All’s
-well!”
-
-“Never mind details now. Get ahead to Yucatan,” exclaimed Jack
-impatiently.
-
-“I’m getting there,” protested Ned, a look of what was almost horror
-passing over his face at the mere mention of the name. “The storm I
-referred to before, struck us when we were off the southernmost point of
-Florida. It was a terror of a rip-roaring hurricane. All we could do was
-to head up into the mountainous seas and run the engines at a quarter
-speed. We battled with the hurricane thus for four days, and then
-MacDuffy, the engineer, came on deck one morning with a white face and
-the news that the main shaft was cracked. It had been unable to
-withstand the pressure of the racing propeller every time the _Sea
-King’s_ stern lifted out of the seas.
-
-“Luckily, the wind had moderated a bit by that time, and we set the try
-sails. Under these we staggered along at a four-knot gait for what
-seemed an eternity of time. In reality it was about five days. One
-morning, when the storm had about blown itself out, the lookout shouted
-that land lay ahead. Sure enough it did. A strip of gray on the horizon;
-and I can tell you it was a mighty welcome sight.
-
-“Captain Andrews, our sailing master, announced that the coast was, in
-all probability, that of Yucatan, and from what he told us of it we
-could not well have struck a more useless stretch of country to us,
-situated as we were. But it’s ‘any port in a storm’ said the skipper,
-and we made for the land, staggering along under our clumsy rig.
-
-“That night we anchored off a wild, desolate-looking coast, without a
-trace of human habitations being visible anywhere. However, we found a
-bay which, after careful soundings from the boats, proved to have
-sufficient depth of water to harbor the _Sea King_ snugly. Here we
-dropped anchor, and mighty glad we were to have struck a haven at last,
-I can tell you.
-
-“Next day the chief came to your father and told him that he thought he
-could clamp a metal collar round the break in the shaft and make it
-practically as good as new. To our astonishment, Professor Chadwick did
-not greet the news with any special enthusiasm.
-
-“‘You may as well take your time, Mr. MacDuffy,’ says he, ‘for it is
-probable that we shall remain here for quite a considerable period.’
-
-“‘A considerable period, sir!’ exclaimed MacDuffy in some surprise. ‘Do
-you mean to explore yon forsaken land in the interests of science?’
-
-“‘It seems to me, MacDuffy,’ answered Professor Chadwick (MacDuffy told
-me all this later), ‘that fate has brought me here. A very dear and a
-very near relative of mine vanished in this part of Yucatan many years
-ago. When we set out on this cruise I had an idea that perhaps I might
-undertake to go in search of him, or, at least, to discover some trace
-of his fate. That accounts for the aero-auto which, as you know, my son
-Jack and I invented, and also explains those chests which contain
-several more of our inventions suitable to such an expedition.’
-
-“The Professor went on to say that now that he found himself off the
-very land which held the secret of Mr. Jesson’s fate, he didn’t mean to
-leave without making an attempt to solve it. From this determination he
-was not to be swayed, and the next day one of the boats set him and
-three of the crew, Abner Jennings, the boatswain; Jack Allworthy, the
-second engineer; and Ezra Kettle, a Maine man and a staunch seaman,
-ashore. We watched them from the _Sea King_ as they dragged the boat up
-on the beach and set off into the jungle, beyond which lay the misty
-blue outline of a range of huge hills.
-
-“Without the slightest warning, and just as they were about to plunge
-into the thick brush, the mangroves and scrub vegetation parted, and a
-score of savage-looking Indians rushed out. We saw your father and the
-others try to parley with them, and then, before we could even train a
-gun on the scene, the thing happened.”
-
-He paused for an instant, overcome by the recollection of that tragedy
-on the Yucatan beach. Immediately Jack jumped to his feet.
-
-“I’ve forgotten the ‘enemy’ outside. Hold on a minute,” he called as he
-dashed away to the deck. “The watch may be all right,” he continued,
-when he returned, “but there’s nothing like one’s own eyes. Go on, Ned.”
-
-“Poor Kettle went down, transfixed by a spear in the first few seconds
-after the encounter. Professor Chadwick’s intention had merely been to
-reconnoitre in preparation for an expedition later on. Not expecting
-trouble, none of the party was armed. Allworthy dashed back to the boat
-and seized up an oar. He did valiant service with it before he, too, was
-felled by a spear-thrust. In the meantime, Professor Chadwick and Abner
-Jennings had been captured, notwithstanding their stout resistance. Then
-they were dragged off into the jungle, while we stood half-paralyzed
-with horror at the suddenness and disastrous consequences of the attack.
-
-“The last we saw of your father. Jack, he was motioning back to us to
-put out to sea. Brave to the last, he thought of us before himself.”
-
-Ned stooped and placed his hands over his eyes as if to shut out the
-picture his words called up. Jack Chadwick sat staring vacantly at the
-paneling of the cabin, not daring to trust his voice to speech. Tom, not
-less affected, gripped his cousin’s hand.
-
-“Remember, old chap,” he murmured, “that Ned told us some time ago that
-there was reason to believe that your father was still alive.”
-
-“I’m coming to that,” said Ned, raising his head and proceeding with his
-narrative.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII—THE THREE COLORED GEMS
-
-
-“It was MacDuffy,” continued the lad, “who organized an expedition to go
-to your father’s rescue. There was MacDuffy, Captain Andrews, four
-seamen and myself. The rest were left in charge of the _Sea King_, the
-engine-room force having instructions to proceed with the repairs to the
-shaft, which were really simple enough, consisting only of bolting a
-collar of metal around the split.
-
-“We were heavily armed, as you may imagine, and after we had landed in
-the light boat, we stowed it in the brush where it would not be likely
-to be discovered by marauders. The other boat, the one in which your
-father landed, had been stove in by those rascally natives. Our first
-task after this, was to bury poor Kettle as decently as we could. This
-done, we took up the trail, which was plain enough to follow. In fact,
-we learned afterward, it was a regular path that the natives followed
-when they came to the coast after turtles and fish.
-
-“Danger? Well, we knew we were going into a desperate game, but, as
-MacDuffy said, we couldn’t do otherwise than our best to rescue your
-father. As we made our way through the jungle we discussed the
-situation. It looked black and no mistake. In the first place, as
-Captain Andrews pointed out, the revolution was raging in northern
-Mexico, and Diaz, in his last desperate stand, had withdrawn troops from
-every province in Mexico. Captain Andrews told us that the descendants
-of the Mayas, who inhabited this part of Yucatan, were endowed with a
-fierce hatred of Mexicans and white men in general, and that they had
-been kept in subjugation solely by the presence of large bodies of
-troops. With this menace to their warlike ideas withdrawn, the Mayas
-were probably ripe for any mischief.
-
-“All this, as you can imagine, didn’t tend to raise our spirits, and the
-prospect of rescuing your father began to seem remote indeed. Well, to
-cut a long story short, we followed the trail for two days till we began
-to arrive in the foothills of the range we had seen. Occasionally we
-came across what were evidently the sites of recent camps, so we knew
-that we were on the track all right.
-
-“The third day, about noon, we marched right out of a canyon, threaded
-by a swift river, into an Indian settlement. Before we could say
-‘knife,’ or raise a weapon, we were surrounded and made captives. We
-were thrown into a palm-thatched hut and placed under strict guard, and
-we faced the prospect of a speedy death. But at the moment we thought
-little of these matters, for the hut already contained three other
-captives, and they were Professor Chadwick, Abner Jennings and Jack
-Allworthy, the last wounded in the shoulder by the spear thrust that had
-knocked him down, but luckily not seriously.
-
-“You can guess how delighted we were in the first few moments, and then
-how depressed we all became as we began to realize that so far as an
-escape was concerned we might as well have been imprisoned in an
-iron-walled dungeon. We were deprived of nothing in the way of food, and
-were not bound in any way, but the hut was surrounded by too strong a
-guard to make any idea of escape practicable. So the night passed, a
-night that we spent in discussing and rejecting a hundred plans of
-escape, for each, in turn, was discarded as hopeless.
-
-“But, although we did not realize it, freedom for some of us was close
-at hand. Shortly before noon the sky became black as night. A screaming
-sort of wind arose, and suddenly we felt the ground under our feet
-beginning to rock. It didn’t take us long to catch on that the
-disturbance was caused by an earthquake of uncommon severity. The
-natives began to howl and yell, and rushed about like madmen. That wind
-suddenly picked up our prison and whisked it off, just as it might have
-dealt with an umbrella. And there we stood, in the middle of all this
-commotion, unbound and practically free to go where we would, for the
-natives were far too busy attending to their own affairs to worry about
-us.
-
-“In the middle of the uproar and the convulsions of the earth, a whole
-section of the cliff which upreared itself at the back of the
-settlement, slid down with a roar like a hundred Niagaras. It caught
-that village, just as a big rock would smash an anthill. We escaped by
-the skin of our teeth, but, as it was, we were showered with flying
-rocks and earth. Luckily, none of us was injured.
-
-“But those poor natives fared otherwise. Of the scores that had been
-rushing about an instant before hardly twenty remained. One of these was
-a big fellow, with a beautiful copper-colored skin, clad in a sort of
-garment made out of jaguar hide. He separated from the rest, and we saw
-that he carried under his arm a large box, or case, which gleamed dully
-in the gloom.
-
-“‘He’s making for the canoes!’ shouted MacDuffy suddenly, and then, sure
-enough, we saw what we hadn’t noticed before in all that hurly-burly,
-namely, that several dugouts were moored to the river bank. I guess we
-all caught the inspiration at the same instant. Anyhow, we began running
-for the bank at top speed. But suddenly that copper-colored giant faced
-about, and we now saw that he carried a whole quiver full of those
-poisoned darts that the Maya tribes use with deadly effect.
-
-“Before he could aim one, or shout to the rest of the villagers, who
-hadn’t noted our escape, Abner Jennings flew at him like a wildcat. Down
-he went, bowled over like a ninepin, under a crashing blow from
-Jennings’ fist.
-
-“‘Hurray, lads! Now for the boats!’ shouted Allworthy, and we scampered
-after him toward them. But at that instant a queer thing happened. A man
-came racing toward us from amidst the ruins of the village.
-
-“‘Get him!’ yelled Allworthy savagely, as Jennings stooped and picked up
-a big rock.
-
-“But the next instant his hand dropped to his side. The man was white!
-In spite of his half-naked condition and sun-browned skin, it was clear
-enough that he was as much of a Caucasian as any of us, and then came
-the wonderful part of it all.
-
-“‘In the name of heaven, white men, stop!’ he shouted, ‘take me with
-you. I am——’”
-
-“Jasper Jesson!”
-
-It was Tom Jesson who had uttered the exclamation. In a flash of
-intuition he had seen what was coming before Ned uttered it. The lad
-literally quivered with excitement as he spoke.
-
-“Right. It was your father, Tom,” rejoined Ned. “Professor Chadwick
-stopped, ran back and embraced him. For a minute we all stood stock
-still, rooted there by sheer amazement, I guess. Well, we got to the
-canoes and set out down the river. There were four dugouts, and the way
-they dashed down that stretch of water was a caution. No need to paddle.
-The current just tore along for several miles. I don’t see how it was we
-didn’t upset, but the fact remains that we didn’t. Pretty soon we
-reached a part of the stream where another flowed into it, and it
-broadened out and grew calmer.
-
-“Then, for the first time, we felt free to talk. We hauled the canoes
-ashore and camped while we discussed plans. But first, you may imagine,
-we heard Mr. Jesson’s story. He had been captured by the tribe who had
-trapped us, soon after his arrival in the country. And their prisoner he
-had remained since. Undoubtedly he would have been put to death, but he
-had by great good luck managed to translate some cryptograms carved in
-the marble stones of some ruins in the mountains, and after that they
-looked on him as a sort of god. At any rate, he was well treated, but
-given no chance to escape. The earthquake that had set us loose had
-proved his opportunity, too. Of course, it’s no use my trying to give
-you any idea of his delight and astonishment at finding his
-brother-in-law and getting news of you, Tom, and of the old home.
-
-“He had just about concluded his story, when Mr. Chadwick drew from
-under his coat that same metal box that we had seen the big
-copper-colored fellow skedaddling with. He had taken it from the chap as
-he lay stunned, rightly guessing that it was of immense value. But he
-was far from surmising what it was he had really discovered, till a few
-moments later.
-
-“‘Maybe, Jesson,’ he said, ‘you can tell me what kind of a box this is.
-It’s silver, all right, for one thing, but it’s covered with some sort
-of picture writing, too, and——’
-
-“But Tom’s father interrupted him with a shout.
-
-“‘Good heavens, man!’ he exclaimed, ‘you’ve got hold of the holy of
-holies of the Zakaks,’——that’s the name of the tribe that had hooked us.
-
-“While we all looked on with open mouths, Mr. Jesson broke a long thorn
-off a prickly bush growing near at hand and shoved it into a small hole
-in the front of the box. The lid flew open, and there inside was
-something that made us blink our eyes,—a blood-red stone, a blue one,
-and a gorgeous green gem.
-
-“We all caught our breath, I can tell you. Each stone was as big as a
-pigeon’s egg, and it didn’t take an expert to tell that we had before us
-a ruby, a turquoise and an emerald that had, probably, not their equals
-in the world.
-
-“Then Mr. Jesson told us how the tribe had a legend that those stones
-were brought from some, mysterious land beyond the seas by their
-fore-runners, and that if they were stolen or lost disaster would
-overtake them. At certain phases of the moon, he said, the stones were
-worshiped with all sorts of queer rites that he had not been permitted
-to witness.
-
-“We, none of us, could guess what they were worth, but it was a safe
-estimate that they represented a snug fortune. As for the box itself, it
-was, as I said, of dull silver, with three sort of oval bosses or bumps
-on its cover. These were of a reddish color, and were evidently of no
-value except as ornaments. After some more talk it was decided to make
-for the Texan coast, and as soon as we had regained the yacht, get into
-wireless communication with you lads.
-
-“Professor Chadwick explained that he had had a half-formed intention of
-attempting to find Mr. Jesson before he left America, and for that
-reason had sent you boys to Lone Island so that he might notify you of
-his success by wireless as soon as possible, without letting the general
-public know, and also have you handy in case of an emergency.”
-
-“So that explains Lone Island,” struck in Jack, “but go on, Ned. I can
-hardly wait for the rest of your story.”
-
-“Neither can I,” added Tom; “but aren’t you fellows surprised that we
-don’t hear anything from outside?”
-
-“It is strange,” agreed Jack. “I’ll run up again soon.”
-
-“Well,” continued Ned, “we knew that by following the river we must
-emerge on the coast, probably near to the spot where the yacht was
-anchored. We therefore lost no time in re-embarking and getting on our
-way once more. Luckily, there was some food, bananas and dried flesh of
-some animal,—deer, most likely,—in the canoes, which must have been
-provisioned for a trip. So that night, when we camped, we had a good
-supper, with something left over for the next day.
-
-“We slept under the canoes, turning them keel up to form a protection
-from the dews, and also from any prowling animals. The spot we had
-chosen was well back in the brush, so that in case of pursuit we had a
-good hiding place. But we slept without interruption, taking watch in
-turn. The next morning, before it was well light, we set out down the
-river again, and that afternoon we had reason to think we were close to
-the coast. The character of the jungle on either side of the river
-changed and the stream grew wider and more sluggish.
-
-“So far we had had no indication that we were not the only human beings
-in that part of the country, so you can imagine our astonishment when,
-about mid-afternoon, on rounding a bend in the stream, we beheld a
-squat, drab-colored craft, without spars or funnel, moored to the bank.
-It didn’t need a second glance to tell us that she was a fighting craft
-of some kind. On her decks were the outlines of several rapid-fire guns
-shrouded under canvas covers. Her bow was shaped like a ram, and we
-could see by the rows of rivets along her sides that she was built of
-steel.
-
-“‘That’s one of the new shoal-draft, gasolene gunboats, built for the
-Diaz government at the Vulcan yards in Charlestown,’ declared Professor
-Chadwick at once.
-
-“He had hardly spoken when several of the crew, who had been lounging
-about the decks, saw us coming. There was an instant stir on board the
-ugly-looking craft, and presently the figure of a small, dark-skinned
-man, with a black, pointed beard and moustache, and heavy, sinister
-eyebrows, appeared on the bridge, which was just forward of a sort of
-conning tower.
-
-“He wore white garments and a broad-brimmed Panama hat. As soon as he
-appeared he hailed us.
-
-“‘Come alongside, gentlemen,’ he said, using almost perfect English. ‘I
-welcome you to _El Tarantula_.’”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII—ON BOARD “THE TARANTULA”
-
-
-“A few moments later,” continued Ned, “we were standing on the deck of
-the sinister-looking craft, confronted by her equally sinister-looking
-owner, for such we soon found he was, in fact, if not in name. From him
-we speedily learned that not only was he the governor of that part of
-the province of Yucatan, but that he also controlled large plantations
-near the mouth of the river. The principal produce of these was sisal
-hemp, a well-known and valuable product of the country.
-
-“Naturally, we supposed that as soon as we had told our story, the first
-act of Ramon Herrera, for such he informed us was his name, would be to
-aid us in reaching our yacht. But the event proved exactly to the
-contrary.
-
-“‘You will take up quarters for the present on my yacht, gentlemen,’ he
-said, in a tone almost of command.
-
-[Illustration: General Herrera, commander of _El Tarantula_, the Mexican
-gasolene gunboat.]
-
-“Professor Chadwick started to protest, but met with a stern
-interruption.
-
-“‘My country is in the throes of a revolution,’ Herrera said, ‘and at
-the present time it is unknown to me whether your United States of North
-America is involved in the trouble or not. It is my belief, and that of
-many of my countrymen, that the massing of troops on the Texan border,
-by orders of your President Taft, is a menace to the Diaz government,
-and an encouragement to the revolutionaries. This being so, you must
-regard yourselves as my guests,—I will not use an uglier word,—till such
-time as I receive further advices. Furthermore, I do not mean to make
-any secret of my dislike for meddling Yankees.’
-
-“‘Sir,’ exclaimed Professor Chadwick, ‘you are deliberately insulting.’
-
-“‘Senor Yankee,’ was the calm reply, ‘you have deliberately intruded
-yourself into a country where you and your inquisitive countrymen are
-not wanted.’
-
-“‘I am not aware by what right you dare to assume such an attitude
-toward us,’ resumed Professor Chadwick, now thoroughly aroused, and,
-indeed, we were all at the boiling-point, as you can imagine. Herrera’s
-every word seemed to be a deliberate taunt.
-
-“‘I assume my attitude, as you call it, by right of might,’ was the cold
-reply, ‘my ancestor. General Jose de Guzman Herrera, was slain by your
-Yankee soldiers in the Mexican war. Judge, then, if I have any reason to
-favor Yankees.’
-
-“‘You are likely to pay dearly for this forcible detention of peaceful
-citizens of a republic at peace with your country,’ warned Allworthy.
-
-“Herrera shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“‘I’ll take my chance of that,’ he said, ‘besides, as I remarked before,
-I am not so certain that my country and your country are not by this
-time at war.’
-
-“Well, there was nothing more to be said, and determined to make the
-best of our situation we went docilely enough to the quarters that
-Herrera had provided for us, which consisted of three cabins in the
-extreme stern of the ship. Captain Andrews, MacDuffy and I were thrust
-into one cabin, your father and Mr. Jesson into the next compartment,
-and Abner Jennings and the two sailors into a third stateroom.
-
-“Here was a pretty kettle of fish, and a fine ending to our hopes of
-reaching the coast, which, we were confident, was not far distant. From
-scraps of conversation we overheard, for there were gratings above each
-stateroom door, we learned that the _Tarantula_ was tied up to the shore
-bordering on one of Herrera’s plantations. We heard later that the
-slaves,—most of them Mosquito Coast negroes illegally impressed as
-slaves,—had made some trouble, and that Herrera was here with his armed
-craft to suppress the uprising by stern means. What these means were we
-found out later, and without going into detail, we heard enough to know
-that the monster,—as we subsequently found him to be,—spared no form of
-cruelty to browbeat his luckless servitors into submission. All this was
-translated for us by Captain Andrews, who spoke Spanish fluently.
-
-“We might have been confined in our narrow quarters for an hour, or it
-might have been longer, when we heard the door of the adjoining
-stateroom unlocked, and presently voices came to us through the grating.
-It was easy to recognize Herrera’s tones as he cross-examined Professor
-Chadwick. One of the Mexican sailors had noticed that when the professor
-came on board he had slipped a silver chest—the treasure box—under his
-coat. The fellow had informed Herrera, and now that arch-scoundrel was
-demanding that Professor Chadwick and Mr. Jesson submit to being
-searched.
-
-“I can tell you we exchanged blank glances when we overheard this. It
-seemed pretty tough that, after all we had gone through, we were to be
-robbed of what was bound to prove a substantial reward, for Professor
-Chadwick had insisted that we agree to take an equal share with him
-having participated in his dangers.
-
-“But to our astonishment the search evidently resulted in nothing being
-found. For before long we heard Herrera bursting out into Spanish oaths.
-He wanted to know what had become of the box.
-
-“‘If you had asked me before,’ Professor Chadwick replied, ‘I would have
-told you. I threw it overboard rather than let it fall into your hands.’
-
-“We listened for an outburst or worse right then. But none came. The
-rascal, in whose power we were, evidently didn’t know the value of the
-silver box, for he merely remarked that Professor Chadwick’s act would
-not improve our situation, and left the cabin. But we, in the adjoining
-stateroom, again exchanged blank glances. It was no joke to think of
-that fortune in magnificent stones being consigned to the muddy depths
-of that Yucatan stream.
-
-“A short time after Herrera left the cabin, however. Professor Chadwick
-climbed up on a bunk in his stateroom, and placing his lips to the
-grating informed us that he had not, in reality, hurled the box
-overboard, but that it was suspended outside the porthole of his cabin
-by a fine bit of cord which he had happened to have in his pockets. The
-porthole was beneath the overhang of the stern of the gunboat, and
-unless any sailor went prying about under the vessel’s counter there was
-not much likelihood of its being discovered. The Professor informed us
-also that he was determined not to purchase our liberty at the price of
-the precious stones.
-
-“‘This is the twentieth century,’ he said, ‘and I refuse to believe that
-this rascal, for such Herrera has shown himself to be, will dare to hold
-captive free American citizens for any length of time.’
-
-“We agreed with him in this, but MacDuffy, who, as an engineer,
-possessed with an investigating turn of mind, still busied himself, as
-he had since the moment of our imprisonment, with trying to find some
-means of escape. There was a nine-inch porthole in our stateroom, and
-also in the other two. But, of course, this offered no opportunity for
-escape. By peeping out through it, however, we could see that our
-dugouts had been attached to the stern of the _Tarantula_ by a line. If
-we could only reach them we might be able to attain freedom.
-
-“All at once MacDuffy uttered an exclamation. He had discovered that
-under the porthole was a square plate, bolted into the stern frames, and
-seemingly devised, when removed, to permit of a gun being thrust through
-the opening. The nuts which held the bolts in place were inside the
-cabin, and MacDuffy produced from his pockets a serviceable-looking
-monkey wrench, which was the engineer’s constant companion.
-
-“‘I’ll undertake to have those nuts unscrewed in half an hour,’ said he
-in a low, excited tone, ‘and then what’s to prevent us dropping through
-the stern to-night, hooking the dugouts and floating down to the coast?’
-
-“What indeed? we thought. The plan looked feasible enough. But,
-naturally, we did not, for a minute, countenance the idea of making good
-our own escape and leaving the rest to their fate. But Professor
-Chadwick, when we communicated our plan, decided at once that we must
-make the attempt that night, and, if we succeeded in reaching the coast
-and the _Sea King_, must summon help.
-
-“After a lot of persuasion we agreed to do this. Then we waited, with as
-much patience as we could muster, for the night to fall. Food and drink
-was brought us at dusk, and we ate all we could, knowing that we might
-have strenuous work before us. After dark MacDuffy fell to work on the
-bolts. It took scarcely an hour to loosen them. This much accomplished,
-we waited till all grew quiet about the _Tarantula_, which was not
-before midnight.
-
-“Whispering a good-by to Professor Chadwick and Mr. Jesson, we dropped
-through the opening, after MacDuffy had removed the plate which left a
-hole some four feet square. The rope by which the dugouts trailed astern
-was just above our heads. Captain Andrews seized it and pulled the first
-of the frail craft toward the _Tarantula_ till it was under the opening
-we had made. Then they told me to drop down as silently as possible.
-When I was on board MacDuffy followed, stuffing his wrench into his hip
-pocket, and last came Captain Andrews. Before we cut loose we, according
-to Professor Chadwick’s instructions, cut the string by which the jewel
-casket was suspended, and stowed it safely on board the dugout.
-
-“This done, I cut the painter with a slash of my knife, and the dugout
-drifted silently off down the current into the darkness. Our escape had
-been made in safety. We reached the coast, and after paddling northward
-for half a day, sighted the _Sea King_. All was as we had left it, and
-mighty glad every one was to see us. I can tell you. But the plight of
-Professor Chadwick, Mr. Jesson and the rest, cast a gloom over us all.”
-
-“Tell me,” begged Tom, interrupting again, “are they still on the
-_Tarantula_?”
-
-“I don’t know,” replied Ned.
-
-“Well, hurry your story,” exclaimed Jack. “We must go to their rescue
-wherever they are!”
-
-“Captain Andrews lost no time in ordering me to the wireless,” continued
-Ned hastily, “and as we steamed northward I kept pumping away at my key.
-At length, as you know, I got into communication with you. But as I did
-so there was a sharp and sudden shock through the _Sea King_, and she
-came to an abrupt stop. That shaft had parted again. There was nothing
-for us to do but to anchor. At almost the same time one of the crew
-shouted that a craft resembling the _Tarantula_ was on the southern
-horizon and overhauling us fast. It didn’t need a second look to show us
-that the strange vessel was indeed the _Tarantula_. As she drew close to
-us there was a flash and a puff of smoke from her bow, and ‘crash!’ our
-aerials parted,—shot through at the foremast.
-
-“There we were, crippled and helpless, and I didn’t even know for sure
-if my message to you was clear or no.”
-
-“One question,” put in Jack, “has the _Tarantula_ a wireless?”
-
-“Yes; I meant to tell you about that. She is fitted with a collapsible
-military mast, and, from what we overheard, Herrera has a complete plant
-at his plantation ashore likewise.”
-
-“That disposes of X. Y. Z.,” said Jack, glancing at Tom. “It’s plain
-enough now that some one ashore intercepted our message, just as we
-caught theirs, and flashed it to Herrera.”
-
-“Guess you’re right,” agreed Tom gloomily, “and we are responsible for
-giving away the exact location of the _Sea King_.”
-
-“How’s that?” asked Ned, in a wondering tone.
-
-“I’ll explain all about it later,” said Jack, “the thing is now to
-formulate some sort of plan to get out of this tangle. Is Captain
-Andrews or Chief MacDuffy about?”
-
-“MacDuffy is below, trying to fix the break in the shaft,” was the
-response. “Captain Andrews is asleep in his cabin. He was worn out, and
-I didn’t wake him when our rocket signals were answered by you.”
-
-“Well, I think we’d better rouse him now,” Jack was beginning, when the
-cabin door was flung open and a sailor, whose face was chalky beneath
-his tan, burst in. The group at the table looked up, startled and alert.
-Ned’s narration had taken almost an hour, and although they had not
-forgotten the dangerous proximity of the _Tarantula_, they had had no
-way of guessing in what way their enemy would next become active.
-
-“That yaller-faced Greaser’s craft is bearing down on us. Mister Bangs!”
-exclaimed the man. “She looks as if——”
-
-There was a sharp crash overhead, and the booming detonation of a gun
-resounded an instant later. The boys sprang to their feet and scrambled
-up the companion way, headed for the deck.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX—THE CHADWICK GAS GUNS
-
-
-As they went Jack flashed a swift word to Ned.
-
-“You say that the chests my father took such care of are still in the
-cabin?”
-
-“Yes; in the Professor’s stateroom.”
-
-“Good. I’ve a notion they contain something that may prove valuable to
-us right now. Open them up and see if one of them contains some
-queer-looking guns. If it does, bring the weapons on deck right away,
-and—summon Captain Andrews.”
-
-Ned retraced his steps and Jack ran swiftly up after Tom. On deck they
-found the sailors running about distractedly. The shot they had heard
-had carried away part of the foremast of the _Sea King_. The wreckage
-lay in a tangle, about which the seamen hovered confusedly.
-
-While the boys still stood regarding the scene, hardly knowing for the
-moment what to do, a stoutly-built man, with an overcoat hastily thrown
-on over a suit of pajamas, joined them. It was Captain Andrews. The
-light from the incandescents fell on his bronzed, blonde-bearded face,
-and Jack felt, as he clasped the newcomer’s hand, that here was a man
-who could be relied on to the last ditch.
-
-“Ned Bangs told me I would find you here,” he said. “I hastened on deck
-right away. I should have been out and about long ago; but——”
-
-“That’s all right, captain,” spoke Jack swiftly, “you had earned your
-rest and no mistake. The thing is, what are we going to do now?”
-
-“The rascal Herrera has attacked us, Ned told me.”
-
-“Yes. His craft is in the offing now. He has shot away part of the
-foremast. The riding-light on it must have acted as a target for him.”
-
-As the lad spoke a voice came cut of the darkness:
-
-“We want that silver casket. Are you going to give it up peaceably, or
-do we have to blow your vessel out of the water?”
-
-“You infernal scoundrels!” shouted Andrews, before Jack could check him.
-
-The captain bounded forward to a machine gun. With quick, nervous
-fingers he was ripping off its cover when Jack laid a hand on his arm.
-
-“Hold on a minute, captain,” he said, “I’ve another plan. We shall know
-in a few seconds now if it will succeed.”
-
-The captain looked at him wonderingly.
-
-“They outnumber and outarm us,” he began. But Jack broke in:
-
-“I’ve an idea that one of those chests in my father’s cabin contains
-some novel weapons,” he said, “a new kind of gun, the invention of Tom
-and myself. They contain a magazine of shells loaded with a gas which
-will paralyze any form of animal life with which they come in contact.”
-
-The captain gasped.
-
-“Well,” he said, “I’d heard that you kids were inventive wonders, but
-this——”
-
-“Oh, we didn’t invent the gas,” interposed Tom, who had been an
-interested listener to Jack’s last words, “Professor Chadwick did that.
-But we applied it to use in the guns.”
-
-“And they work?”
-
-“Well, we’ve tried them on rabbits and small game, and brought down
-whatever we aimed at. You see, the shells are loaded with this gas in a
-semi-solid form. When the gun is fired a fuse is lighted, which releases
-the gases, and they fill the atmosphere, surrounding anything they
-strike with a vapor that causes temporary helplessness.”
-
-As Jack spoke there came another hail out of the darkness.
-
-“We are waiting. Resistance is useless. We know you have that casket
-with you. What is your answer?”
-
-“Will you give us a few moments to consider?” shouted back Jack.
-
-A pause followed.
-
-“I wonder how on earth they know that Ned and the rest secured the
-casket?” wondered Tom.
-
-This was a poser. It was not till long afterward that they found out
-that, following the discovery of their escape from the _Tarantula_, a
-sailor had noticed the severed string hanging from the porthole of the
-Professor’s cabin prison. Herrera’s keen mind at once guessed the
-purpose it had served, and also surmised that the casket must be very
-valuable. Professor Chadwick, on being questioned, admitted,—thinking of
-course that the _Sea King_ was by that time out of danger of
-pursuit,—the manner in which he had tricked the Mexican and the contents
-of the box.
-
-Suddenly, out of the darkness, ranged the ghostly outlines of _El
-Tarantula_. Hardly twenty-five yards separated her from the _Sea King_.
-She was moving slowly, far below her usual swift motion. Her dash from
-the mainland had resulted in overheated engines, which accounted for the
-space of time those on board the _Sea King_ had been free from her
-presence.
-
-“We’ll give you five minutes and no more,” came a voice from her
-midships.
-
-“Good,” murmured Jack, as he heard the terms of the armistice, “that
-ought to be plenty of time and—Oh, glory be!”
-
-Ned had come on deck while the young leader was speaking. In his arms he
-carried a collection of as strange-looking weapons as were ever seen
-outside of a museum. Yet they represented a type of gun destined to
-become famous.
-
-“Hurray!” muttered Tom under his breath, “they’re the gas-guns, sure
-enough.”
-
-While Captain Andrews’ eyes fairly bulged. Jack took one of the guns.
-They were of a dull colored metal, allowing no light to glint from any
-bright surfaces. A barrel about three and a half feet in length,
-terminated in a cylinder of greater diameter than the barrel itself.
-This was a muffler, which effectually silenced the sound of the spring
-that was used to send the gas globes on their way and snap the fuses.
-The stocks of these odd firearms, if such they could be called, were
-large, and contained sixteen “gas globes”—spheres of a tough and
-glutinous kind of gelatine, filled with the destructive gas—a compound
-of ammonium nitrate,—in a semi-liquid form.
-
-“How do you fire them?” asked Captain Andrews.
-
-“Handle them just as you would an ordinary gun,” rejoined Jack. “The
-globes will burst when they strike the _Tarantula_ and spread the gas
-they contain broadcast. Luckily, the craft is to leeward of us, or we
-might be in danger of getting a dose of our own medicine when the gas
-globes detonate.”
-
-“Will the gas kill them?” asked Captain Andrews, in such a vindictive
-tone that Jack couldn’t help smiling.
-
-“Hardly,” he said; “but it will take the fight out of them for a while,
-I imagine.”
-
-Acting under the lad’s instructions. Captain Andrews summoned some of
-the interested sailors to him. There were twelve of the guns “and a
-chest full of ammunition below,” whispered Ned.
-
-Eight of the men were given a gas-gun each. Their faces expanded in
-grins as they learned the nature of the novel weapons.
-
-“First time I ever heard of knocking a feller out with a gas pill,” said
-one of them in an undertone.
-
-The serving out of the gas-guns had hardly been completed when the voice
-from the _Tarantula_ hailed them again:
-
-“Five minutes is up,” it said; “we’re going to board you.”
-
-At the same instant the _Tarantula_ began to range in alongside.
-Evidently those on board her did not fear resistance, for as she drew
-closer her decks blazed with light, and those on board the _Sea King_
-could see that her machine guns were trained full on the yacht.
-
-Under Jack’s orders the armed portion of the _Sea King’s_ company had
-dropped behind the bulwarks, aiming their guns through scupper holes.
-Thus, of course, all that was revealed to the enemy was a group of
-flurried-looking sailors standing about the wreckage of the mast
-forward. Hardly ten yards separated the two vessels when Jack gave the
-whispered command: “Fire!”
-
-What followed, so Tom described it afterward to the author, “was like
-watching a moving picture.”
-
-There was no sound as the triggers on the gas-guns were pulled, but as
-the collapsible globes struck the _Tarantula’s_ decks and superstructure
-and burst with a soft, pattering sound, her crew began to roll about
-like drunken men.
-
-As the stupefying vapors impregnated the air with their fumes, one after
-another the men began to drop like flies. The resistance of the stoutest
-didn’t endure for more than a space of five minutes. Herrera himself,
-the last to succumb, fell beside the wheel house as he was shouting at
-the helmsman to withdraw from the infected air.
-
-The young inventors’ wonderful gas-guns had received their first real
-test, and had surely not been found wanting in efficiency. The
-_Tarantula_, a few moments since the scene of feverish activity, now lay
-a drifting hulk. Her engines were still slowly revolving, but there was
-no hand to govern them. Several of the gas globes had been aimed at the
-engine-room hatches, which were open. Deflecting thence they had burst
-into the machinery space, stupefying the force at work there.
-
-The victory was complete and sweeping.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X—DRAWING A RASCAL’S FANGS
-
-
-“Well, what next?”
-
-It was Tom who spoke, and his voice broke the spell that had held all
-hands as they gazed at the silent craft drifting away from them into the
-darkness.
-
-“We must overhaul the _Tarantula_ and set my father and yours free, Tom,
-if they are still there,” came from Jack.
-
-“A good suggestion; but how are we to do it?” inquired Captain Andrews,
-who was not aware of the readiness of the _Vagrant_ to be placed in
-active service at once.
-
-“We’ll board the _Vagrant_. At the pace that spider-craft is going it
-won’t take long to lay alongside her,” decided Jack.
-
-Before many minutes had passed Jack, Tom Jesson and Ned were on board
-the _Vagrant_. Jupe, much against his wishes, was left behind on the
-_Sea King_.
-
-“Ah’d hev liked jes ter hev one good, big kick at dat Mexican tamale,”
-he argued; but it was decided to go without him.
-
-The _Vagrant’s_ engines, despite the recent strain placed on them, were
-found to be working perfectly. Amidst a shower of good wishes from those
-left on board the _Sea King_, she moved off into the darkness in pursuit
-of their recently vindictive enemy. As Jack had foretold, it did not
-take long to overhaul the craft with which Herrera had hoped to
-intimidate those on board Professor Chadwick’s yacht.
-
-It gave the boys a somewhat uncanny sensation as they stole silently
-alongside the slowly moving _Tarantula_, and then made fast by throwing
-a grappling iron on her decks. This feeling was not changed when,
-clambering on board, they gazed on the decks strewn with senseless
-forms, lying as they had fallen. They appeared to be wrapped in deep,
-dreamless slumber. The gas had operated on them much as if they had been
-patients in a hospital under the influence of an anæsthetic.
-
-Stopping only to make sure that all on board were dead to outward
-impressions for an hour at least,—after which time Jack calculated they
-would begin to stir,—the trio of lads made no more delay about seeking
-out the stern cabins, in which, they believed. Professor Chadwick and
-the rest were confined.
-
-Jack was the first to make the alarming discovery that the staterooms
-which had been the scene of their captivity were empty.
-
-It was a bitter pill to swallow indeed. The boys, perhaps despite their
-better judgment, had confidently calculated on finding and delivering
-their friends. Now, however, it appeared that they were as far from
-accomplishing this as ever.
-
-“There’s only one conclusion to draw,” said Jack at length. “Herrera,
-for reasons best known to himself, has left them some place ashore.”
-
-“Unless he——” began Ned, but Jack cut him short.
-
-“I guess even Herrera wouldn’t dare to go much further than that,” he
-declared stoutly, “the question now is,—where has he left them?”
-
-“Judging from the speed with which he overtook the _Sea King_ he could
-not have proceeded far from the spot where we first encountered the
-_Tarantula_,” decided Ned, “according to my ideas then, our friends have
-most probably been set ashore on his plantation.”
-
-“Cracky! I believe you are right, Ned,” cried Tom in a jubilant tone.
-
-His voice became more sober the next minute, though.
-
-“In that case they will be under a strong guard,” he added despondently.
-
-“I don’t see that that follows,” struck in Jack. “I’ve just been
-thinking that Herrera, judging from his large crew, must have most of
-his fighting men right here on board the _Tarantula_. In such a case,
-the ones left at the plantation can’t be much more formidable than those
-slaves Ned told us about a while back.”
-
-“That does sound reasonable,” assented Tom, “so then it will be our best
-plan to make for the coast at once. Do you think you could find the
-mouth of that river again, Ned?”
-
-“Captain Andrews has its exact bearings,” rejoined the “wireless” lad.
-“I guess we could pick it up with no more trouble than we’d have in
-making any other port.”
-
-“That sounds good,” gleefully exclaimed Jack. “I reckon it will be our
-best plan of action, too.”
-
-“More especially as Herrera and company are going to have bad headaches
-when they do wake up, and will take some time to get their wits
-together,” said Tom with a grin. “By that time, if all goes well, we
-ought to have secured the freedom of our party.”
-
-“Jove! But there’s one thing we were almost forgetting,” cried Ned
-suddenly.
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-The question proceeded from Tom.
-
-“This craft has wireless. When the bunch comes back to life they can
-flash a message to the plantation telling them to be on the lookout for
-us. That is, if they guess where we’ve gone, and there isn’t much doubt
-that they will.”
-
-“Right you are, Ned Bangs,” agreed Jack; “but I guess with what we know
-about wireless it won’t take over and above long to fix the
-_Tarantula’s_ apparatus so that it won’t be any more good than a bunch
-of junk.”
-
-“Seems a shame,” commented Tom.
-
-Jack and Ned stared at him.
-
-“Yes, and it would have been a shame if Herrera had sent the _Sea King_
-to the bottom, as he fully intended to do,” indignantly exclaimed the
-latter. “I don’t see where he comes in to be entitled to any more
-consideration than a rattlesnake.”
-
-“No more do I,” assented Jack. “Come on, let’s find the wireless room of
-this craft and get busy with it.”
-
-It took but a few minutes to locate the wireless room of the speedy
-gunboat. It took still less time for Jack to sever the wires and render
-the condensers and helix useless.
-
-“There,” he said, with a deep breath, as he concluded his task, “I guess
-it will be quite a while before any messages can be flashed from this
-craft.”
-
-“Unless they have extra apparatus on board,” came from Tom.
-
-“Gee whiz! That didn’t occur to me. Wonder if they have?”
-
-“Well, we can’t waste time looking for it,” struck in Ned. “You said the
-effects of that gas would wear off in about an hour, didn’t you. Jack?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then I suggest we get a move on.”
-
-“Right you are,” agreed Jack, and then, looking around for Tom, he
-missed him. The lad had slipped silently out of the place.
-
-“What can have become of him?” gasped Jack, somewhat astounded at Tom’s
-quick disappearance act.
-
-It was not till they emerged on deck a few seconds later that they heard
-sounds from the engine-room, and presently Tom showed up. He had a
-wrench in his hand, and bore a well-satisfied grin on his round face.
-
-“What on earth have you been up to?” asked Jack.
-
-“I’ve been administering much the same treatment to the engines of this
-craft that you have to the wireless,” chuckled Tom. “Gee whillikers!
-what an astonished outfit of tamale-eaters there’s going to be on this
-ship when they come to life!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI—THE “FLYING ROAD RACER”
-
-
-Leaving the _Tarantula_ to drift at her sweet will, all haste was made
-by the youthful adventurers in regaining the side of the _Sea King_.
-When they reascended to the deck of that craft, after making fast the
-_Vagrant_, they found a newcomer among the crew to greet them,—namely,
-MacDuffy, the engineer, who announced that he had made temporary
-repairs.
-
-“But they willna be lastin’ lang, I’m thinkin’,” he said ruefully, “I
-dinna ken if they will carry us a hundred miles.”
-
-“And it’s a good three hundred or more back to that river mouth,” cried
-Ned in dismay.
-
-“Aye, lad, it wull be all of that,” agreed the Scotchman.
-
-A sudden idea struck Jack.
-
-“Is there any one on board who understands wireless besides Ned Bangs?”
-he asked abruptly.
-
-Sam Serviss, a youngish-looking seaman,—he was third officer of the _Sea
-King_,—stepped forward.
-
-“I can read Morse and Continental,” he said simply, “and I’ve taken
-lessons from Ned Bangs here. I guess at a pinch I could operate a
-wireless all right.”
-
-“Good. That puts my plan on a feasible basis,” exclaimed Jack.
-
-“What may the plan be?” asked Captain Andrews interestedly.
-
-“Just this: The _Sea King_ will proceed to Lone Island, navigated by Mr.
-Serviss here. On the island, as you know, is a wireless plant. The
-generator is not a very powerful one, but you can harness the island
-apparatus to the generators of the _Sea King_, and obtain as much
-current as you want,—two kilowatts if necessary. I have a plan to
-increase the power of the _Vagrant’s_ outfit, so that we can keep in
-touch with you.”
-
-Captain Andrews and MacDuffy nodded. Jack went on, while they all
-listened with deep attention.
-
-“The _Sea King_ carries a gasolene launch. On arrival at Lone Island you
-can try to get into communication with us. In the meantime the launch
-can be despatched to Galveston for the supplies and tools needful to
-mend that shaft properly. This being done, Mr. Serviss will watch the
-wireless for further instructions, or, in case of need, proceed to our
-rescue.”
-
-“Then you mean to go back to Yucatan the noo?” inquired MacDuffy.
-
-“Of course,” rejoined Jack, quick as a flash, and in a tone that showed
-he had indeed arrived at a definite conclusion in the matter. “It’s my
-duty and Tom’s to rescue our relatives, and that as soon as possible.”
-
-“And you’ll no be countin’ on taking me?” asked MacDuffy, rather
-piteously.
-
-Jack shook his head.
-
-“The capacity of the _Vagrant_ is limited, Mr. MacDuffy,” he said, “and
-we may have to adopt another means of transportation before we get
-through—I mean the aero-auto.”
-
-“Good. The very thing,” was Ned’s enthusiastic comment.
-
-“I guess Captain Andrews, Tom, Ned, Jupe and myself will be a big enough
-force to take along,” went on Jack; “of course, we’ll carry the gas-guns
-and a supply of ordinary firearms and ammunition.”
-
-The boy’s plans were so clear and well-defined that there was no
-opposition. By this time the sky was streaked with gray and rose color
-in the east, and a wan light overspread the sea. It showed them the
-faint and distant outlines of the _Tarantula_, drifting seaward in the
-clutch of some strong ocean current. Evidently, then, they had nothing
-to fear from that source.
-
-The work of hoisting the aero-auto from its well on the _Sea King_, and
-transferring the odd land-and-air traveler to the _Vagrant_ was set
-about at once. Blocks and tackles were reeved on the derrick boom of the
-after mast of the _Sea King_, and with wondrously little effort, the
-vehicle the Boy Inventors had evolved was transferred to the flush after
-deck of the _Vagrant_, where it was lashed in place, the ropes that
-bound it being affixed to ringbolts on the deck.
-
-The Flying Road Racer must be described in some detail here, as it is
-destined to figure largely in after events of the Boy Inventors’ lives.
-The auto part of the wonderful machine, then, was a cigar-shaped affair
-of aluminum, with four wheels of the “disc” type. It was fitted much
-like an ordinary auto, with padded seats in front and in the tonneau,
-equipped with shock absorbers, and was twelve feet in length.
-
-In the front of the car the engine, a hundred horse-power,
-eight-cylinder, four-cycle machine, was installed. The controls led to
-the steering wheel, just as is the case in ordinary cars. The crank
-shaft, however, projected through the front of the car, and was provided
-with a slotted terminal, by means of which an eight-foot aerial
-propeller, carried in sections in the car itself, might be affixed at
-will.
-
-Above the main body of the car was a light, but strong, framework
-supporting a balloon bag,—also cigar-shaped, and of the finest oiled
-silk,—of a capacity of about fifty thousand cubic feet of gas, and with
-a theoretical lifting power of forty-five hundred pounds. The method of
-inflating this bag at will, and thus converting the auto into a
-practicable dirigible, was the most startling innovation about the
-invention.
-
-The body of the car, as has been said, was cylindrical, with sharp ends,
-like a mammoth perfecto cigar. This cylinder was divided in half,
-longitudinally, by a floor of aluminum alloy. The entire lower chamber
-thus formed was a big generating tank for a gas having a lifting
-capacity exceeding hydrogen vapor by a ratio of three to one. This gas
-was generated from brownish crystals formed of a compound of
-hydrogen-saturated alum and another chemical akin to radium, which the
-boys, for the present, kept a close secret.
-
-Two pounds of these crystals, when forty gallons of water were added to
-them, formed close to sixty thousand cubic feet of the powerful
-inflation gas. One hundred pounds of the crystals were carried in a
-special compartment of the aero-auto, and constituted an ample supply
-for all emergencies. To inflate the bag, then, all that had to be done
-was to unbolt a metal hand-hole in the floor of the front section of the
-car. Through this the crystals were dumped into the tank beneath and the
-water added. The opening of the generator was then closed and clamped
-down tight, hermetically sealing the tank. The gas, under compression,
-was explosive, and was utilized to run the motor as well as for
-inflation purposes.
-
-Immediately in front of the operator of the car was a gauge showing at
-all times the pressure in the tank, and when the gas bag was in
-operation the amount of gas in that also was indicated. When sufficient
-gas was generated, the operator turned a valve and the gas from the tank
-instantly began rushing into the bag carried on the framework above him.
-The bag was so folded that it inflated without necessitating much
-attention. Three broad bands of rubberized fabric of great strength
-encircled the gas bag proper.
-
-To these were attached wires of a tensile strength exceeding anything
-hitherto known. The other ends of the wires, of course, were fastened to
-the body of the aero-auto, so that when the bag was sufficiently buoyant
-the entire car and its occupants were borne aloft. By means of an
-exhaust pump connected with the motor, the volume of gas could be
-reduced at will, causing the entire aero-auto to sink at the pleasure of
-those directing the machine.
-
-“Astern” of this wonderful invention was a rudder of vulcanized silk and
-vanadium steel framework, which, when the invention was in use as a land
-vehicle, was folded. When it was desired to take the air the release of
-a simple clutch caused the rudder to assume its proper position. At the
-same time, two long planes could be attached to the sides of the car, to
-be used in ascending or descending. The machine had two steering and
-governing devices. One wheel was used for the auto control, and another
-“tiller” was put in use when it was soaring through the air. The control
-of the aerial rudder, planes and engine, all centered in this second
-wheel, thus putting the craft, at all times, under one man—or
-boy—management. In conclusion, it may be mentioned that the craft was
-equipped with speedometer, barometer, barograph and patent self-starting
-devices, doing away with the old-fashioned “cranking” of the engine. The
-wheels were fitted with semi-solid tires of great size and strength, and
-the shock-absorbers before mentioned obviated any danger of a severe jar
-or jounce on landing. The machine had been given several trials at High
-Towers and had been found to work perfectly.
-
-It is not necessary here to give a description of the loading of the
-aero-auto, the leave takings, and the final instructions and messages
-that passed between the _Vagrant_ and the _Sea King_. Suffice it to say,
-that at eight o’clock that morning all preparations on both sides were
-completed and that at eight-ten precisely the two vessels parted
-company. The _Sea King_ steamed northward slowly, bound for Lone Island,
-and the _Vagrant_ headed for the mouth of the river on which the
-plantations of the rascally Mexican were situated. At that time the
-_Tarantula_ had drifted out of the adventurers’ ken altogether, over the
-eastern horizon.
-
-Leaving Captain Andrews and Jupe in charge of the _Vagrant_, the lads,
-thoroughly exhausted now that the strain and care of the long night were
-over, sought their bunks and were soon wrapped in slumber. In their
-dreams they flew high above the plateaus and rugged ranges of the
-mysterious land for which they were bound, questing the unknown in
-search of the lost ones.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII—HERRERA IS NOT CAUGHT NAPPING
-
-
-It was noon of the next day when Captain Andrews announced that they
-were still some two hundred miles from their destination. But, as the
-boys were all three of them busy over the aero-auto, adjusting and
-examining every part of the queer craft, the time flew swiftly. The dawn
-of the third day found them anchored off the jungle-clad coast, while
-not a mile from them the waves were breaking on the bar that marked the
-mouth of the shallow river, which, they subsequently learned, was called
-the Apak.
-
-It would be two hours, so Captain Andrews calculated, before the tide
-turned and made the passage of the bar possible. In the meantime. Jack
-brought on deck the silver chest, which he had, of course, taken
-possession of, pending the time when he could deliver it to his father.
-The adventurers spread the three blazing gems it contained out on the
-deck, and revelled in the glow of light and wonderful inward fires the
-precious stones revealed as the bright sunlight played upon them.
-
-The _Vagrant_ had once been used as a passenger craft at Galveston, and
-her former owners had installed an iron safe in the cabin for the
-protection of valuables. In this receptacle Jack replaced the silver
-casket after they had examined the gems to their hearts content.
-
-By this time Captain Andrews was ready to pronounce the crossing of the
-bar at the river mouth feasible. The tide had risen till the tempestuous
-breakers had subsided into long swells, with a narrow passage of smooth
-water marking the channel. Carefully following this, the skipper of the
-_Sea King_ piloted the _Vagrant_ through into the calm water of the
-estuary beyond.
-
-The boys, grouped forward, gazing at the surroundings with eager eyes,
-beheld a scene full of wild, tropic beauty. The white beach, blazingly
-radiant in the strong light, was bordered by a dense jungle of dark,
-melancholy looking mangroves. Beyond these came a tangle of brilliantly
-green jungle, in which the broad fronds of the banana plant
-predominated, while here and there a tall palm reared its feathery head.
-
-Further back still the foliage changed again. Lordly groves of mahogany
-trees, rosewood, and giant royal palms raised their crests. In the
-distant background, far withdrawn, the misty blue outlines of a range of
-majestic, rugged-looking mountains showed against the steely blue sky.
-They looked as if they were hundreds of miles off at least; but Captain
-Andrews explained that the distance from the shore to the foothills was
-not so considerable, by a great deal, as it looked. The condition of the
-atmosphere, laden with the moisture of the lowlands, lent them this
-appearance of tremendous remoteness.
-
-“It is in those mountains,” said Captain Andrews, “that the remnants of
-the most ancient of the Maya tribes still live. They tell stories up the
-coast, in the civilized portions of Yucatan, about vast ruins and
-remains of splendid cities to be found back there.”
-
-The boys gazed up at him as he stood at the wheel. A magic world of
-romance and adventure seemed suddenly opened before them by his words.
-
-“I recall reading once,” said Tom, the studious, “that the Mayas were
-civilized long before the Aztecs or Toltecs, and that their knowledge of
-the building arts exceeded that of either of those races.”
-
-“Sort of pioneer real-estate men,” chuckled Ned Bangs, who in moments
-when he was not oppressed by trouble, as he had been recently, possessed
-a whimsical vein of humor.
-
-“Ho! ho! ho! ah reckon dat’s right, Marse Ned,” roared Jupe, opening his
-big lips and exposing his ivories.
-
-“Has any one ever penetrated into their country?” went on Tom,
-addressing Captain Andrews.
-
-“I guess your father went as far as anybody,” was the response, “and you
-know how far he got. I have heard that the remnants of the ancient
-tribes have a law, making it death for the man who dares to advance into
-their territory.”
-
-“But the natives that caught you didn’t seem disposed to kill you,”
-objected Jack.
-
-“Oh, those fellows; they are of the inferior coast tribes,” was the
-rejoinder. “The ancient races regarded them as dirt under their feet. I
-guess they don’t know any more about the interior of those mountains
-than we do.”
-
-The current of the river, discolored and yellow from the recent
-earthquake back in the foothills, was so swift as they ascended that
-Captain Andrews found no opportunity for further talk. It required all
-his attention to keep the _Vagrant’s_ bow pointed upstream. The river
-narrowed considerably after passing its mouth. Its turbid current rolled
-seaward between two low and densely wooded banks, not more than sixty
-feet apart.
-
-“How far is it to the spot where that craft of Herrera’s was moored?”
-asked Jack, when he found an opportunity.
-
-“Fully fifteen or twenty miles, I should say,” was the response, “and if
-we are making two miles an hour against this current we are doing well.
-This river runs mighty near as fast as the Lachine Rapids back home.”
-
-“You’re not far out on that, Cap,” remarked the volatile Ned Bang’s, who
-had quite recovered his usual flow of spirits.
-
-The lad had not as much at stake as Jack and Tom, and, moreover, he did
-not quite realize the seriousness of the undertaking before them to the
-same extent that they did.
-
-Hour after hour they fought their way up the coffee-colored river. The
-character of the vegetation on the banks had begun to change by this
-time. Here and there stood a majestic clump of mahogany trees; but
-logwood, a valuable article of commerce in the dyeing industry, formed
-the major part of the growth. Once, as they rounded a bend, the flash of
-a lithe body was seen among the trees, as a beautifully spotted jaguar
-slunk away from the overhanging limb where it had been lying.
-
-“Let’s try the gas-guns on the next one we see,” suggested Tom, and the
-lads hastened below and returned armed with the odd weapons.
-
-An opportunity to use them soon presented itself. From a thick mass of
-brake there came a mighty squealing and grunting, as the _Vagrant_ came
-slowly around one of the numerous bends in the stream. All at once
-several small, bristly animals, like miniature pigs, dashed out with a
-mighty commotion.
-
-Three gas-guns flashed to three shoulders simultaneously. It was an odd
-and rather uncanny sight to behold an instant later, six little wild
-piggies lying with their toes turned up, “dead to the world,” as the
-slangy Ned Bangs put it.
-
-The boys were keen for going ashore and gathering in the victims of the
-ammonium nitrate compound. But Captain Andrews vetoed the proposal as
-impossible.
-
-“There’s hardly a foot of water in shore there,” he said, “it’s a case
-of ‘keep in de middle ob de road’ in this river.”
-
-Dinner was eaten at one o’clock. Jack “spelling” Captain Andrews at the
-wheel while the skipper partook of a hearty meal, after which he
-indulged in a nap while Tom, in his turn, relieved Jack.
-
-The latter was still below enjoying Jupe’s cookery, when there came a
-sudden hail from above:
-
-“Say, Jack, hurry up on deck, won’t you? There’s something odd about the
-water just ahead of us.”
-
-Ned it was who uttered the summons, poking his head down the companion
-way.
-
-Jack finished his meal in a jiffy, and was on deck in another two
-seconds. He found the _Vagrant’s_ nose still pointed up stream, but Tom,
-using the bridge controls, had slowed down the engines till the craft
-was almost stationary in the swift current.
-
-Right ahead of them lay the cause of Jack’s abrupt summons to the deck.
-
-A chain, composed of huge iron links, was stretched from bank to bank of
-the river, effectually barring further progress.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII—A DARING PLAN
-
-
-“Well,” said Jack, after a moment spent in surveying the obstruction,
-“we might have expected something like that. The question is, what are
-we going to do?”
-
-“We might land and remove it,” hazarded Ned.
-
-But Jack shook his head.
-
-“Jupe, go below and call Captain Andrews,” he said, in as calm a voice
-as he could muster. “We won’t risk landing and trying to lower the chain
-for two reasons. One is, that Herrera, having been cunning enough to put
-up the barrier, is not likely to have left it unguarded. There may be
-hidden eyes watching us right now. The second reason is, that it has
-just occurred to me that a man who is playing the game he is, may have
-placed other more dangerous obstacles in our path.”
-
-“For instance?” came from Tom.
-
-“For instance,—mines.”
-
-“By the holy poker! That’s so,” exclaimed Ned, “I guess we’d better turn
-back and make our advance by land.”
-
-“Here’s Captain Andrews now,” struck in Tom, as the skipper of the _Sea
-King_ came on deck, hastily adjusting his white pith helmet.
-
-There was no need to tell that veteran seaman what had happened. He took
-in the situation at a glance.
-
-“It would have been funny if we hadn’t run up against something like
-this,” he remarked, almost in Jack’s words.
-
-“The point is,—what now?” said Tom.
-
-Captain Andrews agreed with Jack that it would be a foolish risk to land
-and try to remove the chain.
-
-“I’ve quite a notion that there are some rifles in that brush, all ready
-for use in case we try to proceed,” he said reflectively, “my advice is
-to drop back down stream and hold a council of war.”
-
-All agreed that this did seem about the only thing to do under the
-circumstances, and accordingly Tom handed the wheel over to the sailor
-while he went below to “stand by” the engines.
-
-In that muddy stream, with its sand banks and shoals, the maneuver they
-were going to try would call for some delicate seamanship and swift
-handling of the motor.
-
-Captain Andrews, with his lips grimly compressed, grasped the wheel and
-sounded a signal. Slowly the _Vagrant_, which had been “hanging”
-motionless, began to drop back with the current.
-
-“Too bad we can’t turn around,” complained Jack.
-
-“Wouldn’t dare to chance it,” rejoined the captain, “for all we know
-there may be a sandbank on either side of us right now.”
-
-A deathlike silence hung over the _Vagrant_ as she drifted stern first
-down the river. The wheel spun swiftly this way and that under the
-helmsman’s muscular direction.
-
-“She goes as well backward as she does forward,” Ned was beginning, when
-there came a sudden shock that almost threw them off their feet. Jupe,
-in fact, did fall sprawling on the bridge.
-
-At almost precisely the same instant a shower of bullets whizzed above
-them, singing a sinister song as they screeched about the motor craft.
-Dense brush lined the banks, and the shooters were well concealed in it.
-Not even a puff of smoke betrayed their exact whereabouts.
-
-And, while this hailstorm of lead whistled about the adventurers, they
-realized all too clearly that the _Vagrant_ had run hard and fast on one
-of the very sandbanks the captain had dreaded. One thing, however,
-speedily became evident, and that was that the bullets had not harmed
-them, because they were not intended to—yet. The shower of lead was
-aimed high above their heads. Presently it ceased altogether.
-
-“That was a warning,” decided Captain Andrews. “Boys, your folks are
-certainly surrounded by a barb-wire fence.”
-
-The lads did not answer. But as they sensed the nature of the obstacles
-that were piling up in the way of their enterprise, a look of
-consternation came over their faces. “The Chadwick Relief Expedition,”
-as they had christened it, appeared to have run up against a stone wall.
-
-“I guess we are not in any danger of another fusillade if we stay where
-we are, or keep on dropping back,” said Captain Andrews after an
-interval of thought, “but if we try to keep on going we’ve had a sample
-of what to expect.”
-
-The boys could not but agree with him. At length Jack spoke.
-
-“Hadn’t we better try to get the _Vagrant_ off whatever we’ve struck?”
-he said. “I’ve got a plan in my head in that case; but I don’t think
-this is the healthiest place to discuss it.”
-
-“We can put out a light anchor and try to warp off,” said Captain
-Andrews.
-
-It was agreed to try this plan for rescuing the _Vagrant_ from her
-uncomfortable berth. The dinghy was lowered and manned by Jack and Tom,
-who took with them the light anchor which was attached to two hundred
-feet of line. A hundred feet down stream they dropped the mud-hook, and
-then rowed back to the _Vagrant_.
-
-When they were once more on board the winch was manned and, to their
-delight, as the rope tightened the _Vagrant’s_ stern began to swing.
-
-“Keep at it, lads,” cried Captain Andrews to the perspiring laborers,
-“if that anchor will only hold I believe we can get off.”
-
-The anchor did hold, and after ten minutes more of back-breaking work
-the craft’s bow slid out of the mud bank with a sucking sound, and she
-was once more free. The anchor was hauled on board, and, without further
-mishap, the _Vagrant_ was set once more on her down-stream course.
-
-The first attempt of the courageous little band to rescue their comrades
-had met with a rather ignominious failure. Captain Andrews said as much
-that evening, as they found themselves anchored near the mouth of the
-river they had fruitlessly ascended with so much pains.
-
-The skipper voiced this opinion after supper, while they sat on deck
-casting anxious eyes to seaward now and again, for the recollection of
-the _Tarantula_ was strong upon them. Above all things, they dreaded the
-reappearance of that drab-colored craft.
-
-“You said you had a plan, Jack,” said Tom, as the skipper disconsolately
-drew on his pipe, “Now’s the time to broach it. What is it?”
-
-“Just this,” was the simple reply, “we’ve got the aero-auto. It looks as
-if the time had come to use her.”
-
-“And leave the _Vagrant_ here to be destroyed when Herrera happens
-along?” demanded Tom.
-
-“That doesn’t follow. Did you notice that small creek almost overgrown
-with brush that branches off about a mile above here?”
-
-“Yes, lad,” came from Captain Andrews, whose tones gave evidence of his
-intense interest, “you’re planning to hide the _Vagrant_ there till we
-come back again?”
-
-“You’ve caught my idea exactly,” said the lad. “What do you think of
-it?”
-
-“That it’s a dumb-gasted good one, and that I, for one, am willing to
-risk my neck in that flying automobubble of yours any time you say the
-word.”
-
-“Then I say it right now,” shot out Jack, with flashing eyes. “We can’t
-ascend this river by water; we’ll try the air route.”
-
-It was while they were still buzzing with the enthusiasm that Jack’s
-fiery words had created that Tom uttered a sharp exclamation.
-
-“Jupiter!” he exclaimed, pointing seaward. “Look yonder. We’re not
-playing a lone hand in this thing now.”
-
-Some distance off apparently, but rushing across the water at a swift
-pace, was a bright white gleam,—the light of a vessel approaching the
-bar at top speed.
-
-“The _Tarantula_, for all I’m worth!” exploded Captain Andrews.
-“Confound her, why couldn’t she have kept her hands off for twelve hours
-longer?”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV—A MESSAGE FROM THE AIR
-
-
-Fortunately, there was no ray of light visible about the _Vagrant_. The
-incandescents had been switched off in every part of her, with the
-exception of the engine room. In this compartment Tom, by some
-inspiration, had closed the deadlights, and therefore not a gleam of
-light leaked out to betray the whereabouts of the craft.
-
-“Do you think the _Tarantula_ will cross the bar to-night?” asked Jack
-presently.
-
-“I don’t imagine so,” was the rejoinder. “They wouldn’t be idiots enough
-to take such a chance as that on this tide. No, if you ask me, we’ve got
-the night ahead of us till the first streak of daylight.”
-
-“Good enough,” said Jack, with much inward satisfaction; “and now, I’ve
-been thinking, it wouldn’t be a bad idea for me to keep watch by the
-wireless. It’s likely enough that Herrera will try to send a message to
-his plantation up the river, provided he’s managed to get his apparatus
-repaired.”
-
-“I’ve been thinking that, too,” said Tom. “I’ll go below and start up
-the generator.”
-
-“You might as well,” said Jack, “although I don’t think that we’ll send
-out any messages to-night. Our job is to catch what we can from the
-air.”
-
-While Tom hastened to the engine-room to start up the dynamo. Jack made
-his way to the cabin, accompanied by Ned Bangs. Captain Andrews and Jupe
-remained on watch on deck.
-
-Seating himself at the wireless table. Jack adjusted the head band,
-placed the receivers at his ears, and then threw the switch for
-receiving. Ned, in the meantime, had run up the wireless mast with its
-slender antennæ, or aerials.
-
-This done, Ned rejoined his chum, seating himself beside him. After an
-interval he spoke.
-
-“Anything yet?”
-
-“No; silent as the grave. Suppose you go on deck and see what Captain
-Andrews and Jupe have observed.”
-
-Ned was back from his errand in a short space of time. His face bore a
-well-pleased grin, as Jack could see in the light of the solitary
-incandescent which illumined the cabin, the shades having, of course,
-been drawn across the portholes before it was switched on.
-
-“Well?” questioned Jack.
-
-“Well,” echoed Ned, “everything is going famously. The light stopped
-moving outside the bar, and presently Captain Andrews heard the rattle
-of her anchor chains as she let go her mud-hooks. Everything has been
-quiet since.”
-
-“Too quiet. I wish——”
-
-Jack broke off suddenly, holding up a hand to Ned to command silence.
-Out of space the electric waves were beginning to break against the
-aerials above. The _Tarantula_ was talking to some one on shore in a
-rapid stream of dots and dashes. Jack’s hand flew across the recording
-pad. As before, the paper was soon covered with figures—the code which
-Tom had exploded.
-
-After half an hour, during which his hand had frequently sought the
-tuning apparatus. Jack’s labors ceased; but his face bore a radiant
-expression.
-
-“The message had a lot in it about us, and my father and the rest,” he
-said. “They did not codify our names, but spelled them right out. That’s
-how I know. They——”
-
-“Hadn’t you better listen in case there’s any more coming?” asked Ned.
-
-“No; they’re through for to-night. They exchanged the good-bye signal.
-Now to find Tom and get him to translate this jumble of figures.”
-
-But Tom, after expending a lot of fruitless labor on the papers,
-declared he could make nothing of them.
-
-“Maybe they’ve changed the code, or maybe——”
-
-“They’ve been using Spanish this time,” exclaimed Jack, struck by a
-happy inspiration.
-
-“Cracky! I’ll bet that’s just what they have been doing,” cried Ned.
-“Say, fellows, you just copy out those messages while I get Captain
-Andrews below in two shakes of a duck’s tail.”
-
-He bounded off up the companion way, while Tom busily transcribed. So
-fast did he work that he had a lot of words written out when the skipper
-appeared.
-
-“So you’ve been catching something out of the air, have you?” he asked
-as he entered the cabin.
-
-“Yes; and I guess it’s important, too,” declared Jack, “but you’ll have
-to translate Tom’s notes. Captain, because it’s all in Spanish.”
-
-“That will be simple enough,” said Captain Andrews, sitting down and
-drawing toward him the scattered sheets which Tom had already rendered
-from the figures of the code.
-
-The veteran seaman began stolidly to con over the Spanish words, not all
-of which, owing to Tom’s unfamiliarity with the language, were written
-in correct form. But before long his composed attitude gave way to
-excitement.
-
-“Jove, lads!” he exclaimed, “this wireless is a wonderful thing. It’s
-tipped off that greaser’s hand to us in great shape. He——”
-
-“Wait till you get the whole message and then you can read it out to
-us,” suggested Jack.
-
-Both the sailor and Tom worked like beavers at their task, and ere long
-Captain Andrews leaned back in his chair and announced that he was ready
-to read the messages as he had translated them.
-
-As he had hinted, they caused a sensation. Herrera had wirelessed his
-plantation, and after a short interval had received a reply. He,—or,
-rather, his operator,—then proceeded to relate all that had occurred;
-and told,—the boys had to smile at this,—how the accursed gringos had
-tricked them by some sort of hypnotism!
-
-However, so the message ran on, the capable Senor Herrera had managed to
-rally his men on their recovery from the spell of witchcraft, and had
-speedily organized a force to repair the damaged machinery and wireless
-apparatus. This done, all speed had been made at once for the coast
-whither, as they guessed, the gringos had preceded them.
-
-“Well, Herrera’s, man ashore soon informed them on board the _Tarantula_
-that such was the case,” continued Captain Andrews, “and gave him a
-full, true and particular account of how they stopped us with that chain
-and that fusillade. He told Herrera that he had confined the gringos in
-one of the buildings used for the hemp crushers, and that they were as
-safe as if they were in a safe deposit vault. Friend Herrera then
-congratulated him on his astuteness, and said that he would run the bar
-first thing in the morning, only stopping, by the way, to blow the
-_Vagrant_ out of the water and send us all to Kingdom Come.”
-
-“Reckon he’s got another guess coming on that,” grinned Ned Bangs,
-looking at Jack.
-
-“I hope so,” said that lad; “but now that we are in possession of these
-facts it’s up to us to move quickly. Captain, do you think we can find
-that branch creek in the night?”
-
-“We’ve got to,” was the grim response, “if we don’t want to part with
-the good old _Vagrant_, and I’d hate to lose any ship I’ve trod the deck
-of.”
-
-“Then, let’s up anchor and get out of here,” said Jack.
-
-“Intercepting that wireless,” he went on, “has taken one great load off
-my mind. We know that those we are in search of are safe, and we know,
-in addition, that they are confined in one of the hemp-making
-buildings.”
-
-“And that’s a whole lot important to us right now,” supplemented Captain
-Andrews. “Whole campaigns have been won with less knowledge of the
-enemy’s country than we have.”
-
-They went on deck. Outside the bar a light showed where the _Tarantula_
-lay at anchor. Herrera must have been chuckling to himself at that very
-instant. According to his knowledge of the situation, he had his foes
-completely “bottled up.” All that remained for him to do was to capture
-them and attain possession; of the coveted precious stones at his
-leisure.
-
-While the Mexican was pondering such thoughts as these and nursing his
-revenge, the company of the _Vagrant_ were busy,—very busy.
-
-It was too risky a thing to chance making the noise that raising the
-anchor would have caused. So the cable was slashed and the engine
-started with the underwater exhaust in operation. Noiselessly the little
-craft glided up the stream and then turned her nose toward the bank. A
-break in the line of trees, showing against the star-sprinkled sky, gave
-the location of the creek mouth, and, feeling his way with the utmost
-caution, Captain Andrews drove his temporary command into it. It was
-driving, in a literal sense, for the brush and trees overhung the creek
-so densely that the _Vagrant_ had to push her way among them. When she
-had proceeded about a hundred yards up the stream she was masked from
-the view of the river with complete effectiveness.
-
-“Glory be!” sighed Jupe, in a voice of intense relief, when Captain
-Andrews ordered the second anchor “let go.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV—A DASH ALOFT
-
-
-“It will be safe enough to light up now, I guess,” announced Captain
-Andrews, when the anchorage had been accomplished. Jack had told him
-previously that they would need deck lights to work by when it was
-possible to use them without danger of detection.
-
-When the incandescents on the after deck were switched on the boys at
-once fell to work on their “Flying Road Racer,” as Jack and Tom had
-christened the craft. There was much to be done, and they worked
-quickly. The tank was supplied with crystals and water, and the gauge
-before long showed a pressure which the lads knew was sufficient to
-inflate the bag when occasion arose.
-
-This done. Jack determined to make a test of the engines. First, seeing
-that the neutral clutch was in working order, he pressed a button which
-set the self-starting apparatus,—run by electricity from a storage
-battery of great power and lightness,—into action. With a buzz and a
-whirr the machinery started, and bit by bit the lad speeded the motor up
-to its maximum number of revolutions per minute,—namely, two thousand.
-While the crank shafts whirled round he carefully examined the
-lubricating appliances. They worked as well as everything else, and
-fully satisfied with his test, the young inventor shut down the engine,
-with the announcement that so far as the machinery was concerned
-everything was in readiness for an immediate flight, or ground cruise.
-
-While this had been going on, Jupe had been placing a stock of
-provisions on board, and Captain Andrews had assembled his navigating
-instruments and chronometers, which he had brought with him from the
-_Sea King_. By midnight Jack declared that it was time for the
-aero-auto’s passengers to get aboard.
-
-A thrill of excitement ran through the whole party at these words; but
-Tom seemed suddenly to recollect something and stepped to Jack’s side,
-talking in a low voice.
-
-The young leader nodded his assent to Tom’s proposal, whatever it was,
-and Tom vanished below, summoning Jupe to help him. When he returned, he
-had his arms full of mechanical apparatus, and the same was true of
-Jupe, who grunted under his burdens. All this impedimenta was placed in
-the tonneau, in lockers under the seats.
-
-It now only remained to bolt on the aerial propeller, adjust the
-side-planes and fix the rudder. This was speedily done.
-
-At twelve-thirty o’clock the party cast off the lashings which had bound
-the Flying Road Racer to the _Vagrant’s_ deck. Jack climbed into the
-driver’s seat, taking his place at the aerial steering wheel. Tom sat
-beside him.
-
-Captain Andrews, Ned Bangs and Jupe, whose eyes were almost popping out
-of his head, seated themselves in the broad, roomy tonneau.
-
-The lights had already been switched off on I board the _Vagrant_ and
-everything made snug. The silver casket, the gas-guns, the ammunition,
-and the other accessories from the Professor’s cabin which had not yet
-been opened, were, of course, on board the Flying Road Racer.
-
-Jack bent forward and snapped a button switch. A hooded light above the
-various gauges and instruments on the dashboard shone out, shedding a
-soft but bright light on the appliances, but not striking up into the
-young leader’s eyes.
-
-“All ready?” queried the lad, giving a backward glance.
-
-“Ready as we ever will be, old top,” quoth the slangy Mr. Bangs.
-
-“Let her go,” said Tom in a tense voice.
-
-Jack’s pulses throbbed, and his heart beat a bit quicker than was
-comfortable as he turned the valve that admitted gas to the bag above
-them.
-
-With a swishing sound, not unlike escaping steam, the folds of the great
-gas container began to fill out. It gradually assumed shape, swelling
-till it reached what appeared to be vast proportions. When Jack shut off
-the gas the huge, cigar-shaped balloon above them looked like an immense
-dark cloud, superimposed over their heads.
-
-The bag took just fifteen minutes to inflate. During this time not a
-word was spoken on board the Flying Road Racer. The tension was far too
-great for speech.
-
-As Jack shut off the gas a tremor ran all through the novel craft. She
-tugged and swayed at the single rope, reeved through a ringbolt, that
-still bound her to the deck. The suspension wires thrummed musically
-under the pressure.
-
-“Let go!” yelled Jack suddenly.
-
-Tom, who had been holding the end of the rope, dropped it. Instantly the
-Flying Road Racer gave a bound upward.
-
-“Bust my toplights!” bellowed Captain Andrews in excitement at the novel
-sensation.
-
-Jupe’s lips might have been seen to move. He appeared to be praying. Ned
-Bangs’ hands were clenched tightly. He was very pale.
-
-“Look out for the tree tops!” cried Tom suddenly.
-
-The wonderful craft, with her precious freight, swayed drunkenly toward
-the crests of a group of giant ceiba trees. For one instant disaster, at
-the very outset of their voyage, appeared inevitable.
-
-But suddenly there was a whirring sound, like the drone of a monstrous
-night beetle. The engine was driving the propeller round at top speed.
-
-Jack twisted the steering wheel over, and the Flying Road Racer, rising
-at the rate of a hundred feet a minute, shot clear of the menacing tree
-tops.
-
-Up and up into the night she rose, while her occupants, forgetting their
-first alarm in their enthusiasm, gave a mighty cheer, careless, for the
-minute, of who might hear it.
-
-The voyage of the Flying Road Racer had begun under a fortunate star
-indeed.
-
-Directly the tree tops were cleared Jack set the planes at a rising
-angle, and the upward course of the Flying Road Racer was more rapid.
-She seemed fairly to shoot up into the ether.
-
-“How do you like it?” asked Tom, turning his head-to speak to those in
-the tonneau.
-
-“Ah’d like it better, Marse Tom, ef I didn’t feel I done lef’ mah
-insides behin’ me,” faltered Jupe.
-
-“You’ll soon get over that feeling,” declared Tom confidently. “Just
-hark at that engine! She’s running as true as a human heart.”
-
-“She is that,” agreed Jack, enthusiastically, “Tom, old boy, we’ve got
-the greatest land-and-air-craft ever put together.”
-
-“And to think that you two lads, hardly more than schoolboys, invented
-her,” struck in Captain Andrews admiringly.
-
-“I guess my father had a whole lot to do with it,” rejoined Jack
-modestly; “we could never have mastered a lot of knotty points without
-his aid.”
-
-“Well, that doesn’t detract from what you’ve accomplished one bit,”
-declared Ned with enthusiasm. “This is the mode of traveling of the
-future all right.”
-
-“We hope to make it so some day,” was Tom’s reply.
-
-The night was almost windless, save for a slight puff now and then. But
-this didn’t bother the Flying Road Racer once she was under control, and
-Jack had managed to climb upward on an almost straight course.
-
-Now he peered over the edge of the aluminum body. Beneath him he could
-see the gleam of the river in the starlight.
-
-“We’ll follow the stream,” he decided. “It is bound to bring us to
-Herrera’s plantation.”
-
-“Keep at a good height, though,” admonished Captain Andrews. “We know
-that those fellows have high-powered rifles.”
-
-“We are now twenty-five hundred feet above the earth,” said Jack,
-glancing at the barograph. “We’ll go higher.”
-
-He pulled a lever, setting the rising planes at a more acute angle. Up
-the aerial staircase they climbed, till the barograph’s indicator
-pointed to the figures five thousand.
-
-Then Jack turned the prow of the craft in a westerly direction, while
-Tom, through night glasses, watched the earth so far below them,
-following the course of the river through the binoculars.
-
-At forty miles an hour the Flying Road Racer swept through the air on
-her momentous errand.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI—INTO THE ENEMY’S CAMP
-
-
-When the Flying Road Racer took the air the weight that the craft
-carried was distributed as follows:
-
-Aluminum body, wheels, motor, suspension wires, etc. 900 pounds.
-
-Five passengers. (approx.) 800 pounds.
-
-Provisions, water, etc. 250 pounds.
-
-(The provisions included canned goods, preserved butter, tea and cocoa,
-flour, sugar, salt and a few delicacies.)
-
-Radolite crystals, instruments, etc. 275 pounds.
-
-Other articles,—including Ned’s last-minute contributions. 300 pounds.
-
-Total 2,525 pounds.
-
-This left lifting power to raise 2,475 lbs., which, however, could be
-increased to a considerable extent by utilizing the reserve sections of
-the gas bag.
-
-Jack roughly estimated the combined weights of those they were to
-rescue,—his father, his uncle, Abner Jennings and the two sailors,—at a
-little over one thousand pounds. Thus, it will be seen, that there was
-no reason why the Flying Road Racer should not be able to perform all
-that was required of her, with some lifting power left over for
-emergencies.
-
-The boy inventors’ craft had been in the air about an hour when Tom
-descried, far below them, the gleam of a light. In that wild country it
-was not likely to betoken anything else but the site of Herrera’s
-plantation houses.
-
-They all agreed on this, and Jack, after a consultation with his
-comrades, decided that the time had come to descend. The plan they
-arrived at, after threshing the situation over in all its bearings, was
-to drop in the most suitable place they could find, adjacent to the
-plantation buildings.
-
-Then the gas bag was to be reinflated, ready for emergencies, and two of
-the party were to reconnoiter the ground as carefully as possible. The
-remainder of the rescue was to be left to circumstances. At one hour and
-ten minutes after midnight. Jack started the exhaust engine up.
-
-Instantly the Flying Road Racer began to drop downward through space
-with her planes set at a slight angle, as Jack did not want to coast to
-earth too rapidly. This course soon brought the craft above the summits
-of the forest trees, at a safe distance from the light they had
-perceived from aloft. To make assurance of being unnoticed doubly sure.
-Jack had shut off the motor. Silently as a night bird the great bulk of
-the flying auto settled earthward.
-
-All this time their eyes had been strained to sight an open space in
-which they might land without risk of damaging the balloon bag. Tom was
-the first to see, through the night glasses, such an area of cleared
-land amid the forest.
-
-It was a tract about ten acres in extent, and formed, as they surmised
-later, one of the outlying fields of Herrera’s plantation. It had not
-yet been put into cultivation, however, and afforded as fine a spot for
-an air craft to ground as could be imagined. Half an hour after the
-descent had begun the Flying Road Racer settled as lightly as a bit of
-breeze-blown down on earth once more.
-
-Thanks to her shock absorbers, hardly a jar was felt by those on board
-as she landed with her bag half deflated and limp and wrinkled. No time
-was lost in alighting and throwing out the anchors, contrived by Jack,
-used for securing the craft to earth in case of a sudden wind springing
-up. These anchors differed considerably from the sea type of “mud hook.”
-They consisted, in fact, merely of discs of iron shaped like an inverted
-mushroom. One edge of the disc was driven into the ground, and the shape
-of the holding appliances was such that an upward tug merely served to
-force them more deeply into the earth.
-
-The adventurers figured that they were about half a mile to the west of
-the spot where they had seen the light, which they believed marked the
-site of Herrera’s plantation houses. They also estimated that there were
-left to them about two hours and a half more of darkness. There was
-urgent necessity then for immediate action.
-
-Much to the chagrin of Tom and Ned, but to the huge delight of Jupe, who
-had no great fancy for the work in hand. Jack and Captain Andrews were
-to be the ones to do the reconnoitering. Tom and Ned were ordered to
-stand by the Flying Road Racer and be ready for any sudden development
-that might occur.
-
-While Captain Andrews and Jack were absent, it would be the others’ duty
-also to refill the gas bag, so that the aero-auto might be ready for an
-instant ascent in case of need.
-
-These preparations completed, the two who were to assume the most risky
-part of the night’s work each selected a fully loaded gas-gun. In
-addition. Captain Andrews carried an automatic revolver; but it was on
-the former weapons that they would largely depend.
-
-There remained nothing more but the leave-takings, and the fervent
-wishes for success in the daring enterprise, coming from the lads who
-were to be left behind. These final ceremonies being disposed of, the
-grizzled old sailor and his young companion set off. Tom and Ned watched
-them till the shadows of the forest swallowed them up.
-
-By good fortune, the two, upon whom so much depended, struck a trail
-almost immediately after their first plunge into the blackness that
-prevailed under the tropical trees. The path had evidently been used by
-the laborers who had made the clearing beyond. It was a broad,
-well-defined track, and their progress was rapid and almost noiseless.
-
-Neither of them spoke as they made their way along the path. The
-situation was too critical for words, and Jack crept along behind
-Captain Andrews, hardly daring to breathe.
-
-He was on the tip-toe of excitement and anxiety, as was natural. At the
-end of the trail they were following’ lay either success or dire
-failure. There was no middle ground. In the event of their failing in
-their mission. Jack could not disguise from himself that the
-consequences would be awful indeed. He had come in contact with Herrera
-only once, but that single occasion had amply sufficed to show him the
-character of the man.
-
-From time to time, as they advanced, they paused and listened intently.
-But, except for the drone of the night insects of the jungle, and the
-occasional scream of a nocturnal bird, there was no sound other than the
-sighing of the breeze in the tree tops far above.
-
-There is no place more mysterious than the jungle at night. The dense
-thickets seem to the nervous traveler to hold all manner of hidden
-perils. Some of these are not altogether imaginary, either. The cunning,
-cruel jaguar, the huge serpents, and a score of other dangers lurk in
-the shadows.
-
-Fortunately, neither of our friends was burdened with sensitive nerves,
-and it was well they were not, for their errand was not one for timid
-folk to embark upon.
-
-They glided along after all these pauses, making as fast time as
-possible. All at once Captain Andrews, who was in the lead, as we know,
-stopped abruptly.
-
-So abruptly, in fact, that Jack almost collided with him.
-
-“What’s the——” began Jack.
-
-But instantly the Captain clapped a hand over his mouth. He raised the
-other in a gesture that Jack read instantly: “Silence!”
-
-Just ahead of them. Jack now perceived, the path broadened and emerged
-on a considerable clearing. The black outlines of several buildings,
-were scattered about this open space.
-
-From one of them hung a lantern, shedding a yellow patch of light all
-about it. This, evidently, was the light they had seen from above.
-
-As they stood, still as graven images in the protecting shadows of the
-forest, a stalwart figure, with a rifle over its shoulder, paced into
-the circle of light and then vanished again.
-
-“A sentry!” huskily breathed Captain Andrews. “If we thought we’d catch
-them napping we’ve been badly mistaken.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII—“DAD!—IT’S JACK!”
-
-
-Jack gave a step forward the better to survey the scene before them. As
-he did so his right foot struck something, and the next instant there
-was a sudden sharp jangling of a bell.
-
-In a flash he realized what had happened. A wire connected with the bell
-had been stretched across the path,—Herrera’s dead line. His forward
-step had given the alarm, and might prove their undoing and cause the
-total failure of their plans. Captain Andrews’ arm shot out and dragged
-the boy back into a clump of brush. He made Jack lie down flat, doing so
-himself.
-
-“The whole pack will be about our ears in a minute,” he whispered; but
-he did not reproach Jack, whose face was burning with humiliation.
-
-Sure enough, almost simultaneously there came from the direction of the
-houses and sheds an excited clamor of voices. Lights flashed and figures
-could be seen rushing about. Presently they gathered in a knot, and some
-one appeared to be giving directions; then they scattered in a
-fan-shaped formation, and moved toward the woods in which the two
-adventurers lay concealed.
-
-Jack’s heart beat like a trip hammer. Beside him he could hear Captain
-Andrews breathing heavily. Their discovery, within the next few minutes,
-appeared inevitable. Flashing their lanterns hither and thither the
-searching party, which they could now see was composed of negroes, from
-the Mosquito coast in all probability, advanced toward the jungle.
-
-There were a dozen or more of them, headed by the big fellow whom they
-had noticed on sentry duty. Almost all of them carried the universal
-weapon of the negro in the tropics, long, glittering-bladed machetes.
-Some of them took to the path by which Captain Andrews and Jack had
-reached their present position. Others plunged into the jungle, cutting
-away the thick growth with their steel blades.
-
-Their leader shouted something in Spanish. “He’s ordering them to search
-every inch of the jungle hereabouts,” interpreted Captain Andrews in a
-whisper. “The precious rascal! I’d like to have my hands on him.”
-
-“It wouldn’t do much good,” was the mournful response; “the odds against
-us are too heavy for us to do much in case of our discovery.”
-
-“Well, we’ve got the gas-guns, and from what I’ve already seen of them I
-reckon that they may prove mighty useful in a few minutes.”
-
-As he spoke there came a crashing sound in the undergrowth a few feet
-from them. The next moment they saw the form of a giant black looming up
-directly in front of them. The fellow was grunting from his exertions in
-cutting his way through the underwood, and paused for an instant to
-catch his breath.
-
-It was a fatal pause for him. Jack gently drew his gas-gun toward him
-and fired. The negro threw both his hands into the air and dropped with
-a loud “Oof!”
-
-But the shot had been at such close range that the powerful gas
-impregnated the air that Captain Andrews and his young companion were
-breathing. The reek of it stung their nostrils.
-
-“We’ve got to get out of here,” whispered Jack, “or we’ll be as dead to
-the world as that fellow is.”
-
-Painfully they crept on their stomachs through the thick brush, moving
-as silently as cats. A single mistake in their movements, the crack of a
-branch snapped by carelessness might, as they both knew, prove fatal.
-But they managed to gain a small clearing under some big trees without
-mishap.
-
-It was at this moment that Jack had a sudden inspiration.
-
-“See here,” he said excitedly, under his breath, “those chaps have
-worked past us now, to judge by the sounds. They think that we have fled
-through the woods. What’s the matter with our doubling back on our
-tracks and marching right into the settlement?”
-
-Captain Andrews, ungiven as he was to emotion, fairly gasped.
-
-“By the beard of Neptune, boy!” he exclaimed, and then, in the same
-breath, “but it’s not as mad a plan as it sounds. In all likelihood,
-almost the entire force of guards from the plantation buildings are out
-after us, and we ought to be more than a match for half a dozen with the
-gas-guns.”
-
-“Then we’ll do it?” throbbed Jack, with a catch of his breath.
-
-“Yes. We came here to rescue those poor chaps, and, by the Polar Star,
-we’ll do it if it’s possible.”
-
-Jack impulsively held out his hand. Captain Andrews clasped it warmly.
-The next moment they were stealthily creeping through the undergrowth,
-but advancing far more quickly than they had retreated a moment before.
-
-When they once more gained the edge of the jungle. Jack perceived, to
-his intense satisfaction, that everything was quiet about the handful of
-buildings before them. So far as could be seen, there was no one about.
-Evidently then, his surmise had been correct. The majority, if not all
-of the residents, were abroad in search of the persons who had sounded
-the alarm bell.
-
-“Which building do you think it likely they are in?” asked Jack, as they
-paused an instant before plunging from the protection of the woods.
-
-“The one that has that lantern hanging on it,
-
-“I imagine,” was the response from the veteran seaman, “we’ll try that
-first, anyway. Are you ready?”
-
-Jack nodded. He did not speak, however. It was not a time for mere
-words. The next moment they had passed from the dark shadows of the
-jungle into the open space about the plantation buildings. Each clasped
-his gas-gun ready for instant use. But nobody appeared to bar their
-progress.
-
-When they gained the structure from which the lamp was hanging, they
-found that it was a tall building of wood, and seemingly three stories
-in height.
-
-It was used, though they did not know this at the time, as a drying
-house for the hemp after it had been through the crushing and separating
-processes. The door was secured on the outside by a weighty bar of wood.
-Captain Andrews lifted this out of its sockets, and in a jiffy had flung
-the door open. Inside was pitchy darkness, so black that it could almost
-be felt.
-
-Jack had brought along his electric pocket lamp. He drew it out and
-switched on the current. The rays revealed a large, bare chamber, empty,
-except for a pile of dry hemp in one corner, and in another a few bales
-of the product stacked ready for shipment.
-
-“Nothing here,” said Captain Andrews briefly.
-
-“No; but see, there’s a flight of steps in that corner. Let’s go higher
-and find out what’s on the floor above.”
-
-“It may be wasting precious time, lad.”
-
-“On the other hand, this was the building that was guarded by the
-sentry. It’s fair to assume, then, that it is in this structure that our
-friends are confined.”
-
-Captain Andrews had nothing to reply to this logic, and followed Jack up
-the steps.
-
-At the summit of the rickety staircase was another door, secured, as had
-been the one below, by a stout bar of wood. Jack tackled this and
-wrenched it free. As he did so a voice that thrilled him in every fiber
-came from within the portal.
-
-“Who is it?”
-
-“Dad! It’s me—Jack—I’ve come to save you!” blurted out Jack, tears of
-sheer gladness springing to his eyes. He flung the door open.
-
-The next instant Jack was clasped in his father’s arms, while about him
-and Captain Andrews, pressed the other captives, all well and unharmed
-and half wild with delight as they greeted the lad whose pluck had
-conquered Herrera’s “deadline.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII—HEMMED IN BY FLAMES
-
-
-Naturally, after the first greeting’s had been exchanged, Mr. Jesson’s
-principal anxiety was for his son Tom. Jack soon set his mind at rest on
-this subject.
-
-“Tom and Ned Bangs are back on the other side of the woods, with the
-aero-auto,” he explained.
-
-“Ah, then it has proved a success?” eagerly interjected Mr. Chadwick.
-
-“It is even better than we hoped it would be,” rejoined Jack
-enthusiastically.
-
-“I wouldn’t be scared to trust myself to that aerial wind-jammer for a
-voyage to China,” stoutly declared Captain Andrews. “I reckon if Wellman
-had had a craft like that he’d have crossed the Atlantic easy as
-shooting.”
-
-“I don’t know but what you’re right,” said Jack; “but the thing to
-discuss now is how to get out of here. Dad, do you know much about this
-place?”
-
-“Nothing, except that there is a floor above this. We were confined
-there the first day of our captivity. But the sheet iron roof used for
-drying hemp made it so insufferably hot that we would have died if they
-hadn’t moved us down here,” was the reply.
-
-“Then, so far as you know, there is no way of getting out but by the
-door we entered?”
-
-“That’s the only way, I guess. We had better make good our escape while
-those rascally hangers-on about the settlement are off hunting for the
-fellows who rang their alarm bell.”
-
-Professor Chadwick, to whom Jack had given a hasty outline of the events
-of the night, moved toward the door as he spoke. But he had not taken
-more than two steps toward the head of the stairs when he stopped
-abruptly.
-
-“Hark!” he exclaimed, standing stock still in an attitude of close
-attention.
-
-The murmur of voices came toward the party. It didn’t take any of them
-long to surmise what had happened. The searching party was coming back.
-In a few moments their egress would be cut off and it would be
-impossible to escape without a fight, the outcome of which was doubtful.
-
-In this emergency Captain Andrews acted quickly. Gas-gun in hand, he ran
-down the stairway, shouting to the others to “come on.”
-
-They pressed close behind him, each with a grim determination to reach
-the doorway before the guardians of the plantation noticed that it was
-open.
-
-But in this they were disappointed. Hardly had Captain Andrews reached
-the doorway before several forms blocked it. As the doughty sea captain
-sprang at the foremost of them, at least a dozen of the husky henchmen
-of Herrera leaped on him.
-
-Before either he or Jack could use their gas-guns, Captain Andrews was
-borne to the ground, while on top of him were piled half a dozen of the
-returned search party.
-
-“Back to the upper room,” ordered Jack, “I’m going to fire my gas-gun.”
-
-The boy shouted this warning because he knew that in that narrow space
-the fumes of the stupefying gas were likely to prove as disastrous to
-the white men as to the brawny negroes. Professor Chadwick, who well
-knew the qualities of the gas, retreated with the others. As he did so.
-Jack saw a rifle aimed at him by one of the negroes who crowded the
-doorway.
-
-In a moment he had the gas-gun at his shoulder. He pressed the trigger
-and one of the sleep-laden globules shot out. It struck the armed negro
-in the chest, and the fellow threw up his arms with a sharp exhalation
-of his breath. Then he fell, as if his legs had been pulled from under
-him.
-
-The fellows who were piled on top of Captain Andrews released him and
-dashed toward their other foe. As they left him the skipper of the _Sea
-King_ sprang to his feet and discharged his weapon. The air became
-impregnated with stifling fumes.
-
-Through the reek the seaman struggled to Jack’s side, and before the
-dazed negroes could realize what had occurred the two whites were
-shoulder to shoulder on the stairway.
-
-Almost simultaneously the contents of the gas spheres began to have
-their effect. Man after man of those who remained, for several had fled,
-staggered and fell, while Jack and the captain retreated up the
-stairway. They lost no time in reaching the door at the head of the
-stairs and shutting it to keep out the fumes. They were none too soon.
-The gas had already affected them, and their heads throbbed and their
-eyelids felt leaden.
-
-In the corner of the room was a big earthen pitcher of water. The
-Professor threw the contents of this over his son and Captain Andrews,
-and though still heavy from the effects of the gas, the shock revived
-them wonderfully.
-
-“What now?” asked the Professor, after Jack and Captain Andrews had
-“come back to life” a little.
-
-“Wait till the fumes of the gas have evaporated through the open door
-downstairs, and then make a dash for freedom,” said Captain Andrews.
-
-“How long will it be before the air is good to breathe?” inquired Mr.
-Jesson.
-
-“About fifteen minutes,” said the Professor; “the gas is of a very
-volatile nature, and the fumes will soon clear off. It will be an hour
-or so at least, however, before the negroes recover.”
-
-“I would suggest, then, that Jack gives us a more detailed account of
-what occurred after he left Lone Island,” said Mr. Jesson.
-
-Falling in with this idea, they seated themselves about the lad, who at
-once plunged into the details of the narrative, which, as may be
-imagined, proved of engrossing interest to all who heard him.
-
-He was interrupted several times by questions and requests for
-information concerning the operation of the aero-auto, and the relation
-of his story took longer than had been anticipated. However, even in
-their critical situation, no one wanted to miss a word of it.
-
-“And so the three gems are safe?” said Professor Chadwick, with a sigh
-of relief, as the lad concluded.
-
-“Yes. They are at this moment in the Flying Road Racer’s locker, in
-charge of Tom and Ned,” was the reply.
-
-As Jack spoke they all, by mutual consent, rose and made for the door.
-
-“I shall be glad to get to the air,” remarked Professor Chadwick.
-
-“Yes; it is insufferably hot in here,” agreed Mr. Jesson. “I had not
-noticed the heat so much while Jack was talking; but now,—phew! It’s
-like a furnace.”
-
-As he spoke. Jack flung the door open. The next instant he staggered
-back, the hot blood in his veins frozen with horror.
-
-A rush of air, hot and arid as a blast from a coke oven, struck him in
-the face. A great puff of smoke followed.
-
-The room below was a vast furnace of red flame. In falling, one of the
-negro’s lanterns had overturned and rolled against the bales of dried
-hemp. All the time they had been talking the fire had been waxing more
-and more furious.
-
-By this time the lower part of the stairway was in flames, and, as Jack
-held the door open, a tongue of fire, sucked upward by the draft, shot
-hungrily toward him.
-
-He slammed the door instantly. But the heat of the seething furnace
-below rendered the air almost unbreathable.
-
-It looked as if, in the very moment of their triumph, the adventurers
-were doomed to death in the burning building. Trapped and helpless, for
-an instant they were deprived of words. Was this to be their appalling
-destiny, their fate,—to be roasted alive without a chance of escape?
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX—“STAND BY FOR A ROPE!”
-
-
-There are some situations so overwhelming that the strongest and coolest
-may well be temporarily stunned by them. The springs of action paralyze,
-while the mind becomes a blank.
-
-This was the case with our party of adventurers. Added to this, was the
-horror of knowing that many of the negroes in the room below must have
-perished in the flames. Jack felt a sickening feeling of panic clutching
-at his heart.
-
-In one corner of the room the two sailors crouched, stolidly awaiting
-death. Professor Chadwick and Mr. Jesson alone remained calm. Even
-Captain Andrews and Abner Jennings appeared dazed and helpless with the
-sickening sense of the disaster that had overtaken them.
-
-“We must leave this room at once.”
-
-It was Professor Chadwick who spoke, in a voice that did not falter in
-its resolute tones.
-
-His calmness, in the face of death, restored Jack’s pluck and heartened
-Captain Andrews and Abner Jennings. Even the two sailors appeared to be
-less panic-stricken.
-
-“We can only leave it for the room above,” objected one of them,
-however; “the flames will reach there afore long. Might as well die now
-as an hour later.”
-
-“Shame on you for American seamen!” burst out Captain Andrews, “rouse up
-there! While there’s life there’s hope.”
-
-His words were effective. At any rate, no more grumbling was heard as
-the beleaguered party ascended to the upper chamber. Like the one below
-it, the place was bare, and Jack flashed his electric searchlight about
-without discovering any loophole of escape. As was the case in the lower
-chamber, the walls were unpierced by windows, and the timbers were too
-solid for it to be feasible to knock them out, except with heavy
-sledges.
-
-All at once, however, Jack noticed, as he flashed his light about, that
-in one corner there seemed to be a sort of trap-door in the roof.
-
-He hailed his discovery with a cry of delight. If they could only reach
-the roof it might be possible for them to attract the attention of some
-one below who could get a ladder.
-
-Of course, in that event, they would be likely to be made captives, but
-anything was preferable to a tomb in the flames.
-
-Jack’s discovery acted like a tonic on the despairing feelings of the
-party. The iron roof was two feet beyond the reach of the tallest of
-them, but this difficulty was gotten over by Jack clambering to Captain
-Andrews’ shoulders, and from that situation he was able to reach the
-trap-door and to open it, for his first fear that it might be locked
-proved to be without foundation.
-
-Having opened it. Jack clambered through, and lying flat on the roof
-extended his hands to his father, who, in turn, used Captain Andrews as
-a ladder. Then came Mr. Jesson, followed by the two sailors. Abner
-Jennings demurred to taking precedence of the Captain. But,——
-
-“The skipper’s the last to leave the ship, my lad,” declared Captain
-Andrews, and Jennings, unwillingly enough, clambered on his back and was
-drawn up.
-
-Then came the Captain’s turn. Abner Jennings, as the strongest of the
-party, lay flat on his stomach and extended his arms down within the
-room. To his legs clung the others, acting as anchors. With a mighty
-heave Captain Andrews, no lightweight, was raised high enough for him to
-clutch the edge of the trap, after which he completed the operation of
-getting through for himself.
-
-As he gained the roof they heard a crash beneath them.
-
-“The floor of your jail has fallen through, I reckon. Professor,” grimly
-spoke the captain.
-
-As Jack heard the angry roar and crackle of the flames beneath them he
-could not repress a shudder. It was a drop of fifty feet or more to the
-ground, and they were by no means out of danger.
-
-“Let’s see if any of those black rascals are about,” said Captain
-Andrews, “if they are we may be able to induce them to get a ladder.”
-
-“Surely they wouldn’t be inhuman enough to let us remain here,”
-exclaimed the Professor.
-
-“I don’t know,” was the response, “like master, like man, you know; and
-this might strike Herrera as a very neat way of disposing of us.”
-
-Several forms could be seen flitting about below them. The flames were
-pouring through the windows of the lower story of the hemp-drying
-building, casting a ruddy glow in which near-by objects could be seen as
-plainly as if by daylight.
-
-But the negroes appeared to be giving no thought to the burning
-structure. Instead, they could be seen dragging piled bales of hemp out
-of danger of flying sparks. Nor did they pay the slightest attention to
-the frantic shouts of the party marooned on the top of the blazing
-building.
-
-“Great heavens! they mean to leave us here to roast to death,” groaned
-the Professor.
-
-As he spoke there came another crash below them, and the building
-trembled.
-
-“The floor of the second room has fallen!” cried Mr. Jesson, rightly
-guessing the cause of the crash. “In a few seconds this roof will become
-red-hot, and——”
-
-He stopped short. There are some things that cannot be put into words.
-
-The trap-door had been closed, but before long they could distinctly
-feel the roof under their feet becoming warmer and warmer.
-
-Suddenly Jack espied a great mass of green hemp piled off in one corner,
-ready to be raked out on the iron roof for drying when the sun arose.
-
-“We can put that under our feet,” he said, “and stick it out a while
-longer that way.”
-
-So tenacious is the instinct of clinging to life, that even though they
-knew it would only avert the end by a very short time,—unless a miracle
-came to aid them,—they adopted Jack’s idea.
-
-But before long the hemp began to smoke and steam. The heat was rapidly
-drying out the moisture, and then——
-
-Suddenly one of the sailors gave a yell, and shouting,—“I’m going to end
-it all right now,” made a plunge for the edge of the roof.
-
-His evident intention was to hurl himself down to death.
-
-But before the crazed man could carry out his plan Captain Andrews
-sprang at the fellow and brought him down with a crash.
-
-“If Providence means us to die, we’ll meet death like men,” he said
-stoutly; “but it’s not like Americans to give up the ship while there’s
-a shred of hope.”
-
-The frenzied sailor fought and struggled on the pile of steaming hemp on
-which the skipper held him. But Captain Andrews’ strong arms pinned him
-down.
-
-Jack felt his senses reeling. The hot breath of the fire had reached
-them by this time. The roof gave off heat like the top of a stove. If it
-had not been for the damp, green hemp they could not have held the
-situation for an eighth of the space of time that they did.
-
-Their throats grew parched and their tongues swelled till they were
-painful, and they could shout for aid no longer. For all the attention
-the negroes below paid to their cries, they might as well have remained
-silent. The blacks seemed to consider the removal of the hemp to a safe
-place of far more importance than the lives of the flame-marooned white
-men.
-
-Just when Jack’s hope had flickered out and a sort of coma of despair
-was creeping over him the miracle happened.
-
-It was Professor Chadwick who saw it first.
-
-Through the red glow that crimsoned the sky came a huge floating form.
-
-The Professor shouted and pointed upward. Jack raised a pair of dimmed
-eyes; but the next instant they cleared as if by magic.
-
-“It’s the Flying Road Racer!” he shouted, yelling like a madman.
-“Hurray! We’re saved! we’re saved!”
-
-And then something in his head seemed to snap with a loud report. He
-swayed, and would have fallen heavily on the hot roof if his father had
-not caught him in his arms.
-
-Then he was startled into alertness again by a sharp hail which came
-from above them.
-
-“Stand by for a rope. We’ll drop as low as we dare!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX—A RESCUE BY AIRSHIP
-
-
-Just what happened in the moments that followed neither Jack nor any of
-his companions has ever been able to describe in detail. It was a time
-in which every second counted, while under their feet the flames roared
-and crackled hungrily.
-
-From the Flying Road Racer a rope came snaking down, and Professor
-Chadwick caught it. At the corner of the roof in which the adventurers
-were huddled was a stout post, used sometimes, apparently, for hoisting
-things from the ground, for a pulley hung from it.
-
-With a flash of inspiration the Professor, with Mr. Jesson and Jack
-aiding, rove the rope through this pulley. Then, while Tom and Ned
-maneuvered the Flying Road Racer so that her “bow” pointed downward, all
-of the marooned adventurers who were able to do so heaved on the rope.
-In this way the air craft was brought to within three feet of the roof.
-
-Another length of rope was then looped over the side by Tom and made
-fast to two of the stanchions of the balloon support. The first to test
-the loop was the companion of the crazed sailor. Half dragged, he
-scrambled into the body of the suspended car. Professor Chadwick
-followed, and then came Mr. Jesson, while a delighted cry at his
-father’s safety came from Tom.
-
-Abner Jennings was the next to be taken on board, and then came Jack. In
-the meantime Captain Andrews had buckled his belt around the limbs of
-the crazed sailor and had borrowed Jack’s for the purpose of confining
-his prisoner’s arms.
-
-Trussed up in this manner the poor fellow was handed up to those on the
-Flying Road Racer, and then the gallant Captain Andrews made a spring
-for the swaying loop.
-
-He was in the nick of time. As he gained the tonneau and sank to the
-floor almost exhausted, there was a deafening roar, and, as if it had
-suddenly melted away, the entire building collapsed. Jack turned away
-shuddering as the flame and sparks shot up above the ruins.
-
-The ideas it suggested of the fate that might have been theirs if help
-had not arrived in the very nick of time, were almost overwhelming.
-
-Tom was at the helm, and Ned it was who had cast off the rope. Slowly,
-almost Phoenix-like, from amidst the flames rose the Flying Road Racer
-with her heavy burden.
-
-There was danger in the situation, too. The gas in the bag was
-inflammable, and the heat of the fire might expand it so that at any
-minute it might burst the container, and cause an appalling catastrophe.
-This danger Tom and Ned had willingly faced when they brought the Flying
-Road Racer to the rescue. But now, all their desires were centered on
-getting as far away from the fire zone as was possible.
-
-Laden as she was, the great air craft had not the same buoyancy that had
-been hers when she set out at midnight from the _Vagrant_. She rose
-slowly, and although her propeller was whirring at top speed, and her
-rising planes were set, she once or twice sagged dangerously.
-
-While this behavior on the air craft’s part was worrying her navigators
-seriously, there came a sudden fresh cause for disquiet. Bullets from
-the negroes below began to whiz about them.
-
-The fellows had luckily been too much astonished to fire while the task
-of rescue was going on. The apparition of the sky-ship had taken them so
-much by surprise that they had temporarily been unable to take any
-hostile action.
-
-Now, however, they had recovered their senses and were doing all in
-their power to render the escape of their late prisoners an
-impossibility. Luckily, however, they did not have enough sense to fire
-at the balloon bag, or their endeavors might have been crowned with
-success. Instead, they aimed at the occupants of the suspended car, and
-what with bad marksmanship and excitement failed to hit any of them.
-True, a few bullets pinged against the suspension wires and struck the
-sides of the car; but none punctured the tank, as the boys feared might
-be the case, or caused any serious injury.
-
-A breeze springing up presently wafted the overladen airship into an
-upper air current, and before long she was rising merrily. More gas had
-been turned into the bag, increasing its buoyancy, and by the time the
-dawn began to show grayly the adventurers were far from the scene of
-their fearfully narrow escape.
-
-Behind them, however, they could see, as the light grew stronger, a
-pillar of dark smoke soaring heavenward and marking the site of what had
-almost proved their funeral pyre.
-
-What with the coming of daylight and the feeling that they had been
-saved from their greatest peril, the adventurers’ spirits rose
-wonderfully as they sailed along. Even the crazed sailor showed symptoms
-of returning sanity, and, as Professor Chadwick expected, his mental
-disengagement soon passed away. Oddly enough, though, he could never
-recall the events of that night. They had been wiped from his
-recollection as an old sum is washed off a slate.
-
-Jupe got out canned goods and made a fairly good breakfast, while they
-were in mid-air. To some of the party it was the most novel meal they
-had ever eaten. But neither their recent hardships nor unusual
-surroundings impaired their appetites. All ate ravenously and felt much
-better after the meal, which included hot coffee cooked on an electric
-radiator. This radiator was connected with the dynamo that filled the
-storage batteries and provided engine ignition and light.
-
-During the meal, Tom told them how he and Ned and Jupe had waited beside
-the Flying Road Racer after the departure of Tom and Captain Andrews on
-their scouting expedition. For some time they stood their ground
-patiently enough, and occupied their time, according to instructions, by
-reinflating the bag.
-
-This done, there was nothing to do but await the progress of events. Of
-the search in the jungle they knew nothing. But the sound of shots from
-the direction of the plantation had first roused their fears that
-something was wrong.
-
-Then they had perceived the red glare of the fire on the night sky.
-Certain then that something serious was wrong, Tom took it upon himself
-to get up the anchors and fly to the rescue. Little did he imagine,
-however, he confessed, what dire straits his friends were in.
-
-“We owe you a great debt of gratitude, you and Ned Bangs, for your
-prompt and brave action,” warmly declared Professor Chadwick.
-
-That the others heartily seconded the motion may be imagined. In fact,
-as they all realized to the full, they owed their lives directly to Tom
-Jesson’s pluck and brains and his able assistant, Ned Bangs. Jupe, too,
-came in for his share of praise, for the old colored man had behaved in
-the great emergency through which they had passed, with remarkable
-coolness and ability.
-
-As Tom concluded his story. Jack glanced at the barograph. They had
-risen to three thousand feet, and were moving in a westerly direction.
-So engrossed had they all been in discussing their wonderful escape,
-that they had really hardly noticed in what course they were sailing.
-
-“I think it’s time that we decided on a destination,” said Jack, as he
-noted these things.
-
-“Why not try for Lone Island?” said Mr. Jesson. “The _Sea King_ should
-be there, and——”
-
-Jack shook his head.
-
-“The Flying Road Racer couldn’t fly as far as that?” asked Captain
-Andrews, who had been glancing about him at all points of the compass
-while this talk was going on.
-
-“She could fly as far as that under normal conditions,” was the reply;
-“but not with such a load on board. We are using up fuel at twice the
-usual rate, and might have to descend to make more gas for running
-purposes.”
-
-“Can’t we refill the reservoir in mid-air?”
-
-Mr. Jesson asked the question.
-
-“Too dangerous, except in case of absolute necessity,” said Jack; “it
-could be done, but there is a certain amount of risk.”
-
-“I think, then, that we had better head about and make for the sea-coast
-where the _Vagrant_ is hidden,” said Professor Chadwick.
-
-“I don’t agree with you there,” said Captain Andrews positively.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“Well, in the first place, during the next few days Herrera is going to
-go through all that vicinity with a fine-tooth comb. He won’t let the
-gems slip through his fingers without some sort of a battle for them,
-you can bet.”
-
-“What would your advice be, then?”
-
-“To make for the mountains yonder with all speed. We can lie snugly
-hidden there for a short time, and can form some definite plan. We are
-all too much tired and overwrought now to discuss such things
-intelligently.”
-
-“I think you are right. I know that, now that the strain is over, I feel
-like taking a long sleep,” said Mr. Jesson.
-
-“Then let us head right on as we are going,” suggested Jack. “That range
-of hills doesn’t look so very far off. We ought to get there before
-afternoon. That will give us time to make camp and get things snug for
-the night.”
-
-And so it was arranged. But Captain Andrews still kept casting anxious
-glances back toward the coast line.
-
-“What’s the trouble. Captain?” asked Jack presently, noting a trace of
-uneasiness on the old sailor’s countenance.
-
-“Why, lad, I don’t much like the look of the weather yonder. See that
-gray haze that’s spreading over the sky so quick? That means wind, and
-maybe worse, or my name ain’t Sam Andrews.”
-
-“Good gracious!” exclaimed Jack, “we’re in no fix to battle with a
-storm.”
-
-As he spoke a sharp puff of wind shook the Flying Road Racer.
-
-“Could we land if anything very bad comes on?” asked Captain Andrews,
-with a yet stronger tincture of anxiety in his tones.
-
-Jack peered over the edge of the car.
-
-“Nothing but dense forests are below us,” he said; “it would be courting
-death to try to land among them.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI—ALOFT IN THE STORM
-
-
-In an almost unbelievably short time the wind had increased to a gale.
-It shrieked and moaned among the wire supports of the car, and the great
-bag that held it in mid-air swayed and tore furiously at its fastenings.
-
-Jack kept a sharp lookout for a good spot to land, while Tom relieved
-Ned at the wheel. Once they saw beneath them a big area of smooth,
-park-like land, almost devoid of trees. It would have made an ideal
-landing place, but as they tried to force the Flying Road Racer around
-to head for it the full force of the wind struck them.
-
-While traveling with the gale they had not noticed its full fury. Now,
-however, it battered them viciously, tearing at the gas bag as if it had
-been some monster bent on its destruction. The car swung wildly
-underneath its support, and they had to cling on to avoid being hurled
-out into space.
-
-Their intention of battling with the wind was quickly given up. Tom
-brought the helm around and the Flying Road Racer hurtled off before the
-blast at a speed the indicator showed to be sixty-five miles.
-
-“Is there no possibility of turning around and landing?” asked Mr.
-Jesson somewhat anxiously.
-
-“It is out of the question,” declared Jack; “we’d rip this craft to
-pieces if we even attempted to buffet the storm.”
-
-“It’s a bad one, all right,” said Abner Jennings.
-
-“And may be worse afore it’s better,” said Captain Andrews, casting an
-anxious eye aloft at the scudding clouds among which they were sailing.
-
-“The wind is blowing about sixty miles an hour,” said Jack, looking at
-the anemometer. “That means practically a hurricane speed.”
-
-“Are we in danger?” asked Mr. Jesson.
-
-“Not as long as we can keep in the air,” said Jack; “but if anything
-should go wrong it would be awkward, to say the least of it.”
-
-“Then something may happen at any minute?”
-
-“I didn’t say so. Uncle; but, as Captain Andrews said, the wind may grow
-stronger.”
-
-“It’s hard to tell what these tropical hurricanes will do, once they get
-started,” said the burly captain. “I’ve seen ’em blow for a week and
-flatten out whole groves of cocoanuts.”
-
-It grew blacker and blacker. The Flying Road Racer was now scudding
-through ragged white clouds that drove as fast as she did under a
-panoply of inky black. The scream of the rigging as the wind rushed
-against the taut, straining wires, sounded almost like the cries of some
-live thing in pain.
-
-Every now and again there would come a sudden burst of vicious fury, and
-once or twice it actually appeared as if the great air craft would be
-ripped in pieces. But so far every wire and brace and turnbuckle in her
-construction had held bravely.
-
-Jack watched the engine anxiously, attending to the lubricating devices
-and adjusting the gas mixers. The machine was behaving splendidly, and
-Jack felt that if only the connections between the gas bag and the car
-would hold they might still weather the fury of the gale.
-
-He knew that these tropical hurricanes while furious are often not of
-very long duration. He stuck to his post, keeping hope alive in his
-heart, while the others pluckily enough endured the situation without
-flinching.
-
-All at once, the wind stopped as suddenly as if it had been cut off at a
-gigantic spigot.
-
-The calm, after that raging, furious gale, was positively startling.
-
-“Is the storm over?” asked Ned.
-
-“No. It’s only just beginning,” was the alarming response from Captain
-Andrews.
-
-“I understand you now,” came from Mr. Jesson suddenly; “it’s a circular
-storm.”
-
-“That’s it, sir. In a few minutes it will be blowing just as hard out of
-the west as a few minutes ago it was blowing from seaward.”
-
-“We’d better put the craft about,” said Tom.
-
-“Yes; bring her round as quick as you can,” said Jack. “Goodness! how
-queer this sudden calm feels.”
-
-It was indeed an uncanny feeling. So still had the air become that a
-candle might have been lighted and its flame would hardly have
-flickered.
-
-Through this stagnant atmosphere the Flying Road Racer was worked around
-till her bow was pointing seaward.
-
-“Gracious!” exclaimed Tom, “if the wind doesn’t come from the quarter
-Captain Andrews expected we’ll be blown to bits.”
-
-Jack said nothing. Any reply he might have made was, in fact, cut short
-at this moment by a moaning sound from the direction of the mountains.
-It was caused by the wind sweeping through the canyons and deep abysses
-that scared them.
-
-“Put on full speed, Tom,” urged Jack; “the faster we are going when that
-wind strikes us the less chance there will be of our being ripped to
-bits.”
-
-The greatest speed of which she was capable was placed on the Flying
-Road Racer. The indicator showed in turn fifty, sixty, sixty-five and
-then seventy miles!
-
-Just as she attained this remarkable speed the wind struck the straining
-air craft with its full velocity.
-
-“Fo’ de Lawd’s sake!” shrilled out Jupe, “we done bin gone dis time fo’
-shoh.”
-
-But he was wrong. The stout fabric of the wonderful craft withstood even
-the terrific assault now made upon her. But her forward motion suddenly
-ceased. Caught in the vortex created by the meeting point of the two
-conflicting storms, she was whirled round and round as if she had been
-gripped in a maelstrom of the winds.
-
-The boys could do nothing to control this nauseating, dizzying, rotating
-motion. Upward and forward the Flying Road Racer was forced, climbing at
-terrifying speed the aerial circular staircase. One by one her occupants
-succumbed to the effects of the rapid circling. It caused a helpless,
-miserable feeling similar to seasickness and quite as prostrating.
-
-“Back! back! Go down lower!” shouted Captain Andrews in Tom’s ear.
-
-“We can’t,” yelled the lad; “we’re being dragged to the sky. We’ve lost
-all control.”
-
-“Oh, but this is fearful!” exclaimed Mr. Jesson. “Nothing made by human
-hands can stand this much longer.”
-
-Truly it seemed a marvel that the craft had held together as long as it
-had. So fast were they being swung round and round by this time that the
-car was suspended at quite a sharp angle, swinging outward from the gas
-bag by the force of the centrifugal motion.
-
-It was terrifying, awe-inspiring, prostrating. Not one of those clinging
-for dear life to the dizzy car had ever had such an experience, and one
-or two among them had faced death not a few times.
-
-All at once there came a sharp snap from above them.
-
-To their overstrung nerves it sounded like a pistol shot.
-
-“One of the wires has parted!” cried Ned in a terror-stricken tone.
-
-“It is the beginning of the end,” groaned Captain Andrews, sinking his
-head in his hands.
-
-“Can nothing be done?” gasped out Mr. Jesson, who alone of all that
-pallid-faced crew could find his voice at that instant.
-
-“Nothing,” was the reply. “In ten minutes or less every wire holding us
-to that gas bag will have parted like that one.”
-
-“And then?”
-
-“And then, my friend, we shall be dropped five thousand feet through
-space.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII—A VOYAGE OF TERROR
-
-
-This dire prophecy was, however, not destined to be fulfilled. To the
-intense joy of the air travelers, the circular motion ceased almost as
-suddenly as it had begun, and the rest of the wires remained intact.
-Evidently, the Flying Road Racer had encountered a cross current of wind
-at the great altitude she had now attained, which brought her safely out
-of the aerial whirlpool.
-
-It was an almost miraculous escape, and they were all duly thankful when
-once more their voyage was resumed on an even keel.
-
-But the wind still blew hard, and it was impossible for them to stem it
-without running too grave a risk to attempt such a task.
-
-In this way an hour or more passed, and then suddenly Jack, who had been
-looking out ahead, gave a startled cry.
-
-“What’s the matter?” asked his father.
-
-“Matter? Good heavens, we are being blown out to sea!”
-
-While he spoke the Flying Road Racer was being hurtled along at a dizzy
-sped above bending tree tops and a storm-stressed expanse of country.
-Tom had brought the craft much lower, and it was now not more than five
-hundred feet above the earth. Beneath them the landscape whizzed by like
-a colored moving picture.
-
-But the peril Jack had called attention to lay directly in front of
-them. Beyond the trees came a strip of white beach, and beyond that
-again the vast troubled expanse of the heaving ocean billows, lashed
-into fury by the storm.
-
-Their situation was indeed critical.
-
-“We’re going from bad to worse,” exclaimed Mr. Jesson. “Is there no way
-of landing?”
-
-“Not without the risk of killing or injuring most of us,” rejoined Jack
-soberly.
-
-“Why—why, then we’ll be compelled to fly above the ocean?”
-
-“It looks that way. I don’t see what else we can do.”
-
-“But in that case we shall be in grave danger?”
-
-“I don’t think the danger will be much greater than the one we have
-faced. We have plenty of gas still, and can keep in the air for a long
-time if need be.”
-
-“A week?” asked Captain Andrews. “These hurricanes sometimes last as
-long as that.”
-
-“I don’t know that we could hold out for a week,” admitted Jack; “but I
-do know that we cannot avoid being blown out to sea. If the storm does
-not abate we are likely to be compelled to spend some time above the
-water.”
-
-“Well, the wind is coming out of the southwest now. If we keep on this
-way we ought to be blown clear across the Gulf of Mexico and on to the
-western shore of Florida.”
-
-It was Captain Andrews who vouchsafed this last remark.
-
-“I don’t know that that would be a bad idea,” commented Professor
-Chadwick.
-
-“How long ought it to take us, going at this rate of speed?” inquired
-Abner Jennings.
-
-“Let’s see, the least distance across would be about fifteen hundred
-miles.”
-
-“Then, at the rate we are being driven, it would take about twenty-four
-hours to make the passage,” calculated Mr. Jesson.
-
-“About that time—yes,” agreed Jack. “I really think we had better try to
-do that.”
-
-All agreed that it appeared to be the best plan. While they had been
-discussing this, they had passed over the last few miles of dry land.
-Looking down now they saw beneath them a vast expanse of gray, tumbling
-billows, tossing and rolling before the wind.
-
-“If we ever took a tumble into the sea it would be all up with us,”
-commented Jack in a low voice to Tom.
-
-“Yes; even a ship could hardly live in such a storm, and yet—look. Jack,
-back yonder,—isn’t that,—yes, surely it’s a craft of some sort!”
-
-The lad indicated a point to the southward of them. Rising and falling
-in the great trough of the billows was a small vessel of some sort. For
-an instant Jack thought it was the _Tarantula_, but the next moment he
-made out that the vessel they were looking at had two masts and a yellow
-funnel amidships.
-
-But another shift of the wind gave them something else to think of right
-then.
-
-The blast “hauled round,” as mariners call it, and shifted to the south.
-The Flying Road Racer’s head was twisted around to the north and she was
-deflected from her course to the eastward and the hoped-for Florida
-coast.
-
-“What shall we do now?” cried Ned Bangs, when he observed this.
-
-“Keep on running before the wind. It’s all we can do,” rejoined Jack.
-
-The storm-beaten air craft, with its heavy human freight, was now being
-driven almost due north along the coast. Tom kept the prow pointed so as
-to bring the course almost parallel with the coast. All the time both he
-and Jack kept a keen lookout for a possible landing place.
-
-But none appeared. The wind, instead of dying down, grew stronger as the
-day went on.
-
-“What will be the end of this?” was the thought that crossed the minds
-of all of them in one form or another.
-
-The sun was obscured by scudding clouds, below them rolled the dismal,
-desolate expanse of salt water, for by this time they had passed over
-the peninsula of Yucatan and were out over the open gulf. In the
-distance to the westward, however, lay a dim coast line, and Tom steered
-toward it.
-
-Suddenly there came a loud, ripping, crashing sound.
-
-As he heard it Jack gave a cry of dismay. It was echoed by Tom and Ned,
-who both instantly guessed what had occurred.
-
-The rudder had given way under the strain.
-
-Looking over the side of the car they could see it being swept away by
-the wind, while astern of the tonneau hung a mass of tangled wreckage.
-
-“Good heavens! This is the worst yet,” groaned Captain Andrews. “Adrift
-in an airship without a rudder! What under the starry dome can we do
-now?”
-
-“Nothing but hope and pray for the best,” rejoined Jack. “We are
-helpless indeed without the rudder.”
-
-Fortunately, however, the propeller still worked, and Tom, abandoning
-the now useless steering wheel, gave all his efforts to aiding Jack in
-attending to the engines.
-
-The aerial screw helped to keep the Flying Road Racer on a straight
-course, and onward she flew, a disabled but still staunch craft.
-
-“Is there anything that we can do to help you?” asked Professor
-Chadwick, after a while.
-
-“Dere ain’t nuffin’ would help now but about a squar’ mile ob good dry
-lan’,” gloomily remarked Jupe.
-
-Tom shook his head, and so did Jack.
-
-“No, Father,” said the latter, “there isn’t a thing to be done. So long
-as we can keep the engine going, though, we can manage, at least, to
-keep before the wind.”
-
-“We’re getting closer to the coast,” cried Mr. Jesson suddenly.
-
-They were indeed. The forms of distant hills and forests could now be
-made out, and hope began to revive that they might, after all, find a
-spot to make a safe landing.
-
-“The wind has shifted again,” announced Captain Andrews, glancing over
-Tom’s shoulder at the compass. “It’s blowing out of the east now, and if
-it holds will drive us upon the Mexican coast.”
-
-Hardly had he made this announcement than there was an alarming
-cracking, snapping sound from the bow of the Flying Road Racer.
-
-A dark, sharp-pointed object whizzed through the air, and the next
-instant there came a sudden sound of ripping fabric, followed by a
-hissing noise as of escaping steam.
-
-“Great jumping sea serpents, what’s happened now?” bellowed Captain
-Andrews.
-
-“A blade of the propeller has torn loose from its hub and pierced the
-gas bag,” shouted Jack in an alarmed tone.
-
-“We’re falling!” suddenly screamed out Abner Jennings.
-
-“Bound for Davy Jones’ locker, sure as fate!” bawled one of the sailors.
-
-“Get out the life jackets!” yelled Tom at the top of his voice. “They
-are in that locker on the right-hand side of the tonneau.”
-
-All this time the Flying Road Racer was slowly descending. The broken
-propeller blade had ripped a big hole in the side of the gas bag,
-through which the vapor was rushing forth.
-
-“Isn’t it possible to repair it?” cried Mr. Jesson.
-
-Jack shook his head.
-
-“Impossible,” he said. “We had better all get on life jackets as quickly
-as possible. It’s lucky I had them put in that locker; but something I
-read about an airship being blown out to sea some months ago made me
-think of it.”
-
-As quickly as possible all of them invested themselves in the cork-lined
-jackets, which were covered with stout canvas.
-
-“Look! look!” cried Jack suddenly, “isn’t that an island ahead of us!”
-
-Captain Andrews pierced the gloom with his keen eyes.
-
-“It is! It’s an island, sure enough!” he cried joyfully. “If we can make
-it we are saved.”
-
-But the Flying Road Racer settled lower even as he spoke.
-
-The angry sea beneath looked savage and cruel as it leaped upward toward
-them, as if impatient for the end to come swiftly.
-
-Ahead lay the island; a large one, with a sandy beach extending in their
-direction. Could they reach it before the air craft sank into the waves?
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII—THE BOY INVENTORS SOLVE A PROBLEM
-
-
-The engine had been shut off, and amidst a dead silence, so far as any
-talk was concerned, the Flying Road Racer drifted down toward the
-island.
-
-But the gas had escaped so rapidly and the weight in the car was so
-great, that the island was still a few hundred feet off when they first
-felt the wind-driven spray dashing against their faces.
-
-“Can we make it?” asked Mr. Jesson in a low, tense voice.
-
-“I think so,” replied Jack; “at any rate, if we can’t, we have the cork
-jackets on and must swim for it.”
-
-As he spoke, though, the disabled flying craft settled suddenly
-downward. Above her the collapsed gas envelope was wrinkled and flabby,
-and barely kept her up.
-
-All at once the crest of a huge wave dashed against the bottom of the
-aluminum tank. The Flying Road Racer careened so far over that for a
-moment it looked as if her end had come.
-
-But at the same moment the wind blew stronger and caught the half-empty
-gas bag. This raised the crippled craft a few feet and drove her
-forward. The impetus thus given was sufficient to save the adventurers
-from a dangerous swim.
-
-With a crash that might have been audible at some distance had there
-been any one to hear it the Flying Road Racer landed in the sand of the
-island beach at precisely one-thirty on that day of stirring events in
-the young inventors lives.
-
-Thanks to the shock absorbers, the auto part was not harmed seriously.
-Five minutes after they had landed the adventurers stood in a group
-surveying the stranded craft.
-
-“What a wreck!” exclaimed Mr. Jesson, gazing the flabby wrinkles of the
-gas envelope and at the wound in its side.
-
-The Flying Road Racer did, indeed, look different from the trim craft
-that had arisen from the deck of the _Vagrant_ not so very long before.
-
-But how much had transpired in those few hours! If time might be
-reckoned by events the boys could record that they had passed through
-years of experience since Jack and Captain Andrews struck out on the
-forest path leading to the plantation houses.
-
-“What a mess!” breathed Abner Jennings, echoing in part Mr. Jesson’s
-remark.
-
-“It’s my opinion that we ought to thank Providence for getting off with
-our lives,” said Captain Andrews stoutly. And to this sentiment they all
-heartily agreed.
-
-“Can you ever repair her. Jack, do you think?” asked his father
-anxiously.
-
-Jack, who had been surveying the wreck carefully, was not yet ready to
-give an opinion, however.
-
-“If we could fix that rip in the gas bag it might be possible to patch
-her up,” he said dubiously. “There is,—or ought to be,—a spare propeller
-on board, and if the engine is working, it might be feasible to put the
-craft in order once more.”
-
-“Well, we’d better run her up out of the reach of the waves anyhow,”
-said Tom.
-
-The air craft had grounded at the margin of the beach, and the spray of
-the thunderous waves showered her as each broke.
-
-The two sailors and the others came forward to lay hands on the Flying
-Road Racer, and shove her up the beach. But Jack had a better plan in
-mind.
-
-“If the motor is working. I’ll run her up under her own power,” he said.
-
-He followed up these words by getting into the driver’s seat, and after
-Tom had removed the wreck of the propeller, his cousin started up the
-engine and threw in the clutch connecting it with the driving machinery.
-
-The rear wheels flew round in the sand for a minute, but as the boy
-applied more power they gripped the surface and the Flying Road Racer—an
-automobile now—moved rapidly up the beach. Jack ran her in under a grove
-of trees and then shut off the engine.
-
-“If only we weren’t on an island,” he said, “we could run right through
-to the city of Mexico!”
-
-“Gee, I wish we could,” said Ned Bangs, “it’s a question of how long the
-grub will hold out on this island, and we don’t know if any ships come
-this way.”
-
-“Easy enough to find out,” said Tom rather carelessly.
-
-“Easy enough?” echoed Ned. “Well, Tom Jesson, you’ll have to show me.
-Here we are, cut off from all communication——”
-
-Tom smiled and shook his head.
-
-“Not while we’ve got the wireless,” he said.
-
-“What do you mean, Tom?” asked Mr. Jesson.
-
-“That when I left the _Vagrant_ I brought her wireless apparatus with
-me,” said Tom in a quiet tone. “That’s what those bundles were.”
-
-“Good,” exclaimed Mr. Jesson. “We’ll have something to eat and some hot
-coffee, and then we’ll try to get into communication with the shore, or
-some vessel, and get them to take us off this desolate place.”
-
-But Jack, who had been looking about the island in their vicinity,
-dampened their enthusiasm by a sudden question.
-
-“How are you going to fix an aerial?” he asked.
-
-“Easy enough,” said Tom confidently; “some tree will do. Ned Bangs,
-here, can climb it. Luckily I loaded a lot of copper wire with the other
-stuff. We can use that for antenna.”
-
-“Why, you monkey!” cried Jack, half laughing, “there isn’t a tree on the
-island.”
-
-This fact, which none of them had noticed before, was evidently so. The
-island was covered with a scrub growth, but nowhere did the bushes
-exceed a height of ten feet.
-
-Professor Chadwick broke in on their dejection.
-
-“Come,” he said, “it’s no use our discussing anything now. Let us have a
-good meal and then, maybe, we’ll hit upon some plan.”
-
-While Jupe made his preparations for a warm meal, selecting a spot
-sheltered by brush not far from the remains of the Flying Road Racer,
-the boys gathered driftwood, of which there seemed to be plenty on the
-beach, and made a big pile of it. This was lighted, and the warmth of
-the blaze proved very comforting to the chilled castaways.
-
-As Professor Chadwick had predicted, the meal served to put new heart
-into them. As they ate they discussed their situation in all its
-bearings, but without arriving at any conclusion as to their future
-course.
-
-If they could not get a wireless message to some station on land or
-ship, their situation looked as if it might speedily become serious.
-They did not dwell on this aspect of the case, however, but made a
-determined effort to be as cheerful as possible.
-
-After dinner, if such the meal could be called. Professor Chadwick and
-Mr. Jesson set out to explore the island. The others, except Jack and
-Tom, lay down to sleep, being’ thoroughly exhausted by what they had
-gone through.
-
-The two lads, however, felt too excited to sleep. Instead, they fell to
-figuring how it would be possible to send out a message telling of their
-plight, without having a tall pole or tree to which to string their
-aerials.
-
-The problem was perplexing, and they threshed it over and over for an
-hour without arriving any nearer a plan for getting their wires into the
-air. It was Jack who finally hit upon what was literally an inspiration.
-
-Close to them, while they had been talking, lay the pile of life jackets
-they had taken off when they landed.
-
-“Is there any of that liquid rubber for repairing the tires in the
-Flying Road Racer?” he inquired of Tom, with seeming meaningless
-curiosity.
-
-“Why, yes; there’s a gallon can of it. But why?”
-
-“You’ll see directly. Will you get it?”
-
-“Yes, of course,” rejoined Tom, rising from his seat on the sand.
-“Anything else?”
-
-“That needle and stout thread in the gas bag tool kit and—well, I guess
-that will be all for now.”
-
-“I wish I knew what you are driving at,” said Tom, as he moved off to
-get the things Jack had asked for.
-
-“I’m driving at a way to get those aerials up,” rejoined the young
-inventor briefly.
-
-When Tom returned with the articles Jack had asked for, he found his
-cousin busily engaged in taking the cork out of one of the life jackets.
-This was easily done, as it was in granulated form.
-
-Having emptied the jacket, the boy heated some of the liquid rubber over
-Jupe’s fire till it was about the consistency of cream. This done, he
-proceeded to coat the canvas of the empty life jacket with the compound.
-Before he did this, however, he sewed a patch on over the hole he had
-made to drain the cork, leaving a bit of rubber tube, also found in the
-supply locker of the Flying Road Racer, sticking out.
-
-Tom, after a few minutes, began to realize dimly what the ingenious lad
-was doing; but he didn’t get the full understanding of Jack’s idea till
-the latter, having allowed the rubber coating to dry, walked toward the
-Flying Road Racer with it.
-
-“I see what you’ve made now. Jack,” he cried. “It’s an airproof canvas
-bag, and you’re——”
-
-“Going to fill it with gas and see if it will rise,” said Jack.
-
-As he spoke he placed the end of the rubber tube he had left protruding
-from the canvas life jacket, over a small stop-cock on the gas tank of
-the Flying Road Racer. When he turned the valve a hissing sound followed
-and the rubber-coated life jacket began to fill, just as any air-tight
-envelope would have done.
-
-When it was half full a laughable thing occurred, giving abundant
-evidence of the bag’s buoyancy. Jack, who was holding it, was suddenly
-lifted off his feet as the bag began to rise, tearing the end of the
-rubber tube off the valve as it did so. Just as he was lifted into the
-air, for he actually couldn’t make up his mind to let go of his
-invention, Tom seized his feet and dragged him to the sand again. A rope
-was secured and the bag lashed to a bush after the end of the tube had
-been tied.
-
-“By cracky!” cried Tom, “that’s the invention of the century. How on
-earth did you come to think of it?”
-
-“I suppose old Mother Necessity had something to do with it,” said Jack;
-“but the fact that those life jackets lay right close to us helped a
-lot. I reasoned it out that they would float on the water, and
-therefore, if they could be emptied and made air-tight, they would rise
-when filled with gas equally well.”
-
-“And you’re going to hitch the aerials on to that one and send them up?”
-
-“I’m not sure that one of them will be enough to raise such a weight of
-copper wire. I guess we’ll make another one.”
-
-“And I’ll help you,” cried Tom enthusiastically.
-
-Half an hour later when Mr. Jesson and his brother-in-law returned from
-exploring the island, which they had found to be a desolate spot some
-five miles off shore, they found two busy lads.
-
-The wires had been strung on “spreaders” cut from the brush. Then one of
-the ends was connected to each of the buoyant “balloons” that were to
-carry the antenna aloft.
-
-In the lee of the Flying Road Racer the boys had arranged the wireless
-equipment, and were now occupied in securing the lower end of the
-antenna and adjusting the connecting wires from aerials to the
-instruments.
-
-At last all was ready, and the two canvas “balloons” were cut loose.
-Slowly but steadily they rose, carrying with them the strands of copper
-wire,—five of them, each one hundred feet in length. The wind had died
-down quite a lot, and there was not much strain on the wires as they
-were pulled skyward like the string of a kite.
-
-As the wires tightened and became extended to their full length the boys
-broke into a cheer. Held by the captive “balloons,” the five parallel
-wires made as effective an aerial as if they had been rigged to a lofty
-pole.
-
-“Boys,” exclaimed Professor Chadwick proudly, “that’s what I call a real
-wireless triumph!”
-
-“Wait and see if it works first, father,” said Jack, with a happy smile.
-He had not much doubt on this point, having solved the vexatious problem
-of getting his wires aloft.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV—AN APPEAL FOR HELP
-
-
-“What are you going to do now?” asked Tom of Jack, who, with the
-receivers clamped over his ears, was seated at the wireless apparatus.
-
-It was the middle of the afternoon, the storm had blown itself out and
-the sun was shining cheerfully.
-
-About the young inventors pressed the castaways,—for they had been
-awakened,—Captain Andrews, so that he might make an observation and get
-their exact position, and the rest to be on hand if need arose.
-
-Jack had just flashed out the location of the island, and with it a
-fervent appeal for help. From the balloon-supported wires above him, the
-message had gone shooting forth into space.
-
-But as yet no answer had come, though the lad sat with the transmitting
-switch open, waiting for a reply.
-
-“Maybe there are no ships in this part of the Gulf,” said Tom.
-
-“Well, with the power we have from that dynamo we ought to have gotten
-into communication with something before this,” said Jack impatiently.
-He turned his head toward the dynamo of the Flying Road Racer, which had
-been connected with the wireless apparatus and was whizzing away
-merrily. The motor, fed by a fresh supply of gas obtained by dumping in
-a new lot of crystals, of course supplied the motive power for the
-current maker.
-
-“Try again,” suggested Professor Chadwick.
-
-Jack threw over the switch to connect the transmitting appliances, and
-began manipulating the key once more.
-
-The message of distress crackled and flashed, like the snapping of a
-whip lash,—or, more truly, a thousand of them.
-
-Jack was utilizing every atom of power he could obtain. He calculated
-that he had at least one hundred and ten volts of current, which should
-be ample to send his messages for a great distance.
-
-After sending for a while he stopped and listened. But no message came
-beating against his ears, breathing a spirit of hope.
-
-“Try sending out a C. Q. D.,” said Abner Jennings.
-
-“You mean S. O. S.,” rejoined Jack. “C. Q. D. isn’t used as an urgent
-call any more. Too many would-be jokers used to send it out and cause
-endless confusion.”
-
-He threw the switch again into a sending position, and began to flash
-out another message.
-
-“o o o —— —— —— o o o” “S. O. S.”
-
-It was the most urgent call known to seamen. The despairing cry of the
-wrecked the lost.
-
-Again and again Jack volleyed it out, and the far-flung appeal went
-skyrocketing off on the electric waves, spreading like the ripples on a
-pond from the tightly stretched aerials. It was signed “The Chadwick
-Party.”
-
-Then the lad tried listening again.
-
-Suddenly a look of joy flashed over his face.
-
-“He’s getting an answer!” yelled Tom in huge excitement. Ned Banks,
-hardly less enthusiastic, capered about.
-
-Jack’s pencil traced the message from space on a pad of paper placed on
-an empty box before him.
-
-“What is it? What’s the matter?”
-
-Once more he began sending furiously.
-
-“We have been driven on a desert island off the Mexican coast.”
-
-“Where is it?” came the reply. “Give latitude and longitude.”
-
-Jack swiftly flashed back the required information. Then he asked a
-question.
-
-“Who is this?”
-
-“The _Sea King_,” was the astonishing reply.
-
-“We are coming to your aid. Have you got the gems?”
-
-“Yes. They are safe, and we are all well, but in need of help,” the lad
-sent back with a joyous heart.
-
-He listened for a reply, but none came. In fact, there was no need for
-more communication. The castaways knew what they wanted to know most of
-all, namely, that they would be taken off the island as soon as
-possible. In the meantime. Professor Chadwick ordered Jupe to prepare a
-royal spread in celebration of the event.
-
-“We look like a lot of pirates,” commented Jack, as, after a hearty
-meal, they lay stretched about the fire.
-
-“I suppose that, like most boys, you have a sort of admiration for those
-gentry?” inquired Captain Andrews.
-
-“Well, he’s stuffed his head with enough books about them,” chuckled
-Tom.
-
-“Guess that applies to you, too,” parried Jack, with a grin.
-
-“I don’t suppose, though, that either of you ever saw a real pirate,”
-commented the captain quietly. “I can tell you they are mighty different
-beings from the red-sashed, romantic sort of chaps you read about.”
-
-“Why, have you ever seen any?” asked Jack, sitting up eagerly.
-
-“Yes, and fought with ’em, too. Care to hear the yarn?” responded the
-seaman.
-
-The boys’ prompt affirmative removed all doubts on this score and
-Captain Andrews, without further preliminaries, struck into his tale.
-
-“It was a good many years ago,” he said, “when I wasn’t much bigger than
-you lads. But for all that I was acting as third mate on a sailing
-packet running from Liverpool to the West Indies. The skipper, whose
-name was David Munson, was a stern man, but kind enough. He had a
-curious way of keeping to himself, though, and the men said that some
-time before he had been attacked by sea-robbers, who had cut him down
-and captured his wife and child, who sailed with him. But the rascals
-had not thought it worth while to take him and left him for dead on his
-burning vessel. For they, according to their usual custom, had set it on
-fire before they sailed away.
-
-“Captain Munson recovered consciousness in the nick of time to stagger
-out of the path of the flames. A boat lay astern of his craft and he had
-just strength enough left to slide down a rope into this and cast off.
-Then he lost consciousness once more.
-
-“For three days he drifted in this way, lying all the time in a dead
-swoon. On the third day he was picked up, more dead than alive, by a
-Bristol line clipper, which brought him back to England.
-
-“It was many a long day before he got about again and it was then found
-that he had lost all recollection of the tragedy and appeared to think
-that his vessel had perished in a storm. But, except for this, his mind
-was clear enough and he found little difficulty in getting a new
-command. This was the West Indiaman _Cambrian Hills_, of which I was
-third mate. Captain Munson’s story was related to me by the first mate,
-a man named Sterling, a fine seaman and a good fellow. This Sterling had
-been on board the ship that the pirates had captured and had been made
-prisoner by them. But later he had managed to make his escape from the
-South American city to which they had taken him to be sold as a slave.
-
-“Reaching England, he found that his former skipper, whom he had thought
-dead, was alive and in good health, but that his mind was hopelessly
-clouded as to the past. In fact, he did not recognize Sterling, and
-Sterling, fearing the consequences of reminding him of what had occurred
-on the Spanish main, made no move to awaken his slumbering memory. This
-was the strange story Mate Sterling told me one stormy night on watch.
-
-“Well, on this particular voyage the _Cambrian Hills_ came in for the
-buffeting of their life. Heavy gales, head seas, and violent squalls
-beat the craft about day after day. And at last up came a terrific gale
-from the northeast, which carried us away off our course and down off
-the coast of Brazil.
-
-“Now, as it so happened, this was the very worst place we could have
-been driven to at this particular time. One of those little wars that
-were then eternally harassing the South American republics had just come
-to an end and the seas thereabouts were swarming with piratical craft.
-These gentry called themselves privateers and carried government papers,
-but were, to all intents and purposes, pirates and nothing more nor
-less.
-
-“Following the gale, the weather fell into a regular condition of
-doldrums. Sometimes it blew a light wind, but more often a dead calm
-till it seemed that we were doomed to haunt the Brazilian coast for the
-rest of our lives. The men grew restive. It was insufferably hot and the
-calking in the deck seams fairly bubbled and boiled.
-
-“Thus passed an entire week and the only man or board whose nerves were
-not on edge was Captain Munson. He appeared not to worry or chafe over
-our situation in the least. This was the more curious, inasmuch as
-Sterling had informed me that the seas in which we lay were the very
-identical ones in which the fatal battle with the pirates who had looted
-Captain Munson’s last command had taken place.
-
-“One morning just after breakfast I was standing against the taffrail,
-with Sterling by my side, idly gazing horizonward for a sign of coming
-wind. All at once I saw Sterling clap his telescope to his eye and gaze
-intently off into the southeast.
-
-“‘Wind?’ says I.
-
-“‘No,’ says he.
-
-“‘Well, what then?’ says I.
-
-“‘A sail,’ says he.
-
-“‘Then they must be getting more wind than we are,’ says I. ‘What do you
-make her out to be?’
-
-“‘Can’t tell yet; but somehow I don’t much like the look of her.’
-
-“He handed me the glass.
-
-“‘Take a look yourself,’ he said.
-
-“I squinted through the telescope and at last made out the distant sail.
-She was a black brigantine, low in the water and with a rakish sort of
-look about her masts and spars. The water over around her was dark
-blue—of a deeper tinge than the ocean surrounding us—showing that the
-wind was blowing off in that direction.
-
-“‘She doesn’t show any colors,’ says I, handing the glass back to
-Sterling. ‘What do you make her out to be?’
-
-“He shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“‘I don’t know, laddie,’ he said, ‘but she looks to me like a war vessel
-of some sort. Maybe a Brazilian craft.’
-
-“‘Well, whatever she is,’ says I, ‘she’s got the wind with her and it’ll
-hit us in a minute.’
-
-“‘That’s right,’ says he, coming out of a sort of a reverie. ‘Get your
-yards squared and your courses braced up.’
-
-“I hastened to put these orders into execution, and hardly had they been
-completed when the long awaited wind struck us. The _Cambrian Hills_
-heeled over and began to move through the water.
-
-“The crew set up a cheer as we began to get under way and the noise
-brought the skipper on deck. He looked more than usually grave and had a
-Bible, which he had evidently been reading, in his hand.
-
-“‘Wind at last, Mr. Sterling?’ he said quietly.
-
-“‘Aye! aye, sir,’ said the mate. ‘I knew the luck was bound to turn,’ he
-added.
-
-“‘There is no such thing as luck, Mr. Sterling,’ said the captain in his
-quiet, grave way. ‘All is the doings of Providence.’
-
-“Then he turned and moved away, but Sterling was at his side in a
-minute.
-
-“‘There’s a sail off there to windward, sir. Will you take a look at her
-and tell us what you think of her? You know it pays to be suspicious in
-these waters, and I don’t much like her looks.’
-
-“In his usual serious manner the skipper took the glass and gazed
-through it at the brigantine, which, to my eye, was sailing two feet to
-our one, and overhauling us fast. He gazed at her a long time and when
-he set the glass down his face was working curiously. He clapped his
-hand to his forehead as if something there hurt him.
-
-“‘I—I—There’s something strangely familiar about that craft, Mr.
-Sterling,’ says he, ‘but, for the life of me, I can’t tell what it is.’
-
-“‘Looks to me like a man-o’-war of some sort, sir,’ says Sterling.
-
-“He took up the glass again and scrutinized the stranger. Then I saw the
-color begin to die out of his red, good-natured face till it grew white
-as a corpse.
-
-“‘It’s an armed vessel, sir,’ he grated out through his clenched teeth,
-‘and—and she’s just broken out the Black Flag,—the skull and cross
-bones, sir!’
-
-“‘A pirate, eh?’ said Munson quietly, and I noticed the same curious
-expression pass across his face. It was the strained look of a man
-trying to recall something that eludes him persistently. ‘Well, Mr.
-Sterling, she’s faster than us. We must fight for it, sir,’ he said at
-length.
-
-“‘Aye, sir,’ says Sterling gravely, ‘I’ll call the men aft and explain
-to them. Andrews, my lad, you attend to distributing the weapons.’
-
-“Every West Indiaman in those days carried a small arsenal of
-weapons—blunderbusses and cutlasses—for attacks by roving bands of
-sea-robbers were not infrequent. The men took the news well enough,
-although one or two of them went white. But there were enough old
-veterans among them to keep them steady and prevent a panic.
-
-“I guess the resolute bearing of Captain Munson and Mr. Sterling had a
-good deal to do with putting heart into them. As for myself, I was
-horribly scared inside, but I trust that my alarm did not appear too
-conspicuously on my countenance.
-
-“The men gave a cheer as Captain Munson concluded his little speech and
-I summoned three of them below to assist in the distribution of the
-arms. In the meantime Mr. Sterling gave orders to the men to rig up as
-many dummies as possible and station them along the bulwarks so that we
-might seem to be more in number than we actually were. This was a common
-enough trick in those days.
-
-“I have to smile even now when I think of it, but one good fellow in his
-zeal even clapped a cap on top of the galley chimney, although what a
-man would have been doing poking his head out of ‘Charley Noble’—as the
-cook-house stack is called by seamen—is hard to say. By the time all our
-preparations were completed the craft that was overhauling us was not
-more than half a mile astern.
-
-“She was a handsome craft and a witch at sailing. The _Cambrian Hills_
-was accounted a fast vessel; but we weren’t in it with our pursuer. If
-we had had any doubt as to her intentions toward us till then she soon
-dispelled it. From her bow came a flash and a puff of smoke and a ball
-screamed through our rigging. It did no harm—wasn’t meant to,
-probably—but it showed us that they ‘meant business.’
-
-“The _Cambrian Hills_ carried an old brass cannon, more for saluting
-purposes than anything else. But we had slugs on board and the piece of
-artillery was loaded up. But the enemy, as we now rightfully regarded
-her, was too far off for our carronade to be effective as yet. She, on
-the other hand, appeared to have a serviceable heavy gun. All this was
-not encouraging, but the prospect grew worse as we swept their decks
-with the glass. Fully forty men lined her bulwarks and we numbered only
-twenty, including the cook, who was not accounted a first class fighting
-man. Of him, however, more anon.
-
-“I was a young fellow then and had always thought of pirates as being
-chaps all covered with finery, gold lace and jewels and such. I was
-stricken with astonishment to see that no such men appeared on the
-brigantine. They were all filthy, wretched looking things, many of them
-being coal-black negroes. Among them were even one or two Chinese. Such
-a mixture of races I never saw before or since.
-
-“Suddenly Captain Munson, to my astonishment, snatched up his speaking
-trumpet and hailed the pirate, who was now almost alongside and to
-windward.
-
-“‘Ship ahoy!’
-
-“His voice was as bold as if he had been skipper of a man-o’-war hailing
-a sea criminal. It was a bold move, but it was successful in producing
-some confusion among the pirates. All at once a giant of a man with a
-black beard stepped up on the pirate’s rail, holding on by the lee
-forestays.
-
-“‘Hullo!’ he hailed in a foreign accent.
-
-“‘What ship’s that?’ hailed Captain Munson again.
-
-“‘None of your business. Heave to. I want to board you,’ was the reply
-in an insolent voice.
-
-“‘You go plumb to blazes!’ came from Sterling, who was a hot-tempered
-chap and could contain himself no longer.
-
-“At that very instant a puff of wind blew the man’s black beard aside.
-He clutched at it desperately, but somehow he bungled the job, and to my
-utter astonishment—it came off! He stood revealed as a man of huge frame
-with a brutal bull-dog jaw and unmistakable Latin cast of features. But
-I had little time to notice this, for a strange cry had broken from
-Captain Munson’s lips as the man’s disguise blew off. He turned deathly
-pale and staggered like a drunken man.
-
-“Sterling and I rushed to his side. We thought for a minute that he was
-about to faint. But he rallied and stared at us for a moment wildly.
-
-“‘Good Lord!’ exclaimed Sterling, ‘it’s all come back to him!’
-
-“Then I understood. That man who had hailed us was the captain of the
-same piratical band that had attacked Captain Munson’s other ship and
-carried off his wife and child. The next instant following Sterling’s
-exclamation was a dramatic one.
-
-“‘You know me, sir?’ asked the mate.
-
-“‘Yes! Yes! You’re Robert Sterling,’ burst from the captain’s lips. ‘I
-recall it all now. The fight! That ruffian struck me down. I woke up to
-find you all gone. But, Sterling, how do you come to be here,—and—and
-where are Bess and the baby?’
-
-“I felt sorry for Sterling then. His face went as white as the captain’s
-visage and he actually shook as if from cold. But he had to answer.
-
-“‘Better off than if they were in the hands of those ruffians, sir,’ he
-replied in a low voice which shook perilously, ‘they are——’
-
-“‘Dead!’ burst out the captain, with a terrible cry.
-
-“Sterling bowed his head.
-
-“‘Your wife leaped overboard rather than be sold down the coast as a
-slave,’ he said slowly, ‘and—and she took the baby with her.’
-
-“I did not dare to look at Captain Munson’s face. But I could hear his
-breath come short and quick, just like a man breathes after a long, hard
-swim. But the next instant we had other things to think of. A volley of
-small arms from the pirate craft whistled about our ears. She was up to
-windward and evidently meant to grapple and board us. What followed is
-hard to describe. I don’t know how most men feel in a fight of that
-character, but it seemed to me that I was in a dream. I fired and
-loaded, and fired and loaded, while all about me bullets were flying and
-fallen men groaning. Splinters flew as the pirate’s volleys raked our
-rails. I was suddenly conscious of being wounded, but I fought on,
-actually hardly knowing what I was doing.
-
-“Suddenly the pirate’s sails loomed close alongside. Our yardarms locked
-with his. Grappling irons were thrown aboard us and the whole horde of
-ruffians tried to board us by main force. But they met with such
-desperate resistance that they were compelled to retreat for the time.
-Right here is where the cook figured. Just as things looked most
-critical he turned the tide for us. Attached to a huge boiler in his
-domain was a hose, used for washing stains out of the decks.
-
-“While we had been arming he had made up a roaring fire. By the time the
-pirates boarded us there was enough boiling water in the boiler to make
-that hose an effective weapon. Yelling like an Indian, the cook turned
-it on the scrambling mass of rascals. The stream of boiling water was
-more effective than bullets. With yells and cries they fell back, some
-of them scalded horribly.
-
-“All this time I had lost sight of Captain Munson. Now I glimpsed him,
-just in time to see him leap into the main chains and from thence on to
-the bulwarks of the pirate ship. His face was fixed and terrible and
-held an expression of desperate resolve. Cutlass in hand, he fought his
-way through the demoralized pirates and at last I saw, in a flash of
-understanding, his purpose. His object was to find out, and kill with
-his own hands, the pirate chief. Hardly had I realized this before the
-men encountered each other. Apparently the pirate recognized Munson
-instantly, for I saw him recoil as if he had seen a ghost. But the next
-instant he had recovered and began to fight desperately for his life.
-
-“In the meantime some of our crew had cut the two vessels apart, and
-before any of us recovered his wits and started to the captain’s rescue
-the two craft had drifted so far asunder that it was impossible. With
-horrified fascination we watched the fight, and if it held us spellbound
-it appeared to have the same effect on the pirate crew; at any rate,
-none of them interfered.
-
-“Such a furious fight could not, in the nature of things, last long, but
-it came to an altogether unexpected conclusion. Captain Munson’s cutlass
-had broken off short and he closed with his enemy, grasping him about
-the waist. They both reeled backward—and suddenly vanished from sight. A
-hatchway had been left open, and in their blind fury neither had noticed
-it. Tripping on the coaming, they had plunged into it.
-
-“Suddenly we heard a shot from the pirate craft, and then came a great
-cry. I could not make out what all the yelling was about, and turned to
-Sterling who seemed equally spellbound at the horror of the thing we had
-just witnessed.
-
-“‘What is it? What are they saying?’ I demanded.
-
-“‘They are shouting that the magazine is on fire!’ he exclaimed, ‘that a
-shot fired by the Englishman has ignited the powder!’”
-
-“The words had hardly left his lips before a hot blast rushed full at
-me. I was knocked from my feet, saw a vast sheet of flame before me, and
-knew no more. When I came to I discovered Sterling bending over me. His
-face was very grave and serious.
-
-“‘What has happened?’ I asked weakly.
-
-“‘The pirate ship is blown up,’ he replied; ‘not a vestige of her is
-left.’
-
-“‘And Captain Munson?’ I demanded, although I knew what the reply would
-be.
-
-“Sterling removed his cap; a last tribute to a brave man.
-
-”‘Has gone with her to Jones’ locker,’ he rejoined; ‘maybe it was better
-so. It would be just about here that his wife and baby died.’”
-
-Captain Andrews paused. So ended his story, which cast a gloom over the
-party that was not to be dispelled. Soon after, therefore, they retired,
-with the picture of the sea captain’s tragic death still vividly before
-their eyes.
-
-Before joining the others. Jack tried to get into communication with the
-_Sea King_ by wireless once more. But he failed. However, this did not
-worry them, as they knew that their friends must know where to find
-them.
-
-“I wonder when they’ll arrive here,” said Professor Chadwick, as they
-prepared to spend as comfortable a night as they could on the sand.
-“Those repairs were surely effected quickly,” he added.
-
-“Very quickly,” said Captain Andrews, who alone of the party had not
-been almost wild with delight at the prospect of the rescue. “By the
-way. Jack, you are quite sure that it was the _Sea King_ that you were
-in communication with?”
-
-“Of course,” rejoined the lad rather impatiently, “who else could it
-have been? Who would have had any object in trying to pass themselves
-off as the _Sea King_ unless they——”
-
-He stopped short and looked rather blank all of a sudden. The idea of
-Herrera had just crossed his mind. And then that ship that they had seen
-laboring in the stormy sea that afternoon?
-
-“Pshaw!” said the lad to himself; “she had two masts and a yellow
-funnel, there’s no chance of that being the _Tarantula_.”
-
-When he voiced this belief aloud later on, the others agreed with him.
-But Captain Andrews, still suspicious, determined, he said, to keep
-watch. The others, almost too tired to keep their eyes open, rather
-ridiculed this precaution, and soon sleep enwrapped every one on that
-desolate island.
-
-Every one? Yes; for tired nature had asserted herself and Captain
-Andrews, after a hard struggle to keep awake, dozed off, woke with a
-start, dozed off again and finally slumbered profoundly.
-
-Had he kept his eyes open a while longer he would have seen something
-approaching the island that would have caused him to keep awake with a
-vengeance. This object was nothing more nor less than the _Tarantula_,
-disguised cunningly by a canvas smokestack painted yellow, and two
-masts.
-
-Herrera early that day had ascended the river and heard of the flight of
-the prisoners and the destruction of his hemp-drying plant. Half crazy
-with fury he kept a watch on the skies and saw the Flying Road Racer,
-high in air as she was driven seaward after her perilous experience in
-the circular storm.
-
-In defiance of the wild weather he at once prepared to put to sea
-disguising his ship, as he had done on other occasions, as she dropped
-down the river.
-
-Me had seen the storm-racked air craft as she flew above him. He had
-observed her, in fact, at the very moment that the adventurers espied
-his tossing craft. To his chagrin, however, she passed out of sight. But
-he held on in the direction she had vanished determined not to give up
-the chase of those precious stones till he had exhausted every means of
-trying to obtain them.
-
-Just as he was despairing of ever hearing of the Flying Road Racer
-again. Jack’s “S. O. S.” message had come winging across the sea. As
-soon as his operator gave him the despatch the rascal conceived the
-daring plan of impersonating the _Sea King_ and in this guise he flashed
-back the message inquiring the position of the castaways. He took care
-to ascertain that the gems were safe.
-
-While profound and peaceful sleep wrapped the party of adventurers, a
-boat landed on the beach, crowded with men. It came from the
-_Tarantula_, which had anchored about two hundred yards to seaward.
-Every man was armed and among them was Herrera with one or two of his
-chosen aides.
-
-Their plans had been formed before they landed and they silently sneaked
-up on the castaways’ camp. They were agreeably surprised to find no
-sentries posted.
-
-According to previous plans, each man of the crew carried ropes and
-gags. The sleeping party was surprised without warning and tied and
-gagged without a chance of their presenting any opposition. Each of the
-Chadwick party, as they awakened under the rough handling of the
-henchmen of Herrera, was given a strong hint not to resist, in the form
-of a pistol barrel pressed to the nape of his neck.
-
-As resistance would have been worse than useless all submitted quietly
-to the outrage, and Herrera’s triumph appeared to be complete. When they
-all had been secured the marauders commenced a frantic search for the
-great silver jewel casket. They found it without much difficulty under
-the professor’s coat which he had used as a pillow. Not expecting any
-attack he had not taken much pains to conceal it.
-
-Herrera burst into a loud laugh as he opened the casket and took out the
-three great flashing stones it contained.
-
-“So you thought that you could trick Herrera, eh, you stupid Yankee,” he
-snarled, “but I caught your message by wireless, you dogs of gringos. I
-spit on you and despise you. The jewels you thought to steal are now
-mine. But see—Herrera is generous. He leaves you the box!”
-
-As he spoke the ruffian flung the silver casket to the sand and then,
-with some gruff orders to his men, strode off across the beach. A few
-minutes later the splash of oars informed the marooned castaways that
-their foe had departed taking with him the gems they had gone through so
-much to save intact; and not only that, he took with him also their
-hopes of being rescued. From what he had said about the wireless, it was
-clear that he had intercepted the message for aid, and thus been guided
-to the island. The _Sea King_ had not received word from them at all.
-
-With what bitter feelings they reviewed the situation may be imagined.
-And it did not relieve the misery of their present position, as they lay
-gagged and helpless, to reflect that if they had kept a guard, the
-disaster might not have happened. They had been trapped like so many
-unthinking children.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV—“IT’S DEATH TO REMAIN HERE!”
-
-
-Jack struggled and strained at his bonds, as, in fact, all the rest of
-the party were doing. To his delight, after a brief period of
-struggling, he managed to loosen them considerably. The work of tying up
-the party had been done hastily, and, consequently, the knots were not
-very hard to loosen. In fact, all that Herrera had wanted, was to keep
-them quiet till he had looted the treasure of the gems.
-
-When Jack had worked his hands free he pulled the gag out of his mouth,
-and then, after undoing his ankle bonds, he drew out his knife and
-rapidly liberated his companions.
-
-“Well, a fine mess I’ve made of it,” grumbled out Captain Andrews, as
-soon as he was free.
-
-“I don’t see that you were any worse than the rest of us,” said
-Professor Chadwick; “in fact, it was you who had a keen enough mind to
-guess that our message might have been received and answered by another
-craft than the _Sea King_.”
-
-“Which it was,” put in Mr. Jesson.
-
-“Yes; but I kept watch for a while,” contritely said the captain,
-“and—I’m bitterly ashamed to say it,—I fell asleep at my post of duty.”
-
-“For which we don’t attach a bit of blame to you,” said Professor
-Chadwick; “what we had passed through was enough to exhaust a giant. To
-tell you the truth, I almost feel relieved now that the gems are gone.”
-
-“The natives had a legend that they brought bad luck,” said Mr. Jesson,
-“and indeed they seemed to.”
-
-“I hope they bring evil fortune to that greaser who has them now,”
-struck in Abner Jennings.
-
-The two sailors added their growling assent to this wish, nor could any
-of the party refrain from echoing it.
-
-[Illustration: Jack liberated Captain Andrews.]
-
-“I suppose he’s got clear away,” hazarded Ned presently.
-
-“Of course he has,” grunted Captain Andrews. “I’ll bet there’s twenty
-miles between him and this island right now. And, incidentally, I’m
-ready to bet as to his future.”
-
-“What will it be?” asked Jack, with some curiosity.
-
-“Why, he’ll throw up his governorship,—the Diaz government is on its
-last legs, anyhow,—and skip out to Paris. He’ll sell those gems over
-there and—live happy ever afterward.”
-
-“Why Paris?” asked Mr. Jesson.
-
-“Oh, all those scallywags go over there when they’ve made their graft,”
-laughed Ned; “they won’t tolerate them any other place, I guess. When I
-was over there with my folks two years ago we saw more princes and
-exiled presidents from South America than you could shake a stick at.
-You couldn’t have thrown a brick on the main boulevards without hitting
-some ruler who had left his country for his country’s good.”
-
-“All of which disquisition,” said Professor Chadwick dryly, “doesn’t
-solve our problem.”
-
-“No, indeed,” said Mr. Jesson; “we are as badly off as before.”
-
-“Worse,” exclaimed Jack.
-
-“How’s that?” asked Tom.
-
-“Well, haven’t we lost those gems?”
-
-“Oh, bother the old gems,” said Tom, “we’ve got the box, haven’t we? If
-any one in the States doesn’t believe we ever had the three gems we can
-show them the casket as proof that we really did have them once.”
-
-As he spoke he picked up the box from the sand where Herrera had flung
-it, and handed it to the Professor.
-
-“It will make a handsome relic of our trip at all events,” said that
-gentleman, with half a sigh. “I guess I’ll present it to some institute
-interested in such things.”
-
-“Pity those bumps on the cover aren’t precious stones,” said Ned,
-indicating the three dull-colored knobs on the cover. “Wonder what they
-are there for?”
-
-“To make the box look nobby,” ventured Tom, a pun which almost cost him
-a clip on the side of the head.
-
-But they were soon recalled to the seriousness of their situation. In
-the east the day was beginning to dawn, and a return to sleep was out of
-the question after all that had occurred.
-
-“I guess I’ll get to work with the wireless,” said Jack, “it’s our only
-hope.”
-
-“Unless we could swim ashore,” said Captain Andrews. “It isn’t more than
-five miles off.”
-
-“True. But from what we could see yesterday it is a rugged, inhospitable
-shore,” said Mr. Jesson.
-
-“Most anything would be better than this, though, so long as it was the
-mainland,” said Ned.
-
-“Yes, if only the old Flying Road Racer would have kept in the air half
-an hour longer,” groaned Tom, “we might have used her as an auto to
-reach some civilized spot.”
-
-“We could easily have done that,” struck in Jack. “The engine and
-running gear are in perfect order. So far as that is concerned, she is
-ready for a road trip of a thousand miles right now.”
-
-“You ought to have fixed it so she could swim, while you were about it,”
-said Ned.
-
-He meant the remark as a joke; but Jack answered quite seriously.
-
-“I’ve been thinking over such a plan,” he said; “maybe some day I’ll get
-to work and invent something that will make the good old craft as
-capable in the water as she is on land and in the air.”
-
-“Wish you could invent it right now,” began Ned with a laugh. “I——”
-
-He stopped short with a puzzled look, which, oddly enough, was reflected
-on all their races the next moment.
-
-“My legs are wobbly!” cried Tom.
-
-“By the trident of Neptune,” roared Captain Andrews, “so are mine!”
-
-“It’s not our legs!” cried Mr. Jesson, “it’s the ground that’s moving!”
-
-“The whole island is quivering like jelly!” cried Ned.
-
-“Good land, what ails de place? It’s done got chills and feber!” shouted
-Jupe from his pots and pans, which were now rolling in every direction.
-
-The tremor grew stronger. Accompanying it was a queer, moaning sort of
-sound. All at once there came a violent convulsion, and they were all
-thrown flat. The roaring noise increased till it was almost deafening.
-
-“It’s an earthquake!” called out Professor Chadwick.
-
-“An earthquake?” cried the others in terrified tones as they rolled
-about.
-
-Suddenly, not far from them, a great ragged fissure yawned in the earth
-and almost instantly closed again. From that moment, for the ensuing ten
-minutes, the castaways were in a condition bordering on panic. With the
-very earth under their feet refusing them support they felt that they
-were, indeed, in a sorry plight.
-
-At the conclusion of the period of time mentioned, the shocks stopped as
-suddenly as they had begun.
-
-“Do you think there’ll be any more of them?” asked Tom in rather a
-quavery voice.
-
-“Impossible to say,” said Mr. Jesson. “I imagine that this is a
-continuation of the one that caused that cliff to collapse, which
-resulted in my escape from those Indians.”
-
-“I suspect that is it,” said Professor Chadwick. “The great storm may
-have also resulted from the generally disturbed conditions. We may have
-no more shocks and we may have a dozen.”
-
-“I’ve known cases of whole islands being swallowed in the South Seas——”
-began Abner Jennings gloomily.
-
-But Professor Chadwick stopped him.
-
-“If you can’t talk of something more cheerful, my man, don’t talk at
-all,” he said.
-
-“And tidal waves, too, that wiped out whole cities like Galveston,”
-muttered Jennings, in a low tone, however.
-
-“There is no reason to expect that another shock will occur,” resumed
-the Professor; “the very nature of these seismic disturbances results
-in——”
-
-“Wow! Glory to Goshen, here comes annudder one!” bellowed Jupe, dropping
-a frying pan with a clatter and throwing himself flat on his face.
-
-The others followed his example. Indeed, it was impossible to remain on
-one’s feet. The mighty earth waves undulated like the billows of the
-sea.
-
-This shock lasted longer than the other, and was more severe. When it
-was over they arose to their feet considerably unnerved by the
-convulsion of nature.
-
-“Do——do you think there is any danger of this island sinking.
-Professor?” asked Ned in a shaky voice.
-
-“I do not,” rejoined the other with a confidence that he was very far
-from actually feeling, however. “I see no evidence of any volcanic
-formation hereabouts.”
-
-“Maybe de ole Mudder Earth done got a bad tummy ache,” hazarded Jupe.
-
-“I wish she’d get it in her foot, then,” grumbled Ned. “I don’t—say,
-Jack,” he broke off suddenly, “am I seeing things or is that beach
-narrower than it was?”
-
-A worried look passed over Jack’s face.
-
-“I’m afraid your eyesight is all right, Ned,” he said. “The water is
-closer than it was, beyond a doubt.”
-
-“And that means?” gasped Captain Andrews. “That we are sinking,” calmly
-said Professor Chadwick. “There is no use deceiving ourselves. Jack,
-send out a call for aid. There may be a chance of some ship catching the
-message.”
-
-Jack sent an appeal flashing forth from the wireless. Then he listened
-as usual for an answer.
-
-It came, but not in the way he had expected. He flung the receivers from
-his ears with an angry expression.
-
-“It’s that rascal Herrera,” he said. “He intercepted the call.”
-
-“The villain! What did he say?” demanded Mr. Jesson.
-
-“He said that we could stay here till the island sank, for all he cared,
-and added that Diaz had been driven out of Mexico, and that he was off
-to Europe with those gems.”
-
-“Dat dere coffee-colored man is de worst no ’count trash I ebber done
-heard of,” announced Jupe solemnly, while the others stood thunderstruck
-at such pitiless behavior.
-
-Before they could utter a word of comment, however, another shock struck
-the island. And this time it caused an amazing thing to happen. The
-centre of the isolated spot of land had been quite an elevation. During
-this spasm of the earth, however, an astonishing change took place in
-the form of the island. The “crown” of the sandy little place sank until
-it was depressed into a sort of cup. On the outer rim of this odd
-subsidence of the island, were the adventurers who looked with alarmed
-eyes on this freak of the earthquake. It mean only one thing, and that
-was that if another shock occurred and the land sank any further, that
-the sea must overwhelm it utterly.
-
-While they were still looking over the altered scene. Captain Andrews
-gave a shout.
-
-“Shiver my timbers,” he cried, “look yonder, will you?”
-
-The subsidence of the centre of the island, of course, gave them a clear
-view of the distant shore and of the neck of water between it and the
-island.
-
-An astounding thing had happened, as the adventurers could now see.
-Although they had not known it, the island had once formed part of the
-mainland, and a narrow neck still connected it at a depth of only a few
-feet at low water. It was now low tide, and the earthquake, while it
-depressed the central part of the island, had performed a still more
-astonishing freak.
-
-It had raised this narrow neck linking it to the shore till it was quite
-a few inches above the level of the water, making a causeway of wet sand
-between the island and the mainland!
-
-Jack was the first to grasp the significance of this. He gave a glad
-shout as he did so.
-
-“Hurrah! We are saved!” he cried. “The earthquake has saved us!”
-
-“What?” demanded his hearers, not quite so quick-thinking as Jack.
-
-“Don’t you see?” exclaimed the boy. “We can drive the Flying Road Racer
-ashore over that neck of sand as easily as if we were taking a spin in
-the park.”
-
-“But suppose another shock causes the neck of sand to subside again?”
-asked Mr. Jesson skeptically.
-
-“We must take our chances of that,” Tom answered him. “In any case, it
-means death to remain where we are.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI—AN ASTOUNDING DISCOVERY
-
-
-As Jack spoke, the island gave another trembling shake. It was only a
-slight one, but it warned them that, in all probability, there were to
-be more violent shocks succeeding it.
-
-It was plain enough that their escape, if it was to be made at all, must
-be made quickly. Jack and Tom at once set about dismantling the wireless
-station and packing the apparatus.
-
-The hastily extemporized life jacket balloons were hauled down and the
-wires coiled. When this had been done. Jack told everybody to take their
-seats in the car, on the top of which the dismantled gas bag had been
-folded by the captain and the two sailors, while Abner Jennings helped
-Jupe to pack up.
-
-Jack took his seat last of all and started the engine going. It worked
-without a hitch, and the auto,—a flying machine no longer,—moved off
-across the sand, heavily laden as it was, without difficulty.
-
-The rim about the submerged centre of the island was soon
-circumnavigated, and the beginning of the narrow neck of land reached.
-Then Jack fairly “let the car out.”
-
-The newly formed isthmus was hard, and the car flew over it under the
-full power of its engines.
-
-“Mighty good t’ing dere ain’t no speed laws in dis part ob de world,”
-grunted Jupe as they flew along.
-
-The shore appeared to rush toward them, but if they had hoped to see any
-signs of human habitation as they drew close to it they were mistaken.
-Nothing but a mass of trees, backed by rising ground, appeared along the
-coast as far as the eye could reach in either direction.
-
-As they sped along they heard behind them a sudden mighty uproar. Gazing
-back they saw the ocean heaving and boiling all about the island they
-had left, as if it had been a witches’ caldron. Great jets of water shot
-up, and the surface of the sea was flecked with foam and spume.
-
-The sight fascinated every one of them but Jack, who had to be intent on
-his driving.
-
-“The whole island is going!” shouted the Professor.
-
-He was right.
-
-With a sudden booming roar and upheaval of the ocean, the entire mass of
-land sank under the waves, which for a long time boiled and simmered
-above it. Just as the last vestige of the island vanished, leaving only
-the newly created peninsula projecting from the land, they reached the
-solid earth.
-
-Their dash to the mainland had taken place only just in time. A little
-more delay, they realized with shudders, would have meant their total
-annihilation.
-
-“I said the island would go,” cried Abner Jennings triumphantly. “I’ve
-’em vanish like that in the South Seas.”
-
-No one had any comment to make. The horror of what they had just
-witnessed struck them all dumb. The gratitude they felt to Divine
-Providence for their lucky rescue filled their hearts to overflowing,
-and left no room for speech.
-
-The Flying Road Racer was stopped, and they silently gazed for a long
-time at the bubbling, heaving waters.
-
-The sight was impressive, even if it did cause a shiver and inspire a
-feeling that bordered on fear.
-
-After a while the Professor spoke. His tone was as solemn as his words.
-
-“Boys,” he said, addressing his young friends, “we have just witnessed
-something that many scientists would give a great deal to behold.”
-
-“Well, candidly,” said Tom, “I’ve seen enough of it.”
-
-So had they all, in fact, and the Flying Road Racer was soon turned
-north, following a rough road that ran parallel with the sea-coast.
-
-It was now late afternoon, and the shadows were lengthening apace.
-Before long the swift tropic night would overtake them. Although they
-had arrived at a determination to continue traveling north till they
-arrived at a large city, where a telegraph wire could be found, they did
-not care to risk advancing over the rough, half-formed road in the
-darkness, so a halt was made where a small stream of fresh water ran
-down to the sea, and they prepared to spend the night there.
-
-It was somewhat chilly and a roaring fire was built around which they
-seated themselves after the evening meal. All were rather silent and
-abstracted, and there was no inclination for conversation. The Professor
-had brought out the silver casket and was examining some queer marks
-like hieroglyphics on its cover.
-
-“I’m sure they have some sort of meaning,” he remarked to Mr. Jesson,
-“but it’s beyond me to make out what it can be. See if you can do any
-better.”
-
-He handed the box to his brother-in-law to examine. But in the transfer
-it was fumbled, and before Mr. Jesson could save it the silver casket
-rolled toward the fire, only stopping when it was embedded in a mass of
-embers.
-
-It was raked out with a stick by Mr. Jesson before it was damaged. He
-set it aside to cool before examining it, and in the meantime the boys
-took occasion to observe it more narrowly than they had yet found
-opportunity to do.
-
-“Say, I thought that those knobs on the top were dull-colored!”
-exclaimed Jack Chadwick suddenly.
-
-“Why, so they are!” rejoined Mr. Jesson. “Some sort of inferior stone, I
-guess. They——”
-
-“But they are not dull! Look!”
-
-Risking burning his fingers. Jack seized the still warm casket and held
-it toward his elders.
-
-On the cover, embedded in the silver, flashed and winked in the
-firelight, three magnificent gems, red, blue, green!
-
-“Let me look at that a minute. Jack,” exclaimed Professor Chadwick in
-sharp, excited tones.
-
-He took the box from his son, and an instant later his head and Mr.
-Jesson’s were close together over the rifled silver casket.
-
-“Well, gentlemen?” said Ned after a while.
-
-“Well,” echoed Professor Chadwick, “we have made a most astounding
-discovery. These gems which Jack discovered,—for they are genuine,
-there’s not a doubt of it,—must have been covered with wax of some sort.
-The heat of the fire, when the box fell into it, melted this substance,
-and—well, here are three gems worth, conservatively, two hundred and
-fifty thousand dollars; probably a great deal more.”
-
-The listeners looked at him in amazement.
-
-“But what were the gems that Herrera took out of the casket, then?”
-demanded Jack, when he found his voice.
-
-“Imitations, undoubtedly,” was the reply of Mr. Jesson. “The tribe that
-owned the genuine stones adopted this cunning means of concealing the
-real ones by coating them with wax of some sort. Then they placed
-inferior gems, or cunning imitations, within the box, trusting to the
-cupidity of any one who stole them not to investigate further.”
-
-And so it proved afterward. The stones, which the strange and seemingly
-trivial accident had revealed, turned out to be as fine specimens of
-their respective kinds as there are in existence. They were appraised at
-six hundred and eighty thousand dollars, but cryptic carvings on the
-back of them made them of infinitely more value to science as specimens
-of the treasures of a vanished race.
-
-Despite their keen excitement over the discovery that, after all,
-Herrera had not decamped with the precious stones, the adventurers slept
-soundly and peacefully that night.
-
-When they awakened the daylight was sparkling on land and sea, and Jupe
-was filling the air with appetizing aromas proceeding from his cooking
-fire.
-
-It was while they were in the midst of the morning meal that Jack sprang
-to his feet with a shout.
-
-“The _Sea King_! the _Sea King_!” he cried, pointing seaward.
-
-About half a mile off shore, steaming leisurely along, was a
-fine-looking white yacht that the Professor speedily pronounced to be,
-indeed, the _Sea King_.
-
-“The wireless, Tom, as quick as you can,” called Jack, and the two lads
-at once set about sending their life-jacket balloons aloft.
-
-This time the message that Jack sent out reached the persons it was
-intended for, and an hour later a boat came ashore and the castaways
-found themselves among their friends.
-
-Repairs had been effected in record time on the yacht, and those in
-charge of her had determined not to wait longer at Lone Island, but
-proceed south at once. They were urged to this course, also, by news
-from Mexico that the revolutionists had triumphed, and that Diaz had
-abdicated.
-
-We should like to chronicle more of the adventures of the Boy Inventors
-on this trip, but the exigencies of space forbid it. Suffice it to say
-then, that while the Professor, the rescued explorer and the rest,
-including Captain Andrews, voyaged to Lone Island and thence home on the
-_Sea King_, the boys drove the Flying Road Racer through Mexico, and
-reached home in that way by the overland route. They had many exciting
-times, but none so filled with peril and incident as their career on the
-gulf had been.
-
-In due time the _Vagrant_ was also recovered and sent home by the newly
-formed Madero government. Of Herrera, all trace was lost for a time. But
-ultimately he was heard from in Paris, whither, as had been prophesied,
-he had fled when the Diaz government fell. But he is not leading the
-life of a luxurious refugee there. Far from it. The gems he had stolen
-with the exercise of so much villainy and planning, proved to be, as
-Professor Chadwick had conjectured, mere cheap imitations worth very
-little except as specimens of Maya workmanship. Herrera, when last heard
-from, was acting as a head waiter in an humble Mexican restaurant in the
-Latin quarter of the French capital.
-
-The genuine gems were sold to a New York millionaire, and when he dies
-will be seen in his private museum, which will then be opened to the
-public. The proceeds were shared, by the wishes of Professor Chadwick
-and Mr. Jesson, with the faithful crew of the _Sea King_, each, from
-Captain Andrews down, receiving a due portion. A handsome monument was
-also erected above the grave of poor Kettle, who fell in the battle with
-the Mayas.
-
-Professor Chadwick did not fulfill the object of his cruise in finding a
-new form of biologic life; but he often says that he established
-something far more precious,—namely, the safety of his long-lost
-brother-in-law, Tom Jesson’s father.
-
-One morning, not long after the household at High Towers had settled
-down to its ordinary routine, a telegram came for Jack. It contained
-astonishing things, things which were—though he didn’t guess it at the
-time,—to open up an entirely new field of invention for him and his
-chums, Tom Jesson and Ned Bangs.
-
-The message stated,—but positively, we must keep all that for another
-telling. In our next volume we will relate further astonishing and
-stirring occurrences in the lives of our ingenious, progressive young
-friends. The title of the forthcoming book will be _The Boy Inventors
-and the Vanishing Gun_,—a tale which promises to be of extraordinary
-interest to every American boy, brimful and running over, as it will be,
-with experiment and achievement along new and significant lines.
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Boy Inventor's Wireless Triumph, by
-Richard Bonner and Charles L. Wrenn
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Boy Inventor's Wireless Triumph
-
-Author: Richard Bonner
-
-Illustrator: Charles L. Wrenn
-
-Release Date: October 17, 2016 [EBook #53302]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY INVENTOR'S WIRELESS ***
-
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-Produced by Roger Frank
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-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='page'> <!-- start of page div -->
-<div class='figcenter id01'>
- <img id='illus-fpc' src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' style='width:100%;' alt=''/>
- <div class='caption'>
- Each clasped the gas-gun ready for instant use.
- </div>
-</div>
-</div> <!-- end of page div -->
-<hr class='page'/>
-<div class='page'> <!-- start of page div -->
-<div class='c'>
-<h1 class='mt20px fs1r6em'>The Boy Inventor’s Wireless Triumph</h1>
-<div class='mt20px'>By</div>
-<div>RICHARD BONNER</div>
-<div class='mt20px fs0r8em'>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY</div>
-<div class='fs0r8em'>CHARLES L. WRENN</div>
-<div class='mt20px'>M. A. DONOHUE &amp; COMPANY</div>
-<div>CHICAGO NEW YORK</div>
-</div>
-</div> <!-- end of page div -->
-<hr class='page'/>
-<div class='page'> <!-- start of page div -->
-<div class='c'>
-<div class='mt20px'>Copyright 1929</div>
-<div>by</div>
-<div>M. A. Donohue &amp; Company</div>
-<div class='mt20px fs0r8em'>Made in the U. S. A.</div>
-</div>
-</div> <!-- end of page div -->
-<hr class='page'/>
-<div class='page'> <!-- start of page div -->
-<div class='c'>
-<div class='mb10px'>TABLE OF CONTENTS</div>
-</div>
-<div class='cb-container'><div class='cb'>
-<div><a href='#chapter-ithe-wireless-at-lone-island'>CHAPTER I—THE WIRELESS AT LONE ISLAND</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-iithe-mysterious-x.y.z.'>CHAPTER II—THE MYSTERIOUS X. Y. Z.</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-iiithe-cipher-code'>CHAPTER III—THE CIPHER CODE</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-iva-marine-game-of-blind-mans-buff'>CHAPTER IV—A MARINE GAME OF BLIND-MAN’S BUFF</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-va-shot-in-the-night'>CHAPTER V—A SHOT IN THE NIGHT</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-vined-bangs-story'>CHAPTER VI—NED BANGS’ STORY</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-viithe-three-colored-gems'>CHAPTER VII—THE THREE COLORED GEMS</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-viiion-board-the-tarantula'>CHAPTER VIII—ON BOARD “THE TARANTULA”</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-ixthe-chadwick-gas-guns'>CHAPTER IX—THE CHADWICK GAS GUNS</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xdrawing-a-rascals-fangs'>CHAPTER X—DRAWING A RASCAL’S FANGS</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xithe-flying-road-racer'>CHAPTER XI—THE “FLYING ROAD RACER”</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xiiherrera-is-not-caught-napping'>CHAPTER XII—HERRERA IS NOT CAUGHT NAPPING</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xiiia-daring-plan'>CHAPTER XIII—A DARING PLAN</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xiva-message-from-the-air'>CHAPTER XIV—A MESSAGE FROM THE AIR</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xva-dash-aloft'>CHAPTER XV—A DASH ALOFT</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xviinto-the-enemys-camp'>CHAPTER XVI—INTO THE ENEMY’S CAMP</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xviidadits-jack'>CHAPTER XVII—“DAD!—IT’S JACK!”</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xviiihemmed-in-by-flames'>CHAPTER XVIII—HEMMED IN BY FLAMES</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xixstand-by-for-a-rope'>CHAPTER XIX—“STAND BY FOR A ROPE!”</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xxa-rescue-by-airship'>CHAPTER XX—A RESCUE BY AIRSHIP</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xxialoft-in-the-storm'>CHAPTER XXI—ALOFT IN THE STORM</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xxiia-voyage-of-terror'>CHAPTER XXII—A VOYAGE OF TERROR</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xxiiithe-boy-inventors-solve-a-problem'>CHAPTER XXIII—THE BOY INVENTORS SOLVE A PROBLEM</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xxivan-appeal-for-help'>CHAPTER XXIV—AN APPEAL FOR HELP</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xxvits-death-to-remain-here'>CHAPTER XXV—“IT’S DEATH TO REMAIN HERE!”</a></div>
-<div><a href='#chapter-xxvian-astounding-discovery'>CHAPTER XXVI—AN ASTOUNDING DISCOVERY</a></div>
-</div></div>
-</div> <!-- end of page div -->
-<hr class='page'/>
-<div class='page'> <!-- start of page div -->
-<div class='c'>
-<div class='fs1r4em'>The Boy Inventor’s Wireless Triumph</div>
-</div>
-</div> <!-- end of page div -->
-<div id='chapter-ithe-wireless-at-lone-island'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER I—THE WIRELESS AT LONE ISLAND</h2>
-</div>
-<p>The book Jack Chadwick had been reading,—a volume dealing with some rather
-dry experimental work,—slipped from his fingers and fell with a crash on the
-floor of the veranda. At the sudden interruption to the sleepy, breathless calm
-of Lone Island on a July noon, his cousin Tom Jesson, sixteen, and more than a
-year Jack’s junior, looked up from the steamer chair in which he, too, was
-extended, with one of his quiet smiles.</p>
-<p>Suspending his task of wrapping some new condenser plates with glittering
-tin-foil, he gazed about him. In front of the bungalow was a strip of dazzling
-white sand,—the beach. Beyond shimmered the cobalt-blue waters of the Gulf of
-Mexico. At a small wharf lay a capable-looking motor cruiser, painted white and
-about forty-five feet in length. She had been moored thus for the past seven
-days—ever since Jack and his cousin and their colored attendant, Jupe, had
-landed on the island after an uneventful passage from Galveston.</p>
-<p>“Dozed off,” chuckled Tom, regarding Jack as the latter’s eyelids closed
-drowsily; “well, I don’t know that I blame him. Waiting on Lone Island with
-nothing to do but read, eat and sleep, does get monotonous after a week of
-it.”</p>
-<p>Suddenly a gong, affixed to the freshly painted wall above their heads, broke
-forth in a wild, insistent clamor.</p>
-<p>“Clang! C-l-a-n-g! Clang! Clang!—Clang! Clang!”</p>
-<p>The effect on Tom was electrical.</p>
-<p>“L-I in the Continental Code!” he exclaimed springing to his feet. “Hurray,
-Jack, old boy! Wake up! It’s our call at last!”</p>
-<p>Jack Chadwick galvanized from his nap into vibrant action with hardly less
-suddenness than had marked Tom’s arousing. Three times the gong, connected by an
-ingenious arrangement of Jack’s with his detector, beat out brazenly the call of
-Lone Island. Then came the signature:</p>
-<p>“S-K.”</p>
-<p>“Whoop! It really is the <i>Sea King</i> at last!” exclaimed Jack, his blue
-eyes dancing. The lees of sleep had cleared from them as if by magic.</p>
-<p>“Race you to the wireless station, Tom!” he shot out, jumping from the
-veranda without bothering about the steps.</p>
-<p>“You’re on!” was the instant response. Like a flash Tom was at his side.</p>
-<p>The few dozen yards between the bungalow and the shed of raw, resinous-smelling
-pine lumber that housed the wireless was covered in less time than it
-takes to tell it. Panting from their dash through the heavy sand the two lads
-flung themselves, shoulder to shoulder, at the door.</p>
-<p>“Dead heat!” laughingly proclaimed Jack, as he opened the portal and hastened
-to the array of shining instruments which occupied most of the space within.</p>
-<p>All this time, behind them, the bell had kept up its insistent tocsin. With a
-quick movement Jack “threw” a “knife-blade” switch. Instantly the resonant drone
-of a dynamo filled the small sun-heated shack. Bending forward. Jack depressed
-the sending key.</p>
-<p>Flash! C-r-a-s-h!</p>
-<p>A wriggling snake of blue flame leaped, like a live thing, between the
-polished sparking points.</p>
-<p>Alternately pressing and releasing his key. Jack sent an answer to the
-message. With nimble fingers he directed the powerful electric impulses, which
-were winging into space from the lofty aerials stretched between their masts
-above the shed.</p>
-<p>While he did this with one hand, with the other he deftly adjusted the bright
-metal head band with its twin receivers that fitted over each ear. This
-accomplished, he drew toward him a pencil and a pad of paper.</p>
-<p>“L-I! L-I! L-I!”</p>
-<p>Crackling and squealing the powerful spark volleyed across the gap, and
-rushing into the aerials went flashing hundreds of miles through the ether.</p>
-<p>Then came a pause. Tom, his hand on Jack’s shoulder, leaned eagerly forward
-and over him, watching for the first words of the message from space to be
-written on the pad.</p>
-<p>All at once Jack began to write. His fingers flew fast in response to the
-flood of dots and dashes that came beating against his ear drums, transmitted by
-the sensitive diaphragms of the receivers.</p>
-<p>To an untrained ear the soft tappings would have sounded as vague and
-undefined as the footsteps of a fly on a sheet of sensitive matter. But to Jack,
-the whisperings winging their way in three hundred meter waves through space
-were as clear as a story read aloud.</p>
-<p>As he wrote, shoving his pencil over the sheets as fast as he could, Tom
-began to gasp.</p>
-<p>“Great ginger-snaps!” he choked out, and then, “Well, we were sighing for
-action, and it looks as if we’ll get it in big, juicy chunks before we’re much
-older.”</p>
-<p>While the message, destined to have such an important effect on their
-immediate future, is still pulsing through the air, we will take the opportunity
-to place the reader in closer touch, so to speak, with our two lads. Jack
-Chadwick, then, was the only son of Professor Chester Chadwick, an inventor,
-whose various discoveries in many mechanical fields had resulted in gaining him
-a handsome fortune. Jack’s mother had died when he was a tiny lad, and, as he
-was an only son, he had been brought up in constant association with his father.
-Almost as soon as he had mastered his earliest lessons Jack was familiar with
-his parent’s laboratory and workshop, and Mr. Chadwick, delighted at the
-interest the boy displayed in science, had made him a close companion.</p>
-<p>When Jack was twelve years old a new interest entered his life. His cousin,
-Tom Jesson, came to live with them at Mr. Chadwick’s handsome home on the
-outskirts of Boston. Tom was the son of Jasper Jesson, the noted traveler, and,
-like Jack, he was motherless. Mr. Jesson had, some time before, accepted a
-commission from a scientific institute to travel and collect antiquities in the
-then little-known territory of Yucatan. From this expedition he did not return
-within the year allotted him to complete his researches.</p>
-<p>Time went on and no word came from him, and at length he was given up for
-lost even by the most hopeful of his friends. And thus it was that his son Tom,
-then ten years old, came to High Towers, Mr. Chadwick’s estate, even then known
-as the home of a famous inventor.</p>
-<p>And so Jack and Tom had practically grown up together in close association
-and with kindred interests.</p>
-<p>To two lads of inventive mind, no more delightful field for their experiments
-could have been imagined than High Towers. A park of some fifty or sixty acres
-surrounded the house, which, among other features of a country estate, possessed
-a small lake. On this sheet of water Jack and Tom tried out models of a dozen
-different kinds of craft before they were fourteen. Professor Chadwick gave them
-practically “the run” of his workshops and experimental sheds, besides
-instructing them in scientific investigations.</p>
-<p>Among other things, the lads had constructed a complete miniature railroad on
-the grounds, and had also built gliders of various types. But their most recent
-“craze” had been wireless telegraphy. With a dozen lads of their own age they
-had formed a “Wireless Club,” which met at High Towers every month. But, with
-the summer vacation, the members of the body had scattered, leaving only Jack
-and Tom to carry on the work. As Professor Chadwick stinted his son in nothing
-pertaining to his chosen pursuits, the two lads had assembled as complete an
-amateur station as could be found in the country.</p>
-<p>In addition to the latest instruments and appliances, their natural ingenuity
-had enabled them to invent several additional features, some of them
-patentable,—as, for instance, the call-bell which tapped out the mysterious
-summons to the island station.</p>
-<p>Which brings us back to Lone Island and to an explanation of how the two lads
-and Jupe, their faithful colored attendant, happened to be quartered on this
-low-lying, sandy, rather desolate patch of land off the coast of Texas, not far
-from the mouth of the Rio Grande. The islet belonged to Professor Chadwick,
-being part of an estate which had been owned by his wife, the daughter of a
-Texas cattle man. The lads had already camped there a winter, and knew the
-vicinity well.</p>
-<p>About two months before this story opens, Professor Chadwick had left home,
-bound, so he informed the lads, on a biological investigation cruise among the
-Florida Keys and the West Indies. The lads had heard nothing more of him, or of
-his steam yacht, the <i>Sea King</i>, with the exception of a letter from Key
-West, and another from the island of Jamaica, stating that all was going
-well.</p>
-<p>Imagine their bewildered astonishment and excitement therefore, when, two
-weeks before, a brief letter came to High Towers telling them to proceed, with
-Jupe, to Galveston, where the motor cruiser <i>Vagrant</i> would be awaiting
-them. Their instructions continued to inform them that they were to equip the
-<i>Vagrant</i> with wireless, and also purchase a portable bungalow and shed,
-with which to establish a wireless station on Lone Island. The letter, signed by
-Professor Chadwick, closed in his customary abrupt manner, without vouchsafing
-any explanation of his orders.</p>
-<p>But Jack and Tom hardly needed any. The letter opened up before them a
-delightful vista of fun and adventure.</p>
-<p>“Just fancy, a wireless island all to ourselves!” Jack had exclaimed as the
-boys joined hands in a wild war dance of delight. They had pleasant
-recollections of former jolly days in camp on the Gulf.</p>
-<p>The letter enclosed a liberal draft on Professor Chadwick’s bank, and within
-forty-eight hours after receiving the missive which was to mean so much to them,
-the two cousins and chums, with the faithful Jupe attending them like a black
-shadow, were off for Galveston. On arrival there they went to the boatyard
-mentioned in the Professor’s letter, where they found the <i>Vagrant</i>,—the
-smart craft already mentioned as lying at the Lone Island wharf,—already
-equipped for sea, awaiting them.</p>
-<p>To install a wireless plant on board did not take long. The most difficult
-part of their task lay in finding a suitable mast for the support of the
-aerials. Jack solved this problem by constructing a telescopic staff of steel
-tubing which, when not in use, could be lowered to a height of twelve feet. In
-use it could be raised to an altitude of sixty feet, giving a very fair radius
-of scope.</p>
-<p>The materials for the wireless on the island, like those for the floating
-plant, had been brought from Boston. But the portable shack and bungalow were
-purchased in Galveston.</p>
-<p>The Professor’s letter had instructed the lads to wait on the island for a
-message by wireless. Now it had come; come, too, with a startling suddenness
-that might be likened to a jolt. Tom, watching Jack’s fingers with burning eyes,
-finally saw this message inscribed on the receiving pad:</p>
-<p>“Lone Island Station.—Proceed with all speed to Long. 96° W. by Lat. 27° N.
-Urgent. We are in dire peril.—Bangs, operator <i>Sea King</i>.”</p>
-<p>The patter of the electric waves against the receivers ceased. No further
-word came, and Jack, after a brief interval, took off the headpiece and laid it
-down beside him on the table. For an instant the message, so utterly, wildly
-different from any they had expected, almost deprived him of speech.</p>
-<p>Now his faculties rushed back, but he did not speak. Instead, he grounded the
-aerials by throwing the switch, and leaped to his feet with such impulsiveness
-that the stool on which he had been sitting went careering to the floor.</p>
-<p>“Come on, Tom,” he cried, darting for the door.</p>
-<p>As he ran he stuffed the message into the pocket of his linen jacket. Tom
-shot out of the shack after him.</p>
-<p>“You’d better lock——” he began.</p>
-<p>“Send Jupe to do it,” was the backward flung rejoinder, as Jack sprinted for
-the bungalow, “we’ve got to get grub on board and fill the water tanks within
-fifteen minutes.”</p>
-<p>“And then what?”</p>
-<p>“To sea—at top speed! The best the <i>Vagrant</i> can do will be none too
-quick! They need us out there,” he flung his arm seaward in an embracing
-gesture, “need us mighty bad, and it’s up to us to make a record run to the
-rescue.”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-iithe-mysterious-x.y.z.'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER II—THE MYSTERIOUS X. Y. Z.</h2>
-</div>
-<p>“They said nothing as to what was the matter?”</p>
-<p>Tom propounded the question ten minutes later as the two lads busied
-themselves in the after cabin of the <i>Vagrant</i>, stowing provisions
-hastily. “No, not a word. If only I could have got in communication with them
-again I might——”</p>
-<p>At this point a very black, very round, very good-natured negro countenance
-appeared in the companion way above them.</p>
-<p>“Ah’se done locked up, Marse Tom. Anyfing else yo’ all might be requirmentin’
-ob?”</p>
-<p>“No, Jupe. I guess we’re about ready for a start. Let’s see,” and Jack
-rapidly ran over a mental list of what they had on board.</p>
-<p>“Yes, we’ve got everything. The water tanks are full, plenty of
-gasolene,—it’s a good thing we brought that extra stock from Galveston,—grub, O.
-K., and—better get forward and start the motor up, Tom.”</p>
-<p>Tom needed no second bidding. He shot up the companion way three steps at a
-time, almost upsetting Jupe, who stood at the summit on deck. He scurried to a
-hatchway forward of amidships and dived below. A hasty glance over the forty
-horse-power, four-cylindered, four-cycle engine showed him that everything was
-in working order. An adjustment of the force-feed lubricator, a swift
-examination of the magneto, a few turns of the starting apparatus, and a
-rhythmic series of explosions as the crank shaft began to revolve, and the
-<i>Vagrant</i> was ready, so far as her machinery was concerned, to begin her
-dash across the Gulf.</p>
-<p>In the meantime, Jupe had been hustled ashore by Jack, who had taken up his
-position at the wheel, and in a very few seconds the lines that held the motor
-cruiser to the wharf were cast off. Jupe made a flying leap aboard as the tide
-swung the <i>Vagrant</i> from her resting place.</p>
-<p>At the same instant Jack jerked the bell pull, which signaled Tom in the
-engine-room below to throw in the clutch, and as the propeller began to revolve
-the <i>Vagrant</i> backed slowly out. In a few minutes Jack rang in the “Go-ahead”
-signal, and swinging the doughty little craft in a short semicircle, the
-young captain headed her almost due S. E.</p>
-<p>Tom emerged on deck wiping his hands on a bit of waste.</p>
-<p>“Everything all right below?” inquired Jack as his cousin took up a position
-beside him.</p>
-<p>“Running like a dollar watch,” was the response.</p>
-<p>“How much speed can we get?”</p>
-<p>“Well, twelve knots is her registered gait, but I might coax a bit more out
-of her.”</p>
-<p>“Try and get all you can.”</p>
-<p>“I will. What time do you think we ought to reach the vicinity of the <i>Sea
-King</i>?”</p>
-<p>“It’s a trifle over a hundred miles to the spot at which she gave her
-bearings,” was the response, with a glance at the chart which lay exposed in the
-uncovered case in front of the wheel. “It’s now just one o’clock. Say, about
-midnight.”</p>
-<p>“Phew! You propose to pick up a yacht, whose location you know only vaguely,
-in the <i>dark</i>?”</p>
-<p>“Not so dark, either. There’ll be a moon at ten-thirty. Anyhow, if we keep
-right on this course we’re bound to come within a few miles of the given
-bearings.”</p>
-<p>“I guess that’s so. Well, I’m off below to watch the engines.”</p>
-<p>“Better start the dynamo and get some ‘juice’ into the storage batteries. I
-mean to try the wireless again before long.”</p>
-<p>Tom nodded, and vanished below once more. Jupe came forward from the stern,
-where he had been coiling lines and generally setting things to rights.</p>
-<p>“Marse Tom,” he said, with some hesitation, “is dere any objection to
-informationing me concerning de percise objec’ ob dis here penguination?”</p>
-<p>“Why, no, Jupe,” rejoined Jack, with a smile at the old negro’s remarkable
-choice of what he himself would have called “highfaluting” words, “the <i>Sea
-King</i>, with my father on board, as you know, is in some sort of trouble, and
-we are going to the rescue as fast as we can.”</p>
-<p>“How you find out dat, Marse Jack?” asked the old man, with a tinge of
-suspicion in his voice.</p>
-<p>“By wireless, Jupe.”</p>
-<p>“What!” in a tone of frank unbelief, “yo’ all mean ter tell me dat dat
-birdcage rigamarole ob yo’s done tell yo’ all dat?”</p>
-<p>“That’s right, Jupe.”</p>
-<p>“Sho’ now! Yo’ ain’t foolin’ de ole man, Marse Jack? Dat conjo’ wire done
-tell yo’ all dat?”</p>
-<p>“Of course. I should have thought that you’d seen enough of it at High Towers
-to know what it could do.”</p>
-<p>“Humph!” the old negro scratched his head in a puzzled way, “yo mean dose
-eccentrical wabes, as yo’ call ’em, done come all de way frum Marse Chadwick’s
-boat to de island?”</p>
-<p>“Just what I do, Jupe. It’s the same thing as chucking a stone in a pond. You
-know how the waves and ripples spread out and out in circles that get bigger and
-bigger?”</p>
-<p>“Ya’as, sah.”</p>
-<p>“Well, it’s the same thing in wireless. Instead of a pond you’ve got the air,
-or the atmosphere; instead of a stone, you’ve got an electric impulse from the
-antenna.”</p>
-<p>“An’ when dat eccentric ’pulse go ’way from dose—dose—aunties, it jes’ spread
-and spread like de ripples on a pond?”</p>
-<p>“Yes. The waves spread till they strike another wireless apparatus ‘in tune’
-with them.”</p>
-<p>“An’ yo’ birdcage fiddle was tuned to de same pitch as de <i>Sea
-King’s</i>?”</p>
-<p>“That’s right, Jupe. You’re catching on fast We both use three hundred meter
-waves. That was agreed upon. Thus, you see, our station caught the message from
-the disabled yacht.”</p>
-<p>“Humph! But s’pose dere was some odder station dat had its fiddle tuned de
-percise same way?”</p>
-<p>“Why, then they’d have caught the message, too.”</p>
-<p>“An’ dey’d know, too, dat de po’ <i>Sea King</i> done busted?”</p>
-<p>“I suppose so,—yes. But why do you ask?”</p>
-<p>“Fo’ jes dis reason, Marse Jack,—if any ob dem ole wreckers dat used ter hang
-about dese parts got dat message, maybe dey gwine ter go out dere, too.”</p>
-<p>“I guess not, Jupe. I never heard of any such rascals who had a wireless
-equipment.”</p>
-<p>“Den how ’bout dat po’ful mysterious X. Y. Z. I done heard yo’ an’ Marse Tom
-talkin’ ’bout at supper de odder night?”</p>
-<p>“Oh, X. Y. Z.!” exclaimed Jack with a laugh; “well, he <i>is</i> a mystery
-for a fact. Some amateur on shore or some place, I suppose, who just happened to
-get tangled up with our slaves when we were practicing.”</p>
-<p>The “X. Y. Z.” referred to had made himself manifest three days before, while
-Jack and Tom were conducting some experiments with their sending apparatus. In
-the midst of their work a confused sound had broken in upon them, and Jack, on
-tuning his apparatus to catch the “stranger” waves, had intercepted an
-apparently meaningless message signed X. Y. Z. The message consisted of a jumble
-of numerals which, the two lads had little difficulty in deciding, was a code of
-some sort. The catching of such messages being common enough in the north, they
-gave the matter little more thought and, in fact, till Jupe mentioned it. Jack
-had not recollected the occurrence at all. Now, however, as Jupe moved off
-forward to complete his work, he caught himself wondering who X. Y. Z. might be.
-He wished that they had taken down the intercepted message and devoted some of
-their leisure time to deciphering it; but the urgent business now in hand soon
-drove such thoughts out of the young navigator’s head.</p>
-<p>Tom reappeared on deck, the inevitable bit of waste in his hands.</p>
-<p>“I’ve adjusted the magneto,” he announced, “and I guess we’re turning over a
-bit faster than ordinary.”</p>
-<p>“Good for you,” nodded Jack approvingly, “every minute counts on a job like
-this.”</p>
-<p>At every turn of the shaft Jack’s heart was bounding with keen anxiety. The
-same might be said of Tom’s condition. The very vagueness of the message from
-the air, fraught as it was with the sense of disaster, added to their
-mystification and eagerness to reach the scene.</p>
-<p>But mingled with all this, as the two lads stood side by side on the
-miniature bridge of their speedy little cruiser, was a fierce sort of pleasure
-as they sped through the rolling swells of the gulf, hurling white masses of
-foam aside from the sharp “cutwater.”</p>
-<p>Behind them the coast line lay like a dim gray scarf stretched along the blue
-horizon. The keen, ozone-laden wind struck their faces with an invigorating
-tang. It was great, glorious, exciting to be out here on the broad bosom of the
-gulf, guiding a speedy motor craft toward unknown adventures. The zest of
-achievement, the glory of grappling with obstacles as yet unseen and hardly
-guessed at, ran hot in both boys’ veins. Fast as the <i>Vagrant</i> was, she
-seemed to them to crawl, and yet, thanks to Tom’s skill as an engineer, she was
-reeling off her thirteen knots with the regularity of a sleeping infant’s
-breathing.</p>
-<p>“Jupe!” called Jack presently, “come aft and spell me at the wheel for a
-while. I’m going to send a few questions into the air,” he added to Tom.</p>
-<p>“Good. We’ve got plenty of ‘juice.’ Shall I go below and send up the
-mast?”</p>
-<p>“Yes. Better run it up to its full height. It won’t hurt in this light
-breeze, and I want all the radius I can get.”</p>
-<p>“Right you are.”</p>
-<p>Tom descended once more. The base of the telescoping aerial mast was in the
-forepart of the engine-room. A hand winch operated it much in the same manner
-that a fire department’s extension ladders are sent aloft. It did not take Tom
-long to extend the slender, yet pliant and strong steel spar heavenward to its
-fullest length.</p>
-<p>At its truck, or summit, was a pulley, through which halyards attached to the
-aerials had been rove. Jack had gotten these out while Tom had been busy below,
-and in a remarkably short time the slender antenna, or aerials, were strung from
-mast tip to deck. There were four separate wires of stranded phosphor bronze
-attached to wooden spreads, and properly insulated. From them a wire led back to
-the instruments attached to a table in the forepart of the cabin.</p>
-<p>The aerials being up Jack, after satisfying himself that everything was
-shipshape, made for the cabin. Seating himself at the wireless table he sent a
-signal crashing out into space.</p>
-<p>“S-K! S-K! S-K!”</p>
-<p>Then, after a pause:—</p>
-<p>“L-I.”</p>
-<p>There followed a period of listenings with the receiving switch over and the
-“watch-case” receivers closely clamped to the young operator’s ears. But no
-answer came.</p>
-<p>A worried look crept over Jack’s countenance. This silence was ominous. Once
-more he manipulated the key with nimble fingers. The spark squealing and
-crackling shot bluely hither and thither.</p>
-<p>But to the electrical appeals sent broadcast into the atmosphere, space
-vouchsafed no answer.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-iiithe-cipher-code'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER III—THE CIPHER CODE</h2>
-</div>
-<p>A sudden break in the rhythmic pulse of the engine reached Tom’s alert ears
-at this instant. Without speaking he hastened from the cabin to the engine-room,
-using, for this purpose, a door cut in the forward bulkhead. He found that one
-of the cylinders was missing fire and traced the trouble to a badly sooted
-plug.</p>
-<p>While he was adjusting the trouble Jack stuck to his key. He would pound out
-his “S-K” call furiously for an interval, and then listen intently for even the
-faintest indication of a response. The lad tried various adjustments, of the
-potentiometer, which regulates the voltage and current supplied to the detector,
-and operated his receiving tuning coil in various ways. But though he tried for
-wave lengths from two hundred meters up to fifteen hundred, not a whisper came
-out of the void of silence about them.</p>
-<p>“I’ll call once more,” said the lad to himself in a determined voice, “it’s
-our duty to do all we can and keep at it all the time. Of course, if the <i>Sea
-King</i> has met with a really serious disaster her wireless may be out of
-order and—Hullo! Here’s something coming now!”</p>
-<p>Something was coming, sure enough!</p>
-<p>As Jack clamped the receivers to his ears a hail of dots and dashes beat
-against his organs of hearing. Somebody was transmitting a message at a furious
-rate. Expert as the lad was, it was all he could do to make head or tail of it.
-His pencil fairly flew over the recording pad, and when he got through he had
-nothing for his pains but a sheet covered with figures, and again that
-annoyingly mysterious signature X. Y. Z.</p>
-<p>Tom had returned to the cabin while Jack’s pencil was scurrying across the
-paper. He leaned over, the other lad’s shoulder and watched intently. When Jack
-stopped and affixed the signature X. Y. Z., he looked up at his cousin
-wonderingly.</p>
-<p>“It’s X. Y. Z. again. He was sending like blue blazes, too. What do you make
-of it?”</p>
-<p>“Blessed if I know. Using his cipher again, too, isn’t he? Say, Jack! See
-here,—X. Y. Z.,—whoever he is,—is within our radius right now—at this instant.
-Call him, and see if you can find out who or what he is and where his station
-is. If the <i>Sea King</i> is badly off he may be of great assistance to
-us.”</p>
-<p>Jack switched his current over for sending out a call. With a puzzled frown
-on his face he adopted Tom’s suggestion.</p>
-<p>“X-Y-Z! X-Y-Z! X-Y-Z!” he flashed out, and then added the signature “L-I.”</p>
-<p>“Now to see if we get any result,” he said, adjusting the receivers to his
-ears and throwing the switch for the detection of a reply. He had not long to
-wait.</p>
-<p>“L-I! L-I! L-I!—X-Y-Z!” came billowing through the ether, “what do you
-want?”</p>
-<p>“We are proceeding to rescue of disabled yacht <i>Sea King</i>,” flashed
-back Jack. “Where are you? Can we rely on you for help?”</p>
-<p>A long silence followed. Then the Continental code began to throb and beat in
-the receivers, once more.</p>
-<p>But it was another question that came.</p>
-<p>“Where is yacht <i>Sea King</i>?”</p>
-<p>Jack flashed the bearings as he had received them earlier in the day, and
-then repeated his former question. But no reply came. For an instant the lad
-thought he had got out of tune with the wireless mystery, but although he ran
-the gamut of the tuning coil, nothing more came. For all that was further heard
-of him, X. Y. Z. might have been as intangible as the atmosphere out of which he
-had projected his questions.</p>
-<p>For half an hour or more Jack persisted in his endeavors to reach X. Y. Z.
-again, but finally gave it up as a bad job. Grounding his current, he laid down
-his head band and swung in his chair.</p>
-<p>“Lost him?” inquired Tom.</p>
-<p>“I’d rather say that he lost us,” responded Jack, “it must have been a
-deliberate cut-out. One second he was coming strong and then—silence. How do you
-figure it, Tom?”</p>
-<p>“I don’t attempt to. I give it up, unless X. Y. Z. is some sort of a wireless
-lunatic.”</p>
-<p>Jack gave a rather mirthless laugh.</p>
-<p>“Hardly. Or, if so, I begin to fear there is some method in his madness. You
-notice that he only seemed to want to find out the exact position of the <i>Sea
-King</i>?”</p>
-<p>He indicated the writing pad on which the entire conversation was recorded,
-as was the young inventor’s wont.</p>
-<p>Tom nodded.</p>
-<p>“I see that plain enough. I am inclined to think. Jack, that you made a big
-mistake in giving that chap the location of the <i>Sea King</i>.”</p>
-<p>“You do? Why?”</p>
-<p>But as he spoke there came into Jack’s mind an uncomfortable recollection of
-what Jupe had said about wreckers.</p>
-<p>“I don’t know just why,” was Tom’s frank response; “didn’t you ever have a
-feeling that somehow something you had done had been,—quite unintentionally,—a
-bad blunder?”</p>
-<p>“I know what you mean. I wish to goodness we knew who this X. Y. Z. was,—or
-is.”</p>
-<p>“Easy to find out.”</p>
-<p>“Easy to find out!” echoed Jack with a fine note of scorn, “about as easy
-as—as——”</p>
-<p>“Translating that cipher,” broke in Tom. “If we can read it we may have a
-good clew to Mister X. Y. Z. and his doings.”</p>
-<p>Jack laughed aloud.</p>
-<p>“Yes, ‘if,’” he said mockingly, “and if——”</p>
-<p>“I think I can do it,” said Tom quietly.</p>
-<p>“You do! Well, tackle it at once, then. I’m kind of worried, I don’t mind
-telling you, about that chap and his questions.”</p>
-<p>Tom picked up the sheet of paper with the numbers inscribed on it in a
-seemingly hopeless jumble.</p>
-<p>“I’ll take it to the engine-room with me and try to work it out and keep an
-eye on the motor at the same time. I like tackling propositions of this
-kind.”</p>
-<p>“Yes, you always were a nutcracker at school; but I fancy you’ll find that
-the toughest yet.”</p>
-<p>“I’m not so sure about that. Ciphers divide themselves up into groups pretty
-well, and I’ve half an idea that this is a very common one. Suppose you take a
-look at Jupe and take the wheel while he gets supper.”</p>
-<p>“By ginger, I’d forgotten all about that till this moment.”</p>
-<p>Jack glanced up at the clock affixed to the bulkhead.</p>
-<p>“Almost five o’clock. Time has flown certainly. Well, good luck, Tom, with
-that mess of figures, and if you find out anything from them about X. Y. Z.
-you’re entitled to a big hunk of credit on a silver platter.”</p>
-<p>Jupe, so Jack found, had kept the <i>Vagrant</i> on her course to a hair’s
-breadth. The old fellow had been a sailor in his younger days, and the waters
-they were now traversing were not unfamiliar to him. He hailed the news that he
-was to get supper with pleasure, however.</p>
-<p>“Ah’ll cook yo’ boys as fine a meal as yo’ ebber sat down to,” he promised,
-as with a broad grin he surrendered the wheel and made aft to the galley, which
-was a small room forward of the cabin and between it and the engine-room.</p>
-<p>It was an hour later that Tom appeared on deck with a knitted brow, and
-several sheets of paper covered closely with cabalistic figuring.</p>
-<p>“Well?” said Jack.</p>
-<p>“Well, I’ve worked it out, and——”</p>
-<p>“You know who X. Y. Z. is, I hope?”</p>
-<p>“Why, no,” was the response in a puzzled tone, “I don’t know who he is, but
-I’ve learned considerable of what he is,—and I don’t much like it.”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-iva-marine-game-of-blind-mans-buff'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER IV—A MARINE GAME OF BLIND-MAN’S BUFF</h2>
-</div>
-<p>Jupe’s summons to supper ended the talk for the time being, and the two lads
-went below to eat a hearty meal while the colored man took a spell at the wheel.
-After supper they emerged on deck again, and as Jack took the helm Tom drew up a
-camp stool beside him, and seating himself, spread the figure-covered sheet of
-paper out on the chart case. He then switched on the shaded light, which caused
-a soft glow to reveal the cabalistic scribbling clearly.</p>
-<p>“Now then,” he began, “in figuring out a cipher of this sort the first thing
-to do is to note what figure appears most frequently. Having ascertained this,
-it is safe to assume that such a figure stands for the most frequently occurring
-letter in the language,—always provided, of course, the message is in
-English.”</p>
-<p>“Well?” interrogated Jack.</p>
-<p>“We know that the most frequently used vowel in English is <i>E</i>. And,
-by the way, this translation proved fairly easy, because the transmitter of the
-message made a gap between each of his groups of figures, showing that each
-collection stood for a separate word.”</p>
-<p>“I noticed that,—go ahead.”</p>
-<p>“I was trying to show you something of the method; but I guess you’ve about
-grasped it. In figuring out the cipher I made groups of all the numerals
-occurring in your transcript of the message, and found that the number ‘five’
-appeared most often. I assumed, then, that it stood for H. Working in this way,
-I found that the first word of the message was <i>The</i>. That <i>Th</i>
-stuck for some time, till I saw that the figures ‘twenty-five’ had been used to
-express the phonetic sound of <i>Th</i>.</p>
-<p>“This gave me a valuable clew. I wrote down <i>The</i> and then passed on
-to the next words. Figuring as before, I assigned the number ‘three,’ which
-appeared alone, to the letter <i>C</i>. I was puzzled for a minute. ‘<i>The
-C</i>’ didn’t seem to mean a whole lot, but I let it go and passed on to the
-next word. Using my system I spelled out <i>King</i>, and then, of course, I
-realized that the <i>C</i> was a phonetic rendering for the first part of the
-yacht <i>Sea King’s</i> name.”</p>
-<p>“Great guns!” gasped Jack, “then they are interested in dad’s craft
-and——”</p>
-<p>“Wait a while; let me get the rest of it off my chest. I’m not going to tire
-your patience out by going through every step. I’ve told you enough to show you
-my method. As I got further combinations it became more and more simple till I
-finally had this message figured out:</p>
-<p>“‘The <i>Sea King</i> is disabled. Trying to get bearings from you know
-who. <i>Vagrant</i> left Lone Island this P. M. going to rescue. You had
-better make all speed or they will beat you out. Am proceeding. X. Y. Z.’”</p>
-<p>Jack’s lips emitted an amazed whistle.</p>
-<p>“What sort of a maze have we blundered into?” he exclaimed. “This X. Y. Z.,
-who is he? Who was he talking to? What are they after?”</p>
-<p>“All of which questions will be answered by the time we arrive at the scene
-of the wreck, I imagine,” quoth Tom with a dry intonation; “in the meantime, it
-looks as if we are ‘it’ in this marine game of blind-man’s buff.”</p>
-<p>“That’s the name for it, all right,” assented Jack, peering at his compass
-card. “Tom, old lad, I’ve a presentiment that we are going to blunder into
-something that will call for every bit of ingenuity and courage we possess.”</p>
-<p>“And in the meantime,” said Tom, “it’s up to me to keep that motor turning
-over as she never turned before.”</p>
-<p>“Um,—well, beyond knowing that X. Y. Z. is a dangerous factor, or seemingly
-so,” mused Jack, “we are about as far off as ever from knowing just where he
-fits into the problem.”</p>
-<p>The night wore on, and still the <i>Vagrant</i> churned her way steadily
-across the dark waters of the gulf under the brilliant white stars of the
-southern sky. The phosphorescence slid by her in fiery green streaks as she cut
-her way along, and from time to time Tom emerged from below and “spelled” his
-cousin, and comrade, at the wheel. At ten o’clock Jupe served coffee and
-biscuits on the bridge, and shortly thereafter Jack had another try with the
-wireless. But space, as before, was mute as the Sphinx. From out of the darkness
-came no whisper as to the nature of the enigma into which the situation, evolved
-by that first message from the air, had developed itself.</p>
-<p>Eleven o’clock came, and both boys commenced to strain their eyes into the
-velvety blackness ahead.</p>
-<p>“We ought to be picking something up before long,” observed Jack,
-“unless—unless——”</p>
-<p>His voice shook a bit. Between this lad and his father there was a deep bond
-of affection. Their close association had riveted the lad’s love for his parent
-even more strongly than is the case with most boys. As they neared the location
-where the yacht ought to be discovered, a feeling of painful suspense clutched
-coldly at his heart. Nor was Tom’s agitation much less. But the younger lad was
-more accustomed to suppress his feelings than Jack. He stood by his cousin’s
-side with tightly closed lips, as the <i>Vagrant</i> throbbed onward, but
-through his brain, like fires in a blast furnace, a constant succession of
-anxious thoughts flashed and agitated.</p>
-<p>“Unless what. Jack?” said Tom at length.</p>
-<p>“Unless—gracious, Tom, suppose—suppose that the <i>Sea King</i> has——”</p>
-<p>There was no need for him to conclude the sentence. Tom knew well enough what
-the other dreaded. The ominous silence after that first message, the lack of any
-signals from the disabled craft whose vicinity they must be close to now if she
-were still afloat—all these things induced a gloomy presentiment of evil which
-Tom, no more than Jack, was able to shake off.</p>
-<p>“It isn’t possible that she has proceeded?” mused Tom.</p>
-<p>“Not likely. As I understood that message the location was given us so that
-we could make direct for her. If she had been capable of proceeding under her
-own steam, surely she would have made for Lone Island.”</p>
-<p>“If only we knew something of the object of Uncle Chester’s mission, we might
-form a clearer idea of what has happened out here,” ventured Tom. “One thing is
-certain, the <i>Sea King</i> hasn’t struck a rock——”</p>
-<p>Jack laughed mirthlessly.</p>
-<p>“There isn’t a reef or a shoal within a hundred miles of her bearings, as
-given to us,” he said; “that’s what makes the whole thing such a baffling
-puzzle. Her boilers and machinery were new. I don’t see what can have happened
-to them, and surely if the accident had been of that nature, the despatch would
-have said so. It’s just the vagueness of the whole thing that worries me.”</p>
-<p>“Complicated by Mister X. Y. Z., whoever he may be,” supplemented Tom. “Do
-you know, Jack, I’ve got a hunch that we, are destined to see that individual
-before very long?”</p>
-<p>A sudden yell from Jupe, who was at the bow keeping a keen lookout according
-to instructions, cut the night.</p>
-<p>“Marse Jack! Marse Tom! Look! Look dere, yondah!”</p>
-<p>There was no need for Jupe to explain himself. Dead ahead, and directly on
-the <i>Vagrant’s</i> course, a bright streamer of flame slashed the sky like a
-scimitar of fire.</p>
-<p>“A rocket!” exploded Jack.</p>
-<p>As he uttered the exclamation the skyward end of the flaming ribbon burst
-into a diadem of brilliant scarlet stars.</p>
-<p>“Here, take the wheel,” choked out Jack, seizing Tom by the shoulder and
-shoving him into the helmsman’s place.</p>
-<p>With nimble fingers he unlaced the canvas covering of the <i>Vagrant’s</i>
-searchlight, snapped the switch on with a tiny sputter of green sparks. and the
-next instant a pencil of white light was sweeping the darkness ahead.</p>
-<p>Back and forth it swept and suddenly steadied. As it did so the boys uttered
-a simultaneous exclamation of amazement. Into the field of light had suddenly
-swung, not the expected outlines of the <i>Sea King</i>, but the form of a low
-craft without masts or funnels, rushing, at what appeared to be terrific speed,
-toward the northeast.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-va-shot-in-the-night'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER V—A SHOT IN THE NIGHT</h2>
-</div>
-<p>“Jove!” burst from Jack’s lips, “what on earth is this fresh
-complication?”</p>
-<p>He had hardly spoken before there came a crash of glass close to his hand,
-and something flew whistling by him. At the same instant the searchlight was
-extinguished, and from seaward, where they had last seen the speeding craft,
-came a dull “B-o-o-m!”</p>
-<p>“Knocked that searchlight into smithereens,” was Tom’s exclamation as old
-Jupe, with an alarmed cry, came running forward at the sound of the screaming
-projectile and the splintering glass.</p>
-<p>“At any rate,” was Jack’s grim retort, “they’ve shown us their hands. Tom,
-old chap, this thing is going to be bigger than we thought.”</p>
-<p>“You think then——”</p>
-<p>“That we are not the only persons interested in the <i>Sea King</i>. If I
-don’t make a big mistake, that shot was a message from our friend X. Y. Z.”</p>
-<p>“It looks like it,” admitted Tom; “oh, if we could only glimpse the <i>Sea
-King</i>!”</p>
-<p>“The rocket cattle from her. I’m sure of it. She must have mistaken the
-lights of that marine raceabout for our signals.”</p>
-<p>“Let’s try an answering rocket,” suggested Tom.</p>
-<p>“Won’t do any harm. Jupe, quit shivering like a jellyfish and get the rockets
-out. Two will be enough. Tom, you rig the tube.”</p>
-<p>The firing apparatus, a cylinder of galvanized iron, was speedily rigged in
-place, and by that time Jupe, whose face was an ashen gray tinge, reappeared
-with the rockets, two powerful signaling instruments, two feet or more in
-length.</p>
-<p>“All right, Tom, touch them off,” came from Jack, as the younger lad
-proclaimed that all was ready.</p>
-<p>There was the sputter of a match, a burst of yellow flame and then, almost
-instantly, a roar and a shriek as the first of the signals shot aloft, trailing
-a long tail of golden fire. At two hundred feet it exploded in a shower of blue
-stars. Almost simultaneously, it seemed, another cluster of red stars were
-spattered over the sky.</p>
-<p>“Hurray! That’s the <i>Sea King</i>, sure enough!” cried Jack; “see,
-they’ve answered us. Crowd her as much as you can, Tom, it’s a race for all
-we’re worth now.”</p>
-<p>“I can get a bit more speed, but it means overheating the engines,” warned
-Tom.</p>
-<p>“Never mind that. Put us alongside the <i>Sea King</i> ahead of that other
-chap, and I don’t care if you blow the engines up,” was the curt rejoinder.</p>
-<p>Tom shrugged his shoulders as he went below, but a few seconds later the dial
-hand of the patent log crept up a notch.</p>
-<p>“Fourteen knots!” exclaimed Jack, with a note of satisfaction, “we’ll beat
-her out yet.”</p>
-<p>All at once, from out of the obscurity, a grim possibility materialized.
-Rushing straight for the <i>Vagrant</i> came a sharp bow, with a wave of white
-phosphorescent foam curling away from it on each side as it cleaved the
-swells.</p>
-<p>“Great guns! They’re trying to ram us!” gasped out Jack as he sensed the
-meaning of this new peril.</p>
-<p>He seized up the speaking tube and bellowed down to Tom with all the force of
-his lungs.</p>
-<p>“Back! Back her for our lives!”</p>
-<p>Round spun the spokes of the wheel fast as a revolving squirrel’s cage. The
-<i>Vagrant’s</i> forward way was checked, but not wholly. To Jack’s horror it
-seemed impossible that the other vessel could fail in her evident object of
-ramming the smaller craft.</p>
-<p>Less than a few score of feet separated them now. He could hear the hiss of
-the other craft’s cutwater as it rushed down on them.</p>
-<p>“Golly to goodness, Marse Jack, dey sink us fo’ sho’,” wailed Jupe, dropping
-to his knees in terror on the bridge.</p>
-<p>Jack vouchsafed no reply. But the next instant he felt like giving a shout of
-joy. The backward revolving propeller of the <i>Vagrant</i> was “biting” the
-water. The motor craft’s forward impulse was checked. She hesitated, stopped,
-and slowly her bow began to swing. It was not a second too soon. As the
-<i>Vagrant</i> swung off, the other craft tore by at a vicious speed, and Jack
-saw that her bow was shaped like a man-of-war’s “ram.” So closely did she race
-across the <i>Vagrant’s</i> bow that he could see dim figures on her bridge,
-and could catch a torrent of maledictions, as those in command of the strange
-vessel saw that their evident purpose had been frustrated.</p>
-<p>At the pace she was going. Jack realized that it would be some moments before
-she could be put on another tack for a fresh onslaught.</p>
-<p>“Ahead! Come ahead!” he shouted down the tube, and the propeller of the
-<i>Vagrant</i> began to churn in a forward direction once more. The lads’
-craft forged forward, crossing the troubled wake of the vindictive stranger.</p>
-<p>“Glory be!” breathed old Jupe fervently; “ah could heah de angels’ harps dat
-time, Marse Jack.”</p>
-<p>“I don’t know that I wasn’t in the same mental condition myself,” rejoined
-Jack, with a nervous laugh. His hands shook and his heart beat thickly. The
-escape had been narrow enough to unnerve older and more experienced persons than
-this boyish captain.</p>
-<p>“Ahoy!” came a sudden voice out of the darkness ahead, “what craft’s
-that?”</p>
-<p>“The <i>Vagrant</i>!” hailed back Jack, with a glad ring in his tones; “is
-that the <i>Sky King</i>?”</p>
-<p>“Aye! aye! Thank heaven, you’ve come—in time,” was the answering hail from
-the yacht.</p>
-<p>A moment later, against the stars. Jack could trace the spidery outlines of
-the larger vessel’s spars and wireless aerials and rigging.</p>
-<p>“This is Jack Chadwick,” he shouted, not giving a thought to the stranger
-craft now, but in a torment of anxiety to know what it all portended, “is my
-father on board?”</p>
-<p>There was a pause. Across the water there came a confused murmur of voices,
-but what they said was not audible.</p>
-<p>“<i>Sea King</i>, ahoy!” hailed Jack impatiently, “is my father on board
-and well?”</p>
-<p>“Your father is well, we hope, but he’s not on board,” came back the reply in
-somewhat hesitating tones.</p>
-<p>“Not on board!” stammered Jack, feeling for an instant as if he had been
-struck a heavy blow, “then where is he?”</p>
-<p>“Come alongside. Master Jack,” was the response, “there’s a lot to be
-told.”</p>
-<p>The black hulk of the <i>Sea King</i> was plainly visible now, and Jack,
-steering carefully, with one hand on the engine-room signaling device,
-skillfully maneuvered the <i>Vagrant</i> alongside of the bigger craft. As he
-did so an accommodation ladder was lowered, and several heads appeared along the
-yacht’s rail.</p>
-<p>“Stop her,” chimed the signal.</p>
-<p>Then came the order to reverse and then “stop” once more. Jupe, with a line
-in his hand, leaped for the accommodation ladder. Tom, emerging on deck, took in
-the situation in a glance and made for the stern. He hurled another line, which
-was caught from above. In as short a time as it takes to tell it, the
-<i>Vagrant</i> was snugly moored alongside her larger consort.</p>
-<p>Jack, with his head in a whirl, stepped from the bridge. Tom was at his side
-in an instant.</p>
-<p>“Is all well with Uncle Chester?” he demanded impatiently. “Is he on
-board?”</p>
-<p>“No, he isn’t,” came the staggering reply, in a voice that was half a sob. It
-was a bolt from the blue that had assailed the lad, and who will blame him for
-being utterly unnerved by the blow fate had just dealt him.</p>
-<p>Tom was silent for an instant. Tidings that stun have a way of sinking in
-slowly. Then, as the two lads stood at the foot of the ladder, he flung his arm
-around Jack’s shoulder, and from his gritted teeth came speech:</p>
-<p>“If harm has come to him. Jack, those who have caused it will have to
-pay—<i>and pay big!</i>”</p>
-<p>And so the two lads ascended the ladder to the <i>Sea King’s</i> deck,
-followed by the awe-struck Jupe.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-vined-bangs-story'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER VI—NED BANGS’ STORY</h2>
-</div>
-<p>It was Ned Bang’s, the boyish wireless operator of the <i>Sea King</i>, who
-met them at the head of the ladder. Behind him pressed a ring of curious faces,
-the bronzed countenances of seamen. Some incandescents had been switched on as
-the newcomers gained the deck, and in the yellow light Jack saw that all the
-faces that gazed into his bore the unmistakable stamp of agitation.</p>
-<p>Bangs, besides being the wireless operator of the <i>Sea King</i>, was
-something more. He had been a pupil of Professor Chadwick’s and a school fellow
-of Jack’s, and was quite a scientific adept along the lines he had chosen to
-follow.</p>
-<p>But Jack and Tom exchanged merely hasty words of greeting with the youngster
-who stood facing them, pallid-faced under his coat of tan and shaken evidently
-by some recent shock.</p>
-<p>“What is it, Ned? What has happened?” demanded Jack eagerly, as soon as the
-boys had clasped hands. “Where is father? Why are you out here alone?”</p>
-<p>“It’s—it’s a long story. Jack,” half-stammered Ned. “I—I’m afraid that we who
-are here on board don’t show up to very good advantage in it. But you must be
-the judge of that. Shall we go below, where we can talk?”</p>
-<p>There was a reticence, a hesitancy in his tones that irritated Jack,
-overwrought as he already was.</p>
-<p>“I asked you a question, Ned,” he said in sharp tones, very unlike his usual
-affable ones, “where is my father?”</p>
-<p>“I saw him last near Yucatan,” burst forth Ned miserably.</p>
-<p>The reply was so utterly unexpected that it fairly took Jack and Tom off
-their feet. Ned had not seen fit to supplement his statement, but stood there
-with that same shamefaced expression playing over his visage.</p>
-<p>“And you—you left him behind there?” broke out Jack, guessing part of the
-truth.</p>
-<p>“We couldn’t help it,” wailed Ned wretchedly. “Wait till I tell you about
-it.”</p>
-<p>Jack’s head swam. Behind the vague words he sensed a tragedy of some sort in
-that mysterious country which had already, so it was thought, claimed the life
-of Tom’s father, Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>“How did the <i>Sea King</i> come to be off Yucatan?” inquired Jack, “her
-course, as laid out, was far to the east of that country.”</p>
-<p>“I know that,” replied Ned; “but a gale blew us off our reckonings, and into
-as strange and terrible a series of adventures as you ever heard of in the
-wildest fiction.”</p>
-<p>“Tell us about it,” demanded Tom crisply, cutting short Ned’s rather
-hysterical outburst. “Come below, into the cabin. It is important that we should
-know everything as soon as possible.”</p>
-<p>“This way,” said Ned, stepping toward the stern.</p>
-<p>But Jack paused.</p>
-<p>“An attempt was made to ram the <i>Vagrant</i> to-night,” he said, “by a
-queer, but extremely speedy craft. Do you know anything about her, Ned?”</p>
-<p>“Do I know anything about her?”</p>
-<p>A quaver of indignation injected itself into Ned’s voice.</p>
-<p>“Well, I should say so,” he went on; “that’s the vessel of that scoundrel
-Herrera, the cousin of the governor of Yucatan, which, as you know, is at
-present a province of Mexico, but, so far as civilization is concerned, parts of
-it might as well be in the wilds of Africa.”</p>
-<p>Tom had been fidgeting excitedly. The name of Yucatan had called up a
-swarming crowd of memories of his father, the long missing explorer.</p>
-<p>“Had my uncle’s visit to Yucatan anything to do with my father’s
-disappearance?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“Everything,” was the rejoinder, in steadier tones than Ned Bangs had yet
-assumed. The presence of the self-possessed cousins, and their infectious manner
-of quiet ability, had braced the unstrung lad up wonderfully.</p>
-<p>“It was to rescue your father from——”</p>
-<p>“Then he is alive?” burst in Tom, aglow at the wonderful news.</p>
-<p>“So there is every reason to suppose,” was Ned’s reply.</p>
-<p>Without giving him time to say more, the cousins, having ordered the crew to
-keep a keen lookout for the speedy “ram” craft and notify them instantly of its
-appearance, half dragged Ned below, and shoved him into a chair in the
-comfortably furnished main cabin of the <i>Sea King</i>.</p>
-<p>“Now then,” said Jack, “tell us everything, Ned, from the beginning. But
-first you are reasonably certain that both my father and my uncle are
-alive?”</p>
-<p>“There is practically no doubt of that,” was Ned’s response.</p>
-<p>“Then fire away,” ordered Tom, seating himself beside Jack, opposite the
-still badly shaken Ned Bangs.</p>
-<p>“We left New York at the time you know,” commenced Ned, “and cruised for some
-time in the West Indies, your father. Jack, making stacks of observations and
-records. We met many interesting adventures, but I’m not going to detail all
-those now. But, although your father seemed to be immersed in his scientific
-observations, there were several things unexplained about the <i>Sea
-King’s</i> equipment.</p>
-<p>“In a sort of well amidships was stored the aero-auto with which you had been
-experimenting before he left High Towers.”</p>
-<p>Jack nodded. He knew the wonderful craft had been placed aboard, but had
-understood it had been taken along for private demonstration purposes.</p>
-<p>“You mean the air and land craft driven by the gas generated from radolite
-crystals?” he asked. “The Flying Road Racer, as we called it.”</p>
-<p>“Yes,” rejoined Ned, “I guess that’s it. But I reckon you know more about
-that than I do since you invented it. Anyhow, the aero-auto, as Professor
-Chadwick called it, was installed in this well, or pit, amidships, which had
-evidently been prepared for its reception in advance.”</p>
-<p>“And it’s still there?” inquired Tom sharply.</p>
-<p>“Still there. Whatever Professor Chadwick intended to use it for, he had no
-opportunity to try it out before—before what I’m going to tell you occurred.
-Then, too, I noticed that several chests containing articles whose nature was a
-mystery to me were stored in a sort of lazaretto under the cabin floor. Whatever
-their contents, they were evidently too precious for Professor Chadwick to let
-them out of his sight.”</p>
-<p>“Wait a second,” interrupted Tom, “I want to take a look outside.”</p>
-<p>In a moment he was back, anti dropped into his place with an “All’s
-well!”</p>
-<p>“Never mind details now. Get ahead to Yucatan,” exclaimed Jack
-impatiently.</p>
-<p>“I’m getting there,” protested Ned, a look of what was almost horror passing
-over his face at the mere mention of the name. “The storm I referred to before,
-struck us when we were off the southernmost point of Florida. It was a terror of
-a rip-roaring hurricane. All we could do was to head up into the mountainous
-seas and run the engines at a quarter speed. We battled with the hurricane thus
-for four days, and then MacDuffy, the engineer, came on deck one morning with a
-white face and the news that the main shaft was cracked. It had been unable to
-withstand the pressure of the racing propeller every time the <i>Sea
-King’s</i> stern lifted out of the seas.</p>
-<p>“Luckily, the wind had moderated a bit by that time, and we set the try
-sails. Under these we staggered along at a four-knot gait for what seemed an
-eternity of time. In reality it was about five days. One morning, when the storm
-had about blown itself out, the lookout shouted that land lay ahead. Sure enough
-it did. A strip of gray on the horizon; and I can tell you it was a mighty
-welcome sight.</p>
-<p>“Captain Andrews, our sailing master, announced that the coast was, in all
-probability, that of Yucatan, and from what he told us of it we could not well
-have struck a more useless stretch of country to us, situated as we were. But
-it’s ‘any port in a storm’ said the skipper, and we made for the land, staggering
-along under our clumsy rig.</p>
-<p>“That night we anchored off a wild, desolate-looking coast, without a trace
-of human habitations being visible anywhere. However, we found a bay which,
-after careful soundings from the boats, proved to have sufficient depth of water
-to harbor the <i>Sea King</i> snugly. Here we dropped anchor, and mighty glad
-we were to have struck a haven at last, I can tell you.</p>
-<p>“Next day the chief came to your father and told him that he thought he could
-clamp a metal collar round the break in the shaft and make it practically as
-good as new. To our astonishment, Professor Chadwick did not greet the news with
-any special enthusiasm.</p>
-<p>“‘You may as well take your time, Mr. MacDuffy,’ says he, ‘for it is probable
-that we shall remain here for quite a considerable period.’</p>
-<p>“‘A considerable period, sir!’ exclaimed MacDuffy in some surprise. ‘Do you
-mean to explore yon forsaken land in the interests of science?’</p>
-<p>“‘It seems to me, MacDuffy,’ answered Professor Chadwick (MacDuffy told me
-all this later), ‘that fate has brought me here. A very dear and a very near
-relative of mine vanished in this part of Yucatan many years ago. When we set
-out on this cruise I had an idea that perhaps I might undertake to go in search
-of him, or, at least, to discover some trace of his fate. That accounts for the
-aero-auto which, as you know, my son Jack and I invented, and also explains
-those chests which contain several more of our inventions suitable to such an
-expedition.’</p>
-<p>“The Professor went on to say that now that he found himself off the very
-land which held the secret of Mr. Jesson’s fate, he didn’t mean to leave without
-making an attempt to solve it. From this determination he was not to be swayed,
-and the next day one of the boats set him and three of the crew, Abner Jennings,
-the boatswain; Jack Allworthy, the second engineer; and Ezra Kettle, a Maine man
-and a staunch seaman, ashore. We watched them from the <i>Sea King</i> as they
-dragged the boat up on the beach and set off into the jungle, beyond which lay
-the misty blue outline of a range of huge hills.</p>
-<p>“Without the slightest warning, and just as they were about to plunge into
-the thick brush, the mangroves and scrub vegetation parted, and a score of
-savage-looking Indians rushed out. We saw your father and the others try to
-parley with them, and then, before we could even train a gun on the scene, the
-thing happened.”</p>
-<p>He paused for an instant, overcome by the recollection of that tragedy on the
-Yucatan beach. Immediately Jack jumped to his feet.</p>
-<p>“I’ve forgotten the ‘enemy’ outside. Hold on a minute,” he called as he
-dashed away to the deck. “The watch may be all right,” he continued, when he
-returned, “but there’s nothing like one’s own eyes. Go on, Ned.”</p>
-<p>“Poor Kettle went down, transfixed by a spear in the first few seconds after
-the encounter. Professor Chadwick’s intention had merely been to reconnoitre in
-preparation for an expedition later on. Not expecting trouble, none of the party
-was armed. Allworthy dashed back to the boat and seized up an oar. He did
-valiant service with it before he, too, was felled by a spear-thrust. In the
-meantime, Professor Chadwick and Abner Jennings had been captured,
-notwithstanding their stout resistance. Then they were dragged off into the
-jungle, while we stood half-paralyzed with horror at the suddenness and
-disastrous consequences of the attack.</p>
-<p>“The last we saw of your father. Jack, he was motioning back to us to put out
-to sea. Brave to the last, he thought of us before himself.”</p>
-<p>Ned stooped and placed his hands over his eyes as if to shut out the picture
-his words called up. Jack Chadwick sat staring vacantly at the paneling of the
-cabin, not daring to trust his voice to speech. Tom, not less affected, gripped
-his cousin’s hand.</p>
-<p>“Remember, old chap,” he murmured, “that Ned told us some time ago that there
-was reason to believe that your father was still alive.”</p>
-<p>“I’m coming to that,” said Ned, raising his head and proceeding with his
-narrative.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-viithe-three-colored-gems'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER VII—THE THREE COLORED GEMS</h2>
-</div>
-<p>“It was MacDuffy,” continued the lad, “who organized an expedition to go to
-your father’s rescue. There was MacDuffy, Captain Andrews, four seamen and
-myself. The rest were left in charge of the <i>Sea King</i>, the engine-room
-force having instructions to proceed with the repairs to the shaft, which were
-really simple enough, consisting only of bolting a collar of metal around the
-split.</p>
-<p>“We were heavily armed, as you may imagine, and after we had landed in the
-light boat, we stowed it in the brush where it would not be likely to be
-discovered by marauders. The other boat, the one in which your father landed,
-had been stove in by those rascally natives. Our first task after this, was to
-bury poor Kettle as decently as we could. This done, we took up the trail, which
-was plain enough to follow. In fact, we learned afterward, it was a regular path
-that the natives followed when they came to the coast after turtles and
-fish.</p>
-<p>“Danger? Well, we knew we were going into a desperate game, but, as MacDuffy
-said, we couldn’t do otherwise than our best to rescue your father. As we made
-our way through the jungle we discussed the situation. It looked black and no
-mistake. In the first place, as Captain Andrews pointed out, the revolution was
-raging in northern Mexico, and Diaz, in his last desperate stand, had withdrawn
-troops from every province in Mexico. Captain Andrews told us that the
-descendants of the Mayas, who inhabited this part of Yucatan, were endowed with
-a fierce hatred of Mexicans and white men in general, and that they had been
-kept in subjugation solely by the presence of large bodies of troops. With this
-menace to their warlike ideas withdrawn, the Mayas were probably ripe for any
-mischief.</p>
-<p>“All this, as you can imagine, didn’t tend to raise our spirits, and the
-prospect of rescuing your father began to seem remote indeed. Well, to cut a
-long story short, we followed the trail for two days till we began to arrive in
-the foothills of the range we had seen. Occasionally we came across what were
-evidently the sites of recent camps, so we knew that we were on the track all
-right.</p>
-<p>“The third day, about noon, we marched right out of a canyon, threaded by a
-swift river, into an Indian settlement. Before we could say ‘knife,’ or raise a
-weapon, we were surrounded and made captives. We were thrown into a
-palm-thatched hut and placed under strict guard, and we faced the prospect of a
-speedy death. But at the moment we thought little of these matters, for the hut
-already contained three other captives, and they were Professor Chadwick, Abner
-Jennings and Jack Allworthy, the last wounded in the shoulder by the spear
-thrust that had knocked him down, but luckily not seriously.</p>
-<p>“You can guess how delighted we were in the first few moments, and then how
-depressed we all became as we began to realize that so far as an escape was
-concerned we might as well have been imprisoned in an iron-walled dungeon. We
-were deprived of nothing in the way of food, and were not bound in any way, but
-the hut was surrounded by too strong a guard to make any idea of escape
-practicable. So the night passed, a night that we spent in discussing and
-rejecting a hundred plans of escape, for each, in turn, was discarded as
-hopeless.</p>
-<p>“But, although we did not realize it, freedom for some of us was close at
-hand. Shortly before noon the sky became black as night. A screaming sort of
-wind arose, and suddenly we felt the ground under our feet beginning to rock. It
-didn’t take us long to catch on that the disturbance was caused by an earthquake
-of uncommon severity. The natives began to howl and yell, and rushed about like
-madmen. That wind suddenly picked up our prison and whisked it off, just as it
-might have dealt with an umbrella. And there we stood, in the middle of all this
-commotion, unbound and practically free to go where we would, for the natives
-were far too busy attending to their own affairs to worry about us.</p>
-<p>“In the middle of the uproar and the convulsions of the earth, a whole
-section of the cliff which upreared itself at the back of the settlement, slid
-down with a roar like a hundred Niagaras. It caught that village, just as a big
-rock would smash an anthill. We escaped by the skin of our teeth, but, as it
-was, we were showered with flying rocks and earth. Luckily, none of us was
-injured.</p>
-<p>“But those poor natives fared otherwise. Of the scores that had been rushing
-about an instant before hardly twenty remained. One of these was a big fellow,
-with a beautiful copper-colored skin, clad in a sort of garment made out of
-jaguar hide. He separated from the rest, and we saw that he carried under his
-arm a large box, or case, which gleamed dully in the gloom.</p>
-<p>“‘He’s making for the canoes!’ shouted MacDuffy suddenly, and then, sure
-enough, we saw what we hadn’t noticed before in all that hurly-burly, namely,
-that several dugouts were moored to the river bank. I guess we all caught the
-inspiration at the same instant. Anyhow, we began running for the bank at top
-speed. But suddenly that copper-colored giant faced about, and we now saw that
-he carried a whole quiver full of those poisoned darts that the Maya tribes use
-with deadly effect.</p>
-<p>“Before he could aim one, or shout to the rest of the villagers, who hadn’t
-noted our escape, Abner Jennings flew at him like a wildcat. Down he went,
-bowled over like a ninepin, under a crashing blow from Jennings’ fist.</p>
-<p>“‘Hurray, lads! Now for the boats!’ shouted Allworthy, and we scampered after
-him toward them. But at that instant a queer thing happened. A man came racing
-toward us from amidst the ruins of the village.</p>
-<p>“‘Get him!’ yelled Allworthy savagely, as Jennings stooped and picked up a
-big rock.</p>
-<p>“But the next instant his hand dropped to his side. The man was white! In
-spite of his half-naked condition and sun-browned skin, it was clear enough that
-he was as much of a Caucasian as any of us, and then came the wonderful part of
-it all.</p>
-<p>“‘In the name of heaven, white men, stop!’ he shouted, ‘take me with you. I
-am——’”</p>
-<p>“Jasper Jesson!”</p>
-<p>It was Tom Jesson who had uttered the exclamation. In a flash of intuition he
-had seen what was coming before Ned uttered it. The lad literally quivered with
-excitement as he spoke.</p>
-<p>“Right. It was your father, Tom,” rejoined Ned. “Professor Chadwick stopped,
-ran back and embraced him. For a minute we all stood stock still, rooted there
-by sheer amazement, I guess. Well, we got to the canoes and set out down the
-river. There were four dugouts, and the way they dashed down that stretch of
-water was a caution. No need to paddle. The current just tore along for several
-miles. I don’t see how it was we didn’t upset, but the fact remains that we
-didn’t. Pretty soon we reached a part of the stream where another flowed into
-it, and it broadened out and grew calmer.</p>
-<p>“Then, for the first time, we felt free to talk. We hauled the canoes ashore
-and camped while we discussed plans. But first, you may imagine, we heard Mr.
-Jesson’s story. He had been captured by the tribe who had trapped us, soon after
-his arrival in the country. And their prisoner he had remained since.
-Undoubtedly he would have been put to death, but he had by great good luck
-managed to translate some cryptograms carved in the marble stones of some ruins
-in the mountains, and after that they looked on him as a sort of god. At any
-rate, he was well treated, but given no chance to escape. The earthquake that
-had set us loose had proved his opportunity, too. Of course, it’s no use my
-trying to give you any idea of his delight and astonishment at finding his
-brother-in-law and getting news of you, Tom, and of the old home.</p>
-<p>“He had just about concluded his story, when Mr. Chadwick drew from under his
-coat that same metal box that we had seen the big copper-colored fellow
-skedaddling with. He had taken it from the chap as he lay stunned, rightly
-guessing that it was of immense value. But he was far from surmising what it was
-he had really discovered, till a few moments later.</p>
-<p>“‘Maybe, Jesson,’ he said, ‘you can tell me what kind of a box this is. It’s
-silver, all right, for one thing, but it’s covered with some sort of picture
-writing, too, and——’</p>
-<p>“But Tom’s father interrupted him with a shout.</p>
-<p>“‘Good heavens, man!’ he exclaimed, ‘you’ve got hold of the holy of holies of
-the Zakaks,’——that’s the name of the tribe that had hooked us.</p>
-<p>“While we all looked on with open mouths, Mr. Jesson broke a long thorn off a
-prickly bush growing near at hand and shoved it into a small hole in the front
-of the box. The lid flew open, and there inside was something that made us blink
-our eyes,—a blood-red stone, a blue one, and a gorgeous green gem.</p>
-<p>“We all caught our breath, I can tell you. Each stone was as big as a
-pigeon’s egg, and it didn’t take an expert to tell that we had before us a ruby,
-a turquoise and an emerald that had, probably, not their equals in the
-world.</p>
-<p>“Then Mr. Jesson told us how the tribe had a legend that those stones were
-brought from some, mysterious land beyond the seas by their fore-runners, and
-that if they were stolen or lost disaster would overtake them. At certain phases
-of the moon, he said, the stones were worshiped with all sorts of queer rites
-that he had not been permitted to witness.</p>
-<p>“We, none of us, could guess what they were worth, but it was a safe estimate
-that they represented a snug fortune. As for the box itself, it was, as I said,
-of dull silver, with three sort of oval bosses or bumps on its cover. These were
-of a reddish color, and were evidently of no value except as ornaments. After
-some more talk it was decided to make for the Texan coast, and as soon as we had
-regained the yacht, get into wireless communication with you lads.</p>
-<p>“Professor Chadwick explained that he had had a half-formed intention of
-attempting to find Mr. Jesson before he left America, and for that reason had
-sent you boys to Lone Island so that he might notify you of his success by
-wireless as soon as possible, without letting the general public know, and also
-have you handy in case of an emergency.”</p>
-<p>“So that explains Lone Island,” struck in Jack, “but go on, Ned. I can hardly
-wait for the rest of your story.”</p>
-<p>“Neither can I,” added Tom; “but aren’t you fellows surprised that we don’t
-hear anything from outside?”</p>
-<p>“It is strange,” agreed Jack. “I’ll run up again soon.”</p>
-<p>“Well,” continued Ned, “we knew that by following the river we must emerge on
-the coast, probably near to the spot where the yacht was anchored. We therefore
-lost no time in re-embarking and getting on our way once more. Luckily, there
-was some food, bananas and dried flesh of some animal,—deer, most likely,—in the
-canoes, which must have been provisioned for a trip. So that night, when we
-camped, we had a good supper, with something left over for the next day.</p>
-<p>“We slept under the canoes, turning them keel up to form a protection from
-the dews, and also from any prowling animals. The spot we had chosen was well
-back in the brush, so that in case of pursuit we had a good hiding place. But we
-slept without interruption, taking watch in turn. The next morning, before it
-was well light, we set out down the river again, and that afternoon we had
-reason to think we were close to the coast. The character of the jungle on
-either side of the river changed and the stream grew wider and more
-sluggish.</p>
-<p>“So far we had had no indication that we were not the only human beings in
-that part of the country, so you can imagine our astonishment when, about
-mid-afternoon, on rounding a bend in the stream, we beheld a squat, drab-colored
-craft, without spars or funnel, moored to the bank. It didn’t need a second
-glance to tell us that she was a fighting craft of some kind. On her decks were
-the outlines of several rapid-fire guns shrouded under canvas covers. Her bow
-was shaped like a ram, and we could see by the rows of rivets along her sides
-that she was built of steel.</p>
-<p>“‘That’s one of the new shoal-draft, gasolene gunboats, built for the Diaz
-government at the Vulcan yards in Charlestown,’ declared Professor Chadwick at
-once.</p>
-<p>“He had hardly spoken when several of the crew, who had been lounging about
-the decks, saw us coming. There was an instant stir on board the ugly-looking
-craft, and presently the figure of a small, dark-skinned man, with a black,
-pointed beard and moustache, and heavy, sinister eyebrows, appeared on the
-bridge, which was just forward of a sort of conning tower.</p>
-<p>“He wore white garments and a broad-brimmed Panama hat. As soon as he
-appeared he hailed us.</p>
-<p>“‘Come alongside, gentlemen,’ he said, using almost perfect English. ‘I
-welcome you to <i>El Tarantula</i>.’”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-viiion-board-the-tarantula'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER VIII—ON BOARD “THE TARANTULA”</h2>
-</div>
-<p>“A few moments later,” continued Ned, “we were standing on the deck of the
-sinister-looking craft, confronted by her equally sinister-looking owner, for
-such we soon found he was, in fact, if not in name. From him we speedily learned
-that not only was he the governor of that part of the province of Yucatan, but
-that he also controlled large plantations near the mouth of the river. The
-principal produce of these was sisal hemp, a well-known and valuable product of
-the country.</p>
-<p>“Naturally, we supposed that as soon as we had told our story, the first act
-of Ramon Herrera, for such he informed us was his name, would be to aid us in
-reaching our yacht. But the event proved exactly to the contrary.</p>
-<p>“‘You will take up quarters for the present on my yacht, gentlemen,’ he said,
-in a tone almost of command.</p>
-<div class='figcenter id02'>
- <img id='illus-001' src='images/illus-001.jpg' style='width:100%;' alt=''/>
- <div class='caption'>
- General Herrera, commander of <i>El Tarantula</i>, the Mexican gasolene gunboat.
- </div>
-</div>
-<p>“Professor Chadwick started to protest, but met with a stern
-interruption.</p>
-<p>“‘My country is in the throes of a revolution,’ Herrera said, ‘and at the
-present time it is unknown to me whether your United States of North America is
-involved in the trouble or not. It is my belief, and that of many of my
-countrymen, that the massing of troops on the Texan border, by orders of your
-President Taft, is a menace to the Diaz government, and an encouragement to the
-revolutionaries. This being so, you must regard yourselves as my guests,—I will
-not use an uglier word,—till such time as I receive further advices.
-Furthermore, I do not mean to make any secret of my dislike for meddling
-Yankees.’</p>
-<p>“‘Sir,’ exclaimed Professor Chadwick, ‘you are deliberately insulting.’</p>
-<p>“‘Senor Yankee,’ was the calm reply, ‘you have deliberately intruded yourself
-into a country where you and your inquisitive countrymen are not wanted.’</p>
-<p>“‘I am not aware by what right you dare to assume such an attitude toward
-us,’ resumed Professor Chadwick, now thoroughly aroused, and, indeed, we were
-all at the boiling-point, as you can imagine. Herrera’s every word seemed to be
-a deliberate taunt.</p>
-<p>“‘I assume my attitude, as you call it, by right of might,’ was the cold
-reply, ‘my ancestor. General Jose de Guzman Herrera, was slain by your Yankee
-soldiers in the Mexican war. Judge, then, if I have any reason to favor
-Yankees.’</p>
-<p>“‘You are likely to pay dearly for this forcible detention of peaceful
-citizens of a republic at peace with your country,’ warned Allworthy.</p>
-<p>“Herrera shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-<p>“‘I’ll take my chance of that,’ he said, ‘besides, as I remarked before, I am
-not so certain that my country and your country are not by this time at
-war.’</p>
-<p>“Well, there was nothing more to be said, and determined to make the best of
-our situation we went docilely enough to the quarters that Herrera had provided
-for us, which consisted of three cabins in the extreme stern of the ship.
-Captain Andrews, MacDuffy and I were thrust into one cabin, your father and Mr.
-Jesson into the next compartment, and Abner Jennings and the two sailors into a
-third stateroom.</p>
-<p>“Here was a pretty kettle of fish, and a fine ending to our hopes of reaching
-the coast, which, we were confident, was not far distant. From scraps of
-conversation we overheard, for there were gratings above each stateroom door, we
-learned that the <i>Tarantula</i> was tied up to the shore bordering on one of
-Herrera’s plantations. We heard later that the slaves,—most of them Mosquito
-Coast negroes illegally impressed as slaves,—had made some trouble, and that
-Herrera was here with his armed craft to suppress the uprising by stern means.
-What these means were we found out later, and without going into detail, we
-heard enough to know that the monster,—as we subsequently found him to
-be,—spared no form of cruelty to browbeat his luckless servitors into
-submission. All this was translated for us by Captain Andrews, who spoke Spanish
-fluently.</p>
-<p>“We might have been confined in our narrow quarters for an hour, or it might
-have been longer, when we heard the door of the adjoining stateroom unlocked,
-and presently voices came to us through the grating. It was easy to recognize
-Herrera’s tones as he cross-examined Professor Chadwick. One of the Mexican
-sailors had noticed that when the professor came on board he had slipped a
-silver chest—the treasure box—under his coat. The fellow had informed Herrera,
-and now that arch-scoundrel was demanding that Professor Chadwick and Mr. Jesson
-submit to being searched.</p>
-<p>“I can tell you we exchanged blank glances when we overheard this. It seemed
-pretty tough that, after all we had gone through, we were to be robbed of what
-was bound to prove a substantial reward, for Professor Chadwick had insisted
-that we agree to take an equal share with him having participated in his
-dangers.</p>
-<p>“But to our astonishment the search evidently resulted in nothing being
-found. For before long we heard Herrera bursting out into Spanish oaths. He
-wanted to know what had become of the box.</p>
-<p>“‘If you had asked me before,’ Professor Chadwick replied, ‘I would have told
-you. I threw it overboard rather than let it fall into your hands.’</p>
-<p>“We listened for an outburst or worse right then. But none came. The rascal,
-in whose power we were, evidently didn’t know the value of the silver box, for
-he merely remarked that Professor Chadwick’s act would not improve our
-situation, and left the cabin. But we, in the adjoining stateroom, again
-exchanged blank glances. It was no joke to think of that fortune in magnificent
-stones being consigned to the muddy depths of that Yucatan stream.</p>
-<p>“A short time after Herrera left the cabin, however. Professor Chadwick
-climbed up on a bunk in his stateroom, and placing his lips to the grating
-informed us that he had not, in reality, hurled the box overboard, but that it
-was suspended outside the porthole of his cabin by a fine bit of cord which he
-had happened to have in his pockets. The porthole was beneath the overhang of
-the stern of the gunboat, and unless any sailor went prying about under the
-vessel’s counter there was not much likelihood of its being discovered. The
-Professor informed us also that he was determined not to purchase our liberty at
-the price of the precious stones.</p>
-<p>“‘This is the twentieth century,’ he said, ‘and I refuse to believe that this
-rascal, for such Herrera has shown himself to be, will dare to hold captive free
-American citizens for any length of time.’</p>
-<p>“We agreed with him in this, but MacDuffy, who, as an engineer, possessed
-with an investigating turn of mind, still busied himself, as he had since the
-moment of our imprisonment, with trying to find some means of escape. There was
-a nine-inch porthole in our stateroom, and also in the other two. But, of
-course, this offered no opportunity for escape. By peeping out through it,
-however, we could see that our dugouts had been attached to the stern of the
-<i>Tarantula</i> by a line. If we could only reach them we might be able to
-attain freedom.</p>
-<p>“All at once MacDuffy uttered an exclamation. He had discovered that under
-the porthole was a square plate, bolted into the stern frames, and seemingly
-devised, when removed, to permit of a gun being thrust through the opening. The
-nuts which held the bolts in place were inside the cabin, and MacDuffy produced
-from his pockets a serviceable-looking monkey wrench, which was the engineer’s
-constant companion.</p>
-<p>“‘I’ll undertake to have those nuts unscrewed in half an hour,’ said he in a
-low, excited tone, ‘and then what’s to prevent us dropping through the stern
-to-night, hooking the dugouts and floating down to the coast?’</p>
-<p>“What indeed? we thought. The plan looked feasible enough. But, naturally, we
-did not, for a minute, countenance the idea of making good our own escape and
-leaving the rest to their fate. But Professor Chadwick, when we communicated our
-plan, decided at once that we must make the attempt that night, and, if we
-succeeded in reaching the coast and the <i>Sea King</i>, must summon help.</p>
-<p>“After a lot of persuasion we agreed to do this. Then we waited, with as much
-patience as we could muster, for the night to fall. Food and drink was brought
-us at dusk, and we ate all we could, knowing that we might have strenuous work
-before us. After dark MacDuffy fell to work on the bolts. It took scarcely an
-hour to loosen them. This much accomplished, we waited till all grew quiet about
-the <i>Tarantula</i>, which was not before midnight.</p>
-<p>“Whispering a good-by to Professor Chadwick and Mr. Jesson, we dropped
-through the opening, after MacDuffy had removed the plate which left a hole some
-four feet square. The rope by which the dugouts trailed astern was just above
-our heads. Captain Andrews seized it and pulled the first of the frail craft
-toward the <i>Tarantula</i> till it was under the opening we had made. Then
-they told me to drop down as silently as possible. When I was on board MacDuffy
-followed, stuffing his wrench into his hip pocket, and last came Captain
-Andrews. Before we cut loose we, according to Professor Chadwick’s instructions,
-cut the string by which the jewel casket was suspended, and stowed it safely on
-board the dugout.</p>
-<p>“This done, I cut the painter with a slash of my knife, and the dugout
-drifted silently off down the current into the darkness. Our escape had been
-made in safety. We reached the coast, and after paddling northward for half a
-day, sighted the <i>Sea King</i>. All was as we had left it, and mighty glad
-every one was to see us. I can tell you. But the plight of Professor Chadwick,
-Mr. Jesson and the rest, cast a gloom over us all.”</p>
-<p>“Tell me,” begged Tom, interrupting again, “are they still on the
-<i>Tarantula</i>?”</p>
-<p>“I don’t know,” replied Ned.</p>
-<p>“Well, hurry your story,” exclaimed Jack. “We must go to their rescue
-wherever they are!”</p>
-<p>“Captain Andrews lost no time in ordering me to the wireless,” continued Ned
-hastily, “and as we steamed northward I kept pumping away at my key. At length,
-as you know, I got into communication with you. But as I did so there was a
-sharp and sudden shock through the <i>Sea King</i>, and she came to an abrupt
-stop. That shaft had parted again. There was nothing for us to do but to anchor.
-At almost the same time one of the crew shouted that a craft resembling the
-<i>Tarantula</i> was on the southern horizon and overhauling us fast. It
-didn’t need a second look to show us that the strange vessel was indeed the
-<i>Tarantula</i>. As she drew close to us there was a flash and a puff of
-smoke from her bow, and ‘crash!’ our aerials parted,—shot through at the
-foremast.</p>
-<p>“There we were, crippled and helpless, and I didn’t even know for sure if my
-message to you was clear or no.”</p>
-<p>“One question,” put in Jack, “has the <i>Tarantula</i> a wireless?”</p>
-<p>“Yes; I meant to tell you about that. She is fitted with a collapsible
-military mast, and, from what we overheard, Herrera has a complete plant at his
-plantation ashore likewise.”</p>
-<p>“That disposes of X. Y. Z.,” said Jack, glancing at Tom. “It’s plain enough
-now that some one ashore intercepted our message, just as we caught theirs, and
-flashed it to Herrera.”</p>
-<p>“Guess you’re right,” agreed Tom gloomily, “and we are responsible for giving
-away the exact location of the <i>Sea King</i>.”</p>
-<p>“How’s that?” asked Ned, in a wondering tone.</p>
-<p>“I’ll explain all about it later,” said Jack, “the thing is now to formulate
-some sort of plan to get out of this tangle. Is Captain Andrews or Chief
-MacDuffy about?”</p>
-<p>“MacDuffy is below, trying to fix the break in the shaft,” was the response.
-“Captain Andrews is asleep in his cabin. He was worn out, and I didn’t wake him
-when our rocket signals were answered by you.”</p>
-<p>“Well, I think we’d better rouse him now,” Jack was beginning, when the cabin
-door was flung open and a sailor, whose face was chalky beneath his tan, burst
-in. The group at the table looked up, startled and alert. Ned’s narration had
-taken almost an hour, and although they had not forgotten the dangerous
-proximity of the <i>Tarantula</i>, they had had no way of guessing in what way
-their enemy would next become active.</p>
-<p>“That yaller-faced Greaser’s craft is bearing down on us. Mister Bangs!”
-exclaimed the man. “She looks as if——”</p>
-<p>There was a sharp crash overhead, and the booming detonation of a gun
-resounded an instant later. The boys sprang to their feet and scrambled up the
-companion way, headed for the deck.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-ixthe-chadwick-gas-guns'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER IX—THE CHADWICK GAS GUNS</h2>
-</div>
-<p>As they went Jack flashed a swift word to Ned.</p>
-<p>“You say that the chests my father took such care of are still in the
-cabin?”</p>
-<p>“Yes; in the Professor’s stateroom.”</p>
-<p>“Good. I’ve a notion they contain something that may prove valuable to us
-right now. Open them up and see if one of them contains some queer-looking guns.
-If it does, bring the weapons on deck right away, and—summon Captain
-Andrews.”</p>
-<p>Ned retraced his steps and Jack ran swiftly up after Tom. On deck they found
-the sailors running about distractedly. The shot they had heard had carried away
-part of the foremast of the <i>Sea King</i>. The wreckage lay in a tangle,
-about which the seamen hovered confusedly.</p>
-<p>While the boys still stood regarding the scene, hardly knowing for the moment
-what to do, a stoutly-built man, with an overcoat hastily thrown on over a suit
-of pajamas, joined them. It was Captain Andrews. The light from the
-incandescents fell on his bronzed, blonde-bearded face, and Jack felt, as he
-clasped the newcomer’s hand, that here was a man who could be relied on to the
-last ditch.</p>
-<p>“Ned Bangs told me I would find you here,” he said. “I hastened on deck right
-away. I should have been out and about long ago; but——”</p>
-<p>“That’s all right, captain,” spoke Jack swiftly, “you had earned your rest
-and no mistake. The thing is, what are we going to do now?”</p>
-<p>“The rascal Herrera has attacked us, Ned told me.”</p>
-<p>“Yes. His craft is in the offing now. He has shot away part of the foremast.
-The riding-light on it must have acted as a target for him.”</p>
-<p>As the lad spoke a voice came cut of the darkness:</p>
-<p>“We want that silver casket. Are you going to give it up peaceably, or do we
-have to blow your vessel out of the water?”</p>
-<p>“You infernal scoundrels!” shouted Andrews, before Jack could check him.</p>
-<p>The captain bounded forward to a machine gun. With quick, nervous fingers he
-was ripping off its cover when Jack laid a hand on his arm.</p>
-<p>“Hold on a minute, captain,” he said, “I’ve another plan. We shall know in a
-few seconds now if it will succeed.”</p>
-<p>The captain looked at him wonderingly.</p>
-<p>“They outnumber and outarm us,” he began. But Jack broke in:</p>
-<p>“I’ve an idea that one of those chests in my father’s cabin contains some
-novel weapons,” he said, “a new kind of gun, the invention of Tom and myself.
-They contain a magazine of shells loaded with a gas which will paralyze any form
-of animal life with which they come in contact.”</p>
-<p>The captain gasped.</p>
-<p>“Well,” he said, “I’d heard that you kids were inventive wonders, but
-this——”</p>
-<p>“Oh, we didn’t invent the gas,” interposed Tom, who had been an interested
-listener to Jack’s last words, “Professor Chadwick did that. But we applied it
-to use in the guns.”</p>
-<p>“And they work?”</p>
-<p>“Well, we’ve tried them on rabbits and small game, and brought down whatever
-we aimed at. You see, the shells are loaded with this gas in a semi-solid form.
-When the gun is fired a fuse is lighted, which releases the gases, and they fill
-the atmosphere, surrounding anything they strike with a vapor that causes
-temporary helplessness.”</p>
-<p>As Jack spoke there came another hail out of the darkness.</p>
-<p>“We are waiting. Resistance is useless. We know you have that casket with
-you. What is your answer?”</p>
-<p>“Will you give us a few moments to consider?” shouted back Jack.</p>
-<p>A pause followed.</p>
-<p>“I wonder how on earth they know that Ned and the rest secured the casket?”
-wondered Tom.</p>
-<p>This was a poser. It was not till long afterward that they found out that,
-following the discovery of their escape from the <i>Tarantula</i>, a sailor
-had noticed the severed string hanging from the porthole of the Professor’s
-cabin prison. Herrera’s keen mind at once guessed the purpose it had served, and
-also surmised that the casket must be very valuable. Professor Chadwick, on
-being questioned, admitted,—thinking of course that the <i>Sea King</i> was by
-that time out of danger of pursuit,—the manner in which he had tricked the
-Mexican and the contents of the box.</p>
-<p>Suddenly, out of the darkness, ranged the ghostly outlines of <i>El
-Tarantula</i>. Hardly twenty-five yards separated her from the <i>Sea
-King</i>. She was moving slowly, far below her usual swift motion. Her dash
-from the mainland had resulted in overheated engines, which accounted for the
-space of time those on board the <i>Sea King</i> had been free from her
-presence.</p>
-<p>“We’ll give you five minutes and no more,” came a voice from her
-midships.</p>
-<p>“Good,” murmured Jack, as he heard the terms of the armistice, “that ought to
-be plenty of time and—Oh, glory be!”</p>
-<p>Ned had come on deck while the young leader was speaking. In his arms he
-carried a collection of as strange-looking weapons as were ever seen outside of
-a museum. Yet they represented a type of gun destined to become famous.</p>
-<p>“Hurray!” muttered Tom under his breath, “they’re the gas-guns, sure
-enough.”</p>
-<p>While Captain Andrews’ eyes fairly bulged. Jack took one of the guns. They
-were of a dull colored metal, allowing no light to glint from any bright
-surfaces. A barrel about three and a half feet in length, terminated in a
-cylinder of greater diameter than the barrel itself. This was a muffler, which
-effectually silenced the sound of the spring that was used to send the gas
-globes on their way and snap the fuses. The stocks of these odd firearms, if
-such they could be called, were large, and contained sixteen “gas
-globes”—spheres of a tough and glutinous kind of gelatine, filled with the
-destructive gas—a compound of ammonium nitrate,—in a semi-liquid form.</p>
-<p>“How do you fire them?” asked Captain Andrews.</p>
-<p>“Handle them just as you would an ordinary gun,” rejoined Jack. “The globes
-will burst when they strike the <i>Tarantula</i> and spread the gas they
-contain broadcast. Luckily, the craft is to leeward of us, or we might be in
-danger of getting a dose of our own medicine when the gas globes detonate.”</p>
-<p>“Will the gas kill them?” asked Captain Andrews, in such a vindictive tone
-that Jack couldn’t help smiling.</p>
-<p>“Hardly,” he said; “but it will take the fight out of them for a while, I
-imagine.”</p>
-<p>Acting under the lad’s instructions. Captain Andrews summoned some of the
-interested sailors to him. There were twelve of the guns “and a chest full of
-ammunition below,” whispered Ned.</p>
-<p>Eight of the men were given a gas-gun each. Their faces expanded in grins as
-they learned the nature of the novel weapons.</p>
-<p>“First time I ever heard of knocking a feller out with a gas pill,” said one
-of them in an undertone.</p>
-<p>The serving out of the gas-guns had hardly been completed when the voice from
-the <i>Tarantula</i> hailed them again:</p>
-<p>“Five minutes is up,” it said; “we’re going to board you.”</p>
-<p>At the same instant the <i>Tarantula</i> began to range in alongside.
-Evidently those on board her did not fear resistance, for as she drew closer her
-decks blazed with light, and those on board the <i>Sea King</i> could see that
-her machine guns were trained full on the yacht.</p>
-<p>Under Jack’s orders the armed portion of the <i>Sea King’s</i> company had
-dropped behind the bulwarks, aiming their guns through scupper holes. Thus, of
-course, all that was revealed to the enemy was a group of flurried-looking
-sailors standing about the wreckage of the mast forward. Hardly ten yards
-separated the two vessels when Jack gave the whispered command: “Fire!”</p>
-<p>What followed, so Tom described it afterward to the author, “was like
-watching a moving picture.”</p>
-<p>There was no sound as the triggers on the gas-guns were pulled, but as the
-collapsible globes struck the <i>Tarantula’s</i> decks and superstructure and
-burst with a soft, pattering sound, her crew began to roll about like drunken
-men.</p>
-<p>As the stupefying vapors impregnated the air with their fumes, one after
-another the men began to drop like flies. The resistance of the stoutest didn’t
-endure for more than a space of five minutes. Herrera himself, the last to
-succumb, fell beside the wheel house as he was shouting at the helmsman to
-withdraw from the infected air.</p>
-<p>The young inventors’ wonderful gas-guns had received their first real test,
-and had surely not been found wanting in efficiency. The <i>Tarantula</i>, a
-few moments since the scene of feverish activity, now lay a drifting hulk. Her
-engines were still slowly revolving, but there was no hand to govern them.
-Several of the gas globes had been aimed at the engine-room hatches, which were
-open. Deflecting thence they had burst into the machinery space, stupefying the
-force at work there.</p>
-<p>The victory was complete and sweeping.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xdrawing-a-rascals-fangs'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER X—DRAWING A RASCAL’S FANGS</h2>
-</div>
-<p>“Well, what next?”</p>
-<p>It was Tom who spoke, and his voice broke the spell that had held all hands
-as they gazed at the silent craft drifting away from them into the darkness.</p>
-<p>“We must overhaul the <i>Tarantula</i> and set my father and yours free,
-Tom, if they are still there,” came from Jack.</p>
-<p>“A good suggestion; but how are we to do it?” inquired Captain Andrews, who
-was not aware of the readiness of the <i>Vagrant</i> to be placed in active
-service at once.</p>
-<p>“We’ll board the <i>Vagrant</i>. At the pace that spider-craft is going it
-won’t take long to lay alongside her,” decided Jack.</p>
-<p>Before many minutes had passed Jack, Tom Jesson and Ned were on board the
-<i>Vagrant</i>. Jupe, much against his wishes, was left behind on the <i>Sea
-King</i>.</p>
-<p>“Ah’d hev liked jes ter hev one good, big kick at dat Mexican tamale,” he
-argued; but it was decided to go without him.</p>
-<p>The <i>Vagrant’s</i> engines, despite the recent strain placed on them,
-were found to be working perfectly. Amidst a shower of good wishes from those
-left on board the <i>Sea King</i>, she moved off into the darkness in pursuit
-of their recently vindictive enemy. As Jack had foretold, it did not take long
-to overhaul the craft with which Herrera had hoped to intimidate those on board
-Professor Chadwick’s yacht.</p>
-<p>It gave the boys a somewhat uncanny sensation as they stole silently
-alongside the slowly moving <i>Tarantula</i>, and then made fast by throwing a
-grappling iron on her decks. This feeling was not changed when, clambering on
-board, they gazed on the decks strewn with senseless forms, lying as they had
-fallen. They appeared to be wrapped in deep, dreamless slumber. The gas had
-operated on them much as if they had been patients in a hospital under the
-influence of an anæsthetic.</p>
-<p>Stopping only to make sure that all on board were dead to outward impressions
-for an hour at least,—after which time Jack calculated they would begin to
-stir,—the trio of lads made no more delay about seeking out the stern cabins, in
-which, they believed. Professor Chadwick and the rest were confined.</p>
-<p>Jack was the first to make the alarming discovery that the staterooms which
-had been the scene of their captivity were empty.</p>
-<p>It was a bitter pill to swallow indeed. The boys, perhaps despite their
-better judgment, had confidently calculated on finding and delivering their
-friends. Now, however, it appeared that they were as far from accomplishing this
-as ever.</p>
-<p>“There’s only one conclusion to draw,” said Jack at length. “Herrera, for
-reasons best known to himself, has left them some place ashore.”</p>
-<p>“Unless he——” began Ned, but Jack cut him short.</p>
-<p>“I guess even Herrera wouldn’t dare to go much further than that,” he
-declared stoutly, “the question now is,—where has he left them?”</p>
-<p>“Judging from the speed with which he overtook the <i>Sea King</i> he could
-not have proceeded far from the spot where we first encountered the
-<i>Tarantula</i>,” decided Ned, “according to my ideas then, our friends have
-most probably been set ashore on his plantation.”</p>
-<p>“Cracky! I believe you are right, Ned,” cried Tom in a jubilant tone.</p>
-<p>His voice became more sober the next minute, though.</p>
-<p>“In that case they will be under a strong guard,” he added despondently.</p>
-<p>“I don’t see that that follows,” struck in Jack. “I’ve just been thinking
-that Herrera, judging from his large crew, must have most of his fighting men
-right here on board the <i>Tarantula</i>. In such a case, the ones left at the
-plantation can’t be much more formidable than those slaves Ned told us about a
-while back.”</p>
-<p>“That does sound reasonable,” assented Tom, “so then it will be our best plan
-to make for the coast at once. Do you think you could find the mouth of that
-river again, Ned?”</p>
-<p>“Captain Andrews has its exact bearings,” rejoined the “wireless” lad. “I
-guess we could pick it up with no more trouble than we’d have in making any
-other port.”</p>
-<p>“That sounds good,” gleefully exclaimed Jack. “I reckon it will be our best
-plan of action, too.”</p>
-<p>“More especially as Herrera and company are going to have bad headaches when
-they do wake up, and will take some time to get their wits together,” said Tom
-with a grin. “By that time, if all goes well, we ought to have secured the
-freedom of our party.”</p>
-<p>“Jove! But there’s one thing we were almost forgetting,” cried Ned
-suddenly.</p>
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-<p>The question proceeded from Tom.</p>
-<p>“This craft has wireless. When the bunch comes back to life they can flash a
-message to the plantation telling them to be on the lookout for us. That is, if
-they guess where we’ve gone, and there isn’t much doubt that they will.”</p>
-<p>“Right you are, Ned Bangs,” agreed Jack; “but I guess with what we know about
-wireless it won’t take over and above long to fix the <i>Tarantula’s</i>
-apparatus so that it won’t be any more good than a bunch of junk.”</p>
-<p>“Seems a shame,” commented Tom.</p>
-<p>Jack and Ned stared at him.</p>
-<p>“Yes, and it would have been a shame if Herrera had sent the <i>Sea
-King</i> to the bottom, as he fully intended to do,” indignantly exclaimed the
-latter. “I don’t see where he comes in to be entitled to any more consideration
-than a rattlesnake.”</p>
-<p>“No more do I,” assented Jack. “Come on, let’s find the wireless room of this
-craft and get busy with it.”</p>
-<p>It took but a few minutes to locate the wireless room of the speedy gunboat.
-It took still less time for Jack to sever the wires and render the condensers
-and helix useless.</p>
-<p>“There,” he said, with a deep breath, as he concluded his task, “I guess it
-will be quite a while before any messages can be flashed from this craft.”</p>
-<p>“Unless they have extra apparatus on board,” came from Tom.</p>
-<p>“Gee whiz! That didn’t occur to me. Wonder if they have?”</p>
-<p>“Well, we can’t waste time looking for it,” struck in Ned. “You said the
-effects of that gas would wear off in about an hour, didn’t you. Jack?”</p>
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-<p>“Then I suggest we get a move on.”</p>
-<p>“Right you are,” agreed Jack, and then, looking around for Tom, he missed
-him. The lad had slipped silently out of the place.</p>
-<p>“What can have become of him?” gasped Jack, somewhat astounded at Tom’s quick
-disappearance act.</p>
-<p>It was not till they emerged on deck a few seconds later that they heard
-sounds from the engine-room, and presently Tom showed up. He had a wrench in his
-hand, and bore a well-satisfied grin on his round face.</p>
-<p>“What on earth have you been up to?” asked Jack.</p>
-<p>“I’ve been administering much the same treatment to the engines of this craft
-that you have to the wireless,” chuckled Tom. “Gee whillikers! what an
-astonished outfit of tamale-eaters there’s going to be on this ship when they
-come to life!”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xithe-flying-road-racer'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XI—THE “FLYING ROAD RACER”</h2>
-</div>
-<p>Leaving the <i>Tarantula</i> to drift at her sweet will, all haste was made
-by the youthful adventurers in regaining the side of the <i>Sea King</i>. When
-they reascended to the deck of that craft, after making fast the
-<i>Vagrant</i>, they found a newcomer among the crew to greet them,—namely,
-MacDuffy, the engineer, who announced that he had made temporary repairs.</p>
-<p>“But they willna be lastin’ lang, I’m thinkin’,” he said ruefully, “I dinna
-ken if they will carry us a hundred miles.”</p>
-<p>“And it’s a good three hundred or more back to that river mouth,” cried Ned
-in dismay.</p>
-<p>“Aye, lad, it wull be all of that,” agreed the Scotchman.</p>
-<p>A sudden idea struck Jack.</p>
-<p>“Is there any one on board who understands wireless besides Ned Bangs?” he
-asked abruptly.</p>
-<p>Sam Serviss, a youngish-looking seaman,—he was third officer of the <i>Sea
-King</i>,—stepped forward.</p>
-<p>“I can read Morse and Continental,” he said simply, “and I’ve taken lessons
-from Ned Bangs here. I guess at a pinch I could operate a wireless all
-right.”</p>
-<p>“Good. That puts my plan on a feasible basis,” exclaimed Jack.</p>
-<p>“What may the plan be?” asked Captain Andrews interestedly.</p>
-<p>“Just this: The <i>Sea King</i> will proceed to Lone Island, navigated by
-Mr. Serviss here. On the island, as you know, is a wireless plant. The generator
-is not a very powerful one, but you can harness the island apparatus to the
-generators of the <i>Sea King</i>, and obtain as much current as you want,—two
-kilowatts if necessary. I have a plan to increase the power of the
-<i>Vagrant’s</i> outfit, so that we can keep in touch with you.”</p>
-<p>Captain Andrews and MacDuffy nodded. Jack went on, while they all listened
-with deep attention.</p>
-<p>“The <i>Sea King</i> carries a gasolene launch. On arrival at Lone Island
-you can try to get into communication with us. In the meantime the launch can be
-despatched to Galveston for the supplies and tools needful to mend that shaft
-properly. This being done, Mr. Serviss will watch the wireless for further
-instructions, or, in case of need, proceed to our rescue.”</p>
-<p>“Then you mean to go back to Yucatan the noo?” inquired MacDuffy.</p>
-<p>“Of course,” rejoined Jack, quick as a flash, and in a tone that showed he
-had indeed arrived at a definite conclusion in the matter. “It’s my duty and
-Tom’s to rescue our relatives, and that as soon as possible.”</p>
-<p>“And you’ll no be countin’ on taking me?” asked MacDuffy, rather
-piteously.</p>
-<p>Jack shook his head.</p>
-<p>“The capacity of the <i>Vagrant</i> is limited, Mr. MacDuffy,” he said,
-“and we may have to adopt another means of transportation before we get
-through—I mean the aero-auto.”</p>
-<p>“Good. The very thing,” was Ned’s enthusiastic comment.</p>
-<p>“I guess Captain Andrews, Tom, Ned, Jupe and myself will be a big enough
-force to take along,” went on Jack; “of course, we’ll carry the gas-guns and a
-supply of ordinary firearms and ammunition.”</p>
-<p>The boy’s plans were so clear and well-defined that there was no opposition.
-By this time the sky was streaked with gray and rose color in the east, and a
-wan light overspread the sea. It showed them the faint and distant outlines of
-the <i>Tarantula</i>, drifting seaward in the clutch of some strong ocean
-current. Evidently, then, they had nothing to fear from that source.</p>
-<p>The work of hoisting the aero-auto from its well on the <i>Sea King</i>,
-and transferring the odd land-and-air traveler to the <i>Vagrant</i> was set
-about at once. Blocks and tackles were reeved on the derrick boom of the after
-mast of the <i>Sea King</i>, and with wondrously little effort, the vehicle
-the Boy Inventors had evolved was transferred to the flush after deck of the
-<i>Vagrant</i>, where it was lashed in place, the ropes that bound it being
-affixed to ringbolts on the deck.</p>
-<p>The Flying Road Racer must be described in some detail here, as it is
-destined to figure largely in after events of the Boy Inventors’ lives. The auto
-part of the wonderful machine, then, was a cigar-shaped affair of aluminum, with
-four wheels of the “disc” type. It was fitted much like an ordinary auto, with
-padded seats in front and in the tonneau, equipped with shock absorbers, and was
-twelve feet in length.</p>
-<p>In the front of the car the engine, a hundred horse-power, eight-cylinder,
-four-cycle machine, was installed. The controls led to the steering wheel, just
-as is the case in ordinary cars. The crank shaft, however, projected through the
-front of the car, and was provided with a slotted terminal, by means of which an
-eight-foot aerial propeller, carried in sections in the car itself, might be
-affixed at will.</p>
-<p>Above the main body of the car was a light, but strong, framework supporting
-a balloon bag,—also cigar-shaped, and of the finest oiled silk,—of a capacity of
-about fifty thousand cubic feet of gas, and with a theoretical lifting power of
-forty-five hundred pounds. The method of inflating this bag at will, and thus
-converting the auto into a practicable dirigible, was the most startling
-innovation about the invention.</p>
-<p>The body of the car, as has been said, was cylindrical, with sharp ends, like
-a mammoth perfecto cigar. This cylinder was divided in half, longitudinally, by
-a floor of aluminum alloy. The entire lower chamber thus formed was a big
-generating tank for a gas having a lifting capacity exceeding hydrogen vapor by
-a ratio of three to one. This gas was generated from brownish crystals formed of
-a compound of hydrogen-saturated alum and another chemical akin to radium, which
-the boys, for the present, kept a close secret.</p>
-<p>Two pounds of these crystals, when forty gallons of water were added to them,
-formed close to sixty thousand cubic feet of the powerful inflation gas. One
-hundred pounds of the crystals were carried in a special compartment of the
-aero-auto, and constituted an ample supply for all emergencies. To inflate the
-bag, then, all that had to be done was to unbolt a metal hand-hole in the floor
-of the front section of the car. Through this the crystals were dumped into the
-tank beneath and the water added. The opening of the generator was then closed
-and clamped down tight, hermetically sealing the tank. The gas, under
-compression, was explosive, and was utilized to run the motor as well as for
-inflation purposes.</p>
-<p>Immediately in front of the operator of the car was a gauge showing at all
-times the pressure in the tank, and when the gas bag was in operation the amount
-of gas in that also was indicated. When sufficient gas was generated, the
-operator turned a valve and the gas from the tank instantly began rushing into
-the bag carried on the framework above him. The bag was so folded that it
-inflated without necessitating much attention. Three broad bands of rubberized
-fabric of great strength encircled the gas bag proper.</p>
-<p>To these were attached wires of a tensile strength exceeding anything
-hitherto known. The other ends of the wires, of course, were fastened to the
-body of the aero-auto, so that when the bag was sufficiently buoyant the entire
-car and its occupants were borne aloft. By means of an exhaust pump connected
-with the motor, the volume of gas could be reduced at will, causing the entire
-aero-auto to sink at the pleasure of those directing the machine.</p>
-<p>“Astern” of this wonderful invention was a rudder of vulcanized silk and
-vanadium steel framework, which, when the invention was in use as a land
-vehicle, was folded. When it was desired to take the air the release of a simple
-clutch caused the rudder to assume its proper position. At the same time, two
-long planes could be attached to the sides of the car, to be used in ascending
-or descending. The machine had two steering and governing devices. One wheel was
-used for the auto control, and another “tiller” was put in use when it was
-soaring through the air. The control of the aerial rudder, planes and engine,
-all centered in this second wheel, thus putting the craft, at all times, under
-one man—or boy—management. In conclusion, it may be mentioned that the craft was
-equipped with speedometer, barometer, barograph and patent self-starting
-devices, doing away with the old-fashioned “cranking” of the engine. The wheels
-were fitted with semi-solid tires of great size and strength, and the
-shock-absorbers before mentioned obviated any danger of a severe jar or jounce on
-landing. The machine had been given several trials at High Towers and had been
-found to work perfectly.</p>
-<p>It is not necessary here to give a description of the loading of the aero-auto,
-the leave takings, and the final instructions and messages that passed
-between the <i>Vagrant</i> and the <i>Sea King</i>. Suffice it to say, that
-at eight o’clock that morning all preparations on both sides were completed and
-that at eight-ten precisely the two vessels parted company. The <i>Sea
-King</i> steamed northward slowly, bound for Lone Island, and the
-<i>Vagrant</i> headed for the mouth of the river on which the plantations of
-the rascally Mexican were situated. At that time the <i>Tarantula</i> had
-drifted out of the adventurers’ ken altogether, over the eastern horizon.</p>
-<p>Leaving Captain Andrews and Jupe in charge of the <i>Vagrant</i>, the lads,
-thoroughly exhausted now that the strain and care of the long night were over,
-sought their bunks and were soon wrapped in slumber. In their dreams they flew
-high above the plateaus and rugged ranges of the mysterious land for which they
-were bound, questing the unknown in search of the lost ones.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xiiherrera-is-not-caught-napping'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XII—HERRERA IS NOT CAUGHT NAPPING</h2>
-</div>
-<p>It was noon of the next day when Captain Andrews announced that they were
-still some two hundred miles from their destination. But, as the boys were all
-three of them busy over the aero-auto, adjusting and examining every part of the
-queer craft, the time flew swiftly. The dawn of the third day found them
-anchored off the jungle-clad coast, while not a mile from them the waves were
-breaking on the bar that marked the mouth of the shallow river, which, they
-subsequently learned, was called the Apak.</p>
-<p>It would be two hours, so Captain Andrews calculated, before the tide turned
-and made the passage of the bar possible. In the meantime. Jack brought on deck
-the silver chest, which he had, of course, taken possession of, pending the time
-when he could deliver it to his father. The adventurers spread the three blazing
-gems it contained out on the deck, and revelled in the glow of light and
-wonderful inward fires the precious stones revealed as the bright sunlight
-played upon them.</p>
-<p>The <i>Vagrant</i> had once been used as a passenger craft at Galveston,
-and her former owners had installed an iron safe in the cabin for the protection
-of valuables. In this receptacle Jack replaced the silver casket after they had
-examined the gems to their hearts content.</p>
-<p>By this time Captain Andrews was ready to pronounce the crossing of the bar
-at the river mouth feasible. The tide had risen till the tempestuous breakers
-had subsided into long swells, with a narrow passage of smooth water marking the
-channel. Carefully following this, the skipper of the <i>Sea King</i> piloted
-the <i>Vagrant</i> through into the calm water of the estuary beyond.</p>
-<p>The boys, grouped forward, gazing at the surroundings with eager eyes, beheld
-a scene full of wild, tropic beauty. The white beach, blazingly radiant in the
-strong light, was bordered by a dense jungle of dark, melancholy looking
-mangroves. Beyond these came a tangle of brilliantly green jungle, in which the
-broad fronds of the banana plant predominated, while here and there a tall palm
-reared its feathery head.</p>
-<p>Further back still the foliage changed again. Lordly groves of mahogany
-trees, rosewood, and giant royal palms raised their crests. In the distant
-background, far withdrawn, the misty blue outlines of a range of majestic,
-rugged-looking mountains showed against the steely blue sky. They looked as if
-they were hundreds of miles off at least; but Captain Andrews explained that the
-distance from the shore to the foothills was not so considerable, by a great
-deal, as it looked. The condition of the atmosphere, laden with the moisture of
-the lowlands, lent them this appearance of tremendous remoteness.</p>
-<p>“It is in those mountains,” said Captain Andrews, “that the remnants of the
-most ancient of the Maya tribes still live. They tell stories up the coast, in
-the civilized portions of Yucatan, about vast ruins and remains of splendid
-cities to be found back there.”</p>
-<p>The boys gazed up at him as he stood at the wheel. A magic world of romance
-and adventure seemed suddenly opened before them by his words.</p>
-<p>“I recall reading once,” said Tom, the studious, “that the Mayas were
-civilized long before the Aztecs or Toltecs, and that their knowledge of the
-building arts exceeded that of either of those races.”</p>
-<p>“Sort of pioneer real-estate men,” chuckled Ned Bangs, who in moments when he
-was not oppressed by trouble, as he had been recently, possessed a whimsical
-vein of humor.</p>
-<p>“Ho! ho! ho! ah reckon dat’s right, Marse Ned,” roared Jupe, opening his big
-lips and exposing his ivories.</p>
-<p>“Has any one ever penetrated into their country?” went on Tom, addressing
-Captain Andrews.</p>
-<p>“I guess your father went as far as anybody,” was the response, “and you know
-how far he got. I have heard that the remnants of the ancient tribes have a law,
-making it death for the man who dares to advance into their territory.”</p>
-<p>“But the natives that caught you didn’t seem disposed to kill you,” objected
-Jack.</p>
-<p>“Oh, those fellows; they are of the inferior coast tribes,” was the
-rejoinder. “The ancient races regarded them as dirt under their feet. I guess
-they don’t know any more about the interior of those mountains than we do.”</p>
-<p>The current of the river, discolored and yellow from the recent earthquake
-back in the foothills, was so swift as they ascended that Captain Andrews found
-no opportunity for further talk. It required all his attention to keep the
-<i>Vagrant’s</i> bow pointed upstream. The river narrowed considerably after
-passing its mouth. Its turbid current rolled seaward between two low and densely
-wooded banks, not more than sixty feet apart.</p>
-<p>“How far is it to the spot where that craft of Herrera’s was moored?” asked
-Jack, when he found an opportunity.</p>
-<p>“Fully fifteen or twenty miles, I should say,” was the response, “and if we
-are making two miles an hour against this current we are doing well. This river
-runs mighty near as fast as the Lachine Rapids back home.”</p>
-<p>“You’re not far out on that, Cap,” remarked the volatile Ned Bang’s, who had
-quite recovered his usual flow of spirits.</p>
-<p>The lad had not as much at stake as Jack and Tom, and, moreover, he did not
-quite realize the seriousness of the undertaking before them to the same extent
-that they did.</p>
-<p>Hour after hour they fought their way up the coffee-colored river. The
-character of the vegetation on the banks had begun to change by this time. Here
-and there stood a majestic clump of mahogany trees; but logwood, a valuable
-article of commerce in the dyeing industry, formed the major part of the growth.
-Once, as they rounded a bend, the flash of a lithe body was seen among the
-trees, as a beautifully spotted jaguar slunk away from the overhanging limb
-where it had been lying.</p>
-<p>“Let’s try the gas-guns on the next one we see,” suggested Tom, and the lads
-hastened below and returned armed with the odd weapons.</p>
-<p>An opportunity to use them soon presented itself. From a thick mass of brake
-there came a mighty squealing and grunting, as the <i>Vagrant</i> came slowly
-around one of the numerous bends in the stream. All at once several small,
-bristly animals, like miniature pigs, dashed out with a mighty commotion.</p>
-<p>Three gas-guns flashed to three shoulders simultaneously. It was an odd and
-rather uncanny sight to behold an instant later, six little wild piggies lying
-with their toes turned up, “dead to the world,” as the slangy Ned Bangs put
-it.</p>
-<p>The boys were keen for going ashore and gathering in the victims of the
-ammonium nitrate compound. But Captain Andrews vetoed the proposal as
-impossible.</p>
-<p>“There’s hardly a foot of water in shore there,” he said, “it’s a case of
-‘keep in de middle ob de road’ in this river.”</p>
-<p>Dinner was eaten at one o’clock. Jack “spelling” Captain Andrews at the wheel
-while the skipper partook of a hearty meal, after which he indulged in a nap
-while Tom, in his turn, relieved Jack.</p>
-<p>The latter was still below enjoying Jupe’s cookery, when there came a sudden
-hail from above:</p>
-<p>“Say, Jack, hurry up on deck, won’t you? There’s something odd about the
-water just ahead of us.”</p>
-<p>Ned it was who uttered the summons, poking his head down the companion
-way.</p>
-<p>Jack finished his meal in a jiffy, and was on deck in another two seconds. He
-found the <i>Vagrant’s</i> nose still pointed up stream, but Tom, using the
-bridge controls, had slowed down the engines till the craft was almost
-stationary in the swift current.</p>
-<p>Right ahead of them lay the cause of Jack’s abrupt summons to the deck.</p>
-<p>A chain, composed of huge iron links, was stretched from bank to bank of the
-river, effectually barring further progress.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xiiia-daring-plan'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XIII—A DARING PLAN</h2>
-</div>
-<p>“Well,” said Jack, after a moment spent in surveying the obstruction, “we
-might have expected something like that. The question is, what are we going to
-do?”</p>
-<p>“We might land and remove it,” hazarded Ned.</p>
-<p>But Jack shook his head.</p>
-<p>“Jupe, go below and call Captain Andrews,” he said, in as calm a voice as he
-could muster. “We won’t risk landing and trying to lower the chain for two
-reasons. One is, that Herrera, having been cunning enough to put up the barrier,
-is not likely to have left it unguarded. There may be hidden eyes watching us
-right now. The second reason is, that it has just occurred to me that a man who
-is playing the game he is, may have placed other more dangerous obstacles in our
-path.”</p>
-<p>“For instance?” came from Tom.</p>
-<p>“For instance,—mines.”</p>
-<p>“By the holy poker! That’s so,” exclaimed Ned, “I guess we’d better turn back
-and make our advance by land.”</p>
-<p>“Here’s Captain Andrews now,” struck in Tom, as the skipper of the <i>Sea
-King</i> came on deck, hastily adjusting his white pith helmet.</p>
-<p>There was no need to tell that veteran seaman what had happened. He took in
-the situation at a glance.</p>
-<p>“It would have been funny if we hadn’t run up against something like this,”
-he remarked, almost in Jack’s words.</p>
-<p>“The point is,—what now?” said Tom.</p>
-<p>Captain Andrews agreed with Jack that it would be a foolish risk to land and
-try to remove the chain.</p>
-<p>“I’ve quite a notion that there are some rifles in that brush, all ready for
-use in case we try to proceed,” he said reflectively, “my advice is to drop back
-down stream and hold a council of war.”</p>
-<p>All agreed that this did seem about the only thing to do under the
-circumstances, and accordingly Tom handed the wheel over to the sailor while he
-went below to “stand by” the engines.</p>
-<p>In that muddy stream, with its sand banks and shoals, the maneuver they were
-going to try would call for some delicate seamanship and swift handling of the
-motor.</p>
-<p>Captain Andrews, with his lips grimly compressed, grasped the wheel and
-sounded a signal. Slowly the <i>Vagrant</i>, which had been “hanging”
-motionless, began to drop back with the current.</p>
-<p>“Too bad we can’t turn around,” complained Jack.</p>
-<p>“Wouldn’t dare to chance it,” rejoined the captain, “for all we know there
-may be a sandbank on either side of us right now.”</p>
-<p>A deathlike silence hung over the <i>Vagrant</i> as she drifted stern first
-down the river. The wheel spun swiftly this way and that under the helmsman’s
-muscular direction.</p>
-<p>“She goes as well backward as she does forward,” Ned was beginning, when
-there came a sudden shock that almost threw them off their feet. Jupe, in fact,
-did fall sprawling on the bridge.</p>
-<p>At almost precisely the same instant a shower of bullets whizzed above them,
-singing a sinister song as they screeched about the motor craft. Dense brush
-lined the banks, and the shooters were well concealed in it. Not even a puff of
-smoke betrayed their exact whereabouts.</p>
-<p>And, while this hailstorm of lead whistled about the adventurers, they
-realized all too clearly that the <i>Vagrant</i> had run hard and fast on one
-of the very sandbanks the captain had dreaded. One thing, however, speedily
-became evident, and that was that the bullets had not harmed them, because they
-were not intended to—yet. The shower of lead was aimed high above their heads.
-Presently it ceased altogether.</p>
-<p>“That was a warning,” decided Captain Andrews. “Boys, your folks are
-certainly surrounded by a barb-wire fence.”</p>
-<p>The lads did not answer. But as they sensed the nature of the obstacles that
-were piling up in the way of their enterprise, a look of consternation came over
-their faces. “The Chadwick Relief Expedition,” as they had christened it,
-appeared to have run up against a stone wall.</p>
-<p>“I guess we are not in any danger of another fusillade if we stay where we
-are, or keep on dropping back,” said Captain Andrews after an interval of
-thought, “but if we try to keep on going we’ve had a sample of what to
-expect.”</p>
-<p>The boys could not but agree with him. At length Jack spoke.</p>
-<p>“Hadn’t we better try to get the <i>Vagrant</i> off whatever we’ve struck?”
-he said. “I’ve got a plan in my head in that case; but I don’t think this is the
-healthiest place to discuss it.”</p>
-<p>“We can put out a light anchor and try to warp off,” said Captain
-Andrews.</p>
-<p>It was agreed to try this plan for rescuing the <i>Vagrant</i> from her
-uncomfortable berth. The dinghy was lowered and manned by Jack and Tom, who took
-with them the light anchor which was attached to two hundred feet of line. A
-hundred feet down stream they dropped the mud-hook, and then rowed back to the
-<i>Vagrant</i>.</p>
-<p>When they were once more on board the winch was manned and, to their delight,
-as the rope tightened the <i>Vagrant’s</i> stern began to swing.</p>
-<p>“Keep at it, lads,” cried Captain Andrews to the perspiring laborers, “if
-that anchor will only hold I believe we can get off.”</p>
-<p>The anchor did hold, and after ten minutes more of back-breaking work the
-craft’s bow slid out of the mud bank with a sucking sound, and she was once more
-free. The anchor was hauled on board, and, without further mishap, the
-<i>Vagrant</i> was set once more on her down-stream course.</p>
-<p>The first attempt of the courageous little band to rescue their comrades had
-met with a rather ignominious failure. Captain Andrews said as much that
-evening, as they found themselves anchored near the mouth of the river they had
-fruitlessly ascended with so much pains.</p>
-<p>The skipper voiced this opinion after supper, while they sat on deck casting
-anxious eyes to seaward now and again, for the recollection of the
-<i>Tarantula</i> was strong upon them. Above all things, they dreaded the
-reappearance of that drab-colored craft.</p>
-<p>“You said you had a plan, Jack,” said Tom, as the skipper disconsolately drew
-on his pipe, “Now’s the time to broach it. What is it?”</p>
-<p>“Just this,” was the simple reply, “we’ve got the aero-auto. It looks as if
-the time had come to use her.”</p>
-<p>“And leave the <i>Vagrant</i> here to be destroyed when Herrera happens
-along?” demanded Tom.</p>
-<p>“That doesn’t follow. Did you notice that small creek almost overgrown with
-brush that branches off about a mile above here?”</p>
-<p>“Yes, lad,” came from Captain Andrews, whose tones gave evidence of his
-intense interest, “you’re planning to hide the <i>Vagrant</i> there till we
-come back again?”</p>
-<p>“You’ve caught my idea exactly,” said the lad. “What do you think of it?”</p>
-<p>“That it’s a dumb-gasted good one, and that I, for one, am willing to risk my
-neck in that flying automobubble of yours any time you say the word.”</p>
-<p>“Then I say it right now,” shot out Jack, with flashing eyes. “We can’t
-ascend this river by water; we’ll try the air route.”</p>
-<p>It was while they were still buzzing with the enthusiasm that Jack’s fiery
-words had created that Tom uttered a sharp exclamation.</p>
-<p>“Jupiter!” he exclaimed, pointing seaward. “Look yonder. We’re not playing a
-lone hand in this thing now.”</p>
-<p>Some distance off apparently, but rushing across the water at a swift pace,
-was a bright white gleam,—the light of a vessel approaching the bar at top
-speed.</p>
-<p>“The <i>Tarantula</i>, for all I’m worth!” exploded Captain Andrews.
-“Confound her, why couldn’t she have kept her hands off for twelve hours
-longer?”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xiva-message-from-the-air'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XIV—A MESSAGE FROM THE AIR</h2>
-</div>
-<p>Fortunately, there was no ray of light visible about the <i>Vagrant</i>.
-The incandescents had been switched off in every part of her, with the exception
-of the engine room. In this compartment Tom, by some inspiration, had closed the
-deadlights, and therefore not a gleam of light leaked out to betray the
-whereabouts of the craft.</p>
-<p>“Do you think the <i>Tarantula</i> will cross the bar to-night?” asked Jack
-presently.</p>
-<p>“I don’t imagine so,” was the rejoinder. “They wouldn’t be idiots enough to
-take such a chance as that on this tide. No, if you ask me, we’ve got the night
-ahead of us till the first streak of daylight.”</p>
-<p>“Good enough,” said Jack, with much inward satisfaction; “and now, I’ve been
-thinking, it wouldn’t be a bad idea for me to keep watch by the wireless. It’s
-likely enough that Herrera will try to send a message to his plantation up the
-river, provided he’s managed to get his apparatus repaired.”</p>
-<p>“I’ve been thinking that, too,” said Tom. “I’ll go below and start up the
-generator.”</p>
-<p>“You might as well,” said Jack, “although I don’t think that we’ll send out
-any messages to-night. Our job is to catch what we can from the air.”</p>
-<p>While Tom hastened to the engine-room to start up the dynamo. Jack made his
-way to the cabin, accompanied by Ned Bangs. Captain Andrews and Jupe remained on
-watch on deck.</p>
-<p>Seating himself at the wireless table. Jack adjusted the head band, placed
-the receivers at his ears, and then threw the switch for receiving. Ned, in the
-meantime, had run up the wireless mast with its slender antennæ, or aerials.</p>
-<p>This done, Ned rejoined his chum, seating himself beside him. After an
-interval he spoke.</p>
-<p>“Anything yet?”</p>
-<p>“No; silent as the grave. Suppose you go on deck and see what Captain Andrews
-and Jupe have observed.”</p>
-<p>Ned was back from his errand in a short space of time. His face bore a
-well-pleased grin, as Jack could see in the light of the solitary incandescent which
-illumined the cabin, the shades having, of course, been drawn across the
-portholes before it was switched on.</p>
-<p>“Well?” questioned Jack.</p>
-<p>“Well,” echoed Ned, “everything is going famously. The light stopped moving
-outside the bar, and presently Captain Andrews heard the rattle of her anchor
-chains as she let go her mud-hooks. Everything has been quiet since.”</p>
-<p>“Too quiet. I wish——”</p>
-<p>Jack broke off suddenly, holding up a hand to Ned to command silence. Out of
-space the electric waves were beginning to break against the aerials above. The
-<i>Tarantula</i> was talking to some one on shore in a rapid stream of dots
-and dashes. Jack’s hand flew across the recording pad. As before, the paper was
-soon covered with figures—the code which Tom had exploded.</p>
-<p>After half an hour, during which his hand had frequently sought the tuning
-apparatus. Jack’s labors ceased; but his face bore a radiant expression.</p>
-<p>“The message had a lot in it about us, and my father and the rest,” he said.
-“They did not codify our names, but spelled them right out. That’s how I know.
-They——”</p>
-<p>“Hadn’t you better listen in case there’s any more coming?” asked Ned.</p>
-<p>“No; they’re through for to-night. They exchanged the good-bye signal. Now to
-find Tom and get him to translate this jumble of figures.”</p>
-<p>But Tom, after expending a lot of fruitless labor on the papers, declared he
-could make nothing of them.</p>
-<p>“Maybe they’ve changed the code, or maybe——”</p>
-<p>“They’ve been using Spanish this time,” exclaimed Jack, struck by a happy
-inspiration.</p>
-<p>“Cracky! I’ll bet that’s just what they have been doing,” cried Ned. “Say,
-fellows, you just copy out those messages while I get Captain Andrews below in
-two shakes of a duck’s tail.”</p>
-<p>He bounded off up the companion way, while Tom busily transcribed. So fast
-did he work that he had a lot of words written out when the skipper
-appeared.</p>
-<p>“So you’ve been catching something out of the air, have you?” he asked as he
-entered the cabin.</p>
-<p>“Yes; and I guess it’s important, too,” declared Jack, “but you’ll have to
-translate Tom’s notes. Captain, because it’s all in Spanish.”</p>
-<p>“That will be simple enough,” said Captain Andrews, sitting down and drawing
-toward him the scattered sheets which Tom had already rendered from the figures
-of the code.</p>
-<p>The veteran seaman began stolidly to con over the Spanish words, not all of
-which, owing to Tom’s unfamiliarity with the language, were written in correct
-form. But before long his composed attitude gave way to excitement.</p>
-<p>“Jove, lads!” he exclaimed, “this wireless is a wonderful thing. It’s tipped
-off that greaser’s hand to us in great shape. He——”</p>
-<p>“Wait till you get the whole message and then you can read it out to us,”
-suggested Jack.</p>
-<p>Both the sailor and Tom worked like beavers at their task, and ere long
-Captain Andrews leaned back in his chair and announced that he was ready to read
-the messages as he had translated them.</p>
-<p>As he had hinted, they caused a sensation. Herrera had wirelessed his
-plantation, and after a short interval had received a reply. He,—or, rather, his
-operator,—then proceeded to relate all that had occurred; and told,—the boys had
-to smile at this,—how the accursed gringos had tricked them by some sort of
-hypnotism!</p>
-<p>However, so the message ran on, the capable Senor Herrera had managed to
-rally his men on their recovery from the spell of witchcraft, and had speedily
-organized a force to repair the damaged machinery and wireless apparatus. This
-done, all speed had been made at once for the coast whither, as they guessed,
-the gringos had preceded them.</p>
-<p>“Well, Herrera’s, man ashore soon informed them on board the
-<i>Tarantula</i> that such was the case,” continued Captain Andrews, “and gave
-him a full, true and particular account of how they stopped us with that chain
-and that fusillade. He told Herrera that he had confined the gringos in one of
-the buildings used for the hemp crushers, and that they were as safe as if they
-were in a safe deposit vault. Friend Herrera then congratulated him on his
-astuteness, and said that he would run the bar first thing in the morning, only
-stopping, by the way, to blow the <i>Vagrant</i> out of the water and send us
-all to Kingdom Come.”</p>
-<p>“Reckon he’s got another guess coming on that,” grinned Ned Bangs, looking at
-Jack.</p>
-<p>“I hope so,” said that lad; “but now that we are in possession of these facts
-it’s up to us to move quickly. Captain, do you think we can find that branch
-creek in the night?”</p>
-<p>“We’ve got to,” was the grim response, “if we don’t want to part with the
-good old <i>Vagrant</i>, and I’d hate to lose any ship I’ve trod the deck
-of.”</p>
-<p>“Then, let’s up anchor and get out of here,” said Jack.</p>
-<p>“Intercepting that wireless,” he went on, “has taken one great load off my
-mind. We know that those we are in search of are safe, and we know, in addition,
-that they are confined in one of the hemp-making buildings.”</p>
-<p>“And that’s a whole lot important to us right now,” supplemented Captain
-Andrews. “Whole campaigns have been won with less knowledge of the enemy’s
-country than we have.”</p>
-<p>They went on deck. Outside the bar a light showed where the
-<i>Tarantula</i> lay at anchor. Herrera must have been chuckling to himself at
-that very instant. According to his knowledge of the situation, he had his foes
-completely “bottled up.” All that remained for him to do was to capture them and
-attain possession; of the coveted precious stones at his leisure.</p>
-<p>While the Mexican was pondering such thoughts as these and nursing his
-revenge, the company of the <i>Vagrant</i> were busy,—very busy.</p>
-<p>It was too risky a thing to chance making the noise that raising the anchor
-would have caused. So the cable was slashed and the engine started with the
-underwater exhaust in operation. Noiselessly the little craft glided up the
-stream and then turned her nose toward the bank. A break in the line of trees,
-showing against the star-sprinkled sky, gave the location of the creek mouth,
-and, feeling his way with the utmost caution, Captain Andrews drove his
-temporary command into it. It was driving, in a literal sense, for the brush and
-trees overhung the creek so densely that the <i>Vagrant</i> had to push her
-way among them. When she had proceeded about a hundred yards up the stream she
-was masked from the view of the river with complete effectiveness.</p>
-<p>“Glory be!” sighed Jupe, in a voice of intense relief, when Captain Andrews
-ordered the second anchor “let go.”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xva-dash-aloft'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XV—A DASH ALOFT</h2>
-</div>
-<p>“It will be safe enough to light up now, I guess,” announced Captain Andrews,
-when the anchorage had been accomplished. Jack had told him previously that they
-would need deck lights to work by when it was possible to use them without
-danger of detection.</p>
-<p>When the incandescents on the after deck were switched on the boys at once
-fell to work on their “Flying Road Racer,” as Jack and Tom had christened the
-craft. There was much to be done, and they worked quickly. The tank was supplied
-with crystals and water, and the gauge before long showed a pressure which the
-lads knew was sufficient to inflate the bag when occasion arose.</p>
-<p>This done. Jack determined to make a test of the engines. First, seeing that
-the neutral clutch was in working order, he pressed a button which set the
-self-starting apparatus,—run by electricity from a storage battery of great power and
-lightness,—into action. With a buzz and a whirr the machinery started, and bit
-by bit the lad speeded the motor up to its maximum number of revolutions per
-minute,—namely, two thousand. While the crank shafts whirled round he carefully
-examined the lubricating appliances. They worked as well as everything else, and
-fully satisfied with his test, the young inventor shut down the engine, with the
-announcement that so far as the machinery was concerned everything was in
-readiness for an immediate flight, or ground cruise.</p>
-<p>While this had been going on, Jupe had been placing a stock of provisions on
-board, and Captain Andrews had assembled his navigating instruments and
-chronometers, which he had brought with him from the <i>Sea King</i>. By
-midnight Jack declared that it was time for the aero-auto’s passengers to get
-aboard.</p>
-<p>A thrill of excitement ran through the whole party at these words; but Tom
-seemed suddenly to recollect something and stepped to Jack’s side, talking in a
-low voice.</p>
-<p>The young leader nodded his assent to Tom’s proposal, whatever it was, and
-Tom vanished below, summoning Jupe to help him. When he returned, he had his
-arms full of mechanical apparatus, and the same was true of Jupe, who grunted
-under his burdens. All this impedimenta was placed in the tonneau, in lockers
-under the seats.</p>
-<p>It now only remained to bolt on the aerial propeller, adjust the side-planes
-and fix the rudder. This was speedily done.</p>
-<p>At twelve-thirty o’clock the party cast off the lashings which had bound the
-Flying Road Racer to the <i>Vagrant’s</i> deck. Jack climbed into the driver’s
-seat, taking his place at the aerial steering wheel. Tom sat beside him.</p>
-<p>Captain Andrews, Ned Bangs and Jupe, whose eyes were almost popping out of
-his head, seated themselves in the broad, roomy tonneau.</p>
-<p>The lights had already been switched off on I board the <i>Vagrant</i> and
-everything made snug. The silver casket, the gas-guns, the ammunition, and the
-other accessories from the Professor’s cabin which had not yet been opened,
-were, of course, on board the Flying Road Racer.</p>
-<p>Jack bent forward and snapped a button switch. A hooded light above the
-various gauges and instruments on the dashboard shone out, shedding a soft but
-bright light on the appliances, but not striking up into the young leader’s
-eyes.</p>
-<p>“All ready?” queried the lad, giving a backward glance.</p>
-<p>“Ready as we ever will be, old top,” quoth the slangy Mr. Bangs.</p>
-<p>“Let her go,” said Tom in a tense voice.</p>
-<p>Jack’s pulses throbbed, and his heart beat a bit quicker than was comfortable
-as he turned the valve that admitted gas to the bag above them.</p>
-<p>With a swishing sound, not unlike escaping steam, the folds of the great gas
-container began to fill out. It gradually assumed shape, swelling till it
-reached what appeared to be vast proportions. When Jack shut off the gas the
-huge, cigar-shaped balloon above them looked like an immense dark cloud,
-superimposed over their heads.</p>
-<p>The bag took just fifteen minutes to inflate. During this time not a word was
-spoken on board the Flying Road Racer. The tension was far too great for
-speech.</p>
-<p>As Jack shut off the gas a tremor ran all through the novel craft. She tugged
-and swayed at the single rope, reeved through a ringbolt, that still bound her
-to the deck. The suspension wires thrummed musically under the pressure.</p>
-<p>“Let go!” yelled Jack suddenly.</p>
-<p>Tom, who had been holding the end of the rope, dropped it. Instantly the
-Flying Road Racer gave a bound upward.</p>
-<p>“Bust my toplights!” bellowed Captain Andrews in excitement at the novel
-sensation.</p>
-<p>Jupe’s lips might have been seen to move. He appeared to be praying. Ned
-Bangs’ hands were clenched tightly. He was very pale.</p>
-<p>“Look out for the tree tops!” cried Tom suddenly.</p>
-<p>The wonderful craft, with her precious freight, swayed drunkenly toward the
-crests of a group of giant ceiba trees. For one instant disaster, at the very
-outset of their voyage, appeared inevitable.</p>
-<p>But suddenly there was a whirring sound, like the drone of a monstrous night
-beetle. The engine was driving the propeller round at top speed.</p>
-<p>Jack twisted the steering wheel over, and the Flying Road Racer, rising at
-the rate of a hundred feet a minute, shot clear of the menacing tree tops.</p>
-<p>Up and up into the night she rose, while her occupants, forgetting their
-first alarm in their enthusiasm, gave a mighty cheer, careless, for the minute,
-of who might hear it.</p>
-<p>The voyage of the Flying Road Racer had begun under a fortunate star
-indeed.</p>
-<p>Directly the tree tops were cleared Jack set the planes at a rising angle,
-and the upward course of the Flying Road Racer was more rapid. She seemed fairly
-to shoot up into the ether.</p>
-<p>“How do you like it?” asked Tom, turning his head-to speak to those in the
-tonneau.</p>
-<p>“Ah’d like it better, Marse Tom, ef I didn’t feel I done lef’ mah insides
-behin’ me,” faltered Jupe.</p>
-<p>“You’ll soon get over that feeling,” declared Tom confidently. “Just hark at
-that engine! She’s running as true as a human heart.”</p>
-<p>“She is that,” agreed Jack, enthusiastically, “Tom, old boy, we’ve got the
-greatest land-and-air-craft ever put together.”</p>
-<p>“And to think that you two lads, hardly more than schoolboys, invented her,”
-struck in Captain Andrews admiringly.</p>
-<p>“I guess my father had a whole lot to do with it,” rejoined Jack modestly;
-“we could never have mastered a lot of knotty points without his aid.”</p>
-<p>“Well, that doesn’t detract from what you’ve accomplished one bit,” declared
-Ned with enthusiasm. “This is the mode of traveling of the future all
-right.”</p>
-<p>“We hope to make it so some day,” was Tom’s reply.</p>
-<p>The night was almost windless, save for a slight puff now and then. But this
-didn’t bother the Flying Road Racer once she was under control, and Jack had
-managed to climb upward on an almost straight course.</p>
-<p>Now he peered over the edge of the aluminum body. Beneath him he could see
-the gleam of the river in the starlight.</p>
-<p>“We’ll follow the stream,” he decided. “It is bound to bring us to Herrera’s
-plantation.”</p>
-<p>“Keep at a good height, though,” admonished Captain Andrews. “We know that
-those fellows have high-powered rifles.”</p>
-<p>“We are now twenty-five hundred feet above the earth,” said Jack, glancing at
-the barograph. “We’ll go higher.”</p>
-<p>He pulled a lever, setting the rising planes at a more acute angle. Up the
-aerial staircase they climbed, till the barograph’s indicator pointed to the
-figures five thousand.</p>
-<p>Then Jack turned the prow of the craft in a westerly direction, while Tom,
-through night glasses, watched the earth so far below them, following the course
-of the river through the binoculars.</p>
-<p>At forty miles an hour the Flying Road Racer swept through the air on her
-momentous errand.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xviinto-the-enemys-camp'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XVI—INTO THE ENEMY’S CAMP</h2>
-</div>
-<p>When the Flying Road Racer took the air the weight that the craft carried was
-distributed as follows:</p>
-<p>Aluminum body, wheels, motor, suspension wires, etc. 900 pounds.</p>
-<p>Five passengers. (approx.) 800 pounds.</p>
-<p>Provisions, water, etc. 250 pounds.</p>
-<p>(The provisions included canned goods, preserved butter, tea and cocoa,
-flour, sugar, salt and a few delicacies.)</p>
-<p>Radolite crystals, instruments, etc. 275 pounds.</p>
-<p>Other articles,—including Ned’s last-minute contributions. 300 pounds.</p>
-<p>Total 2,525 pounds.</p>
-<p>This left lifting power to raise 2,475 lbs., which, however, could be
-increased to a considerable extent by utilizing the reserve sections of the gas
-bag.</p>
-<p>Jack roughly estimated the combined weights of those they were to rescue,—his
-father, his uncle, Abner Jennings and the two sailors,—at a little over one
-thousand pounds. Thus, it will be seen, that there was no reason why the Flying
-Road Racer should not be able to perform all that was required of her, with some
-lifting power left over for emergencies.</p>
-<p>The boy inventors’ craft had been in the air about an hour when Tom descried,
-far below them, the gleam of a light. In that wild country it was not likely to
-betoken anything else but the site of Herrera’s plantation houses.</p>
-<p>They all agreed on this, and Jack, after a consultation with his comrades,
-decided that the time had come to descend. The plan they arrived at, after
-threshing the situation over in all its bearings, was to drop in the most
-suitable place they could find, adjacent to the plantation buildings.</p>
-<p>Then the gas bag was to be reinflated, ready for emergencies, and two of the
-party were to reconnoiter the ground as carefully as possible. The remainder of
-the rescue was to be left to circumstances. At one hour and ten minutes after
-midnight. Jack started the exhaust engine up.</p>
-<p>Instantly the Flying Road Racer began to drop downward through space with her
-planes set at a slight angle, as Jack did not want to coast to earth too
-rapidly. This course soon brought the craft above the summits of the forest
-trees, at a safe distance from the light they had perceived from aloft. To make
-assurance of being unnoticed doubly sure. Jack had shut off the motor. Silently
-as a night bird the great bulk of the flying auto settled earthward.</p>
-<p>All this time their eyes had been strained to sight an open space in which
-they might land without risk of damaging the balloon bag. Tom was the first to
-see, through the night glasses, such an area of cleared land amid the
-forest.</p>
-<p>It was a tract about ten acres in extent, and formed, as they surmised later,
-one of the outlying fields of Herrera’s plantation. It had not yet been put into
-cultivation, however, and afforded as fine a spot for an air craft to ground as
-could be imagined. Half an hour after the descent had begun the Flying Road
-Racer settled as lightly as a bit of breeze-blown down on earth once more.</p>
-<p>Thanks to her shock absorbers, hardly a jar was felt by those on board as she
-landed with her bag half deflated and limp and wrinkled. No time was lost in
-alighting and throwing out the anchors, contrived by Jack, used for securing the
-craft to earth in case of a sudden wind springing up. These anchors differed
-considerably from the sea type of “mud hook.” They consisted, in fact, merely of
-discs of iron shaped like an inverted mushroom. One edge of the disc was driven
-into the ground, and the shape of the holding appliances was such that an upward
-tug merely served to force them more deeply into the earth.</p>
-<p>The adventurers figured that they were about half a mile to the west of the
-spot where they had seen the light, which they believed marked the site of
-Herrera’s plantation houses. They also estimated that there were left to them
-about two hours and a half more of darkness. There was urgent necessity then for
-immediate action.</p>
-<p>Much to the chagrin of Tom and Ned, but to the huge delight of Jupe, who had
-no great fancy for the work in hand. Jack and Captain Andrews were to be the
-ones to do the reconnoitering. Tom and Ned were ordered to stand by the Flying
-Road Racer and be ready for any sudden development that might occur.</p>
-<p>While Captain Andrews and Jack were absent, it would be the others’ duty also
-to refill the gas bag, so that the aero-auto might be ready for an instant
-ascent in case of need.</p>
-<p>These preparations completed, the two who were to assume the most risky part
-of the night’s work each selected a fully loaded gas-gun. In addition. Captain
-Andrews carried an automatic revolver; but it was on the former weapons that
-they would largely depend.</p>
-<p>There remained nothing more but the leave-takings, and the fervent wishes for
-success in the daring enterprise, coming from the lads who were to be left
-behind. These final ceremonies being disposed of, the grizzled old sailor and
-his young companion set off. Tom and Ned watched them till the shadows of the
-forest swallowed them up.</p>
-<p>By good fortune, the two, upon whom so much depended, struck a trail almost
-immediately after their first plunge into the blackness that prevailed under the
-tropical trees. The path had evidently been used by the laborers who had made
-the clearing beyond. It was a broad, well-defined track, and their progress was
-rapid and almost noiseless.</p>
-<p>Neither of them spoke as they made their way along the path. The situation
-was too critical for words, and Jack crept along behind Captain Andrews, hardly
-daring to breathe.</p>
-<p>He was on the tip-toe of excitement and anxiety, as was natural. At the end
-of the trail they were following’ lay either success or dire failure. There was
-no middle ground. In the event of their failing in their mission. Jack could not
-disguise from himself that the consequences would be awful indeed. He had come
-in contact with Herrera only once, but that single occasion had amply sufficed
-to show him the character of the man.</p>
-<p>From time to time, as they advanced, they paused and listened intently. But,
-except for the drone of the night insects of the jungle, and the occasional
-scream of a nocturnal bird, there was no sound other than the sighing of the
-breeze in the tree tops far above.</p>
-<p>There is no place more mysterious than the jungle at night. The dense
-thickets seem to the nervous traveler to hold all manner of hidden perils. Some
-of these are not altogether imaginary, either. The cunning, cruel jaguar, the
-huge serpents, and a score of other dangers lurk in the shadows.</p>
-<p>Fortunately, neither of our friends was burdened with sensitive nerves, and
-it was well they were not, for their errand was not one for timid folk to embark
-upon.</p>
-<p>They glided along after all these pauses, making as fast time as possible.
-All at once Captain Andrews, who was in the lead, as we know, stopped
-abruptly.</p>
-<p>So abruptly, in fact, that Jack almost collided with him.</p>
-<p>“What’s the——” began Jack.</p>
-<p>But instantly the Captain clapped a hand over his mouth. He raised the other
-in a gesture that Jack read instantly: “Silence!”</p>
-<p>Just ahead of them. Jack now perceived, the path broadened and emerged on a
-considerable clearing. The black outlines of several buildings, were scattered
-about this open space.</p>
-<p>From one of them hung a lantern, shedding a yellow patch of light all about
-it. This, evidently, was the light they had seen from above.</p>
-<p>As they stood, still as graven images in the protecting shadows of the
-forest, a stalwart figure, with a rifle over its shoulder, paced into the circle
-of light and then vanished again.</p>
-<p>“A sentry!” huskily breathed Captain Andrews. “If we thought we’d catch them
-napping we’ve been badly mistaken.”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xviidadits-jack'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XVII—“DAD!—IT’S JACK!”</h2>
-</div>
-<p>Jack gave a step forward the better to survey the scene before them. As he
-did so his right foot struck something, and the next instant there was a sudden
-sharp jangling of a bell.</p>
-<p>In a flash he realized what had happened. A wire connected with the bell had
-been stretched across the path,—Herrera’s dead line. His forward step had given
-the alarm, and might prove their undoing and cause the total failure of their
-plans. Captain Andrews’ arm shot out and dragged the boy back into a clump of
-brush. He made Jack lie down flat, doing so himself.</p>
-<p>“The whole pack will be about our ears in a minute,” he whispered; but he did
-not reproach Jack, whose face was burning with humiliation.</p>
-<p>Sure enough, almost simultaneously there came from the direction of the
-houses and sheds an excited clamor of voices. Lights flashed and figures could
-be seen rushing about. Presently they gathered in a knot, and some one appeared
-to be giving directions; then they scattered in a fan-shaped formation, and
-moved toward the woods in which the two adventurers lay concealed.</p>
-<p>Jack’s heart beat like a trip hammer. Beside him he could hear Captain
-Andrews breathing heavily. Their discovery, within the next few minutes,
-appeared inevitable. Flashing their lanterns hither and thither the searching
-party, which they could now see was composed of negroes, from the Mosquito coast
-in all probability, advanced toward the jungle.</p>
-<p>There were a dozen or more of them, headed by the big fellow whom they had
-noticed on sentry duty. Almost all of them carried the universal weapon of the
-negro in the tropics, long, glittering-bladed machetes. Some of them took to the
-path by which Captain Andrews and Jack had reached their present position.
-Others plunged into the jungle, cutting away the thick growth with their steel
-blades.</p>
-<p>Their leader shouted something in Spanish. “He’s ordering them to search
-every inch of the jungle hereabouts,” interpreted Captain Andrews in a whisper.
-“The precious rascal! I’d like to have my hands on him.”</p>
-<p>“It wouldn’t do much good,” was the mournful response; “the odds against us
-are too heavy for us to do much in case of our discovery.”</p>
-<p>“Well, we’ve got the gas-guns, and from what I’ve already seen of them I
-reckon that they may prove mighty useful in a few minutes.”</p>
-<p>As he spoke there came a crashing sound in the undergrowth a few feet from
-them. The next moment they saw the form of a giant black looming up directly in
-front of them. The fellow was grunting from his exertions in cutting his way
-through the underwood, and paused for an instant to catch his breath.</p>
-<p>It was a fatal pause for him. Jack gently drew his gas-gun toward him and
-fired. The negro threw both his hands into the air and dropped with a loud
-“Oof!”</p>
-<p>But the shot had been at such close range that the powerful gas impregnated
-the air that Captain Andrews and his young companion were breathing. The reek of
-it stung their nostrils.</p>
-<p>“We’ve got to get out of here,” whispered Jack, “or we’ll be as dead to the
-world as that fellow is.”</p>
-<p>Painfully they crept on their stomachs through the thick brush, moving as
-silently as cats. A single mistake in their movements, the crack of a branch
-snapped by carelessness might, as they both knew, prove fatal. But they managed
-to gain a small clearing under some big trees without mishap.</p>
-<p>It was at this moment that Jack had a sudden inspiration.</p>
-<p>“See here,” he said excitedly, under his breath, “those chaps have worked
-past us now, to judge by the sounds. They think that we have fled through the
-woods. What’s the matter with our doubling back on our tracks and marching right
-into the settlement?”</p>
-<p>Captain Andrews, ungiven as he was to emotion, fairly gasped.</p>
-<p>“By the beard of Neptune, boy!” he exclaimed, and then, in the same breath,
-“but it’s not as mad a plan as it sounds. In all likelihood, almost the entire
-force of guards from the plantation buildings are out after us, and we ought to
-be more than a match for half a dozen with the gas-guns.”</p>
-<p>“Then we’ll do it?” throbbed Jack, with a catch of his breath.</p>
-<p>“Yes. We came here to rescue those poor chaps, and, by the Polar Star, we’ll
-do it if it’s possible.”</p>
-<p>Jack impulsively held out his hand. Captain Andrews clasped it warmly. The
-next moment they were stealthily creeping through the undergrowth, but advancing
-far more quickly than they had retreated a moment before.</p>
-<p>When they once more gained the edge of the jungle. Jack perceived, to his
-intense satisfaction, that everything was quiet about the handful of buildings
-before them. So far as could be seen, there was no one about. Evidently then,
-his surmise had been correct. The majority, if not all of the residents, were
-abroad in search of the persons who had sounded the alarm bell.</p>
-<p>“Which building do you think it likely they are in?” asked Jack, as they
-paused an instant before plunging from the protection of the woods.</p>
-<p>“The one that has that lantern hanging on it,</p>
-<p>“I imagine,” was the response from the veteran seaman, “we’ll try that first,
-anyway. Are you ready?”</p>
-<p>Jack nodded. He did not speak, however. It was not a time for mere words. The
-next moment they had passed from the dark shadows of the jungle into the open
-space about the plantation buildings. Each clasped his gas-gun ready for instant
-use. But nobody appeared to bar their progress.</p>
-<p>When they gained the structure from which the lamp was hanging, they found
-that it was a tall building of wood, and seemingly three stories in height.</p>
-<p>It was used, though they did not know this at the time, as a drying house for
-the hemp after it had been through the crushing and separating processes. The
-door was secured on the outside by a weighty bar of wood. Captain Andrews lifted
-this out of its sockets, and in a jiffy had flung the door open. Inside was
-pitchy darkness, so black that it could almost be felt.</p>
-<p>Jack had brought along his electric pocket lamp. He drew it out and switched
-on the current. The rays revealed a large, bare chamber, empty, except for a
-pile of dry hemp in one corner, and in another a few bales of the product
-stacked ready for shipment.</p>
-<p>“Nothing here,” said Captain Andrews briefly.</p>
-<p>“No; but see, there’s a flight of steps in that corner. Let’s go higher and
-find out what’s on the floor above.”</p>
-<p>“It may be wasting precious time, lad.”</p>
-<p>“On the other hand, this was the building that was guarded by the sentry.
-It’s fair to assume, then, that it is in this structure that our friends are
-confined.”</p>
-<p>Captain Andrews had nothing to reply to this logic, and followed Jack up the
-steps.</p>
-<p>At the summit of the rickety staircase was another door, secured, as had been
-the one below, by a stout bar of wood. Jack tackled this and wrenched it free.
-As he did so a voice that thrilled him in every fiber came from within the
-portal.</p>
-<p>“Who is it?”</p>
-<p>“Dad! It’s me—Jack—I’ve come to save you!” blurted out Jack, tears of sheer
-gladness springing to his eyes. He flung the door open.</p>
-<p>The next instant Jack was clasped in his father’s arms, while about him and
-Captain Andrews, pressed the other captives, all well and unharmed and half wild
-with delight as they greeted the lad whose pluck had conquered Herrera’s “deadline.”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xviiihemmed-in-by-flames'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XVIII—HEMMED IN BY FLAMES</h2>
-</div>
-<p>Naturally, after the first greeting’s had been exchanged, Mr. Jesson’s
-principal anxiety was for his son Tom. Jack soon set his mind at rest on this
-subject.</p>
-<p>“Tom and Ned Bangs are back on the other side of the woods, with the
-aero-auto,” he explained.</p>
-<p>“Ah, then it has proved a success?” eagerly interjected Mr. Chadwick.</p>
-<p>“It is even better than we hoped it would be,” rejoined Jack
-enthusiastically.</p>
-<p>“I wouldn’t be scared to trust myself to that aerial wind-jammer for a voyage
-to China,” stoutly declared Captain Andrews. “I reckon if Wellman had had a
-craft like that he’d have crossed the Atlantic easy as shooting.”</p>
-<p>“I don’t know but what you’re right,” said Jack; “but the thing to discuss
-now is how to get out of here. Dad, do you know much about this place?”</p>
-<p>“Nothing, except that there is a floor above this. We were confined there the
-first day of our captivity. But the sheet iron roof used for drying hemp made it
-so insufferably hot that we would have died if they hadn’t moved us down here,”
-was the reply.</p>
-<p>“Then, so far as you know, there is no way of getting out but by the door we
-entered?”</p>
-<p>“That’s the only way, I guess. We had better make good our escape while those
-rascally hangers-on about the settlement are off hunting for the fellows who
-rang their alarm bell.”</p>
-<p>Professor Chadwick, to whom Jack had given a hasty outline of the events of
-the night, moved toward the door as he spoke. But he had not taken more than two
-steps toward the head of the stairs when he stopped abruptly.</p>
-<p>“Hark!” he exclaimed, standing stock still in an attitude of close
-attention.</p>
-<p>The murmur of voices came toward the party. It didn’t take any of them long
-to surmise what had happened. The searching party was coming back. In a few
-moments their egress would be cut off and it would be impossible to escape
-without a fight, the outcome of which was doubtful.</p>
-<p>In this emergency Captain Andrews acted quickly. Gas-gun in hand, he ran down
-the stairway, shouting to the others to “come on.”</p>
-<p>They pressed close behind him, each with a grim determination to reach the
-doorway before the guardians of the plantation noticed that it was open.</p>
-<p>But in this they were disappointed. Hardly had Captain Andrews reached the
-doorway before several forms blocked it. As the doughty sea captain sprang at
-the foremost of them, at least a dozen of the husky henchmen of Herrera leaped
-on him.</p>
-<p>Before either he or Jack could use their gas-guns, Captain Andrews was borne
-to the ground, while on top of him were piled half a dozen of the returned
-search party.</p>
-<p>“Back to the upper room,” ordered Jack, “I’m going to fire my gas-gun.”</p>
-<p>The boy shouted this warning because he knew that in that narrow space the
-fumes of the stupefying gas were likely to prove as disastrous to the white men
-as to the brawny negroes. Professor Chadwick, who well knew the qualities of the
-gas, retreated with the others. As he did so. Jack saw a rifle aimed at him by
-one of the negroes who crowded the doorway.</p>
-<p>In a moment he had the gas-gun at his shoulder. He pressed the trigger and
-one of the sleep-laden globules shot out. It struck the armed negro in the
-chest, and the fellow threw up his arms with a sharp exhalation of his breath.
-Then he fell, as if his legs had been pulled from under him.</p>
-<p>The fellows who were piled on top of Captain Andrews released him and dashed
-toward their other foe. As they left him the skipper of the <i>Sea King</i>
-sprang to his feet and discharged his weapon. The air became impregnated with
-stifling fumes.</p>
-<p>Through the reek the seaman struggled to Jack’s side, and before the dazed
-negroes could realize what had occurred the two whites were shoulder to shoulder
-on the stairway.</p>
-<p>Almost simultaneously the contents of the gas spheres began to have their
-effect. Man after man of those who remained, for several had fled, staggered and
-fell, while Jack and the captain retreated up the stairway. They lost no time in
-reaching the door at the head of the stairs and shutting it to keep out the
-fumes. They were none too soon. The gas had already affected them, and their
-heads throbbed and their eyelids felt leaden.</p>
-<p>In the corner of the room was a big earthen pitcher of water. The Professor
-threw the contents of this over his son and Captain Andrews, and though still
-heavy from the effects of the gas, the shock revived them wonderfully.</p>
-<p>“What now?” asked the Professor, after Jack and Captain Andrews had “come
-back to life” a little.</p>
-<p>“Wait till the fumes of the gas have evaporated through the open door
-downstairs, and then make a dash for freedom,” said Captain Andrews.</p>
-<p>“How long will it be before the air is good to breathe?” inquired Mr.
-Jesson.</p>
-<p>“About fifteen minutes,” said the Professor; “the gas is of a very volatile
-nature, and the fumes will soon clear off. It will be an hour or so at least,
-however, before the negroes recover.”</p>
-<p>“I would suggest, then, that Jack gives us a more detailed account of what
-occurred after he left Lone Island,” said Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>Falling in with this idea, they seated themselves about the lad, who at once
-plunged into the details of the narrative, which, as may be imagined, proved of
-engrossing interest to all who heard him.</p>
-<p>He was interrupted several times by questions and requests for information
-concerning the operation of the aero-auto, and the relation of his story took
-longer than had been anticipated. However, even in their critical situation, no
-one wanted to miss a word of it.</p>
-<p>“And so the three gems are safe?” said Professor Chadwick, with a sigh of
-relief, as the lad concluded.</p>
-<p>“Yes. They are at this moment in the Flying Road Racer’s locker, in charge of
-Tom and Ned,” was the reply.</p>
-<p>As Jack spoke they all, by mutual consent, rose and made for the door.</p>
-<p>“I shall be glad to get to the air,” remarked Professor Chadwick.</p>
-<p>“Yes; it is insufferably hot in here,” agreed Mr. Jesson. “I had not noticed
-the heat so much while Jack was talking; but now,—phew! It’s like a
-furnace.”</p>
-<p>As he spoke. Jack flung the door open. The next instant he staggered back,
-the hot blood in his veins frozen with horror.</p>
-<p>A rush of air, hot and arid as a blast from a coke oven, struck him in the
-face. A great puff of smoke followed.</p>
-<p>The room below was a vast furnace of red flame. In falling, one of the
-negro’s lanterns had overturned and rolled against the bales of dried hemp. All
-the time they had been talking the fire had been waxing more and more
-furious.</p>
-<p>By this time the lower part of the stairway was in flames, and, as Jack held
-the door open, a tongue of fire, sucked upward by the draft, shot hungrily
-toward him.</p>
-<p>He slammed the door instantly. But the heat of the seething furnace below
-rendered the air almost unbreathable.</p>
-<p>It looked as if, in the very moment of their triumph, the adventurers were
-doomed to death in the burning building. Trapped and helpless, for an instant
-they were deprived of words. Was this to be their appalling destiny, their
-fate,—to be roasted alive without a chance of escape?</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xixstand-by-for-a-rope'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XIX—“STAND BY FOR A ROPE!”</h2>
-</div>
-<p>There are some situations so overwhelming that the strongest and coolest may
-well be temporarily stunned by them. The springs of action paralyze, while the
-mind becomes a blank.</p>
-<p>This was the case with our party of adventurers. Added to this, was the
-horror of knowing that many of the negroes in the room below must have perished
-in the flames. Jack felt a sickening feeling of panic clutching at his
-heart.</p>
-<p>In one corner of the room the two sailors crouched, stolidly awaiting death.
-Professor Chadwick and Mr. Jesson alone remained calm. Even Captain Andrews and
-Abner Jennings appeared dazed and helpless with the sickening sense of the
-disaster that had overtaken them.</p>
-<p>“We must leave this room at once.”</p>
-<p>It was Professor Chadwick who spoke, in a voice that did not falter in its
-resolute tones.</p>
-<p>His calmness, in the face of death, restored Jack’s pluck and heartened
-Captain Andrews and Abner Jennings. Even the two sailors appeared to be less
-panic-stricken.</p>
-<p>“We can only leave it for the room above,” objected one of them, however;
-“the flames will reach there afore long. Might as well die now as an hour
-later.”</p>
-<p>“Shame on you for American seamen!” burst out Captain Andrews, “rouse up
-there! While there’s life there’s hope.”</p>
-<p>His words were effective. At any rate, no more grumbling was heard as the
-beleaguered party ascended to the upper chamber. Like the one below it, the
-place was bare, and Jack flashed his electric searchlight about without
-discovering any loophole of escape. As was the case in the lower chamber, the
-walls were unpierced by windows, and the timbers were too solid for it to be
-feasible to knock them out, except with heavy sledges.</p>
-<p>All at once, however, Jack noticed, as he flashed his light about, that in
-one corner there seemed to be a sort of trap-door in the roof.</p>
-<p>He hailed his discovery with a cry of delight. If they could only reach the
-roof it might be possible for them to attract the attention of some one below
-who could get a ladder.</p>
-<p>Of course, in that event, they would be likely to be made captives, but
-anything was preferable to a tomb in the flames.</p>
-<p>Jack’s discovery acted like a tonic on the despairing feelings of the party.
-The iron roof was two feet beyond the reach of the tallest of them, but this
-difficulty was gotten over by Jack clambering to Captain Andrews’ shoulders, and
-from that situation he was able to reach the trap-door and to open it, for his
-first fear that it might be locked proved to be without foundation.</p>
-<p>Having opened it. Jack clambered through, and lying flat on the roof extended
-his hands to his father, who, in turn, used Captain Andrews as a ladder. Then
-came Mr. Jesson, followed by the two sailors. Abner Jennings demurred to taking
-precedence of the Captain. But,——</p>
-<p>“The skipper’s the last to leave the ship, my lad,” declared Captain Andrews,
-and Jennings, unwillingly enough, clambered on his back and was drawn up.</p>
-<p>Then came the Captain’s turn. Abner Jennings, as the strongest of the party,
-lay flat on his stomach and extended his arms down within the room. To his legs
-clung the others, acting as anchors. With a mighty heave Captain Andrews, no
-lightweight, was raised high enough for him to clutch the edge of the trap,
-after which he completed the operation of getting through for himself.</p>
-<p>As he gained the roof they heard a crash beneath them.</p>
-<p>“The floor of your jail has fallen through, I reckon. Professor,” grimly
-spoke the captain.</p>
-<p>As Jack heard the angry roar and crackle of the flames beneath them he could
-not repress a shudder. It was a drop of fifty feet or more to the ground, and
-they were by no means out of danger.</p>
-<p>“Let’s see if any of those black rascals are about,” said Captain Andrews,
-“if they are we may be able to induce them to get a ladder.”</p>
-<p>“Surely they wouldn’t be inhuman enough to let us remain here,” exclaimed the
-Professor.</p>
-<p>“I don’t know,” was the response, “like master, like man, you know; and this
-might strike Herrera as a very neat way of disposing of us.”</p>
-<p>Several forms could be seen flitting about below them. The flames were
-pouring through the windows of the lower story of the hemp-drying building,
-casting a ruddy glow in which near-by objects could be seen as plainly as if by
-daylight.</p>
-<p>But the negroes appeared to be giving no thought to the burning structure.
-Instead, they could be seen dragging piled bales of hemp out of danger of flying
-sparks. Nor did they pay the slightest attention to the frantic shouts of the
-party marooned on the top of the blazing building.</p>
-<p>“Great heavens! they mean to leave us here to roast to death,” groaned the
-Professor.</p>
-<p>As he spoke there came another crash below them, and the building
-trembled.</p>
-<p>“The floor of the second room has fallen!” cried Mr. Jesson, rightly guessing
-the cause of the crash. “In a few seconds this roof will become red-hot,
-and——”</p>
-<p>He stopped short. There are some things that cannot be put into words.</p>
-<p>The trap-door had been closed, but before long they could distinctly feel the
-roof under their feet becoming warmer and warmer.</p>
-<p>Suddenly Jack espied a great mass of green hemp piled off in one corner,
-ready to be raked out on the iron roof for drying when the sun arose.</p>
-<p>“We can put that under our feet,” he said, “and stick it out a while longer
-that way.”</p>
-<p>So tenacious is the instinct of clinging to life, that even though they knew
-it would only avert the end by a very short time,—unless a miracle came to aid
-them,—they adopted Jack’s idea.</p>
-<p>But before long the hemp began to smoke and steam. The heat was rapidly
-drying out the moisture, and then——</p>
-<p>Suddenly one of the sailors gave a yell, and shouting,—“I’m going to end it
-all right now,” made a plunge for the edge of the roof.</p>
-<p>His evident intention was to hurl himself down to death.</p>
-<p>But before the crazed man could carry out his plan Captain Andrews sprang at
-the fellow and brought him down with a crash.</p>
-<p>“If Providence means us to die, we’ll meet death like men,” he said stoutly;
-“but it’s not like Americans to give up the ship while there’s a shred of
-hope.”</p>
-<p>The frenzied sailor fought and struggled on the pile of steaming hemp on
-which the skipper held him. But Captain Andrews’ strong arms pinned him
-down.</p>
-<p>Jack felt his senses reeling. The hot breath of the fire had reached them by
-this time. The roof gave off heat like the top of a stove. If it had not been
-for the damp, green hemp they could not have held the situation for an eighth of
-the space of time that they did.</p>
-<p>Their throats grew parched and their tongues swelled till they were painful,
-and they could shout for aid no longer. For all the attention the negroes below
-paid to their cries, they might as well have remained silent. The blacks seemed
-to consider the removal of the hemp to a safe place of far more importance than
-the lives of the flame-marooned white men.</p>
-<p>Just when Jack’s hope had flickered out and a sort of coma of despair was
-creeping over him the miracle happened.</p>
-<p>It was Professor Chadwick who saw it first.</p>
-<p>Through the red glow that crimsoned the sky came a huge floating form.</p>
-<p>The Professor shouted and pointed upward. Jack raised a pair of dimmed eyes;
-but the next instant they cleared as if by magic.</p>
-<p>“It’s the Flying Road Racer!” he shouted, yelling like a madman. “Hurray!
-We’re saved! we’re saved!”</p>
-<p>And then something in his head seemed to snap with a loud report. He swayed,
-and would have fallen heavily on the hot roof if his father had not caught him
-in his arms.</p>
-<p>Then he was startled into alertness again by a sharp hail which came from
-above them.</p>
-<p>“Stand by for a rope. We’ll drop as low as we dare!”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xxa-rescue-by-airship'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XX—A RESCUE BY AIRSHIP</h2>
-</div>
-<p>Just what happened in the moments that followed neither Jack nor any of his
-companions has ever been able to describe in detail. It was a time in which
-every second counted, while under their feet the flames roared and crackled
-hungrily.</p>
-<p>From the Flying Road Racer a rope came snaking down, and Professor Chadwick
-caught it. At the corner of the roof in which the adventurers were huddled was a
-stout post, used sometimes, apparently, for hoisting things from the ground, for
-a pulley hung from it.</p>
-<p>With a flash of inspiration the Professor, with Mr. Jesson and Jack aiding,
-rove the rope through this pulley. Then, while Tom and Ned maneuvered the Flying
-Road Racer so that her “bow” pointed downward, all of the marooned adventurers
-who were able to do so heaved on the rope. In this way the air craft was brought
-to within three feet of the roof.</p>
-<p>Another length of rope was then looped over the side by Tom and made fast to
-two of the stanchions of the balloon support. The first to test the loop was the
-companion of the crazed sailor. Half dragged, he scrambled into the body of the
-suspended car. Professor Chadwick followed, and then came Mr. Jesson, while a
-delighted cry at his father’s safety came from Tom.</p>
-<p>Abner Jennings was the next to be taken on board, and then came Jack. In the
-meantime Captain Andrews had buckled his belt around the limbs of the crazed
-sailor and had borrowed Jack’s for the purpose of confining his prisoner’s
-arms.</p>
-<p>Trussed up in this manner the poor fellow was handed up to those on the
-Flying Road Racer, and then the gallant Captain Andrews made a spring for the
-swaying loop.</p>
-<p>He was in the nick of time. As he gained the tonneau and sank to the floor
-almost exhausted, there was a deafening roar, and, as if it had suddenly melted
-away, the entire building collapsed. Jack turned away shuddering as the flame
-and sparks shot up above the ruins.</p>
-<p>The ideas it suggested of the fate that might have been theirs if help had
-not arrived in the very nick of time, were almost overwhelming.</p>
-<p>Tom was at the helm, and Ned it was who had cast off the rope. Slowly, almost
-Phoenix-like, from amidst the flames rose the Flying Road Racer with her heavy
-burden.</p>
-<p>There was danger in the situation, too. The gas in the bag was inflammable,
-and the heat of the fire might expand it so that at any minute it might burst
-the container, and cause an appalling catastrophe. This danger Tom and Ned had
-willingly faced when they brought the Flying Road Racer to the rescue. But now,
-all their desires were centered on getting as far away from the fire zone as was
-possible.</p>
-<p>Laden as she was, the great air craft had not the same buoyancy that had been
-hers when she set out at midnight from the <i>Vagrant</i>. She rose slowly,
-and although her propeller was whirring at top speed, and her rising planes were
-set, she once or twice sagged dangerously.</p>
-<p>While this behavior on the air craft’s part was worrying her navigators
-seriously, there came a sudden fresh cause for disquiet. Bullets from the
-negroes below began to whiz about them.</p>
-<p>The fellows had luckily been too much astonished to fire while the task of
-rescue was going on. The apparition of the sky-ship had taken them so much by
-surprise that they had temporarily been unable to take any hostile action.</p>
-<p>Now, however, they had recovered their senses and were doing all in their
-power to render the escape of their late prisoners an impossibility. Luckily,
-however, they did not have enough sense to fire at the balloon bag, or their
-endeavors might have been crowned with success. Instead, they aimed at the
-occupants of the suspended car, and what with bad marksmanship and excitement
-failed to hit any of them. True, a few bullets pinged against the suspension
-wires and struck the sides of the car; but none punctured the tank, as the boys
-feared might be the case, or caused any serious injury.</p>
-<p>A breeze springing up presently wafted the overladen airship into an upper
-air current, and before long she was rising merrily. More gas had been turned
-into the bag, increasing its buoyancy, and by the time the dawn began to show
-grayly the adventurers were far from the scene of their fearfully narrow
-escape.</p>
-<p>Behind them, however, they could see, as the light grew stronger, a pillar of
-dark smoke soaring heavenward and marking the site of what had almost proved
-their funeral pyre.</p>
-<p>What with the coming of daylight and the feeling that they had been saved
-from their greatest peril, the adventurers’ spirits rose wonderfully as they
-sailed along. Even the crazed sailor showed symptoms of returning sanity, and,
-as Professor Chadwick expected, his mental disengagement soon passed away. Oddly
-enough, though, he could never recall the events of that night. They had been
-wiped from his recollection as an old sum is washed off a slate.</p>
-<p>Jupe got out canned goods and made a fairly good breakfast, while they were
-in mid-air. To some of the party it was the most novel meal they had ever eaten.
-But neither their recent hardships nor unusual surroundings impaired their
-appetites. All ate ravenously and felt much better after the meal, which
-included hot coffee cooked on an electric radiator. This radiator was connected
-with the dynamo that filled the storage batteries and provided engine ignition
-and light.</p>
-<p>During the meal, Tom told them how he and Ned and Jupe had waited beside the
-Flying Road Racer after the departure of Tom and Captain Andrews on their
-scouting expedition. For some time they stood their ground patiently enough, and
-occupied their time, according to instructions, by reinflating the bag.</p>
-<p>This done, there was nothing to do but await the progress of events. Of the
-search in the jungle they knew nothing. But the sound of shots from the
-direction of the plantation had first roused their fears that something was
-wrong.</p>
-<p>Then they had perceived the red glare of the fire on the night sky. Certain
-then that something serious was wrong, Tom took it upon himself to get up the
-anchors and fly to the rescue. Little did he imagine, however, he confessed,
-what dire straits his friends were in.</p>
-<p>“We owe you a great debt of gratitude, you and Ned Bangs, for your prompt and
-brave action,” warmly declared Professor Chadwick.</p>
-<p>That the others heartily seconded the motion may be imagined. In fact, as
-they all realized to the full, they owed their lives directly to Tom Jesson’s
-pluck and brains and his able assistant, Ned Bangs. Jupe, too, came in for his
-share of praise, for the old colored man had behaved in the great emergency
-through which they had passed, with remarkable coolness and ability.</p>
-<p>As Tom concluded his story. Jack glanced at the barograph. They had risen to
-three thousand feet, and were moving in a westerly direction. So engrossed had
-they all been in discussing their wonderful escape, that they had really hardly
-noticed in what course they were sailing.</p>
-<p>“I think it’s time that we decided on a destination,” said Jack, as he noted
-these things.</p>
-<p>“Why not try for Lone Island?” said Mr. Jesson. “The <i>Sea King</i> should
-be there, and——”</p>
-<p>Jack shook his head.</p>
-<p>“The Flying Road Racer couldn’t fly as far as that?” asked Captain Andrews,
-who had been glancing about him at all points of the compass while this talk was
-going on.</p>
-<p>“She could fly as far as that under normal conditions,” was the reply; “but
-not with such a load on board. We are using up fuel at twice the usual rate, and
-might have to descend to make more gas for running purposes.”</p>
-<p>“Can’t we refill the reservoir in mid-air?”</p>
-<p>Mr. Jesson asked the question.</p>
-<p>“Too dangerous, except in case of absolute necessity,” said Jack; “it could
-be done, but there is a certain amount of risk.”</p>
-<p>“I think, then, that we had better head about and make for the sea-coast
-where the <i>Vagrant</i> is hidden,” said Professor Chadwick.</p>
-<p>“I don’t agree with you there,” said Captain Andrews positively.</p>
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-<p>“Well, in the first place, during the next few days Herrera is going to go
-through all that vicinity with a fine-tooth comb. He won’t let the gems slip
-through his fingers without some sort of a battle for them, you can bet.”</p>
-<p>“What would your advice be, then?”</p>
-<p>“To make for the mountains yonder with all speed. We can lie snugly hidden
-there for a short time, and can form some definite plan. We are all too much
-tired and overwrought now to discuss such things intelligently.”</p>
-<p>“I think you are right. I know that, now that the strain is over, I feel like
-taking a long sleep,” said Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>“Then let us head right on as we are going,” suggested Jack. “That range of
-hills doesn’t look so very far off. We ought to get there before afternoon. That
-will give us time to make camp and get things snug for the night.”</p>
-<p>And so it was arranged. But Captain Andrews still kept casting anxious
-glances back toward the coast line.</p>
-<p>“What’s the trouble. Captain?” asked Jack presently, noting a trace of
-uneasiness on the old sailor’s countenance.</p>
-<p>“Why, lad, I don’t much like the look of the weather yonder. See that gray
-haze that’s spreading over the sky so quick? That means wind, and maybe worse,
-or my name ain’t Sam Andrews.”</p>
-<p>“Good gracious!” exclaimed Jack, “we’re in no fix to battle with a
-storm.”</p>
-<p>As he spoke a sharp puff of wind shook the Flying Road Racer.</p>
-<p>“Could we land if anything very bad comes on?” asked Captain Andrews, with a
-yet stronger tincture of anxiety in his tones.</p>
-<p>Jack peered over the edge of the car.</p>
-<p>“Nothing but dense forests are below us,” he said; “it would be courting
-death to try to land among them.”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xxialoft-in-the-storm'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XXI—ALOFT IN THE STORM</h2>
-</div>
-<p>In an almost unbelievably short time the wind had increased to a gale. It
-shrieked and moaned among the wire supports of the car, and the great bag that
-held it in mid-air swayed and tore furiously at its fastenings.</p>
-<p>Jack kept a sharp lookout for a good spot to land, while Tom relieved Ned at
-the wheel. Once they saw beneath them a big area of smooth, park-like land,
-almost devoid of trees. It would have made an ideal landing place, but as they
-tried to force the Flying Road Racer around to head for it the full force of the
-wind struck them.</p>
-<p>While traveling with the gale they had not noticed its full fury. Now,
-however, it battered them viciously, tearing at the gas bag as if it had been
-some monster bent on its destruction. The car swung wildly underneath its
-support, and they had to cling on to avoid being hurled out into space.</p>
-<p>Their intention of battling with the wind was quickly given up. Tom brought
-the helm around and the Flying Road Racer hurtled off before the blast at a
-speed the indicator showed to be sixty-five miles.</p>
-<p>“Is there no possibility of turning around and landing?” asked Mr. Jesson
-somewhat anxiously.</p>
-<p>“It is out of the question,” declared Jack; “we’d rip this craft to pieces if
-we even attempted to buffet the storm.”</p>
-<p>“It’s a bad one, all right,” said Abner Jennings.</p>
-<p>“And may be worse afore it’s better,” said Captain Andrews, casting an
-anxious eye aloft at the scudding clouds among which they were sailing.</p>
-<p>“The wind is blowing about sixty miles an hour,” said Jack, looking at the
-anemometer. “That means practically a hurricane speed.”</p>
-<p>“Are we in danger?” asked Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>“Not as long as we can keep in the air,” said Jack; “but if anything should
-go wrong it would be awkward, to say the least of it.”</p>
-<p>“Then something may happen at any minute?”</p>
-<p>“I didn’t say so. Uncle; but, as
-Captain Andrews said, the wind may grow stronger.”</p>
-<p>“It’s hard to tell what these tropical hurricanes will do, once they get
-started,” said the burly captain. “I’ve seen ’em blow for a week and flatten out
-whole groves of cocoanuts.”</p>
-<p>It grew blacker and blacker. The Flying Road Racer was now scudding through
-ragged white clouds that drove as fast as she did under a panoply of inky black.
-The scream of the rigging as the wind rushed against the taut, straining wires,
-sounded almost like the cries of some live thing in pain.</p>
-<p>Every now and again there would come a sudden burst of vicious fury, and once
-or twice it actually appeared as if the great air craft would be ripped in
-pieces. But so far every wire and brace and turnbuckle in her construction had
-held bravely.</p>
-<p>Jack watched the engine anxiously, attending to the lubricating devices and
-adjusting the gas mixers. The machine was behaving splendidly, and Jack felt
-that if only the connections between the gas bag and the car would hold they
-might still weather the fury of the gale.</p>
-<p>He knew that these tropical hurricanes while furious are often not of very
-long duration. He stuck to his post, keeping hope alive in his heart, while the
-others pluckily enough endured the situation without flinching.</p>
-<p>All at once, the wind stopped as suddenly as if it had been cut off at a
-gigantic spigot.</p>
-<p>The calm, after that raging, furious gale, was positively startling.</p>
-<p>“Is the storm over?” asked Ned.</p>
-<p>“No. It’s only just beginning,” was the alarming response from Captain
-Andrews.</p>
-<p>“I understand you now,” came from Mr. Jesson suddenly; “it’s a circular
-storm.”</p>
-<p>“That’s it, sir. In a few minutes it will be blowing just as hard out of the
-west as a few minutes ago it was blowing from seaward.”</p>
-<p>“We’d better put the craft about,” said Tom.</p>
-<p>“Yes; bring her round as quick as you can,” said Jack. “Goodness! how queer
-this sudden calm feels.”</p>
-<p>It was indeed an uncanny feeling. So still had the air become that a candle
-might have been lighted and its flame would hardly have flickered.</p>
-<p>Through this stagnant atmosphere the Flying Road Racer was worked around till
-her bow was pointing seaward.</p>
-<p>“Gracious!” exclaimed Tom, “if the wind doesn’t come from the quarter Captain
-Andrews expected we’ll be blown to bits.”</p>
-<p>Jack said nothing. Any reply he might have made was, in fact, cut short at
-this moment by a moaning sound from the direction of the mountains. It was
-caused by the wind sweeping through the canyons and deep abysses that scared
-them.</p>
-<p>“Put on full speed, Tom,” urged Jack; “the faster we are going when that wind
-strikes us the less chance there will be of our being ripped to bits.”</p>
-<p>The greatest speed of which she was capable was placed on the Flying Road
-Racer. The indicator showed in turn fifty, sixty, sixty-five and then seventy
-miles!</p>
-<p>Just as she attained this remarkable speed the wind struck the straining air
-craft with its full velocity.</p>
-<p>“Fo’ de Lawd’s sake!” shrilled out Jupe, “we done bin gone dis time fo’
-shoh.”</p>
-<p>But he was wrong. The stout fabric of the wonderful craft withstood even the
-terrific assault now made upon her. But her forward motion suddenly ceased.
-Caught in the vortex created by the meeting point of the two conflicting storms,
-she was whirled round and round as if she had been gripped in a maelstrom of the
-winds.</p>
-<p>The boys could do nothing to control this nauseating, dizzying, rotating
-motion. Upward and forward the Flying Road Racer was forced, climbing at
-terrifying speed the aerial circular staircase. One by one her occupants
-succumbed to the effects of the rapid circling. It caused a helpless, miserable
-feeling similar to seasickness and quite as prostrating.</p>
-<p>“Back! back! Go down lower!” shouted Captain Andrews in Tom’s ear.</p>
-<p>“We can’t,” yelled the lad; “we’re being dragged to the sky. We’ve lost all
-control.”</p>
-<p>“Oh, but this is fearful!” exclaimed Mr. Jesson. “Nothing made by human hands
-can stand this much longer.”</p>
-<p>Truly it seemed a marvel that the craft had held together as long as it had.
-So fast were they being swung round and round by this time that the car was
-suspended at quite a sharp angle, swinging outward from the gas bag by the force
-of the centrifugal motion.</p>
-<p>It was terrifying, awe-inspiring, prostrating. Not one of those clinging for
-dear life to the dizzy car had ever had such an experience, and one or two among
-them had faced death not a few times.</p>
-<p>All at once there came a sharp snap from above them.</p>
-<p>To their overstrung nerves it sounded like a pistol shot.</p>
-<p>“One of the wires has parted!” cried Ned in a terror-stricken tone.</p>
-<p>“It is the beginning of the end,” groaned Captain Andrews, sinking his head
-in his hands.</p>
-<p>“Can nothing be done?” gasped out Mr. Jesson, who alone of all that
-pallid-faced crew could find his voice at that instant.</p>
-<p>“Nothing,” was the reply. “In ten minutes or less every wire holding us to
-that gas bag will have parted like that one.”</p>
-<p>“And then?”</p>
-<p>“And then, my friend, we shall be dropped five thousand feet through
-space.”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xxiia-voyage-of-terror'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XXII—A VOYAGE OF TERROR</h2>
-</div>
-<p>This dire prophecy was, however, not destined to be fulfilled. To the intense
-joy of the air travelers, the circular motion ceased almost as suddenly as it
-had begun, and the rest of the wires remained intact. Evidently, the Flying Road
-Racer had encountered a cross current of wind at the great altitude she had now
-attained, which brought her safely out of the aerial whirlpool.</p>
-<p>It was an almost miraculous escape, and they were all duly thankful when once
-more their voyage was resumed on an even keel.</p>
-<p>But the wind still blew hard, and it was impossible for them to stem it
-without running too grave a risk to attempt such a task.</p>
-<p>In this way an hour or more passed, and then suddenly Jack, who had been
-looking out ahead, gave a startled cry.</p>
-<p>“What’s the matter?” asked his father.</p>
-<p>“Matter? Good heavens, we are being blown out to sea!”</p>
-<p>While he spoke the Flying Road Racer was being hurtled along at a dizzy sped
-above bending tree tops and a storm-stressed expanse of country. Tom had brought
-the craft much lower, and it was now not more than five hundred feet above the
-earth. Beneath them the landscape whizzed by like a colored moving picture.</p>
-<p>But the peril Jack had called attention to lay directly in front of them.
-Beyond the trees came a strip of white beach, and beyond that again the vast
-troubled expanse of the heaving ocean billows, lashed into fury by the
-storm.</p>
-<p>Their situation was indeed critical.</p>
-<p>“We’re going from bad to worse,” exclaimed Mr. Jesson. “Is there no way of
-landing?”</p>
-<p>“Not without the risk of killing or injuring most of us,” rejoined Jack
-soberly.</p>
-<p>“Why—why, then we’ll be compelled to fly above the ocean?”</p>
-<p>“It looks that way. I don’t see what else we can do.”</p>
-<p>“But in that case we shall be in grave danger?”</p>
-<p>“I don’t think the danger will be much greater than the one we have faced. We
-have plenty of gas still, and can keep in the air for a long time if need
-be.”</p>
-<p>“A week?” asked Captain Andrews. “These hurricanes sometimes last as long as
-that.”</p>
-<p>“I don’t know that we could hold out for a week,” admitted Jack; “but I do
-know that we cannot avoid being blown out to sea. If the storm does not abate we
-are likely to be compelled to spend some time above the water.”</p>
-<p>“Well, the wind is coming out of the southwest now. If we keep on this way we
-ought to be blown clear across the Gulf of Mexico and on to the western shore of
-Florida.”</p>
-<p>It was Captain Andrews who vouchsafed this last remark.</p>
-<p>“I don’t know that that would be a bad idea,” commented Professor
-Chadwick.</p>
-<p>“How long ought it to take us, going at this rate of speed?” inquired Abner
-Jennings.</p>
-<p>“Let’s see, the least distance across would be about fifteen hundred
-miles.”</p>
-<p>“Then, at the rate we are being driven, it would take about twenty-four hours
-to make the passage,” calculated Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>“About that time—yes,” agreed Jack. “I really think we had better try to do
-that.”</p>
-<p>All agreed that it appeared to be the best plan. While they had been
-discussing this, they had passed over the last few miles of dry land. Looking
-down now they saw beneath them a vast expanse of gray, tumbling billows, tossing
-and rolling before the wind.</p>
-<p>“If we ever took a tumble into the sea it would be all up with us,” commented
-Jack in a low voice to Tom.</p>
-<p>“Yes; even a ship could hardly live in such a storm, and yet—look. Jack, back
-yonder,—isn’t that,—yes, surely it’s a craft of some sort!”</p>
-<p>The lad indicated a point to the southward of them. Rising and falling in the
-great trough of the billows was a small vessel of some sort. For an instant Jack
-thought it was the <i>Tarantula</i>, but the next moment he made out that the
-vessel they were looking at had two masts and a yellow funnel amidships.</p>
-<p>But another shift of the wind gave them something else to think of right
-then.</p>
-<p>The blast “hauled round,” as mariners call it, and shifted to the south. The
-Flying Road Racer’s head was twisted around to the north and she was deflected
-from her course to the eastward and the hoped-for Florida coast.</p>
-<p>“What shall we do now?” cried Ned Bangs, when he observed this.</p>
-<p>“Keep on running before the wind. It’s all we can do,” rejoined Jack.</p>
-<p>The storm-beaten air craft, with its heavy human freight, was now being
-driven almost due north along the coast. Tom kept the prow pointed so as to
-bring the course almost parallel with the coast. All the time both he and Jack
-kept a keen lookout for a possible landing place.</p>
-<p>But none appeared. The wind, instead of dying down, grew stronger as the day
-went on.</p>
-<p>“What will be the end of this?” was the thought that crossed the minds of all
-of them in one form or another.</p>
-<p>The sun was obscured by scudding clouds, below them rolled the dismal,
-desolate expanse of salt water, for by this time they had passed over the
-peninsula of Yucatan and were out over the open gulf. In the distance to the
-westward, however, lay a dim coast line, and Tom steered toward it.</p>
-<p>Suddenly there came a loud, ripping, crashing sound.</p>
-<p>As he heard it Jack gave a cry of dismay. It was echoed by Tom and Ned, who
-both instantly guessed what had occurred.</p>
-<p>The rudder had given way under the strain.</p>
-<p>Looking over the side of the car they could see it being swept away by the
-wind, while astern of the tonneau hung a mass of tangled wreckage.</p>
-<p>“Good heavens! This is the worst yet,” groaned Captain Andrews. “Adrift in an
-airship without a rudder! What under the starry dome can we do now?”</p>
-<p>“Nothing but hope and pray for the best,” rejoined Jack. “We are helpless
-indeed without the rudder.”</p>
-<p>Fortunately, however, the propeller still worked, and Tom, abandoning the now
-useless steering wheel, gave all his efforts to aiding Jack in attending to the
-engines.</p>
-<p>The aerial screw helped to keep the Flying Road Racer on a straight course,
-and onward she flew, a disabled but still staunch craft.</p>
-<p>“Is there anything that we can do to help you?” asked Professor Chadwick,
-after a while.</p>
-<p>“Dere ain’t nuffin’ would help now but about a squar’ mile ob good dry lan’,”
-gloomily remarked Jupe.</p>
-<p>Tom shook his head, and so did Jack.</p>
-<p>“No, Father,” said the latter, “there isn’t a thing to be done. So long as we
-can keep the engine going, though, we can manage, at least, to keep before the
-wind.”</p>
-<p>“We’re getting closer to the coast,” cried Mr. Jesson suddenly.</p>
-<p>They were indeed. The forms of distant hills and forests could now be made
-out, and hope began to revive that they might, after all, find a spot to make a
-safe landing.</p>
-<p>“The wind has shifted again,” announced Captain Andrews, glancing over Tom’s
-shoulder at the compass. “It’s blowing out of the east now, and if it holds will
-drive us upon the Mexican coast.”</p>
-<p>Hardly had he made this announcement than there was an alarming cracking,
-snapping sound from the bow of the Flying Road Racer.</p>
-<p>A dark, sharp-pointed object whizzed through the air, and the next instant
-there came a sudden sound of ripping fabric, followed by a hissing noise as of
-escaping steam.</p>
-<p>“Great jumping sea serpents, what’s happened now?” bellowed Captain
-Andrews.</p>
-<p>“A blade of the propeller has torn loose from its hub and pierced the gas
-bag,” shouted Jack in an alarmed tone.</p>
-<p>“We’re falling!” suddenly screamed out Abner Jennings.</p>
-<p>“Bound for Davy Jones’ locker, sure as fate!” bawled one of the sailors.</p>
-<p>“Get out the life jackets!” yelled Tom at the top of his voice. “They are in
-that locker on the right-hand side of the tonneau.”</p>
-<p>All this time the Flying Road Racer was slowly descending. The broken
-propeller blade had ripped a big hole in the side of the gas bag, through which
-the vapor was rushing forth.</p>
-<p>“Isn’t it possible to repair it?” cried Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>Jack shook his head.</p>
-<p>“Impossible,” he said. “We had better all get on life jackets as quickly as
-possible. It’s lucky I had them put in that locker; but something I read about
-an airship being blown out to sea some months ago made me think of it.”</p>
-<p>As quickly as possible all of them invested themselves in the cork-lined
-jackets, which were covered with stout canvas.</p>
-<p>“Look! look!” cried Jack suddenly, “isn’t that an island ahead of us!”</p>
-<p>Captain Andrews pierced the gloom with his keen eyes.</p>
-<p>“It is! It’s an island, sure enough!” he cried joyfully. “If we can make it
-we are saved.”</p>
-<p>But the Flying Road Racer settled lower even as he spoke.</p>
-<p>The angry sea beneath looked savage and cruel as it leaped upward toward
-them, as if impatient for the end to come swiftly.</p>
-<p>Ahead lay the island; a large one, with a sandy beach extending in their
-direction. Could they reach it before the air craft sank into the waves?</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xxiiithe-boy-inventors-solve-a-problem'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XXIII—THE BOY INVENTORS SOLVE A PROBLEM</h2>
-</div>
-<p>The engine had been shut off, and amidst a dead silence, so far as any talk
-was concerned, the Flying Road Racer drifted down toward the island.</p>
-<p>But the gas had escaped so rapidly and the weight in the car was so great,
-that the island was still a few hundred feet off when they first felt the
-wind-driven spray dashing against their faces.</p>
-<p>“Can we make it?” asked Mr. Jesson in a low, tense voice.</p>
-<p>“I think so,” replied Jack; “at any rate, if we can’t, we have the cork
-jackets on and must swim for it.”</p>
-<p>As he spoke, though, the disabled flying craft settled suddenly downward.
-Above her the collapsed gas envelope was wrinkled and flabby, and barely kept
-her up.</p>
-<p>All at once the crest of a huge wave dashed against the bottom of the
-aluminum tank. The Flying Road Racer careened so far over that for a moment it
-looked as if her end had come.</p>
-<p>But at the same moment the wind blew stronger and caught the half-empty gas
-bag. This raised the crippled craft a few feet and drove her forward. The
-impetus thus given was sufficient to save the adventurers from a dangerous
-swim.</p>
-<p>With a crash that might have been audible at some distance had there been any
-one to hear it the Flying Road Racer landed in the sand of the island beach at
-precisely one-thirty on that day of stirring events in the young inventors
-lives.</p>
-<p>Thanks to the shock absorbers, the auto part was not harmed seriously. Five
-minutes after they had landed the adventurers stood in a group surveying the
-stranded craft.</p>
-<p>“What a wreck!” exclaimed Mr. Jesson, gazing the flabby wrinkles of the gas
-envelope and at the wound in its side.</p>
-<p>The Flying Road Racer did, indeed, look different from the trim craft that
-had arisen from the deck of the <i>Vagrant</i> not so very long before.</p>
-<p>But how much had transpired in those few hours! If time might be reckoned by
-events the boys could record that they had passed through years of experience
-since Jack and Captain Andrews struck out on the forest path leading to the
-plantation houses.</p>
-<p>“What a mess!” breathed Abner Jennings, echoing in part Mr. Jesson’s
-remark.</p>
-<p>“It’s my opinion that we ought to thank Providence for getting off with our
-lives,” said Captain Andrews stoutly. And to this sentiment they all heartily
-agreed.</p>
-<p>“Can you ever repair her. Jack, do you think?” asked his father
-anxiously.</p>
-<p>Jack, who had been surveying the wreck carefully, was not yet ready to give
-an opinion, however.</p>
-<p>“If we could fix that rip in the gas bag it might be possible to patch her
-up,” he said dubiously. “There is,—or ought to be,—a spare propeller on board,
-and if the engine is working, it might be feasible to put the craft in order
-once more.”</p>
-<p>“Well, we’d better run her up out of the reach of the waves anyhow,” said
-Tom.</p>
-<p>The air craft had grounded at the margin of the beach, and the spray of the
-thunderous waves showered her as each broke.</p>
-<p>The two sailors and the others came forward to lay hands on the Flying Road
-Racer, and shove her up the beach. But Jack had a better plan in mind.</p>
-<p>“If the motor is working. I’ll run her up under her own power,” he said.</p>
-<p>He followed up these words by getting into the driver’s seat, and after Tom
-had removed the wreck of the propeller, his cousin started up the engine and
-threw in the clutch connecting it with the driving machinery.</p>
-<p>The rear wheels flew round in the sand for a minute, but as the boy applied
-more power they gripped the surface and the Flying Road Racer—an automobile
-now—moved rapidly up the beach. Jack ran her in under a grove of trees and then
-shut off the engine.</p>
-<p>“If only we weren’t on an island,” he said, “we could run right through to
-the city of Mexico!”</p>
-<p>“Gee, I wish we could,” said Ned Bangs, “it’s a question of how long the grub
-will hold out on this island, and we don’t know if any ships come this way.”</p>
-<p>“Easy enough to find out,” said Tom rather carelessly.</p>
-<p>“Easy enough?” echoed Ned. “Well, Tom Jesson, you’ll have to show me. Here
-we are, cut off from all communication——”</p>
-<p>Tom smiled and shook his head.</p>
-<p>“Not while we’ve got the wireless,” he said.</p>
-<p>“What do you mean, Tom?” asked Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>“That when I left the <i>Vagrant</i> I brought her wireless apparatus with
-me,” said Tom in a quiet tone. “That’s what those bundles were.”</p>
-<p>“Good,” exclaimed Mr. Jesson. “We’ll have something to eat and some hot
-coffee, and then we’ll try to get into communication with the shore, or some
-vessel, and get them to take us off this desolate place.”</p>
-<p>But Jack, who had been looking about the island in their vicinity, dampened
-their enthusiasm by a sudden question.</p>
-<p>“How are you going to fix an aerial?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“Easy enough,” said Tom confidently; “some tree will do. Ned Bangs, here, can
-climb it. Luckily I loaded a lot of copper wire with the other stuff. We can use
-that for antenna.”</p>
-<p>“Why, you monkey!” cried Jack, half laughing, “there isn’t a tree on the
-island.”</p>
-<p>This fact, which none of them had noticed before, was evidently so. The
-island was covered with a scrub growth, but nowhere did the bushes exceed a
-height of ten feet.</p>
-<p>Professor Chadwick broke in on their dejection.</p>
-<p>“Come,” he said, “it’s no use our discussing anything now. Let us have a good
-meal and then, maybe, we’ll hit upon some plan.”</p>
-<p>While Jupe made his preparations for a warm meal, selecting a spot sheltered
-by brush not far from the remains of the Flying Road Racer, the boys gathered
-driftwood, of which there seemed to be plenty on the beach, and made a big pile
-of it. This was lighted, and the warmth of the blaze proved very comforting to
-the chilled castaways.</p>
-<p>As Professor Chadwick had predicted, the meal served to put new heart into
-them. As they ate they discussed their situation in all its bearings, but
-without arriving at any conclusion as to their future course.</p>
-<p>If they could not get a wireless message to some station on land or ship,
-their situation looked as if it might speedily become serious. They did not
-dwell on this aspect of the case, however, but made a determined effort to be as
-cheerful as possible.</p>
-<p>After dinner, if such the meal could be called. Professor Chadwick and Mr.
-Jesson set out to explore the island. The others, except Jack and Tom, lay down
-to sleep, being’ thoroughly exhausted by what they had gone through.</p>
-<p>The two lads, however, felt too excited to sleep. Instead, they fell to
-figuring how it would be possible to send out a message telling of their plight,
-without having a tall pole or tree to which to string their aerials.</p>
-<p>The problem was perplexing, and they threshed it over and over for an hour
-without arriving any nearer a plan for getting their wires into the air. It was
-Jack who finally hit upon what was literally an inspiration.</p>
-<p>Close to them, while they had been talking, lay the pile of life jackets they
-had taken off when they landed.</p>
-<p>“Is there any of that liquid rubber for repairing the tires in the Flying
-Road Racer?” he inquired of Tom, with seeming meaningless curiosity.</p>
-<p>“Why, yes; there’s a gallon can of it. But why?”</p>
-<p>“You’ll see directly. Will you get it?”</p>
-<p>“Yes, of course,” rejoined Tom, rising from his seat on the sand. “Anything
-else?”</p>
-<p>“That needle and stout thread in the gas bag tool kit and—well, I guess that
-will be all for now.”</p>
-<p>“I wish I knew what you are driving at,” said Tom, as he moved off to get the
-things Jack had asked for.</p>
-<p>“I’m driving at a way to get those aerials up,” rejoined the young inventor
-briefly.</p>
-<p>When Tom returned with the articles Jack had asked for, he found his cousin
-busily engaged in taking the cork out of one of the life jackets. This was
-easily done, as it was in granulated form.</p>
-<p>Having emptied the jacket, the boy heated some of the liquid rubber over
-Jupe’s fire till it was about the consistency of cream. This done, he proceeded
-to coat the canvas of the empty life jacket with the compound. Before he did
-this, however, he sewed a patch on over the hole he had made to drain the cork,
-leaving a bit of rubber tube, also found in the supply locker of the Flying Road
-Racer, sticking out.</p>
-<p>Tom, after a few minutes, began to realize dimly what the ingenious lad was
-doing; but he didn’t get the full understanding of Jack’s idea till the latter,
-having allowed the rubber coating to dry, walked toward the Flying Road Racer
-with it.</p>
-<p>“I see what you’ve made now. Jack,” he cried. “It’s an airproof canvas bag,
-and you’re——”</p>
-<p>“Going to fill it with gas and see if it will rise,” said Jack.</p>
-<p>As he spoke he placed the end of the rubber tube he had left protruding from
-the canvas life jacket, over a small stop-cock on the gas tank of the Flying
-Road Racer. When he turned the valve a hissing sound followed and the
-rubber-coated life jacket began to fill, just as any air-tight envelope would have
-done.</p>
-<p>When it was half full a laughable thing occurred, giving abundant evidence of
-the bag’s buoyancy. Jack, who was holding it, was suddenly lifted off his feet
-as the bag began to rise, tearing the end of the rubber tube off the valve as it
-did so. Just as he was lifted into the air, for he actually couldn’t make up his
-mind to let go of his invention, Tom seized his feet and dragged him to the sand
-again. A rope was secured and the bag lashed to a bush after the end of the tube
-had been tied.</p>
-<p>“By cracky!” cried Tom, “that’s the invention of the century. How on earth
-did you come to think of it?”</p>
-<p>“I suppose old Mother Necessity had something to do with it,” said Jack; “but
-the fact that those life jackets lay right close to us helped a lot. I reasoned
-it out that they would float on the water, and therefore, if they could be
-emptied and made air-tight, they would rise when filled with gas equally
-well.”</p>
-<p>“And you’re going to hitch the aerials on to that one and send them up?”</p>
-<p>“I’m not sure that one of them will be enough to raise such a weight of
-copper wire. I guess we’ll make another one.”</p>
-<p>“And I’ll help you,” cried Tom enthusiastically.</p>
-<p>Half an hour later when Mr. Jesson and his brother-in-law returned from
-exploring the island, which they had found to be a desolate spot some five miles
-off shore, they found two busy lads.</p>
-<p>The wires had been strung on “spreaders” cut from the brush. Then one of the
-ends was connected to each of the buoyant “balloons” that were to carry the
-antenna aloft.</p>
-<p>In the lee of the Flying Road Racer the boys had arranged the wireless
-equipment, and were now occupied in securing the lower end of the antenna and
-adjusting the connecting wires from aerials to the instruments.</p>
-<p>At last all was ready, and the two canvas “balloons” were cut loose. Slowly
-but steadily they rose, carrying with them the strands of copper wire,—five of
-them, each one hundred feet in length. The wind had died down quite a lot, and
-there was not much strain on the wires as they were pulled skyward like the
-string of a kite.</p>
-<p>As the wires tightened and became extended to their full length the boys
-broke into a cheer. Held by the captive “balloons,” the five parallel wires made
-as effective an aerial as if they had been rigged to a lofty pole.</p>
-<p>“Boys,” exclaimed Professor Chadwick proudly, “that’s what I call a real
-wireless triumph!”</p>
-<p>“Wait and see if it works first, father,” said Jack, with a happy smile. He
-had not much doubt on this point, having solved the vexatious problem of getting
-his wires aloft.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xxivan-appeal-for-help'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XXIV—AN APPEAL FOR HELP</h2>
-</div>
-<p>“What are you going to do now?” asked Tom of Jack, who, with the receivers
-clamped over his ears, was seated at the wireless apparatus.</p>
-<p>It was the middle of the afternoon, the storm had blown itself out and the
-sun was shining cheerfully.</p>
-<p>About the young inventors pressed the castaways,—for they had been
-awakened,—Captain Andrews, so that he might make an observation and get their
-exact position, and the rest to be on hand if need arose.</p>
-<p>Jack had just flashed out the location of the island, and with it a fervent
-appeal for help. From the balloon-supported wires above him, the message had
-gone shooting forth into space.</p>
-<p>But as yet no answer had come, though the lad sat with the transmitting
-switch open, waiting for a reply.</p>
-<p>“Maybe there are no ships in this part of the Gulf,” said Tom.</p>
-<p>“Well, with the power we have from that dynamo we ought to have gotten into
-communication with something before this,” said Jack impatiently. He turned his
-head toward the dynamo of the Flying Road Racer, which had been connected with
-the wireless apparatus and was whizzing away merrily. The motor, fed by a fresh
-supply of gas obtained by dumping in a new lot of crystals, of course supplied
-the motive power for the current maker.</p>
-<p>“Try again,” suggested Professor Chadwick.</p>
-<p>Jack threw over the switch to connect the transmitting appliances, and began
-manipulating the key once more.</p>
-<p>The message of distress crackled and flashed, like the snapping of a whip
-lash,—or, more truly, a thousand of them.</p>
-<p>Jack was utilizing every atom of power he could obtain. He calculated that he
-had at least one hundred and ten volts of current, which should be ample to send
-his messages for a great distance.</p>
-<p>After sending for a while he stopped and listened. But no message came
-beating against his ears, breathing a spirit of hope.</p>
-<p>“Try sending out a C. Q. D.,” said Abner Jennings.</p>
-<p>“You mean S. O. S.,” rejoined Jack. “C. Q. D. isn’t used as an urgent call
-any more. Too many would-be jokers used to send it out and cause endless
-confusion.”</p>
-<p>He threw the switch again into a sending position, and began to flash out
-another message.</p>
-<p>“o o o —— —— —— o o o” “S. O. S.”</p>
-<p>It was the most urgent call known to seamen. The despairing cry of the
-wrecked the lost.</p>
-<p>Again and again Jack volleyed it out, and the far-flung appeal went
-skyrocketing off on the electric waves, spreading like the ripples on a pond
-from the tightly stretched aerials. It was signed “The Chadwick Party.”</p>
-<p>Then the lad tried listening again.</p>
-<p>Suddenly a look of joy flashed over his face.</p>
-<p>“He’s getting an answer!” yelled Tom in huge excitement. Ned Banks, hardly
-less enthusiastic, capered about.</p>
-<p>Jack’s pencil traced the message from space on a pad of paper placed on an
-empty box before him.</p>
-<p>“What is it? What’s the matter?”</p>
-<p>Once more he began sending furiously.</p>
-<p>“We have been driven on a desert island off the Mexican coast.”</p>
-<p>“Where is it?” came the reply. “Give latitude and longitude.”</p>
-<p>Jack swiftly flashed back the required information. Then he asked a
-question.</p>
-<p>“Who is this?”</p>
-<p>“The <i>Sea King</i>,” was the astonishing reply.</p>
-<p>“We are coming to your aid. Have you got the gems?”</p>
-<p>“Yes. They are safe, and we are all well, but in need of help,” the lad sent
-back with a joyous heart.</p>
-<p>He listened for a reply, but none came. In fact, there was no need for more
-communication. The castaways knew what they wanted to know most of all, namely,
-that they would be taken off the island as soon as possible. In the meantime.
-Professor Chadwick ordered Jupe to prepare a royal spread in celebration of the
-event.</p>
-<p>“We look like a lot of pirates,” commented Jack, as, after a hearty meal,
-they lay stretched about the fire.</p>
-<p>“I suppose that, like most boys, you have a sort of admiration for those
-gentry?” inquired Captain Andrews.</p>
-<p>“Well, he’s stuffed his head with enough books about them,” chuckled Tom.</p>
-<p>“Guess that applies to you, too,” parried Jack, with a grin.</p>
-<p>“I don’t suppose, though, that either of you ever saw a real pirate,”
-commented the captain quietly. “I can tell you they are mighty different beings
-from the red-sashed, romantic sort of chaps you read about.”</p>
-<p>“Why, have you ever seen any?” asked Jack, sitting up eagerly.</p>
-<p>“Yes, and fought with ’em, too. Care to hear the yarn?” responded the
-seaman.</p>
-<p>The boys’ prompt affirmative removed all doubts on this score and Captain
-Andrews, without further preliminaries, struck into his tale.</p>
-<p>“It was a good many years ago,” he said, “when I wasn’t much bigger than you
-lads. But for all that I was acting as third mate on a sailing packet running
-from Liverpool to the West Indies. The skipper, whose name was David Munson, was
-a stern man, but kind enough. He had a curious way of keeping to himself,
-though, and the men said that some time before he had been attacked by
-sea-robbers, who had cut him down and captured his wife and child, who sailed with
-him. But the rascals had not thought it worth while to take him and left him for
-dead on his burning vessel. For they, according to their usual custom, had set
-it on fire before they sailed away.</p>
-<p>“Captain Munson recovered consciousness in the nick of time to stagger out of
-the path of the flames. A boat lay astern of his craft and he had just strength
-enough left to slide down a rope into this and cast off. Then he lost
-consciousness once more.</p>
-<p>“For three days he drifted in this way, lying all the time in a dead swoon.
-On the third day he was picked up, more dead than alive, by a Bristol line
-clipper, which brought him back to England.</p>
-<p>“It was many a long day before he got about again and it was then found that
-he had lost all recollection of the tragedy and appeared to think that his
-vessel had perished in a storm. But, except for this, his mind was clear enough
-and he found little difficulty in getting a new command. This was the West
-Indiaman <i>Cambrian Hills</i>, of which I was third mate. Captain Munson’s
-story was related to me by the first mate, a man named Sterling, a fine seaman
-and a good fellow. This Sterling had been on board the ship that the pirates had
-captured and had been made prisoner by them. But later he had managed to make
-his escape from the South American city to which they had taken him to be sold
-as a slave.</p>
-<p>“Reaching England, he found that his former skipper, whom he had thought
-dead, was alive and in good health, but that his mind was hopelessly clouded as
-to the past. In fact, he did not recognize Sterling, and Sterling, fearing the
-consequences of reminding him of what had occurred on the Spanish main, made no
-move to awaken his slumbering memory. This was the strange story Mate Sterling
-told me one stormy night on watch.</p>
-<p>“Well, on this particular voyage the <i>Cambrian Hills</i> came in for the
-buffeting of their life. Heavy gales, head seas, and violent squalls beat the
-craft about day after day. And at last up came a terrific gale from the
-northeast, which carried us away off our course and down off the coast of
-Brazil.</p>
-<p>“Now, as it so happened, this was the very worst place we could have been
-driven to at this particular time. One of those little wars that were then
-eternally harassing the South American republics had just come to an end and the
-seas thereabouts were swarming with piratical craft. These gentry called
-themselves privateers and carried government papers, but were, to all intents
-and purposes, pirates and nothing more nor less.</p>
-<p>“Following the gale, the weather fell into a regular condition of doldrums.
-Sometimes it blew a light wind, but more often a dead calm till it seemed that
-we were doomed to haunt the Brazilian coast for the rest of our lives. The men
-grew restive. It was insufferably hot and the calking in the deck seams fairly
-bubbled and boiled.</p>
-<p>“Thus passed an entire week and the only man or board whose nerves were not on
-edge was Captain Munson. He appeared not to worry or chafe over our situation in
-the least. This was the more curious, inasmuch as Sterling had informed me that
-the seas in which we lay were the very identical ones in which the fatal battle
-with the pirates who had looted Captain Munson’s last command had taken
-place.</p>
-<p>“One morning just after breakfast I was standing against the taffrail, with
-Sterling by my side, idly gazing horizonward for a sign of coming wind. All at
-once I saw Sterling clap his telescope to his eye and gaze intently off into the
-southeast.</p>
-<p>“‘Wind?’ says I.</p>
-<p>“‘No,’ says he.</p>
-<p>“‘Well, what then?’ says I.</p>
-<p>“‘A sail,’ says he.</p>
-<p>“‘Then they must be getting more wind than we are,’ says I. ‘What do you make
-her out to be?’</p>
-<p>“‘Can’t tell yet; but somehow I don’t much like the look of her.’</p>
-<p>“He handed me the glass.</p>
-<p>“‘Take a look yourself,’ he said.</p>
-<p>“I squinted through the telescope and at last made out the distant sail. She
-was a black brigantine, low in the water and with a rakish sort of look about
-her masts and spars. The water over around her was dark blue—of a deeper tinge
-than the ocean surrounding us—showing that the wind was blowing off in that
-direction.</p>
-<p>“‘She doesn’t show any colors,’ says I, handing the glass back to Sterling.
-‘What do you make her out to be?’</p>
-<p>“He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-<p>“‘I don’t know, laddie,’ he said, ‘but she looks to me like a war vessel of
-some sort. Maybe a Brazilian craft.’</p>
-<p>“‘Well, whatever she is,’ says I, ‘she’s got the wind with her and it’ll hit
-us in a minute.’</p>
-<p>“‘That’s right,’ says he, coming out of a sort of a reverie. ‘Get your yards
-squared and your courses braced up.’</p>
-<p>“I hastened to put these orders into execution, and hardly had they been
-completed when the long awaited wind struck us. The <i>Cambrian Hills</i>
-heeled over and began to move through the water.</p>
-<p>“The crew set up a cheer as we began to get under way and the noise brought
-the skipper on deck. He looked more than usually grave and had a Bible, which he
-had evidently been reading, in his hand.</p>
-<p>“‘Wind at last, Mr. Sterling?’ he said quietly.</p>
-<p>“‘Aye! aye, sir,’ said the mate. ‘I knew the luck was bound to turn,’ he
-added.</p>
-<p>“‘There is no such thing as luck, Mr. Sterling,’ said the captain in his
-quiet, grave way. ‘All is the doings of Providence.’</p>
-<p>“Then he turned and moved away, but Sterling was at his side in a minute.</p>
-<p>“‘There’s a sail off there to windward, sir. Will you take a look at her and
-tell us what you think of her? You know it pays to be suspicious in these
-waters, and I don’t much like her looks.’</p>
-<p>“In his usual serious manner the skipper took the glass and gazed through it
-at the brigantine, which, to my eye, was sailing two feet to our one, and
-overhauling us fast. He gazed at her a long time and when he set the glass down
-his face was working curiously. He clapped his hand to his forehead as if
-something there hurt him.</p>
-<p>“‘I—I—There’s something strangely familiar about that craft, Mr. Sterling,’
-says he, ‘but, for the life of me, I can’t tell what it is.’</p>
-<p>“‘Looks to me like a man-o’-war of some sort, sir,’ says Sterling.</p>
-<p>“He took up the glass again and scrutinized the stranger. Then I saw the
-color begin to die out of his red, good-natured face till it grew white as a
-corpse.</p>
-<p>“‘It’s an armed vessel, sir,’ he grated out through his clenched teeth,
-‘and—and she’s just broken out the Black Flag,—the skull and cross bones,
-sir!’</p>
-<p>“‘A pirate, eh?’ said Munson quietly, and I noticed the same curious
-expression pass across his face. It was the strained look of a man trying to
-recall something that eludes him persistently. ‘Well, Mr. Sterling, she’s faster
-than us. We must fight for it, sir,’ he said at length.</p>
-<p>“‘Aye, sir,’ says Sterling gravely, ‘I’ll call the men aft and explain to
-them. Andrews, my lad, you attend to distributing the weapons.’</p>
-<p>“Every West Indiaman in those days carried a small arsenal of
-weapons—blunderbusses and cutlasses—for attacks by roving bands of sea-robbers
-were not infrequent. The men took the news well enough, although one or two of
-them went white. But there were enough old veterans among them to keep them
-steady and prevent a panic.</p>
-<p>“I guess the resolute bearing of Captain Munson and Mr. Sterling had a good
-deal to do with putting heart into them. As for myself, I was horribly scared
-inside, but I trust that my alarm did not appear too conspicuously on my
-countenance.</p>
-<p>“The men gave a cheer as Captain Munson concluded his little speech and I
-summoned three of them below to assist in the distribution of the arms. In the
-meantime Mr. Sterling gave orders to the men to rig up as many dummies as
-possible and station them along the bulwarks so that we might seem to be more in
-number than we actually were. This was a common enough trick in those days.</p>
-<p>“I have to smile even now when I think of it, but one good fellow in his zeal
-even clapped a cap on top of the galley chimney, although what a man would have
-been doing poking his head out of ‘Charley Noble’—as the cook-house stack is
-called by seamen—is hard to say. By the time all our preparations were completed
-the craft that was overhauling us was not more than half a mile astern.</p>
-<p>“She was a handsome craft and a witch at sailing. The <i>Cambrian Hills</i>
-was accounted a fast vessel; but we weren’t in it with our pursuer. If we had
-had any doubt as to her intentions toward us till then she soon dispelled it.
-From her bow came a flash and a puff of smoke and a ball screamed through our
-rigging. It did no harm—wasn’t meant to, probably—but it showed us that they
-‘meant business.’</p>
-<p>“The <i>Cambrian Hills</i> carried an old brass cannon, more for saluting
-purposes than anything else. But we had slugs on board and the piece of
-artillery was loaded up. But the enemy, as we now rightfully regarded her, was
-too far off for our carronade to be effective as yet. She, on the other hand,
-appeared to have a serviceable heavy gun. All this was not encouraging, but the
-prospect grew worse as we swept their decks with the glass. Fully forty men
-lined her bulwarks and we numbered only twenty, including the cook, who was not
-accounted a first class fighting man. Of him, however, more anon.</p>
-<p>“I was a young fellow then and had always thought of pirates as being chaps
-all covered with finery, gold lace and jewels and such. I was stricken with
-astonishment to see that no such men appeared on the brigantine. They were all
-filthy, wretched looking things, many of them being coal-black negroes. Among
-them were even one or two Chinese. Such a mixture of races I never saw before or
-since.</p>
-<p>“Suddenly Captain Munson, to my astonishment, snatched up his speaking
-trumpet and hailed the pirate, who was now almost alongside and to windward.</p>
-<p>“‘Ship ahoy!’</p>
-<p>“His voice was as bold as if he had been skipper of a man-o’-war hailing a
-sea criminal. It was a bold move, but it was successful in producing some
-confusion among the pirates. All at once a giant of a man with a black beard
-stepped up on the pirate’s rail, holding on by the lee forestays.</p>
-<p>“‘Hullo!’ he hailed in a foreign accent.</p>
-<p>“‘What ship’s that?’ hailed Captain Munson again.</p>
-<p>“‘None of your business. Heave to. I want to board you,’ was the reply in an
-insolent voice.</p>
-<p>“‘You go plumb to blazes!’ came from Sterling, who was a hot-tempered chap
-and could contain himself no longer.</p>
-<p>“At that very instant a puff of wind blew the man’s black beard aside. He
-clutched at it desperately, but somehow he bungled the job, and to my utter
-astonishment—it came off! He stood revealed as a man of huge frame with a brutal
-bull-dog jaw and unmistakable Latin cast of features. But I had little time to
-notice this, for a strange cry had broken from Captain Munson’s lips as the
-man’s disguise blew off. He turned deathly pale and staggered like a drunken
-man.</p>
-<p>“Sterling and I rushed to his side. We thought for a minute that he was about
-to faint. But he rallied and stared at us for a moment wildly.</p>
-<p>“‘Good Lord!’ exclaimed Sterling, ‘it’s all come back to him!’</p>
-<p>“Then I understood. That man who had hailed us was the captain of the same
-piratical band that had attacked Captain Munson’s other ship and carried off his
-wife and child. The next instant following Sterling’s exclamation was a dramatic
-one.</p>
-<p>“‘You know me, sir?’ asked the mate.</p>
-<p>“‘Yes! Yes! You’re Robert Sterling,’ burst from the captain’s lips. ‘I recall
-it all now. The fight! That ruffian struck me down. I woke up to find you all
-gone. But, Sterling, how do you come to be here,—and—and where are Bess and the
-baby?’</p>
-<p>“I felt sorry for Sterling then. His face went as white as the captain’s
-visage and he actually shook as if from cold. But he had to answer.</p>
-<p>“‘Better off than if they were in the hands of those ruffians, sir,’ he
-replied in a low voice which shook perilously, ‘they are——’</p>
-<p>“‘Dead!’ burst out the captain, with a terrible cry.</p>
-<p>“Sterling bowed his head.</p>
-<p>“‘Your wife leaped overboard rather than be sold down the coast as a slave,’
-he said slowly, ‘and—and she took the baby with her.’</p>
-<p>“I did not dare to look at Captain Munson’s face. But I could hear his breath
-come short and quick, just like a man breathes after a long, hard swim. But the
-next instant we had other things to think of. A volley of small arms from the
-pirate craft whistled about our ears. She was up to windward and evidently meant
-to grapple and board us. What followed is hard to describe. I don’t know how
-most men feel in a fight of that character, but it seemed to me that I was in a
-dream. I fired and loaded, and fired and loaded, while all about me bullets were
-flying and fallen men groaning. Splinters flew as the pirate’s volleys raked our
-rails. I was suddenly conscious of being wounded, but I fought on, actually
-hardly knowing what I was doing.</p>
-<p>“Suddenly the pirate’s sails loomed close alongside. Our yardarms locked with
-his. Grappling irons were thrown aboard us and the whole horde of ruffians tried
-to board us by main force. But they met with such desperate resistance that they
-were compelled to retreat for the time. Right here is where the cook figured.
-Just as things looked most critical he turned the tide for us. Attached to a
-huge boiler in his domain was a hose, used for washing stains out of the
-decks.</p>
-<p>“While we had been arming he had made up a roaring fire. By the time the
-pirates boarded us there was enough boiling water in the boiler to make that
-hose an effective weapon. Yelling like an Indian, the cook turned it on the
-scrambling mass of rascals. The stream of boiling water was more effective than
-bullets. With yells and cries they fell back, some of them scalded horribly.</p>
-<p>“All this time I had lost sight of Captain Munson. Now I glimpsed him, just
-in time to see him leap into the main chains and from thence on to the bulwarks
-of the pirate ship. His face was fixed and terrible and held an expression of
-desperate resolve. Cutlass in hand, he fought his way through the demoralized
-pirates and at last I saw, in a flash of understanding, his purpose. His object
-was to find out, and kill with his own hands, the pirate chief. Hardly had I
-realized this before the men encountered each other. Apparently the pirate
-recognized Munson instantly, for I saw him recoil as if he had seen a ghost. But
-the next instant he had recovered and began to fight desperately for his
-life.</p>
-<p>“In the meantime some of our crew had cut the two vessels apart, and before
-any of us recovered his wits and started to the captain’s rescue the two craft
-had drifted so far asunder that it was impossible. With horrified fascination we
-watched the fight, and if it held us spellbound it appeared to have the same
-effect on the pirate crew; at any rate, none of them interfered.</p>
-<p>“Such a furious fight could not, in the nature of things, last long, but it
-came to an altogether unexpected conclusion. Captain Munson’s cutlass had broken
-off short and he closed with his enemy, grasping him about the waist. They both
-reeled backward—and suddenly vanished from sight. A hatchway had been left open,
-and in their blind fury neither had noticed it. Tripping on the coaming, they
-had plunged into it.</p>
-<p>“Suddenly we heard a shot from the pirate craft, and then came a great cry. I
-could not make out what all the yelling was about, and turned to Sterling who
-seemed equally spellbound at the horror of the thing we had just witnessed.</p>
-<p>“‘What is it? What are they saying?’ I demanded.</p>
-<p>“‘They are shouting that the magazine is on fire!’ he exclaimed, ‘that a shot
-fired by the Englishman has ignited the powder!’”</p>
-<p>“The words had hardly left his lips before a hot blast rushed full at me. I
-was knocked from my feet, saw a vast sheet of flame before me, and knew no more.
-When I came to I discovered Sterling bending over me. His face was very grave
-and serious.</p>
-<p>“‘What has happened?’ I asked weakly.</p>
-<p>“‘The pirate ship is blown up,’ he replied; ‘not a vestige of her is
-left.’</p>
-<p>“‘And Captain Munson?’ I demanded, although I knew what the reply would
-be.</p>
-<p>“Sterling removed his cap; a last tribute to a brave man.</p>
-<p>”‘Has gone with her to Jones’ locker,’ he rejoined; ‘maybe it was better so.
-It would be just about here that his wife and baby died.’”</p>
-<p>Captain Andrews paused. So ended his story, which cast a gloom over the party
-that was not to be dispelled. Soon after, therefore, they retired, with the
-picture of the sea captain’s tragic death still vividly before their eyes.</p>
-<p>Before joining the others. Jack tried to get into communication with the
-<i>Sea King</i> by wireless once more. But he failed. However, this did not
-worry them, as they knew that their friends must know where to find them.</p>
-<p>“I wonder when they’ll arrive here,” said Professor Chadwick, as they
-prepared to spend as comfortable a night as they could on the sand. “Those
-repairs were surely effected quickly,” he added.</p>
-<p>“Very quickly,” said Captain Andrews, who alone of the party had not been
-almost wild with delight at the prospect of the rescue. “By the way. Jack, you
-are quite sure that it was the <i>Sea King</i> that you were in communication
-with?”</p>
-<p>“Of course,” rejoined the lad rather impatiently, “who else could it have
-been? Who would have had any object in trying to pass themselves off as the
-<i>Sea King</i> unless they——”</p>
-<p>He stopped short and looked rather blank all of a sudden. The idea of Herrera
-had just crossed his mind. And then that ship that they had seen laboring in the
-stormy sea that afternoon?</p>
-<p>“Pshaw!” said the lad to himself; “she had two masts and a yellow funnel,
-there’s no chance of that being the <i>Tarantula</i>.”</p>
-<p>When he voiced this belief aloud later on, the others agreed with him. But
-Captain Andrews, still suspicious, determined, he said, to keep watch. The
-others, almost too tired to keep their eyes open, rather ridiculed this
-precaution, and soon sleep enwrapped every one on that desolate island.</p>
-<p>Every one? Yes; for tired nature had asserted herself and Captain Andrews,
-after a hard struggle to keep awake, dozed off, woke with a start, dozed off
-again and finally slumbered profoundly.</p>
-<p>Had he kept his eyes open a while longer he would have seen something
-approaching the island that would have caused him to keep awake with a
-vengeance. This object was nothing more nor less than the <i>Tarantula</i>,
-disguised cunningly by a canvas smokestack painted yellow, and two masts.</p>
-<p>Herrera early that day had ascended the river and heard of the flight of the
-prisoners and the destruction of his hemp-drying plant. Half crazy with fury he
-kept a watch on the skies and saw the Flying Road Racer, high in air as she was
-driven seaward after her perilous experience in the circular storm.</p>
-<p>In defiance of the wild weather he at once prepared to put to sea disguising
-his ship, as he had done on other occasions, as she dropped down the river.</p>
-<p>Me had seen the storm-racked air craft as she flew above him. He had observed
-her, in fact, at the very moment that the adventurers espied his tossing craft.
-To his chagrin, however, she passed out of sight. But he held on in the
-direction she had vanished determined not to give up the chase of those precious
-stones till he had exhausted every means of trying to obtain them.</p>
-<p>Just as he was despairing of ever hearing of the Flying Road Racer again.
-Jack’s “S. O. S.” message had come winging across the sea. As soon as his
-operator gave him the despatch the rascal conceived the daring plan of
-impersonating the <i>Sea King</i> and in this guise he flashed back the
-message inquiring the position of the castaways. He took care to ascertain that
-the gems were safe.</p>
-<p>While profound and peaceful sleep wrapped the party of adventurers, a boat
-landed on the beach, crowded with men. It came from the <i>Tarantula</i>,
-which had anchored about two hundred yards to seaward. Every man was armed and
-among them was Herrera with one or two of his chosen aides.</p>
-<p>Their plans had been formed before they landed and they silently sneaked up
-on the castaways’ camp. They were agreeably surprised to find no sentries
-posted.</p>
-<p>According to previous plans, each man of the crew carried ropes and gags. The
-sleeping party was surprised without warning and tied and gagged without a
-chance of their presenting any opposition. Each of the Chadwick party, as they
-awakened under the rough handling of the henchmen of Herrera, was given a strong
-hint not to resist, in the form of a pistol barrel pressed to the nape of his
-neck.</p>
-<p>As resistance would have been worse than useless all submitted quietly to the
-outrage, and Herrera’s triumph appeared to be complete. When they all had been
-secured the marauders commenced a frantic search for the great silver jewel
-casket. They found it without much difficulty under the professor’s coat which
-he had used as a pillow. Not expecting any attack he had not taken much pains to
-conceal it.</p>
-<p>Herrera burst into a loud laugh as he opened the casket and took out the
-three great flashing stones it contained.</p>
-<p>“So you thought that you could trick Herrera, eh, you stupid Yankee,” he
-snarled, “but I caught your message by wireless, you dogs of gringos. I spit on
-you and despise you. The jewels you thought to steal are now mine. But
-see—Herrera is generous. He leaves you the box!”</p>
-<p>As he spoke the ruffian flung the silver casket to the sand and then, with
-some gruff orders to his men, strode off across the beach. A few minutes later
-the splash of oars informed the marooned castaways that their foe had departed
-taking with him the gems they had gone through so much to save intact; and not
-only that, he took with him also their hopes of being rescued. From what he had
-said about the wireless, it was clear that he had intercepted the message for
-aid, and thus been guided to the island. The <i>Sea King</i> had not received
-word from them at all.</p>
-<p>With what bitter feelings they reviewed the situation may be imagined. And it
-did not relieve the misery of their present position, as they lay gagged and
-helpless, to reflect that if they had kept a guard, the disaster might not have
-happened. They had been trapped like so many unthinking children.</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xxvits-death-to-remain-here'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XXV—“IT’S DEATH TO REMAIN HERE!”</h2>
-</div>
-<p>Jack struggled and strained at his bonds, as, in fact, all the rest of the
-party were doing. To his delight, after a brief period of struggling, he managed
-to loosen them considerably. The work of tying up the party had been done
-hastily, and, consequently, the knots were not very hard to loosen. In fact, all
-that Herrera had wanted, was to keep them quiet till he had looted the treasure
-of the gems.</p>
-<p>When Jack had worked his hands free he pulled the gag out of his mouth, and
-then, after undoing his ankle bonds, he drew out his knife and rapidly liberated
-his companions.</p>
-<p>“Well, a fine mess I’ve made of it,” grumbled out Captain Andrews, as soon as
-he was free.</p>
-<p>“I don’t see that you were any worse than the rest of us,” said Professor
-Chadwick; “in fact, it was you who had a keen enough mind to guess that our
-message might have been received and answered by another craft than the <i>Sea
-King</i>.”</p>
-<p>“Which it was,” put in Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>“Yes; but I kept watch for a while,” contritely said the captain, “and—I’m
-bitterly ashamed to say it,—I fell asleep at my post of duty.”</p>
-<p>“For which we don’t attach a bit of blame to you,” said Professor Chadwick;
-“what we had passed through was enough to exhaust a giant. To tell you the
-truth, I almost feel relieved now that the gems are gone.”</p>
-<p>“The natives had a legend that they brought bad luck,” said Mr. Jesson, “and
-indeed they seemed to.”</p>
-<p>“I hope they bring evil fortune to that greaser who has them now,” struck in
-Abner Jennings.</p>
-<p>The two sailors added their growling assent to this wish, nor could any of
-the party refrain from echoing it.</p>
-<p>[Illustration: Jack liberated Captain Andrews.]</p>
-<p>“I suppose he’s got clear away,” hazarded Ned presently.</p>
-<p>“Of course he has,” grunted Captain Andrews. “I’ll bet there’s twenty miles
-between him and this island right now. And, incidentally, I’m ready to bet as to
-his future.”</p>
-<p>“What will it be?” asked Jack, with some curiosity.</p>
-<p>“Why, he’ll throw up his governorship,—the Diaz government is on its last
-legs, anyhow,—and skip out to Paris. He’ll sell those gems over there and—live
-happy ever afterward.”</p>
-<p>“Why Paris?” asked Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>“Oh, all those scallywags go over there when they’ve made their graft,”
-laughed Ned; “they won’t tolerate them any other place, I guess. When I was over
-there with my folks two years ago we saw more princes and exiled presidents from
-South America than you could shake a stick at. You couldn’t have thrown a brick
-on the main boulevards without hitting some ruler who had left his country for
-his country’s good.”</p>
-<p>“All of which disquisition,” said Professor Chadwick dryly, “doesn’t solve
-our problem.”</p>
-<p>“No, indeed,” said Mr. Jesson; “we are as badly off as before.”</p>
-<p>“Worse,” exclaimed Jack.</p>
-<p>“How’s that?” asked Tom.</p>
-<p>“Well, haven’t we lost those gems?”</p>
-<p>“Oh, bother the old gems,” said Tom, “we’ve got the box, haven’t we? If any
-one in the States doesn’t believe we ever had the three gems we can show them
-the casket as proof that we really did have them once.”</p>
-<p>As he spoke he picked up the box from the sand where Herrera had flung it,
-and handed it to the Professor.</p>
-<p>“It will make a handsome relic of our trip at all events,” said that
-gentleman, with half a sigh. “I guess I’ll present it to some institute
-interested in such things.”</p>
-<p>“Pity those bumps on the cover aren’t precious stones,” said Ned, indicating
-the three dull-colored knobs on the cover. “Wonder what they are there for?”</p>
-<p>“To make the box look nobby,” ventured Tom, a pun which almost cost him a
-clip on the side of the head.</p>
-<p>But they were soon recalled to the seriousness of their situation. In the
-east the day was beginning to dawn, and a return to sleep was out of the
-question after all that had occurred.</p>
-<p>“I guess I’ll get to work with the wireless,” said Jack, “it’s our only
-hope.”</p>
-<p>“Unless we could swim ashore,” said Captain Andrews. “It isn’t more than five
-miles off.”</p>
-<p>“True. But from what we could see yesterday it is a rugged, inhospitable
-shore,” said Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>“Most anything would be better than this, though, so long as it was the
-mainland,” said Ned.</p>
-<p>“Yes, if only the old Flying Road Racer would have kept in the air half an
-hour longer,” groaned Tom, “we might have used her as an auto to reach some
-civilized spot.”</p>
-<p>“We could easily have done that,” struck in Jack. “The engine and running
-gear are in perfect order. So far as that is concerned, she is ready for a road
-trip of a thousand miles right now.”</p>
-<p>“You ought to have fixed it so she could swim, while you were about it,” said
-Ned.</p>
-<p>He meant the remark as a joke; but Jack answered quite seriously.</p>
-<p>“I’ve been thinking over such a plan,” he said; “maybe some day I’ll get to
-work and invent something that will make the good old craft as capable in the
-water as she is on land and in the air.”</p>
-<p>“Wish you could invent it right now,” began Ned with a laugh. “I——”</p>
-<p>He stopped short with a puzzled look, which, oddly enough, was reflected on
-all their races the next moment.</p>
-<p>“My legs are wobbly!” cried Tom.</p>
-<p>“By the trident of Neptune,” roared Captain Andrews, “so are mine!”</p>
-<p>“It’s not our legs!” cried Mr. Jesson, “it’s the ground that’s moving!”</p>
-<p>“The whole island is quivering like jelly!” cried Ned.</p>
-<p>“Good land, what ails de place? It’s done got chills and feber!” shouted Jupe
-from his pots and pans, which were now rolling in every direction.</p>
-<p>The tremor grew stronger. Accompanying it was a queer, moaning sort of sound.
-All at once there came a violent convulsion, and they were all thrown flat. The
-roaring noise increased till it was almost deafening.</p>
-<p>“It’s an earthquake!” called out Professor Chadwick.</p>
-<p>“An earthquake?” cried the others in terrified tones as they rolled
-about.</p>
-<p>Suddenly, not far from them, a great ragged fissure yawned in the earth and
-almost instantly closed again. From that moment, for the ensuing ten minutes,
-the castaways were in a condition bordering on panic. With the very earth under
-their feet refusing them support they felt that they were, indeed, in a sorry
-plight.</p>
-<p>At the conclusion of the period of time mentioned, the shocks stopped as
-suddenly as they had begun.</p>
-<p>“Do you think there’ll be any more of them?” asked Tom in rather a quavery
-voice.</p>
-<p>“Impossible to say,” said Mr. Jesson. “I imagine that this is a continuation
-of the one that caused that cliff to collapse, which resulted in my escape from
-those Indians.”</p>
-<p>“I suspect that is it,” said Professor Chadwick. “The great storm may have
-also resulted from the generally disturbed conditions. We may have no more
-shocks and we may have a dozen.”</p>
-<p>“I’ve known cases of whole islands being swallowed in the South Seas——” began
-Abner Jennings gloomily.</p>
-<p>But Professor Chadwick stopped him.</p>
-<p>“If you can’t talk of something more cheerful, my man, don’t talk at all,” he
-said.</p>
-<p>“And tidal waves, too, that wiped out whole cities like Galveston,” muttered
-Jennings, in a low tone, however.</p>
-<p>“There is no reason to expect that another shock will occur,” resumed the
-Professor; “the very nature of these seismic disturbances results in——”</p>
-<p>“Wow! Glory to Goshen, here comes annudder one!” bellowed Jupe, dropping a
-frying pan with a clatter and throwing himself flat on his face.</p>
-<p>The others followed his example. Indeed, it was impossible to remain on one’s
-feet. The mighty earth waves undulated like the billows of the sea.</p>
-<p>This shock lasted longer than the other, and was more severe. When it was
-over they arose to their feet considerably unnerved by the convulsion of
-nature.</p>
-<p>“Do——do you think there is any danger of this island sinking. Professor?”
-asked Ned in a shaky voice.</p>
-<p>“I do not,” rejoined the other with a confidence that he was very far from
-actually feeling, however. “I see no evidence of any volcanic formation
-hereabouts.”</p>
-<p>“Maybe de ole Mudder Earth done got a bad tummy ache,” hazarded Jupe.</p>
-<p>“I wish she’d get it in her foot, then,” grumbled Ned. “I don’t—say, Jack,”
-he broke off suddenly, “am I seeing things or is that beach narrower than it
-was?”</p>
-<p>A worried look passed over Jack’s face.</p>
-<p>“I’m afraid your eyesight is all right, Ned,” he said. “The water is closer
-than it was, beyond a doubt.”</p>
-<p>“And that means?” gasped Captain Andrews. “That we are sinking,” calmly said
-Professor Chadwick. “There is no use deceiving ourselves. Jack, send out a call
-for aid. There may be a chance of some ship catching the message.”</p>
-<p>Jack sent an appeal flashing forth from the wireless. Then he listened as
-usual for an answer.</p>
-<p>It came, but not in the way he had expected. He flung the receivers from his
-ears with an angry expression.</p>
-<p>“It’s that rascal Herrera,” he said. “He intercepted the call.”</p>
-<p>“The villain! What did he say?” demanded Mr. Jesson.</p>
-<p>“He said that we could stay here till the island sank, for all he cared, and
-added that Diaz had been driven out of Mexico, and that he was off to Europe
-with those gems.”</p>
-<p>“Dat dere coffee-colored man is de worst no ’count trash I ebber done heard
-of,” announced Jupe solemnly, while the others stood thunderstruck at such
-pitiless behavior.</p>
-<p>Before they could utter a word of comment, however, another shock struck the
-island. And this time it caused an amazing thing to happen. The centre of the
-isolated spot of land had been quite an elevation. During this spasm of the
-earth, however, an astonishing change took place in the form of the island. The
-“crown” of the sandy little place sank until it was depressed into a sort of
-cup. On the outer rim of this odd subsidence of the island, were the adventurers
-who looked with alarmed eyes on this freak of the earthquake. It mean only one
-thing, and that was that if another shock occurred and the land sank any
-further, that the sea must overwhelm it utterly.</p>
-<p>While they were still looking over the altered scene. Captain Andrews gave a
-shout.</p>
-<p>“Shiver my timbers,” he cried, “look yonder, will you?”</p>
-<p>The subsidence of the centre of the island, of course, gave them a clear view
-of the distant shore and of the neck of water between it and the island.</p>
-<p>An astounding thing had happened, as the adventurers could now see. Although
-they had not known it, the island had once formed part of the mainland, and a
-narrow neck still connected it at a depth of only a few feet at low water. It
-was now low tide, and the earthquake, while it depressed the central part of the
-island, had performed a still more astonishing freak.</p>
-<p>It had raised this narrow neck linking it to the shore till it was quite a
-few inches above the level of the water, making a causeway of wet sand between
-the island and the mainland!</p>
-<p>Jack was the first to grasp the significance of this. He gave a glad shout as
-he did so.</p>
-<p>“Hurrah! We are saved!” he cried. “The earthquake has saved us!”</p>
-<p>“What?” demanded his hearers, not quite so quick-thinking as Jack.</p>
-<p>“Don’t you see?” exclaimed the boy. “We can drive the Flying Road Racer
-ashore over that neck of sand as easily as if we were taking a spin in the
-park.”</p>
-<p>“But suppose another shock causes the neck of sand to subside again?” asked
-Mr. Jesson skeptically.</p>
-<p>“We must take our chances of that,” Tom answered him. “In any case, it means
-death to remain where we are.”</p>
-</div>
-<div id='chapter-xxvian-astounding-discovery'>
-<div class='c'>
-<h2 class='mt2em mb1em fs1r2em chapter'>CHAPTER XXVI—AN ASTOUNDING DISCOVERY</h2>
-</div>
-<p>As Jack spoke, the island gave another trembling shake. It was only a slight
-one, but it warned them that, in all probability, there were to be more violent
-shocks succeeding it.</p>
-<p>It was plain enough that their escape, if it was to be made at all, must be
-made quickly. Jack and Tom at once set about dismantling the wireless station
-and packing the apparatus.</p>
-<p>The hastily extemporized life jacket balloons were hauled down and the wires
-coiled. When this had been done. Jack told everybody to take their seats in the
-car, on the top of which the dismantled gas bag had been folded by the captain
-and the two sailors, while Abner Jennings helped Jupe to pack up.</p>
-<p>Jack took his seat last of all and started the engine going. It worked
-without a hitch, and the auto,—a flying machine no longer,—moved off across the
-sand, heavily laden as it was, without difficulty.</p>
-<p>The rim about the submerged centre of the island was soon circumnavigated,
-and the beginning of the narrow neck of land reached. Then Jack fairly “let the
-car out.”</p>
-<p>The newly formed isthmus was hard, and the car flew over it under the full
-power of its engines.</p>
-<p>“Mighty good t’ing dere ain’t no speed laws in dis part ob de world,” grunted
-Jupe as they flew along.</p>
-<p>The shore appeared to rush toward them, but if they had hoped to see any
-signs of human habitation as they drew close to it they were mistaken. Nothing
-but a mass of trees, backed by rising ground, appeared along the coast as far as
-the eye could reach in either direction.</p>
-<p>As they sped along they heard behind them a sudden mighty uproar. Gazing back
-they saw the ocean heaving and boiling all about the island they had left, as if
-it had been a witches’ caldron. Great jets of water shot up, and the surface of
-the sea was flecked with foam and spume.</p>
-<p>The sight fascinated every one of them but Jack, who had to be intent on his
-driving.</p>
-<p>“The whole island is going!” shouted the Professor.</p>
-<p>He was right.</p>
-<p>With a sudden booming roar and upheaval of the ocean, the entire mass of land
-sank under the waves, which for a long time boiled and simmered above it. Just
-as the last vestige of the island vanished, leaving only the newly created
-peninsula projecting from the land, they reached the solid earth.</p>
-<p>Their dash to the mainland had taken place only just in time. A little more
-delay, they realized with shudders, would have meant their total
-annihilation.</p>
-<p>“I said the island would go,” cried Abner Jennings triumphantly. “I’ve ’em
-vanish like that in the South Seas.”</p>
-<p>No one had any comment to make. The horror of what they had just witnessed
-struck them all dumb. The gratitude they felt to Divine Providence for their
-lucky rescue filled their hearts to overflowing, and left no room for
-speech.</p>
-<p>The Flying Road Racer was stopped, and they silently gazed for a long time at
-the bubbling, heaving waters.</p>
-<p>The sight was impressive, even if it did cause a shiver and inspire a feeling
-that bordered on fear.</p>
-<p>After a while the Professor spoke. His tone was as solemn as his words.</p>
-<p>“Boys,” he said, addressing his young friends, “we have just witnessed
-something that many scientists would give a great deal to behold.”</p>
-<p>“Well, candidly,” said Tom, “I’ve seen enough of it.”</p>
-<p>So had they all, in fact, and the Flying Road Racer was soon turned north,
-following a rough road that ran parallel with the sea-coast.</p>
-<p>It was now late afternoon, and the shadows were lengthening apace. Before
-long the swift tropic night would overtake them. Although they had arrived at a
-determination to continue traveling north till they arrived at a large city,
-where a telegraph wire could be found, they did not care to risk advancing over
-the rough, half-formed road in the darkness, so a halt was made where a small
-stream of fresh water ran down to the sea, and they prepared to spend the night
-there.</p>
-<p>It was somewhat chilly and a roaring fire was built around which they seated
-themselves after the evening meal. All were rather silent and abstracted, and
-there was no inclination for conversation. The Professor had brought out the
-silver casket and was examining some queer marks like hieroglyphics on its
-cover.</p>
-<p>“I’m sure they have some sort of meaning,” he remarked to Mr. Jesson, “but
-it’s beyond me to make out what it can be. See if you can do any better.”</p>
-<p>He handed the box to his brother-in-law to examine. But in the transfer it
-was fumbled, and before Mr. Jesson could save it the silver casket rolled toward
-the fire, only stopping when it was embedded in a mass of embers.</p>
-<p>It was raked out with a stick by Mr. Jesson before it was damaged. He set it
-aside to cool before examining it, and in the meantime the boys took occasion to
-observe it more narrowly than they had yet found opportunity to do.</p>
-<p>“Say, I thought that those knobs on the top were dull-colored!” exclaimed
-Jack Chadwick suddenly.</p>
-<p>“Why, so they are!” rejoined Mr. Jesson. “Some sort of inferior stone, I
-guess. They——”</p>
-<p>“But they are not dull! Look!”</p>
-<p>Risking burning his fingers. Jack seized the still warm casket and held it
-toward his elders.</p>
-<p>On the cover, embedded in the silver, flashed and winked in the firelight,
-three magnificent gems, red, blue, green!</p>
-<p>“Let me look at that a minute. Jack,” exclaimed Professor Chadwick in sharp,
-excited tones.</p>
-<p>He took the box from his son, and an instant later his head and Mr. Jesson’s
-were close together over the rifled silver casket.</p>
-<p>“Well, gentlemen?” said Ned after a while.</p>
-<p>“Well,” echoed Professor Chadwick, “we have made a most astounding discovery.
-These gems which Jack discovered,—for they are genuine, there’s not a doubt of
-it,—must have been covered with wax of some sort. The heat of the fire, when the
-box fell into it, melted this substance, and—well, here are three gems worth,
-conservatively, two hundred and fifty thousand dollars; probably a great deal
-more.”</p>
-<p>The listeners looked at him in amazement.</p>
-<p>“But what were the gems that Herrera took out of the casket, then?” demanded
-Jack, when he found his voice.</p>
-<p>“Imitations, undoubtedly,” was the reply of Mr. Jesson. “The tribe that owned
-the genuine stones adopted this cunning means of concealing the real ones by
-coating them with wax of some sort. Then they placed inferior gems, or cunning
-imitations, within the box, trusting to the cupidity of any one who stole them
-not to investigate further.”</p>
-<p>And so it proved afterward. The stones, which the strange and seemingly
-trivial accident had revealed, turned out to be as fine specimens of their
-respective kinds as there are in existence. They were appraised at six hundred
-and eighty thousand dollars, but cryptic carvings on the back of them made them
-of infinitely more value to science as specimens of the treasures of a vanished
-race.</p>
-<p>Despite their keen excitement over the discovery that, after all, Herrera had
-not decamped with the precious stones, the adventurers slept soundly and
-peacefully that night.</p>
-<p>When they awakened the daylight was sparkling on land and sea, and Jupe was
-filling the air with appetizing aromas proceeding from his cooking fire.</p>
-<p>It was while they were in the midst of the morning meal that Jack sprang to
-his feet with a shout.</p>
-<p>“The <i>Sea King</i>! the <i>Sea King</i>!” he cried, pointing
-seaward.</p>
-<p>About half a mile off shore, steaming leisurely along, was a fine-looking
-white yacht that the Professor speedily pronounced to be, indeed, the <i>Sea
-King</i>.</p>
-<p>“The wireless, Tom, as quick as you can,” called Jack, and the two lads at
-once set about sending their life-jacket balloons aloft.</p>
-<p>This time the message that Jack sent out reached the persons it was intended
-for, and an hour later a boat came ashore and the castaways found themselves
-among their friends.</p>
-<p>Repairs had been effected in record time on the yacht, and those in charge of
-her had determined not to wait longer at Lone Island, but proceed south at once.
-They were urged to this course, also, by news from Mexico that the
-revolutionists had triumphed, and that Diaz had abdicated.</p>
-<p>We should like to chronicle more of the adventures of the Boy Inventors on
-this trip, but the exigencies of space forbid it. Suffice it to say then, that
-while the Professor, the rescued explorer and the rest, including Captain
-Andrews, voyaged to Lone Island and thence home on the <i>Sea King</i>, the
-boys drove the Flying Road Racer through Mexico, and reached home in that way by
-the overland route. They had many exciting times, but none so filled with peril
-and incident as their career on the gulf had been.</p>
-<p>In due time the <i>Vagrant</i> was also recovered and sent home by the
-newly formed Madero government. Of Herrera, all trace was lost for a time. But
-ultimately he was heard from in Paris, whither, as had been prophesied, he had
-fled when the Diaz government fell. But he is not leading the life of a
-luxurious refugee there. Far from it. The gems he had stolen with the exercise
-of so much villainy and planning, proved to be, as Professor Chadwick had
-conjectured, mere cheap imitations worth very little except as specimens of Maya
-workmanship. Herrera, when last heard from, was acting as a head waiter in an
-humble Mexican restaurant in the Latin quarter of the French capital.</p>
-<p>The genuine gems were sold to a New York millionaire, and when he dies will
-be seen in his private museum, which will then be opened to the public. The
-proceeds were shared, by the wishes of Professor Chadwick and Mr. Jesson, with
-the faithful crew of the <i>Sea King</i>, each, from Captain Andrews down,
-receiving a due portion. A handsome monument was also erected above the grave of
-poor Kettle, who fell in the battle with the Mayas.</p>
-<p>Professor Chadwick did not fulfill the object of his cruise in finding a new
-form of biologic life; but he often says that he established something far more
-precious,—namely, the safety of his long-lost brother-in-law, Tom Jesson’s
-father.</p>
-<p>One morning, not long after the household at High Towers had settled down to
-its ordinary routine, a telegram came for Jack. It contained astonishing things,
-things which were—though he didn’t guess it at the time,—to open up an entirely
-new field of invention for him and his chums, Tom Jesson and Ned Bangs.</p>
-<p>The message stated,—but positively, we must keep all that for another
-telling. In our next volume we will relate further astonishing and stirring
-occurrences in the lives of our ingenious, progressive young friends. The title
-of the forthcoming book will be <i>The Boy Inventors and the Vanishing
-Gun</i>,—a tale which promises to be of extraordinary interest to every
-American boy, brimful and running over, as it will be, with experiment and
-achievement along new and significant lines.</p>
-<div class='c'>
-<div class='mt1r5em'>THE END</div>
-</div>
-</div>
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