summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/55359-0.txt7837
-rw-r--r--old/55359-0.zipbin124958 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55359-h.zipbin415414 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55359-h/55359-h.htm8284
-rw-r--r--old/55359-h/images/cover.jpgbin100592 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55359-h/images/p1.jpgbin162833 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55359-h/images/p2.jpgbin16270 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55359.txt7845
-rw-r--r--old/55359.zipbin123405 -> 0 bytes
12 files changed, 17 insertions, 23966 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+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.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5384865
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55359 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55359)
diff --git a/old/55359-0.txt b/old/55359-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index e2545a3..0000000
--- a/old/55359-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,7837 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery Crash, by Ardon Van Buren Powell
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Mystery Crash
- Sky Scout Series, #1
-
-Author: Ardon Van Buren Powell
-
-Release Date: August 15, 2017 [EBook #55359]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY CRASH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: He caught the gunwale and pulled himself up and into the
-boat with Curt’s aid. (Page 21)]
-
-
-
-
- THE
- MYSTERY CRASH
-
-
- By VAN POWELL
-
- [Illustration: Airplane]
-
- THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY
- Akron, Ohio New York
-
- Copyright MCMXXXII
- THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY
- _Made in the United States of America_
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- I The Deserted Airplane 5
- II At Rocky Lake 12
- III A Greater Mystery 19
- IV The Sky Squad is Formed 28
- V A Double Puzzle 36
- VI Suspicion and Suspense 42
- VII In the Falling ’Plane 53
- VIII Watchful Waiting 59
- IX Strange Actions 67
- X A Summons 76
- XI A Trail and a Flight 81
- XII The Chase 93
- XIII The Detective’s Theory 98
- XIV The Sky Squad Disobeys 104
- XV A Triple Trail 112
- XVI The “Windsock” 121
- XVII “The Case Is ‘Sewed Up’” 128
- XVIII A New Mystery 136
- XIX Tangled Threads 144
- XX A Package of Money 151
- XXI Caught and Cleared! 159
- XXII The “Mystery Crate” 171
- XXIII Bob Pursues! 179
- XXIV Suspense! 188
- XXV Crossed Wires 197
- XXVI The Sky Squad Goes Into Action 207
- XXVII Driven Down 219
- XXVIII Curt’s Discovery 227
- XXIX A Confession 235
- XXX Barney Gives a Hint 246
- XXXI “One More Problem” 257
- XXXII Flight! 268
- XXXIII The Sky Squad Wins 277
-
-
-
-
- THE MYSTERY CRASH
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- THE DESERTED AIRPLANE
-
-
-“See that! Look! There’s our mystery!”
-
-Bob Wright pointed from the cabin window of the monoplane. Al, his
-younger brother, peered toward the ground.
-
-“What? Where? Show me any mystery!”
-
-To make himself understood above the roar of the engine, Bob put his
-lips close to Al’s ear while Curt, Bob’s closest friend, also a
-passenger, bent close to catch his words.
-
-“It’s a mystery all right—but you can’t see from here. It was in that
-cornfield we passed over.”
-
-“What’s the mystery?” Curtis Brown’s eyes snapped with eagerness.
-
-“Why did you say ‘our’ mystery?” Al asked at the same instant. Bob
-answered both at once.
-
-“The mystery is: Why is an airplane hidden in the grove at the edge of a
-cornfield? Our mystery because we discovered it and because, ever since
-we helped father solve his detective cases and took an interest in
-aviation we have wanted to solve something that connects up puzzles and
-’planes!”
-
-“A ‘crate’?” Al stared out. “I don’t see it.” Bob was not there to
-reply. He moved up to the pilot, Langley Wright, his cousin, who was
-test pilot for the Tredway Aircraft Corporation and who was giving this
-beautiful “job” its final test and check flight.
-
-“Lang,” he said, “I saw an airplane in the grove at the edge of that
-last field we crossed. Circle back, won’t you?” As Lang turned from
-jotting down some data, Bob added: “The ship hasn’t crashed. It’s in
-among the trees—backed in. I caught a glimpse of it, and then the trees
-hid it. I’d like to have another look.”
-
-“Surest thing you know.”
-
-Lang, twenty-one and an expert flyer, grinned at his sixteen-year-old
-cousin, dipped ailerons, kicked rudder and with a good “bank” as the
-craft swung its nose around, he deftly counteracted a tendency of the
-ship to go into a sideslip, jotted down some information on his data
-board and then looked out of his window.
-
-“There’s the field,” he said. “I don’t see a crate there!”
-
-“That’s why I told Al and Curt it’s a mystery,” Bob replied. “The ship
-has been hidden! Its tail is in between trees, and the wings are under
-trees with high branches. I don’t believe it could be seen from the
-highway that runs by the field. I know it wouldn’t be noticed from the
-air, except by chance.”
-
-“Hm-m-m!” grunted Langley, “I’ve heard of hidden treasure, but this is
-the first hidden ’plane——”
-
-“There!” Bob pointed past Lang’s face.
-
-“I see it!” Lang continued to circle, in order to get another sight of
-the mysteriously hidden ship. As they came around again Al and Curt
-located it also.
-
-“It’s staked down!” Al, although he was the youngest, not much past
-thirteen, had the quickest eyes of the group. “I saw the stakes, and
-rope over the wing-tips.”
-
-“The engine was covered over,” added Curt.
-
-Lang spiraled down to pass as close as the trees would allow.
-
-They saw nothing more, however, and after Lang had refused Al’s
-impulsive request to “set down” in the small field, the party flew on to
-the landing field of the Aircraft Corporation where Lang had some
-alterations to report in the adjustment of the ship’s balance before it
-could be delivered to its purchaser.
-
-“Let’s get our bicycles and ride out to the field,” urged Al, as the
-trio of comrades alighted beyond the aircraft plant.
-
-They pedaled the three miles in record time.
-
-“I was right,” commented Bob, as they left the wheels beside the highway
-and climbed over the high rail fence enclosing the stubble where corn
-had recently been cut down. “You can’t see the airplane from any place
-along the highway——”
-
-“Unless it’s gone,” interrupted Al.
-
-“No!” Curt was a little ahead. He waved his arm. “There she is!”
-
-They crossed the rough field, toward the mysterious, silent object of
-interest.
-
-“I can see from here it hasn’t cracked up,” Curt declared. “Not a
-scratch on it and the landing gear is perfect.”
-
-“Whoever flew it must be clever,” declared Bob. “Look at the narrow
-strip of open, smooth ground he had to ‘set down’ on. If he hadn’t been
-able to shoot the field so as to get in on that long, smooth side, with
-only a few feet clearance, he’d have come down in rough stubble.”
-
-“Yes, he must have been good,” agreed Al. “And it proves that he was
-forced down. Any sane pilot would have gone on to a better spot.”
-
-They reached the airplane, a two-winged model with a radial motor and
-small wings; it was a speed ship, trim and mystifying with its dark,
-brown body and airfoils freshly done.
-
-Curtis, whose age was midway between Al’s thirteen and Bob’s sixteen,
-clambered onto a landing wheel and observed the instruments on the dash.
-“Plenty of gas, and oil,” he remarked. Then his companions saw his face
-change.
-
-“Look!” As he called he leaped from his perch so that Bob could occupy
-it; Al was up on the other side, and it took no explaining to show what
-had caused Curt’s exclamation. Both youths saw the small square of paper
-pinned to the folded parachute on the seat.
-
-“Dare we look?” questioned Bob.
-
-“‘I can read it from here,” Al said, and reported. “It says, ‘Everything
-O.K.’”
-
-“Crickety Christmas!” Curt resorted to his favorite expression.
-“‘Everything O.K.’ Then it wasn’t a forced landing.”
-
-“No,” agreed Bob. “It didn’t seem like one, somehow. The ship is too
-carefully tucked away. And, now—this note. Who is it to? Who put it
-there? Does it mean the ship is all right—or something else? I was right
-when I said—‘there’s our mystery.’”
-
-“You were!” admitted Curt.
-
-“But what can we do about it?” objected Al. “Take turns watching? Wait
-to see who comes back, and what he does?”
-
-“I think not,” counseled Curt. “It may be a mystery why the crate is
-here, and all that! But it isn’t any of our business—is it?”
-
-“No,” admitted Bob. “Let’s go home, and see what father thinks of it.
-There is probably some easy explanation we haven’t thought of.”
-
-“All right. We can ride out here first thing—early—tomorrow.”
-
-They could not consult the private detective whose success had been so
-pronounced that cases came to him from distant cities: he was out of
-town that night.
-
-When they rode out to the field the next day, at sunrise, looking for
-the mysteriously deserted airplane it was gone!
-
-“Where is your mystery now?” Curt was inclined to poke a little fun at
-Bob. “As the sleight-of-hand performers say, ‘Now you see it, now you
-don’t!’”
-
-“Anyway,” Al who was poking about in the grass under the trees, bent and
-then exhibited a damp, crumpled paper, “here is the note. Now, what do
-you say if we have a session of the old Master Sleuths, and see what we
-can deduce from this paper?”
-
-A year before, asked to do a little investigating for Mr. Wright, when
-he was handling a case where youths would be least likely to arouse
-suspicion by shadowing, the trio had become intensely interested in
-detective work and had termed themselves the Master Sleuths, more in fun
-than in earnest. However, when they had become “air minded” the term had
-been dropped. Al, reviving it, won a grin from Bob.
-
-“All right,” Bob agreed. “The paper is damp. It has been out in the dew.
-Under the trees it would take a good while for it to get as soggy as it
-is. The writing has smudged—it’s sort of purple——”
-
-“It was written with an indelible pencil,” remarked Curt.
-
-“Then all we have to do is to find a man with an—” Al was not allowed to
-finish. Bob broke in, as older brothers like to do.
-
-“Yes—get ‘the man in the gray suit!’ How many indelible pencils do you
-suppose there are in this country?”
-
-“All right!” Al took the matter good-humoredly. “Anyhow, if a man wrote
-it and a man read it and threw it away—two hands have handled it.” He
-put it carefully in his pocket. “There may be fingerprints.”
-
-“What good will they do?” asked Curt. “The mystery is all done with.”
-
-“No it isn’t!” cried Bob, holding up his hand.
-
-“Listen!”
-
-From above came the drone of an airplane engine.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- AT ROCKY LAKE
-
-
-“I hear it!” exclaimed Al. He ran out onto the turf that had been used
-as a runway, probably, when the airplane took off.
-
-“So do I,” agreed Curt, following him. “But I don’t locate it.”
-
-Bob, craning his neck, staring up toward the great banks of clouds which
-the early sun was painting with rosy fire, looked puzzled.
-
-“Come to think of it,” he said, “we ought not to hear it at all.”
-
-“Why not?” demanded Curt.
-
-“He ought to be too far away.”
-
-“How do you make that out?” Al was incredulous.
-
-“Easy! Lang came home a little before daybreak. He had been at the
-airplane plant all night, with the ‘mechs’ because Mr. Tredway wanted to
-get that Silver Flash ready for delivery in a rush. I didn’t go to sleep
-again. I got up, and dressed and went out to tighten the handlebar on my
-bicycle. I glanced up, just as day broke, at the little windsock I have
-on our roof.”
-
-“The wind was directly _West_.”
-
-“I don’t see—” began Al; but Curt, wetting the back of his hand, tested
-the air in various directions.
-
-“You use your head, Bob,” he said admiringly. “The breeze is pretty
-strong, and it has shifted around _to South_, straight from the
-Equator.”
-
-“Are you two trying to be mysterious?” Al was a little bit annoyed.
-
-“I thought you wanted to be a Master Sleuth, last year,” remarked Curt.
-“Use your eyes and your brains.”
-
-“Um-m-m—the airplane must be gone a long time because the wind was West
-and now it’s South—um-m-m. Oh!”
-
-“‘Ah-ha!’ cried Shawkhaw,” Bob mocked, twisting the famous Hawkshaw
-title as he made fun of his brother.
-
-“This turf runs East and West.” Al ignored Bob’s mockery. “That biplane
-was a speed model and it would have to get up higher speed than the
-average to take off. The runway is too short to give it a good run, so
-it couldn’t very well have hopped off in time to get over the trees
-unless it took full advantage of the wind! Isn’t that it, Bob?”
-
-“That’s it. The wind changed about the time we left our meeting point
-with Curt. So that airplane ought to be well on its way, wherever its
-way leads.”
-
-“But this engine is getting louder,” stated Curt.
-
-“There it is!” cried Al, pointing toward the South. “It’s only a speck.
-But you see it, don’t you, Curt?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“So do I,” added Bob.
-
-“It looks as if it is spiraling down—yes, it is!”
-
-“And it isn’t the biplane we saw here, at all,” Bob said. “Curt, do you
-know what?——”
-
-“Yes. It’s the very ’plane we were in yesterday, with Lang. He gave it a
-final check-up and said if they worked on it all night it would be ready
-to take off today. That’s it, all righty! The biplane was brown, and——”
-
-“This is the Silver Flash! I can see it glisten against that dark
-cloud,” added Al. “I think it’s coming down.”
-
-“It’s diving.”
-
-“No!” cried Bob. “It’s out of control! It’s falling!”
-
-“Right over Rocky Lake!” shouted Curt.
-
-“Come on!” urged Al, scrambling over the short stubble in the field, in
-haste to reach his bicycle and pedal toward the picnic grounds, less
-than a quarter of a mile away, in which Rocky Lake was situated.
-
-“Wait!” counseled Bob.
-
-“No! Come on!” Curt agreed with Al. The airplane was out of control. It
-was diving, straight toward the amusement ground around the lake. “It’s
-a crack-up!”
-
-“There it goes!”
-
-Behind the trees, out of sight, like a silver streak, a comet, the
-airplane fell. Three hearts went cold as the ship was lost to view
-behind the foliage. While they could not see the craft strike, any spot
-in Rocky Lake Park was bad for a landing: dense trees, whole groves,
-alternated with stands, pavilions, and the deep, boulder-studded water
-of Rocky Lake and the rivulet which fed it.
-
-Three minds worked as one, three pairs of legs tumbled their owners over
-the stile, onto the roadside turf, up to the bicycles.
-
-Pedaling like madmen they made short time of the trip to the edge of the
-amusement spot.
-
-“I think it was directly over Rocky Lake!” Curt, in the lead, called
-over his shoulder.
-
-Dropping their wheels by the roadside they ran, winded but determined,
-towards the picnic grounds.
-
-“There—there—in the lake!” gasped Bob.
-
-“It crashed, all right!” panted Curt.
-
-“It’s half buried in the water.” Al puffed along a little to the rear.
-“I hope the pilot——”
-
-“It wasn’t Lang, was it?”
-
-“No!” Bob responded to Curt’s question. “It must have been some other
-pilot—I can’t think who, though.”
-
-“Hurry!” urged Al. “Hello—hello!” he called, passing the pavilions. “Is
-anybody around! Wake up—somebody! Help! Help! A ’plane has cracked up in
-Rocky Lake!”
-
-“See anything of the pilot?” Bob turned to Curt. Gasping for breath they
-had reached the shore of the lake, by a small wharf where rowboats were
-hired during the day.
-
-Curt scanned the surface of the lake.
-
-Quite near the shore, and on the rocks, with one crumpled wing, and with
-her nose and cabin buried in soft, oozey mud, the smashed monoplane lay
-with its pitifully useless tail assembly sticking up into the air. The
-“flippers” had carried way with the impact and hung by the control
-cables.
-
-Bob turned a serious face toward his companion.
-
-“I hope—I wonder”— He could not finish. The thought flitted through his
-mind that unless the pilot had been extremely quick and very clever, he
-could not have gotten out of the cabin—in time. The falling craft had
-been close enough so that had any figure leaped, especially with a
-parachute, they should have seen it clearly.
-
-No such figure had leaped—in time.
-
-“Maybe he—crawled out when it struck,” said Curt, hopefully.
-
-“Anyhow, let’s get a boat, and try to get to it.”
-
-“Al,” called Curt, “stop calling for help! There isn’t anybody here. Run
-to the farmhouse across the road—no, that’s empty. Ride back down the
-road, till you see an automobile and send it to town for help. If you
-don’t meet one, stop at the first house and telephone.”
-
-Al, for all his natural eagerness to be at the scene, to share in their
-experiences, saluted without a word of remonstrance and hurried away.
-Meanwhile Bob, realizing that the oars for the boats were locked in the
-small pavilion on the wharf, determined to break in, feeling that the
-emergency removed any taint of robbery or pillage from the act.
-
-Fortunately he found the old, rusted lock not caught. He slipped the
-rusty padlock, slipped the hasp free, and ran back to the dock where
-Curt had a boat untied and ready. In this, pushing off, they rowed out
-to the airplane. The weight of its engine was very slowly driving its
-nose deeper into the soft ooze of the marshy ground at that end of the
-lake.
-
-“Hurry!” begged Curt, as Bob bent to his task.
-
-Suddenly Bob rested on his oars.
-
-“What’s the matter?” cried Curt, and as he saw the expression of Bob’s
-face he, too, became intent.
-
-“There it is again!” panted Bob. “A call—a call for help?” he
-questioned.
-
-“I don’t know. But row!”
-
-Bob rowed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- A GREATER MYSTERY
-
-
-“There comes the call again!” whispered Curt. “It was ‘help!’”
-
-Bob sent the boat through the mirrorlike water. He headed for the
-immersed nose of the airplane and as they rounded the cabin, part of it
-sticking up forlornly, Curt lifted a hand to point.
-
-“Look! There is the parachute, partly inflated, floating on the water.”
-
-“It looks as though the pilot tried to get out of the cabin, and either
-pulled his ripcord too soon, or else some part of the harness caught and
-held him—until too late!”
-
-Sobered and worried, wondering just what to do and who had called, they
-sent their eyes questing here and there—into as much of the cabin as
-they could see from the window just under the transparent surface of
-Rocky Lake, but without result.
-
-“I thought he might be caught in the cabin,” said Bob. “But I can’t see
-any——”
-
-“There he is—see! Out on the lake!” Curt pointed. “He’s swimming.”
-
-Bob pushed away from the fuselage of the sinking craft, and with a sweep
-brought the bow of their boat around.
-
-“Oh!” he caught sight of a head bobbing in the water, “oh, Curt—I’m so
-glad!”
-
-Rowing hard, he sent the boat toward the swimmer.
-
-“So am I.” Curt’s voice was relieved. “The pilot escaped.”
-
-“But—it can’t be the pilot, Curt.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“He has been swimming toward the ’plane, from out in the lake.”
-
-“I know, Bob, but he may have seen us.”
-
-“But he’d have part of the parachute harness on,” Bob objected.
-
-“Probably he slashed it off. Maybe he saw it was too late to get out,
-that the ’chute was too low, and he slashed himself free and started to
-swim across the water——”
-
-“No. He’d have come to this closer shore, and landed on the wharf.”
-
-They watched the man, treading water as he saw them coming.
-
-Across the water a call floated clearly to them.
-
-“Did you hear—a call—for help?”
-
-“We thought we did,” Bob called back, and, as they came closer the man
-spoke less loudly.
-
-“I don’t see anybody.”
-
-“Then you aren’t the pilot?”
-
-“He can’t be!” Curt commented when the man failed to reply, being busy
-clearing water from his eyes to look around the lake again.
-
-“Haven’t seen anybody at all,” the man spoke as he caught the gunwale
-and pulled himself up and into the boat with Curt’s aid. “Heard a shout,
-though. Row back boys, to that thing.”
-
-They went back over the course. The stranger, studying the aircraft,
-seemed very much disturbed and worried. He had a hand ready to catch the
-struts of a wing as they swung under the tilted airfoil: while Bob
-stowed the needless oar on that side he drew the boat forward.
-
-“We didn’t see anything in the cabin. We looked, before,” Bob explained.
-
-“Untie that painter,” the stranger ordered. “I’m going down under the
-nose, and the mud might hold me—so, if I signal, you pull.” As Curt
-unknotted the tying rope and threw it to him, the man looped an end
-under his arms, knotting it swiftly, flung the short coil to Bob and
-lowered himself, disappearing into the water, his descent stirred up
-mud, moiling the water. Down he went, hidden almost at once in the murky
-disturbance.
-
-Paying out the rope until it grew slack, Bob took a turn around a
-rowlock, and they waited breathlessly. Some bubbles floated up and
-broke. Then came a tug on the rope.
-
-Curt, who had already come to the midships section, helped Bob tug and
-haul in the wet manilla strands. The stranger came up through the murky
-water, emerged, shook himself free of the liquid, caught the boat and
-shook his head.
-
-“Not in the cabin—only thing I can think of is—if he tried to jump and
-got under the thing.”
-
-Very soberly the youths helped him back into the boat.
-
-People were arriving on the bank, shouting to one another, calling for
-information, shipping oars in boats. Al, having met several motorists,
-had spread the alarm, and then had ridden on to telephone the police and
-to report the crash.
-
-Al, having returned, was in the second boat to arrive by the slowly
-sinking craft.
-
-Bob gave him a concise report while they pushed away from the place to
-enable a deputy sheriff to take command and to jot down the stranger’s
-explanation and their own, from Curt.
-
-“I wish you boys would row me across the little bayou, here,” the man
-said. Al had transferred to their boat by that time.
-
-“Take me to that point, over there,” the man added. “It’s closest to
-where I dropped my motorcycle when I saw the thing happen.”
-
-Bob nodded. The presence of the motorcycle beyond the lake, where it was
-nearest to the road, explained why they had seen the man swimming toward
-them. He must have heard and seen the airplane, watched its descent, and
-then rushed to see what he could do.
-
-“But won’t the police want you to testify, or whatever it is?” asked Al.
-
-The man shook his head.
-
-“No,” he replied. “If they do, they can find me soon enough. I’m off to
-get into dry duds. I didn’t waste time riding around the end of the
-lake. I dropped my motorcycle and ran in to see what I could see.” He
-smiled, sadly. “I guess I was too late, even at that.”
-
-Thanking them as he climbed onto the rocky shore, he pushed the bow of
-their boat into the stream again, and watched them turn in the still
-water.
-
-“You can tell the police I didn’t think they’d need me right away,” he
-called. “I’m passing through this section, and I don’t want to be held
-up and kept here for any sort of investigation. You saw as much as I
-did. Well—goodbye!”
-
-He turned, and as they heard the “crash ’bus” arriving from the airport
-in a nearby city of which they lived in the suburbs, Bob rowed his two
-young companions back toward the airplane.
-
-The police came, and many others with them and after them.
-
-Preparations were made to drag under the craft, and to lift it, if
-tackle could be gotten into suitable position, to see if any trace of
-the missing pilot could be discovered.
-
-Nothing further developed, however, and one of the “mechs” with the
-airport ’bus told Bob it would be afternoon before they got the
-monoplane out. The three comrades had given the police lieutenant all
-the information they could. There was a healthy appetite making itself
-felt among them.
-
-“Let’s go home,” Bob suggested.
-
-“Wait, all of you,” urged the reporter for a small suburban daily. “I’ll
-make heroes of you yet.”
-
-Protesting that they had done nothing heroic and that they did not want
-to be “put in the paper” for doing their duty, Curt and Bob refused to
-answer any questions. The police, Bob said, might not want information
-published. He did not know, but he would prefer not to talk. “Oh, I
-see—there is a mystery, then!” the reporter declared. “Well, if you
-won’t talk—” he began to write swiftly.
-
-“If we won’t talk,” Bob commented as the trio walked toward their
-bicycles. “He’ll write something anyhow.”
-
-“It’s queer that there isn’t any trace of the pilot.” Al’s mind returned
-to the tragic part of the crash.
-
-“Maybe he jumped clear, got away and went into the water, and then,
-coming up, got to land. He may be on shore, somewhere, hurt, or too weak
-to make himself known.”
-
-Curt’s explanation renewed their hope.
-
-“Let’s hope it’s that way,” said Bob. “Well, we’ve got a long road to
-breakfast. Mother will be just about wild. I left a note, but she will
-worry about Al and me, just the same. If we go to the ball park and
-don’t get home within half an hour after the game, she frets.”
-
-“Excuse me, boys.” A pleasant voice behind them caused the three to
-wheel around. They saw a pleasant-faced man, beside an automobile,
-parked close to the bicycles they were disentangling. “If you want to
-get home in a hurry, pile the bicycles in that little comfort station
-over there, and tell the attendant ‘Barney’ said to look out for them.
-I’m from the aircraft plant, and as long as I can’t do anything here, if
-you’ll hop into my car I’ll ride you home while you give me the facts as
-well as you know them about this smash. It’s a bad thing, and I want to
-get as straight as I can what happened.”
-
-They were very grateful to Barney, who neglected to furnish any other
-name. He waited until they had stowed away the bicycles, and while he
-drove them toward the village he questioned them rapidly.
-
-“I think you are all very brave, and quick, and fine,” he commented,
-after they had, in turn, recited their adventures. “You acted splendidly
-and I thank you very much.”
-
-Al looked surprised.
-
-“We did our duty,” he replied. “But why are you thanking us? I know it
-was one of the Tredway airplanes because we were in it, with Lang,
-yesterday on check-up. But who was in it, and what do you think
-happened—really?”
-
-“The owner of the manufacturing plant was in it,” said Barney, very
-soberly and sadly. “Mr. Tredway was flying it himself. He wanted to
-deliver it in person—for a reason.”
-
-“For a reason?” Bob repeated, inquiringly.
-
-“Yes,” said Barney. “There is a mystery behind that crack-up—it’s more
-likely it’s a ‘washout.’ Anyhow, there is something behind the smash,
-and—I’ve heard there is a private detective, a Mr. Wright, at Forty-one
-Elm. If you can tell me the quickest way to get there, I’ll appreciate
-it. I want to consult him—on this case.”
-
-Bob, Curt and Al stared.
-
-“That’s father!” said Al.
-
-“Indeed! Then I am glad I offered you a ‘lift.’”
-
-They directed him, and eventually he drew up the car before the neat,
-cozy cottage. Curtis, accepting the invitation to stay for their
-somewhat belated breakfast, sat, with Bob and Al, in the cheerful
-breakfast room, finishing up a stack of pancakes thickly syruped, when
-Bob was sent for.
-
-Returning, after a few minutes, he showed his younger brother and his
-best friend a face of elation.
-
-“There is a mystery, all righty,” he declared. “And you’re to come with
-me——”
-
-“Why?” asked Curt.
-
-“Because,” retorted Bob, “we’re—in—on—it!” As the others jumped up he
-added, “Father’s home and he’s taken a real air mystery case!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- THE SKY SQUAD IS FORMED
-
-
-Entering Mr. Wright’s library, which the detective used as a reception
-room for clients, Bob, Curtis and Al could hardly repress their
-excitement. To share in the possible solution of a real mystery of the
-airlanes was more than they had really dared to hope for.
-
-Seated opposite Mr. Wright, smiling pleasantly, was the man who had
-given no other name than Barney.
-
-“Good morning, Mr. Wright.” Curtis Brown greeted the quiet, but cordial
-father of his two chums. Al added a salute to his father.
-
-“Sit down,” suggested the detective. Bob, Curt and Al ranged themselves
-along the leather upholstered davenport at the side, where the light was
-on their faces. Mr. Wright had his room so arranged that only his own
-place beside the desk enabled him to keep his face in the shadow;
-clients and other visitors had to show every expression in the light
-from the two sunny windows.
-
-While Mr. Wright seemed to be deciding how to disclose his plans, Curt
-compared the two men.
-
-They were of very distinct types. Fred Wright would make anybody think
-of an ordinary, everyday business man, fairly prosperous, quiet in his
-manner, affable and cordial in his speech. His calm, serious face was
-neither severe nor too soft; and while its steel-gray eyes were kindly,
-they could look through a person, it seemed, and find out, almost, what
-that one was thinking, or, perhaps, trying to conceal.
-
-Barney, on the other hand, made one think of a working man who had risen
-to a position of prosperity and influence without being able entirely to
-shake off his servile, unpolished manner. Although his clothes were
-expertly tailored, he seemed a little ill at ease in them. What was
-more, he gave the impression that he knew it!
-
-He was a trifle blustery to cover his feeling of inferiority, Curt
-decided; and he had a habit of interrupting when another person was
-speaking. However, this might be due to excitement, Curt thought
-charitably.
-
-Glancing sidewise, he sensed that much the same comparisons were passing
-through Bob’s mind. Al gave no thought to character. His whole attention
-was bent on the possibility of “action!”
-
-Curt, who liked to look for good points more than for the other sort,
-checked up Barney’s dark eyes, almost black, and decided that they were
-only serious because of the gravity of the situation. They could twinkle
-with fun, he guessed; also, the mouth was so shaped that Bob admitted to
-himself that Barney smiled oftener than he scowled.
-
-“I have told Mr. Horton about you three young aviation enthusiasts,”
-Fred Wright began. “Also I have explained that you used to be very fond
-of ‘detecting’ in a decidedly amateurish way, of course.” He smiled
-across the desk toward Barney, whose face broke into a broad, pleased
-grin, immediately suppressed because of the seriousness of his errand.
-
-“I’ll say we were amateurish,” chuckled Bob. “Why, Mr. Horton——”
-
-“Call me Barney—just Barney,” the visitor interrupted.
-
-“If you say so, sir. Well, Barney, then! We were crazy to be great
-detectives, because father is one,” he paid the compliment
-whole-heartedly and only his father smiled and shook his head
-deprecatingly, “but we let our enthusiasm take the place of brains,” Bob
-added. “I was not much help because I let vanity get the best of cool,
-common sense——”
-
-“I was a failure because I am too impulsive,” contributed Al.
-
-“I was so short-sighted, in my mind, that I forgot to look at the whole
-of a case and pinned my nose down onto every little clew,” Curt grinned
-sheepishly, “so I kept going around in circles.”
-
-“All the same,” Mr. Wright looked over at Barney, “in such work as boys
-could do—they were a few years younger then—these three helped me a
-great deal in handling two quite important cases.”
-
-The trio lowered their heads modestly.
-
-“However,” the detective continued, “they turned from being Master
-Sleuths, as they termed themselves, to aviation——”
-
-“Airboys!” chuckled Barney.
-
-“Why, yes. That is an apt expression.”
-
-“But we didn’t give up wanting to be detectives, really!” exclaimed Al,
-earnestly. “We were looking for a way to mix the aviation with the
-detecting—only we haven’t gotten into either one.”
-
-“Then here’s your chance.” Barney said it very seriously.
-
-“How?”
-
-“Barney has brought me a very baffling case,” Mr. Wright explained.
-“Unfortunately, I am so deeply involved in another matter that I cannot
-drop it.”
-
-“But you can give some time to this, you said.” Barney was earnest.
-
-“Not personally. That is, I shan’t be able to investigate in person,”
-the detective replied. “That is where our three assistants will
-figure——”
-
-“And be Airboys and Master Sleuths, both at the one time,” Barney
-interrupted.
-
-“Hooray!” Al clapped his hand to his knee, unable to restrain his
-enthusiasm. Mr. Wright, although with a tolerant, if brief smile, shook
-his head at his younger son.
-
-“This will be a serious affair,” he stated, forcefully.
-
-Al immediately became sobered.
-
-“How can we combine aviation and detective work?” asked Curt, the most
-practical of the chums.
-
-“By going to the aircraft plant to work as mechanics’ helpers, or
-whatever positions Barney sees fit to put you in,” Mr. Wright told them.
-“That takes care of the detective work because you will have to keep
-eyes and ears open and without appearing to do so.”
-
-“We can do that easily,” said Bob.
-
-“That takes no effort at all,” agreed Al. His father, knowing Al’s
-expressive face to be easily read, made no comment.
-
-“While you are at the aircraft plant,” Barney took up the explanation,
-“you will be working in and around the crates we are building, and you
-will learn a whole lot about how an airplane is put together, what the
-parts are for, and how they are assembled. That’s the aviation part.” He
-emphasized the first syllable, making it “av-iation.” “What do you say?”
-
-“Hooray!” Al was irrepressible.
-
-“Just show us the jobs!” added Bob.
-
-“Of course we will be glad to learn.” Curt was more sober. “That ought
-to be one of the first things for anybody to do who means to be a
-pilot.” Mr. Wright nodded and Curt proceeded. “A good grounding in
-airplane construction will be fine. But—for the detective part—I think
-we ought to be very serious and consider it carefully.”
-
-“Indeed you should,” agreed Mr. Wright. “There is a deeper mystery to be
-solved than appears on the surface.”
-
-“I see that,” agreed Curt. “And we must be sure that we will be a help
-and not a hindrance to you——”
-
-“Fine lad!” broke in Barney.
-
-“Oh, we won’t be a hindrance!” Al was almost bouncing on the divan
-springs in his eagerness. “We’ll watch, and catch whoever you want
-caught—maybe learn to fly a ‘crate’ and hop off and fly after him and
-ride him down and force him to land—and there you are!”
-
-All the party laughed. Al, realizing his childish lapse into silly
-chatter, laughed, finally, himself, a little ruefully.
-
-“I see what Curt meant, now,” he said, more quietly; but his excitement
-was hard to hold. “But, anyhow, Mr.——”
-
-“Barney!”
-
-“Anyhow, Barney, we will try to help. We can learn about airplane
-construction, and that will be fine; but we will give all our minds to
-watching and listening and doing whatever is wanted of us—we ought to
-form some kind of club or order, so we would have a head to get orders
-from father—especially if he is too busy to take part himself.”
-
-“That’s sensible, even if it does seem boy-like to want to have a secret
-association,” said the older detective.
-
-“Then let’s call ourselves what Barney called us—the Airboys.”
-
-“I don’t like that very much,” objected Bob.
-
-“Well, then, you pick a name.”
-
-“I think the game is more important than the name,” observed the older
-detective.
-
-“Oh—but with a good name for our band, and a chief, we can know where we
-are,” urged Al.
-
-“All right,” said Curt. “Let’s humor the youngster!” Al grimaced at him,
-but subsided as Curt went on. “We are detectives as well as airplane
-enthusiasts. Why not combine the two in the name of the order we are to
-form—something about the sky, and something about a police—detective
-squad——”
-
-“You’ve hit it!” Barney interrupted.
-
-“Hit it? How?”
-
-“Sky Squad!”
-
-“Crickety Christmas!” Curt was as enthusiastic as Bob and Al became on
-hearing the words. “That’s it!”
-
-“Very well,” Mr. Wright was patient, but a little annoyed. “That being
-settled, we can take up the important matter of—the case!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- A DOUBLE PUZZLE
-
-
-Barney stood up and looked at his watch: also, he frowned a little.
-
-“I wish we didn’t have to waste the time,” he objected. “I’ve went
-through it all with you, Mr. Wright, and I wanted to take these lads
-along back to the plant in my car. I wanted to make it look like I just
-happened on them at the accident—the—well, the accident, and found they
-were interested in av-iation and brought them back to fill a couple of
-places in the plant.”
-
-“But how can we solve a case if we don’t know what it is?” remonstrated
-Bob.
-
-To that Curt nodded and Al bobbed his head rapidly.
-
-“As a matter of fact,” Barney turned to Bob, “I think you would do a
-whole heap better if you went in to it blind, sort of. If you know all
-about it, you’ll go out to the plant, all serious and acting like judges
-or detectives. If you take it the way our youngest friend, Al, does—as a
-sort of lark—you won’t be suspected so quick.”
-
-“There is something in that,” Mr. Wright admitted. “Al’s face is apt to
-give him away if he thinks it is really serious. Perhaps——”
-
-“But all the same, Father,” Bob declared, “how will we know what to
-watch for? How will we know what to report?”
-
-“Watch anything you see. Listen to whatever you hear. Report the whole
-business!” Barney exclaimed.
-
-“That does seem wise,” Mr. Wright agreed, rising also. “Boys, let’s
-emphasize the Sky part of your order, and let the Squad side rest
-awhile. Barney wants to get back to the plant—he is the Manager, I meant
-to explain. He ought to be at the end of a telephone wire. Let’s say
-only this: There is a double mystery. First of all, valuable parts have
-been missed, from time to time, from the plant. That is a minor matter,
-at present, but your first puzzle is—where have the missing parts gone
-and who took them? But, as I said, that is a minor affair, because——”
-
-“Somebody has tampered with some of the finished crates,” broke in
-Barney. “Why, and who—that’s the second puzzle!”
-
-“Suppose you take that as enough for the present,” suggested Mr. Wright.
-He turned to Barney. “Now these three young lads are alert, obedient,
-and they will follow instructions to the letter, if you give orders,” he
-explained. “You have already seen how——”
-
-“How quick they are in emergencies! Yes sirree! All right. I know I can
-depend on them. Sorry you can’t investigate in person, Mr. Wright—but
-maybe this way will work out best. Anyhow, nobody at the plant will get
-suspicious of these boys. They won’t have the brains of older men, like
-you and me, but they will have quick eyes and wide ears,” he laughed,
-and beckoned, “come on, lads.”
-
-A little disappointed, feeling that there was more behind the mystery
-than Mr. Wright had disclosed, but accepting his “lead,” Bob, Al and
-Curt caught up their caps from the hall rack and followed Barney into
-the car.
-
-As he drove toward the large manufacturing buildings, the administration
-offices and the assembling rooms, “dope” rooms and testing field that
-formed the Tredway Aircraft Corporation plant, Barney kept away from
-talk about the mysteries.
-
-Instead, he questioned them about the plan for their new organization,
-suggested secret codes, urged them to elect a “Boss Pilot” and really
-fired their imaginations to such a point that when they came in sight of
-the aircraft plant they had almost forgotten their disappointment at not
-being taken fully into his confidence.
-
-“Well,” he said, when they turned in at the gateway in the high board
-fence that kept curious wanderers out of the grounds, “here we are, Sky
-Squad—ready to begin to learn how a crate is started, what the design
-means, and why certain things have to be planned for—and then, what goes
-into construction and why, how she’s put together, and then, how to fly
-the finished crate.”
-
-Sensing from his tone that he wanted them to concentrate, at least
-outwardly, on airplane construction and to let the other part of their
-activity be kept quiet, the three comrades agreed by assuming an
-interest that was by no means hard to pretend, when he took them into
-the offices, introduced them to some of the men working there, and
-explained that he was going to put them to work “to learn to build
-crates from the prop to the tail skid.” Barney, on the way, had learned
-their special interests. Therefore he put Bob into the engine assembling
-division where he could learn more about radial engines and the
-experiments being conducted with oil-burning types. Curt, who was
-methodical, cool and careful, was assigned to work, at least for awhile,
-in the wing assembling rooms. Al, being rather young for too much
-technical understanding, was assigned as helper to a “rigger,” who had
-been grumbling for some time at the laziness of his present assistant.
-
-Everything was so new and so interesting that the trio forgot the
-seriousness with which Mr. Wright had assembled them that morning; but
-as they rode their bicycles toward home at lunch time, Bob imparted
-information that both startled them and turned their minds back to the
-serious business really underlying their work.
-
-“I heard some talk, this morning,” Bob told his brother and Curt. “It’s
-serious, fellows! Missing parts aren’t half the puzzle—and tampering
-with airplanes isn’t all the rest.”
-
-“What is, then?” demanded Al.
-
-“They think, in the wing assembling room,” Curt put in, “that the
-airplane fell this morning because something went wrong with Mr.
-Tredway. The plant owner was delivering that craft himself. They all
-argue that he must have had a heart attack, or something of the sort,
-because the airplane was tested and gone over thoroughly. They say he
-must have been taken sick and lost control. Is that what you mean?”
-
-“I heard some ‘mechs’ saying they think he deliberately made away with
-himself because of money trouble or something they don’t know about,”
-added Al. “Maybe trouble with his family, one says.”
-
-“That isn’t it,” Bob said soberly.
-
-“What is?”
-
-“The talk in the engine plant was that some enemy deliberately tampered
-with that airplane because—because he knew the owner was to fly it.”
-
-“But—” Curt was astounded, “but, Bob—that would be——”
-
-“Yes,” admitted Bob, very gravely, “yes—it would!”
-
-“That makes the puzzle about missing parts and the rest unimportant,”
-Curt commented, thoughtfully.
-
-“But it still gives us two puzzles to solve,” Al began.
-
-“Well,” corrected Curt, “not two separate puzzles—but a double puzzle,
-all the same.”
-
-“A double puzzle? I don’t quite see——”
-
-“It’s all one problem,” Bob explained to his younger brother. “But it
-has two sections. First—was the airplane tampered with as an act against
-the aircraft corporation or against Mr. Tredway in person?”
-
-“And second?——”
-
-Al did not let Curt complete his deduction. Al had one of his own.
-
-“And second—who did it?”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- SUSPICION AND SUSPENSE
-
-
-Full of their horrifying suspicions, Curt and Bob rode on. Al turned off
-on a side street to deliver a parcel at the home of his new boss,
-“Sandy” Jim Bailey, the rigger. Al wanted to “make himself solid” with
-the sandy-haired man whom he already liked and whose grumbling was over
-now that he had, as he said, “a willin’ and brainy helper.”
-
-Curt ate lunch with Bob. Both were disappointed when Bob’s mother told
-them that his father had been called out of town on his case, accepted
-earlier.
-
-Riding back, to rejoin Al, who was waiting at the gate of the plant
-ground, Bob accosted his brother in some surprise.
-
-“Aren’t you going to have lunch?” he asked.
-
-“I had it,” Al told Bob and Curt. “I delivered that package for Mr.
-Bailey, and met his son, Jimmy-junior. He’s just about my age, and an
-awfully nice fellow. He invited me, so I stayed.” He dismounted and set
-his wheel inside the enclosure. “You ought to see the model airplanes he
-builds. They’re great!”
-
-“Well, we can’t stop to talk about them now. Mr. Barney Horton left word
-with the gate-man we are to come into the administration offices to see
-him.” Bob led the way as he gave the information.
-
-“It will give us a chance to look over the office staff,” Curt
-explained.
-
-“Be careful, Al,” his brother warned him. “See that you don’t let
-anybody guess that you see any suspicious things. You show everything on
-your face, you know.”
-
-“All right.”
-
-Barney greeted them in his private office and introduced them to Mr.
-Tredway’s partner, Mr. Parsons, who was there.
-
-If his manner was somewhat abrupt and his mind preoccupied, Bob made
-allowances for that. The man was overcome by the mishap and its sinister
-outcome.
-
-His restless, seemingly uneasy, and almost furtive actions, however,
-were not so easy to account for. He seemed unable to meet the eyes of
-the comrades directly, and appeared to be nervous—even more than the
-circumstances justified, Bob thought.
-
-Almost on top of the introductions he hurried out, “To get out there
-where the airplane cracked up and see what’s what!” he explained.
-
-“He takes it mighty hard, he does,” Barney told the youths. “No wonder.
-He’s Mr. Tredway’s partner.”
-
-“But there isn’t any real certainty that anything terrible happened to
-Mr. Tredway,” asserted Curt. “He might have jumped clear.”
-
-“Yes, and maybe he was hurt, and managed to swim off to some part of the
-shore and wasn’t able to go any further. They haven’t searched every
-possible spot have they?” Al was hopeful.
-
-“I’m afraid they have,” Barney replied. “Furthermore, there are so many
-soft, muddy sink-holes in Rocky Lake——”
-
-“Do you agree with what the people in the plant are saying?” Al asked.
-
-“I don’t know, my lad. You see, it’s a good idea, having you here. When
-I’m around the people shut their mouths. But you hear things. What are
-they saying?”
-
-“They think it’s something worse than missing parts and damage done to
-the ‘crates’,” Al answered and explained, calling on Curt and Bob for
-their versions of the talk.
-
-“Hm-m-m. Well, Al, I think—if I were you—I wouldn’t listen to the talk
-around the plant too hard. Pick it up, of course, but don’t go making
-any theories of your own out of it.” Barney explained that people buzzed
-like a lot of flies every time anything happened, and that many of the
-less sensible ones, liking to be “in the limelight,” worked up almost
-idiotic theories. Usually, if they were accepted, they led to unjust
-suspicions, he argued.
-
-“Those scatter-brains only want an audience to listen to them,” he
-declared. “I’d advise you to listen and let it go out the other ear.
-Otherwise you may get off onto the wrong notion. Better watch out for
-suspicious actions, and leave the theories to Mr. Wright.”
-
-“But he’s away,” argued Al.
-
-“Only temporary, I guess. Anyhow, you can tell me what you hear and see,
-and let it go at that. I’ll communicate with Mr. Wright, and if he
-thinks there is anything as bad as you say, I can tell you how to go
-on.”
-
-“All right,” agreed Curt.
-
-Bob and Al added their own agreement to the suggestion.
-
-The designer and the engineering staff were introduced and several hours
-were devoted to discussions between them, for the benefit of the trio,
-about airplane design and the things that had to be taken into
-consideration.
-
-“If my young friends are going to learn airplane building,” Barney
-asserted, “it will be better if they know how important it is to figure
-stresses, safety margins, stability and so on, before ever a design gets
-on paper.”
-
-“I thought all those things came out in the tests, after the airplanes
-are built,” Al contributed.
-
-“Oh, no,” the designer said. “The tests show us how well we figured and
-how good the designs are that we created. But we work everything out up
-here before ever an engine part is cast, a fuselage built or a wing
-assembled.”
-
-“Any other way would be hit or miss,” Bob agreed.
-
-While they learned the many sections into which an airplane design is
-divided, and how carefully every curve, streamline, distribution of
-weight, lift of wing and drag of body must be calculated, Bob decided
-that no one in the office—at least no one with whom he came in
-contact—was acting in any suspicious manner.
-
-Able to do nothing about the accident, the staff went on with its
-accustomed work, sadly, more seriously, to be sure, but steadily.
-
-However, when Bob returned to his engine assembling work, he met a new
-character, and one of whom he at once formed an unsatisfactory opinion.
-
-By association of ideas Griff Parsons fell under his suspicion because
-the youth, about eighteen or nineteen, was the son of the man Bob had
-seen in Barney’s office—Mr. Parsons. Griff, whose handclasp was flabby,
-whose eyes were even more shifty, whose manner was still more uneasy
-than his father’s had been, did not impress Bob favorably at all.
-
-He had something on his mind, Bob decided.
-
-Assigned by the engine department foreman to help Griff fit piston rings
-onto the small pistons, to fit the piston assembly into the cylinders,
-before the final assembly was made, Bob learned much, and somewhat more
-about Griff than about the nice adjustments of machinery.
-
-If he turned suddenly, Griff almost jumped, having hard work to control
-his muscles.
-
-When he spoke of the morning’s accident, Griff, with a scowl, told him
-to “Keep your mind on what you’re doing! That other ain’t any of your
-business!”
-
-Bob had hard work not to show his antagonism to the gruff, snappish
-young man; he was grateful when a summons took him out into the yard.
-
-“I think it is a good idea to have you fellows treated as though all you
-are here for is to learn about airplanes,” Barney greeted him. “Your
-Cousin Langley is going to take up the sister ship to the cracked up
-Silver Flash, this afternoon, and I’m sending all three of you with him.
-It will give you a chance to understand what the designer told you about
-how carefully he had estimated the shape and weight of the new type
-longerons and how some mistake that he hasn’t been able to figure out
-yet makes the new crate tend to slip off sideways too easily. Langley
-will show you how he checks and reports, and then you will understand
-how every one of us works in harmony with every other one, to build our
-ships airworthy, safe and steady.”
-
-When they joined Lang, who was busy checking his dashboard instruments
-as the engine warmed up on the line, Bob, Curt and Al did not hook
-safety belts on. They had every confidence in Lang’s ability to handle
-the ship, and they were more anxious to be near him so they could talk
-than to sit along the cabin sides unable to communicate their news to
-him over the roar of the engine.
-
-As soon as Lang sent the powerful engine into speed, racing down the
-runway into the wind, lifting the elevators to catch the propeller blast
-and tip upward the nose, then flying level, just above the ground for
-those essential few seconds in which flying speed was regained before
-the climb, Al opened the conversation.
-
-“Lang,” he cried, pitching his voice to offset the noise about them,
-“did you know what they are saying about the accident?”
-
-Langley nodded.
-
-“This seems to be a test flight,” he said. “But I’m really flying over
-to the airport, in the city suburbs—Barney wants you along to scatter
-and pick up talk there.”
-
-“What’s the airport got to do with the mystery?”
-
-“Barney thinks that mysterious crate we saw in the field might have
-something to do with it,” Lang responded to Curt’s question.
-
-“But Barney told us not to go building theories,” Bob objected.
-
-“He’s older, and better able to see things clearly,” Lang reminded him.
-“So we will climb pretty high, as if for test dives and slips, and
-skids, and barrel rolls—you’d better be sure to snap your safety
-belts—not right now, though. This crate slips pretty sharp. But——”
-
-“I think we’re wasting time,” declared Bob, “flying to the airport.”
-
-“Why?” asked Lang.
-
-“In the first place, the airplane was carefully hidden. No one at the
-airport would know anything about it. In the second place, I can’t see
-how it could link in with the crash——”
-
-“Unless its pilot was higher than Mr. Tredway, and flew over him and
-forced him down—” Al was excited at his deduction. He felt puffed up.
-
-“We would have seen him,” objected Curt, crushing Al’s inflated vanity.
-
-“By the way,” Bob broke in, “let’s talk about something else. If Barney
-sent you for information, that’s that. Never mind what we think. What I
-want to do is to get a line on that fellow named Griff—Griff Parsons.”
-
-“Why?” Lang swung in his seat, catching the shift of the crate with
-almost automatic movements of stick and rudder bar. “What about him?”
-
-“He’s the son of the superintendent, isn’t he?” asked Curt.
-
-“Yes,” Al broke in, “and what’s more, I suspect that ‘super.’ He looks
-like the sort who could do tricky things. Did you see his eyes?”
-
-“Yes,” agreed Curt. Lang cut the motor, and glided gently, to hear
-better.
-
-“But what has that to do with Griff?”
-
-Bob, surprised at the sharpness of Lang’s tone, frowned.
-
-“He looks like the same type as his father—same shifty eyes, same
-restlessness—furtiveness!”
-
-“Say! See here!” Lang became suddenly angry. “You let that young man
-alone and keep your unfair suspicions off him.”
-
-“Is that so?” Al was angry, too, all at once. “Who are you to give us
-orders?”
-
-“I’ll let you know who I am if you go on suspecting innocent people.
-What’s more, I’ll have Uncle Fred yank you out of there so quick——”
-
-“What makes you so hot under the collar?” demanded Bob. “What is it to
-you if we suspect Griff? Is he an angel that we have to keep our minds
-off him?”
-
-“He’s a mighty good friend of mine!” snapped Langley.
-
-All of them were angry. Curt, not related to the others, felt that he
-ought to intervene between the quarreling cousins, but something in the
-unreasoning fury of Lang’s next words stopped him.
-
-“See here!” Lang forgot he was piloting an airplane, and swung around on
-his seat, his face working. “If you keep on, if you bother Griff, or try
-to trail him, or anything—I’ll have Uncle Fred yank you out of there so
-quick——”
-
-“Oh! Look out!”
-
-Forgotten, the airplane, with no guide, answered automatically to the
-thrust of Lang’s foot on the rudder bar as he whirled on his cousins.
-The shift of the rudder swung the nose, and Lang’s instinct made him
-operate it to make the ailerons bank the ship, but she had almost lost
-flying speed, the all important velocity which gives the wings lifting
-qualities.
-
-Sickeningly the airplane tilted. Al, Bob and Curt, not strapped fast,
-tumbled sidewise, and the unstable craft tipped down.
-
-Abruptly, realizing the slip and the danger, although they were quite
-high, Lang “kicked rudder” sharply.
-
-To his dismay, there came a dull, snapping thump and one end of the
-rudder bar worked free.
-
-The cable had either come loose or had snapped!
-
-And, with its unstrapped occupants in a huddle, on the side which was
-lowermost, the lower wingtip turned straight downward, the other pointed
-toward the sky, the windowed sides were in the position of floor and
-ceiling—and the airplane began to fall!
-
-“Three thousand feet,” Lang’s eyes consulted the altimeter. “Three——”
-
-Momentarily he lost his “nerve” and faltered.
-
-Bob, on the instant, acted!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- IN THE FALLING ’PLANE
-
-
-In an emergency, thoughts leap through some minds quicker than lightning
-crosses the sky.
-
-Bob’s mentality was of that type. Whether his mind worked through what
-is called instinct, or whether he put together many things he had
-learned about airplanes, or whether he worked through a chain of
-reasoning from beginning to end in a fraction of a second does not
-matter.
-
-The important thing was his action.
-
-In an airplane which is falling with wingtips toward sky and earth, the
-ailerons which usually tilt it are practically useless, because it has
-no forward movement sufficient to bring the air against the leading
-edges of the wings for lift, or to press against the ailerons to cause
-them to function properly.
-
-Furthermore, when the ship is falling “on its side” the elevators which
-in level flight serve to lift or to drop the nose, are no longer
-elevators; they, because of the position of the ship, are really the
-rudders, while the rudder, because it is then parallel to the ground,
-assumes the position and functions of the elevators.
-
-But Bob knew, in a flash, from the action of the ship, from the free
-movement of the rudder bar, that the rudder cable had come loose or had
-snapped.
-
-Bob knew, furthermore, that unless he could drop the nose, “give her the
-gun,” and thus—by partly diving instead of falling sideways, and by
-partly using the propeller pull—could regain flying speed, Lang could
-not get the craft under control and save them from a crash.
-
-There were seconds, not more, between them and eternity!
-
-That rudder must be operated.
-
-It must be done before they came too close to earth to make the
-maneuvers, necessary to a safe landing, possible.
-
-Even as he called to Lang, “Give her the gun!” his hand smashed through
-the thin side of the cabin wall, down where it came together with the
-sturdy, but light plates of the flooring.
-
-Because the airplane fell on its side, the side he smashed was under
-him, the flooring was at his side, acting as the sidewall.
-
-He knew that if the lower of rudder cables in the ship’s present
-position was broken he could get it there; if the upper one was severed
-its end would have dropped down, perhaps caught on a longeron or on a
-longitudinal fuselage brace; he might be able to catch hold of it.
-
-It took but a second to thrust his hand through the cabin wall, to grip
-the edge of a floor plate, to rip it from its temporary fastenings which
-were not completed until the tests made it sure that no further
-adjustments under the flooring would be necessary.
-
-Thus disclosed, he could see the under framework of that part of the
-fuselage.
-
-Braced so that his body would not crash down through a window, he
-looked, and grappled for the cable end. His fingers touched cable!
-
-For all the exigency of their desperate situation he tugged very gently
-and was glad. That cable was fast! It might lead to the elevators, the
-ailerons. Anyway it was not the right strand.
-
-Again he felt under the edge of what was in the ship’s position, the
-plate above the one ripped away. His fingers touched a loose strand.
-
-“We’re all right!” he panted, grasping the plate and tugging it partly
-free so that his arm could go further in and secure in his gripping
-fingers the loose cable end.
-
-In the brief time that this had taken, Lang had obeyed the call for gas
-to be fed to the engine. Idling, it roared into its power pulsations.
-
-There was an instant of fear in Bob’s mind.
-
-If the cable he held were pulled and it depressed the rudder, which
-would act in their position as an elevator or “flipper” acts, all would
-be well. In that case, the propeller blast striking the rudder airfoil
-would push the nose downward, and the ship would begin to dive; then the
-air, rushing against the leading edge of the wings, would cause them to
-be operative, even in their sidewise position, and with the dive and the
-engine pull giving flying speed, they could then maneuver.
-
-But if the rudder went upward, it would lift the nose. Already deprived
-of all but the little speed the engine had picked up, the blast on the
-rudder, lifting the nose, would cause another stall, and they would
-perhaps fall too far to get the other side of the rudder cable before he
-could help it.
-
-“I’ve got the end of the cable,” he cried. “Set yourself, Lang!”
-
-Lang, with a swift glance toward the windows, which faced the earth, saw
-the ground seeming to leap upward toward them. Above was the silent sky.
-There was a little margin of time—if——
-
-“Pull easy!” Lang shouted.
-
-“Pull easy!” Instantly Curt relayed the message.
-
-“Easy!” cried Al.
-
-Bob tensed his muscles, braced himself, gave a gentle tug and held it.
-
-The nose lowered.
-
-“Hold it!” shrilled Al, relaying Lang’s relieved cry.
-
-The rudder had sent the nose a little downward, the drop changed into a
-dive.
-
-“Can you pull the rudder further?” The message came swiftly from Lang,
-through Curt and Al, to Bob, almost out of one mouth before the other
-said it, so quick was the response.
-
-“Yes!” Bob did so.
-
-Slowly the ship swung onto a more level keel, and while Bob clung with
-fingers that were growing numb from his excitement, the ship got flying
-speed, in a sort of descending spiral, the elevators could again be made
-to lift the nose as flying speed was attained, and the ship was in
-control.
-
-The signal to ease off did not come at once. Lang preferred to hold his
-present bank and circle, while he looked over through the lower cabin
-windows to sight their position.
-
-In that brief time Curt, also keyed up, had located the loose end of the
-cable that led from the rudder bar; with a piece of strong twine he made
-a splice, securely reaved onto the loose end, led it to the free end in
-Bob’s fingers, and, since the rudder was hard down and could be held
-there by grasping further along the cable, Bob shifted his grip until
-Curt was able to get his twine, doubled, fast on that part of the cable
-also. Then, while Lang held his rudder bar steady, Curt tightened gently
-until the ends of the severed strand were almost touching, made several
-knots that could not slip—and the entire control of the ship was in
-Lang’s hands again!
-
-They did not feel like going on to the airport, but Curt, always cool,
-generally far-seeing, urged that they do so.
-
-“If we go back, we’ll have to tell about this, and create new excitement
-and talk,” he counseled, and Lang saw the good sense of the idea.
-
-“We’ll go on, and land at the airport,” he agreed, above the sound of
-his motor. “After we get over our excitement we can think better.”
-
-When they got there, and Lang telephoned the aircraft plant, the trio,
-outside the booth, heard him ask for Griff.
-
-Moodily, sorrowfully, with common consent, they moved away.
-
-One and all they linked Griff’s uneasiness and Lang’s curious anger and
-immediate call to the one he called “a very good friend.”
-
-It was bad enough to suspect Griff. But Lang—Bob’s cousin——
-
-That was dreadful!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- WATCHFUL WAITING
-
-
-Moodily walking back toward their airplane, around which a group of
-handlers and mechanics watched one assigned to make sure the cable
-splice was entirely safe, Curt spoke quietly.
-
-“Bob, maybe we should have waited to hear what Langley said to Griff.”
-
-“No!” Bob was almost snappish. “No!”
-
-“I hate to suspect your cousin of anything wrong,” Curt assured the
-brothers earnestly.
-
-“Not any more than I hate it,” Al retorted. “But you’ve got to look at
-what you see and hear what comes to your ears.”
-
-“All the same,” counseled Curt, hoping to lighten the burden of
-unhappiness for his chums, “I’d go slow. You know—they may be just
-friends, close ones. There may not be anything wrong about Griff. We are
-likely to be suspicious, because that’s what we are there for.”
-
-“But look!” objected Al. “The cable snaps. Now that’s almost a
-spick-span new crate. That cable ought not to fray apart—it could never
-wear so soon. It was—filed or scraped.”
-
-“But that doesn’t involve Griff,” urged Curt, hoping, if he lightened
-their suspicion of Griff the cousin who was his friend would be less
-suspected. “He works in the engine department. Anyhow, he knew his
-friend, your cousin, would fly the ’plane. He’d never——”
-
-“Sh-h-h!” warned Bob.
-
-Langley, looking very glum, came up to them.
-
-“I talked to Griff,” he said. “Told him what had happened. He was
-flabbergasted.”
-
-“You ought to have reported to Barney—or to Mr. Parsons,” Bob declared.
-
-“Why did Griff have to know anyhow?” Al was impulsive and did not care
-if he started a fresh quarrel or not. The conclusion he jumped to was
-that an angry Langley would disclose “secrets.”
-
-“I wanted to warn him against—you!”
-
-Langley walked away. But they did not let him get far ahead of them as
-they approached the airplane.
-
-The mechanic who had been in the cabin greeted them.
-
-“Funny about that cable,” he stated. “How did it ever get so much use
-that it wore through? You must kick rudder every two seconds.”
-
-“Was it worn through—or—” Al began. Curt prodded his ribs very sharply.
-As Al became quiet Curt asked a louder question to distract the man from
-pursuing that “or—” and learning their fears.
-
-“Or did it break at the rudder bar?” he asked.
-
-“It chafed against the transverse brace it ran under,” the mechanic
-responded. “They ought to have an eyelet or something for a guide—a
-small pulley would be best, with an eyelet to keep the cable from
-slipping out of the groove and chafing on the solid part of the pulley.”
-
-“We’ll report that,” said Curt. “A rudder is pretty important.”
-
-“I’ll say,” replied the mechanic.
-
-The plates had been fastened back into their light frame, being of
-sturdy construction and not permanently attached, they had come away
-clean and were put back easily. Only the cracked hole in the panels gave
-outward evidence of the recent near catastrophe.
-
-“Suppose we let on that was an accident, that I put my foot through the
-panel,” suggested Curt. “Repairing it only means putting in a new
-section there—it ought not to cost much and I have some money in my
-savings account to pay for it.”
-
-“Let’s all put together,” urged Al.
-
-“Why not tell the truth?” snapped Langley.
-
-“Don’t you want to find out who endangered you and the rest of us?”
-
-Lang considered Bob’s sharp phrase. “Yes,” he said finally.
-
-The best way to do that, argued Curt, was by watchful waiting, not by
-putting the possible malefactor on his guard. “They could,” Al declared,
-“see who makes the repair, and I can watch, being out near the ’planes,
-and see if anybody takes a special interest in the floor and the
-cables.”
-
-Langley agreed rather bruskly and went off to take up his inquiries
-about the brown airplane they had seen in the field.
-
-“Watchful waiting!” repeated Bob, thoughtfully. “That’s a good slogan.
-Let’s ‘watchful wait’ to see what Griff does—and how Lang acts—and if
-either of them acts queerly when they are with Griff’s father.”
-
-“Just what makes you suspicious of him—the father?” Curt asked, more to
-check up his own theories than for information. “He’s Mr. Tredway’s
-partner, you know.”
-
-“I suspect him,” Al declared, “because he’s the kind that looks
-suspicious, with his quick action and his sharp talk and his shifty
-eyes.”
-
-“And Griff is exactly the same in every way,” supplemented Bob.
-
-“Then we have two suspects to keep tabs on,” agreed Curt.
-
-“Three,” corrected Al.
-
-“Let’s leave Lang out,” urged Curt.
-
-“All right—we won’t watch him. But it’s bad, because we can’t talk over
-plans and tell him everything. There will be—a—a——”
-
-“Strained relationship,” suggested Bob.
-
-“Yes,” agreed Al.
-
-“Well, pretend to be the same as ever, but keep your ideas to yourself,”
-Curt begged. “And—we’ll be watchful waiters.”
-
-During the next week that was the only policy they would have been able
-to adopt. Nothing happened at all.
-
-Al still carried parcels, on occasion, for rigger Sandy Jim Bailey, and
-improved his acquaintance with Jimmy-junior.
-
-Mr. Wright’s absence from town during the entire week prevented them
-from consulting that detective. The comrades were thrown on their own
-resources.
-
-“I don’t see that watchful waiting has gotten us very far,” commented Al
-as they rode home for lunch, Curt with the brothers, at noon on
-Saturday. The day’s work was over.
-
-“We know a little more than we did,” Curt reminded him. “I’ve had talks
-with some of the boys I know, and I’ve found out that the ones Griff
-associates with aren’t thought well of. And Bob has trailed him, several
-evenings, in spite of Lang’s warning to Griff, and Bob has told you that
-Griff always gets away on his motorcycle and goes somewhere that we
-can’t locate yet. But we know his character isn’t very high class, and
-his father still acts uneasy and preoccupied. So we have gained that
-much.”
-
-“What good is it?” Al was unconvinced. “It doesn’t say what happened to
-Mr. Tredway. It hasn’t told us who is taking airplane parts. It doesn’t
-explain who tampered with the rudder cable in the Golden Dart—or why.”
-
-“No,” Bob admitted. “That’s true, it doesn’t. But it’s the best we can
-do, for the present. And we never know when something may ‘break.’”
-
-“Let’s keep on learning airplane technique,” suggested Curt. “We know
-we’ve gained there, anyhow.”
-
-“Yes,” Al nodded. “I can name the different parts of a biplane without
-stumbling over any of them.” He did, “—fuselage; engine; propeller;
-upper and lower wing; cockpit and its cowling; struts and landing and
-flying wires; stabilizer, fin, elevator, rudder; ailerons; tail skid;
-and landing gear that Sandy calls the ‘trucks.’”
-
-“Correct,” agreed Curt. “And they comprise five groupings, each one
-having a special purpose—the fuselage, the supporting structure for
-everything else. Everything is attached to that. Then——”
-
-“The second group,” Bob cut in, “is the supporting surfaces, the wings.
-They sustain the whole weight in the air, and the flying wires take the
-lift of the wings as the air sustains them, and communicates it, with
-the struts helping, to the body.
-
-“Well, in a way,” Bob changed the statement slightly. “The flying wires
-are to take the stress, and if it wasn’t for them the wings would tilt
-up at the ends or tips, like a ‘V.’ The flying wires take the stress in
-flying the same as the landing wires take the weight of the wings in
-landing; without the landing wires, when the ship came down the wings
-would crumple down over the crate like the two slanting sides of a tent
-or like the ‘V’ upside down.”
-
-“Yes,” Al showed his knowledge, “and then there is the control group,
-the ailerons at the backs or trailing edges of the wings, to be moved
-upward or downward, to tilt the ship; and the rudder, to turn it
-sideways—and if it’s flying on its side the rudder is performing the
-office of the elevators and they of the rudder, because when it’s flying
-level the elevators are to tip its nose up for a climb or down for a
-glide; then there’s the fin and the stabilizers that give it balance and
-help to hold the whole ship in whatever position it is placed by the
-movable controls I just mentioned.”
-
-“And with all those you have a glider,” agreed Bob. “The engine, and its
-‘prop’ are for motive power, and the landing group, either wheels for
-the earth, or pontoons for the water, or both, combined, in an
-amphibian, for land-and-water use——”
-
-“We know some things,” agreed Curt. “But we don’t know where Mr.
-Tredway’s body went—or——”
-
-“What Griff is going to do with his Saturday afternoon,” commented Bob.
-“I’m going back to the plant, and pretend to finish up work, and see
-what happens there while it’s supposed to be closed down.”
-
-The others agreed. Something might “break.” Actually, something did!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- STRANGE ACTIONS
-
-
-Although the aircraft manufacturing plant observed a forty-four hour
-week, closing down on Saturday afternoons, when the three members of the
-Sky Squad returned, about two o’clock, they were somewhat startled to
-discover that their “suspects” were there.
-
-Bob, entering the engine section, discovered Griff.
-
-The youth was surprised, “caught in the act!” mused Bob as he saw the
-youth, with furtive, hasty actions, completing the wrappings of a
-smallish package which he hurriedly slipped into his coat as he turned
-aside, trying to conceal his action from Bob and then, noting that he
-was caught, trying to pass it off as an ordinary action.
-
-“So that’s where some of the smaller parts are going,” Bob concluded,
-pretending not to be aware that anything was wrong.
-
-“Hello,” he greeted. “I thought I’d come back and take that model engine
-apart, while no one was here to bother me, so I can get it straight in
-my head just how the valves operate.”
-
-“Yeah?” Griff was inclined to be gruff, and as he tinkered around trying
-to pretend to be busy, but, to Bob’s notion, watching the member of the
-Sky Squad, the latter gave every impression he could of ignorance that
-he was being supervised, studied, observed.
-
-Had Griff been intruded upon before he finished what he had been doing?
-Bob wondered as he took off the cylinder head of a small, roughly
-assembled model of a new design for a Vee-type motor they were working
-on. It appeared that Mr. Tredway had been “all for” the newer radial
-engines, while Mr. Parsons exerted all his influence to introduce the
-model in which the cylinders, in line, came together in a slanting
-fashion, like a “V” at the crankcase jointure.
-
-Bob took out pistons and pretended to examine the crankpin assembly.
-
-Griff watched covertly and appeared to be exceptionally uneasy.
-
-Curt entered from the wing assembly rooms.
-
-“Hello, Griff.” He nodded, paid little attention to Griff and went over
-to Bob.
-
-“Interesting?” he hinted. Bob nodded, and began to explain the parts.
-
-“I see.” Curt, bent close, whispered his next words. “Lang is out in the
-yard, working on the Golden Dart. He has the plates out and he is——”
-
-As he spoke Lang came in.
-
-“Say, Curt,” he called, “run up to the offices, and if Mr. Parsons or
-Barney is around, get me a new—er—length of cable, will you?”
-
-“Will they give it to me?”
-
-“Sure.”
-
-“Supposing there’s nobody around. The office is closed.”
-
-“Go to the supply room, on the ground floor. The watchman will let you
-get what you want. All you have to do is to write out a requisition form
-and put it on the spindle on the desk. You’ll see it.”
-
-“Can you get supplies as easily as that?” Bob asked.
-
-“Surely! Why not?”
-
-Curt and Bob made no comment. The former went to execute Lang’s request.
-
-In the offices, as he neared the open door of the bookkeeper’s little
-cubby of a room, Curt heard two low voices. He hesitated. He was close
-enough to be able to recognize in the bent figure leaning over the
-other, with his back turned, the peculiarly checked brown suit which
-identified Mr. Parsons.
-
-Evidently neither the partner nor his companion heard Curt, so absorbed
-were they in some discussion or comparison of figures.
-
-Curt, wondering why they were so engrossed in that work when the office
-was closed, and so absorbed that they had not heard him—he had not tried
-to snoop or to creep along the hall!—decided that it must be legitimate
-business, and that he would not disturb them.
-
-He went on beyond to the rear stairway and down, looking for the
-watchman.
-
-Al found him there.
-
-“How do you get into the supply room?” asked Al.
-
-“That’s what I’m trying to do. What’s that you’re carrying?”
-
-“It’s an earth inductor compass,” Al explained. “You heard Sandy hail me
-as we came in.” Curt nodded. “He stayed on to check up my work,” Al
-informed him. “I’m pretty raw, you know, and Sandy is so good-natured
-that he didn’t want to see me get into any trouble. I was helping one of
-the mechs this morning”—he had already picked up some of the slang,
-shortening “mechanic” as did those in the plant—“and Sandy was going
-over the instruments I had installed. That Golden Dart is going to be
-used for an overseas hop, he says—and—” he went close to Curt, “Curt, I
-think Sandy has helped us to get a line on somebody else to
-suspect—about the stolen parts, anyhow.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“He called me over and told me, in a joking way, I had a lot to learn.
-And then he asked me if I knew anything about how this new type compass
-operated. I knew a little, but not much, and he showed me how little I
-knew. Curt—” he was very serious—“this is an old, broken thing. Look!”
-
-He indicated the failure of the parts to operate correctly.
-
-“If we’d let that get to the checker, Monday, I’d have been suspected of
-getting away with the regular, real one. This must have been substituted
-by the mechanic who was on that job—the one I helped. Or else it was
-given out by the clerk who has charge of this room. Anyhow, Sandy says I
-ought to put in a requisition for another one, and then he is going to
-help me keep an eye out to see what happens on Monday. He wants to help
-us. I saw he was so afraid I’d get the blame, and he’s so mad about the
-way things are being taken that I let him in on our secret——”
-
-“About being detectives?”
-
-“Well, only as far as saying we were crazy about aviation and had formed
-a sort of order we call the Sky Squad, and naturally, being honest, we
-saw how things were going here and wanted to do what we could to
-discover who is taking parts.”
-
-“And what did he say about it?”
-
-“He said not to be too hasty to jump to conclusions. He told me that
-this substituting of the old inductor compass looked like the work of
-the mech, but it could be the supply clerk, or, maybe, somebody outside
-the plant entirely who had sent it in, boxed, in a new consignment. He
-said the safest way would be to put in a new requisition, then we’d see
-who acted guilty when it was discovered. If the supply clerk is guilty
-he would never mention it for fear of being caught. If the mech is the
-culprit, the clerk will raise a howl about the exchange. If they are
-both innocent, you’ll hear from both of them, and we can trace it to
-somebody who sent the consignment.”
-
-“Good stuff!” agreed Curt. “But didn’t the mechanic notice it was a
-broken model of the compass?”
-
-“He gave me the instructions how to assemble it and told me to be
-careful, and then went over to work on that small speed craft that Griff
-is testing out. Griff called him, so it looks all right. If the mech
-noticed this old compass, before he went home, he’ll tell me, first
-thing Monday. If he knew about it and had taken the other, the good
-one——”
-
-“He’ll lay low. I see.”
-
-The watchman, making his rounds, observed the pair. Readily enough he
-admitted them to the supply department. Either he was of too
-unsuspicious a nature, being rather dull, to wonder or question; or he
-had been told by Barney that the youths were especially privileged. In
-either case he made no comment as they found the cable Curt wanted for
-Lang and the several extra inductor compasses, neatly boxed, among the
-stacked instruments in the shelves.
-
-Making out two of the slips he saw in a pad, and fixing them on the
-upstanding spike of a file, Curt handed Al his box and with the cable
-went to find Lang.
-
-Handing the strand to his chum’s cousin, Curt decided to return to the
-office building to see what he might see. The excuse that he was
-studying the blue prints of an airplane would furnish reason for his
-presence in the office if Mr. Parsons was still there and asked.
-
-Bob, as Lang left, found Griff suddenly and unaccountably pleasant.
-
-“Funny about that cable,” he remarked.
-
-“Sure is,” admitted Bob, watchful, quiet, but willing to follow Griff’s
-unexpected lead.
-
-“Lang says you had your suspicions of me,” Griff grinned, quite
-pleasantly. Had he, Bob wondered, been “tipped” by Lang to cultivate
-friendship? Was there something really underneath the friendship of the
-partner’s son and Bob’s pilot cousin? Was there something else?
-
-“Why, I suppose when we got excited about that broken rudder pull, we
-thought of anything and everything,” Bob grinned also.
-
-“Well, you thought wrong, friend. Would you try to do any harm to your
-buddy, Curtis, if you knew he was to fly a certain crate?”
-
-“No,” Bob admitted, honestly and fervently.
-
-“But some other pilot, jealous, maybe—might! Eh?”
-
-Bob had not in any way considered that possible solution. There was
-another test pilot, not as popular as his cousin. He gave the most
-serious attention, but Griff evidently felt that he had said enough,
-adding only: “But I don’t mean to accuse anybody. Let’s forget it. Come
-on, let’s forget motors and go up and have a look at them little fleecy
-clouds.” He caught Bob’s arm, after slipping the cylinder head over the
-pistons of the model with Bob’s help.
-
-“Ever fly a crate?” he asked.
-
-“Not solo!” Bob admitted, “but Lang has let me take the controls six or
-seven times when he used to take us up, before we came here to——”
-
-“To what?”
-
-“To learn all there is about building airplanes,” Bob continued without
-the flicker of an eyelash.
-
-“Hm-m-m! Well, come on, kidlets! I’ll take you up in the prettiest
-little crate you ever sat in—what’s more, I’ll give you some experience
-so you can fly them crates after you get wise to how they’re assembled.”
-
-It was evidently a genuinely friendly offer. If it had any hidden
-motives, Bob, on that sunny Saturday, with a gentle, warm vacation wind
-blowing, with bonny clouds drifting slowly, gave up watching and went in
-for air experience.
-
-Al, finally deserted by Sandy, who had errands down town, saw Bob and
-Griff warm up the little speed sportster he had been rigging. A little
-envious he watched the check-up, the trial spurts of the fast little
-engine, the take-off and the soaring of the handsomely designed craft.
-Then he went on to visit Jimmy-junior, whose father, Sandy, had given
-him a special invitation to spend the afternoon and to stay to dinner
-with Jimmy-junior.
-
-Lang, taking the cabin monoplane for a test of his rudder performance,
-called Curt to go along; so the trio lost interest in detective work and
-concentrated on enjoyment——
-
-Until evening!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- A SUMMONS
-
-
-While Griff, who handled an airplane expertly, was executing dives and
-slips, barrel rolls and figure eights, and a loop or so to demonstrate
-his skill, Bob, in the rear cockpit seat, wondered whether Griff was
-trying to frighten him.
-
-That was not his purpose, Bob decided, and he was more convinced when
-Griff, with a grin, turned, after waggling the stick and holding both
-hands up beside his head—the signal to “take control.”
-
-Bob nodded.
-
-Under Lang’s tuition, in several airplanes, during tests, Bob had been
-permitted to handle the stick, rudder and throttle. He knew the
-elementary movements of straight flying and had some of “the feel of the
-air” which comes to any person who has the flying sense: that “feel of
-the air” is akin to knowing what the ship is going to do and, of course,
-sensing how to meet its various tendencies. When, during a climb, with
-too steep an angle, the controls begin to get “loggy” for an example,
-the born pilot, or the trained fellow with his air-sense developed,
-knows instinctively that the ship is about to stall, and automatically
-drops the nose and picks up flying speed.
-
-For awhile Bob, flying straight, or banking and turning, remained near
-the small flying field of the plant. He knew the signals with which a
-flying instructor guides his pupil, and, handling the dual control
-section in his own hands, and with his feet, he made simple maneuvers
-under Griff’s direction, and seemed to please Griff by the quickness
-with which he caught the corrections signaled to him when he
-over-banked, or let the ship skid too long without catching the skid.
-
-The trial was over all too soon, and as Griff took over to shoot the
-field and set down, the most ticklish part of flying tactics, Bob felt a
-trifle sheepish for having suspected him.
-
-Griff was, really, quite a pleasant fellow.
-
-However, Bob began to think. This sudden affable manner must have some
-reason behind it. Furthermore, he decided, Griff might be trying to win
-his confidence through the hidden flattery of telling Bob what a
-“corking” pilot he would make with a little more training. Bob knew that
-flying is taught carefully by any self-respecting school, that a
-thorough ground-school training and many hours of instructed flight will
-be followed by many solo flights, with intermittent check flights under
-the instructor’s eyes, before a pilot is considered more than a student.
-Griff over-flattered.
-
-Bob, as he went home, where Al and Lang had preceded him, his cousin
-having stopped in for dinner, decided that he would accept Griff’s
-offered friendship with a grain of salt.
-
-Al was there, of course, but no confidences were exchanged.
-
-Al had already eaten his dinner, with Jimmy-junior, after a fun-filled
-afternoon during which Jimmy had displayed his airplane models, had
-supervised many trials while he let his guest wind the sturdy rubber
-band motors and set the tiny, practicable controls of the toys.
-Furthermore, he had talked about the Sky Squad idea and had begged to be
-permitted to join, being air-crazy, as he put it. Al, promising to take
-the matter up with his brother and with Curt, had said he would do all
-he could to induce them to agree. He could not broach the matter,
-however, as Curt, Bob and Lang ate, because Lang was full of the
-excitement of receiving a telegram from Bob’s and Al’s father, the
-detective, from a city about fifty miles away, asking Lang to come to
-the city for a report and a conference.
-
-Glancing at Bob, both Curt and Al saw that the older member of the
-secret membership was disturbed in his mind. Lang would not tell about
-Griff, as he visited his uncle over Sunday. That was what Bob was
-thinking, as Al and Curt saw. But Curt, looking at his watch, reminded
-Lang that he must stop stuffing down the filet of sole, a form of fish
-steaks of which he was extremely fond, if he expected to “make” the ’bus
-that would pass the house on the way to the city, and the railway
-station.
-
-“I’m going to fly!” Lang declared, reaching for more fish.
-
-“Why not take us, then?” demanded Al.
-
-“No. I’m going to borrow Griff’s sport model. More speedy and I want to
-check before it is turned over to him finally.”
-
-“There’d be room for one of us,” Bob spoke up.
-
-“No sirree!” and they knew why Lang was so snappish.
-
-Bob pushed back his chair as Al and Curt sprang up. Lang, rising with
-his superior, amused grin at their anxiety, waved them back and kissing
-his aunt and thanking her for the fish he loved, he departed.
-
-“I’m going!” said Bob, and explained excitedly to his mother that he had
-information of importance.
-
-“Lang will tell it,” she said. “Explain to him.”
-
-Bob’s face fell, as did Al’s. They were in a box!
-
-They could not explain to their mother that they suspected Lang, at the
-very least, of protecting Griff, a friend but not a desirable one.
-Whatever their own ideas they were none of them blabbers.
-
-Bob ran out on the porch, leaped down the steps, hopped on his bicycle
-and pedaled down the first side street. He was not entirely sure of his
-plans, perhaps he half intended to secrete himself in the fuselage of
-the ’plane, to go on as an unsuspected passenger; possibly he hoped to
-induce Lang to take him by getting there first.
-
-At any rate, as he neared the plant, he was glad he had come.
-
-Griff, at the gate, was in close communication with a mysteriously
-furtive stranger!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- A TRAIL AND A FLIGHT
-
-
-Twisting his handlebars sharply, Bob sent his bicycle into brush at the
-end of the aircraft plant grounds where the fence turned; he wanted to
-get out of sight.
-
-The pair at the gate were having some sort of argument and probably had
-been too excited and absorbed to notice him, Bob decided.
-
-He dropped his wheel and crept back to the corner of the fenced
-enclosure to watch.
-
-From that position he could see the man, but only part of Griff’s coat
-and an arm. The man, as he saw, was vigorously arguing. Griff must have
-been either pleading or arguing, Bob guessed, from the man’s violent
-gestures and appearance of “laying down the law.”
-
-Presently a small, flat package came into view.
-
-Bob recalled that he had seen Griff wrapping exactly that sort of parcel
-earlier.
-
-The man took it, put it rapidly into his coat pocket, inside. With a
-quick look up and down the deserted highway he swung and crossed to a
-car parked on the opposite side of the road. Climbing in he speeded up
-his engine and drove away at constantly increasing speed.
-
-“So they are dividing the ‘spoils’—or Griff was giving him money.” Bob,
-unable to see Griff, not daring to emerge from his concealment, made the
-deduction under his breath. “Well, now shall I follow that man? No,
-because his car is too fast. I can’t catch him on my wheel.”
-
-He decided to wait where he was, to see what would happen. To go in at
-once might alarm Griff. He might realize that Bob had been near enough
-to see what had occurred; he might suspect. Bob wanted to keep his
-presence unknown; Griff had already been warned by Lang; he would jump
-to the conclusion that Bob was watching.
-
-Almost at once Bob thanked his good sense for holding him concealed.
-
-Griff, as he watched, ran wildly out into the road and began to wave and
-shout after the receding car.
-
-Its driver did not turn around.
-
-Griff, while Bob stared, dashed back into the gateway. For a moment Bob
-wondered where the watchman was, then he saw the man, in a small
-ice-cream and soda water shack, a little distance down the road opposite
-the fenced property. Griff, Bob guessed, had offered to watch the gate
-while the man refreshed himself.
-
-Bob hesitated. Where had Griff gone? What was he doing?
-
-The last question was answered by the pop-pop of a motor. Bob knew that
-Griff rode a motorcycle. He was getting it started. He meant to pursue
-that car for some reason. Something had caused him to want to talk again
-with the car driver, Bob mused.
-
-While he watched, keeping all but his head concealed, the motorcycle,
-with Griff mounted on it, came sputtering into view.
-
-Never glancing around, opening his throttle, he pelted down the road
-after the car.
-
-Bob, without hesitation, rushed his bicycle into the highway and pedaled
-after the motorcycle for all he was worth. Griff was too intent on his
-purpose to notice, he felt sure.
-
-It would be a losing race, Bob feared, unless Griff overtook that
-rapidly receding car very soon. Muscles could not endure against a
-machine! Nevertheless Bob rode as fast as his pedals would turn.
-
-As he sent the wheels spinning along it crossed his mind that Lang would
-be arriving at the plant almost any moment but he kept on all the same.
-
-“It will take Lang awhile to warm up the engine, and, anyway, if I don’t
-go with him I know another way to communicate with father,” he decided.
-
-The car was almost out of Bob’s sight, the motorcycle was rapidly
-overtaking it.
-
-At that instant Bob’s heart almost stopped beating!
-
-Far ahead, on a cross road, he saw a huge truck come into view. It was
-not only between the car and its pursuer; it was also well onto the road
-and almost directly in front of the motorcycle.
-
-“Griff!” Bob shouted, without thinking that his voice would never be
-heard. He instinctively cried a warning. If the rider had his head low
-over his handlebars!——
-
-His coaster brake jammed on, Bob slowed, alighted, his muscles refusing
-to function for the instant.
-
-But during that instant Griff evidently saw the huge obstacle and
-swerved. In making the wild curve to go around the rear of the truck Bob
-saw the youth and cycle go off the road into the ditch.
-
-Evidently unaware that anything had happened the truck driver kept on
-down the cross road. Bob, remounting, pedaled for all he was worth
-toward the scene of the accident. As he rode swiftly he saw other
-figures approaching.
-
-At the point where the motorcycle lay on its side, he was met by Al and
-Curt, who had been approaching from the opposite way, up the side road.
-“We decided to come and see Lang hop off,” Al explained as the trio ran
-toward Griff.
-
-He was sitting up, a little shaken, a little dazed, when they
-approached. Bob, seeing that he did not appear to be seriously hurt,
-caught Curt’s arm. “Look here,” he said quickly, “I want to go with
-Lang. Don’t say I was following—you know—keep it quiet. I must get to
-see father and tell him——”
-
-“All right. Don’t waste any time. Get out of sight. I’ll tell Al.”
-
-Bob hurried off, as though he was in search of aid, and he felt, as he
-pedaled back toward the field, that Griff probably had been too much
-shaken to notice that Bob had come from the direction he had been
-riding, or deduce that Bob had followed him.
-
-The watchman, and several others from the soda stand came running down
-the road. They called out as he approached and with a brief explanation
-that there had been a “spill” but that he thought it was not serious,
-Bob rode on.
-
-He found Lang riding toward the plant, and swung his bicycle in at the
-gate and set it against the fence.
-
-“What’s the trouble, up there?”
-
-“Griff took a spill going around the back of a truck that came out of
-the side road. I think he’s all right.” Bob called out his answer to
-Lang’s shouted inquiry and saw his cousin ride on to investigate.
-
-Bob, with some idea in his mind that he might crawl into the fuselage of
-the small speed ’plane, and, thus stowed away, be carried to the city
-from which his father had telegraphed, changed his mind. The close,
-smothery fuselage, subjected to the most violent rolling and heaving of
-the airplane’s progress, would probably make him ill. He preferred to
-stay outside, to see what happened, and to compel Langley to take him as
-a passenger.
-
-Watching from the gateway he saw that Griff had been lifted to his feet
-and had apparently found himself only rather badly shaken. This was
-Bob’s decision because he saw a passing car driver help the shaken youth
-into his car, tumble the motorcycle out of the grass and turn it over to
-the plant watchman to be trundled back, and drive off to take Griff
-home, it seemed.
-
-Bob met Lang beside the propeller of the little speed craft.
-
-“Get the ignition key from Griff?” he asked.
-
-“I did.”
-
-“Climb in. I’ll give the prop a twist for you.”
-
-Langley got himself set.
-
-“Gas on?” called Bob.
-
-“Gas on.”
-
-“Switch off?”
-
-“Switch off!”
-
-Bob gave the propeller a couple of revolutions.
-
-“Contact!” he cried, leaping aside to avoid the flailing, knife-like
-edges of the blades. The engine caught on the touch of spark to
-compressed gas mixture.
-
-While Langley opened the throttle and warmed up his engine, Bob
-unconcernedly began to clamber into the after cockpit seat.
-
-“You’re not going!”
-
-“Oh, yes, I am.”
-
-“Get out of there!”
-
-“Listen, Lang,” Bob leaned close to Lang’s ear to carry his message
-above the noise of the radial engine, “which suits you best? To have me
-with you, to tell dad what I know before your face—or to have me
-telegraph him while you’re on your way, and let you explain to him what
-I have to tell?”
-
-Lang, at first furious, presently saw the logic of Bob’s position.
-
-“Oh—all right!” he grunted and “gave her the gun” in somewhat vicious
-spurts.
-
-Bob, fitting on the “crash helmet” kept in the ’plane by Griff for him
-that afternoon, and the leather jacket and gloves, smiled.
-
-He was progressing as a Master Sleuth, doing his share creditably for
-the Sky Squad.
-
-As soon as the engine was sufficiently warm and methodical Lang had
-checked all his instrument readings, the trim little ship taxied down
-the smooth field to head into the wind which Bob saw, from the
-“windsock” blowing out from its mast on the office building, was from
-the south, a nice, light, Summer evening breeze.
-
-The watchman, coming in, put aside the slightly damaged motorcycle and
-strolled across to the hangars, into one of which he stepped to throw a
-switch, lighting the flood light by which they could see to take off. He
-did not question Lang’s right to use the craft because Lang must have
-gotten its ignition key from Griff, its owner.
-
-As they took the runway, and increased speed to the throaty roar of the
-engine, Bob felt that sense of the ship getting “light” which indicates
-to the pilot that she is ready to take the air. He saw the elevators
-tip, glancing around swiftly to check the safety of the way ahead, and
-then saw the lighted earth dropping, contracting into a spot of vivid
-light against a field otherwise dark; then the watchman shut out the
-floods to avoid confusing them in the air, and the ship climbed into
-dark night.
-
-They had climbed several thousand feet and were headed into the north,
-so that Lang could “pick up” the lights of the airway along which his
-night flying would be easiest, when Bob saw him double unexpectedly.
-
-For an instant the craft’s nose went almost straight down and Bob was
-glad he had strapped himself in; then Lang evidently caught control, and
-the stick, thrust forward as he doubled, with some unexpected convulsion
-or “stitch,” was pulled back and brought the ship out of the dive
-gradually.
-
-“What happened?” Bob screamed above the engine noise, the song of wind
-through wires caused by their dive.
-
-“Cramp!” called Lang, cutting the gun as he held a glide for a moment,
-turning a white face toward Bob. “Listen. Bob—oh!——”
-
-He bent again. “The fish—too much fish—” Bob guessed, and had he known
-that Lang’s delay in reaching the field had been due to further
-refreshments, he would have said, “Fish—and ice-cream!”
-
-At least that was a far more reassuring thought than Bob’s first idea,
-that some one had tampered with some control of this craft.
-
-“Oh—” Evidently Lang was very ill.
-
-Suddenly, as he saw his companion in the forward seat double, Bob felt
-the stick waggle against his leg.
-
-In an interval between his spasms of violent pain, Lang held up his two
-hands alongside his helmet.
-
-It was a signal for Bob to take control.
-
-“All right!” he called, and, with a steady hand, he clutched the stick
-of the controls in his cockpit, set his feet against the rudder bars,
-and eased his throttle open to regain speed.
-
-He was not in the least nervous or flurried. He pitied Lang’s cramped
-stomach and evident suffering, but did not permit it to influence his
-steady nerve. He had been given enough lessons to know how to hold the
-craft in level flight. While night flying was not as safe and easy as
-daytime work, he knew that if he followed the ribbon of lighted highway
-that ran toward the beacons of the nearest airway, he could always “set
-down” on the asphalt, if worst came to worst, and if he did smash the
-trucks, the landing gear, he did not think he would do any more serious
-damage.
-
-“Had I better set down?” he shouted, gliding for speed as he cut out the
-engine roar. Lang shook his head and gestured forward. Evidently he was
-not afraid of any immediate physical collapse and preferred to go on
-flying to see if he would recover. Bob held on.
-
-He picked up the beacon and, watching Lang’s gestures, swung in a long,
-banked curve, to head across the wind down the unconfined airway, whose
-second beacon he could see, far away.
-
-By habit looking around to be sure no other ship was close as he turned,
-Bob, startled, saw the flying lights of another craft pursuing.
-
-It must be pursuit! It came from the direction they had come. It turned
-as they turned, only in a more sharpened bank, so as to cut off part of
-the distance, it seemed to Bob, to close the gap between them.
-
-“Lang!” he shouted, and waggled the stick.
-
-Lang looked around.
-
-Bob’s arm pointed backward and upward.
-
-Lang, leaning out of the cockpit, to see around the wing-tip, stared.
-
-“The cabin ’plane!” he cried. “I know it. Golden Dart.”
-
-“After us?”
-
-“I don’t know!”
-
-But as Bob opened the throttle to regain flying speed without having to
-dip down too low, there came from the other ship a red flare.
-
-It was, as Bob realized, a signal—not of danger but of command.
-
-“Land!” it commanded.
-
-Bob looked at Lang.
-
-Lang considered. As he hesitated Bob guessed his thoughts. Some one from
-the small field, some member of the plant staff, probably Mr. Parsons,
-finding the ’plane belonging to Griff gone, and hearing from the
-watchman who had taken it, had taken off in the cabin monoplane to stop
-what he probably considered a prank of Lang and Bob—some night-flying
-lark.
-
-What would Lang say? Set down? Or—go on?
-
-They could outfly that cabin ship in the speedy, easily maneuvered sport
-craft—or, they could, with Lang at the controls. But Lang was badly
-upset in his stomach. What would he decide? Bob mechanically looked
-around for the best spot to set down.
-
-When he looked up again his heart leaped with exultation.
-
-Lang’s arm pointed straight ahead!
-
-“Go on!” he gestured.
-
-Bob opened the throttle joyously. Here was adventure, pursuit, thrill
-enough to suit anyone!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- THE CHASE
-
-
-Rapidly Bob considered the situation.
-
-The speed craft he and Lang occupied had much the best of it on a
-straight flight, but, against that, he had to set his inexpert handling.
-The smaller craft could out-climb, out-maneuver the cabin ship but he
-had no experience in stunting, especially dangerous at night.
-
-Therefore Lang’s decision was the safest one.
-
-To try to make a landing, Lang evidently concluded, was not wise. He
-felt that he could take over the controls before that need arose, Bob
-guessed.
-
-A new complication came, however.
-
-If the cabin ship had the disadvantage of being slower, she had gained
-an offsetting advantage before they saw her. She was much higher in the
-air than their craft; she could dive, if her pilot chose, and thus close
-the distance between them—maybe come down “on their tail,” or ride them
-to earth, if her pilot proved to be determined to force them to land.
-
-Accordingly Bob opened the throttle wider, and slightly elevated the
-nose to climb.
-
-Lang, peering upward and to the rear, made a violent, vigorous gesture.
-
-Bob, reading it, understood.
-
-He did not question. Lang called for a sideslip!
-
-Instantly Bob manipulated ailerons and rudder correctly and felt the
-wind on the cheek toward the lower side of their bank, telling him they
-were slipping.
-
-Then, applying rudder and other controls to check the slip, dropping the
-nose again to pick up flying speed quickly, he saw why the maneuver had
-been executed. The cabin airplane had begun to dive down from above
-them. Lang, having seen it, anticipated. He had not wanted to wrest away
-control—too dangerous. He had risked the signal, and Bob had executed
-his order accurately.
-
-He was glad, all the same, when Lang shook the stick, tapped on his own
-helmet to sign that he wanted the controls.
-
-Bob relinquished them thankfully enough. At night, in strange
-surroundings, in an airplane he had only handled a little, he was not
-foolish enough to wish to risk neck and limb—far less Lang’s than his
-own!—by trying to outfly a pilot who evidently meant to be vicious, to
-resort to war tactics if they did not obey his signals.
-
-Lang, somewhat recovered, took over and Bob, delighted, watched his
-expert manipulation of the splendid little ship. She answered his every
-command. He barrel-rolled out of the way of any immediate danger, thus
-leaving the cabin craft well to one side. He started up a loop after a
-swift dive, but at its top he executed half of a barrel-roll, and since
-the top of the loop had the nose in the direction opposite their course,
-the half-roll put the craft on its level, upright course, but going
-directly away from the former one.
-
-The cabin ship could not be stunted that way, or else its pilot against
-his will was compelled to recognize superior tactics.
-
-At any rate, as Lang swung around in a wide circle, slowly climbing at
-the same time, the other craft seemed to be heading uncertainly back.
-
-It came around, however, as soon as Langley straightened out on the
-former course along the airway; but they rapidly outflew it and when
-they landed at an airport in the distant city suburbs, the cabin ship
-was nowhere in sight.
-
-It was nearly eleven o’clock at night when Bob and Langley were ushered
-up the hotel elevator and along a corridor and into Mr. Wright’s rooms.
-
-The detective, who had been apprised, long distance, by his wife, that
-his nephew was flying to keep the appointment, was waiting.
-
-Hardly had his surprise at Bob’s presence been expressed and a late
-supper for the air-hungered pair been ordered than another visitor was
-announced.
-
-“So this is where you were bound for!”
-
-To Bob’s amazement, Barney spoke.
-
-“Why didn’t you leave word that you were coming here?” he said, rather
-sharply. “We could all have come together.”
-
-“We didn’t know you were on your way here,” said Langley.
-
-“We thought you were chasing us,” Bob added.
-
-“So I was. The watchman said you hopped but he didn’t say where to. I
-was coming over to confer with Mr. Wright, but I thought Lang and you,
-Bob, were joy-riding. So I signaled you to land and when you didn’t I
-decided to scare you into setting down—but it failed.”
-
-He chuckled.
-
-“I ought to know better than to think I could outfly Lang,” he said.
-“Well—if you’ve come with information, it’s all right. We can have a
-conference, all together.”
-
-They did so, over the dinner. Lang listened to Bob’s recital of the
-latest developments about Griff, with growing anger, until he saw
-Barney’s face.
-
-“Good boy, Bob,” commented Barney. “I’ve sort of had a notion in my head
-for some time about——”
-
-“Griff?”
-
-“Yes. I’ve thought he was the one who’s crossed the wires on us and
-short-circuited the whole plant. So he divided with somebody, did he?
-Well—he must have gotten it from somebody higher. Have you thought
-about?——”
-
-“His father?” broke in Bob. “Yes—we have!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- THE DETECTIVE’S THEORY
-
-
-More startling than Bob’s fresh information was the revelation given by
-Barney, the information which had brought him, flying, to consult the
-detective he had engaged to solve the puzzling case.
-
-All that Bob had to tell was the suspicious act of the youth, Griff.
-
-Barney, because it was so late, gave only a hint; but what he said
-caused a great deal of sleeplessness on Bob’s part, at least.
-
-“We got the wrecked airplane up,” Barney told them all, that night.
-“I’ve had it hauled in and dismantled.”
-
-He paused to give his next words more emphasis.
-
-“There wasn’t one thing wrong with that crate!”
-
-When, during their Sunday morning conference, he amplified his
-statements, the mystery deepened.
-
-Dismantled, thoroughly examined, by Barney, in person—he did not trust
-any subordinate in so important a matter—the airplane revealed nothing
-wrong, either with its engine, with its wings, or with its controls!
-
-“But it fell,” commented the detective. “What, do you imagine, caused
-the crash?”
-
-“I give it up.” Barney was unable to make a theory. “I hired you to do
-the doping out of that! I give you the facts. You do the rest.”
-
-“Bob,” his father turned to the youth, “have you jotted down all the
-suspicious things you mentioned, as I asked you to do?”
-
-Bob nodded and handed over a paper.
-
-After consulting it and comparing it with a sheet on which he had
-written, Mr. Wright looked up.
-
-“This is what we know,” he began. “For several months, according to
-Barney’s original explanation, when he gave me the case, airplane parts
-had been missed. Not very many, but some. We have to decide how they are
-taken, and then find out who does it and what happens to them, how they
-are disposed of.”
-
-“How about the man who gives out the instruments and such?” asked
-Langley quickly. Bob thought he said it to forestall comment about
-Griff, “or the mechanics whom Al had been told by his rigger boss were
-possible culprits?”
-
-“We haven’t been able to watch everybody,” Bob said.
-
-“That point is not important,” Mr. Wright declared. “It is the beginning
-of what we know, and can wait. Our second bit of knowledge—and more
-important this is, too—is that for several months before the seemingly
-fatal crash, accidents had occurred to every airplane that was sent out
-of the plant. Buyers complained by letter, and only by good luck was it
-possible to avert several tragedies.”
-
-“I didn’t know it had been as bad as that,” Bob commented.
-
-“It had,” Barney nodded. “We wanted you three boys to start in with open
-minds. Remember? We didn’t tell you details; but now it’s gone too far
-for taking things easy. We’ve got to get to work.”
-
-“Right,” agreed the detective. “The third point we know is that Mr.
-Tredway was very anxious to hold up the good name of his corporation,
-and that he decided to take this last ship to its owner in person, after
-Lang, here, gave it—” he paused, noticing Bob’s expression.
-
-“I know what’s on your mind,” Langley said, turning to his younger
-cousin. “I was the one who tested and checked that Silver Flash. I said
-she was O.K. before the take-off. But,” his manner was defensive, “if
-you think——”
-
-“I don’t think,” Bob asserted. “For a minute I did—but Mr.—but Barney
-says not a thing was wrong about the Silver Flash. So, of course,
-there’s nothing to think.”
-
-“Besides,” said Barney, “we none of us knew it would be the Silver
-Flash. The buyer couldn’t make up his mind, till almost the last minute,
-about that pair of twins. One time he’d come and say he liked the
-silver, then he wanted the copper-gold finish. Both crates were
-identical except for that. I thought, myself, he was going to take—well,
-we all thought the last time he came he wanted the gold one. But I guess
-he telegraphed.”
-
-“Well, then, that explains one thing,” said Bob. “If everybody thought
-he wanted the Golden Dart, that’s why the rudder rope was frayed off in
-that ship.” Barney, who had been told everything, nodded.
-
-“Yes,” he admitted, “but that don’t explain why the other ship—sound and
-perfect—crashed. Unless——”
-
-“Unless—what?” Bob, Lang and the detective were interested, but Bob
-voiced the question.
-
-“Unless Mr. Tredway did it on purpose—crashed!”
-
-“Why should he?”
-
-To Mr. Wright’s quiet inquiry Barney answered readily enough.
-
-“I run the plant,” he said. “The deep part of the money end, and all
-that is none of my business. But I happen to know there’s some trouble
-about money, or losses, or something like that.”
-
-“You think—” Mr. Wright bent forward, “—Tredway, because he was in some
-financial difficulty, or deeper trouble, might have done away with
-himself?”
-
-“Well,” defensively Barney replied, “how else do you account for a
-diving ship, placed so careful, on the lakeside, close to shore, and
-only damaged as little as possible, and then not from anything being
-wrong in her?”
-
-Bob saw that his father was very thoughtful.
-
-“Do you think he ran off and hid, afterward?” he demanded.
-
-“They didn’t find hide nor hair of him, did they? Dredging, or searching
-didn’t locate anything!”
-
-“That’s so!”
-
-“However,” the detective objected, “that doesn’t explain about the
-frayed cable, or the other things done to airplanes to damage the
-reputation of the corporation; that is my theory about the motive.”
-
-“No,” Barney admitted. “If you’ve got a theory about the motive for
-damage to crates, maybe you’ve got one about the whole affair.”
-
-“I have.”
-
-“What is it, Father?” Bob was eager to hear.
-
-“There are three crimes to investigate,” Mr. Wright said slowly. “The
-accidents, the thefts, and the——”
-
-“Do you still think Mr. Tredway’s disappearance was due to a crime?”
-
-“Yes, Lang, I do.”
-
-“What sort of crime? Nothing is wrong with the ship he used, Barney
-says,” objected Bob.
-
-“A very strange one,” his father replied. “Remember—there was a brown
-airplane hidden in a field. It was gone—before the accident. My theory
-is that either some one he feared, or some one who hated him, took off
-in that brown airplane, overtook or waited for Mr. Tredway—and——”
-
-“Rode him down!” gasped Barney. “I’d thought of that!”
-
-“Yes,” agreed the detective, “let’s drop all worry about the less
-important thefts, the deliberate damage to the airplanes—and look for
-the man who flew that brown airplane!”
-
-“Will we?”
-
-Bob asked it as a question, then he repeated it as an exclamation.
-
-“Will we!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- THE SKY SQUAD DISOBEYS
-
-
-Both Curt and Al listened eagerly while Bob related the details of the
-Sunday conference with the detective.
-
-He gave them the information imparted by Barney.
-
-“Not a thing wrong with the Silver Flash?” repeated Al. “Then that brown
-crate must have driven it down—but why?”
-
-“Maybe some revengeful pilot Mr. Tredway had discharged,” suggested
-Curt. “At any rate there must have been some motive to make a man do
-anything as terrible as that. But how are we going to locate the brown
-ship?”
-
-“I still have that message we discovered on the seat, and then picked up
-in the dewy grass.” Al produced it, dry but smudged and crumpled, from
-his pocket card and identification case. “We might compare the writing
-with the—well, say with the books in the aircraft plant, and with
-everybody’s writing.”
-
-“Lang didn’t get any information when we made inquiries about the brown
-craft at the nearest airport, did he?” Lang, who was quite affable and
-good-humored, with Griff and his actions forgotten in the new search,
-answered Curt.
-
-“No, nothing more than you did. They’d never heard of the ship I
-described.”
-
-“_You_ have got me more puzzled than this whole mystery has,” Al said,
-grinning. “Lang, the way Bob tells it, you must have been next door to
-ordering the undertaker, and then you were flying, stunting, as if you’d
-never eaten fish and ice-cream.”
-
-“That’s psychologically explainable,” Lang liked to use long words, to
-indicate his superiority. “Under the stimulus of——”
-
-“Never mind!” Al threw up his hands as if to ward off a flow of words
-too long for his youthful understanding.
-
-“It’s too easy to explain,” Bob said. “Father said Lang got so excited
-that he forgot to think about himself, and ‘Nature took its course’ when
-he stopped worrying about his fears.”
-
-“That was it,” agreed Lang. “I accepted the idea, from somewhere, that
-ice-cream and fish made poison, and while I was flying, when a little
-gas began to bother me I got scared, and the scare did the rest. Uncle
-said that half our pains are due to believing what other folks tell us
-can happen; the rest is from being afraid it is happening to us!”
-
-“That clears it up.” Al became very sober. “I wish the disappearance of
-Mr. Tredway was as easy to settle.”
-
-“Well, we’ll have to find that mysterious brown ’plane, or get hold of
-somebody who saw it flying, to tell us which way it went.” Lang rose,
-stretched, yawning, and sauntered off toward his wheel; the other three,
-sitting on the cottage porch before supper, for which Lang would not
-stay, looked after him in silence.
-
-“Do you know what I think?” Curt broke the thoughtful pause. “I don’t
-mean to criticise, and I don’t want you fellows to get angry, but I have
-a feeling that Uncle Fred is wrong to have us drop all our suspicions
-and try to find a crate that could be five hundred miles away, in any
-direction. My theory is that if we locate the airplane it will be by
-‘luck’ and I don’t believe in ‘luck’ because if you think ‘luck’ is
-going to help, you don’t have to do anything yourself, and if you
-believe it is going to hinder, there’s no use in doing anything. So,” he
-grinned, “I believe that everything comes out right only when we do
-everything we can to make it so—and as long as there isn’t any way to
-start hunting that brown crate, let’s——”
-
-“Disobey?” asked Bob, rather surprised.
-
-“I guess it would amount to that—and in another way it wouldn’t!”
-
-“How could it if it didn’t and why wouldn’t it if it did?”
-
-The others laughed at Al’s twisted inquiry.
-
-“Uncle Fred didn’t give you orders to ‘lay off’ watching, did he, Bob?”
-and as Bob shook his head, “He only meant for us to concentrate on
-seeing if we could pick up a clue to the mysterious ’plane. Well, I feel
-that by finding out what Griff is doing, and why his father is so
-fidgety and furtive, and the rest of the puzzles here, we may be led to
-that ’plane, or get a clue to it or to its pilot.”
-
-“I don’t see any disobedience in that.”
-
-“Well,” Curt answered Bob, “the way I look at it, if Uncle Fred took us
-into the case he expected us to obey the ‘spirit’ of the orders he gave,
-and he did say to forget the smaller things here and work on locating
-the ’plane.”
-
-“I see,” agreed Bob. “It’s a pretty deep—what Lang would call, ethical
-problem. Father meant to leave Griff alone, unless he did something
-actually incriminating, and to put all our effort on the other thing.
-Let’s see your paper, Al.” He held out his hand for the brief note Al
-had preserved.
-
-Study it as they would, they got nothing helpful from the grass-stained
-paper with the smudged writing.
-
-“Let’s think who we’ve seen use an indelible pencil,” hinted Al.
-“Remember, the morning we found this, we decided, in a joke, that there
-were too many indelible pencils to try to trace the writer because he
-used one; but how many people close to this mystery have you seen using
-one?”
-
-“The clerk in the supply room!” gasped Curt.
-
-“Are you sure?”
-
-“Yes, Bob—because he takes a copy of every order he writes and of every
-requisition, on an old-fashioned letter press, the same way they put
-their copying ribbon letters in between a damp cloth and a soft, thin
-sheet of the big book, put it all in the press and make the copying
-ribbon print the letter into the book instead of using carbon paper!”
-
-“Then we have a clue! How does the clerk’s writing compare with this?”
-
-“Let’s see!”
-
-Each of the three having spoken in turn, by common consent they agreed
-to Al’s impulsive suggestion. They were hardly able to wait for their
-supper; however, they put it away with speed if not with the best of
-table manners and secured their bicycles.
-
-It took them only a short time to reach the aircraft plant.
-
-The watchman accepted their explanation that they were passing and
-wanted to borrow several books from Mr. Tredway’s reference library, in
-the offices.
-
-Bob, accordingly, went to the offices, while Curt and Al strolled, with
-apparent aimlessness, across the inner quadrangle.
-
-“There’s a light in one window—no, in two windows—already!” Al
-mentioned. “I wonder who’s here, at night again.” Almost at once he
-suggested that they go and see.
-
-Curt, himself fired by the curiosity of his companion, hurried after Al.
-
-They saw Bob, who had lighted the outer office electric bulbs, choosing
-several volumes from a shelf, to carry out in truth their explanation to
-the watchman.
-
-“Now—who’s here?” Bob said, joining the others at the door as he put out
-the light.
-
-“Can’t be Barney—unless he came back—no, the cabin ’plane isn’t here,”
-Al argued. “Anyway, Barney stayed over to transact some business, you
-said, Bob. Must be either——”
-
-“Griff, or Griff and his father—or Mr. Parsons and somebody else,” Curt
-said breathlessly, excited. “There were two separate offices lighted,
-and you can see the door glass shining.”
-
-“The doors are shut, though,” Al spoke, disappointedly.
-
-“Yes,” continued Curt, “but one of us can hide in the alcove where the
-water cooler and door to the washroom are located. If anybody comes, it
-would be easy to dodge on into the washroom and no one would ask
-questions about that.”
-
-“Then you’re elected!” Bob said. “I want to go with Al, because I think
-I know where to find the latest letter-book.”
-
-With the reference volumes tucked under his arm he led Al down the dim
-corridor, while Curt secured a good place in the niche by the water
-cooler to watch from.
-
-As the two brothers went down the steps, at the rear, toward the supply
-room, to be sure that no one was there and likely to come up and catch
-them, Al’s grip on Bob’s arm tightened convulsively.
-
-Some one was coming down the steps behind them.
-
-With lips close to Al’s ear, Bob whispered:
-
-“Tiptoe! Come on!”
-
-He led Al down to the lowest steps, and there, just beside the door to
-the supply room the brothers flattened themselves against the wall.
-
-They held their breath. They made themselves as small as they could. A
-quick tread came on down the steps, there was the pause of a body
-close—almost touching them. Breathing, sharp, short, quick, carried to
-their ears; but they kept mouse-still. The door opened.
-
-A light flared up as Bob dragged Al back out of range. But as they
-turned and stared down, hearts still pounding from the excitement of the
-narrow escape, both brothers gasped.
-
-In the light below, stood—a bearded stranger!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- A TRIPLE TRAIL
-
-
-Pulling Al further back out of the light, around the little dark jog
-beside the door jamb of the supply room, Bob put his lips close to his
-brother’s ear.
-
-“Watch!” he whispered, hardly loud enough for Al to hear.
-
-With a little squeeze to reassure his brother, Bob let go of Al’s arm
-and tiptoed back up the stairway, carefully clinging to the side wall
-and hoping that this precaution would enable him to get away without
-causing the steps to creak.
-
-He was successful. Al, noting that the man inside the room seemed to be
-doing nothing more than standing there considering the layout of the
-place, guessed that Bob wanted to consult with Curt, watching upstairs.
-Al felt important: he was in the very heart of mystery, and much
-depended on him. Therefore he watched with every faculty alert as the
-man turned his head this way and that, apparently inspecting the stock
-of wing and fuselage cloth, the boxed instruments, the cases of “dope”
-for varnishing bodies and wings, the many other visible objects held in
-reserve.
-
-Bob, slipping along the hallway at the top of the steps, noticed that
-both offices were lighted still, that both doors were closed, and as far
-as he could see, nothing had changed up above.
-
-Curt was still watching. He was practically invisible in his nook by the
-water cooler. Bob, with a small word under his breath, reassured his
-comrade who came out of hiding as soon as he knew that the footsteps he
-heard approaching were Bob’s.
-
-“Where did the stranger come from?” asked Bob softly.
-
-“Stranger?” Curt’s voice betrayed amazement.
-
-“The man who came down to the supply room!” Bob was also surprised.
-
-“Was he a stranger?” Curt asked. “I thought it was Mr. Parsons. He came
-out of that dark directors’ room, beyond me.”
-
-“Oh!” Bob clutched Curt’s arm in a tight grip. “Have you used your eyes,
-Curt, in daylight? If you have, you recall that there is a fire escape
-running up the side of the building—and the landing is by that
-directors’ meeting room window.”
-
-“Is that so? Then, if that window is open——”
-
-The opening of one of the lighted offices startled them, ended the
-consultation. Both comrades, tense, drew close against the wall behind
-the water cooler. If anybody was thirsty!——
-
-The lighted square of that door went black. Someone had put out the dome
-light. Footsteps went carelessly along the corridor from the hiding
-youths, toward the front stairway.
-
-“I must follow—whoever it is!” whispered Bob. “Curt, watch here. Al will
-watch that other man. It’s——”
-
-“A triple trail!” gasped Curt. “Go on, Bob. Be careful.”
-
-Bob agreed and tiptoed along to the stairway. By the time he got there
-he had no need for special caution, the lower door was closing.
-
-Bob ran lightly down the stairs, crossed the entry below, cautiously
-peered into the yard, lighter just there by the arc over the office
-building doorway, and nodded to himself.
-
-Griff was passing around the side of the building!
-
-Cautiously Bob trailed him, allowing the partner’s son to get out of
-sight beyond the turn before he left the doorway.
-
-Where was Griff bound? The main gates were across the yard and, as Bob
-knew, they were locked while the night man made his rounds of inspection
-among hangars and plant structures.
-
-While Al watched his man in the supply room, while Curt hid, watching
-the lighted office door, Bob wondered what Griff was about. The young
-man did not go anywhere near or bend his steps in the direction of the
-main entrance but turned, with Bob carefully watching as he clung close
-in the shadow of the office structure, and went on around the building
-toward the private exit used by the officials. Being the son of Mr.
-Tredway’s partner, Griff had a key; but Bob could see, as he peered
-around the building, that the gate stood slightly ajar already.
-
-“Will he go on home?” Bob wondered. “Had I better go back to Al?”
-
-His thought was answered by Griff’s actions. He paused at the gate,
-seeming to inspect it. He was surprised to find it ajar, Bob decided. He
-held his place close to the office shadow and watched, as Griff looked
-around, inside and outside the fence.
-
-Then, as though discovering something, Griff ran out of sight, leaving
-the gate as he had found it.
-
-Instantly Bob ran across the small open space to the gate. There, in
-sudden caution, he cuddled his body close to the fence; it had just
-crossed his mind that Griff might have gone outside in a pretended hurry
-to draw out any pursuer; he might be hiding, watching!
-
-He was not, however.
-
-The sputter and roar of a motor startled Bob.
-
-“That’s queer,” Bob mused, while he projected his head through the
-gateway. Almost in the same instant that he saw Griff starting up a
-motorcycle, Bob saw Griff shut off the motor and trundle the machine
-away.
-
-“His own motorcycle is broken, since Saturday’s accident,” Bob
-reflected. “Now he must have brought another one. He meant to ride off
-in a hurry,” he deduced, “but he decided the noise would startle and
-warn people, so he’s going further away before he starts up.”
-
-Instantly his own action was decided upon. He streaked back across the
-yard, around the hangars, to get his own bicycle. Against a speedy motor
-it would not keep Griff in sight, but it would enable Bob to get over
-the ground faster, and, if Griff did not go home, Bob meant to pursue
-him, making careful inquiries as he pedaled. There was only the
-crossroad for him to take, and Bob could see it from the highway.
-
-In a very short time, and without having been seen by the watchman, Bob
-was out on the road. The distant sputter of the motorcycle engine and a
-speeding form passing the junction of the crossroads gave Bob all the
-information he needed. Without wasting energy in an effort to keep the
-flying cycle in sight, he pedaled after it.
-
-The sudden sharp noise evidently startled others besides Bob.
-
-Al, watching, saw the man who was evidently making some notes in the
-supply room, suddenly dash to the switch. Out went the light.
-
-Al heard the scrape and rumble of a window being unfastened and thrown
-up. The man was listening, he judged.
-
-Curt, by the water cooler, heard nothing but the faint sounds of the
-motor; at first he thought they were shots. When he saw the office light
-go out suddenly, immediately afterward, he thought someone in there had
-shot at some one else; but the door was flung open and he heard hurried
-feet pounding along the hall and almost stumbling down the front steps,
-careless of how much noise they made.
-
-Curt could not go to explain to Al. He must see who that was going out
-of the quickly darkened office so swiftly.
-
-Al needed no one to warn him. He crouched, tense and listening intently,
-outside the supply room door for a full minute. Absolute, torturing
-silence began to twitch his nerves. Nameless fears and countless
-uncertainties filled his mind. Was the man stalking him? Was he there at
-all? Had he ever been there? Was he human—or——?
-
-Al heard a queer sound; at once he identified it. The window was being
-quietly pulled down.
-
-Again he listened, watched, waited.
-
-Curt, slipping down the banisters in the good, old-fashioned, speedy
-boys’ way, landed quietly at the foot of the stairs soon after the front
-doors of the office building closed.
-
-But by that time whoever had emerged was far across the quadrangle and
-it was too dark to recognize him. There came the flare of the headlights
-of an automobile.
-
-From its position on the grounds and from the style of its lamps, Curt
-guessed it was the runabout used by Mr. Parsons, Tredway’s remaining
-partner. What was he doing here? Where was he going? Curt, in the office
-doorway, not daring to emerge because of the beams of light that might
-swing around the yard at any moment, heard the voice of Parsons hailing
-the watchman, questioning him. The other replied in a way to show he had
-not heard any noises, could not account for them.
-
-Curt, as the car got under way and the main gate was flung wide to
-permit it to depart, raced around the office building “ell” and across
-to his bicycle. He knew he could not pursue, but the wheel would give an
-excuse for emerging from that gate at once.
-
-“Wait!” he called to the watchman, pedaling swiftly across to him. “I
-guess he forgot I was here,” pretending that Mr. Parsons sponsored his
-presence there so late at night. The watchman said nothing but held the
-gates open until Curt pedaled through and took his way after the car,
-not to keep it in sight but to see if it went to its owner’s home.
-
-Al, ignorant that he was the only remaining member of the Sky Squad,
-watched tensely and listened alertly beside the supply room door. He
-heard nothing. Cautiously he protruded his head around the door jamb.
-
-The room was silent, evidently the man was hiding or—“gone!”
-
-“But how—where—could he go?” Al answered his own questions at once, for
-the window, made of tiny panes of thick glass between heavy bars, locked
-always from inside, impossible to open from outside, was not tightly
-shut.
-
-For once in his life Al paused to think before he acted.
-
-That window was not tightly shut. He had heard it opened, and—closed.
-But if the man had closed it from within the room he would have pulled
-it down tightly. He had not done so. He had left it partly open—why? To
-provide a way to come back, Al decided.
-
-Almost at the same instant it flashed into his head that if he were to
-be caught in that room, with its door unfastened, he would be accused by
-any of the plant members, the watchman or those he thought were still in
-the upstairs offices, of stealing whatever might be missing.
-
-He had a plan, at once!
-
-He tiptoed back to the steps, listening. No sound came to him. Softly he
-went into the open doorway, made sure the window was not tightly shut,
-by inspecting the lighter space beneath it, then very quietly let the
-door go shut, allowing its spring lock to snap. He could open it from
-inside if he had to escape. No one without a key could open it from the
-hallway.
-
-Then he ran close to the window, peered out, listened with an ear to the
-crack beneath the lower panes.
-
-Nothing was stirring. But from the window he could see the gate, and the
-light was sufficient to show him a man’s form arriving there.
-
-Evidently the form stopped from surprise or caution, then it went
-swiftly out. Al, forgetting fear, flung the window slightly upward,
-edged out, dropped to the ground, reached up and almost closed the
-window, then fully drew it down with a little slam, and raced to the
-gate. There he paused, peering out carefully.
-
-Down the narrow lane he saw a man’s form trudging rapidly.
-
-The third trail was opened!
-
-After the man, at a distance, trudged Al!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- THE “WINDSOCK”
-
-
-For Al the trail ended abruptly after a walk of a mile. The stranger,
-whose face, with its heavy beard, Al could not dare get close enough to
-identify—even if he knew it!—hailed a passing automobile, asked for a
-“lift” and was taken in. That concluded Al’s chances of following
-because no other car came along. Dejectedly he returned to the aircraft
-plant to discover that some one, perhaps the watchman, had closed the
-gate. There was nothing left for him to do but to go to the main gate,
-call the attendant and get his bicycle. His friends were gone, the man
-assured him, and Al had no excuse to stay there.
-
-Dejectedly, feeling that he had been close to a clue and that it had
-slipped through his hands by his “bad break,” Al rode home.
-
-Curt’s trail took him, eventually, to the Parsons cottage. Seeing the
-car drawn up before the garage, Curt decided that he had no need to
-watch the car being put into the garage; evidently its driver had gone
-into his home for a moment first. Curt rode away. Had he waited his
-trail would have led further; but he did not guess that!
-
-Bob had better fortune.
-
-He saved his strength as he pedaled along, well ahead of his two less
-fortunate trailmates, and when he came to a cross street of the suburbs
-where a policeman was directing traffic Bob drew up beside the officer.
-
-“Hello, Bob!” the policeman hailed. “Out sort of late, hey?”
-
-“Yes, Mr. O’Brien. I stayed at the plant—I’m learning how they put
-airplanes together at the Tredway plant. I wanted to ask if you noticed
-a motorcycle, not long ago—maybe fifteen minutes—a friend——”
-
-“Yes,” the officer, starting the cars down the street by a wave of his
-hand, did not wait for an explanation of Bob’s reason for the question,
-“Griff Parsons rode by.”
-
-“That’s who I mean. Did he turn off, here, to go home?”
-
-Bob knew that Griff’s house was several blocks over, on an up-and-down
-street that was “one way” for traffic. If Griff had turned here Bob’s
-quest, he knew, was over; if he did not, Griff would be gone much
-further, because if he did not turn here, and thus enter his own home
-street in the right direction he surely would not go on and approach it
-in the wrong way, against the traffic rules.
-
-“He rode on by, just waved to me,” O’Brien said, and turned to signal a
-warning to a car that was trying to slip past the stoplights.
-
-Thanking him Bob rode on. Griff must be going somewhere!
-
-The highway had no turns, except the suburb’s cross streets. It was
-possible that Griff might have turned into one of them, perhaps to
-return a hired motorcycle to its garage; nevertheless, so strange had
-been the action of the youth that Bob decided to ride on, at least to
-the last police officer along the main traffic road, to see if he could
-learn whether the trail continued or not.
-
-The traffic officer, used to seeing this rider, greeted Bob and told him
-that several motorcycles had passed him. Bob, riding to the curb to
-rest, was puzzled. Had one of those been the motorcycle he had followed?
-
-A thought caused him to ride on.
-
-Griff, Bob knew, from his own inquiries, “hung out” with quite a rough
-crowd of youths; they had very little reputation in the suburb, and one
-of their haunts, near Rocky Lake, came to Bob’s mind. Griff, riding his
-motorcycle, might have gone on to the inn or roadhouse or “speakeasy” or
-whatever it was, near the picnic grounds at Rocky Lake.
-
-Tired, but determined, Bob went on.
-
-Some time later he approached the gayly lighted roadhouse.
-
-He smiled to himself as he observed the name of the place.
-
-“The Windsock!” it was called.
-
-On roadside signs, down the road in both directions, were admonitions to
-automobilists to “set down at The Windsock,” “Don’t fly past The
-Windsock,” and such tempting notices.
-
-A windsock, Bob knew, was the cornucopia of doped cloth, closed at one
-end and held open at the other by a metal ring, which was fastened in a
-prominent, high position at every flying field and airport, to be filled
-by the draft of a breeze and thus, by its position, to indicate to
-flying craft which direction to “head in” or to “take off.” Since an
-airplane is much easier to get off the ground, and back to earth, headed
-into the wind, the “windsock” was a most important adjunct to every
-field; and Bob knew that the name, and the symbol, a real windsock on
-top of the inn, had been chosen by its owner because he had been an
-ex-pilot who put his money into the hotel venture and tried to attract
-picnickers, automobile parties and other patrons of a less savory nature
-by the novel idea of having his dining alcoves built to resemble the
-cozy little cabins of airplanes and had his meals served by girls clad
-in suits and helmets resembling those worn by pilots. Also, he had let
-it be rumored around town that he chose the flying symbol and the
-aviation idea because, in his inn, “the sky is the limit!”
-
-Bob, approaching, was surprised to see the very motorcycle—he was sure
-of that!—he had followed, leaned against a post in the parking yard, and
-he felt certain that his long ride had not been wasted.
-
-Where was Griff? Bob wondered. He hoped there would be some way for him
-to discover the whereabouts of the youth.
-
-Not wishing to walk into the place for fear he might disclose his
-presence to Griff, Bob skirted the building, unobserved.
-
-From an open window at the side came voices in angry altercation.
-
-Bob did not need to get within sight of the occupants: he recognized
-Griff’s loud, sharp, furious tones. What was he saying?
-
-“——all I could scrape together—I _did_ put it in that package, I keep
-telling you——”
-
-“Bologna! Rats! It was wads of paper!”
-
-“It was money! I want my receipt! If—if you don’t!——”
-
-“If _you_ don’t, you better say. If you don’t come through—by this time
-tomorrow night—I’ll ask your old man for it!”
-
-There was silence.
-
-Bob did not dare creep any closer. They might look out of the window.
-Some payment had been made, by Griff’s claim. By the denial of the other
-man it had not been made. By his threat it must be made.
-
-Bob hesitated—and while he stood, undecided, the roar of a car, coming
-at full speed, came to his ears.
-
-He glanced down the road. Hardly had he located the direction when he
-recognized the car. It contained—Mr. Parsons!
-
-A man’s head leaned out of the open window. To Bob, as he crouched back
-into some ornamental shrubbery, the face was unfamiliar; but he saw it
-was brutish, fierce, angry—and he impressed it on his memory.
-
-“Here’s your pop, now,” the man called—and then he gave an exclamation
-that Bob could not comprehend. Presently the light went out—and, almost
-at the same time, while Parsons alighted in the parking place, Bob, near
-the rear corner of the building, saw a form emerge from the kitchens and
-race away down the yard toward the grove beyond.
-
-“Griff!” muttered Bob to himself. “Griff—running tight as he can
-go—running away from his father—to hide.”
-
-Watching, more interested in the new arrival than in the son, Bob
-remained in concealment. But his mind was puzzled.
-
-“Why?” he wondered. “Why—and what next?”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- “THE CASE IS ‘SEWED UP’”
-
-
-Sitting on the Wright porch, early the next morning, Curt and Al
-listened eagerly to Bob’s recital of the past night’s events.
-
-“After Griff ran off—what, then?” Al demanded.
-
-“A taxi came racing along and stopped at The Windsock.”
-
-“What did you do?”
-
-“What could I do, except keep hidden and watch?” Curt’s question brought
-the counter-question from Bob. “The taxi door opened—and who do you
-suppose jumped out?”
-
-“Who?” Curt and Al spoke at once.
-
-“The very man Al and I saw in the supply room.”
-
-“I saw him hail the taxi,” Al exclaimed. “Everything is beginning to fit
-together.”
-
-“Yes, it is,” Bob agreed, “and, what’s more, it fits tightly. As soon as
-the stranger paid his fare he recognized Mr. Parsons who was halted on
-the roadhouse veranda, watching. They began to talk, and stood there for
-a minute.”
-
-“They knew each other!” Curt exclaimed. “They must be working together
-to loot the supply room. That’s probably how the mystery man got in: he
-had a key from Mr. Parsons.”
-
-“It looks like that,” admitted Bob.
-
-“What then?” Al wanted the story. “Did they find Griff?”
-
-“No—but the stranger saw his motorcycle. He got awfully excited about it
-and he went with Mr. Parsons to look at it. They went close to where I
-was hiding back of the shrubs, but they didn’t say anything until they
-were close to the motorcycle. They were too far away for me to hear,
-then.”
-
-“I’d have crept closer,” declared Al.
-
-“Oh—yes! You would!” Bob was scornful. “Right out across an open yard!”
-
-Al subsided, crestfallen.
-
-“What then?” Curt asked quickly, to avoid any quarrel.
-
-“They talked for about ten minutes—then the man made some notes of
-things Mr. Parsons said—I wish I could have heard! Then he hopped onto
-his motorcycle and rode off, and Mr. Parsons stood thinking for awhile
-and then——”
-
-“Yes? Don’t keep us waiting. What?”
-
-“Curt—he turned the car and went back toward town!”
-
-“Didn’t look for Griff?” Al had recovered his usual interest.
-
-“No! He drove away. Griff must have been watching, too. He came out, and
-shook his fist toward the roadhouse and then walked off, and—that’s
-all.”
-
-They discussed the incidents of the past night, coupling them with the
-strange actions and uneasiness of Mr. Parsons and of Griff on former
-occasions, riding, as they talked, toward the plant.
-
-Barney’s cabin airplane was again on the field, and as soon as they
-arrived and he saw them, from an office window, Barney summoned them.
-
-“Well,” he greeted them, closing the door, “how goes the study of
-airplane building?”
-
-“Oh, we know how they lay down the framework for the fuselage and how
-careful they are to see that every longeron and brace and strut and
-guywire and turnbuckle fits exactly in place and is well fastened,” Al
-exclaimed. “And we’ve helped put on the wings and the tail assembly, and
-Bob is going to help install an engine, today, and we will watch.”
-
-Bob laughed and Curt joined him. They saw the amused light in Barney’s
-eyes.
-
-“Well—you asked!” Al defended his enthusiasm.
-
-“It was just a ‘polite opening’,” Bob grinned. “Barney wants to know
-about—other things we’ve learned.”
-
-Interrupting one another, they gave him the details of their
-experiences.
-
-“Hm-m-m! Well!” Barney’s face became very serious. “So that’s it!”
-
-“What?”
-
-Barney smiled at Al.
-
-“The partner and his son are working with an outsider. I thought so. But
-what about the brown ’plane? Any news of that?”
-
-“We left it out entirely,” Bob said.
-
-“We disobeyed Uncle,” Curt admitted. “Bob said Uncle wanted us to drop
-things here and concentrate on trying to find the brown ’plane, but——”
-
-“We can’t find that ‘crate’ I feel sure.” Bob was earnest.
-
-“Not only that, but if a crime is being committed under your nose you
-won’t go off looking for something else to do while it is going on, will
-you?” Al wanted their course confirmed.
-
-“You did just right,” Barney commended them. “You lads stick to this end
-of it. I’ve suspected that Parsons and his son were ‘up to’ something,
-and I don’t agree with your father, Bob, about the brown crate at all! I
-think you fellows deserve a ‘raise’ and if you can only catch one or all
-of the crowd doing something—catch them ‘red-handed’ in a way of
-speaking, I’ll hand out a little private reward. I feel that it’s due
-to—to the memory of Mr. Tredway. He was mighty good to me and—and I want
-to—get everything cleared up here, because I think the ones who have
-been doing wrong right here at the plant got found out by him and they
-either hired that airplane from some distant place and flew out and rode
-down Tredway or else they paid some unscrupulous pilot——”
-
-He paused as he saw Al squirming in his chair with eagerness.
-
-“What is it, Al?”
-
-“Unscrupulous pilot!” reiterated Al. “Why—the man at The Windsock is
-a—an ex-pilot.”
-
-“Glory be! That’s so!” Barney nodded.
-
-“Well, from what I saw of him, his face shows that he’s unscrupulous,”
-added Bob.
-
-“It looks to me, from here,” Barney said, slowly, “it looks to me as
-though we’ve got the case ‘sewed up.’ All you need to do is to find out,
-some way, about that ex-pilot—what he does with his time, if he owns a
-crate yet, and so on.”
-
-“You think?——”
-
-Barney turned to Curt.
-
-“I think,” he nodded, “that ex-pilot might know a lot about a brown
-’plane, and about what it did to force another one down——”
-
-“Then we have got the case ‘sewed up’,” Al declared. “We came here last
-night to see if we could compare a little scrap of writing we found
-where the ‘plane had been, with the books of letters and things to see
-if the writing agreed.”
-
-“And what did you find?”
-
-“We had no time to find anything,” Curt admitted. “The other things came
-up——”
-
-“Let’s see that note? Where is it?”
-
-Al produced the much-folded, dirty scrap and handed it to Barney.
-
-“No!” he shook his head after a careful study. “Don’t recognize it!”
-
-“The supply clerk?” hinted Bob.
-
-“Not at all like his writing.”
-
-“Well,” said Curt, “it’s done with an indelible pencil. Now that we know
-the ex-pilot is under suspicion, we can find out if he has an indelible
-pencil that he carries around—or, he might destroy it, considering what
-has happened since the note was written.”
-
-“But who’s the note written to?” asked Bob. “It says ‘everything O.K.’”
-
-“To whoever hired him. To Parsons, maybe—or to Griff——”
-
-“That’s so!” Bob became very thoughtful.
-
-“We ought to get a sample of the ex-pilot’s handwriting,” suggested Al,
-eagerly. “Shall I? I can try! They don’t know me out at The Windsock.
-Couldn’t I take my autograph album—and——”
-
-“I’ll make inquiries about the brown ‘plane, from around The Windsock,”
-added Curt.
-
-“Then I can keep tabs at this end,” argued Bob.
-
-“Fine!” agreed Barney. “Fine! Yes, sir! Boys—we’ve got the case ‘sewed
-up’ or circumstantial evidence never pointed true.”
-
-“Did you see Dad, again?” asked Bob as they rose.
-
-“Yes, but he’s awfully busy on that other case. He must trust you
-fellows pretty well.”
-
-“Well,” Al swelled with pride, “maybe we’ve disobeyed orders, but if
-this comes out as good as we think it will, we’ll have no trouble making
-Father see that he was wrong and we were right to disobey.”
-
-“Right you are!” agreed Barney.
-
-Griff seemed to be getting ready to work himself into danger for their
-special benefit, it seemed to Bob in the engine assembling rooms. The
-youth was angry, upset, uneasy, fidgety; he hurried out when he heard
-his father’s voice approaching down the hall and the older man betrayed
-as much uneasiness and concern as did his son.
-
-But that night, when they thought they had the last stitches taken to
-“sew up” the case, as Barney said, Fate ripped out the whole thing—and
-they were left without a thread of a clue!—until the unexpected thing
-happened that gave Bob his “hunch!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- A NEW MYSTERY
-
-
-Cheerfully Al greeted the rigger for whom he worked.
-
-“Barney—Mr. Horton—” he corrected his own familiar allusion to the
-manager of the aircraft plant, “—says please hurry the work on this
-sport biplane. The man who’s buying it is in a big hurry. He wants to
-get into some race with it.”
-
-“Oh, sure!” the rigger grumbled a little. “They’re all in a hurry. But I
-don’t rush my part of it for anybody. There’s been enough complaint
-about this plant, already, without me doing anything to cut down the
-performance of a crate by skimping my share of the high standards Mr.
-Tredway always kept up.”
-
-“I know,” agreed Al, “but he meant to do all you can, I guess.”
-
-“Yes,” the rigger was in a complaining mood, “that’s all very well. But
-did he say why they’re giving us cheaper stuff to work with, since the
-real boss—went West, maybe!—did they tell you why that is, that we’re
-getting cheaper stuff!”
-
-“No,” Al admitted, “but I do know that Mr. Parsons and Bar—and Mr.
-Horton were talking about some complaint from the wing assembling room,
-about poor fabric. They almost quarreled. Barney told Mr. Parsons it had
-to stop, he was going to uphold Mr. Tredway’s ideas, and Mr. Parsons
-said so was he.”
-
-“Well, somebody’s ordering cheap stuff. Look here!”
-
-He picked up a turnbuckle, a metal object in which the threads of each
-wire end were so threaded in that when the ends of wires were screwed
-in, the turning of the central, revolving part either drew the two
-sections of wire close, making it taut, or allowed them to recede a
-little from one another, for more looseness—by which the flying and
-landing wires, and other parts of the guying rig were adjusted.
-
-The turnbuckle looked all right to Al and he said so.
-
-“Shows how much you know,” scoffed the rigger, Sandy. “Look here—heft
-this—and then this one!”
-
-He selected another turnbuckle, handed both to Al, and the youth
-“weighted them” in his two hands.
-
-“This one does feel heavier.”
-
-“Of course it does! It’s a cheap casting, not the aluminum alloy the
-other one is machined from. Why, them threads on the new one will wear
-and go bad in no time!”
-
-Al, watching, observed that as the rigger manipulated a pocket knife in
-the threaded end of the part, bright metal and a worn look were almost
-immediately evident.
-
-“Yes,” Sandy Jim agreed with his discovery, “and I’ve been talking
-around and others is dissatisfied—in the dope room, in the engine room.
-Everywheres!”
-
-“But when Mr. Parsons talked with the manager,” Al explained, “they had
-the supply clerk in and went over the orders and way-bills and delivery
-check-up, and everything was all right. The orders went to the same
-firms, as always——”
-
-“We’re getting shoddy stuff, all the same!” grunted Jim. “What good is
-it to rush out a ‘job’ and have it accepted on the reputation of Mr.
-Tredway, and then have complaints in a few days?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Al, and changed the subject. “Mr. Horton says
-you’ll have to excuse me, this morning. He’s sending me out on an
-errand.”
-
-“Oh, sure!” Jim snapped. “Wants this job rushed, and takes away my
-helper! Whyn’t he use his office boy?”
-
-Al could not explain that it was Barney’s way of releasing him so he
-could go to The Windsock for that comparison of the ex-pilot’s autograph
-with the clue note Al held.
-
-“I guess you’ll have to ask him,” Al grinned, and went over to get his
-bicycle. Sandy Jim followed him, dragging a small parcel out of his hip
-pocket.
-
-“As long as you’re riding,” he suggested, “go past the house and slip
-this in to Jimmy-junior. It’s some odds and ends of broken stuff for him
-to use on his new model air-liner.”
-
-“Glad to,” Al took the parcel.
-
-“Get back quick as you can,” urged Sandy. “I need a good helper.”
-
-Al quickly sent his bicycle along the highway. Stopping at Sandy’s home
-he took as little time as he could to drop the parcel, and to explain to
-Jimmy-junior that the reason he had not yet been taken into the Sky
-Squad was that they had been too busy, evenings, to hold any meetings.
-
-Then he made his way to the roadhouse near Rocky Lake Park, and leaned
-his wheel against the veranda supports.
-
-“Is Mister Jones busy?” he asked a sleepy waiter who was listlessly
-dusting off some chairs in one of the small compartments made to look
-like the cabin of an air-liner. Al had found it easy to learn the
-ex-pilot’s name.
-
-“In the office,” the man jerked a thumb toward a side room. Al, knocking
-at the door and hearing a gruff voice bid him enter, went into the same
-room Bob had described as the scene of the quarrel between the roadhouse
-man and Griff.
-
-The man, looking up from some work at a small desk, had a coarse,
-scowling face. No wonder he was “ex” pilot, Al reflected, with a face as
-brutish and a manner as unfriendly and curt as “Mr. Jones” showed.
-
-“What’s wanted?”
-
-“Why—er—” Al stammered, not so much ill at ease as trying to pretend he
-felt shy in the presence of a great man, “I’m one of the fellows who
-have a sort of club, to study airplanes, and all that—and I—we—heard
-about you being a clever pilot, and I thought I’d ride out and ask if
-you’d be generous enough to write a little something about aviation in
-our club autograph album.” He produced the small book he had brought in
-his coat pocket.
-
-“Hm-m!” The man scowled. “Le’me see that book!”
-
-He took the small volume and Al’s heart sank. Instead of writing
-sensibly and generously on blank page invitingly offered, he flipped the
-pages, and Al knew that the affair was a failure. There was nothing
-about aviation in the few autographed verses and sayings already
-collected.
-
-“That’s no aviation album!” The man thrust it away angrily and jumped
-up. “What’s your scheme, young fellow?”
-
-“Scheme?” Al tried to look innocent. “I told you—we want to get you to
-start the real autographs from aviators!”
-
-The subterfuge did not satisfy the man. He frowned, stared at Al as
-though trying to get through his guard, to discover any hidden motive.
-Al, inexperienced, fidgeted, unable to conceal his uneasiness.
-
-However, he received a surprise.
-
-“Sure!” The man snatched up the book. “Come to think of it, why not?
-Fact is, kid, I’ll start you off with _two_ autographs. Wait!”
-
-He hurried out of the office. Al did not dare “peek” to see where he
-went or what he did. For all Al knew, the man might be just beyond the
-side door, watching. He sat very still, trying to be as self-possessed
-as he could.
-
-Presently the man returned, with the book held open.
-
-“Here y’are!” he said, affably. Al, glancing at the book, saw that two
-opposite pages bore fresh scrawls. The man waved a hand. “Welcome. Run
-along, now. We’re busy, here—getting set to open up a new ‘airport’ out
-on the side, where folks can dance to a fine orchestra in a hangar. Tell
-any of your friends you like—especially your parents. We got the
-prettiest imitation of an airplane for the orchestra to set in——”
-
-Al, hardly able to mumble his thanks, dashed out to his bicycle. He
-could scarcely hold in his impatience. One of those sets of rough
-characters was written with a pencil, the other with an indelible
-pencil!
-
-One had a familiar character to its shaping of letters!
-
-A little way down the road, near the lake, where the airplane had
-cracked up, Al drew his machine in under a tree, almost tore the book
-out of his pocket and opened it hastily.
-
-On one page was a maxim, exactly what a pilot might write:
-
-“Knowing when to stay on the ground makes a better pilot than knowing
-how to get off it!” It was signed with initials—“T. J.” Al did not
-recognize the writing although, he understood that the saying meant that
-a pilot wise enough to be cautious was better than one who thought that
-getting into the air was all there was to flying.
-
-The second page revealed one word, the pilot’s good-luck wish, and two
-initials also:
-
-“Tailwinds! J. T.” it told him.
-
-“T. J. and J. T.”
-
-Hurriedly Al drew out the folded, ragged, dirty little note—his clue.
-
-It exactly corresponded in every character with the short autograph!
-
-But!——
-
-Who had written the autograph? Had Mr. Jones? If his name was Jones he
-would have signed the initials on the first autograph—“T. J.” Or—would
-he have signed that way? Might he not have signed the reverse? Had he
-written either page? Who else had helped?
-
-More mystery! And no way to solve it!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- TANGLED THREADS
-
-
-On a former occasion Bob had related news to an audience composed of Al
-and Curt.
-
-As the trio rode homeward, Curt to share supper with the brothers, Al
-was the spokesman.
-
-“Did you ever see so many people to suspect and so many clues that don’t
-lead anywhere?” asked Curt when Al had told his story and had shown his
-evidence.
-
-“The Sky Squad has a mystery, and there’s no mistake about it,” declared
-Al. “We got what we wanted, but now—what can we do with it?”
-
-“You mean the mystery?”
-
-“No, Bob. I mean the autograph.”
-
-“Well, it proves one thing, anyway,” Bob asserted. “The single word
-matches our ‘Everything O.K.’ note. That proves that the man who wrote
-the note is at that roadhouse, The Windsock.”
-
-“It does,” Curt agreed. “But—is it the man named Jones? Did he write
-it?”
-
-“Did he write either one?” Bob was puzzled as he spoke.
-
-“He left the room, you said.” Curt turned to Al, who nodded.
-
-“Maybe he didn’t write anything!”
-
-“What does all that matter?” Bob said. “The point is that we have proof
-that the man who used the brown ‘plane is staying at The Windsock. Now
-our job is to discover who he is.”
-
-“Let’s see those autographs again.” Curt drew his wheel to the roadside
-and took the book from Al. “‘T. J.’ is written with a plain leadpencil,”
-he remarked. “The ‘J. T.’ one is the one written in indelible pencil.
-‘J. T.’” he repeated thoughtfully. “Do you suppose Jones transposed his
-initials and then got a waiter or a clerk to write the other and sign
-what Al would take for his initials?”
-
-“It’s too tangled up to suppose about,” argued Bob. “Two things we do
-know from it.”
-
-“One is,” Al remarked, as they resumed their ride, “one is that we know
-the brown airplane man is at The Windsock. What’s the other?”
-
-“Well, whether it’s Jones or not—Jones has something to hide, this
-proves. Otherwise he’d have scribbled a word or two for Al, and thought
-no more about it.”
-
-“That’s so.”
-
-“It simplifies things, doesn’t it?” Al, speaking after Curt’s agreement,
-was not so sure as his words indicated.
-
-“It makes them more complicated,” Bob retorted. “Let’s see what we know
-and where we stand.”
-
-As they rode slowly, he tabulated their clues and theories and
-discoveries, with many interruptions from his companions.
-
-“First of all,” he began, “we saw a mysterious brown airplane hidden in
-the woods. Then, when we went there, it was gone—and this note was flung
-aside. The crate took off in a hurry because we saw heavy tracks, and
-made in a hurry, by the way they looked. Then there was a crack-up at
-Rocky Lake and we found out Mr. Tredway was in the Silver Flash that
-crashed.”
-
-“And we saw a man come to try to help, swimming across the lake,” Curt
-broke in.
-
-“And then we met Barney and he and Father called us in to help solve the
-Mystery Crash,” added Al.
-
-“We learned there was more mystery than just the fall of the crate,” Bob
-went on. “That was bad enough; but there was more! Parts were being
-stolen from the aircraft plant, and ‘planes had been tampered with—after
-tests showed them to be perfect!—and——”
-
-“When we went there to work in the plant,” Curt was eager to add his
-contribution to the sum of their recollections. “We saw Mr. Parsons
-acting suspiciously, and Griff, too.”
-
-“And we have suspected Langley was in bad company with Griff, and Lang
-got mad at us about Griff—but we haven’t found any reason to suspect
-Lang, since,” Al declared. “But now we’ve got more people to suspect—the
-stranger who came to the plant and this ex-pilot.”
-
-“But all this hasn’t brought us any closer to knowing anything
-definite,” Bob objected. “I begin to wonder if Father was right, after
-all, when he told us to ‘drop those unimportant things and locate that
-brown airplane.’”
-
-“But we can’t!” defended Al. “There’s no way to start hunting. I’m for
-keeping on disobeying until something happens to help us.”
-
-“And I’m for getting in to supper,” Curt changed the subject as they
-dismounted at the cottage. “Let’s give what brains we have a good rest
-while we eat.”
-
-“Well, one thing more and we will.” Bob paused, thoughtful and serious.
-“Al said we had no cause to suspect Lang. Well—today, I was wondering
-why Griff was so nervous and fidgety and furtive, and Lang came in and
-took me out, to give me a lesson in handling the controls, he hinted. He
-really did, but before he took me up while he tested the new sport
-speedster, he said, ‘I see you’re bothering Griff again,’ and he gave me
-‘down the banks’ about it.”
-
-“What’s suspicious about that?” Curt asked.
-
-“Not that, so much. But—he told me to go on home, that it was closing
-time, and I put on my cap and punched the time-clock, and then I
-recalled that I had left the baseball we were playing ‘catch’ with at
-noon, in my bench drawer. I went back, and there was Griff, all excited,
-and Lang, with his head close to Griff’s, acting as upset and as uneasy
-as Griff when I came in and surprised them. Lang snapped at
-me—I—don’t—like it——”
-
-“Well,” Curt was quiet, a little hesitant, but firm. “If Lang is mixed
-up in something wrong—we ought to—at least we ought to try to save him!”
-
-“That’s good,” agreed Bob, quickly. “I thought you were going to say ‘we
-ought to catch him with the rest.’”
-
-“No, indeed, I think more of Lang than that.”
-
-“But how could we save him?” asked Al.
-
-To that they had no answer as they went in to eat.
-
-As they sat at the table Al mentioned the morning’s chat with
-Jimmy-junior, and suggested that they really ought to go and spend an
-evening with him as he had urged them to do; if the others liked him,
-they could communicate by nods and take him into the Sky Squad, not as a
-full member, but just to please him and have a fourth member to call on
-if an emergency arose where he would be needed. Al vouched for his
-innocence and good nature, eagerness to please and willingness to work
-without asking for explanations of why he did a certain thing.
-
-“He’d be a good one to send to watch anybody—Griff, or the ex-pilot,” Al
-spoke as the trio rode toward Jimmy-junior’s home.
-
-“We’ll see——”
-
-Bob did not finish. He applied his coaster brake, made a quick signal
-for silence, swerved into a garage driveway, followed by his companions,
-and dismounted, dropping his bicycle on the lawn.
-
-“What happened?” asked Al, thrilling to some possible mystery.
-
-“Lang turned the corner!”
-
-“You didn’t want him to see us?”
-
-“Certainly not!” Bob answered Al.
-
-“Wonder where he’s going.” Curt slipped along the side of the house by
-which they had stopped. “He’s in a terrible hurry,” he reported, coming
-back. “In a second he’ll be passing this house. Get back—behind the
-house. I don’t think he’ll notice the bikes on the grass in the dusk.”
-
-They hid from the view of anyone on the sidewalk. Peering cautiously out
-in turn they saw Langley hurrying by.
-
-“Now—where’s he going?”
-
-“And what shall we do about it?”
-
-“See where he goes,” Curt answered the other two.
-
-Lang turned the next corner.
-
-“I’ll bet he’s going to Griff’s house!”
-
-Al was correct in his guess. As they trundled their bicycles, keeping as
-far behind Lang as they thought necessary, they saw him turn in at
-Griff’s gate. Five minutes later, from carefully chosen points of
-concealment they saw Lang come out, take Griff’s repaired motorcycle and
-ride off in haste.
-
-Consulting one another with dismayed eyes, the chums, by common consent,
-mounted and pedaled for dear life along the street, around the corner,
-back to the main highway.
-
-They seemed to sense where Langley was going.
-
-They did not, however, divine what he planned to do!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
- A PACKAGE OF MONEY
-
-
-Before they reached the aircraft plant toward which they pedaled with
-all their power, Bob, Curt and Al saw a light flare up.
-
-“That’s the flying field ready for a hop,” panted Al. “Hurry!”
-
-“Do you think it could be Lang?” Curt asked.
-
-“Who else?” Bob retorted, pedaling faster.
-
-“There’s nobody at the gate,” Curt called. They were near enough to see
-the open gateway.
-
-“The watchman’s helping with chocks and spinning the prop.”
-
-Bob, increasing his pedal revolutions, forging ahead, spoke over his
-shoulder.
-
-“Wait!” called Curt. “What are you going to do?”
-
-“Find out——”
-
-“No! Wait!”
-
-Bob slowed up his pedals, permitting the bicycle to coast along as the
-modern, free-wheeling automobile runs when the foot is removed from the
-accelerator pedal. Curt caught up to him. In a moment, as they
-approached the gate, Al came up also.
-
-“Don’t let him see you at all,” warned Curt. “Better wait and ask the
-watchman after he’s gone. You’ll find out more, that way.”
-
-It was good advice, and Bob agreed to act on it.
-
-They hid the bicycles, in case it turned out that Lang had not left the
-ground. Careful not to disclose themselves, they watched at the gate as
-the engine of the sport model owned by Griff was warmed up. In the flood
-of light on the runway they recognized Lang as the pilot, and watched
-him adjust flying helmet and leather jacket, get into the craft, test
-the instruments, checking carefully, and then get his wind direction
-from the windsock, which told that the light Summer breeze was from the
-South. The watchman swung the tail around, set the chocks again for a
-final test. Lang “gave her the gun,” to see if everything was hitting
-perfectly, signaled for the chocks to be removed, and since his craft
-was correctly headed into the wind the airplane taxied, gaining speed,
-and rose swiftly into the dark.
-
-Hardly waiting for the flood to be extinguished, the trio of amateur
-detectives hailed the watchman.
-
-“Too late to see Lang take off,” greeted Bob. “He didn’t say why he
-hopped at night did he?”
-
-“Yeah, he did! He’s going off to see his uncle about something.”
-
-“That’s funny,” Al argued, under his breath, to Curt.
-
-“Certainly is,” Curt agreed.
-
-“Thanks,” Bob spoke to the watchman. “As long as we’re here,” he turned
-to his chums. “Let’s bring in our bikes and get some more of those books
-on metal alloys Barney told us about.”
-
-“The boss is here, himself,” the watchman explained. “Go ahead.”
-
-Barney was working late!
-
-“His office is lighted,” Al commented. “Let’s stop in and tell him about
-the note and the autograph.”
-
-“And about Lang.”
-
-“He must know Lang hopped off,” Curt told Bob.
-
-“Yes—the crate made enough noise—unless he’s awfully busy.”
-
-Barney was busy enough, but he had heard the take-off, he admitted.
-
-“I’m trying to check up on the firm’s books.” Barney waved a hand toward
-the pile of heavy volumes, ledgers, daybooks, indexes and others,
-scattered on his desk. “I can’t find out what way they’re doing it, but
-something’s being ‘worked’ about the materials.”
-
-“So Sandy told me this morning,” Al stated.
-
-“Well, I can’t find it,” he pushed three of the smaller books into a
-large lower desk drawer, and turned, mysteriously smiling. “How do you
-like this idea?” he asked. “I’ll put a few books aside, and then, when
-the staff comes in, tomorrow, I’ll see how the bookkeeper and Parsons
-take it. If there’s anything ‘flim-flammy’ about them, they will show it
-when they miss the books.”
-
-“That’s dandy!” agreed Al.
-
-“What do you figure on doing now?” Barney asked.
-
-“Why—nothing special,” said Bob. “We thought if Lang was flying over to
-see Father, that would take him about three hours—or four, and he
-wouldn’t get back here before morning, so there’s no use waiting for him
-to come back here. But—we haven’t anything special to do, except go to
-call on Sandy’s son, Jimmy-junior.”
-
-“Why not ‘stick around’ here?” suggested Barney. “For awhile, at least.
-I don’t want to be mixed up in anything, but if anybody should come
-slinking around, I’d like to know it—as long as you have nothing much on
-hand?”
-
-“Let’s!” urged Al.
-
-“Suits me,” Curt agreed. Bob was willing.
-
-“Why not put out all the lights, and just hang around in the dark for an
-hour?” suggested Barney.
-
-They agreed readily enough, and felt quite like conspirators or real
-sleuths on a big case as they occupied easy chairs in the big
-“directors’ room” and talked in low tones.
-
-Their vigil was soon rewarded.
-
-Footsteps, sounding without effort at concealment, in the corridor,
-caused all three comrades to become tense and alert.
-
-Bob felt a hand clutch his arm, and almost called out in his nervous
-reaction until he realized that Curt was whispering:
-
-“Hide!”
-
-Al, already at his other side, was anxious.
-
-“How? Where?” he said quickly but softly.
-
-“Behind the chairs.”
-
-However, hardly had they gotten into concealment when they realized that
-there was no need to hide; the steps went briskly past the door and on,
-down the hallway.
-
-“Now what?” asked Al as a door opened and slammed.
-
-At the door to the hall Curt turned, waiting until the other two joined
-him, he spoke quietly.
-
-“You wait here,” he urged. “I’m lightest—and quickest, I think. Let me
-go on down and ‘snoop’ a little. He slammed the door so hard it jumped
-open a little—it’s Barney’s office!”
-
-“Barney? He—do you suppose?—” Al was puzzled. “He told us to wait,
-though——”
-
-“It’s never Barney. I’ll soon see——”
-
-Curt was gone, tiptoeing, clinging close to the inner wall, where, he
-felt sure, the boards were so sturdy and well secured that they would be
-unlikely to creak.
-
-In suspense his companions waited.
-
-Soon, in the dim hall, they saw Curt returning.
-
-“It’s—it’s—Mr. Parsons!”
-
-“What’s he doing?” Al was eager.
-
-“Hunting for something.”
-
-“Those books, I’ll give you odds on it!” Bob spoke softly.
-
-They waited, uncertain what to do—in fact, there was nothing they could
-do but wait.
-
-They had only a moment to decide. Down the hall, from the stairway, came
-other steps; the chums drew back inside the doorway. They let Curt peer
-out.
-
-“It’s Griff, this time!” he informed the others. “He’s coming to meet
-his—no he isn’t! Get back! Hide!”
-
-Hesitating steps paused but before there was any further movement Curt,
-Al and Bob were well screened from any but a careful search in full
-light.
-
-They were glad, this time, they had gotten under cover. Griff did not go
-to meet his father!
-
-Instead he came into the directors’ room, at least as far as inside its
-door, where, a faint blotch against a very dull oblong of weak light,
-Bob saw him standing, watchful.
-
-“Shucks!” thought Al, “we can’t find out about Mr. Parsons on account
-of——”
-
-They did not hear anything; but evidently the youth watching at the door
-did, for he came further into the room. Would he decide to hide? Might
-he choose the spot already occupied by one of the youths?
-
-Their suspense was relieved! He waited inside the doorway, and it was a
-wait of a long, dragging three or four minutes that seemed like an age
-to the crouching trio; but finally he walked out, his step confident and
-loud, showing that need for concealment was over.
-
-Quickly the three reached the door. Already, as they peered out, a light
-was glowing, but not electric ceiling domes—it was a pocket flash held
-close to something in Mr. Parsons’ own office.
-
-Like shadows the three, arms touching, went down the hall. They could
-not contain their suspense. At an open door, partly drawn shut but not
-locked, they stopped. Looking through the crack, hardly daring to
-breathe or move, they saw Griff fit a key to his father’s desk, open it,
-take something from a small drawer—and walk confidently, if slowly,
-to—the safe in the corner!
-
-Before it his light was held low, close. He was manipulating the knobs
-of the combination. As the partner’s son he had access to it, the chums
-realized. They forgot some of their caution but not all; they peered
-closely in through the crack of the door—and saw——
-
-“Phew!” breathed Al, “he’s got—a package—of—money!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
- CAUGHT AND CLEARED!
-
-
-Spellbound the three watching youths saw Griff count the bills in that
-packet he had taken from the aircraft plant safe.
-
-They heard the ruffle of paper as he ran through the ends of the crisp,
-new bills.
-
-Then he stepped out of their line of vision.
-
-With unexpected promptness, startling his companions, Al flung the door
-inward so that it banged against the wall. Instantly he leaped into the
-room. His chums followed. Startled, dropping his packet, Griff swung
-around to stare in amazement and terror.
-
-“Drop those bills!” Al cried needlessly, “we’ve caught you red-handed!”
-
-All three of the Sky Squad were in the room.
-
-Al dashed across to the window, to block any possibility of Griff trying
-to drop the ten or fifteen feet to the ground. Bob snatched up the
-money. Curt blocked the door.
-
-After his first look of stunned horror, Griff sank into the swivel chair
-and buried his face in his hands. His shoulders shook with a sudden
-revulsion of feeling that unmanned him, made him sob like a creature in
-pain.
-
-For a moment no one moved. The comrades were rather dismayed and
-nonplussed by Griff’s pathetic attitude.
-
-They had caught him, yes! Red-handed, as Al had said, they had caught
-him, in the act of something very dreadful.
-
-Nevertheless, his surprising way of giving in, sitting there in a bent
-posture, with his body racked by his sobs, made him a rather pitiful
-figure.
-
-“Stop that!” Bob said, finally, and rather gruffly. “You’ve done wrong.
-You’ve been caught. Take it like a man!”
-
-“Yes,” Griff replied in a shaking voice. “Yes—I’m caught. I know I’m a
-baby—but—but——”
-
-He fought back his weakness and gulped.
-
-“But—what?” demanded Curt. “I suppose you’ll say you were forced to do
-this by somebody else. They always do, in books!”
-
-“No,” Griff answered. “No. I—it’s all my doing. But——”
-
-“Why do you keep saying ‘but’?” asked Al.
-
-“Oh!” Griff had hard work not to break down again. In spite of the way
-they had found him, in spite of what he had been planning to do, there
-was something that touched the youthful hearts of the trio, in Griff’s
-sorrowful eyes and drawn face.
-
-“Oh!” he repeated, “if only somebody could help me instead of hounding
-me and——”
-
-“We’re not ‘hounding’ you,” Bob defended their action. “You’d have done
-the same.”
-
-“But you’ve been watching me and following me and suspecting me,” Griff
-declared sadly. “I know I deserve it—but——”
-
-“Oh! Stop saying but!” Curt was annoyed by what he took to be an attempt
-to win sympathy. “We’d have helped you, instead of ‘hounding’ you if
-you’d been honest, instead of trying to be cunning and in with the wrong
-sort of people.”
-
-“Oh, yes, you would!” retorted Griff, bitterly. “That’s easy to say.”
-
-“Well, it’s true,” declared Bob stoutly.
-
-“Nobody helps me,” responded Griff. “Everybody is after me for one
-reason or another.”
-
-“That’s because you’re so furtive and fidgety that you ask for it—and
-doing things—like this—” Bob shook the bills.
-
-Griff sat in silence for a moment. Bob walked over to the open safe, saw
-where the package belonged, and pushed it into place, then slammed the
-safe door, turned the knob of the combination to lock it and swung back
-to Griff.
-
-“There!” he exclaimed. “That shows we’re helping you.”
-
-“I—I—what do you mean?” Griff stared.
-
-“I mean this!” Bob came and stood in front of him. “I mean that the
-money is back in the safe. If you can show any reason besides temptation
-or somebody forcing you to do—this!—we’ll all promise to say nothing
-more about the things we saw you do.”
-
-Griff shook his head.
-
-“That wouldn’t do any good,” he said despondently. “I’ve got to have
-that money. You think it’s—” he could not bring out the word, but he saw
-that the trio recognized what he meant. “It isn’t—because Lang is
-flying, right now, to his uncle, to get him to come back and give me
-money—a loan—to replace this.”
-
-The chums exchanged surprised, wondering glances.
-
-“Lang! Going to Father for money for you?”
-
-“Yes,” Griff answered Al. “It’s—it’s all mixed up and—awful!—but you say
-you’d help instead of telling on me, if I could show I wasn’t as bad as
-you think.”
-
-Bob thought he saw a genuine honesty in the clear look Griff gave him.
-His sympathy was really quick and he wanted to be fair.
-
-“You could count on that!” he stated earnestly.
-
-“You bet you could!” Al declared and Curt added a similar assertion.
-
-“If I thought you meant that—if I thought you’d believe me——”
-
-“Really we would!” Al was also touched; Griff, caught and breaking down
-and seeming to be declaring innocence in some way, was not the furtive,
-uneasy, shifty-eyed Griff they had known. “Honestly! Try us and see.” He
-and Curt moved closer. The three stood in a group in front of the
-huddling youth in the swivel chair.
-
-Griff looked up dolefully.
-
-“It will make me out bad enough,” he stated. “But—not as bad as you’ve
-been thinking. Oh, I know!” he took on a touch of his old defiance, “I
-know you’ve tried to connect me with all the wrong things that have been
-going on here! I know I’ve acted as though I am guilty. I’m not,
-though—not in the way you think.”
-
-“All right,” Curt admitted. “We’ll listen. We’d rather have you innocent
-than guilty—of anything!”
-
-“Even if our case—” Al stopped suddenly, but Griff nodded.
-
-“I guess you all think you’re clever,” he said, forgetting his own
-trouble for a second or two. “You come here to learn all about this
-mystery of where the missing parts go and who did things to the crates,
-and why. Don’t you think we have eyes? It’s all over the plant what you
-are trying to do. Don’t you suppose we all know one of you is a close
-friend of the other two, and Bob and Al are sons of a detective? What’s
-the answer?”
-
-“The answer seems to be that you thought we weren’t smart and so you
-went right ahead.” Curt was a little nettled by Griff’s statement,
-although common sense told him, now that Griff mentioned the point, that
-their scheme must be fairly evident to any sensible person.
-
-“I didn’t think whether you were smart or dumb,” Griff replied. “I had
-too much on my mind. Bad as it is, it might as well be confessed. I
-gamble, and owe money for it, and I came here to borrow this from the
-safe—it’s as much my father’s as anybody’s, because he’s Mr. Tredway’s
-partner, but—I didn’t intend to try to ‘get away’ with the money. I only
-wanted it overnight. Before the office opens Lang will be back with the
-money to replace it.”
-
-“What makes it so important to get money at this time of night?”
-demanded Curt, suspiciously.
-
-“I guess I’d better tell the whole thing.”
-
-“We’re listening!”
-
-“Go ahead. Tell us!”
-
-Griff nodded. Dejectedly, shamefaced and humble, he related his story:
-
-“I’ve been running around with a pretty rough crowd,” he admitted, “and
-they got me in the habit of going to places like The Windsock, out on
-the——”
-
-“We know!” Al interrupted impatiently.
-
-“All right. There’s ways to gamble, out there, if you know the people
-who run the place.”
-
-“Jones?”
-
-“Well—he owns it, yes. Mostly its Jenks, his manager, and the waiters
-that let the crowd do things outside the actual license rights of the
-roadhouse. Well, anyhow, I got to spending money pretty fast and I
-gambled. After awhile I lost so much I found out I was owing the ‘house’
-as they say, more than two hundred dollars!”
-
-Although several maxims and Biblical quotations sprang into Bob’s mind,
-he kept silent. This was no time for preaching, for pretending the
-“holier than thou” pose. Under the same temptations, argued Bob to
-himself, it would be hard to say whether he’d go Griff’s way or not. It
-isn’t how good a fellow thinks he is, but how good he proves himself to
-be under temptation, that counts, Bob decided.
-
-“That’s what you’re taking the money for—or trying to,” Curt determined.
-“But why did you have to take it this way, and at this time?”
-
-“The manager at the roadhouse said, last week, he’d have to get all the
-debts owed the house and clean up, because they’re spending a lot on a
-new dance place, like a——”
-
-“Hangar. We know. Never mind why they wanted it. Tell me,” Bob changed
-the subject for a moment, “what does the owner look like? Is he short,
-thick-set——”
-
-“That’s the manager——”
-
-“But that man let on to be Jones.” Al broke in.
-
-“Maybe he did? What were you doing there—snooping?”
-
-“Never mind,” said Curt, pacifically, wishing to get Griff’s side of the
-matter first. “We wanted a specimen of his handwriting——”
-
-“I wish _I_ could get one!” declared Griff, ruefully. “That’s the whole
-trouble, fellows.” His manner was more eager, more confidential. “I paid
-the money once—and he didn’t give me a receipt——”
-
-“Oh!” Bob was connecting some things in his mind. “He came here one
-evening and demanded the money, and you gave him a parcel and then
-realized he didn’t give you a receipt. You tried to chase him on your
-motorcycle and got into an accident.”
-
-“I thought you were watching, but I was too excited and upset to care,”
-agreed Griff. “Yes, I had borrowed from all the fellows I knew, and had
-scraped every cent out of my savings account, and I had the money. But
-he didn’t give any receipt, and when I finally got over the smash of the
-motorcycle and went to ask for it he declared I’d paid him with a
-package of wadded, folded paper and not money!”
-
-“But it was money,” declared Bob. “Unless you changed it, because I
-caught you wrapping up something green the day I came into the engine
-assembling room.”
-
-“It was money, all right enough,” Griff asserted. “But he wanted it
-twice. Well, I had promised my father that I wouldn’t go with that crowd
-any more, and I had been weak and went against my promise. So I couldn’t
-go to him about it.”
-
-“If you had, and made a clean breast of it, he would have gotten you out
-of this scrape.” Bob had to say that much.
-
-“I don’t think so!” Griff was morose. “He’s got so much worry on his
-mind about the plant and all that’s happened that he’s jumpy and nervous
-and suspicious and he’d throw me out of here, and maybe send me away
-from home. And I am trying to go straight. I will—I make a vow on
-that!—if once I can get out of this scrape. I’ve learned a lesson.”
-
-“But that fellow at the roadhouse knows you’re afraid of your dad, I
-guess,” asserted Curt.
-
-“Yes, and when I said I had paid the money——”
-
-“I overheard that,” Al stated, and related what he had heard through the
-open office window at The Windsock.
-
-“You fellows have been on the job!” There was a note of admiration in
-Griff’s voice, then he sobered and went on. “Yes, that fellow, out
-there, knows about me being afraid of Father, and he said if I didn’t
-have the money tonight, before midnight, he’d tell my ‘old man’ as he
-calls Dad. They’re opening a dance place and he said the cash was
-essential tonight.”
-
-“So you told Lang and he went to get it,” ended Curt for him.
-
-“Yes, and he’s going to call me, long distance, as soon as he gets
-there, and I was getting the money out so I could start for The Windsock
-the minute he calls up.”
-
-“What’s your father doing out there so much?” demanded Al, suspiciously.
-
-“Trying to ‘get a line’ on me, I guess!”
-
-Curt turned to his comrades with a rueful grin.
-
-“That explains everything,” he stated, almost regretfully. “Griff has
-cleared himself, and his father’s motive is logical.”
-
-“It leaves us ‘up in the air’—and not in any ‘crate’ either!” agreed Al.
-
-“Yes,” nodded Bob. “Barney said the case was all sewed up—but the
-threads must have been weak, because here’s our case all torn apart!”
-
-“Well,” said Curt, “for my part—I’m glad!”
-
-Since Griff and Mr. Parsons were cleared of suspicion, the other two
-agreed promptly.
-
-“I may be cleared,” said Griff sadly, “but I’m not out of trouble. If I
-don’t get this money to that man—Jenks is what we all call him, Toby
-Jenks!—why, he’ll call up Dad—and then——”
-
-“We said we’d help if you could clear yourself,” stated Bob.
-
-“And we will!” agreed Curt.
-
-“With all our heart!” added Al. “But—how?”
-
-“Let me take the money out there!” urged Griff. “Just keep quiet about
-catching me here——”
-
-“Even if the money belonged to your father, which the stockholders of
-the corporation might argue out with you,” said Bob seriously, “taking
-it, just overnight, would be—wrong, to say the least.”
-
-“Why don’t you go to Mr. Parsons—to your father?” suggested Curt.
-
-“He’s got all this worry on his mind, trying to see what’s wrong——”
-
-“Yes,” admitted Al, “I guess it would be better not to worry him about
-this, if we could see how to get around it and still not let you take
-this money.”
-
-“We suspected him,” Curt said, rather ashamed but anxious to be as frank
-as Griff, whose manner and actions convinced them that he had been
-absolutely honest with them. “We suspected him of being mixed up in
-something.”
-
-“Everybody suspects everybody else,” admitted Griff. “Dad suspects
-Barney, Barney suspects me, I suspect the supply clerk and the
-bookkeeper of working together to get cheaper supplies here, and they
-suspect each other and everybody else—even you three!”
-
-“Well,” Bob waved the statement aside, “that isn’t getting down to brass
-tacks. Think, for five minutes, everybody. We’ve got to help Griff!”
-
-Seeing their case destroyed, their chief suspect cleared, they turned
-loyally to help to retrieve themselves by aiding him.
-
-For five minutes no one spoke.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- THE “MYSTERY CRATE”
-
-
-“Father ordered us to drop this part of things,” said Al finally, “but
-I’m glad we disobeyed if it helps Griff to get out of trouble.”
-
-“So am I,” admitted Bob. “But that isn’t what we were quiet for, to talk
-about what we’ve done.”
-
-“We want to know what to do!” Curt commented.
-
-“That’s what I was coming to,” defended Al. “Let Griff stay here with
-you, Bob, while Curt and I ride out to The Windsock. We can call up as
-soon as we arrive, and then wait outside, hiding. Then Griff can take
-this money and come out, and pay it, and then we will jump in from
-outside the door and grab it and jump through the window and——”
-
-“Is that the best you can do?” scoffed Curt. Al grinned.
-
-“It looked good till I said it,” he admitted, “then——”
-
-“That’s you, all the way!” his brother challenged. “Quick on the trigger
-and sorry when the bullet hits the wrong target.”
-
-“I have a plan, though,” suggested Curt. “Al and I can go out to The
-Windsock, as Al said, to get a good place under that office window.
-Then, when Griff pays the money, we will be witnesses, and if the man
-tries not to give a receipt we’ll be on Griff’s side.”
-
-“Better, but not perfect,” said Bob.
-
-“I suppose the head Sleuth of the Sky Squad has the one perfect plan!”
-Al was sarcastic.
-
-“No,” Bob was honest, “I haven’t! I thought of having Griff call the man
-and say he’d be there bright and early with the money——”
-
-“I did tell him that, when Lang left. He said it would be tonight,
-whether he got it from me or from my father.”
-
-“Um-m-m!” Curt was thoughtful. “Bad! Well——”
-
-“If we could keep that Jenks man so busy, keep his mind so much occupied
-he’d be too excited to think about Griff—” Al was not very sure of
-himself.
-
-“We could!” Curt astonished Al by accepting the idea. “Look here! If he
-isn’t the ex-pilot, maybe the ex-pilot wrote that other autograph.
-Whether he did not or did, anyhow the Jenks man had something to
-conceal, or he wouldn’t have gone to the trouble of giving Al two
-specimens of writing to get mixed up with. Now—if we were out there, and
-Griff tried once more to stave off payment till morning, if he agreed,
-all right, we could come home and this money in the safe would be all
-right.”
-
-“Logical so far,” agreed Bob.
-
-“All right. If the man refused to wait, we could telephone in to Griff
-to find out, and if Jenks refused to wait, we’d walk in on that Jenks
-fellow and say we knew he was mixed up in something wrong about the
-airplane crash, and throw out hints, and so on. I think, myself, he is
-in it somehow. He’d bluster, maybe, but if he has anything to conceal,
-we could scare him, and then tell him to let Griff alone for the present
-or tell his story to a policeman—and we might hint that he could explain
-a lot about the crash——”
-
-“I like it as well as anything you’ve suggested,” said Griff. “If you
-could ‘get way with it.’”
-
-“Trust us to scare him good and proper!” declared Al. “I’d ask him ‘how
-about the brown ‘plane’——”
-
-“No good,” argued Bob. “We looked that craft up in the official registry
-and she’s from out West, and while we know her markings we haven’t found
-her and I don’t believe he——”
-
-“I do,” Al defended his deduction. “I think he had it brought here for
-him to use, and then taken away again, and that accounts for his
-note—‘Everything O.K.’ when the pilot left it there and he put the note
-on the seat to show he had been there!”
-
-“Then maybe this Jenks hopped off, in the morning, met the ‘plane Mr.
-Tredway was flying, forced it into trouble, rode it down——”
-
-“But we saw the big cabin ship!” objected Bob to Curt’s theory. “There
-was no other ship around.”
-
-“You can’t be sure!” argued Al. “That brown crate might have been up
-above, against the dark clouds in the sky! You couldn’t tell if we heard
-one or two engines. He could have surprised Mr. Tredway, could have
-driven him into a dive—something may have gone wrong——”
-
-“But Barney examined the craft when it was hauled in,” urged Bob.
-“Nothing was wrong with it at all!”
-
-“Well,” Al was obstinate, “I think what I think!”
-
-“Who owns the brown ‘plane?” asked Griff. “Did you look that up?”
-
-“Yes, we did! No name we know. No one mixed up in the case. It was
-probably hired by wire, or telephone, from somebody we don’t know.”
-
-“It isn’t important, anyhow,” Curt declared. “Not right now. What do you
-think of my idea, Griff?”
-
-“I’m for anything that will tide me over till Lang gets back.”
-
-“Then—let’s do it!” Al jumped away from the group and was already at the
-door. Bob hesitated a moment, then, seeing how eager Curt was to echo
-Al’s enthusiasm, he agreed.
-
-After the two started for The Windsock, Bob sat with Griff, giving him
-the facts they knew, the theories they had formed for awhile.
-
-“It’s tangled up, and no mistake,” Griff, recovered somewhat, but no
-longer fidgety, feeling that aid was being given him in his trouble,
-rose. “Look here, Bob—I was so excited, I didn’t eat any dinner. What
-say you stay here in case a call comes in, while I run out and get some
-coffee and sinkers?”
-
-“Lock the desk first! I don’t want to be caught here with it open.”
-
-“Right! I shan’t need the slip that has the combination on it, any
-more.” He put a paper in a small drawer, closed down the roll top,
-adjusted his cap at a more confident, rakish angle, and sauntered out,
-while Bob made himself comfortable at the desk in the swivel chair.
-
-The minutes dragged along.
-
-In the deserted office building there was almost no sound—a rat crept
-toward a wastebasket, ran back as Bob moved in his chair; but otherwise
-the place was very still.
-
-“There’s an airplane engine!” Bob mused, as, in the silence, he caught
-the faint, steady drone coming from the sky.
-
-It grew louder—rapidly, much louder!
-
-“It can’t be Lang, coming back!”
-
-Bob went to the window. The sound seemed to come from the other side of
-the building. He ran across the hall into the directors’ room and got to
-the window, which had a fire escape stairway outside it.
-
-Just as he peered through the bars of the fire escape, he saw a craft
-swoop down, quite low. It did not land! Instead, it seemed to zoom along
-and to rise swiftly.
-
-“Overshot the field,” Bob mused. “Why doesn’t he drop a Verey light to
-signal the watchman to turn on the landing floods? Or—maybe the watchman
-isn’t out there. I’d better see.”
-
-He ran down the stairs and out into the yard, across it and onto the
-small landing field. The craft had passed, but he could still hear the
-engine. It seemed from its change of location, that the craft was coming
-around in a spiral.
-
-Bob ran toward the switch controlling the flood lights. One of the
-large, hooded lamps was near it. As the sound of the engine came closer
-he switched on the floods.
-
-To his surprise the sudden light seemed to startle the pilot—at least
-the craft seemed to waver, to skid, to drop, and then, to catch its
-flying speed and control. But it did not spiral as he expected a pilot
-who had waited for light would do.
-
-Instead it began to climb.
-
-Swiftly, eagerly curious, Bob caught hold of the handle on the adjusting
-mechanism of the flood light. It could be lifted, or set lower, to
-govern the range and height of its beam.
-
-Bob proposed to use it as a searchlight, to illuminate the craft if he
-could swing the heavy lamp upward in time.
-
-Eagerly he labored with the mechanism.
-
-Slowly the beam lifted.
-
-Its intense rays caught the craft’s underwings.
-
-“What’s going on here?” The watchman ran up.
-
-For answer Bob pointed excitedly toward a brown, sharply outlined craft,
-climbing, growing dim in the fainter beam as it receded.
-
-“It’s—it’s—” he gasped, “—it’s the mystery crate—the brown airplane!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
- BOB PURSUES!
-
-
-Realizing that the watchman did not know what he meant by “the mystery
-crate,” Bob hurriedly told of the earlier experiences: all the while he
-talked his mind was busy, underneath, wondering why the pilot of the
-brown ship had flown over the plant, why he had appeared to lose control
-when the light flared up, why he had climbed to get away.
-
-“He’s gone!” said the watchman. “Anyhow, that’s clear!”
-
-“I hate to see him get away!” Bob said, sorrowfully.
-
-“Whyn’t you chase him?”
-
-“I?” Bob was startled by the idea.
-
-“Sure—you! Didn’t I see Lang giving you lessons, and Griff, too?”
-
-“Yes—but, at night—and Lang has the small ship.”
-
-The watchman seemed to have caught the excitement of a chase.
-
-“Look here, though!” he cried, beckoning as he ran. “In the hangar is a
-crate just like Griff’s model—belonged to Mr. Tredway. He—he won’t need
-it no more. Whyn’t you?——”
-
-“At night?”
-
-“Sure! Once you get off the ground, the air’s all the same, day or
-night, ain’t it?”
-
-Not exactly, Bob demurred, There were many considerations to be thought
-out, but his father had said “locate the brown ship.”
-
-Here it was, flying away!
-
-It seemed to be “up to him.”
-
-“Can we get the crate out? Can we get it started? Is there any fuel
-aboard?”
-
-Already the watchman had hold of the tail assembly of a trim, slender,
-dark fuselage.
-
-“Grab on!” answered the watchman, jockeying the fuselage so that a
-wingtip missed the span of the cabin ‘plane’s spreading airfoils. “Grab
-on! I know you lads is detectiffs, and here’s your chance for a medal or
-somethin’.”
-
-Bob “grabbed on!” with spirit. He had caught the enthusiasm of the older
-person. It took them only a short time to jockey the craft into the
-open, to get its gauges checked, to see that it had oil and at least a
-tank of gas three-quarters full.
-
-“Holler out!” The watchman stood by the “prop.”
-
-“Ready!”
-
-“Gas on?”
-
-“Gas on!”
-
-“Switch off?”
-
-“Switch off!”
-
-The watchman spun the propeller.
-
-“Contact!” he yelled, stepping swiftly beyond the range of those deadly
-sharp blade tips.
-
-There came the snap and bark of the motor. Cold! But Bob, feeling that
-for all the precious seconds it must waste, he ought to be safe before
-he might be sorry, allowed it to warm up, checked his instruments as he
-had observed Lang and Griff do, and then, as the watchman, obeying his
-signal, kicked away the chocks so the wheels could move forward, the
-amateur pilot, steady and cool all at once, glanced at the windsock, saw
-that he could take off straight down the short field, pulled open the
-throttle, tipped the “flippers” so the tail ceased to drag, as the
-propeller blast caught the elevators, and began to race down the field.
-
-As he went he tipped the elevators sharply, felt the ship sway a trifle,
-realized he was off the ground and moving steadily, climbing to the roar
-of the engine!
-
-He smiled a little. He had not forgotten to hold the ship level for the
-brief seconds that it needed to assume flying speed after the first hop
-from earth. He had not climbed her at too steep an angle, there was no
-indication, at least to his inexperienced hand, of any logginess of the
-controls presaging a stall. He was away!
-
-“Now,” he thought, with a sharp glance around the sky spaces, “I am in
-for it. If nothing goes wrong with the machinery or the prop I guess I
-can keep this crate level and get somewhere.”
-
-But where?
-
-In those precious moments the brown ship could have gone ten miles.
-
-“He was mightily interested in the aircraft plant,” Bob reflected,
-letting the ship “fly herself,” as most well balanced aircraft will do
-in steady air, as long as flying speed is held. “Now all that we have
-found out, so far, has centered about the aircraft plant and—and The
-Windsock! Could he be around there? Or——”
-
-As a new thought struck him he gripped the stick a tiny bit tighter.
-
-“—Or, maybe he’s brought the brown ship back for some new stunt! It
-might be hidden in that field again!”
-
-He pushed the stick a trifle to the side, thus operating the ailerons,
-while he used his rudder experimentally, meaning to swing in a circle.
-
-Whether a good Providence watches over amateurs, in sports or in
-professions, or whether Bob had actually learned from his lessons, the
-fact is that he did not overbank or use too much rudder, and neither
-felt the wind of a skid on one cheek nor the breeze of a slip on the
-other. Around went the ship, in a wide swing.
-
-Bob kept his eyes on the sky, with momentary glances at the instruments,
-not all of which were understandable to him yet; however, he knew the
-altimeter, the tachometer which records engine speed, the gas and oil
-pressure gauges and such important ones.
-
-They seemed all to record satisfactorily. His altitude was six hundred
-feet; a little low for safety, so he climbed to twice that. The
-revolutions were even and plenty for his need, as he watched the
-fluctuations of the tachometer when he eased the throttle forward in his
-climb, or backed it gently in the level-off.
-
-Gas and oil recorded without a hitch or a diminution of supply.
-
-But where was his quarry?
-
-Far ahead Bob saw a tiny flare of red in the sky.
-
-He nearly lost control in his excitement, but with the true air-sense he
-caught the tendency of the sideslip by opposite rudder and aileron and
-then banked and circled till his nose pointed straight for the dying
-flare.
-
-Someone in the sky was signaling for something!
-
-“I’ll get there soon! And see!” Bob told himself. He held the ship
-level, glancing at the “bubble” in the spirit level, as he gave the gun,
-opening the throttle steadily.
-
-To the roar of the engine, the sing of cool wind in taut wires, the
-sting of pulsing blood pounding a thrill-song in his temples, Bob took
-up his quest, and soon saw, ahead, the dim outline of a circling ship.
-It was dark. Was it brown?
-
-He dared not get too close. Rather, he preferred to climb, so as to be
-safely out of the other fellow’s way if he maneuvered.
-
-From above Bob planned to light a white flare, by whose light he could
-identify the ship.
-
-But the other fellow saw him too!
-
-Bob needed no flare to tell him that he had discovered the brown
-craft—its action was indication enough! The pilot dived, and then went
-into a barrel-roll, dangerous at a low altitude, Bob thought.
-
-The “stunt” enabled the ship to get to one side and out of his line of
-flight if he dived for it.
-
-Clearly this showed that the unseen pilot feared to be attacked, driven
-down.
-
-But Bob had no such intention, he merely followed as the small, brown
-craft, speedy and capable, went fleetly through the night.
-
-Bob, easing his throttle a little more open, as he got the line of
-flight, held his elevation and his level position; he did not try to
-overtake the other, he wanted to see where he went—nothing more!
-
-So the flight held, one about five hundred feet up, the other easily as
-high again. The speed was almost identical, the ships were well matched.
-
-But the other man had some tricks up his wings, in a way of speaking!
-
-He began to climb. Bob, fearing to be over-reached, climbed also.
-Higher, higher they both went, Bob still atop the other, for he had as
-much power, as well angled wings, as clever a ship as his adversary.
-
-But the battle of elevation was short. At fifteen hundred feet the brown
-‘plane went into a wingover, and to Bob’s dismay it was, by that
-maneuver, in a reverse direction to the flight of his own, and he dared
-do no maneuvering, no stunting, at night and alone!
-
-Before he could swing in the easy circle which his inexperience
-compelled him to use, the other pilot was almost out of sight. He
-climbed, and thus Bob gained, but he saw that his pursuit was futile.
-
-The man was climbing into a cloud!
-
-In its misty vastness, surrounding a ship like a fog, an inexpert pilot
-could not know, without continually watching his spirit level and other
-instruments, if he flew level or on his back, if he was going sidewise
-or straight toward earth. To watch the instruments “to fly by the
-dashboard” was useless; he could not see to follow if he risked the
-feat.
-
-Disgusted, disappointed, he cut the gun and slowed his ship, and flew
-around toward The Windsock. Somebody on the ground was burning several
-land flares, he saw.
-
-It told him one thing! The other fellow had been expected! His signal
-had been seen.
-
-For an instant Bob was tempted to try a landing, to see if they would be
-startled, those people down there in the glare. Did they perhaps think
-he flew the craft they expected? It would be worth something to discover
-that. Or—would it? The danger, the risk, was considerable. It was
-strange territory to him. The people, seeing his craft markings, its
-different color, might extinguish the flares, leaving him, low, to “set
-down hot” or to climb, too late, and land in trees!
-
-No, it was not worth the risk.
-
-If his adversary had gotten away that was the end of the adventure.
-
-Only—it wasn’t.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
- SUSPENSE!
-
-
-When Al and Curt, riding easily, reached the region of the Rocky Lake
-Park, they hid their wheels in the well remembered field, preferring to
-advance on foot, to spy out conditions before arriving at the roadhouse
-to which they were going.
-
-“There’s something going on, over there,” said Curt, as they walked,
-facing traffic, along the familiar highway.
-
-“The new dance floor—The Hangar—is opening tonight.”
-
-“That will make it easy for us to get in.”
-
-“They may not allow juniors on the floor.”
-
-“But they won’t chase people away! It would be bad for the business!”
-chuckled Curt. “Every young man can have—must have—at least two in his
-family, and they might be dancing papa and mama.”
-
-“We can go on and see.”
-
-They did.
-
-The new dance floor, built in an old-looking, metal-covered addition at
-the side of the main hotel, was crowded. A “jazzy” orchestra, with many
-toots of its saxophones, howls from clarinets, trills and staccato yaps
-from its trumpet, put rhythm into the march of many feet.
-
-“Makes me wish I had a girl and had her here and knew how to dance,”
-laughed Curt.
-
-“What I wish more is—” Al did not get time to express his desire to have
-Bob along, to advise him in his rather impulsive acts. A man in a dress
-suit, as the drums rolled in warning to attract attention, advanced to
-the edge of the band platform and addressed the dancers applauding their
-last “number.”
-
-“Lay—deeze—an’—gemp—mum!” Al nudged Curt and whispered that the man was
-Jenks. “For this opening night the manage—munt has went to the special
-expense—youse mus’ excuse my poor way of speakin’. ‘I’m only a simple
-flyer, an’ my eddication don’t go no higher’——”
-
-Al exclaimed, and Curt scowled at the aspersion thus put on the
-intelligence of the most manly, most steady, best educated general class
-of men in industry—pilots!—but they listened, nevertheless.
-
-“The manage—munt has put on a extra fine show for tonight. In fact,
-folks,” his manner became more natural, “we’ve engaged a stunt flyer to
-come over here tonight, to fly around up in the dark blue, and to do
-stunts, with rockets and colored lights so you can see what he does. I
-understand the whole crate is to be lit up some way. So, if you’ll all
-step outside, while we put tables in here for refreshments, you will
-have the free entertainment as soon as we can get his signal and let him
-know to go ahead.”
-
-As Curt and Al were already outside, they craned their necks.
-
-While the laughing couples gathered, a small, red flare was visible. The
-men who seemed to be awaiting this signal, lighted flares. But to their
-amazement the ship did no stunts! It went away!
-
-“Funny!” muttered the excited, disgruntled manager, Jenks, close by Al
-and Curt.
-
-As the flares brightened it seemed as though there were two airplanes
-dimly reflecting the light.
-
-“But they aren’t doing any stunts!” complained a girl to her partner.
-“Wait!” he counseled. Waiting, however, did no good.
-
-The dancers, murmuring, and the manager, trying to apologize, saying it
-must not be the right crate, went back to dance, shoving the refreshment
-tables roughly aside.
-
-Al and Curt, waiting, watching, wondering, saw the men stick the stubs
-of their flares into the ground and walk off.
-
-“Look! He’s coming back!” Al pointed to a speck. They listened and heard
-the drone of an engine.
-
-“He’s back again!” shouted Al, and the people came out again, standing
-with backs to the glaring light, shaded eyes turned upward.
-
-“No—he’s flying low, though,” commented Curt.
-
-“Yes, he is.”
-
-“Look!” Curt caught Al’s arm. “He’s in trouble—isn’t he?—yes, he is!
-Listen! His engine has stopped—dead!”
-
-“Yes, he’s gliding!”
-
-“He can’t land here,” said Curt. “He’s too low to spiral and shoot this
-little clearing—anyhow, it isn’t a place to land—not for night landing!”
-
-“I wonder if the same things are happening that happened—when Mr.
-Tredway was—lost!” Al murmured. “That time, we heard the engine, and
-then the ship dived.”
-
-“This one isn’t diving—it’s gliding!”
-
-“I know, Curt—he’s getting over Rocky Lake. Come on!”
-
-“There he does go—down!”
-
-Off they pelted toward the road.
-
-An airplane had been cruising over the flares. Its motor had stopped.
-That was sure.
-
-And no one knew it better than Bob.
-
-For he was the pilot whose engine stop had left him with a “dead stick.”
-He must glide. He had enough gliding angle, he supposed, to take him
-back to that providential field—if he could throw over a flare and make
-some sort of a set-down!——
-
-It was dangerous—but it must be done.
-
-For, in spite of its danger, knowing well what might happen, Bob had
-shut off his own engine—deliberately!
-
-He had to—to save his life!
-
-“Look!” gasped Curt, running. “See that glare? The ‘plane——”
-
-“On fire!” panted Al.
-
-Appearances are deceiving. To Al and Curt, on the ground, with darkness,
-distance and trees to screen the truth from them, it seemed as though
-the glare they saw beyond the grove must spell a blazing airplane.
-
-Instead, the light came from a landing flare, dropped by Bob.
-
-As he headed over The Windsock roadhouse, and decided to give up, to
-return to the aircraft field, he had all of his mind and attention on
-his craft. Because of that he was able to notice a mystifying, if tiny
-bluish light, intermittent and flickering, close to the pipe that
-conveyed fuel from the tank to the mixing carburetor.
-
-“That’s an electric spark!” he decided. He was right.
-
-Somehow, either through one of those malicious acts which had already
-been done to other ships, or from a rubbing wire, some electrical
-conducting wire had worn off its insulation and was bare, and each time
-it rubbed or touched metal it made a spark.
-
-If there is one thing more dangerous than another in the air it is the
-menace of an open spark close to gasoline feed lines and carburetor
-mixing chambers.
-
-Knowing it well, unable to determine the cause, but sure that the spark
-was electrical and dangerous, Bob took the only safe course. As Curt and
-Al had observed, his engine stopped. He cut off the ignition.
-
-The sparking light ceased.
-
-“Now,” thought Bob, “I daren’t use my motor. That means I must glide. At
-this height, if I remember what Lang said, the angle that will give me
-safe flying speed will about take me to that little field we first saw
-the brown ‘plane hidden in. Can I make it?”
-
-He depressed the nose, watching, by his sense of touch, how the stick
-and rudder bar acted. As he moved through the air he elevated the nose a
-trifle, to get as flat a gliding angle as he dared; but his whole mind
-was concentrated on that feeling, that sense of heaviness in the
-reacting of the controls. When they began to respond sluggishly he knew
-enough to sense that he was losing flying speed, approaching the danger
-point called stalling, in which the ship gets out of control, drops or
-slips or does some other uncontrollable maneuver.
-
-Always, in time, he lowered the nose, picked up the needful speed, and
-thus, by coming as close to the “graveyard” glide, or flat angle, as he
-dared, and yet conserving enough reserve speed to keep the lift of the
-wings more sustaining than the downward pull of gravity, he held his
-craft in the air.
-
-Always the nose, pointed into the wind, went lower. Always, as he tried
-to penetrate the darkness of the night and of the brown earth below, his
-eyes, over the cockpit cowling, searched for the flattish, light spot he
-wanted. Along its inner side was the strip of turf he needed.
-
-Fear-thoughts flashed through his mind:
-
-“Can I glide that far? Will I overshoot or undershoot? Will I misjudge
-the height as I come down, if I do make it? Will I set the ship down too
-suddenly, so it will bounce off and then—with too little margin of
-height to get speed again—crack up? Will I stall too high and smash
-down? Will I be going too fast, and run too far? Can I glide in to the
-turf or will I set down in stubble and nose over?”
-
-Resolutely, by all the will power he had, Bob crushed out those
-nerve-deadening, muscle-binding terrors.
-
-There was the field. Where, now, did they keep the light producing
-flares? Oh, yes! There, in that little boxlike compartment.
-
-He flung a detonating flare that would light in the air or on striking
-earth. Its light was what horrified Curt and Al.
-
-To Bob, its glare was a great relief!
-
-The white gleam showed, far ahead, faintly lit, the field. His course
-would take him toward it, but he altered the direction of his flight
-slightly to get over the turf, then corrected the bank, leveled his
-wings, depressed the nose still more, picked up speed and, with all his
-force, sent a landing flare into the air, as far ahead and to the side
-as he could fling it.
-
-Then he “shot” the field, got his nose directly onto a line with the
-large trees at the end of the field, pulled up the nose more, to kill
-all the forward momentum he dared, and then——
-
-Bob gasped. He was too far to one side. He would land in the stubble.
-Also, he was a little too high.
-
-Wildly he flung the flare he had been getting ready.
-
-Then, from some hidden source of remembered instructions he got the
-instinctive knowledge of what to do.
-
-He dropped the left wingtip by pushing the stick sidewise, and felt the
-ship tilt. It went into a sideslip. That both lost speed forward and got
-him further over to the left.
-
-Opposite rudder, hard! Up left wingtip, down right! Nose down a little!
-Speed enough to go on!
-
-With his heart in his mouth, looking swiftly down, Bob saw the earth
-seem to come up at him. Up elevators! Stall. He’d have to take it! He
-was close to earth, over turf. He must not keep that nose down and glide
-into the trees or taxi beyond the end of the turf.
-
-The ship stalled, landed with quite a jar—but the trucks held up!
-
-And Bob, from his heart, breathed a little prayer of thanksgiving.
-
-He had done his best, had held his head, and—he was safe!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
- CROSSED WIRES
-
-
-By the time Curt and Al got their bicycles and pedaled to the vicinity
-of Rocky Lake, Bob’s flare was out and they had no means of ending their
-suspense until they had looked around in the picnic grove and assured
-themselves that there was no burning airplane in sight.
-
-They rode along the highway.
-
-“Isn’t that a flashlight, in the old field?”
-
-“It looks like one, Al.”
-
-“It is!”
-
-They pedaled faster. Presently the pair reached the field; soon Bob,
-using a small pocket flashlamp, was telling his brother and his best
-friend how the electric spark had worried him.
-
-“I knew the brown airplane was gone,” he continued his explanation, “the
-only thing left for me to do was to head back to the plant. But I saw
-that quick little flicker close to the gas line and cut off the ignition
-switch.”
-
-“What are you doing now?”
-
-“Tracing the wiring,” Bob told his brother. “And here is a wire! It
-ought not to be run so close to the gas line! And here is another, away
-back under the dash instrument board. They cross!”
-
-“Crossed wires!” gasped Curt. “That isn’t right!”
-
-“Certainly not!” agreed Bob. “We’ve learned enough about airplane
-construction at the Tredway plant to know they don’t do such careless
-things as that!”
-
-“Then somebody deliberately did it,” concluded Al. “It’s part of the
-scheme to damage the crates.”
-
-“It’s worse than that!” Bob climbed to the ground and faced his
-companions. His face, hard to see in the dark, because he was saving his
-electric battery, was very serious. “It’s worse than just tampering!
-Fellows—this is Mr. Tredway’s own airplane!——”
-
-“I see,” commented Curt soberly. “Some one wanted harm to come to the
-owner of the plant.”
-
-“And the ‘some one’ made sure it would. In daylight,” Bob stated, “that
-spark wouldn’t be noticed. It was only by being out in the dark of
-night, that I could see it.”
-
-“But crossed wires ought not to rub enough to wear out the insulation in
-a short time,” objected Al.
-
-“Neither they did. Al—Curt—the insulation was scraped away!”
-
-They were silent for a long moment. The full wickedness of that
-deliberate act made each of the youths feel rather cold. They were
-dealing with something more sinister than an attempt to make away with
-small airplane supplies, to damage airplanes for the purpose of injuring
-the reputation of the manufacturers, as they had decided the conditions
-seemed to indicate.
-
-“Well,” Curt became practical, “you can’t fly that ship home, not in
-that condition.”
-
-“If we had some adhesive tape,” Bob said, “I could tape the wires and
-get back to the aircraft field.”
-
-“I’ve got bicycle friction tape in my little toolcase.” Al ran to get
-it.
-
-“The place is hard to reach,” Bob told Curt.
-
-“Maybe I could do it,” Curt responded. “My hands are thinner and my
-fingers are longer than yours.”
-
-As soon as Al brought the roll of pitched fabric, Curt, with the
-flashlamp set for steady burning, located the damaged insulation and
-began to work with strips of the tape, having some difficulty in winding
-it without pulling the wires too much.
-
-“This is going to be a slow job,” he called out. “Bob, somebody ought to
-go and call up Griff, to see if he has any news.”
-
-“I think so too,” Al agreed.
-
-“Why don’t you both go!” Curt urged. “One could stay at The Windsock and
-watch and the other could come back with news—or, Bob, you could ride
-back on my wheel, to The Windsock with Al, and then come on back here
-and we two could fly back to the hangars together.”
-
-“Would you trust yourself with me, in the dark, flying this ship?” asked
-Bob. “Something else may be wrong with it.”
-
-“That’s so. I’ll look it over. I know how they inspect them,” Curt
-suggested.
-
-Al and Bob agreed, and went to the two bicycles. Off they rode.
-
-“There’s that ‘plane again!” Al pointed to a tiny red flare high up over
-the roadhouse ground. “He has come back.”
-
-“I suppose I frightened him away,” Bob said. “He probably thinks whoever
-chased him has given up, and he has come back.”
-
-“One thing bothers me,” Al observed, forgetting his weary legs in the
-fresh excitement. “Why would a crate that has a pilot who flies away
-from pursuit come back to do stunts?”
-
-“I can’t answer that,” Bob replied. “Let’s get there. See! He is
-looping, and he has lighted some sort of rocket or bomb that makes a
-trail of fire to show his stunt off in the dark.”
-
-“It’s pretty, isn’t it?”
-
-Bob agreed with his brother’s exclamation as the airplane, high above
-them, with fireworks leaving a comet’s tail behind it, made a series of
-loops, dived, zoomed, made a sort of “S” of fire by side-slipping first
-one way and then the other.
-
-When they got back to the roadhouse the display was over. Ground flares
-were going and it was clear that the pilot meant to land.
-
-“We’re going to see who it is, after all,” declared Bob, thrilled by the
-possible revelation that was to come.
-
-Curt saw the gyrating ship and its glowing trail of sparks. He watched
-for a moment and then went doggedly back to his work. If Bob needed this
-sport craft, Curt proposed to have it ready if careful, methodical work
-could get it so.
-
-Surprised, he heard himself addressed by a youth who came over from the
-farmhouse whose builder owned the field.
-
-“What’s goin’ on?” asked the farmer’s son.
-
-“Some display for the opening of the roadhouse dance floor,” Curt
-replied, tightening down the tape and clipping off the end with his
-pocket knife.
-
-“I don’t mean yonder. I mean here.”
-
-“Oh! A little trouble. Crossed wires.”
-
-The youth did not understand; but he accepted the explanation.
-
-“Ain’t you awful young to be a aviation flyer?” he asked.
-
-“I don’t—I’m not the pilot,” Curt stated. He explained. Then, his task
-finished, he clambered down to see the glow of the distant, concealed
-ground flares, and to guess that the sky rider was going to land.
-
-“This is gettin’ to be a regular aviators’ place,” said the youth to
-Curt. “Guess pa ought to put up signs, ‘Places to land for rent.’”
-
-“Do many crates land here?” Curt was surprised.
-
-“Well—look at them tracks!”
-
-Thus having the spot indicated, even in the dim light Curt was able to
-see that deep ruts had been made, not only in the soft, ploughed edge of
-the field, but also on the turf.
-
-“Hm-m-m!” he had no explanation to comment. It was unimportant.
-Something of greater concern was on his mind.
-
-“See here, buddy,” Curt said, “will you help me ‘warm up’ this ship?” He
-was searching for two stones or blocks big enough to hold the airplane
-still while the propeller revolved. “The pilot might want to take off
-now that I’ve fixed the damage.” The boy agreed. Curt, locating several
-rocks near where the brown ‘plane had once been hidden, set them under
-the wheels, and then, realizing that the ship must take off facing into
-the wind, he got the youth to help him drag the tail around, to pull the
-whole ship as far up at the end of the turf as possible.
-
-“First time I ever worked around a—er—‘grate’——”
-
-“‘Crate,’” Curt corrected, smiling in the darkness. “That’s a slang way
-of speaking of an airplane, and it means either a term of fondness, or
-of disgust, according to how the user feels about his ‘ship.’”
-
-“I see. Gee! Wisht I could be one of them aviator flyers.”
-
-“You can, if you are willing to study enough,” Curt said. “It means hard
-work. There’s a lot to learn. But a fellow who has ambition can get to
-be anything he likes.”
-
-“Not without being educated more than me.”
-
-“You can pick up some education while you’re studying in ‘ground
-school,’” Curt explained. “After you learn the parts of the airplane,
-the way each one works, what it is for, and so on, and how they are put
-together, you have to study about airplane engines—the principle of the
-internal combustion engine and what all the parts are for and how they
-work. There has to be study of—let’s see—oh, yes!—aerodynamics—how a
-ship flies, and why, and what different air currents do, and how to know
-their effects. There’s navigation, too—the beginnings of it, anyway.”
-
-“All that? I thought you got in and pushed something and——”
-
-“If there weren’t so many people who thought that,” Curt said soberly,
-“we wouldn’t have so many accidents. Flying is a science; and there’s
-more to it than getting into the air and going somewhere. It takes
-ground school study to learn the foundation part, and instruction
-flights to learn how things are handled, and solo flights and stunting
-to show you how to handle a crate in an emergency—and navigation in its
-practical applications, for long flights. But if you are in earnest, you
-can get all that, and pick up practical arithmetic and grammar and so
-on, in night school at the same time.”
-
-“Not without money!”
-
-“No—unless—you might come over to the Tredway aircraft plant and I’d
-introduce you to Barney—Mr. Horton, the manager. He might give you a
-chance to work as a ‘grease monkey’ in the field, for he is awfully
-nice. He helped all of us.”
-
-The youth agreed eagerly, and then, with the chocks set and the ignition
-switch off, Curt told him how to work the propeller around, and got him
-back to safety as the ignition switch followed the gas “on.”
-
-The engine took up its roar, and Curt knew enough to shut down the
-throttle to idling speed, allowing the slow revolutions to warm up the
-power plant. He knew little about oil pressure and instrument readings,
-but he knew that an engine, to function safely and steadily, in flight,
-must be warm.
-
-While he busied himself getting everything as nearly ready as his
-ability allowed, Bob and Al reached the roadhouse.
-
-The airplane had already “set down.”
-
-“It’s the brown one, and no mistake!” Al was thrilled.
-
-“Yes,” said Bob. “Now, Al, the pilot must have gone inside the
-roadhouse. I don’t see him around the dance place. You could go in to
-ask for his autograph. I see you still carry that little book. It ought
-to be easy to get a look at him, have him pointed out to you. That’s
-really all we need.”
-
-Al agreed. He had no difficulty in getting a busy waiter to jerk a thumb
-toward one of the private compartments.
-
-Al went to its door, pushed aside the curtains—and stepped back.
-
-What he saw stunned him!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
- THE SKY SQUAD GOES INTO ACTION
-
-
-Three men faced one another in the small compartment, made to look like
-a passenger ‘plane cabin.
-
-As Al, at the curtained entrance, recognized the one facing him, all
-three turned to look.
-
-With a mumbled apology Al backed out.
-
-More than anything else, he wanted to get away, to see Bob!
-
-The man who had faced him was Mr. Parsons, partner in the aircraft
-plant.
-
-The man to his right was the mysterious stranger whom Al had seen in the
-supply room!
-
-The third man——
-
-Before Al could form his mental picture of a face that seemed familiar,
-a bus-boy, with a heavy tray of soiled dishes, bumped against him.
-
-“Get out o’ the way,” the youth grunted, to Al, and gave him an angry
-push with his free hand. Al, his balance disturbed, stumbled
-forward—into the arms of Mr. Parsons at the door.
-
-Struggling, squirming to get out of the powerful grip on his arm and
-shoulder, Al found himself held as if in a vise.
-
-Suddenly his whole body went limp. His head dropped, his eyes closed. He
-sagged down, and surprised and disconcerted, imagining that the youth he
-held might have fainted in his fright, the man released him, lowered him
-to the floor while he looked up, intending to call for aid.
-
-Behind him another face looked out, the bearded face of the man Al had
-seen previously in the supply room.
-
-“What’s up?” asked the latter.
-
-“I am!” cried Al, shrilly, as he tensed his muscles, swung free of Mr.
-Parsons as the latter bent over him. Like the leashed spring of a
-panther Al’s squirming, swift move took him out of danger.
-
-To cries, to shouts of surprise and of inquiry, Al eluded the grasping
-hands of a waiter, dodged a diner’s gripping fingers, evaded the move of
-a man to block him at the door, and was free!
-
-Quick thinking and a ruse had prevailed where strength was not enough to
-accomplish his wish.
-
-Speeding along, outside, after vaulting the veranda railing, Al quickly
-located Bob. With a wave of his hand Al signaled. His progress was swift
-as he scampered across the parking space, between standing automobiles,
-toward an old barnlike structure backed into the grove. Bob, seeing the
-wave and Al’s progress, dodged, on his own part, among the cars until he
-rejoined Al in the open door of the old, dilapidated barn.
-
-“What happened?”
-
-Al, pulling his brother back out of sight, recovered his breath.
-
-“I bumped into Mr. Parsons——”
-
-“No!”
-
-“Yes—and the man we saw in the supply room——”
-
-“Well! What happened then?”
-
-“There was somebody else with them. And—I didn’t recognize him, because
-I was so surprised and excited—but his face ‘rang a bell’ and I’ll think
-who he was when I get quieted down.”
-
-“What made you run?”
-
-Al explained.
-
-“Yes, and there comes Mr. Parsons! He’s looking for me,” he ended.
-
-“He has something in his hand—a package——”
-
-“Listen!” Al drew Bob further into the dark interior. “Bob—when I
-blundered in on them, those men had—what do you suppose?—the company
-books!” Al clutched Bob’s arm tighter. “You remember, we hid when Mr.
-Parsons was in the offices—he took those books!”
-
-“Yes,” Bob’s whisper agreed. “Now he’s been showing them to that man we
-saw, and to somebody else.”
-
-“Mr. Parsons isn’t as honest as Griff wanted us to believe.”
-
-Bob shook Al’s arm reassuringly. “No,” he admitted, “I thought Griff’s
-story was part of—what did they say in the war?—oh, yes! It was
-‘camouflage.’ Fancy paint to conceal something.”
-
-“If we could only get the books away from them—and tell Barney!”
-
-“They may be coming to look for you. Mr. Parsons must have recognized
-you, Al. I wonder if there’s a haymow over this old floor?”
-
-“You go along one wall and I’ll take the other. We’ll see!”
-
-They hurried away from one another. Presently Bob called out softly and,
-following the wall, with one hand touching to hold his place, the other
-extended ahead to avoid bumping into any obstruction, the youngest of
-the Sky Squad found his way to Bob.
-
-There was a ladder against the wall. Bob whispered instructions and
-started up the dark, uncertain ladder. Bob had hardly reached the top
-and called down a low reassurance when Al almost scrambled in his
-eagerness to get up quickly.
-
-Voices were growing louder. Some one was coming! It must be Mr. Parsons.
-
-At the top of the ladder, Al fell softly onto the upper floor boards,
-and he, with his brother, bent attentive, strained ears to catch the low
-murmur from below.
-
-“He’s from the plant,” a voice called, and Bob recognized the quick,
-sharp tones of Mr. Parsons. “He was a boy from the plant.”
-
-“You got those books wrapped in record time!” someone else chuckled.
-Then, as the youths drew their heads back, turtle fashion, to avoid the
-glare, a match was struck.
-
-“Nobody here—but yonder’s a ladder.”
-
-“Better go up and have a look,” said a third, deeper voice. “We can’t
-afford to have those kids snooping. I think Barney brought them into the
-thing. They’re only kids—but they have eyes!”
-
-Bob, with a twist of his neck, looked around in the dim upper room. Its
-end window, dirty and cobwebby, allowed the moonlight to stream in. The
-shaft of dull light streamed across, slantwise. Bob, following its path
-with his eyes, touched Al’s arm. Gently he directed his brother’s gaze
-toward a corner.
-
-Sacks, used for packing corn or other cereals, were piled up there.
-
-By common consent the two began a slow, cautious movement toward the
-sacks; but Bob, quick in an emergency, drew the whole pile, very
-cautiously, partly lifting the lower ones, to a darker place.
-
-Al, close beside him, divined his idea. They could hide under the large
-cluster of heavy burlap bags.
-
-By the time that a match was struck in the upper floor they were lying,
-crouched, under a number of the burlap bags.
-
-“Not here! Guess the kid was scared and ran away.”
-
-“Wait, though.” Bob’s breath almost stopped. Had the other man who came
-up discovered the sacking?
-
-“Wait, though,” the man repeated. “We meant to compare the books
-tonight; that’s why I took all the trouble with those stunts, to have a
-logical excuse for landing here. We can’t, now! Those kids may have
-telephoned somebody—whoever they’re working for. Suppose we hide the
-books, and get together tomorrow night. I’ll take the crate back and
-come over by train.”
-
-“Good way.”
-
-In their stuffy concealment the brothers heard steps, low muttered
-suggestions. Evidently a place to sequester the company records was
-selected. The youths quivered and Al nearly screamed aloud as a sack was
-dragged from the top of the pile. But the sack did not pull off the ones
-they clung to over their perspiring heads.
-
-“That’s the stuff! On that shelf, and cover ’em up. Nobody would think
-of that place.”
-
-“Won’t Barney miss them?”
-
-“Let him worry a little. It will do him good!”
-
-The voices receded. The heavy tread ceased. Scuffling sounds told the
-brothers that the men had descended the ladder.
-
-“Well,” whispered Al, “we’re safe——”
-
-“And we can take the books back——”
-
-“Can we find them?”
-
-“They said ‘on the shelf.’ Feel around, as soon as they are out—wait!
-Al, I’ll slip over and spy out through the window——”
-
-Al sat on the floor, among the sacks, mopping his brow which was wet
-with hot perspiration that had, a moment before, been ice cold. Bob
-waved across the bar of moonlight. The trio of seeming conspirators was
-safely away, he indicated.
-
-Again using their hands, they felt along the walls.
-
-With his head, though jarred only slightly, Bob found the shelf. A quick
-exploration defined the books, in a compact roll of tape-tied cloth,
-hidden under the sack. It was a second’s work to remove them and to
-rejoin Al.
-
-“Now—how can we get them away? Won’t they be watching?”
-
-“Let’s go down and see.”
-
-Alertly, and with caution, Bob protruded his head over the edge of the
-opening by the ladder. He was fortunate! In the doorway stood the
-unrecognized member of the party, smoking. Evidently he had returned.
-
-Bob watched, holding Al in check by his grip on the younger one’s arm.
-The man did not propose to leave, it appeared.
-
-The sound of an airplane motor starting conveyed the truth. He was
-waiting until his ship was ready before going into the open.
-
-Bob waited, Al at his side. Neither moved more than was absolutely
-essential.
-
-But Al, try as he would, could not suppress the horrible inclination to
-sneeze, induced by the dust in his nostrils from the dirty burlap.
-
-“Huh—sh—huh—sh!” he tried to hold back, but Nature got the better of his
-will.
-
-“Huh—shoosh!”
-
-“Now you’ve done it!”
-
-“Couldn’t help it—look—the window will open. You could drop!”
-
-The sound of the man ascending the ladder came clearly.
-
-Like two swift gazelles the youths dashed across to the window, wide and
-old. It was part of the door through which hay was drawn up, they
-discovered. They tugged at it. On rollers, but stiff from disuse, it
-stuck. Panting they struggled. Closer came the ascending steps, a call
-to know who was “up there!”
-
-The window slid open a foot—another foot.
-
-“I’ll have to drop,” said Bob. “You get back and hide again.”
-
-“Too late! I’ll drop the books to you! Go on—quick!”
-
-Bob hung by his hands, gave a swift glance down, let go! No sooner did
-he land, with loosened muscles to avoid the shock as much as he could,
-than the package of heavy books landed beside him.
-
-Swiftly he grasped the package, and ran.
-
-Al, almost caught, doubled with a swift, bending squirm, as the angry
-man reached to grapple with him in the moonlit doorway. By his quickness
-Al was able to get away for an instant.
-
-He tried the same ruse he had used so well before, but in another form.
-Every ounce of weight he could put into it he gave to a run away from
-the ladder. Then, doubling on himself, but tiptoeing and bending as low
-as he could, avoiding the moon ray, Al crept softly along. The man,
-following the direction of the footfalls, and thus trying to locate his
-quarry in the dark, did not see the silent, gloom-hidden form slip along
-the wall. Al was down the ladder before his ruse was detected.
-
-But the man ran to the doorway, shouting through its opening.
-
-Bob, racing toward the bicycles, realized that the other two men,
-catching the warning shout, were bearing down on him. Like a rabbit he
-reversed his route, slipping in among the trees behind the barn. But Mr.
-Parsons and the other mysterious stranger were determined men. Bob could
-not run and be silent. He dared not creep. They were too close behind
-him.
-
-Al, seeing that this pursuit was close, tried to divert attention by
-shouting as he ran, openly, across toward the bicycles.
-
-But this did not draw the others away; they felt that Bob had a parcel
-for which they meant to catch him. On and on, through the grove,
-dodging, squirming past trees, through briers, Bob went.
-
-Curt, at the field, with the engine idling on the airplane, did not hear
-the pursuit until Bob, almost worn out, nearly done, came racing along.
-Then, seeing him, Curt ran to meet him. From the grove behind came the
-crash and shout of pursuers.
-
-“The books—hide!—” Bob could say no more.
-
-Curt caught the package as Bob hurled it. Then, with an instinct that
-amounted to genius, Bob noted a flattish stone, and as he ran he bent,
-pausing an instant, and came up tugging along the small, flattish
-boulder that, in the dark could be mistaken for the package of books.
-Unconcernedly, as though watching in the role of a spectator, standing
-on the parcel of books, Curt remained quiet, and the men raced past him.
-
-From the road, where he flung his bicycle, knowing well where Bob would
-head for, Al arrived. He raced toward the airplane just as Bob ran in
-the same direction with his boulder.
-
-Al, not unnerved by his excitement, realized that if the propeller was
-turning, some chocks or other means of holding back the ship were in
-place. He bent under the wheels as Bob arrived.
-
-“Get in!” he cried. Bob, pretending to drop the books in, let the
-boulder fall beside the turf. While he was climbing in, the men paused
-for an instant by Curt who said, sharply, “There he goes!”
-
-They turned, saw Bob was making for the airplane, and ran toward him.
-
-Al tumbled into the rear cockpit, determined not to be caught after the
-enmity he had awakened.
-
-“Take me!” he cried, but the roar of the engine drowned his voice as
-Bob, risking everything, in the dark, opened the throttle.
-
-Up went the elevators enough to lift the tail as the propeller stream
-swept against them.
-
-Along the turf the ship began to move. The men, aware of the sinister
-menace of the whirling blades, fell aside. Bob, sensing the near
-approach of the end of his runway, lifted the elevators again, felt the
-ship going light, gave her the gun, holding her just long enough on the
-level after the take-off to get his speed—then up he roared.
-
-And a boulder beside the turf remained, while Curt, with the books under
-his arm, among the trees, went to Al’s bicycle—and delivered the books
-to his uncle’s study.
-
-But he didn’t stay at home. Mr. Wright was not there. Bob and Al would
-fly to the plant. Thence, on tired feet, Curt pedaled.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
- DRIVEN DOWN
-
-
-Almost as soon as he lifted the airplane above the grove beyond that
-cornfield, Bob recovered his wind and his confidence.
-
-Al, of a more nervous type, was still trembling in his after-cockpit
-seat, but his excitement was changing from that of the recent adventures
-to the thrill of sky-riding at night with his brother. There was not
-only the elation of the climb to keep his nerves quivering; also there
-was the uncertainty of what might happen because of Bob’s lack of skill
-and experience.
-
-Climbing steadily until he was over five hundred feet above the earth,
-Bob felt none of his brother’s uneasiness or excitement. He was
-confident that he could control the airplane as far as straight flying
-was concerned; his only difficulty would be the landing, not the easiest
-thing for a skilful pilot unless a signal could be given that would make
-the plant watchman illuminate the small field.
-
-Bob, making a long swing, banked gently, to head back for the plant,
-calmly considered the elements of the situation and tried to plan, as
-well as he could, how to meet whatever came up.
-
-Al, giving more attention to sky and earth, as they straightened their
-course, correctly pointed for the field at the plant, saw a tiny set of
-glinting lights far away in the sky.
-
-Impulsively he caught the stick of the dual control to waggle it. That
-was the only way to attract Bob’s attention; but Al, in his quick way,
-shook the stick and then held it pretty far to one side, and Bob, not
-expecting the move and unaware at first that Al did it, felt his heart
-sink for an instant, fearing that something had gone wrong with the
-controls.
-
-Al, horrified at the effect of his move, sat, tensely still, waiting for
-a crash. Bob, alert, decided in a flash that he would do all he could to
-avert the smash before he gave up hope. He made the necessary moves to
-correct the slip.
-
-To his delight the craft obeyed promptly, coming back into its proper
-position quickly. Turning to reassure Al, Bob saw his brother violently
-gesturing toward the sky to one side. As he looked Bob saw tiny lights
-and knew them for the flying lights of a craft.
-
-The explanation came at once. Al had attracted his attention to the
-airplane knowing it must be the brown ‘plane. Probably the two men who
-had chased Bob had contrived to tell the pilot, before he took off,
-that—as they supposed—the company books were in Bob’s possession. With a
-wave of his hand toward Al, reassuring him, Bob set his course for the
-flying place belonging to the Tredway plant. He was being pursued by the
-ship he had, recently, followed; it suited him. He would lead the ship
-back there, contrive some way to attract attention, get Al to drop
-flares, and then, landing, telephone all the airports nearby to identify
-and stop the pilot who must eventually alight for fuel.
-
-The pursuer, however had no intention of being lured.
-
-Bob realized it, at the same time that he recalled how swiftly the other
-pilot had climbed to escape identification earlier at the plant.
-
-Instead, the brown ship had some sinister intent toward himself, Bob
-guessed, for it was climbing rapidly, and Bob, unaware of the safe
-climbing angle or stalling angle of his own craft, dared not risk so
-steep a tilt.
-
-Higher, always higher above him, went the other man’s lights.
-
-The wing over him obscured Bob’s view.
-
-He turned to Al. The younger brother leaned out and stared.
-
-“Going up yet!” he cried, and gestured.
-
-Climbing! Climbing faster!
-
-Bob opened his throttle steadily to the full capacity of the engine.
-
-He proposed to gain all he could in speed, and that meant distance ahead
-of the other, while that other airplane climbed. He knew he could fly
-faster, on the level, than a climbing ship could, and he saw the other
-lights slowly becoming somewhat fainter, smaller.
-
-But that did not last long.
-
-In a few seconds the other ship leveled off and began to approach. Bob,
-craning his neck to get a sight of the other craft beyond his own wing
-spread, saw that the other man, evidently angling down and pointing
-directly for a position above him, meant to overtake him and was quite
-capable of doing it. He had superior experience and skill.
-
-Bob realized quickly that the better part of valor in an airplane at
-night, under such conditions, was to give up.
-
-“Or, at least to pretend to give up,” he reflected.
-
-To carry out that pretence he reached into the signal light stores and
-selected a light. This he tossed back to Al.
-
-His signal and his act were understood.
-
-Al knew that Bob wanted light. He ignited the flare, which proved to be
-a green signal blaze, flung it overside and watched its tiny parachute
-catch the air and suspend it.
-
-In that light he swung his eyes to see what Bob meant to do.
-
-The other pilot, arresting his dive, also flew along level, and watched,
-it appeared.
-
-Bob, lighted by the glowing green flare, pointed to himself and then
-pointed to earth.
-
-The other ship, coming steadily closer, was quite plain in the
-illuminated space. Its pilot made a similar gesture, pointing first
-toward the airplane Bob piloted, then downward.
-
-Bob lowered the nose and began to spiral, as though looking for a spot
-on which he might safely “set down.”
-
-On a wider swing the other pilot flew, observing his act.
-
-Swiftly Bob summed up the situation. Beneath him, easily reached, was
-the wide ribbon of the asphalt highway. By heading almost directly into
-the wind he could “shoot” the road, and by keeping his engine running at
-partial speed he could make a “power stall,” letting the craft settle
-very gradually instead of trying to glide down, guess at the correct
-height and then stall and drop. To do the latter in the comparative
-darkness of the highway might result in smashed landing gear or worse if
-he stalled too high and dropped, or it might happen that he would “put
-her on hot,” or at too great speed and without stalling, come against
-the ground. In one case out of ten that might enable him to roll along,
-but if he struck the slightest uneven bit of road, or a bulge of the tar
-at the intersections of the asphalt road blocks, up would bound the
-ship, perhaps to stall herself and crash.
-
-By using power he could keep flying speed while gradually settling until
-his wheels contacted the road. He could also rise more readily if he
-discovered that he had gone too far to either side of the narrow
-road—wide enough in fact but narrow from the standpoint of its use as a
-landing place.
-
-He gave up the half-formed notion of trying to outwit the pilot.
-
-The man meant “business” and that might spell trouble for an amateur.
-Better far would it be to set down and see what came of it.
-
-As he saw the roadway ribboned out straight ahead, with no headlights
-observable in either direction, Bob lifted the nose a trifle, adjusted
-the throttle until, with the road streaming backward under him, he saw
-it very gradually growing wider and clearer.
-
-Almost perfectly he landed. Being a straight road he had lots of time to
-taxi, with his gun cut and his only care being to hold the ship on its
-wheels and not let a wing-tip scrape the asphalt.
-
-To his surprise the other pilot did not land.
-
-Instead he seemed to be circling at a very low altitude, not a hundred
-feet up, and with only bare flying speed, diving ten feet to catch up
-his speed and then climbing back to circle again.
-
-“We can’t leave this crate standing on the highway,” Al called as soon
-as Bob had the engine running at idling speed. “Suppose a Sunday driver
-comes along at sixty miles an hour?”
-
-“What else can we do?” Bob swung in his seat.
-
-“That’s so. If we go up he’ll ride us down, and we might not make as
-good a landing—you might not, I mean.”
-
-“Yonder comes a car!”
-
-As Bob pointed, Al leaned out and stared.
-
-“The headlights blind me,” he declared, shading his eyes with his cap
-brim and hand.
-
-“It’s—it’s the ones who are after us,” called Bob. “See! One of them is
-stopping the car and the other one is jumping out.” He turned to Al.
-
-“They think we have the books. The man in the brown ship drove us down.
-Mr. Parsons, in his car, with the other man, is coming to get us.”
-
-“Well, they won’t!” exclaimed Al, scrambling out of the airplane.
-
-“No! You run into the woods to the right of the road.”
-
-Al, as soon as he was on the ground, used his heels to good purpose.
-Bob, pausing only to bundle up some folds of his coat to make it look,
-from a distance, as though he carried a package under it, slipped to the
-road and ran the other way.
-
-Driven down, they nevertheless left the pursuers outwitted.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- CURT’S DISCOVERY
-
-
-“Those books are off my mind,” Curt reflected as he pedaled slowly
-toward the aircraft plant, “but my legs aren’t. I’d go to bed and rest
-for a week if it wasn’t for seeing what Griff is up to.”
-
-He had ridden only a block or two away from his uncle’s residence, where
-he had deposited the books, when a thought occurred to him.
-
-“I know how to get a ‘tow’ to the plant,” Curt whispered to himself,
-swinging his handlebars to turn into the next cross street. “They
-usually get shipments of fabric on the eleven o’clock freight, and our
-truck is there to load it in.” He glanced at his wrist watch.
-
-“Yes,” he told himself, “it ought to be loaded or nearly so—and that
-means the truck will be starting soon. I’ll ride along till it catches
-up with me and then let it pull me where I’m going.”
-
-It was a reasonable notion and well-founded. That it was sound was soon
-proved, for Curt saw the truck turning into the street just ahead, from
-the direction of the station.
-
-He had expected it to come from the street he had passed, but realized
-that it must have followed the direction it had been pointed instead of
-turning around in the station yards; increasing his speed for the
-moment, Curt caught up with the tail boards of the large truck, took
-hold with one hand, set his coaster brake, and rode in comfort, resting
-his weary feet.
-
-To his great surprise the truck turned off at a crossroad.
-
-“What does that mean?” he wondered.
-
-He let go and dropped back a few yards, intending to let the truck go;
-but it bothered him to decide what caused the change of route.
-
-Curt resuming his pedaling, following at a little distance, determined
-that for all his weariness he ought to find out why a truck, openly
-laden with cases and parcels, boxes and canvas sacks, should not go
-directly to its destination to be ready for unloading when the plant
-opened in the morning.
-
-The ride was not more than a half mile.
-
-Curt, keeping at good distance, let the truck get around a bend. He
-could follow by the sound of the motor. He did not wish to be seen.
-
-There was in him the thrill of the discoverer of a new clue.
-
-When the motor ceased to send its roar across the distance to him Curt
-laid Al’s bicycle, which he had ridden from the cornfield, beside the
-rutted country road and walked, screening himself carefully, to the
-bend.
-
-“No truck should stop in this out-of-the-way place,” he decided. “I’d
-better be careful. They might have a guard set at the turn.”
-
-There was no guard, however. Evidently the truck driver and his
-assistant had no suspicion that they were observed.
-
-Openly the truck stood in the road, to one side. Curt, able to
-distinguish its bulk, was too far away to see through the darkness what
-was going on.
-
-“Maybe a broken drive chain,” he thought. “Still, I’d better be
-certain.”
-
-He made a slight detour through the pines along the byroad, being
-careful to make as little sound as possible, working around toward the
-position of the truck. Whatever sound he made was soon drowned by the
-roar of a motor.
-
-“Just a repair,” he decided. “They’re going.”
-
-Instead of getting further away the motor pulsation became louder.
-
-“That’s another car coming,” Curt told himself, “and it’s a heavy duty
-motor, too.”
-
-He made fast progress toward the edge of the trees. There, hidden behind
-a large trunk of pine, he could see the dim road, the dull outline of
-the truck, and the moving forms of men lifting things out and piling
-them by the road.
-
-“They’re unloading the truck!” Curt was amazed. Was this some bold
-banditry, some open theft?
-
-To his further astonishment and mystification the other truck came along
-and stopped. There was an exchange of low, but jovial banter between the
-rough drivers and their helpers, but no allusion was made to their task.
-Instead, the men on the truck just arrived began also to unload bolts,
-cases, boxes, sacks, from their vehicle.
-
-Curt could not figure the problem to a satisfactory decision. Were they
-substituting one load for the other? Why?
-
-At any rate, they would be occupied for several hours, Curt thought. He
-made his way quietly back into the wood and hurried toward his bicycle.
-
-“I’ll ride to the plant, get the watchman to telephone for the police,
-and round up those fellows.”
-
-Every ounce of his reserve energy Curt put into his pedals as he bumped
-along the byroad and then raced down the main highway.
-
-When he came within sight of the aircraft plant he was surprised at the
-activity displayed. The flood lights were on. Far up overhead he heard
-the sound of an airplane engine.
-
-“Oh!” Curt was reassured. “It must be Bob and Al coming in. They will be
-glad to hear I put the books away safely, and then we can all ride back
-to the truck—no, we can’t!” He recalled that his own wheel was parked at
-The Windsock—if no one had taken it.
-
-There was no one in the watchman’s place by the main gate, which was
-open. Curt decided that the man was at the flying field to give
-assistance to the airplane as it landed.
-
-“Hello!” Al, turning at the door of the administration offices, hailed
-Curt. “Come on!”
-
-Curt raced across the yard, joined Al and Bob at the office building
-doorway.
-
-“I thought—” he gasped, “I thought you flew!”
-
-Rapidly Bob explained. “We hoofed it back,” Al added.
-
-“Then who is landing—or shooting the field to land?”
-
-“Must be Mr. Parsons bringing in the ship we deserted on the road. Did
-you leave that parcel of books at Dad’s? Good! But why did you come back
-here, Curt?”
-
-A quick explanation set everything clearly before his friends.
-
-“We ought to go and round up the two trucks,” he finished.
-
-“No—we must get to Griff. He must be wild, waiting without any word. I
-know the trucks won’t wait forever, but you can identify them in the
-morning. Come on.” Curt followed Bob’s lead, with Al at his heels as
-they entered the office corridor.
-
-Griff’s voice came to them as they reached the upper landing. He was
-talking—telephoning!
-
-“Oh—Langley! You got there! Good! What? Your uncle is gone? Gone? Gone!
-Lang—where? You don’t know? What’ll I do, Lang? You don’t know? Well, I
-do!” and he slammed the receiver on its hook.
-
-“Hurry!” urged Bob as the trio raced to the lighted doorway.
-
-At the safe, kneeling, was Griff. He twirled the dial, clanged back the
-safe door, reached for the packet of bills again.
-
-“Here—you mustn’t! You daren’t. That isn’t yours!”
-
-White-faced, Griff identified Al as the latter called his warning.
-
-“I must!” he snapped, and stood up, holding the packet.
-
-Over the offices came the drone of the approaching airplane circling for
-a landing. Al moved toward Griff.
-
-“Get back!” Griff was furious. Bob, behind him, snatched the packet of
-bills, flung it into the safe, slammed the door. Griff, with a furious
-snarl, bent to recover the packet, but the door was shut.
-
-He flung off Bob, who backed into Al and Curt.
-
-Heedless of the roar of the airplane engine as the ship came low over
-the office roofs in its descent, Bob, Al and Curt disentangled
-themselves, got to their feet.
-
-Already Griff was by the safe, the combination figures on the slip in
-his hand, the dial of the safe door twirling and clicking.
-
-“Here—what are you doing, Griff?” Bob cried out in dismay.
-
-With a quick glance Griff measured them. His face was white, his jaw was
-set, his whole attitude was that of a terrified, trembling young man who
-had determined on a course he knew to be wrong but which circumstances
-would not allow him to avoid.
-
-“Don’t!” exclaimed Curt.
-
-“You daren’t!” corrected Al. “Your father has stolen the books, but you
-shan’t——”
-
-The safe door was wrenched open. Bob started forward, Curt at his side,
-to catch Griff’s hand, to prevent this thing he felt he had to do. His
-fear of his father’s anger was greater than his dread of the boys, it
-seemed.
-
-His hand on the packet of bills, Bob tried to stop him. Griff, with a
-scowl and a wicked word, kicked Bob’s shin, avoided Curt’s grasp, and
-stood back, his face working.
-
-There was an interruption.
-
-“Listen!” Al, nearest the door, called the word. They were halted,
-frozen into statues with tense poses and straining ears.
-
-A step sounded in the hall.
-
-Instantly, white with terror, Griff flung the bills toward the open
-safe, kicked the door shut, turned like a hunted animal and ran out
-through an intervening door into the next office, and, with Bob in hot
-pursuit, raced across the hall, into the directors’ room, to its window
-and down the fire escape. And Bob, at the window, felt a hand grip his
-collar. He was caught!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX
- A CONFESSION
-
-
-Without a struggle Bob gave up. In the dark he did not know who his
-captor might be; but he reasoned that if it turned out to be Barney
-resistance would be less sensible than explanation. To struggle for
-escape if the hand on his collar belonged to Mr. Parsons, would be
-foolish and might make it harder for his chum and his brother to explain
-their situation.
-
-In his mind’s eye Bob recalled how the office had looked as he left it.
-Griff had kicked at the safe door, believing the money had gone in; but
-it had not! It had dropped on the floor.
-
-Unquestionably Mr. Parsons, or Barney, or whoever held him, had come
-past that office but had not stopped there, preferring to make a capture
-of the only person he could put his hands on.
-
-Bob realized that non-resistance was a wise course. As he had surmised,
-he was led back toward the office. He was glad that he had done nothing,
-said nothing to explain the situation so far. The man who had hold of
-him, who urged him along the corridor, was Griff’s father, the man from
-whom they sought to save Griff.
-
-At the office door Bob, panting and choked a trifle by the tight grip on
-his coat, took in the situation swiftly.
-
-It looked, from all the appearances, as though Al were dictating from
-the slip while Curt manipulated the combination, to open the safe; on
-the other hand, from another point of view, it might appear that the
-pair had recently had the safe open and were closing it.
-
-What made that more probable to an outsider’s eyes was the package of
-greenbacks which Al held!
-
-“What does this mean?” Mr. Parsons, half dragging Bob along, made a
-quick, nervous advance, caught the package from Al with his free hand.
-
-“It means that your—” Al began in his imprudent haste; Bob gave him a
-sharp, meaning look. Al, catching it, realizing that he had almost
-mentioned Griff, whom they had previously agreed to aid, was silent.
-
-“It means that we came back here—” Curt began and was interrupted by the
-angry partner of Mr. Tredway.
-
-“Not content with taking those books,” he said angrily, “you want to
-take the company money—how did you get into my desk? Pick the lock? That
-adds another count against you!”
-
-He released Bob’s coat collar and strode to the desk, a flat-topped one
-in the center of the room. Catching up the telephone receiver, he made a
-call.
-
-“Hello—hello! Give me Police Headquarters! Yes, thanks!”
-
-For an instant the members of the Sky Squad were stunned.
-
-“What’s that?” Mr. Parsons spoke into the transmitter again. “He is out?
-How soon will he be back? Have him call Mr. Parsons, at the aircraft
-plant! Yes—perhaps I can give him some tenants for the new cells in the
-police station.”
-
-He hung up the earpiece.
-
-Bob, recovering his usual good judgment, began to consider the very
-difficult situation that faced the Sky Squad.
-
-Al, however, seldom thought before he spoke; more often than his
-brother, he was sorry for hasty decisions and sharp speeches.
-
-“You’ll be sorry if you tell the Chief of Police,” blustered Al.
-
-Curt, as thoughtful as Bob, trod on the foot of the younger captive and
-Al, jumping away, refused to be warned.
-
-“I don’t care!” he cried. “If he thinks two sons of a detective, and
-their friend will be put in cells for trying to save—oh, all right,
-Bob!—for trying to put money back into a safe—” he whirled on Mr.
-Parsons at the sound of the latter’s sarcastic laugh, “—that’s what we
-were doing! If the Police Chief arrests us—we’ll ask him to arrest you,
-too!”
-
-“Indeed! Why!”
-
-“For taking the company books away. For showing them to somebody outside
-the firm—planning how to get more cheap parts into the plant. Oh, we
-know all about you!”
-
-“How do you know I had company books?”
-
-“I saw the pages open on the table at The Windsock!”
-
-“Indeed! Young man,” he swung to Curt. “Please go into the bookkeeper’s
-room, unlock his book cabinet, and bring all the books you find.”
-
-Curt, surprised, took the small key from their captor, went in and
-lighted the adjoining office, returning, finally, with an armful of
-books.
-
-“Do you know the books of a complete set when you see them?”
-
-“Bob does,” declared Al, still angry, but becoming a little uneasy. He
-might have jumped to his decision about the books he had seen. He was
-always making snap decisions!
-
-“Examine that set, young man—er, Bob!”
-
-“It’s complete!” Bob admitted.
-
-“Exactly!”
-
-“Then why were you in such a sweat to get the others when we tried to—”
-Al’s voice tailed down to nothing; he began to see how really guilty
-they could be made to seem. There was entry into the offices at night,
-an open private desk, a tell-tale safe combination memorandum on the
-floor, a package of bills beside the safe, for one chain of evidence;
-there was an intrusion on a private conference, at The Windsock, and the
-subsequent escape with the books for a second, not to think of Bob’s use
-of the airplane with no permission from a higher authority than a
-watchman, and the infraction of State law by landing on a highway and
-deserting the ship in a traffic lane. Al’s bravado began to evaporate.
-
-Bob, who had remained cool, thinking, was able to see a brighter side to
-the situation.
-
-“Please, Mr. Parsons,” he began, “don’t call in the police. That would
-force us to defend ourselves. We could explain what we were doing and
-why. But we have a—a code of honor, and we would rather have you let
-things work out without the police—and reporters.”
-
-“You would really suffer more than we would,” Curt declared.
-
-“Is that so? We shall see.”
-
-The telephone bell blared. Mr. Parsons turned.
-
-“Hello!” he spoke into the instrument.
-
-“Father! Don’t! Those fellows are protecting me! I can’t let them!”
-
-Griff stood in the office door, his face white, his lips quivering.
-
-Mr. Parsons, catching sight of his son, stared.
-
-“Just a minute, Griff,” he said. “Hello—is the——”
-
-“Father! You shan’t! You mustn’t! Listen to me. I took that money!——”
-
-The telephone receiver dropped, hanging by its cord to swing unheeded
-against the man’s leg.
-
-“I’ll confess!” Griff, for all his fear of his father, of consequences,
-was showing his true manliness. “I ran away, Father, because I thought I
-had put the money back and locked the safe. I didn’t want to be caught.
-I thought I could go down the fire escape and get away. But when I saw
-you catch Bob I came back and listened—I must not let these fine friends
-stand a night in a cell for something I’ve done.”
-
-Then, haltingly, ashamed and despairing, but honestly, Griff cleared the
-Sky Squad and told the truth.
-
-“He was trying to get out of his trouble,” Curt said to end the deep
-silence that followed Griff’s explanation, “and he didn’t want to come
-to you when you had so many things on your mind.”
-
-“Our cousin has gone to get money for him from Father,” added Bob. “But
-Father must have started for home before Lang got there, and it was only
-when the man at The Windsock threatened to come and tell you and make it
-look worse than it is, that Griff lost his common sense. We came back
-here to meet each other and saw what he was doing and convinced him it
-was a mistake.”
-
-The impulsiveness of Al prompted him to “put in his oar,” but his
-earlier bluster was gone and he kept still.
-
-They watched Mr. Parsons.
-
-His face was set and pale, his fingers worked nervously. He had his head
-bent.
-
-Bob, quietly picking up the telephone as he heard the impatient voice of
-someone at the other end of the connection making it squeak, spoke into
-the transmitter quietly.
-
-“We’ll call you back. Something has come up to make things different.”
-He hung up the earpiece.
-
-Apparently Mr. Parsons did not notice him at all. Added to the blow
-given by his son’s confession that he had broken promises and gotten
-into deep trouble was the knowledge that three loyal companions, with
-full knowledge of his guilt had not only protected him from himself but
-had shielded him at the expense of being, themselves, suspected and
-unfairly accused.
-
-Mr. Parsons looked up. He held out a hand to Bob.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” he said, “I am sorry!” Bob, smiling with some
-relief, eagerly gripped the extended hand, to be followed by Curt and
-Al.
-
-Then the father turned to his son.
-
-Three members of the Sky Squad held their breath.
-
-“Son,” the voice seemed cool and sharp, but it changed suddenly, “Son, I
-guess I’d have done better to make a comrade of you than to try to rule
-you with fear and threats. Come here, Griffith.” The young man advanced,
-hopeful, but also shame-faced. “Son, we all make mistakes. If we learn
-not to make them again, that is life’s lesson. I am not a judge. I
-am—your father!”
-
-Griff’s hand reached out impulsively.
-
-“I had to tell you—but I guess if it hadn’t been to save these friends,
-I might have gone on. I guess I’m a coward.”
-
-“I should say not!” cried Al.
-
-“Not you!” Bob was equally emphatic.
-
-“It took more bravery to walk in under the circumstances than to tell
-your father any other time, I say!” Curt exclaimed.
-
-“I will settle with that fellow at the roadhouse,” Mr. Parsons stated,
-when forgiveness was assured to Griff and the five occupants of the
-office were determined to “work together” for a change, “If he has been
-paid——”
-
-“Why not meet the Police Chief somewhere and have Griff tell him the
-things that are done against the law at The Windsock,” suggested Al.
-“Then we could all go there and give evidence of how Jenks tried to
-collect twice from Griff—and maybe we would find out something about—our
-own mystery. I think he is in it, some way!”
-
-Mr. Parsons decided that he owed the Chief some explanation of his call
-and, somewhat over-excited, and not his usual sensible self, he failed
-to realize just what Al’s suggestion implied—that they make Griff
-incriminate himself, since he had played at the tables without informing
-against the hotel. The Police Chief agreed to meet them near the
-roadhouse, and when Mr. Parsons hung up and turned back to them he was
-much more calm than they had ever seen him. “If I explain my own
-purposes,” he said, “it will be easier for us all to understand and get
-together. I have been trying to protect my absent partner——”
-
-“Absent?” Bob repeated the word, “your absent partner?”
-
-“Yes. Arthur Tredway. He went into hiding.”
-
-“I know!” cried Al, “I know now! I thought the face of the man in that
-brown airplane—the one who flew it—was familiar. That’s Mr. Tredway!”
-
-“Yes, my boy, you are right.”
-
-“But—” Curt was rather stunned, “I don’t understand.”
-
-“Mr. Tredway—alive?” cried Griff.
-
-“Yes, alive. This has been a very mixed affair,” the partner declared.
-“I knew that Arthur Tredway was alive, but I could not speak of it or
-explain, because we did not know whom we could trust, and so told no
-one.”
-
-“Then he wasn’t—in the crash?”
-
-Mr. Parsons turned to answer Bob.
-
-“No.”
-
-“But why did he do it? Why did he hide and let everybody think he had
-‘gone West?’” Bob demanded.
-
-“Don’t you remember—crossed wires?” Curt reminded him.
-
-That had to be explained.
-
-“So someone crossed wires that were scraped nearly bare, in Arthur’s own
-ship!” Mr. Parsons was dismayed. “That proves his suspicion that
-somebody meant harm to him. And that is what we hid him away to
-discover. If the accidents ceased with his disappearance, he was in
-danger; if not, the damage was aimed at the aircraft company.”
-
-“But you haven’t found out why he was in danger—or from whom?” declared
-Curt.
-
-“No,” admitted the partner. Al, fired with enthusiasm, added:
-
-“But we will!”
-
-Mr. Parsons was not so sure.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXX
- BARNEY GIVES A HINT
-
-
-While the quintet waited for the taxicab which Mr. Parsons summoned from
-town, Griff put the money back in the safe, thankful for his escape.
-Bob, Curt and Al expressed their elation that he was freed from
-suspicion, and Barney arrived.
-
-“The watchman called me,” the manager explained. “Things got a bit too
-exciting out here and he thought I ought to know. What is there to tell
-me?”
-
-The explanations took up the time of waiting.
-
-“Hm-m-m.” Barney was pleased but thoughtful. “Glad to learn my best
-friend’s partner is cleared,” he nodded at Mr. Parsons. “Certainly I’m
-delighted that his son is all straight. And Tredway is alive! Glory be!
-I’m gladdest about that.”
-
-“I knew you would be,” agreed Mr. Parsons.
-
-“The man who gave me everything I have, made me the manager of his
-plant! I’ll say I’m glad he’s all right. Well, let’s go see that
-ex-pilot and his wicked two-autograph ally!” he grinned at Al.
-
-“I think we ought to try to catch those truckmen first,” suggested Curt.
-
-“Oh, let them alone,” argued Barney, and Mr. Parsons agreed.
-
-“You know what they were doing,” he told Curt. “All you have to do now
-is check the stuff that is unloaded from our truck in the morning. If
-that turns out to be poor material, trace the other truck, get your
-proof—and at least one part of the mystery will be easily solved.”
-
-They went out and packed into the taxicab, giving its driver direction
-for meeting the Police Chief at the edge of the picnic grove.
-
-When they got there and related their experiences they were daunted to
-find him decidedly lukewarm about “rounding up” the ex-pilot and his
-roadhouse manager.
-
-“I don’t think the idea is so good,” the Chief of Police stated.
-“Griffith Parsons has no receipt. He can’t actually prove that he paid
-real money, or that he paid at all. Anyway, now that his father knows
-the whole business, that fellow, Jenks, hasn’t a chance to collect
-again. He won’t dare try. Just what do you want me to do?”
-
-“There’s this note put on the airplane, and his trying to avoid showing
-his handwriting by giving me two autographs,” Al suggested.
-
-“In a way I’m sorry to destroy that clue,” said Mr. Parsons, “but when
-we get to the roadhouse you will see that it has no value.”
-
-“What did you want me to do?” repeated the police official.
-
-“We thought of facing the manager, Jenks, with Griff’s evidence of how
-he permits gambling to go on—and other things outside the law—and making
-him tell us what he knows,” Bob urged.
-
-The man shook his head.
-
-“Oh, I know what you’re thinking,” the officer chuckled as he eyed Bob,
-Curt and Al. “Graft—hush-money! But that isn’t it at all. As far as
-Griff’s information goes, we’ll take care of that better by making a
-raid when the place is crowded and the barn is actually in use for
-illicit purposes. But, don’t you see what you are doing?”
-
-The chums shook their heads.
-
-“I do,” said Barney, and Mr. Parsons agreed again. “If we offer to make
-him tell with a threat of what we will do if he refuses,—we are
-‘compounding a felony’ if we get him to tell anything and don’t go
-through with the legal steps on the face of our evidence.”
-
-“That’s it.”
-
-“Oh, well,” Barney saw how disappointed the three chums were, although
-they admitted the justice of the official’s attitude, “let’s go out and
-see my old patron and comrade.”
-
-The Chief of Police agreed to look into the charges Griff had made and
-turned his car to return to his home, while Barney, in one cab with Bob
-and Al, and Mr. Parsons in the one they had called, with Curt and his
-own son, went on.
-
-There was a vociferous greeting between Mr. Tredway and his plant
-manager.
-
-“Why didn’t you tell me you were all right?” he cried, pumping the plant
-owner’s hand, slapping his back, and, as Al said later, “almost kissing
-him,” while the mysterious stranger, and the others watched with various
-feelings.
-
-“I had to make my plans in secret,” Mr. Tredway retorted. “Not even my
-partner knew until tonight. But—let us get acquainted, all the way
-’round.”
-
-He turned to the mystery man behind him.
-
-“This is my brother,” he presented the man, “and so these are the three
-young men who have worked so hard to solve the mystery of my crash into
-the lake!” He shook hands and they selected a private dining room on the
-second floor for a midnight repast.
-
-“Well,” he said, smiling pleasantly at the three rather silent youths as
-the first course, a hot, nourishing soup, was served, “have you solved
-the puzzle of the mystery crash?”
-
-“I think we have—but not all, sir,” replied Bob. “I think I can put
-together what happened, but not why it had to happen.”
-
-“Go ahead,” Mr. Tredway encouraged.
-
-“Yes, do,” urged Barney. “I admit I’m stumped.”
-
-“Well, sir,” Bob, without trying to be vain, spoke frankly. “We got
-mixed up and puzzled, at first, because we were trying to solve a lot of
-things by connecting them with your—disappearance.”
-
-“And we made the mistake of suspecting everybody,” interrupted Al.
-
-“That mixed Griff’s case in, and his father’s,” agreed Curt, and he
-turned back to give Bob the center of the stage.
-
-“You didn’t know whether the damage to airplanes was aimed at the plant
-or at you direct,” Bob told Mr. Tredway, who nodded. “You had two
-airplanes—both alike, except one was the Golden Dart and the other was
-the Silver Flash.”
-
-“Exactly. And I thought,” Mr. Tredway interrupted, “if the guilty person
-knew which airplane I meant to deliver, he would damage that one and so,
-at the last minute I changed my ship, after saying I was going to
-deliver the Golden Dart I took off in the Silver Flash——”
-
-“And you were right,” gasped Al. “When we flew the Golden one her rudder
-cable was frayed and broke.”
-
-“Right, my young friend. And nothing was wrong with the other.”
-
-“Then how did you crash it—why did it crack up?”
-
-Mr. Tredway looked to Bob for an explanation, desiring to test the
-youth’s skill at deduction.
-
-“I haven’t much to work on,” Bob said modestly, “but this is how I think
-you did it:
-
-“Your brother flew here in the brown ship and hid it in the field,
-leaving the note to show you it was ready.”
-
-“And then?——”
-
-“You took off early, and then set down the big cabin ship on the
-turf—that accounts for the deep ruts—and the ship was in the way so you
-dragged it into the stubble until the brown ship got up, then took the
-cabin craft into the air——”
-
-“I fail to see what the brown airplane, and Arthur’s brother, have to do
-with it,” Barney broke in.
-
-“Mr. Tredway’s brother had to be there to bring down the cabin ‘plane,”
-Bob explained. “At least that’s the only way I can see for the tracks in
-the field, and the crack-up, to fit the conditions,” he paused.
-
-“You mean—they exchanged ships? Arthur landed the cabin crate and then
-flew away in the brown one, while his brother crashed the Silver Flash?”
-Barney demanded. Tredway nodded as did his brother.
-
-“The young man is correct in his deduction,” the latter said. “I had to
-come and exchange ships with my brother and then crack up the Silver
-Flash to give the idea that its pilot—and my brother had taken off in
-it!—had gone into a mudhole or under rocks in the lake.”
-
-“What did you expect to gain by that?” asked Barney.
-
-“Removing one partner,” Mr. Tredway smiled, “gave the other one ‘a free
-hand’ if he was in any way guilty, or you, Barney!”
-
-Barney turned red.
-
-“Do you mean to say?——”
-
-“No, I did not suspect you, I only wanted to get away and see what
-happened, and who did it.”
-
-“These young men have cleared most of us,” stated Mr. Parsons. “They
-have done more! They know how the good parts are taken and cheap ones
-are substituted.” He explained about the trucks.
-
-“But we can’t solve the mystery of why you brought books here and then
-said the company books were all at the plant,” argued Al.
-
-“I found a small set of duplicate books—that is, what we would call
-‘fake’ books—private books in the cabinet,” began Mr. Parsons.
-
-Barney bent forward.
-
-“Where did you find those? I had them in my own desk!”
-
-“That’s where I took them from. You see, Barney, as long as we all
-suspected each other it was wisest for me to check them. Not that I
-accuse you, because they were in your desk. You were checking up, also,
-of course.”
-
-“I’m not finished either,” declared Barney. “But—as long as Arthur
-wanted a look at them, it’s all right with me.”
-
-“We have them safe,” said Curt. “And the brother is the mysterious man
-with the dark beard whose motorcycle Griff used, and it was he who was
-in the supply room, the other night.”
-
-“I was,” said Mr. Tredway’s brother. “I came, with his key, got in the
-private gate, went up the fire escape and down to check up in the supply
-room—until Griff, running off with my motorcycle, made me suspicious,
-scared and anxious. So I left.”
-
-“And I came here to see Arthur’s brother,” said Mr. Parsons, and Griff,
-looking ashamed added, “—and I ran away!”
-
-“But we don’t know who damaged the crates, or if it was against Mr.
-Tredway or just spite work against the company,” Al said. “The mystery
-crash has failed to bring that to light.”
-
-“Yes,” Barney suddenly leaned forward, “I’ve got to go, out and dismiss
-my taxicab—it’s eating its head off—but first I’ll give you a hint to
-chew over while I’m away.”
-
-“What?” several spoke the question in unison.
-
-“Suppose the motive was revenge,” Barney spoke very low, and Bob,
-watching some curtains, at a locked side door, thought the breeze must
-be stirring them, “suppose there was once a pilot at the plant and that
-Arthur had to fire him and——”
-
-“You don’t mean to say!—” Mr. Tredway bent close, excited. “The pilot I
-once discharged? Why—he’s the owner of this place. I’d never dream——”
-
-“All the same—chew it over!” Barney rose. “I suppose you’ll be flying
-back—you won’t stay here tonight.” Tredway shook his head.
-
-“Be right back,” Barney said. Bob, as the others chatted softly and
-excitedly, followed the departing manager with his eyes. He had thrown
-suspicion on several, had Barney. Also, he had been the only one who
-inspected and then reported on the Silver Flash, that nothing had been
-found tampered with! And—he had chased Lang and Bob to see Bob’s
-detective father! What a lot of curious facts, Bob mused!
-
-And when Barney rejoined them a moment later Bob was still musing!
-
-“I think it would be a good idea for all of us to stay,” suggested Mr.
-Parsons. “It’s after midnight, and these lads must be worn out, with all
-their pedaling to and fro. We can telephone their homes.”
-
-“You may all stay,” said Mr. Tredway. “But until we prove something I
-shall keep out of sight. Especially if the ex-pilot is apt to be around.
-I’m going to warm up my brother’s airplane and hop back to the airport I
-came from.”
-
-They all parted. Curt declared he wanted to secure his forgotten
-bicycle, Bob and Al were sure they had better go on home if Mr. Parsons
-would let them take the taxicab. He decided that, after all, he and his
-son had better go home. The meal was finished. Mr. Tredway, going by a
-side hall, and down back stairs, sought to avoid recognition while his
-brother agreed to watch the ex-pilot at every chance.
-
-Bob and Curt found the bicycle safe, and trundled it to the luggage rack
-at the back of the taxicab.
-
-Then Bob turned suddenly.
-
-“Stay here,” he said, “I want to say something to Mr. Tredway—he’s
-warming up the airplane.”
-
-“Forget something?”
-
-“No—recalled something!”
-
-As he reached the man so mysteriously lost and so suddenly discovered
-Bob caught his arm and spoke very earnestly.
-
-“For the sake of your safety,” Bob whispered, “take off, just as you
-planned—but only go to the cornfield—set down as soon as you can—and
-then—look for—crossed wires!”
-
-In a flash he was beyond questioning!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXI
- “ONE MORE PROBLEM”
-
-
-Bob did not delay a moment after he delivered his solemn warning to Mr.
-Tredway.
-
-As quickly as he could he located the plant manager.
-
-“Barney,” he said earnestly, “don’t stay here tonight! Come home with
-us. Stay with the Sky Squad.”
-
-“In the name of Sam Hill—why?”
-
-“You forgot where you were, didn’t you, when you spoke about the——” he
-lowered his voice, glanced around, spoke carefully, “—the ex-pilot as
-the one who had a motive for injuring Mr. Tredway?”
-
-“Well—I guess I was thinking pretty much of what I was saying.”
-
-“I know you were.”
-
-“Well—did you hear anything or—see anything?”
-
-“I’m sure I heard something. You didn’t think, but there’s a curtained
-door in that private room we used. How do you know Jenks or—the other
-one—might not have heard you?”
-
-“Lad, you’re quick! Right, too. Maybe I’d better go on. But I won’t need
-to stay with you.”
-
-“Oh, you’d better. We can take turns watching!”
-
-“Fiddlesticks! It’s not as dangerous for me as that!”
-
-“At least come back in the taxi with us.”
-
-“Oh, all right. I’ll do that. But I’ll go on home, then.”
-
-“Won’t you come on, please—right away?”
-
-Barney, half-amused at Bob’s concern, and partly wondering what caused
-it and if he actually had been spied on, overheard, and realizing even
-better than did Bob, he thought, how dangerous such an accusation might
-be, Barney agreed.
-
-The ride back to town was taken up with discussion of Barney’s hint but
-through all the talk Bob was rather quiet.
-
-It was decided that the three members of the Sky Squad would be taken
-home first, then Griff and his father would go on, leaving Barney to
-finish the ride to his own home.
-
-As the car drew up in front of Bob’s house and Al began saying his
-goodnight, quite sleepily, Bob turned to Mr. Parsons.
-
-“What do you say to going back to the plant, after you drop Griff, and
-getting the real set of company books, and bringing them here. We can
-work on them together, and see if there is anything in the private set
-that doesn’t agree with the others.”
-
-“Why not wait until morning?” suggested Mr. Parsons. “Aren’t you worn
-out?”
-
-“What books?” Barney asked. “Oh—that’s so. I remember. You said you had
-them. Put them away carefully! Don’t leave them out.”
-
-“Oh, we will,” agreed Al, overhearing. “We’ll put them in the big desk
-in Father’s study and lock them up.”
-
-“Well, goodnight,” said Curt. He had been invited to stay but he
-preferred to go on home. Bob threw in a suggestion.
-
-“At that,” he said, “Curt, why don’t you let me telephone your mother,
-and you stay. And Barney could wait with us till Mr. Parsons comes
-back.”
-
-“Well, come to think of it, why not?” Barney decided. “If it won’t wake
-up your folks.” Bob assured him it wouldn’t. His mother must still be
-waiting up, he declared; there was a light burning in his father’s
-study.
-
-“Good grief!” he cried, “I never thought—supposing Dad has come home?”
-
-“I’ll bet he has,” Al agreed.
-
-“Let’s go and see—will you come in with us?” he addressed Barney, and
-the latter cordially agreed.
-
-“I guess we’d better let you wait in the living room till we see whether
-it’s Dad or Mother. She might not be dressed for company—if Mother is
-sitting up.” Barney agreed to wait, and Al went to the door to call Curt
-in to telephone home.
-
-The den, into which Bob turned, closing the door quietly, was occupied,
-as he had all along suspected it would be, by his father.
-
-“I heard that you weren’t in the other city,” Bob said, after a hasty
-greeting. His father saw his eagerness and let him talk. “Lang flew
-there to get help—” he sketched very swiftly the incidents of the night.
-“Now, Father, what brought you home? Have you?——”
-
-“I have suspicions—yes.”
-
-“Then you’ve been working on the mystery?” Bob asked.
-
-“All along. I pretended to be busy on another case because——”
-
-“You suspected somebody!”
-
-“From the start. Yes. Did you?”
-
-“Not until tonight. But I know it’s the same person, and I’ve got him in
-the living room and I want to pretend to him that we are guarding him
-from some one else, while we keep guard to see that he doesn’t take
-fright and escape.”
-
-His father framed a name and Bob nodded.
-
-“What is your proof?” demanded his father.
-
-“He came to a detective at the very first. He has put suspicion on
-everybody else. He seems terribly anxious about those books.”
-
-“Circumstantial evidence justifying suspicion, but not proof.
-However—I’ve learned that some people, probably using assumed names—it
-may all be the same person—have been changing aircraft stock into gold.
-What is your plan, son?”
-
-“We must keep him from guessing that we suspect—and keep him where we
-can watch him. The way I plan, if you agree, is this. Father, if he is
-the guilty one, he is terribly dangerous. He must have crossed wires on
-Mr. Tredway’s airplane, before the owner left the plant—hoping he’d have
-a short-circuit, set the gas on fire and come down in flames. Then he
-thought the Golden Dart was the cabin ship to be flown and he frayed the
-rudder cable. When he discovered the other ship was going he might have
-crossed wires on that—remember, he mentioned ‘crossed wires’ back in the
-other city? And he’s the only one who inspected the Silver Flash when
-she crashed and was hauled in. So we must keep him here where we can
-hold him if he makes a move.”
-
-“Right. Get him in, son. We will pretend to study the books, and I will
-watch his reaction.”
-
-“And if he doesn’t betray himself?——”
-
-“We will let him go. He cannot leave tonight because if he has been
-taking stock and exchanging it for gold, he probably had to bank it—he
-wouldn’t leave it in his house, would he, son?”
-
-“We can have detectives watch his house all night. Father, fix it with
-the Chief of Police while I get him.”
-
-Barney was ushered in, Al and Curt joined them and the three of the Sky
-Squad lined up on the davenport to watch Barney as the detective
-discussed the case.
-
-But Barney did not betray any uneasiness. He was clever, Bob decided.
-
-Mr. Parsons, for whom Al watched to let him in without awakening Mrs.
-Wright, brought other books and they were all busy.
-
-“We’ve discovered something!” Al exclaimed, after half an hour.
-
-“Sky Squad will now report!” chuckled Barney. He turned to Bob.
-
-“Go ahead, Chief Pilot!”
-
-Bob, very serious, nodded.
-
-Was Barney getting fidgety? Or, was he simply eager?
-
-“What have you found?” his father prompted him.
-
-“We’ve solved one mystery—how the bad parts are coming in,” said Bob,
-confidently. “Curt, bring the false ledger and the real one.”
-
-All heads bent interestedly.
-
-“Notice how those tiny pencil ‘ticks’ are made in the beginning of some
-entries?” Bob pointed to several. “There aren’t any in the regular
-ledger, but the entries correspond, and they are always worded in a
-queer way. See this one, about fabric: ‘10 bolts fabric, cotton, quality
-A—dash—X—one hundred,’” he quoted. “Now all the entries that are ticked
-in the false ledger are backward like that—and the same in the regular
-book, but no others except the ticked ones are!”
-
-“That’s curious,” muttered Barney. “What else?”
-
-“Here are several bills of lading that weren’t entered Saturday, just
-slipped into the back of the regular ledger,” Bob drew them out and
-unfolded them. “One is all right, but the other is made out backward—the
-same as the ticked ones—and it isn’t a real bill of lading at all,
-because it is dated for today, and the shipment that arrived today isn’t
-to be delivered until tomorrow and we saw the two trucks exchanging
-goods on the byroad—or, Curt did.”
-
-“Very clever, but what does it prove?” asked Barney.
-
-“This bill of lading being dated ahead and being one of the ‘backward
-wording’ sort, shows that those are the entries that are ‘queer.’ That
-solves the mystery, because we know how those things are being
-substituted tonight.”
-
-“But who does it incriminate?” asked Barney.
-
-“Why—whoever’s writing matches this.”
-
-“Then the bookkeeper is due for a call on the carpet—maybe worse,” said
-Barney. “That’s his book, and the false set is the same handwriting!”
-
-“That settles that mystery and leaves only the one about Mr. Tredway’s
-possible evil wisher,” said Mr. Parsons.
-
-“Why, that’s attended to—all we need to do is to watch that ex-pilot,
-and Mr. Tredway’s brother has agreed—” Al paused. The den private
-extension telephone was ringing.
-
-“It’s for you, Bob,” his father said. “Who’d be—oh, Mr. Tredway! How are
-you? Glad you’re ‘alive and kicking.’ Yes, this is Wright. My son stole
-a march on me, finding you. Here he is.”
-
-Bob bent over the desk.
-
-“Hello....” he said amid a tense silence. “Oh, did I guess right?... You
-didn’t go on? ... set down in the cornfield ... fix it in the
-morning?... Yes. Thank you, sir, for calling. Yes, we just got here.”
-
-He replaced the receiver and turned to the interested, expectant
-company.
-
-“Another of the puzzles solved, and I guessed rightly,” he said.
-“Barney, when you suspected the ex-pilot, I thought it might be that
-he’d do the same as he had done on the airplane I piloted—Mr. Tredway’s
-own sport craft. You know why I had to set it down?”
-
-“No—because the other man—Arthur—chased you down?”
-
-“No,” said Bob, slowly. “You mentioned the ex-pilot having access to the
-‘planes. Well, on the brown ship—the wires were crossed tonight!”
-
-“Oh!” Barney gasped, and recovered from his startled amazement. “You
-don’t say! That’s bad for—the ex-pilot.”
-
-“But it disposes of one mystery—who! He was probably there at The
-Windsock and heard you—don’t you suppose?”
-
-“Looks like it. Well, now, that clears up——”
-
-“All but one more puzzle,” said Curt. “Who’s getting away with the small
-parts, and valuable instruments?”
-
-“I can settle that!” said Barney. “Sandy Jim, the rigger Al was put to
-work for—remember him sending you to his house with a lot of parcels
-supposed to contain junk for his kid?” Al nodded, dismayed. It hurt to
-hear that honest-looking Sandy was so wicked. But Barney seemed to have
-the correct idea, as the evidence indicated.
-
-“We’ll round them up tomorrow.” Barney rose. “Suppose I take those books
-along with me? I’ll bring them in early in the morning.”
-
-“Fine!” Bob jumped up, gathering the books. “There’s a Summer shower
-wetting the streets—I’ll wrap these in paper for you.”
-
-When he returned with the parcel all goodnights had been said and the
-party broke up.
-
-“Son,” said Mr. Wright to Bob, “what do you think now?”
-
-“I can’t say. He acted all right. But he always has done that.”
-
-“Who?” Al was sleepy but curious.
-
-“Barney!”
-
-“You don’t suspect Barney?”
-
-They nodded.
-
-“But how can you? He has helped us, and he’s Mr. Tredway’s friend and I
-always thought—er——”
-
-“A criminal had to have a motive?” prompted his father. “I attached no
-importance to one fact I have discovered, until I felt sure of Barney’s
-guilt. Now I do. This might be his motive! Years ago Mr. Tredway won the
-girl whom another pilot was courting. The man went from bad to worse,
-threatened—and then disappeared.”
-
-“Jealousy! Hate!” gasped Curt. “But Barney!——”
-
-“Of course that was not the pilot’s name. He must have changed his name
-as well as his appearance.”
-
-“Then, Father, how did you know it’s Barney. How about the ex-pilot?
-Couldn’t he?——”
-
-“No, Al. He worked for Mr. Tredway after the latter married.”
-
-“Well—then—good cracky! Bob—you gave the culprit all the evidence in
-those books—to destroy!”
-
-“No!” Bob smiled. “Dad’s encyclopedia is shy four volumes, and there are
-three vitamine books gone, and Barney has them. The real books are in
-their places on our shelves!”
-
-Then they did compliment him!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXII
- FLIGHT!
-
-
-When the sun peered through dispersing Summer storm clouds it saw three
-alert, wide-awake youths, a little tired but very tense, in the testing
-field of the Tredway aircraft plant.
-
-With them were Mr. Tredway, the Chief of Police, Mr. Parsons and Griff.
-
-“Is Tredway’s speed plane fueled up,” Mr. Wright came over from the
-offices where he had deposited the company books in readiness for later
-use: his question was addressed to Griff.
-
-“Ready, sir,” the young son of Mr. Tredway’s partner responded.
-
-“All plans arranged, Chief?”
-
-“We’ve got a net spread that Barney Horton couldn’t escape if he was an
-eel. One of my best detectives has been outside his house ever since he
-went in from the taxi, at one ‘a.m.’ Those two men over by the offices,
-getting ready to dig a trench, are two picked men of my headquarters
-staff. Every motorcycle man, every traffic man, all our roundsmen and
-policemen are on the alert.”
-
-“I simply cannot believe it of Barney,” Mr. Tredway was as doleful as
-though they were planning to arrest him, instead of his plant manager,
-“I took him in and gave him every opportunity, taught him all he knows,
-pushed him to the top. To think—”
-
-“Hatred for a fancied wrong is a terrible force for evil,” said Mr.
-Wright.
-
-“But he doesn’t look a bit like the man who was trying to win the woman
-who became my wife.”
-
-“By the way,” interrupted the Chief of Police, “she hasn’t appeared at
-all in this—have you separated? Isn’t she——”
-
-“Oh, yes,” quickly, “she is alive. My wife is away in Europe. That is
-the reason I decided to—disappear. I knew that news of it would not
-reach her before I ‘came to life.’”
-
-“But if Barney is the guilty man,” Curt was still dazed, “why did he
-turn suspicion on that ex-pilot at The Windsock?”
-
-“He tried to turn suspicion on everybody,” retorted Mr. Wright. “It is a
-favorite trick of a guilty person. He has practically accused the
-bookkeeper, the supply clerk, Sandy Jim, the rigger and the man you
-mentioned.”
-
-“But he’s free,” Al spoke. “Why didn’t you arrest him while you had him
-at the house showing him the books?”
-
-“You must remember one fact, my young ‘Sky Squadder,’” the Chief of
-Police commented. “Circumstantial evidence, and suspicion are one thing.
-Proof of guilt that will stand in court against a clever lawyer is
-something quite different.”
-
-“In other words,” Mr. Wright explained, “we feel, with absolute
-conviction, that Barney is our man. We haven’t any actual proof. We must
-wait until he makes some open move. Bob, cleverly discovering Barney’s
-supposed guilt because he saw Barney make that excuse to get out to the
-airplane when he said he wanted to dismiss his taxi, did all he could to
-keep the man close to his Sky Squad; but Barney was clever.”
-
-“I thought he would make a try for the books during the night if I got
-him to stay with us,” Bob admitted modestly. “Then, when he refused to
-spend the night with us I hoped he’d discover that we had substituted
-other books for the ledgers, and would try to get in our place to get
-all the incriminating evidence. But,” dejectedly, “he was too clever for
-that, even.”
-
-“How do you expect him to make an open move, if he’s all that wise?”
-asked Griff.
-
-“Well,” Mr. Wright spoke up, “some one has been quietly exchanging
-company stock, turning some into gold, here and there. I think it was
-Barney’s work under assumed names, to get his money into shape for
-escape. We have made him see that we know how the cheap, shoddy supplies
-are coming in, and other things: he will try to get away.”
-
-“The paying tellers of the town banks are on the watch. The first minute
-he comes to close his accounts, as he will do before he takes a train,
-we will be informed. Before he goes he may try to destroy the false
-account books, and leave only conviction of his guilt, but no real,
-legal proof.”
-
-“But—” Al was still somewhat puzzled. “Bob, how did you come to suspect
-Barney at all?”
-
-“Do you remember me telling what was said when I flew with Lang to see
-Father?” As Al and Curt nodded, Bob added, “Barney used a phrase about
-‘crossed wires.’ Then I found crossed wires in Mr. Tredway’s ship last
-night, and later Mr. Tredway found wires chafed, and led across each
-other, by his brown ‘plane carburetor. It was the quickest way to
-endanger a ship—the spark could set fire to free gas, and might not be
-noticed in daylight. Barney had time to do it.”
-
-“When he went out? I see,” Curt said. “But, Bob, you thought some one
-was listening, watching—you told Barney so.”
-
-“I still think some one was spying over our dinner—but it may have been
-the manager, Jenks, who may be ‘in’ with Barney.”
-
-“Speak of the—” Mr. Tredway gave a warning glance as he began the old
-adage, “speak of the devil, he’s sure to appear.”
-
-To their amazement, Barney came through the gates. He was calm, quiet,
-not at all furtive or frightened.
-
-“What was the idea of that trick you played with the books?” He patted
-the package he carried. Bob was confused.
-
-The arrival of the rigger, Sandy Jim, coming early to complete work on
-the new airplane for which the owner was in such a hurry, enabled Bob to
-hide his confusion as his father answered, quietly, “I’ll tell you that,
-Barney.”
-
-“All right. Tell me.”
-
-Bob, who turned his head to hide his crimson face, and who went to greet
-Sandy Jim, with Al, as an excuse to avoid an explanation that might
-upset their plans, was surprised at the look on Sandy Jim’s face.
-
-The man was staring at Mr. Tredway as though he saw a ghost.
-
-“I—I—thought that man was——”
-
-“Hello, Sandy!” Al greeted, taking the amazement as natural, since
-everyone around the plant supposed the owner to have gone under the mud
-in the Silver Flash, “ready for work early.”
-
-“Ye—yeah! How’d he get here?” He jerked a thumb toward Mr. Tredway.
-
-“In a taxi.”
-
-Bob took over the explanation, giving Sandy enough of the former
-happenings to enable the rigger to recover from his surprise.
-
-“I’m right glad,” the man stated, finally. “Now—Al, you get some of your
-crowd together and fuel up this new crate—soon as a pilot shows up we
-want it tested. I may have to make some changes in the wire tension and
-balance—get busy, me lads!”
-
-Al eagerly agreed, seeing that their carefully planned “coup” had fallen
-through. Barney, listening to Mr. Wright, to Mr. Tredway, to the
-latter’s partner and the Chief of Police, trying, all together, to give
-him a “third degree,” began to laugh.
-
-“That’s a good one!” He threw back his head, roaring his mirth. “So I’m
-the culprit, eh? Ho-ho! Oh, my, that’s rich. Clever Sky Squad you have,
-Wright! Ha-ha-ha-ho-ho! Here I am doing all I can to help my partner,
-trying to solve the puzzles he couldn’t untangle—and I’m to be
-arrested!”
-
-“No one spoke of arrest!” the Police Chief hedged. “Are you sending some
-one else to get your banked gold?”
-
-“Banked gold?” Barney dropped his jaw as the question was shot at him.
-
-“Converting stock!” snapped Mr. Parsons.
-
-Barney stared and then smiled. “All the stock I ever had is in my safe
-deposit box—come on! I’ll show you, at the bank.”
-
-They were puzzled. Arthur Tredway was eager to claim that his friend and
-protege was innocent.
-
-The others were compelled to admit as Bob mentally decided, that
-Barney’s face, manner and actions were open and honest.
-
-“That’s enough gas,” said the rigger. “Now, Al, fill her up with oil—I
-want to see Mr. Tredway.” He descended from the aircraft, went to his
-employer and with many protestations of delight gripped his hand.
-
-“See here,” he urged, “Mr. Tredway, this crate they’re fueling is in a
-big rush. I have to make adjustments for balance before she is
-delivered. Can’t you take her up?”
-
-“Why not?” Mr. Tredway was anxious to get into action since he had
-agreed to “return to life.”
-
-“Hey—Bob—got her filled? Warm her up for Mr. Tredway.”
-
-Bob nodded, consulted the brand new instruments and noted that the fuel
-and oil registered at “full.”
-
-“Gas on—switch off,” he told Al. “Whirl that prop, Al.”
-
-His brother did his bidding. It took several trials to start the new
-engine but Bob got it going and then drew back the throttle to idling
-speed and went over to rejoin the group.
-
-“I don’t think Arthur ought to take that crate up,” Barney was half
-laughing. “Of course I know that the only wires I ever crossed was when
-I flew my crates over telegraph lines—but he might think I had ’em
-crossed in this ship!”
-
-“Oh, no!” Tredway laid a hand on his protege’s shoulder.
-
-But Bob was not watching Barney.
-
-His eyes were fixed on Sandy Jim, and he beckoned to his father.
-
-Hurriedly, rapidly, Bob spoke to his father. The detective nodded.
-
-“I’ll get the speedster of Mr. Tredway’s warmed up, too,” Bob said
-softly, “in case——”
-
-To Al’s amazement and Curt’s astonishment the head of the Sky Squad
-beckoned furiously. They followed.
-
-“See if there’s gas and oil in this,” he urged as he led them to the
-ship he had flown the night before, returned to its field by Mr.
-Parsons. “Listen, fellows——”
-
-As he busied himself making ready to start the motor, getting the nose
-of the sport ‘plane into the wind, Bob explained.
-
-What he said startled his comrades.
-
-“While Mr. Tredway was joking Barney about the crossed wires, did you
-see Jim’s face?”
-
-“The rigger?” Al exclaimed, “you mean—when he got white?”
-
-“Yes! Listen—gas off, switch on. Give her a spin, Curt.”
-
-As the engine took up its roar, he clambered in again, leaned far over
-the edge to Curt, while Al climbed into the after seat.
-
-“Sandy Jim turned white,” he said above the engine hum. “I think we’ve
-found the real—watch, fellows! Father is going to tell Barney in front
-of Sandy Jim about the crossed wires.”
-
-“Jim is acting nervous,” added Curt. “He’s turning—the chief has grabbed
-his arm. Now Dad is going to say to Barney that he’s guilty, that he
-hates his benefactor because of the other man winning Barney’s girl—of
-course we know it’s Jim, now—watch him! Jim’s being accused now—look!”
-
-Baffled, his face displaying his guilt, Sandy Jim fled to the new
-airplane.
-
-Without an instant of delay Bob widened the throttle opening!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII
- THE SKY SQUAD WINS
-
-
-Roaring across the runway, Bob’s one purpose was to use the airplane as
-a missile, to run it into the other before Sandy Jim could rise. In that
-he failed. The other ship was up, and Bob knew that he had so much speed
-that he must take off or ram into a hangar.
-
-By a spurt of the cold engine, risking a stall to get his trucks over
-the hangar, Bob soared.
-
-Leveling off, he glanced around. To his amazement he saw Al snapping on
-his safety belt in the rear cockpit seat. Al waved a hand, pointing to
-one side. And Bob looked.
-
-“He’s having trouble,” Al screamed. “He’s working on something!”
-
-Bob began to climb. If he could force Jim to earth as he had been herded
-the night before—
-
-Jim saw his move, and with a demon’s venom drew a weapon and began to
-fire.
-
-But Bob sideslipped, dropped steeply into a dive to come out of the
-slip, and as he drew the ship to level flight, heard something strike
-the prop, saw it shatter.
-
-Jim had flung the metal gun so that the airplane ran into it.
-
-Bob began to look for a way to spiral back to the testing field. His
-propeller, with a blade shattered, was useless.
-
-Al screeched again. To the west, coming fast, was a ship they both
-recognized. Lang was returning in Griff’s speedster. Also, as Al pointed
-out, the cabin ‘plane was rising from the landing field.
-
-Al was so excited that he waggled the stick.
-
-Then Bob saw!
-
-Forestalled by the approach of Lang, with the other ship rising to
-chase, with his engine functioning badly, and the resulting distraction
-of attention, Jim’s safety was endangered.
-
-The very thing that he had done when he planned to urge Mr. Tredway to
-test the ‘plane—crossing two wires—had prevented his escape.
-
-The new carburetor, leaking, dripped a rich gas and air mixture onto the
-sparking wires—there was a flash of flames as Bob looked.
-
-Almost he forgot his own purpose, but with steeled will he held his
-tight spiral, saw the cabin ship was out of his way, shot the field, and
-landed.
-
-When Lang and the others joined him beside the smoking ruins of the new
-ship, they saw Sandy Jim, who had tried to escape by jumping before the
-flames reached him.
-
-Wrenched, broken, bruised, he was still able to talk.
-
-“Come through, Jim—what’s the truth?” asked the Chief.
-
-“I hated Tredway from the time he got the girl I wanted to marry,” Jim
-panted, as they gave him water. “I went from bad to worse—went to the
-dogs. I got in with tough men, tried prize-fighting, that’s how my face
-got changed, so I wasn’t easy to remember and recognize.
-
-“Laid low for a while, then I gave up plans for revenge, and decided to
-come to work here to be close to the woman I loved, only, last Fall, she
-went away. So I knew Tredway had drove her to separate—”
-
-“You’re crazy! My wife went to Europe for a long visit with relatives in
-France!”
-
-“Honest? Then all my hate was on a wrong idea. Well, you know most of
-the rest. I damaged ships, worked with the bookkeeper and the supply
-clerk and a manager of The Windsock to substitute cheap stuff for good,
-sell the good and ruin the plant—but it was all no use—and started on a
-wrong idea—no use to say I’m sorry—but—well, boys, handle me easy—I’m no
-good, but I can feel pain!”
-
-In that fashion the culprit confessed.
-
-“I feel sorry for Jimmy-junior, and the man’s wife,” said Curt, after
-the ambulance had taken Sandy Jim to the hospital.
-
-“Jimmy-junior isn’t his son,” explained Mr. Parsons. “He is the son of
-Sandy’s brother, whom Jim took to raise. It would be a good idea if you
-young men took him into the Sky Squad now, to take his mind off his
-sorrow.”
-
-“But I saw his mother and I thought she was Jim’s wife,” said Al.
-
-“No, she’s Jimmy-junior’s mother, but Sandy’s sister-in-law.”
-
-“Then let’s go,” urged Bob. “It’s just about time to wake up our new
-member.”
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
---Copyright notice provided as in the original—this e-text is public
- domain in the country of publication.
-
---Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and
- dialect unchanged.
-
---In the text versions, delimited italics text in _underscores_ (the
- HTML version reproduces the font form of the printed book.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Mystery Crash, by Ardon Van Buren Powell
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY CRASH ***
-
-***** This file should be named 55359-0.txt or 55359-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/5/3/5/55359/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/55359-0.zip b/old/55359-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 668c787..0000000
--- a/old/55359-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55359-h.zip b/old/55359-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index c1df2b3..0000000
--- a/old/55359-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55359-h/55359-h.htm b/old/55359-h/55359-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 8d18f34..0000000
--- a/old/55359-h/55359-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8284 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
-<head>
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
-<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" />
-<title>The Mystery Crash, by Van Powell: a Project Gutenberg eBook</title>
-<meta name="author" content="Van Powell" />
-<meta name="pss.pubdate" content="1932" />
-<link rel="schema.DC" href="http://dublincore.org/documents/1998/09/dces/" />
-<meta name="DC.Title" content="The Mystery Crash" />
-<meta name="DC.Language" content="en" />
-<meta name="DC.Format" content="text/html" />
-<meta name="DC.Created" content="1932" />
-<meta name="DC.Creator" content="Van Powell (****-****)" />
-<style type="text/css">
-xbody, table.twocol tr td { margin-left:2em; margin-right:2em; } /* BODY */
-
-h1, h2, h3, h5, h6, .titlepg p { text-align:center; clear:right; } /* HEADINGS */
-h1 { margin-top:3em; margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto; max-width:15em; }
-.box h1, .box h2 { margin-top:.5em; }
-h2 { margin-top:3em; margin-bottom:2em; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; max-width: 19em; font-size:140%; }
-h3 { margin-top:3em; margin-bottom:2em; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; max-width: 17em; font-size:120%; }
-.box h3 { margin-top:1em; }
-h6 { font-size:100%; font-style:italic; }
-h6.var { font-size:80%; font-style:normal; }
-h4 { font-size:110%; text-align:center; clear:right; }
-.titlepg { margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; border-style:double; clear:both; }
-
- /* == BOXES == */
-.dbox { border-style:double; }
-div.box, .dbox { margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; max-width:25em;}
-.nbox { margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; max-width:18em;}
-div.box, div.subbox, div.nbox { border-style:solid; border-width:1px; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:2em; }
-div.subbox { margin:.2em; }
-div.box dl dd, div.subbox dl dd, div.nbox dl dd {margin-left:2em; font-size:90%; }
-div.box dl dt, div.subbox dl dt, div.nbox dl dt {margin-left:1em; }
-div.box p {margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em; max-width:70em; }
-span.chaptertitle { font-style:normal; display:block; text-align:center; font-size:150%; }
-
-p, blockquote, li { text-align:justify; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; } /* PARAGRAPHS */
-p.bq, blockquote { margin-left:2em; margin-right:2em; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:2em; }
-blockquote p.bq { margin-left:1em; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em;}
-div.verse { font-size:100%; }
-p.indent {text-indent:2em; text-align:left; }
-p.tb, p.tbcenter { margin-top:2em; }
-
-span.pb, div.pb, dt.pb, p.pb /* PAGE BREAKS */
-{ text-align:right; float:right; margin-right:0em; clear:right; }
-div.pb { display:inline; }
-.pb, dt.pb, dl.toc dt.pb, dl.tocl dt.pb, .index dt.pb { text-align:right; float:right; margin-left: 1.5em;
- margin-top:.5em; margin-bottom:.5em; display:inline; text-indent:0;
- font-size:80%; font-style:normal; font-weight:bold;
- color:gray; border:1px solid gray;padding:1px 3px; }
-div.index .pb { display:block; }
-.bq div.pb, .bq span.pb { font-size:90%; margin-right:2em; }
-
-div.img, body a img, .imgcenter {text-align:center; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:0em; clear:both; }
-
-sup, a.fn { font-size:75%; vertical-align:100%; line-height:50%; font-weight:normal; }
-.center, .tbcenter, .csmallest, .csmaller, .caption { text-align:center; clear:both; } /* TEXTUAL MARKUP */
-.caption {margin-top:0em; font-weight:bold; font-size:90%; }
-table.center { clear:both; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; clear:both; }
-table.center tr td { vertical-align:top; border-width:.5em; border-style:solid; border-color:white; }
-table.center tr td.l { text-align:justify; text-indent:1em; }
-table.center tr td.r { text-align:right; }
-table.center tr td.c { text-align:center; }
-
-.small { font-size:80%; }
-.smaller, .csmaller { font-size:66%; }
-.smallest, .csmallest { font-size:50%; }
-.larger, .xlarge { font-size:150%; }
-.large { font-size:125%; }
-.gs { letter-spacing:1em; }
-.gs3 { letter-spacing:1.5em; }
-.gslarge { letter-spacing:.3em; font-size:110%; }
-.sc { font-variant:small-caps; font-style: normal; }
-.sc i { font-variant:normal; }
-.ss { font-family:sans-serif; }
-.rubric { color: red; font-weight:bold; }
-hr { width:40%; margin-left:30%; }
-.shorthr { width:20%; }
-.jl { text-align:left; }
-span.jl { float:left; }
-.jr, .jr1 { text-align:right; }
-span.jr, span.jr1, span.center, span.jl { display:block; }
-.jr1 { margin-right:2em; }
-.ind1 { text-align:left; margin-left:2em; }
-.u { text-decoration:underline; }
-
-dd.t { text-align:left; margin-left: 5.5em; }
-
-span.date, span.author { text-align:right; font-variant:small-caps; display:block; margin-right:1em; }
-span.center { text-align:center; display:block; }
-span.hst { margin-left:1.5em; }
-.biblio dt { margin-top:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; }
-.biblio dd { font-size:90%; }
-
-/* INDEX (.INDEX) */
-
-/* FOOTNOTE BLOCKS */
-div.notes p { margin-left:1em; text-indent:-1em; text-align:justify; max-width:25em; }
-.fnblock { margin-top:2em; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; max-width:25em; }
-.fndef { text-align:justify; margin-top:1.5em; margin-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em; }
-.fndef p.fncont, .fndef dl { margin-left:0em; text-indent:0em; }
-.fndef p.fnbq, .fndef dl { margin-left:1em; text-indent:0em; }
-
-.lnum { text-align:right; float:right; margin-left:.5em; /* POETRY LINE NUMBER */
-display:inline; }
-
-.hymn { text-align:left; } /* HYMN AND VERSE: HTML */
-.verse { text-align:left; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:0em; }
-p.t0, p.l, .t0, .l, div.l, l { margin-left:4em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.tw, div.tw, .tw { margin-left:1em; text-indent:-1em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t, div.t, .t { margin-left:5em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t2, div.t2, .t2 { margin-left:6em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t3, div.t3, .t3 { margin-left:7em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t4, div.t4, .t4 { margin-left:8em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t5, div.t5, .t5 { margin-left:9em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t6, div.t6, .t6 { margin-left:10em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t7, div.t7, .t7 { margin-left:11em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t8, div.t8, .t8 { margin-left:12em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t9, div.t9, .t9 { margin-left:13em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t10,div.t10,.t10 { margin-left:14em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t11,div.t11,.t11 { margin-left:15em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t12,div.t12,.t12 { margin-left:16em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t13,div.t13,.t13 { margin-left:17em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t14,div.t14,.t14 { margin-left:18em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t15,div.t15,.t15 { margin-left:19em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-
- /* CONTENTS (.TOC) */
- .toc dt.center { text-align:center; clear:both; margin-top:3em; margin-bottom:1em; }
- .toc dt { text-align:right; clear:left;
- margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; max-width:25em; }
- .toc dt .cn { font-style:normal; }
- .toc dt.jr { text-align:right; }
- .toc dt.smaller { max-width:25em; }
- .toc dd { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:2em; }
- .toc dd.t { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:4em; text-indent:0em; }
- .toc dt a, .toc dd a { text-align:left; clear:right; float:left; }
- .toc dt.sc { text-align:right; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; }
- .toc dt.scl { text-align:left; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; }
- .toc dt.sct { text-align:right; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; margin-left:1em; }
- .toc dt.jl { text-align:left; clear:both; font-variant:normal; }
- .toc dt.scc { text-align:center; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; }
- .toc dt span.lj { text-align:left; display:block; float:left; }
- .toc dt.jr { font-style:normal; }
- .toc dt a span.cn, .toc dt span.cn, dt span.cn { width:3.5em; text-align:right; margin-right:.7em; float:left; }
- dt .large {font-weight:bold; }
- div.bcat dl dd { margin-left:4em; max-width:21em; }
- div.bcat dl dt { text-indent:-2em; margin-left:2em; }
-
-.clear { clear:both; }
-.htab { margin-left:8em; }
- /* MAXWIDTH FOR JUVENILE BOOKS */
- p, blockquote, li, dd, dt, div.bcat, pre { text-align:justify; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
- p, li, dd, dt, div.bcat, pre.internal dl { max-width:25em; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
- p.csmaller { max-width:38em; }
- p.csmallest { max-width:40em; }
- blockquote { max-width:23em; }
-
-
- div.verse { max-width:25em; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
- div.bq { margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; max-width:23em; }
-/* book advertisements */
- p.bkad {font-size:125%; font-weight:bold; margin-top:2em; max-width:20em; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
- p.bkpr {font-size:90%; }
- p.bkrv { }
- dl.blist dt { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; }
- dl.blist, dl.biblio { margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; max-width:25em; }
-
- dl.int { margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; max-width:25em; }
- dl.int dt {margin-left:0em; }
- dl.int dd {margin-left:2em; }
-</style>
-</head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery Crash, by Ardon Van Buren Powell
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Mystery Crash
- Sky Scout Series, #1
-
-Author: Ardon Van Buren Powell
-
-Release Date: August 15, 2017 [EBook #55359]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY CRASH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div id="vol_1" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="The Mystery Crash" width="500" height="743" />
-</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p1.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="785" />
-<p class="caption">He caught the gunwale and pulled himself up and into the boat
-with Curt&rsquo;s aid. (<a class="pgref" href="#Page_21">Page 21</a>)</p>
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>THE
-<br />MYSTERY CRASH</h1>
-<p class="center">By VAN POWELL</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p2.jpg" alt="Airplane" width="304" height="203" />
-</div>
-<p class="center">THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY
-<br /><span class="small">Akron, Ohio</span> <span class="hst"><span class="small">New York</span></span></p>
-<p class="center small">Copyright MCMXXXII
-<br />THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY
-<br /><i>Made in the United States of America</i></p>
-</div>
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt><a href="#c1"><span class="cn">I </span>The Deserted Airplane</a> 5</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c2"><span class="cn">II </span>At Rocky Lake</a> 12</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c3"><span class="cn">III </span>A Greater Mystery</a> 19</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c4"><span class="cn">IV </span>The Sky Squad is Formed</a> 28</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c5"><span class="cn">V </span>A Double Puzzle</a> 36</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c6"><span class="cn">VI </span>Suspicion and Suspense</a> 42</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c7"><span class="cn">VII </span>In the Falling &rsquo;Plane</a> 53</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c8"><span class="cn">VIII </span>Watchful Waiting</a> 59</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c9"><span class="cn">IX </span>Strange Actions</a> 67</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c10"><span class="cn">X </span>A Summons</a> 76</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c11"><span class="cn">XI </span>A Trail and a Flight</a> 81</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c12"><span class="cn">XII </span>The Chase</a> 93</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c13"><span class="cn">XIII </span>The Detective&rsquo;s Theory</a> 98</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c14"><span class="cn">XIV </span>The Sky Squad Disobeys</a> 104</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c15"><span class="cn">XV </span>A Triple Trail</a> 112</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c16"><span class="cn">XVI </span>The &ldquo;Windsock&rdquo;</a> 121</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c17"><span class="cn">XVII </span>&ldquo;The Case Is &lsquo;Sewed Up&rsquo;&rdquo;</a> 128</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c18"><span class="cn">XVIII </span>A New Mystery</a> 136</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c19"><span class="cn">XIX </span>Tangled Threads</a> 144</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c20"><span class="cn">XX </span>A Package of Money</a> 151</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c21"><span class="cn">XXI </span>Caught and Cleared!</a> 159</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c22"><span class="cn">XXII </span>The &ldquo;Mystery Crate&rdquo;</a> 171</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c23"><span class="cn">XXIII </span>Bob Pursues!</a> 179</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c24"><span class="cn">XXIV </span>Suspense!</a> 188</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c25"><span class="cn">XXV </span>Crossed Wires</a> 197</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c26"><span class="cn">XXVI </span>The Sky Squad Goes Into Action</a> 207</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c27"><span class="cn">XXVII </span>Driven Down</a> 219</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c28"><span class="cn">XXVIII </span>Curt&rsquo;s Discovery</a> 227</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c29"><span class="cn">XXIX </span>A Confession</a> 235</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c30"><span class="cn">XXX </span>Barney Gives a Hint</a> 246</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c31"><span class="cn">XXXI </span>&ldquo;One More Problem&rdquo;</a> 257</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c32"><span class="cn">XXXII </span>Flight!</a> 268</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c33"><span class="cn">XXXIII </span>The Sky Squad Wins</a> 277</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
-<h1 title="">THE MYSTERY CRASH</h1>
-<h2 id="c1">CHAPTER I
-<br /><span class="small">THE DESERTED AIRPLANE</span></h2>
-<p>&ldquo;See that! Look! There&rsquo;s our mystery!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob Wright pointed from the cabin window
-of the monoplane. Al, his younger brother,
-peered toward the ground.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What? Where? Show me any mystery!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To make himself understood above the roar
-of the engine, Bob put his lips close to Al&rsquo;s ear
-while Curt, Bob&rsquo;s closest friend, also a passenger,
-bent close to catch his words.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a mystery all right&mdash;but you can&rsquo;t see
-from here. It was in that cornfield we passed
-over.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the mystery?&rdquo; Curtis Brown&rsquo;s eyes
-snapped with eagerness.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why did you say &lsquo;our&rsquo; mystery?&rdquo; Al asked
-at the same instant. Bob answered both at once.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_6">6</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The mystery is: Why is an airplane hidden
-in the grove at the edge of a cornfield? Our
-mystery because we discovered it and because,
-ever since we helped father solve his detective
-cases and took an interest in aviation we have
-wanted to solve something that connects up puzzles
-and &rsquo;planes!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A &lsquo;crate&rsquo;?&rdquo; Al stared out. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see it.&rdquo;
-Bob was not there to reply. He moved up to
-the pilot, Langley Wright, his cousin, who was
-test pilot for the Tredway Aircraft Corporation
-and who was giving this beautiful &ldquo;job&rdquo; its
-final test and check flight.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lang,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I saw an airplane in the
-grove at the edge of that last field we crossed.
-Circle back, won&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; As Lang turned from
-jotting down some data, Bob added: &ldquo;The ship
-hasn&rsquo;t crashed. It&rsquo;s in among the trees&mdash;backed
-in. I caught a glimpse of it, and then the trees
-hid it. I&rsquo;d like to have another look.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Surest thing you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lang, twenty-one and an expert flyer, grinned
-at his sixteen-year-old cousin, dipped ailerons,
-kicked rudder and with a good &ldquo;bank&rdquo; as the
-craft swung its nose around, he deftly counteracted
-a tendency of the ship to go into a sideslip,
-jotted down some information on his data
-board and then looked out of his window.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s the field,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see a
-crate there!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_7">7</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s why I told Al and Curt it&rsquo;s a mystery,&rdquo;
-Bob replied. &ldquo;The ship has been hidden!
-Its tail is in between trees, and the wings are
-under trees with high branches. I don&rsquo;t believe
-it could be seen from the highway that runs by
-the field. I know it wouldn&rsquo;t be noticed from
-the air, except by chance.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hm-m-m!&rdquo; grunted Langley, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard of
-hidden treasure, but this is the first hidden
-&rsquo;plane&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There!&rdquo; Bob pointed past Lang&rsquo;s face.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see it!&rdquo; Lang continued to circle, in order
-to get another sight of the mysteriously hidden
-ship. As they came around again Al and Curt
-located it also.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s staked down!&rdquo; Al, although he was the
-youngest, not much past thirteen, had the quickest
-eyes of the group. &ldquo;I saw the stakes, and
-rope over the wing-tips.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The engine was covered over,&rdquo; added Curt.</p>
-<p>Lang spiraled down to pass as close as the
-trees would allow.</p>
-<p>They saw nothing more, however, and after
-Lang had refused Al&rsquo;s impulsive request to &ldquo;set
-down&rdquo; in the small field, the party flew on to
-the landing field of the Aircraft Corporation
-where Lang had some alterations to report in
-the adjustment of the ship&rsquo;s balance before it
-could be delivered to its purchaser.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s get our bicycles and ride out to the
-field,&rdquo; urged Al, as the trio of comrades alighted
-beyond the aircraft plant.</p>
-<p>They pedaled the three miles in record time.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was right,&rdquo; commented Bob, as they left
-the wheels beside the highway and climbed over
-the high rail fence enclosing the stubble where
-corn had recently been cut down. &ldquo;You can&rsquo;t
-see the airplane from any place along the highway&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Unless it&rsquo;s gone,&rdquo; interrupted Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; Curt was a little ahead. He waved
-his arm. &ldquo;There she is!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They crossed the rough field, toward the mysterious,
-silent object of interest.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can see from here it hasn&rsquo;t cracked up,&rdquo;
-Curt declared. &ldquo;Not a scratch on it and the
-landing gear is perfect.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Whoever flew it must be clever,&rdquo; declared
-Bob. &ldquo;Look at the narrow strip of open, smooth
-ground he had to &lsquo;set down&rsquo; on. If he hadn&rsquo;t
-been able to shoot the field so as to get in on
-that long, smooth side, with only a few feet
-clearance, he&rsquo;d have come down in rough
-stubble.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, he must have been good,&rdquo; agreed Al.
-&ldquo;And it proves that he was forced down. Any
-sane pilot would have gone on to a better spot.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<p>They reached the airplane, a two-winged
-model with a radial motor and small wings; it
-was a speed ship, trim and mystifying with its
-dark, brown body and airfoils freshly done.</p>
-<p>Curtis, whose age was midway between Al&rsquo;s
-thirteen and Bob&rsquo;s sixteen, clambered onto a
-landing wheel and observed the instruments on
-the dash. &ldquo;Plenty of gas, and oil,&rdquo; he remarked.
-Then his companions saw his face change.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look!&rdquo; As he called he leaped from his
-perch so that Bob could occupy it; Al was up
-on the other side, and it took no explaining to
-show what had caused Curt&rsquo;s exclamation. Both
-youths saw the small square of paper pinned to
-the folded parachute on the seat.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Dare we look?&rdquo; questioned Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I can read it from here,&rdquo; Al said, and reported.
-&ldquo;It says, &lsquo;Everything O.K.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Crickety Christmas!&rdquo; Curt resorted to his
-favorite expression. &ldquo;&lsquo;Everything O.K.&rsquo; Then
-it wasn&rsquo;t a forced landing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; agreed Bob. &ldquo;It didn&rsquo;t seem like one,
-somehow. The ship is too carefully tucked away.
-And, now&mdash;this note. Who is it to? Who put it
-there? Does it mean the ship is all right&mdash;or
-something else? I was right when I said&mdash;&lsquo;there&rsquo;s
-our mystery.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You were!&rdquo; admitted Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But what can we do about it?&rdquo; objected Al.
-&ldquo;Take turns watching? Wait to see who comes
-back, and what he does?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; counseled Curt. &ldquo;It may be a
-mystery why the crate is here, and all that!
-But it isn&rsquo;t any of our business&mdash;is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; admitted Bob. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go home, and
-see what father thinks of it. There is probably
-some easy explanation we haven&rsquo;t thought of.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right. We can ride out here first thing&mdash;early&mdash;tomorrow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They could not consult the private detective
-whose success had been so pronounced that
-cases came to him from distant cities: he was
-out of town that night.</p>
-<p>When they rode out to the field the next day,
-at sunrise, looking for the mysteriously deserted
-airplane it was gone!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where is your mystery now?&rdquo; Curt was inclined
-to poke a little fun at Bob. &ldquo;As the
-sleight-of-hand performers say, &lsquo;Now you see
-it, now you don&rsquo;t!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anyway,&rdquo; Al who was poking about in the
-grass under the trees, bent and then exhibited
-a damp, crumpled paper, &ldquo;here is the note. Now,
-what do you say if we have a session of the old
-Master Sleuths, and see what we can deduce
-from this paper?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
-<p>A year before, asked to do a little investigating
-for Mr. Wright, when he was handling a
-case where youths would be least likely to
-arouse suspicion by shadowing, the trio had become
-intensely interested in detective work and
-had termed themselves the Master Sleuths,
-more in fun than in earnest. However, when
-they had become &ldquo;air minded&rdquo; the term had been
-dropped. Al, reviving it, won a grin from Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; Bob agreed. &ldquo;The paper is damp.
-It has been out in the dew. Under the trees it
-would take a good while for it to get as soggy
-as it is. The writing has smudged&mdash;it&rsquo;s sort of
-purple&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was written with an indelible pencil,&rdquo; remarked
-Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then all we have to do is to find a man with
-an&mdash;&rdquo; Al was not allowed to finish. Bob broke
-in, as older brothers like to do.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes&mdash;get &lsquo;the man in the gray suit!&rsquo; How
-many indelible pencils do you suppose there are
-in this country?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right!&rdquo; Al took the matter good-humoredly.
-&ldquo;Anyhow, if a man wrote it and a man
-read it and threw it away&mdash;two hands have
-handled it.&rdquo; He put it carefully in his pocket.
-&ldquo;There may be fingerprints.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What good will they do?&rdquo; asked Curt. &ldquo;The
-mystery is all done with.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No it isn&rsquo;t!&rdquo; cried Bob, holding up his hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Listen!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>From above came the drone of an airplane
-engine.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<h2 id="c2">CHAPTER II
-<br /><span class="small">AT ROCKY LAKE</span></h2>
-<p>&ldquo;I hear it!&rdquo; exclaimed Al. He ran out onto
-the turf that had been used as a runway, probably,
-when the airplane took off.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So do I,&rdquo; agreed Curt, following him. &ldquo;But
-I don&rsquo;t locate it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob, craning his neck, staring up toward the
-great banks of clouds which the early sun was
-painting with rosy fire, looked puzzled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come to think of it,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we ought not
-to hear it at all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; demanded Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He ought to be too far away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How do you make that out?&rdquo; Al was incredulous.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Easy! Lang came home a little before daybreak.
-He had been at the airplane plant all
-night, with the &lsquo;mechs&rsquo; because Mr. Tredway
-wanted to get that Silver Flash ready for delivery
-in a rush. I didn&rsquo;t go to sleep again.
-I got up, and dressed and went out to tighten
-the handlebar on my bicycle. I glanced up, just
-as day broke, at the little windsock I have on
-our roof.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The wind was directly <i>West</i>.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see&mdash;&rdquo; began Al; but Curt, wetting
-the back of his hand, tested the air in various
-directions.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You use your head, Bob,&rdquo; he said admiringly.
-&ldquo;The breeze is pretty strong, and it has
-shifted around <i>to South</i>, straight from the
-Equator.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you two trying to be mysterious?&rdquo; Al
-was a little bit annoyed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought you wanted to be a Master Sleuth,
-last year,&rdquo; remarked Curt. &ldquo;Use your eyes and
-your brains.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Um-m-m&mdash;the airplane must be gone a long
-time because the wind was West and now it&rsquo;s
-South&mdash;um-m-m. Oh!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Ah-ha!&rsquo; cried Shawkhaw,&rdquo; Bob mocked,
-twisting the famous Hawkshaw title as he made
-fun of his brother.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This turf runs East and West.&rdquo; Al ignored
-Bob&rsquo;s mockery. &ldquo;That biplane was a speed
-model and it would have to get up higher speed
-than the average to take off. The runway is
-too short to give it a good run, so it couldn&rsquo;t
-very well have hopped off in time to get over
-the trees unless it took full advantage of the
-wind! Isn&rsquo;t that it, Bob?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_14">14</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it. The wind changed about the time
-we left our meeting point with Curt. So that
-airplane ought to be well on its way, wherever
-its way leads.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But this engine is getting louder,&rdquo; stated
-Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There it is!&rdquo; cried Al, pointing toward the
-South. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s only a speck. But you see it, don&rsquo;t
-you, Curt?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So do I,&rdquo; added Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It looks as if it is spiraling down&mdash;yes, it is!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And it isn&rsquo;t the biplane we saw here, at all,&rdquo;
-Bob said. &ldquo;Curt, do you know what?&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. It&rsquo;s the very &rsquo;plane we were in yesterday,
-with Lang. He gave it a final check-up
-and said if they worked on it all night it would
-be ready to take off today. That&rsquo;s it, all righty!
-The biplane was brown, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is the Silver Flash! I can see it glisten
-against that dark cloud,&rdquo; added Al. &ldquo;I think
-it&rsquo;s coming down.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s diving.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; cried Bob. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s out of control! It&rsquo;s
-falling!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right over Rocky Lake!&rdquo; shouted Curt.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_15">15</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Come on!&rdquo; urged Al, scrambling over the
-short stubble in the field, in haste to reach his
-bicycle and pedal toward the picnic grounds,
-less than a quarter of a mile away, in which
-Rocky Lake was situated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; counseled Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No! Come on!&rdquo; Curt agreed with Al. The
-airplane was out of control. It was diving,
-straight toward the amusement ground around
-the lake. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a crack-up!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There it goes!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Behind the trees, out of sight, like a silver
-streak, a comet, the airplane fell. Three hearts
-went cold as the ship was lost to view behind
-the foliage. While they could not see the craft
-strike, any spot in Rocky Lake Park was bad
-for a landing: dense trees, whole groves, alternated
-with stands, pavilions, and the deep,
-boulder-studded water of Rocky Lake and the
-rivulet which fed it.</p>
-<p>Three minds worked as one, three pairs of
-legs tumbled their owners over the stile, onto
-the roadside turf, up to the bicycles.</p>
-<p>Pedaling like madmen they made short time
-of the trip to the edge of the amusement spot.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think it was directly over Rocky Lake!&rdquo;
-Curt, in the lead, called over his shoulder.</p>
-<p>Dropping their wheels by the roadside they
-ran, winded but determined, towards the picnic
-grounds.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&mdash;there&mdash;in the lake!&rdquo; gasped Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It crashed, all right!&rdquo; panted Curt.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s half buried in the water.&rdquo; Al puffed
-along a little to the rear. &ldquo;I hope the pilot&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It wasn&rsquo;t Lang, was it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; Bob responded to Curt&rsquo;s question. &ldquo;It
-must have been some other pilot&mdash;I can&rsquo;t think
-who, though.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hurry!&rdquo; urged Al. &ldquo;Hello&mdash;hello!&rdquo; he called,
-passing the pavilions. &ldquo;Is anybody around!
-Wake up&mdash;somebody! Help! Help! A &rsquo;plane
-has cracked up in Rocky Lake!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;See anything of the pilot?&rdquo; Bob turned to
-Curt. Gasping for breath they had reached the
-shore of the lake, by a small wharf where rowboats
-were hired during the day.</p>
-<p>Curt scanned the surface of the lake.</p>
-<p>Quite near the shore, and on the rocks, with
-one crumpled wing, and with her nose and cabin
-buried in soft, oozey mud, the smashed monoplane
-lay with its pitifully useless tail assembly
-sticking up into the air. The &ldquo;flippers&rdquo; had carried
-way with the impact and hung by the control
-cables.</p>
-<p>Bob turned a serious face toward his companion.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I hope&mdash;I wonder&rdquo;&mdash; He could not finish.
-The thought flitted through his mind that unless
-the pilot had been extremely quick and very
-clever, he could not have gotten out of the cabin&mdash;in
-time. The falling craft had been close
-enough so that had any figure leaped, especially
-with a parachute, they should have seen it
-clearly.</p>
-<p>No such figure had leaped&mdash;in time.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe he&mdash;crawled out when it struck,&rdquo; said
-Curt, hopefully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anyhow, let&rsquo;s get a boat, and try to get
-to it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Al,&rdquo; called Curt, &ldquo;stop calling for help!
-There isn&rsquo;t anybody here. Run to the farmhouse
-across the road&mdash;no, that&rsquo;s empty. Ride
-back down the road, till you see an automobile
-and send it to town for help. If you don&rsquo;t meet
-one, stop at the first house and telephone.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al, for all his natural eagerness to be at the
-scene, to share in their experiences, saluted
-without a word of remonstrance and hurried
-away. Meanwhile Bob, realizing that the oars
-for the boats were locked in the small pavilion
-on the wharf, determined to break in, feeling
-that the emergency removed any taint of robbery
-or pillage from the act.</p>
-<p>Fortunately he found the old, rusted lock not
-caught. He slipped the rusty padlock, slipped
-the hasp free, and ran back to the dock where
-Curt had a boat untied and ready. In this, pushing
-off, they rowed out to the airplane. The
-weight of its engine was very slowly driving
-its nose deeper into the soft ooze of the marshy
-ground at that end of the lake.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Hurry!&rdquo; begged Curt, as Bob bent to his
-task.</p>
-<p>Suddenly Bob rested on his oars.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter?&rdquo; cried Curt, and as he
-saw the expression of Bob&rsquo;s face he, too, became
-intent.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There it is again!&rdquo; panted Bob. &ldquo;A call&mdash;a
-call for help?&rdquo; he questioned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. But row!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob rowed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_19">19</div>
-<h2 id="c3">CHAPTER III
-<br /><span class="small">A GREATER MYSTERY</span></h2>
-<p>&ldquo;There comes the call again!&rdquo; whispered
-Curt. &ldquo;It was &lsquo;help!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob sent the boat through the mirrorlike
-water. He headed for the immersed nose of the
-airplane and as they rounded the cabin, part
-of it sticking up forlornly, Curt lifted a hand
-to point.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look! There is the parachute, partly inflated,
-floating on the water.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It looks as though the pilot tried to get out
-of the cabin, and either pulled his ripcord too
-soon, or else some part of the harness caught
-and held him&mdash;until too late!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sobered and worried, wondering just what to
-do and who had called, they sent their eyes
-questing here and there&mdash;into as much of the
-cabin as they could see from the window just
-under the transparent surface of Rocky Lake,
-but without result.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought he might be caught in the cabin,&rdquo;
-said Bob. &ldquo;But I can&rsquo;t see any&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_20">20</div>
-<p>&ldquo;There he is&mdash;see! Out on the lake!&rdquo; Curt
-pointed. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s swimming.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob pushed away from the fuselage of the
-sinking craft, and with a sweep brought the
-bow of their boat around.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; he caught sight of a head bobbing in
-the water, &ldquo;oh, Curt&mdash;I&rsquo;m so glad!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Rowing hard, he sent the boat toward the
-swimmer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So am I.&rdquo; Curt&rsquo;s voice was relieved. &ldquo;The
-pilot escaped.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;it can&rsquo;t be the pilot, Curt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He has been swimming toward the &rsquo;plane,
-from out in the lake.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know, Bob, but he may have seen us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But he&rsquo;d have part of the parachute harness
-on,&rdquo; Bob objected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Probably he slashed it off. Maybe he saw
-it was too late to get out, that the &rsquo;chute was
-too low, and he slashed himself free and started
-to swim across the water&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No. He&rsquo;d have come to this closer shore,
-and landed on the wharf.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They watched the man, treading water as he
-saw them coming.</p>
-<p>Across the water a call floated clearly to
-them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you hear&mdash;a call&mdash;for help?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We thought we did,&rdquo; Bob called back, and,
-as they came closer the man spoke less loudly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see anybody.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you aren&rsquo;t the pilot?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He can&rsquo;t be!&rdquo; Curt commented when the man
-failed to reply, being busy clearing water from
-his eyes to look around the lake again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t seen anybody at all,&rdquo; the man spoke
-as he caught the gunwale and pulled himself
-up and into the boat with Curt&rsquo;s aid. &ldquo;Heard
-a shout, though. Row back boys, to that thing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They went back over the course. The
-stranger, studying the aircraft, seemed very
-much disturbed and worried. He had a hand
-ready to catch the struts of a wing as they
-swung under the tilted airfoil: while Bob stowed
-the needless oar on that side he drew the boat
-forward.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t see anything in the cabin. We
-looked, before,&rdquo; Bob explained.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Untie that painter,&rdquo; the stranger ordered.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going down under the nose, and the mud
-might hold me&mdash;so, if I signal, you pull.&rdquo; As
-Curt unknotted the tying rope and threw it to
-him, the man looped an end under his arms,
-knotting it swiftly, flung the short coil to Bob
-and lowered himself, disappearing into the
-water, his descent stirred up mud, moiling the
-water. Down he went, hidden almost at once
-in the murky disturbance.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div>
-<p>Paying out the rope until it grew slack, Bob
-took a turn around a rowlock, and they waited
-breathlessly. Some bubbles floated up and broke.
-Then came a tug on the rope.</p>
-<p>Curt, who had already come to the midships
-section, helped Bob tug and haul in the wet
-manilla strands. The stranger came up through
-the murky water, emerged, shook himself free
-of the liquid, caught the boat and shook his
-head.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not in the cabin&mdash;only thing I can think of
-is&mdash;if he tried to jump and got under the thing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Very soberly the youths helped him back into
-the boat.</p>
-<p>People were arriving on the bank, shouting
-to one another, calling for information, shipping
-oars in boats. Al, having met several
-motorists, had spread the alarm, and then had
-ridden on to telephone the police and to report
-the crash.</p>
-<p>Al, having returned, was in the second boat
-to arrive by the slowly sinking craft.</p>
-<p>Bob gave him a concise report while they
-pushed away from the place to enable a deputy
-sheriff to take command and to jot down the
-stranger&rsquo;s explanation and their own, from
-Curt.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_23">23</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish you boys would row me across the
-little bayou, here,&rdquo; the man said. Al had transferred
-to their boat by that time.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Take me to that point, over there,&rdquo; the man
-added. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s closest to where I dropped my
-motorcycle when I saw the thing happen.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob nodded. The presence of the motorcycle
-beyond the lake, where it was nearest to the
-road, explained why they had seen the man
-swimming toward them. He must have heard
-and seen the airplane, watched its descent, and
-then rushed to see what he could do.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But won&rsquo;t the police want you to testify, or
-whatever it is?&rdquo; asked Al.</p>
-<p>The man shook his head.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;If they do, they can find
-me soon enough. I&rsquo;m off to get into dry duds.
-I didn&rsquo;t waste time riding around the end of
-the lake. I dropped my motorcycle and ran in
-to see what I could see.&rdquo; He smiled, sadly. &ldquo;I
-guess I was too late, even at that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Thanking them as he climbed onto the rocky
-shore, he pushed the bow of their boat into the
-stream again, and watched them turn in the still
-water.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can tell the police I didn&rsquo;t think they&rsquo;d
-need me right away,&rdquo; he called. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m passing
-through this section, and I don&rsquo;t want to be held
-up and kept here for any sort of investigation.
-You saw as much as I did. Well&mdash;goodbye!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<p>He turned, and as they heard the &ldquo;crash &rsquo;bus&rdquo;
-arriving from the airport in a nearby city of
-which they lived in the suburbs, Bob rowed his
-two young companions back toward the airplane.</p>
-<p>The police came, and many others with them
-and after them.</p>
-<p>Preparations were made to drag under the
-craft, and to lift it, if tackle could be gotten
-into suitable position, to see if any trace of the
-missing pilot could be discovered.</p>
-<p>Nothing further developed, however, and one
-of the &ldquo;mechs&rdquo; with the airport &rsquo;bus told Bob
-it would be afternoon before they got the monoplane
-out. The three comrades had given the
-police lieutenant all the information they could.
-There was a healthy appetite making itself felt
-among them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go home,&rdquo; Bob suggested.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait, all of you,&rdquo; urged the reporter for a
-small suburban daily. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll make heroes of you
-yet.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_25">25</div>
-<p>Protesting that they had done nothing heroic
-and that they did not want to be &ldquo;put in the
-paper&rdquo; for doing their duty, Curt and Bob refused
-to answer any questions. The police, Bob
-said, might not want information published. He
-did not know, but he would prefer not to talk.
-&ldquo;Oh, I see&mdash;there is a mystery, then!&rdquo; the reporter
-declared. &ldquo;Well, if you won&rsquo;t talk&mdash;&rdquo;
-he began to write swiftly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If we won&rsquo;t talk,&rdquo; Bob commented as the
-trio walked toward their bicycles. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll write
-something anyhow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s queer that there isn&rsquo;t any trace of the
-pilot.&rdquo; Al&rsquo;s mind returned to the tragic part of
-the crash.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe he jumped clear, got away and went
-into the water, and then, coming up, got to
-land. He may be on shore, somewhere, hurt, or
-too weak to make himself known.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Curt&rsquo;s explanation renewed their hope.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s hope it&rsquo;s that way,&rdquo; said Bob. &ldquo;Well,
-we&rsquo;ve got a long road to breakfast. Mother
-will be just about wild. I left a note, but she
-will worry about Al and me, just the same. If
-we go to the ball park and don&rsquo;t get home within
-half an hour after the game, she frets.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_26">26</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Excuse me, boys.&rdquo; A pleasant voice behind
-them caused the three to wheel around. They
-saw a pleasant-faced man, beside an automobile,
-parked close to the bicycles they were disentangling.
-&ldquo;If you want to get home in a hurry,
-pile the bicycles in that little comfort station
-over there, and tell the attendant &lsquo;Barney&rsquo; said
-to look out for them. I&rsquo;m from the aircraft
-plant, and as long as I can&rsquo;t do anything here,
-if you&rsquo;ll hop into my car I&rsquo;ll ride you home
-while you give me the facts as well as you know
-them about this smash. It&rsquo;s a bad thing, and
-I want to get as straight as I can what happened.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They were very grateful to Barney, who neglected
-to furnish any other name. He waited
-until they had stowed away the bicycles, and
-while he drove them toward the village he questioned
-them rapidly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think you are all very brave, and quick,
-and fine,&rdquo; he commented, after they had, in turn,
-recited their adventures. &ldquo;You acted splendidly
-and I thank you very much.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al looked surprised.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We did our duty,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;But why are
-you thanking us? I know it was one of the Tredway
-airplanes because we were in it, with Lang,
-yesterday on check-up. But who was in it, and
-what do you think happened&mdash;really?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The owner of the manufacturing plant was
-in it,&rdquo; said Barney, very soberly and sadly. &ldquo;Mr.
-Tredway was flying it himself. He wanted to
-deliver it in person&mdash;for a reason.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For a reason?&rdquo; Bob repeated, inquiringly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_27">27</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Barney. &ldquo;There is a mystery
-behind that crack-up&mdash;it&rsquo;s more likely it&rsquo;s a
-&lsquo;washout.&rsquo; Anyhow, there is something behind
-the smash, and&mdash;I&rsquo;ve heard there is a private
-detective, a Mr. Wright, at Forty-one Elm. If
-you can tell me the quickest way to get there,
-I&rsquo;ll appreciate it. I want to consult him&mdash;on this
-case.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob, Curt and Al stared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s father!&rdquo; said Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Indeed! Then I am glad I offered you a
-&lsquo;lift.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They directed him, and eventually he drew up
-the car before the neat, cozy cottage. Curtis,
-accepting the invitation to stay for their somewhat
-belated breakfast, sat, with Bob and Al,
-in the cheerful breakfast room, finishing up a
-stack of pancakes thickly syruped, when Bob
-was sent for.</p>
-<p>Returning, after a few minutes, he showed his
-younger brother and his best friend a face of
-elation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There is a mystery, all righty,&rdquo; he declared.
-&ldquo;And you&rsquo;re to come with me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; asked Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; retorted Bob, &ldquo;we&rsquo;re&mdash;in&mdash;on&mdash;it!&rdquo;
-As the others jumped up he added,
-&ldquo;Father&rsquo;s home and he&rsquo;s taken a real air mystery
-case!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
-<h2 id="c4">CHAPTER IV
-<br /><span class="small">THE SKY SQUAD IS FORMED</span></h2>
-<p>Entering Mr. Wright&rsquo;s library, which the
-detective used as a reception room for clients,
-Bob, Curtis and Al could hardly repress their
-excitement. To share in the possible solution
-of a real mystery of the airlanes was more
-than they had really dared to hope for.</p>
-<p>Seated opposite Mr. Wright, smiling pleasantly,
-was the man who had given no other
-name than Barney.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good morning, Mr. Wright.&rdquo; Curtis Brown
-greeted the quiet, but cordial father of his two
-chums. Al added a salute to his father.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sit down,&rdquo; suggested the detective. Bob,
-Curt and Al ranged themselves along the
-leather upholstered davenport at the side,
-where the light was on their faces. Mr. Wright
-had his room so arranged that only his own
-place beside the desk enabled him to keep his
-face in the shadow; clients and other visitors
-had to show every expression in the light from
-the two sunny windows.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
-<p>While Mr. Wright seemed to be deciding how
-to disclose his plans, Curt compared the two
-men.</p>
-<p>They were of very distinct types. Fred
-Wright would make anybody think of an ordinary,
-everyday business man, fairly prosperous,
-quiet in his manner, affable and cordial in
-his speech. His calm, serious face was neither
-severe nor too soft; and while its steel-gray
-eyes were kindly, they could look through a
-person, it seemed, and find out, almost, what
-that one was thinking, or, perhaps, trying to
-conceal.</p>
-<p>Barney, on the other hand, made one think
-of a working man who had risen to a position
-of prosperity and influence without being able
-entirely to shake off his servile, unpolished manner.
-Although his clothes were expertly tailored,
-he seemed a little ill at ease in them. What was
-more, he gave the impression that he knew it!</p>
-<p>He was a trifle blustery to cover his feeling
-of inferiority, Curt decided; and he had a habit
-of interrupting when another person was speaking.
-However, this might be due to excitement,
-Curt thought charitably.</p>
-<p>Glancing sidewise, he sensed that much the
-same comparisons were passing through Bob&rsquo;s
-mind. Al gave no thought to character. His
-whole attention was bent on the possibility of
-&ldquo;action!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<p>Curt, who liked to look for good points more
-than for the other sort, checked up Barney&rsquo;s
-dark eyes, almost black, and decided that they
-were only serious because of the gravity of the
-situation. They could twinkle with fun, he
-guessed; also, the mouth was so shaped that Bob
-admitted to himself that Barney smiled oftener
-than he scowled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have told Mr. Horton about you three
-young aviation enthusiasts,&rdquo; Fred Wright began.
-&ldquo;Also I have explained that you used to
-be very fond of &lsquo;detecting&rsquo; in a decidedly amateurish
-way, of course.&rdquo; He smiled across the
-desk toward Barney, whose face broke into a
-broad, pleased grin, immediately suppressed because
-of the seriousness of his errand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll say we were amateurish,&rdquo; chuckled Bob.
-&ldquo;Why, Mr. Horton&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Call me Barney&mdash;just Barney,&rdquo; the visitor
-interrupted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you say so, sir. Well, Barney, then! We
-were crazy to be great detectives, because father
-is one,&rdquo; he paid the compliment whole-heartedly
-and only his father smiled and shook his head
-deprecatingly, &ldquo;but we let our enthusiasm take
-the place of brains,&rdquo; Bob added. &ldquo;I was not
-much help because I let vanity get the best of
-cool, common sense&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I was a failure because I am too impulsive,&rdquo;
-contributed Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was so short-sighted, in my mind, that I
-forgot to look at the whole of a case and pinned
-my nose down onto every little clew,&rdquo; Curt
-grinned sheepishly, &ldquo;so I kept going around in
-circles.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All the same,&rdquo; Mr. Wright looked over at
-Barney, &ldquo;in such work as boys could do&mdash;they
-were a few years younger then&mdash;these three
-helped me a great deal in handling two quite important
-cases.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The trio lowered their heads modestly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;However,&rdquo; the detective continued, &ldquo;they
-turned from being Master Sleuths, as they
-termed themselves, to aviation&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Airboys!&rdquo; chuckled Barney.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, yes. That is an apt expression.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But we didn&rsquo;t give up wanting to be detectives,
-really!&rdquo; exclaimed Al, earnestly. &ldquo;We
-were looking for a way to mix the aviation with
-the detecting&mdash;only we haven&rsquo;t gotten into
-either one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then here&rsquo;s your chance.&rdquo; Barney said it
-very seriously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_32">32</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Barney has brought me a very baffling
-case,&rdquo; Mr. Wright explained. &ldquo;Unfortunately,
-I am so deeply involved in another matter that
-I cannot drop it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But you can give some time to this, you
-said.&rdquo; Barney was earnest.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not personally. That is, I shan&rsquo;t be able
-to investigate in person,&rdquo; the detective replied.
-&ldquo;That is where our three assistants will
-figure&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And be Airboys and Master Sleuths, both
-at the one time,&rdquo; Barney interrupted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hooray!&rdquo; Al clapped his hand to his knee,
-unable to restrain his enthusiasm. Mr. Wright,
-although with a tolerant, if brief smile, shook
-his head at his younger son.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This will be a serious affair,&rdquo; he stated,
-forcefully.</p>
-<p>Al immediately became sobered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How can we combine aviation and detective
-work?&rdquo; asked Curt, the most practical of the
-chums.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;By going to the aircraft plant to work as
-mechanics&rsquo; helpers, or whatever positions Barney
-sees fit to put you in,&rdquo; Mr. Wright told
-them. &ldquo;That takes care of the detective work
-because you will have to keep eyes and ears
-open and without appearing to do so.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We can do that easily,&rdquo; said Bob.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_33">33</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That takes no effort at all,&rdquo; agreed Al. His
-father, knowing Al&rsquo;s expressive face to be easily
-read, made no comment.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;While you are at the aircraft plant,&rdquo; Barney
-took up the explanation, &ldquo;you will be working
-in and around the crates we are building, and
-you will learn a whole lot about how an airplane
-is put together, what the parts are for, and how
-they are assembled. That&rsquo;s the aviation part.&rdquo;
-He emphasized the first syllable, making it
-&ldquo;av-iation.&rdquo; &ldquo;What do you say?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hooray!&rdquo; Al was irrepressible.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just show us the jobs!&rdquo; added Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course we will be glad to learn.&rdquo; Curt was
-more sober. &ldquo;That ought to be one of the first
-things for anybody to do who means to be a
-pilot.&rdquo; Mr. Wright nodded and Curt proceeded.
-&ldquo;A good grounding in airplane construction will
-be fine. But&mdash;for the detective part&mdash;I think
-we ought to be very serious and consider it carefully.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Indeed you should,&rdquo; agreed Mr. Wright.
-&ldquo;There is a deeper mystery to be solved than
-appears on the surface.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see that,&rdquo; agreed Curt. &ldquo;And we must be
-sure that we will be a help and not a hindrance
-to you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fine lad!&rdquo; broke in Barney.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_34">34</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, we won&rsquo;t be a hindrance!&rdquo; Al was almost
-bouncing on the divan springs in his eagerness.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll watch, and catch whoever you want
-caught&mdash;maybe learn to fly a &lsquo;crate&rsquo; and hop off
-and fly after him and ride him down and force
-him to land&mdash;and there you are!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All the party laughed. Al, realizing his childish
-lapse into silly chatter, laughed, finally, himself,
-a little ruefully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see what Curt meant, now,&rdquo; he said, more
-quietly; but his excitement was hard to hold.
-&ldquo;But, anyhow, Mr.&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Barney!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anyhow, Barney, we will try to help. We
-can learn about airplane construction, and that
-will be fine; but we will give all our minds to
-watching and listening and doing whatever is
-wanted of us&mdash;we ought to form some kind of
-club or order, so we would have a head to get
-orders from father&mdash;especially if he is too busy
-to take part himself.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s sensible, even if it does seem boy-like
-to want to have a secret association,&rdquo; said
-the older detective.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then let&rsquo;s call ourselves what Barney called
-us&mdash;the Airboys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like that very much,&rdquo; objected Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, then, you pick a name.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think the game is more important than
-the name,&rdquo; observed the older detective.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_35">35</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh&mdash;but with a good name for our band, and
-a chief, we can know where we are,&rdquo; urged Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Curt. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s humor the
-youngster!&rdquo; Al grimaced at him, but subsided
-as Curt went on. &ldquo;We are detectives as well as
-airplane enthusiasts. Why not combine the two
-in the name of the order we are to form&mdash;something
-about the sky, and something about a
-police&mdash;detective squad&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve hit it!&rdquo; Barney interrupted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hit it? How?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sky Squad!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Crickety Christmas!&rdquo; Curt was as enthusiastic
-as Bob and Al became on hearing the
-words. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s it!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; Mr. Wright was patient, but a
-little annoyed. &ldquo;That being settled, we can take
-up the important matter of&mdash;the case!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
-<h2 id="c5">CHAPTER V
-<br /><span class="small">A DOUBLE PUZZLE</span></h2>
-<p>Barney stood up and looked at his watch:
-also, he frowned a little.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish we didn&rsquo;t have to waste the time,&rdquo; he
-objected. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve went through it all with you,
-Mr. Wright, and I wanted to take these lads
-along back to the plant in my car. I wanted to
-make it look like I just happened on them at
-the accident&mdash;the&mdash;well, the accident, and found
-they were interested in av-iation and brought
-them back to fill a couple of places in the plant.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But how can we solve a case if we don&rsquo;t
-know what it is?&rdquo; remonstrated Bob.</p>
-<p>To that Curt nodded and Al bobbed his head
-rapidly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;As a matter of fact,&rdquo; Barney turned to Bob,
-&ldquo;I think you would do a whole heap better if
-you went in to it blind, sort of. If you know
-all about it, you&rsquo;ll go out to the plant, all serious
-and acting like judges or detectives. If you take
-it the way our youngest friend, Al, does&mdash;as a
-sort of lark&mdash;you won&rsquo;t be suspected so quick.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
-<p>&ldquo;There is something in that,&rdquo; Mr. Wright admitted.
-&ldquo;Al&rsquo;s face is apt to give him away if
-he thinks it is really serious. Perhaps&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But all the same, Father,&rdquo; Bob declared,
-&ldquo;how will we know what to watch for? How
-will we know what to report?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Watch anything you see. Listen to whatever
-you hear. Report the whole business!&rdquo;
-Barney exclaimed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That does seem wise,&rdquo; Mr. Wright agreed,
-rising also. &ldquo;Boys, let&rsquo;s emphasize the Sky part
-of your order, and let the Squad side rest
-awhile. Barney wants to get back to the plant&mdash;he
-is the Manager, I meant to explain. He
-ought to be at the end of a telephone wire. Let&rsquo;s
-say only this: There is a double mystery. First
-of all, valuable parts have been missed, from
-time to time, from the plant. That is a minor
-matter, at present, but your first puzzle is&mdash;where
-have the missing parts gone and who took
-them? But, as I said, that is a minor affair,
-because&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Somebody has tampered with some of the
-finished crates,&rdquo; broke in Barney. &ldquo;Why, and
-who&mdash;that&rsquo;s the second puzzle!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_38">38</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Suppose you take that as enough for the
-present,&rdquo; suggested Mr. Wright. He turned to
-Barney. &ldquo;Now these three young lads are alert,
-obedient, and they will follow instructions to the
-letter, if you give orders,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;You
-have already seen how&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How quick they are in emergencies! Yes
-sirree! All right. I know I can depend on
-them. Sorry you can&rsquo;t investigate in person,
-Mr. Wright&mdash;but maybe this way will work out
-best. Anyhow, nobody at the plant will get suspicious
-of these boys. They won&rsquo;t have the
-brains of older men, like you and me, but they
-will have quick eyes and wide ears,&rdquo; he laughed,
-and beckoned, &ldquo;come on, lads.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A little disappointed, feeling that there was
-more behind the mystery than Mr. Wright had
-disclosed, but accepting his &ldquo;lead,&rdquo; Bob, Al and
-Curt caught up their caps from the hall rack
-and followed Barney into the car.</p>
-<p>As he drove toward the large manufacturing
-buildings, the administration offices and the assembling
-rooms, &ldquo;dope&rdquo; rooms and testing field
-that formed the Tredway Aircraft Corporation
-plant, Barney kept away from talk about the
-mysteries.</p>
-<p>Instead, he questioned them about the plan
-for their new organization, suggested secret
-codes, urged them to elect a &ldquo;Boss Pilot&rdquo; and
-really fired their imaginations to such a point
-that when they came in sight of the aircraft
-plant they had almost forgotten their disappointment
-at not being taken fully into his confidence.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, when they turned in at the
-gateway in the high board fence that kept curious
-wanderers out of the grounds, &ldquo;here we are,
-Sky Squad&mdash;ready to begin to learn how a crate
-is started, what the design means, and why certain
-things have to be planned for&mdash;and then,
-what goes into construction and why, how she&rsquo;s
-put together, and then, how to fly the finished
-crate.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sensing from his tone that he wanted them to
-concentrate, at least outwardly, on airplane construction
-and to let the other part of their activity
-be kept quiet, the three comrades agreed
-by assuming an interest that was by no means
-hard to pretend, when he took them into the
-offices, introduced them to some of the men
-working there, and explained that he was going
-to put them to work &ldquo;to learn to build crates
-from the prop to the tail skid.&rdquo; Barney, on the
-way, had learned their special interests. Therefore
-he put Bob into the engine assembling division
-where he could learn more about radial engines
-and the experiments being conducted with
-oil-burning types. Curt, who was methodical,
-cool and careful, was assigned to work, at least
-for awhile, in the wing assembling rooms. Al,
-being rather young for too much technical understanding,
-was assigned as helper to a &ldquo;rigger,&rdquo;
-who had been grumbling for some time
-at the laziness of his present assistant.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_40">40</div>
-<p>Everything was so new and so interesting
-that the trio forgot the seriousness with which
-Mr. Wright had assembled them that morning;
-but as they rode their bicycles toward home at
-lunch time, Bob imparted information that both
-startled them and turned their minds back to
-the serious business really underlying their
-work.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I heard some talk, this morning,&rdquo; Bob told
-his brother and Curt. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s serious, fellows!
-Missing parts aren&rsquo;t half the puzzle&mdash;and tampering
-with airplanes isn&rsquo;t all the rest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is, then?&rdquo; demanded Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They think, in the wing assembling room,&rdquo;
-Curt put in, &ldquo;that the airplane fell this morning
-because something went wrong with Mr.
-Tredway. The plant owner was delivering that
-craft himself. They all argue that he must have
-had a heart attack, or something of the sort,
-because the airplane was tested and gone over
-thoroughly. They say he must have been taken
-sick and lost control. Is that what you mean?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_41">41</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I heard some &lsquo;mechs&rsquo; saying they think he
-deliberately made away with himself because of
-money trouble or something they don&rsquo;t know
-about,&rdquo; added Al. &ldquo;Maybe trouble with his
-family, one says.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That isn&rsquo;t it,&rdquo; Bob said soberly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The talk in the engine plant was that some
-enemy deliberately tampered with that airplane
-because&mdash;because he knew the owner was to fly
-it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo; Curt was astounded, &ldquo;but, Bob&mdash;that
-would be&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; admitted Bob, very gravely, &ldquo;yes&mdash;it
-would!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That makes the puzzle about missing parts
-and the rest unimportant,&rdquo; Curt commented,
-thoughtfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But it still gives us two puzzles to solve,&rdquo;
-Al began.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; corrected Curt, &ldquo;not two separate
-puzzles&mdash;but a double puzzle, all the same.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A double puzzle? I don&rsquo;t quite see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all one problem,&rdquo; Bob explained to his
-younger brother. &ldquo;But it has two sections. First&mdash;was
-the airplane tampered with as an act
-against the aircraft corporation or against Mr.
-Tredway in person?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And second?&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al did not let Curt complete his deduction.
-Al had one of his own.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And second&mdash;who did it?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
-<h2 id="c6">CHAPTER VI
-<br /><span class="small">SUSPICION AND SUSPENSE</span></h2>
-<p>Full of their horrifying suspicions, Curt and
-Bob rode on. Al turned off on a side street to
-deliver a parcel at the home of his new boss,
-&ldquo;Sandy&rdquo; Jim Bailey, the rigger. Al wanted to
-&ldquo;make himself solid&rdquo; with the sandy-haired man
-whom he already liked and whose grumbling
-was over now that he had, as he said, &ldquo;a willin&rsquo;
-and brainy helper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Curt ate lunch with Bob. Both were disappointed
-when Bob&rsquo;s mother told them that his
-father had been called out of town on his case,
-accepted earlier.</p>
-<p>Riding back, to rejoin Al, who was waiting at
-the gate of the plant ground, Bob accosted his
-brother in some surprise.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t you going to have lunch?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had it,&rdquo; Al told Bob and Curt. &ldquo;I delivered
-that package for Mr. Bailey, and met his son,
-Jimmy-junior. He&rsquo;s just about my age, and
-an awfully nice fellow. He invited me, so I
-stayed.&rdquo; He dismounted and set his wheel inside
-the enclosure. &ldquo;You ought to see the model
-airplanes he builds. They&rsquo;re great!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_43">43</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, we can&rsquo;t stop to talk about them now.
-Mr. Barney Horton left word with the gate-man
-we are to come into the administration
-offices to see him.&rdquo; Bob led the way as he gave
-the information.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It will give us a chance to look over the
-office staff,&rdquo; Curt explained.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Be careful, Al,&rdquo; his brother warned him.
-&ldquo;See that you don&rsquo;t let anybody guess that you
-see any suspicious things. You show everything
-on your face, you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Barney greeted them in his private office and
-introduced them to Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s partner, Mr.
-Parsons, who was there.</p>
-<p>If his manner was somewhat abrupt and his
-mind preoccupied, Bob made allowances for
-that. The man was overcome by the mishap and
-its sinister outcome.</p>
-<p>His restless, seemingly uneasy, and almost
-furtive actions, however, were not so easy to
-account for. He seemed unable to meet the eyes
-of the comrades directly, and appeared to be
-nervous&mdash;even more than the circumstances
-justified, Bob thought.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_44">44</div>
-<p>Almost on top of the introductions he hurried
-out, &ldquo;To get out there where the airplane
-cracked up and see what&rsquo;s what!&rdquo; he explained.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He takes it mighty hard, he does,&rdquo; Barney
-told the youths. &ldquo;No wonder. He&rsquo;s Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s
-partner.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But there isn&rsquo;t any real certainty that anything
-terrible happened to Mr. Tredway,&rdquo; asserted
-Curt. &ldquo;He might have jumped clear.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, and maybe he was hurt, and managed
-to swim off to some part of the shore and wasn&rsquo;t
-able to go any further. They haven&rsquo;t searched
-every possible spot have they?&rdquo; Al was hopeful.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid they have,&rdquo; Barney replied.
-&ldquo;Furthermore, there are so many soft, muddy
-sink-holes in Rocky Lake&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you agree with what the people in the
-plant are saying?&rdquo; Al asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know, my lad. You see, it&rsquo;s a good
-idea, having you here. When I&rsquo;m around the
-people shut their mouths. But you hear things.
-What are they saying?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They think it&rsquo;s something worse than missing
-parts and damage done to the &lsquo;crates&rsquo;,&rdquo; Al
-answered and explained, calling on Curt and
-Bob for their versions of the talk.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_45">45</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Hm-m-m. Well, Al, I think&mdash;if I were you&mdash;I
-wouldn&rsquo;t listen to the talk around the plant
-too hard. Pick it up, of course, but don&rsquo;t go
-making any theories of your own out of it.&rdquo;
-Barney explained that people buzzed like a lot
-of flies every time anything happened, and that
-many of the less sensible ones, liking to be &ldquo;in
-the limelight,&rdquo; worked up almost idiotic theories.
-Usually, if they were accepted, they led to unjust
-suspicions, he argued.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Those scatter-brains only want an audience
-to listen to them,&rdquo; he declared. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d advise
-you to listen and let it go out the other ear.
-Otherwise you may get off onto the wrong notion.
-Better watch out for suspicious actions,
-and leave the theories to Mr. Wright.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But he&rsquo;s away,&rdquo; argued Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Only temporary, I guess. Anyhow, you can
-tell me what you hear and see, and let it go at
-that. I&rsquo;ll communicate with Mr. Wright, and
-if he thinks there is anything as bad as you say,
-I can tell you how to go on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; agreed Curt.</p>
-<p>Bob and Al added their own agreement to the
-suggestion.</p>
-<p>The designer and the engineering staff were
-introduced and several hours were devoted to
-discussions between them, for the benefit of the
-trio, about airplane design and the things that
-had to be taken into consideration.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_46">46</div>
-<p>&ldquo;If my young friends are going to learn airplane
-building,&rdquo; Barney asserted, &ldquo;it will be
-better if they know how important it is to figure
-stresses, safety margins, stability and so on, before
-ever a design gets on paper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought all those things came out in the
-tests, after the airplanes are built,&rdquo; Al contributed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; the designer said. &ldquo;The tests show
-us how well we figured and how good the designs
-are that we created. But we work everything
-out up here before ever an engine part is
-cast, a fuselage built or a wing assembled.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Any other way would be hit or miss,&rdquo; Bob
-agreed.</p>
-<p>While they learned the many sections into
-which an airplane design is divided, and how
-carefully every curve, streamline, distribution
-of weight, lift of wing and drag of body must
-be calculated, Bob decided that no one in the
-office&mdash;at least no one with whom he came in
-contact&mdash;was acting in any suspicious manner.</p>
-<p>Able to do nothing about the accident, the
-staff went on with its accustomed work, sadly,
-more seriously, to be sure, but steadily.</p>
-<p>However, when Bob returned to his engine
-assembling work, he met a new character, and
-one of whom he at once formed an unsatisfactory
-opinion.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_47">47</div>
-<p>By association of ideas Griff Parsons fell
-under his suspicion because the youth, about
-eighteen or nineteen, was the son of the man
-Bob had seen in Barney&rsquo;s office&mdash;Mr. Parsons.
-Griff, whose handclasp was flabby, whose eyes
-were even more shifty, whose manner was still
-more uneasy than his father&rsquo;s had been, did not
-impress Bob favorably at all.</p>
-<p>He had something on his mind, Bob decided.</p>
-<p>Assigned by the engine department foreman
-to help Griff fit piston rings onto the small pistons,
-to fit the piston assembly into the cylinders,
-before the final assembly was made, Bob
-learned much, and somewhat more about Griff
-than about the nice adjustments of machinery.</p>
-<p>If he turned suddenly, Griff almost jumped,
-having hard work to control his muscles.</p>
-<p>When he spoke of the morning&rsquo;s accident,
-Griff, with a scowl, told him to &ldquo;Keep your mind
-on what you&rsquo;re doing! That other ain&rsquo;t any of
-your business!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob had hard work not to show his antagonism
-to the gruff, snappish young man; he was
-grateful when a summons took him out into the
-yard.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_48">48</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I think it is a good idea to have you fellows
-treated as though all you are here for is
-to learn about airplanes,&rdquo; Barney greeted him.
-&ldquo;Your Cousin Langley is going to take up the
-sister ship to the cracked up Silver Flash, this
-afternoon, and I&rsquo;m sending all three of you with
-him. It will give you a chance to understand
-what the designer told you about how carefully
-he had estimated the shape and weight of the
-new type longerons and how some mistake that
-he hasn&rsquo;t been able to figure out yet makes the
-new crate tend to slip off sideways too easily.
-Langley will show you how he checks and reports,
-and then you will understand how every
-one of us works in harmony with every other
-one, to build our ships airworthy, safe and
-steady.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When they joined Lang, who was busy checking
-his dashboard instruments as the engine
-warmed up on the line, Bob, Curt and Al did
-not hook safety belts on. They had every confidence
-in Lang&rsquo;s ability to handle the ship, and
-they were more anxious to be near him so they
-could talk than to sit along the cabin sides unable
-to communicate their news to him over the
-roar of the engine.</p>
-<p>As soon as Lang sent the powerful engine
-into speed, racing down the runway into the
-wind, lifting the elevators to catch the propeller
-blast and tip upward the nose, then flying level,
-just above the ground for those essential few
-seconds in which flying speed was regained before
-the climb, Al opened the conversation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lang,&rdquo; he cried, pitching his voice to offset
-the noise about them, &ldquo;did you know what they
-are saying about the accident?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_49">49</div>
-<p>Langley nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This seems to be a test flight,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But
-I&rsquo;m really flying over to the airport, in the city
-suburbs&mdash;Barney wants you along to scatter
-and pick up talk there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the airport got to do with the mystery?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Barney thinks that mysterious crate we saw
-in the field might have something to do with it,&rdquo;
-Lang responded to Curt&rsquo;s question.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But Barney told us not to go building
-theories,&rdquo; Bob objected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s older, and better able to see things
-clearly,&rdquo; Lang reminded him. &ldquo;So we will climb
-pretty high, as if for test dives and slips, and
-skids, and barrel rolls&mdash;you&rsquo;d better be sure
-to snap your safety belts&mdash;not right now,
-though. This crate slips pretty sharp. But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think we&rsquo;re wasting time,&rdquo; declared Bob,
-&ldquo;flying to the airport.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; asked Lang.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the first place, the airplane was carefully
-hidden. No one at the airport would know anything
-about it. In the second place, I can&rsquo;t see
-how it could link in with the crash&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Unless its pilot was higher than Mr. Tredway,
-and flew over him and forced him down&mdash;&rdquo;
-Al was excited at his deduction. He felt puffed
-up.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We would have seen him,&rdquo; objected Curt,
-crushing Al&rsquo;s inflated vanity.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;By the way,&rdquo; Bob broke in, &ldquo;let&rsquo;s talk about
-something else. If Barney sent you for information,
-that&rsquo;s that. Never mind what we think.
-What I want to do is to get a line on that fellow
-named Griff&mdash;Griff Parsons.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; Lang swung in his seat, catching the
-shift of the crate with almost automatic movements
-of stick and rudder bar. &ldquo;What about
-him?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s the son of the superintendent, isn&rsquo;t
-he?&rdquo; asked Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Al broke in, &ldquo;and what&rsquo;s more, I suspect
-that &lsquo;super.&rsquo; He looks like the sort who
-could do tricky things. Did you see his eyes?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; agreed Curt. Lang cut the motor, and
-glided gently, to hear better.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But what has that to do with Griff?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob, surprised at the sharpness of Lang&rsquo;s
-tone, frowned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He looks like the same type as his father&mdash;same
-shifty eyes, same restlessness&mdash;furtiveness!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say! See here!&rdquo; Lang became suddenly
-angry. &ldquo;You let that young man alone and keep
-your unfair suspicions off him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is that so?&rdquo; Al was angry, too, all at once.
-&ldquo;Who are you to give us orders?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_51">51</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll let you know who I am if you go on suspecting
-innocent people. What&rsquo;s more, I&rsquo;ll have
-Uncle Fred yank you out of there so quick&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What makes you so hot under the collar?&rdquo;
-demanded Bob. &ldquo;What is it to you if we suspect
-Griff? Is he an angel that we have to keep
-our minds off him?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a mighty good friend of mine!&rdquo;
-snapped Langley.</p>
-<p>All of them were angry. Curt, not related
-to the others, felt that he ought to intervene between
-the quarreling cousins, but something in
-the unreasoning fury of Lang&rsquo;s next words
-stopped him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;See here!&rdquo; Lang forgot he was piloting an
-airplane, and swung around on his seat, his face
-working. &ldquo;If you keep on, if you bother Griff,
-or try to trail him, or anything&mdash;I&rsquo;ll have Uncle
-Fred yank you out of there so quick&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh! Look out!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Forgotten, the airplane, with no guide, answered
-automatically to the thrust of Lang&rsquo;s
-foot on the rudder bar as he whirled on his
-cousins. The shift of the rudder swung the nose,
-and Lang&rsquo;s instinct made him operate it to make
-the ailerons bank the ship, but she had almost
-lost flying speed, the all important velocity
-which gives the wings lifting qualities.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_52">52</div>
-<p>Sickeningly the airplane tilted. Al, Bob and
-Curt, not strapped fast, tumbled sidewise, and
-the unstable craft tipped down.</p>
-<p>Abruptly, realizing the slip and the danger,
-although they were quite high, Lang &ldquo;kicked
-rudder&rdquo; sharply.</p>
-<p>To his dismay, there came a dull, snapping
-thump and one end of the rudder bar worked
-free.</p>
-<p>The cable had either come loose or had
-snapped!</p>
-<p>And, with its unstrapped occupants in a huddle,
-on the side which was lowermost, the lower
-wingtip turned straight downward, the other
-pointed toward the sky, the windowed sides
-were in the position of floor and ceiling&mdash;and
-the airplane began to fall!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Three thousand feet,&rdquo; Lang&rsquo;s eyes consulted
-the altimeter. &ldquo;Three&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Momentarily he lost his &ldquo;nerve&rdquo; and faltered.</p>
-<p>Bob, on the instant, acted!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_53">53</div>
-<h2 id="c7">CHAPTER VII
-<br /><span class="small">IN THE FALLING &rsquo;PLANE</span></h2>
-<p>In an emergency, thoughts leap through some
-minds quicker than lightning crosses the sky.</p>
-<p>Bob&rsquo;s mentality was of that type. Whether
-his mind worked through what is called instinct,
-or whether he put together many things he had
-learned about airplanes, or whether he worked
-through a chain of reasoning from beginning to
-end in a fraction of a second does not matter.</p>
-<p>The important thing was his action.</p>
-<p>In an airplane which is falling with wingtips
-toward sky and earth, the ailerons which
-usually tilt it are practically useless, because
-it has no forward movement sufficient to bring
-the air against the leading edges of the wings
-for lift, or to press against the ailerons to cause
-them to function properly.</p>
-<p>Furthermore, when the ship is falling &ldquo;on its
-side&rdquo; the elevators which in level flight serve to
-lift or to drop the nose, are no longer elevators;
-they, because of the position of the ship,
-are really the rudders, while the rudder, because
-it is then parallel to the ground, assumes
-the position and functions of the elevators.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_54">54</div>
-<p>But Bob knew, in a flash, from the action of
-the ship, from the free movement of the rudder
-bar, that the rudder cable had come loose or
-had snapped.</p>
-<p>Bob knew, furthermore, that unless he could
-drop the nose, &ldquo;give her the gun,&rdquo; and thus&mdash;by
-partly diving instead of falling sideways, and
-by partly using the propeller pull&mdash;could regain
-flying speed, Lang could not get the craft
-under control and save them from a crash.</p>
-<p>There were seconds, not more, between them
-and eternity!</p>
-<p>That rudder must be operated.</p>
-<p>It must be done before they came too close
-to earth to make the maneuvers, necessary to
-a safe landing, possible.</p>
-<p>Even as he called to Lang, &ldquo;Give her the
-gun!&rdquo; his hand smashed through the thin side
-of the cabin wall, down where it came together
-with the sturdy, but light plates of the flooring.</p>
-<p>Because the airplane fell on its side, the side
-he smashed was under him, the flooring was at
-his side, acting as the sidewall.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_55">55</div>
-<p>He knew that if the lower of rudder cables
-in the ship&rsquo;s present position was broken he
-could get it there; if the upper one was severed
-its end would have dropped down, perhaps
-caught on a longeron or on a longitudinal fuselage
-brace; he might be able to catch hold of it.</p>
-<p>It took but a second to thrust his hand
-through the cabin wall, to grip the edge of a
-floor plate, to rip it from its temporary fastenings
-which were not completed until the tests
-made it sure that no further adjustments under
-the flooring would be necessary.</p>
-<p>Thus disclosed, he could see the under framework
-of that part of the fuselage.</p>
-<p>Braced so that his body would not crash down
-through a window, he looked, and grappled for
-the cable end. His fingers touched cable!</p>
-<p>For all the exigency of their desperate situation
-he tugged very gently and was glad. That
-cable was fast! It might lead to the elevators,
-the ailerons. Anyway it was not the right
-strand.</p>
-<p>Again he felt under the edge of what was in
-the ship&rsquo;s position, the plate above the one
-ripped away. His fingers touched a loose strand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re all right!&rdquo; he panted, grasping the
-plate and tugging it partly free so that his arm
-could go further in and secure in his gripping
-fingers the loose cable end.</p>
-<p>In the brief time that this had taken, Lang
-had obeyed the call for gas to be fed to the engine.
-Idling, it roared into its power pulsations.</p>
-<p>There was an instant of fear in Bob&rsquo;s mind.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_56">56</div>
-<p>If the cable he held were pulled and it depressed
-the rudder, which would act in their
-position as an elevator or &ldquo;flipper&rdquo; acts, all
-would be well. In that case, the propeller blast
-striking the rudder airfoil would push the nose
-downward, and the ship would begin to dive;
-then the air, rushing against the leading edge of
-the wings, would cause them to be operative,
-even in their sidewise position, and with the
-dive and the engine pull giving flying speed,
-they could then maneuver.</p>
-<p>But if the rudder went upward, it would lift
-the nose. Already deprived of all but the little
-speed the engine had picked up, the blast on
-the rudder, lifting the nose, would cause another
-stall, and they would perhaps fall too far
-to get the other side of the rudder cable before
-he could help it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got the end of the cable,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Set
-yourself, Lang!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lang, with a swift glance toward the windows,
-which faced the earth, saw the ground
-seeming to leap upward toward them. Above
-was the silent sky. There was a little margin
-of time&mdash;if&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pull easy!&rdquo; Lang shouted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pull easy!&rdquo; Instantly Curt relayed the message.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Easy!&rdquo; cried Al.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_57">57</div>
-<p>Bob tensed his muscles, braced himself, gave
-a gentle tug and held it.</p>
-<p>The nose lowered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hold it!&rdquo; shrilled Al, relaying Lang&rsquo;s relieved
-cry.</p>
-<p>The rudder had sent the nose a little downward,
-the drop changed into a dive.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can you pull the rudder further?&rdquo; The message
-came swiftly from Lang, through Curt and
-Al, to Bob, almost out of one mouth before the
-other said it, so quick was the response.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; Bob did so.</p>
-<p>Slowly the ship swung onto a more level keel,
-and while Bob clung with fingers that were
-growing numb from his excitement, the ship got
-flying speed, in a sort of descending spiral, the
-elevators could again be made to lift the nose
-as flying speed was attained, and the ship was
-in control.</p>
-<p>The signal to ease off did not come at once.
-Lang preferred to hold his present bank and
-circle, while he looked over through the lower
-cabin windows to sight their position.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_58">58</div>
-<p>In that brief time Curt, also keyed up, had
-located the loose end of the cable that led from
-the rudder bar; with a piece of strong twine
-he made a splice, securely reaved onto the loose
-end, led it to the free end in Bob&rsquo;s fingers,
-and, since the rudder was hard down and could
-be held there by grasping further along the
-cable, Bob shifted his grip until Curt was able
-to get his twine, doubled, fast on that part of
-the cable also. Then, while Lang held his rudder
-bar steady, Curt tightened gently until the ends
-of the severed strand were almost touching,
-made several knots that could not slip&mdash;and the
-entire control of the ship was in Lang&rsquo;s hands
-again!</p>
-<p>They did not feel like going on to the airport,
-but Curt, always cool, generally far-seeing,
-urged that they do so.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If we go back, we&rsquo;ll have to tell about this,
-and create new excitement and talk,&rdquo; he counseled,
-and Lang saw the good sense of the idea.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll go on, and land at the airport,&rdquo; he
-agreed, above the sound of his motor. &ldquo;After
-we get over our excitement we can think better.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When they got there, and Lang telephoned
-the aircraft plant, the trio, outside the booth,
-heard him ask for Griff.</p>
-<p>Moodily, sorrowfully, with common consent,
-they moved away.</p>
-<p>One and all they linked Griff&rsquo;s uneasiness and
-Lang&rsquo;s curious anger and immediate call to the
-one he called &ldquo;a very good friend.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was bad enough to suspect Griff. But Lang&mdash;Bob&rsquo;s
-cousin&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<p>That was dreadful!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_59">59</div>
-<h2 id="c8">CHAPTER VIII
-<br /><span class="small">WATCHFUL WAITING</span></h2>
-<p>Moodily walking back toward their airplane,
-around which a group of handlers and mechanics
-watched one assigned to make sure the cable
-splice was entirely safe, Curt spoke quietly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bob, maybe we should have waited to hear
-what Langley said to Griff.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; Bob was almost snappish. &ldquo;No!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hate to suspect your cousin of anything
-wrong,&rdquo; Curt assured the brothers earnestly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not any more than I hate it,&rdquo; Al retorted.
-&ldquo;But you&rsquo;ve got to look at what you see and
-hear what comes to your ears.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All the same,&rdquo; counseled Curt, hoping to
-lighten the burden of unhappiness for his
-chums, &ldquo;I&rsquo;d go slow. You know&mdash;they may be
-just friends, close ones. There may not be anything
-wrong about Griff. We are likely to be
-suspicious, because that&rsquo;s what we are there
-for.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But look!&rdquo; objected Al. &ldquo;The cable snaps.
-Now that&rsquo;s almost a spick-span new crate. That
-cable ought not to fray apart&mdash;it could never
-wear so soon. It was&mdash;filed or scraped.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But that doesn&rsquo;t involve Griff,&rdquo; urged Curt,
-hoping, if he lightened their suspicion of Griff
-the cousin who was his friend would be less suspected.
-&ldquo;He works in the engine department.
-Anyhow, he knew his friend, your cousin, would
-fly the &rsquo;plane. He&rsquo;d never&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sh-h-h!&rdquo; warned Bob.</p>
-<p>Langley, looking very glum, came up to them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I talked to Griff,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Told him what
-had happened. He was flabbergasted.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You ought to have reported to Barney&mdash;or
-to Mr. Parsons,&rdquo; Bob declared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why did Griff have to know anyhow?&rdquo; Al
-was impulsive and did not care if he started a
-fresh quarrel or not. The conclusion he jumped
-to was that an angry Langley would disclose
-&ldquo;secrets.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wanted to warn him against&mdash;you!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Langley walked away. But they did not let
-him get far ahead of them as they approached
-the airplane.</p>
-<p>The mechanic who had been in the cabin
-greeted them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Funny about that cable,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;How
-did it ever get so much use that it wore through?
-You must kick rudder every two seconds.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Was it worn through&mdash;or&mdash;&rdquo; Al began. Curt
-prodded his ribs very sharply. As Al became
-quiet Curt asked a louder question to distract
-the man from pursuing that &ldquo;or&mdash;&rdquo; and learning
-their fears.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Or did it break at the rudder bar?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It chafed against the transverse brace it ran
-under,&rdquo; the mechanic responded. &ldquo;They ought
-to have an eyelet or something for a guide&mdash;a
-small pulley would be best, with an eyelet to
-keep the cable from slipping out of the groove
-and chafing on the solid part of the pulley.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll report that,&rdquo; said Curt. &ldquo;A rudder is
-pretty important.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll say,&rdquo; replied the mechanic.</p>
-<p>The plates had been fastened back into their
-light frame, being of sturdy construction and
-not permanently attached, they had come away
-clean and were put back easily. Only the cracked
-hole in the panels gave outward evidence of the
-recent near catastrophe.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Suppose we let on that was an accident, that
-I put my foot through the panel,&rdquo; suggested
-Curt. &ldquo;Repairing it only means putting in a
-new section there&mdash;it ought not to cost much
-and I have some money in my savings account
-to pay for it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s all put together,&rdquo; urged Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not tell the truth?&rdquo; snapped Langley.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_62">62</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you want to find out who endangered
-you and the rest of us?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lang considered Bob&rsquo;s sharp phrase. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo;
-he said finally.</p>
-<p>The best way to do that, argued Curt, was by
-watchful waiting, not by putting the possible
-malefactor on his guard. &ldquo;They could,&rdquo; Al declared,
-&ldquo;see who makes the repair, and I can
-watch, being out near the &rsquo;planes, and see if
-anybody takes a special interest in the floor and
-the cables.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Langley agreed rather bruskly and went off
-to take up his inquiries about the brown airplane
-they had seen in the field.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Watchful waiting!&rdquo; repeated Bob, thoughtfully.
-&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a good slogan. Let&rsquo;s &lsquo;watchful
-wait&rsquo; to see what Griff does&mdash;and how Lang
-acts&mdash;and if either of them acts queerly when
-they are with Griff&rsquo;s father.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just what makes you suspicious of him&mdash;the
-father?&rdquo; Curt asked, more to check up his own
-theories than for information. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s
-partner, you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suspect him,&rdquo; Al declared, &ldquo;because he&rsquo;s
-the kind that looks suspicious, with his quick
-action and his sharp talk and his shifty eyes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And Griff is exactly the same in every way,&rdquo;
-supplemented Bob.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Then we have two suspects to keep tabs on,&rdquo;
-agreed Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Three,&rdquo; corrected Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s leave Lang out,&rdquo; urged Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right&mdash;we won&rsquo;t watch him. But it&rsquo;s bad,
-because we can&rsquo;t talk over plans and tell him
-everything. There will be&mdash;a&mdash;a&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Strained relationship,&rdquo; suggested Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; agreed Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, pretend to be the same as ever, but
-keep your ideas to yourself,&rdquo; Curt begged. &ldquo;And&mdash;we&rsquo;ll
-be watchful waiters.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>During the next week that was the only policy
-they would have been able to adopt. Nothing
-happened at all.</p>
-<p>Al still carried parcels, on occasion, for rigger
-Sandy Jim Bailey, and improved his acquaintance
-with Jimmy-junior.</p>
-<p>Mr. Wright&rsquo;s absence from town during the
-entire week prevented them from consulting
-that detective. The comrades were thrown on
-their own resources.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see that watchful waiting has gotten
-us very far,&rdquo; commented Al as they rode home
-for lunch, Curt with the brothers, at noon on
-Saturday. The day&rsquo;s work was over.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_64">64</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We know a little more than we did,&rdquo; Curt reminded
-him. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had talks with some of the
-boys I know, and I&rsquo;ve found out that the ones
-Griff associates with aren&rsquo;t thought well of.
-And Bob has trailed him, several evenings, in
-spite of Lang&rsquo;s warning to Griff, and Bob has
-told you that Griff always gets away on his
-motorcycle and goes somewhere that we can&rsquo;t
-locate yet. But we know his character isn&rsquo;t very
-high class, and his father still acts uneasy and
-preoccupied. So we have gained that much.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What good is it?&rdquo; Al was unconvinced. &ldquo;It
-doesn&rsquo;t say what happened to Mr. Tredway. It
-hasn&rsquo;t told us who is taking airplane parts. It
-doesn&rsquo;t explain who tampered with the rudder
-cable in the Golden Dart&mdash;or why.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Bob admitted. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s true, it doesn&rsquo;t.
-But it&rsquo;s the best we can do, for the present. And
-we never know when something may &lsquo;break.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s keep on learning airplane technique,&rdquo;
-suggested Curt. &ldquo;We know we&rsquo;ve gained there,
-anyhow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Al nodded. &ldquo;I can name the different
-parts of a biplane without stumbling over any
-of them.&rdquo; He did, &ldquo;&mdash;fuselage; engine; propeller;
-upper and lower wing; cockpit and its cowling;
-struts and landing and flying wires; stabilizer,
-fin, elevator, rudder; ailerons; tail skid; and
-landing gear that Sandy calls the &lsquo;trucks.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_65">65</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Correct,&rdquo; agreed Curt. &ldquo;And they comprise
-five groupings, each one having a special purpose&mdash;the
-fuselage, the supporting structure for
-everything else. Everything is attached to that.
-Then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The second group,&rdquo; Bob cut in, &ldquo;is the supporting
-surfaces, the wings. They sustain the
-whole weight in the air, and the flying wires
-take the lift of the wings as the air sustains
-them, and communicates it, with the struts helping,
-to the body.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, in a way,&rdquo; Bob changed the statement
-slightly. &ldquo;The flying wires are to take the stress,
-and if it wasn&rsquo;t for them the wings would tilt
-up at the ends or tips, like a &lsquo;V.&rsquo; The flying
-wires take the stress in flying the same as the
-landing wires take the weight of the wings in
-landing; without the landing wires, when the
-ship came down the wings would crumple down
-over the crate like the two slanting sides of a
-tent or like the &lsquo;V&rsquo; upside down.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Al showed his knowledge, &ldquo;and then
-there is the control group, the ailerons at the
-backs or trailing edges of the wings, to be
-moved upward or downward, to tilt the ship;
-and the rudder, to turn it sideways&mdash;and if it&rsquo;s
-flying on its side the rudder is performing the
-office of the elevators and they of the rudder,
-because when it&rsquo;s flying level the elevators are
-to tip its nose up for a climb or down for a
-glide; then there&rsquo;s the fin and the stabilizers
-that give it balance and help to hold the whole
-ship in whatever position it is placed by the
-movable controls I just mentioned.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_66">66</div>
-<p>&ldquo;And with all those you have a glider,&rdquo; agreed
-Bob. &ldquo;The engine, and its &lsquo;prop&rsquo; are for motive
-power, and the landing group, either wheels for
-the earth, or pontoons for the water, or both,
-combined, in an amphibian, for land-and-water
-use&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We know some things,&rdquo; agreed Curt. &ldquo;But
-we don&rsquo;t know where Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s body went&mdash;or&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What Griff is going to do with his Saturday
-afternoon,&rdquo; commented Bob. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going back
-to the plant, and pretend to finish up work, and
-see what happens there while it&rsquo;s supposed to
-be closed down.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The others agreed. Something might &ldquo;break.&rdquo;
-Actually, something did!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_67">67</div>
-<h2 id="c9">CHAPTER IX
-<br /><span class="small">STRANGE ACTIONS</span></h2>
-<p>Although the aircraft manufacturing plant
-observed a forty-four hour week, closing down
-on Saturday afternoons, when the three members
-of the Sky Squad returned, about two
-o&rsquo;clock, they were somewhat startled to discover
-that their &ldquo;suspects&rdquo; were there.</p>
-<p>Bob, entering the engine section, discovered
-Griff.</p>
-<p>The youth was surprised, &ldquo;caught in the act!&rdquo;
-mused Bob as he saw the youth, with furtive,
-hasty actions, completing the wrappings of a
-smallish package which he hurriedly slipped
-into his coat as he turned aside, trying to conceal
-his action from Bob and then, noting that
-he was caught, trying to pass it off as an ordinary
-action.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So that&rsquo;s where some of the smaller parts
-are going,&rdquo; Bob concluded, pretending not to be
-aware that anything was wrong.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_68">68</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Hello,&rdquo; he greeted. &ldquo;I thought I&rsquo;d come back
-and take that model engine apart, while no one
-was here to bother me, so I can get it straight
-in my head just how the valves operate.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yeah?&rdquo; Griff was inclined to be gruff, and
-as he tinkered around trying to pretend to be
-busy, but, to Bob&rsquo;s notion, watching the member
-of the Sky Squad, the latter gave every impression
-he could of ignorance that he was being
-supervised, studied, observed.</p>
-<p>Had Griff been intruded upon before he finished
-what he had been doing? Bob wondered
-as he took off the cylinder head of a small,
-roughly assembled model of a new design for
-a Vee-type motor they were working on. It appeared
-that Mr. Tredway had been &ldquo;all for&rdquo;
-the newer radial engines, while Mr. Parsons exerted
-all his influence to introduce the model in
-which the cylinders, in line, came together in a
-slanting fashion, like a &ldquo;V&rdquo; at the crankcase
-jointure.</p>
-<p>Bob took out pistons and pretended to examine
-the crankpin assembly.</p>
-<p>Griff watched covertly and appeared to be
-exceptionally uneasy.</p>
-<p>Curt entered from the wing assembly rooms.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hello, Griff.&rdquo; He nodded, paid little attention
-to Griff and went over to Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Interesting?&rdquo; he hinted. Bob nodded, and
-began to explain the parts.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_69">69</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I see.&rdquo; Curt, bent close, whispered his next
-words. &ldquo;Lang is out in the yard, working on the
-Golden Dart. He has the plates out and he
-is&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As he spoke Lang came in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say, Curt,&rdquo; he called, &ldquo;run up to the offices,
-and if Mr. Parsons or Barney is around, get
-me a new&mdash;er&mdash;length of cable, will you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Will they give it to me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Supposing there&rsquo;s nobody around. The office
-is closed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go to the supply room, on the ground floor.
-The watchman will let you get what you want.
-All you have to do is to write out a requisition
-form and put it on the spindle on the desk.
-You&rsquo;ll see it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can you get supplies as easily as that?&rdquo; Bob
-asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Surely! Why not?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Curt and Bob made no comment. The former
-went to execute Lang&rsquo;s request.</p>
-<p>In the offices, as he neared the open door
-of the bookkeeper&rsquo;s little cubby of a room, Curt
-heard two low voices. He hesitated. He was
-close enough to be able to recognize in the bent
-figure leaning over the other, with his back
-turned, the peculiarly checked brown suit which
-identified Mr. Parsons.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_70">70</div>
-<p>Evidently neither the partner nor his companion
-heard Curt, so absorbed were they in
-some discussion or comparison of figures.</p>
-<p>Curt, wondering why they were so engrossed
-in that work when the office was closed, and so
-absorbed that they had not heard him&mdash;he had
-not tried to snoop or to creep along the hall!&mdash;decided
-that it must be legitimate business, and
-that he would not disturb them.</p>
-<p>He went on beyond to the rear stairway and
-down, looking for the watchman.</p>
-<p>Al found him there.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How do you get into the supply room?&rdquo;
-asked Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;m trying to do. What&rsquo;s that
-you&rsquo;re carrying?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s an earth inductor compass,&rdquo; Al explained.
-&ldquo;You heard Sandy hail me as we came
-in.&rdquo; Curt nodded. &ldquo;He stayed on to check up
-my work,&rdquo; Al informed him. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m pretty raw,
-you know, and Sandy is so good-natured that
-he didn&rsquo;t want to see me get into any trouble. I
-was helping one of the mechs this morning&rdquo;&mdash;he
-had already picked up some of the slang,
-shortening &ldquo;mechanic&rdquo; as did those in the plant&mdash;&ldquo;and
-Sandy was going over the instruments
-I had installed. That Golden Dart is going to
-be used for an overseas hop, he says&mdash;and&mdash;&rdquo;
-he went close to Curt, &ldquo;Curt, I think Sandy has
-helped us to get a line on somebody else to suspect&mdash;about
-the stolen parts, anyhow.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_71">71</div>
-<p>&ldquo;How?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He called me over and told me, in a joking
-way, I had a lot to learn. And then he asked
-me if I knew anything about how this new type
-compass operated. I knew a little, but not much,
-and he showed me how little I knew. Curt&mdash;&rdquo;
-he was very serious&mdash;&ldquo;this is an old, broken
-thing. Look!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He indicated the failure of the parts to operate
-correctly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If we&rsquo;d let that get to the checker, Monday,
-I&rsquo;d have been suspected of getting away with
-the regular, real one. This must have been substituted
-by the mechanic who was on that job&mdash;the
-one I helped. Or else it was given out by
-the clerk who has charge of this room. Anyhow,
-Sandy says I ought to put in a requisition for
-another one, and then he is going to help me
-keep an eye out to see what happens on Monday.
-He wants to help us. I saw he was so
-afraid I&rsquo;d get the blame, and he&rsquo;s so mad about
-the way things are being taken that I let him
-in on our secret&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;About being detectives?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_72">72</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, only as far as saying we were crazy
-about aviation and had formed a sort of order
-we call the Sky Squad, and naturally, being
-honest, we saw how things were going here and
-wanted to do what we could to discover who is
-taking parts.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And what did he say about it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He said not to be too hasty to jump to conclusions.
-He told me that this substituting of
-the old inductor compass looked like the work
-of the mech, but it could be the supply clerk,
-or, maybe, somebody outside the plant entirely
-who had sent it in, boxed, in a new consignment.
-He said the safest way would be to put
-in a new requisition, then we&rsquo;d see who acted
-guilty when it was discovered. If the supply
-clerk is guilty he would never mention it for
-fear of being caught. If the mech is the culprit,
-the clerk will raise a howl about the exchange.
-If they are both innocent, you&rsquo;ll hear
-from both of them, and we can trace it to somebody
-who sent the consignment.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good stuff!&rdquo; agreed Curt. &ldquo;But didn&rsquo;t the
-mechanic notice it was a broken model of the
-compass?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He gave me the instructions how to assemble
-it and told me to be careful, and then went over
-to work on that small speed craft that Griff is
-testing out. Griff called him, so it looks all
-right. If the mech noticed this old compass,
-before he went home, he&rsquo;ll tell me, first thing
-Monday. If he knew about it and had taken the
-other, the good one&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_73">73</div>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll lay low. I see.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The watchman, making his rounds, observed
-the pair. Readily enough he admitted them to
-the supply department. Either he was of too
-unsuspicious a nature, being rather dull, to wonder
-or question; or he had been told by Barney
-that the youths were especially privileged. In
-either case he made no comment as they found
-the cable Curt wanted for Lang and the several
-extra inductor compasses, neatly boxed, among
-the stacked instruments in the shelves.</p>
-<p>Making out two of the slips he saw in a pad,
-and fixing them on the upstanding spike of a
-file, Curt handed Al his box and with the cable
-went to find Lang.</p>
-<p>Handing the strand to his chum&rsquo;s cousin, Curt
-decided to return to the office building to see
-what he might see. The excuse that he was
-studying the blue prints of an airplane would
-furnish reason for his presence in the office if
-Mr. Parsons was still there and asked.</p>
-<p>Bob, as Lang left, found Griff suddenly and
-unaccountably pleasant.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Funny about that cable,&rdquo; he remarked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure is,&rdquo; admitted Bob, watchful, quiet, but
-willing to follow Griff&rsquo;s unexpected lead.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_74">74</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lang says you had your suspicions of me,&rdquo;
-Griff grinned, quite pleasantly. Had he, Bob
-wondered, been &ldquo;tipped&rdquo; by Lang to cultivate
-friendship? Was there something really underneath
-the friendship of the partner&rsquo;s son and
-Bob&rsquo;s pilot cousin? Was there something else?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, I suppose when we got excited about
-that broken rudder pull, we thought of anything
-and everything,&rdquo; Bob grinned also.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you thought wrong, friend. Would
-you try to do any harm to your buddy, Curtis,
-if you knew he was to fly a certain crate?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Bob admitted, honestly and fervently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But some other pilot, jealous, maybe&mdash;might!
-Eh?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob had not in any way considered that possible
-solution. There was another test pilot,
-not as popular as his cousin. He gave the most
-serious attention, but Griff evidently felt that
-he had said enough, adding only: &ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t
-mean to accuse anybody. Let&rsquo;s forget it. Come
-on, let&rsquo;s forget motors and go up and have a
-look at them little fleecy clouds.&rdquo; He caught
-Bob&rsquo;s arm, after slipping the cylinder head over
-the pistons of the model with Bob&rsquo;s help.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ever fly a crate?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not solo!&rdquo; Bob admitted, &ldquo;but Lang has let
-me take the controls six or seven times when
-he used to take us up, before we came here
-to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_75">75</div>
-<p>&ldquo;To what?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To learn all there is about building airplanes,&rdquo;
-Bob continued without the flicker of an
-eyelash.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hm-m-m! Well, come on, kidlets! I&rsquo;ll take
-you up in the prettiest little crate you ever sat
-in&mdash;what&rsquo;s more, I&rsquo;ll give you some experience
-so you can fly them crates after you get wise
-to how they&rsquo;re assembled.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was evidently a genuinely friendly offer.
-If it had any hidden motives, Bob, on that sunny
-Saturday, with a gentle, warm vacation wind
-blowing, with bonny clouds drifting slowly, gave
-up watching and went in for air experience.</p>
-<p>Al, finally deserted by Sandy, who had errands
-down town, saw Bob and Griff warm up
-the little speed sportster he had been rigging.
-A little envious he watched the check-up, the
-trial spurts of the fast little engine, the take-off
-and the soaring of the handsomely designed
-craft. Then he went on to visit Jimmy-junior,
-whose father, Sandy, had given him a special invitation
-to spend the afternoon and to stay to
-dinner with Jimmy-junior.</p>
-<p>Lang, taking the cabin monoplane for a test
-of his rudder performance, called Curt to go
-along; so the trio lost interest in detective work
-and concentrated on enjoyment&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<p>Until evening!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_76">76</div>
-<h2 id="c10">CHAPTER X
-<br /><span class="small">A SUMMONS</span></h2>
-<p>While Griff, who handled an airplane expertly,
-was executing dives and slips, barrel
-rolls and figure eights, and a loop or so to demonstrate
-his skill, Bob, in the rear cockpit
-seat, wondered whether Griff was trying to
-frighten him.</p>
-<p>That was not his purpose, Bob decided, and
-he was more convinced when Griff, with a grin,
-turned, after waggling the stick and holding
-both hands up beside his head&mdash;the signal to
-&ldquo;take control.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob nodded.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_77">77</div>
-<p>Under Lang&rsquo;s tuition, in several airplanes,
-during tests, Bob had been permitted to handle
-the stick, rudder and throttle. He knew the elementary
-movements of straight flying and had
-some of &ldquo;the feel of the air&rdquo; which comes to any
-person who has the flying sense: that &ldquo;feel of
-the air&rdquo; is akin to knowing what the ship is
-going to do and, of course, sensing how to meet
-its various tendencies. When, during a climb,
-with too steep an angle, the controls begin to
-get &ldquo;loggy&rdquo; for an example, the born pilot, or
-the trained fellow with his air-sense developed,
-knows instinctively that the ship is about to
-stall, and automatically drops the nose and
-picks up flying speed.</p>
-<p>For awhile Bob, flying straight, or banking
-and turning, remained near the small flying field
-of the plant. He knew the signals with which a
-flying instructor guides his pupil, and, handling
-the dual control section in his own hands, and
-with his feet, he made simple maneuvers under
-Griff&rsquo;s direction, and seemed to please Griff by
-the quickness with which he caught the corrections
-signaled to him when he over-banked, or
-let the ship skid too long without catching the
-skid.</p>
-<p>The trial was over all too soon, and as Griff
-took over to shoot the field and set down, the
-most ticklish part of flying tactics, Bob felt a
-trifle sheepish for having suspected him.</p>
-<p>Griff was, really, quite a pleasant fellow.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_78">78</div>
-<p>However, Bob began to think. This sudden
-affable manner must have some reason behind
-it. Furthermore, he decided, Griff might be
-trying to win his confidence through the hidden
-flattery of telling Bob what a &ldquo;corking&rdquo; pilot
-he would make with a little more training. Bob
-knew that flying is taught carefully by any self-respecting
-school, that a thorough ground-school
-training and many hours of instructed
-flight will be followed by many solo flights, with
-intermittent check flights under the instructor&rsquo;s
-eyes, before a pilot is considered more than a
-student. Griff over-flattered.</p>
-<p>Bob, as he went home, where Al and Lang
-had preceded him, his cousin having stopped in
-for dinner, decided that he would accept Griff&rsquo;s
-offered friendship with a grain of salt.</p>
-<p>Al was there, of course, but no confidences
-were exchanged.</p>
-<p>Al had already eaten his dinner, with Jimmy-junior,
-after a fun-filled afternoon during which
-Jimmy had displayed his airplane models, had
-supervised many trials while he let his guest
-wind the sturdy rubber band motors and set the
-tiny, practicable controls of the toys. Furthermore,
-he had talked about the Sky Squad idea
-and had begged to be permitted to join, being
-air-crazy, as he put it. Al, promising to take
-the matter up with his brother and with Curt,
-had said he would do all he could to induce them
-to agree. He could not broach the matter, however,
-as Curt, Bob and Lang ate, because Lang
-was full of the excitement of receiving a telegram
-from Bob&rsquo;s and Al&rsquo;s father, the detective,
-from a city about fifty miles away, asking Lang
-to come to the city for a report and a conference.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_79">79</div>
-<p>Glancing at Bob, both Curt and Al saw that
-the older member of the secret membership was
-disturbed in his mind. Lang would not tell about
-Griff, as he visited his uncle over Sunday. That
-was what Bob was thinking, as Al and Curt
-saw. But Curt, looking at his watch, reminded
-Lang that he must stop stuffing down the filet
-of sole, a form of fish steaks of which he was
-extremely fond, if he expected to &ldquo;make&rdquo; the
-&rsquo;bus that would pass the house on the way to
-the city, and the railway station.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to fly!&rdquo; Lang declared, reaching
-for more fish.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not take us, then?&rdquo; demanded Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No. I&rsquo;m going to borrow Griff&rsquo;s sport model.
-More speedy and I want to check before it is
-turned over to him finally.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;d be room for one of us,&rdquo; Bob spoke
-up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No sirree!&rdquo; and they knew why Lang was
-so snappish.</p>
-<p>Bob pushed back his chair as Al and Curt
-sprang up. Lang, rising with his superior,
-amused grin at their anxiety, waved them back
-and kissing his aunt and thanking her for the
-fish he loved, he departed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going!&rdquo; said Bob, and explained excitedly
-to his mother that he had information of
-importance.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_80">80</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lang will tell it,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Explain to
-him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob&rsquo;s face fell, as did Al&rsquo;s. They were in a
-box!</p>
-<p>They could not explain to their mother that
-they suspected Lang, at the very least, of protecting
-Griff, a friend but not a desirable one.
-Whatever their own ideas they were none of
-them blabbers.</p>
-<p>Bob ran out on the porch, leaped down the
-steps, hopped on his bicycle and pedaled down
-the first side street. He was not entirely sure of
-his plans, perhaps he half intended to secrete
-himself in the fuselage of the &rsquo;plane, to go on as
-an unsuspected passenger; possibly he hoped
-to induce Lang to take him by getting there first.</p>
-<p>At any rate, as he neared the plant, he was
-glad he had come.</p>
-<p>Griff, at the gate, was in close communication
-with a mysteriously furtive stranger!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_81">81</div>
-<h2 id="c11">CHAPTER XI
-<br /><span class="small">A TRAIL AND A FLIGHT</span></h2>
-<p>Twisting his handlebars sharply, Bob sent his
-bicycle into brush at the end of the aircraft
-plant grounds where the fence turned; he
-wanted to get out of sight.</p>
-<p>The pair at the gate were having some sort
-of argument and probably had been too excited
-and absorbed to notice him, Bob decided.</p>
-<p>He dropped his wheel and crept back to the
-corner of the fenced enclosure to watch.</p>
-<p>From that position he could see the man, but
-only part of Griff&rsquo;s coat and an arm. The man,
-as he saw, was vigorously arguing. Griff must
-have been either pleading or arguing, Bob
-guessed, from the man&rsquo;s violent gestures and
-appearance of &ldquo;laying down the law.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Presently a small, flat package came into
-view.</p>
-<p>Bob recalled that he had seen Griff wrapping
-exactly that sort of parcel earlier.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_82">82</div>
-<p>The man took it, put it rapidly into his coat
-pocket, inside. With a quick look up and down
-the deserted highway he swung and crossed to
-a car parked on the opposite side of the road.
-Climbing in he speeded up his engine and drove
-away at constantly increasing speed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So they are dividing the &lsquo;spoils&rsquo;&mdash;or Griff
-was giving him money.&rdquo; Bob, unable to see
-Griff, not daring to emerge from his concealment,
-made the deduction under his breath.
-&ldquo;Well, now shall I follow that man? No, because
-his car is too fast. I can&rsquo;t catch him on
-my wheel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He decided to wait where he was, to see what
-would happen. To go in at once might alarm
-Griff. He might realize that Bob had been near
-enough to see what had occurred; he might
-suspect. Bob wanted to keep his presence unknown;
-Griff had already been warned by Lang;
-he would jump to the conclusion that Bob was
-watching.</p>
-<p>Almost at once Bob thanked his good sense
-for holding him concealed.</p>
-<p>Griff, as he watched, ran wildly out into the
-road and began to wave and shout after the
-receding car.</p>
-<p>Its driver did not turn around.</p>
-<p>Griff, while Bob stared, dashed back into the
-gateway. For a moment Bob wondered where
-the watchman was, then he saw the man, in a
-small ice-cream and soda water shack, a little
-distance down the road opposite the fenced
-property. Griff, Bob guessed, had offered to
-watch the gate while the man refreshed himself.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_83">83</div>
-<p>Bob hesitated. Where had Griff gone? What
-was he doing?</p>
-<p>The last question was answered by the pop-pop
-of a motor. Bob knew that Griff rode a
-motorcycle. He was getting it started. He meant
-to pursue that car for some reason. Something
-had caused him to want to talk again with the
-car driver, Bob mused.</p>
-<p>While he watched, keeping all but his head
-concealed, the motorcycle, with Griff mounted
-on it, came sputtering into view.</p>
-<p>Never glancing around, opening his throttle,
-he pelted down the road after the car.</p>
-<p>Bob, without hesitation, rushed his bicycle
-into the highway and pedaled after the motorcycle
-for all he was worth. Griff was too intent
-on his purpose to notice, he felt sure.</p>
-<p>It would be a losing race, Bob feared, unless
-Griff overtook that rapidly receding car very
-soon. Muscles could not endure against a machine!
-Nevertheless Bob rode as fast as his
-pedals would turn.</p>
-<p>As he sent the wheels spinning along it
-crossed his mind that Lang would be arriving
-at the plant almost any moment but he kept on
-all the same.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_84">84</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It will take Lang awhile to warm up the
-engine, and, anyway, if I don&rsquo;t go with him I
-know another way to communicate with father,&rdquo;
-he decided.</p>
-<p>The car was almost out of Bob&rsquo;s sight, the
-motorcycle was rapidly overtaking it.</p>
-<p>At that instant Bob&rsquo;s heart almost stopped
-beating!</p>
-<p>Far ahead, on a cross road, he saw a huge
-truck come into view. It was not only between
-the car and its pursuer; it was also well onto
-the road and almost directly in front of the
-motorcycle.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Griff!&rdquo; Bob shouted, without thinking that
-his voice would never be heard. He instinctively
-cried a warning. If the rider had his head low
-over his handlebars!&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<p>His coaster brake jammed on, Bob slowed,
-alighted, his muscles refusing to function for
-the instant.</p>
-<p>But during that instant Griff evidently saw
-the huge obstacle and swerved. In making the
-wild curve to go around the rear of the truck
-Bob saw the youth and cycle go off the road into
-the ditch.</p>
-<p>Evidently unaware that anything had happened
-the truck driver kept on down the cross
-road. Bob, remounting, pedaled for all he was
-worth toward the scene of the accident. As he
-rode swiftly he saw other figures approaching.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_85">85</div>
-<p>At the point where the motorcycle lay on its
-side, he was met by Al and Curt, who had been
-approaching from the opposite way, up the side
-road. &ldquo;We decided to come and see Lang hop
-off,&rdquo; Al explained as the trio ran toward Griff.</p>
-<p>He was sitting up, a little shaken, a little
-dazed, when they approached. Bob, seeing that
-he did not appear to be seriously hurt, caught
-Curt&rsquo;s arm. &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; he said quickly, &ldquo;I
-want to go with Lang. Don&rsquo;t say I was following&mdash;you
-know&mdash;keep it quiet. I must get to see
-father and tell him&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right. Don&rsquo;t waste any time. Get out
-of sight. I&rsquo;ll tell Al.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob hurried off, as though he was in search
-of aid, and he felt, as he pedaled back toward
-the field, that Griff probably had been too much
-shaken to notice that Bob had come from the
-direction he had been riding, or deduce that Bob
-had followed him.</p>
-<p>The watchman, and several others from the
-soda stand came running down the road. They
-called out as he approached and with a brief
-explanation that there had been a &ldquo;spill&rdquo; but
-that he thought it was not serious, Bob rode on.</p>
-<p>He found Lang riding toward the plant, and
-swung his bicycle in at the gate and set it
-against the fence.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the trouble, up there?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_86">86</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Griff took a spill going around the back of
-a truck that came out of the side road. I think
-he&rsquo;s all right.&rdquo; Bob called out his answer to
-Lang&rsquo;s shouted inquiry and saw his cousin ride
-on to investigate.</p>
-<p>Bob, with some idea in his mind that he might
-crawl into the fuselage of the small speed
-&rsquo;plane, and, thus stowed away, be carried to the
-city from which his father had telegraphed,
-changed his mind. The close, smothery fuselage,
-subjected to the most violent rolling and heaving
-of the airplane&rsquo;s progress, would probably
-make him ill. He preferred to stay outside, to
-see what happened, and to compel Langley to
-take him as a passenger.</p>
-<p>Watching from the gateway he saw that Griff
-had been lifted to his feet and had apparently
-found himself only rather badly shaken. This
-was Bob&rsquo;s decision because he saw a passing car
-driver help the shaken youth into his car, tumble
-the motorcycle out of the grass and turn it over
-to the plant watchman to be trundled back, and
-drive off to take Griff home, it seemed.</p>
-<p>Bob met Lang beside the propeller of the
-little speed craft.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get the ignition key from Griff?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I did.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Climb in. I&rsquo;ll give the prop a twist for you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Langley got himself set.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_87">87</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Gas on?&rdquo; called Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gas on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Switch off?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Switch off!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob gave the propeller a couple of revolutions.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Contact!&rdquo; he cried, leaping aside to avoid
-the flailing, knife-like edges of the blades. The
-engine caught on the touch of spark to compressed
-gas mixture.</p>
-<p>While Langley opened the throttle and
-warmed up his engine, Bob unconcernedly began
-to clamber into the after cockpit seat.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not going!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, I am.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get out of there!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Listen, Lang,&rdquo; Bob leaned close to Lang&rsquo;s
-ear to carry his message above the noise of the
-radial engine, &ldquo;which suits you best? To have
-me with you, to tell dad what I know before
-your face&mdash;or to have me telegraph him while
-you&rsquo;re on your way, and let you explain to him
-what I have to tell?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lang, at first furious, presently saw the logic
-of Bob&rsquo;s position.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh&mdash;all right!&rdquo; he grunted and &ldquo;gave her
-the gun&rdquo; in somewhat vicious spurts.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_88">88</div>
-<p>Bob, fitting on the &ldquo;crash helmet&rdquo; kept in the
-&rsquo;plane by Griff for him that afternoon, and the
-leather jacket and gloves, smiled.</p>
-<p>He was progressing as a Master Sleuth, doing
-his share creditably for the Sky Squad.</p>
-<p>As soon as the engine was sufficiently warm
-and methodical Lang had checked all his instrument
-readings, the trim little ship taxied down
-the smooth field to head into the wind which Bob
-saw, from the &ldquo;windsock&rdquo; blowing out from its
-mast on the office building, was from the south,
-a nice, light, Summer evening breeze.</p>
-<p>The watchman, coming in, put aside the
-slightly damaged motorcycle and strolled across
-to the hangars, into one of which he stepped
-to throw a switch, lighting the flood light by
-which they could see to take off. He did not
-question Lang&rsquo;s right to use the craft because
-Lang must have gotten its ignition key from
-Griff, its owner.</p>
-<p>As they took the runway, and increased speed
-to the throaty roar of the engine, Bob felt that
-sense of the ship getting &ldquo;light&rdquo; which indicates
-to the pilot that she is ready to take the air. He
-saw the elevators tip, glancing around swiftly
-to check the safety of the way ahead, and then
-saw the lighted earth dropping, contracting into
-a spot of vivid light against a field otherwise
-dark; then the watchman shut out the floods to
-avoid confusing them in the air, and the ship
-climbed into dark night.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_89">89</div>
-<p>They had climbed several thousand feet and
-were headed into the north, so that Lang could
-&ldquo;pick up&rdquo; the lights of the airway along which
-his night flying would be easiest, when Bob saw
-him double unexpectedly.</p>
-<p>For an instant the craft&rsquo;s nose went almost
-straight down and Bob was glad he had
-strapped himself in; then Lang evidently caught
-control, and the stick, thrust forward as he
-doubled, with some unexpected convulsion or
-&ldquo;stitch,&rdquo; was pulled back and brought the ship
-out of the dive gradually.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What happened?&rdquo; Bob screamed above the
-engine noise, the song of wind through wires
-caused by their dive.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cramp!&rdquo; called Lang, cutting the gun as he
-held a glide for a moment, turning a white face
-toward Bob. &ldquo;Listen. Bob&mdash;oh!&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He bent again. &ldquo;The fish&mdash;too much fish&mdash;&rdquo;
-Bob guessed, and had he known that Lang&rsquo;s delay
-in reaching the field had been due to further
-refreshments, he would have said, &ldquo;Fish&mdash;and
-ice-cream!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At least that was a far more reassuring
-thought than Bob&rsquo;s first idea, that some one had
-tampered with some control of this craft.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh&mdash;&rdquo; Evidently Lang was very ill.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_90">90</div>
-<p>Suddenly, as he saw his companion in the
-forward seat double, Bob felt the stick waggle
-against his leg.</p>
-<p>In an interval between his spasms of violent
-pain, Lang held up his two hands alongside his
-helmet.</p>
-<p>It was a signal for Bob to take control.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right!&rdquo; he called, and, with a steady
-hand, he clutched the stick of the controls in his
-cockpit, set his feet against the rudder bars, and
-eased his throttle open to regain speed.</p>
-<p>He was not in the least nervous or flurried.
-He pitied Lang&rsquo;s cramped stomach and evident
-suffering, but did not permit it to influence his
-steady nerve. He had been given enough lessons
-to know how to hold the craft in level
-flight. While night flying was not as safe and
-easy as daytime work, he knew that if he followed
-the ribbon of lighted highway that ran
-toward the beacons of the nearest airway, he
-could always &ldquo;set down&rdquo; on the asphalt, if worst
-came to worst, and if he did smash the trucks,
-the landing gear, he did not think he would do
-any more serious damage.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_91">91</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Had I better set down?&rdquo; he shouted, gliding
-for speed as he cut out the engine roar. Lang
-shook his head and gestured forward. Evidently
-he was not afraid of any immediate physical collapse
-and preferred to go on flying to see if he
-would recover. Bob held on.</p>
-<p>He picked up the beacon and, watching
-Lang&rsquo;s gestures, swung in a long, banked curve,
-to head across the wind down the unconfined airway,
-whose second beacon he could see, far
-away.</p>
-<p>By habit looking around to be sure no other
-ship was close as he turned, Bob, startled, saw
-the flying lights of another craft pursuing.</p>
-<p>It must be pursuit! It came from the direction
-they had come. It turned as they turned,
-only in a more sharpened bank, so as to cut off
-part of the distance, it seemed to Bob, to close
-the gap between them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lang!&rdquo; he shouted, and waggled the stick.</p>
-<p>Lang looked around.</p>
-<p>Bob&rsquo;s arm pointed backward and upward.</p>
-<p>Lang, leaning out of the cockpit, to see around
-the wing-tip, stared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The cabin &rsquo;plane!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;I know it.
-Golden Dart.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;After us?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But as Bob opened the throttle to regain flying
-speed without having to dip down too low,
-there came from the other ship a red flare.</p>
-<p>It was, as Bob realized, a signal&mdash;not of
-danger but of command.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_92">92</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Land!&rdquo; it commanded.</p>
-<p>Bob looked at Lang.</p>
-<p>Lang considered. As he hesitated Bob guessed
-his thoughts. Some one from the small field,
-some member of the plant staff, probably Mr.
-Parsons, finding the &rsquo;plane belonging to Griff
-gone, and hearing from the watchman who had
-taken it, had taken off in the cabin monoplane
-to stop what he probably considered a prank of
-Lang and Bob&mdash;some night-flying lark.</p>
-<p>What would Lang say? Set down? Or&mdash;go
-on?</p>
-<p>They could outfly that cabin ship in the
-speedy, easily maneuvered sport craft&mdash;or, they
-could, with Lang at the controls. But Lang was
-badly upset in his stomach. What would he decide?
-Bob mechanically looked around for the
-best spot to set down.</p>
-<p>When he looked up again his heart leaped
-with exultation.</p>
-<p>Lang&rsquo;s arm pointed straight ahead!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go on!&rdquo; he gestured.</p>
-<p>Bob opened the throttle joyously. Here was
-adventure, pursuit, thrill enough to suit anyone!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_93">93</div>
-<h2 id="c12">CHAPTER XII
-<br /><span class="small">THE CHASE</span></h2>
-<p>Rapidly Bob considered the situation.</p>
-<p>The speed craft he and Lang occupied had
-much the best of it on a straight flight, but,
-against that, he had to set his inexpert handling.
-The smaller craft could out-climb, out-maneuver
-the cabin ship but he had no experience in stunting,
-especially dangerous at night.</p>
-<p>Therefore Lang&rsquo;s decision was the safest one.</p>
-<p>To try to make a landing, Lang evidently concluded,
-was not wise. He felt that he could take
-over the controls before that need arose, Bob
-guessed.</p>
-<p>A new complication came, however.</p>
-<p>If the cabin ship had the disadvantage of being
-slower, she had gained an offsetting advantage
-before they saw her. She was much higher
-in the air than their craft; she could dive, if her
-pilot chose, and thus close the distance between
-them&mdash;maybe come down &ldquo;on their tail,&rdquo; or ride
-them to earth, if her pilot proved to be determined
-to force them to land.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_94">94</div>
-<p>Accordingly Bob opened the throttle wider,
-and slightly elevated the nose to climb.</p>
-<p>Lang, peering upward and to the rear, made
-a violent, vigorous gesture.</p>
-<p>Bob, reading it, understood.</p>
-<p>He did not question. Lang called for a sideslip!</p>
-<p>Instantly Bob manipulated ailerons and rudder
-correctly and felt the wind on the cheek
-toward the lower side of their bank, telling him
-they were slipping.</p>
-<p>Then, applying rudder and other controls to
-check the slip, dropping the nose again to pick
-up flying speed quickly, he saw why the maneuver
-had been executed. The cabin airplane
-had begun to dive down from above them. Lang,
-having seen it, anticipated. He had not wanted
-to wrest away control&mdash;too dangerous. He had
-risked the signal, and Bob had executed his
-order accurately.</p>
-<p>He was glad, all the same, when Lang shook
-the stick, tapped on his own helmet to sign that
-he wanted the controls.</p>
-<p>Bob relinquished them thankfully enough. At
-night, in strange surroundings, in an airplane
-he had only handled a little, he was not foolish
-enough to wish to risk neck and limb&mdash;far less
-Lang&rsquo;s than his own!&mdash;by trying to outfly a
-pilot who evidently meant to be vicious, to resort
-to war tactics if they did not obey his
-signals.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_95">95</div>
-<p>Lang, somewhat recovered, took over and
-Bob, delighted, watched his expert manipulation
-of the splendid little ship. She answered his
-every command. He barrel-rolled out of the
-way of any immediate danger, thus leaving the
-cabin craft well to one side. He started up a
-loop after a swift dive, but at its top he executed
-half of a barrel-roll, and since the top
-of the loop had the nose in the direction opposite
-their course, the half-roll put the craft on
-its level, upright course, but going directly away
-from the former one.</p>
-<p>The cabin ship could not be stunted that way,
-or else its pilot against his will was compelled
-to recognize superior tactics.</p>
-<p>At any rate, as Lang swung around in a wide
-circle, slowly climbing at the same time, the
-other craft seemed to be heading uncertainly
-back.</p>
-<p>It came around, however, as soon as Langley
-straightened out on the former course along the
-airway; but they rapidly outflew it and when
-they landed at an airport in the distant city
-suburbs, the cabin ship was nowhere in sight.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_96">96</div>
-<p>It was nearly eleven o&rsquo;clock at night when
-Bob and Langley were ushered up the hotel
-elevator and along a corridor and into Mr.
-Wright&rsquo;s rooms.</p>
-<p>The detective, who had been apprised, long
-distance, by his wife, that his nephew was flying
-to keep the appointment, was waiting.</p>
-<p>Hardly had his surprise at Bob&rsquo;s presence
-been expressed and a late supper for the air-hungered
-pair been ordered than another visitor
-was announced.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So this is where you were bound for!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To Bob&rsquo;s amazement, Barney spoke.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you leave word that you were
-coming here?&rdquo; he said, rather sharply. &ldquo;We
-could all have come together.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We didn&rsquo;t know you were on your way
-here,&rdquo; said Langley.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We thought you were chasing us,&rdquo; Bob
-added.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So I was. The watchman said you hopped
-but he didn&rsquo;t say where to. I was coming over
-to confer with Mr. Wright, but I thought Lang
-and you, Bob, were joy-riding. So I signaled
-you to land and when you didn&rsquo;t I decided to
-scare you into setting down&mdash;but it failed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He chuckled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I ought to know better than to think I could
-outfly Lang,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Well&mdash;if you&rsquo;ve come
-with information, it&rsquo;s all right. We can have
-a conference, all together.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_97">97</div>
-<p>They did so, over the dinner. Lang listened
-to Bob&rsquo;s recital of the latest developments about
-Griff, with growing anger, until he saw Barney&rsquo;s
-face.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good boy, Bob,&rdquo; commented Barney. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
-sort of had a notion in my head for some time
-about&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Griff?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. I&rsquo;ve thought he was the one who&rsquo;s
-crossed the wires on us and short-circuited the
-whole plant. So he divided with somebody, did
-he? Well&mdash;he must have gotten it from somebody
-higher. Have you thought about?&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;His father?&rdquo; broke in Bob. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;we have!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_98">98</div>
-<h2 id="c13">CHAPTER XIII
-<br /><span class="small">THE DETECTIVE&rsquo;S THEORY</span></h2>
-<p>More startling than Bob&rsquo;s fresh information
-was the revelation given by Barney, the information
-which had brought him, flying, to consult
-the detective he had engaged to solve the
-puzzling case.</p>
-<p>All that Bob had to tell was the suspicious
-act of the youth, Griff.</p>
-<p>Barney, because it was so late, gave only a
-hint; but what he said caused a great deal of
-sleeplessness on Bob&rsquo;s part, at least.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We got the wrecked airplane up,&rdquo; Barney
-told them all, that night. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had it hauled in
-and dismantled.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He paused to give his next words more emphasis.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There wasn&rsquo;t one thing wrong with that
-crate!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When, during their Sunday morning conference,
-he amplified his statements, the mystery
-deepened.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_99">99</div>
-<p>Dismantled, thoroughly examined, by Barney,
-in person&mdash;he did not trust any subordinate in
-so important a matter&mdash;the airplane revealed
-nothing wrong, either with its engine, with its
-wings, or with its controls!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But it fell,&rdquo; commented the detective.
-&ldquo;What, do you imagine, caused the crash?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I give it up.&rdquo; Barney was unable to make a
-theory. &ldquo;I hired you to do the doping out of
-that! I give you the facts. You do the rest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bob,&rdquo; his father turned to the youth, &ldquo;have
-you jotted down all the suspicious things you
-mentioned, as I asked you to do?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob nodded and handed over a paper.</p>
-<p>After consulting it and comparing it with a
-sheet on which he had written, Mr. Wright
-looked up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is what we know,&rdquo; he began. &ldquo;For several
-months, according to Barney&rsquo;s original explanation,
-when he gave me the case, airplane
-parts had been missed. Not very many, but
-some. We have to decide how they are taken,
-and then find out who does it and what happens
-to them, how they are disposed of.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How about the man who gives out the instruments
-and such?&rdquo; asked Langley quickly.
-Bob thought he said it to forestall comment
-about Griff, &ldquo;or the mechanics whom Al had
-been told by his rigger boss were possible culprits?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_100">100</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We haven&rsquo;t been able to watch everybody,&rdquo;
-Bob said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That point is not important,&rdquo; Mr. Wright
-declared. &ldquo;It is the beginning of what we know,
-and can wait. Our second bit of knowledge&mdash;and
-more important this is, too&mdash;is that for
-several months before the seemingly fatal crash,
-accidents had occurred to every airplane that
-was sent out of the plant. Buyers complained
-by letter, and only by good luck was it possible
-to avert several tragedies.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know it had been as bad as that,&rdquo;
-Bob commented.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It had,&rdquo; Barney nodded. &ldquo;We wanted you
-three boys to start in with open minds. Remember?
-We didn&rsquo;t tell you details; but now it&rsquo;s
-gone too far for taking things easy. We&rsquo;ve got
-to get to work.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right,&rdquo; agreed the detective. &ldquo;The third
-point we know is that Mr. Tredway was very
-anxious to hold up the good name of his corporation,
-and that he decided to take this last
-ship to its owner in person, after Lang, here,
-gave it&mdash;&rdquo; he paused, noticing Bob&rsquo;s expression.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know what&rsquo;s on your mind,&rdquo; Langley said,
-turning to his younger cousin. &ldquo;I was the one
-who tested and checked that Silver Flash. I
-said she was O.K. before the take-off. But,&rdquo; his
-manner was defensive, &ldquo;if you think&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_101">101</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think,&rdquo; Bob asserted. &ldquo;For a minute
-I did&mdash;but Mr.&mdash;but Barney says not a thing
-was wrong about the Silver Flash. So, of
-course, there&rsquo;s nothing to think.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Besides,&rdquo; said Barney, &ldquo;we none of us knew
-it would be the Silver Flash. The buyer couldn&rsquo;t
-make up his mind, till almost the last minute,
-about that pair of twins. One time he&rsquo;d come
-and say he liked the silver, then he wanted the
-copper-gold finish. Both crates were identical
-except for that. I thought, myself, he was going
-to take&mdash;well, we all thought the last time he
-came he wanted the gold one. But I guess he
-telegraphed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, then, that explains one thing,&rdquo; said
-Bob. &ldquo;If everybody thought he wanted the
-Golden Dart, that&rsquo;s why the rudder rope was
-frayed off in that ship.&rdquo; Barney, who had been
-told everything, nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he admitted, &ldquo;but that don&rsquo;t explain
-why the other ship&mdash;sound and perfect&mdash;crashed.
-Unless&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Unless&mdash;what?&rdquo; Bob, Lang and the detective
-were interested, but Bob voiced the question.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Unless Mr. Tredway did it on purpose&mdash;crashed!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why should he?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_102">102</div>
-<p>To Mr. Wright&rsquo;s quiet inquiry Barney answered
-readily enough.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I run the plant,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;The deep part
-of the money end, and all that is none of my
-business. But I happen to know there&rsquo;s some
-trouble about money, or losses, or something
-like that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You think&mdash;&rdquo; Mr. Wright bent forward,
-&ldquo;&mdash;Tredway, because he was in some financial
-difficulty, or deeper trouble, might have done
-away with himself?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; defensively Barney replied, &ldquo;how else
-do you account for a diving ship, placed so careful,
-on the lakeside, close to shore, and only
-damaged as little as possible, and then not from
-anything being wrong in her?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob saw that his father was very thoughtful.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you think he ran off and hid, afterward?&rdquo;
-he demanded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They didn&rsquo;t find hide nor hair of him, did
-they? Dredging, or searching didn&rsquo;t locate anything!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s so!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;However,&rdquo; the detective objected, &ldquo;that
-doesn&rsquo;t explain about the frayed cable, or the
-other things done to airplanes to damage the
-reputation of the corporation; that is my theory
-about the motive.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_103">103</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Barney admitted. &ldquo;If you&rsquo;ve got a
-theory about the motive for damage to crates,
-maybe you&rsquo;ve got one about the whole affair.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it, Father?&rdquo; Bob was eager to hear.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There are three crimes to investigate,&rdquo; Mr.
-Wright said slowly. &ldquo;The accidents, the thefts,
-and the&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you still think Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s disappearance
-was due to a crime?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Lang, I do.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What sort of crime? Nothing is wrong with
-the ship he used, Barney says,&rdquo; objected Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A very strange one,&rdquo; his father replied. &ldquo;Remember&mdash;there
-was a brown airplane hidden in
-a field. It was gone&mdash;before the accident. My
-theory is that either some one he feared, or
-some one who hated him, took off in that brown
-airplane, overtook or waited for Mr. Tredway&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rode him down!&rdquo; gasped Barney. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d
-thought of that!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; agreed the detective, &ldquo;let&rsquo;s drop all
-worry about the less important thefts, the deliberate
-damage to the airplanes&mdash;and look for
-the man who flew that brown airplane!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Will we?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob asked it as a question, then he repeated
-it as an exclamation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Will we!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_104">104</div>
-<h2 id="c14">CHAPTER XIV
-<br /><span class="small">THE SKY SQUAD DISOBEYS</span></h2>
-<p>Both Curt and Al listened eagerly while Bob
-related the details of the Sunday conference
-with the detective.</p>
-<p>He gave them the information imparted by
-Barney.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not a thing wrong with the Silver Flash?&rdquo;
-repeated Al. &ldquo;Then that brown crate must have
-driven it down&mdash;but why?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe some revengeful pilot Mr. Tredway
-had discharged,&rdquo; suggested Curt. &ldquo;At any rate
-there must have been some motive to make a
-man do anything as terrible as that. But how
-are we going to locate the brown ship?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I still have that message we discovered on
-the seat, and then picked up in the dewy grass.&rdquo;
-Al produced it, dry but smudged and crumpled,
-from his pocket card and identification case.
-&ldquo;We might compare the writing with the&mdash;well,
-say with the books in the aircraft plant, and
-with everybody&rsquo;s writing.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_105">105</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lang didn&rsquo;t get any information when we
-made inquiries about the brown craft at the
-nearest airport, did he?&rdquo; Lang, who was quite
-affable and good-humored, with Griff and his
-actions forgotten in the new search, answered
-Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, nothing more than you did. They&rsquo;d
-never heard of the ship I described.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>You</i> have got me more puzzled than this
-whole mystery has,&rdquo; Al said, grinning. &ldquo;Lang,
-the way Bob tells it, you must have been next
-door to ordering the undertaker, and then you
-were flying, stunting, as if you&rsquo;d never eaten
-fish and ice-cream.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s psychologically explainable,&rdquo; Lang
-liked to use long words, to indicate his superiority.
-&ldquo;Under the stimulus of&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never mind!&rdquo; Al threw up his hands as if to
-ward off a flow of words too long for his youthful
-understanding.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s too easy to explain,&rdquo; Bob said. &ldquo;Father
-said Lang got so excited that he forgot to think
-about himself, and &lsquo;Nature took its course&rsquo; when
-he stopped worrying about his fears.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was it,&rdquo; agreed Lang. &ldquo;I accepted the
-idea, from somewhere, that ice-cream and fish
-made poison, and while I was flying, when a
-little gas began to bother me I got scared, and
-the scare did the rest. Uncle said that half our
-pains are due to believing what other folks tell
-us can happen; the rest is from being afraid
-it is happening to us!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_106">106</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That clears it up.&rdquo; Al became very sober. &ldquo;I
-wish the disappearance of Mr. Tredway was as
-easy to settle.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, we&rsquo;ll have to find that mysterious
-brown &rsquo;plane, or get hold of somebody who saw
-it flying, to tell us which way it went.&rdquo; Lang
-rose, stretched, yawning, and sauntered off
-toward his wheel; the other three, sitting on the
-cottage porch before supper, for which Lang
-would not stay, looked after him in silence.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you know what I think?&rdquo; Curt broke the
-thoughtful pause. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mean to criticise,
-and I don&rsquo;t want you fellows to get angry, but
-I have a feeling that Uncle Fred is wrong to
-have us drop all our suspicions and try to find a
-crate that could be five hundred miles away, in
-any direction. My theory is that if we locate
-the airplane it will be by &lsquo;luck&rsquo; and I don&rsquo;t
-believe in &lsquo;luck&rsquo; because if you think &lsquo;luck&rsquo; is
-going to help, you don&rsquo;t have to do anything
-yourself, and if you believe it is going to hinder,
-there&rsquo;s no use in doing anything. So,&rdquo; he
-grinned, &ldquo;I believe that everything comes out
-right only when we do everything we can to
-make it so&mdash;and as long as there isn&rsquo;t any way
-to start hunting that brown crate, let&rsquo;s&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Disobey?&rdquo; asked Bob, rather surprised.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_107">107</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess it would amount to that&mdash;and in another
-way it wouldn&rsquo;t!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How could it if it didn&rsquo;t and why wouldn&rsquo;t
-it if it did?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The others laughed at Al&rsquo;s twisted inquiry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Uncle Fred didn&rsquo;t give you orders to &lsquo;lay
-off&rsquo; watching, did he, Bob?&rdquo; and as Bob shook
-his head, &ldquo;He only meant for us to concentrate
-on seeing if we could pick up a clue to the mysterious
-&rsquo;plane. Well, I feel that by finding out
-what Griff is doing, and why his father is so
-fidgety and furtive, and the rest of the puzzles
-here, we may be led to that &rsquo;plane, or get a clue
-to it or to its pilot.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see any disobedience in that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Curt answered Bob, &ldquo;the way I look
-at it, if Uncle Fred took us into the case he expected
-us to obey the &lsquo;spirit&rsquo; of the orders he
-gave, and he did say to forget the smaller things
-here and work on locating the &rsquo;plane.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; agreed Bob. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a pretty deep&mdash;what
-Lang would call, ethical problem. Father
-meant to leave Griff alone, unless he did something
-actually incriminating, and to put all our
-effort on the other thing. Let&rsquo;s see your paper,
-Al.&rdquo; He held out his hand for the brief note
-Al had preserved.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_108">108</div>
-<p>Study it as they would, they got nothing helpful
-from the grass-stained paper with the
-smudged writing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s think who we&rsquo;ve seen use an indelible
-pencil,&rdquo; hinted Al. &ldquo;Remember, the morning
-we found this, we decided, in a joke, that there
-were too many indelible pencils to try to trace
-the writer because he used one; but how many
-people close to this mystery have you seen using
-one?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The clerk in the supply room!&rdquo; gasped Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you sure?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Bob&mdash;because he takes a copy of every
-order he writes and of every requisition, on an
-old-fashioned letter press, the same way they
-put their copying ribbon letters in between a
-damp cloth and a soft, thin sheet of the big
-book, put it all in the press and make the copying
-ribbon print the letter into the book instead
-of using carbon paper!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then we have a clue! How does the clerk&rsquo;s
-writing compare with this?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s see!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Each of the three having spoken in turn, by
-common consent they agreed to Al&rsquo;s impulsive
-suggestion. They were hardly able to wait for
-their supper; however, they put it away with
-speed if not with the best of table manners and
-secured their bicycles.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_109">109</div>
-<p>It took them only a short time to reach the
-aircraft plant.</p>
-<p>The watchman accepted their explanation
-that they were passing and wanted to borrow
-several books from Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s reference
-library, in the offices.</p>
-<p>Bob, accordingly, went to the offices, while
-Curt and Al strolled, with apparent aimlessness,
-across the inner quadrangle.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a light in one window&mdash;no, in two
-windows&mdash;already!&rdquo; Al mentioned. &ldquo;I wonder
-who&rsquo;s here, at night again.&rdquo; Almost at once he
-suggested that they go and see.</p>
-<p>Curt, himself fired by the curiosity of his companion,
-hurried after Al.</p>
-<p>They saw Bob, who had lighted the outer office
-electric bulbs, choosing several volumes from a
-shelf, to carry out in truth their explanation to
-the watchman.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now&mdash;who&rsquo;s here?&rdquo; Bob said, joining the
-others at the door as he put out the light.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t be Barney&mdash;unless he came back&mdash;no,
-the cabin &rsquo;plane isn&rsquo;t here,&rdquo; Al argued. &ldquo;Anyway,
-Barney stayed over to transact some business,
-you said, Bob. Must be either&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Griff, or Griff and his father&mdash;or Mr. Parsons
-and somebody else,&rdquo; Curt said breathlessly,
-excited. &ldquo;There were two separate offices
-lighted, and you can see the door glass shining.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_110">110</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The doors are shut, though,&rdquo; Al spoke, disappointedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; continued Curt, &ldquo;but one of us can
-hide in the alcove where the water cooler and
-door to the washroom are located. If anybody
-comes, it would be easy to dodge on into the
-washroom and no one would ask questions about
-that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you&rsquo;re elected!&rdquo; Bob said. &ldquo;I want to
-go with Al, because I think I know where to
-find the latest letter-book.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>With the reference volumes tucked under his
-arm he led Al down the dim corridor, while Curt
-secured a good place in the niche by the water
-cooler to watch from.</p>
-<p>As the two brothers went down the steps, at
-the rear, toward the supply room, to be sure
-that no one was there and likely to come up
-and catch them, Al&rsquo;s grip on Bob&rsquo;s arm tightened
-convulsively.</p>
-<p>Some one was coming down the steps behind
-them.</p>
-<p>With lips close to Al&rsquo;s ear, Bob whispered:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tiptoe! Come on!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He led Al down to the lowest steps, and there,
-just beside the door to the supply room the
-brothers flattened themselves against the wall.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_111">111</div>
-<p>They held their breath. They made themselves
-as small as they could. A quick tread came
-on down the steps, there was the pause of a
-body close&mdash;almost touching them. Breathing,
-sharp, short, quick, carried to their ears; but
-they kept mouse-still. The door opened.</p>
-<p>A light flared up as Bob dragged Al back out
-of range. But as they turned and stared down,
-hearts still pounding from the excitement of the
-narrow escape, both brothers gasped.</p>
-<p>In the light below, stood&mdash;a bearded stranger!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_112">112</div>
-<h2 id="c15">CHAPTER XV
-<br /><span class="small">A TRIPLE TRAIL</span></h2>
-<p>Pulling Al further back out of the light,
-around the little dark jog beside the door jamb
-of the supply room, Bob put his lips close to his
-brother&rsquo;s ear.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Watch!&rdquo; he whispered, hardly loud enough
-for Al to hear.</p>
-<p>With a little squeeze to reassure his brother,
-Bob let go of Al&rsquo;s arm and tiptoed back up the
-stairway, carefully clinging to the side wall and
-hoping that this precaution would enable him to
-get away without causing the steps to creak.</p>
-<p>He was successful. Al, noting that the man
-inside the room seemed to be doing nothing
-more than standing there considering the layout
-of the place, guessed that Bob wanted to
-consult with Curt, watching upstairs. Al felt
-important: he was in the very heart of mystery,
-and much depended on him. Therefore he
-watched with every faculty alert as the man
-turned his head this way and that, apparently
-inspecting the stock of wing and fuselage cloth,
-the boxed instruments, the cases of &ldquo;dope&rdquo; for
-varnishing bodies and wings, the many other
-visible objects held in reserve.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_113">113</div>
-<p>Bob, slipping along the hallway at the top of
-the steps, noticed that both offices were lighted
-still, that both doors were closed, and as far as
-he could see, nothing had changed up above.</p>
-<p>Curt was still watching. He was practically
-invisible in his nook by the water cooler. Bob,
-with a small word under his breath, reassured
-his comrade who came out of hiding as soon as
-he knew that the footsteps he heard approaching
-were Bob&rsquo;s.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did the stranger come from?&rdquo; asked
-Bob softly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stranger?&rdquo; Curt&rsquo;s voice betrayed amazement.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The man who came down to the supply
-room!&rdquo; Bob was also surprised.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was he a stranger?&rdquo; Curt asked. &ldquo;I thought
-it was Mr. Parsons. He came out of that dark
-directors&rsquo; room, beyond me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Bob clutched Curt&rsquo;s arm in a tight
-grip. &ldquo;Have you used your eyes, Curt, in daylight?
-If you have, you recall that there is a
-fire escape running up the side of the building&mdash;and
-the landing is by that directors&rsquo; meeting
-room window.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is that so? Then, if that window is open&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_114">114</div>
-<p>The opening of one of the lighted offices
-startled them, ended the consultation. Both
-comrades, tense, drew close against the wall
-behind the water cooler. If anybody was
-thirsty!&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<p>The lighted square of that door went black.
-Someone had put out the dome light. Footsteps
-went carelessly along the corridor from
-the hiding youths, toward the front stairway.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I must follow&mdash;whoever it is!&rdquo; whispered
-Bob. &ldquo;Curt, watch here. Al will watch that
-other man. It&rsquo;s&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A triple trail!&rdquo; gasped Curt. &ldquo;Go on, Bob.
-Be careful.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob agreed and tiptoed along to the stairway.
-By the time he got there he had no need for
-special caution, the lower door was closing.</p>
-<p>Bob ran lightly down the stairs, crossed the
-entry below, cautiously peered into the yard,
-lighter just there by the arc over the office building
-doorway, and nodded to himself.</p>
-<p>Griff was passing around the side of the
-building!</p>
-<p>Cautiously Bob trailed him, allowing the partner&rsquo;s
-son to get out of sight beyond the turn
-before he left the doorway.</p>
-<p>Where was Griff bound? The main gates were
-across the yard and, as Bob knew, they were
-locked while the night man made his rounds of
-inspection among hangars and plant structures.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_115">115</div>
-<p>While Al watched his man in the supply room,
-while Curt hid, watching the lighted office door,
-Bob wondered what Griff was about. The young
-man did not go anywhere near or bend his steps
-in the direction of the main entrance but turned,
-with Bob carefully watching as he clung close
-in the shadow of the office structure, and went
-on around the building toward the private exit
-used by the officials. Being the son of Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s
-partner, Griff had a key; but Bob could
-see, as he peered around the building, that the
-gate stood slightly ajar already.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Will he go on home?&rdquo; Bob wondered. &ldquo;Had
-I better go back to Al?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>His thought was answered by Griff&rsquo;s actions.
-He paused at the gate, seeming to inspect it.
-He was surprised to find it ajar, Bob decided.
-He held his place close to the office shadow and
-watched, as Griff looked around, inside and outside
-the fence.</p>
-<p>Then, as though discovering something, Griff
-ran out of sight, leaving the gate as he had
-found it.</p>
-<p>Instantly Bob ran across the small open space
-to the gate. There, in sudden caution, he
-cuddled his body close to the fence; it had just
-crossed his mind that Griff might have gone
-outside in a pretended hurry to draw out any
-pursuer; he might be hiding, watching!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_116">116</div>
-<p>He was not, however.</p>
-<p>The sputter and roar of a motor startled Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s queer,&rdquo; Bob mused, while he projected
-his head through the gateway. Almost
-in the same instant that he saw Griff starting up
-a motorcycle, Bob saw Griff shut off the motor
-and trundle the machine away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;His own motorcycle is broken, since Saturday&rsquo;s
-accident,&rdquo; Bob reflected. &ldquo;Now he must
-have brought another one. He meant to ride off
-in a hurry,&rdquo; he deduced, &ldquo;but he decided the
-noise would startle and warn people, so he&rsquo;s going
-further away before he starts up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Instantly his own action was decided upon.
-He streaked back across the yard, around the
-hangars, to get his own bicycle. Against a
-speedy motor it would not keep Griff in sight,
-but it would enable Bob to get over the ground
-faster, and, if Griff did not go home, Bob meant
-to pursue him, making careful inquiries as he
-pedaled. There was only the crossroad for him
-to take, and Bob could see it from the highway.</p>
-<p>In a very short time, and without having been
-seen by the watchman, Bob was out on the road.
-The distant sputter of the motorcycle engine
-and a speeding form passing the junction of
-the crossroads gave Bob all the information he
-needed. Without wasting energy in an effort to
-keep the flying cycle in sight, he pedaled after it.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_117">117</div>
-<p>The sudden sharp noise evidently startled
-others besides Bob.</p>
-<p>Al, watching, saw the man who was evidently
-making some notes in the supply room, suddenly
-dash to the switch. Out went the light.</p>
-<p>Al heard the scrape and rumble of a window
-being unfastened and thrown up. The man was
-listening, he judged.</p>
-<p>Curt, by the water cooler, heard nothing but
-the faint sounds of the motor; at first he
-thought they were shots. When he saw the office
-light go out suddenly, immediately afterward, he
-thought someone in there had shot at some one
-else; but the door was flung open and he heard
-hurried feet pounding along the hall and almost
-stumbling down the front steps, careless of how
-much noise they made.</p>
-<p>Curt could not go to explain to Al. He must
-see who that was going out of the quickly darkened
-office so swiftly.</p>
-<p>Al needed no one to warn him. He crouched,
-tense and listening intently, outside the supply
-room door for a full minute. Absolute, torturing
-silence began to twitch his nerves. Nameless
-fears and countless uncertainties filled his
-mind. Was the man stalking him? Was he there
-at all? Had he ever been there? Was he human&mdash;or&mdash;&mdash;?</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_118">118</div>
-<p>Al heard a queer sound; at once he identified
-it. The window was being quietly pulled down.</p>
-<p>Again he listened, watched, waited.</p>
-<p>Curt, slipping down the banisters in the good,
-old-fashioned, speedy boys&rsquo; way, landed quietly
-at the foot of the stairs soon after the front
-doors of the office building closed.</p>
-<p>But by that time whoever had emerged was
-far across the quadrangle and it was too dark
-to recognize him. There came the flare of the
-headlights of an automobile.</p>
-<p>From its position on the grounds and from
-the style of its lamps, Curt guessed it was the
-runabout used by Mr. Parsons, Tredway&rsquo;s remaining
-partner. What was he doing here?
-Where was he going? Curt, in the office doorway,
-not daring to emerge because of the beams
-of light that might swing around the yard at
-any moment, heard the voice of Parsons hailing
-the watchman, questioning him. The other
-replied in a way to show he had not heard any
-noises, could not account for them.</p>
-<p>Curt, as the car got under way and the main
-gate was flung wide to permit it to depart, raced
-around the office building &ldquo;ell&rdquo; and across to
-his bicycle. He knew he could not pursue, but
-the wheel would give an excuse for emerging
-from that gate at once.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_119">119</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; he called to the watchman, pedaling
-swiftly across to him. &ldquo;I guess he forgot I was
-here,&rdquo; pretending that Mr. Parsons sponsored
-his presence there so late at night. The watchman
-said nothing but held the gates open until
-Curt pedaled through and took his way after
-the car, not to keep it in sight but to see if it
-went to its owner&rsquo;s home.</p>
-<p>Al, ignorant that he was the only remaining
-member of the Sky Squad, watched tensely and
-listened alertly beside the supply room door.
-He heard nothing. Cautiously he protruded his
-head around the door jamb.</p>
-<p>The room was silent, evidently the man was
-hiding or&mdash;&ldquo;gone!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But how&mdash;where&mdash;could he go?&rdquo; Al answered
-his own questions at once, for the window,
-made of tiny panes of thick glass between
-heavy bars, locked always from inside, impossible
-to open from outside, was not tightly shut.</p>
-<p>For once in his life Al paused to think before
-he acted.</p>
-<p>That window was not tightly shut. He had
-heard it opened, and&mdash;closed. But if the man
-had closed it from within the room he would
-have pulled it down tightly. He had not done
-so. He had left it partly open&mdash;why? To provide
-a way to come back, Al decided.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_120">120</div>
-<p>Almost at the same instant it flashed into his
-head that if he were to be caught in that room,
-with its door unfastened, he would be accused
-by any of the plant members, the watchman or
-those he thought were still in the upstairs offices,
-of stealing whatever might be missing.</p>
-<p>He had a plan, at once!</p>
-<p>He tiptoed back to the steps, listening. No
-sound came to him. Softly he went into the
-open doorway, made sure the window was not
-tightly shut, by inspecting the lighter space beneath
-it, then very quietly let the door go shut,
-allowing its spring lock to snap. He could open
-it from inside if he had to escape. No one without
-a key could open it from the hallway.</p>
-<p>Then he ran close to the window, peered out,
-listened with an ear to the crack beneath the
-lower panes.</p>
-<p>Nothing was stirring. But from the window
-he could see the gate, and the light was sufficient
-to show him a man&rsquo;s form arriving there.</p>
-<p>Evidently the form stopped from surprise or
-caution, then it went swiftly out. Al, forgetting
-fear, flung the window slightly upward,
-edged out, dropped to the ground, reached up
-and almost closed the window, then fully drew
-it down with a little slam, and raced to the gate.
-There he paused, peering out carefully.</p>
-<p>Down the narrow lane he saw a man&rsquo;s form
-trudging rapidly.</p>
-<p>The third trail was opened!</p>
-<p>After the man, at a distance, trudged Al!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_121">121</div>
-<h2 id="c16">CHAPTER XVI
-<br /><span class="small">THE &ldquo;WINDSOCK&rdquo;</span></h2>
-<p>For Al the trail ended abruptly after a walk
-of a mile. The stranger, whose face, with its
-heavy beard, Al could not dare get close enough
-to identify&mdash;even if he knew it!&mdash;hailed a passing
-automobile, asked for a &ldquo;lift&rdquo; and was taken
-in. That concluded Al&rsquo;s chances of following
-because no other car came along. Dejectedly
-he returned to the aircraft plant to discover that
-some one, perhaps the watchman, had closed the
-gate. There was nothing left for him to do but
-to go to the main gate, call the attendant and
-get his bicycle. His friends were gone, the man
-assured him, and Al had no excuse to stay there.</p>
-<p>Dejectedly, feeling that he had been close to
-a clue and that it had slipped through his hands
-by his &ldquo;bad break,&rdquo; Al rode home.</p>
-<p>Curt&rsquo;s trail took him, eventually, to the Parsons
-cottage. Seeing the car drawn up before
-the garage, Curt decided that he had no need
-to watch the car being put into the garage; evidently
-its driver had gone into his home for
-a moment first. Curt rode away. Had he waited
-his trail would have led further; but he did not
-guess that!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_122">122</div>
-<p>Bob had better fortune.</p>
-<p>He saved his strength as he pedaled along,
-well ahead of his two less fortunate trailmates,
-and when he came to a cross street of the
-suburbs where a policeman was directing traffic
-Bob drew up beside the officer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hello, Bob!&rdquo; the policeman hailed. &ldquo;Out sort
-of late, hey?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Mr. O&rsquo;Brien. I stayed at the plant&mdash;I&rsquo;m
-learning how they put airplanes together at
-the Tredway plant. I wanted to ask if you noticed
-a motorcycle, not long ago&mdash;maybe fifteen
-minutes&mdash;a friend&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; the officer, starting the cars down the
-street by a wave of his hand, did not wait for
-an explanation of Bob&rsquo;s reason for the question,
-&ldquo;Griff Parsons rode by.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s who I mean. Did he turn off, here,
-to go home?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob knew that Griff&rsquo;s house was several
-blocks over, on an up-and-down street that was
-&ldquo;one way&rdquo; for traffic. If Griff had turned here
-Bob&rsquo;s quest, he knew, was over; if he did not,
-Griff would be gone much further, because if he
-did not turn here, and thus enter his own home
-street in the right direction he surely would not
-go on and approach it in the wrong way, against
-the traffic rules.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_123">123</div>
-<p>&ldquo;He rode on by, just waved to me,&rdquo; O&rsquo;Brien
-said, and turned to signal a warning to a car
-that was trying to slip past the stoplights.</p>
-<p>Thanking him Bob rode on. Griff must be
-going somewhere!</p>
-<p>The highway had no turns, except the suburb&rsquo;s
-cross streets. It was possible that Griff
-might have turned into one of them, perhaps to
-return a hired motorcycle to its garage; nevertheless,
-so strange had been the action of the
-youth that Bob decided to ride on, at least to the
-last police officer along the main traffic road,
-to see if he could learn whether the trail continued
-or not.</p>
-<p>The traffic officer, used to seeing this rider,
-greeted Bob and told him that several motorcycles
-had passed him. Bob, riding to the curb
-to rest, was puzzled. Had one of those been the
-motorcycle he had followed?</p>
-<p>A thought caused him to ride on.</p>
-<p>Griff, Bob knew, from his own inquiries,
-&ldquo;hung out&rdquo; with quite a rough crowd of youths;
-they had very little reputation in the suburb,
-and one of their haunts, near Rocky Lake, came
-to Bob&rsquo;s mind. Griff, riding his motorcycle,
-might have gone on to the inn or roadhouse or
-&ldquo;speakeasy&rdquo; or whatever it was, near the picnic
-grounds at Rocky Lake.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_124">124</div>
-<p>Tired, but determined, Bob went on.</p>
-<p>Some time later he approached the gayly
-lighted roadhouse.</p>
-<p>He smiled to himself as he observed the name
-of the place.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Windsock!&rdquo; it was called.</p>
-<p>On roadside signs, down the road in both directions,
-were admonitions to automobilists to
-&ldquo;set down at The Windsock,&rdquo; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t fly past
-The Windsock,&rdquo; and such tempting notices.</p>
-<p>A windsock, Bob knew, was the cornucopia
-of doped cloth, closed at one end and held open
-at the other by a metal ring, which was fastened
-in a prominent, high position at every flying
-field and airport, to be filled by the draft of a
-breeze and thus, by its position, to indicate to
-flying craft which direction to &ldquo;head in&rdquo; or to
-&ldquo;take off.&rdquo; Since an airplane is much easier to
-get off the ground, and back to earth, headed
-into the wind, the &ldquo;windsock&rdquo; was a most important
-adjunct to every field; and Bob knew
-that the name, and the symbol, a real windsock
-on top of the inn, had been chosen by its owner
-because he had been an ex-pilot who put his
-money into the hotel venture and tried to attract
-picnickers, automobile parties and other
-patrons of a less savory nature by the novel idea
-of having his dining alcoves built to resemble the
-cozy little cabins of airplanes and had his meals
-served by girls clad in suits and helmets resembling
-those worn by pilots. Also, he had
-let it be rumored around town that he chose the
-flying symbol and the aviation idea because, in
-his inn, &ldquo;the sky is the limit!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_125">125</div>
-<p>Bob, approaching, was surprised to see the
-very motorcycle&mdash;he was sure of that!&mdash;he had
-followed, leaned against a post in the parking
-yard, and he felt certain that his long ride had
-not been wasted.</p>
-<p>Where was Griff? Bob wondered. He hoped
-there would be some way for him to discover
-the whereabouts of the youth.</p>
-<p>Not wishing to walk into the place for fear he
-might disclose his presence to Griff, Bob skirted
-the building, unobserved.</p>
-<p>From an open window at the side came voices
-in angry altercation.</p>
-<p>Bob did not need to get within sight of the
-occupants: he recognized Griff&rsquo;s loud, sharp,
-furious tones. What was he saying?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&mdash;&mdash;all I could scrape together&mdash;I <i>did</i> put it
-in that package, I keep telling you&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bologna! Rats! It was wads of paper!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was money! I want my receipt! If&mdash;if
-you don&rsquo;t!&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_126">126</div>
-<p>&ldquo;If <i>you</i> don&rsquo;t, you better say. If you don&rsquo;t
-come through&mdash;by this time tomorrow night&mdash;I&rsquo;ll
-ask your old man for it!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was silence.</p>
-<p>Bob did not dare creep any closer. They
-might look out of the window. Some payment
-had been made, by Griff&rsquo;s claim. By the denial
-of the other man it had not been made. By his
-threat it must be made.</p>
-<p>Bob hesitated&mdash;and while he stood, undecided,
-the roar of a car, coming at full speed, came
-to his ears.</p>
-<p>He glanced down the road. Hardly had he
-located the direction when he recognized the car.
-It contained&mdash;Mr. Parsons!</p>
-<p>A man&rsquo;s head leaned out of the open window.
-To Bob, as he crouched back into some ornamental
-shrubbery, the face was unfamiliar; but
-he saw it was brutish, fierce, angry&mdash;and he impressed
-it on his memory.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s your pop, now,&rdquo; the man called&mdash;and
-then he gave an exclamation that Bob
-could not comprehend. Presently the light went
-out&mdash;and, almost at the same time, while Parsons
-alighted in the parking place, Bob, near
-the rear corner of the building, saw a form
-emerge from the kitchens and race away down
-the yard toward the grove beyond.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_127">127</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Griff!&rdquo; muttered Bob to himself. &ldquo;Griff&mdash;running
-tight as he can go&mdash;running away from
-his father&mdash;to hide.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Watching, more interested in the new arrival
-than in the son, Bob remained in concealment.
-But his mind was puzzled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he wondered. &ldquo;Why&mdash;and what
-next?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_128">128</div>
-<h2 id="c17">CHAPTER XVII
-<br /><span class="small">&ldquo;THE CASE IS &lsquo;SEWED UP&rsquo;&rdquo;</span></h2>
-<p>Sitting on the Wright porch, early the next
-morning, Curt and Al listened eagerly to Bob&rsquo;s
-recital of the past night&rsquo;s events.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;After Griff ran off&mdash;what, then?&rdquo; Al demanded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A taxi came racing along and stopped at
-The Windsock.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you do?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What could I do, except keep hidden and
-watch?&rdquo; Curt&rsquo;s question brought the counter-question
-from Bob. &ldquo;The taxi door opened&mdash;and
-who do you suppose jumped out?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who?&rdquo; Curt and Al spoke at once.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The very man Al and I saw in the supply
-room.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I saw him hail the taxi,&rdquo; Al exclaimed.
-&ldquo;Everything is beginning to fit together.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, it is,&rdquo; Bob agreed, &ldquo;and, what&rsquo;s more,
-it fits tightly. As soon as the stranger paid his
-fare he recognized Mr. Parsons who was halted
-on the roadhouse veranda, watching. They began
-to talk, and stood there for a minute.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_129">129</div>
-<p>&ldquo;They knew each other!&rdquo; Curt exclaimed.
-&ldquo;They must be working together to loot the
-supply room. That&rsquo;s probably how the mystery
-man got in: he had a key from Mr. Parsons.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It looks like that,&rdquo; admitted Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What then?&rdquo; Al wanted the story. &ldquo;Did
-they find Griff?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;but the stranger saw his motorcycle.
-He got awfully excited about it and he went
-with Mr. Parsons to look at it. They went close
-to where I was hiding back of the shrubs, but
-they didn&rsquo;t say anything until they were close
-to the motorcycle. They were too far away for
-me to hear, then.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d have crept closer,&rdquo; declared Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh&mdash;yes! You would!&rdquo; Bob was scornful.
-&ldquo;Right out across an open yard!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al subsided, crestfallen.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What then?&rdquo; Curt asked quickly, to avoid
-any quarrel.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They talked for about ten minutes&mdash;then the
-man made some notes of things Mr. Parsons
-said&mdash;I wish I could have heard! Then he
-hopped onto his motorcycle and rode off, and
-Mr. Parsons stood thinking for awhile and
-then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes? Don&rsquo;t keep us waiting. What?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Curt&mdash;he turned the car and went back
-toward town!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_130">130</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t look for Griff?&rdquo; Al had recovered
-his usual interest.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No! He drove away. Griff must have been
-watching, too. He came out, and shook his fist
-toward the roadhouse and then walked off, and&mdash;that&rsquo;s
-all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They discussed the incidents of the past night,
-coupling them with the strange actions and uneasiness
-of Mr. Parsons and of Griff on former
-occasions, riding, as they talked, toward the
-plant.</p>
-<p>Barney&rsquo;s cabin airplane was again on the
-field, and as soon as they arrived and he saw
-them, from an office window, Barney summoned
-them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he greeted them, closing the door,
-&ldquo;how goes the study of airplane building?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, we know how they lay down the framework
-for the fuselage and how careful they are
-to see that every longeron and brace and strut
-and guywire and turnbuckle fits exactly in place
-and is well fastened,&rdquo; Al exclaimed. &ldquo;And we&rsquo;ve
-helped put on the wings and the tail assembly,
-and Bob is going to help install an engine, today,
-and we will watch.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob laughed and Curt joined him. They saw
-the amused light in Barney&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;you asked!&rdquo; Al defended his enthusiasm.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_131">131</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It was just a &lsquo;polite opening&rsquo;,&rdquo; Bob grinned.
-&ldquo;Barney wants to know about&mdash;other things
-we&rsquo;ve learned.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Interrupting one another, they gave him the
-details of their experiences.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hm-m-m! Well!&rdquo; Barney&rsquo;s face became very
-serious. &ldquo;So that&rsquo;s it!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Barney smiled at Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The partner and his son are working with
-an outsider. I thought so. But what about the
-brown &rsquo;plane? Any news of that?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We left it out entirely,&rdquo; Bob said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We disobeyed Uncle,&rdquo; Curt admitted. &ldquo;Bob
-said Uncle wanted us to drop things here and
-concentrate on trying to find the brown &rsquo;plane,
-but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We can&rsquo;t find that &lsquo;crate&rsquo; I feel sure.&rdquo; Bob
-was earnest.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not only that, but if a crime is being committed
-under your nose you won&rsquo;t go off looking
-for something else to do while it is going on,
-will you?&rdquo; Al wanted their course confirmed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_132">132</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You did just right,&rdquo; Barney commended
-them. &ldquo;You lads stick to this end of it. I&rsquo;ve
-suspected that Parsons and his son were &lsquo;up to&rsquo;
-something, and I don&rsquo;t agree with your father,
-Bob, about the brown crate at all! I think you
-fellows deserve a &lsquo;raise&rsquo; and if you can only
-catch one or all of the crowd doing something&mdash;catch
-them &lsquo;red-handed&rsquo; in a way of speaking,
-I&rsquo;ll hand out a little private reward. I feel that
-it&rsquo;s due to&mdash;to the memory of Mr. Tredway.
-He was mighty good to me and&mdash;and I want to&mdash;get
-everything cleared up here, because I
-think the ones who have been doing wrong right
-here at the plant got found out by him and they
-either hired that airplane from some distant
-place and flew out and rode down Tredway or
-else they paid some unscrupulous pilot&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He paused as he saw Al squirming in his
-chair with eagerness.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is it, Al?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Unscrupulous pilot!&rdquo; reiterated Al. &ldquo;Why&mdash;the
-man at The Windsock is a&mdash;an ex-pilot.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Glory be! That&rsquo;s so!&rdquo; Barney nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, from what I saw of him, his face shows
-that he&rsquo;s unscrupulous,&rdquo; added Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It looks to me, from here,&rdquo; Barney said,
-slowly, &ldquo;it looks to me as though we&rsquo;ve got the
-case &lsquo;sewed up.&rsquo; All you need to do is to find
-out, some way, about that ex-pilot&mdash;what he
-does with his time, if he owns a crate yet, and
-so on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You think?&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Barney turned to Curt.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_133">133</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; he nodded, &ldquo;that ex-pilot might
-know a lot about a brown &rsquo;plane, and about what
-it did to force another one down&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then we have got the case &lsquo;sewed up&rsquo;,&rdquo; Al
-declared. &ldquo;We came here last night to see if we
-could compare a little scrap of writing we found
-where the &lsquo;plane had been, with the books of
-letters and things to see if the writing agreed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And what did you find?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We had no time to find anything,&rdquo; Curt admitted.
-&ldquo;The other things came up&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s see that note? Where is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al produced the much-folded, dirty scrap and
-handed it to Barney.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; he shook his head after a careful study.
-&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t recognize it!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The supply clerk?&rdquo; hinted Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not at all like his writing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Curt, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s done with an indelible
-pencil. Now that we know the ex-pilot is under
-suspicion, we can find out if he has an indelible
-pencil that he carries around&mdash;or, he might destroy
-it, considering what has happened since
-the note was written.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But who&rsquo;s the note written to?&rdquo; asked Bob.
-&ldquo;It says &lsquo;everything O.K.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;To whoever hired him. To Parsons, maybe&mdash;or
-to Griff&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s so!&rdquo; Bob became very thoughtful.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_134">134</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We ought to get a sample of the ex-pilot&rsquo;s
-handwriting,&rdquo; suggested Al, eagerly. &ldquo;Shall I?
-I can try! They don&rsquo;t know me out at The
-Windsock. Couldn&rsquo;t I take my autograph album&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll make inquiries about the brown &lsquo;plane,
-from around The Windsock,&rdquo; added Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then I can keep tabs at this end,&rdquo; argued
-Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fine!&rdquo; agreed Barney. &ldquo;Fine! Yes, sir!
-Boys&mdash;we&rsquo;ve got the case &lsquo;sewed up&rsquo; or circumstantial
-evidence never pointed true.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you see Dad, again?&rdquo; asked Bob as they
-rose.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, but he&rsquo;s awfully busy on that other
-case. He must trust you fellows pretty well.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Al swelled with pride, &ldquo;maybe we&rsquo;ve
-disobeyed orders, but if this comes out as good
-as we think it will, we&rsquo;ll have no trouble making
-Father see that he was wrong and we were right
-to disobey.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right you are!&rdquo; agreed Barney.</p>
-<p>Griff seemed to be getting ready to work himself
-into danger for their special benefit, it
-seemed to Bob in the engine assembling rooms.
-The youth was angry, upset, uneasy, fidgety; he
-hurried out when he heard his father&rsquo;s voice
-approaching down the hall and the older man
-betrayed as much uneasiness and concern as did
-his son.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_135">135</div>
-<p>But that night, when they thought they had
-the last stitches taken to &ldquo;sew up&rdquo; the case,
-as Barney said, Fate ripped out the whole thing&mdash;and
-they were left without a thread of a
-clue!&mdash;until the unexpected thing happened that
-gave Bob his &ldquo;hunch!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_136">136</div>
-<h2 id="c18">CHAPTER XVIII
-<br /><span class="small">A NEW MYSTERY</span></h2>
-<p>Cheerfully Al greeted the rigger for whom
-he worked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Barney&mdash;Mr. Horton&mdash;&rdquo; he corrected his
-own familiar allusion to the manager of the aircraft
-plant, &ldquo;&mdash;says please hurry the work on
-this sport biplane. The man who&rsquo;s buying it
-is in a big hurry. He wants to get into some
-race with it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, sure!&rdquo; the rigger grumbled a little.
-&ldquo;They&rsquo;re all in a hurry. But I don&rsquo;t rush my
-part of it for anybody. There&rsquo;s been enough
-complaint about this plant, already, without me
-doing anything to cut down the performance of
-a crate by skimping my share of the high standards
-Mr. Tredway always kept up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; agreed Al, &ldquo;but he meant to do all
-you can, I guess.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; the rigger was in a complaining mood,
-&ldquo;that&rsquo;s all very well. But did he say why they&rsquo;re
-giving us cheaper stuff to work with, since the
-real boss&mdash;went West, maybe!&mdash;did they tell
-you why that is, that we&rsquo;re getting cheaper
-stuff!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_137">137</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Al admitted, &ldquo;but I do know that Mr.
-Parsons and Bar&mdash;and Mr. Horton were talking
-about some complaint from the wing assembling
-room, about poor fabric. They almost quarreled.
-Barney told Mr. Parsons it had to stop,
-he was going to uphold Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s ideas,
-and Mr. Parsons said so was he.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, somebody&rsquo;s ordering cheap stuff. Look
-here!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He picked up a turnbuckle, a metal object in
-which the threads of each wire end were so
-threaded in that when the ends of wires were
-screwed in, the turning of the central, revolving
-part either drew the two sections of wire close,
-making it taut, or allowed them to recede a little
-from one another, for more looseness&mdash;by
-which the flying and landing wires, and other
-parts of the guying rig were adjusted.</p>
-<p>The turnbuckle looked all right to Al and he
-said so.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shows how much you know,&rdquo; scoffed the rigger,
-Sandy. &ldquo;Look here&mdash;heft this&mdash;and then
-this one!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He selected another turnbuckle, handed both
-to Al, and the youth &ldquo;weighted them&rdquo; in his two
-hands.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This one does feel heavier.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_138">138</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course it does! It&rsquo;s a cheap casting, not
-the aluminum alloy the other one is machined
-from. Why, them threads on the new one will
-wear and go bad in no time!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al, watching, observed that as the rigger
-manipulated a pocket knife in the threaded end
-of the part, bright metal and a worn look were
-almost immediately evident.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Sandy Jim agreed with his discovery,
-&ldquo;and I&rsquo;ve been talking around and others is dissatisfied&mdash;in
-the dope room, in the engine room.
-Everywheres!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But when Mr. Parsons talked with the manager,&rdquo;
-Al explained, &ldquo;they had the supply clerk
-in and went over the orders and way-bills and
-delivery check-up, and everything was all right.
-The orders went to the same firms, as always&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re getting shoddy stuff, all the same!&rdquo;
-grunted Jim. &ldquo;What good is it to rush out a
-&lsquo;job&rsquo; and have it accepted on the reputation of
-Mr. Tredway, and then have complaints in a
-few days?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said Al, and changed the subject.
-&ldquo;Mr. Horton says you&rsquo;ll have to excuse
-me, this morning. He&rsquo;s sending me out on an
-errand.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_139">139</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, sure!&rdquo; Jim snapped. &ldquo;Wants this job
-rushed, and takes away my helper! Whyn&rsquo;t he
-use his office boy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al could not explain that it was Barney&rsquo;s
-way of releasing him so he could go to The
-Windsock for that comparison of the ex-pilot&rsquo;s
-autograph with the clue note Al held.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess you&rsquo;ll have to ask him,&rdquo; Al grinned,
-and went over to get his bicycle. Sandy Jim
-followed him, dragging a small parcel out of his
-hip pocket.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;As long as you&rsquo;re riding,&rdquo; he suggested, &ldquo;go
-past the house and slip this in to Jimmy-junior.
-It&rsquo;s some odds and ends of broken stuff for him
-to use on his new model air-liner.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Glad to,&rdquo; Al took the parcel.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get back quick as you can,&rdquo; urged Sandy.
-&ldquo;I need a good helper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al quickly sent his bicycle along the highway.
-Stopping at Sandy&rsquo;s home he took as little time
-as he could to drop the parcel, and to explain
-to Jimmy-junior that the reason he had not yet
-been taken into the Sky Squad was that they
-had been too busy, evenings, to hold any meetings.</p>
-<p>Then he made his way to the roadhouse near
-Rocky Lake Park, and leaned his wheel against
-the veranda supports.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_140">140</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Is Mister Jones busy?&rdquo; he asked a sleepy
-waiter who was listlessly dusting off some
-chairs in one of the small compartments made
-to look like the cabin of an air-liner. Al had
-found it easy to learn the ex-pilot&rsquo;s name.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the office,&rdquo; the man jerked a thumb
-toward a side room. Al, knocking at the door
-and hearing a gruff voice bid him enter, went
-into the same room Bob had described as the
-scene of the quarrel between the roadhouse man
-and Griff.</p>
-<p>The man, looking up from some work at a
-small desk, had a coarse, scowling face. No
-wonder he was &ldquo;ex&rdquo; pilot, Al reflected, with a
-face as brutish and a manner as unfriendly and
-curt as &ldquo;Mr. Jones&rdquo; showed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s wanted?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why&mdash;er&mdash;&rdquo; Al stammered, not so much ill
-at ease as trying to pretend he felt shy in the
-presence of a great man, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m one of the fellows
-who have a sort of club, to study airplanes,
-and all that&mdash;and I&mdash;we&mdash;heard about you being
-a clever pilot, and I thought I&rsquo;d ride out
-and ask if you&rsquo;d be generous enough to write
-a little something about aviation in our club
-autograph album.&rdquo; He produced the small book
-he had brought in his coat pocket.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hm-m!&rdquo; The man scowled. &ldquo;Le&rsquo;me see that
-book!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_141">141</div>
-<p>He took the small volume and Al&rsquo;s heart sank.
-Instead of writing sensibly and generously on
-blank page invitingly offered, he flipped the
-pages, and Al knew that the affair was a failure.
-There was nothing about aviation in the
-few autographed verses and sayings already collected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s no aviation album!&rdquo; The man thrust
-it away angrily and jumped up. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s your
-scheme, young fellow?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Scheme?&rdquo; Al tried to look innocent. &ldquo;I told
-you&mdash;we want to get you to start the real autographs
-from aviators!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The subterfuge did not satisfy the man. He
-frowned, stared at Al as though trying to get
-through his guard, to discover any hidden motive.
-Al, inexperienced, fidgeted, unable to conceal
-his uneasiness.</p>
-<p>However, he received a surprise.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure!&rdquo; The man snatched up the book.
-&ldquo;Come to think of it, why not? Fact is, kid,
-I&rsquo;ll start you off with <i>two</i> autographs. Wait!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He hurried out of the office. Al did not dare
-&ldquo;peek&rdquo; to see where he went or what he did.
-For all Al knew, the man might be just beyond
-the side door, watching. He sat very still, trying
-to be as self-possessed as he could.</p>
-<p>Presently the man returned, with the book
-held open.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_142">142</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Here y&rsquo;are!&rdquo; he said, affably. Al, glancing
-at the book, saw that two opposite pages bore
-fresh scrawls. The man waved a hand. &ldquo;Welcome.
-Run along, now. We&rsquo;re busy, here&mdash;getting
-set to open up a new &lsquo;airport&rsquo; out on the
-side, where folks can dance to a fine orchestra
-in a hangar. Tell any of your friends you like&mdash;especially
-your parents. We got the prettiest
-imitation of an airplane for the orchestra
-to set in&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al, hardly able to mumble his thanks, dashed
-out to his bicycle. He could scarcely hold in his
-impatience. One of those sets of rough characters
-was written with a pencil, the other with
-an indelible pencil!</p>
-<p>One had a familiar character to its shaping
-of letters!</p>
-<p>A little way down the road, near the lake,
-where the airplane had cracked up, Al drew his
-machine in under a tree, almost tore the book
-out of his pocket and opened it hastily.</p>
-<p>On one page was a maxim, exactly what a
-pilot might write:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Knowing when to stay on the ground makes
-a better pilot than knowing how to get off it!&rdquo;
-It was signed with initials&mdash;&ldquo;T. J.&rdquo; Al did not
-recognize the writing although, he understood
-that the saying meant that a pilot wise enough
-to be cautious was better than one who thought
-that getting into the air was all there was to
-flying.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_143">143</div>
-<p>The second page revealed one word, the
-pilot&rsquo;s good-luck wish, and two initials also:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tailwinds! J. T.&rdquo; it told him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;T. J. and J. T.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Hurriedly Al drew out the folded, ragged,
-dirty little note&mdash;his clue.</p>
-<p>It exactly corresponded in every character
-with the short autograph!</p>
-<p>But!&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<p>Who had written the autograph? Had Mr.
-Jones? If his name was Jones he would have
-signed the initials on the first autograph&mdash;&ldquo;T.
-J.&rdquo; Or&mdash;would he have signed that way?
-Might he not have signed the reverse? Had he
-written either page? Who else had helped?</p>
-<p>More mystery! And no way to solve it!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_144">144</div>
-<h2 id="c19">CHAPTER XIX
-<br /><span class="small">TANGLED THREADS</span></h2>
-<p>On a former occasion Bob had related news
-to an audience composed of Al and Curt.</p>
-<p>As the trio rode homeward, Curt to share
-supper with the brothers, Al was the spokesman.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you ever see so many people to suspect
-and so many clues that don&rsquo;t lead anywhere?&rdquo;
-asked Curt when Al had told his story and had
-shown his evidence.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Sky Squad has a mystery, and there&rsquo;s
-no mistake about it,&rdquo; declared Al. &ldquo;We got
-what we wanted, but now&mdash;what can we do with
-it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You mean the mystery?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, Bob. I mean the autograph.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, it proves one thing, anyway,&rdquo; Bob asserted.
-&ldquo;The single word matches our &lsquo;Everything
-O.K.&rsquo; note. That proves that the man
-who wrote the note is at that roadhouse, The
-Windsock.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It does,&rdquo; Curt agreed. &ldquo;But&mdash;is it the man
-named Jones? Did he write it?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_145">145</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Did he write either one?&rdquo; Bob was puzzled
-as he spoke.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He left the room, you said.&rdquo; Curt turned to
-Al, who nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe he didn&rsquo;t write anything!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What does all that matter?&rdquo; Bob said. &ldquo;The
-point is that we have proof that the man who
-used the brown &lsquo;plane is staying at The Windsock.
-Now our job is to discover who he is.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s see those autographs again.&rdquo; Curt
-drew his wheel to the roadside and took the
-book from Al. &ldquo;&lsquo;T. J.&rsquo; is written with a plain
-leadpencil,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;The &lsquo;J. T.&rsquo; one is
-the one written in indelible pencil. &lsquo;J. T.&rsquo;&rdquo; he
-repeated thoughtfully. &ldquo;Do you suppose Jones
-transposed his initials and then got a waiter
-or a clerk to write the other and sign what Al
-would take for his initials?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s too tangled up to suppose about,&rdquo;
-argued Bob. &ldquo;Two things we do know from it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One is,&rdquo; Al remarked, as they resumed their
-ride, &ldquo;one is that we know the brown airplane
-man is at The Windsock. What&rsquo;s the other?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, whether it&rsquo;s Jones or not&mdash;Jones has
-something to hide, this proves. Otherwise he&rsquo;d
-have scribbled a word or two for Al, and thought
-no more about it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s so.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_146">146</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It simplifies things, doesn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; Al, speaking
-after Curt&rsquo;s agreement, was not so sure as
-his words indicated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It makes them more complicated,&rdquo; Bob retorted.
-&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s see what we know and where
-we stand.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As they rode slowly, he tabulated their clues
-and theories and discoveries, with many interruptions
-from his companions.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;First of all,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;we saw a mysterious
-brown airplane hidden in the woods. Then,
-when we went there, it was gone&mdash;and this note
-was flung aside. The crate took off in a hurry
-because we saw heavy tracks, and made in a
-hurry, by the way they looked. Then there was
-a crack-up at Rocky Lake and we found out Mr.
-Tredway was in the Silver Flash that crashed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And we saw a man come to try to help, swimming
-across the lake,&rdquo; Curt broke in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And then we met Barney and he and Father
-called us in to help solve the Mystery Crash,&rdquo;
-added Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We learned there was more mystery than
-just the fall of the crate,&rdquo; Bob went on. &ldquo;That
-was bad enough; but there was more! Parts
-were being stolen from the aircraft plant, and
-&lsquo;planes had been tampered with&mdash;after tests
-showed them to be perfect!&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_147">147</div>
-<p>&ldquo;When we went there to work in the plant,&rdquo;
-Curt was eager to add his contribution to the
-sum of their recollections. &ldquo;We saw Mr. Parsons
-acting suspiciously, and Griff, too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And we have suspected Langley was in bad
-company with Griff, and Lang got mad at us
-about Griff&mdash;but we haven&rsquo;t found any reason
-to suspect Lang, since,&rdquo; Al declared. &ldquo;But now
-we&rsquo;ve got more people to suspect&mdash;the stranger
-who came to the plant and this ex-pilot.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But all this hasn&rsquo;t brought us any closer to
-knowing anything definite,&rdquo; Bob objected. &ldquo;I
-begin to wonder if Father was right, after all,
-when he told us to &lsquo;drop those unimportant
-things and locate that brown airplane.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But we can&rsquo;t!&rdquo; defended Al. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s no
-way to start hunting. I&rsquo;m for keeping on disobeying
-until something happens to help us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And I&rsquo;m for getting in to supper,&rdquo; Curt
-changed the subject as they dismounted at the
-cottage. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s give what brains we have a
-good rest while we eat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, one thing more and we will.&rdquo; Bob
-paused, thoughtful and serious. &ldquo;Al said we
-had no cause to suspect Lang. Well&mdash;today, I
-was wondering why Griff was so nervous and
-fidgety and furtive, and Lang came in and took
-me out, to give me a lesson in handling the controls,
-he hinted. He really did, but before he
-took me up while he tested the new sport speedster,
-he said, &lsquo;I see you&rsquo;re bothering Griff
-again,&rsquo; and he gave me &lsquo;down the banks&rsquo; about
-it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_148">148</div>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s suspicious about that?&rdquo; Curt asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not that, so much. But&mdash;he told me to go
-on home, that it was closing time, and I put on
-my cap and punched the time-clock, and then
-I recalled that I had left the baseball we were
-playing &lsquo;catch&rsquo; with at noon, in my bench
-drawer. I went back, and there was Griff, all
-excited, and Lang, with his head close to Griff&rsquo;s,
-acting as upset and as uneasy as Griff when
-I came in and surprised them. Lang snapped
-at me&mdash;I&mdash;don&rsquo;t&mdash;like it&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Curt was quiet, a little hesitant, but
-firm. &ldquo;If Lang is mixed up in something wrong&mdash;we
-ought to&mdash;at least we ought to try to save
-him!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s good,&rdquo; agreed Bob, quickly. &ldquo;I
-thought you were going to say &lsquo;we ought to
-catch him with the rest.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, indeed, I think more of Lang than that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But how could we save him?&rdquo; asked Al.</p>
-<p>To that they had no answer as they went in
-to eat.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_149">149</div>
-<p>As they sat at the table Al mentioned the
-morning&rsquo;s chat with Jimmy-junior, and suggested
-that they really ought to go and spend
-an evening with him as he had urged them to
-do; if the others liked him, they could communicate
-by nods and take him into the Sky
-Squad, not as a full member, but just to please
-him and have a fourth member to call on if an
-emergency arose where he would be needed. Al
-vouched for his innocence and good nature,
-eagerness to please and willingness to work
-without asking for explanations of why he did
-a certain thing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;d be a good one to send to watch anybody&mdash;Griff,
-or the ex-pilot,&rdquo; Al spoke as the
-trio rode toward Jimmy-junior&rsquo;s home.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob did not finish. He applied his coaster
-brake, made a quick signal for silence, swerved
-into a garage driveway, followed by his companions,
-and dismounted, dropping his bicycle
-on the lawn.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What happened?&rdquo; asked Al, thrilling to
-some possible mystery.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lang turned the corner!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t want him to see us?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Certainly not!&rdquo; Bob answered Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wonder where he&rsquo;s going.&rdquo; Curt slipped
-along the side of the house by which they had
-stopped. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s in a terrible hurry,&rdquo; he reported,
-coming back. &ldquo;In a second he&rsquo;ll be passing
-this house. Get back&mdash;behind the house. I
-don&rsquo;t think he&rsquo;ll notice the bikes on the grass in
-the dusk.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_150">150</div>
-<p>They hid from the view of anyone on the
-sidewalk. Peering cautiously out in turn they
-saw Langley hurrying by.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now&mdash;where&rsquo;s he going?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And what shall we do about it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;See where he goes,&rdquo; Curt answered the other
-two.</p>
-<p>Lang turned the next corner.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet he&rsquo;s going to Griff&rsquo;s house!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al was correct in his guess. As they trundled
-their bicycles, keeping as far behind Lang as
-they thought necessary, they saw him turn in at
-Griff&rsquo;s gate. Five minutes later, from carefully
-chosen points of concealment they saw Lang
-come out, take Griff&rsquo;s repaired motorcycle and
-ride off in haste.</p>
-<p>Consulting one another with dismayed eyes,
-the chums, by common consent, mounted and
-pedaled for dear life along the street, around
-the corner, back to the main highway.</p>
-<p>They seemed to sense where Langley was going.</p>
-<p>They did not, however, divine what he
-planned to do!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_151">151</div>
-<h2 id="c20">CHAPTER XX
-<br /><span class="small">A PACKAGE OF MONEY</span></h2>
-<p>Before they reached the aircraft plant toward
-which they pedaled with all their power, Bob,
-Curt and Al saw a light flare up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the flying field ready for a hop,&rdquo;
-panted Al. &ldquo;Hurry!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you think it could be Lang?&rdquo; Curt asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who else?&rdquo; Bob retorted, pedaling faster.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nobody at the gate,&rdquo; Curt called.
-They were near enough to see the open gateway.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The watchman&rsquo;s helping with chocks and
-spinning the prop.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob, increasing his pedal revolutions, forging
-ahead, spoke over his shoulder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; called Curt. &ldquo;What are you going
-to do?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Find out&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No! Wait!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_152">152</div>
-<p>Bob slowed up his pedals, permitting the
-bicycle to coast along as the modern, free-wheeling
-automobile runs when the foot is removed
-from the accelerator pedal. Curt caught
-up to him. In a moment, as they approached
-the gate, Al came up also.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let him see you at all,&rdquo; warned Curt.
-&ldquo;Better wait and ask the watchman after he&rsquo;s
-gone. You&rsquo;ll find out more, that way.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was good advice, and Bob agreed to act
-on it.</p>
-<p>They hid the bicycles, in case it turned out
-that Lang had not left the ground. Careful not
-to disclose themselves, they watched at the gate
-as the engine of the sport model owned by Griff
-was warmed up. In the flood of light on the runway
-they recognized Lang as the pilot, and
-watched him adjust flying helmet and leather
-jacket, get into the craft, test the instruments,
-checking carefully, and then get his wind direction
-from the windsock, which told that the
-light Summer breeze was from the South. The
-watchman swung the tail around, set the chocks
-again for a final test. Lang &ldquo;gave her the gun,&rdquo;
-to see if everything was hitting perfectly, signaled
-for the chocks to be removed, and since
-his craft was correctly headed into the wind
-the airplane taxied, gaining speed, and rose
-swiftly into the dark.</p>
-<p>Hardly waiting for the flood to be extinguished,
-the trio of amateur detectives hailed
-the watchman.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_153">153</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Too late to see Lang take off,&rdquo; greeted Bob.
-&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t say why he hopped at night did he?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yeah, he did! He&rsquo;s going off to see his uncle
-about something.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s funny,&rdquo; Al argued, under his breath,
-to Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Certainly is,&rdquo; Curt agreed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thanks,&rdquo; Bob spoke to the watchman. &ldquo;As
-long as we&rsquo;re here,&rdquo; he turned to his chums.
-&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s bring in our bikes and get some more of
-those books on metal alloys Barney told us
-about.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The boss is here, himself,&rdquo; the watchman
-explained. &ldquo;Go ahead.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Barney was working late!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;His office is lighted,&rdquo; Al commented. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s
-stop in and tell him about the note and the autograph.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And about Lang.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He must know Lang hopped off,&rdquo; Curt told
-Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes&mdash;the crate made enough noise&mdash;unless
-he&rsquo;s awfully busy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Barney was busy enough, but he had heard
-the take-off, he admitted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m trying to check up on the firm&rsquo;s books.&rdquo;
-Barney waved a hand toward the pile of heavy
-volumes, ledgers, daybooks, indexes and others,
-scattered on his desk. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t find out what
-way they&rsquo;re doing it, but something&rsquo;s being
-&lsquo;worked&rsquo; about the materials.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_154">154</div>
-<p>&ldquo;So Sandy told me this morning,&rdquo; Al stated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I can&rsquo;t find it,&rdquo; he pushed three of the
-smaller books into a large lower desk drawer,
-and turned, mysteriously smiling. &ldquo;How do you
-like this idea?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll put a few books
-aside, and then, when the staff comes in, tomorrow,
-I&rsquo;ll see how the bookkeeper and Parsons
-take it. If there&rsquo;s anything &lsquo;flim-flammy&rsquo; about
-them, they will show it when they miss the
-books.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s dandy!&rdquo; agreed Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you figure on doing now?&rdquo; Barney
-asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why&mdash;nothing special,&rdquo; said Bob. &ldquo;We
-thought if Lang was flying over to see Father,
-that would take him about three hours&mdash;or four,
-and he wouldn&rsquo;t get back here before morning,
-so there&rsquo;s no use waiting for him to come
-back here. But&mdash;we haven&rsquo;t anything special
-to do, except go to call on Sandy&rsquo;s son, Jimmy-junior.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not &lsquo;stick around&rsquo; here?&rdquo; suggested
-Barney. &ldquo;For awhile, at least. I don&rsquo;t want
-to be mixed up in anything, but if anybody
-should come slinking around, I&rsquo;d like to know
-it&mdash;as long as you have nothing much on hand?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s!&rdquo; urged Al.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_155">155</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Suits me,&rdquo; Curt agreed. Bob was willing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not put out all the lights, and just hang
-around in the dark for an hour?&rdquo; suggested
-Barney.</p>
-<p>They agreed readily enough, and felt quite
-like conspirators or real sleuths on a big case
-as they occupied easy chairs in the big &ldquo;directors&rsquo;
-room&rdquo; and talked in low tones.</p>
-<p>Their vigil was soon rewarded.</p>
-<p>Footsteps, sounding without effort at concealment,
-in the corridor, caused all three comrades
-to become tense and alert.</p>
-<p>Bob felt a hand clutch his arm, and almost
-called out in his nervous reaction until he
-realized that Curt was whispering:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hide!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al, already at his other side, was anxious.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How? Where?&rdquo; he said quickly but softly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Behind the chairs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>However, hardly had they gotten into concealment
-when they realized that there was no
-need to hide; the steps went briskly past the
-door and on, down the hallway.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now what?&rdquo; asked Al as a door opened and
-slammed.</p>
-<p>At the door to the hall Curt turned, waiting
-until the other two joined him, he spoke quietly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_156">156</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You wait here,&rdquo; he urged. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m lightest&mdash;and
-quickest, I think. Let me go on down
-and &lsquo;snoop&rsquo; a little. He slammed the door so
-hard it jumped open a little&mdash;it&rsquo;s Barney&rsquo;s
-office!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Barney? He&mdash;do you suppose?&mdash;&rdquo; Al was
-puzzled. &ldquo;He told us to wait, though&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s never Barney. I&rsquo;ll soon see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Curt was gone, tiptoeing, clinging close to the
-inner wall, where, he felt sure, the boards were
-so sturdy and well secured that they would be
-unlikely to creak.</p>
-<p>In suspense his companions waited.</p>
-<p>Soon, in the dim hall, they saw Curt returning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s&mdash;it&rsquo;s&mdash;Mr. Parsons!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s he doing?&rdquo; Al was eager.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hunting for something.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Those books, I&rsquo;ll give you odds on it!&rdquo; Bob
-spoke softly.</p>
-<p>They waited, uncertain what to do&mdash;in fact,
-there was nothing they could do but wait.</p>
-<p>They had only a moment to decide. Down the
-hall, from the stairway, came other steps; the
-chums drew back inside the doorway. They let
-Curt peer out.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Griff, this time!&rdquo; he informed the others.
-&ldquo;He&rsquo;s coming to meet his&mdash;no he isn&rsquo;t! Get
-back! Hide!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_157">157</div>
-<p>Hesitating steps paused but before there was
-any further movement Curt, Al and Bob were
-well screened from any but a careful search in
-full light.</p>
-<p>They were glad, this time, they had gotten
-under cover. Griff did not go to meet his father!</p>
-<p>Instead he came into the directors&rsquo; room, at
-least as far as inside its door, where, a faint
-blotch against a very dull oblong of weak light,
-Bob saw him standing, watchful.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shucks!&rdquo; thought Al, &ldquo;we can&rsquo;t find out
-about Mr. Parsons on account of&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They did not hear anything; but evidently the
-youth watching at the door did, for he came
-further into the room. Would he decide to hide?
-Might he choose the spot already occupied by
-one of the youths?</p>
-<p>Their suspense was relieved! He waited inside
-the doorway, and it was a wait of a long,
-dragging three or four minutes that seemed like
-an age to the crouching trio; but finally he
-walked out, his step confident and loud, showing
-that need for concealment was over.</p>
-<p>Quickly the three reached the door. Already,
-as they peered out, a light was glowing, but not
-electric ceiling domes&mdash;it was a pocket flash
-held close to something in Mr. Parsons&rsquo; own
-office.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_158">158</div>
-<p>Like shadows the three, arms touching, went
-down the hall. They could not contain their
-suspense. At an open door, partly drawn shut
-but not locked, they stopped. Looking through
-the crack, hardly daring to breathe or move,
-they saw Griff fit a key to his father&rsquo;s desk,
-open it, take something from a small drawer&mdash;and
-walk confidently, if slowly, to&mdash;the safe in
-the corner!</p>
-<p>Before it his light was held low, close. He
-was manipulating the knobs of the combination.
-As the partner&rsquo;s son he had access to it, the
-chums realized. They forgot some of their caution
-but not all; they peered closely in through
-the crack of the door&mdash;and saw&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Phew!&rdquo; breathed Al, &ldquo;he&rsquo;s got&mdash;a package&mdash;of&mdash;money!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_159">159</div>
-<h2 id="c21">CHAPTER XXI
-<br /><span class="small">CAUGHT AND CLEARED!</span></h2>
-<p>Spellbound the three watching youths saw
-Griff count the bills in that packet he had taken
-from the aircraft plant safe.</p>
-<p>They heard the ruffle of paper as he ran
-through the ends of the crisp, new bills.</p>
-<p>Then he stepped out of their line of vision.</p>
-<p>With unexpected promptness, startling his
-companions, Al flung the door inward so that
-it banged against the wall. Instantly he leaped
-into the room. His chums followed. Startled,
-dropping his packet, Griff swung around to
-stare in amazement and terror.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Drop those bills!&rdquo; Al cried needlessly,
-&ldquo;we&rsquo;ve caught you red-handed!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All three of the Sky Squad were in the room.</p>
-<p>Al dashed across to the window, to block any
-possibility of Griff trying to drop the ten or
-fifteen feet to the ground. Bob snatched up the
-money. Curt blocked the door.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_160">160</div>
-<p>After his first look of stunned horror, Griff
-sank into the swivel chair and buried his face
-in his hands. His shoulders shook with a sudden
-revulsion of feeling that unmanned him,
-made him sob like a creature in pain.</p>
-<p>For a moment no one moved. The comrades
-were rather dismayed and nonplussed by
-Griff&rsquo;s pathetic attitude.</p>
-<p>They had caught him, yes! Red-handed, as
-Al had said, they had caught him, in the act
-of something very dreadful.</p>
-<p>Nevertheless, his surprising way of giving in,
-sitting there in a bent posture, with his body
-racked by his sobs, made him a rather pitiful
-figure.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stop that!&rdquo; Bob said, finally, and rather
-gruffly. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve done wrong. You&rsquo;ve been
-caught. Take it like a man!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Griff replied in a shaking voice. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;I&rsquo;m
-caught. I know I&rsquo;m a baby&mdash;but&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He fought back his weakness and gulped.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;what?&rdquo; demanded Curt. &ldquo;I suppose
-you&rsquo;ll say you were forced to do this by somebody
-else. They always do, in books!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Griff answered. &ldquo;No. I&mdash;it&rsquo;s all my
-doing. But&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why do you keep saying &lsquo;but&rsquo;?&rdquo; asked Al.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_161">161</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Griff had hard work not to break down
-again. In spite of the way they had found him,
-in spite of what he had been planning to do,
-there was something that touched the youthful
-hearts of the trio, in Griff&rsquo;s sorrowful eyes and
-drawn face.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; he repeated, &ldquo;if only somebody could
-help me instead of hounding me and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re not &lsquo;hounding&rsquo; you,&rdquo; Bob defended
-their action. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d have done the same.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But you&rsquo;ve been watching me and following
-me and suspecting me,&rdquo; Griff declared sadly. &ldquo;I
-know I deserve it&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh! Stop saying but!&rdquo; Curt was annoyed
-by what he took to be an attempt to win sympathy.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;d have helped you, instead of
-&lsquo;hounding&rsquo; you if you&rsquo;d been honest, instead of
-trying to be cunning and in with the wrong sort
-of people.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, you would!&rdquo; retorted Griff, bitterly.
-&ldquo;That&rsquo;s easy to say.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s true,&rdquo; declared Bob stoutly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody helps me,&rdquo; responded Griff. &ldquo;Everybody
-is after me for one reason or another.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s because you&rsquo;re so furtive and fidgety
-that you ask for it&mdash;and doing things&mdash;like
-this&mdash;&rdquo; Bob shook the bills.</p>
-<p>Griff sat in silence for a moment. Bob walked
-over to the open safe, saw where the package
-belonged, and pushed it into place, then
-slammed the safe door, turned the knob of the
-combination to lock it and swung back to Griff.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_162">162</div>
-<p>&ldquo;There!&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;That shows we&rsquo;re
-helping you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;I&mdash;what do you mean?&rdquo; Griff stared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I mean this!&rdquo; Bob came and stood in front
-of him. &ldquo;I mean that the money is back in the
-safe. If you can show any reason besides
-temptation or somebody forcing you to do&mdash;this!&mdash;we&rsquo;ll
-all promise to say nothing more
-about the things we saw you do.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Griff shook his head.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That wouldn&rsquo;t do any good,&rdquo; he said despondently.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to have that money. You
-think it&rsquo;s&mdash;&rdquo; he could not bring out the word,
-but he saw that the trio recognized what he
-meant. &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t&mdash;because Lang is flying, right
-now, to his uncle, to get him to come back and
-give me money&mdash;a loan&mdash;to replace this.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The chums exchanged surprised, wondering
-glances.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lang! Going to Father for money for you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Griff answered Al. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s&mdash;it&rsquo;s all
-mixed up and&mdash;awful!&mdash;but you say you&rsquo;d help
-instead of telling on me, if I could show I wasn&rsquo;t
-as bad as you think.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob thought he saw a genuine honesty in the
-clear look Griff gave him. His sympathy was
-really quick and he wanted to be fair.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You could count on that!&rdquo; he stated earnestly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_163">163</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You bet you could!&rdquo; Al declared and Curt
-added a similar assertion.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If I thought you meant that&mdash;if I thought
-you&rsquo;d believe me&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Really we would!&rdquo; Al was also touched;
-Griff, caught and breaking down and seeming
-to be declaring innocence in some way, was not
-the furtive, uneasy, shifty-eyed Griff they had
-known. &ldquo;Honestly! Try us and see.&rdquo; He and
-Curt moved closer. The three stood in a group
-in front of the huddling youth in the swivel
-chair.</p>
-<p>Griff looked up dolefully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It will make me out bad enough,&rdquo; he stated.
-&ldquo;But&mdash;not as bad as you&rsquo;ve been thinking. Oh,
-I know!&rdquo; he took on a touch of his old defiance,
-&ldquo;I know you&rsquo;ve tried to connect me with all the
-wrong things that have been going on here! I
-know I&rsquo;ve acted as though I am guilty. I&rsquo;m
-not, though&mdash;not in the way you think.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; Curt admitted. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll listen.
-We&rsquo;d rather have you innocent than guilty&mdash;of
-anything!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Even if our case&mdash;&rdquo; Al stopped suddenly,
-but Griff nodded.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_164">164</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess you all think you&rsquo;re clever,&rdquo; he said,
-forgetting his own trouble for a second or two.
-&ldquo;You come here to learn all about this mystery
-of where the missing parts go and who did
-things to the crates, and why. Don&rsquo;t you think
-we have eyes? It&rsquo;s all over the plant what you
-are trying to do. Don&rsquo;t you suppose we all
-know one of you is a close friend of the other
-two, and Bob and Al are sons of a detective?
-What&rsquo;s the answer?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The answer seems to be that you thought
-we weren&rsquo;t smart and so you went right ahead.&rdquo;
-Curt was a little nettled by Griff&rsquo;s statement,
-although common sense told him, now that Griff
-mentioned the point, that their scheme must be
-fairly evident to any sensible person.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think whether you were smart or
-dumb,&rdquo; Griff replied. &ldquo;I had too much on my
-mind. Bad as it is, it might as well be confessed.
-I gamble, and owe money for it, and
-I came here to borrow this from the safe&mdash;it&rsquo;s
-as much my father&rsquo;s as anybody&rsquo;s, because he&rsquo;s
-Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s partner, but&mdash;I didn&rsquo;t intend to
-try to &lsquo;get away&rsquo; with the money. I only wanted
-it overnight. Before the office opens Lang will
-be back with the money to replace it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What makes it so important to get money
-at this time of night?&rdquo; demanded Curt, suspiciously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess I&rsquo;d better tell the whole thing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re listening!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go ahead. Tell us!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_165">165</div>
-<p>Griff nodded. Dejectedly, shamefaced and
-humble, he related his story:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been running around with a pretty
-rough crowd,&rdquo; he admitted, &ldquo;and they got me
-in the habit of going to places like The Windsock,
-out on the&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We know!&rdquo; Al interrupted impatiently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right. There&rsquo;s ways to gamble, out there,
-if you know the people who run the place.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jones?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;he owns it, yes. Mostly its Jenks,
-his manager, and the waiters that let the crowd
-do things outside the actual license rights of the
-roadhouse. Well, anyhow, I got to spending
-money pretty fast and I gambled. After awhile
-I lost so much I found out I was owing the
-&lsquo;house&rsquo; as they say, more than two hundred
-dollars!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Although several maxims and Biblical quotations
-sprang into Bob&rsquo;s mind, he kept silent.
-This was no time for preaching, for pretending
-the &ldquo;holier than thou&rdquo; pose. Under the same
-temptations, argued Bob to himself, it would
-be hard to say whether he&rsquo;d go Griff&rsquo;s way or
-not. It isn&rsquo;t how good a fellow thinks he is,
-but how good he proves himself to be under
-temptation, that counts, Bob decided.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_166">166</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what you&rsquo;re taking the money for&mdash;or
-trying to,&rdquo; Curt determined. &ldquo;But why did
-you have to take it this way, and at this time?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The manager at the roadhouse said, last
-week, he&rsquo;d have to get all the debts owed the
-house and clean up, because they&rsquo;re spending a
-lot on a new dance place, like a&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hangar. We know. Never mind why they
-wanted it. Tell me,&rdquo; Bob changed the subject
-for a moment, &ldquo;what does the owner look like?
-Is he short, thick-set&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the manager&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But that man let on to be Jones.&rdquo; Al broke
-in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe he did? What were you doing there&mdash;snooping?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; said Curt, pacifically, wishing
-to get Griff&rsquo;s side of the matter first. &ldquo;We
-wanted a specimen of his handwriting&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish <i>I</i> could get one!&rdquo; declared Griff, ruefully.
-&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the whole trouble, fellows.&rdquo; His
-manner was more eager, more confidential. &ldquo;I
-paid the money once&mdash;and he didn&rsquo;t give me a
-receipt&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Bob was connecting some things in his
-mind. &ldquo;He came here one evening and demanded
-the money, and you gave him a parcel
-and then realized he didn&rsquo;t give you a receipt.
-You tried to chase him on your motorcycle and
-got into an accident.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_167">167</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought you were watching, but I was too
-excited and upset to care,&rdquo; agreed Griff. &ldquo;Yes,
-I had borrowed from all the fellows I knew, and
-had scraped every cent out of my savings account,
-and I had the money. But he didn&rsquo;t give
-any receipt, and when I finally got over the
-smash of the motorcycle and went to ask for it
-he declared I&rsquo;d paid him with a package of
-wadded, folded paper and not money!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But it was money,&rdquo; declared Bob. &ldquo;Unless
-you changed it, because I caught you wrapping
-up something green the day I came into the engine
-assembling room.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was money, all right enough,&rdquo; Griff asserted.
-&ldquo;But he wanted it twice. Well, I had
-promised my father that I wouldn&rsquo;t go with
-that crowd any more, and I had been weak and
-went against my promise. So I couldn&rsquo;t go to
-him about it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you had, and made a clean breast of it,
-he would have gotten you out of this scrape.&rdquo;
-Bob had to say that much.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think so!&rdquo; Griff was morose. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
-got so much worry on his mind about the plant
-and all that&rsquo;s happened that he&rsquo;s jumpy and
-nervous and suspicious and he&rsquo;d throw me out
-of here, and maybe send me away from home.
-And I am trying to go straight. I will&mdash;I make
-a vow on that!&mdash;if once I can get out of this
-scrape. I&rsquo;ve learned a lesson.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_168">168</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But that fellow at the roadhouse knows
-you&rsquo;re afraid of your dad, I guess,&rdquo; asserted
-Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, and when I said I had paid the money&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I overheard that,&rdquo; Al stated, and related
-what he had heard through the open office window
-at The Windsock.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You fellows have been on the job!&rdquo; There
-was a note of admiration in Griff&rsquo;s voice, then
-he sobered and went on. &ldquo;Yes, that fellow, out
-there, knows about me being afraid of Father,
-and he said if I didn&rsquo;t have the money tonight,
-before midnight, he&rsquo;d tell my &lsquo;old man&rsquo; as he
-calls Dad. They&rsquo;re opening a dance place and
-he said the cash was essential tonight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So you told Lang and he went to get it,&rdquo;
-ended Curt for him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, and he&rsquo;s going to call me, long distance,
-as soon as he gets there, and I was getting
-the money out so I could start for The
-Windsock the minute he calls up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your father doing out there so
-much?&rdquo; demanded Al, suspiciously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Trying to &lsquo;get a line&rsquo; on me, I guess!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Curt turned to his comrades with a rueful
-grin.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_169">169</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That explains everything,&rdquo; he stated, almost
-regretfully. &ldquo;Griff has cleared himself, and
-his father&rsquo;s motive is logical.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It leaves us &lsquo;up in the air&rsquo;&mdash;and not in any
-&lsquo;crate&rsquo; either!&rdquo; agreed Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; nodded Bob. &ldquo;Barney said the case
-was all sewed up&mdash;but the threads must have
-been weak, because here&rsquo;s our case all torn
-apart!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Curt, &ldquo;for my part&mdash;I&rsquo;m glad!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Since Griff and Mr. Parsons were cleared of
-suspicion, the other two agreed promptly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I may be cleared,&rdquo; said Griff sadly, &ldquo;but
-I&rsquo;m not out of trouble. If I don&rsquo;t get this money
-to that man&mdash;Jenks is what we all call him,
-Toby Jenks!&mdash;why, he&rsquo;ll call up Dad&mdash;and
-then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We said we&rsquo;d help if you could clear yourself,&rdquo;
-stated Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And we will!&rdquo; agreed Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;With all our heart!&rdquo; added Al. &ldquo;But&mdash;how?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let me take the money out there!&rdquo; urged
-Griff. &ldquo;Just keep quiet about catching me
-here&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Even if the money belonged to your father,
-which the stockholders of the corporation might
-argue out with you,&rdquo; said Bob seriously, &ldquo;taking
-it, just overnight, would be&mdash;wrong, to say
-the least.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_170">170</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you go to Mr. Parsons&mdash;to your
-father?&rdquo; suggested Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s got all this worry on his mind, trying
-to see what&rsquo;s wrong&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; admitted Al, &ldquo;I guess it would be
-better not to worry him about this, if we could
-see how to get around it and still not let you
-take this money.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We suspected him,&rdquo; Curt said, rather
-ashamed but anxious to be as frank as Griff,
-whose manner and actions convinced them that
-he had been absolutely honest with them. &ldquo;We
-suspected him of being mixed up in something.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Everybody suspects everybody else,&rdquo; admitted
-Griff. &ldquo;Dad suspects Barney, Barney
-suspects me, I suspect the supply clerk and the
-bookkeeper of working together to get cheaper
-supplies here, and they suspect each other and
-everybody else&mdash;even you three!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Bob waved the statement aside, &ldquo;that
-isn&rsquo;t getting down to brass tacks. Think, for five
-minutes, everybody. We&rsquo;ve got to help Griff!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Seeing their case destroyed, their chief suspect
-cleared, they turned loyally to help to retrieve
-themselves by aiding him.</p>
-<p>For five minutes no one spoke.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_171">171</div>
-<h2 id="c22">CHAPTER XXII
-<br /><span class="small">THE &ldquo;MYSTERY CRATE&rdquo;</span></h2>
-<p>&ldquo;Father ordered us to drop this part of
-things,&rdquo; said Al finally, &ldquo;but I&rsquo;m glad we disobeyed
-if it helps Griff to get out of trouble.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So am I,&rdquo; admitted Bob. &ldquo;But that isn&rsquo;t
-what we were quiet for, to talk about what
-we&rsquo;ve done.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We want to know what to do!&rdquo; Curt commented.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I was coming to,&rdquo; defended Al.
-&ldquo;Let Griff stay here with you, Bob, while Curt
-and I ride out to The Windsock. We can call
-up as soon as we arrive, and then wait outside,
-hiding. Then Griff can take this money
-and come out, and pay it, and then we will jump
-in from outside the door and grab it and jump
-through the window and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is that the best you can do?&rdquo; scoffed Curt.
-Al grinned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It looked good till I said it,&rdquo; he admitted,
-&ldquo;then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_172">172</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s you, all the way!&rdquo; his brother challenged.
-&ldquo;Quick on the trigger and sorry when
-the bullet hits the wrong target.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have a plan, though,&rdquo; suggested Curt. &ldquo;Al
-and I can go out to The Windsock, as Al said,
-to get a good place under that office window.
-Then, when Griff pays the money, we will be
-witnesses, and if the man tries not to give a receipt
-we&rsquo;ll be on Griff&rsquo;s side.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Better, but not perfect,&rdquo; said Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose the head Sleuth of the Sky Squad
-has the one perfect plan!&rdquo; Al was sarcastic.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Bob was honest, &ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t! I thought
-of having Griff call the man and say he&rsquo;d be
-there bright and early with the money&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I did tell him that, when Lang left. He said
-it would be tonight, whether he got it from me
-or from my father.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Um-m-m!&rdquo; Curt was thoughtful. &ldquo;Bad!
-Well&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If we could keep that Jenks man so busy,
-keep his mind so much occupied he&rsquo;d be too
-excited to think about Griff&mdash;&rdquo; Al was not very
-sure of himself.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_173">173</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We could!&rdquo; Curt astonished Al by accepting
-the idea. &ldquo;Look here! If he isn&rsquo;t the ex-pilot,
-maybe the ex-pilot wrote that other autograph.
-Whether he did not or did, anyhow the
-Jenks man had something to conceal, or he
-wouldn&rsquo;t have gone to the trouble of giving Al
-two specimens of writing to get mixed up with.
-Now&mdash;if we were out there, and Griff tried once
-more to stave off payment till morning, if he
-agreed, all right, we could come home and this
-money in the safe would be all right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Logical so far,&rdquo; agreed Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right. If the man refused to wait, we
-could telephone in to Griff to find out, and if
-Jenks refused to wait, we&rsquo;d walk in on that
-Jenks fellow and say we knew he was mixed up
-in something wrong about the airplane crash,
-and throw out hints, and so on. I think, myself,
-he is in it somehow. He&rsquo;d bluster, maybe, but
-if he has anything to conceal, we could scare
-him, and then tell him to let Griff alone for the
-present or tell his story to a policeman&mdash;and
-we might hint that he could explain a lot about
-the crash&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I like it as well as anything you&rsquo;ve suggested,&rdquo;
-said Griff. &ldquo;If you could &lsquo;get way with
-it.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Trust us to scare him good and proper!&rdquo;
-declared Al. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d ask him &lsquo;how about the brown
-&lsquo;plane&rsquo;&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No good,&rdquo; argued Bob. &ldquo;We looked that craft
-up in the official registry and she&rsquo;s from out
-West, and while we know her markings we
-haven&rsquo;t found her and I don&rsquo;t believe he&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_174">174</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I do,&rdquo; Al defended his deduction. &ldquo;I think
-he had it brought here for him to use, and then
-taken away again, and that accounts for his
-note&mdash;&lsquo;Everything O.K.&rsquo; when the pilot left it
-there and he put the note on the seat to show
-he had been there!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then maybe this Jenks hopped off, in the
-morning, met the &lsquo;plane Mr. Tredway was flying,
-forced it into trouble, rode it down&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But we saw the big cabin ship!&rdquo; objected
-Bob to Curt&rsquo;s theory. &ldquo;There was no other
-ship around.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t be sure!&rdquo; argued Al. &ldquo;That brown
-crate might have been up above, against the
-dark clouds in the sky! You couldn&rsquo;t tell if
-we heard one or two engines. He could have
-surprised Mr. Tredway, could have driven him
-into a dive&mdash;something may have gone wrong&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But Barney examined the craft when it was
-hauled in,&rdquo; urged Bob. &ldquo;Nothing was wrong
-with it at all!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Al was obstinate, &ldquo;I think what I
-think!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who owns the brown &lsquo;plane?&rdquo; asked Griff.
-&ldquo;Did you look that up?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_175">175</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, we did! No name we know. No one
-mixed up in the case. It was probably hired
-by wire, or telephone, from somebody we don&rsquo;t
-know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t important, anyhow,&rdquo; Curt declared.
-&ldquo;Not right now. What do you think of my idea,
-Griff?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m for anything that will tide me over till
-Lang gets back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then&mdash;let&rsquo;s do it!&rdquo; Al jumped away from
-the group and was already at the door. Bob
-hesitated a moment, then, seeing how eager Curt
-was to echo Al&rsquo;s enthusiasm, he agreed.</p>
-<p>After the two started for The Windsock, Bob
-sat with Griff, giving him the facts they knew,
-the theories they had formed for awhile.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s tangled up, and no mistake,&rdquo; Griff, recovered
-somewhat, but no longer fidgety, feeling
-that aid was being given him in his trouble,
-rose. &ldquo;Look here, Bob&mdash;I was so excited, I
-didn&rsquo;t eat any dinner. What say you stay here
-in case a call comes in, while I run out and get
-some coffee and sinkers?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lock the desk first! I don&rsquo;t want to be
-caught here with it open.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_176">176</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Right! I shan&rsquo;t need the slip that has the
-combination on it, any more.&rdquo; He put a paper
-in a small drawer, closed down the roll top, adjusted
-his cap at a more confident, rakish angle,
-and sauntered out, while Bob made himself comfortable
-at the desk in the swivel chair.</p>
-<p>The minutes dragged along.</p>
-<p>In the deserted office building there was almost
-no sound&mdash;a rat crept toward a wastebasket,
-ran back as Bob moved in his chair; but
-otherwise the place was very still.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s an airplane engine!&rdquo; Bob mused,
-as, in the silence, he caught the faint, steady
-drone coming from the sky.</p>
-<p>It grew louder&mdash;rapidly, much louder!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It can&rsquo;t be Lang, coming back!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob went to the window. The sound seemed
-to come from the other side of the building.
-He ran across the hall into the directors&rsquo; room
-and got to the window, which had a fire escape
-stairway outside it.</p>
-<p>Just as he peered through the bars of the fire
-escape, he saw a craft swoop down, quite low.
-It did not land! Instead, it seemed to zoom
-along and to rise swiftly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Overshot the field,&rdquo; Bob mused. &ldquo;Why
-doesn&rsquo;t he drop a Verey light to signal the
-watchman to turn on the landing floods? Or&mdash;maybe
-the watchman isn&rsquo;t out there. I&rsquo;d better
-see.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_177">177</div>
-<p>He ran down the stairs and out into the yard,
-across it and onto the small landing field. The
-craft had passed, but he could still hear the
-engine. It seemed from its change of location,
-that the craft was coming around in a spiral.</p>
-<p>Bob ran toward the switch controlling the
-flood lights. One of the large, hooded lamps was
-near it. As the sound of the engine came closer
-he switched on the floods.</p>
-<p>To his surprise the sudden light seemed to
-startle the pilot&mdash;at least the craft seemed to
-waver, to skid, to drop, and then, to catch its
-flying speed and control. But it did not spiral
-as he expected a pilot who had waited for light
-would do.</p>
-<p>Instead it began to climb.</p>
-<p>Swiftly, eagerly curious, Bob caught hold of
-the handle on the adjusting mechanism of the
-flood light. It could be lifted, or set lower, to
-govern the range and height of its beam.</p>
-<p>Bob proposed to use it as a searchlight, to
-illuminate the craft if he could swing the heavy
-lamp upward in time.</p>
-<p>Eagerly he labored with the mechanism.</p>
-<p>Slowly the beam lifted.</p>
-<p>Its intense rays caught the craft&rsquo;s underwings.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s going on here?&rdquo; The watchman ran
-up.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_178">178</div>
-<p>For answer Bob pointed excitedly toward a
-brown, sharply outlined craft, climbing, growing
-dim in the fainter beam as it receded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s&mdash;it&rsquo;s&mdash;&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;&mdash;it&rsquo;s the mystery
-crate&mdash;the brown airplane!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_179">179</div>
-<h2 id="c23">CHAPTER XXIII
-<br /><span class="small">BOB PURSUES!</span></h2>
-<p>Realizing that the watchman did not know
-what he meant by &ldquo;the mystery crate,&rdquo; Bob hurriedly
-told of the earlier experiences: all the
-while he talked his mind was busy, underneath,
-wondering why the pilot of the brown ship had
-flown over the plant, why he had appeared to
-lose control when the light flared up, why he had
-climbed to get away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s gone!&rdquo; said the watchman. &ldquo;Anyhow,
-that&rsquo;s clear!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hate to see him get away!&rdquo; Bob said, sorrowfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Whyn&rsquo;t you chase him?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I?&rdquo; Bob was startled by the idea.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure&mdash;you! Didn&rsquo;t I see Lang giving you
-lessons, and Griff, too?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes&mdash;but, at night&mdash;and Lang has the small
-ship.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The watchman seemed to have caught the excitement
-of a chase.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_180">180</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Look here, though!&rdquo; he cried, beckoning as
-he ran. &ldquo;In the hangar is a crate just like Griff&rsquo;s
-model&mdash;belonged to Mr. Tredway. He&mdash;he
-won&rsquo;t need it no more. Whyn&rsquo;t you?&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At night?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure! Once you get off the ground, the air&rsquo;s
-all the same, day or night, ain&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Not exactly, Bob demurred, There were many
-considerations to be thought out, but his father
-had said &ldquo;locate the brown ship.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Here it was, flying away!</p>
-<p>It seemed to be &ldquo;up to him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can we get the crate out? Can we get it
-started? Is there any fuel aboard?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Already the watchman had hold of the tail
-assembly of a trim, slender, dark fuselage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Grab on!&rdquo; answered the watchman, jockeying
-the fuselage so that a wingtip missed the
-span of the cabin &lsquo;plane&rsquo;s spreading airfoils.
-&ldquo;Grab on! I know you lads is detectiffs, and
-here&rsquo;s your chance for a medal or somethin&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob &ldquo;grabbed on!&rdquo; with spirit. He had caught
-the enthusiasm of the older person. It took them
-only a short time to jockey the craft into the
-open, to get its gauges checked, to see that it
-had oil and at least a tank of gas three-quarters
-full.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Holler out!&rdquo; The watchman stood by the
-&ldquo;prop.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ready!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gas on?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_181">181</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Gas on!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Switch off?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Switch off!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The watchman spun the propeller.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Contact!&rdquo; he yelled, stepping swiftly beyond
-the range of those deadly sharp blade tips.</p>
-<p>There came the snap and bark of the motor.
-Cold! But Bob, feeling that for all the precious
-seconds it must waste, he ought to be safe before
-he might be sorry, allowed it to warm up,
-checked his instruments as he had observed
-Lang and Griff do, and then, as the watchman,
-obeying his signal, kicked away the chocks so
-the wheels could move forward, the amateur
-pilot, steady and cool all at once, glanced at the
-windsock, saw that he could take off straight
-down the short field, pulled open the throttle,
-tipped the &ldquo;flippers&rdquo; so the tail ceased to drag,
-as the propeller blast caught the elevators, and
-began to race down the field.</p>
-<p>As he went he tipped the elevators sharply,
-felt the ship sway a trifle, realized he was off
-the ground and moving steadily, climbing to the
-roar of the engine!</p>
-<p>He smiled a little. He had not forgotten to
-hold the ship level for the brief seconds that it
-needed to assume flying speed after the first hop
-from earth. He had not climbed her at too
-steep an angle, there was no indication, at least
-to his inexperienced hand, of any logginess of
-the controls presaging a stall. He was away!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_182">182</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; he thought, with a sharp glance
-around the sky spaces, &ldquo;I am in for it. If nothing
-goes wrong with the machinery or the prop
-I guess I can keep this crate level and get somewhere.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But where?</p>
-<p>In those precious moments the brown ship
-could have gone ten miles.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He was mightily interested in the aircraft
-plant,&rdquo; Bob reflected, letting the ship &ldquo;fly herself,&rdquo;
-as most well balanced aircraft will do in
-steady air, as long as flying speed is held. &ldquo;Now
-all that we have found out, so far, has centered
-about the aircraft plant and&mdash;and The Windsock!
-Could he be around there? Or&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As a new thought struck him he gripped the
-stick a tiny bit tighter.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&mdash;Or, maybe he&rsquo;s brought the brown ship
-back for some new stunt! It might be hidden in
-that field again!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He pushed the stick a trifle to the side, thus
-operating the ailerons, while he used his rudder
-experimentally, meaning to swing in a circle.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_183">183</div>
-<p>Whether a good Providence watches over
-amateurs, in sports or in professions, or
-whether Bob had actually learned from his lessons,
-the fact is that he did not overbank or use
-too much rudder, and neither felt the wind of a
-skid on one cheek nor the breeze of a slip on
-the other. Around went the ship, in a wide
-swing.</p>
-<p>Bob kept his eyes on the sky, with momentary
-glances at the instruments, not all of which
-were understandable to him yet; however, he
-knew the altimeter, the tachometer which
-records engine speed, the gas and oil pressure
-gauges and such important ones.</p>
-<p>They seemed all to record satisfactorily. His
-altitude was six hundred feet; a little low for
-safety, so he climbed to twice that. The revolutions
-were even and plenty for his need, as he
-watched the fluctuations of the tachometer when
-he eased the throttle forward in his climb, or
-backed it gently in the level-off.</p>
-<p>Gas and oil recorded without a hitch or a
-diminution of supply.</p>
-<p>But where was his quarry?</p>
-<p>Far ahead Bob saw a tiny flare of red in the
-sky.</p>
-<p>He nearly lost control in his excitement, but
-with the true air-sense he caught the tendency
-of the sideslip by opposite rudder and aileron
-and then banked and circled till his nose pointed
-straight for the dying flare.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_184">184</div>
-<p>Someone in the sky was signaling for something!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get there soon! And see!&rdquo; Bob told
-himself. He held the ship level, glancing at the
-&ldquo;bubble&rdquo; in the spirit level, as he gave the gun,
-opening the throttle steadily.</p>
-<p>To the roar of the engine, the sing of cool
-wind in taut wires, the sting of pulsing blood
-pounding a thrill-song in his temples, Bob took
-up his quest, and soon saw, ahead, the dim outline
-of a circling ship. It was dark. Was it
-brown?</p>
-<p>He dared not get too close. Rather, he preferred
-to climb, so as to be safely out of the
-other fellow&rsquo;s way if he maneuvered.</p>
-<p>From above Bob planned to light a white
-flare, by whose light he could identify the ship.</p>
-<p>But the other fellow saw him too!</p>
-<p>Bob needed no flare to tell him that he had
-discovered the brown craft&mdash;its action was indication
-enough! The pilot dived, and then went
-into a barrel-roll, dangerous at a low altitude,
-Bob thought.</p>
-<p>The &ldquo;stunt&rdquo; enabled the ship to get to one
-side and out of his line of flight if he dived for it.</p>
-<p>Clearly this showed that the unseen pilot
-feared to be attacked, driven down.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_185">185</div>
-<p>But Bob had no such intention, he merely
-followed as the small, brown craft, speedy and
-capable, went fleetly through the night.</p>
-<p>Bob, easing his throttle a little more open, as
-he got the line of flight, held his elevation and
-his level position; he did not try to overtake the
-other, he wanted to see where he went&mdash;nothing
-more!</p>
-<p>So the flight held, one about five hundred feet
-up, the other easily as high again. The speed
-was almost identical, the ships were well
-matched.</p>
-<p>But the other man had some tricks up his
-wings, in a way of speaking!</p>
-<p>He began to climb. Bob, fearing to be over-reached,
-climbed also. Higher, higher they both
-went, Bob still atop the other, for he had as
-much power, as well angled wings, as clever a
-ship as his adversary.</p>
-<p>But the battle of elevation was short. At fifteen
-hundred feet the brown &lsquo;plane went into
-a wingover, and to Bob&rsquo;s dismay it was, by that
-maneuver, in a reverse direction to the flight
-of his own, and he dared do no maneuvering,
-no stunting, at night and alone!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_186">186</div>
-<p>Before he could swing in the easy circle which
-his inexperience compelled him to use, the other
-pilot was almost out of sight. He climbed, and
-thus Bob gained, but he saw that his pursuit
-was futile.</p>
-<p>The man was climbing into a cloud!</p>
-<p>In its misty vastness, surrounding a ship like
-a fog, an inexpert pilot could not know, without
-continually watching his spirit level and
-other instruments, if he flew level or on his
-back, if he was going sidewise or straight toward
-earth. To watch the instruments &ldquo;to fly
-by the dashboard&rdquo; was useless; he could not see
-to follow if he risked the feat.</p>
-<p>Disgusted, disappointed, he cut the gun and
-slowed his ship, and flew around toward The
-Windsock. Somebody on the ground was burning
-several land flares, he saw.</p>
-<p>It told him one thing! The other fellow had
-been expected! His signal had been seen.</p>
-<p>For an instant Bob was tempted to try a
-landing, to see if they would be startled, those
-people down there in the glare. Did they perhaps
-think he flew the craft they expected? It
-would be worth something to discover that. Or&mdash;would
-it? The danger, the risk, was considerable.
-It was strange territory to him. The
-people, seeing his craft markings, its different
-color, might extinguish the flares, leaving him,
-low, to &ldquo;set down hot&rdquo; or to climb, too late, and
-land in trees!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_187">187</div>
-<p>No, it was not worth the risk.</p>
-<p>If his adversary had gotten away that was
-the end of the adventure.</p>
-<p>Only&mdash;it wasn&rsquo;t.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_188">188</div>
-<h2 id="c24">CHAPTER XXIV
-<br /><span class="small">SUSPENSE!</span></h2>
-<p>When Al and Curt, riding easily, reached the
-region of the Rocky Lake Park, they hid their
-wheels in the well remembered field, preferring
-to advance on foot, to spy out conditions before
-arriving at the roadhouse to which they were
-going.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s something going on, over there,&rdquo;
-said Curt, as they walked, facing traffic, along
-the familiar highway.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The new dance floor&mdash;The Hangar&mdash;is opening
-tonight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That will make it easy for us to get in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They may not allow juniors on the floor.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But they won&rsquo;t chase people away! It would
-be bad for the business!&rdquo; chuckled Curt. &ldquo;Every
-young man can have&mdash;must have&mdash;at least two
-in his family, and they might be dancing papa
-and mama.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We can go on and see.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They did.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_189">189</div>
-<p>The new dance floor, built in an old-looking,
-metal-covered addition at the side of the main
-hotel, was crowded. A &ldquo;jazzy&rdquo; orchestra, with
-many toots of its saxophones, howls from clarinets,
-trills and staccato yaps from its trumpet,
-put rhythm into the march of many feet.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Makes me wish I had a girl and had her
-here and knew how to dance,&rdquo; laughed Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What I wish more is&mdash;&rdquo; Al did not get
-time to express his desire to have Bob along,
-to advise him in his rather impulsive acts. A
-man in a dress suit, as the drums rolled in warning
-to attract attention, advanced to the edge
-of the band platform and addressed the dancers
-applauding their last &ldquo;number.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lay&mdash;deeze&mdash;an&rsquo;&mdash;gemp&mdash;mum!&rdquo; Al
-nudged Curt and whispered that the man was
-Jenks. &ldquo;For this opening night the manage&mdash;munt
-has went to the special expense&mdash;youse
-mus&rsquo; excuse my poor way of speakin&rsquo;. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m
-only a simple flyer, an&rsquo; my eddication don&rsquo;t go
-no higher&rsquo;&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al exclaimed, and Curt scowled at the aspersion
-thus put on the intelligence of the
-most manly, most steady, best educated general
-class of men in industry&mdash;pilots!&mdash;but they listened,
-nevertheless.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_190">190</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The manage&mdash;munt has put on a extra fine
-show for tonight. In fact, folks,&rdquo; his manner
-became more natural, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ve engaged a stunt
-flyer to come over here tonight, to fly around up
-in the dark blue, and to do stunts, with rockets
-and colored lights so you can see what he does.
-I understand the whole crate is to be lit up
-some way. So, if you&rsquo;ll all step outside, while
-we put tables in here for refreshments, you will
-have the free entertainment as soon as we can
-get his signal and let him know to go ahead.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As Curt and Al were already outside, they
-craned their necks.</p>
-<p>While the laughing couples gathered, a small,
-red flare was visible. The men who seemed to
-be awaiting this signal, lighted flares. But to
-their amazement the ship did no stunts! It
-went away!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Funny!&rdquo; muttered the excited, disgruntled
-manager, Jenks, close by Al and Curt.</p>
-<p>As the flares brightened it seemed as though
-there were two airplanes dimly reflecting the
-light.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But they aren&rsquo;t doing any stunts!&rdquo; complained
-a girl to her partner. &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; he counseled.
-Waiting, however, did no good.</p>
-<p>The dancers, murmuring, and the manager,
-trying to apologize, saying it must not be the
-right crate, went back to dance, shoving the refreshment
-tables roughly aside.</p>
-<p>Al and Curt, waiting, watching, wondering,
-saw the men stick the stubs of their flares into
-the ground and walk off.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_191">191</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Look! He&rsquo;s coming back!&rdquo; Al pointed to a
-speck. They listened and heard the drone of
-an engine.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s back again!&rdquo; shouted Al, and the
-people came out again, standing with backs to
-the glaring light, shaded eyes turned upward.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;he&rsquo;s flying low, though,&rdquo; commented
-Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, he is.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look!&rdquo; Curt caught Al&rsquo;s arm. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s in
-trouble&mdash;isn&rsquo;t he?&mdash;yes, he is! Listen! His engine
-has stopped&mdash;dead!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, he&rsquo;s gliding!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He can&rsquo;t land here,&rdquo; said Curt. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s too
-low to spiral and shoot this little clearing&mdash;anyhow,
-it isn&rsquo;t a place to land&mdash;not for night
-landing!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wonder if the same things are happening
-that happened&mdash;when Mr. Tredway was&mdash;lost!&rdquo;
-Al murmured. &ldquo;That time, we heard the engine,
-and then the ship dived.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This one isn&rsquo;t diving&mdash;it&rsquo;s gliding!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know, Curt&mdash;he&rsquo;s getting over Rocky Lake.
-Come on!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There he does go&mdash;down!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Off they pelted toward the road.</p>
-<p>An airplane had been cruising over the flares.
-Its motor had stopped. That was sure.</p>
-<p>And no one knew it better than Bob.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_192">192</div>
-<p>For he was the pilot whose engine stop had
-left him with a &ldquo;dead stick.&rdquo; He must glide.
-He had enough gliding angle, he supposed, to
-take him back to that providential field&mdash;if he
-could throw over a flare and make some sort of
-a set-down!&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<p>It was dangerous&mdash;but it must be done.</p>
-<p>For, in spite of its danger, knowing well what
-might happen, Bob had shut off his own engine&mdash;deliberately!</p>
-<p>He had to&mdash;to save his life!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look!&rdquo; gasped Curt, running. &ldquo;See that
-glare? The &lsquo;plane&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;On fire!&rdquo; panted Al.</p>
-<p>Appearances are deceiving. To Al and Curt,
-on the ground, with darkness, distance and
-trees to screen the truth from them, it seemed
-as though the glare they saw beyond the grove
-must spell a blazing airplane.</p>
-<p>Instead, the light came from a landing flare,
-dropped by Bob.</p>
-<p>As he headed over The Windsock roadhouse,
-and decided to give up, to return to the aircraft
-field, he had all of his mind and attention
-on his craft. Because of that he was able to
-notice a mystifying, if tiny bluish light, intermittent
-and flickering, close to the pipe that
-conveyed fuel from the tank to the mixing carburetor.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_193">193</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s an electric spark!&rdquo; he decided. He
-was right.</p>
-<p>Somehow, either through one of those malicious
-acts which had already been done to other
-ships, or from a rubbing wire, some electrical
-conducting wire had worn off its insulation and
-was bare, and each time it rubbed or touched
-metal it made a spark.</p>
-<p>If there is one thing more dangerous than
-another in the air it is the menace of an open
-spark close to gasoline feed lines and carburetor
-mixing chambers.</p>
-<p>Knowing it well, unable to determine the
-cause, but sure that the spark was electrical
-and dangerous, Bob took the only safe course.
-As Curt and Al had observed, his engine
-stopped. He cut off the ignition.</p>
-<p>The sparking light ceased.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; thought Bob, &ldquo;I daren&rsquo;t use my
-motor. That means I must glide. At this
-height, if I remember what Lang said, the angle
-that will give me safe flying speed will about
-take me to that little field we first saw the
-brown &lsquo;plane hidden in. Can I make it?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_194">194</div>
-<p>He depressed the nose, watching, by his
-sense of touch, how the stick and rudder bar
-acted. As he moved through the air he elevated
-the nose a trifle, to get as flat a gliding angle
-as he dared; but his whole mind was concentrated
-on that feeling, that sense of heaviness
-in the reacting of the controls. When they began
-to respond sluggishly he knew enough to
-sense that he was losing flying speed, approaching
-the danger point called stalling, in which
-the ship gets out of control, drops or slips or
-does some other uncontrollable maneuver.</p>
-<p>Always, in time, he lowered the nose, picked
-up the needful speed, and thus, by coming as
-close to the &ldquo;graveyard&rdquo; glide, or flat angle,
-as he dared, and yet conserving enough reserve
-speed to keep the lift of the wings more sustaining
-than the downward pull of gravity, he held
-his craft in the air.</p>
-<p>Always the nose, pointed into the wind, went
-lower. Always, as he tried to penetrate the
-darkness of the night and of the brown earth
-below, his eyes, over the cockpit cowling,
-searched for the flattish, light spot he wanted.
-Along its inner side was the strip of turf he
-needed.</p>
-<p>Fear-thoughts flashed through his mind:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_195">195</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Can I glide that far? Will I overshoot or
-undershoot? Will I misjudge the height as I
-come down, if I do make it? Will I set the ship
-down too suddenly, so it will bounce off and
-then&mdash;with too little margin of height to get
-speed again&mdash;crack up? Will I stall too high
-and smash down? Will I be going too fast, and
-run too far? Can I glide in to the turf or will
-I set down in stubble and nose over?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Resolutely, by all the will power he had, Bob
-crushed out those nerve-deadening, muscle-binding
-terrors.</p>
-<p>There was the field. Where, now, did they
-keep the light producing flares? Oh, yes! There,
-in that little boxlike compartment.</p>
-<p>He flung a detonating flare that would light
-in the air or on striking earth. Its light was
-what horrified Curt and Al.</p>
-<p>To Bob, its glare was a great relief!</p>
-<p>The white gleam showed, far ahead, faintly
-lit, the field. His course would take him toward
-it, but he altered the direction of his flight
-slightly to get over the turf, then corrected the
-bank, leveled his wings, depressed the nose still
-more, picked up speed and, with all his force,
-sent a landing flare into the air, as far ahead
-and to the side as he could fling it.</p>
-<p>Then he &ldquo;shot&rdquo; the field, got his nose directly
-onto a line with the large trees at the end of the
-field, pulled up the nose more, to kill all the forward
-momentum he dared, and then&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<p>Bob gasped. He was too far to one side. He
-would land in the stubble. Also, he was a little
-too high.</p>
-<p>Wildly he flung the flare he had been getting
-ready.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_196">196</div>
-<p>Then, from some hidden source of remembered
-instructions he got the instinctive knowledge
-of what to do.</p>
-<p>He dropped the left wingtip by pushing the
-stick sidewise, and felt the ship tilt. It went
-into a sideslip. That both lost speed forward
-and got him further over to the left.</p>
-<p>Opposite rudder, hard! Up left wingtip, down
-right! Nose down a little! Speed enough to
-go on!</p>
-<p>With his heart in his mouth, looking swiftly
-down, Bob saw the earth seem to come up at
-him. Up elevators! Stall. He&rsquo;d have to take
-it! He was close to earth, over turf. He must
-not keep that nose down and glide into the trees
-or taxi beyond the end of the turf.</p>
-<p>The ship stalled, landed with quite a jar&mdash;but
-the trucks held up!</p>
-<p>And Bob, from his heart, breathed a little
-prayer of thanksgiving.</p>
-<p>He had done his best, had held his head, and&mdash;he
-was safe!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_197">197</div>
-<h2 id="c25">CHAPTER XXV
-<br /><span class="small">CROSSED WIRES</span></h2>
-<p>By the time Curt and Al got their bicycles
-and pedaled to the vicinity of Rocky Lake,
-Bob&rsquo;s flare was out and they had no means of
-ending their suspense until they had looked
-around in the picnic grove and assured themselves
-that there was no burning airplane in
-sight.</p>
-<p>They rode along the highway.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that a flashlight, in the old field?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It looks like one, Al.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It is!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They pedaled faster. Presently the pair
-reached the field; soon Bob, using a small
-pocket flashlamp, was telling his brother and
-his best friend how the electric spark had worried
-him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I knew the brown airplane was gone,&rdquo; he
-continued his explanation, &ldquo;the only thing left
-for me to do was to head back to the plant.
-But I saw that quick little flicker close to the
-gas line and cut off the ignition switch.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What are you doing now?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_198">198</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Tracing the wiring,&rdquo; Bob told his brother.
-&ldquo;And here is a wire! It ought not to be run
-so close to the gas line! And here is another,
-away back under the dash instrument board.
-They cross!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Crossed wires!&rdquo; gasped Curt. &ldquo;That isn&rsquo;t
-right!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Certainly not!&rdquo; agreed Bob. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve learned
-enough about airplane construction at the Tredway
-plant to know they don&rsquo;t do such careless
-things as that!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then somebody deliberately did it,&rdquo; concluded
-Al. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s part of the scheme to damage
-the crates.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s worse than that!&rdquo; Bob climbed to the
-ground and faced his companions. His face,
-hard to see in the dark, because he was saving
-his electric battery, was very serious. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
-worse than just tampering! Fellows&mdash;this is
-Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s own airplane!&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; commented Curt soberly. &ldquo;Some one
-wanted harm to come to the owner of the
-plant.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And the &lsquo;some one&rsquo; made sure it would. In
-daylight,&rdquo; Bob stated, &ldquo;that spark wouldn&rsquo;t
-be noticed. It was only by being out in the
-dark of night, that I could see it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_199">199</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But crossed wires ought not to rub enough
-to wear out the insulation in a short time,&rdquo; objected
-Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Neither they did. Al&mdash;Curt&mdash;the insulation
-was scraped away!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They were silent for a long moment. The full
-wickedness of that deliberate act made each of
-the youths feel rather cold. They were dealing
-with something more sinister than an attempt
-to make away with small airplane supplies,
-to damage airplanes for the purpose of
-injuring the reputation of the manufacturers,
-as they had decided the conditions seemed to
-indicate.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Curt became practical, &ldquo;you can&rsquo;t fly
-that ship home, not in that condition.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If we had some adhesive tape,&rdquo; Bob said, &ldquo;I
-could tape the wires and get back to the aircraft
-field.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got bicycle friction tape in my little
-toolcase.&rdquo; Al ran to get it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The place is hard to reach,&rdquo; Bob told Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe I could do it,&rdquo; Curt responded. &ldquo;My
-hands are thinner and my fingers are longer
-than yours.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_200">200</div>
-<p>As soon as Al brought the roll of pitched fabric,
-Curt, with the flashlamp set for steady burning,
-located the damaged insulation and began
-to work with strips of the tape, having some
-difficulty in winding it without pulling the wires
-too much.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is going to be a slow job,&rdquo; he called
-out. &ldquo;Bob, somebody ought to go and call up
-Griff, to see if he has any news.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think so too,&rdquo; Al agreed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you both go!&rdquo; Curt urged. &ldquo;One
-could stay at The Windsock and watch and the
-other could come back with news&mdash;or, Bob, you
-could ride back on my wheel, to The Windsock
-with Al, and then come on back here and we
-two could fly back to the hangars together.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Would you trust yourself with me, in the
-dark, flying this ship?&rdquo; asked Bob. &ldquo;Something
-else may be wrong with it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s so. I&rsquo;ll look it over. I know how
-they inspect them,&rdquo; Curt suggested.</p>
-<p>Al and Bob agreed, and went to the two bicycles.
-Off they rode.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s that &lsquo;plane again!&rdquo; Al pointed to
-a tiny red flare high up over the roadhouse
-ground. &ldquo;He has come back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose I frightened him away,&rdquo; Bob said.
-&ldquo;He probably thinks whoever chased him has
-given up, and he has come back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One thing bothers me,&rdquo; Al observed, forgetting
-his weary legs in the fresh excitement.
-&ldquo;Why would a crate that has a pilot who flies
-away from pursuit come back to do stunts?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_201">201</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t answer that,&rdquo; Bob replied. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s
-get there. See! He is looping, and he has
-lighted some sort of rocket or bomb that makes
-a trail of fire to show his stunt off in the dark.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s pretty, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob agreed with his brother&rsquo;s exclamation as
-the airplane, high above them, with fireworks
-leaving a comet&rsquo;s tail behind it, made a series
-of loops, dived, zoomed, made a sort of &ldquo;S&rdquo; of
-fire by side-slipping first one way and then the
-other.</p>
-<p>When they got back to the roadhouse the display
-was over. Ground flares were going and
-it was clear that the pilot meant to land.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re going to see who it is, after all,&rdquo; declared
-Bob, thrilled by the possible revelation
-that was to come.</p>
-<p>Curt saw the gyrating ship and its glowing
-trail of sparks. He watched for a moment and
-then went doggedly back to his work. If Bob
-needed this sport craft, Curt proposed to have
-it ready if careful, methodical work could get
-it so.</p>
-<p>Surprised, he heard himself addressed by a
-youth who came over from the farmhouse whose
-builder owned the field.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s goin&rsquo; on?&rdquo; asked the farmer&rsquo;s son.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_202">202</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Some display for the opening of the roadhouse
-dance floor,&rdquo; Curt replied, tightening
-down the tape and clipping off the end with his
-pocket knife.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mean yonder. I mean here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh! A little trouble. Crossed wires.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The youth did not understand; but he accepted
-the explanation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ain&rsquo;t you awful young to be a aviation
-flyer?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t&mdash;I&rsquo;m not the pilot,&rdquo; Curt stated. He
-explained. Then, his task finished, he clambered
-down to see the glow of the distant, concealed
-ground flares, and to guess that the sky rider
-was going to land.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is gettin&rsquo; to be a regular aviators&rsquo;
-place,&rdquo; said the youth to Curt. &ldquo;Guess pa ought
-to put up signs, &lsquo;Places to land for rent.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do many crates land here?&rdquo; Curt was surprised.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;look at them tracks!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Thus having the spot indicated, even in the
-dim light Curt was able to see that deep ruts
-had been made, not only in the soft, ploughed
-edge of the field, but also on the turf.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hm-m-m!&rdquo; he had no explanation to comment.
-It was unimportant. Something of
-greater concern was on his mind.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_203">203</div>
-<p>&ldquo;See here, buddy,&rdquo; Curt said, &ldquo;will you help
-me &lsquo;warm up&rsquo; this ship?&rdquo; He was searching
-for two stones or blocks big enough to hold the
-airplane still while the propeller revolved. &ldquo;The
-pilot might want to take off now that I&rsquo;ve fixed
-the damage.&rdquo; The boy agreed. Curt, locating
-several rocks near where the brown &lsquo;plane had
-once been hidden, set them under the wheels,
-and then, realizing that the ship must take off
-facing into the wind, he got the youth to help
-him drag the tail around, to pull the whole ship
-as far up at the end of the turf as possible.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;First time I ever worked around a&mdash;er&mdash;&lsquo;grate&rsquo;&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Crate,&rsquo;&rdquo; Curt corrected, smiling in the
-darkness. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a slang way of speaking of
-an airplane, and it means either a term of fondness,
-or of disgust, according to how the user
-feels about his &lsquo;ship.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I see. Gee! Wisht I could be one of them
-aviator flyers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can, if you are willing to study enough,&rdquo;
-Curt said. &ldquo;It means hard work. There&rsquo;s a
-lot to learn. But a fellow who has ambition
-can get to be anything he likes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not without being educated more than me.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_204">204</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You can pick up some education while
-you&rsquo;re studying in &lsquo;ground school,&rsquo;&rdquo; Curt explained.
-&ldquo;After you learn the parts of the airplane,
-the way each one works, what it is for,
-and so on, and how they are put together, you
-have to study about airplane engines&mdash;the principle
-of the internal combustion engine and
-what all the parts are for and how they work.
-There has to be study of&mdash;let&rsquo;s see&mdash;oh, yes!&mdash;aerodynamics&mdash;how
-a ship flies, and why, and
-what different air currents do, and how to know
-their effects. There&rsquo;s navigation, too&mdash;the beginnings
-of it, anyway.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All that? I thought you got in and pushed
-something and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If there weren&rsquo;t so many people who
-thought that,&rdquo; Curt said soberly, &ldquo;we wouldn&rsquo;t
-have so many accidents. Flying is a science;
-and there&rsquo;s more to it than getting into the air
-and going somewhere. It takes ground school
-study to learn the foundation part, and instruction
-flights to learn how things are handled, and
-solo flights and stunting to show you how to
-handle a crate in an emergency&mdash;and navigation
-in its practical applications, for long flights. But
-if you are in earnest, you can get all that, and
-pick up practical arithmetic and grammar and
-so on, in night school at the same time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not without money!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_205">205</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;unless&mdash;you might come over to the
-Tredway aircraft plant and I&rsquo;d introduce you
-to Barney&mdash;Mr. Horton, the manager. He
-might give you a chance to work as a &lsquo;grease
-monkey&rsquo; in the field, for he is awfully nice. He
-helped all of us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The youth agreed eagerly, and then, with the
-chocks set and the ignition switch off, Curt told
-him how to work the propeller around, and got
-him back to safety as the ignition switch followed
-the gas &ldquo;on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The engine took up its roar, and Curt knew
-enough to shut down the throttle to idling speed,
-allowing the slow revolutions to warm up the
-power plant. He knew little about oil pressure
-and instrument readings, but he knew that an
-engine, to function safely and steadily, in flight,
-must be warm.</p>
-<p>While he busied himself getting everything
-as nearly ready as his ability allowed, Bob and
-Al reached the roadhouse.</p>
-<p>The airplane had already &ldquo;set down.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the brown one, and no mistake!&rdquo; Al was
-thrilled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Bob. &ldquo;Now, Al, the pilot must
-have gone inside the roadhouse. I don&rsquo;t see
-him around the dance place. You could go in
-to ask for his autograph. I see you still carry
-that little book. It ought to be easy to get a
-look at him, have him pointed out to you. That&rsquo;s
-really all we need.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_206">206</div>
-<p>Al agreed. He had no difficulty in getting a
-busy waiter to jerk a thumb toward one of the
-private compartments.</p>
-<p>Al went to its door, pushed aside the curtains&mdash;and
-stepped back.</p>
-<p>What he saw stunned him!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_207">207</div>
-<h2 id="c26">CHAPTER XXVI
-<br /><span class="small">THE SKY SQUAD GOES INTO ACTION</span></h2>
-<p>Three men faced one another in the small
-compartment, made to look like a passenger
-&lsquo;plane cabin.</p>
-<p>As Al, at the curtained entrance, recognized
-the one facing him, all three turned to look.</p>
-<p>With a mumbled apology Al backed out.</p>
-<p>More than anything else, he wanted to get
-away, to see Bob!</p>
-<p>The man who had faced him was Mr. Parsons,
-partner in the aircraft plant.</p>
-<p>The man to his right was the mysterious
-stranger whom Al had seen in the supply room!</p>
-<p>The third man&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-<p>Before Al could form his mental picture of a
-face that seemed familiar, a bus-boy, with a
-heavy tray of soiled dishes, bumped against
-him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get out o&rsquo; the way,&rdquo; the youth grunted, to
-Al, and gave him an angry push with his free
-hand. Al, his balance disturbed, stumbled forward&mdash;into
-the arms of Mr. Parsons at the door.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_208">208</div>
-<p>Struggling, squirming to get out of the powerful
-grip on his arm and shoulder, Al found
-himself held as if in a vise.</p>
-<p>Suddenly his whole body went limp. His head
-dropped, his eyes closed. He sagged down, and
-surprised and disconcerted, imagining that the
-youth he held might have fainted in his fright,
-the man released him, lowered him to the floor
-while he looked up, intending to call for aid.</p>
-<p>Behind him another face looked out, the
-bearded face of the man Al had seen previously
-in the supply room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s up?&rdquo; asked the latter.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am!&rdquo; cried Al, shrilly, as he tensed his
-muscles, swung free of Mr. Parsons as the latter
-bent over him. Like the leashed spring of a
-panther Al&rsquo;s squirming, swift move took him
-out of danger.</p>
-<p>To cries, to shouts of surprise and of inquiry,
-Al eluded the grasping hands of a waiter,
-dodged a diner&rsquo;s gripping fingers, evaded the
-move of a man to block him at the door, and
-was free!</p>
-<p>Quick thinking and a ruse had prevailed
-where strength was not enough to accomplish
-his wish.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_209">209</div>
-<p>Speeding along, outside, after vaulting the
-veranda railing, Al quickly located Bob. With
-a wave of his hand Al signaled. His progress
-was swift as he scampered across the parking
-space, between standing automobiles, toward an
-old barnlike structure backed into the grove.
-Bob, seeing the wave and Al&rsquo;s progress, dodged,
-on his own part, among the cars until he rejoined
-Al in the open door of the old, dilapidated
-barn.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What happened?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al, pulling his brother back out of sight, recovered
-his breath.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I bumped into Mr. Parsons&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes&mdash;and the man we saw in the supply
-room&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well! What happened then?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There was somebody else with them. And&mdash;I
-didn&rsquo;t recognize him, because I was so surprised
-and excited&mdash;but his face &lsquo;rang a bell&rsquo;
-and I&rsquo;ll think who he was when I get quieted
-down.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What made you run?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al explained.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, and there comes Mr. Parsons! He&rsquo;s
-looking for me,&rdquo; he ended.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He has something in his hand&mdash;a package&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_210">210</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; Al drew Bob further into the dark
-interior. &ldquo;Bob&mdash;when I blundered in on them,
-those men had&mdash;what do you suppose?&mdash;the
-company books!&rdquo; Al clutched Bob&rsquo;s arm tighter.
-&ldquo;You remember, we hid when Mr. Parsons was
-in the offices&mdash;he took those books!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Bob&rsquo;s whisper agreed. &ldquo;Now he&rsquo;s been
-showing them to that man we saw, and to somebody
-else.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Parsons isn&rsquo;t as honest as Griff wanted
-us to believe.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob shook Al&rsquo;s arm reassuringly. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he
-admitted, &ldquo;I thought Griff&rsquo;s story was part of&mdash;what
-did they say in the war?&mdash;oh, yes! It
-was &lsquo;camouflage.&rsquo; Fancy paint to conceal something.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If we could only get the books away from
-them&mdash;and tell Barney!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They may be coming to look for you. Mr.
-Parsons must have recognized you, Al. I wonder
-if there&rsquo;s a haymow over this old floor?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You go along one wall and I&rsquo;ll take the other.
-We&rsquo;ll see!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They hurried away from one another. Presently
-Bob called out softly and, following the
-wall, with one hand touching to hold his place,
-the other extended ahead to avoid bumping into
-any obstruction, the youngest of the Sky Squad
-found his way to Bob.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_211">211</div>
-<p>There was a ladder against the wall. Bob
-whispered instructions and started up the dark,
-uncertain ladder. Bob had hardly reached the
-top and called down a low reassurance when Al
-almost scrambled in his eagerness to get up
-quickly.</p>
-<p>Voices were growing louder. Some one was
-coming! It must be Mr. Parsons.</p>
-<p>At the top of the ladder, Al fell softly onto
-the upper floor boards, and he, with his brother,
-bent attentive, strained ears to catch the low
-murmur from below.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s from the plant,&rdquo; a voice called, and
-Bob recognized the quick, sharp tones of Mr.
-Parsons. &ldquo;He was a boy from the plant.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You got those books wrapped in record
-time!&rdquo; someone else chuckled. Then, as the
-youths drew their heads back, turtle fashion, to
-avoid the glare, a match was struck.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody here&mdash;but yonder&rsquo;s a ladder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Better go up and have a look,&rdquo; said a third,
-deeper voice. &ldquo;We can&rsquo;t afford to have those
-kids snooping. I think Barney brought them
-into the thing. They&rsquo;re only kids&mdash;but they have
-eyes!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob, with a twist of his neck, looked around
-in the dim upper room. Its end window, dirty
-and cobwebby, allowed the moonlight to stream
-in. The shaft of dull light streamed across,
-slantwise. Bob, following its path with his eyes,
-touched Al&rsquo;s arm. Gently he directed his
-brother&rsquo;s gaze toward a corner.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_212">212</div>
-<p>Sacks, used for packing corn or other cereals,
-were piled up there.</p>
-<p>By common consent the two began a slow,
-cautious movement toward the sacks; but Bob,
-quick in an emergency, drew the whole pile,
-very cautiously, partly lifting the lower ones,
-to a darker place.</p>
-<p>Al, close beside him, divined his idea. They
-could hide under the large cluster of heavy burlap
-bags.</p>
-<p>By the time that a match was struck in the
-upper floor they were lying, crouched, under a
-number of the burlap bags.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not here! Guess the kid was scared and
-ran away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait, though.&rdquo; Bob&rsquo;s breath almost stopped.
-Had the other man who came up discovered
-the sacking?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait, though,&rdquo; the man repeated. &ldquo;We
-meant to compare the books tonight; that&rsquo;s
-why I took all the trouble with those stunts, to
-have a logical excuse for landing here. We
-can&rsquo;t, now! Those kids may have telephoned
-somebody&mdash;whoever they&rsquo;re working for. Suppose
-we hide the books, and get together tomorrow
-night. I&rsquo;ll take the crate back and come
-over by train.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good way.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_213">213</div>
-<p>In their stuffy concealment the brothers heard
-steps, low muttered suggestions. Evidently a
-place to sequester the company records was
-selected. The youths quivered and Al nearly
-screamed aloud as a sack was dragged from the
-top of the pile. But the sack did not pull off the
-ones they clung to over their perspiring heads.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the stuff! On that shelf, and cover
-&rsquo;em up. Nobody would think of that place.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t Barney miss them?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let him worry a little. It will do him good!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The voices receded. The heavy tread ceased.
-Scuffling sounds told the brothers that the men
-had descended the ladder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; whispered Al, &ldquo;we&rsquo;re safe&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And we can take the books back&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can we find them?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They said &lsquo;on the shelf.&rsquo; Feel around, as
-soon as they are out&mdash;wait! Al, I&rsquo;ll slip over
-and spy out through the window&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al sat on the floor, among the sacks, mopping
-his brow which was wet with hot perspiration
-that had, a moment before, been ice cold. Bob
-waved across the bar of moonlight. The trio
-of seeming conspirators was safely away, he
-indicated.</p>
-<p>Again using their hands, they felt along the
-walls.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_214">214</div>
-<p>With his head, though jarred only slightly,
-Bob found the shelf. A quick exploration defined
-the books, in a compact roll of tape-tied
-cloth, hidden under the sack. It was a second&rsquo;s
-work to remove them and to rejoin Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now&mdash;how can we get them away? Won&rsquo;t
-they be watching?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go down and see.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Alertly, and with caution, Bob protruded his
-head over the edge of the opening by the ladder.
-He was fortunate! In the doorway stood the
-unrecognized member of the party, smoking.
-Evidently he had returned.</p>
-<p>Bob watched, holding Al in check by his grip
-on the younger one&rsquo;s arm. The man did not
-propose to leave, it appeared.</p>
-<p>The sound of an airplane motor starting
-conveyed the truth. He was waiting until his
-ship was ready before going into the open.</p>
-<p>Bob waited, Al at his side. Neither moved
-more than was absolutely essential.</p>
-<p>But Al, try as he would, could not suppress
-the horrible inclination to sneeze, induced by the
-dust in his nostrils from the dirty burlap.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huh&mdash;sh&mdash;huh&mdash;sh!&rdquo; he tried to hold back,
-but Nature got the better of his will.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Huh&mdash;shoosh!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now you&rsquo;ve done it!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t help it&mdash;look&mdash;the window will
-open. You could drop!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_215">215</div>
-<p>The sound of the man ascending the ladder
-came clearly.</p>
-<p>Like two swift gazelles the youths dashed
-across to the window, wide and old. It was
-part of the door through which hay was drawn
-up, they discovered. They tugged at it. On
-rollers, but stiff from disuse, it stuck. Panting
-they struggled. Closer came the ascending
-steps, a call to know who was &ldquo;up there!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The window slid open a foot&mdash;another foot.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have to drop,&rdquo; said Bob. &ldquo;You get back
-and hide again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Too late! I&rsquo;ll drop the books to you! Go
-on&mdash;quick!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob hung by his hands, gave a swift glance
-down, let go! No sooner did he land, with
-loosened muscles to avoid the shock as much as
-he could, than the package of heavy books
-landed beside him.</p>
-<p>Swiftly he grasped the package, and ran.</p>
-<p>Al, almost caught, doubled with a swift, bending
-squirm, as the angry man reached to
-grapple with him in the moonlit doorway. By
-his quickness Al was able to get away for an
-instant.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_216">216</div>
-<p>He tried the same ruse he had used so well
-before, but in another form. Every ounce of
-weight he could put into it he gave to a run
-away from the ladder. Then, doubling on himself,
-but tiptoeing and bending as low as he
-could, avoiding the moon ray, Al crept softly
-along. The man, following the direction of the
-footfalls, and thus trying to locate his quarry in
-the dark, did not see the silent, gloom-hidden
-form slip along the wall. Al was down the
-ladder before his ruse was detected.</p>
-<p>But the man ran to the doorway, shouting
-through its opening.</p>
-<p>Bob, racing toward the bicycles, realized that
-the other two men, catching the warning shout,
-were bearing down on him. Like a rabbit he
-reversed his route, slipping in among the trees
-behind the barn. But Mr. Parsons and the other
-mysterious stranger were determined men. Bob
-could not run and be silent. He dared not creep.
-They were too close behind him.</p>
-<p>Al, seeing that this pursuit was close, tried
-to divert attention by shouting as he ran,
-openly, across toward the bicycles.</p>
-<p>But this did not draw the others away; they
-felt that Bob had a parcel for which they meant
-to catch him. On and on, through the grove,
-dodging, squirming past trees, through briers,
-Bob went.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_217">217</div>
-<p>Curt, at the field, with the engine idling on
-the airplane, did not hear the pursuit until Bob,
-almost worn out, nearly done, came racing
-along. Then, seeing him, Curt ran to meet him.
-From the grove behind came the crash and
-shout of pursuers.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The books&mdash;hide!&mdash;&rdquo; Bob could say no more.</p>
-<p>Curt caught the package as Bob hurled it.
-Then, with an instinct that amounted to genius,
-Bob noted a flattish stone, and as he ran he
-bent, pausing an instant, and came up tugging
-along the small, flattish boulder that, in the
-dark could be mistaken for the package of
-books. Unconcernedly, as though watching in
-the role of a spectator, standing on the parcel
-of books, Curt remained quiet, and the men
-raced past him.</p>
-<p>From the road, where he flung his bicycle,
-knowing well where Bob would head for, Al arrived.
-He raced toward the airplane just as
-Bob ran in the same direction with his boulder.</p>
-<p>Al, not unnerved by his excitement, realized
-that if the propeller was turning, some chocks
-or other means of holding back the ship were
-in place. He bent under the wheels as Bob
-arrived.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get in!&rdquo; he cried. Bob, pretending to drop
-the books in, let the boulder fall beside the turf.
-While he was climbing in, the men paused for
-an instant by Curt who said, sharply, &ldquo;There
-he goes!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They turned, saw Bob was making for the
-airplane, and ran toward him.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_218">218</div>
-<p>Al tumbled into the rear cockpit, determined
-not to be caught after the enmity he had
-awakened.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Take me!&rdquo; he cried, but the roar of the engine
-drowned his voice as Bob, risking everything,
-in the dark, opened the throttle.</p>
-<p>Up went the elevators enough to lift the tail
-as the propeller stream swept against them.</p>
-<p>Along the turf the ship began to move. The
-men, aware of the sinister menace of the whirling
-blades, fell aside. Bob, sensing the near
-approach of the end of his runway, lifted the
-elevators again, felt the ship going light, gave
-her the gun, holding her just long enough on
-the level after the take-off to get his speed&mdash;then
-up he roared.</p>
-<p>And a boulder beside the turf remained, while
-Curt, with the books under his arm, among the
-trees, went to Al&rsquo;s bicycle&mdash;and delivered the
-books to his uncle&rsquo;s study.</p>
-<p>But he didn&rsquo;t stay at home. Mr. Wright was
-not there. Bob and Al would fly to the plant.
-Thence, on tired feet, Curt pedaled.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_219">219</div>
-<h2 id="c27">CHAPTER XXVII
-<br /><span class="small">DRIVEN DOWN</span></h2>
-<p>Almost as soon as he lifted the airplane above
-the grove beyond that cornfield, Bob recovered
-his wind and his confidence.</p>
-<p>Al, of a more nervous type, was still trembling
-in his after-cockpit seat, but his excitement
-was changing from that of the recent adventures
-to the thrill of sky-riding at night with his
-brother. There was not only the elation of the
-climb to keep his nerves quivering; also there
-was the uncertainty of what might happen because
-of Bob&rsquo;s lack of skill and experience.</p>
-<p>Climbing steadily until he was over five
-hundred feet above the earth, Bob felt none of
-his brother&rsquo;s uneasiness or excitement. He was
-confident that he could control the airplane as
-far as straight flying was concerned; his only
-difficulty would be the landing, not the easiest
-thing for a skilful pilot unless a signal could be
-given that would make the plant watchman illuminate
-the small field.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_220">220</div>
-<p>Bob, making a long swing, banked gently, to
-head back for the plant, calmly considered the
-elements of the situation and tried to plan, as
-well as he could, how to meet whatever came up.</p>
-<p>Al, giving more attention to sky and earth,
-as they straightened their course, correctly
-pointed for the field at the plant, saw a tiny
-set of glinting lights far away in the sky.</p>
-<p>Impulsively he caught the stick of the dual
-control to waggle it. That was the only way to
-attract Bob&rsquo;s attention; but Al, in his quick
-way, shook the stick and then held it pretty far
-to one side, and Bob, not expecting the move
-and unaware at first that Al did it, felt his heart
-sink for an instant, fearing that something had
-gone wrong with the controls.</p>
-<p>Al, horrified at the effect of his move, sat,
-tensely still, waiting for a crash. Bob, alert,
-decided in a flash that he would do all he could
-to avert the smash before he gave up hope. He
-made the necessary moves to correct the slip.</p>
-<p>To his delight the craft obeyed promptly, coming
-back into its proper position quickly. Turning
-to reassure Al, Bob saw his brother violently
-gesturing toward the sky to one side. As
-he looked Bob saw tiny lights and knew them
-for the flying lights of a craft.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_221">221</div>
-<p>The explanation came at once. Al had attracted
-his attention to the airplane knowing it
-must be the brown &lsquo;plane. Probably the two
-men who had chased Bob had contrived to tell
-the pilot, before he took off, that&mdash;as they supposed&mdash;the
-company books were in Bob&rsquo;s possession.
-With a wave of his hand toward Al,
-reassuring him, Bob set his course for the flying
-place belonging to the Tredway plant. He
-was being pursued by the ship he had, recently,
-followed; it suited him. He would lead the ship
-back there, contrive some way to attract attention,
-get Al to drop flares, and then, landing,
-telephone all the airports nearby to identify and
-stop the pilot who must eventually alight for
-fuel.</p>
-<p>The pursuer, however had no intention of being
-lured.</p>
-<p>Bob realized it, at the same time that he recalled
-how swiftly the other pilot had climbed
-to escape identification earlier at the plant.</p>
-<p>Instead, the brown ship had some sinister intent
-toward himself, Bob guessed, for it was
-climbing rapidly, and Bob, unaware of the safe
-climbing angle or stalling angle of his own
-craft, dared not risk so steep a tilt.</p>
-<p>Higher, always higher above him, went the
-other man&rsquo;s lights.</p>
-<p>The wing over him obscured Bob&rsquo;s view.</p>
-<p>He turned to Al. The younger brother leaned
-out and stared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Going up yet!&rdquo; he cried, and gestured.</p>
-<p>Climbing! Climbing faster!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_222">222</div>
-<p>Bob opened his throttle steadily to the full
-capacity of the engine.</p>
-<p>He proposed to gain all he could in speed,
-and that meant distance ahead of the other,
-while that other airplane climbed. He knew he
-could fly faster, on the level, than a climbing
-ship could, and he saw the other lights slowly
-becoming somewhat fainter, smaller.</p>
-<p>But that did not last long.</p>
-<p>In a few seconds the other ship leveled off
-and began to approach. Bob, craning his neck
-to get a sight of the other craft beyond his own
-wing spread, saw that the other man, evidently
-angling down and pointing directly for a position
-above him, meant to overtake him and was
-quite capable of doing it. He had superior experience
-and skill.</p>
-<p>Bob realized quickly that the better part of
-valor in an airplane at night, under such conditions,
-was to give up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Or, at least to pretend to give up,&rdquo; he reflected.</p>
-<p>To carry out that pretence he reached into
-the signal light stores and selected a light. This
-he tossed back to Al.</p>
-<p>His signal and his act were understood.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_223">223</div>
-<p>Al knew that Bob wanted light. He ignited
-the flare, which proved to be a green signal
-blaze, flung it overside and watched its tiny
-parachute catch the air and suspend it.</p>
-<p>In that light he swung his eyes to see what
-Bob meant to do.</p>
-<p>The other pilot, arresting his dive, also flew
-along level, and watched, it appeared.</p>
-<p>Bob, lighted by the glowing green flare,
-pointed to himself and then pointed to earth.</p>
-<p>The other ship, coming steadily closer, was
-quite plain in the illuminated space. Its pilot
-made a similar gesture, pointing first toward
-the airplane Bob piloted, then downward.</p>
-<p>Bob lowered the nose and began to spiral, as
-though looking for a spot on which he might
-safely &ldquo;set down.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On a wider swing the other pilot flew, observing
-his act.</p>
-<p>Swiftly Bob summed up the situation. Beneath
-him, easily reached, was the wide ribbon
-of the asphalt highway. By heading almost directly
-into the wind he could &ldquo;shoot&rdquo; the road,
-and by keeping his engine running at partial
-speed he could make a &ldquo;power stall,&rdquo; letting
-the craft settle very gradually instead of trying
-to glide down, guess at the correct height and
-then stall and drop. To do the latter in the comparative
-darkness of the highway might result
-in smashed landing gear or worse if he stalled
-too high and dropped, or it might happen
-that he would &ldquo;put her on hot,&rdquo; or at too great
-speed and without stalling, come against the
-ground. In one case out of ten that might enable
-him to roll along, but if he struck the slightest
-uneven bit of road, or a bulge of the tar at
-the intersections of the asphalt road blocks, up
-would bound the ship, perhaps to stall herself
-and crash.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_224">224</div>
-<p>By using power he could keep flying speed
-while gradually settling until his wheels contacted
-the road. He could also rise more readily
-if he discovered that he had gone too far to
-either side of the narrow road&mdash;wide enough
-in fact but narrow from the standpoint of its
-use as a landing place.</p>
-<p>He gave up the half-formed notion of trying
-to outwit the pilot.</p>
-<p>The man meant &ldquo;business&rdquo; and that might
-spell trouble for an amateur. Better far would
-it be to set down and see what came of it.</p>
-<p>As he saw the roadway ribboned out straight
-ahead, with no headlights observable in either
-direction, Bob lifted the nose a trifle, adjusted
-the throttle until, with the road streaming backward
-under him, he saw it very gradually growing
-wider and clearer.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_225">225</div>
-<p>Almost perfectly he landed. Being a straight
-road he had lots of time to taxi, with his gun
-cut and his only care being to hold the ship on
-its wheels and not let a wing-tip scrape the
-asphalt.</p>
-<p>To his surprise the other pilot did not land.</p>
-<p>Instead he seemed to be circling at a very low
-altitude, not a hundred feet up, and with only
-bare flying speed, diving ten feet to catch up his
-speed and then climbing back to circle again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We can&rsquo;t leave this crate standing on the
-highway,&rdquo; Al called as soon as Bob had the engine
-running at idling speed. &ldquo;Suppose a Sunday
-driver comes along at sixty miles an hour?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What else can we do?&rdquo; Bob swung in his
-seat.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s so. If we go up he&rsquo;ll ride us down,
-and we might not make as good a landing&mdash;you
-might not, I mean.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yonder comes a car!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As Bob pointed, Al leaned out and stared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The headlights blind me,&rdquo; he declared, shading
-his eyes with his cap brim and hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s&mdash;it&rsquo;s the ones who are after us,&rdquo; called
-Bob. &ldquo;See! One of them is stopping the car
-and the other one is jumping out.&rdquo; He turned
-to Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They think we have the books. The man in
-the brown ship drove us down. Mr. Parsons,
-in his car, with the other man, is coming to get
-us.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_226">226</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, they won&rsquo;t!&rdquo; exclaimed Al, scrambling
-out of the airplane.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No! You run into the woods to the right of
-the road.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al, as soon as he was on the ground, used his
-heels to good purpose. Bob, pausing only to
-bundle up some folds of his coat to make it look,
-from a distance, as though he carried a package
-under it, slipped to the road and ran the other
-way.</p>
-<p>Driven down, they nevertheless left the pursuers
-outwitted.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_227">227</div>
-<h2 id="c28">CHAPTER XXVIII
-<br /><span class="small">CURT&rsquo;S DISCOVERY</span></h2>
-<p>&ldquo;Those books are off my mind,&rdquo; Curt reflected
-as he pedaled slowly toward the aircraft
-plant, &ldquo;but my legs aren&rsquo;t. I&rsquo;d go to bed and
-rest for a week if it wasn&rsquo;t for seeing what
-Griff is up to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He had ridden only a block or two away from
-his uncle&rsquo;s residence, where he had deposited
-the books, when a thought occurred to him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know how to get a &lsquo;tow&rsquo; to the plant,&rdquo;
-Curt whispered to himself, swinging his handlebars
-to turn into the next cross street. &ldquo;They
-usually get shipments of fabric on the eleven
-o&rsquo;clock freight, and our truck is there to load
-it in.&rdquo; He glanced at his wrist watch.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he told himself, &ldquo;it ought to be loaded
-or nearly so&mdash;and that means the truck will be
-starting soon. I&rsquo;ll ride along till it catches up
-with me and then let it pull me where I&rsquo;m going.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_228">228</div>
-<p>It was a reasonable notion and well-founded.
-That it was sound was soon proved, for Curt
-saw the truck turning into the street just ahead,
-from the direction of the station.</p>
-<p>He had expected it to come from the street
-he had passed, but realized that it must have
-followed the direction it had been pointed instead
-of turning around in the station yards;
-increasing his speed for the moment, Curt
-caught up with the tail boards of the large
-truck, took hold with one hand, set his coaster
-brake, and rode in comfort, resting his weary
-feet.</p>
-<p>To his great surprise the truck turned off at
-a crossroad.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What does that mean?&rdquo; he wondered.</p>
-<p>He let go and dropped back a few yards, intending
-to let the truck go; but it bothered him
-to decide what caused the change of route.</p>
-<p>Curt resuming his pedaling, following at a
-little distance, determined that for all his weariness
-he ought to find out why a truck, openly
-laden with cases and parcels, boxes and canvas
-sacks, should not go directly to its destination
-to be ready for unloading when the plant
-opened in the morning.</p>
-<p>The ride was not more than a half mile.</p>
-<p>Curt, keeping at good distance, let the truck
-get around a bend. He could follow by the sound
-of the motor. He did not wish to be seen.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_229">229</div>
-<p>There was in him the thrill of the discoverer
-of a new clue.</p>
-<p>When the motor ceased to send its roar across
-the distance to him Curt laid Al&rsquo;s bicycle, which
-he had ridden from the cornfield, beside the
-rutted country road and walked, screening himself
-carefully, to the bend.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No truck should stop in this out-of-the-way
-place,&rdquo; he decided. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d better be careful. They
-might have a guard set at the turn.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was no guard, however. Evidently the
-truck driver and his assistant had no suspicion
-that they were observed.</p>
-<p>Openly the truck stood in the road, to one
-side. Curt, able to distinguish its bulk, was too
-far away to see through the darkness what was
-going on.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe a broken drive chain,&rdquo; he thought.
-&ldquo;Still, I&rsquo;d better be certain.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He made a slight detour through the pines
-along the byroad, being careful to make as little
-sound as possible, working around toward the
-position of the truck. Whatever sound he made
-was soon drowned by the roar of a motor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just a repair,&rdquo; he decided. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re going.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Instead of getting further away the motor
-pulsation became louder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s another car coming,&rdquo; Curt told himself,
-&ldquo;and it&rsquo;s a heavy duty motor, too.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_230">230</div>
-<p>He made fast progress toward the edge of the
-trees. There, hidden behind a large trunk of
-pine, he could see the dim road, the dull outline
-of the truck, and the moving forms of men lifting
-things out and piling them by the road.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re unloading the truck!&rdquo; Curt was
-amazed. Was this some bold banditry, some
-open theft?</p>
-<p>To his further astonishment and mystification
-the other truck came along and stopped.
-There was an exchange of low, but jovial banter
-between the rough drivers and their helpers, but
-no allusion was made to their task. Instead,
-the men on the truck just arrived began also
-to unload bolts, cases, boxes, sacks, from their
-vehicle.</p>
-<p>Curt could not figure the problem to a satisfactory
-decision. Were they substituting one
-load for the other? Why?</p>
-<p>At any rate, they would be occupied for several
-hours, Curt thought. He made his way
-quietly back into the wood and hurried toward
-his bicycle.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll ride to the plant, get the watchman to
-telephone for the police, and round up those
-fellows.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Every ounce of his reserve energy Curt put
-into his pedals as he bumped along the byroad
-and then raced down the main highway.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_231">231</div>
-<p>When he came within sight of the aircraft
-plant he was surprised at the activity displayed.
-The flood lights were on. Far up overhead he
-heard the sound of an airplane engine.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Curt was reassured. &ldquo;It must be Bob
-and Al coming in. They will be glad to hear
-I put the books away safely, and then we can
-all ride back to the truck&mdash;no, we can&rsquo;t!&rdquo; He
-recalled that his own wheel was parked at The
-Windsock&mdash;if no one had taken it.</p>
-<p>There was no one in the watchman&rsquo;s place
-by the main gate, which was open. Curt decided
-that the man was at the flying field to
-give assistance to the airplane as it landed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hello!&rdquo; Al, turning at the door of the administration
-offices, hailed Curt. &ldquo;Come on!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Curt raced across the yard, joined Al and
-Bob at the office building doorway.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought&mdash;&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;I thought you
-flew!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Rapidly Bob explained. &ldquo;We hoofed it back,&rdquo;
-Al added.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then who is landing&mdash;or shooting the field
-to land?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Must be Mr. Parsons bringing in the ship
-we deserted on the road. Did you leave that
-parcel of books at Dad&rsquo;s? Good! But why did
-you come back here, Curt?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_232">232</div>
-<p>A quick explanation set everything clearly
-before his friends.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We ought to go and round up the two
-trucks,&rdquo; he finished.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;we must get to Griff. He must be wild,
-waiting without any word. I know the trucks
-won&rsquo;t wait forever, but you can identify them
-in the morning. Come on.&rdquo; Curt followed Bob&rsquo;s
-lead, with Al at his heels as they entered the
-office corridor.</p>
-<p>Griff&rsquo;s voice came to them as they reached
-the upper landing. He was talking&mdash;telephoning!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh&mdash;Langley! You got there! Good! What?
-Your uncle is gone? Gone? Gone! Lang&mdash;where?
-You don&rsquo;t know? What&rsquo;ll I do, Lang?
-You don&rsquo;t know? Well, I do!&rdquo; and he slammed
-the receiver on its hook.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hurry!&rdquo; urged Bob as the trio raced to the
-lighted doorway.</p>
-<p>At the safe, kneeling, was Griff. He twirled
-the dial, clanged back the safe door, reached for
-the packet of bills again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here&mdash;you mustn&rsquo;t! You daren&rsquo;t. That
-isn&rsquo;t yours!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>White-faced, Griff identified Al as the latter
-called his warning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I must!&rdquo; he snapped, and stood up, holding
-the packet.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_233">233</div>
-<p>Over the offices came the drone of the approaching
-airplane circling for a landing. Al
-moved toward Griff.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get back!&rdquo; Griff was furious. Bob, behind
-him, snatched the packet of bills, flung it into
-the safe, slammed the door. Griff, with a furious
-snarl, bent to recover the packet, but the door
-was shut.</p>
-<p>He flung off Bob, who backed into Al and
-Curt.</p>
-<p>Heedless of the roar of the airplane engine
-as the ship came low over the office roofs in its
-descent, Bob, Al and Curt disentangled themselves,
-got to their feet.</p>
-<p>Already Griff was by the safe, the combination
-figures on the slip in his hand, the dial of
-the safe door twirling and clicking.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here&mdash;what are you doing, Griff?&rdquo; Bob
-cried out in dismay.</p>
-<p>With a quick glance Griff measured them. His
-face was white, his jaw was set, his whole attitude
-was that of a terrified, trembling young
-man who had determined on a course he knew
-to be wrong but which circumstances would not
-allow him to avoid.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t!&rdquo; exclaimed Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You daren&rsquo;t!&rdquo; corrected Al. &ldquo;Your father
-has stolen the books, but you shan&rsquo;t&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_234">234</div>
-<p>The safe door was wrenched open. Bob
-started forward, Curt at his side, to catch
-Griff&rsquo;s hand, to prevent this thing he felt he
-had to do. His fear of his father&rsquo;s anger was
-greater than his dread of the boys, it seemed.</p>
-<p>His hand on the packet of bills, Bob tried to
-stop him. Griff, with a scowl and a wicked
-word, kicked Bob&rsquo;s shin, avoided Curt&rsquo;s grasp,
-and stood back, his face working.</p>
-<p>There was an interruption.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Listen!&rdquo; Al, nearest the door, called the
-word. They were halted, frozen into statues
-with tense poses and straining ears.</p>
-<p>A step sounded in the hall.</p>
-<p>Instantly, white with terror, Griff flung the
-bills toward the open safe, kicked the door shut,
-turned like a hunted animal and ran out through
-an intervening door into the next office, and,
-with Bob in hot pursuit, raced across the hall,
-into the directors&rsquo; room, to its window and
-down the fire escape. And Bob, at the window,
-felt a hand grip his collar. He was caught!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_235">235</div>
-<h2 id="c29">CHAPTER XXIX
-<br /><span class="small">A CONFESSION</span></h2>
-<p>Without a struggle Bob gave up. In the
-dark he did not know who his captor might be;
-but he reasoned that if it turned out to be
-Barney resistance would be less sensible than
-explanation. To struggle for escape if the hand
-on his collar belonged to Mr. Parsons, would be
-foolish and might make it harder for his chum
-and his brother to explain their situation.</p>
-<p>In his mind&rsquo;s eye Bob recalled how the office
-had looked as he left it. Griff had kicked at the
-safe door, believing the money had gone in;
-but it had not! It had dropped on the floor.</p>
-<p>Unquestionably Mr. Parsons, or Barney, or
-whoever held him, had come past that office but
-had not stopped there, preferring to make a
-capture of the only person he could put his
-hands on.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_236">236</div>
-<p>Bob realized that non-resistance was a wise
-course. As he had surmised, he was led back
-toward the office. He was glad that he had done
-nothing, said nothing to explain the situation
-so far. The man who had hold of him, who
-urged him along the corridor, was Griff&rsquo;s
-father, the man from whom they sought to save
-Griff.</p>
-<p>At the office door Bob, panting and choked a
-trifle by the tight grip on his coat, took in the
-situation swiftly.</p>
-<p>It looked, from all the appearances, as
-though Al were dictating from the slip while
-Curt manipulated the combination, to open the
-safe; on the other hand, from another point of
-view, it might appear that the pair had recently
-had the safe open and were closing it.</p>
-<p>What made that more probable to an outsider&rsquo;s
-eyes was the package of greenbacks
-which Al held!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What does this mean?&rdquo; Mr. Parsons, half
-dragging Bob along, made a quick, nervous advance,
-caught the package from Al with his free
-hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It means that your&mdash;&rdquo; Al began in his imprudent
-haste; Bob gave him a sharp, meaning
-look. Al, catching it, realizing that he had almost
-mentioned Griff, whom they had previously
-agreed to aid, was silent.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It means that we came back here&mdash;&rdquo; Curt
-began and was interrupted by the angry partner
-of Mr. Tredway.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_237">237</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Not content with taking those books,&rdquo; he
-said angrily, &ldquo;you want to take the company
-money&mdash;how did you get into my desk? Pick
-the lock? That adds another count against you!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He released Bob&rsquo;s coat collar and strode to
-the desk, a flat-topped one in the center of the
-room. Catching up the telephone receiver, he
-made a call.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hello&mdash;hello! Give me Police Headquarters!
-Yes, thanks!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>For an instant the members of the Sky Squad
-were stunned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; Mr. Parsons spoke into the
-transmitter again. &ldquo;He is out? How soon will
-he be back? Have him call Mr. Parsons, at the
-aircraft plant! Yes&mdash;perhaps I can give him
-some tenants for the new cells in the police
-station.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He hung up the earpiece.</p>
-<p>Bob, recovering his usual good judgment, began
-to consider the very difficult situation that
-faced the Sky Squad.</p>
-<p>Al, however, seldom thought before he spoke;
-more often than his brother, he was sorry for
-hasty decisions and sharp speeches.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be sorry if you tell the Chief of
-Police,&rdquo; blustered Al.</p>
-<p>Curt, as thoughtful as Bob, trod on the foot
-of the younger captive and Al, jumping away,
-refused to be warned.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_238">238</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;If he thinks two
-sons of a detective, and their friend will be put
-in cells for trying to save&mdash;oh, all right, Bob!&mdash;for
-trying to put money back into a safe&mdash;&rdquo; he
-whirled on Mr. Parsons at the sound of the
-latter&rsquo;s sarcastic laugh, &ldquo;&mdash;that&rsquo;s what we were
-doing! If the Police Chief arrests us&mdash;we&rsquo;ll
-ask him to arrest you, too!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Indeed! Why!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For taking the company books away. For
-showing them to somebody outside the firm&mdash;planning
-how to get more cheap parts into the
-plant. Oh, we know all about you!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How do you know I had company books?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I saw the pages open on the table at The
-Windsock!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Indeed! Young man,&rdquo; he swung to Curt.
-&ldquo;Please go into the bookkeeper&rsquo;s room, unlock
-his book cabinet, and bring all the books you
-find.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Curt, surprised, took the small key from their
-captor, went in and lighted the adjoining office,
-returning, finally, with an armful of books.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you know the books of a complete set
-when you see them?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bob does,&rdquo; declared Al, still angry, but becoming
-a little uneasy. He might have jumped
-to his decision about the books he had seen. He
-was always making snap decisions!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Examine that set, young man&mdash;er, Bob!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_239">239</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s complete!&rdquo; Bob admitted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Exactly!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then why were you in such a sweat to get
-the others when we tried to&mdash;&rdquo; Al&rsquo;s voice tailed
-down to nothing; he began to see how really
-guilty they could be made to seem. There was
-entry into the offices at night, an open private
-desk, a tell-tale safe combination memorandum
-on the floor, a package of bills beside the safe,
-for one chain of evidence; there was an intrusion
-on a private conference, at The Windsock,
-and the subsequent escape with the books for
-a second, not to think of Bob&rsquo;s use of the airplane
-with no permission from a higher authority
-than a watchman, and the infraction of
-State law by landing on a highway and deserting
-the ship in a traffic lane. Al&rsquo;s bravado began
-to evaporate.</p>
-<p>Bob, who had remained cool, thinking, was
-able to see a brighter side to the situation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Please, Mr. Parsons,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t call
-in the police. That would force us to defend
-ourselves. We could explain what we were doing
-and why. But we have a&mdash;a code of honor,
-and we would rather have you let things work
-out without the police&mdash;and reporters.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You would really suffer more than we
-would,&rdquo; Curt declared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is that so? We shall see.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_240">240</div>
-<p>The telephone bell blared. Mr. Parsons
-turned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hello!&rdquo; he spoke into the instrument.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Father! Don&rsquo;t! Those fellows are protecting
-me! I can&rsquo;t let them!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Griff stood in the office door, his face white,
-his lips quivering.</p>
-<p>Mr. Parsons, catching sight of his son, stared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just a minute, Griff,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Hello&mdash;is
-the&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Father! You shan&rsquo;t! You mustn&rsquo;t! Listen
-to me. I took that money!&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The telephone receiver dropped, hanging by
-its cord to swing unheeded against the man&rsquo;s
-leg.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll confess!&rdquo; Griff, for all his fear of his
-father, of consequences, was showing his true
-manliness. &ldquo;I ran away, Father, because I
-thought I had put the money back and locked
-the safe. I didn&rsquo;t want to be caught. I thought
-I could go down the fire escape and get away.
-But when I saw you catch Bob I came back and
-listened&mdash;I must not let these fine friends stand
-a night in a cell for something I&rsquo;ve done.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then, haltingly, ashamed and despairing, but
-honestly, Griff cleared the Sky Squad and told
-the truth.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_241">241</div>
-<p>&ldquo;He was trying to get out of his trouble,&rdquo; Curt
-said to end the deep silence that followed Griff&rsquo;s
-explanation, &ldquo;and he didn&rsquo;t want to come to you
-when you had so many things on your mind.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Our cousin has gone to get money for him
-from Father,&rdquo; added Bob. &ldquo;But Father must
-have started for home before Lang got there,
-and it was only when the man at The Windsock
-threatened to come and tell you and make it
-look worse than it is, that Griff lost his common
-sense. We came back here to meet each other
-and saw what he was doing and convinced him
-it was a mistake.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The impulsiveness of Al prompted him to
-&ldquo;put in his oar,&rdquo; but his earlier bluster was
-gone and he kept still.</p>
-<p>They watched Mr. Parsons.</p>
-<p>His face was set and pale, his fingers worked
-nervously. He had his head bent.</p>
-<p>Bob, quietly picking up the telephone as he
-heard the impatient voice of someone at the
-other end of the connection making it squeak,
-spoke into the transmitter quietly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll call you back. Something has come
-up to make things different.&rdquo; He hung up the
-earpiece.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_242">242</div>
-<p>Apparently Mr. Parsons did not notice him
-at all. Added to the blow given by his son&rsquo;s
-confession that he had broken promises and
-gotten into deep trouble was the knowledge that
-three loyal companions, with full knowledge of
-his guilt had not only protected him from himself
-but had shielded him at the expense of being,
-themselves, suspected and unfairly accused.</p>
-<p>Mr. Parsons looked up. He held out a hand
-to Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I beg your pardon,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am sorry!&rdquo;
-Bob, smiling with some relief, eagerly gripped
-the extended hand, to be followed by Curt and
-Al.</p>
-<p>Then the father turned to his son.</p>
-<p>Three members of the Sky Squad held their
-breath.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Son,&rdquo; the voice seemed cool and sharp, but
-it changed suddenly, &ldquo;Son, I guess I&rsquo;d have
-done better to make a comrade of you than to
-try to rule you with fear and threats. Come
-here, Griffith.&rdquo; The young man advanced, hopeful,
-but also shame-faced. &ldquo;Son, we all make
-mistakes. If we learn not to make them again,
-that is life&rsquo;s lesson. I am not a judge. I am&mdash;your
-father!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Griff&rsquo;s hand reached out impulsively.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had to tell you&mdash;but I guess if it hadn&rsquo;t
-been to save these friends, I might have gone
-on. I guess I&rsquo;m a coward.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I should say not!&rdquo; cried Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not you!&rdquo; Bob was equally emphatic.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_243">243</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It took more bravery to walk in under the
-circumstances than to tell your father any other
-time, I say!&rdquo; Curt exclaimed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will settle with that fellow at the roadhouse,&rdquo;
-Mr. Parsons stated, when forgiveness
-was assured to Griff and the five occupants of
-the office were determined to &ldquo;work together&rdquo;
-for a change, &ldquo;If he has been paid&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not meet the Police Chief somewhere
-and have Griff tell him the things that are done
-against the law at The Windsock,&rdquo; suggested
-Al. &ldquo;Then we could all go there and give evidence
-of how Jenks tried to collect twice from
-Griff&mdash;and maybe we would find out something
-about&mdash;our own mystery. I think he is in it,
-some way!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. Parsons decided that he owed the Chief
-some explanation of his call and, somewhat
-over-excited, and not his usual sensible self, he
-failed to realize just what Al&rsquo;s suggestion implied&mdash;that
-they make Griff incriminate himself,
-since he had played at the tables without
-informing against the hotel. The Police Chief
-agreed to meet them near the roadhouse, and
-when Mr. Parsons hung up and turned back to
-them he was much more calm than they had
-ever seen him. &ldquo;If I explain my own purposes,&rdquo;
-he said, &ldquo;it will be easier for us all to understand
-and get together. I have been trying to
-protect my absent partner&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_244">244</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Absent?&rdquo; Bob repeated the word, &ldquo;your absent
-partner?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. Arthur Tredway. He went into hiding.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know!&rdquo; cried Al, &ldquo;I know now! I thought
-the face of the man in that brown airplane&mdash;the
-one who flew it&mdash;was familiar. That&rsquo;s Mr.
-Tredway!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, my boy, you are right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo; Curt was rather stunned, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
-understand.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Tredway&mdash;alive?&rdquo; cried Griff.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, alive. This has been a very mixed affair,&rdquo;
-the partner declared. &ldquo;I knew that Arthur
-Tredway was alive, but I could not speak of it
-or explain, because we did not know whom we
-could trust, and so told no one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then he wasn&rsquo;t&mdash;in the crash?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. Parsons turned to answer Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But why did he do it? Why did he hide and
-let everybody think he had &lsquo;gone West?&rsquo;&rdquo; Bob
-demanded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you remember&mdash;crossed wires?&rdquo; Curt
-reminded him.</p>
-<p>That had to be explained.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_245">245</div>
-<p>&ldquo;So someone crossed wires that were scraped
-nearly bare, in Arthur&rsquo;s own ship!&rdquo; Mr. Parsons
-was dismayed. &ldquo;That proves his suspicion
-that somebody meant harm to him. And that is
-what we hid him away to discover. If the accidents
-ceased with his disappearance, he was in
-danger; if not, the damage was aimed at the
-aircraft company.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But you haven&rsquo;t found out why he was in
-danger&mdash;or from whom?&rdquo; declared Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; admitted the partner. Al, fired with enthusiasm,
-added:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But we will!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. Parsons was not so sure.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_246">246</div>
-<h2 id="c30">CHAPTER XXX
-<br /><span class="small">BARNEY GIVES A HINT</span></h2>
-<p>While the quintet waited for the taxicab
-which Mr. Parsons summoned from town, Griff
-put the money back in the safe, thankful for his
-escape. Bob, Curt and Al expressed their elation
-that he was freed from suspicion, and Barney
-arrived.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The watchman called me,&rdquo; the manager explained.
-&ldquo;Things got a bit too exciting out
-here and he thought I ought to know. What is
-there to tell me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The explanations took up the time of waiting.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hm-m-m.&rdquo; Barney was pleased but thoughtful.
-&ldquo;Glad to learn my best friend&rsquo;s partner is
-cleared,&rdquo; he nodded at Mr. Parsons. &ldquo;Certainly
-I&rsquo;m delighted that his son is all straight. And
-Tredway is alive! Glory be! I&rsquo;m gladdest
-about that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I knew you would be,&rdquo; agreed Mr. Parsons.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_247">247</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The man who gave me everything I have,
-made me the manager of his plant! I&rsquo;ll say I&rsquo;m
-glad he&rsquo;s all right. Well, let&rsquo;s go see that ex-pilot
-and his wicked two-autograph ally!&rdquo; he
-grinned at Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think we ought to try to catch those truckmen
-first,&rdquo; suggested Curt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, let them alone,&rdquo; argued Barney, and Mr.
-Parsons agreed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You know what they were doing,&rdquo; he told
-Curt. &ldquo;All you have to do now is check the
-stuff that is unloaded from our truck in the
-morning. If that turns out to be poor material,
-trace the other truck, get your proof&mdash;and at
-least one part of the mystery will be easily
-solved.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They went out and packed into the taxicab,
-giving its driver direction for meeting the
-Police Chief at the edge of the picnic grove.</p>
-<p>When they got there and related their experiences
-they were daunted to find him decidedly
-lukewarm about &ldquo;rounding up&rdquo; the ex-pilot
-and his roadhouse manager.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think the idea is so good,&rdquo; the Chief
-of Police stated. &ldquo;Griffith Parsons has no receipt.
-He can&rsquo;t actually prove that he paid real
-money, or that he paid at all. Anyway, now
-that his father knows the whole business, that
-fellow, Jenks, hasn&rsquo;t a chance to collect again.
-He won&rsquo;t dare try. Just what do you want me
-to do?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_248">248</div>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s this note put on the airplane, and
-his trying to avoid showing his handwriting by
-giving me two autographs,&rdquo; Al suggested.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In a way I&rsquo;m sorry to destroy that clue,&rdquo;
-said Mr. Parsons, &ldquo;but when we get to the roadhouse
-you will see that it has no value.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you want me to do?&rdquo; repeated the
-police official.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We thought of facing the manager, Jenks,
-with Griff&rsquo;s evidence of how he permits gambling
-to go on&mdash;and other things outside the law&mdash;and
-making him tell us what he knows,&rdquo; Bob
-urged.</p>
-<p>The man shook his head.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I know what you&rsquo;re thinking,&rdquo; the officer
-chuckled as he eyed Bob, Curt and Al. &ldquo;Graft&mdash;hush-money!
-But that isn&rsquo;t it at all. As far
-as Griff&rsquo;s information goes, we&rsquo;ll take care of
-that better by making a raid when the place is
-crowded and the barn is actually in use for
-illicit purposes. But, don&rsquo;t you see what you
-are doing?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The chums shook their heads.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I do,&rdquo; said Barney, and Mr. Parsons agreed
-again. &ldquo;If we offer to make him tell with a
-threat of what we will do if he refuses,&mdash;we are
-&lsquo;compounding a felony&rsquo; if we get him to tell
-anything and don&rsquo;t go through with the legal
-steps on the face of our evidence.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_249">249</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; Barney saw how disappointed the
-three chums were, although they admitted the
-justice of the official&rsquo;s attitude, &ldquo;let&rsquo;s go out
-and see my old patron and comrade.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Chief of Police agreed to look into the
-charges Griff had made and turned his car to
-return to his home, while Barney, in one cab
-with Bob and Al, and Mr. Parsons in the one
-they had called, with Curt and his own son, went
-on.</p>
-<p>There was a vociferous greeting between Mr.
-Tredway and his plant manager.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you tell me you were all right?&rdquo;
-he cried, pumping the plant owner&rsquo;s hand, slapping
-his back, and, as Al said later, &ldquo;almost
-kissing him,&rdquo; while the mysterious stranger,
-and the others watched with various feelings.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I had to make my plans in secret,&rdquo; Mr. Tredway
-retorted. &ldquo;Not even my partner knew until
-tonight. But&mdash;let us get acquainted, all the
-way &rsquo;round.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He turned to the mystery man behind him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is my brother,&rdquo; he presented the man,
-&ldquo;and so these are the three young men who have
-worked so hard to solve the mystery of my
-crash into the lake!&rdquo; He shook hands and they
-selected a private dining room on the second
-floor for a midnight repast.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_250">250</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said, smiling pleasantly at the
-three rather silent youths as the first course,
-a hot, nourishing soup, was served, &ldquo;have you
-solved the puzzle of the mystery crash?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think we have&mdash;but not all, sir,&rdquo; replied
-Bob. &ldquo;I think I can put together what happened,
-but not why it had to happen.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go ahead,&rdquo; Mr. Tredway encouraged.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, do,&rdquo; urged Barney. &ldquo;I admit I&rsquo;m
-stumped.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, sir,&rdquo; Bob, without trying to be vain,
-spoke frankly. &ldquo;We got mixed up and puzzled,
-at first, because we were trying to solve a lot
-of things by connecting them with your&mdash;disappearance.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And we made the mistake of suspecting
-everybody,&rdquo; interrupted Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That mixed Griff&rsquo;s case in, and his father&rsquo;s,&rdquo;
-agreed Curt, and he turned back to give Bob
-the center of the stage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t know whether the damage to
-airplanes was aimed at the plant or at you direct,&rdquo;
-Bob told Mr. Tredway, who nodded. &ldquo;You
-had two airplanes&mdash;both alike, except one was
-the Golden Dart and the other was the Silver
-Flash.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_251">251</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Exactly. And I thought,&rdquo; Mr. Tredway interrupted,
-&ldquo;if the guilty person knew which airplane
-I meant to deliver, he would damage that
-one and so, at the last minute I changed my
-ship, after saying I was going to deliver the
-Golden Dart I took off in the Silver Flash&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And you were right,&rdquo; gasped Al. &ldquo;When we
-flew the Golden one her rudder cable was frayed
-and broke.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right, my young friend. And nothing was
-wrong with the other.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then how did you crash it&mdash;why did it crack
-up?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mr. Tredway looked to Bob for an explanation,
-desiring to test the youth&rsquo;s skill at deduction.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t much to work on,&rdquo; Bob said modestly,
-&ldquo;but this is how I think you did it:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your brother flew here in the brown ship
-and hid it in the field, leaving the note to show
-you it was ready.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And then?&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You took off early, and then set down the
-big cabin ship on the turf&mdash;that accounts for the
-deep ruts&mdash;and the ship was in the way so you
-dragged it into the stubble until the brown ship
-got up, then took the cabin craft into the
-air&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I fail to see what the brown airplane, and
-Arthur&rsquo;s brother, have to do with it,&rdquo; Barney
-broke in.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_252">252</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s brother had to be there to
-bring down the cabin &lsquo;plane,&rdquo; Bob explained.
-&ldquo;At least that&rsquo;s the only way I can see for the
-tracks in the field, and the crack-up, to fit the
-conditions,&rdquo; he paused.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You mean&mdash;they exchanged ships? Arthur
-landed the cabin crate and then flew away in
-the brown one, while his brother crashed the
-Silver Flash?&rdquo; Barney demanded. Tredway
-nodded as did his brother.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The young man is correct in his deduction,&rdquo;
-the latter said. &ldquo;I had to come and exchange
-ships with my brother and then crack up the
-Silver Flash to give the idea that its pilot&mdash;and
-my brother had taken off in it!&mdash;had gone
-into a mudhole or under rocks in the lake.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you expect to gain by that?&rdquo; asked
-Barney.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Removing one partner,&rdquo; Mr. Tredway
-smiled, &ldquo;gave the other one &lsquo;a free hand&rsquo; if he
-was in any way guilty, or you, Barney!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Barney turned red.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you mean to say?&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, I did not suspect you, I only wanted to
-get away and see what happened, and who did
-it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;These young men have cleared most of us,&rdquo;
-stated Mr. Parsons. &ldquo;They have done more!
-They know how the good parts are taken and
-cheap ones are substituted.&rdquo; He explained
-about the trucks.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_253">253</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But we can&rsquo;t solve the mystery of why you
-brought books here and then said the company
-books were all at the plant,&rdquo; argued Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I found a small set of duplicate books&mdash;that
-is, what we would call &lsquo;fake&rsquo; books&mdash;private
-books in the cabinet,&rdquo; began Mr. Parsons.</p>
-<p>Barney bent forward.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did you find those? I had them in
-my own desk!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where I took them from. You see,
-Barney, as long as we all suspected each other
-it was wisest for me to check them. Not that I
-accuse you, because they were in your desk.
-You were checking up, also, of course.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not finished either,&rdquo; declared Barney.
-&ldquo;But&mdash;as long as Arthur wanted a look at them,
-it&rsquo;s all right with me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We have them safe,&rdquo; said Curt. &ldquo;And the
-brother is the mysterious man with the dark
-beard whose motorcycle Griff used, and it was
-he who was in the supply room, the other
-night.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was,&rdquo; said Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s brother. &ldquo;I
-came, with his key, got in the private gate, went
-up the fire escape and down to check up in the
-supply room&mdash;until Griff, running off with my
-motorcycle, made me suspicious, scared and
-anxious. So I left.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_254">254</div>
-<p>&ldquo;And I came here to see Arthur&rsquo;s brother,&rdquo;
-said Mr. Parsons, and Griff, looking ashamed
-added, &ldquo;&mdash;and I ran away!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But we don&rsquo;t know who damaged the crates,
-or if it was against Mr. Tredway or just spite
-work against the company,&rdquo; Al said. &ldquo;The
-mystery crash has failed to bring that to light.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Barney suddenly leaned forward,
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to go, out and dismiss my taxicab&mdash;it&rsquo;s
-eating its head off&mdash;but first I&rsquo;ll give you
-a hint to chew over while I&rsquo;m away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; several spoke the question in unison.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Suppose the motive was revenge,&rdquo; Barney
-spoke very low, and Bob, watching some curtains,
-at a locked side door, thought the breeze
-must be stirring them, &ldquo;suppose there was once
-a pilot at the plant and that Arthur had to fire
-him and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t mean to say!&mdash;&rdquo; Mr. Tredway
-bent close, excited. &ldquo;The pilot I once discharged?
-Why&mdash;he&rsquo;s the owner of this place.
-I&rsquo;d never dream&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All the same&mdash;chew it over!&rdquo; Barney rose.
-&ldquo;I suppose you&rsquo;ll be flying back&mdash;you won&rsquo;t
-stay here tonight.&rdquo; Tredway shook his head.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_255">255</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Be right back,&rdquo; Barney said. Bob, as the
-others chatted softly and excitedly, followed the
-departing manager with his eyes. He had
-thrown suspicion on several, had Barney. Also,
-he had been the only one who inspected and
-then reported on the Silver Flash, that nothing
-had been found tampered with! And&mdash;he had
-chased Lang and Bob to see Bob&rsquo;s detective
-father! What a lot of curious facts, Bob mused!</p>
-<p>And when Barney rejoined them a moment
-later Bob was still musing!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think it would be a good idea for all of us
-to stay,&rdquo; suggested Mr. Parsons. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s after
-midnight, and these lads must be worn out, with
-all their pedaling to and fro. We can telephone
-their homes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You may all stay,&rdquo; said Mr. Tredway. &ldquo;But
-until we prove something I shall keep out of
-sight. Especially if the ex-pilot is apt to be
-around. I&rsquo;m going to warm up my brother&rsquo;s
-airplane and hop back to the airport I came
-from.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They all parted. Curt declared he wanted to
-secure his forgotten bicycle, Bob and Al were
-sure they had better go on home if Mr. Parsons
-would let them take the taxicab. He decided
-that, after all, he and his son had better go
-home. The meal was finished. Mr. Tredway,
-going by a side hall, and down back stairs,
-sought to avoid recognition while his brother
-agreed to watch the ex-pilot at every chance.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_256">256</div>
-<p>Bob and Curt found the bicycle safe, and
-trundled it to the luggage rack at the back of
-the taxicab.</p>
-<p>Then Bob turned suddenly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stay here,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I want to say something
-to Mr. Tredway&mdash;he&rsquo;s warming up the
-airplane.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Forget something?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;recalled something!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As he reached the man so mysteriously lost
-and so suddenly discovered Bob caught his arm
-and spoke very earnestly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For the sake of your safety,&rdquo; Bob whispered,
-&ldquo;take off, just as you planned&mdash;but only
-go to the cornfield&mdash;set down as soon as you can&mdash;and
-then&mdash;look for&mdash;crossed wires!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In a flash he was beyond questioning!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_257">257</div>
-<h2 id="c31">CHAPTER XXXI
-<br /><span class="small">&ldquo;ONE MORE PROBLEM&rdquo;</span></h2>
-<p>Bob did not delay a moment after he delivered
-his solemn warning to Mr. Tredway.</p>
-<p>As quickly as he could he located the plant
-manager.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Barney,&rdquo; he said earnestly, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t stay here
-tonight! Come home with us. Stay with the
-Sky Squad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In the name of Sam Hill&mdash;why?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You forgot where you were, didn&rsquo;t you,
-when you spoke about the&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; he lowered his
-voice, glanced around, spoke carefully, &ldquo;&mdash;the
-ex-pilot as the one who had a motive for injuring
-Mr. Tredway?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;I guess I was thinking pretty much
-of what I was saying.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know you were.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;did you hear anything or&mdash;see anything?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I heard something. You didn&rsquo;t
-think, but there&rsquo;s a curtained door in that private
-room we used. How do you know Jenks or&mdash;the
-other one&mdash;might not have heard you?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_258">258</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Lad, you&rsquo;re quick! Right, too. Maybe I&rsquo;d
-better go on. But I won&rsquo;t need to stay with
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, you&rsquo;d better. We can take turns watching!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fiddlesticks! It&rsquo;s not as dangerous for me
-as that!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At least come back in the taxi with us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, all right. I&rsquo;ll do that. But I&rsquo;ll go on
-home, then.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you come on, please&mdash;right away?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Barney, half-amused at Bob&rsquo;s concern, and
-partly wondering what caused it and if he actually
-had been spied on, overheard, and realizing
-even better than did Bob, he thought, how dangerous
-such an accusation might be, Barney
-agreed.</p>
-<p>The ride back to town was taken up with discussion
-of Barney&rsquo;s hint but through all the
-talk Bob was rather quiet.</p>
-<p>It was decided that the three members of the
-Sky Squad would be taken home first, then Griff
-and his father would go on, leaving Barney to
-finish the ride to his own home.</p>
-<p>As the car drew up in front of Bob&rsquo;s house
-and Al began saying his goodnight, quite sleepily,
-Bob turned to Mr. Parsons.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_259">259</div>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you say to going back to the plant,
-after you drop Griff, and getting the real set
-of company books, and bringing them here. We
-can work on them together, and see if there is
-anything in the private set that doesn&rsquo;t agree
-with the others.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not wait until morning?&rdquo; suggested
-Mr. Parsons. &ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t you worn out?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What books?&rdquo; Barney asked. &ldquo;Oh&mdash;that&rsquo;s
-so. I remember. You said you had them. Put
-them away carefully! Don&rsquo;t leave them out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, we will,&rdquo; agreed Al, overhearing. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll
-put them in the big desk in Father&rsquo;s study and
-lock them up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, goodnight,&rdquo; said Curt. He had been
-invited to stay but he preferred to go on home.
-Bob threw in a suggestion.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At that,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Curt, why don&rsquo;t you let
-me telephone your mother, and you stay. And
-Barney could wait with us till Mr. Parsons
-comes back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, come to think of it, why not?&rdquo; Barney
-decided. &ldquo;If it won&rsquo;t wake up your folks.&rdquo; Bob
-assured him it wouldn&rsquo;t. His mother must still
-be waiting up, he declared; there was a light
-burning in his father&rsquo;s study.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good grief!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;I never thought&mdash;supposing
-Dad has come home?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet he has,&rdquo; Al agreed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_260">260</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go and see&mdash;will you come in with us?&rdquo;
-he addressed Barney, and the latter cordially
-agreed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess we&rsquo;d better let you wait in the living
-room till we see whether it&rsquo;s Dad or Mother.
-She might not be dressed for company&mdash;if
-Mother is sitting up.&rdquo; Barney agreed to wait,
-and Al went to the door to call Curt in to telephone
-home.</p>
-<p>The den, into which Bob turned, closing the
-door quietly, was occupied, as he had all along
-suspected it would be, by his father.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I heard that you weren&rsquo;t in the other city,&rdquo;
-Bob said, after a hasty greeting. His father
-saw his eagerness and let him talk. &ldquo;Lang flew
-there to get help&mdash;&rdquo; he sketched very swiftly the
-incidents of the night. &ldquo;Now, Father, what
-brought you home? Have you?&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have suspicions&mdash;yes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you&rsquo;ve been working on the mystery?&rdquo;
-Bob asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All along. I pretended to be busy on another
-case because&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You suspected somebody!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;From the start. Yes. Did you?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_261">261</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Not until tonight. But I know it&rsquo;s the same
-person, and I&rsquo;ve got him in the living room and
-I want to pretend to him that we are guarding
-him from some one else, while we keep
-guard to see that he doesn&rsquo;t take fright and
-escape.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>His father framed a name and Bob nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is your proof?&rdquo; demanded his father.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He came to a detective at the very first. He
-has put suspicion on everybody else. He seems
-terribly anxious about those books.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Circumstantial evidence justifying suspicion,
-but not proof. However&mdash;I&rsquo;ve learned
-that some people, probably using assumed
-names&mdash;it may all be the same person&mdash;have
-been changing aircraft stock into gold. What
-is your plan, son?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We must keep him from guessing that we
-suspect&mdash;and keep him where we can watch him.
-The way I plan, if you agree, is this. Father,
-if he is the guilty one, he is terribly dangerous.
-He must have crossed wires on Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s
-airplane, before the owner left the plant&mdash;hoping
-he&rsquo;d have a short-circuit, set the gas on
-fire and come down in flames. Then he thought
-the Golden Dart was the cabin ship to be flown
-and he frayed the rudder cable. When he discovered
-the other ship was going he might have
-crossed wires on that&mdash;remember, he mentioned
-&lsquo;crossed wires&rsquo; back in the other city? And he&rsquo;s
-the only one who inspected the Silver Flash
-when she crashed and was hauled in. So we
-must keep him here where we can hold him if
-he makes a move.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_262">262</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Right. Get him in, son. We will pretend to
-study the books, and I will watch his reaction.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And if he doesn&rsquo;t betray himself?&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We will let him go. He cannot leave tonight
-because if he has been taking stock and exchanging
-it for gold, he probably had to bank
-it&mdash;he wouldn&rsquo;t leave it in his house, would he,
-son?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We can have detectives watch his house all
-night. Father, fix it with the Chief of Police
-while I get him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Barney was ushered in, Al and Curt joined
-them and the three of the Sky Squad lined up
-on the davenport to watch Barney as the detective
-discussed the case.</p>
-<p>But Barney did not betray any uneasiness.
-He was clever, Bob decided.</p>
-<p>Mr. Parsons, for whom Al watched to let him
-in without awakening Mrs. Wright, brought
-other books and they were all busy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve discovered something!&rdquo; Al exclaimed,
-after half an hour.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sky Squad will now report!&rdquo; chuckled Barney.
-He turned to Bob.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go ahead, Chief Pilot!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob, very serious, nodded.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_263">263</div>
-<p>Was Barney getting fidgety? Or, was he
-simply eager?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What have you found?&rdquo; his father prompted
-him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve solved one mystery&mdash;how the bad
-parts are coming in,&rdquo; said Bob, confidently.
-&ldquo;Curt, bring the false ledger and the real one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>All heads bent interestedly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Notice how those tiny pencil &lsquo;ticks&rsquo; are
-made in the beginning of some entries?&rdquo; Bob
-pointed to several. &ldquo;There aren&rsquo;t any in the
-regular ledger, but the entries correspond, and
-they are always worded in a queer way. See
-this one, about fabric: &lsquo;10 bolts fabric, cotton,
-quality A&mdash;dash&mdash;X&mdash;one hundred,&rsquo;&rdquo; he
-quoted. &ldquo;Now all the entries that are ticked in
-the false ledger are backward like that&mdash;and
-the same in the regular book, but no others except
-the ticked ones are!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s curious,&rdquo; muttered Barney. &ldquo;What
-else?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here are several bills of lading that
-weren&rsquo;t entered Saturday, just slipped into the
-back of the regular ledger,&rdquo; Bob drew them out
-and unfolded them. &ldquo;One is all right, but the
-other is made out backward&mdash;the same as the
-ticked ones&mdash;and it isn&rsquo;t a real bill of lading at
-all, because it is dated for today, and the shipment
-that arrived today isn&rsquo;t to be delivered
-until tomorrow and we saw the two trucks exchanging
-goods on the byroad&mdash;or, Curt did.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_264">264</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Very clever, but what does it prove?&rdquo; asked
-Barney.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This bill of lading being dated ahead and
-being one of the &lsquo;backward wording&rsquo; sort,
-shows that those are the entries that are &lsquo;queer.&rsquo;
-That solves the mystery, because we know how
-those things are being substituted tonight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But who does it incriminate?&rdquo; asked Barney.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why&mdash;whoever&rsquo;s writing matches this.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then the bookkeeper is due for a call on the
-carpet&mdash;maybe worse,&rdquo; said Barney. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s
-his book, and the false set is the same handwriting!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That settles that mystery and leaves only
-the one about Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s possible evil
-wisher,&rdquo; said Mr. Parsons.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, that&rsquo;s attended to&mdash;all we need to do
-is to watch that ex-pilot, and Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s
-brother has agreed&mdash;&rdquo; Al paused. The den
-private extension telephone was ringing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s for you, Bob,&rdquo; his father said. &ldquo;Who&rsquo;d
-be&mdash;oh, Mr. Tredway! How are you? Glad
-you&rsquo;re &lsquo;alive and kicking.&rsquo; Yes, this is Wright.
-My son stole a march on me, finding you. Here
-he is.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob bent over the desk.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_265">265</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Hello....&rdquo; he said amid a tense silence.
-&ldquo;Oh, did I guess right?... You didn&rsquo;t go on?
-... set down in the cornfield ... fix it in the
-morning?... Yes. Thank you, sir, for calling.
-Yes, we just got here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He replaced the receiver and turned to the
-interested, expectant company.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Another of the puzzles solved, and I guessed
-rightly,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Barney, when you suspected
-the ex-pilot, I thought it might be that he&rsquo;d do
-the same as he had done on the airplane I
-piloted&mdash;Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s own sport craft. You
-know why I had to set it down?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;because the other man&mdash;Arthur&mdash;chased
-you down?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Bob, slowly. &ldquo;You mentioned the
-ex-pilot having access to the &lsquo;planes. Well, on
-the brown ship&mdash;the wires were crossed tonight!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Barney gasped, and recovered from
-his startled amazement. &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t say! That&rsquo;s
-bad for&mdash;the ex-pilot.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But it disposes of one mystery&mdash;who! He
-was probably there at The Windsock and heard
-you&mdash;don&rsquo;t you suppose?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Looks like it. Well, now, that clears up&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All but one more puzzle,&rdquo; said Curt. &ldquo;Who&rsquo;s
-getting away with the small parts, and valuable
-instruments?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_266">266</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I can settle that!&rdquo; said Barney. &ldquo;Sandy
-Jim, the rigger Al was put to work for&mdash;remember
-him sending you to his house with a lot
-of parcels supposed to contain junk for his
-kid?&rdquo; Al nodded, dismayed. It hurt to hear
-that honest-looking Sandy was so wicked. But
-Barney seemed to have the correct idea, as the
-evidence indicated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll round them up tomorrow.&rdquo; Barney
-rose. &ldquo;Suppose I take those books along with
-me? I&rsquo;ll bring them in early in the morning.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fine!&rdquo; Bob jumped up, gathering the books.
-&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a Summer shower wetting the streets&mdash;I&rsquo;ll
-wrap these in paper for you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When he returned with the parcel all goodnights
-had been said and the party broke up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Son,&rdquo; said Mr. Wright to Bob, &ldquo;what do you
-think now?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t say. He acted all right. But he always
-has done that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who?&rdquo; Al was sleepy but curious.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Barney!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t suspect Barney?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But how can you? He has helped us, and
-he&rsquo;s Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s friend and I always thought&mdash;er&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_267">267</div>
-<p>&ldquo;A criminal had to have a motive?&rdquo; prompted
-his father. &ldquo;I attached no importance to one
-fact I have discovered, until I felt sure of Barney&rsquo;s
-guilt. Now I do. This might be his motive!
-Years ago Mr. Tredway won the girl
-whom another pilot was courting. The man went
-from bad to worse, threatened&mdash;and then disappeared.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jealousy! Hate!&rdquo; gasped Curt. &ldquo;But Barney!&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course that was not the pilot&rsquo;s name. He
-must have changed his name as well as his appearance.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then, Father, how did you know it&rsquo;s Barney.
-How about the ex-pilot? Couldn&rsquo;t he?&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, Al. He worked for Mr. Tredway after
-the latter married.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well&mdash;then&mdash;good cracky! Bob&mdash;you gave
-the culprit all the evidence in those books&mdash;to
-destroy!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; Bob smiled. &ldquo;Dad&rsquo;s encyclopedia is
-shy four volumes, and there are three vitamine
-books gone, and Barney has them. The real
-books are in their places on our shelves!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then they did compliment him!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_268">268</div>
-<h2 id="c32">CHAPTER XXXII
-<br /><span class="small">FLIGHT!</span></h2>
-<p>When the sun peered through dispersing
-Summer storm clouds it saw three alert, wide-awake
-youths, a little tired but very tense, in
-the testing field of the Tredway aircraft plant.</p>
-<p>With them were Mr. Tredway, the Chief of
-Police, Mr. Parsons and Griff.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is Tredway&rsquo;s speed plane fueled up,&rdquo; Mr.
-Wright came over from the offices where he had
-deposited the company books in readiness for
-later use: his question was addressed to Griff.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ready, sir,&rdquo; the young son of Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s
-partner responded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All plans arranged, Chief?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got a net spread that Barney Horton
-couldn&rsquo;t escape if he was an eel. One of my best
-detectives has been outside his house ever since
-he went in from the taxi, at one &lsquo;a.m.&rsquo; Those
-two men over by the offices, getting ready to dig
-a trench, are two picked men of my headquarters
-staff. Every motorcycle man, every traffic man,
-all our roundsmen and policemen are on the
-alert.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_269">269</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I simply cannot believe it of Barney,&rdquo; Mr.
-Tredway was as doleful as though they were
-planning to arrest him, instead of his plant manager,
-&ldquo;I took him in and gave him every opportunity,
-taught him all he knows, pushed him
-to the top. To think&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hatred for a fancied wrong is a terrible
-force for evil,&rdquo; said Mr. Wright.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But he doesn&rsquo;t look a bit like the man who
-was trying to win the woman who became my
-wife.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;By the way,&rdquo; interrupted the Chief of Police,
-&ldquo;she hasn&rsquo;t appeared at all in this&mdash;have you
-separated? Isn&rsquo;t she&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; quickly, &ldquo;she is alive. My wife
-is away in Europe. That is the reason I decided
-to&mdash;disappear. I knew that news of it would
-not reach her before I &lsquo;came to life.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But if Barney is the guilty man,&rdquo; Curt was
-still dazed, &ldquo;why did he turn suspicion on that
-ex-pilot at The Windsock?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He tried to turn suspicion on everybody,&rdquo;
-retorted Mr. Wright. &ldquo;It is a favorite trick of
-a guilty person. He has practically accused the
-bookkeeper, the supply clerk, Sandy Jim, the
-rigger and the man you mentioned.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But he&rsquo;s free,&rdquo; Al spoke. &ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you
-arrest him while you had him at the house showing
-him the books?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_270">270</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You must remember one fact, my young
-&lsquo;Sky Squadder,&rsquo;&rdquo; the Chief of Police commented.
-&ldquo;Circumstantial evidence, and suspicion
-are one thing. Proof of guilt that will
-stand in court against a clever lawyer is something
-quite different.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In other words,&rdquo; Mr. Wright explained, &ldquo;we
-feel, with absolute conviction, that Barney is
-our man. We haven&rsquo;t any actual proof. We
-must wait until he makes some open move. Bob,
-cleverly discovering Barney&rsquo;s supposed guilt
-because he saw Barney make that excuse to get
-out to the airplane when he said he wanted to
-dismiss his taxi, did all he could to keep the
-man close to his Sky Squad; but Barney was
-clever.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought he would make a try for the books
-during the night if I got him to stay with us,&rdquo;
-Bob admitted modestly. &ldquo;Then, when he refused
-to spend the night with us I hoped he&rsquo;d
-discover that we had substituted other books
-for the ledgers, and would try to get in our
-place to get all the incriminating evidence. But,&rdquo;
-dejectedly, &ldquo;he was too clever for that, even.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How do you expect him to make an open
-move, if he&rsquo;s all that wise?&rdquo; asked Griff.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_271">271</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; Mr. Wright spoke up, &ldquo;some one has
-been quietly exchanging company stock, turning
-some into gold, here and there. I think it
-was Barney&rsquo;s work under assumed names, to
-get his money into shape for escape. We have
-made him see that we know how the cheap,
-shoddy supplies are coming in, and other
-things: he will try to get away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The paying tellers of the town banks are on
-the watch. The first minute he comes to close
-his accounts, as he will do before he takes a
-train, we will be informed. Before he goes he
-may try to destroy the false account books, and
-leave only conviction of his guilt, but no real,
-legal proof.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo; Al was still somewhat puzzled. &ldquo;Bob,
-how did you come to suspect Barney at all?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you remember me telling what was said
-when I flew with Lang to see Father?&rdquo; As Al
-and Curt nodded, Bob added, &ldquo;Barney used a
-phrase about &lsquo;crossed wires.&rsquo; Then I found
-crossed wires in Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s ship last night,
-and later Mr. Tredway found wires chafed, and
-led across each other, by his brown &lsquo;plane
-carburetor. It was the quickest way to endanger
-a ship&mdash;the spark could set fire to free gas, and
-might not be noticed in daylight. Barney had
-time to do it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When he went out? I see,&rdquo; Curt said. &ldquo;But,
-Bob, you thought some one was listening, watching&mdash;you
-told Barney so.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_272">272</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I still think some one was spying over our
-dinner&mdash;but it may have been the manager,
-Jenks, who may be &lsquo;in&rsquo; with Barney.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Speak of the&mdash;&rdquo; Mr. Tredway gave a warning
-glance as he began the old adage, &ldquo;speak of
-the devil, he&rsquo;s sure to appear.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To their amazement, Barney came through
-the gates. He was calm, quiet, not at all furtive
-or frightened.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What was the idea of that trick you played
-with the books?&rdquo; He patted the package he carried.
-Bob was confused.</p>
-<p>The arrival of the rigger, Sandy Jim, coming
-early to complete work on the new airplane
-for which the owner was in such a hurry, enabled
-Bob to hide his confusion as his father
-answered, quietly, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you that, Barney.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right. Tell me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob, who turned his head to hide his crimson
-face, and who went to greet Sandy Jim, with
-Al, as an excuse to avoid an explanation that
-might upset their plans, was surprised at the
-look on Sandy Jim&rsquo;s face.</p>
-<p>The man was staring at Mr. Tredway as
-though he saw a ghost.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;I&mdash;thought that man was&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_273">273</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Hello, Sandy!&rdquo; Al greeted, taking the
-amazement as natural, since everyone around
-the plant supposed the owner to have gone under
-the mud in the Silver Flash, &ldquo;ready for
-work early.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ye&mdash;yeah! How&rsquo;d he get here?&rdquo; He jerked
-a thumb toward Mr. Tredway.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;In a taxi.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob took over the explanation, giving Sandy
-enough of the former happenings to enable the
-rigger to recover from his surprise.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m right glad,&rdquo; the man stated, finally.
-&ldquo;Now&mdash;Al, you get some of your crowd together
-and fuel up this new crate&mdash;soon as a pilot
-shows up we want it tested. I may have to make
-some changes in the wire tension and balance&mdash;get
-busy, me lads!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Al eagerly agreed, seeing that their carefully
-planned &ldquo;coup&rdquo; had fallen through. Barney,
-listening to Mr. Wright, to Mr. Tredway, to the
-latter&rsquo;s partner and the Chief of Police, trying,
-all together, to give him a &ldquo;third degree,&rdquo; began
-to laugh.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a good one!&rdquo; He threw back his head,
-roaring his mirth. &ldquo;So I&rsquo;m the culprit, eh? Ho-ho!
-Oh, my, that&rsquo;s rich. Clever Sky Squad
-you have, Wright! Ha-ha-ha-ho-ho! Here I
-am doing all I can to help my partner, trying to
-solve the puzzles he couldn&rsquo;t untangle&mdash;and I&rsquo;m
-to be arrested!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_274">274</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No one spoke of arrest!&rdquo; the Police Chief
-hedged. &ldquo;Are you sending some one else to get
-your banked gold?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Banked gold?&rdquo; Barney dropped his jaw as
-the question was shot at him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Converting stock!&rdquo; snapped Mr. Parsons.</p>
-<p>Barney stared and then smiled. &ldquo;All the stock
-I ever had is in my safe deposit box&mdash;come on!
-I&rsquo;ll show you, at the bank.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They were puzzled. Arthur Tredway was
-eager to claim that his friend and protege was
-innocent.</p>
-<p>The others were compelled to admit as Bob
-mentally decided, that Barney&rsquo;s face, manner
-and actions were open and honest.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s enough gas,&rdquo; said the rigger. &ldquo;Now,
-Al, fill her up with oil&mdash;I want to see Mr. Tredway.&rdquo;
-He descended from the aircraft, went
-to his employer and with many protestations of
-delight gripped his hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;See here,&rdquo; he urged, &ldquo;Mr. Tredway, this
-crate they&rsquo;re fueling is in a big rush. I have
-to make adjustments for balance before she is
-delivered. Can&rsquo;t you take her up?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; Mr. Tredway was anxious to get
-into action since he had agreed to &ldquo;return to
-life.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hey&mdash;Bob&mdash;got her filled? Warm her up
-for Mr. Tredway.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_275">275</div>
-<p>Bob nodded, consulted the brand new instruments
-and noted that the fuel and oil registered
-at &ldquo;full.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gas on&mdash;switch off,&rdquo; he told Al. &ldquo;Whirl
-that prop, Al.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>His brother did his bidding. It took several
-trials to start the new engine but Bob got it
-going and then drew back the throttle to idling
-speed and went over to rejoin the group.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think Arthur ought to take that crate
-up,&rdquo; Barney was half laughing. &ldquo;Of course I
-know that the only wires I ever crossed was
-when I flew my crates over telegraph lines&mdash;but
-he might think I had &rsquo;em crossed in this ship!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; Tredway laid a hand on his protege&rsquo;s
-shoulder.</p>
-<p>But Bob was not watching Barney.</p>
-<p>His eyes were fixed on Sandy Jim, and he
-beckoned to his father.</p>
-<p>Hurriedly, rapidly, Bob spoke to his father.
-The detective nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get the speedster of Mr. Tredway&rsquo;s
-warmed up, too,&rdquo; Bob said softly, &ldquo;in case&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To Al&rsquo;s amazement and Curt&rsquo;s astonishment
-the head of the Sky Squad beckoned furiously.
-They followed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;See if there&rsquo;s gas and oil in this,&rdquo; he urged
-as he led them to the ship he had flown the night
-before, returned to its field by Mr. Parsons.
-&ldquo;Listen, fellows&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_276">276</div>
-<p>As he busied himself making ready to start
-the motor, getting the nose of the sport &lsquo;plane
-into the wind, Bob explained.</p>
-<p>What he said startled his comrades.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;While Mr. Tredway was joking Barney
-about the crossed wires, did you see Jim&rsquo;s
-face?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The rigger?&rdquo; Al exclaimed, &ldquo;you mean&mdash;when
-he got white?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes! Listen&mdash;gas off, switch on. Give her
-a spin, Curt.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As the engine took up its roar, he clambered
-in again, leaned far over the edge to Curt, while
-Al climbed into the after seat.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sandy Jim turned white,&rdquo; he said above the
-engine hum. &ldquo;I think we&rsquo;ve found the real&mdash;watch,
-fellows! Father is going to tell Barney
-in front of Sandy Jim about the crossed wires.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jim is acting nervous,&rdquo; added Curt. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
-turning&mdash;the chief has grabbed his arm. Now
-Dad is going to say to Barney that he&rsquo;s guilty,
-that he hates his benefactor because of the
-other man winning Barney&rsquo;s girl&mdash;of course we
-know it&rsquo;s Jim, now&mdash;watch him! Jim&rsquo;s being
-accused now&mdash;look!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Baffled, his face displaying his guilt, Sandy
-Jim fled to the new airplane.</p>
-<p>Without an instant of delay Bob widened the
-throttle opening!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_277">277</div>
-<h2 id="c33">CHAPTER XXXIII
-<br /><span class="small">THE SKY SQUAD WINS</span></h2>
-<p>Roaring across the runway, Bob&rsquo;s one purpose
-was to use the airplane as a missile, to run
-it into the other before Sandy Jim could rise.
-In that he failed. The other ship was up, and
-Bob knew that he had so much speed that he
-must take off or ram into a hangar.</p>
-<p>By a spurt of the cold engine, risking a stall
-to get his trucks over the hangar, Bob soared.</p>
-<p>Leveling off, he glanced around. To his
-amazement he saw Al snapping on his safety
-belt in the rear cockpit seat. Al waved a hand,
-pointing to one side. And Bob looked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s having trouble,&rdquo; Al screamed. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
-working on something!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Bob began to climb. If he could force Jim to
-earth as he had been herded the night before&mdash;</p>
-<p>Jim saw his move, and with a demon&rsquo;s venom
-drew a weapon and began to fire.</p>
-<p>But Bob sideslipped, dropped steeply into a
-dive to come out of the slip, and as he drew
-the ship to level flight, heard something strike
-the prop, saw it shatter.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_278">278</div>
-<p>Jim had flung the metal gun so that the airplane
-ran into it.</p>
-<p>Bob began to look for a way to spiral back
-to the testing field. His propeller, with a blade
-shattered, was useless.</p>
-<p>Al screeched again. To the west, coming
-fast, was a ship they both recognized. Lang
-was returning in Griff&rsquo;s speedster. Also, as Al
-pointed out, the cabin &lsquo;plane was rising from
-the landing field.</p>
-<p>Al was so excited that he waggled the stick.</p>
-<p>Then Bob saw!</p>
-<p>Forestalled by the approach of Lang, with
-the other ship rising to chase, with his engine
-functioning badly, and the resulting distraction
-of attention, Jim&rsquo;s safety was endangered.</p>
-<p>The very thing that he had done when he
-planned to urge Mr. Tredway to test the
-&lsquo;plane&mdash;crossing two wires&mdash;had prevented his
-escape.</p>
-<p>The new carburetor, leaking, dripped a rich
-gas and air mixture onto the sparking wires&mdash;there
-was a flash of flames as Bob looked.</p>
-<p>Almost he forgot his own purpose, but with
-steeled will he held his tight spiral, saw the
-cabin ship was out of his way, shot the field,
-and landed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_279">279</div>
-<p>When Lang and the others joined him beside
-the smoking ruins of the new ship, they saw
-Sandy Jim, who had tried to escape by jumping
-before the flames reached him.</p>
-<p>Wrenched, broken, bruised, he was still able
-to talk.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come through, Jim&mdash;what&rsquo;s the truth?&rdquo;
-asked the Chief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hated Tredway from the time he got the
-girl I wanted to marry,&rdquo; Jim panted, as they
-gave him water. &ldquo;I went from bad to worse&mdash;went
-to the dogs. I got in with tough men,
-tried prize-fighting, that&rsquo;s how my face got
-changed, so I wasn&rsquo;t easy to remember and
-recognize.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Laid low for a while, then I gave up plans
-for revenge, and decided to come to work here
-to be close to the woman I loved, only, last Fall,
-she went away. So I knew Tredway had drove
-her to separate&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re crazy! My wife went to Europe for
-a long visit with relatives in France!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Honest? Then all my hate was on a wrong
-idea. Well, you know most of the rest. I
-damaged ships, worked with the bookkeeper and
-the supply clerk and a manager of The Windsock
-to substitute cheap stuff for good, sell the
-good and ruin the plant&mdash;but it was all no use&mdash;and
-started on a wrong idea&mdash;no use to say
-I&rsquo;m sorry&mdash;but&mdash;well, boys, handle me easy&mdash;I&rsquo;m
-no good, but I can feel pain!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_280">280</div>
-<p>In that fashion the culprit confessed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I feel sorry for Jimmy-junior, and the
-man&rsquo;s wife,&rdquo; said Curt, after the ambulance
-had taken Sandy Jim to the hospital.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Jimmy-junior isn&rsquo;t his son,&rdquo; explained Mr.
-Parsons. &ldquo;He is the son of Sandy&rsquo;s brother,
-whom Jim took to raise. It would be a good
-idea if you young men took him into the Sky
-Squad now, to take his mind off his sorrow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I saw his mother and I thought she
-was Jim&rsquo;s wife,&rdquo; said Al.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, she&rsquo;s Jimmy-junior&rsquo;s mother, but
-Sandy&rsquo;s sister-in-law.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then let&rsquo;s go,&rdquo; urged Bob. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s just
-about time to wake up our new member.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><span class="small">THE END</span></p>
-<h2 id="tn">Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2><ul>
-<li>Copyright notice provided as in the original&mdash;this e-text is public domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and dialect unchanged.</li>
-<li>In the text versions, delimited italics text in _underscores_ (the HTML version reproduces the font form of the printed book.)</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Mystery Crash, by Ardon Van Buren Powell
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY CRASH ***
-
-***** This file should be named 55359-h.htm or 55359-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/5/3/5/55359/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/55359-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/55359-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 5a6480f..0000000
--- a/old/55359-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55359-h/images/p1.jpg b/old/55359-h/images/p1.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 9e3bf8b..0000000
--- a/old/55359-h/images/p1.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55359-h/images/p2.jpg b/old/55359-h/images/p2.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 7efc229..0000000
--- a/old/55359-h/images/p2.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55359.txt b/old/55359.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index a26ae1a..0000000
--- a/old/55359.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,7845 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery Crash, by Ardon Van Buren Powell
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Mystery Crash
- Sky Scout Series, #1
-
-Author: Ardon Van Buren Powell
-
-Release Date: August 15, 2017 [EBook #55359]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY CRASH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: He caught the gunwale and pulled himself up and into the
-boat with Curt's aid. (Page 21)]
-
-
-
-
- THE
- MYSTERY CRASH
-
-
- By VAN POWELL
-
- [Illustration: Airplane]
-
- THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY
- Akron, Ohio New York
-
- Copyright MCMXXXII
- THE SAALFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY
- _Made in the United States of America_
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- I The Deserted Airplane 5
- II At Rocky Lake 12
- III A Greater Mystery 19
- IV The Sky Squad is Formed 28
- V A Double Puzzle 36
- VI Suspicion and Suspense 42
- VII In the Falling 'Plane 53
- VIII Watchful Waiting 59
- IX Strange Actions 67
- X A Summons 76
- XI A Trail and a Flight 81
- XII The Chase 93
- XIII The Detective's Theory 98
- XIV The Sky Squad Disobeys 104
- XV A Triple Trail 112
- XVI The "Windsock" 121
- XVII "The Case Is 'Sewed Up'" 128
- XVIII A New Mystery 136
- XIX Tangled Threads 144
- XX A Package of Money 151
- XXI Caught and Cleared! 159
- XXII The "Mystery Crate" 171
- XXIII Bob Pursues! 179
- XXIV Suspense! 188
- XXV Crossed Wires 197
- XXVI The Sky Squad Goes Into Action 207
- XXVII Driven Down 219
- XXVIII Curt's Discovery 227
- XXIX A Confession 235
- XXX Barney Gives a Hint 246
- XXXI "One More Problem" 257
- XXXII Flight! 268
- XXXIII The Sky Squad Wins 277
-
-
-
-
- THE MYSTERY CRASH
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- THE DESERTED AIRPLANE
-
-
-"See that! Look! There's our mystery!"
-
-Bob Wright pointed from the cabin window of the monoplane. Al, his
-younger brother, peered toward the ground.
-
-"What? Where? Show me any mystery!"
-
-To make himself understood above the roar of the engine, Bob put his
-lips close to Al's ear while Curt, Bob's closest friend, also a
-passenger, bent close to catch his words.
-
-"It's a mystery all right--but you can't see from here. It was in that
-cornfield we passed over."
-
-"What's the mystery?" Curtis Brown's eyes snapped with eagerness.
-
-"Why did you say 'our' mystery?" Al asked at the same instant. Bob
-answered both at once.
-
-"The mystery is: Why is an airplane hidden in the grove at the edge of a
-cornfield? Our mystery because we discovered it and because, ever since
-we helped father solve his detective cases and took an interest in
-aviation we have wanted to solve something that connects up puzzles and
-'planes!"
-
-"A 'crate'?" Al stared out. "I don't see it." Bob was not there to
-reply. He moved up to the pilot, Langley Wright, his cousin, who was
-test pilot for the Tredway Aircraft Corporation and who was giving this
-beautiful "job" its final test and check flight.
-
-"Lang," he said, "I saw an airplane in the grove at the edge of that
-last field we crossed. Circle back, won't you?" As Lang turned from
-jotting down some data, Bob added: "The ship hasn't crashed. It's in
-among the trees--backed in. I caught a glimpse of it, and then the trees
-hid it. I'd like to have another look."
-
-"Surest thing you know."
-
-Lang, twenty-one and an expert flyer, grinned at his sixteen-year-old
-cousin, dipped ailerons, kicked rudder and with a good "bank" as the
-craft swung its nose around, he deftly counteracted a tendency of the
-ship to go into a sideslip, jotted down some information on his data
-board and then looked out of his window.
-
-"There's the field," he said. "I don't see a crate there!"
-
-"That's why I told Al and Curt it's a mystery," Bob replied. "The ship
-has been hidden! Its tail is in between trees, and the wings are under
-trees with high branches. I don't believe it could be seen from the
-highway that runs by the field. I know it wouldn't be noticed from the
-air, except by chance."
-
-"Hm-m-m!" grunted Langley, "I've heard of hidden treasure, but this is
-the first hidden 'plane----"
-
-"There!" Bob pointed past Lang's face.
-
-"I see it!" Lang continued to circle, in order to get another sight of
-the mysteriously hidden ship. As they came around again Al and Curt
-located it also.
-
-"It's staked down!" Al, although he was the youngest, not much past
-thirteen, had the quickest eyes of the group. "I saw the stakes, and
-rope over the wing-tips."
-
-"The engine was covered over," added Curt.
-
-Lang spiraled down to pass as close as the trees would allow.
-
-They saw nothing more, however, and after Lang had refused Al's
-impulsive request to "set down" in the small field, the party flew on to
-the landing field of the Aircraft Corporation where Lang had some
-alterations to report in the adjustment of the ship's balance before it
-could be delivered to its purchaser.
-
-"Let's get our bicycles and ride out to the field," urged Al, as the
-trio of comrades alighted beyond the aircraft plant.
-
-They pedaled the three miles in record time.
-
-"I was right," commented Bob, as they left the wheels beside the highway
-and climbed over the high rail fence enclosing the stubble where corn
-had recently been cut down. "You can't see the airplane from any place
-along the highway----"
-
-"Unless it's gone," interrupted Al.
-
-"No!" Curt was a little ahead. He waved his arm. "There she is!"
-
-They crossed the rough field, toward the mysterious, silent object of
-interest.
-
-"I can see from here it hasn't cracked up," Curt declared. "Not a
-scratch on it and the landing gear is perfect."
-
-"Whoever flew it must be clever," declared Bob. "Look at the narrow
-strip of open, smooth ground he had to 'set down' on. If he hadn't been
-able to shoot the field so as to get in on that long, smooth side, with
-only a few feet clearance, he'd have come down in rough stubble."
-
-"Yes, he must have been good," agreed Al. "And it proves that he was
-forced down. Any sane pilot would have gone on to a better spot."
-
-They reached the airplane, a two-winged model with a radial motor and
-small wings; it was a speed ship, trim and mystifying with its dark,
-brown body and airfoils freshly done.
-
-Curtis, whose age was midway between Al's thirteen and Bob's sixteen,
-clambered onto a landing wheel and observed the instruments on the dash.
-"Plenty of gas, and oil," he remarked. Then his companions saw his face
-change.
-
-"Look!" As he called he leaped from his perch so that Bob could occupy
-it; Al was up on the other side, and it took no explaining to show what
-had caused Curt's exclamation. Both youths saw the small square of paper
-pinned to the folded parachute on the seat.
-
-"Dare we look?" questioned Bob.
-
-"'I can read it from here," Al said, and reported. "It says, 'Everything
-O.K.'"
-
-"Crickety Christmas!" Curt resorted to his favorite expression.
-"'Everything O.K.' Then it wasn't a forced landing."
-
-"No," agreed Bob. "It didn't seem like one, somehow. The ship is too
-carefully tucked away. And, now--this note. Who is it to? Who put it
-there? Does it mean the ship is all right--or something else? I was
-right when I said--'there's our mystery.'"
-
-"You were!" admitted Curt.
-
-"But what can we do about it?" objected Al. "Take turns watching? Wait
-to see who comes back, and what he does?"
-
-"I think not," counseled Curt. "It may be a mystery why the crate is
-here, and all that! But it isn't any of our business--is it?"
-
-"No," admitted Bob. "Let's go home, and see what father thinks of it.
-There is probably some easy explanation we haven't thought of."
-
-"All right. We can ride out here first thing--early--tomorrow."
-
-They could not consult the private detective whose success had been so
-pronounced that cases came to him from distant cities: he was out of
-town that night.
-
-When they rode out to the field the next day, at sunrise, looking for
-the mysteriously deserted airplane it was gone!
-
-"Where is your mystery now?" Curt was inclined to poke a little fun at
-Bob. "As the sleight-of-hand performers say, 'Now you see it, now you
-don't!'"
-
-"Anyway," Al who was poking about in the grass under the trees, bent and
-then exhibited a damp, crumpled paper, "here is the note. Now, what do
-you say if we have a session of the old Master Sleuths, and see what we
-can deduce from this paper?"
-
-A year before, asked to do a little investigating for Mr. Wright, when
-he was handling a case where youths would be least likely to arouse
-suspicion by shadowing, the trio had become intensely interested in
-detective work and had termed themselves the Master Sleuths, more in fun
-than in earnest. However, when they had become "air minded" the term had
-been dropped. Al, reviving it, won a grin from Bob.
-
-"All right," Bob agreed. "The paper is damp. It has been out in the dew.
-Under the trees it would take a good while for it to get as soggy as it
-is. The writing has smudged--it's sort of purple----"
-
-"It was written with an indelible pencil," remarked Curt.
-
-"Then all we have to do is to find a man with an--" Al was not allowed
-to finish. Bob broke in, as older brothers like to do.
-
-"Yes--get 'the man in the gray suit!' How many indelible pencils do you
-suppose there are in this country?"
-
-"All right!" Al took the matter good-humoredly. "Anyhow, if a man wrote
-it and a man read it and threw it away--two hands have handled it." He
-put it carefully in his pocket. "There may be fingerprints."
-
-"What good will they do?" asked Curt. "The mystery is all done with."
-
-"No it isn't!" cried Bob, holding up his hand.
-
-"Listen!"
-
-From above came the drone of an airplane engine.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- AT ROCKY LAKE
-
-
-"I hear it!" exclaimed Al. He ran out onto the turf that had been used
-as a runway, probably, when the airplane took off.
-
-"So do I," agreed Curt, following him. "But I don't locate it."
-
-Bob, craning his neck, staring up toward the great banks of clouds which
-the early sun was painting with rosy fire, looked puzzled.
-
-"Come to think of it," he said, "we ought not to hear it at all."
-
-"Why not?" demanded Curt.
-
-"He ought to be too far away."
-
-"How do you make that out?" Al was incredulous.
-
-"Easy! Lang came home a little before daybreak. He had been at the
-airplane plant all night, with the 'mechs' because Mr. Tredway wanted to
-get that Silver Flash ready for delivery in a rush. I didn't go to sleep
-again. I got up, and dressed and went out to tighten the handlebar on my
-bicycle. I glanced up, just as day broke, at the little windsock I have
-on our roof."
-
-"The wind was directly _West_."
-
-"I don't see--" began Al; but Curt, wetting the back of his hand, tested
-the air in various directions.
-
-"You use your head, Bob," he said admiringly. "The breeze is pretty
-strong, and it has shifted around _to South_, straight from the
-Equator."
-
-"Are you two trying to be mysterious?" Al was a little bit annoyed.
-
-"I thought you wanted to be a Master Sleuth, last year," remarked Curt.
-"Use your eyes and your brains."
-
-"Um-m-m--the airplane must be gone a long time because the wind was West
-and now it's South--um-m-m. Oh!"
-
-"'Ah-ha!' cried Shawkhaw," Bob mocked, twisting the famous Hawkshaw
-title as he made fun of his brother.
-
-"This turf runs East and West." Al ignored Bob's mockery. "That biplane
-was a speed model and it would have to get up higher speed than the
-average to take off. The runway is too short to give it a good run, so
-it couldn't very well have hopped off in time to get over the trees
-unless it took full advantage of the wind! Isn't that it, Bob?"
-
-"That's it. The wind changed about the time we left our meeting point
-with Curt. So that airplane ought to be well on its way, wherever its
-way leads."
-
-"But this engine is getting louder," stated Curt.
-
-"There it is!" cried Al, pointing toward the South. "It's only a speck.
-But you see it, don't you, Curt?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"So do I," added Bob.
-
-"It looks as if it is spiraling down--yes, it is!"
-
-"And it isn't the biplane we saw here, at all," Bob said. "Curt, do you
-know what?----"
-
-"Yes. It's the very 'plane we were in yesterday, with Lang. He gave it a
-final check-up and said if they worked on it all night it would be ready
-to take off today. That's it, all righty! The biplane was brown,
-and----"
-
-"This is the Silver Flash! I can see it glisten against that dark
-cloud," added Al. "I think it's coming down."
-
-"It's diving."
-
-"No!" cried Bob. "It's out of control! It's falling!"
-
-"Right over Rocky Lake!" shouted Curt.
-
-"Come on!" urged Al, scrambling over the short stubble in the field, in
-haste to reach his bicycle and pedal toward the picnic grounds, less
-than a quarter of a mile away, in which Rocky Lake was situated.
-
-"Wait!" counseled Bob.
-
-"No! Come on!" Curt agreed with Al. The airplane was out of control. It
-was diving, straight toward the amusement ground around the lake. "It's
-a crack-up!"
-
-"There it goes!"
-
-Behind the trees, out of sight, like a silver streak, a comet, the
-airplane fell. Three hearts went cold as the ship was lost to view
-behind the foliage. While they could not see the craft strike, any spot
-in Rocky Lake Park was bad for a landing: dense trees, whole groves,
-alternated with stands, pavilions, and the deep, boulder-studded water
-of Rocky Lake and the rivulet which fed it.
-
-Three minds worked as one, three pairs of legs tumbled their owners over
-the stile, onto the roadside turf, up to the bicycles.
-
-Pedaling like madmen they made short time of the trip to the edge of the
-amusement spot.
-
-"I think it was directly over Rocky Lake!" Curt, in the lead, called
-over his shoulder.
-
-Dropping their wheels by the roadside they ran, winded but determined,
-towards the picnic grounds.
-
-"There--there--in the lake!" gasped Bob.
-
-"It crashed, all right!" panted Curt.
-
-"It's half buried in the water." Al puffed along a little to the rear.
-"I hope the pilot----"
-
-"It wasn't Lang, was it?"
-
-"No!" Bob responded to Curt's question. "It must have been some other
-pilot--I can't think who, though."
-
-"Hurry!" urged Al. "Hello--hello!" he called, passing the pavilions. "Is
-anybody around! Wake up--somebody! Help! Help! A 'plane has cracked up
-in Rocky Lake!"
-
-"See anything of the pilot?" Bob turned to Curt. Gasping for breath they
-had reached the shore of the lake, by a small wharf where rowboats were
-hired during the day.
-
-Curt scanned the surface of the lake.
-
-Quite near the shore, and on the rocks, with one crumpled wing, and with
-her nose and cabin buried in soft, oozey mud, the smashed monoplane lay
-with its pitifully useless tail assembly sticking up into the air. The
-"flippers" had carried way with the impact and hung by the control
-cables.
-
-Bob turned a serious face toward his companion.
-
-"I hope--I wonder"-- He could not finish. The thought flitted through
-his mind that unless the pilot had been extremely quick and very clever,
-he could not have gotten out of the cabin--in time. The falling craft
-had been close enough so that had any figure leaped, especially with a
-parachute, they should have seen it clearly.
-
-No such figure had leaped--in time.
-
-"Maybe he--crawled out when it struck," said Curt, hopefully.
-
-"Anyhow, let's get a boat, and try to get to it."
-
-"Al," called Curt, "stop calling for help! There isn't anybody here. Run
-to the farmhouse across the road--no, that's empty. Ride back down the
-road, till you see an automobile and send it to town for help. If you
-don't meet one, stop at the first house and telephone."
-
-Al, for all his natural eagerness to be at the scene, to share in their
-experiences, saluted without a word of remonstrance and hurried away.
-Meanwhile Bob, realizing that the oars for the boats were locked in the
-small pavilion on the wharf, determined to break in, feeling that the
-emergency removed any taint of robbery or pillage from the act.
-
-Fortunately he found the old, rusted lock not caught. He slipped the
-rusty padlock, slipped the hasp free, and ran back to the dock where
-Curt had a boat untied and ready. In this, pushing off, they rowed out
-to the airplane. The weight of its engine was very slowly driving its
-nose deeper into the soft ooze of the marshy ground at that end of the
-lake.
-
-"Hurry!" begged Curt, as Bob bent to his task.
-
-Suddenly Bob rested on his oars.
-
-"What's the matter?" cried Curt, and as he saw the expression of Bob's
-face he, too, became intent.
-
-"There it is again!" panted Bob. "A call--a call for help?" he
-questioned.
-
-"I don't know. But row!"
-
-Bob rowed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- A GREATER MYSTERY
-
-
-"There comes the call again!" whispered Curt. "It was 'help!'"
-
-Bob sent the boat through the mirrorlike water. He headed for the
-immersed nose of the airplane and as they rounded the cabin, part of it
-sticking up forlornly, Curt lifted a hand to point.
-
-"Look! There is the parachute, partly inflated, floating on the water."
-
-"It looks as though the pilot tried to get out of the cabin, and either
-pulled his ripcord too soon, or else some part of the harness caught and
-held him--until too late!"
-
-Sobered and worried, wondering just what to do and who had called, they
-sent their eyes questing here and there--into as much of the cabin as
-they could see from the window just under the transparent surface of
-Rocky Lake, but without result.
-
-"I thought he might be caught in the cabin," said Bob. "But I can't see
-any----"
-
-"There he is--see! Out on the lake!" Curt pointed. "He's swimming."
-
-Bob pushed away from the fuselage of the sinking craft, and with a sweep
-brought the bow of their boat around.
-
-"Oh!" he caught sight of a head bobbing in the water, "oh, Curt--I'm so
-glad!"
-
-Rowing hard, he sent the boat toward the swimmer.
-
-"So am I." Curt's voice was relieved. "The pilot escaped."
-
-"But--it can't be the pilot, Curt."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"He has been swimming toward the 'plane, from out in the lake."
-
-"I know, Bob, but he may have seen us."
-
-"But he'd have part of the parachute harness on," Bob objected.
-
-"Probably he slashed it off. Maybe he saw it was too late to get out,
-that the 'chute was too low, and he slashed himself free and started to
-swim across the water----"
-
-"No. He'd have come to this closer shore, and landed on the wharf."
-
-They watched the man, treading water as he saw them coming.
-
-Across the water a call floated clearly to them.
-
-"Did you hear--a call--for help?"
-
-"We thought we did," Bob called back, and, as they came closer the man
-spoke less loudly.
-
-"I don't see anybody."
-
-"Then you aren't the pilot?"
-
-"He can't be!" Curt commented when the man failed to reply, being busy
-clearing water from his eyes to look around the lake again.
-
-"Haven't seen anybody at all," the man spoke as he caught the gunwale
-and pulled himself up and into the boat with Curt's aid. "Heard a shout,
-though. Row back boys, to that thing."
-
-They went back over the course. The stranger, studying the aircraft,
-seemed very much disturbed and worried. He had a hand ready to catch the
-struts of a wing as they swung under the tilted airfoil: while Bob
-stowed the needless oar on that side he drew the boat forward.
-
-"We didn't see anything in the cabin. We looked, before," Bob explained.
-
-"Untie that painter," the stranger ordered. "I'm going down under the
-nose, and the mud might hold me--so, if I signal, you pull." As Curt
-unknotted the tying rope and threw it to him, the man looped an end
-under his arms, knotting it swiftly, flung the short coil to Bob and
-lowered himself, disappearing into the water, his descent stirred up
-mud, moiling the water. Down he went, hidden almost at once in the murky
-disturbance.
-
-Paying out the rope until it grew slack, Bob took a turn around a
-rowlock, and they waited breathlessly. Some bubbles floated up and
-broke. Then came a tug on the rope.
-
-Curt, who had already come to the midships section, helped Bob tug and
-haul in the wet manilla strands. The stranger came up through the murky
-water, emerged, shook himself free of the liquid, caught the boat and
-shook his head.
-
-"Not in the cabin--only thing I can think of is--if he tried to jump and
-got under the thing."
-
-Very soberly the youths helped him back into the boat.
-
-People were arriving on the bank, shouting to one another, calling for
-information, shipping oars in boats. Al, having met several motorists,
-had spread the alarm, and then had ridden on to telephone the police and
-to report the crash.
-
-Al, having returned, was in the second boat to arrive by the slowly
-sinking craft.
-
-Bob gave him a concise report while they pushed away from the place to
-enable a deputy sheriff to take command and to jot down the stranger's
-explanation and their own, from Curt.
-
-"I wish you boys would row me across the little bayou, here," the man
-said. Al had transferred to their boat by that time.
-
-"Take me to that point, over there," the man added. "It's closest to
-where I dropped my motorcycle when I saw the thing happen."
-
-Bob nodded. The presence of the motorcycle beyond the lake, where it was
-nearest to the road, explained why they had seen the man swimming toward
-them. He must have heard and seen the airplane, watched its descent, and
-then rushed to see what he could do.
-
-"But won't the police want you to testify, or whatever it is?" asked Al.
-
-The man shook his head.
-
-"No," he replied. "If they do, they can find me soon enough. I'm off to
-get into dry duds. I didn't waste time riding around the end of the
-lake. I dropped my motorcycle and ran in to see what I could see." He
-smiled, sadly. "I guess I was too late, even at that."
-
-Thanking them as he climbed onto the rocky shore, he pushed the bow of
-their boat into the stream again, and watched them turn in the still
-water.
-
-"You can tell the police I didn't think they'd need me right away," he
-called. "I'm passing through this section, and I don't want to be held
-up and kept here for any sort of investigation. You saw as much as I
-did. Well--goodbye!"
-
-He turned, and as they heard the "crash 'bus" arriving from the airport
-in a nearby city of which they lived in the suburbs, Bob rowed his two
-young companions back toward the airplane.
-
-The police came, and many others with them and after them.
-
-Preparations were made to drag under the craft, and to lift it, if
-tackle could be gotten into suitable position, to see if any trace of
-the missing pilot could be discovered.
-
-Nothing further developed, however, and one of the "mechs" with the
-airport 'bus told Bob it would be afternoon before they got the
-monoplane out. The three comrades had given the police lieutenant all
-the information they could. There was a healthy appetite making itself
-felt among them.
-
-"Let's go home," Bob suggested.
-
-"Wait, all of you," urged the reporter for a small suburban daily. "I'll
-make heroes of you yet."
-
-Protesting that they had done nothing heroic and that they did not want
-to be "put in the paper" for doing their duty, Curt and Bob refused to
-answer any questions. The police, Bob said, might not want information
-published. He did not know, but he would prefer not to talk. "Oh, I
-see--there is a mystery, then!" the reporter declared. "Well, if you
-won't talk--" he began to write swiftly.
-
-"If we won't talk," Bob commented as the trio walked toward their
-bicycles. "He'll write something anyhow."
-
-"It's queer that there isn't any trace of the pilot." Al's mind returned
-to the tragic part of the crash.
-
-"Maybe he jumped clear, got away and went into the water, and then,
-coming up, got to land. He may be on shore, somewhere, hurt, or too weak
-to make himself known."
-
-Curt's explanation renewed their hope.
-
-"Let's hope it's that way," said Bob. "Well, we've got a long road to
-breakfast. Mother will be just about wild. I left a note, but she will
-worry about Al and me, just the same. If we go to the ball park and
-don't get home within half an hour after the game, she frets."
-
-"Excuse me, boys." A pleasant voice behind them caused the three to
-wheel around. They saw a pleasant-faced man, beside an automobile,
-parked close to the bicycles they were disentangling. "If you want to
-get home in a hurry, pile the bicycles in that little comfort station
-over there, and tell the attendant 'Barney' said to look out for them.
-I'm from the aircraft plant, and as long as I can't do anything here, if
-you'll hop into my car I'll ride you home while you give me the facts as
-well as you know them about this smash. It's a bad thing, and I want to
-get as straight as I can what happened."
-
-They were very grateful to Barney, who neglected to furnish any other
-name. He waited until they had stowed away the bicycles, and while he
-drove them toward the village he questioned them rapidly.
-
-"I think you are all very brave, and quick, and fine," he commented,
-after they had, in turn, recited their adventures. "You acted splendidly
-and I thank you very much."
-
-Al looked surprised.
-
-"We did our duty," he replied. "But why are you thanking us? I know it
-was one of the Tredway airplanes because we were in it, with Lang,
-yesterday on check-up. But who was in it, and what do you think
-happened--really?"
-
-"The owner of the manufacturing plant was in it," said Barney, very
-soberly and sadly. "Mr. Tredway was flying it himself. He wanted to
-deliver it in person--for a reason."
-
-"For a reason?" Bob repeated, inquiringly.
-
-"Yes," said Barney. "There is a mystery behind that crack-up--it's more
-likely it's a 'washout.' Anyhow, there is something behind the smash,
-and--I've heard there is a private detective, a Mr. Wright, at Forty-one
-Elm. If you can tell me the quickest way to get there, I'll appreciate
-it. I want to consult him--on this case."
-
-Bob, Curt and Al stared.
-
-"That's father!" said Al.
-
-"Indeed! Then I am glad I offered you a 'lift.'"
-
-They directed him, and eventually he drew up the car before the neat,
-cozy cottage. Curtis, accepting the invitation to stay for their
-somewhat belated breakfast, sat, with Bob and Al, in the cheerful
-breakfast room, finishing up a stack of pancakes thickly syruped, when
-Bob was sent for.
-
-Returning, after a few minutes, he showed his younger brother and his
-best friend a face of elation.
-
-"There is a mystery, all righty," he declared. "And you're to come with
-me----"
-
-"Why?" asked Curt.
-
-"Because," retorted Bob, "we're--in--on--it!" As the others jumped up he
-added, "Father's home and he's taken a real air mystery case!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- THE SKY SQUAD IS FORMED
-
-
-Entering Mr. Wright's library, which the detective used as a reception
-room for clients, Bob, Curtis and Al could hardly repress their
-excitement. To share in the possible solution of a real mystery of the
-airlanes was more than they had really dared to hope for.
-
-Seated opposite Mr. Wright, smiling pleasantly, was the man who had
-given no other name than Barney.
-
-"Good morning, Mr. Wright." Curtis Brown greeted the quiet, but cordial
-father of his two chums. Al added a salute to his father.
-
-"Sit down," suggested the detective. Bob, Curt and Al ranged themselves
-along the leather upholstered davenport at the side, where the light was
-on their faces. Mr. Wright had his room so arranged that only his own
-place beside the desk enabled him to keep his face in the shadow;
-clients and other visitors had to show every expression in the light
-from the two sunny windows.
-
-While Mr. Wright seemed to be deciding how to disclose his plans, Curt
-compared the two men.
-
-They were of very distinct types. Fred Wright would make anybody think
-of an ordinary, everyday business man, fairly prosperous, quiet in his
-manner, affable and cordial in his speech. His calm, serious face was
-neither severe nor too soft; and while its steel-gray eyes were kindly,
-they could look through a person, it seemed, and find out, almost, what
-that one was thinking, or, perhaps, trying to conceal.
-
-Barney, on the other hand, made one think of a working man who had risen
-to a position of prosperity and influence without being able entirely to
-shake off his servile, unpolished manner. Although his clothes were
-expertly tailored, he seemed a little ill at ease in them. What was
-more, he gave the impression that he knew it!
-
-He was a trifle blustery to cover his feeling of inferiority, Curt
-decided; and he had a habit of interrupting when another person was
-speaking. However, this might be due to excitement, Curt thought
-charitably.
-
-Glancing sidewise, he sensed that much the same comparisons were passing
-through Bob's mind. Al gave no thought to character. His whole attention
-was bent on the possibility of "action!"
-
-Curt, who liked to look for good points more than for the other sort,
-checked up Barney's dark eyes, almost black, and decided that they were
-only serious because of the gravity of the situation. They could twinkle
-with fun, he guessed; also, the mouth was so shaped that Bob admitted to
-himself that Barney smiled oftener than he scowled.
-
-"I have told Mr. Horton about you three young aviation enthusiasts,"
-Fred Wright began. "Also I have explained that you used to be very fond
-of 'detecting' in a decidedly amateurish way, of course." He smiled
-across the desk toward Barney, whose face broke into a broad, pleased
-grin, immediately suppressed because of the seriousness of his errand.
-
-"I'll say we were amateurish," chuckled Bob. "Why, Mr. Horton----"
-
-"Call me Barney--just Barney," the visitor interrupted.
-
-"If you say so, sir. Well, Barney, then! We were crazy to be great
-detectives, because father is one," he paid the compliment
-whole-heartedly and only his father smiled and shook his head
-deprecatingly, "but we let our enthusiasm take the place of brains," Bob
-added. "I was not much help because I let vanity get the best of cool,
-common sense----"
-
-"I was a failure because I am too impulsive," contributed Al.
-
-"I was so short-sighted, in my mind, that I forgot to look at the whole
-of a case and pinned my nose down onto every little clew," Curt grinned
-sheepishly, "so I kept going around in circles."
-
-"All the same," Mr. Wright looked over at Barney, "in such work as boys
-could do--they were a few years younger then--these three helped me a
-great deal in handling two quite important cases."
-
-The trio lowered their heads modestly.
-
-"However," the detective continued, "they turned from being Master
-Sleuths, as they termed themselves, to aviation----"
-
-"Airboys!" chuckled Barney.
-
-"Why, yes. That is an apt expression."
-
-"But we didn't give up wanting to be detectives, really!" exclaimed Al,
-earnestly. "We were looking for a way to mix the aviation with the
-detecting--only we haven't gotten into either one."
-
-"Then here's your chance." Barney said it very seriously.
-
-"How?"
-
-"Barney has brought me a very baffling case," Mr. Wright explained.
-"Unfortunately, I am so deeply involved in another matter that I cannot
-drop it."
-
-"But you can give some time to this, you said." Barney was earnest.
-
-"Not personally. That is, I shan't be able to investigate in person,"
-the detective replied. "That is where our three assistants will
-figure----"
-
-"And be Airboys and Master Sleuths, both at the one time," Barney
-interrupted.
-
-"Hooray!" Al clapped his hand to his knee, unable to restrain his
-enthusiasm. Mr. Wright, although with a tolerant, if brief smile, shook
-his head at his younger son.
-
-"This will be a serious affair," he stated, forcefully.
-
-Al immediately became sobered.
-
-"How can we combine aviation and detective work?" asked Curt, the most
-practical of the chums.
-
-"By going to the aircraft plant to work as mechanics' helpers, or
-whatever positions Barney sees fit to put you in," Mr. Wright told them.
-"That takes care of the detective work because you will have to keep
-eyes and ears open and without appearing to do so."
-
-"We can do that easily," said Bob.
-
-"That takes no effort at all," agreed Al. His father, knowing Al's
-expressive face to be easily read, made no comment.
-
-"While you are at the aircraft plant," Barney took up the explanation,
-"you will be working in and around the crates we are building, and you
-will learn a whole lot about how an airplane is put together, what the
-parts are for, and how they are assembled. That's the aviation part." He
-emphasized the first syllable, making it "av-iation." "What do you say?"
-
-"Hooray!" Al was irrepressible.
-
-"Just show us the jobs!" added Bob.
-
-"Of course we will be glad to learn." Curt was more sober. "That ought
-to be one of the first things for anybody to do who means to be a
-pilot." Mr. Wright nodded and Curt proceeded. "A good grounding in
-airplane construction will be fine. But--for the detective part--I think
-we ought to be very serious and consider it carefully."
-
-"Indeed you should," agreed Mr. Wright. "There is a deeper mystery to be
-solved than appears on the surface."
-
-"I see that," agreed Curt. "And we must be sure that we will be a help
-and not a hindrance to you----"
-
-"Fine lad!" broke in Barney.
-
-"Oh, we won't be a hindrance!" Al was almost bouncing on the divan
-springs in his eagerness. "We'll watch, and catch whoever you want
-caught--maybe learn to fly a 'crate' and hop off and fly after him and
-ride him down and force him to land--and there you are!"
-
-All the party laughed. Al, realizing his childish lapse into silly
-chatter, laughed, finally, himself, a little ruefully.
-
-"I see what Curt meant, now," he said, more quietly; but his excitement
-was hard to hold. "But, anyhow, Mr.----"
-
-"Barney!"
-
-"Anyhow, Barney, we will try to help. We can learn about airplane
-construction, and that will be fine; but we will give all our minds to
-watching and listening and doing whatever is wanted of us--we ought to
-form some kind of club or order, so we would have a head to get orders
-from father--especially if he is too busy to take part himself."
-
-"That's sensible, even if it does seem boy-like to want to have a secret
-association," said the older detective.
-
-"Then let's call ourselves what Barney called us--the Airboys."
-
-"I don't like that very much," objected Bob.
-
-"Well, then, you pick a name."
-
-"I think the game is more important than the name," observed the older
-detective.
-
-"Oh--but with a good name for our band, and a chief, we can know where
-we are," urged Al.
-
-"All right," said Curt. "Let's humor the youngster!" Al grimaced at him,
-but subsided as Curt went on. "We are detectives as well as airplane
-enthusiasts. Why not combine the two in the name of the order we are to
-form--something about the sky, and something about a police--detective
-squad----"
-
-"You've hit it!" Barney interrupted.
-
-"Hit it? How?"
-
-"Sky Squad!"
-
-"Crickety Christmas!" Curt was as enthusiastic as Bob and Al became on
-hearing the words. "That's it!"
-
-"Very well," Mr. Wright was patient, but a little annoyed. "That being
-settled, we can take up the important matter of--the case!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- A DOUBLE PUZZLE
-
-
-Barney stood up and looked at his watch: also, he frowned a little.
-
-"I wish we didn't have to waste the time," he objected. "I've went
-through it all with you, Mr. Wright, and I wanted to take these lads
-along back to the plant in my car. I wanted to make it look like I just
-happened on them at the accident--the--well, the accident, and found
-they were interested in av-iation and brought them back to fill a couple
-of places in the plant."
-
-"But how can we solve a case if we don't know what it is?" remonstrated
-Bob.
-
-To that Curt nodded and Al bobbed his head rapidly.
-
-"As a matter of fact," Barney turned to Bob, "I think you would do a
-whole heap better if you went in to it blind, sort of. If you know all
-about it, you'll go out to the plant, all serious and acting like judges
-or detectives. If you take it the way our youngest friend, Al, does--as
-a sort of lark--you won't be suspected so quick."
-
-"There is something in that," Mr. Wright admitted. "Al's face is apt to
-give him away if he thinks it is really serious. Perhaps----"
-
-"But all the same, Father," Bob declared, "how will we know what to
-watch for? How will we know what to report?"
-
-"Watch anything you see. Listen to whatever you hear. Report the whole
-business!" Barney exclaimed.
-
-"That does seem wise," Mr. Wright agreed, rising also. "Boys, let's
-emphasize the Sky part of your order, and let the Squad side rest
-awhile. Barney wants to get back to the plant--he is the Manager, I
-meant to explain. He ought to be at the end of a telephone wire. Let's
-say only this: There is a double mystery. First of all, valuable parts
-have been missed, from time to time, from the plant. That is a minor
-matter, at present, but your first puzzle is--where have the missing
-parts gone and who took them? But, as I said, that is a minor affair,
-because----"
-
-"Somebody has tampered with some of the finished crates," broke in
-Barney. "Why, and who--that's the second puzzle!"
-
-"Suppose you take that as enough for the present," suggested Mr. Wright.
-He turned to Barney. "Now these three young lads are alert, obedient,
-and they will follow instructions to the letter, if you give orders," he
-explained. "You have already seen how----"
-
-"How quick they are in emergencies! Yes sirree! All right. I know I can
-depend on them. Sorry you can't investigate in person, Mr. Wright--but
-maybe this way will work out best. Anyhow, nobody at the plant will get
-suspicious of these boys. They won't have the brains of older men, like
-you and me, but they will have quick eyes and wide ears," he laughed,
-and beckoned, "come on, lads."
-
-A little disappointed, feeling that there was more behind the mystery
-than Mr. Wright had disclosed, but accepting his "lead," Bob, Al and
-Curt caught up their caps from the hall rack and followed Barney into
-the car.
-
-As he drove toward the large manufacturing buildings, the administration
-offices and the assembling rooms, "dope" rooms and testing field that
-formed the Tredway Aircraft Corporation plant, Barney kept away from
-talk about the mysteries.
-
-Instead, he questioned them about the plan for their new organization,
-suggested secret codes, urged them to elect a "Boss Pilot" and really
-fired their imaginations to such a point that when they came in sight of
-the aircraft plant they had almost forgotten their disappointment at not
-being taken fully into his confidence.
-
-"Well," he said, when they turned in at the gateway in the high board
-fence that kept curious wanderers out of the grounds, "here we are, Sky
-Squad--ready to begin to learn how a crate is started, what the design
-means, and why certain things have to be planned for--and then, what
-goes into construction and why, how she's put together, and then, how to
-fly the finished crate."
-
-Sensing from his tone that he wanted them to concentrate, at least
-outwardly, on airplane construction and to let the other part of their
-activity be kept quiet, the three comrades agreed by assuming an
-interest that was by no means hard to pretend, when he took them into
-the offices, introduced them to some of the men working there, and
-explained that he was going to put them to work "to learn to build
-crates from the prop to the tail skid." Barney, on the way, had learned
-their special interests. Therefore he put Bob into the engine assembling
-division where he could learn more about radial engines and the
-experiments being conducted with oil-burning types. Curt, who was
-methodical, cool and careful, was assigned to work, at least for awhile,
-in the wing assembling rooms. Al, being rather young for too much
-technical understanding, was assigned as helper to a "rigger," who had
-been grumbling for some time at the laziness of his present assistant.
-
-Everything was so new and so interesting that the trio forgot the
-seriousness with which Mr. Wright had assembled them that morning; but
-as they rode their bicycles toward home at lunch time, Bob imparted
-information that both startled them and turned their minds back to the
-serious business really underlying their work.
-
-"I heard some talk, this morning," Bob told his brother and Curt. "It's
-serious, fellows! Missing parts aren't half the puzzle--and tampering
-with airplanes isn't all the rest."
-
-"What is, then?" demanded Al.
-
-"They think, in the wing assembling room," Curt put in, "that the
-airplane fell this morning because something went wrong with Mr.
-Tredway. The plant owner was delivering that craft himself. They all
-argue that he must have had a heart attack, or something of the sort,
-because the airplane was tested and gone over thoroughly. They say he
-must have been taken sick and lost control. Is that what you mean?"
-
-"I heard some 'mechs' saying they think he deliberately made away with
-himself because of money trouble or something they don't know about,"
-added Al. "Maybe trouble with his family, one says."
-
-"That isn't it," Bob said soberly.
-
-"What is?"
-
-"The talk in the engine plant was that some enemy deliberately tampered
-with that airplane because--because he knew the owner was to fly it."
-
-"But--" Curt was astounded, "but, Bob--that would be----"
-
-"Yes," admitted Bob, very gravely, "yes--it would!"
-
-"That makes the puzzle about missing parts and the rest unimportant,"
-Curt commented, thoughtfully.
-
-"But it still gives us two puzzles to solve," Al began.
-
-"Well," corrected Curt, "not two separate puzzles--but a double puzzle,
-all the same."
-
-"A double puzzle? I don't quite see----"
-
-"It's all one problem," Bob explained to his younger brother. "But it
-has two sections. First--was the airplane tampered with as an act
-against the aircraft corporation or against Mr. Tredway in person?"
-
-"And second?----"
-
-Al did not let Curt complete his deduction. Al had one of his own.
-
-"And second--who did it?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- SUSPICION AND SUSPENSE
-
-
-Full of their horrifying suspicions, Curt and Bob rode on. Al turned off
-on a side street to deliver a parcel at the home of his new boss,
-"Sandy" Jim Bailey, the rigger. Al wanted to "make himself solid" with
-the sandy-haired man whom he already liked and whose grumbling was over
-now that he had, as he said, "a willin' and brainy helper."
-
-Curt ate lunch with Bob. Both were disappointed when Bob's mother told
-them that his father had been called out of town on his case, accepted
-earlier.
-
-Riding back, to rejoin Al, who was waiting at the gate of the plant
-ground, Bob accosted his brother in some surprise.
-
-"Aren't you going to have lunch?" he asked.
-
-"I had it," Al told Bob and Curt. "I delivered that package for Mr.
-Bailey, and met his son, Jimmy-junior. He's just about my age, and an
-awfully nice fellow. He invited me, so I stayed." He dismounted and set
-his wheel inside the enclosure. "You ought to see the model airplanes he
-builds. They're great!"
-
-"Well, we can't stop to talk about them now. Mr. Barney Horton left word
-with the gate-man we are to come into the administration offices to see
-him." Bob led the way as he gave the information.
-
-"It will give us a chance to look over the office staff," Curt
-explained.
-
-"Be careful, Al," his brother warned him. "See that you don't let
-anybody guess that you see any suspicious things. You show everything on
-your face, you know."
-
-"All right."
-
-Barney greeted them in his private office and introduced them to Mr.
-Tredway's partner, Mr. Parsons, who was there.
-
-If his manner was somewhat abrupt and his mind preoccupied, Bob made
-allowances for that. The man was overcome by the mishap and its sinister
-outcome.
-
-His restless, seemingly uneasy, and almost furtive actions, however,
-were not so easy to account for. He seemed unable to meet the eyes of
-the comrades directly, and appeared to be nervous--even more than the
-circumstances justified, Bob thought.
-
-Almost on top of the introductions he hurried out, "To get out there
-where the airplane cracked up and see what's what!" he explained.
-
-"He takes it mighty hard, he does," Barney told the youths. "No wonder.
-He's Mr. Tredway's partner."
-
-"But there isn't any real certainty that anything terrible happened to
-Mr. Tredway," asserted Curt. "He might have jumped clear."
-
-"Yes, and maybe he was hurt, and managed to swim off to some part of the
-shore and wasn't able to go any further. They haven't searched every
-possible spot have they?" Al was hopeful.
-
-"I'm afraid they have," Barney replied. "Furthermore, there are so many
-soft, muddy sink-holes in Rocky Lake----"
-
-"Do you agree with what the people in the plant are saying?" Al asked.
-
-"I don't know, my lad. You see, it's a good idea, having you here. When
-I'm around the people shut their mouths. But you hear things. What are
-they saying?"
-
-"They think it's something worse than missing parts and damage done to
-the 'crates'," Al answered and explained, calling on Curt and Bob for
-their versions of the talk.
-
-"Hm-m-m. Well, Al, I think--if I were you--I wouldn't listen to the talk
-around the plant too hard. Pick it up, of course, but don't go making
-any theories of your own out of it." Barney explained that people buzzed
-like a lot of flies every time anything happened, and that many of the
-less sensible ones, liking to be "in the limelight," worked up almost
-idiotic theories. Usually, if they were accepted, they led to unjust
-suspicions, he argued.
-
-"Those scatter-brains only want an audience to listen to them," he
-declared. "I'd advise you to listen and let it go out the other ear.
-Otherwise you may get off onto the wrong notion. Better watch out for
-suspicious actions, and leave the theories to Mr. Wright."
-
-"But he's away," argued Al.
-
-"Only temporary, I guess. Anyhow, you can tell me what you hear and see,
-and let it go at that. I'll communicate with Mr. Wright, and if he
-thinks there is anything as bad as you say, I can tell you how to go
-on."
-
-"All right," agreed Curt.
-
-Bob and Al added their own agreement to the suggestion.
-
-The designer and the engineering staff were introduced and several hours
-were devoted to discussions between them, for the benefit of the trio,
-about airplane design and the things that had to be taken into
-consideration.
-
-"If my young friends are going to learn airplane building," Barney
-asserted, "it will be better if they know how important it is to figure
-stresses, safety margins, stability and so on, before ever a design gets
-on paper."
-
-"I thought all those things came out in the tests, after the airplanes
-are built," Al contributed.
-
-"Oh, no," the designer said. "The tests show us how well we figured and
-how good the designs are that we created. But we work everything out up
-here before ever an engine part is cast, a fuselage built or a wing
-assembled."
-
-"Any other way would be hit or miss," Bob agreed.
-
-While they learned the many sections into which an airplane design is
-divided, and how carefully every curve, streamline, distribution of
-weight, lift of wing and drag of body must be calculated, Bob decided
-that no one in the office--at least no one with whom he came in
-contact--was acting in any suspicious manner.
-
-Able to do nothing about the accident, the staff went on with its
-accustomed work, sadly, more seriously, to be sure, but steadily.
-
-However, when Bob returned to his engine assembling work, he met a new
-character, and one of whom he at once formed an unsatisfactory opinion.
-
-By association of ideas Griff Parsons fell under his suspicion because
-the youth, about eighteen or nineteen, was the son of the man Bob had
-seen in Barney's office--Mr. Parsons. Griff, whose handclasp was flabby,
-whose eyes were even more shifty, whose manner was still more uneasy
-than his father's had been, did not impress Bob favorably at all.
-
-He had something on his mind, Bob decided.
-
-Assigned by the engine department foreman to help Griff fit piston rings
-onto the small pistons, to fit the piston assembly into the cylinders,
-before the final assembly was made, Bob learned much, and somewhat more
-about Griff than about the nice adjustments of machinery.
-
-If he turned suddenly, Griff almost jumped, having hard work to control
-his muscles.
-
-When he spoke of the morning's accident, Griff, with a scowl, told him
-to "Keep your mind on what you're doing! That other ain't any of your
-business!"
-
-Bob had hard work not to show his antagonism to the gruff, snappish
-young man; he was grateful when a summons took him out into the yard.
-
-"I think it is a good idea to have you fellows treated as though all you
-are here for is to learn about airplanes," Barney greeted him. "Your
-Cousin Langley is going to take up the sister ship to the cracked up
-Silver Flash, this afternoon, and I'm sending all three of you with him.
-It will give you a chance to understand what the designer told you about
-how carefully he had estimated the shape and weight of the new type
-longerons and how some mistake that he hasn't been able to figure out
-yet makes the new crate tend to slip off sideways too easily. Langley
-will show you how he checks and reports, and then you will understand
-how every one of us works in harmony with every other one, to build our
-ships airworthy, safe and steady."
-
-When they joined Lang, who was busy checking his dashboard instruments
-as the engine warmed up on the line, Bob, Curt and Al did not hook
-safety belts on. They had every confidence in Lang's ability to handle
-the ship, and they were more anxious to be near him so they could talk
-than to sit along the cabin sides unable to communicate their news to
-him over the roar of the engine.
-
-As soon as Lang sent the powerful engine into speed, racing down the
-runway into the wind, lifting the elevators to catch the propeller blast
-and tip upward the nose, then flying level, just above the ground for
-those essential few seconds in which flying speed was regained before
-the climb, Al opened the conversation.
-
-"Lang," he cried, pitching his voice to offset the noise about them,
-"did you know what they are saying about the accident?"
-
-Langley nodded.
-
-"This seems to be a test flight," he said. "But I'm really flying over
-to the airport, in the city suburbs--Barney wants you along to scatter
-and pick up talk there."
-
-"What's the airport got to do with the mystery?"
-
-"Barney thinks that mysterious crate we saw in the field might have
-something to do with it," Lang responded to Curt's question.
-
-"But Barney told us not to go building theories," Bob objected.
-
-"He's older, and better able to see things clearly," Lang reminded him.
-"So we will climb pretty high, as if for test dives and slips, and
-skids, and barrel rolls--you'd better be sure to snap your safety
-belts--not right now, though. This crate slips pretty sharp. But----"
-
-"I think we're wasting time," declared Bob, "flying to the airport."
-
-"Why?" asked Lang.
-
-"In the first place, the airplane was carefully hidden. No one at the
-airport would know anything about it. In the second place, I can't see
-how it could link in with the crash----"
-
-"Unless its pilot was higher than Mr. Tredway, and flew over him and
-forced him down--" Al was excited at his deduction. He felt puffed up.
-
-"We would have seen him," objected Curt, crushing Al's inflated vanity.
-
-"By the way," Bob broke in, "let's talk about something else. If Barney
-sent you for information, that's that. Never mind what we think. What I
-want to do is to get a line on that fellow named Griff--Griff Parsons."
-
-"Why?" Lang swung in his seat, catching the shift of the crate with
-almost automatic movements of stick and rudder bar. "What about him?"
-
-"He's the son of the superintendent, isn't he?" asked Curt.
-
-"Yes," Al broke in, "and what's more, I suspect that 'super.' He looks
-like the sort who could do tricky things. Did you see his eyes?"
-
-"Yes," agreed Curt. Lang cut the motor, and glided gently, to hear
-better.
-
-"But what has that to do with Griff?"
-
-Bob, surprised at the sharpness of Lang's tone, frowned.
-
-"He looks like the same type as his father--same shifty eyes, same
-restlessness--furtiveness!"
-
-"Say! See here!" Lang became suddenly angry. "You let that young man
-alone and keep your unfair suspicions off him."
-
-"Is that so?" Al was angry, too, all at once. "Who are you to give us
-orders?"
-
-"I'll let you know who I am if you go on suspecting innocent people.
-What's more, I'll have Uncle Fred yank you out of there so quick----"
-
-"What makes you so hot under the collar?" demanded Bob. "What is it to
-you if we suspect Griff? Is he an angel that we have to keep our minds
-off him?"
-
-"He's a mighty good friend of mine!" snapped Langley.
-
-All of them were angry. Curt, not related to the others, felt that he
-ought to intervene between the quarreling cousins, but something in the
-unreasoning fury of Lang's next words stopped him.
-
-"See here!" Lang forgot he was piloting an airplane, and swung around on
-his seat, his face working. "If you keep on, if you bother Griff, or try
-to trail him, or anything--I'll have Uncle Fred yank you out of there so
-quick----"
-
-"Oh! Look out!"
-
-Forgotten, the airplane, with no guide, answered automatically to the
-thrust of Lang's foot on the rudder bar as he whirled on his cousins.
-The shift of the rudder swung the nose, and Lang's instinct made him
-operate it to make the ailerons bank the ship, but she had almost lost
-flying speed, the all important velocity which gives the wings lifting
-qualities.
-
-Sickeningly the airplane tilted. Al, Bob and Curt, not strapped fast,
-tumbled sidewise, and the unstable craft tipped down.
-
-Abruptly, realizing the slip and the danger, although they were quite
-high, Lang "kicked rudder" sharply.
-
-To his dismay, there came a dull, snapping thump and one end of the
-rudder bar worked free.
-
-The cable had either come loose or had snapped!
-
-And, with its unstrapped occupants in a huddle, on the side which was
-lowermost, the lower wingtip turned straight downward, the other pointed
-toward the sky, the windowed sides were in the position of floor and
-ceiling--and the airplane began to fall!
-
-"Three thousand feet," Lang's eyes consulted the altimeter. "Three----"
-
-Momentarily he lost his "nerve" and faltered.
-
-Bob, on the instant, acted!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- IN THE FALLING 'PLANE
-
-
-In an emergency, thoughts leap through some minds quicker than lightning
-crosses the sky.
-
-Bob's mentality was of that type. Whether his mind worked through what
-is called instinct, or whether he put together many things he had
-learned about airplanes, or whether he worked through a chain of
-reasoning from beginning to end in a fraction of a second does not
-matter.
-
-The important thing was his action.
-
-In an airplane which is falling with wingtips toward sky and earth, the
-ailerons which usually tilt it are practically useless, because it has
-no forward movement sufficient to bring the air against the leading
-edges of the wings for lift, or to press against the ailerons to cause
-them to function properly.
-
-Furthermore, when the ship is falling "on its side" the elevators which
-in level flight serve to lift or to drop the nose, are no longer
-elevators; they, because of the position of the ship, are really the
-rudders, while the rudder, because it is then parallel to the ground,
-assumes the position and functions of the elevators.
-
-But Bob knew, in a flash, from the action of the ship, from the free
-movement of the rudder bar, that the rudder cable had come loose or had
-snapped.
-
-Bob knew, furthermore, that unless he could drop the nose, "give her the
-gun," and thus--by partly diving instead of falling sideways, and by
-partly using the propeller pull--could regain flying speed, Lang could
-not get the craft under control and save them from a crash.
-
-There were seconds, not more, between them and eternity!
-
-That rudder must be operated.
-
-It must be done before they came too close to earth to make the
-maneuvers, necessary to a safe landing, possible.
-
-Even as he called to Lang, "Give her the gun!" his hand smashed through
-the thin side of the cabin wall, down where it came together with the
-sturdy, but light plates of the flooring.
-
-Because the airplane fell on its side, the side he smashed was under
-him, the flooring was at his side, acting as the sidewall.
-
-He knew that if the lower of rudder cables in the ship's present
-position was broken he could get it there; if the upper one was severed
-its end would have dropped down, perhaps caught on a longeron or on a
-longitudinal fuselage brace; he might be able to catch hold of it.
-
-It took but a second to thrust his hand through the cabin wall, to grip
-the edge of a floor plate, to rip it from its temporary fastenings which
-were not completed until the tests made it sure that no further
-adjustments under the flooring would be necessary.
-
-Thus disclosed, he could see the under framework of that part of the
-fuselage.
-
-Braced so that his body would not crash down through a window, he
-looked, and grappled for the cable end. His fingers touched cable!
-
-For all the exigency of their desperate situation he tugged very gently
-and was glad. That cable was fast! It might lead to the elevators, the
-ailerons. Anyway it was not the right strand.
-
-Again he felt under the edge of what was in the ship's position, the
-plate above the one ripped away. His fingers touched a loose strand.
-
-"We're all right!" he panted, grasping the plate and tugging it partly
-free so that his arm could go further in and secure in his gripping
-fingers the loose cable end.
-
-In the brief time that this had taken, Lang had obeyed the call for gas
-to be fed to the engine. Idling, it roared into its power pulsations.
-
-There was an instant of fear in Bob's mind.
-
-If the cable he held were pulled and it depressed the rudder, which
-would act in their position as an elevator or "flipper" acts, all would
-be well. In that case, the propeller blast striking the rudder airfoil
-would push the nose downward, and the ship would begin to dive; then the
-air, rushing against the leading edge of the wings, would cause them to
-be operative, even in their sidewise position, and with the dive and the
-engine pull giving flying speed, they could then maneuver.
-
-But if the rudder went upward, it would lift the nose. Already deprived
-of all but the little speed the engine had picked up, the blast on the
-rudder, lifting the nose, would cause another stall, and they would
-perhaps fall too far to get the other side of the rudder cable before he
-could help it.
-
-"I've got the end of the cable," he cried. "Set yourself, Lang!"
-
-Lang, with a swift glance toward the windows, which faced the earth, saw
-the ground seeming to leap upward toward them. Above was the silent sky.
-There was a little margin of time--if----
-
-"Pull easy!" Lang shouted.
-
-"Pull easy!" Instantly Curt relayed the message.
-
-"Easy!" cried Al.
-
-Bob tensed his muscles, braced himself, gave a gentle tug and held it.
-
-The nose lowered.
-
-"Hold it!" shrilled Al, relaying Lang's relieved cry.
-
-The rudder had sent the nose a little downward, the drop changed into a
-dive.
-
-"Can you pull the rudder further?" The message came swiftly from Lang,
-through Curt and Al, to Bob, almost out of one mouth before the other
-said it, so quick was the response.
-
-"Yes!" Bob did so.
-
-Slowly the ship swung onto a more level keel, and while Bob clung with
-fingers that were growing numb from his excitement, the ship got flying
-speed, in a sort of descending spiral, the elevators could again be made
-to lift the nose as flying speed was attained, and the ship was in
-control.
-
-The signal to ease off did not come at once. Lang preferred to hold his
-present bank and circle, while he looked over through the lower cabin
-windows to sight their position.
-
-In that brief time Curt, also keyed up, had located the loose end of the
-cable that led from the rudder bar; with a piece of strong twine he made
-a splice, securely reaved onto the loose end, led it to the free end in
-Bob's fingers, and, since the rudder was hard down and could be held
-there by grasping further along the cable, Bob shifted his grip until
-Curt was able to get his twine, doubled, fast on that part of the cable
-also. Then, while Lang held his rudder bar steady, Curt tightened gently
-until the ends of the severed strand were almost touching, made several
-knots that could not slip--and the entire control of the ship was in
-Lang's hands again!
-
-They did not feel like going on to the airport, but Curt, always cool,
-generally far-seeing, urged that they do so.
-
-"If we go back, we'll have to tell about this, and create new excitement
-and talk," he counseled, and Lang saw the good sense of the idea.
-
-"We'll go on, and land at the airport," he agreed, above the sound of
-his motor. "After we get over our excitement we can think better."
-
-When they got there, and Lang telephoned the aircraft plant, the trio,
-outside the booth, heard him ask for Griff.
-
-Moodily, sorrowfully, with common consent, they moved away.
-
-One and all they linked Griff's uneasiness and Lang's curious anger and
-immediate call to the one he called "a very good friend."
-
-It was bad enough to suspect Griff. But Lang--Bob's cousin----
-
-That was dreadful!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- WATCHFUL WAITING
-
-
-Moodily walking back toward their airplane, around which a group of
-handlers and mechanics watched one assigned to make sure the cable
-splice was entirely safe, Curt spoke quietly.
-
-"Bob, maybe we should have waited to hear what Langley said to Griff."
-
-"No!" Bob was almost snappish. "No!"
-
-"I hate to suspect your cousin of anything wrong," Curt assured the
-brothers earnestly.
-
-"Not any more than I hate it," Al retorted. "But you've got to look at
-what you see and hear what comes to your ears."
-
-"All the same," counseled Curt, hoping to lighten the burden of
-unhappiness for his chums, "I'd go slow. You know--they may be just
-friends, close ones. There may not be anything wrong about Griff. We are
-likely to be suspicious, because that's what we are there for."
-
-"But look!" objected Al. "The cable snaps. Now that's almost a
-spick-span new crate. That cable ought not to fray apart--it could never
-wear so soon. It was--filed or scraped."
-
-"But that doesn't involve Griff," urged Curt, hoping, if he lightened
-their suspicion of Griff the cousin who was his friend would be less
-suspected. "He works in the engine department. Anyhow, he knew his
-friend, your cousin, would fly the 'plane. He'd never----"
-
-"Sh-h-h!" warned Bob.
-
-Langley, looking very glum, came up to them.
-
-"I talked to Griff," he said. "Told him what had happened. He was
-flabbergasted."
-
-"You ought to have reported to Barney--or to Mr. Parsons," Bob declared.
-
-"Why did Griff have to know anyhow?" Al was impulsive and did not care
-if he started a fresh quarrel or not. The conclusion he jumped to was
-that an angry Langley would disclose "secrets."
-
-"I wanted to warn him against--you!"
-
-Langley walked away. But they did not let him get far ahead of them as
-they approached the airplane.
-
-The mechanic who had been in the cabin greeted them.
-
-"Funny about that cable," he stated. "How did it ever get so much use
-that it wore through? You must kick rudder every two seconds."
-
-"Was it worn through--or--" Al began. Curt prodded his ribs very
-sharply. As Al became quiet Curt asked a louder question to distract the
-man from pursuing that "or--" and learning their fears.
-
-"Or did it break at the rudder bar?" he asked.
-
-"It chafed against the transverse brace it ran under," the mechanic
-responded. "They ought to have an eyelet or something for a guide--a
-small pulley would be best, with an eyelet to keep the cable from
-slipping out of the groove and chafing on the solid part of the pulley."
-
-"We'll report that," said Curt. "A rudder is pretty important."
-
-"I'll say," replied the mechanic.
-
-The plates had been fastened back into their light frame, being of
-sturdy construction and not permanently attached, they had come away
-clean and were put back easily. Only the cracked hole in the panels gave
-outward evidence of the recent near catastrophe.
-
-"Suppose we let on that was an accident, that I put my foot through the
-panel," suggested Curt. "Repairing it only means putting in a new
-section there--it ought not to cost much and I have some money in my
-savings account to pay for it."
-
-"Let's all put together," urged Al.
-
-"Why not tell the truth?" snapped Langley.
-
-"Don't you want to find out who endangered you and the rest of us?"
-
-Lang considered Bob's sharp phrase. "Yes," he said finally.
-
-The best way to do that, argued Curt, was by watchful waiting, not by
-putting the possible malefactor on his guard. "They could," Al declared,
-"see who makes the repair, and I can watch, being out near the 'planes,
-and see if anybody takes a special interest in the floor and the
-cables."
-
-Langley agreed rather bruskly and went off to take up his inquiries
-about the brown airplane they had seen in the field.
-
-"Watchful waiting!" repeated Bob, thoughtfully. "That's a good slogan.
-Let's 'watchful wait' to see what Griff does--and how Lang acts--and if
-either of them acts queerly when they are with Griff's father."
-
-"Just what makes you suspicious of him--the father?" Curt asked, more to
-check up his own theories than for information. "He's Mr. Tredway's
-partner, you know."
-
-"I suspect him," Al declared, "because he's the kind that looks
-suspicious, with his quick action and his sharp talk and his shifty
-eyes."
-
-"And Griff is exactly the same in every way," supplemented Bob.
-
-"Then we have two suspects to keep tabs on," agreed Curt.
-
-"Three," corrected Al.
-
-"Let's leave Lang out," urged Curt.
-
-"All right--we won't watch him. But it's bad, because we can't talk over
-plans and tell him everything. There will be--a--a----"
-
-"Strained relationship," suggested Bob.
-
-"Yes," agreed Al.
-
-"Well, pretend to be the same as ever, but keep your ideas to yourself,"
-Curt begged. "And--we'll be watchful waiters."
-
-During the next week that was the only policy they would have been able
-to adopt. Nothing happened at all.
-
-Al still carried parcels, on occasion, for rigger Sandy Jim Bailey, and
-improved his acquaintance with Jimmy-junior.
-
-Mr. Wright's absence from town during the entire week prevented them
-from consulting that detective. The comrades were thrown on their own
-resources.
-
-"I don't see that watchful waiting has gotten us very far," commented Al
-as they rode home for lunch, Curt with the brothers, at noon on
-Saturday. The day's work was over.
-
-"We know a little more than we did," Curt reminded him. "I've had talks
-with some of the boys I know, and I've found out that the ones Griff
-associates with aren't thought well of. And Bob has trailed him, several
-evenings, in spite of Lang's warning to Griff, and Bob has told you that
-Griff always gets away on his motorcycle and goes somewhere that we
-can't locate yet. But we know his character isn't very high class, and
-his father still acts uneasy and preoccupied. So we have gained that
-much."
-
-"What good is it?" Al was unconvinced. "It doesn't say what happened to
-Mr. Tredway. It hasn't told us who is taking airplane parts. It doesn't
-explain who tampered with the rudder cable in the Golden Dart--or why."
-
-"No," Bob admitted. "That's true, it doesn't. But it's the best we can
-do, for the present. And we never know when something may 'break.'"
-
-"Let's keep on learning airplane technique," suggested Curt. "We know
-we've gained there, anyhow."
-
-"Yes," Al nodded. "I can name the different parts of a biplane without
-stumbling over any of them." He did, "--fuselage; engine; propeller;
-upper and lower wing; cockpit and its cowling; struts and landing and
-flying wires; stabilizer, fin, elevator, rudder; ailerons; tail skid;
-and landing gear that Sandy calls the 'trucks.'"
-
-"Correct," agreed Curt. "And they comprise five groupings, each one
-having a special purpose--the fuselage, the supporting structure for
-everything else. Everything is attached to that. Then----"
-
-"The second group," Bob cut in, "is the supporting surfaces, the wings.
-They sustain the whole weight in the air, and the flying wires take the
-lift of the wings as the air sustains them, and communicates it, with
-the struts helping, to the body.
-
-"Well, in a way," Bob changed the statement slightly. "The flying wires
-are to take the stress, and if it wasn't for them the wings would tilt
-up at the ends or tips, like a 'V.' The flying wires take the stress in
-flying the same as the landing wires take the weight of the wings in
-landing; without the landing wires, when the ship came down the wings
-would crumple down over the crate like the two slanting sides of a tent
-or like the 'V' upside down."
-
-"Yes," Al showed his knowledge, "and then there is the control group,
-the ailerons at the backs or trailing edges of the wings, to be moved
-upward or downward, to tilt the ship; and the rudder, to turn it
-sideways--and if it's flying on its side the rudder is performing the
-office of the elevators and they of the rudder, because when it's flying
-level the elevators are to tip its nose up for a climb or down for a
-glide; then there's the fin and the stabilizers that give it balance and
-help to hold the whole ship in whatever position it is placed by the
-movable controls I just mentioned."
-
-"And with all those you have a glider," agreed Bob. "The engine, and its
-'prop' are for motive power, and the landing group, either wheels for
-the earth, or pontoons for the water, or both, combined, in an
-amphibian, for land-and-water use----"
-
-"We know some things," agreed Curt. "But we don't know where Mr.
-Tredway's body went--or----"
-
-"What Griff is going to do with his Saturday afternoon," commented Bob.
-"I'm going back to the plant, and pretend to finish up work, and see
-what happens there while it's supposed to be closed down."
-
-The others agreed. Something might "break." Actually, something did!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- STRANGE ACTIONS
-
-
-Although the aircraft manufacturing plant observed a forty-four hour
-week, closing down on Saturday afternoons, when the three members of the
-Sky Squad returned, about two o'clock, they were somewhat startled to
-discover that their "suspects" were there.
-
-Bob, entering the engine section, discovered Griff.
-
-The youth was surprised, "caught in the act!" mused Bob as he saw the
-youth, with furtive, hasty actions, completing the wrappings of a
-smallish package which he hurriedly slipped into his coat as he turned
-aside, trying to conceal his action from Bob and then, noting that he
-was caught, trying to pass it off as an ordinary action.
-
-"So that's where some of the smaller parts are going," Bob concluded,
-pretending not to be aware that anything was wrong.
-
-"Hello," he greeted. "I thought I'd come back and take that model engine
-apart, while no one was here to bother me, so I can get it straight in
-my head just how the valves operate."
-
-"Yeah?" Griff was inclined to be gruff, and as he tinkered around trying
-to pretend to be busy, but, to Bob's notion, watching the member of the
-Sky Squad, the latter gave every impression he could of ignorance that
-he was being supervised, studied, observed.
-
-Had Griff been intruded upon before he finished what he had been doing?
-Bob wondered as he took off the cylinder head of a small, roughly
-assembled model of a new design for a Vee-type motor they were working
-on. It appeared that Mr. Tredway had been "all for" the newer radial
-engines, while Mr. Parsons exerted all his influence to introduce the
-model in which the cylinders, in line, came together in a slanting
-fashion, like a "V" at the crankcase jointure.
-
-Bob took out pistons and pretended to examine the crankpin assembly.
-
-Griff watched covertly and appeared to be exceptionally uneasy.
-
-Curt entered from the wing assembly rooms.
-
-"Hello, Griff." He nodded, paid little attention to Griff and went over
-to Bob.
-
-"Interesting?" he hinted. Bob nodded, and began to explain the parts.
-
-"I see." Curt, bent close, whispered his next words. "Lang is out in the
-yard, working on the Golden Dart. He has the plates out and he is----"
-
-As he spoke Lang came in.
-
-"Say, Curt," he called, "run up to the offices, and if Mr. Parsons or
-Barney is around, get me a new--er--length of cable, will you?"
-
-"Will they give it to me?"
-
-"Sure."
-
-"Supposing there's nobody around. The office is closed."
-
-"Go to the supply room, on the ground floor. The watchman will let you
-get what you want. All you have to do is to write out a requisition form
-and put it on the spindle on the desk. You'll see it."
-
-"Can you get supplies as easily as that?" Bob asked.
-
-"Surely! Why not?"
-
-Curt and Bob made no comment. The former went to execute Lang's request.
-
-In the offices, as he neared the open door of the bookkeeper's little
-cubby of a room, Curt heard two low voices. He hesitated. He was close
-enough to be able to recognize in the bent figure leaning over the
-other, with his back turned, the peculiarly checked brown suit which
-identified Mr. Parsons.
-
-Evidently neither the partner nor his companion heard Curt, so absorbed
-were they in some discussion or comparison of figures.
-
-Curt, wondering why they were so engrossed in that work when the office
-was closed, and so absorbed that they had not heard him--he had not
-tried to snoop or to creep along the hall!--decided that it must be
-legitimate business, and that he would not disturb them.
-
-He went on beyond to the rear stairway and down, looking for the
-watchman.
-
-Al found him there.
-
-"How do you get into the supply room?" asked Al.
-
-"That's what I'm trying to do. What's that you're carrying?"
-
-"It's an earth inductor compass," Al explained. "You heard Sandy hail me
-as we came in." Curt nodded. "He stayed on to check up my work," Al
-informed him. "I'm pretty raw, you know, and Sandy is so good-natured
-that he didn't want to see me get into any trouble. I was helping one of
-the mechs this morning"--he had already picked up some of the slang,
-shortening "mechanic" as did those in the plant--"and Sandy was going
-over the instruments I had installed. That Golden Dart is going to be
-used for an overseas hop, he says--and--" he went close to Curt, "Curt,
-I think Sandy has helped us to get a line on somebody else to
-suspect--about the stolen parts, anyhow."
-
-"How?"
-
-"He called me over and told me, in a joking way, I had a lot to learn.
-And then he asked me if I knew anything about how this new type compass
-operated. I knew a little, but not much, and he showed me how little I
-knew. Curt--" he was very serious--"this is an old, broken thing. Look!"
-
-He indicated the failure of the parts to operate correctly.
-
-"If we'd let that get to the checker, Monday, I'd have been suspected of
-getting away with the regular, real one. This must have been substituted
-by the mechanic who was on that job--the one I helped. Or else it was
-given out by the clerk who has charge of this room. Anyhow, Sandy says I
-ought to put in a requisition for another one, and then he is going to
-help me keep an eye out to see what happens on Monday. He wants to help
-us. I saw he was so afraid I'd get the blame, and he's so mad about the
-way things are being taken that I let him in on our secret----"
-
-"About being detectives?"
-
-"Well, only as far as saying we were crazy about aviation and had formed
-a sort of order we call the Sky Squad, and naturally, being honest, we
-saw how things were going here and wanted to do what we could to
-discover who is taking parts."
-
-"And what did he say about it?"
-
-"He said not to be too hasty to jump to conclusions. He told me that
-this substituting of the old inductor compass looked like the work of
-the mech, but it could be the supply clerk, or, maybe, somebody outside
-the plant entirely who had sent it in, boxed, in a new consignment. He
-said the safest way would be to put in a new requisition, then we'd see
-who acted guilty when it was discovered. If the supply clerk is guilty
-he would never mention it for fear of being caught. If the mech is the
-culprit, the clerk will raise a howl about the exchange. If they are
-both innocent, you'll hear from both of them, and we can trace it to
-somebody who sent the consignment."
-
-"Good stuff!" agreed Curt. "But didn't the mechanic notice it was a
-broken model of the compass?"
-
-"He gave me the instructions how to assemble it and told me to be
-careful, and then went over to work on that small speed craft that Griff
-is testing out. Griff called him, so it looks all right. If the mech
-noticed this old compass, before he went home, he'll tell me, first
-thing Monday. If he knew about it and had taken the other, the good
-one----"
-
-"He'll lay low. I see."
-
-The watchman, making his rounds, observed the pair. Readily enough he
-admitted them to the supply department. Either he was of too
-unsuspicious a nature, being rather dull, to wonder or question; or he
-had been told by Barney that the youths were especially privileged. In
-either case he made no comment as they found the cable Curt wanted for
-Lang and the several extra inductor compasses, neatly boxed, among the
-stacked instruments in the shelves.
-
-Making out two of the slips he saw in a pad, and fixing them on the
-upstanding spike of a file, Curt handed Al his box and with the cable
-went to find Lang.
-
-Handing the strand to his chum's cousin, Curt decided to return to the
-office building to see what he might see. The excuse that he was
-studying the blue prints of an airplane would furnish reason for his
-presence in the office if Mr. Parsons was still there and asked.
-
-Bob, as Lang left, found Griff suddenly and unaccountably pleasant.
-
-"Funny about that cable," he remarked.
-
-"Sure is," admitted Bob, watchful, quiet, but willing to follow Griff's
-unexpected lead.
-
-"Lang says you had your suspicions of me," Griff grinned, quite
-pleasantly. Had he, Bob wondered, been "tipped" by Lang to cultivate
-friendship? Was there something really underneath the friendship of the
-partner's son and Bob's pilot cousin? Was there something else?
-
-"Why, I suppose when we got excited about that broken rudder pull, we
-thought of anything and everything," Bob grinned also.
-
-"Well, you thought wrong, friend. Would you try to do any harm to your
-buddy, Curtis, if you knew he was to fly a certain crate?"
-
-"No," Bob admitted, honestly and fervently.
-
-"But some other pilot, jealous, maybe--might! Eh?"
-
-Bob had not in any way considered that possible solution. There was
-another test pilot, not as popular as his cousin. He gave the most
-serious attention, but Griff evidently felt that he had said enough,
-adding only: "But I don't mean to accuse anybody. Let's forget it. Come
-on, let's forget motors and go up and have a look at them little fleecy
-clouds." He caught Bob's arm, after slipping the cylinder head over the
-pistons of the model with Bob's help.
-
-"Ever fly a crate?" he asked.
-
-"Not solo!" Bob admitted, "but Lang has let me take the controls six or
-seven times when he used to take us up, before we came here to----"
-
-"To what?"
-
-"To learn all there is about building airplanes," Bob continued without
-the flicker of an eyelash.
-
-"Hm-m-m! Well, come on, kidlets! I'll take you up in the prettiest
-little crate you ever sat in--what's more, I'll give you some experience
-so you can fly them crates after you get wise to how they're assembled."
-
-It was evidently a genuinely friendly offer. If it had any hidden
-motives, Bob, on that sunny Saturday, with a gentle, warm vacation wind
-blowing, with bonny clouds drifting slowly, gave up watching and went in
-for air experience.
-
-Al, finally deserted by Sandy, who had errands down town, saw Bob and
-Griff warm up the little speed sportster he had been rigging. A little
-envious he watched the check-up, the trial spurts of the fast little
-engine, the take-off and the soaring of the handsomely designed craft.
-Then he went on to visit Jimmy-junior, whose father, Sandy, had given
-him a special invitation to spend the afternoon and to stay to dinner
-with Jimmy-junior.
-
-Lang, taking the cabin monoplane for a test of his rudder performance,
-called Curt to go along; so the trio lost interest in detective work and
-concentrated on enjoyment----
-
-Until evening!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- A SUMMONS
-
-
-While Griff, who handled an airplane expertly, was executing dives and
-slips, barrel rolls and figure eights, and a loop or so to demonstrate
-his skill, Bob, in the rear cockpit seat, wondered whether Griff was
-trying to frighten him.
-
-That was not his purpose, Bob decided, and he was more convinced when
-Griff, with a grin, turned, after waggling the stick and holding both
-hands up beside his head--the signal to "take control."
-
-Bob nodded.
-
-Under Lang's tuition, in several airplanes, during tests, Bob had been
-permitted to handle the stick, rudder and throttle. He knew the
-elementary movements of straight flying and had some of "the feel of the
-air" which comes to any person who has the flying sense: that "feel of
-the air" is akin to knowing what the ship is going to do and, of course,
-sensing how to meet its various tendencies. When, during a climb, with
-too steep an angle, the controls begin to get "loggy" for an example,
-the born pilot, or the trained fellow with his air-sense developed,
-knows instinctively that the ship is about to stall, and automatically
-drops the nose and picks up flying speed.
-
-For awhile Bob, flying straight, or banking and turning, remained near
-the small flying field of the plant. He knew the signals with which a
-flying instructor guides his pupil, and, handling the dual control
-section in his own hands, and with his feet, he made simple maneuvers
-under Griff's direction, and seemed to please Griff by the quickness
-with which he caught the corrections signaled to him when he
-over-banked, or let the ship skid too long without catching the skid.
-
-The trial was over all too soon, and as Griff took over to shoot the
-field and set down, the most ticklish part of flying tactics, Bob felt a
-trifle sheepish for having suspected him.
-
-Griff was, really, quite a pleasant fellow.
-
-However, Bob began to think. This sudden affable manner must have some
-reason behind it. Furthermore, he decided, Griff might be trying to win
-his confidence through the hidden flattery of telling Bob what a
-"corking" pilot he would make with a little more training. Bob knew that
-flying is taught carefully by any self-respecting school, that a
-thorough ground-school training and many hours of instructed flight will
-be followed by many solo flights, with intermittent check flights under
-the instructor's eyes, before a pilot is considered more than a student.
-Griff over-flattered.
-
-Bob, as he went home, where Al and Lang had preceded him, his cousin
-having stopped in for dinner, decided that he would accept Griff's
-offered friendship with a grain of salt.
-
-Al was there, of course, but no confidences were exchanged.
-
-Al had already eaten his dinner, with Jimmy-junior, after a fun-filled
-afternoon during which Jimmy had displayed his airplane models, had
-supervised many trials while he let his guest wind the sturdy rubber
-band motors and set the tiny, practicable controls of the toys.
-Furthermore, he had talked about the Sky Squad idea and had begged to be
-permitted to join, being air-crazy, as he put it. Al, promising to take
-the matter up with his brother and with Curt, had said he would do all
-he could to induce them to agree. He could not broach the matter,
-however, as Curt, Bob and Lang ate, because Lang was full of the
-excitement of receiving a telegram from Bob's and Al's father, the
-detective, from a city about fifty miles away, asking Lang to come to
-the city for a report and a conference.
-
-Glancing at Bob, both Curt and Al saw that the older member of the
-secret membership was disturbed in his mind. Lang would not tell about
-Griff, as he visited his uncle over Sunday. That was what Bob was
-thinking, as Al and Curt saw. But Curt, looking at his watch, reminded
-Lang that he must stop stuffing down the filet of sole, a form of fish
-steaks of which he was extremely fond, if he expected to "make" the 'bus
-that would pass the house on the way to the city, and the railway
-station.
-
-"I'm going to fly!" Lang declared, reaching for more fish.
-
-"Why not take us, then?" demanded Al.
-
-"No. I'm going to borrow Griff's sport model. More speedy and I want to
-check before it is turned over to him finally."
-
-"There'd be room for one of us," Bob spoke up.
-
-"No sirree!" and they knew why Lang was so snappish.
-
-Bob pushed back his chair as Al and Curt sprang up. Lang, rising with
-his superior, amused grin at their anxiety, waved them back and kissing
-his aunt and thanking her for the fish he loved, he departed.
-
-"I'm going!" said Bob, and explained excitedly to his mother that he had
-information of importance.
-
-"Lang will tell it," she said. "Explain to him."
-
-Bob's face fell, as did Al's. They were in a box!
-
-They could not explain to their mother that they suspected Lang, at the
-very least, of protecting Griff, a friend but not a desirable one.
-Whatever their own ideas they were none of them blabbers.
-
-Bob ran out on the porch, leaped down the steps, hopped on his bicycle
-and pedaled down the first side street. He was not entirely sure of his
-plans, perhaps he half intended to secrete himself in the fuselage of
-the 'plane, to go on as an unsuspected passenger; possibly he hoped to
-induce Lang to take him by getting there first.
-
-At any rate, as he neared the plant, he was glad he had come.
-
-Griff, at the gate, was in close communication with a mysteriously
-furtive stranger!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- A TRAIL AND A FLIGHT
-
-
-Twisting his handlebars sharply, Bob sent his bicycle into brush at the
-end of the aircraft plant grounds where the fence turned; he wanted to
-get out of sight.
-
-The pair at the gate were having some sort of argument and probably had
-been too excited and absorbed to notice him, Bob decided.
-
-He dropped his wheel and crept back to the corner of the fenced
-enclosure to watch.
-
-From that position he could see the man, but only part of Griff's coat
-and an arm. The man, as he saw, was vigorously arguing. Griff must have
-been either pleading or arguing, Bob guessed, from the man's violent
-gestures and appearance of "laying down the law."
-
-Presently a small, flat package came into view.
-
-Bob recalled that he had seen Griff wrapping exactly that sort of parcel
-earlier.
-
-The man took it, put it rapidly into his coat pocket, inside. With a
-quick look up and down the deserted highway he swung and crossed to a
-car parked on the opposite side of the road. Climbing in he speeded up
-his engine and drove away at constantly increasing speed.
-
-"So they are dividing the 'spoils'--or Griff was giving him money." Bob,
-unable to see Griff, not daring to emerge from his concealment, made the
-deduction under his breath. "Well, now shall I follow that man? No,
-because his car is too fast. I can't catch him on my wheel."
-
-He decided to wait where he was, to see what would happen. To go in at
-once might alarm Griff. He might realize that Bob had been near enough
-to see what had occurred; he might suspect. Bob wanted to keep his
-presence unknown; Griff had already been warned by Lang; he would jump
-to the conclusion that Bob was watching.
-
-Almost at once Bob thanked his good sense for holding him concealed.
-
-Griff, as he watched, ran wildly out into the road and began to wave and
-shout after the receding car.
-
-Its driver did not turn around.
-
-Griff, while Bob stared, dashed back into the gateway. For a moment Bob
-wondered where the watchman was, then he saw the man, in a small
-ice-cream and soda water shack, a little distance down the road opposite
-the fenced property. Griff, Bob guessed, had offered to watch the gate
-while the man refreshed himself.
-
-Bob hesitated. Where had Griff gone? What was he doing?
-
-The last question was answered by the pop-pop of a motor. Bob knew that
-Griff rode a motorcycle. He was getting it started. He meant to pursue
-that car for some reason. Something had caused him to want to talk again
-with the car driver, Bob mused.
-
-While he watched, keeping all but his head concealed, the motorcycle,
-with Griff mounted on it, came sputtering into view.
-
-Never glancing around, opening his throttle, he pelted down the road
-after the car.
-
-Bob, without hesitation, rushed his bicycle into the highway and pedaled
-after the motorcycle for all he was worth. Griff was too intent on his
-purpose to notice, he felt sure.
-
-It would be a losing race, Bob feared, unless Griff overtook that
-rapidly receding car very soon. Muscles could not endure against a
-machine! Nevertheless Bob rode as fast as his pedals would turn.
-
-As he sent the wheels spinning along it crossed his mind that Lang would
-be arriving at the plant almost any moment but he kept on all the same.
-
-"It will take Lang awhile to warm up the engine, and, anyway, if I don't
-go with him I know another way to communicate with father," he decided.
-
-The car was almost out of Bob's sight, the motorcycle was rapidly
-overtaking it.
-
-At that instant Bob's heart almost stopped beating!
-
-Far ahead, on a cross road, he saw a huge truck come into view. It was
-not only between the car and its pursuer; it was also well onto the road
-and almost directly in front of the motorcycle.
-
-"Griff!" Bob shouted, without thinking that his voice would never be
-heard. He instinctively cried a warning. If the rider had his head low
-over his handlebars!----
-
-His coaster brake jammed on, Bob slowed, alighted, his muscles refusing
-to function for the instant.
-
-But during that instant Griff evidently saw the huge obstacle and
-swerved. In making the wild curve to go around the rear of the truck Bob
-saw the youth and cycle go off the road into the ditch.
-
-Evidently unaware that anything had happened the truck driver kept on
-down the cross road. Bob, remounting, pedaled for all he was worth
-toward the scene of the accident. As he rode swiftly he saw other
-figures approaching.
-
-At the point where the motorcycle lay on its side, he was met by Al and
-Curt, who had been approaching from the opposite way, up the side road.
-"We decided to come and see Lang hop off," Al explained as the trio ran
-toward Griff.
-
-He was sitting up, a little shaken, a little dazed, when they
-approached. Bob, seeing that he did not appear to be seriously hurt,
-caught Curt's arm. "Look here," he said quickly, "I want to go with
-Lang. Don't say I was following--you know--keep it quiet. I must get to
-see father and tell him----"
-
-"All right. Don't waste any time. Get out of sight. I'll tell Al."
-
-Bob hurried off, as though he was in search of aid, and he felt, as he
-pedaled back toward the field, that Griff probably had been too much
-shaken to notice that Bob had come from the direction he had been
-riding, or deduce that Bob had followed him.
-
-The watchman, and several others from the soda stand came running down
-the road. They called out as he approached and with a brief explanation
-that there had been a "spill" but that he thought it was not serious,
-Bob rode on.
-
-He found Lang riding toward the plant, and swung his bicycle in at the
-gate and set it against the fence.
-
-"What's the trouble, up there?"
-
-"Griff took a spill going around the back of a truck that came out of
-the side road. I think he's all right." Bob called out his answer to
-Lang's shouted inquiry and saw his cousin ride on to investigate.
-
-Bob, with some idea in his mind that he might crawl into the fuselage of
-the small speed 'plane, and, thus stowed away, be carried to the city
-from which his father had telegraphed, changed his mind. The close,
-smothery fuselage, subjected to the most violent rolling and heaving of
-the airplane's progress, would probably make him ill. He preferred to
-stay outside, to see what happened, and to compel Langley to take him as
-a passenger.
-
-Watching from the gateway he saw that Griff had been lifted to his feet
-and had apparently found himself only rather badly shaken. This was
-Bob's decision because he saw a passing car driver help the shaken youth
-into his car, tumble the motorcycle out of the grass and turn it over to
-the plant watchman to be trundled back, and drive off to take Griff
-home, it seemed.
-
-Bob met Lang beside the propeller of the little speed craft.
-
-"Get the ignition key from Griff?" he asked.
-
-"I did."
-
-"Climb in. I'll give the prop a twist for you."
-
-Langley got himself set.
-
-"Gas on?" called Bob.
-
-"Gas on."
-
-"Switch off?"
-
-"Switch off!"
-
-Bob gave the propeller a couple of revolutions.
-
-"Contact!" he cried, leaping aside to avoid the flailing, knife-like
-edges of the blades. The engine caught on the touch of spark to
-compressed gas mixture.
-
-While Langley opened the throttle and warmed up his engine, Bob
-unconcernedly began to clamber into the after cockpit seat.
-
-"You're not going!"
-
-"Oh, yes, I am."
-
-"Get out of there!"
-
-"Listen, Lang," Bob leaned close to Lang's ear to carry his message
-above the noise of the radial engine, "which suits you best? To have me
-with you, to tell dad what I know before your face--or to have me
-telegraph him while you're on your way, and let you explain to him what
-I have to tell?"
-
-Lang, at first furious, presently saw the logic of Bob's position.
-
-"Oh--all right!" he grunted and "gave her the gun" in somewhat vicious
-spurts.
-
-Bob, fitting on the "crash helmet" kept in the 'plane by Griff for him
-that afternoon, and the leather jacket and gloves, smiled.
-
-He was progressing as a Master Sleuth, doing his share creditably for
-the Sky Squad.
-
-As soon as the engine was sufficiently warm and methodical Lang had
-checked all his instrument readings, the trim little ship taxied down
-the smooth field to head into the wind which Bob saw, from the
-"windsock" blowing out from its mast on the office building, was from
-the south, a nice, light, Summer evening breeze.
-
-The watchman, coming in, put aside the slightly damaged motorcycle and
-strolled across to the hangars, into one of which he stepped to throw a
-switch, lighting the flood light by which they could see to take off. He
-did not question Lang's right to use the craft because Lang must have
-gotten its ignition key from Griff, its owner.
-
-As they took the runway, and increased speed to the throaty roar of the
-engine, Bob felt that sense of the ship getting "light" which indicates
-to the pilot that she is ready to take the air. He saw the elevators
-tip, glancing around swiftly to check the safety of the way ahead, and
-then saw the lighted earth dropping, contracting into a spot of vivid
-light against a field otherwise dark; then the watchman shut out the
-floods to avoid confusing them in the air, and the ship climbed into
-dark night.
-
-They had climbed several thousand feet and were headed into the north,
-so that Lang could "pick up" the lights of the airway along which his
-night flying would be easiest, when Bob saw him double unexpectedly.
-
-For an instant the craft's nose went almost straight down and Bob was
-glad he had strapped himself in; then Lang evidently caught control, and
-the stick, thrust forward as he doubled, with some unexpected convulsion
-or "stitch," was pulled back and brought the ship out of the dive
-gradually.
-
-"What happened?" Bob screamed above the engine noise, the song of wind
-through wires caused by their dive.
-
-"Cramp!" called Lang, cutting the gun as he held a glide for a moment,
-turning a white face toward Bob. "Listen. Bob--oh!----"
-
-He bent again. "The fish--too much fish--" Bob guessed, and had he known
-that Lang's delay in reaching the field had been due to further
-refreshments, he would have said, "Fish--and ice-cream!"
-
-At least that was a far more reassuring thought than Bob's first idea,
-that some one had tampered with some control of this craft.
-
-"Oh--" Evidently Lang was very ill.
-
-Suddenly, as he saw his companion in the forward seat double, Bob felt
-the stick waggle against his leg.
-
-In an interval between his spasms of violent pain, Lang held up his two
-hands alongside his helmet.
-
-It was a signal for Bob to take control.
-
-"All right!" he called, and, with a steady hand, he clutched the stick
-of the controls in his cockpit, set his feet against the rudder bars,
-and eased his throttle open to regain speed.
-
-He was not in the least nervous or flurried. He pitied Lang's cramped
-stomach and evident suffering, but did not permit it to influence his
-steady nerve. He had been given enough lessons to know how to hold the
-craft in level flight. While night flying was not as safe and easy as
-daytime work, he knew that if he followed the ribbon of lighted highway
-that ran toward the beacons of the nearest airway, he could always "set
-down" on the asphalt, if worst came to worst, and if he did smash the
-trucks, the landing gear, he did not think he would do any more serious
-damage.
-
-"Had I better set down?" he shouted, gliding for speed as he cut out the
-engine roar. Lang shook his head and gestured forward. Evidently he was
-not afraid of any immediate physical collapse and preferred to go on
-flying to see if he would recover. Bob held on.
-
-He picked up the beacon and, watching Lang's gestures, swung in a long,
-banked curve, to head across the wind down the unconfined airway, whose
-second beacon he could see, far away.
-
-By habit looking around to be sure no other ship was close as he turned,
-Bob, startled, saw the flying lights of another craft pursuing.
-
-It must be pursuit! It came from the direction they had come. It turned
-as they turned, only in a more sharpened bank, so as to cut off part of
-the distance, it seemed to Bob, to close the gap between them.
-
-"Lang!" he shouted, and waggled the stick.
-
-Lang looked around.
-
-Bob's arm pointed backward and upward.
-
-Lang, leaning out of the cockpit, to see around the wing-tip, stared.
-
-"The cabin 'plane!" he cried. "I know it. Golden Dart."
-
-"After us?"
-
-"I don't know!"
-
-But as Bob opened the throttle to regain flying speed without having to
-dip down too low, there came from the other ship a red flare.
-
-It was, as Bob realized, a signal--not of danger but of command.
-
-"Land!" it commanded.
-
-Bob looked at Lang.
-
-Lang considered. As he hesitated Bob guessed his thoughts. Some one from
-the small field, some member of the plant staff, probably Mr. Parsons,
-finding the 'plane belonging to Griff gone, and hearing from the
-watchman who had taken it, had taken off in the cabin monoplane to stop
-what he probably considered a prank of Lang and Bob--some night-flying
-lark.
-
-What would Lang say? Set down? Or--go on?
-
-They could outfly that cabin ship in the speedy, easily maneuvered sport
-craft--or, they could, with Lang at the controls. But Lang was badly
-upset in his stomach. What would he decide? Bob mechanically looked
-around for the best spot to set down.
-
-When he looked up again his heart leaped with exultation.
-
-Lang's arm pointed straight ahead!
-
-"Go on!" he gestured.
-
-Bob opened the throttle joyously. Here was adventure, pursuit, thrill
-enough to suit anyone!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- THE CHASE
-
-
-Rapidly Bob considered the situation.
-
-The speed craft he and Lang occupied had much the best of it on a
-straight flight, but, against that, he had to set his inexpert handling.
-The smaller craft could out-climb, out-maneuver the cabin ship but he
-had no experience in stunting, especially dangerous at night.
-
-Therefore Lang's decision was the safest one.
-
-To try to make a landing, Lang evidently concluded, was not wise. He
-felt that he could take over the controls before that need arose, Bob
-guessed.
-
-A new complication came, however.
-
-If the cabin ship had the disadvantage of being slower, she had gained
-an offsetting advantage before they saw her. She was much higher in the
-air than their craft; she could dive, if her pilot chose, and thus close
-the distance between them--maybe come down "on their tail," or ride them
-to earth, if her pilot proved to be determined to force them to land.
-
-Accordingly Bob opened the throttle wider, and slightly elevated the
-nose to climb.
-
-Lang, peering upward and to the rear, made a violent, vigorous gesture.
-
-Bob, reading it, understood.
-
-He did not question. Lang called for a sideslip!
-
-Instantly Bob manipulated ailerons and rudder correctly and felt the
-wind on the cheek toward the lower side of their bank, telling him they
-were slipping.
-
-Then, applying rudder and other controls to check the slip, dropping the
-nose again to pick up flying speed quickly, he saw why the maneuver had
-been executed. The cabin airplane had begun to dive down from above
-them. Lang, having seen it, anticipated. He had not wanted to wrest away
-control--too dangerous. He had risked the signal, and Bob had executed
-his order accurately.
-
-He was glad, all the same, when Lang shook the stick, tapped on his own
-helmet to sign that he wanted the controls.
-
-Bob relinquished them thankfully enough. At night, in strange
-surroundings, in an airplane he had only handled a little, he was not
-foolish enough to wish to risk neck and limb--far less Lang's than his
-own!--by trying to outfly a pilot who evidently meant to be vicious, to
-resort to war tactics if they did not obey his signals.
-
-Lang, somewhat recovered, took over and Bob, delighted, watched his
-expert manipulation of the splendid little ship. She answered his every
-command. He barrel-rolled out of the way of any immediate danger, thus
-leaving the cabin craft well to one side. He started up a loop after a
-swift dive, but at its top he executed half of a barrel-roll, and since
-the top of the loop had the nose in the direction opposite their course,
-the half-roll put the craft on its level, upright course, but going
-directly away from the former one.
-
-The cabin ship could not be stunted that way, or else its pilot against
-his will was compelled to recognize superior tactics.
-
-At any rate, as Lang swung around in a wide circle, slowly climbing at
-the same time, the other craft seemed to be heading uncertainly back.
-
-It came around, however, as soon as Langley straightened out on the
-former course along the airway; but they rapidly outflew it and when
-they landed at an airport in the distant city suburbs, the cabin ship
-was nowhere in sight.
-
-It was nearly eleven o'clock at night when Bob and Langley were ushered
-up the hotel elevator and along a corridor and into Mr. Wright's rooms.
-
-The detective, who had been apprised, long distance, by his wife, that
-his nephew was flying to keep the appointment, was waiting.
-
-Hardly had his surprise at Bob's presence been expressed and a late
-supper for the air-hungered pair been ordered than another visitor was
-announced.
-
-"So this is where you were bound for!"
-
-To Bob's amazement, Barney spoke.
-
-"Why didn't you leave word that you were coming here?" he said, rather
-sharply. "We could all have come together."
-
-"We didn't know you were on your way here," said Langley.
-
-"We thought you were chasing us," Bob added.
-
-"So I was. The watchman said you hopped but he didn't say where to. I
-was coming over to confer with Mr. Wright, but I thought Lang and you,
-Bob, were joy-riding. So I signaled you to land and when you didn't I
-decided to scare you into setting down--but it failed."
-
-He chuckled.
-
-"I ought to know better than to think I could outfly Lang," he said.
-"Well--if you've come with information, it's all right. We can have a
-conference, all together."
-
-They did so, over the dinner. Lang listened to Bob's recital of the
-latest developments about Griff, with growing anger, until he saw
-Barney's face.
-
-"Good boy, Bob," commented Barney. "I've sort of had a notion in my head
-for some time about----"
-
-"Griff?"
-
-"Yes. I've thought he was the one who's crossed the wires on us and
-short-circuited the whole plant. So he divided with somebody, did he?
-Well--he must have gotten it from somebody higher. Have you thought
-about?----"
-
-"His father?" broke in Bob. "Yes--we have!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- THE DETECTIVE'S THEORY
-
-
-More startling than Bob's fresh information was the revelation given by
-Barney, the information which had brought him, flying, to consult the
-detective he had engaged to solve the puzzling case.
-
-All that Bob had to tell was the suspicious act of the youth, Griff.
-
-Barney, because it was so late, gave only a hint; but what he said
-caused a great deal of sleeplessness on Bob's part, at least.
-
-"We got the wrecked airplane up," Barney told them all, that night.
-"I've had it hauled in and dismantled."
-
-He paused to give his next words more emphasis.
-
-"There wasn't one thing wrong with that crate!"
-
-When, during their Sunday morning conference, he amplified his
-statements, the mystery deepened.
-
-Dismantled, thoroughly examined, by Barney, in person--he did not trust
-any subordinate in so important a matter--the airplane revealed nothing
-wrong, either with its engine, with its wings, or with its controls!
-
-"But it fell," commented the detective. "What, do you imagine, caused
-the crash?"
-
-"I give it up." Barney was unable to make a theory. "I hired you to do
-the doping out of that! I give you the facts. You do the rest."
-
-"Bob," his father turned to the youth, "have you jotted down all the
-suspicious things you mentioned, as I asked you to do?"
-
-Bob nodded and handed over a paper.
-
-After consulting it and comparing it with a sheet on which he had
-written, Mr. Wright looked up.
-
-"This is what we know," he began. "For several months, according to
-Barney's original explanation, when he gave me the case, airplane parts
-had been missed. Not very many, but some. We have to decide how they are
-taken, and then find out who does it and what happens to them, how they
-are disposed of."
-
-"How about the man who gives out the instruments and such?" asked
-Langley quickly. Bob thought he said it to forestall comment about
-Griff, "or the mechanics whom Al had been told by his rigger boss were
-possible culprits?"
-
-"We haven't been able to watch everybody," Bob said.
-
-"That point is not important," Mr. Wright declared. "It is the beginning
-of what we know, and can wait. Our second bit of knowledge--and more
-important this is, too--is that for several months before the seemingly
-fatal crash, accidents had occurred to every airplane that was sent out
-of the plant. Buyers complained by letter, and only by good luck was it
-possible to avert several tragedies."
-
-"I didn't know it had been as bad as that," Bob commented.
-
-"It had," Barney nodded. "We wanted you three boys to start in with open
-minds. Remember? We didn't tell you details; but now it's gone too far
-for taking things easy. We've got to get to work."
-
-"Right," agreed the detective. "The third point we know is that Mr.
-Tredway was very anxious to hold up the good name of his corporation,
-and that he decided to take this last ship to its owner in person, after
-Lang, here, gave it--" he paused, noticing Bob's expression.
-
-"I know what's on your mind," Langley said, turning to his younger
-cousin. "I was the one who tested and checked that Silver Flash. I said
-she was O.K. before the take-off. But," his manner was defensive, "if
-you think----"
-
-"I don't think," Bob asserted. "For a minute I did--but Mr.--but Barney
-says not a thing was wrong about the Silver Flash. So, of course,
-there's nothing to think."
-
-"Besides," said Barney, "we none of us knew it would be the Silver
-Flash. The buyer couldn't make up his mind, till almost the last minute,
-about that pair of twins. One time he'd come and say he liked the
-silver, then he wanted the copper-gold finish. Both crates were
-identical except for that. I thought, myself, he was going to
-take--well, we all thought the last time he came he wanted the gold one.
-But I guess he telegraphed."
-
-"Well, then, that explains one thing," said Bob. "If everybody thought
-he wanted the Golden Dart, that's why the rudder rope was frayed off in
-that ship." Barney, who had been told everything, nodded.
-
-"Yes," he admitted, "but that don't explain why the other ship--sound
-and perfect--crashed. Unless----"
-
-"Unless--what?" Bob, Lang and the detective were interested, but Bob
-voiced the question.
-
-"Unless Mr. Tredway did it on purpose--crashed!"
-
-"Why should he?"
-
-To Mr. Wright's quiet inquiry Barney answered readily enough.
-
-"I run the plant," he said. "The deep part of the money end, and all
-that is none of my business. But I happen to know there's some trouble
-about money, or losses, or something like that."
-
-"You think--" Mr. Wright bent forward, "--Tredway, because he was in
-some financial difficulty, or deeper trouble, might have done away with
-himself?"
-
-"Well," defensively Barney replied, "how else do you account for a
-diving ship, placed so careful, on the lakeside, close to shore, and
-only damaged as little as possible, and then not from anything being
-wrong in her?"
-
-Bob saw that his father was very thoughtful.
-
-"Do you think he ran off and hid, afterward?" he demanded.
-
-"They didn't find hide nor hair of him, did they? Dredging, or searching
-didn't locate anything!"
-
-"That's so!"
-
-"However," the detective objected, "that doesn't explain about the
-frayed cable, or the other things done to airplanes to damage the
-reputation of the corporation; that is my theory about the motive."
-
-"No," Barney admitted. "If you've got a theory about the motive for
-damage to crates, maybe you've got one about the whole affair."
-
-"I have."
-
-"What is it, Father?" Bob was eager to hear.
-
-"There are three crimes to investigate," Mr. Wright said slowly. "The
-accidents, the thefts, and the----"
-
-"Do you still think Mr. Tredway's disappearance was due to a crime?"
-
-"Yes, Lang, I do."
-
-"What sort of crime? Nothing is wrong with the ship he used, Barney
-says," objected Bob.
-
-"A very strange one," his father replied. "Remember--there was a brown
-airplane hidden in a field. It was gone--before the accident. My theory
-is that either some one he feared, or some one who hated him, took off
-in that brown airplane, overtook or waited for Mr. Tredway--and----"
-
-"Rode him down!" gasped Barney. "I'd thought of that!"
-
-"Yes," agreed the detective, "let's drop all worry about the less
-important thefts, the deliberate damage to the airplanes--and look for
-the man who flew that brown airplane!"
-
-"Will we?"
-
-Bob asked it as a question, then he repeated it as an exclamation.
-
-"Will we!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- THE SKY SQUAD DISOBEYS
-
-
-Both Curt and Al listened eagerly while Bob related the details of the
-Sunday conference with the detective.
-
-He gave them the information imparted by Barney.
-
-"Not a thing wrong with the Silver Flash?" repeated Al. "Then that brown
-crate must have driven it down--but why?"
-
-"Maybe some revengeful pilot Mr. Tredway had discharged," suggested
-Curt. "At any rate there must have been some motive to make a man do
-anything as terrible as that. But how are we going to locate the brown
-ship?"
-
-"I still have that message we discovered on the seat, and then picked up
-in the dewy grass." Al produced it, dry but smudged and crumpled, from
-his pocket card and identification case. "We might compare the writing
-with the--well, say with the books in the aircraft plant, and with
-everybody's writing."
-
-"Lang didn't get any information when we made inquiries about the brown
-craft at the nearest airport, did he?" Lang, who was quite affable and
-good-humored, with Griff and his actions forgotten in the new search,
-answered Curt.
-
-"No, nothing more than you did. They'd never heard of the ship I
-described."
-
-"_You_ have got me more puzzled than this whole mystery has," Al said,
-grinning. "Lang, the way Bob tells it, you must have been next door to
-ordering the undertaker, and then you were flying, stunting, as if you'd
-never eaten fish and ice-cream."
-
-"That's psychologically explainable," Lang liked to use long words, to
-indicate his superiority. "Under the stimulus of----"
-
-"Never mind!" Al threw up his hands as if to ward off a flow of words
-too long for his youthful understanding.
-
-"It's too easy to explain," Bob said. "Father said Lang got so excited
-that he forgot to think about himself, and 'Nature took its course' when
-he stopped worrying about his fears."
-
-"That was it," agreed Lang. "I accepted the idea, from somewhere, that
-ice-cream and fish made poison, and while I was flying, when a little
-gas began to bother me I got scared, and the scare did the rest. Uncle
-said that half our pains are due to believing what other folks tell us
-can happen; the rest is from being afraid it is happening to us!"
-
-"That clears it up." Al became very sober. "I wish the disappearance of
-Mr. Tredway was as easy to settle."
-
-"Well, we'll have to find that mysterious brown 'plane, or get hold of
-somebody who saw it flying, to tell us which way it went." Lang rose,
-stretched, yawning, and sauntered off toward his wheel; the other three,
-sitting on the cottage porch before supper, for which Lang would not
-stay, looked after him in silence.
-
-"Do you know what I think?" Curt broke the thoughtful pause. "I don't
-mean to criticise, and I don't want you fellows to get angry, but I have
-a feeling that Uncle Fred is wrong to have us drop all our suspicions
-and try to find a crate that could be five hundred miles away, in any
-direction. My theory is that if we locate the airplane it will be by
-'luck' and I don't believe in 'luck' because if you think 'luck' is
-going to help, you don't have to do anything yourself, and if you
-believe it is going to hinder, there's no use in doing anything. So," he
-grinned, "I believe that everything comes out right only when we do
-everything we can to make it so--and as long as there isn't any way to
-start hunting that brown crate, let's----"
-
-"Disobey?" asked Bob, rather surprised.
-
-"I guess it would amount to that--and in another way it wouldn't!"
-
-"How could it if it didn't and why wouldn't it if it did?"
-
-The others laughed at Al's twisted inquiry.
-
-"Uncle Fred didn't give you orders to 'lay off' watching, did he, Bob?"
-and as Bob shook his head, "He only meant for us to concentrate on
-seeing if we could pick up a clue to the mysterious 'plane. Well, I feel
-that by finding out what Griff is doing, and why his father is so
-fidgety and furtive, and the rest of the puzzles here, we may be led to
-that 'plane, or get a clue to it or to its pilot."
-
-"I don't see any disobedience in that."
-
-"Well," Curt answered Bob, "the way I look at it, if Uncle Fred took us
-into the case he expected us to obey the 'spirit' of the orders he gave,
-and he did say to forget the smaller things here and work on locating
-the 'plane."
-
-"I see," agreed Bob. "It's a pretty deep--what Lang would call, ethical
-problem. Father meant to leave Griff alone, unless he did something
-actually incriminating, and to put all our effort on the other thing.
-Let's see your paper, Al." He held out his hand for the brief note Al
-had preserved.
-
-Study it as they would, they got nothing helpful from the grass-stained
-paper with the smudged writing.
-
-"Let's think who we've seen use an indelible pencil," hinted Al.
-"Remember, the morning we found this, we decided, in a joke, that there
-were too many indelible pencils to try to trace the writer because he
-used one; but how many people close to this mystery have you seen using
-one?"
-
-"The clerk in the supply room!" gasped Curt.
-
-"Are you sure?"
-
-"Yes, Bob--because he takes a copy of every order he writes and of every
-requisition, on an old-fashioned letter press, the same way they put
-their copying ribbon letters in between a damp cloth and a soft, thin
-sheet of the big book, put it all in the press and make the copying
-ribbon print the letter into the book instead of using carbon paper!"
-
-"Then we have a clue! How does the clerk's writing compare with this?"
-
-"Let's see!"
-
-Each of the three having spoken in turn, by common consent they agreed
-to Al's impulsive suggestion. They were hardly able to wait for their
-supper; however, they put it away with speed if not with the best of
-table manners and secured their bicycles.
-
-It took them only a short time to reach the aircraft plant.
-
-The watchman accepted their explanation that they were passing and
-wanted to borrow several books from Mr. Tredway's reference library, in
-the offices.
-
-Bob, accordingly, went to the offices, while Curt and Al strolled, with
-apparent aimlessness, across the inner quadrangle.
-
-"There's a light in one window--no, in two windows--already!" Al
-mentioned. "I wonder who's here, at night again." Almost at once he
-suggested that they go and see.
-
-Curt, himself fired by the curiosity of his companion, hurried after Al.
-
-They saw Bob, who had lighted the outer office electric bulbs, choosing
-several volumes from a shelf, to carry out in truth their explanation to
-the watchman.
-
-"Now--who's here?" Bob said, joining the others at the door as he put
-out the light.
-
-"Can't be Barney--unless he came back--no, the cabin 'plane isn't here,"
-Al argued. "Anyway, Barney stayed over to transact some business, you
-said, Bob. Must be either----"
-
-"Griff, or Griff and his father--or Mr. Parsons and somebody else," Curt
-said breathlessly, excited. "There were two separate offices lighted,
-and you can see the door glass shining."
-
-"The doors are shut, though," Al spoke, disappointedly.
-
-"Yes," continued Curt, "but one of us can hide in the alcove where the
-water cooler and door to the washroom are located. If anybody comes, it
-would be easy to dodge on into the washroom and no one would ask
-questions about that."
-
-"Then you're elected!" Bob said. "I want to go with Al, because I think
-I know where to find the latest letter-book."
-
-With the reference volumes tucked under his arm he led Al down the dim
-corridor, while Curt secured a good place in the niche by the water
-cooler to watch from.
-
-As the two brothers went down the steps, at the rear, toward the supply
-room, to be sure that no one was there and likely to come up and catch
-them, Al's grip on Bob's arm tightened convulsively.
-
-Some one was coming down the steps behind them.
-
-With lips close to Al's ear, Bob whispered:
-
-"Tiptoe! Come on!"
-
-He led Al down to the lowest steps, and there, just beside the door to
-the supply room the brothers flattened themselves against the wall.
-
-They held their breath. They made themselves as small as they could. A
-quick tread came on down the steps, there was the pause of a body
-close--almost touching them. Breathing, sharp, short, quick, carried to
-their ears; but they kept mouse-still. The door opened.
-
-A light flared up as Bob dragged Al back out of range. But as they
-turned and stared down, hearts still pounding from the excitement of the
-narrow escape, both brothers gasped.
-
-In the light below, stood--a bearded stranger!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- A TRIPLE TRAIL
-
-
-Pulling Al further back out of the light, around the little dark jog
-beside the door jamb of the supply room, Bob put his lips close to his
-brother's ear.
-
-"Watch!" he whispered, hardly loud enough for Al to hear.
-
-With a little squeeze to reassure his brother, Bob let go of Al's arm
-and tiptoed back up the stairway, carefully clinging to the side wall
-and hoping that this precaution would enable him to get away without
-causing the steps to creak.
-
-He was successful. Al, noting that the man inside the room seemed to be
-doing nothing more than standing there considering the layout of the
-place, guessed that Bob wanted to consult with Curt, watching upstairs.
-Al felt important: he was in the very heart of mystery, and much
-depended on him. Therefore he watched with every faculty alert as the
-man turned his head this way and that, apparently inspecting the stock
-of wing and fuselage cloth, the boxed instruments, the cases of "dope"
-for varnishing bodies and wings, the many other visible objects held in
-reserve.
-
-Bob, slipping along the hallway at the top of the steps, noticed that
-both offices were lighted still, that both doors were closed, and as far
-as he could see, nothing had changed up above.
-
-Curt was still watching. He was practically invisible in his nook by the
-water cooler. Bob, with a small word under his breath, reassured his
-comrade who came out of hiding as soon as he knew that the footsteps he
-heard approaching were Bob's.
-
-"Where did the stranger come from?" asked Bob softly.
-
-"Stranger?" Curt's voice betrayed amazement.
-
-"The man who came down to the supply room!" Bob was also surprised.
-
-"Was he a stranger?" Curt asked. "I thought it was Mr. Parsons. He came
-out of that dark directors' room, beyond me."
-
-"Oh!" Bob clutched Curt's arm in a tight grip. "Have you used your eyes,
-Curt, in daylight? If you have, you recall that there is a fire escape
-running up the side of the building--and the landing is by that
-directors' meeting room window."
-
-"Is that so? Then, if that window is open----"
-
-The opening of one of the lighted offices startled them, ended the
-consultation. Both comrades, tense, drew close against the wall behind
-the water cooler. If anybody was thirsty!----
-
-The lighted square of that door went black. Someone had put out the dome
-light. Footsteps went carelessly along the corridor from the hiding
-youths, toward the front stairway.
-
-"I must follow--whoever it is!" whispered Bob. "Curt, watch here. Al
-will watch that other man. It's----"
-
-"A triple trail!" gasped Curt. "Go on, Bob. Be careful."
-
-Bob agreed and tiptoed along to the stairway. By the time he got there
-he had no need for special caution, the lower door was closing.
-
-Bob ran lightly down the stairs, crossed the entry below, cautiously
-peered into the yard, lighter just there by the arc over the office
-building doorway, and nodded to himself.
-
-Griff was passing around the side of the building!
-
-Cautiously Bob trailed him, allowing the partner's son to get out of
-sight beyond the turn before he left the doorway.
-
-Where was Griff bound? The main gates were across the yard and, as Bob
-knew, they were locked while the night man made his rounds of inspection
-among hangars and plant structures.
-
-While Al watched his man in the supply room, while Curt hid, watching
-the lighted office door, Bob wondered what Griff was about. The young
-man did not go anywhere near or bend his steps in the direction of the
-main entrance but turned, with Bob carefully watching as he clung close
-in the shadow of the office structure, and went on around the building
-toward the private exit used by the officials. Being the son of Mr.
-Tredway's partner, Griff had a key; but Bob could see, as he peered
-around the building, that the gate stood slightly ajar already.
-
-"Will he go on home?" Bob wondered. "Had I better go back to Al?"
-
-His thought was answered by Griff's actions. He paused at the gate,
-seeming to inspect it. He was surprised to find it ajar, Bob decided. He
-held his place close to the office shadow and watched, as Griff looked
-around, inside and outside the fence.
-
-Then, as though discovering something, Griff ran out of sight, leaving
-the gate as he had found it.
-
-Instantly Bob ran across the small open space to the gate. There, in
-sudden caution, he cuddled his body close to the fence; it had just
-crossed his mind that Griff might have gone outside in a pretended hurry
-to draw out any pursuer; he might be hiding, watching!
-
-He was not, however.
-
-The sputter and roar of a motor startled Bob.
-
-"That's queer," Bob mused, while he projected his head through the
-gateway. Almost in the same instant that he saw Griff starting up a
-motorcycle, Bob saw Griff shut off the motor and trundle the machine
-away.
-
-"His own motorcycle is broken, since Saturday's accident," Bob
-reflected. "Now he must have brought another one. He meant to ride off
-in a hurry," he deduced, "but he decided the noise would startle and
-warn people, so he's going further away before he starts up."
-
-Instantly his own action was decided upon. He streaked back across the
-yard, around the hangars, to get his own bicycle. Against a speedy motor
-it would not keep Griff in sight, but it would enable Bob to get over
-the ground faster, and, if Griff did not go home, Bob meant to pursue
-him, making careful inquiries as he pedaled. There was only the
-crossroad for him to take, and Bob could see it from the highway.
-
-In a very short time, and without having been seen by the watchman, Bob
-was out on the road. The distant sputter of the motorcycle engine and a
-speeding form passing the junction of the crossroads gave Bob all the
-information he needed. Without wasting energy in an effort to keep the
-flying cycle in sight, he pedaled after it.
-
-The sudden sharp noise evidently startled others besides Bob.
-
-Al, watching, saw the man who was evidently making some notes in the
-supply room, suddenly dash to the switch. Out went the light.
-
-Al heard the scrape and rumble of a window being unfastened and thrown
-up. The man was listening, he judged.
-
-Curt, by the water cooler, heard nothing but the faint sounds of the
-motor; at first he thought they were shots. When he saw the office light
-go out suddenly, immediately afterward, he thought someone in there had
-shot at some one else; but the door was flung open and he heard hurried
-feet pounding along the hall and almost stumbling down the front steps,
-careless of how much noise they made.
-
-Curt could not go to explain to Al. He must see who that was going out
-of the quickly darkened office so swiftly.
-
-Al needed no one to warn him. He crouched, tense and listening intently,
-outside the supply room door for a full minute. Absolute, torturing
-silence began to twitch his nerves. Nameless fears and countless
-uncertainties filled his mind. Was the man stalking him? Was he there at
-all? Had he ever been there? Was he human--or----?
-
-Al heard a queer sound; at once he identified it. The window was being
-quietly pulled down.
-
-Again he listened, watched, waited.
-
-Curt, slipping down the banisters in the good, old-fashioned, speedy
-boys' way, landed quietly at the foot of the stairs soon after the front
-doors of the office building closed.
-
-But by that time whoever had emerged was far across the quadrangle and
-it was too dark to recognize him. There came the flare of the headlights
-of an automobile.
-
-From its position on the grounds and from the style of its lamps, Curt
-guessed it was the runabout used by Mr. Parsons, Tredway's remaining
-partner. What was he doing here? Where was he going? Curt, in the office
-doorway, not daring to emerge because of the beams of light that might
-swing around the yard at any moment, heard the voice of Parsons hailing
-the watchman, questioning him. The other replied in a way to show he had
-not heard any noises, could not account for them.
-
-Curt, as the car got under way and the main gate was flung wide to
-permit it to depart, raced around the office building "ell" and across
-to his bicycle. He knew he could not pursue, but the wheel would give an
-excuse for emerging from that gate at once.
-
-"Wait!" he called to the watchman, pedaling swiftly across to him. "I
-guess he forgot I was here," pretending that Mr. Parsons sponsored his
-presence there so late at night. The watchman said nothing but held the
-gates open until Curt pedaled through and took his way after the car,
-not to keep it in sight but to see if it went to its owner's home.
-
-Al, ignorant that he was the only remaining member of the Sky Squad,
-watched tensely and listened alertly beside the supply room door. He
-heard nothing. Cautiously he protruded his head around the door jamb.
-
-The room was silent, evidently the man was hiding or--"gone!"
-
-"But how--where--could he go?" Al answered his own questions at once,
-for the window, made of tiny panes of thick glass between heavy bars,
-locked always from inside, impossible to open from outside, was not
-tightly shut.
-
-For once in his life Al paused to think before he acted.
-
-That window was not tightly shut. He had heard it opened, and--closed.
-But if the man had closed it from within the room he would have pulled
-it down tightly. He had not done so. He had left it partly open--why? To
-provide a way to come back, Al decided.
-
-Almost at the same instant it flashed into his head that if he were to
-be caught in that room, with its door unfastened, he would be accused by
-any of the plant members, the watchman or those he thought were still in
-the upstairs offices, of stealing whatever might be missing.
-
-He had a plan, at once!
-
-He tiptoed back to the steps, listening. No sound came to him. Softly he
-went into the open doorway, made sure the window was not tightly shut,
-by inspecting the lighter space beneath it, then very quietly let the
-door go shut, allowing its spring lock to snap. He could open it from
-inside if he had to escape. No one without a key could open it from the
-hallway.
-
-Then he ran close to the window, peered out, listened with an ear to the
-crack beneath the lower panes.
-
-Nothing was stirring. But from the window he could see the gate, and the
-light was sufficient to show him a man's form arriving there.
-
-Evidently the form stopped from surprise or caution, then it went
-swiftly out. Al, forgetting fear, flung the window slightly upward,
-edged out, dropped to the ground, reached up and almost closed the
-window, then fully drew it down with a little slam, and raced to the
-gate. There he paused, peering out carefully.
-
-Down the narrow lane he saw a man's form trudging rapidly.
-
-The third trail was opened!
-
-After the man, at a distance, trudged Al!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- THE "WINDSOCK"
-
-
-For Al the trail ended abruptly after a walk of a mile. The stranger,
-whose face, with its heavy beard, Al could not dare get close enough to
-identify--even if he knew it!--hailed a passing automobile, asked for a
-"lift" and was taken in. That concluded Al's chances of following
-because no other car came along. Dejectedly he returned to the aircraft
-plant to discover that some one, perhaps the watchman, had closed the
-gate. There was nothing left for him to do but to go to the main gate,
-call the attendant and get his bicycle. His friends were gone, the man
-assured him, and Al had no excuse to stay there.
-
-Dejectedly, feeling that he had been close to a clue and that it had
-slipped through his hands by his "bad break," Al rode home.
-
-Curt's trail took him, eventually, to the Parsons cottage. Seeing the
-car drawn up before the garage, Curt decided that he had no need to
-watch the car being put into the garage; evidently its driver had gone
-into his home for a moment first. Curt rode away. Had he waited his
-trail would have led further; but he did not guess that!
-
-Bob had better fortune.
-
-He saved his strength as he pedaled along, well ahead of his two less
-fortunate trailmates, and when he came to a cross street of the suburbs
-where a policeman was directing traffic Bob drew up beside the officer.
-
-"Hello, Bob!" the policeman hailed. "Out sort of late, hey?"
-
-"Yes, Mr. O'Brien. I stayed at the plant--I'm learning how they put
-airplanes together at the Tredway plant. I wanted to ask if you noticed
-a motorcycle, not long ago--maybe fifteen minutes--a friend----"
-
-"Yes," the officer, starting the cars down the street by a wave of his
-hand, did not wait for an explanation of Bob's reason for the question,
-"Griff Parsons rode by."
-
-"That's who I mean. Did he turn off, here, to go home?"
-
-Bob knew that Griff's house was several blocks over, on an up-and-down
-street that was "one way" for traffic. If Griff had turned here Bob's
-quest, he knew, was over; if he did not, Griff would be gone much
-further, because if he did not turn here, and thus enter his own home
-street in the right direction he surely would not go on and approach it
-in the wrong way, against the traffic rules.
-
-"He rode on by, just waved to me," O'Brien said, and turned to signal a
-warning to a car that was trying to slip past the stoplights.
-
-Thanking him Bob rode on. Griff must be going somewhere!
-
-The highway had no turns, except the suburb's cross streets. It was
-possible that Griff might have turned into one of them, perhaps to
-return a hired motorcycle to its garage; nevertheless, so strange had
-been the action of the youth that Bob decided to ride on, at least to
-the last police officer along the main traffic road, to see if he could
-learn whether the trail continued or not.
-
-The traffic officer, used to seeing this rider, greeted Bob and told him
-that several motorcycles had passed him. Bob, riding to the curb to
-rest, was puzzled. Had one of those been the motorcycle he had followed?
-
-A thought caused him to ride on.
-
-Griff, Bob knew, from his own inquiries, "hung out" with quite a rough
-crowd of youths; they had very little reputation in the suburb, and one
-of their haunts, near Rocky Lake, came to Bob's mind. Griff, riding his
-motorcycle, might have gone on to the inn or roadhouse or "speakeasy" or
-whatever it was, near the picnic grounds at Rocky Lake.
-
-Tired, but determined, Bob went on.
-
-Some time later he approached the gayly lighted roadhouse.
-
-He smiled to himself as he observed the name of the place.
-
-"The Windsock!" it was called.
-
-On roadside signs, down the road in both directions, were admonitions to
-automobilists to "set down at The Windsock," "Don't fly past The
-Windsock," and such tempting notices.
-
-A windsock, Bob knew, was the cornucopia of doped cloth, closed at one
-end and held open at the other by a metal ring, which was fastened in a
-prominent, high position at every flying field and airport, to be filled
-by the draft of a breeze and thus, by its position, to indicate to
-flying craft which direction to "head in" or to "take off." Since an
-airplane is much easier to get off the ground, and back to earth, headed
-into the wind, the "windsock" was a most important adjunct to every
-field; and Bob knew that the name, and the symbol, a real windsock on
-top of the inn, had been chosen by its owner because he had been an
-ex-pilot who put his money into the hotel venture and tried to attract
-picnickers, automobile parties and other patrons of a less savory nature
-by the novel idea of having his dining alcoves built to resemble the
-cozy little cabins of airplanes and had his meals served by girls clad
-in suits and helmets resembling those worn by pilots. Also, he had let
-it be rumored around town that he chose the flying symbol and the
-aviation idea because, in his inn, "the sky is the limit!"
-
-Bob, approaching, was surprised to see the very motorcycle--he was sure
-of that!--he had followed, leaned against a post in the parking yard,
-and he felt certain that his long ride had not been wasted.
-
-Where was Griff? Bob wondered. He hoped there would be some way for him
-to discover the whereabouts of the youth.
-
-Not wishing to walk into the place for fear he might disclose his
-presence to Griff, Bob skirted the building, unobserved.
-
-From an open window at the side came voices in angry altercation.
-
-Bob did not need to get within sight of the occupants: he recognized
-Griff's loud, sharp, furious tones. What was he saying?
-
-"----all I could scrape together--I _did_ put it in that package, I keep
-telling you----"
-
-"Bologna! Rats! It was wads of paper!"
-
-"It was money! I want my receipt! If--if you don't!----"
-
-"If _you_ don't, you better say. If you don't come through--by this time
-tomorrow night--I'll ask your old man for it!"
-
-There was silence.
-
-Bob did not dare creep any closer. They might look out of the window.
-Some payment had been made, by Griff's claim. By the denial of the other
-man it had not been made. By his threat it must be made.
-
-Bob hesitated--and while he stood, undecided, the roar of a car, coming
-at full speed, came to his ears.
-
-He glanced down the road. Hardly had he located the direction when he
-recognized the car. It contained--Mr. Parsons!
-
-A man's head leaned out of the open window. To Bob, as he crouched back
-into some ornamental shrubbery, the face was unfamiliar; but he saw it
-was brutish, fierce, angry--and he impressed it on his memory.
-
-"Here's your pop, now," the man called--and then he gave an exclamation
-that Bob could not comprehend. Presently the light went out--and, almost
-at the same time, while Parsons alighted in the parking place, Bob, near
-the rear corner of the building, saw a form emerge from the kitchens and
-race away down the yard toward the grove beyond.
-
-"Griff!" muttered Bob to himself. "Griff--running tight as he can
-go--running away from his father--to hide."
-
-Watching, more interested in the new arrival than in the son, Bob
-remained in concealment. But his mind was puzzled.
-
-"Why?" he wondered. "Why--and what next?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- "THE CASE IS 'SEWED UP'"
-
-
-Sitting on the Wright porch, early the next morning, Curt and Al
-listened eagerly to Bob's recital of the past night's events.
-
-"After Griff ran off--what, then?" Al demanded.
-
-"A taxi came racing along and stopped at The Windsock."
-
-"What did you do?"
-
-"What could I do, except keep hidden and watch?" Curt's question brought
-the counter-question from Bob. "The taxi door opened--and who do you
-suppose jumped out?"
-
-"Who?" Curt and Al spoke at once.
-
-"The very man Al and I saw in the supply room."
-
-"I saw him hail the taxi," Al exclaimed. "Everything is beginning to fit
-together."
-
-"Yes, it is," Bob agreed, "and, what's more, it fits tightly. As soon as
-the stranger paid his fare he recognized Mr. Parsons who was halted on
-the roadhouse veranda, watching. They began to talk, and stood there for
-a minute."
-
-"They knew each other!" Curt exclaimed. "They must be working together
-to loot the supply room. That's probably how the mystery man got in: he
-had a key from Mr. Parsons."
-
-"It looks like that," admitted Bob.
-
-"What then?" Al wanted the story. "Did they find Griff?"
-
-"No--but the stranger saw his motorcycle. He got awfully excited about
-it and he went with Mr. Parsons to look at it. They went close to where
-I was hiding back of the shrubs, but they didn't say anything until they
-were close to the motorcycle. They were too far away for me to hear,
-then."
-
-"I'd have crept closer," declared Al.
-
-"Oh--yes! You would!" Bob was scornful. "Right out across an open yard!"
-
-Al subsided, crestfallen.
-
-"What then?" Curt asked quickly, to avoid any quarrel.
-
-"They talked for about ten minutes--then the man made some notes of
-things Mr. Parsons said--I wish I could have heard! Then he hopped onto
-his motorcycle and rode off, and Mr. Parsons stood thinking for awhile
-and then----"
-
-"Yes? Don't keep us waiting. What?"
-
-"Curt--he turned the car and went back toward town!"
-
-"Didn't look for Griff?" Al had recovered his usual interest.
-
-"No! He drove away. Griff must have been watching, too. He came out, and
-shook his fist toward the roadhouse and then walked off, and--that's
-all."
-
-They discussed the incidents of the past night, coupling them with the
-strange actions and uneasiness of Mr. Parsons and of Griff on former
-occasions, riding, as they talked, toward the plant.
-
-Barney's cabin airplane was again on the field, and as soon as they
-arrived and he saw them, from an office window, Barney summoned them.
-
-"Well," he greeted them, closing the door, "how goes the study of
-airplane building?"
-
-"Oh, we know how they lay down the framework for the fuselage and how
-careful they are to see that every longeron and brace and strut and
-guywire and turnbuckle fits exactly in place and is well fastened," Al
-exclaimed. "And we've helped put on the wings and the tail assembly, and
-Bob is going to help install an engine, today, and we will watch."
-
-Bob laughed and Curt joined him. They saw the amused light in Barney's
-eyes.
-
-"Well--you asked!" Al defended his enthusiasm.
-
-"It was just a 'polite opening'," Bob grinned. "Barney wants to know
-about--other things we've learned."
-
-Interrupting one another, they gave him the details of their
-experiences.
-
-"Hm-m-m! Well!" Barney's face became very serious. "So that's it!"
-
-"What?"
-
-Barney smiled at Al.
-
-"The partner and his son are working with an outsider. I thought so. But
-what about the brown 'plane? Any news of that?"
-
-"We left it out entirely," Bob said.
-
-"We disobeyed Uncle," Curt admitted. "Bob said Uncle wanted us to drop
-things here and concentrate on trying to find the brown 'plane, but----"
-
-"We can't find that 'crate' I feel sure." Bob was earnest.
-
-"Not only that, but if a crime is being committed under your nose you
-won't go off looking for something else to do while it is going on, will
-you?" Al wanted their course confirmed.
-
-"You did just right," Barney commended them. "You lads stick to this end
-of it. I've suspected that Parsons and his son were 'up to' something,
-and I don't agree with your father, Bob, about the brown crate at all! I
-think you fellows deserve a 'raise' and if you can only catch one or all
-of the crowd doing something--catch them 'red-handed' in a way of
-speaking, I'll hand out a little private reward. I feel that it's due
-to--to the memory of Mr. Tredway. He was mighty good to me and--and I
-want to--get everything cleared up here, because I think the ones who
-have been doing wrong right here at the plant got found out by him and
-they either hired that airplane from some distant place and flew out and
-rode down Tredway or else they paid some unscrupulous pilot----"
-
-He paused as he saw Al squirming in his chair with eagerness.
-
-"What is it, Al?"
-
-"Unscrupulous pilot!" reiterated Al. "Why--the man at The Windsock is
-a--an ex-pilot."
-
-"Glory be! That's so!" Barney nodded.
-
-"Well, from what I saw of him, his face shows that he's unscrupulous,"
-added Bob.
-
-"It looks to me, from here," Barney said, slowly, "it looks to me as
-though we've got the case 'sewed up.' All you need to do is to find out,
-some way, about that ex-pilot--what he does with his time, if he owns a
-crate yet, and so on."
-
-"You think?----"
-
-Barney turned to Curt.
-
-"I think," he nodded, "that ex-pilot might know a lot about a brown
-'plane, and about what it did to force another one down----"
-
-"Then we have got the case 'sewed up'," Al declared. "We came here last
-night to see if we could compare a little scrap of writing we found
-where the 'plane had been, with the books of letters and things to see
-if the writing agreed."
-
-"And what did you find?"
-
-"We had no time to find anything," Curt admitted. "The other things came
-up----"
-
-"Let's see that note? Where is it?"
-
-Al produced the much-folded, dirty scrap and handed it to Barney.
-
-"No!" he shook his head after a careful study. "Don't recognize it!"
-
-"The supply clerk?" hinted Bob.
-
-"Not at all like his writing."
-
-"Well," said Curt, "it's done with an indelible pencil. Now that we know
-the ex-pilot is under suspicion, we can find out if he has an indelible
-pencil that he carries around--or, he might destroy it, considering what
-has happened since the note was written."
-
-"But who's the note written to?" asked Bob. "It says 'everything O.K.'"
-
-"To whoever hired him. To Parsons, maybe--or to Griff----"
-
-"That's so!" Bob became very thoughtful.
-
-"We ought to get a sample of the ex-pilot's handwriting," suggested Al,
-eagerly. "Shall I? I can try! They don't know me out at The Windsock.
-Couldn't I take my autograph album--and----"
-
-"I'll make inquiries about the brown 'plane, from around The Windsock,"
-added Curt.
-
-"Then I can keep tabs at this end," argued Bob.
-
-"Fine!" agreed Barney. "Fine! Yes, sir! Boys--we've got the case 'sewed
-up' or circumstantial evidence never pointed true."
-
-"Did you see Dad, again?" asked Bob as they rose.
-
-"Yes, but he's awfully busy on that other case. He must trust you
-fellows pretty well."
-
-"Well," Al swelled with pride, "maybe we've disobeyed orders, but if
-this comes out as good as we think it will, we'll have no trouble making
-Father see that he was wrong and we were right to disobey."
-
-"Right you are!" agreed Barney.
-
-Griff seemed to be getting ready to work himself into danger for their
-special benefit, it seemed to Bob in the engine assembling rooms. The
-youth was angry, upset, uneasy, fidgety; he hurried out when he heard
-his father's voice approaching down the hall and the older man betrayed
-as much uneasiness and concern as did his son.
-
-But that night, when they thought they had the last stitches taken to
-"sew up" the case, as Barney said, Fate ripped out the whole thing--and
-they were left without a thread of a clue!--until the unexpected thing
-happened that gave Bob his "hunch!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- A NEW MYSTERY
-
-
-Cheerfully Al greeted the rigger for whom he worked.
-
-"Barney--Mr. Horton--" he corrected his own familiar allusion to the
-manager of the aircraft plant, "--says please hurry the work on this
-sport biplane. The man who's buying it is in a big hurry. He wants to
-get into some race with it."
-
-"Oh, sure!" the rigger grumbled a little. "They're all in a hurry. But I
-don't rush my part of it for anybody. There's been enough complaint
-about this plant, already, without me doing anything to cut down the
-performance of a crate by skimping my share of the high standards Mr.
-Tredway always kept up."
-
-"I know," agreed Al, "but he meant to do all you can, I guess."
-
-"Yes," the rigger was in a complaining mood, "that's all very well. But
-did he say why they're giving us cheaper stuff to work with, since the
-real boss--went West, maybe!--did they tell you why that is, that we're
-getting cheaper stuff!"
-
-"No," Al admitted, "but I do know that Mr. Parsons and Bar--and Mr.
-Horton were talking about some complaint from the wing assembling room,
-about poor fabric. They almost quarreled. Barney told Mr. Parsons it had
-to stop, he was going to uphold Mr. Tredway's ideas, and Mr. Parsons
-said so was he."
-
-"Well, somebody's ordering cheap stuff. Look here!"
-
-He picked up a turnbuckle, a metal object in which the threads of each
-wire end were so threaded in that when the ends of wires were screwed
-in, the turning of the central, revolving part either drew the two
-sections of wire close, making it taut, or allowed them to recede a
-little from one another, for more looseness--by which the flying and
-landing wires, and other parts of the guying rig were adjusted.
-
-The turnbuckle looked all right to Al and he said so.
-
-"Shows how much you know," scoffed the rigger, Sandy. "Look here--heft
-this--and then this one!"
-
-He selected another turnbuckle, handed both to Al, and the youth
-"weighted them" in his two hands.
-
-"This one does feel heavier."
-
-"Of course it does! It's a cheap casting, not the aluminum alloy the
-other one is machined from. Why, them threads on the new one will wear
-and go bad in no time!"
-
-Al, watching, observed that as the rigger manipulated a pocket knife in
-the threaded end of the part, bright metal and a worn look were almost
-immediately evident.
-
-"Yes," Sandy Jim agreed with his discovery, "and I've been talking
-around and others is dissatisfied--in the dope room, in the engine room.
-Everywheres!"
-
-"But when Mr. Parsons talked with the manager," Al explained, "they had
-the supply clerk in and went over the orders and way-bills and delivery
-check-up, and everything was all right. The orders went to the same
-firms, as always----"
-
-"We're getting shoddy stuff, all the same!" grunted Jim. "What good is
-it to rush out a 'job' and have it accepted on the reputation of Mr.
-Tredway, and then have complaints in a few days?"
-
-"I don't know," said Al, and changed the subject. "Mr. Horton says
-you'll have to excuse me, this morning. He's sending me out on an
-errand."
-
-"Oh, sure!" Jim snapped. "Wants this job rushed, and takes away my
-helper! Whyn't he use his office boy?"
-
-Al could not explain that it was Barney's way of releasing him so he
-could go to The Windsock for that comparison of the ex-pilot's autograph
-with the clue note Al held.
-
-"I guess you'll have to ask him," Al grinned, and went over to get his
-bicycle. Sandy Jim followed him, dragging a small parcel out of his hip
-pocket.
-
-"As long as you're riding," he suggested, "go past the house and slip
-this in to Jimmy-junior. It's some odds and ends of broken stuff for him
-to use on his new model air-liner."
-
-"Glad to," Al took the parcel.
-
-"Get back quick as you can," urged Sandy. "I need a good helper."
-
-Al quickly sent his bicycle along the highway. Stopping at Sandy's home
-he took as little time as he could to drop the parcel, and to explain to
-Jimmy-junior that the reason he had not yet been taken into the Sky
-Squad was that they had been too busy, evenings, to hold any meetings.
-
-Then he made his way to the roadhouse near Rocky Lake Park, and leaned
-his wheel against the veranda supports.
-
-"Is Mister Jones busy?" he asked a sleepy waiter who was listlessly
-dusting off some chairs in one of the small compartments made to look
-like the cabin of an air-liner. Al had found it easy to learn the
-ex-pilot's name.
-
-"In the office," the man jerked a thumb toward a side room. Al, knocking
-at the door and hearing a gruff voice bid him enter, went into the same
-room Bob had described as the scene of the quarrel between the roadhouse
-man and Griff.
-
-The man, looking up from some work at a small desk, had a coarse,
-scowling face. No wonder he was "ex" pilot, Al reflected, with a face as
-brutish and a manner as unfriendly and curt as "Mr. Jones" showed.
-
-"What's wanted?"
-
-"Why--er--" Al stammered, not so much ill at ease as trying to pretend
-he felt shy in the presence of a great man, "I'm one of the fellows who
-have a sort of club, to study airplanes, and all that--and I--we--heard
-about you being a clever pilot, and I thought I'd ride out and ask if
-you'd be generous enough to write a little something about aviation in
-our club autograph album." He produced the small book he had brought in
-his coat pocket.
-
-"Hm-m!" The man scowled. "Le'me see that book!"
-
-He took the small volume and Al's heart sank. Instead of writing
-sensibly and generously on blank page invitingly offered, he flipped the
-pages, and Al knew that the affair was a failure. There was nothing
-about aviation in the few autographed verses and sayings already
-collected.
-
-"That's no aviation album!" The man thrust it away angrily and jumped
-up. "What's your scheme, young fellow?"
-
-"Scheme?" Al tried to look innocent. "I told you--we want to get you to
-start the real autographs from aviators!"
-
-The subterfuge did not satisfy the man. He frowned, stared at Al as
-though trying to get through his guard, to discover any hidden motive.
-Al, inexperienced, fidgeted, unable to conceal his uneasiness.
-
-However, he received a surprise.
-
-"Sure!" The man snatched up the book. "Come to think of it, why not?
-Fact is, kid, I'll start you off with _two_ autographs. Wait!"
-
-He hurried out of the office. Al did not dare "peek" to see where he
-went or what he did. For all Al knew, the man might be just beyond the
-side door, watching. He sat very still, trying to be as self-possessed
-as he could.
-
-Presently the man returned, with the book held open.
-
-"Here y'are!" he said, affably. Al, glancing at the book, saw that two
-opposite pages bore fresh scrawls. The man waved a hand. "Welcome. Run
-along, now. We're busy, here--getting set to open up a new 'airport' out
-on the side, where folks can dance to a fine orchestra in a hangar. Tell
-any of your friends you like--especially your parents. We got the
-prettiest imitation of an airplane for the orchestra to set in----"
-
-Al, hardly able to mumble his thanks, dashed out to his bicycle. He
-could scarcely hold in his impatience. One of those sets of rough
-characters was written with a pencil, the other with an indelible
-pencil!
-
-One had a familiar character to its shaping of letters!
-
-A little way down the road, near the lake, where the airplane had
-cracked up, Al drew his machine in under a tree, almost tore the book
-out of his pocket and opened it hastily.
-
-On one page was a maxim, exactly what a pilot might write:
-
-"Knowing when to stay on the ground makes a better pilot than knowing
-how to get off it!" It was signed with initials--"T. J." Al did not
-recognize the writing although, he understood that the saying meant that
-a pilot wise enough to be cautious was better than one who thought that
-getting into the air was all there was to flying.
-
-The second page revealed one word, the pilot's good-luck wish, and two
-initials also:
-
-"Tailwinds! J. T." it told him.
-
-"T. J. and J. T."
-
-Hurriedly Al drew out the folded, ragged, dirty little note--his clue.
-
-It exactly corresponded in every character with the short autograph!
-
-But!----
-
-Who had written the autograph? Had Mr. Jones? If his name was Jones he
-would have signed the initials on the first autograph--"T. J." Or--would
-he have signed that way? Might he not have signed the reverse? Had he
-written either page? Who else had helped?
-
-More mystery! And no way to solve it!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- TANGLED THREADS
-
-
-On a former occasion Bob had related news to an audience composed of Al
-and Curt.
-
-As the trio rode homeward, Curt to share supper with the brothers, Al
-was the spokesman.
-
-"Did you ever see so many people to suspect and so many clues that don't
-lead anywhere?" asked Curt when Al had told his story and had shown his
-evidence.
-
-"The Sky Squad has a mystery, and there's no mistake about it," declared
-Al. "We got what we wanted, but now--what can we do with it?"
-
-"You mean the mystery?"
-
-"No, Bob. I mean the autograph."
-
-"Well, it proves one thing, anyway," Bob asserted. "The single word
-matches our 'Everything O.K.' note. That proves that the man who wrote
-the note is at that roadhouse, The Windsock."
-
-"It does," Curt agreed. "But--is it the man named Jones? Did he write
-it?"
-
-"Did he write either one?" Bob was puzzled as he spoke.
-
-"He left the room, you said." Curt turned to Al, who nodded.
-
-"Maybe he didn't write anything!"
-
-"What does all that matter?" Bob said. "The point is that we have proof
-that the man who used the brown 'plane is staying at The Windsock. Now
-our job is to discover who he is."
-
-"Let's see those autographs again." Curt drew his wheel to the roadside
-and took the book from Al. "'T. J.' is written with a plain leadpencil,"
-he remarked. "The 'J. T.' one is the one written in indelible pencil.
-'J. T.'" he repeated thoughtfully. "Do you suppose Jones transposed his
-initials and then got a waiter or a clerk to write the other and sign
-what Al would take for his initials?"
-
-"It's too tangled up to suppose about," argued Bob. "Two things we do
-know from it."
-
-"One is," Al remarked, as they resumed their ride, "one is that we know
-the brown airplane man is at The Windsock. What's the other?"
-
-"Well, whether it's Jones or not--Jones has something to hide, this
-proves. Otherwise he'd have scribbled a word or two for Al, and thought
-no more about it."
-
-"That's so."
-
-"It simplifies things, doesn't it?" Al, speaking after Curt's agreement,
-was not so sure as his words indicated.
-
-"It makes them more complicated," Bob retorted. "Let's see what we know
-and where we stand."
-
-As they rode slowly, he tabulated their clues and theories and
-discoveries, with many interruptions from his companions.
-
-"First of all," he began, "we saw a mysterious brown airplane hidden in
-the woods. Then, when we went there, it was gone--and this note was
-flung aside. The crate took off in a hurry because we saw heavy tracks,
-and made in a hurry, by the way they looked. Then there was a crack-up
-at Rocky Lake and we found out Mr. Tredway was in the Silver Flash that
-crashed."
-
-"And we saw a man come to try to help, swimming across the lake," Curt
-broke in.
-
-"And then we met Barney and he and Father called us in to help solve the
-Mystery Crash," added Al.
-
-"We learned there was more mystery than just the fall of the crate," Bob
-went on. "That was bad enough; but there was more! Parts were being
-stolen from the aircraft plant, and 'planes had been tampered
-with--after tests showed them to be perfect!--and----"
-
-"When we went there to work in the plant," Curt was eager to add his
-contribution to the sum of their recollections. "We saw Mr. Parsons
-acting suspiciously, and Griff, too."
-
-"And we have suspected Langley was in bad company with Griff, and Lang
-got mad at us about Griff--but we haven't found any reason to suspect
-Lang, since," Al declared. "But now we've got more people to
-suspect--the stranger who came to the plant and this ex-pilot."
-
-"But all this hasn't brought us any closer to knowing anything
-definite," Bob objected. "I begin to wonder if Father was right, after
-all, when he told us to 'drop those unimportant things and locate that
-brown airplane.'"
-
-"But we can't!" defended Al. "There's no way to start hunting. I'm for
-keeping on disobeying until something happens to help us."
-
-"And I'm for getting in to supper," Curt changed the subject as they
-dismounted at the cottage. "Let's give what brains we have a good rest
-while we eat."
-
-"Well, one thing more and we will." Bob paused, thoughtful and serious.
-"Al said we had no cause to suspect Lang. Well--today, I was wondering
-why Griff was so nervous and fidgety and furtive, and Lang came in and
-took me out, to give me a lesson in handling the controls, he hinted. He
-really did, but before he took me up while he tested the new sport
-speedster, he said, 'I see you're bothering Griff again,' and he gave me
-'down the banks' about it."
-
-"What's suspicious about that?" Curt asked.
-
-"Not that, so much. But--he told me to go on home, that it was closing
-time, and I put on my cap and punched the time-clock, and then I
-recalled that I had left the baseball we were playing 'catch' with at
-noon, in my bench drawer. I went back, and there was Griff, all excited,
-and Lang, with his head close to Griff's, acting as upset and as uneasy
-as Griff when I came in and surprised them. Lang snapped at
-me--I--don't--like it----"
-
-"Well," Curt was quiet, a little hesitant, but firm. "If Lang is mixed
-up in something wrong--we ought to--at least we ought to try to save
-him!"
-
-"That's good," agreed Bob, quickly. "I thought you were going to say 'we
-ought to catch him with the rest.'"
-
-"No, indeed, I think more of Lang than that."
-
-"But how could we save him?" asked Al.
-
-To that they had no answer as they went in to eat.
-
-As they sat at the table Al mentioned the morning's chat with
-Jimmy-junior, and suggested that they really ought to go and spend an
-evening with him as he had urged them to do; if the others liked him,
-they could communicate by nods and take him into the Sky Squad, not as a
-full member, but just to please him and have a fourth member to call on
-if an emergency arose where he would be needed. Al vouched for his
-innocence and good nature, eagerness to please and willingness to work
-without asking for explanations of why he did a certain thing.
-
-"He'd be a good one to send to watch anybody--Griff, or the ex-pilot,"
-Al spoke as the trio rode toward Jimmy-junior's home.
-
-"We'll see----"
-
-Bob did not finish. He applied his coaster brake, made a quick signal
-for silence, swerved into a garage driveway, followed by his companions,
-and dismounted, dropping his bicycle on the lawn.
-
-"What happened?" asked Al, thrilling to some possible mystery.
-
-"Lang turned the corner!"
-
-"You didn't want him to see us?"
-
-"Certainly not!" Bob answered Al.
-
-"Wonder where he's going." Curt slipped along the side of the house by
-which they had stopped. "He's in a terrible hurry," he reported, coming
-back. "In a second he'll be passing this house. Get back--behind the
-house. I don't think he'll notice the bikes on the grass in the dusk."
-
-They hid from the view of anyone on the sidewalk. Peering cautiously out
-in turn they saw Langley hurrying by.
-
-"Now--where's he going?"
-
-"And what shall we do about it?"
-
-"See where he goes," Curt answered the other two.
-
-Lang turned the next corner.
-
-"I'll bet he's going to Griff's house!"
-
-Al was correct in his guess. As they trundled their bicycles, keeping as
-far behind Lang as they thought necessary, they saw him turn in at
-Griff's gate. Five minutes later, from carefully chosen points of
-concealment they saw Lang come out, take Griff's repaired motorcycle and
-ride off in haste.
-
-Consulting one another with dismayed eyes, the chums, by common consent,
-mounted and pedaled for dear life along the street, around the corner,
-back to the main highway.
-
-They seemed to sense where Langley was going.
-
-They did not, however, divine what he planned to do!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
- A PACKAGE OF MONEY
-
-
-Before they reached the aircraft plant toward which they pedaled with
-all their power, Bob, Curt and Al saw a light flare up.
-
-"That's the flying field ready for a hop," panted Al. "Hurry!"
-
-"Do you think it could be Lang?" Curt asked.
-
-"Who else?" Bob retorted, pedaling faster.
-
-"There's nobody at the gate," Curt called. They were near enough to see
-the open gateway.
-
-"The watchman's helping with chocks and spinning the prop."
-
-Bob, increasing his pedal revolutions, forging ahead, spoke over his
-shoulder.
-
-"Wait!" called Curt. "What are you going to do?"
-
-"Find out----"
-
-"No! Wait!"
-
-Bob slowed up his pedals, permitting the bicycle to coast along as the
-modern, free-wheeling automobile runs when the foot is removed from the
-accelerator pedal. Curt caught up to him. In a moment, as they
-approached the gate, Al came up also.
-
-"Don't let him see you at all," warned Curt. "Better wait and ask the
-watchman after he's gone. You'll find out more, that way."
-
-It was good advice, and Bob agreed to act on it.
-
-They hid the bicycles, in case it turned out that Lang had not left the
-ground. Careful not to disclose themselves, they watched at the gate as
-the engine of the sport model owned by Griff was warmed up. In the flood
-of light on the runway they recognized Lang as the pilot, and watched
-him adjust flying helmet and leather jacket, get into the craft, test
-the instruments, checking carefully, and then get his wind direction
-from the windsock, which told that the light Summer breeze was from the
-South. The watchman swung the tail around, set the chocks again for a
-final test. Lang "gave her the gun," to see if everything was hitting
-perfectly, signaled for the chocks to be removed, and since his craft
-was correctly headed into the wind the airplane taxied, gaining speed,
-and rose swiftly into the dark.
-
-Hardly waiting for the flood to be extinguished, the trio of amateur
-detectives hailed the watchman.
-
-"Too late to see Lang take off," greeted Bob. "He didn't say why he
-hopped at night did he?"
-
-"Yeah, he did! He's going off to see his uncle about something."
-
-"That's funny," Al argued, under his breath, to Curt.
-
-"Certainly is," Curt agreed.
-
-"Thanks," Bob spoke to the watchman. "As long as we're here," he turned
-to his chums. "Let's bring in our bikes and get some more of those books
-on metal alloys Barney told us about."
-
-"The boss is here, himself," the watchman explained. "Go ahead."
-
-Barney was working late!
-
-"His office is lighted," Al commented. "Let's stop in and tell him about
-the note and the autograph."
-
-"And about Lang."
-
-"He must know Lang hopped off," Curt told Bob.
-
-"Yes--the crate made enough noise--unless he's awfully busy."
-
-Barney was busy enough, but he had heard the take-off, he admitted.
-
-"I'm trying to check up on the firm's books." Barney waved a hand toward
-the pile of heavy volumes, ledgers, daybooks, indexes and others,
-scattered on his desk. "I can't find out what way they're doing it, but
-something's being 'worked' about the materials."
-
-"So Sandy told me this morning," Al stated.
-
-"Well, I can't find it," he pushed three of the smaller books into a
-large lower desk drawer, and turned, mysteriously smiling. "How do you
-like this idea?" he asked. "I'll put a few books aside, and then, when
-the staff comes in, tomorrow, I'll see how the bookkeeper and Parsons
-take it. If there's anything 'flim-flammy' about them, they will show it
-when they miss the books."
-
-"That's dandy!" agreed Al.
-
-"What do you figure on doing now?" Barney asked.
-
-"Why--nothing special," said Bob. "We thought if Lang was flying over to
-see Father, that would take him about three hours--or four, and he
-wouldn't get back here before morning, so there's no use waiting for him
-to come back here. But--we haven't anything special to do, except go to
-call on Sandy's son, Jimmy-junior."
-
-"Why not 'stick around' here?" suggested Barney. "For awhile, at least.
-I don't want to be mixed up in anything, but if anybody should come
-slinking around, I'd like to know it--as long as you have nothing much
-on hand?"
-
-"Let's!" urged Al.
-
-"Suits me," Curt agreed. Bob was willing.
-
-"Why not put out all the lights, and just hang around in the dark for an
-hour?" suggested Barney.
-
-They agreed readily enough, and felt quite like conspirators or real
-sleuths on a big case as they occupied easy chairs in the big
-"directors' room" and talked in low tones.
-
-Their vigil was soon rewarded.
-
-Footsteps, sounding without effort at concealment, in the corridor,
-caused all three comrades to become tense and alert.
-
-Bob felt a hand clutch his arm, and almost called out in his nervous
-reaction until he realized that Curt was whispering:
-
-"Hide!"
-
-Al, already at his other side, was anxious.
-
-"How? Where?" he said quickly but softly.
-
-"Behind the chairs."
-
-However, hardly had they gotten into concealment when they realized that
-there was no need to hide; the steps went briskly past the door and on,
-down the hallway.
-
-"Now what?" asked Al as a door opened and slammed.
-
-At the door to the hall Curt turned, waiting until the other two joined
-him, he spoke quietly.
-
-"You wait here," he urged. "I'm lightest--and quickest, I think. Let me
-go on down and 'snoop' a little. He slammed the door so hard it jumped
-open a little--it's Barney's office!"
-
-"Barney? He--do you suppose?--" Al was puzzled. "He told us to wait,
-though----"
-
-"It's never Barney. I'll soon see----"
-
-Curt was gone, tiptoeing, clinging close to the inner wall, where, he
-felt sure, the boards were so sturdy and well secured that they would be
-unlikely to creak.
-
-In suspense his companions waited.
-
-Soon, in the dim hall, they saw Curt returning.
-
-"It's--it's--Mr. Parsons!"
-
-"What's he doing?" Al was eager.
-
-"Hunting for something."
-
-"Those books, I'll give you odds on it!" Bob spoke softly.
-
-They waited, uncertain what to do--in fact, there was nothing they could
-do but wait.
-
-They had only a moment to decide. Down the hall, from the stairway, came
-other steps; the chums drew back inside the doorway. They let Curt peer
-out.
-
-"It's Griff, this time!" he informed the others. "He's coming to meet
-his--no he isn't! Get back! Hide!"
-
-Hesitating steps paused but before there was any further movement Curt,
-Al and Bob were well screened from any but a careful search in full
-light.
-
-They were glad, this time, they had gotten under cover. Griff did not go
-to meet his father!
-
-Instead he came into the directors' room, at least as far as inside its
-door, where, a faint blotch against a very dull oblong of weak light,
-Bob saw him standing, watchful.
-
-"Shucks!" thought Al, "we can't find out about Mr. Parsons on account
-of----"
-
-They did not hear anything; but evidently the youth watching at the door
-did, for he came further into the room. Would he decide to hide? Might
-he choose the spot already occupied by one of the youths?
-
-Their suspense was relieved! He waited inside the doorway, and it was a
-wait of a long, dragging three or four minutes that seemed like an age
-to the crouching trio; but finally he walked out, his step confident and
-loud, showing that need for concealment was over.
-
-Quickly the three reached the door. Already, as they peered out, a light
-was glowing, but not electric ceiling domes--it was a pocket flash held
-close to something in Mr. Parsons' own office.
-
-Like shadows the three, arms touching, went down the hall. They could
-not contain their suspense. At an open door, partly drawn shut but not
-locked, they stopped. Looking through the crack, hardly daring to
-breathe or move, they saw Griff fit a key to his father's desk, open it,
-take something from a small drawer--and walk confidently, if slowly,
-to--the safe in the corner!
-
-Before it his light was held low, close. He was manipulating the knobs
-of the combination. As the partner's son he had access to it, the chums
-realized. They forgot some of their caution but not all; they peered
-closely in through the crack of the door--and saw----
-
-"Phew!" breathed Al, "he's got--a package--of--money!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
- CAUGHT AND CLEARED!
-
-
-Spellbound the three watching youths saw Griff count the bills in that
-packet he had taken from the aircraft plant safe.
-
-They heard the ruffle of paper as he ran through the ends of the crisp,
-new bills.
-
-Then he stepped out of their line of vision.
-
-With unexpected promptness, startling his companions, Al flung the door
-inward so that it banged against the wall. Instantly he leaped into the
-room. His chums followed. Startled, dropping his packet, Griff swung
-around to stare in amazement and terror.
-
-"Drop those bills!" Al cried needlessly, "we've caught you red-handed!"
-
-All three of the Sky Squad were in the room.
-
-Al dashed across to the window, to block any possibility of Griff trying
-to drop the ten or fifteen feet to the ground. Bob snatched up the
-money. Curt blocked the door.
-
-After his first look of stunned horror, Griff sank into the swivel chair
-and buried his face in his hands. His shoulders shook with a sudden
-revulsion of feeling that unmanned him, made him sob like a creature in
-pain.
-
-For a moment no one moved. The comrades were rather dismayed and
-nonplussed by Griff's pathetic attitude.
-
-They had caught him, yes! Red-handed, as Al had said, they had caught
-him, in the act of something very dreadful.
-
-Nevertheless, his surprising way of giving in, sitting there in a bent
-posture, with his body racked by his sobs, made him a rather pitiful
-figure.
-
-"Stop that!" Bob said, finally, and rather gruffly. "You've done wrong.
-You've been caught. Take it like a man!"
-
-"Yes," Griff replied in a shaking voice. "Yes--I'm caught. I know I'm a
-baby--but--but----"
-
-He fought back his weakness and gulped.
-
-"But--what?" demanded Curt. "I suppose you'll say you were forced to do
-this by somebody else. They always do, in books!"
-
-"No," Griff answered. "No. I--it's all my doing. But----"
-
-"Why do you keep saying 'but'?" asked Al.
-
-"Oh!" Griff had hard work not to break down again. In spite of the way
-they had found him, in spite of what he had been planning to do, there
-was something that touched the youthful hearts of the trio, in Griff's
-sorrowful eyes and drawn face.
-
-"Oh!" he repeated, "if only somebody could help me instead of hounding
-me and----"
-
-"We're not 'hounding' you," Bob defended their action. "You'd have done
-the same."
-
-"But you've been watching me and following me and suspecting me," Griff
-declared sadly. "I know I deserve it--but----"
-
-"Oh! Stop saying but!" Curt was annoyed by what he took to be an attempt
-to win sympathy. "We'd have helped you, instead of 'hounding' you if
-you'd been honest, instead of trying to be cunning and in with the wrong
-sort of people."
-
-"Oh, yes, you would!" retorted Griff, bitterly. "That's easy to say."
-
-"Well, it's true," declared Bob stoutly.
-
-"Nobody helps me," responded Griff. "Everybody is after me for one
-reason or another."
-
-"That's because you're so furtive and fidgety that you ask for it--and
-doing things--like this--" Bob shook the bills.
-
-Griff sat in silence for a moment. Bob walked over to the open safe, saw
-where the package belonged, and pushed it into place, then slammed the
-safe door, turned the knob of the combination to lock it and swung back
-to Griff.
-
-"There!" he exclaimed. "That shows we're helping you."
-
-"I--I--what do you mean?" Griff stared.
-
-"I mean this!" Bob came and stood in front of him. "I mean that the
-money is back in the safe. If you can show any reason besides temptation
-or somebody forcing you to do--this!--we'll all promise to say nothing
-more about the things we saw you do."
-
-Griff shook his head.
-
-"That wouldn't do any good," he said despondently. "I've got to have
-that money. You think it's--" he could not bring out the word, but he
-saw that the trio recognized what he meant. "It isn't--because Lang is
-flying, right now, to his uncle, to get him to come back and give me
-money--a loan--to replace this."
-
-The chums exchanged surprised, wondering glances.
-
-"Lang! Going to Father for money for you?"
-
-"Yes," Griff answered Al. "It's--it's all mixed up and--awful!--but you
-say you'd help instead of telling on me, if I could show I wasn't as bad
-as you think."
-
-Bob thought he saw a genuine honesty in the clear look Griff gave him.
-His sympathy was really quick and he wanted to be fair.
-
-"You could count on that!" he stated earnestly.
-
-"You bet you could!" Al declared and Curt added a similar assertion.
-
-"If I thought you meant that--if I thought you'd believe me----"
-
-"Really we would!" Al was also touched; Griff, caught and breaking down
-and seeming to be declaring innocence in some way, was not the furtive,
-uneasy, shifty-eyed Griff they had known. "Honestly! Try us and see." He
-and Curt moved closer. The three stood in a group in front of the
-huddling youth in the swivel chair.
-
-Griff looked up dolefully.
-
-"It will make me out bad enough," he stated. "But--not as bad as you've
-been thinking. Oh, I know!" he took on a touch of his old defiance, "I
-know you've tried to connect me with all the wrong things that have been
-going on here! I know I've acted as though I am guilty. I'm not,
-though--not in the way you think."
-
-"All right," Curt admitted. "We'll listen. We'd rather have you innocent
-than guilty--of anything!"
-
-"Even if our case--" Al stopped suddenly, but Griff nodded.
-
-"I guess you all think you're clever," he said, forgetting his own
-trouble for a second or two. "You come here to learn all about this
-mystery of where the missing parts go and who did things to the crates,
-and why. Don't you think we have eyes? It's all over the plant what you
-are trying to do. Don't you suppose we all know one of you is a close
-friend of the other two, and Bob and Al are sons of a detective? What's
-the answer?"
-
-"The answer seems to be that you thought we weren't smart and so you
-went right ahead." Curt was a little nettled by Griff's statement,
-although common sense told him, now that Griff mentioned the point, that
-their scheme must be fairly evident to any sensible person.
-
-"I didn't think whether you were smart or dumb," Griff replied. "I had
-too much on my mind. Bad as it is, it might as well be confessed. I
-gamble, and owe money for it, and I came here to borrow this from the
-safe--it's as much my father's as anybody's, because he's Mr. Tredway's
-partner, but--I didn't intend to try to 'get away' with the money. I
-only wanted it overnight. Before the office opens Lang will be back with
-the money to replace it."
-
-"What makes it so important to get money at this time of night?"
-demanded Curt, suspiciously.
-
-"I guess I'd better tell the whole thing."
-
-"We're listening!"
-
-"Go ahead. Tell us!"
-
-Griff nodded. Dejectedly, shamefaced and humble, he related his story:
-
-"I've been running around with a pretty rough crowd," he admitted, "and
-they got me in the habit of going to places like The Windsock, out on
-the----"
-
-"We know!" Al interrupted impatiently.
-
-"All right. There's ways to gamble, out there, if you know the people
-who run the place."
-
-"Jones?"
-
-"Well--he owns it, yes. Mostly its Jenks, his manager, and the waiters
-that let the crowd do things outside the actual license rights of the
-roadhouse. Well, anyhow, I got to spending money pretty fast and I
-gambled. After awhile I lost so much I found out I was owing the 'house'
-as they say, more than two hundred dollars!"
-
-Although several maxims and Biblical quotations sprang into Bob's mind,
-he kept silent. This was no time for preaching, for pretending the
-"holier than thou" pose. Under the same temptations, argued Bob to
-himself, it would be hard to say whether he'd go Griff's way or not. It
-isn't how good a fellow thinks he is, but how good he proves himself to
-be under temptation, that counts, Bob decided.
-
-"That's what you're taking the money for--or trying to," Curt
-determined. "But why did you have to take it this way, and at this
-time?"
-
-"The manager at the roadhouse said, last week, he'd have to get all the
-debts owed the house and clean up, because they're spending a lot on a
-new dance place, like a----"
-
-"Hangar. We know. Never mind why they wanted it. Tell me," Bob changed
-the subject for a moment, "what does the owner look like? Is he short,
-thick-set----"
-
-"That's the manager----"
-
-"But that man let on to be Jones." Al broke in.
-
-"Maybe he did? What were you doing there--snooping?"
-
-"Never mind," said Curt, pacifically, wishing to get Griff's side of the
-matter first. "We wanted a specimen of his handwriting----"
-
-"I wish _I_ could get one!" declared Griff, ruefully. "That's the whole
-trouble, fellows." His manner was more eager, more confidential. "I paid
-the money once--and he didn't give me a receipt----"
-
-"Oh!" Bob was connecting some things in his mind. "He came here one
-evening and demanded the money, and you gave him a parcel and then
-realized he didn't give you a receipt. You tried to chase him on your
-motorcycle and got into an accident."
-
-"I thought you were watching, but I was too excited and upset to care,"
-agreed Griff. "Yes, I had borrowed from all the fellows I knew, and had
-scraped every cent out of my savings account, and I had the money. But
-he didn't give any receipt, and when I finally got over the smash of the
-motorcycle and went to ask for it he declared I'd paid him with a
-package of wadded, folded paper and not money!"
-
-"But it was money," declared Bob. "Unless you changed it, because I
-caught you wrapping up something green the day I came into the engine
-assembling room."
-
-"It was money, all right enough," Griff asserted. "But he wanted it
-twice. Well, I had promised my father that I wouldn't go with that crowd
-any more, and I had been weak and went against my promise. So I couldn't
-go to him about it."
-
-"If you had, and made a clean breast of it, he would have gotten you out
-of this scrape." Bob had to say that much.
-
-"I don't think so!" Griff was morose. "He's got so much worry on his
-mind about the plant and all that's happened that he's jumpy and nervous
-and suspicious and he'd throw me out of here, and maybe send me away
-from home. And I am trying to go straight. I will--I make a vow on
-that!--if once I can get out of this scrape. I've learned a lesson."
-
-"But that fellow at the roadhouse knows you're afraid of your dad, I
-guess," asserted Curt.
-
-"Yes, and when I said I had paid the money----"
-
-"I overheard that," Al stated, and related what he had heard through the
-open office window at The Windsock.
-
-"You fellows have been on the job!" There was a note of admiration in
-Griff's voice, then he sobered and went on. "Yes, that fellow, out
-there, knows about me being afraid of Father, and he said if I didn't
-have the money tonight, before midnight, he'd tell my 'old man' as he
-calls Dad. They're opening a dance place and he said the cash was
-essential tonight."
-
-"So you told Lang and he went to get it," ended Curt for him.
-
-"Yes, and he's going to call me, long distance, as soon as he gets
-there, and I was getting the money out so I could start for The Windsock
-the minute he calls up."
-
-"What's your father doing out there so much?" demanded Al, suspiciously.
-
-"Trying to 'get a line' on me, I guess!"
-
-Curt turned to his comrades with a rueful grin.
-
-"That explains everything," he stated, almost regretfully. "Griff has
-cleared himself, and his father's motive is logical."
-
-"It leaves us 'up in the air'--and not in any 'crate' either!" agreed
-Al.
-
-"Yes," nodded Bob. "Barney said the case was all sewed up--but the
-threads must have been weak, because here's our case all torn apart!"
-
-"Well," said Curt, "for my part--I'm glad!"
-
-Since Griff and Mr. Parsons were cleared of suspicion, the other two
-agreed promptly.
-
-"I may be cleared," said Griff sadly, "but I'm not out of trouble. If I
-don't get this money to that man--Jenks is what we all call him, Toby
-Jenks!--why, he'll call up Dad--and then----"
-
-"We said we'd help if you could clear yourself," stated Bob.
-
-"And we will!" agreed Curt.
-
-"With all our heart!" added Al. "But--how?"
-
-"Let me take the money out there!" urged Griff. "Just keep quiet about
-catching me here----"
-
-"Even if the money belonged to your father, which the stockholders of
-the corporation might argue out with you," said Bob seriously, "taking
-it, just overnight, would be--wrong, to say the least."
-
-"Why don't you go to Mr. Parsons--to your father?" suggested Curt.
-
-"He's got all this worry on his mind, trying to see what's wrong----"
-
-"Yes," admitted Al, "I guess it would be better not to worry him about
-this, if we could see how to get around it and still not let you take
-this money."
-
-"We suspected him," Curt said, rather ashamed but anxious to be as frank
-as Griff, whose manner and actions convinced them that he had been
-absolutely honest with them. "We suspected him of being mixed up in
-something."
-
-"Everybody suspects everybody else," admitted Griff. "Dad suspects
-Barney, Barney suspects me, I suspect the supply clerk and the
-bookkeeper of working together to get cheaper supplies here, and they
-suspect each other and everybody else--even you three!"
-
-"Well," Bob waved the statement aside, "that isn't getting down to brass
-tacks. Think, for five minutes, everybody. We've got to help Griff!"
-
-Seeing their case destroyed, their chief suspect cleared, they turned
-loyally to help to retrieve themselves by aiding him.
-
-For five minutes no one spoke.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- THE "MYSTERY CRATE"
-
-
-"Father ordered us to drop this part of things," said Al finally, "but
-I'm glad we disobeyed if it helps Griff to get out of trouble."
-
-"So am I," admitted Bob. "But that isn't what we were quiet for, to talk
-about what we've done."
-
-"We want to know what to do!" Curt commented.
-
-"That's what I was coming to," defended Al. "Let Griff stay here with
-you, Bob, while Curt and I ride out to The Windsock. We can call up as
-soon as we arrive, and then wait outside, hiding. Then Griff can take
-this money and come out, and pay it, and then we will jump in from
-outside the door and grab it and jump through the window and----"
-
-"Is that the best you can do?" scoffed Curt. Al grinned.
-
-"It looked good till I said it," he admitted, "then----"
-
-"That's you, all the way!" his brother challenged. "Quick on the trigger
-and sorry when the bullet hits the wrong target."
-
-"I have a plan, though," suggested Curt. "Al and I can go out to The
-Windsock, as Al said, to get a good place under that office window.
-Then, when Griff pays the money, we will be witnesses, and if the man
-tries not to give a receipt we'll be on Griff's side."
-
-"Better, but not perfect," said Bob.
-
-"I suppose the head Sleuth of the Sky Squad has the one perfect plan!"
-Al was sarcastic.
-
-"No," Bob was honest, "I haven't! I thought of having Griff call the man
-and say he'd be there bright and early with the money----"
-
-"I did tell him that, when Lang left. He said it would be tonight,
-whether he got it from me or from my father."
-
-"Um-m-m!" Curt was thoughtful. "Bad! Well----"
-
-"If we could keep that Jenks man so busy, keep his mind so much occupied
-he'd be too excited to think about Griff--" Al was not very sure of
-himself.
-
-"We could!" Curt astonished Al by accepting the idea. "Look here! If he
-isn't the ex-pilot, maybe the ex-pilot wrote that other autograph.
-Whether he did not or did, anyhow the Jenks man had something to
-conceal, or he wouldn't have gone to the trouble of giving Al two
-specimens of writing to get mixed up with. Now--if we were out there,
-and Griff tried once more to stave off payment till morning, if he
-agreed, all right, we could come home and this money in the safe would
-be all right."
-
-"Logical so far," agreed Bob.
-
-"All right. If the man refused to wait, we could telephone in to Griff
-to find out, and if Jenks refused to wait, we'd walk in on that Jenks
-fellow and say we knew he was mixed up in something wrong about the
-airplane crash, and throw out hints, and so on. I think, myself, he is
-in it somehow. He'd bluster, maybe, but if he has anything to conceal,
-we could scare him, and then tell him to let Griff alone for the present
-or tell his story to a policeman--and we might hint that he could
-explain a lot about the crash----"
-
-"I like it as well as anything you've suggested," said Griff. "If you
-could 'get way with it.'"
-
-"Trust us to scare him good and proper!" declared Al. "I'd ask him 'how
-about the brown 'plane'----"
-
-"No good," argued Bob. "We looked that craft up in the official registry
-and she's from out West, and while we know her markings we haven't found
-her and I don't believe he----"
-
-"I do," Al defended his deduction. "I think he had it brought here for
-him to use, and then taken away again, and that accounts for his
-note--'Everything O.K.' when the pilot left it there and he put the note
-on the seat to show he had been there!"
-
-"Then maybe this Jenks hopped off, in the morning, met the 'plane Mr.
-Tredway was flying, forced it into trouble, rode it down----"
-
-"But we saw the big cabin ship!" objected Bob to Curt's theory. "There
-was no other ship around."
-
-"You can't be sure!" argued Al. "That brown crate might have been up
-above, against the dark clouds in the sky! You couldn't tell if we heard
-one or two engines. He could have surprised Mr. Tredway, could have
-driven him into a dive--something may have gone wrong----"
-
-"But Barney examined the craft when it was hauled in," urged Bob.
-"Nothing was wrong with it at all!"
-
-"Well," Al was obstinate, "I think what I think!"
-
-"Who owns the brown 'plane?" asked Griff. "Did you look that up?"
-
-"Yes, we did! No name we know. No one mixed up in the case. It was
-probably hired by wire, or telephone, from somebody we don't know."
-
-"It isn't important, anyhow," Curt declared. "Not right now. What do you
-think of my idea, Griff?"
-
-"I'm for anything that will tide me over till Lang gets back."
-
-"Then--let's do it!" Al jumped away from the group and was already at
-the door. Bob hesitated a moment, then, seeing how eager Curt was to
-echo Al's enthusiasm, he agreed.
-
-After the two started for The Windsock, Bob sat with Griff, giving him
-the facts they knew, the theories they had formed for awhile.
-
-"It's tangled up, and no mistake," Griff, recovered somewhat, but no
-longer fidgety, feeling that aid was being given him in his trouble,
-rose. "Look here, Bob--I was so excited, I didn't eat any dinner. What
-say you stay here in case a call comes in, while I run out and get some
-coffee and sinkers?"
-
-"Lock the desk first! I don't want to be caught here with it open."
-
-"Right! I shan't need the slip that has the combination on it, any
-more." He put a paper in a small drawer, closed down the roll top,
-adjusted his cap at a more confident, rakish angle, and sauntered out,
-while Bob made himself comfortable at the desk in the swivel chair.
-
-The minutes dragged along.
-
-In the deserted office building there was almost no sound--a rat crept
-toward a wastebasket, ran back as Bob moved in his chair; but otherwise
-the place was very still.
-
-"There's an airplane engine!" Bob mused, as, in the silence, he caught
-the faint, steady drone coming from the sky.
-
-It grew louder--rapidly, much louder!
-
-"It can't be Lang, coming back!"
-
-Bob went to the window. The sound seemed to come from the other side of
-the building. He ran across the hall into the directors' room and got to
-the window, which had a fire escape stairway outside it.
-
-Just as he peered through the bars of the fire escape, he saw a craft
-swoop down, quite low. It did not land! Instead, it seemed to zoom along
-and to rise swiftly.
-
-"Overshot the field," Bob mused. "Why doesn't he drop a Verey light to
-signal the watchman to turn on the landing floods? Or--maybe the
-watchman isn't out there. I'd better see."
-
-He ran down the stairs and out into the yard, across it and onto the
-small landing field. The craft had passed, but he could still hear the
-engine. It seemed from its change of location, that the craft was coming
-around in a spiral.
-
-Bob ran toward the switch controlling the flood lights. One of the
-large, hooded lamps was near it. As the sound of the engine came closer
-he switched on the floods.
-
-To his surprise the sudden light seemed to startle the pilot--at least
-the craft seemed to waver, to skid, to drop, and then, to catch its
-flying speed and control. But it did not spiral as he expected a pilot
-who had waited for light would do.
-
-Instead it began to climb.
-
-Swiftly, eagerly curious, Bob caught hold of the handle on the adjusting
-mechanism of the flood light. It could be lifted, or set lower, to
-govern the range and height of its beam.
-
-Bob proposed to use it as a searchlight, to illuminate the craft if he
-could swing the heavy lamp upward in time.
-
-Eagerly he labored with the mechanism.
-
-Slowly the beam lifted.
-
-Its intense rays caught the craft's underwings.
-
-"What's going on here?" The watchman ran up.
-
-For answer Bob pointed excitedly toward a brown, sharply outlined craft,
-climbing, growing dim in the fainter beam as it receded.
-
-"It's--it's--" he gasped, "--it's the mystery crate--the brown
-airplane!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
- BOB PURSUES!
-
-
-Realizing that the watchman did not know what he meant by "the mystery
-crate," Bob hurriedly told of the earlier experiences: all the while he
-talked his mind was busy, underneath, wondering why the pilot of the
-brown ship had flown over the plant, why he had appeared to lose control
-when the light flared up, why he had climbed to get away.
-
-"He's gone!" said the watchman. "Anyhow, that's clear!"
-
-"I hate to see him get away!" Bob said, sorrowfully.
-
-"Whyn't you chase him?"
-
-"I?" Bob was startled by the idea.
-
-"Sure--you! Didn't I see Lang giving you lessons, and Griff, too?"
-
-"Yes--but, at night--and Lang has the small ship."
-
-The watchman seemed to have caught the excitement of a chase.
-
-"Look here, though!" he cried, beckoning as he ran. "In the hangar is a
-crate just like Griff's model--belonged to Mr. Tredway. He--he won't
-need it no more. Whyn't you?----"
-
-"At night?"
-
-"Sure! Once you get off the ground, the air's all the same, day or
-night, ain't it?"
-
-Not exactly, Bob demurred, There were many considerations to be thought
-out, but his father had said "locate the brown ship."
-
-Here it was, flying away!
-
-It seemed to be "up to him."
-
-"Can we get the crate out? Can we get it started? Is there any fuel
-aboard?"
-
-Already the watchman had hold of the tail assembly of a trim, slender,
-dark fuselage.
-
-"Grab on!" answered the watchman, jockeying the fuselage so that a
-wingtip missed the span of the cabin 'plane's spreading airfoils. "Grab
-on! I know you lads is detectiffs, and here's your chance for a medal or
-somethin'."
-
-Bob "grabbed on!" with spirit. He had caught the enthusiasm of the older
-person. It took them only a short time to jockey the craft into the
-open, to get its gauges checked, to see that it had oil and at least a
-tank of gas three-quarters full.
-
-"Holler out!" The watchman stood by the "prop."
-
-"Ready!"
-
-"Gas on?"
-
-"Gas on!"
-
-"Switch off?"
-
-"Switch off!"
-
-The watchman spun the propeller.
-
-"Contact!" he yelled, stepping swiftly beyond the range of those deadly
-sharp blade tips.
-
-There came the snap and bark of the motor. Cold! But Bob, feeling that
-for all the precious seconds it must waste, he ought to be safe before
-he might be sorry, allowed it to warm up, checked his instruments as he
-had observed Lang and Griff do, and then, as the watchman, obeying his
-signal, kicked away the chocks so the wheels could move forward, the
-amateur pilot, steady and cool all at once, glanced at the windsock, saw
-that he could take off straight down the short field, pulled open the
-throttle, tipped the "flippers" so the tail ceased to drag, as the
-propeller blast caught the elevators, and began to race down the field.
-
-As he went he tipped the elevators sharply, felt the ship sway a trifle,
-realized he was off the ground and moving steadily, climbing to the roar
-of the engine!
-
-He smiled a little. He had not forgotten to hold the ship level for the
-brief seconds that it needed to assume flying speed after the first hop
-from earth. He had not climbed her at too steep an angle, there was no
-indication, at least to his inexperienced hand, of any logginess of the
-controls presaging a stall. He was away!
-
-"Now," he thought, with a sharp glance around the sky spaces, "I am in
-for it. If nothing goes wrong with the machinery or the prop I guess I
-can keep this crate level and get somewhere."
-
-But where?
-
-In those precious moments the brown ship could have gone ten miles.
-
-"He was mightily interested in the aircraft plant," Bob reflected,
-letting the ship "fly herself," as most well balanced aircraft will do
-in steady air, as long as flying speed is held. "Now all that we have
-found out, so far, has centered about the aircraft plant and--and The
-Windsock! Could he be around there? Or----"
-
-As a new thought struck him he gripped the stick a tiny bit tighter.
-
-"--Or, maybe he's brought the brown ship back for some new stunt! It
-might be hidden in that field again!"
-
-He pushed the stick a trifle to the side, thus operating the ailerons,
-while he used his rudder experimentally, meaning to swing in a circle.
-
-Whether a good Providence watches over amateurs, in sports or in
-professions, or whether Bob had actually learned from his lessons, the
-fact is that he did not overbank or use too much rudder, and neither
-felt the wind of a skid on one cheek nor the breeze of a slip on the
-other. Around went the ship, in a wide swing.
-
-Bob kept his eyes on the sky, with momentary glances at the instruments,
-not all of which were understandable to him yet; however, he knew the
-altimeter, the tachometer which records engine speed, the gas and oil
-pressure gauges and such important ones.
-
-They seemed all to record satisfactorily. His altitude was six hundred
-feet; a little low for safety, so he climbed to twice that. The
-revolutions were even and plenty for his need, as he watched the
-fluctuations of the tachometer when he eased the throttle forward in his
-climb, or backed it gently in the level-off.
-
-Gas and oil recorded without a hitch or a diminution of supply.
-
-But where was his quarry?
-
-Far ahead Bob saw a tiny flare of red in the sky.
-
-He nearly lost control in his excitement, but with the true air-sense he
-caught the tendency of the sideslip by opposite rudder and aileron and
-then banked and circled till his nose pointed straight for the dying
-flare.
-
-Someone in the sky was signaling for something!
-
-"I'll get there soon! And see!" Bob told himself. He held the ship
-level, glancing at the "bubble" in the spirit level, as he gave the gun,
-opening the throttle steadily.
-
-To the roar of the engine, the sing of cool wind in taut wires, the
-sting of pulsing blood pounding a thrill-song in his temples, Bob took
-up his quest, and soon saw, ahead, the dim outline of a circling ship.
-It was dark. Was it brown?
-
-He dared not get too close. Rather, he preferred to climb, so as to be
-safely out of the other fellow's way if he maneuvered.
-
-From above Bob planned to light a white flare, by whose light he could
-identify the ship.
-
-But the other fellow saw him too!
-
-Bob needed no flare to tell him that he had discovered the brown
-craft--its action was indication enough! The pilot dived, and then went
-into a barrel-roll, dangerous at a low altitude, Bob thought.
-
-The "stunt" enabled the ship to get to one side and out of his line of
-flight if he dived for it.
-
-Clearly this showed that the unseen pilot feared to be attacked, driven
-down.
-
-But Bob had no such intention, he merely followed as the small, brown
-craft, speedy and capable, went fleetly through the night.
-
-Bob, easing his throttle a little more open, as he got the line of
-flight, held his elevation and his level position; he did not try to
-overtake the other, he wanted to see where he went--nothing more!
-
-So the flight held, one about five hundred feet up, the other easily as
-high again. The speed was almost identical, the ships were well matched.
-
-But the other man had some tricks up his wings, in a way of speaking!
-
-He began to climb. Bob, fearing to be over-reached, climbed also.
-Higher, higher they both went, Bob still atop the other, for he had as
-much power, as well angled wings, as clever a ship as his adversary.
-
-But the battle of elevation was short. At fifteen hundred feet the brown
-'plane went into a wingover, and to Bob's dismay it was, by that
-maneuver, in a reverse direction to the flight of his own, and he dared
-do no maneuvering, no stunting, at night and alone!
-
-Before he could swing in the easy circle which his inexperience
-compelled him to use, the other pilot was almost out of sight. He
-climbed, and thus Bob gained, but he saw that his pursuit was futile.
-
-The man was climbing into a cloud!
-
-In its misty vastness, surrounding a ship like a fog, an inexpert pilot
-could not know, without continually watching his spirit level and other
-instruments, if he flew level or on his back, if he was going sidewise
-or straight toward earth. To watch the instruments "to fly by the
-dashboard" was useless; he could not see to follow if he risked the
-feat.
-
-Disgusted, disappointed, he cut the gun and slowed his ship, and flew
-around toward The Windsock. Somebody on the ground was burning several
-land flares, he saw.
-
-It told him one thing! The other fellow had been expected! His signal
-had been seen.
-
-For an instant Bob was tempted to try a landing, to see if they would be
-startled, those people down there in the glare. Did they perhaps think
-he flew the craft they expected? It would be worth something to discover
-that. Or--would it? The danger, the risk, was considerable. It was
-strange territory to him. The people, seeing his craft markings, its
-different color, might extinguish the flares, leaving him, low, to "set
-down hot" or to climb, too late, and land in trees!
-
-No, it was not worth the risk.
-
-If his adversary had gotten away that was the end of the adventure.
-
-Only--it wasn't.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
- SUSPENSE!
-
-
-When Al and Curt, riding easily, reached the region of the Rocky Lake
-Park, they hid their wheels in the well remembered field, preferring to
-advance on foot, to spy out conditions before arriving at the roadhouse
-to which they were going.
-
-"There's something going on, over there," said Curt, as they walked,
-facing traffic, along the familiar highway.
-
-"The new dance floor--The Hangar--is opening tonight."
-
-"That will make it easy for us to get in."
-
-"They may not allow juniors on the floor."
-
-"But they won't chase people away! It would be bad for the business!"
-chuckled Curt. "Every young man can have--must have--at least two in his
-family, and they might be dancing papa and mama."
-
-"We can go on and see."
-
-They did.
-
-The new dance floor, built in an old-looking, metal-covered addition at
-the side of the main hotel, was crowded. A "jazzy" orchestra, with many
-toots of its saxophones, howls from clarinets, trills and staccato yaps
-from its trumpet, put rhythm into the march of many feet.
-
-"Makes me wish I had a girl and had her here and knew how to dance,"
-laughed Curt.
-
-"What I wish more is--" Al did not get time to express his desire to
-have Bob along, to advise him in his rather impulsive acts. A man in a
-dress suit, as the drums rolled in warning to attract attention,
-advanced to the edge of the band platform and addressed the dancers
-applauding their last "number."
-
-"Lay--deeze--an'--gemp--mum!" Al nudged Curt and whispered that the man
-was Jenks. "For this opening night the manage--munt has went to the
-special expense--youse mus' excuse my poor way of speakin'. 'I'm only a
-simple flyer, an' my eddication don't go no higher'----"
-
-Al exclaimed, and Curt scowled at the aspersion thus put on the
-intelligence of the most manly, most steady, best educated general class
-of men in industry--pilots!--but they listened, nevertheless.
-
-"The manage--munt has put on a extra fine show for tonight. In fact,
-folks," his manner became more natural, "we've engaged a stunt flyer to
-come over here tonight, to fly around up in the dark blue, and to do
-stunts, with rockets and colored lights so you can see what he does. I
-understand the whole crate is to be lit up some way. So, if you'll all
-step outside, while we put tables in here for refreshments, you will
-have the free entertainment as soon as we can get his signal and let him
-know to go ahead."
-
-As Curt and Al were already outside, they craned their necks.
-
-While the laughing couples gathered, a small, red flare was visible. The
-men who seemed to be awaiting this signal, lighted flares. But to their
-amazement the ship did no stunts! It went away!
-
-"Funny!" muttered the excited, disgruntled manager, Jenks, close by Al
-and Curt.
-
-As the flares brightened it seemed as though there were two airplanes
-dimly reflecting the light.
-
-"But they aren't doing any stunts!" complained a girl to her partner.
-"Wait!" he counseled. Waiting, however, did no good.
-
-The dancers, murmuring, and the manager, trying to apologize, saying it
-must not be the right crate, went back to dance, shoving the refreshment
-tables roughly aside.
-
-Al and Curt, waiting, watching, wondering, saw the men stick the stubs
-of their flares into the ground and walk off.
-
-"Look! He's coming back!" Al pointed to a speck. They listened and heard
-the drone of an engine.
-
-"He's back again!" shouted Al, and the people came out again, standing
-with backs to the glaring light, shaded eyes turned upward.
-
-"No--he's flying low, though," commented Curt.
-
-"Yes, he is."
-
-"Look!" Curt caught Al's arm. "He's in trouble--isn't he?--yes, he is!
-Listen! His engine has stopped--dead!"
-
-"Yes, he's gliding!"
-
-"He can't land here," said Curt. "He's too low to spiral and shoot this
-little clearing--anyhow, it isn't a place to land--not for night
-landing!"
-
-"I wonder if the same things are happening that happened--when Mr.
-Tredway was--lost!" Al murmured. "That time, we heard the engine, and
-then the ship dived."
-
-"This one isn't diving--it's gliding!"
-
-"I know, Curt--he's getting over Rocky Lake. Come on!"
-
-"There he does go--down!"
-
-Off they pelted toward the road.
-
-An airplane had been cruising over the flares. Its motor had stopped.
-That was sure.
-
-And no one knew it better than Bob.
-
-For he was the pilot whose engine stop had left him with a "dead stick."
-He must glide. He had enough gliding angle, he supposed, to take him
-back to that providential field--if he could throw over a flare and make
-some sort of a set-down!----
-
-It was dangerous--but it must be done.
-
-For, in spite of its danger, knowing well what might happen, Bob had
-shut off his own engine--deliberately!
-
-He had to--to save his life!
-
-"Look!" gasped Curt, running. "See that glare? The 'plane----"
-
-"On fire!" panted Al.
-
-Appearances are deceiving. To Al and Curt, on the ground, with darkness,
-distance and trees to screen the truth from them, it seemed as though
-the glare they saw beyond the grove must spell a blazing airplane.
-
-Instead, the light came from a landing flare, dropped by Bob.
-
-As he headed over The Windsock roadhouse, and decided to give up, to
-return to the aircraft field, he had all of his mind and attention on
-his craft. Because of that he was able to notice a mystifying, if tiny
-bluish light, intermittent and flickering, close to the pipe that
-conveyed fuel from the tank to the mixing carburetor.
-
-"That's an electric spark!" he decided. He was right.
-
-Somehow, either through one of those malicious acts which had already
-been done to other ships, or from a rubbing wire, some electrical
-conducting wire had worn off its insulation and was bare, and each time
-it rubbed or touched metal it made a spark.
-
-If there is one thing more dangerous than another in the air it is the
-menace of an open spark close to gasoline feed lines and carburetor
-mixing chambers.
-
-Knowing it well, unable to determine the cause, but sure that the spark
-was electrical and dangerous, Bob took the only safe course. As Curt and
-Al had observed, his engine stopped. He cut off the ignition.
-
-The sparking light ceased.
-
-"Now," thought Bob, "I daren't use my motor. That means I must glide. At
-this height, if I remember what Lang said, the angle that will give me
-safe flying speed will about take me to that little field we first saw
-the brown 'plane hidden in. Can I make it?"
-
-He depressed the nose, watching, by his sense of touch, how the stick
-and rudder bar acted. As he moved through the air he elevated the nose a
-trifle, to get as flat a gliding angle as he dared; but his whole mind
-was concentrated on that feeling, that sense of heaviness in the
-reacting of the controls. When they began to respond sluggishly he knew
-enough to sense that he was losing flying speed, approaching the danger
-point called stalling, in which the ship gets out of control, drops or
-slips or does some other uncontrollable maneuver.
-
-Always, in time, he lowered the nose, picked up the needful speed, and
-thus, by coming as close to the "graveyard" glide, or flat angle, as he
-dared, and yet conserving enough reserve speed to keep the lift of the
-wings more sustaining than the downward pull of gravity, he held his
-craft in the air.
-
-Always the nose, pointed into the wind, went lower. Always, as he tried
-to penetrate the darkness of the night and of the brown earth below, his
-eyes, over the cockpit cowling, searched for the flattish, light spot he
-wanted. Along its inner side was the strip of turf he needed.
-
-Fear-thoughts flashed through his mind:
-
-"Can I glide that far? Will I overshoot or undershoot? Will I misjudge
-the height as I come down, if I do make it? Will I set the ship down too
-suddenly, so it will bounce off and then--with too little margin of
-height to get speed again--crack up? Will I stall too high and smash
-down? Will I be going too fast, and run too far? Can I glide in to the
-turf or will I set down in stubble and nose over?"
-
-Resolutely, by all the will power he had, Bob crushed out those
-nerve-deadening, muscle-binding terrors.
-
-There was the field. Where, now, did they keep the light producing
-flares? Oh, yes! There, in that little boxlike compartment.
-
-He flung a detonating flare that would light in the air or on striking
-earth. Its light was what horrified Curt and Al.
-
-To Bob, its glare was a great relief!
-
-The white gleam showed, far ahead, faintly lit, the field. His course
-would take him toward it, but he altered the direction of his flight
-slightly to get over the turf, then corrected the bank, leveled his
-wings, depressed the nose still more, picked up speed and, with all his
-force, sent a landing flare into the air, as far ahead and to the side
-as he could fling it.
-
-Then he "shot" the field, got his nose directly onto a line with the
-large trees at the end of the field, pulled up the nose more, to kill
-all the forward momentum he dared, and then----
-
-Bob gasped. He was too far to one side. He would land in the stubble.
-Also, he was a little too high.
-
-Wildly he flung the flare he had been getting ready.
-
-Then, from some hidden source of remembered instructions he got the
-instinctive knowledge of what to do.
-
-He dropped the left wingtip by pushing the stick sidewise, and felt the
-ship tilt. It went into a sideslip. That both lost speed forward and got
-him further over to the left.
-
-Opposite rudder, hard! Up left wingtip, down right! Nose down a little!
-Speed enough to go on!
-
-With his heart in his mouth, looking swiftly down, Bob saw the earth
-seem to come up at him. Up elevators! Stall. He'd have to take it! He
-was close to earth, over turf. He must not keep that nose down and glide
-into the trees or taxi beyond the end of the turf.
-
-The ship stalled, landed with quite a jar--but the trucks held up!
-
-And Bob, from his heart, breathed a little prayer of thanksgiving.
-
-He had done his best, had held his head, and--he was safe!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
- CROSSED WIRES
-
-
-By the time Curt and Al got their bicycles and pedaled to the vicinity
-of Rocky Lake, Bob's flare was out and they had no means of ending their
-suspense until they had looked around in the picnic grove and assured
-themselves that there was no burning airplane in sight.
-
-They rode along the highway.
-
-"Isn't that a flashlight, in the old field?"
-
-"It looks like one, Al."
-
-"It is!"
-
-They pedaled faster. Presently the pair reached the field; soon Bob,
-using a small pocket flashlamp, was telling his brother and his best
-friend how the electric spark had worried him.
-
-"I knew the brown airplane was gone," he continued his explanation, "the
-only thing left for me to do was to head back to the plant. But I saw
-that quick little flicker close to the gas line and cut off the ignition
-switch."
-
-"What are you doing now?"
-
-"Tracing the wiring," Bob told his brother. "And here is a wire! It
-ought not to be run so close to the gas line! And here is another, away
-back under the dash instrument board. They cross!"
-
-"Crossed wires!" gasped Curt. "That isn't right!"
-
-"Certainly not!" agreed Bob. "We've learned enough about airplane
-construction at the Tredway plant to know they don't do such careless
-things as that!"
-
-"Then somebody deliberately did it," concluded Al. "It's part of the
-scheme to damage the crates."
-
-"It's worse than that!" Bob climbed to the ground and faced his
-companions. His face, hard to see in the dark, because he was saving his
-electric battery, was very serious. "It's worse than just tampering!
-Fellows--this is Mr. Tredway's own airplane!----"
-
-"I see," commented Curt soberly. "Some one wanted harm to come to the
-owner of the plant."
-
-"And the 'some one' made sure it would. In daylight," Bob stated, "that
-spark wouldn't be noticed. It was only by being out in the dark of
-night, that I could see it."
-
-"But crossed wires ought not to rub enough to wear out the insulation in
-a short time," objected Al.
-
-"Neither they did. Al--Curt--the insulation was scraped away!"
-
-They were silent for a long moment. The full wickedness of that
-deliberate act made each of the youths feel rather cold. They were
-dealing with something more sinister than an attempt to make away with
-small airplane supplies, to damage airplanes for the purpose of injuring
-the reputation of the manufacturers, as they had decided the conditions
-seemed to indicate.
-
-"Well," Curt became practical, "you can't fly that ship home, not in
-that condition."
-
-"If we had some adhesive tape," Bob said, "I could tape the wires and
-get back to the aircraft field."
-
-"I've got bicycle friction tape in my little toolcase." Al ran to get
-it.
-
-"The place is hard to reach," Bob told Curt.
-
-"Maybe I could do it," Curt responded. "My hands are thinner and my
-fingers are longer than yours."
-
-As soon as Al brought the roll of pitched fabric, Curt, with the
-flashlamp set for steady burning, located the damaged insulation and
-began to work with strips of the tape, having some difficulty in winding
-it without pulling the wires too much.
-
-"This is going to be a slow job," he called out. "Bob, somebody ought to
-go and call up Griff, to see if he has any news."
-
-"I think so too," Al agreed.
-
-"Why don't you both go!" Curt urged. "One could stay at The Windsock and
-watch and the other could come back with news--or, Bob, you could ride
-back on my wheel, to The Windsock with Al, and then come on back here
-and we two could fly back to the hangars together."
-
-"Would you trust yourself with me, in the dark, flying this ship?" asked
-Bob. "Something else may be wrong with it."
-
-"That's so. I'll look it over. I know how they inspect them," Curt
-suggested.
-
-Al and Bob agreed, and went to the two bicycles. Off they rode.
-
-"There's that 'plane again!" Al pointed to a tiny red flare high up over
-the roadhouse ground. "He has come back."
-
-"I suppose I frightened him away," Bob said. "He probably thinks whoever
-chased him has given up, and he has come back."
-
-"One thing bothers me," Al observed, forgetting his weary legs in the
-fresh excitement. "Why would a crate that has a pilot who flies away
-from pursuit come back to do stunts?"
-
-"I can't answer that," Bob replied. "Let's get there. See! He is
-looping, and he has lighted some sort of rocket or bomb that makes a
-trail of fire to show his stunt off in the dark."
-
-"It's pretty, isn't it?"
-
-Bob agreed with his brother's exclamation as the airplane, high above
-them, with fireworks leaving a comet's tail behind it, made a series of
-loops, dived, zoomed, made a sort of "S" of fire by side-slipping first
-one way and then the other.
-
-When they got back to the roadhouse the display was over. Ground flares
-were going and it was clear that the pilot meant to land.
-
-"We're going to see who it is, after all," declared Bob, thrilled by the
-possible revelation that was to come.
-
-Curt saw the gyrating ship and its glowing trail of sparks. He watched
-for a moment and then went doggedly back to his work. If Bob needed this
-sport craft, Curt proposed to have it ready if careful, methodical work
-could get it so.
-
-Surprised, he heard himself addressed by a youth who came over from the
-farmhouse whose builder owned the field.
-
-"What's goin' on?" asked the farmer's son.
-
-"Some display for the opening of the roadhouse dance floor," Curt
-replied, tightening down the tape and clipping off the end with his
-pocket knife.
-
-"I don't mean yonder. I mean here."
-
-"Oh! A little trouble. Crossed wires."
-
-The youth did not understand; but he accepted the explanation.
-
-"Ain't you awful young to be a aviation flyer?" he asked.
-
-"I don't--I'm not the pilot," Curt stated. He explained. Then, his task
-finished, he clambered down to see the glow of the distant, concealed
-ground flares, and to guess that the sky rider was going to land.
-
-"This is gettin' to be a regular aviators' place," said the youth to
-Curt. "Guess pa ought to put up signs, 'Places to land for rent.'"
-
-"Do many crates land here?" Curt was surprised.
-
-"Well--look at them tracks!"
-
-Thus having the spot indicated, even in the dim light Curt was able to
-see that deep ruts had been made, not only in the soft, ploughed edge of
-the field, but also on the turf.
-
-"Hm-m-m!" he had no explanation to comment. It was unimportant.
-Something of greater concern was on his mind.
-
-"See here, buddy," Curt said, "will you help me 'warm up' this ship?" He
-was searching for two stones or blocks big enough to hold the airplane
-still while the propeller revolved. "The pilot might want to take off
-now that I've fixed the damage." The boy agreed. Curt, locating several
-rocks near where the brown 'plane had once been hidden, set them under
-the wheels, and then, realizing that the ship must take off facing into
-the wind, he got the youth to help him drag the tail around, to pull the
-whole ship as far up at the end of the turf as possible.
-
-"First time I ever worked around a--er--'grate'----"
-
-"'Crate,'" Curt corrected, smiling in the darkness. "That's a slang way
-of speaking of an airplane, and it means either a term of fondness, or
-of disgust, according to how the user feels about his 'ship.'"
-
-"I see. Gee! Wisht I could be one of them aviator flyers."
-
-"You can, if you are willing to study enough," Curt said. "It means hard
-work. There's a lot to learn. But a fellow who has ambition can get to
-be anything he likes."
-
-"Not without being educated more than me."
-
-"You can pick up some education while you're studying in 'ground
-school,'" Curt explained. "After you learn the parts of the airplane,
-the way each one works, what it is for, and so on, and how they are put
-together, you have to study about airplane engines--the principle of the
-internal combustion engine and what all the parts are for and how they
-work. There has to be study of--let's see--oh, yes!--aerodynamics--how a
-ship flies, and why, and what different air currents do, and how to know
-their effects. There's navigation, too--the beginnings of it, anyway."
-
-"All that? I thought you got in and pushed something and----"
-
-"If there weren't so many people who thought that," Curt said soberly,
-"we wouldn't have so many accidents. Flying is a science; and there's
-more to it than getting into the air and going somewhere. It takes
-ground school study to learn the foundation part, and instruction
-flights to learn how things are handled, and solo flights and stunting
-to show you how to handle a crate in an emergency--and navigation in its
-practical applications, for long flights. But if you are in earnest, you
-can get all that, and pick up practical arithmetic and grammar and so
-on, in night school at the same time."
-
-"Not without money!"
-
-"No--unless--you might come over to the Tredway aircraft plant and I'd
-introduce you to Barney--Mr. Horton, the manager. He might give you a
-chance to work as a 'grease monkey' in the field, for he is awfully
-nice. He helped all of us."
-
-The youth agreed eagerly, and then, with the chocks set and the ignition
-switch off, Curt told him how to work the propeller around, and got him
-back to safety as the ignition switch followed the gas "on."
-
-The engine took up its roar, and Curt knew enough to shut down the
-throttle to idling speed, allowing the slow revolutions to warm up the
-power plant. He knew little about oil pressure and instrument readings,
-but he knew that an engine, to function safely and steadily, in flight,
-must be warm.
-
-While he busied himself getting everything as nearly ready as his
-ability allowed, Bob and Al reached the roadhouse.
-
-The airplane had already "set down."
-
-"It's the brown one, and no mistake!" Al was thrilled.
-
-"Yes," said Bob. "Now, Al, the pilot must have gone inside the
-roadhouse. I don't see him around the dance place. You could go in to
-ask for his autograph. I see you still carry that little book. It ought
-to be easy to get a look at him, have him pointed out to you. That's
-really all we need."
-
-Al agreed. He had no difficulty in getting a busy waiter to jerk a thumb
-toward one of the private compartments.
-
-Al went to its door, pushed aside the curtains--and stepped back.
-
-What he saw stunned him!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
- THE SKY SQUAD GOES INTO ACTION
-
-
-Three men faced one another in the small compartment, made to look like
-a passenger 'plane cabin.
-
-As Al, at the curtained entrance, recognized the one facing him, all
-three turned to look.
-
-With a mumbled apology Al backed out.
-
-More than anything else, he wanted to get away, to see Bob!
-
-The man who had faced him was Mr. Parsons, partner in the aircraft
-plant.
-
-The man to his right was the mysterious stranger whom Al had seen in the
-supply room!
-
-The third man----
-
-Before Al could form his mental picture of a face that seemed familiar,
-a bus-boy, with a heavy tray of soiled dishes, bumped against him.
-
-"Get out o' the way," the youth grunted, to Al, and gave him an angry
-push with his free hand. Al, his balance disturbed, stumbled
-forward--into the arms of Mr. Parsons at the door.
-
-Struggling, squirming to get out of the powerful grip on his arm and
-shoulder, Al found himself held as if in a vise.
-
-Suddenly his whole body went limp. His head dropped, his eyes closed. He
-sagged down, and surprised and disconcerted, imagining that the youth he
-held might have fainted in his fright, the man released him, lowered him
-to the floor while he looked up, intending to call for aid.
-
-Behind him another face looked out, the bearded face of the man Al had
-seen previously in the supply room.
-
-"What's up?" asked the latter.
-
-"I am!" cried Al, shrilly, as he tensed his muscles, swung free of Mr.
-Parsons as the latter bent over him. Like the leashed spring of a
-panther Al's squirming, swift move took him out of danger.
-
-To cries, to shouts of surprise and of inquiry, Al eluded the grasping
-hands of a waiter, dodged a diner's gripping fingers, evaded the move of
-a man to block him at the door, and was free!
-
-Quick thinking and a ruse had prevailed where strength was not enough to
-accomplish his wish.
-
-Speeding along, outside, after vaulting the veranda railing, Al quickly
-located Bob. With a wave of his hand Al signaled. His progress was swift
-as he scampered across the parking space, between standing automobiles,
-toward an old barnlike structure backed into the grove. Bob, seeing the
-wave and Al's progress, dodged, on his own part, among the cars until he
-rejoined Al in the open door of the old, dilapidated barn.
-
-"What happened?"
-
-Al, pulling his brother back out of sight, recovered his breath.
-
-"I bumped into Mr. Parsons----"
-
-"No!"
-
-"Yes--and the man we saw in the supply room----"
-
-"Well! What happened then?"
-
-"There was somebody else with them. And--I didn't recognize him, because
-I was so surprised and excited--but his face 'rang a bell' and I'll
-think who he was when I get quieted down."
-
-"What made you run?"
-
-Al explained.
-
-"Yes, and there comes Mr. Parsons! He's looking for me," he ended.
-
-"He has something in his hand--a package----"
-
-"Listen!" Al drew Bob further into the dark interior. "Bob--when I
-blundered in on them, those men had--what do you suppose?--the company
-books!" Al clutched Bob's arm tighter. "You remember, we hid when Mr.
-Parsons was in the offices--he took those books!"
-
-"Yes," Bob's whisper agreed. "Now he's been showing them to that man we
-saw, and to somebody else."
-
-"Mr. Parsons isn't as honest as Griff wanted us to believe."
-
-Bob shook Al's arm reassuringly. "No," he admitted, "I thought Griff's
-story was part of--what did they say in the war?--oh, yes! It was
-'camouflage.' Fancy paint to conceal something."
-
-"If we could only get the books away from them--and tell Barney!"
-
-"They may be coming to look for you. Mr. Parsons must have recognized
-you, Al. I wonder if there's a haymow over this old floor?"
-
-"You go along one wall and I'll take the other. We'll see!"
-
-They hurried away from one another. Presently Bob called out softly and,
-following the wall, with one hand touching to hold his place, the other
-extended ahead to avoid bumping into any obstruction, the youngest of
-the Sky Squad found his way to Bob.
-
-There was a ladder against the wall. Bob whispered instructions and
-started up the dark, uncertain ladder. Bob had hardly reached the top
-and called down a low reassurance when Al almost scrambled in his
-eagerness to get up quickly.
-
-Voices were growing louder. Some one was coming! It must be Mr. Parsons.
-
-At the top of the ladder, Al fell softly onto the upper floor boards,
-and he, with his brother, bent attentive, strained ears to catch the low
-murmur from below.
-
-"He's from the plant," a voice called, and Bob recognized the quick,
-sharp tones of Mr. Parsons. "He was a boy from the plant."
-
-"You got those books wrapped in record time!" someone else chuckled.
-Then, as the youths drew their heads back, turtle fashion, to avoid the
-glare, a match was struck.
-
-"Nobody here--but yonder's a ladder."
-
-"Better go up and have a look," said a third, deeper voice. "We can't
-afford to have those kids snooping. I think Barney brought them into the
-thing. They're only kids--but they have eyes!"
-
-Bob, with a twist of his neck, looked around in the dim upper room. Its
-end window, dirty and cobwebby, allowed the moonlight to stream in. The
-shaft of dull light streamed across, slantwise. Bob, following its path
-with his eyes, touched Al's arm. Gently he directed his brother's gaze
-toward a corner.
-
-Sacks, used for packing corn or other cereals, were piled up there.
-
-By common consent the two began a slow, cautious movement toward the
-sacks; but Bob, quick in an emergency, drew the whole pile, very
-cautiously, partly lifting the lower ones, to a darker place.
-
-Al, close beside him, divined his idea. They could hide under the large
-cluster of heavy burlap bags.
-
-By the time that a match was struck in the upper floor they were lying,
-crouched, under a number of the burlap bags.
-
-"Not here! Guess the kid was scared and ran away."
-
-"Wait, though." Bob's breath almost stopped. Had the other man who came
-up discovered the sacking?
-
-"Wait, though," the man repeated. "We meant to compare the books
-tonight; that's why I took all the trouble with those stunts, to have a
-logical excuse for landing here. We can't, now! Those kids may have
-telephoned somebody--whoever they're working for. Suppose we hide the
-books, and get together tomorrow night. I'll take the crate back and
-come over by train."
-
-"Good way."
-
-In their stuffy concealment the brothers heard steps, low muttered
-suggestions. Evidently a place to sequester the company records was
-selected. The youths quivered and Al nearly screamed aloud as a sack was
-dragged from the top of the pile. But the sack did not pull off the ones
-they clung to over their perspiring heads.
-
-"That's the stuff! On that shelf, and cover 'em up. Nobody would think
-of that place."
-
-"Won't Barney miss them?"
-
-"Let him worry a little. It will do him good!"
-
-The voices receded. The heavy tread ceased. Scuffling sounds told the
-brothers that the men had descended the ladder.
-
-"Well," whispered Al, "we're safe----"
-
-"And we can take the books back----"
-
-"Can we find them?"
-
-"They said 'on the shelf.' Feel around, as soon as they are out--wait!
-Al, I'll slip over and spy out through the window----"
-
-Al sat on the floor, among the sacks, mopping his brow which was wet
-with hot perspiration that had, a moment before, been ice cold. Bob
-waved across the bar of moonlight. The trio of seeming conspirators was
-safely away, he indicated.
-
-Again using their hands, they felt along the walls.
-
-With his head, though jarred only slightly, Bob found the shelf. A quick
-exploration defined the books, in a compact roll of tape-tied cloth,
-hidden under the sack. It was a second's work to remove them and to
-rejoin Al.
-
-"Now--how can we get them away? Won't they be watching?"
-
-"Let's go down and see."
-
-Alertly, and with caution, Bob protruded his head over the edge of the
-opening by the ladder. He was fortunate! In the doorway stood the
-unrecognized member of the party, smoking. Evidently he had returned.
-
-Bob watched, holding Al in check by his grip on the younger one's arm.
-The man did not propose to leave, it appeared.
-
-The sound of an airplane motor starting conveyed the truth. He was
-waiting until his ship was ready before going into the open.
-
-Bob waited, Al at his side. Neither moved more than was absolutely
-essential.
-
-But Al, try as he would, could not suppress the horrible inclination to
-sneeze, induced by the dust in his nostrils from the dirty burlap.
-
-"Huh--sh--huh--sh!" he tried to hold back, but Nature got the better of
-his will.
-
-"Huh--shoosh!"
-
-"Now you've done it!"
-
-"Couldn't help it--look--the window will open. You could drop!"
-
-The sound of the man ascending the ladder came clearly.
-
-Like two swift gazelles the youths dashed across to the window, wide and
-old. It was part of the door through which hay was drawn up, they
-discovered. They tugged at it. On rollers, but stiff from disuse, it
-stuck. Panting they struggled. Closer came the ascending steps, a call
-to know who was "up there!"
-
-The window slid open a foot--another foot.
-
-"I'll have to drop," said Bob. "You get back and hide again."
-
-"Too late! I'll drop the books to you! Go on--quick!"
-
-Bob hung by his hands, gave a swift glance down, let go! No sooner did
-he land, with loosened muscles to avoid the shock as much as he could,
-than the package of heavy books landed beside him.
-
-Swiftly he grasped the package, and ran.
-
-Al, almost caught, doubled with a swift, bending squirm, as the angry
-man reached to grapple with him in the moonlit doorway. By his quickness
-Al was able to get away for an instant.
-
-He tried the same ruse he had used so well before, but in another form.
-Every ounce of weight he could put into it he gave to a run away from
-the ladder. Then, doubling on himself, but tiptoeing and bending as low
-as he could, avoiding the moon ray, Al crept softly along. The man,
-following the direction of the footfalls, and thus trying to locate his
-quarry in the dark, did not see the silent, gloom-hidden form slip along
-the wall. Al was down the ladder before his ruse was detected.
-
-But the man ran to the doorway, shouting through its opening.
-
-Bob, racing toward the bicycles, realized that the other two men,
-catching the warning shout, were bearing down on him. Like a rabbit he
-reversed his route, slipping in among the trees behind the barn. But Mr.
-Parsons and the other mysterious stranger were determined men. Bob could
-not run and be silent. He dared not creep. They were too close behind
-him.
-
-Al, seeing that this pursuit was close, tried to divert attention by
-shouting as he ran, openly, across toward the bicycles.
-
-But this did not draw the others away; they felt that Bob had a parcel
-for which they meant to catch him. On and on, through the grove,
-dodging, squirming past trees, through briers, Bob went.
-
-Curt, at the field, with the engine idling on the airplane, did not hear
-the pursuit until Bob, almost worn out, nearly done, came racing along.
-Then, seeing him, Curt ran to meet him. From the grove behind came the
-crash and shout of pursuers.
-
-"The books--hide!--" Bob could say no more.
-
-Curt caught the package as Bob hurled it. Then, with an instinct that
-amounted to genius, Bob noted a flattish stone, and as he ran he bent,
-pausing an instant, and came up tugging along the small, flattish
-boulder that, in the dark could be mistaken for the package of books.
-Unconcernedly, as though watching in the role of a spectator, standing
-on the parcel of books, Curt remained quiet, and the men raced past him.
-
-From the road, where he flung his bicycle, knowing well where Bob would
-head for, Al arrived. He raced toward the airplane just as Bob ran in
-the same direction with his boulder.
-
-Al, not unnerved by his excitement, realized that if the propeller was
-turning, some chocks or other means of holding back the ship were in
-place. He bent under the wheels as Bob arrived.
-
-"Get in!" he cried. Bob, pretending to drop the books in, let the
-boulder fall beside the turf. While he was climbing in, the men paused
-for an instant by Curt who said, sharply, "There he goes!"
-
-They turned, saw Bob was making for the airplane, and ran toward him.
-
-Al tumbled into the rear cockpit, determined not to be caught after the
-enmity he had awakened.
-
-"Take me!" he cried, but the roar of the engine drowned his voice as
-Bob, risking everything, in the dark, opened the throttle.
-
-Up went the elevators enough to lift the tail as the propeller stream
-swept against them.
-
-Along the turf the ship began to move. The men, aware of the sinister
-menace of the whirling blades, fell aside. Bob, sensing the near
-approach of the end of his runway, lifted the elevators again, felt the
-ship going light, gave her the gun, holding her just long enough on the
-level after the take-off to get his speed--then up he roared.
-
-And a boulder beside the turf remained, while Curt, with the books under
-his arm, among the trees, went to Al's bicycle--and delivered the books
-to his uncle's study.
-
-But he didn't stay at home. Mr. Wright was not there. Bob and Al would
-fly to the plant. Thence, on tired feet, Curt pedaled.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
- DRIVEN DOWN
-
-
-Almost as soon as he lifted the airplane above the grove beyond that
-cornfield, Bob recovered his wind and his confidence.
-
-Al, of a more nervous type, was still trembling in his after-cockpit
-seat, but his excitement was changing from that of the recent adventures
-to the thrill of sky-riding at night with his brother. There was not
-only the elation of the climb to keep his nerves quivering; also there
-was the uncertainty of what might happen because of Bob's lack of skill
-and experience.
-
-Climbing steadily until he was over five hundred feet above the earth,
-Bob felt none of his brother's uneasiness or excitement. He was
-confident that he could control the airplane as far as straight flying
-was concerned; his only difficulty would be the landing, not the easiest
-thing for a skilful pilot unless a signal could be given that would make
-the plant watchman illuminate the small field.
-
-Bob, making a long swing, banked gently, to head back for the plant,
-calmly considered the elements of the situation and tried to plan, as
-well as he could, how to meet whatever came up.
-
-Al, giving more attention to sky and earth, as they straightened their
-course, correctly pointed for the field at the plant, saw a tiny set of
-glinting lights far away in the sky.
-
-Impulsively he caught the stick of the dual control to waggle it. That
-was the only way to attract Bob's attention; but Al, in his quick way,
-shook the stick and then held it pretty far to one side, and Bob, not
-expecting the move and unaware at first that Al did it, felt his heart
-sink for an instant, fearing that something had gone wrong with the
-controls.
-
-Al, horrified at the effect of his move, sat, tensely still, waiting for
-a crash. Bob, alert, decided in a flash that he would do all he could to
-avert the smash before he gave up hope. He made the necessary moves to
-correct the slip.
-
-To his delight the craft obeyed promptly, coming back into its proper
-position quickly. Turning to reassure Al, Bob saw his brother violently
-gesturing toward the sky to one side. As he looked Bob saw tiny lights
-and knew them for the flying lights of a craft.
-
-The explanation came at once. Al had attracted his attention to the
-airplane knowing it must be the brown 'plane. Probably the two men who
-had chased Bob had contrived to tell the pilot, before he took off,
-that--as they supposed--the company books were in Bob's possession. With
-a wave of his hand toward Al, reassuring him, Bob set his course for the
-flying place belonging to the Tredway plant. He was being pursued by the
-ship he had, recently, followed; it suited him. He would lead the ship
-back there, contrive some way to attract attention, get Al to drop
-flares, and then, landing, telephone all the airports nearby to identify
-and stop the pilot who must eventually alight for fuel.
-
-The pursuer, however had no intention of being lured.
-
-Bob realized it, at the same time that he recalled how swiftly the other
-pilot had climbed to escape identification earlier at the plant.
-
-Instead, the brown ship had some sinister intent toward himself, Bob
-guessed, for it was climbing rapidly, and Bob, unaware of the safe
-climbing angle or stalling angle of his own craft, dared not risk so
-steep a tilt.
-
-Higher, always higher above him, went the other man's lights.
-
-The wing over him obscured Bob's view.
-
-He turned to Al. The younger brother leaned out and stared.
-
-"Going up yet!" he cried, and gestured.
-
-Climbing! Climbing faster!
-
-Bob opened his throttle steadily to the full capacity of the engine.
-
-He proposed to gain all he could in speed, and that meant distance ahead
-of the other, while that other airplane climbed. He knew he could fly
-faster, on the level, than a climbing ship could, and he saw the other
-lights slowly becoming somewhat fainter, smaller.
-
-But that did not last long.
-
-In a few seconds the other ship leveled off and began to approach. Bob,
-craning his neck to get a sight of the other craft beyond his own wing
-spread, saw that the other man, evidently angling down and pointing
-directly for a position above him, meant to overtake him and was quite
-capable of doing it. He had superior experience and skill.
-
-Bob realized quickly that the better part of valor in an airplane at
-night, under such conditions, was to give up.
-
-"Or, at least to pretend to give up," he reflected.
-
-To carry out that pretence he reached into the signal light stores and
-selected a light. This he tossed back to Al.
-
-His signal and his act were understood.
-
-Al knew that Bob wanted light. He ignited the flare, which proved to be
-a green signal blaze, flung it overside and watched its tiny parachute
-catch the air and suspend it.
-
-In that light he swung his eyes to see what Bob meant to do.
-
-The other pilot, arresting his dive, also flew along level, and watched,
-it appeared.
-
-Bob, lighted by the glowing green flare, pointed to himself and then
-pointed to earth.
-
-The other ship, coming steadily closer, was quite plain in the
-illuminated space. Its pilot made a similar gesture, pointing first
-toward the airplane Bob piloted, then downward.
-
-Bob lowered the nose and began to spiral, as though looking for a spot
-on which he might safely "set down."
-
-On a wider swing the other pilot flew, observing his act.
-
-Swiftly Bob summed up the situation. Beneath him, easily reached, was
-the wide ribbon of the asphalt highway. By heading almost directly into
-the wind he could "shoot" the road, and by keeping his engine running at
-partial speed he could make a "power stall," letting the craft settle
-very gradually instead of trying to glide down, guess at the correct
-height and then stall and drop. To do the latter in the comparative
-darkness of the highway might result in smashed landing gear or worse if
-he stalled too high and dropped, or it might happen that he would "put
-her on hot," or at too great speed and without stalling, come against
-the ground. In one case out of ten that might enable him to roll along,
-but if he struck the slightest uneven bit of road, or a bulge of the tar
-at the intersections of the asphalt road blocks, up would bound the
-ship, perhaps to stall herself and crash.
-
-By using power he could keep flying speed while gradually settling until
-his wheels contacted the road. He could also rise more readily if he
-discovered that he had gone too far to either side of the narrow
-road--wide enough in fact but narrow from the standpoint of its use as a
-landing place.
-
-He gave up the half-formed notion of trying to outwit the pilot.
-
-The man meant "business" and that might spell trouble for an amateur.
-Better far would it be to set down and see what came of it.
-
-As he saw the roadway ribboned out straight ahead, with no headlights
-observable in either direction, Bob lifted the nose a trifle, adjusted
-the throttle until, with the road streaming backward under him, he saw
-it very gradually growing wider and clearer.
-
-Almost perfectly he landed. Being a straight road he had lots of time to
-taxi, with his gun cut and his only care being to hold the ship on its
-wheels and not let a wing-tip scrape the asphalt.
-
-To his surprise the other pilot did not land.
-
-Instead he seemed to be circling at a very low altitude, not a hundred
-feet up, and with only bare flying speed, diving ten feet to catch up
-his speed and then climbing back to circle again.
-
-"We can't leave this crate standing on the highway," Al called as soon
-as Bob had the engine running at idling speed. "Suppose a Sunday driver
-comes along at sixty miles an hour?"
-
-"What else can we do?" Bob swung in his seat.
-
-"That's so. If we go up he'll ride us down, and we might not make as
-good a landing--you might not, I mean."
-
-"Yonder comes a car!"
-
-As Bob pointed, Al leaned out and stared.
-
-"The headlights blind me," he declared, shading his eyes with his cap
-brim and hand.
-
-"It's--it's the ones who are after us," called Bob. "See! One of them is
-stopping the car and the other one is jumping out." He turned to Al.
-
-"They think we have the books. The man in the brown ship drove us down.
-Mr. Parsons, in his car, with the other man, is coming to get us."
-
-"Well, they won't!" exclaimed Al, scrambling out of the airplane.
-
-"No! You run into the woods to the right of the road."
-
-Al, as soon as he was on the ground, used his heels to good purpose.
-Bob, pausing only to bundle up some folds of his coat to make it look,
-from a distance, as though he carried a package under it, slipped to the
-road and ran the other way.
-
-Driven down, they nevertheless left the pursuers outwitted.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- CURT'S DISCOVERY
-
-
-"Those books are off my mind," Curt reflected as he pedaled slowly
-toward the aircraft plant, "but my legs aren't. I'd go to bed and rest
-for a week if it wasn't for seeing what Griff is up to."
-
-He had ridden only a block or two away from his uncle's residence, where
-he had deposited the books, when a thought occurred to him.
-
-"I know how to get a 'tow' to the plant," Curt whispered to himself,
-swinging his handlebars to turn into the next cross street. "They
-usually get shipments of fabric on the eleven o'clock freight, and our
-truck is there to load it in." He glanced at his wrist watch.
-
-"Yes," he told himself, "it ought to be loaded or nearly so--and that
-means the truck will be starting soon. I'll ride along till it catches
-up with me and then let it pull me where I'm going."
-
-It was a reasonable notion and well-founded. That it was sound was soon
-proved, for Curt saw the truck turning into the street just ahead, from
-the direction of the station.
-
-He had expected it to come from the street he had passed, but realized
-that it must have followed the direction it had been pointed instead of
-turning around in the station yards; increasing his speed for the
-moment, Curt caught up with the tail boards of the large truck, took
-hold with one hand, set his coaster brake, and rode in comfort, resting
-his weary feet.
-
-To his great surprise the truck turned off at a crossroad.
-
-"What does that mean?" he wondered.
-
-He let go and dropped back a few yards, intending to let the truck go;
-but it bothered him to decide what caused the change of route.
-
-Curt resuming his pedaling, following at a little distance, determined
-that for all his weariness he ought to find out why a truck, openly
-laden with cases and parcels, boxes and canvas sacks, should not go
-directly to its destination to be ready for unloading when the plant
-opened in the morning.
-
-The ride was not more than a half mile.
-
-Curt, keeping at good distance, let the truck get around a bend. He
-could follow by the sound of the motor. He did not wish to be seen.
-
-There was in him the thrill of the discoverer of a new clue.
-
-When the motor ceased to send its roar across the distance to him Curt
-laid Al's bicycle, which he had ridden from the cornfield, beside the
-rutted country road and walked, screening himself carefully, to the
-bend.
-
-"No truck should stop in this out-of-the-way place," he decided. "I'd
-better be careful. They might have a guard set at the turn."
-
-There was no guard, however. Evidently the truck driver and his
-assistant had no suspicion that they were observed.
-
-Openly the truck stood in the road, to one side. Curt, able to
-distinguish its bulk, was too far away to see through the darkness what
-was going on.
-
-"Maybe a broken drive chain," he thought. "Still, I'd better be
-certain."
-
-He made a slight detour through the pines along the byroad, being
-careful to make as little sound as possible, working around toward the
-position of the truck. Whatever sound he made was soon drowned by the
-roar of a motor.
-
-"Just a repair," he decided. "They're going."
-
-Instead of getting further away the motor pulsation became louder.
-
-"That's another car coming," Curt told himself, "and it's a heavy duty
-motor, too."
-
-He made fast progress toward the edge of the trees. There, hidden behind
-a large trunk of pine, he could see the dim road, the dull outline of
-the truck, and the moving forms of men lifting things out and piling
-them by the road.
-
-"They're unloading the truck!" Curt was amazed. Was this some bold
-banditry, some open theft?
-
-To his further astonishment and mystification the other truck came along
-and stopped. There was an exchange of low, but jovial banter between the
-rough drivers and their helpers, but no allusion was made to their task.
-Instead, the men on the truck just arrived began also to unload bolts,
-cases, boxes, sacks, from their vehicle.
-
-Curt could not figure the problem to a satisfactory decision. Were they
-substituting one load for the other? Why?
-
-At any rate, they would be occupied for several hours, Curt thought. He
-made his way quietly back into the wood and hurried toward his bicycle.
-
-"I'll ride to the plant, get the watchman to telephone for the police,
-and round up those fellows."
-
-Every ounce of his reserve energy Curt put into his pedals as he bumped
-along the byroad and then raced down the main highway.
-
-When he came within sight of the aircraft plant he was surprised at the
-activity displayed. The flood lights were on. Far up overhead he heard
-the sound of an airplane engine.
-
-"Oh!" Curt was reassured. "It must be Bob and Al coming in. They will be
-glad to hear I put the books away safely, and then we can all ride back
-to the truck--no, we can't!" He recalled that his own wheel was parked
-at The Windsock--if no one had taken it.
-
-There was no one in the watchman's place by the main gate, which was
-open. Curt decided that the man was at the flying field to give
-assistance to the airplane as it landed.
-
-"Hello!" Al, turning at the door of the administration offices, hailed
-Curt. "Come on!"
-
-Curt raced across the yard, joined Al and Bob at the office building
-doorway.
-
-"I thought--" he gasped, "I thought you flew!"
-
-Rapidly Bob explained. "We hoofed it back," Al added.
-
-"Then who is landing--or shooting the field to land?"
-
-"Must be Mr. Parsons bringing in the ship we deserted on the road. Did
-you leave that parcel of books at Dad's? Good! But why did you come back
-here, Curt?"
-
-A quick explanation set everything clearly before his friends.
-
-"We ought to go and round up the two trucks," he finished.
-
-"No--we must get to Griff. He must be wild, waiting without any word. I
-know the trucks won't wait forever, but you can identify them in the
-morning. Come on." Curt followed Bob's lead, with Al at his heels as
-they entered the office corridor.
-
-Griff's voice came to them as they reached the upper landing. He was
-talking--telephoning!
-
-"Oh--Langley! You got there! Good! What? Your uncle is gone? Gone? Gone!
-Lang--where? You don't know? What'll I do, Lang? You don't know? Well, I
-do!" and he slammed the receiver on its hook.
-
-"Hurry!" urged Bob as the trio raced to the lighted doorway.
-
-At the safe, kneeling, was Griff. He twirled the dial, clanged back the
-safe door, reached for the packet of bills again.
-
-"Here--you mustn't! You daren't. That isn't yours!"
-
-White-faced, Griff identified Al as the latter called his warning.
-
-"I must!" he snapped, and stood up, holding the packet.
-
-Over the offices came the drone of the approaching airplane circling for
-a landing. Al moved toward Griff.
-
-"Get back!" Griff was furious. Bob, behind him, snatched the packet of
-bills, flung it into the safe, slammed the door. Griff, with a furious
-snarl, bent to recover the packet, but the door was shut.
-
-He flung off Bob, who backed into Al and Curt.
-
-Heedless of the roar of the airplane engine as the ship came low over
-the office roofs in its descent, Bob, Al and Curt disentangled
-themselves, got to their feet.
-
-Already Griff was by the safe, the combination figures on the slip in
-his hand, the dial of the safe door twirling and clicking.
-
-"Here--what are you doing, Griff?" Bob cried out in dismay.
-
-With a quick glance Griff measured them. His face was white, his jaw was
-set, his whole attitude was that of a terrified, trembling young man who
-had determined on a course he knew to be wrong but which circumstances
-would not allow him to avoid.
-
-"Don't!" exclaimed Curt.
-
-"You daren't!" corrected Al. "Your father has stolen the books, but you
-shan't----"
-
-The safe door was wrenched open. Bob started forward, Curt at his side,
-to catch Griff's hand, to prevent this thing he felt he had to do. His
-fear of his father's anger was greater than his dread of the boys, it
-seemed.
-
-His hand on the packet of bills, Bob tried to stop him. Griff, with a
-scowl and a wicked word, kicked Bob's shin, avoided Curt's grasp, and
-stood back, his face working.
-
-There was an interruption.
-
-"Listen!" Al, nearest the door, called the word. They were halted,
-frozen into statues with tense poses and straining ears.
-
-A step sounded in the hall.
-
-Instantly, white with terror, Griff flung the bills toward the open
-safe, kicked the door shut, turned like a hunted animal and ran out
-through an intervening door into the next office, and, with Bob in hot
-pursuit, raced across the hall, into the directors' room, to its window
-and down the fire escape. And Bob, at the window, felt a hand grip his
-collar. He was caught!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX
- A CONFESSION
-
-
-Without a struggle Bob gave up. In the dark he did not know who his
-captor might be; but he reasoned that if it turned out to be Barney
-resistance would be less sensible than explanation. To struggle for
-escape if the hand on his collar belonged to Mr. Parsons, would be
-foolish and might make it harder for his chum and his brother to explain
-their situation.
-
-In his mind's eye Bob recalled how the office had looked as he left it.
-Griff had kicked at the safe door, believing the money had gone in; but
-it had not! It had dropped on the floor.
-
-Unquestionably Mr. Parsons, or Barney, or whoever held him, had come
-past that office but had not stopped there, preferring to make a capture
-of the only person he could put his hands on.
-
-Bob realized that non-resistance was a wise course. As he had surmised,
-he was led back toward the office. He was glad that he had done nothing,
-said nothing to explain the situation so far. The man who had hold of
-him, who urged him along the corridor, was Griff's father, the man from
-whom they sought to save Griff.
-
-At the office door Bob, panting and choked a trifle by the tight grip on
-his coat, took in the situation swiftly.
-
-It looked, from all the appearances, as though Al were dictating from
-the slip while Curt manipulated the combination, to open the safe; on
-the other hand, from another point of view, it might appear that the
-pair had recently had the safe open and were closing it.
-
-What made that more probable to an outsider's eyes was the package of
-greenbacks which Al held!
-
-"What does this mean?" Mr. Parsons, half dragging Bob along, made a
-quick, nervous advance, caught the package from Al with his free hand.
-
-"It means that your--" Al began in his imprudent haste; Bob gave him a
-sharp, meaning look. Al, catching it, realizing that he had almost
-mentioned Griff, whom they had previously agreed to aid, was silent.
-
-"It means that we came back here--" Curt began and was interrupted by
-the angry partner of Mr. Tredway.
-
-"Not content with taking those books," he said angrily, "you want to
-take the company money--how did you get into my desk? Pick the lock?
-That adds another count against you!"
-
-He released Bob's coat collar and strode to the desk, a flat-topped one
-in the center of the room. Catching up the telephone receiver, he made a
-call.
-
-"Hello--hello! Give me Police Headquarters! Yes, thanks!"
-
-For an instant the members of the Sky Squad were stunned.
-
-"What's that?" Mr. Parsons spoke into the transmitter again. "He is out?
-How soon will he be back? Have him call Mr. Parsons, at the aircraft
-plant! Yes--perhaps I can give him some tenants for the new cells in the
-police station."
-
-He hung up the earpiece.
-
-Bob, recovering his usual good judgment, began to consider the very
-difficult situation that faced the Sky Squad.
-
-Al, however, seldom thought before he spoke; more often than his
-brother, he was sorry for hasty decisions and sharp speeches.
-
-"You'll be sorry if you tell the Chief of Police," blustered Al.
-
-Curt, as thoughtful as Bob, trod on the foot of the younger captive and
-Al, jumping away, refused to be warned.
-
-"I don't care!" he cried. "If he thinks two sons of a detective, and
-their friend will be put in cells for trying to save--oh, all right,
-Bob!--for trying to put money back into a safe--" he whirled on Mr.
-Parsons at the sound of the latter's sarcastic laugh, "--that's what we
-were doing! If the Police Chief arrests us--we'll ask him to arrest you,
-too!"
-
-"Indeed! Why!"
-
-"For taking the company books away. For showing them to somebody outside
-the firm--planning how to get more cheap parts into the plant. Oh, we
-know all about you!"
-
-"How do you know I had company books?"
-
-"I saw the pages open on the table at The Windsock!"
-
-"Indeed! Young man," he swung to Curt. "Please go into the bookkeeper's
-room, unlock his book cabinet, and bring all the books you find."
-
-Curt, surprised, took the small key from their captor, went in and
-lighted the adjoining office, returning, finally, with an armful of
-books.
-
-"Do you know the books of a complete set when you see them?"
-
-"Bob does," declared Al, still angry, but becoming a little uneasy. He
-might have jumped to his decision about the books he had seen. He was
-always making snap decisions!
-
-"Examine that set, young man--er, Bob!"
-
-"It's complete!" Bob admitted.
-
-"Exactly!"
-
-"Then why were you in such a sweat to get the others when we tried to--"
-Al's voice tailed down to nothing; he began to see how really guilty
-they could be made to seem. There was entry into the offices at night,
-an open private desk, a tell-tale safe combination memorandum on the
-floor, a package of bills beside the safe, for one chain of evidence;
-there was an intrusion on a private conference, at The Windsock, and the
-subsequent escape with the books for a second, not to think of Bob's use
-of the airplane with no permission from a higher authority than a
-watchman, and the infraction of State law by landing on a highway and
-deserting the ship in a traffic lane. Al's bravado began to evaporate.
-
-Bob, who had remained cool, thinking, was able to see a brighter side to
-the situation.
-
-"Please, Mr. Parsons," he began, "don't call in the police. That would
-force us to defend ourselves. We could explain what we were doing and
-why. But we have a--a code of honor, and we would rather have you let
-things work out without the police--and reporters."
-
-"You would really suffer more than we would," Curt declared.
-
-"Is that so? We shall see."
-
-The telephone bell blared. Mr. Parsons turned.
-
-"Hello!" he spoke into the instrument.
-
-"Father! Don't! Those fellows are protecting me! I can't let them!"
-
-Griff stood in the office door, his face white, his lips quivering.
-
-Mr. Parsons, catching sight of his son, stared.
-
-"Just a minute, Griff," he said. "Hello--is the----"
-
-"Father! You shan't! You mustn't! Listen to me. I took that money!----"
-
-The telephone receiver dropped, hanging by its cord to swing unheeded
-against the man's leg.
-
-"I'll confess!" Griff, for all his fear of his father, of consequences,
-was showing his true manliness. "I ran away, Father, because I thought I
-had put the money back and locked the safe. I didn't want to be caught.
-I thought I could go down the fire escape and get away. But when I saw
-you catch Bob I came back and listened--I must not let these fine
-friends stand a night in a cell for something I've done."
-
-Then, haltingly, ashamed and despairing, but honestly, Griff cleared the
-Sky Squad and told the truth.
-
-"He was trying to get out of his trouble," Curt said to end the deep
-silence that followed Griff's explanation, "and he didn't want to come
-to you when you had so many things on your mind."
-
-"Our cousin has gone to get money for him from Father," added Bob. "But
-Father must have started for home before Lang got there, and it was only
-when the man at The Windsock threatened to come and tell you and make it
-look worse than it is, that Griff lost his common sense. We came back
-here to meet each other and saw what he was doing and convinced him it
-was a mistake."
-
-The impulsiveness of Al prompted him to "put in his oar," but his
-earlier bluster was gone and he kept still.
-
-They watched Mr. Parsons.
-
-His face was set and pale, his fingers worked nervously. He had his head
-bent.
-
-Bob, quietly picking up the telephone as he heard the impatient voice of
-someone at the other end of the connection making it squeak, spoke into
-the transmitter quietly.
-
-"We'll call you back. Something has come up to make things different."
-He hung up the earpiece.
-
-Apparently Mr. Parsons did not notice him at all. Added to the blow
-given by his son's confession that he had broken promises and gotten
-into deep trouble was the knowledge that three loyal companions, with
-full knowledge of his guilt had not only protected him from himself but
-had shielded him at the expense of being, themselves, suspected and
-unfairly accused.
-
-Mr. Parsons looked up. He held out a hand to Bob.
-
-"I beg your pardon," he said, "I am sorry!" Bob, smiling with some
-relief, eagerly gripped the extended hand, to be followed by Curt and
-Al.
-
-Then the father turned to his son.
-
-Three members of the Sky Squad held their breath.
-
-"Son," the voice seemed cool and sharp, but it changed suddenly, "Son, I
-guess I'd have done better to make a comrade of you than to try to rule
-you with fear and threats. Come here, Griffith." The young man advanced,
-hopeful, but also shame-faced. "Son, we all make mistakes. If we learn
-not to make them again, that is life's lesson. I am not a judge. I
-am--your father!"
-
-Griff's hand reached out impulsively.
-
-"I had to tell you--but I guess if it hadn't been to save these friends,
-I might have gone on. I guess I'm a coward."
-
-"I should say not!" cried Al.
-
-"Not you!" Bob was equally emphatic.
-
-"It took more bravery to walk in under the circumstances than to tell
-your father any other time, I say!" Curt exclaimed.
-
-"I will settle with that fellow at the roadhouse," Mr. Parsons stated,
-when forgiveness was assured to Griff and the five occupants of the
-office were determined to "work together" for a change, "If he has been
-paid----"
-
-"Why not meet the Police Chief somewhere and have Griff tell him the
-things that are done against the law at The Windsock," suggested Al.
-"Then we could all go there and give evidence of how Jenks tried to
-collect twice from Griff--and maybe we would find out something
-about--our own mystery. I think he is in it, some way!"
-
-Mr. Parsons decided that he owed the Chief some explanation of his call
-and, somewhat over-excited, and not his usual sensible self, he failed
-to realize just what Al's suggestion implied--that they make Griff
-incriminate himself, since he had played at the tables without informing
-against the hotel. The Police Chief agreed to meet them near the
-roadhouse, and when Mr. Parsons hung up and turned back to them he was
-much more calm than they had ever seen him. "If I explain my own
-purposes," he said, "it will be easier for us all to understand and get
-together. I have been trying to protect my absent partner----"
-
-"Absent?" Bob repeated the word, "your absent partner?"
-
-"Yes. Arthur Tredway. He went into hiding."
-
-"I know!" cried Al, "I know now! I thought the face of the man in that
-brown airplane--the one who flew it--was familiar. That's Mr. Tredway!"
-
-"Yes, my boy, you are right."
-
-"But--" Curt was rather stunned, "I don't understand."
-
-"Mr. Tredway--alive?" cried Griff.
-
-"Yes, alive. This has been a very mixed affair," the partner declared.
-"I knew that Arthur Tredway was alive, but I could not speak of it or
-explain, because we did not know whom we could trust, and so told no
-one."
-
-"Then he wasn't--in the crash?"
-
-Mr. Parsons turned to answer Bob.
-
-"No."
-
-"But why did he do it? Why did he hide and let everybody think he had
-'gone West?'" Bob demanded.
-
-"Don't you remember--crossed wires?" Curt reminded him.
-
-That had to be explained.
-
-"So someone crossed wires that were scraped nearly bare, in Arthur's own
-ship!" Mr. Parsons was dismayed. "That proves his suspicion that
-somebody meant harm to him. And that is what we hid him away to
-discover. If the accidents ceased with his disappearance, he was in
-danger; if not, the damage was aimed at the aircraft company."
-
-"But you haven't found out why he was in danger--or from whom?" declared
-Curt.
-
-"No," admitted the partner. Al, fired with enthusiasm, added:
-
-"But we will!"
-
-Mr. Parsons was not so sure.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXX
- BARNEY GIVES A HINT
-
-
-While the quintet waited for the taxicab which Mr. Parsons summoned from
-town, Griff put the money back in the safe, thankful for his escape.
-Bob, Curt and Al expressed their elation that he was freed from
-suspicion, and Barney arrived.
-
-"The watchman called me," the manager explained. "Things got a bit too
-exciting out here and he thought I ought to know. What is there to tell
-me?"
-
-The explanations took up the time of waiting.
-
-"Hm-m-m." Barney was pleased but thoughtful. "Glad to learn my best
-friend's partner is cleared," he nodded at Mr. Parsons. "Certainly I'm
-delighted that his son is all straight. And Tredway is alive! Glory be!
-I'm gladdest about that."
-
-"I knew you would be," agreed Mr. Parsons.
-
-"The man who gave me everything I have, made me the manager of his
-plant! I'll say I'm glad he's all right. Well, let's go see that
-ex-pilot and his wicked two-autograph ally!" he grinned at Al.
-
-"I think we ought to try to catch those truckmen first," suggested Curt.
-
-"Oh, let them alone," argued Barney, and Mr. Parsons agreed.
-
-"You know what they were doing," he told Curt. "All you have to do now
-is check the stuff that is unloaded from our truck in the morning. If
-that turns out to be poor material, trace the other truck, get your
-proof--and at least one part of the mystery will be easily solved."
-
-They went out and packed into the taxicab, giving its driver direction
-for meeting the Police Chief at the edge of the picnic grove.
-
-When they got there and related their experiences they were daunted to
-find him decidedly lukewarm about "rounding up" the ex-pilot and his
-roadhouse manager.
-
-"I don't think the idea is so good," the Chief of Police stated.
-"Griffith Parsons has no receipt. He can't actually prove that he paid
-real money, or that he paid at all. Anyway, now that his father knows
-the whole business, that fellow, Jenks, hasn't a chance to collect
-again. He won't dare try. Just what do you want me to do?"
-
-"There's this note put on the airplane, and his trying to avoid showing
-his handwriting by giving me two autographs," Al suggested.
-
-"In a way I'm sorry to destroy that clue," said Mr. Parsons, "but when
-we get to the roadhouse you will see that it has no value."
-
-"What did you want me to do?" repeated the police official.
-
-"We thought of facing the manager, Jenks, with Griff's evidence of how
-he permits gambling to go on--and other things outside the law--and
-making him tell us what he knows," Bob urged.
-
-The man shook his head.
-
-"Oh, I know what you're thinking," the officer chuckled as he eyed Bob,
-Curt and Al. "Graft--hush-money! But that isn't it at all. As far as
-Griff's information goes, we'll take care of that better by making a
-raid when the place is crowded and the barn is actually in use for
-illicit purposes. But, don't you see what you are doing?"
-
-The chums shook their heads.
-
-"I do," said Barney, and Mr. Parsons agreed again. "If we offer to make
-him tell with a threat of what we will do if he refuses,--we are
-'compounding a felony' if we get him to tell anything and don't go
-through with the legal steps on the face of our evidence."
-
-"That's it."
-
-"Oh, well," Barney saw how disappointed the three chums were, although
-they admitted the justice of the official's attitude, "let's go out and
-see my old patron and comrade."
-
-The Chief of Police agreed to look into the charges Griff had made and
-turned his car to return to his home, while Barney, in one cab with Bob
-and Al, and Mr. Parsons in the one they had called, with Curt and his
-own son, went on.
-
-There was a vociferous greeting between Mr. Tredway and his plant
-manager.
-
-"Why didn't you tell me you were all right?" he cried, pumping the plant
-owner's hand, slapping his back, and, as Al said later, "almost kissing
-him," while the mysterious stranger, and the others watched with various
-feelings.
-
-"I had to make my plans in secret," Mr. Tredway retorted. "Not even my
-partner knew until tonight. But--let us get acquainted, all the way
-'round."
-
-He turned to the mystery man behind him.
-
-"This is my brother," he presented the man, "and so these are the three
-young men who have worked so hard to solve the mystery of my crash into
-the lake!" He shook hands and they selected a private dining room on the
-second floor for a midnight repast.
-
-"Well," he said, smiling pleasantly at the three rather silent youths as
-the first course, a hot, nourishing soup, was served, "have you solved
-the puzzle of the mystery crash?"
-
-"I think we have--but not all, sir," replied Bob. "I think I can put
-together what happened, but not why it had to happen."
-
-"Go ahead," Mr. Tredway encouraged.
-
-"Yes, do," urged Barney. "I admit I'm stumped."
-
-"Well, sir," Bob, without trying to be vain, spoke frankly. "We got
-mixed up and puzzled, at first, because we were trying to solve a lot of
-things by connecting them with your--disappearance."
-
-"And we made the mistake of suspecting everybody," interrupted Al.
-
-"That mixed Griff's case in, and his father's," agreed Curt, and he
-turned back to give Bob the center of the stage.
-
-"You didn't know whether the damage to airplanes was aimed at the plant
-or at you direct," Bob told Mr. Tredway, who nodded. "You had two
-airplanes--both alike, except one was the Golden Dart and the other was
-the Silver Flash."
-
-"Exactly. And I thought," Mr. Tredway interrupted, "if the guilty person
-knew which airplane I meant to deliver, he would damage that one and so,
-at the last minute I changed my ship, after saying I was going to
-deliver the Golden Dart I took off in the Silver Flash----"
-
-"And you were right," gasped Al. "When we flew the Golden one her rudder
-cable was frayed and broke."
-
-"Right, my young friend. And nothing was wrong with the other."
-
-"Then how did you crash it--why did it crack up?"
-
-Mr. Tredway looked to Bob for an explanation, desiring to test the
-youth's skill at deduction.
-
-"I haven't much to work on," Bob said modestly, "but this is how I think
-you did it:
-
-"Your brother flew here in the brown ship and hid it in the field,
-leaving the note to show you it was ready."
-
-"And then?----"
-
-"You took off early, and then set down the big cabin ship on the
-turf--that accounts for the deep ruts--and the ship was in the way so
-you dragged it into the stubble until the brown ship got up, then took
-the cabin craft into the air----"
-
-"I fail to see what the brown airplane, and Arthur's brother, have to do
-with it," Barney broke in.
-
-"Mr. Tredway's brother had to be there to bring down the cabin 'plane,"
-Bob explained. "At least that's the only way I can see for the tracks in
-the field, and the crack-up, to fit the conditions," he paused.
-
-"You mean--they exchanged ships? Arthur landed the cabin crate and then
-flew away in the brown one, while his brother crashed the Silver Flash?"
-Barney demanded. Tredway nodded as did his brother.
-
-"The young man is correct in his deduction," the latter said. "I had to
-come and exchange ships with my brother and then crack up the Silver
-Flash to give the idea that its pilot--and my brother had taken off in
-it!--had gone into a mudhole or under rocks in the lake."
-
-"What did you expect to gain by that?" asked Barney.
-
-"Removing one partner," Mr. Tredway smiled, "gave the other one 'a free
-hand' if he was in any way guilty, or you, Barney!"
-
-Barney turned red.
-
-"Do you mean to say?----"
-
-"No, I did not suspect you, I only wanted to get away and see what
-happened, and who did it."
-
-"These young men have cleared most of us," stated Mr. Parsons. "They
-have done more! They know how the good parts are taken and cheap ones
-are substituted." He explained about the trucks.
-
-"But we can't solve the mystery of why you brought books here and then
-said the company books were all at the plant," argued Al.
-
-"I found a small set of duplicate books--that is, what we would call
-'fake' books--private books in the cabinet," began Mr. Parsons.
-
-Barney bent forward.
-
-"Where did you find those? I had them in my own desk!"
-
-"That's where I took them from. You see, Barney, as long as we all
-suspected each other it was wisest for me to check them. Not that I
-accuse you, because they were in your desk. You were checking up, also,
-of course."
-
-"I'm not finished either," declared Barney. "But--as long as Arthur
-wanted a look at them, it's all right with me."
-
-"We have them safe," said Curt. "And the brother is the mysterious man
-with the dark beard whose motorcycle Griff used, and it was he who was
-in the supply room, the other night."
-
-"I was," said Mr. Tredway's brother. "I came, with his key, got in the
-private gate, went up the fire escape and down to check up in the supply
-room--until Griff, running off with my motorcycle, made me suspicious,
-scared and anxious. So I left."
-
-"And I came here to see Arthur's brother," said Mr. Parsons, and Griff,
-looking ashamed added, "--and I ran away!"
-
-"But we don't know who damaged the crates, or if it was against Mr.
-Tredway or just spite work against the company," Al said. "The mystery
-crash has failed to bring that to light."
-
-"Yes," Barney suddenly leaned forward, "I've got to go, out and dismiss
-my taxicab--it's eating its head off--but first I'll give you a hint to
-chew over while I'm away."
-
-"What?" several spoke the question in unison.
-
-"Suppose the motive was revenge," Barney spoke very low, and Bob,
-watching some curtains, at a locked side door, thought the breeze must
-be stirring them, "suppose there was once a pilot at the plant and that
-Arthur had to fire him and----"
-
-"You don't mean to say!--" Mr. Tredway bent close, excited. "The pilot I
-once discharged? Why--he's the owner of this place. I'd never dream----"
-
-"All the same--chew it over!" Barney rose. "I suppose you'll be flying
-back--you won't stay here tonight." Tredway shook his head.
-
-"Be right back," Barney said. Bob, as the others chatted softly and
-excitedly, followed the departing manager with his eyes. He had thrown
-suspicion on several, had Barney. Also, he had been the only one who
-inspected and then reported on the Silver Flash, that nothing had been
-found tampered with! And--he had chased Lang and Bob to see Bob's
-detective father! What a lot of curious facts, Bob mused!
-
-And when Barney rejoined them a moment later Bob was still musing!
-
-"I think it would be a good idea for all of us to stay," suggested Mr.
-Parsons. "It's after midnight, and these lads must be worn out, with all
-their pedaling to and fro. We can telephone their homes."
-
-"You may all stay," said Mr. Tredway. "But until we prove something I
-shall keep out of sight. Especially if the ex-pilot is apt to be around.
-I'm going to warm up my brother's airplane and hop back to the airport I
-came from."
-
-They all parted. Curt declared he wanted to secure his forgotten
-bicycle, Bob and Al were sure they had better go on home if Mr. Parsons
-would let them take the taxicab. He decided that, after all, he and his
-son had better go home. The meal was finished. Mr. Tredway, going by a
-side hall, and down back stairs, sought to avoid recognition while his
-brother agreed to watch the ex-pilot at every chance.
-
-Bob and Curt found the bicycle safe, and trundled it to the luggage rack
-at the back of the taxicab.
-
-Then Bob turned suddenly.
-
-"Stay here," he said, "I want to say something to Mr. Tredway--he's
-warming up the airplane."
-
-"Forget something?"
-
-"No--recalled something!"
-
-As he reached the man so mysteriously lost and so suddenly discovered
-Bob caught his arm and spoke very earnestly.
-
-"For the sake of your safety," Bob whispered, "take off, just as you
-planned--but only go to the cornfield--set down as soon as you can--and
-then--look for--crossed wires!"
-
-In a flash he was beyond questioning!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXI
- "ONE MORE PROBLEM"
-
-
-Bob did not delay a moment after he delivered his solemn warning to Mr.
-Tredway.
-
-As quickly as he could he located the plant manager.
-
-"Barney," he said earnestly, "don't stay here tonight! Come home with
-us. Stay with the Sky Squad."
-
-"In the name of Sam Hill--why?"
-
-"You forgot where you were, didn't you, when you spoke about the----" he
-lowered his voice, glanced around, spoke carefully, "--the ex-pilot as
-the one who had a motive for injuring Mr. Tredway?"
-
-"Well--I guess I was thinking pretty much of what I was saying."
-
-"I know you were."
-
-"Well--did you hear anything or--see anything?"
-
-"I'm sure I heard something. You didn't think, but there's a curtained
-door in that private room we used. How do you know Jenks or--the other
-one--might not have heard you?"
-
-"Lad, you're quick! Right, too. Maybe I'd better go on. But I won't need
-to stay with you."
-
-"Oh, you'd better. We can take turns watching!"
-
-"Fiddlesticks! It's not as dangerous for me as that!"
-
-"At least come back in the taxi with us."
-
-"Oh, all right. I'll do that. But I'll go on home, then."
-
-"Won't you come on, please--right away?"
-
-Barney, half-amused at Bob's concern, and partly wondering what caused
-it and if he actually had been spied on, overheard, and realizing even
-better than did Bob, he thought, how dangerous such an accusation might
-be, Barney agreed.
-
-The ride back to town was taken up with discussion of Barney's hint but
-through all the talk Bob was rather quiet.
-
-It was decided that the three members of the Sky Squad would be taken
-home first, then Griff and his father would go on, leaving Barney to
-finish the ride to his own home.
-
-As the car drew up in front of Bob's house and Al began saying his
-goodnight, quite sleepily, Bob turned to Mr. Parsons.
-
-"What do you say to going back to the plant, after you drop Griff, and
-getting the real set of company books, and bringing them here. We can
-work on them together, and see if there is anything in the private set
-that doesn't agree with the others."
-
-"Why not wait until morning?" suggested Mr. Parsons. "Aren't you worn
-out?"
-
-"What books?" Barney asked. "Oh--that's so. I remember. You said you had
-them. Put them away carefully! Don't leave them out."
-
-"Oh, we will," agreed Al, overhearing. "We'll put them in the big desk
-in Father's study and lock them up."
-
-"Well, goodnight," said Curt. He had been invited to stay but he
-preferred to go on home. Bob threw in a suggestion.
-
-"At that," he said, "Curt, why don't you let me telephone your mother,
-and you stay. And Barney could wait with us till Mr. Parsons comes
-back."
-
-"Well, come to think of it, why not?" Barney decided. "If it won't wake
-up your folks." Bob assured him it wouldn't. His mother must still be
-waiting up, he declared; there was a light burning in his father's
-study.
-
-"Good grief!" he cried, "I never thought--supposing Dad has come home?"
-
-"I'll bet he has," Al agreed.
-
-"Let's go and see--will you come in with us?" he addressed Barney, and
-the latter cordially agreed.
-
-"I guess we'd better let you wait in the living room till we see whether
-it's Dad or Mother. She might not be dressed for company--if Mother is
-sitting up." Barney agreed to wait, and Al went to the door to call Curt
-in to telephone home.
-
-The den, into which Bob turned, closing the door quietly, was occupied,
-as he had all along suspected it would be, by his father.
-
-"I heard that you weren't in the other city," Bob said, after a hasty
-greeting. His father saw his eagerness and let him talk. "Lang flew
-there to get help--" he sketched very swiftly the incidents of the
-night. "Now, Father, what brought you home? Have you?----"
-
-"I have suspicions--yes."
-
-"Then you've been working on the mystery?" Bob asked.
-
-"All along. I pretended to be busy on another case because----"
-
-"You suspected somebody!"
-
-"From the start. Yes. Did you?"
-
-"Not until tonight. But I know it's the same person, and I've got him in
-the living room and I want to pretend to him that we are guarding him
-from some one else, while we keep guard to see that he doesn't take
-fright and escape."
-
-His father framed a name and Bob nodded.
-
-"What is your proof?" demanded his father.
-
-"He came to a detective at the very first. He has put suspicion on
-everybody else. He seems terribly anxious about those books."
-
-"Circumstantial evidence justifying suspicion, but not proof.
-However--I've learned that some people, probably using assumed names--it
-may all be the same person--have been changing aircraft stock into gold.
-What is your plan, son?"
-
-"We must keep him from guessing that we suspect--and keep him where we
-can watch him. The way I plan, if you agree, is this. Father, if he is
-the guilty one, he is terribly dangerous. He must have crossed wires on
-Mr. Tredway's airplane, before the owner left the plant--hoping he'd
-have a short-circuit, set the gas on fire and come down in flames. Then
-he thought the Golden Dart was the cabin ship to be flown and he frayed
-the rudder cable. When he discovered the other ship was going he might
-have crossed wires on that--remember, he mentioned 'crossed wires' back
-in the other city? And he's the only one who inspected the Silver Flash
-when she crashed and was hauled in. So we must keep him here where we
-can hold him if he makes a move."
-
-"Right. Get him in, son. We will pretend to study the books, and I will
-watch his reaction."
-
-"And if he doesn't betray himself?----"
-
-"We will let him go. He cannot leave tonight because if he has been
-taking stock and exchanging it for gold, he probably had to bank it--he
-wouldn't leave it in his house, would he, son?"
-
-"We can have detectives watch his house all night. Father, fix it with
-the Chief of Police while I get him."
-
-Barney was ushered in, Al and Curt joined them and the three of the Sky
-Squad lined up on the davenport to watch Barney as the detective
-discussed the case.
-
-But Barney did not betray any uneasiness. He was clever, Bob decided.
-
-Mr. Parsons, for whom Al watched to let him in without awakening Mrs.
-Wright, brought other books and they were all busy.
-
-"We've discovered something!" Al exclaimed, after half an hour.
-
-"Sky Squad will now report!" chuckled Barney. He turned to Bob.
-
-"Go ahead, Chief Pilot!"
-
-Bob, very serious, nodded.
-
-Was Barney getting fidgety? Or, was he simply eager?
-
-"What have you found?" his father prompted him.
-
-"We've solved one mystery--how the bad parts are coming in," said Bob,
-confidently. "Curt, bring the false ledger and the real one."
-
-All heads bent interestedly.
-
-"Notice how those tiny pencil 'ticks' are made in the beginning of some
-entries?" Bob pointed to several. "There aren't any in the regular
-ledger, but the entries correspond, and they are always worded in a
-queer way. See this one, about fabric: '10 bolts fabric, cotton, quality
-A--dash--X--one hundred,'" he quoted. "Now all the entries that are
-ticked in the false ledger are backward like that--and the same in the
-regular book, but no others except the ticked ones are!"
-
-"That's curious," muttered Barney. "What else?"
-
-"Here are several bills of lading that weren't entered Saturday, just
-slipped into the back of the regular ledger," Bob drew them out and
-unfolded them. "One is all right, but the other is made out
-backward--the same as the ticked ones--and it isn't a real bill of
-lading at all, because it is dated for today, and the shipment that
-arrived today isn't to be delivered until tomorrow and we saw the two
-trucks exchanging goods on the byroad--or, Curt did."
-
-"Very clever, but what does it prove?" asked Barney.
-
-"This bill of lading being dated ahead and being one of the 'backward
-wording' sort, shows that those are the entries that are 'queer.' That
-solves the mystery, because we know how those things are being
-substituted tonight."
-
-"But who does it incriminate?" asked Barney.
-
-"Why--whoever's writing matches this."
-
-"Then the bookkeeper is due for a call on the carpet--maybe worse," said
-Barney. "That's his book, and the false set is the same handwriting!"
-
-"That settles that mystery and leaves only the one about Mr. Tredway's
-possible evil wisher," said Mr. Parsons.
-
-"Why, that's attended to--all we need to do is to watch that ex-pilot,
-and Mr. Tredway's brother has agreed--" Al paused. The den private
-extension telephone was ringing.
-
-"It's for you, Bob," his father said. "Who'd be--oh, Mr. Tredway! How
-are you? Glad you're 'alive and kicking.' Yes, this is Wright. My son
-stole a march on me, finding you. Here he is."
-
-Bob bent over the desk.
-
-"Hello...." he said amid a tense silence. "Oh, did I guess right?... You
-didn't go on? ... set down in the cornfield ... fix it in the
-morning?... Yes. Thank you, sir, for calling. Yes, we just got here."
-
-He replaced the receiver and turned to the interested, expectant
-company.
-
-"Another of the puzzles solved, and I guessed rightly," he said.
-"Barney, when you suspected the ex-pilot, I thought it might be that
-he'd do the same as he had done on the airplane I piloted--Mr. Tredway's
-own sport craft. You know why I had to set it down?"
-
-"No--because the other man--Arthur--chased you down?"
-
-"No," said Bob, slowly. "You mentioned the ex-pilot having access to the
-'planes. Well, on the brown ship--the wires were crossed tonight!"
-
-"Oh!" Barney gasped, and recovered from his startled amazement. "You
-don't say! That's bad for--the ex-pilot."
-
-"But it disposes of one mystery--who! He was probably there at The
-Windsock and heard you--don't you suppose?"
-
-"Looks like it. Well, now, that clears up----"
-
-"All but one more puzzle," said Curt. "Who's getting away with the small
-parts, and valuable instruments?"
-
-"I can settle that!" said Barney. "Sandy Jim, the rigger Al was put to
-work for--remember him sending you to his house with a lot of parcels
-supposed to contain junk for his kid?" Al nodded, dismayed. It hurt to
-hear that honest-looking Sandy was so wicked. But Barney seemed to have
-the correct idea, as the evidence indicated.
-
-"We'll round them up tomorrow." Barney rose. "Suppose I take those books
-along with me? I'll bring them in early in the morning."
-
-"Fine!" Bob jumped up, gathering the books. "There's a Summer shower
-wetting the streets--I'll wrap these in paper for you."
-
-When he returned with the parcel all goodnights had been said and the
-party broke up.
-
-"Son," said Mr. Wright to Bob, "what do you think now?"
-
-"I can't say. He acted all right. But he always has done that."
-
-"Who?" Al was sleepy but curious.
-
-"Barney!"
-
-"You don't suspect Barney?"
-
-They nodded.
-
-"But how can you? He has helped us, and he's Mr. Tredway's friend and I
-always thought--er----"
-
-"A criminal had to have a motive?" prompted his father. "I attached no
-importance to one fact I have discovered, until I felt sure of Barney's
-guilt. Now I do. This might be his motive! Years ago Mr. Tredway won the
-girl whom another pilot was courting. The man went from bad to worse,
-threatened--and then disappeared."
-
-"Jealousy! Hate!" gasped Curt. "But Barney!----"
-
-"Of course that was not the pilot's name. He must have changed his name
-as well as his appearance."
-
-"Then, Father, how did you know it's Barney. How about the ex-pilot?
-Couldn't he?----"
-
-"No, Al. He worked for Mr. Tredway after the latter married."
-
-"Well--then--good cracky! Bob--you gave the culprit all the evidence in
-those books--to destroy!"
-
-"No!" Bob smiled. "Dad's encyclopedia is shy four volumes, and there are
-three vitamine books gone, and Barney has them. The real books are in
-their places on our shelves!"
-
-Then they did compliment him!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXII
- FLIGHT!
-
-
-When the sun peered through dispersing Summer storm clouds it saw three
-alert, wide-awake youths, a little tired but very tense, in the testing
-field of the Tredway aircraft plant.
-
-With them were Mr. Tredway, the Chief of Police, Mr. Parsons and Griff.
-
-"Is Tredway's speed plane fueled up," Mr. Wright came over from the
-offices where he had deposited the company books in readiness for later
-use: his question was addressed to Griff.
-
-"Ready, sir," the young son of Mr. Tredway's partner responded.
-
-"All plans arranged, Chief?"
-
-"We've got a net spread that Barney Horton couldn't escape if he was an
-eel. One of my best detectives has been outside his house ever since he
-went in from the taxi, at one 'a.m.' Those two men over by the offices,
-getting ready to dig a trench, are two picked men of my headquarters
-staff. Every motorcycle man, every traffic man, all our roundsmen and
-policemen are on the alert."
-
-"I simply cannot believe it of Barney," Mr. Tredway was as doleful as
-though they were planning to arrest him, instead of his plant manager,
-"I took him in and gave him every opportunity, taught him all he knows,
-pushed him to the top. To think--"
-
-"Hatred for a fancied wrong is a terrible force for evil," said Mr.
-Wright.
-
-"But he doesn't look a bit like the man who was trying to win the woman
-who became my wife."
-
-"By the way," interrupted the Chief of Police, "she hasn't appeared at
-all in this--have you separated? Isn't she----"
-
-"Oh, yes," quickly, "she is alive. My wife is away in Europe. That is
-the reason I decided to--disappear. I knew that news of it would not
-reach her before I 'came to life.'"
-
-"But if Barney is the guilty man," Curt was still dazed, "why did he
-turn suspicion on that ex-pilot at The Windsock?"
-
-"He tried to turn suspicion on everybody," retorted Mr. Wright. "It is a
-favorite trick of a guilty person. He has practically accused the
-bookkeeper, the supply clerk, Sandy Jim, the rigger and the man you
-mentioned."
-
-"But he's free," Al spoke. "Why didn't you arrest him while you had him
-at the house showing him the books?"
-
-"You must remember one fact, my young 'Sky Squadder,'" the Chief of
-Police commented. "Circumstantial evidence, and suspicion are one thing.
-Proof of guilt that will stand in court against a clever lawyer is
-something quite different."
-
-"In other words," Mr. Wright explained, "we feel, with absolute
-conviction, that Barney is our man. We haven't any actual proof. We must
-wait until he makes some open move. Bob, cleverly discovering Barney's
-supposed guilt because he saw Barney make that excuse to get out to the
-airplane when he said he wanted to dismiss his taxi, did all he could to
-keep the man close to his Sky Squad; but Barney was clever."
-
-"I thought he would make a try for the books during the night if I got
-him to stay with us," Bob admitted modestly. "Then, when he refused to
-spend the night with us I hoped he'd discover that we had substituted
-other books for the ledgers, and would try to get in our place to get
-all the incriminating evidence. But," dejectedly, "he was too clever for
-that, even."
-
-"How do you expect him to make an open move, if he's all that wise?"
-asked Griff.
-
-"Well," Mr. Wright spoke up, "some one has been quietly exchanging
-company stock, turning some into gold, here and there. I think it was
-Barney's work under assumed names, to get his money into shape for
-escape. We have made him see that we know how the cheap, shoddy supplies
-are coming in, and other things: he will try to get away."
-
-"The paying tellers of the town banks are on the watch. The first minute
-he comes to close his accounts, as he will do before he takes a train,
-we will be informed. Before he goes he may try to destroy the false
-account books, and leave only conviction of his guilt, but no real,
-legal proof."
-
-"But--" Al was still somewhat puzzled. "Bob, how did you come to suspect
-Barney at all?"
-
-"Do you remember me telling what was said when I flew with Lang to see
-Father?" As Al and Curt nodded, Bob added, "Barney used a phrase about
-'crossed wires.' Then I found crossed wires in Mr. Tredway's ship last
-night, and later Mr. Tredway found wires chafed, and led across each
-other, by his brown 'plane carburetor. It was the quickest way to
-endanger a ship--the spark could set fire to free gas, and might not be
-noticed in daylight. Barney had time to do it."
-
-"When he went out? I see," Curt said. "But, Bob, you thought some one
-was listening, watching--you told Barney so."
-
-"I still think some one was spying over our dinner--but it may have been
-the manager, Jenks, who may be 'in' with Barney."
-
-"Speak of the--" Mr. Tredway gave a warning glance as he began the old
-adage, "speak of the devil, he's sure to appear."
-
-To their amazement, Barney came through the gates. He was calm, quiet,
-not at all furtive or frightened.
-
-"What was the idea of that trick you played with the books?" He patted
-the package he carried. Bob was confused.
-
-The arrival of the rigger, Sandy Jim, coming early to complete work on
-the new airplane for which the owner was in such a hurry, enabled Bob to
-hide his confusion as his father answered, quietly, "I'll tell you that,
-Barney."
-
-"All right. Tell me."
-
-Bob, who turned his head to hide his crimson face, and who went to greet
-Sandy Jim, with Al, as an excuse to avoid an explanation that might
-upset their plans, was surprised at the look on Sandy Jim's face.
-
-The man was staring at Mr. Tredway as though he saw a ghost.
-
-"I--I--thought that man was----"
-
-"Hello, Sandy!" Al greeted, taking the amazement as natural, since
-everyone around the plant supposed the owner to have gone under the mud
-in the Silver Flash, "ready for work early."
-
-"Ye--yeah! How'd he get here?" He jerked a thumb toward Mr. Tredway.
-
-"In a taxi."
-
-Bob took over the explanation, giving Sandy enough of the former
-happenings to enable the rigger to recover from his surprise.
-
-"I'm right glad," the man stated, finally. "Now--Al, you get some of
-your crowd together and fuel up this new crate--soon as a pilot shows up
-we want it tested. I may have to make some changes in the wire tension
-and balance--get busy, me lads!"
-
-Al eagerly agreed, seeing that their carefully planned "coup" had fallen
-through. Barney, listening to Mr. Wright, to Mr. Tredway, to the
-latter's partner and the Chief of Police, trying, all together, to give
-him a "third degree," began to laugh.
-
-"That's a good one!" He threw back his head, roaring his mirth. "So I'm
-the culprit, eh? Ho-ho! Oh, my, that's rich. Clever Sky Squad you have,
-Wright! Ha-ha-ha-ho-ho! Here I am doing all I can to help my partner,
-trying to solve the puzzles he couldn't untangle--and I'm to be
-arrested!"
-
-"No one spoke of arrest!" the Police Chief hedged. "Are you sending some
-one else to get your banked gold?"
-
-"Banked gold?" Barney dropped his jaw as the question was shot at him.
-
-"Converting stock!" snapped Mr. Parsons.
-
-Barney stared and then smiled. "All the stock I ever had is in my safe
-deposit box--come on! I'll show you, at the bank."
-
-They were puzzled. Arthur Tredway was eager to claim that his friend and
-protege was innocent.
-
-The others were compelled to admit as Bob mentally decided, that
-Barney's face, manner and actions were open and honest.
-
-"That's enough gas," said the rigger. "Now, Al, fill her up with oil--I
-want to see Mr. Tredway." He descended from the aircraft, went to his
-employer and with many protestations of delight gripped his hand.
-
-"See here," he urged, "Mr. Tredway, this crate they're fueling is in a
-big rush. I have to make adjustments for balance before she is
-delivered. Can't you take her up?"
-
-"Why not?" Mr. Tredway was anxious to get into action since he had
-agreed to "return to life."
-
-"Hey--Bob--got her filled? Warm her up for Mr. Tredway."
-
-Bob nodded, consulted the brand new instruments and noted that the fuel
-and oil registered at "full."
-
-"Gas on--switch off," he told Al. "Whirl that prop, Al."
-
-His brother did his bidding. It took several trials to start the new
-engine but Bob got it going and then drew back the throttle to idling
-speed and went over to rejoin the group.
-
-"I don't think Arthur ought to take that crate up," Barney was half
-laughing. "Of course I know that the only wires I ever crossed was when
-I flew my crates over telegraph lines--but he might think I had 'em
-crossed in this ship!"
-
-"Oh, no!" Tredway laid a hand on his protege's shoulder.
-
-But Bob was not watching Barney.
-
-His eyes were fixed on Sandy Jim, and he beckoned to his father.
-
-Hurriedly, rapidly, Bob spoke to his father. The detective nodded.
-
-"I'll get the speedster of Mr. Tredway's warmed up, too," Bob said
-softly, "in case----"
-
-To Al's amazement and Curt's astonishment the head of the Sky Squad
-beckoned furiously. They followed.
-
-"See if there's gas and oil in this," he urged as he led them to the
-ship he had flown the night before, returned to its field by Mr.
-Parsons. "Listen, fellows----"
-
-As he busied himself making ready to start the motor, getting the nose
-of the sport 'plane into the wind, Bob explained.
-
-What he said startled his comrades.
-
-"While Mr. Tredway was joking Barney about the crossed wires, did you
-see Jim's face?"
-
-"The rigger?" Al exclaimed, "you mean--when he got white?"
-
-"Yes! Listen--gas off, switch on. Give her a spin, Curt."
-
-As the engine took up its roar, he clambered in again, leaned far over
-the edge to Curt, while Al climbed into the after seat.
-
-"Sandy Jim turned white," he said above the engine hum. "I think we've
-found the real--watch, fellows! Father is going to tell Barney in front
-of Sandy Jim about the crossed wires."
-
-"Jim is acting nervous," added Curt. "He's turning--the chief has
-grabbed his arm. Now Dad is going to say to Barney that he's guilty,
-that he hates his benefactor because of the other man winning Barney's
-girl--of course we know it's Jim, now--watch him! Jim's being accused
-now--look!"
-
-Baffled, his face displaying his guilt, Sandy Jim fled to the new
-airplane.
-
-Without an instant of delay Bob widened the throttle opening!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII
- THE SKY SQUAD WINS
-
-
-Roaring across the runway, Bob's one purpose was to use the airplane as
-a missile, to run it into the other before Sandy Jim could rise. In that
-he failed. The other ship was up, and Bob knew that he had so much speed
-that he must take off or ram into a hangar.
-
-By a spurt of the cold engine, risking a stall to get his trucks over
-the hangar, Bob soared.
-
-Leveling off, he glanced around. To his amazement he saw Al snapping on
-his safety belt in the rear cockpit seat. Al waved a hand, pointing to
-one side. And Bob looked.
-
-"He's having trouble," Al screamed. "He's working on something!"
-
-Bob began to climb. If he could force Jim to earth as he had been herded
-the night before--
-
-Jim saw his move, and with a demon's venom drew a weapon and began to
-fire.
-
-But Bob sideslipped, dropped steeply into a dive to come out of the
-slip, and as he drew the ship to level flight, heard something strike
-the prop, saw it shatter.
-
-Jim had flung the metal gun so that the airplane ran into it.
-
-Bob began to look for a way to spiral back to the testing field. His
-propeller, with a blade shattered, was useless.
-
-Al screeched again. To the west, coming fast, was a ship they both
-recognized. Lang was returning in Griff's speedster. Also, as Al pointed
-out, the cabin 'plane was rising from the landing field.
-
-Al was so excited that he waggled the stick.
-
-Then Bob saw!
-
-Forestalled by the approach of Lang, with the other ship rising to
-chase, with his engine functioning badly, and the resulting distraction
-of attention, Jim's safety was endangered.
-
-The very thing that he had done when he planned to urge Mr. Tredway to
-test the 'plane--crossing two wires--had prevented his escape.
-
-The new carburetor, leaking, dripped a rich gas and air mixture onto the
-sparking wires--there was a flash of flames as Bob looked.
-
-Almost he forgot his own purpose, but with steeled will he held his
-tight spiral, saw the cabin ship was out of his way, shot the field, and
-landed.
-
-When Lang and the others joined him beside the smoking ruins of the new
-ship, they saw Sandy Jim, who had tried to escape by jumping before the
-flames reached him.
-
-Wrenched, broken, bruised, he was still able to talk.
-
-"Come through, Jim--what's the truth?" asked the Chief.
-
-"I hated Tredway from the time he got the girl I wanted to marry," Jim
-panted, as they gave him water. "I went from bad to worse--went to the
-dogs. I got in with tough men, tried prize-fighting, that's how my face
-got changed, so I wasn't easy to remember and recognize.
-
-"Laid low for a while, then I gave up plans for revenge, and decided to
-come to work here to be close to the woman I loved, only, last Fall, she
-went away. So I knew Tredway had drove her to separate--"
-
-"You're crazy! My wife went to Europe for a long visit with relatives in
-France!"
-
-"Honest? Then all my hate was on a wrong idea. Well, you know most of
-the rest. I damaged ships, worked with the bookkeeper and the supply
-clerk and a manager of The Windsock to substitute cheap stuff for good,
-sell the good and ruin the plant--but it was all no use--and started on
-a wrong idea--no use to say I'm sorry--but--well, boys, handle me
-easy--I'm no good, but I can feel pain!"
-
-In that fashion the culprit confessed.
-
-"I feel sorry for Jimmy-junior, and the man's wife," said Curt, after
-the ambulance had taken Sandy Jim to the hospital.
-
-"Jimmy-junior isn't his son," explained Mr. Parsons. "He is the son of
-Sandy's brother, whom Jim took to raise. It would be a good idea if you
-young men took him into the Sky Squad now, to take his mind off his
-sorrow."
-
-"But I saw his mother and I thought she was Jim's wife," said Al.
-
-"No, she's Jimmy-junior's mother, but Sandy's sister-in-law."
-
-"Then let's go," urged Bob. "It's just about time to wake up our new
-member."
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Copyright notice provided as in the original--this e-text is public
- domain in the country of publication.
-
---Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and
- dialect unchanged.
-
---In the text versions, delimited italics text in _underscores_ (the
- HTML version reproduces the font form of the printed book.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Mystery Crash, by Ardon Van Buren Powell
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY CRASH ***
-
-***** This file should be named 55359.txt or 55359.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/5/3/5/55359/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/55359.zip b/old/55359.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 3260ffc..0000000
--- a/old/55359.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ